Times Square suspect’s dad a ”patriotic man” who raised his family ”cleanly”

Mohib Banda (Pakistan), May 14 (ANI): Air Vice-Marshal Bahar ul-Haq”s life has taken a twist he would have never imagined, considering the fact that he was always regarded in Pakistani society as an ”enlightened, upright” man, who brought up his kids “cleanly”.

Today though, he is known more as the dad of the Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad.

At 70, the retired air vice marshal is hiding in humiliation and shock, secluded somewhere in the northwestern city of Peshawar.

His younger son, Faisal, whom friends say he sent to the United States to study and to escape Pakistan”s problems, stands accused of attempting to explode a bomb in New York”s Times Square with help from Islamist militants.

Pakistani investigators are poring through family files and quizzing neighbors. Television crews have mobbed the lanes of this northwestern village where Haq grew up and have camped outside his home in Peshawar.

According to the Washington Post, Haq “is very, very depressed.”

“He is an honorable, patriotic man who worked hard to rise in the air force and raised his children cleanly. Now his family”s reputation has been destroyed,” said Hajji Sherzada, a retired importer and a lifelong friend of Haq.

“Every time his wife gets on the phone, she just cries,” he added.

Haq has not made any statements and has not been seen in the past week. Provincial authorities said Sunday that he was in “protective custody,” but relatives said he and his wife are in seclusion to avoid publicity.

Friends, relations and air force colleagues of Haq”s, interviewed in several northwestern communities and Islamabad this week, said they could make no sense of his son”s alleged actions or possible conversion to radical Islam.

His father, an accomplished pilot, rose from humble village roots to the top ranks of the air force, serving stints in Britain and Saudi Arabia. Several other family members were air force officers, including Shahzad”s maternal grandfather.

Over the years, Haq gained a reputation as an exceptional flight instructor and enjoyed training young pilots, especially in loops and other aerobatic stunts. He was invited to teach at an air academy in England for several years.

Described by friends as a strict and protective father, he raised his children to become civilian professionals.

Faisal”s older brother is an engineer in Canada, and one sister is a doctor.

Shirzada Bacha, a maternal uncle of Shahzad”s, said that if Haq had suspected that his son was involved in extremist activities, he would have “killed him in the house.” (ANI)

Death threats made in manslaughter case

The Northern Territory Supreme Court has heard of death threats made by prisoners against the five men charged with killing an Alice Springs man last July.

Anton Kloeden, Scott Doody, Timothy Hird, Joshua Spears and Glen Swain have been in protective custody on remand at the Alice Springs jail for the past eight months.

All five today pleaded guilty to manslaughter over the fatal assault of Kwementyere Ryder.

The court heard the accused men are only allowed one or two hours a day outside their cells because they need to be kept separated from other prisoners.

Kloedon’s lawyer told the court that his client sees a person dragging a finger across his throat every day as an unmistakable signal.

He said another prisoner claims he will chop off his head and cook him like a kangaroo and has threatened to kill one of Kloedon’s relatives.

The court heard the men, who are in their early 20s, drove through the dry Todd River towards two camps of Aboriginal people early on the morning of July 25 last year after a night of drinking.

They later returned to the river and fatally assaulted Mr Ryder who had thrown a bottle at their utility.

The five men are expected to be sentenced next week.

Demi Moore”s tweets ‘save suicidal 18 year old’

Washington, March 20 (ANI): Twitter exchange between Demi Moore and a suicidal 18-year-old may have prevented the teen from taking his life, it has been claimed.

Nia Vardalos, a member of the popular social networking website, read the messages exchanged between the actress and the boy, who threatened to hang himself in a tree outside of his Florida home.

Vardalos later contacted a suicide prevention centre in Los Angeles, informing authorities of the boy’s intentions, according to TMZ.

The celebrity website claimed to have procured details of the phone call made between the centre and Florida authorities.

Officials managed to locate the guy with the help of the information on his Twitter account provided by Nia.

The police report apparently said the teenager was “sitting at his computer desk crying” when they found him. He was later placed under protective custody. (ANI)

Richard Buttrose jailed for cocaine dealing

A former Sydney restaurant owner has been jailed for at least twelve and a half years for drug offences.

Richard Buttrose, 37, pleaded guilty to two counts of supplying cocaine to an undercover officer and another charge relating to six kilograms of the drug which were found in his unit.

The cocaine in his unit had a street value of around $10 million.

In sentencing Buttrose a District Court judge said cocaine is a highly dangerous drug and that the social cost of drug addiction to the community is high.

Buttrose previously told the court that he started using cocaine to cope with the pressure of running his restaurant chain.

He said when he was selling it, he liked being known as ‘The Man.’

Buttrose winked at members of his family in the court just before he was sentenced.

They included his aunty, the Sydney media identity, Ita Buttrose.

Outside the court Detective Senior Constable Craig Partridge welcomed the sentence.

“It was a large-scale retail drug operation,” he said.

“We are very happy with the outcome.”

The court heard that Buttrose is in protective custody in jail. With time already served, he will be eligible for parole in 2021.

Family members refused to comment on the sentence to media waiting outside the court.

Calls for immediate restrictions on cask wine

A coalition of community groups wants the Northern Territory Licensing Commission to immediately go ahead with restrictions on takeaway cask wine in Darwin and Palmerston.

The Commission says it has received 34 submissions ranging from support for an immediate ban to opposition to any restrictions.

It says a decision will not be made until an Alcohol Management Plan for the two cities is developed further and there are more discussions with government, health professionals and police.

Dr John Boffa from the People’s Alcohol Action Coalition says that is disappointing.

“We think the licensing commission is an independent statutory authority that has the responsibility for regulating supply,” he said.

“Now irrespective of what else the government might do in terms of a management plan and what other measures they might bring in, supply reduction is the key missing link in our approach on alcohol in the Northern Territory.”

Meanwhile, the Northern Territory Police Commissioner John McRoberts says excessive drinking in Alice Springs is an acute problem.

The Commissioner walked the streets of Alice Springs last Friday night and says across 24 hours more than 100 people were taken into protective custody

Mr McRoberts says the 26-bed sobering up shelter was at capacity a number of times and the overflow was taken to the watch-house.

Last year, a study found alcohol sales in the town had dropped by 18 per cent since the introduction of restrictions but Mr McRoberts says intoxication is still a problem and there is no quick fix.

“I suspect building shelters is really only a stop gap or a bandaid measure,” he said.

“The more shelters we build ultimately the more drunks we may have to put in them.

“So we’ve got to deal with the problem of excessive alcohol consumption that has a very negative impact on those individuals’ well being and indeed other members of the community.”

Mr McRoberts says he will talk to his colleagues and the government about how to reduce excessive drinking of alcohol in Alice Springs.

“We’ve got too [many] people who are so intoxicated that they can’t take care of themselves,” he said.

“And what we’ve now go to do is look at ways we can reduce that.

“We’ve got to look at why people are intoxicated at the level they are.”

Florida court will send runaway Ohia Muslim teen home despite honor killing fears

Florida (US), Aug.21 (ANI): A judge is expected to rule Friday to send 17-year-old Rifqa Bary, a Muslim, back to her home in Ohio, despite her fears that may become a victim of an honor killing for taking to Christianity and abandoning her parents’ faith.

Bary hitchhiked to an Ohio bus station earlier this month and then took a charter bus to Orlando. She remains in protective custody with Florida’s Department of Children and Families, Fox News reports.

Several legal experts contacted by Fox News said the girl is bound to be sent back to Ohio.

“She’ll be returned to the original jurisdiction,” said Katherine Hunt Federle, professor of law and director of the Justice for Children Project at Ohio State University’s Moritz College of Law.

“She probably doesn’t have a lot of options other than to return home,” she added.

Bary, a native of Sri Lanka who turned 17 earlier this month, is neither a U.S. citizen nor a resident of Florida, so if her parents want her returned to their home in New Albany, Ohio, that likely will occur, experts said. (ANI)

Sufi Mohammad ‘mysteriously’ resurfaces in Peshawar

Peshawar, July 7 (ANI): After being mysteriously missing for the past two months, the Tehrik Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-Muhammadi chief Maulana Sufi Mohammad has reportedly resurfaced.

A close relative of Sufi Mohammad, Bakht Wahid, claimed that the TNSM chief has arrived here along with his family, but refused to comment on his whereabouts.

Wahid also refused to disclose where Sufi Mohammad would be staying in Peshawar.

“We don’t know where Maulana Sufi and his family were detained,” The Dawn quoted Wahid, as saying.

Mohammad’s son, Rizwanullah also called media houses and said that his father has been released, but he too refused to divulge much detail.

However, the government has said that it has no knowledge about Mohammad’s whereabouts, and don’t know much about his release.

“We were neither privy to his arrest nor are we privy to his release,” a government official said.

According to sources, Mohammad and his family members were taken into protective custody just before the government launched a military offensive against the Taliban and other extremists in the North West Frontier Province’s (NWFP) Swat and Malakand Divisions.

Mohammad and his 12 family members had moved to Mirpur, in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK), where security agencies had taken them into custody, and shifted them to an undisclosed location, sources added.

It may be noted that Pakistan government had released the 80 year old TNSM chief to strike a peace deal with the Taliban, but the government’s attempt failed to yield the desired results, and he went missing days before a full fledged military operation was initiated in the region. (ANI)

Prabhakaran’s parents in government custody

Colombo, May 28 (IANS) The parents of the now dead Tamil Tigers chief Velupillai Prabhakaran are in the “protective custody” of the Sri Lankan government, a media report said Thursday.

Thiruvenkatam Velupillai (76) and his wife Parvathi (71) surrendered to the army several days ago, The Island newspaper quoted a government official as saying.

They were reportedly among the civilians holed up in the no fire zone along the coast in Mullaitivu district before the army launched its final assault against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Prabhakaran and other LTTE leaders were killed May 18.

“Velupillai and Parvathi were among the early batch of Sri Lankan Tamils to go to India. They settled in Tiruchi,” the report said.

They returned to the LTTE zone in northern Sri Lanka in 2003, a year after the Tigers and Colombo signed a Norway-brokered ceasefire agreement. Prabhakaran had fled their home in Jaffna way back in 1972.

Prabhakaran’s death and the decimation of the LTTE ended a dragging Tamil separatist conflict that left some 90,000 people dead in Sri Lanka.

Tibetan exiles protest against Panchen Lama’s detention

New Delhi, May 17 (ANI): The Regional Tibetan Women Association (RTWA) organised a peaceful protest march here on Sunday for the detention of eleventh Panchen Lama, who they allege has been held captive by China.

The eleventh Panchen Lama, also known as Gedhun Choekyi Nyima, is said to be under detention for the past 13 years.

Holding banners and raising slogans against the Chinese government, the protestors asked China to furnish verifiable information about the young Panchen Lama.

“We appeal to the United Nations (UN) and the World Human Right Organisation (WHRO) to pressurise the Chinese leaders to confirm the whereabouts of eleventh Panchen Lama. We also appeal to our international supporters, peace loving countries, NGOs and individuals to take up our cause at all levels to ensure early restoration of human rights in Tibet,” said Rinzing Ongmu, RTWA President.

Born on April 25, 1989, Gedhun Choekyi Nyima was named by the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama as the eleventh Panchen Lama on 14 May, 1995, when he was aged six years.

However, three days later, on May 17, he and his parents were reportedly missing.

On May, 15, 1996, the Chinese government admitted to holding the eleventh Panchen Lama and his parents in their ‘protective custody’.

Over the years, China has provided conflicting reports about the whereabouts and well being of the Panchen Lama, ranging from rumours of his death towards the late 1999 to a set of photos that Chinese officials displayed briefly, but did not hand over to European human rights activists.

Reportedly, the photos showed the young Gedhun Choekyi Nyima playing table-tennis and writing Chinese characters on a blackboard.

In 2001, the International Campaign for Tibet obtained a new photo purporting to be of 12-year-old Gedhun Choekyi Nyima. However, nothing is known of the authenticity of the photograph.

Lately, China claimed that the Panchen Lama is attending school and leading a normal life somewhere in China, and that his whereabouts are kept undisclosed to protect him, but all requests for access to Gedhun Choekyi Nyima have been repeatedly refused so far.

Tibetan Government-in-exile based at Dharamsala in India claims that the young Panchen Lama and his family continue to be political prisoners, and have called him the ‘youngest political prisoner in the world’ while a few others have named him as ‘The Stolen Child of Tibet’. (ANI)