Civilian deaths rise as Afghan fight intensifies

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Hundreds of Afghans took to the streets of Mazar-i-Sharif on Saturday to protest against mounting civilian deaths, while five U.S. and NATO troops died in separate insurgent attacks on a bloody day of fighting across the country.

Protesters chanted slogans against foreign forces and Afghan President Hamid Karzai after U.S. troops killed two civilians in a pre-dawn raid on Wednesday in the northern city’s outskirts.

NATO also admitted killing six people with stray artillery on Thursday, a day after an airstrike accidently killed five Afghan soldiers.

Insurgent gunmen also killed 11 Pakistani tribesmen near the eastern Afghan border, opening fire on their bus, while a bomb placed on a motorbike killed one civilian at a bazaar in the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar. [ID:nSGE669GBL] Civilian casualties and friendly fire deaths among Afghan security forces have been a frequent irritant between Karzai and Western military forces during the nine-year war since the ousting of the Taliban in 2001. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For more on Afghanistan click [ID:nAFPAK]

or see link.reuters.com/syx62d

Afghan blog: blogs.reuters.com/afghanistan/ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

General David Petraeus, the U.S. general tapped by Washington to take over the Afghan war after his predecessor criticised senior administration officials, last week wrote to international troops to warn civilian deaths must be kept at a minimum.

“We must never forget that the decisive terrain in Afghanistan is the human terrain,” Petraeus, who masterminded the Iraq counter-insurgency, wrote to 150,000 U.S. and NATO troops preparing an all-out offensive against the Taliban in the south.

In Kabul, The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said five soldiers were killed by roadside bombs and insurgent gunfire in separate incidents in the south and east.

A joint Afghan and NATO investigation team found six civilians died on Thursday when artillery shells went astray in Paktia Province, the alliance said in a statement.

“ISAF officials offer sincere condolences to those affected and accept full responsibility for the actions that led to this tragic incident,” the statement said.

Five Afghan government soldiers were accidently killed and two others wounded in a pre-dawn NATO helicopter airstrike on Wednesday, prompting condemnation from the government.

SENSITIVE CHANGE

Petraeus is considering a sensitive change to rules of engagement drawn up his predecessor to avoid civilian casualties, following complaints they tie the hands of coalition troops combating insurgents.

The latest deaths will make any relaxation more difficult and may prompt more strains with the government.

Karzai is already annoyed over plans outlined by Petraeus for Afghan villagers to form militia-style defence groups to help fight the Taliban on their own, The Washington Post newspaper said on Saturday.

Casualties among NATO forces fighting in Afghanistan hit a high in June and commanders expect violence to rise in parallel with an anti-insurgent offensive in coming months, raising questions about whether more can be done to protect troops.

Bombers including one suicide attacker hit two separate NATO convoys in eastern Khost and northern Kunduz on Saturday, injuring German soldiers and showing the growing insurgency can strike well beyond the Taliban-dominated south.

Two coalition soldiers were killed on Friday in separate bomb attacks, NATO said, while a suicide car bomb hit an alliance convoy on a bridge outside Jalalabad, killing one civilian. (Additional reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Stray NATO artillery kills six Afghan civilians

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Foreign troops in Afghanistan killed six civilians and wounded several others with stray artillery fire just a day after a NATO airstrike accidently killed five Afghan government soldiers.

A joint Afghan and NATO investigation team found the civilians died on Thursday when artillery fire failed to hit a target in the Jani Khel district of Paktia Province, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.

“ISAF officials offer sincere condolences to those affected and accept full responsibility for the actions that led to this tragic incident,” the statement, received late on Friday, said.

The country’s interior ministry initially blamed the deaths on a rocket fired by insurgents hitting a local bazaar.

Civilian casualties and friendly fire deaths among Afghan security forces have been a frequent irritant between President Hamid Karzai and Western military forces during the nine-year war since the ousting of the Taliban in 2001.

ISAF said commanders had held two days of meetings, or “shuras”, with local elders in Jani Khel to discuss the incident.

New U.S. and NATO forces commander General David Petraeus is considering a change to rules of engagement drawn up his predecessor to avoid civilian casualties, following complaints they tie the hands of coalition troops combating insurgents.

Casualties among NATO forces fighting in Afghanistan hit a record high in June and commanders expect violence to rise in parallel with an anti-insurgent offensive in coming months, raising questions about whether more can be done to protect troops.

Two coalition soldiers were killed on Friday in separate bomb attacks, the alliance said, while a suicide car bomb hit a NATO convoy on a bridge outside Jalalabad, killing one civilian and wounding nine others.

Five Afghan government soldiers were accidently killed and two others wounded in a pre-dawn NATO helicopter airstrike on Wednesday, prompting condemnation from the country’s government.

The attack took place after a aircraft mistook Afghan National Army soldiers for Taliban insurgents during an operation in southwest Ghazni. (Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Pakistan says forces kill 23 militants in northwest

Pakistan (Reuters) – Pakistani forces killed 23 militants early on Tuesday in fighting that erupted after insurgents fired on troops during a search operation in the country’s northwest, police and intelligence officials said.

The search was launched after a suicide bomb attack on a paramilitary fort in Lower Dir district, where troops killed hundreds of militants in an offensive last year.

“The fighting began when miscreants opened fire on troops searching the area after reports of militant movement there,” Dir’s top police chief, Mumtaz Zireen, told Reuters.

Zireen said 23 militants were killed in the pre-dawn exchange of fire in the Maidan area.

Independent verification was not immediately available. Militants often reject and dispute casualty figures issued by officials.

Fresh violence after a relative lull has again focused attention on Pakistan’s performance against homegrown Taliban insurgents.

At least 42 people were killed and 175 wounded when two suicide bombers struck Pakistan’s most important Sufi shrine last week, the second major attack in a month on Pakistan’s cultural hub and traditional seat of power, Punjab Province.

(Reporting by Junaid Khan; Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Michael Georgy and Ron Popeski)

Pakistan says forces kill 23 militants in northwest

Pakistan, July 6 (Reuters) – Pakistani forces killed 23 militants early on Tuesday in fighting that erupted after insurgents fired on troops during a search operation in the country’s northwest, police and intelligence officials said.

The search was launched after a suicide bomb attack on a paramilitary fort in Lower Dir district, where troops killed hundreds of militants in an offensive last year.

“The fighting began when miscreants opened fire on troops searching the area after reports of militant movement there,” Dir’s top police chief, Mumtaz Zireen, told Reuters.

Zireen said 23 militants were killed in the pre-dawn exchange of fire in the Maidan area.

Independent verfication was not immediately available. Militants often reject and dispute casualty figures issued by officials.

Fresh violence after a relative lull has again focused attention on Pakistan’s performance against homegrown Taliban insurgents.

At least 42 people were killed and 175 wounded when two suicide bombers struck Pakistan’s most important Sufi shrine last week, the second major attack in a month on Pakistan’s cultural hub and traditional seat of power, Punjab Province. (Reporting by Junaid Khan; Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Michael Georgy and Ron Popeski) (E-mail: augustine.anthony@thomsonreuters.com; Reuters Messaging: augustine.anthony.reuters.com@reuters.net; Islamabad newsroom: +92 51 281 0017)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

South Africans party but robbery mars mood

(Reuters) – South Africans danced and blew horns for their beloved national team on Wednesday but a robbery by gunmen at a media hotel dampened the World Cup party mood.

Sports

Tens of thousands of fans sang and shook their stuff in the streets of Johannesburg for a parade by the local “Bafana Bafana” (The Boys) team who are helping unite a nation still suffering divisions 16 years after the end of apartheid.

In scenic Cape Town, fans brought out their “vuvuzela” trumpets — fast becoming the unofficial symbol of South Africa 2010 — for a massive show of support at midday.

“This can be our 12th man,” South Africa coach Carlos Alberto Parreira said of the horns. His side face Mexico on Friday in the first game of Africa’s first World Cup.

Africans are praying the June 11-July 11 tournament will be a roaring success and displace the stereotypical images of hunger, AIDS and high crime. “I have never experienced this type of vibe in my life before,” said Brenda Barratt, 59, at the team parade.

Robbers soured the atmosphere, though, and sent a reminder of local crime levels rivaling anywhere outside a war-zone with a pre-dawn raid on journalists from Portugal and Spain.

They rifled through rooms of sleeping reporters to steal equipment and cash at a lodge at scenic Magaliesburg town. “It was the scariest thing that has ever happened to me,” said photographer Antonio Simoes, who woke up to be held at gunpoint.

In other unwanted developments, a shocking and ever-growing injury list — some are already calling it the “curse” of this World Cup — has kept out leading names like David Beckham, Nani, Michael Essien and Michael Ballack.

Even a referee, Chile’s Pablo Pozo Quinteros, fell victim and had to pull out of handling Sunday’s Algeria-Slovenia game.

Other big names of world football, like Arjen Robben of the Netherlands, Spain’s Andres Iniesta and Ivory Coast’s Didier Drogba, are racing to get fit.

There was good news for Australia, with midfielder and main goal threat Tim Cahill expected to be over a neck strain for their Group D opener on Sunday against Germany.

SPANISH STROLL

Plenty of other established names will be present. One of them, Fernando Torres, shrugged off a knee injury to score in Spain’s 6-0 rout of Poland in a final warm-up on Tuesday night.

The Euro 2008 champions have never won a World Cup, but have a team brimming with talent and are marginally bookies’ Favorites to win ahead of the leading ranked team, Brazil.

Five-times world champions Brazil romped to a 5-1 win over Tanzania in their last friendly on Monday, with Kaka emerging from an injury-plagued season at Real Madrid to net.

With hooligans from England and Argentina already thwarted, and a stampede injuring 15 people at a weekend match, the hosts are praying for calm off the pitch as well as success on it.

“The government will not tolerate any unruly, disruptive and unsafe behavior,” South African government spokesman Themba Maseko said in a statement on Wednesday.

Authorities, who are particularly worried about illegal tickets, have deployed more than 40,000 police to keep order.

Africa’s most famous son, Nelson Mandela, 91, is expected to join the party at Soccer City on Friday.

His presence spurred South Africa to Rugby World Cup glory in 1995 and the political prisoner-turned-president is the living symbol of the nation’s transformation into the modern era from its past of apartheid and international isolation.

Africa’s six competing teams will hope to draw inspiration from Mandela to break Europe and South America’s stranglehold on the World Cup, or at least go further than Cameroon and Senegal’s quarter-final showings in 1990 and 2002.

English bookmaker William Hill has Ivory Coast as Africa’s best hope at 50/1 odds, way behind Spain at 4/1 and Brazil at 9/2. Argentina, England and the Netherlands are next in betting.

Hosts South Africa are rated 150/1.

(Reporting by Reuters reporters across South Africa; editing by Jon Bramley)

Air strike kills Yemen mediator, tribes hit pipeline

An air strike in Yemen targetting al Qaeda missed its mark and killed a mediator, prompting members of his tribe to blow up an oil pipeline in clashes that followed, a provincial official said on Tuesday.

Separately, a Yemeni government official said a U.S. couple taken hostage by tribesmen were released on Tuesday, a day after they were seized near the capital Sanaa.

A Yemeni website aligned with the opposition said the strike was carried out by a drone, a weapon that Yemen is not believed to have. U.S. forces have used drones in the past in Yemen, but a U.S. diplomat declined to say if Washington was involved.

The strike could heighten anti-U.S. sentiment and broaden al Qaeda’s appeal among powerful Yemeni tribes, threatening efforts to stabilise a country neighbouring oil power Saudi Arabia and busy international shipping lanes, analysts said.

The botched bombing of a U.S. airliner on Dec. 25, claimed by al Qaeda’s Yemen-based wing, spurred Washington to step up security help to President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s government, which faces grave challenges apart from militancy.

The mediator, seeking to persuade al Qaeda members to surrender, was killed in the pre-dawn strike on his car in the mountainous Maarib province that also killed three other people.

“Jaber al-Shabwani, the deputy governor of Maarib, was killed with a number of his relatives and travel companions in an air strike targeting the Wadi Obeida area, where al Qaeda elements are present,” the provincial official said.

U.S. COUPLE RELEASED

On Monday, armed tribesmen kidnapped two U.S. tourists near Sanaa and demanded the release of a relative jailed over a land dispute that was before the courts.

“The Americans have arrived at the interior ministry building in Sanaa,” a government official told Reuters.

Authorities had set up road blocks and arrested dozens of members of the kidnappers’ families to pressure the abductors.

Another official told Reuters that authorities had promised to look into the kidnappers’ demand.

The air strike provoked clashes between the army and members of Shabwani’s tribe, and the tribesmen attacked the pipeline that ferries crude oil from Maarib, east of the capital Sanaa, to the Red Sea coast, the official said.

Clashes with the mediator’s tribe spread from the countryside to Maarib town, where dozens of tribal gunmen opened fire on government buildings, a local official said.

Security officials said angry tribes blocked a main road to Sanaa, stopping trucks carrying cooking gas and petrol.

“Many of the tribes have become increasingly hostile to the Saleh government, and AQAP (al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula) have done a better job than some al Qaeda affiliates elsewhere in making inroads into the local population,” said Shadi Hamid, a deputy director at the Brookings Doha Center.

“There is more of an indigenous character to the group, more of a Yemeni character. So it would not be surprising if this incident feeds into more latent support for AQAP,” he added.

The United States and Saudi Arabia want Yemen, which is trying to end a conflict with Shi’ite rebels in the north while separatist sentiment bubbles over in the south, to focus its efforts on fighting al Qaeda, seen as a greater global threat.

Yemen declared war on al Qaeda after the failed December attack, stepping up air strikes on the group, which has vowed attacks against Western targets in the oil-exporting region.

A statement from a top Yemeni security body expressed sorrow for Shabwani’s death and called him a martyr, without saying who carried out the strike or what type of aircraft was used.

A U.S. diplomat would not discuss the attack. Washington backed Sanaa’s fight against al Qaeda by training Yemeni forces, sharing information and providing equipment, and recognised al Qaeda in Yemen was a threat to both countries, he said.

“So we are working together. The Yemeni forces always take the lead in operations carried out in Yemen using some of that support that we have provided for them through training and information sharing,” the diplomat said.

Asked directly if the United States was involved in the strike, he said: “If you want operation-specific details you need to contact the Yemeni government.”

Yemen and U.S. military targeted al Qaeda figures in Yemen, where Osama bin Laden’s father was born, after the September 11, 2001, attacks. A CIA drone fired a missile that killed al Qaeda’s leader in Yemen in 2002.

The latest strike had likely intended to hit Ayed al-Shabwani, an al Qaeda leader whose farm in Maarib province was the target of a strike in January, the provincial official said. Shabwani is a relative of the mediator who was killed.

Shipping companies said there was no impact on exports from the attack on the pipeline, which ferries crude to the Ras Isa offshore export terminal. Authorities could not immediately reach the affected area.

(Additional reporting by William Maclean in London, and Simon Webb and Luke Pachymuthu in Dubai; Writing by Cynthia Johnston and Firouz Sedarat; editing by Ralph Boulton)

Airstrike kills Yemen mediator, tribes hit pipeline

An airstrike in Yemen targeting al Qaeda missed its mark on Tuesday and killed a mediator by mistake, prompting members of his tribe to blow up a crude oil pipeline in clashes that followed, a provincial official said.

The mediator, who had been trying to persuade members of the global militant group to surrender, was killed instantly in a pre-dawn strike on his car in Yemen’s mountainous Maarib province that also killed three other people.

“Jaber al-Shabwani, the deputy governor of Maarib, was killed with a number of his relatives and travel companions in an airstrike targeting the Wadi Obeida area, where al Qaeda elements are present,” said the official, a member of a local council in Maarib, who declined to be named.

“The deputy governor was on a mediation mission to persuade al Qaeda elements to hand themselves over to the authorities, but it seems that the airstrike missed its target and struck his car, killing him instantly in addition to three companions,” he added. Two others were wounded.

The strike provoked clashes between the army and members of Shabwani’s tribe, and the tribesmen attacked the pipeline that ferries crude oil from Maarib, east of the capital Sanaa, to the Red Sea coast, the official said.

He said the pipeline attack was “in response to the killing of the deputy governor of Maarib province”.

Yemen, which borders the world’s top oil exporter Saudi Arabia, moved to the forefront of Western security concerns after al Qaeda’s Yemen-based regional arm claimed responsibility for a failed attempt to bomb a U.S.-bound plane in December.

The United States and Saudi Arabia want Yemen, which is trying to end a conflict with Shi’ite rebels in the north while separatist sentiment bubbles over in the south, to focus its efforts on fighting al Qaeda, which they see as a greater global threat.

NO EXPORT DISRUPTION

Shipping companies said there was no impact on exports from the attack on the pipeline, which ferries crude to the Ras Isa offshore export terminal. Authorities could not immediately reach the affected area.

“There has been no hindrance to exports,” one shipper said. Exports from Ras Isa are about 30,000 barrels per day. The terminal exports Marib Light crude.

Clashes with the tribe, which began in the countryside, spread to Maarib town, where dozens of tribal gunmen opened fire on government buildings, and the army was returning fire. At least seven people were injured, a local official said.

“Units from the army are now fighting the deputy governor’s tribe. It’s turned into a ground battle. There are ground operations,” a Maarib area resident reached by telephone from London said.

Tuesday’s air strike had intended to target Ayed al-Shabwani, an al Qaeda leader whose farm in Maarib province was the target of a similar strike in January, the provincial official said. Shabwani is a relative of the mediator killed in the strike.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari in Sanaa, William Maclean in London, and Simon Webb and Luke Pachymuthu in Dubai; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; editing by Myra MacDonald)

13 students injured in knife attack in China’s Hainan province

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): More than 10 men, armed with knives, burst into two dormitories at a vocational college in Hainan and slashed nine students, two of them seriously.

The pre-dawn attack took place in Haikou, the capital of South China’s island province of Hainan at the Hainan Institute of Science and Technology.

The new attack has sparked fears in China, which is already on edge following a series of such horrific assaults.

Four students had been wounded in an earlier confrontation between the two groups, bringing the total number of injured to 13, according to local authorities.

The assailants attacked a guard and disabled a security camera before gaining access to the dormitories, The China Daily reports.

Among the wounded, two were severely injured, with one student having his hand cut off. Following eight hours of surgery at the Haikou City People”s Hospital, their conditions were not considered to be life threatening.

Students from the school, who accompanied the injured to the hospital, said the violence began late on Tuesday when a confrontation took place at a food stall outside the campus with some men from surrounding villages, The China Daily reports.

Four students were attacked with knives in the incident and the police were called, they said, but left after questioning the students.

The villagers then called for reinforcements and attacked the school at about 2:30 am on Wednesday, witnesses said.

The violence has resulted in security being tightened at schools across China. (ANI)

Fire leaves thousands homeless in Philippine capital

Manila, May 15 (DPA) Thousands of people were left homeless Saturday in a pre-dawn blaze that struck a slum area in the Philippine capital. No one was injured, a fire official said.

The fire razed some 800 houses in Muntinlupa City, leaving at least 4,000 people homeless, according to metropolitan Manila fire chief Senior Superintendent Pablito Cordeta.

Cordeta said there were no reported injuries in the conflagration that lasted for several hours.

Investigators were still determining the cause.

North Korea’s Kim Jong-il visits China – reports

North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has arrived in China, his destitute state’s biggest benefactor, for a rare trip abroad that could defuse regional tensions and bring him much-needed aid, reports said on Monday.

China has the most influence in curbing the North’s military grandstanding and the reclusive Kim’s previous trips to his neighbour have led to steps that have reduced security concerns for the economically vibrant region and between the rival Koreas.

The trip to China would be the first in four years and comes at a time when South Korea is considering ways to respond to a suspected North Korean attack on one of its naval ships. South Korea lost 46 sailors in what could be one of the deadliest strikes since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

“We have confirmed the arrival of a special train at (the Chinese border city) Dandong, and we believe it is highly likely that Chairman Kim is on board,” a South Korean government official told Yonhap news agency.

Kim later entered the Chinese port city of Dalian, Yonhap quoted officials as saying. In his last trip in 2006, Kim toured China’s industrial centres for a first-hand look under the hood of the country’s quickly growing economy.

Dalian, a thriving city that has attracted major foreign investment, is a symbol of development that Beijing’s leaders have advocated for years to Kim and his father and state founder Kim Il-sung to revive the North’s moribund economy.

A booking agent at the Furama Hotel in the city where Kim is thought to be staying told Reuters it was not accepting reservations for Monday because of “an event”.

There has been no confirmation of the trip, and reporters, camping out along the railway line that Kim’s special armoured train would have to use to enter China, were hounded out of the area by Chinese security agents just before the suspected crossing.

Yonhap said the train thought to have carried Kim crossed in the pre-dawn hours of Monday with several hundred Chinese security agents sealing off the area around the train station.

Witnesses at the border said the security clampdown ended a few hours afterwards. The North’s KCNA news agency’s last report on Kim was on Saturday and said he attended a May Day concert in Pyongyang where songs including “This Is Icon of Socialism” and “Where Are You, Dear General” were performed.

In another sign pointing to a visit, a North Korean performance troupe that played at a meeting between Kim and top Chinese officials in Pyongyang, has entered China for shows in Beijing, a major Chinese newspaper reported.

The visit would be Kim’s first trip abroad since a suspected stroke in 2008.

PUNISHING PYONGYANG

South Korea is expected to seek economic and political punishment against Pyongyang for the attack on the ship but avoid a revenge strike that might spark an escalating conflict between the rivals and devastate its own quickly recovering economy.

China, fearful of a collapse of the Kim family regime that would bring chaos to its border, has supported the North’s leaders for decades.

It wants to prevent an escalation of military tension but is unlikely to punish its neighbour if it was to blame for the attack on the warship, analysts said.

Kim is even more reliant on China’s help after a botched currency reform at the end of last year worsened inflation and sparked rare civil unrest that raised questions about Kim’s grip on power in the state his family has run for more than 60 years.

“China has heard from South Korean President Lee Myung-bak on the ship sinking when he met President Hu Jintao last week and now it could hear from North Korea,” said Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the South’s University of North Korean Studies.

Yang said Beijing will weigh its options and see how far it is willing to cooperate with Pyongyang.

Analysts said Kim may be heading to China to seek financial aid in exchange for a return to international nuclear disarmament-for-aid talks hosted by Beijing that Pyongyang has boycotted for over a year.

Kim’s trip to China in 2000 was soon followed by a summit in Pyongyang with South Korea’s leader and the start of two major joint development projects in North Korea. A China trip in 2004 led to a push for talks on the North’s nuclear programmes.

The North has come under pressure to return to six-country nuclear talks due to U.N. sanctions imposed after a May 2009 atomic test that have dealt a blow to its wobbly economy.

The North’s official media did not announce his 2006 visit until after Kim’s armoured train crossed the border and he was safely back in North Korea.

(Writing by Jon Herskovitz in Seoul; Additional reporting by Chris Buckley in Beijing and Christine Kim and Cheon Jong-woo in Seoul; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Sanjeev Miglani)

Macca admits small gigs make him nervous

London, May 03 (ANI): Sir Paul McCartney has admitted that he still gets butterflies in his stomach – when he plays in small venues.

The former Beatle says that playing in front of a large audience doesn’t bother him but it’s the more intimate gigs that still make him nervous, reports the Telegraph.

Sir Paul – due to play the Hard Rock Calling event in Hyde Park, as well as the Isle Of Wight Festival in June said in an interview with Absolute Radio:

””I”ll tell you what does get me nervous, when you”re playing to small groups of people. If it”s at all kind of corporate – so in other words, charity dos – you don”t know who you”ve got in the audience.

“It can be people who really don”t like rock and roll, and you”re sitting there going ”Yeah, we”re going to have a great time tonight” and they”re just chatting to each other.

””You know, ”Well I think that was a great deal, how”s your bank?’ I sort of turn round to the band and give a look which says ”We”re working, we”re going to have to work this one, you know, there”s no relaxing”.””

Sir Paul told DJ Geoff Lloyd that he once almost gave up before Beatles were due to play at the NME pollwinners concert in the 1960s, but now he has no such problem with massive shows.

””I don”t get that kind of nervous, because if the tickets sell really well, you get an idea that these people really want to come and see you. And I kind of feel that about the people who come and see me, we”re sort of mates. We get this kind of thing going, so I don”t feel too bad.”” (ANI)

Terrorist atrocity is the biggest human rights violation

New Delhi, Apr. 29 (ANI): There is a tacit albeit distinct pattern in the politics of Jammu and Kashmir, a method to the madness, which can be discerned only through deep analysis and research.

The Army Chief, General V K Singh, on assuming his appointment stated that he was not in favour of revocation of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) since this would adversely impact conduct of operations in the state.

As if on cue, the unfortunate death of two civilians during counter terrorist operations elicited visits to their bereaved families by some political leaders, ostensibly to express sorrow and solidarity, but in actuality to demand the revocation of the AFSPA.

The first incident was the unfortunate death of Habibullah Khan at Kupwara during conduct of counter infiltration operations in the Rainwari forests. The cause of death could not be ascertained even as the possibility of the individual having been used as a human shield by fleeing terrorists was not ruled out.

People’s Democratic Party (PDP) chief Mehbooba Mufti visited the bereaved family at Devar in Lolab, expressed solidarity, demanded a probe, demanded compensation and finally made a fiery pitch for revocation of the AFSPA and withdrawal of the Army from the state.

The second incident was the death of Ghulam Muhammad Kalas near Kellar. The individual along with an accomplice walked into an ambush laid by the Army on specific information regarding presence of terrorists in the area. The time being pre-dawn, a civilian was not expected to be outside his house and troops opened fire due to mistaken identity.

The Superintendent of Police did give a hint that the deceased and his accomplice could have been involved in smuggling of timber which could be the reason for their being out of their houses at that early hour and also for the fact that they were unaware of the Army ambush.

The first to visit the family of the deceased was the chairman of Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front, Muhammad Yaseen Malik, the condolences over, he used the platform to voice his protest against the AFSPA. Then came Mehbooba Mufti who also brushed through the condolence formalities and proceeded to instigate the gathered crowd to campaign against the AFSPA.

There is nothing wrong in visiting families of victims of terrorism, apart from expressing sorrow there is every reason to compensate these families and look after them, but to use the occasion for political mileage is quite unfortunate.

This apart, the selective condolence of victims of terrorism based on political expediency is even more inappropriate.

On April 21, unidentified terrorists mercilessly gunned down a police constable, Bashir Ahmed Sheikh, of Gardh Daman, Marwah at Nawapachi. He had been recently regularised after serving as Special Police Officer for several years and was known to be most active in counter terrorist operations.

Surprisingly, none of the aforementioned leaders considered it necessary to visit his bereaved family and express solidarity with them for having sacrificed a son to rid the region of the menace of terrorism.

If you ask the parents of Bashir Ahmed they will say that AFSPA should not only stay but also be strengthened so that terrorism can be eradicated once and for all. It is pitiable to note that the suffering of the people is being exploited on the mantle of political opportunism.

The existing security scenario in the State presents a strong case for proactive action to quell undeterred terrorist atrocity. Over 40 innocent civilians have been killed in terrorist initiated violence from 2009 to date, the youngest being a three year old child and the oldest a sixty year old.

The police have registered at least six cases of marriages and rape at gunpoint by terrorists during the last year. Fresh inputs indicate that terrorists have now started targeting children, the sick and the infirm. Recently an IED was discovered by the Indian Army in the compound of the Government High School, Shangus, Anantnag, adjoining the Government Hospital. Quite obviously, their aim of the terrorists was to emulate their brethren in Pakistan and perpetrate the kind of jihad that they are carrying out in their own country against their own people.

Why do we not question such blatant human rights violations? Why are there no bandhs being called and speeches made to exhort security forces exhorted to do everything in their power to break the back of these mercenary murderers? Why are the security forces not given the assurance of complete cooperation in achievement of this objective? Why are people not out on the streets with stones in their hands to protest against violation of their rights by foreigners? How many groups have taken up cudgels to get justice for women exploited by terrorists?

The terrorists are merrily continuing with their pernicious agenda of pillage, rape and murder but not one leader of a particular hue has ever come out openly against this gross barbarism. Holding on to a particular political ideology is the right of every democratic Indian citizen, but basic civilisational norm should be kept above politics.

There are media reports that the Jammu and Kashmir Government is planning to conduct a survey of militancy-affected people to ascertain the exact number of widows and orphans in the State.

It would be in order to extend the terms of reference of the survey to also ascertain the complete human and infrastructural loss that terrorism has afflicted on the State through rampant murder, grenade and IED attacks, abductions etc. (ANI)

Tesoro says Anacortes hydroprocessing units shut by fire

HOUSTON, April 2 (Reuters) – Hydroprocessing units at Tesoro Corp’s (TSO.N) 120,000 barrel per day Anacortes, Washington, refinery were shut on Friday morning following a deadly pre-dawn fire on a naphtha hydrotreater, the company’s chief financial officer told Reuters.

Stocks | Energy

The company was consider shutting the other units still operating at the refinery after it can conduct a daylight inspection of damage from the blaze, in which three workers were killed and four injured, said Tesoro Chief Financial Officer Gregory Wright.

Among the units still operating was the refinery’s crude distillation unit, Wright said. (Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by John Picinich)

North Korean cargo train sparks Kim trip speculation

(Reuters) – The train thought to be carrying Kim Jong-il to China appears to have be a cargo freighter on a journey unrelated to the reclusive North Korean leader, witnesses at the border said on Saturday.

World | China | North Korea

South Korea’s Yonhap news sparked speculation that Kim may be heading to China when it said one of the special trains Kim uses on rare trips outside his hermit state was seen in the Chinese border city of Dandong.

Witnesses in Dandong who saw the train cross in the pre-dawn hours and video footage shot by Reuters TV indicates it was a freighter and not Kim’s armored train.

“It was a regular cargo train,” one witness said.

South Korean officials said this week a trip was imminent, with analysts saying a visit would help revive dormant international talks hosted by Beijing on ending Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions.

The North’s official news agency said in a report on Saturday that Kim had watched a musical performance in Pyongyang. It did not give a date for when he attended the event.

Kim’s few trips to China have often led to moves that decrease the security threat Pyongyang poses to the economically vibrant region.

Kim’s trips abroad are usually shrouded in secrecy and his state’s official media does not report on them until his journey is over and he is safely back in Pyongyang.

The visit would be the first since January 2006 when Kim toured China’s commercial centers and his first trip abroad since his recovery from a suspected stroke in 2008.

The North has come under pressure to return to six-country nuclear talks due to U.N. sanctions imposed after a May 2009 atomic test. The sanctions have dealt a blow to its wobbly economy, and a botched currency move late last year has sparked inflation and rare civil unrest.

(Additional reporting by Kim Yeon-hee in Seoul; Writing by Jon Herskovitz in Seoul)

Five Pak security officials killed in militant strike in NWFP

Islamabad, Mar. 26 (ANI): At least five Pakistani soldiers were killed and several others injured in a pre-dawn attack on a security check post in the restive Orakzai Agency of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) on Friday.

According to sources, a senior military officer Lt. Col. Anwar Abbas was among those killed in the militant strike, which is supposed to have been carried out by Taliban insurgents.

Following the strike, security forces launched a massive counter attack in the region killing at least 25 extremists at Kayala checkpost in region, Xinhua reported.

However, the casualties were not confirmed through independent sources.

Pakistani security forces, backed by helicopter gunships and combat jets, are engaged in an intense battle with the Taliban and other extremist groups in the troubled tribal region which has forced hundreds of people to migrate to safer places.

Officials said a large number of militants have forced to flee by the air strikes being conducted in the Orakzai region, which is believed to a stronghold of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP

Locals said that over 80 percent of residents have shifted out of the region and moved to nearby cities such as Hangu and Kohat. (ANI)

12 killed in pre-dawn drone attack in Miranshah

Islamabad, Aug.21 (ANI): At least twelve people were killed in a suspected US drone strike in the Danday Darpa Khel area of Miranshah early morning today (Friday).

According to sources, US drones fired several missiles targeting a house in the region killing all the 12 people on the spot besides wounding many others.

Eyewitnesses said casualties may rise as more people are feared trapped inside the rubble.

Sources said that all victims belonged to Afghanistan.

Immediately after the strike there were reports of extremists carrying out synchronized attacks in the region in retaliation of the drone hit.

Militants attacked three check-posts situated near the Miranshah air force base, The News reported.

Officials have imposed an indefinite curfew in Miranshah and adjacent areas after the incident. (ANI)

Israel demolishes two settlement outposts in southern West Bank

Jerusalem – Israel police and paramilitary police demolished two unauthorized settlement outposts in the southern West Bank early Wednesday morning, but settlers vowed to rebuild them.

When the dismantling forces arrived at an outpost outside the settlement town of Kiryat Arba, adjacent to Hebron, in the pre-dawn hours Wednesday, they found only one large tent filled with equipment.

According to Israel Army Radio, the outpost had been dismantled in the past, but rebuilt.

At the second outpost, also outside Kiryat Arba, police found five youths who did not resist when they were taken away and their two make shift huts and equipment were confiscated.

One of the outposts’ founders, Tzur Natan, told Army Radio that settlers “will continue, continue to settle” the occupied West Bank and set up more outposts.

“At these very moments, a new building is being built,” he said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak on Sunday said they would remove the outposts, which settlers had built without government sanction.

Some 100 outposts, set up independently by Jewish settlers without formal government approval, are scattered throughout the West Bank. Of those, Barak said, 22 would be removed, if not through agreement with settler leaders then by force.

Often consisting of little more than a few makeshift shelters, the unauthorized outposts are located next to the 121 “formal” Israeli settlements in the territory. All are considered illegal under international law. Israel considers the formal settlements legal, but not the outposts.

The 2003 “road map” authored by the quartet of Middle East peace sponsors – the United States, Europe, United Nations and Russia – calls on Israel to uproot all outposts erected since March 2001 and to freeze all construction in the other settlements.

Previous attempts to evacuate outposts have not always gone smoothly and in some cases have been met with violence on the part of settlers. Settlers also often return to rebuild after removal forces have left. (dpa)

Three policemen killed in Pakistan’s north-west

Islamabad – Three policemen were killed Tuesday in Pakistan’s north-west when gunmen attacked officers deployed outside the house of a suspected Islamist militant who was arrested last week, police said.

The pre-dawn raid took place in the district of Haripur, located some 65 kilometres north of the capital city, Islamabad.

“Heavily-armed men raided the building at around 2:30 am (2030 GMT) and fired indiscriminately at the policemen guarding the place,” a senior police officer told the German Press Agency dpa on the phone.

“Three policemen died on the spot and two more sustained bullet wounds,” the officer said on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the incident.

The officer said the house belonged to an Afghan national who was arrested on Thursday for suspected links with the Taliban and the al-Qaeda terrorist organization. He was later handed over into the custody of the intelligence agencies.

The suspect’s family remained in the house under police guard.

“Apparently, the attack was carried out to avenge the arrest,” according to the officer.

Haripur borders the insurgency-hit district of Buner, where the security forces have been battling Taliban fighters since April 28.

Militants, emboldened by a controversial peace deal, overran Buner early last month, expanding their control to territory just 100 kilometers from Islamabad.

The advance, which sparked serious concerns in the West about the future of the nuclear-armed country, forced the Pakistani government to launch a military operation to re-establish its writ.(dpa)

Malaysian police kill Indonesian armed robbery suspect in shootout

Kuala Lumpur – Malaysian police shot dead an Indonesian robber armed with stolen firearms after he held a family hostage for more than 13 hours, news reports said Sunday.

The 27-year old suspect, armed with weapons stolen from a police volunteer corps unit nearby, had allegedly broken into a home in the central Malacca state pre-dawn Saturday, the Star daily reported.

The suspect demanded 3,000 ringgit (857 dollars) after finding little cash and valuables and threatened to kill the family of five if he did not get the money by morning.

Alerted by a family friend who was asked to raise the money, a team of 20 policemen arrived at the scene but waited outside out of fear for the safety of the hostages.

Several hours later, using one of the victims as his shield, the suspect attempted to escape while firing several shots at the police but was killed when his hostage stumbled and fell, giving the police a clear shot at him.

State criminal investigation department chief Salehhudin Abdulah Rahman said police recovered a shotgun, an ammunition belt with 15 rounds, a machete and 3,200 ringgit (914 dollars) from the suspect.

Sallehudin added that the police were investigating to determine if the suspect was responsible for several other violent crimes in the district recently. (dpa)

Malaysian police bust cigarette-smuggling ring

Kuala Lumpur – Malaysian police detained eight Indonesian men and seized 23,300 packets of cigarettes following a high-speed sea chase in waters off the northern Johor state, a news report said Monday.

Marine police fired at the engine of a boat they believed to be carrying smugglers in Saturday’s pre-dawn incident, marine police assistant commander Mohamad Khamsani Abdul Rahman said.

During the pursuit, one of the suspects was injured. He was later sent to a nearby hospital for treatment, Mohamad Khamsani was quoted as saying by the Star daily.

The arrested, aged 26 to 49, will be charged for smuggling. (dpa)