25 Saudi Guantanamo prisoners return to militancy

(Reuters) – Around 25 former detainees from Guantanamo Bay camp returned to militancy after going through a rehabilitation program for al Qaeda members in Saudi Arabia, a Saudi security official said on Saturday.

World | Saudi Arabia

The United States have sent back around 120 Saudis from the detention camp at the U.S. naval base in Cuba, set up after the U.S. launched a “war on terror” following the September 11 attacks by mostly Saudi suicide hijackers sent by al Qaeda.

Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, has put the returned prisoners along with other al Qaeda suspects through a rehabilitation program which includes religious re-education by clerics and financial help to start a new life.

The scheme, which some 300 extremists have attended, is part of anti-terrorism efforts after al Qaeda staged attacks inside the kingdom from 2003-06. These were halted after scores of suspects were arrested with the help of foreign experts.

Around 11 Saudis from Guantanamo have gone to Yemen, an operating base for al Qaeda, while others have been jailed again or killed after attending the program, said Abdulrahman al-Hadlaq, Director General of the General Administration for Intellectual Security overseeing the rehabilitation.

He pinpointed strong personal ties among former prisoners but also tough U.S. tactics as the reason why some 20 percent of the returned Saudis relapsed into militancy compared to 9.5 percent overall in the rehabilitation program.

“Those guys from other groups didn’t suffer torture before, the non-Guantanamos (participants). Torturing is the most dangerous thing in radicalization. You have more extremist people if you have more torture,” Hadlaq told reporters in a rare briefing about Saudi anti-terrorism efforts.

REHABILITATION SCHEME “A SUCCESS”

Despite the setback with Guantanamo prisoners, Saudi Arabia regards the rehabilitation scheme, which kicks in after militants have served a prison term, as a success.

“There is no doubt that there is an effect,” Hadlaq said.

U.S. President Barack Obama ordered the camp shut after taking office in January 2009 but his plans have been stymied. There are now about 180 detainees left, among them 13 Saudis. At its peak, the camp held about 780 detainees.

More than 2,000 sympathizers of al Qaeda are still in prison in Saudi Arabia. Some 2,000 teachers have been removed from classrooms for their extremist views in the past five years while 400 teachers are in prison, Hadlaq said.

Saudi Arabia plans to build five more rehabilitation centers which will be able to accommodate 250 people each, he said.

The expansion plans are partly to cope with the eventual release of 991 suspected al Qaeda militants whom the authorities said in October were awaiting trial for 30 attacks since 2003.

In July, a Saudi court sentenced one unnamed Islamist to death and handed out to others jail terms of up to 30 years in the first publicly reported trials since the arrests.

(Reporting by Ulf Laessing; Editing by Robert Woodward)

LiLo may land in jail if she misses mandatory court hearing

New York, May 20 (ANI): Lindsay Lohan is expected to miss a mandatory court date this week because the actress is stuck in Cannes.

According to TMZ.com, if the actress misses court hearing this time, she may be sent to jail, reports New York Post.

Sources said that that Lohan claims her passport was stolen this week while she partied at the Cannes Film Festival.

The “Mean Girls” actress, 23, is on a three years” probation completing an alcohol rehabilitation program after pleading guilty to cocaine use and driving under the influence in August 2007.

She attends the rehab course once every 21 days, TMZ reported – enough for her not to be reported, but in direct violation of court orders.

“I was on the phone with Lindsay”s assistant the entire night and we”re doing everything we can to resolve this issue and get her back to L.A,” The New York Post quoted Lohan’s lawyer, Shawn Chapman Holley, as telling TMZ.

“Lindsay is distraught because it was her intention to get back to L.A. today to do more alcohol education classes and appear in court tomorrow,” Holley added. (ANI)

A Centre for disability but more of a centre of hope

Srinagar, March 10 (ANI): ‘She Hope Disability Centre’ in Srinagar has been offering physiotherapy and corrective surgery, as well as hearing aids and low-cost prosthetic legs. Since 2001 the latter has been pioneered by Mobility Equipment Needs of the Displaced, MEND, a New Zealand-based charity.

Housed in a single storey building, four-room brick building, the centre has treated more than 700 people in the last two years alone, claims Sami Wani, the young manager of the centre.

“We give out all these aids free of cost and also take on the post-operative care of our patients. Their rehabilitation is also our responsibility,” says Wani.

One of the beneficiaries has been a 14-year-old Rihana who is today in the post-operative care ward of the Centre. Her mother Sakeena narrates that Rihana’s left leg was shorter than her right, which made her limp. Today, Rihana is a happy girl and excited at the idea of returning to school sans any embarrassment caused by schoolmates.

Since childhood, Wani nurtured a deep desire to do something for the disabled. After training himself to be a physiotherapist at a college in Mangalore, Wani returned home to Kashmir in 2001.

A chance email led him to contact Rob Buchanan, Director of MEND. With the help of MEND he opened a single-room community-based rehabilitation program in his hometown of Vyail, around 20 kilometres from Srinagar.

Every week he visits a new village with his staff and begins creating awareness of the causes, prevention and treatment of disabilities. This is followed by identification, assessment and referral of disabled people to his Centre. Surgery cases are identified and treated during the winter by the local government hospital

He tells that his experience has proved personal eye opener. “I was really pained to see the lack of awareness, especially among people in remote areas. Poverty and the high cost of treatment made things even more difficult for them,” says Wani.

The social stigma attached to disability, particularly among women and especially in rural areas, adds to the complexity of the problem. Wani recalls an incident where villagers told him about a family with a deaf girl. “She was so beautiful. We approached her parents to help her, but they refused to admit that she had a hearing problem. But after a few days, her mother came to our Centre for help.”

Realizing the need to upgrade his Centre”s infrastructure and facilities, with the help of his father who provided land, Wani constructed a four-room building. He also hired two physiotherapists, an occupational therapist, a speech therapist and a driver.

Donations came from the police and Indian Army, as well as locals. Wani’s mentor, Rob visits every year for a few months with his team of doctors and helps Wani with the surgeries and aids.

During summer, the Centre is converted into a special school for the disabled where children are given individual attention and everyone is taught as per his or her specific requirements. Deaf students are given speech therapy and the blind are taught Braille, after which many children are able to join the normal schooling process. She Hope also admits mentally challenged students.

Living up to their motto of “Promoting Self-Help, not Sympathy” the ‘She Hope Disability Centre’ also has a vocational programme that offers training in practical arts and crafts like basket weaving, cutting and tailoring, with the aim of helping their clients become self-reliant. “In some cases, it is really difficult for the patients to go back to school, especially when they have crossed a certain age, so we try to help them by teaching some skills,” says Wani.

She Hope, as the centre, is also called, offers these individuals soft loans for setting up their own small businesses. Wani tells about a girl who opened a tailoring training Centre of her own in her village. He says his next goal is to set up a hostel facility for patients.

“There are far off areas where there are no roads and no reliable means of transport, so it is really difficult for patients to come for daily physiotherapy,” he says.

In 2007, supported by the Finnish Abilities Foundation, She Hope set up services in Kupwara District of Jammu and Kashmir, which was hit by a massive earthquake in October 2005. “The earthquake caused much devastation and the number of people left disabled was really alarming. With limited resources we were able to treat only a small number, but we got almost 300 cases,” says Wani.

The Centre has submitted a few proposals for funds to the state department of Social Welfare, which has, in turn, forwarded them to the Central Government.

Though the government has cleared She Hope for foreign grants, thus offering the promise of much-needed growth, Wani laments the files are gathering dust there. “It is a long, long wait and I am still waiting.”

Wani’s centre may not have won the 20,000 dollars prize and may be surviving from one grant to the next, but that fact does not deter Wani. He continues to dream that no disabled person will suffer from want of treatment and from getting the chance to live a life of dignity and fulfilment.

The number of disabled persons in Kashmir has sharply increased over the last two decades of turbulence. Hospitals in Kashmir, generally overburdened, cater to basic heath services.

According to an article published by Combat Law in 2008, “There are 302,670 persons with disabilities, constituting about three percent of the total population of the State, as per the Census of 2001. Unofficial estimates overtake that figure, as it only takes into account persons that are registered as differently-abled.”

No formal survey has been carried out to accurately determine the exact number and types of disabled persons in Kashmir. Based on its own calculations and numbers served, She Hope, according to Charkha Feature service, estimates that 20,000 people urgently await basic assessment. (ANI)

Soon, mobile phones to monitor cardiac patients

Melbourne, May 2 (ANI): In a bid to encourage heart patients to complete their rehabilitation programs after surgery, Australian scientists have come up with a new technique that will see nurses monitoring them via a mobile phone.

The trial, being run by the CSIRO’s Australian E-Health Research Centre (AEHRC) and Queensland Health, uses a mobile phone to collect and send health-related information about patients’ activities at home to a central computer.

AEHRC chief executive officer Dr Phil Gurney said that less than 20 pct of the heart surgery patients complete their six-week rehabilitation program, following the need for patients to return regularly to the hospital for the rehab program.

“We are largely using technology that is available, but we have customised it to our purposes,” ABC Science quoted Gurney as saying.

The mobile phones have an inbuilt accelerator that measures physical activity such as the number of steps walked.

The patients also use the phone to record data from blood pressure monitors and scales.

The participants were asked to take photos of meals they eat or videos of themselves exercising, and use an electronic diary on the phone to record observations about their stress levels, diet, smoking and alcohol intake.

The information is sent to a central computer.

“We tried to take advantage of what technology is available because we want to get it out to as many people as possible and be cost effective,” he added.

Gurney said that a small subset of the group is also trailing home use of a heart-rate monitor while exercising. The data is transferred to the phone automatically via Bluetooth.

He said that if the trials are successful, the technique could be used by patients who live in remote areas or have commitments that make hospital visits difficult. (ANI)

Malnourished cancer patients ‘experience more psychological distress’

Washington, Mar 22 (ANI): A new study has revealed that cancer patients who are malnourished experience significantly greater levels of psychological distress than those who are more adequately nourished.

For the study, Dr Shafia Amdouni, from the Cancer Nutrition Rehabilitation Program at Canada’s McGill University Health Center, and colleagues set out to examine the relationship between malnutrition and psychological distress in patients who were taking part in a cancer nutrition rehabilitation program.

They looked at 213 patients with advanced cancer, asking them to assess their own nutrition status and their distress.

Nutrition was measured using a patient-generated subjective global assessment, which calculates a grouping of nutritional scores after combining information from food intake, weight change, nutrition-related symptoms, and performance status and categorizes patients into three distinctive classes of nutritional status.

Distress was measured using a ‘distress thermometer’, a self-reported measure using an 11-point scale from 0 (no distress) to 10 (extreme distress).

The researchers found that the score on the distress thermometer was positively correlated with the total score of the patient-generated subjective global assessment. The higher the distress, the worse the patient’s nutrition status.

“Our data suggest that nutrition status may contribute to the level of distress in patients with cancer. Evaluation of the nutrition status should be included in the evaluation of distress experienced by these patients,” Amdouni said.

The researchers said that ideally, patients should be seen by a clinical nutritionist or a clinical dietician.

The new results have been reported at the European Society for Medical Oncology’s Symposium on Cancer and Nutrition. (ANI)

Helium may be beneficial for lung patients

Washington, Mar 10 (ANI): Researchers from University of Calgary have suggested an innovative therapy to help patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) breathe easier.

Lead researcher Neil Eves, PhD has found that patients who breathed a mix of 60pct helium and 40 pct oxygen during a rehabilitation program were able to exercise longer and harder than those who breathed normal air.

“COPD is not curable,” said Eves, a researcher with the Faculties of Kinesiology and Medicine.

“Our hope is that this research will help more individuals with COPD to realize the benefits of exercise,” he added.

Eves said he chose this specific gas mixture, because helium is a less dense gas that allows patients suffering with COPD to empty their damaged lungs better, while oxygen slows their breathing and further helps to reduce the shortness of breath these patients commonly suffer from.

During the study, individuals with COPD breathed either the helium/oxygen mix or air during cycling exercise.

While both groups improved their tolerance for exercise over a six-week rehabilitation program, the group that trained with helium could exercise significantly longer following rehabilitation than the control group.

“We are always interested in innovations that can help to improve the effectiveness of our health interventions,” said Dr. Sandra Delon, PhD, the director of Alberta Health Services’ Chronic Disease Management Program.

“We’ve already seen some promising results in this pilot program, so we’re very encouraged,” she added. (ANI)

Sidelined Oz pacer Tait suffering from chronic hamstring tendonitis

Adelaide, Feb.20 (ANI): The international future of sidelined Australian fast bowler Shaun Tait is in doubt again, as he is suffering from a chronic form of hamstring tendinitis.

According to Fox Sports, Tait has had his own blood injected into the affected area in an attempt to fasttrack the healing process.

The injury to Tait’s left hamstring, which has destroyed his summer, is sabotaging his three-Test career.

Tait hasn’t played since taking 2-40 in Australia’s two-wicket loss to New Zealand in the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy series opener in Perth, and medicos don’t know when he will return.

“Shaun has sustained a tendon injury to his left hamstring. Australian team physiotherapist Alex Kountouris and I have been working closely with Shaun on his rehabilitation program, which has included autologous blood injection treatment here in Adelaide. He is recuperating well but there is no specified date for his return to cricket,” Fox Sports quotyed ,” Redbacks physio John Porter, as saying.

Redbacks officials don’t expect Tait to return for South Australia’s remaining Sheffield Shield games, against Western Australia and Tasmania, meaning he’s in doubt to menace the Proteas. Tait must now fight to ensure he can front for Indian Premier League champions Rajasthan Royals in April and May. (ANI)

Qaeda field commander in Saudi custody still a threat from prison

Riyadh (Saudi Arabia), Feb.19 (ANI): The Saudi Arabian Government and the country’s investigators continue to see a jailed Muhammad al-Awfi, a one-time Guantanamo Bay detainee, as a major threat to world peace, even from prison.

According to Fox News, al-Awfi was captured by Yemeni authorities and transferred to Saudi Arabia on Tuesday. He was an Al Qaeda field commander in Yemen after his release from a Saudi “rehabilitation” program.

Abu al-Hareth Muhammad al-Awfi lived quietly in Saudi Arabia for a year after his release from Guantanamo Bay in November 2007, but he re-emerged last month in a jihadist video that showed him in Yemen, wearing a bandolier of bullets and threatening the United States.

The Saudi rehabilitation program entices prisoners with gifts and good treatment and releases them to their families’ custody when they sign pledges to abandon terror.

But according to David Draper, director of Strategic Operations at the terror watchdog NEFA Foundation, the inmates’ radical commitment cannot be overcome with kindness. (ANI)

Symonds ruled out of Proteas tour

Melbourne, Feb.3 (ANI): Australian all rounder Andrew Symonds has been dropped from the team that is to tour South Africa this month, and told to undergo further rehabilitation and counselling before he can be considered eligible for national selection.

A Fox Sports reports said that the Cricket Australia board met in Melbourne on Tuesday to make a ruling on Symonds.

Symonds has already copped a fine of 4000 dollars for calling New Zealand wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum “a lump of shit in a radio interview.

CA chief executive James Sutherland said Symonds would have to satisfy formal rehab criteria before again being available for international selection.

Earlier, some senior Cricket Australia officials were reported as saying that they were likely to tell the board of directors not to consider Symonds for selection, given his alleged disturbed psychological state.

Top cricket officials have had concerns about Symonds’ psychological state and want to keep him on a rehabilitation program rather than expose him to the pitfalls of a hostile South African tour.

Board sources say the most likely course of action is that Symonds will be stood down and a fresh focus put on his rehabilitation program, overseen by several psychologists.

The earliest Symonds could return to play for Australia would be the one-day series against Pakistan in April/May. That series is almost certain not to go ahead as scheduled in strife-torn Pakistan, although it could be shifted to a neutral venue.

Symonds being pitch forked into the international cricket wilderness represents stern action by the board at a time when Australia’s cricketing fortunes have hit a rocky low. (ANI)

Symonds selected to play in Queensland Vs Western Australia match

Brisbane, Jan.26 (ANI): Under fire Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds has been selected to play for Queensland in their match against Western Australia at the Gabba later this week.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, Symonds will bat at number four in a match that is being seen as his one and only chance to prove his fitness and form before the selectors sit down to name their Australian squad for next month’s three-Test tour of South Africa.

Despite the high stakes of the Shield match, the Queensland selectors aren’t about to make any concessions for Symonds, who has struggled up the order early this season.

The swashbuckling Test No.6 failed in his four bats at No.4 for the Bulls at the seam-friendly Gabba, scoring 5, 5, 26, 0 as he was exposed to the swinging new ball.

Despite the run of outs he was still recalled to the Australian team for the first Test of the summer against NZ after completing his Cricket Australia rehabilitation program, which followed his “gone fishing” axing.

Skipper Ricky Ponting again wants Symonds back for the South African tour if he is fit but his most recent drama, labelling New Zealand wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum as a “lump of s___” on FM radio, has added to the doubt surrounding his tenuous position.

Cricket Australia is expected to charge the dreadlocked Queenslander with a code of conduct breach as soon as Tuesday but he’s expected to cop a fine rather than suspension.

Queensland chief selector Ray Phillips acknowledged Symonds had spluttered high up the order against the swinging ball, and the in-form Lee Carseldine presented as a strong option at No.4.

But both Phillips and coach Trevor Barsby said Symonds would stay at second drop with Carseldine, who averaged 100 in the Twenty20 competition, at No.5.

“We’re still not sure if he is going to play. We haven’t heard anything so it’s business as usual,” Phillips said.

Barsby said Symonds, who will not bowl against WA, would have a “burning desire” to prove himself ready and able to return to Test cricket with a big score at the Gabba.

“It would be in Andrew’s best interests to come out in this Shield game and score as many runs as he can to show he’s still a dominant force,” said the coach.

The second-placed Bulls have also recalled spearhead Ashley Noffke from a lingering back problem, while fellow paceman Chris Swan has shrugged off a groin injury.

Strapping left-arm bolter Scott Walter, 19, is set to make his first-class debut if Ryan Harris isn’t released from the Australian one-day squad.

Queensland: Chris Simpson (captainRyan Broad, Nick Kruger, Martin Love, Andrew Symonds, Lee Carseldine, Nathan Reardon, Ashley Noffke, Chris Hartley, Ryan Harris, Chris Swan, Scott Walter (12th man to be named). (ANI)