Rockets fired at Israeli resort of Eilat – reports

Two rockets were fired from Jordan at Israel’s Red Sea resort of Eilat on Thursday but landed in Jordanian territory, apparently without causing any injuries, Israel’s Haaretz newspaper reported on its website.

The Israeli military had no immediate comment.

Jordan’s port of Aqaba is adjacent to Eilat, which also borders Egypt’s Sinai peninsula.

Israel’s YNet news web site, giving a slightly different version of events, said rockets may have been fired from the Sinai toward Eilat but landed in Aqaba instead.

Israeli Army Radio said one rocket hit Aqaba and the other fell into the Gulf of Aqaba between the two cities.

Earlier this month, Israel cautioned its citizens not to visit the Sinai, citing information that militants might try to kidnap vacationing Israelis.

Egypt and Israel signed a peace treaty in 1979. Jordan and Israel made peace in 1994.

(Writing by Jeffrey Heller, Editing by Ari Rabinovitch)

US denies playing any role in Singh, Gilani meeting

Lahore, July 16 (ANI): The United States has denied playing any role in facilitating the proposed meeting between Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani on the margins of the XVth Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) summit in Sharm-el-Sheikh.

US Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia, Robert Blake rejected suggestions that Washington is behind the meeting due to take place in the Red Sea resort of Sharm-el-Sheikh today.

Earlier, addressing the 118-nation summit on Wednesday, Dr.Singh, without directly naming or targeting Pakistan, said that no nation should provide a safe haven to terrorists

Apparently setting the tone for his meeting with Gilani, he said that in recent years terrorists have become “more sophisticated, more organized and more daring”.

Dr. Singh said that terror infrastructures in any part of the world must and should be dismantled.

“Terrorists and those who aid and abet them must be brought to justice. The infrastructure of terrorism must be dismantled and there should be no safe havens for terrorists because they do not represent any cause, group or religion.

It is time we agree on a comprehensive convention on international terrorism,” he said. (ANI)

PM tells NAM no nation should provide safe haven to terrorists

Sharm-el-Sheikh (Egypt), July 15 (ANI): Addressing the 118-member XVth Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Summit in this Red Sea resort on Wednesday afternoon, India’s Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, without directly naming or targeting Pakistan, said that no nation should provide a safe haven to terrorists.

Apparently setting the tone for what he is likely to take up with Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani during their meeting on Thursday, Dr. Singh said that in recent years terrorists have become “more sophisticated, more organized and more daring”.

Dr. Singh said that terror infrastructures in any part of the world must and should be dismantled. He was indirectly referring to the number of times India has been subjected to terror strikes in the recent past, the alleged export of terror from Pakistani soil, and in particular to the Mumbai terror attacks of November 2008 in which more than 180 persons had been killed and more than 300 had been maimed by terrorists from Pakistan.

“Terrorists and those who aid and abet them must be brought to justice. The infrastructure of terrorism must be dismantled and there should be no safe havens for terrorists because they do not represent any cause, group or religion. It is time we agree on a comprehensive convention on international terrorism,” the Prime Minister said.

The convention would bind countries to an internationally accepted definition of terrorism and abide by a code of conduct in dealing with the issue of trans-border terrorism, he added.he Prime Minister said “extremism, intolerance and terrorism are our antitheses; they seek to destroy us and our movement.”

Dwelling on other issues, Dr. Singh called on multilateral institutions like the UN to include developing countries as members.

“Developing countries must be fully represented in the decision making levels of international institutions if they are to remain effective. Decision making processes, whether in the United Nations or the international financial institutions continue to be based on charters written more than 60 years ago, though the world has changed greatly since then,” he said.

Recalling the first NAM summit of 1961, Dr. Singh said India’s first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, who was one of the founders of movement, had spoken of the “moral force” of the grouping. He said Nehru’s words held true even today.

“History has shown that non-alignment is an idea that evolves but does not fade. We must take it forward, harnessing it to meet the challenges of today,” he said.

The relevance of NAM, he countered, has never been greater than today.

Focusing on the economic challenges ahead, he said no other NAM summit had ever “been held in an economic and financial crisis of the magnitude that now grips the world”.

Though the crisis had emanated from advanced industrial economies, “developing economies, the members of our movement, have been the hardest hit,” he said.

The Prime Minister asserted that NAM had a “great stake in ensuring that steps planned to revive the global economy take into account the concerns of developing countries.”

“These include the challenges of food security, energy security, the environment and the reform of institutions of global governance.”

He said NAM had a “crucial stake in a rule-based multilateral trading system and in an early conclusion of a balanced and fair agreement in the Doha round.”

He also said that cooperation, trade and investment among NAM countries could contribute significantly to reviving the world economy.

Speaking about climate change, Dr. Singh said: “We are already making our own significant contributions in this regard, but climate change action must not perpetuate the poverty of developing countries.”

NAM should be used to achieve “a comprehensive, balanced and above all equitable outcome in the ongoing multilateral negotiations, leading up to the Copenhagen conference in December this year”. By Smita Prakash (ANI)

India, Pak foreign secretaries burn midnight oil to find common ground

Sharm-el-Sheikh (Egypt), July 15 (ANI): Foreign Secretaries of India and Pakistan – Shiv Shankar Menon and Salman Basheer – burnt the midnight oil on Tuesday to try to work out some kind of framework to lay the ground for the resumption of talks between the two countries.

Mandated by their respective Prime Ministers’ – Dr. Manmohan Singh and Yousuf Raza Gilani-to work out the modalities before the two heads of government meet on Thursday (July 16). Menon and Basheer interacted with each other without the assistance of aides late into the night.

The 90-minute meeting took place soon after the Indian delegation landed here from Paris after attending the French National Day celebrations there.

According to senior officials, the discussions between the two were good and detailed, and both agreed to meet again on Wednesday on the sidelines of the XVth Non-Aligned Summit that opens in this Red Sea resort today.

There were suggestions of some movement being made by both sides on the issue of terrorism and the possibility of a joint media appearance by the Prime Ministers’ of the two countries after they hear from their respective foreign secretaries.

Menon and Basheer are believed to have discussed the progress made by Islamabad in its probe into the 26/11 strikes and the steps taken to dismantle the terrorism infrastructure on its soil.

Menon and Basheer’s discussions are also believed to have covered Pakistan’s flip-flop over the arrest and release of Sayeed and the withdrawal of petitions challenging his release from the Supreme Court.

Ahead of the meeting between the two foreign secretaries and the two Prime Ministers’, Indian External Affairs Minister S M Krishna has demanded a “visible response” and undertaking from Pakistan on bringing the perpetrators of Mumbai terror attacks to justice.

Prime Minister Gilani, who also arrived here on Tuesday, has said that he will approach his meeting with Dr. Singh with an “open heart and a positive mind.”

But he refused to comment on the Punjab provincial government’s decision to withdraw the petitions that challenged last month’s release from house arrest of Jamaat-ud Dawa chief Hafiz Mohammed Sayeed.

Tuesday night’s talks come four days after Pakistan handed over a fresh dossier on its probe into the Mumbai terror attacks to India.

The dossier, handed over to the Indian High Commission officials in Islamabad on Saturday, identifies 13 new suspects and gives an update on Pakistan’s investigations into the November 26 attacks, sources said.

After Prime Minister Singh’s disclosure on Saturday that ISI chief Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha had met some Indian High Commission officials in Islamabad, speculation are rife about the powerful spy agency’s influence on the talks process.

At present, the Indian side is unwilling to hazard a guess on whether the ISI will be a part of the talks.

There is, however, a hope on the Indian side about some kind of commitment being made by Pakistan to bring the Mumbai terror accused quickly to justice and to stop the use of Pakistani soil for terror acts against India.

The Pakistani side is of the view that the composite dialogue process should not be held hostage to one case. (ANI)

India and Pakistan Foreign Ministers may meet in Italy

New Delhi, June 23 (ANI): Indian External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna and Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi may meet on the sidelines of G8 Outreach AF-Pak summit, which begins from June 27 in Italy’s Trieste city.

Though the Ministry of External Affairs has declined to confirm about the meet between the two foreign ministers, reliable sources have told ANI that External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna and Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi can hold a stand alone bilateral talk on the sidelines of the summit in Italy.

The Foreign Ministers’ meet can also be viewed as another step towards resumption of dialogue process for peace between the two countries, which paused after 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks last year.

The probable meet can be viewed as a follow up of the recent meet between Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari held on the sidelines of Russian summits in Yeketerinberg.

Besides, India Foreign Minister Krishna will also be holding bilateral talks with his Afghan counterpart on the sidelines of the summit, which will focus on regional issues of reconstruction and rehabilitation of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Pakistan.

The India and Pakistan foreign ministers’ meet will hold its own significance, as it will be a second high-level engagement between the two countries within a span of a month.

The Krishna-Qureshi meet will precede the Foreign Secretary-level Talks between the two countries that are likely to take place on the sidelines of G8 Summit, which begins on July 8. This will be followed by another bilateral discussion between Indian Prime minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart on the margins of Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) at Red Sea resort in Sharm-Al Shiekh, Egypt.

Meanwhile, External Affairs Minister Krishna and his counterpart Pakistan Foreign Minister Qureshi may ask about the steps taken by Pakistan to prevent terrorism against India. While Qureshi may update Krishna about the status of held terrorists involved in masterminding Mumbai attacks.

This meeting could set the agenda for Gilani- Manmohan meet, which eventually is expected to de-pause the peace dialogue between the two countries.

Both sides have shown keenness in resuming the peace dialogue ever since the much talked about meeting between the Indian Prime Minister in the Russian city of Yeketerinberg with Pakistan President. By Naveen Kapoor (ANI)

Israeli tourism poster withdrawn after complaints

An Israeli tourism poster is being pulled from the London subway after the Syrian Embassy complained that the map on it appeared to show the Golan Heights and Palestinian territories within Israel’s boundaries, officials said on Friday.

Britain’s Advertising Standards Authority received more than 300 complaints about the ad, a promotion for the Israeli Red Sea resort town of Eilat, according to the agency’s spokesman Matt Wilson.

The Syrian Embassy and pro-Palestinian groups complained about it because the featured map appeared to show the territories Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights, within the borders of the Jewish state, according to the Israeli Tourism Ministry and the British standards authority.

Syrian Embassy spokesman Jihad Makdissi said the move follows days of lobbying to get rid of the ad, which he called offensive.

Although Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005, Israel maintains a tight blockade on the narrow strip of land and remains in the West Bank.

Israel’s hold on the Golan Heights, a strategic plateau captured from Syria, is a particularly sensitive issue for Syrians. Damascus has said it will not make peace with Israel until the land is returned.

Poll reveals positive views of al-Qaeda in Egypt, Pakistan

Poll reveals positive views of al-Qaeda in Egypt, PakistanCairo – Egypt and Pakistan were the only nations in a poll of 23 nations released Friday in which the majority of people did not have a negative view of the al-Qaeda terrorist network.

Around 60 per cent of Egyptians had “positive or mixed” view towards al-Qaeda, the opinion poll carried out for the BBC World Service said.

In Pakistan, where much of the battle against al-Qaeda is being fought, just 19 per cent said they had a negative view of Osama bin Laden’s organisation.

Doug Miller, from polling agency Globescan, was quoted by the BBC as saying the findings from Egypt and Pakistan were “yet another indicator that the US ‘war on terror’ is not winning hearts and minds.”

US-led efforts to tackle al-Qaeda have not been regarded as successful, the poll showed. Asked who is winning “the conflict between al-Qaeda and the US”, 49 per cent said neither side while 22 per cent believed the US had gained the upper hand. Just 10 per cent said al-Qaeda was winning.

Al-Qaeda second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri, is an Egyptian who last Friday released a six-minute audio statement offering his condolences to the victims of a fatal rockslide in Cairo that killed at least 103 people on September 6.

Al-Zawahri is believed to be somewhere along the Afghan-Pakistan border.

In 2005, al-Qaeda was blamed for a series of bomb attacks which shook the Red Sea resort of Sharm al-Sheikh killing around 100 people – Egyptians and foreigners.

Some 23,937 adults across 23 countries were polled for the BBC World Service between July 8 and September 12. (dpa)