China’s far-west city held in check on bloody anniversary

URUMQI, China, July 5 (Reuters) – Chinese security forces kept a wary watch on Monday on a far-western city that erupted in deadly ethnic violence a year ago, flooding the streets with paramilitary police, some armed and others in riot gear.

On July 5 last year, mobs of Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking people who have called Xinjiang their homeland, attacked hundreds of Han Chinese after a demonstration by Uighurs was broken up. At least 197 people died in the violence.

In the following days Uighurs were hunted by Han gangs shouting for vengeance. It was unclear how many people may have died in those attacks.

The streets of Urumqi were slightly quieter than on a usual, but a steady stream of people still headed to work in the city centre. Most said the memory of last year still weighed but not enough to stop them coming out.

“I’m actually very happy today because its my first day of work,” said 20 year-old Dou Huanying, heading around the city’s closed-off central square, where last year’s unrest began.

“I am not worried because I believe in China. You can see all the extra measures that the government has taken.”

Commuters in taxis, buses and on foot came under the watchful eye of thousands of new security cameras and regular patrols by riot police, armed with guns, loudspeakers, shields and helmets.

Dilxat Raxit, a spokesman for the exiled World Uyghur Congress, said they were planning protests around the world to mark the day, and repeated a call for Beijing to allow an independent probe of the riots.

“There is too big a gap between the numbers of dead China has announced and the reports we have received,” he said by telephone. “There must be an independent investigation.”

A DAY OFF

A propaganda effort to keep emotions in check matched the massive security drive, with state media promoting a push to boost economic growth that would ensure control in the restive but resource-rich and strategically-located region.

The anniversary appeared to have been kept out of regional television, radio and print news, which featured stories on ethnic unity and local issues like flooding and a new airport.

Some Uighurs in Urumqi said they had been told to stay off the streets, and taxi drivers said customers were scarcer than usual with several government offices closing.

“We’ve been given the day off, to rest at home,” said one physical education student on the eve of the anniversary.

But on the morning of the anniversary, small businesses in a Uighur neighbourhood near some of the worst rioting opened up as usual, saying they couldn’t afford to take a day off work.

Beijing has pledged faster development to ease tensions in the strategically vital area, which has rich energy deposits, borders several central Asian nations and accounts for around one-sixth of the country’s territory.

New jobs should be created within three months for about 16,000 families struggling to secure work, the region’s Communist Party boss was quoted saying in the official People’s Daily.

Urumqi city will also invest 3.5 billion yuan ($517 million) moving 200,000 families into new and renovated homes, the paper added. It did not say how the apartments or jobs would be split between Han and Uighur.

The English-language China Daily carried a more graphic account of lingering sorrow, among Han victims of the violence and their relatives, and confirmed that the government is increasing networks of informants in Uighur areas.

“Ethnic officers communicate with local residents better and can be sent into ethnic areas undercover so we can obtain intelligence,” the report quoted Li Shenhui, chief director of the city’s special police force, saying.

Around 70 percent of his expanded force of 530 officers are non-Han, the paper added. ($1 = 6.770 Yuan) (Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing)

(Editing by Sugita Katyal)

ThinkFlood and C.E.D. Partner to Sell RedEye Remotes for iPad, iPhone and iPod touch in Midwestern US

WALTHAM, MA and NORTHBROOK, IL, Jun 30 (MARKET WIRE)

ThinkFlood (http://thinkflood.com/), maker of RedEye remotes for iPad,
iPhone and iPod touch, and Consumer Electronics Distributors, Inc.
(C.E.D.) (http://www.goced.com/), the leading wholesale electronics
supplier for northern Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota, today announced
a strategic distribution partnership to address consumer and reseller
demand for RedEye remotes in the US.

ThinkFlood selected C.E.D. as a regional distributor for RedEye remotes
because C.E.D. is the premier AV supplier to the custom installers in
northern Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota, and a one-stop solution for
independent retailers of all sizes.

RedEye products turn the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch into networked
universal remotes that offer high-end functionality at an affordable
price. Using an Apple iDevice instead of a traditional remote, RedEye and
RedEye mini users can operate anything controlled by infrared: TVs, DVRs,
cable and satellite receivers, DVD and Blu-ray players, game consoles,
stereos, and more.

“Imagine doing an installation in a home, office, hotel, restaurant or
yacht that will allow your client control everything through any iPad,
iPod touch or iPhone. RedEye is the most affordable way to create
completely customized interfaces for controlling all IR devices,” said
C.E.D. President Avery Baron. “And by adding a few items to the RedEye
system, you can even operate lighting, window coverings, jacuzzis,
security cameras — the possibilities are endless.”

“We look forward to seeing what great things happen when you team up with
the top consumer electronics distributor in the Chicago market,” said
ThinkFlood founder and Vice President Adam Shapiro. “We think C.E.D.’s
dealers will be surprised to see how easy it is to configure a RedEye
system, especially compared to the complicated programming that most
integrators are used to.”

C.E.D. offers products from ATON, Bell’O International, Chief
Manufacturing, Da-Lite Screen Company, ELAN Home Systems, Energy,
Fujifilm, Furman Sound, Jamo, JVC, LG, OmniMount Systems, Onkyo,
Proficient Audio Systems, QSC Audio Products, RedEye, Repair Master,
Sanus Systems, Sharp, Sunfire, Toshiba, Ultralink, Vutec, WyreStorm,
Yamaha and others.

About ThinkFlood
ThinkFlood (http://thinkflood.com/) designs and
develops networked remote control hardware and software. Its first
commercial application, RedEye, turns the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch
into a personal remote that allows control of virtually any home
entertainment device from any room in the home. RedEye mini offers a
similar level of control in a low-cost, portable form. All RedEye
networked universal remotes offer features and functionality previously
available only in remotes costing several times as much. Founded in 2007,
ThinkFlood is a privately held company headquartered in Waltham,
Massachusetts. Sign up for ThinkFlood’s RedEye newsletter at

http://thinkflood.com/news/newsletter.

With over 4,000 fans and counting, RedEye is the most popular remote
control on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/thinkredeye.

Visit ThinkFlood’s blog, MoreControl (http://morecontrol.com/) for the
latest remote control and home automation news.

About Consumer Electronics Distributors, Inc.
Consumer Electronics
Distributors, Inc. (CED) (http://www.goced.com/) is a full service
wholesale distributor to the custom installation industry and independent
retailers of all sizes. Headquartered in Northbrook, Illinois, C.E.D. has
been the premier consumer electronics distributor in the Chicago market
since its founding in 1992. C.E.D. has a clear understanding of its
partners’ strategies, extensive product knowledge, some of the best
training courses in the industry, and experience in all channels of
distribution.

Contact:
Christina Carlson
ThinkFlood, Inc
christina.carlson@thinkflood.com
617-299-2000 x1005

Nathan Longbottom
Consumer Electronics Distributors, Inc.
nathanl@goced.com
847-656-8457

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

Police hunt Times Square bomb suspect

New York police are trawling through hundreds of hours of video tape from surveillance cameras in the hunt for those responsible for the attempted bombing in Times Square.

Police say they have numerous leads already but none of them point to the work of international terrorists, despite a claim of responsibility from the Pakistani Taliban.

Propane tanks, fireworks, petrol and a clock device were all removed from the vehicle parked in Times Square, and police say the “amateurish” bomb could have created a “significant fireball” if it had detonated.

Theatre-goers were heading to dinner while thousands of other tourists filled Times Square when street vendors near 45th Street spotted the car.

Rallis Gialaboukis was selling hot dogs about seven metres away.

“[The car was] abandoned, hazard [lights] on and people started talking amongst us,” he said.

“[We could] see the smoke coming out of the car, like seeping through the windows, and you could see it.

“You couldn’t see what’s in the car, nobody could see and then as they were trying to evacuate … away from it it just went off inside the car – an explosion went off inside the car.”

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said the bomb was probably beginning to detonate but malfunctioned.

“It looks like it would have caused a significant fireball and you have large numbers of pedestrians in that area so yep, we were lucky that it didn’t detonate,” he said.

The police have 82 of their own surveillance cameras to check, plus hundreds of hours of material from privately owned security cameras in the area.

Already they are looking for a white man in his 40s who was acting suspiciously.

“He also was seen shedding a dark-coloured shirt, revealing a red one underneath. He put the darker one into a bag that he was carrying,” Commissioner Kelly said.

“This happened about a half block from where the vehicle was parked.”

Detectives are also en route to a town in Pennsylvania where a tourist believes he may have captured the suspect’s image on his video camera.

Taliban claim

The Pakistani Taliban have claimed credit in a video message but Commissioner Kelly says nothing indicates they are to blame.

Homeland security secretary Janet Napolitano said authorities were treating the incident “as if it could be a potential terrorist attack”.

“The derivation of that, we do not know. And that’s what the investigation will tell us,” she said.

New York congressman Peter King says the possible connection to international terrorist groups cannot be ruled out.

“Just because it’s not done by a bombing expert doesn’t mean that we can rule out an international connection or even just having a cell or operatives in this country working together,” he said.

Twenty-four hours after the attempted bombing, Times Square was again filled with people.

But New York’s mayor Michael Bloomberg says the attempted bombing is another reminder of what the city faces every day.

“Tonight is a further reminder of the dangers that we face,” he said.

President Barack Obama, who is surveying a massive oil slick in Louisiana, says he is monitoring the situation in New York and will ensure justice is done.

Politicians support police ‘mini-cameras’

The Northern Territory Government says it may consider using mini-security cameras for police to try to deter alcohol-fuelled violence.

Security guards in Darwin have been trialing mini-cameras, which are worn on the user’s ear.

The Deputy Chief Minister Delia Lawrie says the Government will look at the device, but only if the Police Commissioner calls for its introduction.

“We have got a track record of having considered anything the police have put forward, in terms of any tools for their job,” Ms Lawrie said.

“We have introduced tough measures in Parliament in terms of assisting police to tackle down on people who want to go out and commit crime.

“Any crime is unacceptable. Alcohol fuelled violence is completely unacceptable.”

The Opposition’s John Elferink says if the cameras deter anti-social behaviour and provide evidence in court, they would be a worthwhile investment.

“If the technology is available and it produces good evidence in a court room, and has the effect of preventing offences from occurring, the Country Liberals would support its introduction,” Mr Elferink said.

Scientists develop new language to improve home computer security

Washington, Sept 19 (ANI): Korean computer scientists have developed a novel security language for home networks that could ward off cyber attack in homes.

Like companies, banks, and other big organizations, domestic and small office networks are just as vulnerable to hacking, malicious computer code, worms, viruses, and eavesdropping.

An attack can wreak havoc on individuals and small businesses when security it compromised.

With home and small office networks connecting all kinds of devices – personal computers, mobile devices, remote security cameras, gaming consoles, and more – they represent an even more heterogeneous mix than many larger offices.

Lead researcher Geon Woo Kim of the Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute, in Korea has developed a specification for security policy on home networks that can guarantee reliability and availability.

“Whenever a new access to the home network is found, it should be able to authenticate and authorize it and enforce the security policy based on rules set by the home administrator,” said the researchers.

However, to make such an approach effective but simple requires a way to consistently describe and specify the security policy.

The computer scientists first turned to a computer markup language, eXtensible Access Control Markup Language (XACML).

XACML is a general purpose language and so it lacks the notation for security policies and authorization rules.

The team has now developed a related language – Home security Description Language, xHDL – that includes the necessary notation for securing a home network.

They report details in the International Journal of Ad Hoc and Ubiquitous Computing.

Each of these terms within xHDL could be used to run a browser-based control centre.

That program would provide the domestic administrator with simple control options to allow access to the home network only for specific devices and to control the packets of information that can pass through the gateway to and from the internet.

The study appears in nternational Journal of Ad Hoc and Ubiquitous Computing. (ANI)

Krishna visits Melbourne’s Railway station where Indian students were attacked

Melbourne, Aug.9 (ANI): External Affairs Minister SM Krishna on Sunday visited Sunshine train station in Melbourne, where several Indian students were targeted by mobs a couple of months ago.

Krishna was briefed by a senior police officer about the extra security measurements taken at the station.

“By and large I think there are so many other considerations which have led to this attack on Indian students,” SM Krishna said during a news conference about the motive of these attacks.

“In India itself we will have to take some measure like regulate unscrupulous agents to ensure students understand what is in store for them when they go abroad to study,” Krishna said.

Australian police told Krishna that the attacks had not been racially motivated and blamed Indian media for labelling the incidents as ‘racially motivated’.

New security cameras have since then been placed to outwatch security at that train station.

Krishna also met Victoria’s premier John Brumby.

Indian students, generally working until late hours and travelling alone with valuables such as iPods and mobile phones form “perfect preys” for the mobs and they are not the only foreign students who were targeted, Australian police said in its earlier statements.

An Australian current affairs programme last month also unveiled scam visa agents and education institutions targeting foreign students.

The reaction to both the attacks and the scams is seen as a major threat to Australia’s 3rd largest export.

Krishna’s visit has come at a time when Australian Government announced its review over the education system.

On Friday, Krishna met with Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith and got reassurances from the top end of the Australia’s political scale.

Kishna is undertaking five-day visit to Australia. (ANI)

New video “perfection tool” to locate terrorists and identify suspects in crime scenes

Washington, July 1 (ANI): A team of scientists has developed a new video “perfection tool” to help investigators enhance raw video images to locate terrorists and identify suspects in crime scenes.

Professor Leonid Yaroslavsky of Israel’s Tel Aviv University (TAU) and his colleagues have developed the new technology.

Commissioned by a defense-related company to improve what the naked eye cannot see, the tool can be used with live video or with recordings, in color or black-and-white.

“This enhancement of resolution can be a critical factor in locating terrorists or identifying criminal suspects,” said Yaroslavsky.

The new invention enhances the resolution of raw video images from security cameras, military binoculars, and standard personal-use video cameras, improving the quality at which the images were originally recorded or transmitted.

This can mean the difference between “seeing” trees blowing in the wind and finding a terrorist hiding in those trees.

“Our video perfection tool works to improve visual quality and achieving a higher resolution of the video image,” said Yaroslavsky.

“Once a commercial partner is found, the device can be integrated into existing technology within a matter of months,” he said.

A major challenge in video analysis is that images of objects become distorted over long distances due to variations in the air that can affect our sight and the “sight” of a camera.

In the language of optical science, this is known as a “turbulent atmosphere.”

A critical image of a person or object can become unstable and almost impossible to identify with any amount of accuracy.

The TAU team exploited the fact that most parts of a video scene remain still.

While there are moving objects such as people, animals or vehicles, a major part of the video ? the background-does not move at all.

Using specially designed algorithms, the team built a software application that lets cameras and video analysis equipment stabilize images, allowing objects that are really moving to be distinguished from chaotic atmospheric changes.

“The technology will increase the odds of identifying suspects in court, but its civilian applications are equally significant,” said Professor Yaroslavsky.

Instead of sending large video files over the Internet, smaller and lower-resolution files could be sent, to be enhanced at their destination points. This could save bandwidth and time.

“It’s quite a new approach to video perfection,” said Yaroslavsky. (ANI)

Attackers are Pakistani nationals, says Rehman Malik

Islamabad, Apr 6 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister’s Interior Affairs Adviser Rehman Malik has said the attackers are Pakistani nationals and that they have not come from outside.

He said a suicide bomber is not under any compulsion to carry out attacks. “They are sold for money,” he added.

Rehman Malik said the family of a suicide bomber gets Rs500, 000 for blowing himself up. He hoped to flush out the terrorists out of the country.

Malik also said that a high level meeting would be held to review security situation in the country. eanwhile, Interior Ministry, following the suicide attack on Chakwal Imambargah, has issued orders to security forces in Islamabad and Rawalpindi to be high alert for 24 hours till further orders and to provide additional security for mosques, imambargahs, worship places and religious congregations.

Directives have been given to police and law-enforcing agencies in a circular, received by Rawalpindi regional police officer and Islamabad police.

They have been asked to ensure checking of vehicles and suspect persons on the interior and exterior routes and monitor through security cameras at important places, buildings, roundabouts, bus stands, airports, railway stations while give additional security during the hours of worship in mosques, imambargahs and other worship places. (ANI)