Israel failed in ship interception planning-reports

JERUSALEM, July 12 (Reuters) – Israel’s military failed to prepare adequately for what turned into a deadly raid on a Gaza aid flotilla, according to findings of a military inquiry quoted by the Israeli media on Monday.

The official report into the May 31 incident, in which nine pro-Palestiniam Turkish activists were killed, was set to be released later in the day by a military commission led by Giora Eiland, a retired Israeli general.

A civilian panel is conducting a separate investigation into the interception that triggered an international outcry and severely strained Israel’s relations with its once-close Muslim ally Turkey.

Quoting from what it said were portions of the military commission’s report, the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper said the findings pointed to “flawed preparation (in intelligence) prior to the arrival” of the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara.

The “battle guidelines” issued to commandos who raided the vessel were flawed as was the intelligence.

Israel said the troops acted in self-defence in opening fire on passengers who attacked them with metal rods and knives as the Israelis boarded the ship.

PAINTBALL GUNS

Some of the commandos, the military said at the time, were armed with paintball guns — but also carried pistols — in anticipation of only light resistance.

Yedioth Ahronoth and other Israeli media reported that the Eiland commission’s report would not call for any military personnel to resign. But the findings raised speculation that senior officers’ careers could be affected.

Israel has said its commandos were enforcing a naval blockade necessary to prevent weapons from reaching the Gaza Strip’s Hamas Islamist rulers.

In response to Western criticism, including from its biggest ally, the United States, Israel has since eased a land blockade of the enclave where 1.5 million Palestinians live, allowing most civilian goods through, while continuing to enforce the naval embargo.

Eiland’s report is the first to be published in the affair.

The separate civilian panel is led by a former Israeli Supreme Court Justice Jacob Turkel and includes two international observers.

Its narrow mandate does not include an examination of the political decision-making process behind the launching of the raid, although Turkel said it would call for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to testify.

Instead, it focuses on whether the naval blockade and the flotilla’s interception conformed with international law. The panel also will investigate the actions taken by the convoy’s organisers and participants.

Turkey called the bloodshed Israeli “state terrorism”, withdrew its ambassador and cancelled joint military exercises. (Editing by Matthew Jones)

Gaza aid ship sails from Greece, may head to Egypt

July 10 (Reuters) – A ship carrying aid for Palestinians blockaded by Israel in Gaza left Greece on Saturday, just over a month after 9 activists died in an Israeli raid on an aid flotilla trying to reach Gaza.

It was unclear if the boat, with twelve crew and up to ten activists on board, would try to reach Gaza in defiance of the Israeli blockade or would go to the Egyptian port of El Arish.

A spokesman at the Greek Foreign Ministry said the ship would head for El Arish.

An official from ACA Shipping, which owns the ship, told Reuters ahead of the ship’s departure: “The ship will leave in a few minutes for Gaza. If they don’t let us reach there (Gaza) we will head to El Arish harbour in Egypt.”

A charity chaired by the Libyan Leader’s son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is organising the trip and said the Amalthea vessel, re-named Hope for the trip, carried some 2,000 tons of food and medicine and complied with international rules.

Nine pro-Palestinian activists died in May when Israeli marines stormed a Turkish aid ship leading a Gaza-bound convoy, prompting world outcry and a condemnation from the United Nations Security Council.

Israel said its commandoes were attacked with knives and sticks when they boarded the ship and acted in self-defence.

(Reporting by Reuters TV and Lefteris Papadimas; additional reporting by Dan Williams in Jerusalem; writing by Ingrid Melander, editing by Matthew Jones)

Gaza aid ship sails from Greece, may head to Egypt

July 10 (Reuters) – A ship carrying aid for Palestinians blockaded by Israel in Gaza left Greece on Saturday, just over a month after 9 activists died in an Israeli raid on an aid flotilla trying to reach Gaza.

It was unclear if the boat, with twelve crew and up to ten activists on board, would try to reach Gaza in defiance of the Israeli blockade or would go to the Egyptian port of El Arish.

A spokesman at the Greek Foreign Ministry said the ship would head for El Arish.

An official from ACA Shipping, which owns the ship, told Reuters ahead of the ship’s departure: “The ship will leave in a few minutes for Gaza. If they don’t let us reach there (Gaza) we will head to El Arish harbour in Egypt.”

A charity chaired by the Libyan Leader’s son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is organising the trip and said the Amalthea vessel, re-named Hope for the trip, carried some 2,000 tons of food and medicine and complied with international rules.

Nine pro-Palestinian activists died in May when Israeli marines stormed a Turkish aid ship leading a Gaza-bound convoy, prompting world outcry and a condemnation from the United Nations Security Council.

Israel said its commandoes were attacked with knives and sticks when they boarded the ship and acted in self-defence.

(Reporting by Reuters TV and Lefteris Papadimas; additional reporting by Dan Williams in Jerusalem; writing by Ingrid Melander, editing by Matthew Jones)

Gaza aid ship sails from Greece, may head to Egypt

July 10 (Reuters) – A ship carrying aid for Palestinians blockaded by Israel in Gaza left Greece on Saturday, just over a month after 9 activists died in an Israeli raid on an aid flotilla trying to reach Gaza.

It was unclear if the boat, with twelve crew and up to ten activists on board, would try to reach Gaza in defiance of the Israeli blockade or would go to the Egyptian port of El Arish.

A spokesman at the Greek Foreign Ministry said the ship would head for El Arish.

An official from ACA Shipping, which owns the ship, told Reuters ahead of the ship’s departure: “The ship will leave in a few minutes for Gaza. If they don’t let us reach there (Gaza) we will head to El Arish harbour in Egypt.”

A charity chaired by the Libyan Leader’s son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is organising the trip and said the Amalthea vessel, re-named Hope for the trip, carried some 2,000 tons of food and medicine and complied with international rules.

Nine pro-Palestinian activists died in May when Israeli marines stormed a Turkish aid ship leading a Gaza-bound convoy, prompting world outcry and a condemnation from the United Nations Security Council.

Israel said its commandoes were attacked with knives and sticks when they boarded the ship and acted in self-defence.

(Reporting by Reuters TV and Lefteris Papadimas; additional reporting by Dan Williams in Jerusalem; writing by Ingrid Melander, editing by Matthew Jones)

Israel boards Gaza aid ship, blockade criticised

Israel’s navy boarded a ship carrying aid to Gaza without incident on Saturday, five days after killing nine people on a Turkish aid ship to enforce what Washington calls an unsustainable blockade.

The navy, whose actions on Monday triggered an international outcry, took control of the Rachel Corrie and sailed it to Ashdod, where it docked, the Israeli military said.

The Irish-owned cargo vessel had ignored the navy’s orders to divert and allow its cargo to be unloaded and inspected before delivery to Gaza.

Interior Ministry spokeswoman Sabine Haddad said all 19 passengers and crew had signed deportation papers and most would leave the country on various flights on Sunday.

“The process went very smoothly and they will be flying out through Ben-Gurion Airport during tomorrow,” Haddad said.

She added that six Malaysian citizens and one Cuban would leave the country via the Allenby Bridge land crossing to Jordan.

The army said the ship had been boarded in the Mediterranean “with the full compliance of the crew and without incident”.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement: “Forces used the same procedures for Monday’s flotilla and Saturday’s boat but were met by a different response.

“On today’s ship and in five of the six vessels in the previous flotilla, (their boarding) procedure ended without casualties. The only difference was with one ship where extremist Islamic activists, supporters of terrorism, waited for our troops on the deck with axes and knives.”

The Rachel Corrie, carrying Irish, Malaysian and other activists, is named after a pro-Palestinian activist killed in Gaza in 2003.

Its mission was the latest bid to break a blockade imposed on Gaza four years ago with the stated aim of stopping its Hamas rulers from bolstering their arsenal to fight the Jewish state.

“Israel will continue to exercise its right to self defence. We will not allow the establishment of an Iranian port in Gaza,” Netanyahu said.

Kevin Squires of the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign in Dublin, one of whose members was on the Rachel Corrie, called the boarding “another brazen act of Israeli piracy”.

A senior Turkish pathologist said autopsy results had found 30 bullets in the bodies of the activists killed in the raid on the Mavi Marmara this week. All the dead were Turks, including one with dual U.S. citizenship. Ankara’s already strained ties with Israel, once an ally, are at an all-time low.

ARRANGEMENTS “UNSUSTAINABLE”

Friends and foes alike have heaped criticism on Israel.

While the United States, its main ally, has expressed more sympathy than most for its security concerns, it has also spoken of the need for Gazans to receive adequate supplies, and signalled that the embargo cannot continue in its present form.

“We are working urgently with Israel, the Palestinian Authority and other international partners to develop new procedures for delivering more goods and assistance to Gaza,” a spokesman for the White House National Security Council said.

“The current arrangements are unsustainable and must be changed.”

The U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, said the embargo, which had blighted the lives of Gaza’s 1.5 million people, was illegal.

“International humanitarian law prohibits starvation of civilians as a method of warfare and … it is also prohibited to impose collective punishment on civilians,” she said.

Israel denies there is a humanitarian crisis in Gaza and says it lets in hundreds of truckloads of supplies each day.

But it does stop cement and other materials that it says could be used by Hamas for military purposes, and a range of other goods with no obvious military application.

Hamas, an Islamist group backed by Syria and Iran, is hostile to Israel and does not recognise interim peace agreements signed by the Western-backed Palestinian Authority led by President Mahmoud Abbas, who holds sway in the West Bank.

TURKISH ANGER

Analysts expect Israel, buffeted by diplomatic storms in the past year, at least to modify the blockade. Israeli officials say Netanyahu is considering some form of international role in enforcing an arms embargo, while letting in “civilian goods”.

There have also been calls for an international inquiry. Israeli officials have proposed a foreign role in an Israeli inquiry.

The head of Turkey’s state forensics laboratory said autopsy results on the nine Turkish activists killed in Monday’s raid showed they had been shot a total of 30 times, many at close range. Five were killed by gunshots to the head, he said.

Twenty-four people were still in a hospital in Ankara, including seven in critical condition, according to physicians.

(Additional reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza, Alastair Macdonald in Jerusalem, Tom Perry in Ramallah, Andras Gergely in Dublin, Ibon Villelabeitia in Ankara, Ayla Jean Yackley in Istanbul, Alister Bull in Washington and Aaron Gray-Block in Kampala; Editing by Charles Dick)

Skinny-dipping tourist gets bitten by venomous spider on willie

Sydney, May 14 (ANI): A Canadian tourist, who fell asleep on the sand dunes after skinny-dipping at a beach in New Zealand”s far north, is said to have woken up with a bite from a venomous spider on his penis.

According to news agency NZPA, the 22-year-old man woke to find his penis swollen and painful, with a bite mark on the shaft.

By the time he reached Dargaville Hospital, his penis was severely swollen, his blood pressure was up and his heart racing.

When chest pain and other symptoms developed the next morning, doctors presumed he had been bitten by a katipo.

The man was given anti-venom but his heart problems persisted.

He was treated at Whangarei and Auckland hospitals before he returned to Canada.

The case was covered in the NZ Medical Journal after the man recorded the first known case of myocarditis, or heart inflammation, caused by a spider bite.

Nigel Harrison wrote in the journal that a venomous katipo spider, which lives in New Zealand sand dunes and attacks only in self-defence, had bitten the man.

“He woke to find his penis swollen and painful with a red mark on the shaft suggestive of a bite,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Dr Harrison as writing in his report.

“He rapidly developed generalised muscle pains, fever, headache, photophobia [light sensitivity] and vomiting,” he stated.

The katipo, a Maori word meaning “night-stinger”, is an endangered species of spider native to New Zealand, related to Australian redbacks and North American black widow spiders.

Bites are rare, but The Encyclopaedia of New Zealand reports they can cause agonising pain that develops and spreads within a few minutes.

And profuse sweating, difficulty in breathing, vomiting, convulsions, and other effects often accompany it. (ANI)

Thailand’s Red Shirts seek UN peace-keepers to keep protests alive

Bangkok, Apr 22(ANI): Thailand’s opposition United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), also known as the “Red Shirts”, will petition the United Nations to send a peace-keeping force to the trouble-torn country.

UDD co-leader Weng Tojirakarn said about 2000 supporters of the group will go visit the UN office on Ratchadamnoen Avenue to submit a letter to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

“The UDD will ask the UN to send a peace-keeping force to oversee the anti-government demonstration at Ratchaprasong intersection rally site to prevent the government from using force to disperse the protesters,” The Bangkok Post quoted Tojirakarn, as saying.

He further said that there would be no peace talks with the government at this stage, as Thai soldiers were pointing guns at the Red-Shirts’.

“Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva must dissolve House of Representatives to show responsibility for the April 10 bloodshed, then the Red-Shirts will immediately disperse,” Tojirakarn said.

Earlier, Thai troops had said that they would follow seven steps to counter the Red Shirts.

They would begin with soft measures and then get gradually harsher, to deal with protesters. If all else fails, troops would use real weapons.

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban warned that the troops deployed in the financial district are equipped with weapons and live ammunition and are authorised to fire in self-defence. (ANI)

Tension in Bangkok, ‘red shirts’ reject compromise

Thai protesters are sticking to their demand for parliament to be dissolved immediately, according to a report on Thursday, after a tense night as fears grew of a crackdown to end their six-week rally in Bangkok.

Some leaders of the “red shirts” had suggested on Wednesday they might consider a three-month time frame for Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to dissolve parliament and call elections.

But the Nation daily said the red shirts, mostly supporters of ousted ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra, were insisting on an immediate dissolution and had rejected an appeal by a national economic council to wait until a budget bill was passed in July.

The red shirts have occupied an upmarket shopping district for three weeks, forcing posh malls and some luxury hotels to close their doors.

They have a second camp near the Silom business district, and there were rowdy scenes in the area late into the night on Wednesday when several hundred pro-government supporters massed opposite their barricade. Riot police got between them as troops looked on, but there was no violence.

The Bangkok Post reported this loose pro-government group planned a demonstration of up to 100,000 people on Friday.

On the security situation in the capital, it said: “About 60,000 troops are being deployed and all have permission to use live ammunition if necessary for self-defence.”

The protests have frightened away tourists following a deadly clash on April 10 between the army and demonstrators that killed 25 people and wounded more than 800.

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

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.

TRAIN SEIZED

Fearing a crackdown, the “red shirts” have bolstered security at their shopping district camp and built a barricade of tyres and sharpened bamboo poles near the business district.

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

A crackdown in the capital might 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.

However, on Wednesday protesters stopped an 18-car train carrying soldiers 450 km (280 miles) away in northeastern Khon Kaen province.

The train was meant to take troops and military vehicles to the south to help contain a Muslim insurgency. The protesters mistakenly thought they were to be deployed in Bangkok, a railway police officer told Reuters by telephone from Khon Kaen.

Despite negotiations between a Khon Kaen deputy governor and red shirt leaders, the train was still blocked by around 200 protesters on Thursday, police said.

Analysts say the protests are radically different from other periods of unrest in Thailand’s five-year political crisis — and arguably in modern Thai history, 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.

The protesters have demanded immediate elections, but both sides want to be in power during a September military reshuffle.

If Thaksin’s camp prevails and is governing at the time of the reshuffle, analysts expect big changes including the ousting of generals allied with Thailand’s royalist elite, a prospect royalists fear could diminish the power of the monarchy.

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

“GM Thailand does not currently have any plans to review its investments in Thailand,” said Sasinan Allmand, public relations director for Thailand at the Thai unit of General Motors.

The world’s largest maker of disk drives, Seagate Technology, echoed that. “Business goes on as normal,” said a senior Seagate communication official.

Tension in Bangkok, “red shirts” reject compromise

Thai protesters are sticking to their demand for parliament to be dissolved immediately, according to a report on Thursday, after a tense night as fears grew of a crackdown to end their six-week rally in Bangkok.

Some leaders of the “red shirts” had suggested on Wednesday they might consider a three-month timeframe for Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to dissolve parliament and call elections.

But the Nation daily said the red shirts, mostly supporters of ousted ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra, were insisting on an immediate dissolution and had rejected an appeal by a national economic council to wait until a budget bill was passed in July.

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

The red shirts have occupied an upmarket shopping district for three weeks, forcing posh malls and some luxury hotels to close their doors.

They have a second camp near the Silom business district, and there were rowdy scenes in the area late into the night on Wednesday when several hundred pro-government supporters massed opposite their barricade. Riot police got between them as troops looked on, but there was no violence.

The Bangkok Post reported this loose pro-government group planned a demonstration of up to 100,000 people on Friday.

On the security situation in the capital, it said: “About 60,000 troops are being deployed and all have permission to use live ammunition if necessary for self-defence.”

The protests have frightened away tourists following a deadly clash on April 10 between the army and demonstrators that killed 25 people and wounded more than 800.

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

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.

TRAIN SEIZED

Fearing a crackdown, the “red shirts” have bolstered security at their shopping district camp and built a barricade of tyres and sharpened bamboo poles near the business district.

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

A crackdown in the capital might 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.

However, on Wednesday protesters stopped an 18-car train carrying soldiers 450 km (280 miles) away in northeastern Khon Kaen province.

The train was meant to take troops and military vehicles to the south to help contain a Muslim insurgency. The protesters mistakenly thought they were to be deployed in Bangkok, a railway police officer told Reuters by telephone from Khon Kaen.

Despite negotiations between a Khon Kaen deputy governor and red shirt leaders, the train was still blocked by around 200 protesters on Thursday, police said.

Analysts say the protests are radically different from other periods of unrest in Thailand’s five-year political crisis — and arguably in modern Thai history, 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.

The protesters have demanded immediate elections, but both sides want to be in power during a September military reshuffle.

If Thaksin’s camp prevails and is governing at the time of the reshuffle, analysts expect big changes including the ousting of generals allied with Thailand’s royalist elite, a prospect royalists fear could diminish the power of the monarchy.

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

“GM Thailand does not currently have any plans to review its investments in Thailand,” said Sasinan Allmand, public relations director for Thailand at the Thai unit of General Motors.

The world’s largest maker of disk drives, Seagate Technology, echoed that. “Business goes on as normal,” said a senior Seagate communication official.

(Additional reporting by Orathai Sriring, Nopporn Wong-Anan, Martin Petty, Bill Tarrant and Khettiya Jittapong; Writing by Alan Raybould; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

Inglis avoids conviction over assault

Melbourne Storm and representative centre Greg Inglis has avoided a conviction for assault against his girlfriend.

A Victorian court has ordered the matter be dealt by a diversion program.

Inglis, 23, appeared in the Sunshine Magistrates Court, supported by his girlfriend, Sally Robinson, whom he was accused of pushing in the face at a Maribyrnong home last year.

He was charged with assault, but police have agreed to drop the more serious charge of recklessly causing serious injury.

The court heard the couple had argued, and Inglis pushed his girlfriend back onto the bed with an open hand.

Robert Richter QC told the court that in a statement to police, Ms Robinson said her boyfriend has never hurt her before and she had got in his face.

Previously, the court heard self-defence was an issue, not because Inglis was defending himself, but because he was trying to stop his girlfriend from hurting herself.

The magistrate agreed the assault was born out of frustration and a diversion program was suitable to deal with the matter.

Inglis was ordered to attend a men’s behavioural change program and to pay $3,000 to Women’s Health West.

He issued a statement via the Storm saying that he accepts the court’s ruling.

“It was in the best interests of all parties that I have today accepted the issuing of this diversion order,” he said.

“This was the right decision for Sally’s welfare and privacy.”

Acting Storm chief executive Matt Hanson says the club will continue to offer counselling to Inglis and Ms Robinson.

Thai protests turn deadly

Thai authorities say 15 people have died in clashes between security forces and anti-government protestors in the country’s bloodiest political violence in almost two decades.

Bangkok officials say four soldiers, a Japanese cameraman and ten other civilians died in the violence.

Using tear gas and rubber bullets, security forces moved in to try to clear demonstrators from a downtown district of Bangkok.

Protestors hurled rocks in reply, with the clashes leaving more than 300 people injured.

Prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has acknowledged that some live bullets were also fired, but says soldiers were only authorised to use them in self-defence.

Riot shields and pools of blood were left scattered around the city’s historic district, while ambulances ferried away casualties and injured soldiers were loaded onto pick-up trucks.

Protesters hauled the dead bodies of two protesters draped in Thai flags onto their rally stage in the old city.

“It’s frightening. We heard explosions and people were running all around,” 34-year-old Israeli tourist Sharon Aradbasson said.

A Japanese cameraman with the Reuters news agency was among those killed.

The clashes are the country’s worst since 1992.

After four weeks of protests, security forces are now calling for a truce with demonstrators, who a military spokesman said were holding five soldiers hostage.

Mr Vejjajiva offered his condolences but refused to bow to the protesters’ calls to resign.

“I and my government will continue to work to resolve the situation,” he said in a televised address to the nation.

“Now the military has stopped the operation, while protesters have retreated to the rally site.”

The mostly poor and rural red shirts accuse the government of being illegitimate because it came to power with military backing in 2008, after a court ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s allies from power.

Thousands more demonstrators were also refusing to leave another rally site in the main commercial district of the Thai capital, demanding Mr Abhisit dissolve parliament.

The red shirts called for the king to intervene in the crisis, saying it was the “way to prevent further dead”.

“Did anybody inform the king that his children were killed in the middle of the road without justice?” reds’ leader Jatuporn Prompan asked protesters.

“Is there anyone close to him who told him of the gunfights?”

Although he has no official political role, King Bhumibol Adulyadej is seen as a unifying figure and during an 1992 uprising he chastised both the military and protest leaders, effectively bringing an end to the violence.

It is the latest chapter in years of political turmoil in Thailand.

The country has been riven by political tensions since a bloodless coup ousted telecoms tycoon-turned-premier Mr Thaksin in 2006.

Trial delay for murder accused guard

The trial of a British security contractor accused of killing two of his co-workers in Iraq has reportedly been postponed.

Danny Fitzsimons says he shot his co-workers Paul McGuigan and Queenslander Darren Hoare in self-defence.

He claims he shot the men during a drunken brawl and insists they both threatened him with a gun first.

His trial was meant to begin today, but officials from the criminal court in western Baghdad say it has been adjourned for another two months.

The court is reportedly still waiting for the results of Mr Fitzsimons’s psychiatric evaluation.

His lawyers claim he was suffering from post-traumatic stress at the time of the incident.

Mr Fitzsimons’s parents say he should never have been allowed to go to Baghdad.

If found guilty he could face the death penalty.

Kashmiri girls take up taekwondo for self-defence

Srinagar, Mar 30 (ANI): Women in the Kashmir region are learning martial arts for self-defence and also to stay physically fit.

At a training centre conducted by Syed Shujat in Srinagar, nearly 100 girls from different schools are actively learning taekwondo.

The taekwondo trainees feel that the martial art would help them build their stamina and enhance their abilities to defend themselves.

“It”s important because it helps us in our protection. It builds our stamina and in many other aspects. If we see, it has a bright future. Doing MBBS, engineering is not enough, sports also plays a vital role in our day-to-day life. Yes, I would say in Kashmir it”s very important. We just think what is the use of these games… but no! It is very important,” said Saima Qayoom, a taekwondo trainee.

Initially, most conservative Kashmiri families were reluctant to let their girls participate in a sporting activity on account of it appearing manly.

However, on realising the assets of this martial art, they relented and permitted their daughters to train in the art.

Syed Shujat, who imparts training in taekwondo, feels that the sport would gain more popularity if more girls would take to it.

“Girls of our state should learn taekwondo as it will help them in their future. Some girls come to us to get their taekwondo certificates, which will help them during admission in universities. But I want them to come without any such reasons and learn it so that the sport gains popularity,” said Shujat. (ANI)

BSF personnel gun down two Pakistan smugglers in Punjab, seize fake currency

Naushera Dhalla (Punjab), Mar 27 (ANI): Border Security Force (BSF) personnel gunned down two Pakistani smugglers and seized fake currency worth 6.5 million rupees, while the duo were attempting to sneak into Punjab”s Naushera sector.

A top BSF official said both intruders were shot dead near the Naushera Dhalla village, as they infiltrated into Indian territory.

BSF Inspector General (Frontier) Himmat Singh said: “A movement of some people was noticed at the border fence last night, they were successful in reaching to the fence taking advantage of standing crops and darkness. Two people remained in front while the other two provided them a cover from behind.”

“They tried to insert something through pipe. Our personnel challenged them while people who were providing cover to them from behind opened fire,” he added.

Singh also said both intruders were backed by a couple of armed persons from across the border.

“Our personnel also opened fire in self-defence in which two people were killed, probably one sustained injuries. Two people have been shot dead while the other two managed to escape. After checking the pipe, fake Indian currency notes of about 65,00000 rupees have been seized,” he said.

The incident took place just a day after the BSF and the Pakistan Rangers had held a joint meeting to chalk out plans for curbing smuggling across the international border. (ANI)

La Porchetta founder dies in motorbike crash

Co-founder of the La Porchetta restaurant group Rocco Pantaleo has died in a motorbike crash in St Kilda in Melbourne.

The 53-year-old came to Australia in 1977 and jointly opened the restaurant group eight years later.

Police said he was hit by a car on the corner of St Kilda Road and Fitzroy Street about 11:30am AEDT and died at the scene.

Sergeant Mark Amos said it appeared Mr Pantaleo was going to the Formula One Grand Prix.

“He has a large number of access passes on him, so I dare say he was looking forward to a weekend at the Grand Prix,” he said.

“Unfortunately that’s been cut short in a very untimely and unhappy manner.”

Traffic on St Kilda Road was disrupted for several hours after the crash.

Victoria’s 2010 road toll is 74 – seven more for the same period last year.

Mr Pantaleo was in the news in 1997 over a shooting at one of his restaurants.

A coroner found that he shot a man, Keith Lane, after Mr Lane started punching him in a relentless attack.

Mr Lane came into one of Mr Pantaleo’s restaurants and accused him of assaulting a 16-year-old girl.

It was found that Mr Pantaleo shot Mr Lane in self defence.

When Amy Winehouse shoved a fan in face for taking her picture

London, Mar 17 (ANI): ‘Rehab’ singer Amy Winehouse is said to have attacked a fan of hers as he was trying to take a picture of her.

Winehouse, 26, was seen and photographed lashing out before grabbing the man’s iPhone and shoving it in his face on March 16 outside a supermarket with pals in Marylebone High Street, central London.

She claimed she feared the man was going to attack her and was acting in self- defence.

“This guy lifted his iPhone up to try to take her picture. She tried to take it out of his hand and they grappled with it,” the Daily Star quoted an onlooker as saying.

“Then she got it and open-handedly hit him in the face. She started shouting but wasn’t trying to hide what she’d done,” the onlooker said.

Her spokesman said she was just retaliating because the man had pushed her friend out of the way so he could take her photo.

“She asked him: ‘Why did you do that?’ and then shoved him,” he added. (ANI)

Now, umbrella that protects against rain and muggers!

London, Sept 16 (ANI): An unbreakable umbrella, worth 125 pounds, has been created which can protect against rain and muggers.

Made of hi-tech steel, the designers of Unbreakable Umbrella claim their invention can support the weight of a man and can be wielded like a baseball bat, reports The Telegraph.

Makers Real Self-Defense say their brolly is as strong as a steel pipe despite weighing only 775g.

According to the makers, the invention is perfect for use as a self-defence weapon, particularly when combined with knowledge of martial arts training such as Kendo, a Japanese style of fencing.

A spokesman for Real Self-Defence, based in Vermont, USA, said: “Our Unbreakable Umbrella has no unusual parts, no more metal than an average umbrella, it does not arouse suspicion, can be carried legally everywhere where any weapons are prohibited.

“Anyone who can use a stick for defence can use this umbrella. Do you know how to swing a baseball bat? Do you know how to strike with a sturdy stick? If you do, you know all you need to know.”

The Unbreakable Umbrella is available to buy in the UK from Tactical Things in Colchester, Essex, with a straight or curved handle. (ANI)

Wushu Championship a big draw in Shillong

Shillong, Sep.5 (ANI): The 7th Meghalaya Wushu Championship attracted a large number of martial art enthusiasts to Shillong.

‘Wushu’, derived from traditional Chinese martial arts, is a combination of Taekwondo, Judo and Boxing.

The art form originated from warfare combat and it has been shaped and devised into an effective self-defence mechanism.

It is presently quit a draw for the local youths in Meghalaya. Over a 100 students participated in the Wushu championship, organized by the Meghalaya Wushu Association here.

“More and more students want to know about this game. This game is very competitive. There are three parts, taekwondo, boxing and judo. Three events are mixed together kick, punch and throw. That’s why this is a good game,” said Yogesh Nongrum, a participant.

“I feel this sport is very important for me. As human beings we need exercise. The youth of this generation should get involved in sports. I will try my best to be a good sportsperson,” said Monica Nongrum, another participant.

Winners of the tournament will be selected to represent the State in the upcoming 4th North East Wushu Championship that will be held at Imphal in Manipur next month. By D. Henpilen (ANI)

Pakistan modifying US missile posed a danger to India, says Sureesh Mehta

New Delhi, Aug 31 (ANI): Outgoing Navy Chief Admiral Sureesh Mehta on Monday alleged that Pakistan’s attempt to modify Harpoon missile posed a danger to India’s interest.

As per media reports, the Obama administration has protested to Pakistan for illegally modifying U.S.-made missiles to expand its ability to hit land-based targets.

Citing senior administration and Congressional officials, the reports said the charge came in late June through an unpublicized diplomatic protest to Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani and other top Pakistani officials.

The accusation, made amid growing concerns about Pakistan’s increasingly rapid conventional and nuclear weapons development, triggered a new round of U.S.-Pakistani tensions, the report added. eacting to the same, Mehta said that US authorities are constantly being told that their aid to Pakistan is not necessarily used for self-defence.

“Here are certain things which people do. Like if we made our own Brahmos (a supersonic cruise missile), it was for the sea, then it become land version, so there are certain things that can be done to it. This is a danger of proliferation which we have also been mentioning to Americans at all times that what you give them (Pakistan) will not necessarily be targeted for self defence. And this in any case has got nothing to do with self-defence; it is obviously against Indian interest,” Mehta added.

A senior Pakistani official called the accusation “incorrect,” saying that the missile tested was developed by Pakistan, just as it had modified North Korean designs to build a range of land-based missiles that could strike India, according to the Times.

U.S. officials said the disputed weapon is a conventional one based on the Harpoon antiship missiles that were sold to Pakistan during the Reagan administration as a defensive weapon, the newspaper reported, but the charges come as the Obama administration is seeking Congressional approval for 7.5 billion dollars in aid for Pakistan over the next five years.

U.S. military and intelligence officials suspect Pakistan of modifying the Harpoon sold to them in the 1980s, which would violate the Arms Control Export Act.

Pakistan denied the charge and said it developed the missile, the media report said.

According to experts, the missiles would bolster Pakistan’s ability to threaten India, stoking fears of heating up the two nations’ arms race. (ANI)

Martial art gaining popularity in Meghalaya

Shillong (Meghalaya), July 1 (ANI): ‘Wushu’ a form of martial art, in which the players not only fight like any other martial art but also indulge in wrestling, is gaining immense popularity in Meghalaya.

“Wushu is very new to Meghalaya. This year we have seen from time to time the students have started coming and taking interest in Wushu. It was not known earlier before Karate, Taekwondo were popular here but now since Wushu has started many children are very much interested in it,” said Doni, a Wushu coach.

An art of self-defense, but also an art of performance, it originated from warfare combat to offend the enemy with spear and sword, which has been shaped and devised into an effective self-defence mechanism.

The level of enthusiasm can be seen from the scores of youngsters who are taking interest in the art.

“I chose this game because it’s a complete game where I could challenge myself and I want others to get encouragement and experience this game. This game is enjoyable and it has been recognised by the central government,” said Johnny Ryntathiang, a ‘Wushu’ Student. (ANI)