Chemical weapons use in Syria unacceptable: NATO

Brussels, June 14 : NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Friday that any use of chemical weapons in Syria was “completely unacceptable” and was a breach of international law.

The remarks came after the White House announced the Syria government had used chemical weapons against rebels.

“This is indeed a matter of great concern. The international community has made clear that any use of chemical weapons is completely unacceptable and a clear breach of international law,” Rasmussen told reporters at the NATO headquarters.

“I welcomed the clear US statement. It is urgent that the Syrian regime should grant access to the United Nations to investigate all reports of chemical weapons use,” he said.

On Thursday, the White House said in a statement the Syrian government had used chemical weapons against rebels, a major move that signals deeper US involvement in the Syrian conflict.

Rasmussen said he still believed a political solution was the right way forward in Syria and urged all parties involved, the Syrian government and the opposition to attend an international conference proposed by the US and Russia jointly. (IANS)

Egypt orders 14 Libyan TV channels off satellite

CAIRO: Egypt's state news agency says a court has ordered the state-owned satellite operator Nilesat to take 14 Libyan TV stations off the air.

The court decision Monday follows a lawsuit by Libyan citizens and Egyptian lawyers who said the stations owned by the regime of Muammar Gaddafi incite against the rebels fighting to topple the leader, in power f

or 42 years.

The stations are off the air until they can find another satellite to beam them.

Libya's rebels have launched their homegrown satellite TV station in May to counter the regime's powerful media machine, which depicts the opposition as terrorists and drums up patriotic fervor by beaming images of burning buildings hit by Nato airstrikes.

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Yemeni tribe, Shi’ite rebels fight as truce broken

SANAA, July 25 (Reuters) – Fighting broke out on Sunday between a pro-government tribe and Shi’ite rebels in Yemen, hours after the two sides agreed to a truce following battles last week which threatened to re-ignite a civil war.

Tribal leader Sheikh Saghir Ibn Aziz blamed the rebels, named Houthis after the clan name of their leaders, for the renewed fighting after clashes killed up to 70 people last week.

“The Houthis did not respect the agreement and attacked us. We responded,” he told Reuters by telephone.

Al Arabiya television said the latest fighting, which it said killed four rebels, broke out after the tribesmen did not withdraw from a position as demanded by the rebels, who said it was part of the truce accords.

There was no immediate comment by the rebels on their website.

Last week’s fighting, in which government forces were also involved, was the bloodiest in the north since a truce in February ended a war between the state and the rebels that has raged intermittently since 2004 and last year drew in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

Earlier on Sunday, Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh called for a permanent end to fighting in the north, especially in Saada province, the rebels’ stronghold.

“Six wars are enough. Yes to security, stability and peace in Saada. No to the latest war,” Saleh said in remarks carried by regional television stations.

Yemen’s Western and Saudi allies want Sanaa, also trying to quell southern separatism, to resolve domestic conflicts such as the northern war so it can focus on fighting a resurgent regional arm of al Qaeda, seen as a bigger international threat.

Tension between the rebels and the Ibn Aziz tribe, from the same Zaidi sect of Shi’ite Islam but which sided with the state during the civil war, has been growing for months.

The tension exploded into violence after rebels attacked Sheikh Saghir’s home in early July, killing three of his followers. Clashes broke out again last week, prompting government forces to intervene to assist the tribe. Five government soldiers were among those killed.

Qatar has offered to revive a 2008 peace deal it brokered between Sanaa and the rebels to end the war, which displaced 350,000 people. (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Cynthia Johnston and Firouz Sedarat)

Yemeni tribe, Shi’ite rebels agree truce in north

SANAA, July 25 (Reuters) – A pro-government tribe has agreed a truce with Shi’ite rebels in Yemen to halt battles which caused up to 70 deaths last week and threatened to re-ignite a civil war, a provincial official said on Sunday.

The latest fighting, in which Yemeni government forces were also involved, was the bloodiest in the north since a truce in February ended a war between the government and Shi’ite rebels, known as Houthis, that has raged intermittently since 2004 and last year drew in neighbouring Saudi Arabia.

“Battles between the Houthis and followers of Sheikh Saghir Ibn Aziz were halted after the success of tribal mediation in establishing a truce between the two sides,” the official told Reuters.

The official said the truce, sealed late on Saturday, provided for the withdrawal of all gunmen from their positions, the lifting of checkpoints and roadblocks and the removal of mines from roads. Between 53 and 70 people were estimated to have been killed in the fighting.

Yemen’s Western and Saudi allies want Sanaa, also trying to quell southern separatism, to resolve domestic conflicts like the northern war so it can focus on fighting a resurgent regional arm of al Qaeda, seen as a bigger international threat.

Tension between the rebels and the Ibn Aziz tribe, from the same Zaidi sect of Shi’ite Islam but which sided with the state during the civil war, has been growing in the Harf Sufyan area for months.

The tension exploded into violence after rebels attacked a tribal leader’s home in early July, killing three of his followers. Clashes broke out again last week, prompting government forces to intervene to assist the Ibn Aziz tribe. Five government soldiers were among those killed.

Qatar has offered to revive a 2008 peace deal it brokered between Sanaa and the rebels to end the war, which displaced 350,000 people.

Under Saturday’s truce, the Ibn Aziz tribe and rebels are expected to hold talks with mediators to resolve differences.

“Yes, we signed the agreement but there are still violations by the Houthis which we hope will stop,” tribal leader Sheikh Saghir told Reuters, accusing the rebels of trying to exact revenge on their wartime foes. There was no immediate comment from the rebels. (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Andrew Dobbie)

Machine gun and mortar battle in Yemen kills 19

July 22 (Reuters) – A mortar and machine gun battle between Shi’ite rebels and pro-government tribesmen in north Yemen drew in government forces overnight, killing at least 19 people and complicating efforts to cement a truce, local officials said.

“Yesterday night there were very violent confrontations. Nine soldiers and pro-government tribesmen were killed as well as about 10 Houthis (rebels),” a local official in the flashpoint Harf Sufyan region told Reuters on Thursday.

“It remains very tense after the failure of efforts to stop the fighting between the two sides,” he added. (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Andrew Callus)

Yemen accuses rebels of kidnapping oil workers

July 10 (Reuters) – Yemen accused Shi’ite rebels on Saturday of kidnapping five oil workers this week and said it had foiled an attempt to blow up an oil pipeline.

Yemen is struggling to curb a separatist movement in the south and cement a ceasefire with Shi’ite rebels in the north, and is under pressure to combat a resurgent al Qaeda wing.

The Interior Ministry said that five employees of a state oil company were kidnapped by the rebels on Thursday.

“The Houthis captured five staff from an oil company in Marib along with their car when they were inspecting fuel stations in the directorate of Barat in al-Jouf province,” it said in a statement.

“The security forces … are using all measures to ensure their release.”

A Houthi source denied any link to the incident, saying the kidnap was a result of a tribal dispute.

In a separate statement, the government said security forces had foiled an attempt to sabotage an oil pipeline in Marib in the northeast of the country. The pipeline is used to transport oil to ports on the Red Sea.

It said that “unknown people” were forced to flee by security guards during the incident. (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Jason Benham; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

Saudi spends $1.6 billion to house displaced near Yemen

(Reuters) – Saudi Arabia has allocated 6 billion riyals ($1.6 billion) to build 6,000 houses for citizens who were displaced from areas bordering Yemen after a two-month conflict with Yemeni Shi’ite rebels.

World

The official SPA news agency said the money would also fund the construction of basic educational and health infrastructure at five sites in the southern Jazan province.

Citizens who have been living in areas bordering Yemen would be housed in these new developments, SPA added.

The Saudi army started in November a campaign against what it said were intrusions into its territory by Yemeni Shi’ite rebels who were accusing Riyadh of letting Yemeni troops use its territory to attack them.

At least 113 Saudi soldiers were killed in the fighting which ended with a truce in January.

Western diplomats have been expecting Riyadh to provide adequate housing for thousands of citizens who live in the relatively poor southern region along the porous border with Yemen, some of whom rely on smuggling for their subsistence.

Before the conflict with the Yemeni rebels, Saudi Arabia started laying out basic infrastructure for the so-called Jazan Economic City in the hope of attracting $30 billion in investments to create an industrial hub that would create much-needed jobs for the population there.

(Reporting by Souhail Karam)

Saudi spends $1.6 bln to house displaced near Yemen

June 20 (Reuters) – Saudi Arabia has allocated 6 billion riyals ($1.6 billion) to build 6,000 houses for citizens who were displaced from areas bordering Yemen after a two-month conflict with Yemeni Shi’ite rebels.

The official SPA news agency said the money would also fund the construction of basic educational and health infrastructure at five sites in the southern Jazan province.

Citizens who have been living in areas bordering Yemen would be housed in these new developments, SPA added.

The Saudi army started in November a campaign against what it said were intrusions into its territory by Yemeni Shi’ite rebels who were accusing Riyadh of letting Yemeni troops use its territory to attack them.

At least 113 Saudi soldiers were killed in the fighting which ended with a truce in January.

Western diplomats have been expecting Riyadh to provide adequate housing for thousands of citizens who live in the relatively poor southern region along the porous border with Yemen, some of whom rely on smuggling for their subsistence.

Before the conflict with the Yemeni rebels, Saudi Arabia started laying out basic infrastructure for the so-called Jazan Economic City in the hope of attracting $30 billion in investments to create an industrial hub that would create much-needed jobs for the population there. (Reporting by Souhail Karam)

Fighting kills at least 12 in Somali capital

MOGADISHU (Reuters)- Fighting between government forces and rebels, and a roadside blast Wednesday killed at least 12 people in the Somali capital and wounded 22 others, a medic and residents said.

World

The anarchic country’s U.N.-backed Transitional Federal Government controls just a few blocks of the war-scarred coastal city and its security forces have been fighting to regain Mogadishu’s north.

Residents in the first incident said rebels attacked government forces between the president’s palace and the main Bakara Market, prompting an exchange of shells and machinegun fire.

“We have so far collected seven dead people and 22 others injured from around Bakara market,” Ali Muse, the coordinator of ambulance services, told Reuters.

“Among the dead is a mother. Most of the shells landed in and around the market. Death toll may rise because shelling is still going on.”

Somalia has had no effective central government for 19 years and Western efforts to install one to guide the country back to stability have been greatly undermined by an insurgency by al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab insurgents and another smaller group, Hizbul Islam.

In another incident, residents said at least five policemen on patrol died and another was wounded in a roadside blast targeting them.

“I could see five dead policemen and another seriously injured. The area was soon sealed off by the government forces. I was passing near the scene when the explosion happened,” Hussein Osman, one resident, said.

Government officials and rebels could not immediately be reached for comment.

Al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab fighters are trying to hold on to the city’s north which puts the presidential palace, known as Villa Somalia, within easy range of their crude mortar rockets.

Al Shabaab, and a second hardline group Hizbul Islam, have been fighting President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed’s Western-backed government since the start of 2007.

In the last two days, four ministers have resigned. Three stepped down Tuesday, including a defense minister who said he was quitting because the government had failed to fulfill its pledge to restore order.

(Writing by Abdi Sheikh, editing by George Obulutsa and Ralph Boulton)

Fighting, blast kills at least 12 in Somali capital

MOGADISHU, JUNE 9 (Reuters)- Fighting between government forces and rebels, and a roadside blast on Wednesday killed at least 12 people in the Somali capital and wounded 22 others, a medic and residents said.

The anarchic country’s U.N.-backed Transitional Federal Government controls just a few blocks of the war-scarred coastal city and its security forces have been fighting to regain Mogadishu’s north.

Residents in the first incident said rebels attacked government forces between the president’s palace and the main Bakara Market, prompting an exchange of shells and machinegun fire.

“We have so far collected seven dead people and 22 others injured from around Bakara market,” Ali Muse, the coordinator of ambulance services, told Reuters.

“Among the dead is a mother. Most of the shells landed in and around the market. Death toll may rise because shelling is still going on.”

Somalia has had no effective central government for 19 years and Western efforts to install one to guide the country back to stability have been greatly undermined by an insurgency by al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab insurgents and another smaller group, Hizbul Islam.

In another incident, residents said at least five policemen on patrol died and another was wounded in a roadside blast targeting them.

“I could see five dead policemen and another seriously injured. The area was soon sealed off by the government forces. I was passing near the scene when the explosion happened,” Hussein Osman, one resident, said.

Government officials and rebels could not immediately be reached for comment.

Al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab fighters are trying to hold on to the city’s north which puts the presidential palace, known as Villa Somalia, within easy range of their crude mortar rockets.

Al Shabaab, and a second hardline group Hizbul Islam, have been fighting President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed’s Western-backed government since the start of 2007.

In the last two days, four ministers have resigned. Three stepped down on Tuesday, including a defence minister who said he was quitting because the government had failed to fulfill its pledge to restore order. [ID:nLDE6571U4] (Writing by Abdi Sheikh, editing by George Obulutsa and Ralph Boulton)

Left, Mamata try to corner each other

Kolkata, May 29 — With municipal polls across West Bengal scheduled for Sunday, both the ruling Left Front and Trinamool Congress sought to use Friday’s tragedy to score political points. As Trinamool chief Mamata Banerjee is also Union railway minister, the CPI(M) lost no time in demanding her resignation over the railway disaster.

The Railways, it said, had clearly failed to check tracks closely in a Maoist area, despite regulations to that effect. “The railway minister should accept responsibility,” said CPM state secretary, Biman Bose.

Banerjee in turn, rushing to the accident spot, demanded a central enquiry as she had no faith in the Left Front ruling the state. “It is very unfortunate so many innocent lives have been lost.

We should not play games with innocent lives,” she said, without directly blaming the Maoists. Though the official statements of both the CPM and Left Front made no reference to it, some CPM leaders did not hesitate to refer to Banerjee’s alleged proximity to Maoists.

The rebels had supported her during Banerjee’s campaign against forcible land acquisition in Nandigram. “Mamata Banerjee has never been critical of the Maoists.

Even today she did not criticise them, though so many innocent lives have been lost,” said Mohammed Salim, former MP and CPM central committee member. Banerjee has often claimed that the ‘terrorism’ of the Left Front cadres is worse than the Naxal menace.

Over 1,000 landmines found in Colombia

Bogota, May 26 (IANS/EFE) At least 1,053 landmines, which rebel guerrillas were planning to use in attacks ahead of the May 30 presidential elections in Colombia, have been found buried in a rural area in the northwestern region, police said.

The mines found in Antioquia province belonged to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), ‘which planned to utilize the landmines to carry out terrorist attacks against the upcoming elections’, the National Police said Tuesday.

Last week, the commander of an army explosives disposal team was killed in a landmine blast, while the team was clearing a mine field in Antioquia province.

Capt Victor Hugo Valencia was killed May 17 near a place where the rebels blasted electricity transmission towers using dynamite, leaving residents of four towns without power.

Since 1990, over 1,700 people have been killed in landmine blasts planted by guerrillas and drug traffickers, the defence ministry said.

Jailed for 15 years, US woman wants to be pastry chef

Lima, May 26 (IANS/EFE) An American woman, who spent 15 years in a Peruvian prison for helping rebels plan an attack on the parliament, has been granted parole and wants to work as a translator and a pastry chef.

Lori Berenson, 39, a native of New York, was released Tuesday. However, judge Jessica Leon Yarango barred her from leaving Peru and forbade any contact with others convicted of terrorism.

Berenson signed the parole document without raising any objections or consulting her attorney and resisted posing for photographers.

She has to remain in Peru for the remaining part of her original 20-year sentence, and is planning to work as a translator and a pastry chef, her lawyer said.

Berenson was arrested in December 1995 as she was leaving the Peruvian Congress. She was found to have entered the premises with false press credentials to obtain information on the building’s security systems to plan an attack by the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA), prosecutors said.

A day after her arrest, police foiled a plot to occupy the Congress building, take lawmakers hostage and exchange them for jailed leaders of the now-defunct rebel group.

Berenson is married to Peruvian attorney Anibal Apari, who was also paroled several years ago after serving a sentence for links with the MRTA.

ANALYSIS – Twenty years after unity, Yemen struggles for survival

Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh this week marked 20 years ruling a united Yemen, but has little to celebrate in a country buckling under the pressure of separatist, sectarian and al Qaeda violence.

Pro-unity billboards lining the streets of the capital Sanaa — “Strength in unity and unity in strength!” — serve as a soft warning to Yemenis not to challenge the state, whose government has strong Western backing and a history of quashing dissent.

But they also underline challenges the government faces including struggles with northern Shi’ite rebels, southern secessionists and al Qaeda, any of which could spiral to threaten the state’s survival. All that is exacerbated by a foundering economy.

“There are the challenges to Yemen that we spend all of our time talking about — the south, al Qaeda or the war in Saada — but there is also a failing economy, resources depletion, population growth, unemployment,” said Christopher Boucek, an expert with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

“These are what will overwhelm the state. It won’t be terrorism or the traditional security challenges.”

The cash-strapped Yemeni government is almost powerless to meet the needs and demands of most of its people in a heavily armed society that is growing increasingly discontent and sometimes takes its struggles to the street.

One in three of Yemen’s 23 million people suffer chronic hunger, according to U.N. aid agencies, and sky-high unemployment — more than half of 15- to 24-year-olds are out of work — means few people can help themselves.

The ranks of the poor include nearly 270,000 people displaced by northern fighting, most of whom have not returned to their homes despite a February truce to end a war that raged since 2004. Refugees from war-torn Somalia add yet more strain.

“This regime is focused on its survival, there is no doubt about that,” a Western diplomat in Sanaa said.

Violence between government forces and separatists in the south is nearing its worst level since a 1994 civil war, and a crackdown on a resurgent al Qaeda, whose regional wing has its base in the country, has been only partly successful.

North and South Yemen united in 1990 under Saleh, who took power in the former North Yemen in 1978. Many in the south, home to most Yemeni oil facilities, feel northerners have commandeered their resources and are denying them their identity and political rights.

DANGERS OF DIVISION

Sanaa often resorts to military means to quash dissent, but the government has recently appeared ready to do whatever it takes, including talking to opponents in the south, if it means it will stay in power.

After all, a divided Yemen would not necessarily dissolve into two — South and North — but more likely into a number of entities, which could lead to more violence among southern factions and potentially a destabilising civil war.

“For Saleh, the unity of Yemen is non-negotiable and defending it is top priority. The president would divert all resources necessary to prevent secession,” said Nicole Stracke at the Gulf Research Centre in Dubai.

In an anniversary speech on Friday, Saleh appeared to want to appease his opponents, announcing an amnesty for nearly 300 imprisoned Houthis, southern separatists and journalists, and saying he wanted to open Yemen’s political process to all.

Though Yemen’s opposition largely welcomed the move, albeit with some scepticism, southern media played a different tune.

“The issue of the south must be recognised and dealt with for what it is in reality, not how the government wants to market it to the outside world,” a journalist wrote on a southern opposition website in response to Saleh’s speech.

Saleh’s powerful foreign allies have no interest in seeing Yemen break up, especially as al Qaeda wing tries to make its comeback from the Arabian Peninsula state, where powerful tribes hold much sway.

“The international community is clearly in favour of having a unified Yemen,” said Theodore Karasik, of the Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis. “Splitting up again would be too shocking for the country and the region.”

Both the United States and Britain support Yemeni unity. Saudi Arabia, which in the 1994 war backed the south, now backs Saleh’s Sanaa-based government.

International alarm over instability in Yemen peaked in December when al Qaeda claimed an attempted bombing of a U.S.-bound plane.

“Countries splitting in half makes everyone nervous … it would just create an even more chaotic, decentralised environment in southern Arabia, and that’s just something that nobody sees any benefit in,” said Eurasia Group’s David Bender.

“In terms of there being any support for the south, I don’t know where that would come from. There would be overwhelming support to the north in order to prevent a southern secession.”

With next to no hope of drumming up international backing for its cause, Yemen’s southern separatist movement is also far too divided and poor to pose a serious threat to the government.

Yemenis have supported unity as a natural reflex, seeing it as vital for the country’s future. “We need unity,” said Mohammed, a textiles and coffee trader from Sanaa. “If we don’t have unity, we will not have security.”

(Editing by Samia Nakhoul)

Ex-England test player Lipman signs with Rebels, RGU

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Former England flanker Michael Lipman has been signed by the new Melbourne Rebels team that will begin play next year in the Super 15 rugby tournament. The London-born Lipman was raised in Australia before playing 10 tests for England.

He has recently captained Warringah in the Sydney competition. Last week, the Rebels announced the signing of Julian Huxley, who has returned to professional rugby following two years of recovery from surgery to remove a brain tumor.

He made a comeback with the ACT Brumbies this season. Other Rebels signings include Welsh No.

8 Gareth Delve, England flyhalf Danny Cipriani, former Australia hooker Adam Freier and 80-test Wallaby and former skipper Stirling Mortlock.

”Salwa Judum” activists condemn Dantewada massacre

Bijapur/ Raipur, May 20 (ANI): The ”Salwa Judum”, a local militia formed to fight Maoists, took out a peace rally in Bijapur on Wednesday to condemn the Maoist attack that killed over 30 people in Chhattisgarh”s Dantewada District.

“To condemn the heinous attack carried out by Maoists, we have gathered here. We paid condolences to the deceased civilians and carried out an anti-Maoist rally,” said Hanif Khan, a leader of a ”Salwa Judam” chapter.

He also said that their group, which has been carrying out peaceful protests against the Maoists, was not getting adequate support from the government and in turn the very objective has been subjugated.

Meanwhile, in Raipur, locals have voiced their concern over increasing violent attacks by rebels.

“Naxalism is the biggest problem for Chhattisgarh and requires full attention of the central government. The crimes in Chhattisgarh, Jagdalpur and Dantewada have become the major issue of concern for India,” said Ravi Kumar Sharma, a resident.

Vikas Sathe, another resident, felt the rebels should be attacked directly through an air-borne strike and wiped out completely.

“The airborne strikes which they are talking about like the Americans do an air-strike on Taliban, a similar one should be carried out here on the Maoists. Their strength will be broken. The arms supply to them should also stop,” he said.

He also noted that all routes of food and arms supply to the Maoists should be blocked so that once they are helpless they would ultimately surrender.

In the latest of such violent attacks, the Maoists targeted a bus and detonated a landmine killing over 30 persons, including police personnel near Dantewada in Chhattisgarh.

The Maoists claim they are crusading for poor, marginal farmers and landless labourers.

They have spread their influence into rural pockets of 20 of India”s 28 states. (ANI)

Suspected Maoists force Orissa youth to join their cause

Malkangiri (Orissa), May 12 (ANI): With the aim of building a strong youth brigade, suspected Maoists are now threatening the unemployed youth in Orissa”s Malkangiri District and forcing them to join their group.

The lack of employment and deprivation had made them a soft target for the rebels.

“The young people in our village don”t have any work, they are all unemployed. We don”t even have land to cultivate. We all are educated but are still unemployed. That is why the young people here join their (Maoists) gang,” said Daitari Sisa, a local.

He added that the Maoists also misbehave with the women of the village, if they refuse to obey their orders.

“They always threaten us; they force us to join their group and if we don”t, they threaten to kill us. These Maoists live behind this hill. We are facing a lot of problems due to them,” said Palla, a local.

Thousands have been killed during the Maoist insurgency, which began in the late 1960s, Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh has described the Maoist threat one of the gravest homegrown threats to India”s internal security.

The rebels claim they are fighting for the rights of poor farmers and landless labourers.

They have spread into the rural pockets of 20 of India”s 28 states. (ANI)

Maoists kill four BMP soldiers in Bihar

Aurangabad (Bihar), May 3 (ANI): Around four Bihar Military Police (BMP) soldiers were killed and one injured, when the Maoists opened fire on a police patrol party in Bihar”s Aurangabad District on Monday.

The rebels opened fire on the BMP personnel and the District Armed Police Force, who were patrolling near the Tandawa Bazaar area this morning.

“Six Maoists, armed with sophisticated weapons, indiscriminately fired at them. Four BMP jawans were killed on the spot, while another was seriously injured,” said Aurangabad Superintendent of Police Sanjay Kumar Singh.

“The ultras also looted five rifles and several rounds of ammunition from them before escaping. The entry and exit points of the district were sealed and a combing operation launched for the Maoists,” he added.

The Maoists claim they are crusading for the poor, marginal farmers, and landless labourers.

They have spread into the rural pockets of 20 of India”s 28 states. (ANI)

Jharkhand Police recovers the body of Maoist killed in encounter

Latehar (Jharkhand), Apr 29 (ANI): Jharkhand Police has found the body of a Maoist near Ladi village falling under Barwadi police station of Latehar District here.

It is reported that he was killed in an encounter with the police personnel on Tuesday.

The gunfight between the police personnel and the Maoists took place at around 9.30 p.m. at Ladi village following an attack on a police patrolling team by the rebels.

At this, the police personnel retaliated and forced the Maoists to flee from the spot. They also recovered a loaded rifle near the dead body of the killed Maoist.

“A group of Maoists started firing at the patrolling team. Police also retaliated. During the search operation today in the morning, body of one slain Maoist was found and along with him a loaded .303 rifle was also recovered,” said Latehar Superintendent of Police
Kuldip Dwivedi.

However, there are reports that in the cross fire between the police personnel and the Maoists, 30-year-old Jayanti Devi, a resident of Ladi village was also killed.

Bisram Singh, brother-in-law of the deceased woman said that she died on the spot during the encounter.

“We were inside our house and these people (patrolling team) were outside. Suddenly, we heard firing in which my sister-in-law died,” said Bisram Singh, brother-in-law of Jayanti Devi.

This encounter took place during the 48-hour shutdown call given by the Maoists in the three states of Jharkhand, Orissa and West Bengal.

The Maoists had called for a 48-hour shutdown demanding the release of six Maoists, who were arrested earlier.

Earlier this month, Union Home Minister P Chidambaram described the Maoists as anti-poor and anti-development.

He had said the Maoists have targeted all instruments of development.

“The Naxalites are anti-development and have targeted the very instruments of development – school buildings, roads, telephone towers etc. They know that development will mean the masses, especially poor tribals, wean them away from the grip of Naxalites,” Chidambaram said.

In 2009 alone, Maoists have demolished 71 school buildings, 23 Panchayat Bhawans, two power plants. They also destroyed 67 telephone exchanges or mobile towers.

Maoists also targeted railway property for 46 times and targeted specific industrial establishments at least 17 times in 2009. (ANI)

Police commandos arrest two militants in Manipur

Imphal, Apr 27 (ANI): Police have arrested two commandoes of the banned People”s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK) during a counter-insurgency operation here in Imphal.

The rebels, who were arrested a day earlier, were produced before a designated court and also the media on Monday.

The security personnel also recovered some arms and allied explosives, which included two Chinese hand grenades, six live rounds of AK-36 and mobile handset.

Imphal West Range Additional Superintendent of Police (ASP) A K Jahlajit Singh stated that based on specific intelligence inputs about PREPAK cadres loitering in the vicinity of the All India Radio (AIR) station, the commandos swooped into action and nabbed the rebels.

The two arrested persons have been identified as K Shantikumar Singh alias S K Singh and S Amuba Singh alias Amu Singh.

“On their body search, we got two hand grenades and six live rounds of AK-36. They disclosed that they were on a mission to lob a hand grenade at the residence of one, H Joydev Sharma in Imphal West,” said A K Jahlajit Singh.

“They further disclosed that they had committed a hand grenade lobbing at the residence of the owner of the Hoakip Travels on the ninth of April this month,” he added. (ANI)