Strasburg sharp in 8-1 romp over Giants

(Reuters) – Stephen Strasburg returned to form and won his first game in nearly a month with the aid of a pair of Adam Dunn home runs as the Washington Nationals cruised to an 8-1 victory over the San Francisco Giants on Friday.

Strasburg improved to 3-2 with his first win since June 13, having endured a pair of losses and three no-decisions since overpowering the Cleveland Indians in a 9-4 victory.

After giving up a leadoff home run to Andres Torres in the first inning, Strasburg allowed just two more hits and a walk, while striking out eight in six innings.

“After that I was like, ‘You know what, bottom line, if they’re going to beat me, they’re going to beat me. Me calling my own game’,” Strasburg told reporters. “I just put it all on my shoulders.”

Dunn was three-for-four with three RBIs and three runs scored. His solo home run in the third inning broke a 1-1 tie, and his two-run blast in the seventh was part of a four-run inning that put the game out of reach for San Francisco.

“I think every hitter, especially every power hitter, goes through a stretch where they hit home runs,” said Dunn. “That’s kind of what’s happening right now.”

After falling behind in the top of the first the Nationals countered with a run in the bottom of the inning, capitalizing on a throwing error by pitcher Matt Cain on an attempted pickoff at second base.

Washington added two more runs in the sixth.

Giants starter Matt Cain (6-8) gave up 11 hits in over six innings, allowing all eight runs while striking out six and walking three.

(Reporting by Mike Mouat in Windsor, Ontario; Editing by Ian Ransom)

Strasburg sharp in 8-1 romp over Giants

(Reuters) – Stephen Strasburg returned to form and won his first game in nearly a month with the aid of a pair of Adam Dunn home runs as the Washington Nationals cruised to an 8-1 victory over the San Francisco Giants on Friday.

Strasburg improved to 3-2 with his first win since June 13, having endured a pair of losses and three no-decisions since overpowering the Cleveland Indians in a 9-4 victory.

After giving up a leadoff home run to Andres Torres in the first inning, Strasburg allowed just two more hits and a walk, while striking out eight in six innings.

“After that I was like, ‘You know what, bottom line, if they’re going to beat me, they’re going to beat me. Me calling my own game’,” Strasburg told reporters. “I just put it all on my shoulders.”

Dunn was three-for-four with three RBIs and three runs scored. His solo home run in the third inning broke a 1-1 tie, and his two-run blast in the seventh was part of a four-run inning that put the game out of reach for San Francisco.

“I think every hitter, especially every power hitter, goes through a stretch where they hit home runs,” said Dunn. “That’s kind of what’s happening right now.”

After falling behind in the top of the first the Nationals countered with a run in the bottom of the inning, capitalizing on a throwing error by pitcher Matt Cain on an attempted pickoff at second base.

Washington added two more runs in the sixth.

Giants starter Matt Cain (6-8) gave up 11 hits in over six innings, allowing all eight runs while striking out six and walking three.

(Reporting by Mike Mouat in Windsor, Ontario; Editing by Ian Ransom)

Jimenez wins season-best 14th as Rockies beat Padres

(Reuters) – Ace pitcher Ubaldo Jimenez recorded his Major League-leading 14th win of the season despite bleeding four runs from his final inning in the Colorado Rockies’ 10-6 win over the NL West-leading San Diego Padres on Monday.

Sports

Jimenez (14-1), who struggled in his previous start against the Boston Red Sox last week, tossed five scoreless innings before getting punished in the sixth.

The Rockies had long established an 8-0 lead for their starter, however, led by Miguel Olivo who hit a two-run double in the third and a two-run homer in the fifth.

San Diego outfielder Scott Hairston recorded four RBIs and pulled the home side within 8-6 with a run-scoring double in the seventh, but Colorado added two insurance runs in the ninth before reliever Huston Street took the final three outs.

(Reporting by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; Compiled by Infostrada Sports; Editing by Ian Ransom)

Blackhawks trade Byfuglien in multi-player deal with Atlanta

(Reuters) – Stanley Cup champions the Chicago Blackhawks have released forward Dustin Byfuglien in a multi-player trade with the Atlanta Thrashers.

Sports

The 25-year-old Byfuglien, who scored 11 goals during Chicago’s run to their first championship since 1961, will head to Atlanta with center Ben Eager, defenseman Brent Sopel and prospect, Akim Aliu.

The Blackhawks receive a first and second-round pick in exchange, along with forward Marty Reasoner, winger Joseph Crabb and prospect Jeremy Morin.

Chicago have been forced to part with some of their players due to salary cap issues and lose Byfuglien after he netted five game-winning goals in the post-season.

“It is what it is. It’s part of the job,” Byfuglien told a local Chicago radio station. “You’re not going to stick in one spot the whole time, so I’ve got to go.”

(Reporting by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; Editing by Ian Ransom)

Philippine troops rescue kidnapped Swiss-born trader

June 16 (Reuters) – Philippine soldiers and policemen rescued a Swiss-born businessman from gunmen holding him for more than two months in a remote southern province, military and local government officials said on Wednesday.

Charlie Reith, 72, was found in a makeshift hut before dawn at a coastal village in Zamboanga City when elite troops stormed the kidnappers’ lair after a tip off from some local residents, Rear Admiral Alexander Pama told reporters.

Pama said the Swiss-born and naturalised Filipino businessman was held for ransom by a group of bandits with ties to either Islamist militant Abu Sayyaf or Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) rebels operating in the Zamboanga peninsula.

Reith was entertaining some German visitors at his beachfront home in Zamboanga City when gunmen broke up the party and dragged him to a boat on April 4. They initially demanded 50 million pesos ($1.08 million) for his release, but lowered it to 20 million pesos. (Reporting by Manny Mogato; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

Family hoping for release of kidnapped Manipur sericulture official

Imphal, June 4 (ANI): Dispairing family members of an abducted official of Manipur”s Department of Sericulture, continue to hope for his safe return home.

Suspected ultras of United Kuki Liberation Army-Military Council (UKLA-MC) abducted Nameirakpam Nabakumar, a Farm Overseer (FO) of the Sericulture Department, on May 20, and are now demanding a ransom amount of rupees one crore for his safe release.

Memthoi, Nabakumar”s wife, said: “We are very worried about his well being, we do not know whom to approach and we do not know where to search him.” (ANI)

Hundley pinch-hit propels Padres win over Nats

(Reuters) – Nick Hundley delivered a pinch-hit single in the bottom of the 11th inning to give the San Diego Padres a 3-2 victory over the Washington Nationals on Sunday.

Sports

Hundley’s hit scored Lance Zawadzki who reached base on a two-out infield single and advanced to second on a throwing error by the Nationals.

Washington forced extra innings after two home runs from Ryan Zimmerman, who tied the game 2-2 with his second blast in the sixth inning off starter Jon Garland.

Starting the game on the bench, Hundley has split time in the lineup this season with fellow catcher Yorvit Torrealba, who was picked on Sunday to work with pitcher Jon Garland.

“We both want to be in there every day. That’s kind of up to (manager Bud Black), and fortunately now, I think we’re making it tough on him to decide,” Hundley told reporters.

“This is a good thing, a positive thing. We’re both playing well, both driving in runs.”

Garland has been a tremendous force in his first year with San Diego and has not lost since April 11.

Looking for his seventh straight win in as many decisions, Garland took a no-decision after pitching seven innings. Reliever Luke Gregerson was credited with the victory after he held the Nationals (25-26) hit-less in the last two innings.

The National League West-leading Padres (30-20) scored twice for a 2-1 lead in the fourth inning where Tony Gwynn Jr. had an RBI single.

Those were the only runs allowed by starter Livan Hernandez, who lasted six and one-third innings but failed to win his first since May 4.

Nationals pitcher Sean Burnett took the loss and was relieved with two outs in the 11th by Matt Capps, who surrendered the game-winning RBI to Hundley.

“It was a fast-ball that I was trying to go away,” Capps said, of his final pitch. “I was too aggressive, I think. It just ran over the middle of the plate and he hit it.”

(Reporting by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; Editing by Ian Ransom)

Johnson seals victory at Colonial by three shots

Texas (Reuters) – American Zach Johnson sank four long-range birdie putts over the closing stretch to overhaul British pacesetter Brian Davis for a three-shot victory at the Colonial Invitational Sunday.

Sports

Ice-cool on a hot and humid afternoon at Colonial Country Club, Johnson shrugged off two suspensions in play because of threatening weather to card a sizzling six-under-par 64.

The 2007 U.S. Masters champion broke clear of a congested leaderboard with birdies at 12, 13, 15 and 17 sandwiching a lone bogey on 14 as he posted a tournament record low of 21-under 259.

Englishman Davis, who had led by two shots with 11 holes to play in pursuit of his maiden PGA Tour title, had to settle for second place after closing with a 68.

(Writing by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles; Editing by Ian Ransom)

Critics won’t budge Japan coach Okada

Japan coach Takeshi Okada is planning no major changes to his World Cup-bound team despite coming under fire after a 2-0 defeat to South Korea earlier this week.

Frenchman Philippe Troussier, who led Japan to the last 16 as co-hosts of the 2002 World Cup, told Reuters on Tuesday that the team had a “stupid mentality”, Okada was confused and recommended wholesale changes.

Okada, who said he had offered his resignation after the defeat in Saitama on Monday, said he was sticking to his plans after the squad’s first training session at a training camp in Saas-Fee, Switzerland.

“I think this team is what it is,” he told the Kyodo news agency.

“Sometimes you are going to have players injured or out of condition or unavailable or whatever but I have no intention of making any major changes to what we have been doing.

“I still think this is a team that is capable of going places. The most important thing is to keep repeating what we have been trying to do until now.”

Next up for Japan is a friendly against England in Austria followed by their final warm-up match against Ivory Coast on June 4 back in Switzerland.

Japan play their Group E opener against Cameroon on June 14 and also face the Netherlands and Denmark in the first round of the June 11-July 11 tournament in South Africa.

(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney in Beijing; Editing by Ian Ransom; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

NBA – Magic keep playoff hopes alive by beating the Celtics

The Orlando Magic again staved off elimination in the Eastern Conference final with a commanding 113-92 win against the Boston Celtics in Game Five on Wednesday.

Two days after beating the Celtics 96-92 in an overtime thriller in Boston to stay alive, the Magic delivered a confident display on their home court to trail 3-2 in the best-of-seven series.

Guard Jameer Nelson top scored for Orlando with 24 points while muscular center Dwight Howard weighed in with 21 points, along with 10 rebounds and five blocked shots.

Rasheed Wallace contributed 21 points to lead the way for Boston, who had appeared to have the series firmly in control after winning the first two games in Orlando.

Game Six is in Boston on Friday when the Celtics need just one more win to advance to the NBA finals.

(Writing by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles; Editing by Ian Ransom; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

NBA – Suns shoot down Lakers to even series 2-2

The Phoenix Suns rained three-pointers in a 115-106 home victory over NBA champions the Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday to level their Western Conference series and re-ignite their title hopes.

The Suns pulled away in a rampant fourth-quarter phase to win their second straight and send the best-of-seven series back to Los Angeles tied at 2-2.

Amare Stoudemire led a balanced Phoenix attack with 21 points and Channing Frye broke through with 14 points and four three-pointers after making only 1 of 20 shots in the first three games.

Kobe Bryant sparkled with 38 points and 10 assists but the Lakers were left behind in a cloud of smoke when the Suns made three straight three-pointers to take control with an 98-89 lead in the fourth.

(Reporting by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; Editing by Ian Ransom; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

South Korea stun champions China to win Uber Cup

South Korea stunned champions China 3-1 to win their first Uber Cup on Saturday and snap a run of five final losses to the badminton powerhouse.

Unheralded Bae Seung-hee upset world number one Wang Yihan 23-21 21-11 in the first singles match before Lee Hyo-jung and Kim Min-jung ground out a comeback 18-21 21-12 21-15 win over top-ranked doubles pair Ma Jin and Wang Xiaoli.

Wang Xin kept China’s hopes alive with a 21-14 16-21 21-7 victory against Sung Ji-hyun but Lee Kyung-won and Ha Jung-eun sealed the championship when they toppled Olympic champions Du Jing and Yu Yang 19-21 21-14 21-19.

South Korea’s triumph broke their opponents’ unbeaten record in the prestigious biennial women’s team tournament, China having won all six titles since 1998.

The loss was also at odds with China coach Li Yongbo’s confident pre-match prediction.

“The final will be tough but the outcome will be the same. We will win again,” Li told Chinese state news agency Xinhua.

(Writing by Ian Ransom; Editing by Ken Ferris; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Pakistani woman allowed to marry prisoner on death row

Lahore, May 13 (IANS) The High Court in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore has allowed a woman to marry a prisoner, who has been awarded death sentence but challenged his conviction in the Supreme Court.

Laiba Sehar had moved the court seeking permission to marry her fiance Atiq-ur-Rahman, who was sentenced to death in a case of kidnapping for ransom in 2002.

The High Court Wednesday asked the jail authorities to make arrangements for the wedding and said that the ceremony must be held in the office of the prison chief, Xinhua reported.

Laiba Sehar in her application had complained that her request for the marriage with her 28-year-old fiance was turned down by the prison officials.

Jail authorities told the court that there is no section in prison regulations to allow a prisoner to get married.

Syed Mazhar Hussain, the applicant’s lawyer, argued that marriage is a fundamental right of everyone and no citizen could be deprived of the right.

He informed the court that the convict has moved the Supreme Court against his conviction and his application was pending in the apex court.

Earlier this week, government of southern Sindh province allowed wives of prisoners to stay overnight with their spouses in jails once in a month.

Malaysia awarded win after Nigeria no-show

Malaysia were awarded a 5-0 win against Nigeria after the African qualifiers failed to show up for their opening Group B match of the Thomas Cup in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday.

Although suffering a plane cancellation, the Nigerian team were expected to touch down at Kuala Lumpur airport three hours before the match, but when the 6 p.m. (local) starting time came, only the Malaysian team were at the venue, Malaysian news agency Bernama said.

The Badminton World Federation (BWF) dithered in deciding whether to give a walk-over win to Malaysia or wait for the Nigerian team to arrive three hours after the starting time, “causing the 200 fans in the stadium to shout,” Bernama said.

The BWF then issued a statement cancelling the match.

BWF official Thomas Lund told reporters Nigeria could be disqualified on Monday if lacking a valid excuse.

“But flight problems are uncontrollable … If the Nigerian excuse is valid, we’ll allow them to play in the second match,” he said.

Nigeria are scheduled to play Japan on Monday.

The Thomas Cup, badminton’s biennial men’s team world championship, runs until May 16 in Kuala Lumpur.

(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Kevin Fylan and Pritha Sarkar; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

China Olympic judo champion Tong banned for two years

Chinese Olympic judo champion Tong Wen has been banned for two years and stripped of her world title after failing a doping test at the world championships in the Netherlands last year.

Tong, who claimed the women’s 78kg title at the 2008 Beijing Games and won a fourth world championship at Rotterdam, had tested positive for banned substance Clenbuterol, Chinese state media reported late on Saturday.

The International Judo Federation issued the ban at a council meeting in Tunis on Friday, Xinhua news agency said, citing a Chinese judo official.

Ma Wenguang, the director of China’s weightlifting, wrestling and judo administration centre, told Xinhua the sport’s governing body “would seriously deal with it”.

The International Judo Federation was unavailable for comment.

Clenbuterol is often used to treat breathing disorders, rising blood pressure and for oxygen transportation.

“(It) can boost muscle, like an anabolic steroid,” Zhao Jian, deputy director of the China Anti-Doping Agency, told Xinhua.

“We had tested Tong last year before she went to the Netherlands but found nothing at that moment,” he added.

Tong, China’s most successful judoka, won three world titles in the 78kg class between 2005-2009 and one in the open category in 2003.

(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne, Editing by Greg Stutchbury; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

SCENARIOS – Possible forms of government after UK election

Britain’s Conservative party has offered to work in government with the third-largest party, the Liberal Democrats, after the Conservatives won most seats in a parliamentary election but failed to secure a majority.

Below is a look at various scenarios:

CONSERVATIVE MINORITY GOVERNMENT – CONFIDENCE AND SUPPLY

* Probability: possible

In a minority government run on a “confidence and supply” basis, a party strikes deals with others on a bill-by-bill basis.

This is potentially risky since it means the government can effectively be held to ransom over every piece of legislation it wants to pass and has to enter long and complex negotiations to get bills through.

Any party faced with this prospect is likely to seek a swift second election in an attempt to get a stronger mandate.

Conservative leader David Cameron said on Friday this was one option but added: “I am prepared to consider alternative options. It may be possible to have stronger, more stable, more collaborative government than that.” These are discussed below.

* Likely market reaction: some analysts argue a centre-right Conservative minority government would still be enough to produce a small sterling rally in its own right. But financial markets could remain under pressure if investors think the government will struggle to push through much-needed reform to tackle the country’s budget deficit.

CONSERVATIVE MINORITY GOVERNMENT WITH LIB DEM PACT

* Probability: possible

Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg encouraged the Conservatives to try to form a government on Friday.

He did not specify the price for support from the left-leaning Lib Dems but stressed the need for electoral reform. This could prove a stumbling block as the Conservatives are strongly opposed to changes to the voting system.

Cameron proposed on Friday establishing an all-party committee to look into electoral reform but Clegg is likely to press at least for a referendum, as Labour have promised.

The two differ on the timing of deficit reduction although both agree on the need for drastic action to cut the deficit, currently standing at 11 percent of GDP.

Stances on Europe, immigration and defence are also likely to be stumbling blocks.

* Likely market reaction: the most important issue will be how quickly such a deal is worked out. If it becomes clear the Lib Dems will not block a budget, markets will be reassured. If horsetrading continues for a prolonged period of time, markets will sell off.

CONSERVATIVE AND LIBERAL DEMOCRAT COALITION

* Probability: less likely

The centre-left Lib Dems and centre-right Conservatives may find it difficult and impractical to work together in a formal coalition in which they share cabinet posts. Britain has no history of coalition in the post World War Two period.

* Likely market reaction: If the parties could inspire confidence the coalition was stable, markets are likely to rally but there would be deep scepticism about how long such an awkward partnership might last.

CONSERVATIVE MINORITY GOVERNMENT WITH SMALLER PARTY PACT

* Probability: less likely

Prior to the election, the Conservatives agreed an alliance with Northern Ireland’s Ulster Unionist Party, the more moderate of the two unionist parties who support UK rule in the province. But, the UUP did not win any seats in the election.

Support from the bigger Democratic Unionist Party, which won 8 seats, would still not give a Conservative government a parliamentary majority, so he would also need to bring in other parties such as Wales’s Plaid Cymru and the Scottish National Party.

* Likely market reaction: depends on how fast such a deal can be reached and how stable the informal coalition of such a wide grouping would be, but it is unlikely to give the markets much cause for a rally.

LABOUR MINORITY GOVERNMENT – CONFIDENCE AND SUPPLY

* Probability: unlikely

Labour won 258 seats in the election, well short of the 326 seats needed for a majority. To get legislation through on a piece-by-piece basis would require deals with not just the third-placed Liberal Democrats, who won 57 seats, but also other smaller parties such as Plaid Cymru and the SNP.

However, Labour might be able to secure a more formal pact on a programme of legislative reform as it did with the short-lived Lib-Lab pact in the late 1970s.

* Likely market reaction: negative. Such a government would be highly unstable. Investors may fear a minority Labour government would be slow to tackle public spending. But prompt action — or even simply promises of action — might reassure them. A second election within a few months would be likely.

LABOUR MINORITY GOVERNMENT WITH LIB DEM PACT

* Probability: possible

A more formal agreement on a programme of legislative reform would be considered more stable and is likely to include a promise of a referendum on electoral reform, as Labour has pledged in its manifesto.

* Likely market reaction: negative if it fears the deal lacks popular support but could rally if swift action and a programme to tackle the deficit was unveiled.

LABOUR AND LIBERAL DEMOCRAT COALITION

* Probability: unlikely

Nick Clegg has already expressed concern about working with Labour leader and current Prime Minister Gordon Brown. The parties would also be a minority coalition government, which would be seen as lacking legitimacy.

* Likely market reaction: negative. Such a coalition would be seen as weak and lacking a proper popular mandate.

(Reporting by Jodie Ginsberg; Editing by Matthew Jones)

NRL clubs to look at salary cap changes

NRL chief executive David Gallop has urged Johnathan Thurston and Israel Folau to not turn their backs on rugby league, but insists the sport cannot be held to ransom by big-name players.

Gallop met with club bosses from every team apart from Melbourne, whose representatives did not attend the discussions in Sydney on Tuesday, with a review of the salary cap top of the agenda.

In addition to rubber stamping the appointments of Newcastle and Canberra chiefs Steve Burraston and Don Furner to an expanded Collective Bargaining Agreement committee, the clubs also gave their backing for the need for a salary cap.

The committee, which also includes Sydney Roosters boss Steve Noyce, Brisbane’s Bruno Cullen and South Sydney’s Shane Richardson, will be looking at ways the cap can be reviewed after submissions from clubs are received by May 21.

Gallop acknowledged that the cap needed to be looked at but urged clubs to explore the option of third party payments from non-club sponsors to keep their star players in the game.

“There is a misconception in the game that third party agreements are not allowed,” Gallop said.

“There is a limit on third party agreements with clubs and club sponsors, but beyond that it is pretty much unlimited, there is millions of dollars being paid to players outside the cap.”

However, Gallop said the current format cannot be changed until the new television deal comes up for renewal in 2012 and urged players such as Thurston and Folau to stay in the game.

“We’d like them to stay in rugby league, but we can’t throw cash at them outside of the salary cap rules, we haven’t done it in the past and we can’t make exceptions for them,” he said.

“There is a big opportunity for the game and a big new injection of funds, hopefully we don’t lose players to rival codes.

“But it is really important that we continue to operate … so there can’t be exception to the rules.”

Richardson said he hoped the review will lead to a more flexible system.

“We want the salary cap to be more workable and not just about (salary cap auditor) Ian Schubert and David Gallop,” Richardson said.

“It is important that out of these talks and the submissions that come in from different people, including sponsors and members, to nut out the best way forward.

“One of the great things about rugby league is that over the years we have been flexible to change the game and this is an opportunity now.”

Cullen said the Broncos have managed to attract a large number of interested parties who want to become involved with the club.

“My board last week sat down to meet about the Melbourne issue and where we were with everything and when we put on the table the number of third parties involved they were quite shocked,” he said.

“There is probably $3 million or $4 million over and above the cap … and we worked out we could get much more out of that and we are just one of 16 clubs.”

However, Cullen remained hopeful, rather than confident, it would be enough to keep Folau at the club.

“There is a flicker of hope yet but I am not too sure what Israel wants to do,” he said.

“He is obviously seriously considering leaving, but until he does we will get down on our knees and pray.”

Somali Islamists seize pirate hub

Heavily armed Islamist militants on Sunday seized Somalia’s port town and major pirate hub of Harardhere, meeting no resistance as pirates fled before their arrival, residents said.

Militants from the Hezb Al-Islam group had been advancing on Harardhere, 500 kilometres north of the capital Mogadishu, over the past few weeks and entered without a fight.

“The pirates emptied the town this morning after getting the information that Islamist fighters were about to enter town. I saw heavily armed militants enter the town on around 10 armed vehicles,” Abdulkadir Hasan, an elder in Harardhere said.

“There was not fighting because the Islamists did not encounter any resistance.”

Harardhere is one of three major pirate hubs in Somalia. As of late April, pirates operating from the Somali coast were holding 23 foreign vessels and 384 sailors awaiting the payment of ransom, maritime watchdog Ecoterra says.

The residents said the only militants who entered the town Sunday were from Hezb Al-Islam. Fighters from another hardline Islamist group, the Al Qaeda-inspired Shebab, have in recent days advanced on villages close to the town.

Ahmed Hasan Tubey, another witness, said the Hezb Al-Islam fighters chanted “Allahu Akbar” (God is great) as they entered the port town.

“They entered the town chanting Allahu Akbar, and took control of the police station and other positions,” he said.

Somalia’s hardline Islamists, who long condoned piracy, turned against the pirates after they started targeting vessels owned by Somali businessmen that were bringing food into the country.

Late last month Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage, a Shebab spokesman, said his group had previously seen the pirates as a positive force fighting illegal fishing off Somalia.

“But now they have interfered with Somali commercial interests by hijacking Somali vessels,” he said, adding: “We have decided to take immediate action against those gangs.”

But he insisted: “We will not be cooperating in any way with the foreign naval forces in the waters off Somalia that have ulterior motives.”

An international flotilla of warships has been patrolling waters off Somalia, one of the world’s busiest maritime routes, since 2008, in a bid to stop the hijackings.

Despite the patrols, Somali sea bandits operating in nimble skiffs and mother ships – from which the smaller boats take to the sea – have repeatedly managed to seize vessels for ransom.

The International Maritime Bureau (IMB) has reported a drop in the number of vessels hijacked in the first three months of 2010 compared to the same period last year.

Sixty-seven piracy incidents were reported since January compared to 102 in the first quarter of 2009, the Kuala Lumpur-based agency said in a report last month.

Islamist insurgents seize Somali pirate base

Mogadishu (Somalia), May 3 (ANI): Radical Islamist insurgents in Somalia have seized one of the country’s most notorious pirate dens, raising questions about whether rebels with connections to Al Qaeda will now have a pipeline to tens of millions of dollars.

According to a New York Times report, dozens of insurgents stormed into Xarardheere, a pirate cove on the central Somali coast, around noon, but instead of putting up a fight, the pirates sped off.

According to witnesses, several pirate bosses raced out of town in luxury four-by-four trucks, with TVs packed in the back and mattresses strapped on top.

Islamist fighters in a fleet of heavily armed pickup trucks then occupied the strategic points in town, including the defunct police station and several crossroads.

What will happen next is not clear.

Maritime experts estimate that Somali pirates have received more than 100 million dollars in ransom — an enormous sum for a nation with virtually no economy.

The pirates of Xarardheere currently hold several hijacked ships. But before they fled, they sent the ships further out to sea to prevent Islamist insurgents from capturing their hostages, which is a worrying prospect for Western diplomats and others.

Under strict Islamic law, piracy is considered haram (forbidden), and in 2006, during a six-month period when an Islamist movement pacified much of Somalia, the Islamists curtailed piracy significantly. (ANI)

Unbeaten Mayweather survives early Mosley onslaught

Floyd Mayweather Jr preserved his unbeaten professional record with an unanimous points decision victory over fellow American Shane Mosley in a non-title welterweight bout on Saturday.

Widely regarded as the best defensive fighter of his generation, Mayweather dominated 11 of the 12 rounds with his lightning hand speed and agile movement to improve his career record to 41-0 with 25 knockouts.

A 4-1 favourite going into the highly anticipated bout at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, Mayweather was stunned by a flurry of punishing blows from Mosley in the second round.

However, the 33-year-old Mayweather immediately regained control and dictated the rest of the fight with his probing right hand, rock-solid defence and a series of telling combinations.

The flamboyant American gained one-sided verdicts from all three judges — by 119-109, 119-109 and 118-110.

WBA welterweight champion Mosley, who had not fought since a ninth-round TKO upset of feared Mexican slugger Antonio Margarito in Jan. 2009, slipped to 46-6 with 39 knockouts.

(Editing by Ian Ransom; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)