Amnesty says 4 million Pakistanis under Taliban rule

June 10 (Reuters) – Nearly four million people are living under Taliban rule in northwest Pakistan, suffering human rights abuses from the Islamists as well as the military, Amnesty International (AI) said on Thursday.

The report “As If Hell Fell on Me” says more than 1,300 civilians were killed in fighting between Pakistani troops and Taliban in 2009 while more than one million displaced people are still in various towns.

“Over the last few years, Taliban have been able to assert their rule, their ideology through combination of violence and fear,” Saman Zia-Zarifi, director Asia-Pacific, told reporters in Islamabad.

“They have killed anybody who can challenge them. They have killed hundreds of maliks (tribal elders), religious leaders, civil society workers, teachers.”

He said militants also used the civilian population as human shield against military assaults and often placed themselves in residential areas.

Pakistan went on an offensive last year to crush al Qaeda-linked Pakistani militants who wanted to impose Taliban-style strict Islamic rule in their strongholds in northwestern Swat and the tribal areas.

In their violent campaign, militants killed thousands of people in the country.

The military say the tribal lands have largely been cleared of militants in these operations.

Zarifi accused government forces of not trying to protect civilian population in the conflict-zones and using indiscriminate artillery and air power against them.

“The government acted as if its role is simply to kill the enemy as if it was not there to protect the citizens of Pakistan,” he said.

“The Pakistani military is not designed to fight counter-insurgency. It’s not designed to provide the rule of law. It’s really designed to fight a mechanised war probably against India but that’s not the situation in FATA and neighbouring areas.”

The international human rights watchdog’s report says some 2,500 people are said to have been detained by Pakistani authorities without framing any charge against them. It fears the figures of enforced disappearance could be much higher.

“It does no good for justice to simply detain these people in secret places and have them show up dead in encounter killings,” Zarifi said asking the government to try them in the courts.

The report also criticises the role of “unaccountable and untrained” tribal militia raised with the backing of authorities against Taliban militants.

“In some they seem to say they target Taliban but other cases they’re simply carrying old vendetta or taking advantage of the situation to settle scores,” the Amnesty official said.

“It’s the opposite of enforcing the rule of the law. This is moving towards chaos.”

(Editing by Alistair Scrutton and Sanjeev Miglani)

Pedal your way to Rohini metro station

New Delhi, June 5 — If you live in the vicinity of the Rohini Metro station, you will soon be able to pedal to the station. Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC), in association with Delhi Cycles Pvt.

Ltd has decided to launch a cycle feeder service from Rohini East Metro station to nearby residential areas later this month. The idea is to promote the use of bicycles, as it is a non-polluting and eco friendly mode of transport.

The initiative was formally announced on Saturday on the occasion of World Environment Day with a bicycle rally, in which more than 100 cycling enthusiasts participated, informed DMRC officials. “The service will be started on a trial basis initially and will be extended to other stations based on its success,” the added.

“Apart from a cycle stand at the Metro station, four cycle sub-stations will be created in nearby localities of Rohini East. Commuters will be able to take the cycles from a sub-station near their residence and reach Metro stations,” informed Atul Jain of Delhi Cycles Pvt.

Ltd. “Similarly, while returning home they can deposit the cycle at the sub stations,” added Jain.

Initially, the Rohini East Metro station will have 25 cycles – all insured – he added. While cycle feeder service will initially be available at Rohini East metro station, Jain said its success would help them expand the service to other areas.

Commuters will be able to register with a nominal refundable deposit of Rs 300 against ID and residential proofs. Fare will be calculated according to the time spent by the commuter after he takes the cycle.

A time slot of 15 minutes will cost the user Rs 3. The commuters will be provided a rechargeable smart card with initial recharge value of Rs 50.

Guwahati residents face monsoon hazards

Guwahati (Assam), June 4 (ANI): Despite the monsoon bringing respite for the people of the country from the scorching heat of the sun, the incessant showers have forced poor residents here, as the rain waters have flooded Guwahati city forcing people to leave their homes in search for a safe shelter.

The heavy monsoon downpour for the last couple of days has caused havoc here, as the city has turned into a sea of muddy water with flash flood waters entering the residential areas forcing people to leave their homes for a safe shelter.

The Meteorological (MeT) Department has forcast more than average rainfall this monsoon.

The comment of Guwahati Development Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma asking the
people to accustom themselves to live with the water has irked the people, who already are knee deep in troubled waters.

Incessant rain has also triggered several landsides in many parts of the state.

Though no lives have been lost, the landslide has made the lives of the people living in the seven hills in and around Guwahati vulnerable. (ANI)

Thai police confront “red shirts” after blasts

Hundreds of Thai riot police moved on Friday in front of a barricade erected by anti-government protesters in Bangkok’s Silom business district, a day after grenade attacks in the area killed three people.

Thai television said police asked the “red shirts” to dismantle the barrier. They made no move to do so, and TV pictures showed protesters pouring what a reporter said was fuel onto the barricade, which is made up largely of tyres.

The government said the grenades on Thursday, which also wounded 75 people, were fired from the red shirt protest area. Leaders of the red shirts, who have been demonstrating in Bangkok for six weeks seeking new elections, denied they were to blame.

The grenade blasts came 12 days after clashes between troops and protesters killed 25 people and wounded more than 800 in the country’s worst street violence in 18 years.

The protesters, supporters of ousted former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, have also been occupying an upmarket shopping area for three weeks.

Any attempt to disperse them risks heavy casualties and the prospect of clashes spilling into high-end residential areas.

However, Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said there would be no crackdown Thursday night because women and children were in the area.

Adding to the volatile mix, a new “multi-coloured” group is planning a demonstration of 50,000 people in Bangkok’s old quarter on Friday to demand the “red shirts” end their rally.

Demonstrations by this group have increased the tension in the Silom business district this week.

“There are now two conflicting groups and this kind of confrontation could create havoc and turmoil,” said Somjai Phagaphasvivat, politics and economics professor at Thammasat University.

Under growing pressure to restore order, the army warned the red shirts on Thursday their “days are numbered”.

Leaders of the red shirted supporters of twice-elected and now fugitive Thaksin say they will only leave when the military-backed government announces an early election.

They say the British-born, Oxford-educated Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva came to power illegitimately, heading a coalition the military cobbled together after courts dissolved a pro-Thaksin party that led the previous coalition government.

(Writing by Alan Raybould; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Tension deepens in Bangkok, fears unrest may spread

Thailand’s tense political standoff was nearing a climax on Thursday with anti-government protesters preparing for imminent battle in central Bangkok against tens of thousands of armed troops.

The “red shirt” uprising showed the first signs of spreading beyond Bangkok to the protesters’ stronghold in the northeast after they blocked a train carrying troops and military vehicles.

Tens of thousands of red-shirted supporters of former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra have fortified their redoubt in a Bangkok commercial district with home-made barricades, expecting the army to evict them any time.

“We’ve heard from insiders in the government that April 26 is their deadline,” Kwanchai Sarakam, 57, a red shirt leader from the northeast told Reuters.

For a graphic: http://link.reuters.com/rap67j

Neither side shows any sign of backing down after the army’s chaotic attempt to evict protesters from another site on April 10 that led to the deaths of 25 people and wounded more than 800.

Red shirt leaders say another such attempt would be futile. They say they will only leave Bangkok when the prime minister announces a dissolution of parliament and early elections.

“I’m sending a signal (by remaining at the site and fortifying it) that I want to see their cards,” said Nattawut Saikuar, one of the three top red shirt leaders, on Wednesday. “You cannot issue an order because the soldiers won’t listen,” he added, citing last Friday’s bungled attempt to arrest red shirt leaders as an example.

The central bank left interest rates at a record low on Wednesday, noting political risks were “affecting confidence, tourism, private consumption and investment”.

FLEXIBILITY IN DEMANDS?

Any attempt to disperse the protesters risks heavy casualties and the prospect of clashes spilling into nearby high-end residential areas. It may also lead the red shirts to step up action elsewhere in the country, particularly in their strongholds in the north and northeast where there has been little unrest so far in the six-week campaign.

“The risk for Abhisit is that even a successful dispersal, while assuring the near-term survival of his government, will not in any way ease — and in fact may even worsen — the disenchantment of the red-shirts,” risk consultancy Eurasia Group said in a note. “In that case, their next rally, and the next round of volatility, will only be a matter of time.”

Thai media reported that a “multi-coloured” pro-government group planned a demonstration of up to 100,000 people on Friday demanding a dispersal of the red shirts, splitting the capital into opposing groups.

This group includes office workers, shopkeepers, the middle class and members of the pro-government “yellow shirts’ who staged their own paralysing protests in Bangkok two years ago to force the ouster of a Thaksin-allied government.

About 200 red shirt protesters rallied in front of the regional headquarters of the United Nations in Bangkok on Thursday requesting peacekeepers be deployed to provide security. Police made no move to stop them.

Some red shirt leaders suggested on Wednesday they might consider a three-month timeframe for Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to dissolve parliament and call elections.

But the movement is led by a 22-member committee that often sends mixed signals on its positions. They all agree, however, a crackdown is imminent and they are preparing for battle.

The army spokesman said around 900 fully armed troops on motorcycles would be deployed around the red shirt rally site at the Rachaprasong intersection to keep them going elsewhere, and checkpoints have been strengthened in Bangkok to stop red shirt reinforcements from coming into the capital.

The red shirts have fortified entrances to their rally site in an upmarket shopping district with barricades made of tyres, chunks of concrete and bamboo staves, forcing posh malls and some luxury hotels to close their doors.

At one end of their sprawling encampment, leading to the Silom business district, anti-government protesters atop their barricade faced off against several hundred “multi-coloured” demonstrators on Wednesday night throwing bottles and rocks before riot police got between them.

About 60,000 troops have been deployed in the capital and can use live ammunition if necessary for self-defence, the Bangkok Post newspaper quoted security officials as saying.

In the province of Khon Kaen, about 400 km from Bangkok, red shirts agreed on Thursday to let the military train proceed — if it takes along 10 of them to make sure the train goes to its intended destination in southern Thailand.

Talks between Abhisit and the protesters collapsed last month when the red shirts rejected his offer to dissolve parliament within nine months — a year early.

Analysts say the protests are radically different from other periods of unrest in Thailand’s five-year political crisis, pushing the country close to an undeclared civil war.

The demonstrations have evolved into a dangerous standoff between the army and a rogue military faction that supports the protesters and includes retired generals allied with twice-elected and now fugitive former premier Thaksin.

Despite the turmoil, some big foreign manufacturers — most of them with plants well away from the capital — said they are maintaining their investment policies.

Thailand’s exports jumped 41 pct, year-on-year in March, compared to 23 percent in February, indicating the protests have yet to hit the wider economy significantly.

(Additional reporting by Orathai Sriring, Nopporn Wong-Anan, and Martin Petty; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Council told to fix koala corridor

Port Stephens Council says it is acutely aware of the need to protect a vulnerable koala population from the perils of development.

The Planning Department has approved a 33-lot housing development at Salamander Bay with the proviso council revegetates an existing koala corridor and removes powerlines.

Fears are being raised for koalas across Australia, with increased calls for them to be listed as endangered.

The council’s natural resources coordinator, Sally Whitehall, says it is important to ensure houses do not encroach on their habitat.

“Best case scenario is that you don’t have to have koalas moving through residential areas because then they’re always prone to vehicles and dogs,” she said.

“But obviously it has to happen sometimes so the best thing we can do is make those corridors as wide and as strong as possible.”

Council told to fix koala corridor

Port Stephens Council says it is acutely aware of the need to protect a vulnerable koala population from the perils of development.

The Planning Department has approved a 33-lot housing development at Salamander Bay with the proviso council revegetates an existing koala corridor and removes powerlines.

Fears are being raised for koalas across Australia, with increased calls for them to be listed as endangered.

The council’s natural resources coordinator, Sally Whitehall, says it is important to ensure houses do not encroach on their habitat.

“Best case scenario is that you don’t have to have koalas moving through residential areas because then they’re always prone to vehicles and dogs,” she said.

“But obviously it has to happen sometimes so the best thing we can do is make those corridors as wide and as strong as possible.”

Radon in residential buildings can cause lung cancer

Washington, Mar 31 (ANI): Radon, a radioactive, colourless, odourless, tasteless noble gas present in residential buildings, has been found to contribute to the deaths of patients suffering from lung cancer.

Klaus Schmid of the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg and his co-authors say that about 1900 deaths from lung cancer per year in Germany are due to radon within residential buildings.

The authors base their assessment on the results of relevant studies, the recently published S1 guideline of the German Society for Occupational and Environmental Medicine and a current publication from the German Commission on Radiological Protection.

These indicate that radon within residential buildings makes a major contribution to the radiological exposure of the general population.

Thus, measurements in residential areas found radon radiation levels of more than 100 Bq/m3 in 36 percent of cases and more than 200 Bq/m3 in 18 percent of cases.

This should be compared with the range of 1 to 15 Bq/m3 found for the concentration of radon in the outside air in Germany.

Exposure within houses is predominantly due to release of radon-containing subsurface air from the soil into the building.

Radon can penetrate into houses through leaks in the base plate or in the walls in contact with the soil.

It is thought that 300 cases of lung cancer per year could be prevented in Germany if the maximum radon concentration in residences was reduced to 100 Bq/m3.

It is also necessary to identify buildings with high radon levels and to take structural measures if necessary.

Occupational physicians have long known that radon can cause lung cancer, particularly in uranium miners.

For individuals without occupational exposure, radon is regarded as the second most important cause of lung cancer after smoking. (ANI)

U.S. ‘respects’ Japan’s request on airbase – Pentagon

The Pentagon said on Monday it respected Japan’s request to consider alternatives to the relocation of a U.S. air base on Okinawa island but stopped short of pledging to explore new options to soothe strained ties between the allies.

The comments by a Pentagon spokesman came as U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates met Japan’s foreign minister at the Pentagon, talks that touched on the future of Futenma Air Station, which is home to about 2,000 Marines.

“We respect Japan’s request to explore alternatives,” Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said. “But with respect to any discussions or details, we’ll conduct those discussions through diplomatic channels.”

The dispute, which is eroding Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s ratings before a mid-year election, centers on a 2006 accord that included shifting the Marines’ base to a less crowded spot on Okinawa.

During the campaign that swept his party to power last year, Hatoyama raised hopes Futenma could be moved entirely off the island, which plays reluctant host to most of the roughly 49,000 U.S. military personnel stationed in Japan.

But there was still no sign of a feasible alternative before Hatoyama’s self-imposed May deadline to resolve the matter. Washington wants to go ahead with the accord, as-is.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton discussed the matter later on Monday with Japanese Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada in Ottawa, but U.S. officials gave no indication Washington was ready to change its mind.

“Basically there was no change here from previous conversations,” a U.S. official said after the meeting, adding that the Japanese did not provide details of their new ideas for Futenma during the conversation with Clinton.

WRAPPING UP THE REVIEW

Japanese opposition to keeping the base in Okinawa has centered on safety concerns and air pollution tied to training flights over residential areas but has also been stirred by anti-American feelings.

Mass protests erupted in 1995 when three U.S. servicemen abducted and raped a 12-year-old Okinawan girl.

The Pentagon offered few details of the Gates-Okada meeting. It stressed Gates underscored his view that “the Marines in Okinawa are critical to the alliance,” according to a Defense Department statement.

The United States expected Tokyo “to help ensure (the Marines’) presence remains operationally and politically sustainable,” the statement added, without elaborating.

Okada and Gates also agreed on the importance of quickly completing the review on Futenma, it said.

The Futenma relocation is part of a broader realignment that also involves shifting 8,000 Marines to Guam from Okinawa by 2014, a deadline that looks increasingly difficult because of foot-dragging on Futenma.

Japanese media have reported Tokyo’s alternative could involve the creation of an artificial island off Okinawa or the use of a different island for the base.

Admiral Robert Willard, head of U.S. Pacific Command, told lawmakers in Washington last week he was optimistic Hatoyama would stick to the current 2006 agreement on Futenma.

A recent poll published in the Sankei newspaper showed nearly half of those who responded said Hatoyama should quit if he fails to resolve the air base issue.

More than 73 percent of voters polled by the Sankei said they were unhappy with his management of the problem, while nearly 85 percent of respondents said they were unimpressed with Hatoyama’s leadership skills overall.

(Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell and Andrew Quinn in Ottawa; editing by Paul Simao and Todd Eastham)

Manipur people waiting for peace

Imphal, Mar 10 (ANI): People in Manipur are fed up with abductions, extortion and bomb attacks by militants. They want to get on with their lives and want an end to violence and uncertainty.

Living in constant fear and uncertainty created by insurgency has completely exhausted the people in Manipur.

Realizing the need to end violence, people are now raising their voice in unison against extortion demands, abductions for ransom and violence by militants.

Recently, four different bomb attacks were reported from the state.

On February 23, two unidentified armed miscreants fired upon and attacked the residence of the Deputy Finance Officer of Manipur University Mayanglambam Biren.

Local womenfolk at Tera Sapam Leirak staged a sit-in-protest against the attack.

“They (militants) forcibly take hard earned money from people, which they use to buy arms and ammunition. Then, they use these arms to kill innocent people. We are against such heinous crimes,” Nganbi Devi, a local.

“We all should try to solve the problem and improve the prevailing situation in the state. From the grassroots level, we should teach our children the problems of militancy,” said R.K. Bhuvaneshwori, a local.

In another incident on February 26, a grenade was thrown at the residence of a Government contractor, Meitram Kesho at Lamshang.

The blast damaged some household property but no casualty was reported.

Condemning the bomb attack on residential areas, people of Lamsang staged a sit-in protest.

In other two incidents, unknown armed persons lobbed a hand-grenade at the Kshetrigao residence of Manipur Rural bank manager Md. Safir on February 24 while another attack was carried out at the house of Assistant Agriculture Officer Chongtham Jilla of Lamlai Awang Leikai on February 16. (ANI)

Car bomb at Manipur governor’s residence

Imphal, Sep 19 (ANI): A major disaster was averted in Manipur when police detected a powerful car bomb inside the premises of the heavily guarded governor’s residence on Friday.

According to reports, militants masquerading as social activists managed to sneak in the small car fitted with powerful bombs inside the premises.

Bomb disposal squad of the state police recovered the bombs and took them to a forested area to be defused.

Governor Gurbachan Jagat was in his office when the car bomb was detected.

Attacks on heavily guarded residential areas of ministers and senior officials with bomb or grenade attacks are a frequent occurrence in Manipur. (ANI)

Homes contribute to 50 percent more water pollution than previously believed

Washington, August 20 (ANI): A new study has determined that homes are an alarming and probably underestimated source of water pollution, and can contribute to 50 percent more water pollution than previously believed.

Scientists Lorence Oki, Darren Haver and colleagues carried out the study.

In the study, the research team explains that runoff results from rainfall and watering of lawns and gardens, which winds up in municipal storm drains.

The runoff washes fertilizers, pesticides and other contaminants into storm drains, and they eventually appear in rivers, lakes and other bodies of water.

“Results from our sampling and monitoring study revealed high detection frequencies of pollutants such as pesticides and pathogen indicators at all sites,” Oki said of their study of eight residential areas in Sacramento and Orange Counties in California.

Preliminary results of the study suggest that current models may underestimate the amount of pollution contributed by homes by up to 50 percent.

That’s because past estimates focused on rain-based runoff during the wet season.

“Use of pesticides, however, increases noticeably during the dry season due to gardening, and our data contains greater resolution than previous studies,” Oki said.

Pollutants detected in outdoor runoff included ant-control pesticide products.

Previous surveys have shown that the majority of pesticides purchased by homeowners are used to control ants.

To encourage pollutant reduction, the researchers initiated community outreach programs centered on improving both irrigation control and pest management. (ANI)

Rats are loyal to their neighbourhoods

Washington, May 27 (ANI): In what may have important implications for controlling diseases that spread from rats to humans, Johns Hopkins scientists have found that rodents spend the majority of their lives close to their homes.

The researchers have also observed that some rodents may, in the face of danger, travel as far as seven miles to repopulate abandoned areas.

Wild Norway rats-also called wharf rats, sewer rats or brown rats-can weigh nearly 2 pounds and transmit a variety of diseases to humans.

Even though expensive eradication efforts have been made in Baltimore, point out the researchers, the number of rats there has remained unchanged over the past 50 years.

With a view to finding out why such drives have failed to eradicate rats from Baltimore, the researchers trapped about 300 rats from 11 residential areas and conducted genetic studies to see how the rats were related.

They found that East Baltimore rats are separated from their unrelated West-side counterparts by a large waterway known as the Jones Falls. Within these hemispheres, rat families form smaller communities of about 11 city blocks.

Each community is further divided into neighborhoods that span little more than the length of an average alley. And to a city rat, this is home sweet home.

Based on their observations, the researchers have come to the conclusion that while rats rarely migrate, neighborhood eradication efforts may backfire by encouraging the rodents to repopulate other areas and further spread disease.

They believe that the best solution may be to tackle the problem on a much larger scale-perhaps by targeting entire families at once.

A research article on the study has been published in the journal Molecular Ecology. (ANI)

Israeli troops kill 2 Palestinians in Gaza clash

JERUSALEM: Israeli troops crossed into Gaza and killed two Palestinian militants who were planting a bomb along the border fence before dawn on Friday, the Israeli military said.

Violence has largely abated along the tense frontier since Israel’s devastating offensive against Gaza’s Hamas rulers early this year, but sporadic border violence and rocket fire have continued.

Soldiers posted along the border spotted the two men planting a bomb near the fence and crossed into Gaza to engage them, the military said. The gunmen were killed in the ensuing firefight.

The military says the men were carrying rifles, grenades and an improvised explosive device. Militants have often used such devices to target Israeli military patrols along the border, planting bombs under cover of darkness and detonating them later by remote control.

It was not immediately clear to which Palestinian militant group the fighters belonged. Most violent incidents in recent months have been claimed by small militant factions and not by Hamas, which might be trying to avoid provoking further Israeli retaliation.

Gaza is still struggling to rebuild after the offensive Israel launched nearly five months ago in an attempt to halt years of rocket fire at Israeli towns. The three-week offensive claimed some 1,400 lives in Gaza, including more than 900 civilians, according to Palestinian officials and human rights groups.

Israel says the death toll was lower than that and that most of the dead were militants. It blames Hamas for the civilian casualties, saying the militants used schools, mosques and residential areas for cover. Thirteen Israelis were killed during the fighting.

Israel pulled all of its troops out of Gaza after the offensive ended in mid-January. But small forces have occasionally crossed back inside in short incursions to battle militants or defuse bombs along the border fence.

Friday’s gunfight took place near one of the border crossings where Israel allows a trickle of humanitarian aid into the territory. Gaza has been blockaded by Israel and Egypt since Hamas seized power there nearly two years ago.

Srinagar observes shutdown on poll day

Srinagar, May 13 (ANI): A shutdown is being observed in Srinagar today to thwart planned protests by separatists during the fifth and last phase of general elections.

Troops patrolled deserted streets in Srinagar, cutting off access to residential areas after separatists called for a two-day strike from Tuesday. Shops and businesses also remained closed.

Voting, however, is taking place in the Baramulla region of the valley.

The appeal by the All Parties Hurriyat (Freedom) Conference to stay away from the vote in Baramulla, is seen as an attempt to deny New Delhi any credit for holding elections in the Himalayan region.

But Kashmiris are questioning whether such tactics have brought them any closer to the long-held goal of self-determination.

This is not the first time that separatists have given a call for poll boycott in the Kashmir Valley.

The separatists have had to suffer a major setback after residents defied a boycott call given by the Hurriyat during the State Assembly polls held in November 2008 and came out in large numbers to cast their votes.

A prominent Kashmiri separatist leader, Sajjad Lone, who had given a call for poll boycott during the state elections, has decided to contest during these general elections and raise the voices of Kashmiris in Parliament.

Besides the Congress party and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the National Conference (NC) and the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) are also contesting the elections. (ANI)

Kashmir shuts down on poll day to thwart separatists’ protest

Srinagar, May 7 (ANI): Jammu and Kashmir’s main city Srinagar has been shutdown to thwart planned protests by separatists against the fourth phase of general elections.

Troops patrolled deserted streets in Srinagar, cutting off residential areas after separatists called for a two-day strike from Wednesday. Shops and businesses also remained closed.

This is not the first time that separatists have given a call for poll boycott in the Kashmir Valley.

The separatists have had to suffer a major setback after residents defied a boycott call given by the Hurriyat during the State Assembly polls held in November 2008 and came out in large numbers to cast their votes.

A prominent Kashmiri separatist leader, Sajjad Lone, who had given a call for poll boycott during the state elections, has decided to contest during these general elections and raise the voices of Kashmiris in Parliament.

Besides the Congress party and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the National Conference (NC) and the People”s Democratic Party (PDP) are also contesting the elections. (ANI)

Kashmir shuts down in poll protest, troops out on patrol

Srinagar, May 6 (ANI): Government forces locked down Kashmir’s main city Srinagar on Wednesday to thwart planned protests against the fourth phase of general elections on Thursday.

Troops patrolled deserted streets in Srinagar, cutting off residential areas after the separatists called for a two-day strike from Wednesday. Shops and businesses also remained closed.

The boycott call, which was announced before polling day, is seen as a bid by the separatists to deny New Delhi any credit for holding an election in Kashmir.

“Srinagar is going to polls on May 7, so we have called for a 50-hour shutdown in Kashmir,” said Syed Ali Shah Geelani, the Chairman of the hardline faction of the All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC).

This is not the first time the separatists have given a call for poll boycott in Kashmir.

The separatists have had to suffer a major setback after residents defied a boycott call given by the Hurriyat during the State Assembly polls held in November 2008 and came out in large numbers to cast their votes.

A prominent Kashmiri separatist leader, Sajjad Lone, who had given a call for poll boycott during the state elections, has decided to contest during these general elections and raise the voices of Kashmiris in Parliament.

Besides the Congress party and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the National Conference (NC) and the People”s Democratic Party (PDP) are also contesting the elections. (ANI)

Raging jumbos destroy houses in Jharkhand village

Purnapani (Jharkhand), Apr 28 (ANI): Farmers in a village in Jharkhand are rebuilding their houses after they were destroyed by raging elephants searching for food.

In Purnapani village, about 30 kilometers from Ranchi, the farmers have been on constant fear.

“They ate our crops and entered our houses. We screamed and there were no one around. Then my brother came with a fire torch and the elephant ran away,” Tembu, a farmer.

Farmers said that the elephants have been plundering their poorly built thatched houses as they could not afford concrete structures that would secure them not only against wild animals but also snakes and insects.

“It has broken our house. We have no other place to stay, where will I go with my children. All our belongings are out in open. It has also eaten our crops,” Kamli, another farmer.

The elephants attack the farmers for the newly harvested crops and also country made liquor which the farmers usually brew in this season from the new crop.

With decreasing forest cover and extension of human habitations into their habitats, elephants often stray into residential areas in search of food. (ANI)

Hindu elder approaches UK High Court over right to open-air cremation

London, Mar.24 (ANI): An elderly Hindu man has said that he will be going to the High Court in a bid to win the right to be cremated on a traditional open-air funeral pyre when he dies.

In a test case on religious burials, Davender Ghai, aged 70, is challenging a refusal by Newcastle City Council to permit him to be cremated according to his Hindu faith, The Telegraph reports.

His human rights application is being supported by a wide range of Hindu organisations.

The local authority contends that the 1902 Cremation Act prohibits a pyre outside a crematorium.

Ghai’s lawyer, Andrew Singh Bogan, said a successful challenge would “create a precedent for all local authorities to grant open air funeral pyres if there was demand in their area”.

Ghai, founder of the Anglo-Asian Friendship Society (AAFS), was refused a permit for an open-air cremation site in a remote part of Northumberland in February 2006.

His legal team will argue at a three-day hearing before Mr Justice Cranston, sitting in London, that the law does not prohibit a religious cremation outside a crematorium.

They will contend that, if it does, it is incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.

They will ask the judge to declare it is discriminatory and breaches Mr Ghai’s right to protection for his private life and religious and cultural beliefs.

Ghai, who moved to Britain from Kenya in 1958, says he is seeking a judicial review to “clarify and enforce the law, not disrespect it”.

He stated: “As a Hindu, I believe my soul should be liberated in consecrated fire, “Agni”, after death – a sacramental rebirth, like the mythical phoenix arising from the flames anew. I will not deny my claim is provocative, least of all in a nation as notoriously squeamish towards death as our own. However, I honestly do not believe natural cremation grounds would offend public decency – as long as they were discreet, designated sites far from urban and residential areas.”

“I have lived my entire life by the Hindu scriptures and they have inspired me to charitably serve this country for over 30 years. In the frailty of my twilight, I now yearn to die by them,” he said. (ANI)

A stray tiger caught and released in Rajasthan

Sawai Madhopur (Rajasthan), Mar 23 (ANI): A tiger that entered a residential area and injured a woman in the Sawai Madhopur area of Rajasthan has been captured and released in a nearby forest.

Forest authorities swung into action by tranquilising the tiger and releasing it into the forest.

“A tiger caught hold of me. I was in the field. I screamed for help. Some four people came to rescue me,” said Vimala Devi.

Instances of tigers straying into residential areas is not a new thing. There have been instances in the past when wildlife officials have caught the animals after they strayed into houses.

Depleting forest cover and lack of natural habitat for the animals is one of the major reasons for the wild animals to stray into the residential areas.

There were about 40,000 tigers in India a century ago.

A government census report published this year says the tiger population has fallen to 1,411, down from 3,642 in 2002, largely due to dwindling habitat and poaching. (ANI)