Burundi holds journalist for rapping govt on Somalia

July 18 (Reuters) – Burundi authorities have arrested a journalist over an article questioning security forces’ ability to respond to attacks by Somalia’s al Shabaab insurgents, his relatives said on Sunday.

Al Shabaab, which is linked to al Qaeda, claimed responsibility for twin explosions at a crowded restaurant and a rugby club in Uganda’s capital Kampala on July 11, during the last moments of the World Cup final, killing 73. [ID:nLDE66B00L]

The insurgent group has threatened more attacks unless Uganda and Burundi withdraw their peacekeepers from Somalia, where al Shaabab is fighting the government and control large parts of the chaotic country. [ID:nLDE66C033]

Burundian police arrested Jean Claude Kavumbagu — who runs the online news agency Net Press — on Saturday, relatives said.

He wrote in a July 12 article: “If Somali Islamists had to try something in Burundi, it would be easy since our defence and security forces are much better in looting and killing innocent people than defending the nation.”

“A judge who questioned him told me that he was being prosecuted for a story he wrote linked to the al Shabaab’s threats,” his brother, Jean Marie-Vianey Kavumbagu, told Reuters. “For us, the law was violated because he was not assisted by his lawyer during the interrogation.”

Burundi has said it will keep its 2,500 peacekeepers in Somalia despite al Shabaab’s threats. [ID:nLDE66D1DQ]

Kavumbagu has been arrested five other times for stories he has written critical of government authorities.

(Reporting by Patrick Nduwimana, editing by George Obulutsa and Mark Heinrich)

Two men with militant ties arrested in NY – report

Two men were arrested late Saturday at John F. Kennedy International Airport where they were believed headed for meetings with militant groups in Somalia, The New Jersey Star Ledger reported.

The men were arrested as they tried to board flights to Egypt. They were charged with conspiring to commit an act of international terrorism through a group tied to al Qaeda, the newspaper said, citing officials familiar with the arrests.

Both in their twenties and both residents of New Jersey, the two men had been under investigation since October 2006, the Star Ledger said.

An unidentified official told the newspaper both men were unmarried American citizens.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office confirmed the arrests but said the pair did not pose any immediate threat. They are scheduled to appear on Monday in U.S. District Court in Newark, New Jersey.

Federal and local law enforcement officials searched the homes of both men where they conducted interviews and removed boxes of papers, a computer and other materials.

Authorities had infiltrated the men’s social circle and said the suspects were not planning an imminent attack in the New York-New Jersey area but were believed to be intending to join with the Al Shabaab youth movement to fight against Americans in Somalia, the report said.

One official briefed on the case was hopeful it would lead to a “web of arrests,” the newspaper said.

The arrests followed a failed attempt to explode a car bomb in New York’s Times Square last month and an incident on Christmas Day in which a 23-year-old Nigerian tried to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner by setting off explosives hidden in his underwear. (Reporting by Chris Michaud; editing by Chris Wilson)

Militants take over UN compound

Somali militant Islamist group Al Shabaab has forcibly taken over a United Nations compound in the south of the country.

They disarmed UN staff at the compound near Baidoa and seized food supplies from the World Food Program (WFP) and other equipment.

They also took control of the airstrip.

In February, Al Shabaab ordered WFP to halt all operations and leave the country, saying Somalis should buy food from local farmers.

Pirates hijack $170m oil shipment

A South Korean navy destroyer has caught up with a supertanker that was hijacked by Somali pirates in the Indian Ocean.

The ship was on its way from Iraq to the United States with crude oil worth more than $170 million.

The hijack took place hundreds of kilometres from the coast of Somalia in the middle of the Indian Ocean, an area of sea normally thought to be relatively safe from this kind of attack.

The South Korean navy warship had been based in the Gulf of Aden to assist with the international efforts to protect shipping.

It was ordered to get to the oil tanker before it reaches the African coast.

South Korean officials say the warship is equipped with a combat helicopter and weapons that can hit targets as far away as 32 kilometres.

But there was no comment on what was now being planned by the combat unit.

Any attempt to recapture the ship by force would be risky and the volatile cargo makes a gun battle inconceivable.

11 dead in Somalia artillery fire

At least 11 civilians were killed during artillery exchanges between Islamist militants and government forces in the Somali capital Mogadishu , witnesses and medical sources said.

Both sides exchanged artillery fire during the fighting, which broke out in the south and the north of the city.

“Eleven civilians including children were killed in the clashes, which ended in the evening,” said Ali Muse, head of Mogadishu ambulance services.

“The ambulances also collected 26 others who were injured,” he added.

“Seven of them died in northern Mogadishu while the other four died in Bakara,” the city’s biggest market, which is in the south.

Most of the seven civilians killed in northern Mogadishu came from the same family, said local resident Farah Abdulahi Jumale.

“A mortar struck a house in Manbolyon neighbourhood killing six family members,” Jumale said.

“It was [a] terrible incident and everybody was shocked.”

SKorean warship diverted after pirates hijack tanker

A South Korean warship is rushing to the area where Somali pirates hijacked a South Korean oil tanker with 24 crew members aboard, the military said on Monday.

The 300,000-tonne Samho Dream was seized yesterday on its way from Iraq to the US state of Louisiana with a crew of five South Koreans and 19 Filipinos.

A South Korean destroyer, which was in the Gulf of Aden on anti-piracy operations, has been ordered to move to waters off Somalia, a Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesman said.

“The destroyer is sailing in a hurry to catch up with the hijacked ship,” he said.

But the spokesman declined to say whether the 4,500-ton destroyer with about 300 soldiers on board has been ordered to intercept the hijacked ship.

Somali pirates have given no word yet but the South Korean government will not engage in any negotiations with them, the foreign ministry said.

Instead the ship’s owner, Samho Shipping, based in the southern port city of Busan, will be in charge of any negotiations, it said.

The company said the tanker’s captain had remained out of contact.

Somali pirates, targeting one of the world’s busiest maritime trade routes, raked in an estimated 60 million dollars in ransoms last year.

A South Korean tuna ship with 25 crew was hijacked by Somali pirates in April 2006. The ship and its crew were released after four months when a ransom was paid.

In 2007 Somali pirates seized two South Korean vessels and 24 crew. The crew were released after six months in captivity.

Pak minister advocates ‘tit for tat’ response to US ‘strip-search’ laws

Islamabad, Apr.1 (ANI): Pakistan Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Malik Ammad has criticised the United States for including the country’s name on the list of nations whose citizens have to undergo physical frisking at American airports, and asked the government to adopt a ‘tit for tat’ attitude over the issue.

Addressing the Senate, Ammad said American nationals should be treated exactly the way Pakistanis are being treated at US airports, The Daily Times reports.

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, in a written reply to the House, said that Islamabad is in consultations with Washington over the screening issue, and expressed the hope that the matter would be resolved soon.

Pakistan’s name is in the list of 14 countries, whose citizens have to go for full body screening as part of America””s new stringent air security measures under the new US Transportation Security Administration rules.

All citizens of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Algeria, Lebanon, Libya, Iraq, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Somalia and Yemen must receive a pat down and an extra check of their carry-on bags before boarding a plane bound for the US. (ANI)

Hijacked Indian vessels traced in Seychelles

Seychelles, Mar 30 (ANI): One out of the total eight boats that were kidnapped by Somali pirates was on Tuesday reportedly traced near the Seychelles port after the Kenyan Navy established communication with the crew.

There are reports that the authorities are giving indications that the other vessels have also been spotted in Seychelles.

Somali pirates had kidnapped the sailors along with 120 other Indians when they were sailing from Somalia to Dubai.

The sailors, who belong to Gujarat”s Saurashtra and Kutch regions had anchored last in the rebel territory of Kismayo in Somalia where they loaded cargo into their boats. But soon after, they were taken as hostages.

The pirates have, however, till now not demanded any ransom.

There are reports that on account of the current hijacking, patrolling has been intensified following naval deployment in the Gulf of Aden and Seychelles.

Somali pirates had earlier also targeted many Indian ships and taken crew as hostages.

Armed pirates had on December 23, 2009 attacked the Indian ship M T Agrasen, just 300 nautical miles off the coast of Maharashtra. The forty-one crew were, however, able to thwart the siege.

A similar incident took place on December 15 last year, when the pirates seized the Indian vessel Laxmi Sagar off the Somalian coast and kept ten members hostage. (ANI)

Israeli may be held by Al Qaeda in Algeria – report

An Israeli man who disappeared in Algeria nearly a week ago may have been kidnapped by Al Qaeda’s North African wing, an Arabic daily said on Friday.

Asharq al-Awsat, citing what it described as “informed sources”, said the Israeli man entered Algeria with a Spanish passport and disappeared in Hassi Messaoud, 800 km (500 miles) south of the capital Algiers.

News of the possible kidnapping comes a day after Osama bin Laden threatened Qaeda would kill any Americans it takes prisoner if accused Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is put to death.

“Investigators think it is likely that he was kidnapped by the al Qaeda in the Islamist Maghreb (AQIM),” the newspaper quoted the sources as saying.

“It is unclear so far whether the Israeli is dual-national or his Spanish passport was forged. It is also unclear why he was in the desert and how he entered the country.”

Western countries say that unless the region’s fractious governments join forces to fight the insurgents, al Qaeda could turn the Sahara desert into a safe haven along the lines of Yemen and Somalia and use it to launch large-scale attacks.

(Writing by Rania Oteify; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Jolie visits ‘dire’ refugee camp in Kenya

Washington, September 14 (ANI): Angelina Jolie recently visited a refugee settlement camp in Africa.

As United Nations Goodwill Ambassador she spent a day at the Dadaab Refugee camp on the Kenyan border.

The beauty was appalled to see the conditions of 285,000 refugees living in a camp, which was initially made for just 90,000 people.

Somali people, who have fled into Kenya because of atrocities in their country, live in the camp.

The ‘Gia’ star wants to bring world’s attention to the plight of the refugees.

“If this is the better solution, then what must it be like in Somalia? The toilets are already overflowing. There is not even enough space for trash dumps so people are living amongst the garbage,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying.

“What is amazing is that as more and more people come into the camp, the Somali families continue to be generous with what little they have, even if that means having one eighth of the water they need and their children suffering from dehydration,” she added.

The beauty met some families in the camp too.

She said: “The Somali families I met today are full of warmth and affection. I wish more people could meet them because then they would have a stronger desire to help.” (ANI)

MI5 warns that young Brits heading for terrorist training Somalia soaring

London, Sep.13 (ANI): British intelligence chiefs have targeted war-torn Somalia as the next major challenge to their efforts to repel Islamic terrorism, after receiving reports of scores of youths leaving the UK for “jihad training” in that failed African state.

According to The Independent, MI5 bosses have warned ministers that the number of young Britons travelling to Somalia to fight in a “holy war”, or train in terror training camps, has soared in recent years as the country has emerged as an alternative base for radical Islamic groups.

The number of young Britons following the trail every year has more than quadrupled to at least 100 since 2004 – and analysts warn that the true figure (which would include those who enter the country overland) will be much higher.

However, the British authorities are particularly concerned about the number of people with no direct family connection to Somalia who are travelling to fight and train there.

The diversity suggests Somalia is flourishing as a training ground for radical British Muslims, who could join the local terrorist militia al-Shabaab (“the youth”), go on to join conflicts including the Afghan campaign, or return home to pose a security threat to the UK. (ANI)

‘The American’ leading al Qaeda in Somalia awaits terrorism charges back home

Washington, Sep 5 (ANI): The man who grew up in Daphne, Alabama, as Omar Hammami, but is now reported to be a member of al Qaeda-linked Somali terrorist group al-Shabaab under the name Abu Mansour al-Amriki, told a school newspaper after 9/11 attacks that it was “difficult to believe a Muslim could have done this”.

According to FOX News, eight years later he is professing to launch attacks himself and calling on others to join the fight, as terror-related charges await him at home in Alabama.

Abu Mansour al-Amriki or “The American” has become one of the most recognizable and outspoken voices of terrorist propaganda, the report said.

He has been in war-torn Somalia for several years, fighting the secular government there with a group known as al-Shabaab, which has ties to Al Qaeda and was labeled a terrorist organization by the US Government last year, but only recently has he taken on a starring and jarring role in al-Shabaab’s outreach efforts the report added.

The FBI has been looking into him for several years. In fact, a grand jury in Mobile, Alabama., has already indicted him on charges of providing material support to terrorists, a source said.

Al-Amriki first surfaced in October 2007, when Al-Jazeera TV aired a report about the “common goal” of al Qaeda and hard-line militants in Somalia. The report described al-Amriki as a fighter and military instructor, but he concealed his face with a cloth wrap throughout the report.

In April, he showed his face for the first time, during a highly polished, 30-minute recruitment video posted online. It featured anti-American hip-hop and sporadic images of Osama bin Laden.

In the video, he purportedly led a group of al-Shabaab militants in an ambush of pro-government forces in Somalia.

Speaking about one man killed in the fight, he said: “We need more like him, so if you can encourage more of your children and more of your neighbors, anyone around, to send people like him to this jihad, it would be a great asset for us.” (ANI)

US should conduct ‘offshore’ strikes on Afghanistan

Washington, Sep.2 (ANI): A leading conservative columnist, George Will, has called on the Obama administration to pull American troops out of Afghanistan, and instead focus on fighting from “offshore” by means of “intelligence, drones, cruise missiles, air strikes and small, potent Special Forces units.”

According to the Washington Post, there seems to be some merit in waging an “offshore” war, given the success that has been achieved in neighbouring Pakistan against the Taliban with the help of Predator drone strikes, minimum troop deployment and contractors. The acknowledged U.S. toll: zero dead. That’s in stark contrast to the 813 Americans killed so far in Afghanistan.

Obama faces a key decision in coming weeks on Afghanistan. He has already sent 21,000 additional troops there this year, boosting the U.S. total there to 68,000, along with some 40,000 NATO allies.

US commander in Afghanistan General Stanley McChrystal is likely to ask him for more – most likely 10,000 to 20,000 – just as the President wrestles with health-care reform and a still-feeble economy.

Stephen Biddle of the Council on Foreign Relations, who has been advising General McChrystal, says that drones don’t work everywhere. They can be easily shot down by even a “third-rate air force,” he says.

He also says using drones to eliminate enemy personnel needs good intelligence from sources on the ground, something that would melt away should the Taliban reclaim power.

Biddle isn’t overly concerned about Afghanistan falling, again, into the hands of the Taliban. But he is concerned about its nuclear-armed neighbor.

“At some level, the loss of Afghanistan could be tolerated,” he says. “There’s nothing especially unique about Afghanistan as a haven for striking the U.S. Yemen, Djibouti or Somalia could play that role – there are lots of ill-governed spaces around the world that could. But Afghanistan is unique in its proximity to Pakistan, and its potential role in destabilizing Pakistan if Kabul falls under a Taliban government,” he says.

Andrew Bacevich, a retired Army colonel, says the drone strikes are paying off in Pakistan because of that nation’s “quasi-legitimate government and reasonably effective army” – neither of which Afghanistan has.

But he does call the war “misguided and unnecessary,” and argues the U.S. should work with the country’s tribal chiefs to ensure stability in their respective valleys.

And offshore spy-and-strike capabilities could, at a minimum, keep al-Qaeda off-balance in the region “and optimally destroy whatever entity is engaged in a plot,” Bacevich says. (ANI)

Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan named Best War Film Of All Time

London, Aug 20 (ANI): Steven Spielberg’s flick Saving Private Ryan, starring Tom Hanks and Matt Damon, has topped the list of all time best war movies.

More than 3,000 members of the online DVD and games rental service, Lovefilm, took part in the poll. The survey was conducted to mark the release of Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds.

Saving Private Ryan is an Oscar-winning epic about the D-Day landings and it pipped Steve McQueen starrer The Great Escape to land the honour.

The 1998 Spielberg classic received 21 per cent of the fans’ votes.

The Great Escape got 11 percent of votes, and it pipped another Spielberg movie, Schindler’s List, to grab the second spot.

Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now, based on Josef Conrad’s novel Heart of Darkness, was ranked fourth with nine per cent of the votes.

The Vietnam War inspired Full Metal Jacket by director Stanley Kubrick and Oliver Stone’s Platoon, came fifth and sixth.

Mel Gibson starrer Braveheart claimed the seventh spot, Back Hawk Down, a tale of American troops in Somalia, came eighth.

Michael Cimino’s haunting The Deer Hunter was positioned at number 10.

Wolfgang Peterson’s German U-Boat drama Das Boot was the only non-English language film to make it in to the top 10 in ninth place.

The Telegraph quoted Darren Bignell, Lovefilm’s communications manager, as saying: “Having polarised opinion at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival, Inglourious Basterds marks the comeback of one of modern cinema’s most revered directors.

“Tarantino fans have been chomping at the bit for his latest offering and we’ll soon discover whether it hits the mark with cinema-goers.”

The Top 10 War Films Ever:

1 Saving Private Ryan (1998) 21 percent

2 The Great Escape (1963) 11 percent

3 Schindler’s List (1993) 10 percent

4 Apocalypse Now (1979) 9 percent

5 Full Metal Jacket (1987) 7 percent

6 Platoon (1986) 6 percent

7 Braveheart (1995) 5 percent

8 Black Hawk Down (2001) 4 percent

9 Das Boot (2006) 2 percent

10 The Deer Hunter (2078) 1 percent (others 24 percent) (ANI)

Pak has more internal threats than threats from India: Siddiqa

Karachi, Aug 13 (ANI): Refuting the idea that countries were “after Pakistan” in order to destroy it, a well known political and defence analyst has said that Pakistan had more internal threats than external.

Speaking at the Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology, Dr Ayesha Siddiqa, an author of two books on defence decision-making and political economy of the Pakistan military, advanced the idea that even though the relationship between India and Pakistan is not ideal, Pakistan, however, did not have much of a threat from its eastern neighbour.

“We have some problems with India, but it seems that they have become ideological problems now. We do not have to idolize them or be patronized by them, but we can have a normal relationship. After all, we are neighbours. Neither country can afford to carry this animosity eternally,” she said.

Dr Siddiqa told students that they should understand various factors clearly before defining “today’s Pakistan”.

“We are mired with problems. We have created some of them, some by others; but we have to solve them and we have to solve them in time before they become chronic. We have potential, but so do Somalia, Sudan and Rwanda,” The News quoted her, as saying.

She said that the ideal situation would come when “we try and use our potential in an appropriate manner. We have sparks in our nation as it was proved during the 2005 earthquake in NWFP and Northern Areas. The spark, however, is momentary. The usual behaviour is that of despondence and self-centeredness.”he Pakistani nation is the victim of conspiracy theories. Instead of reasoning and analyzing facts, people accuse everybody else for their own misfortunes, Dr Siddiqa said.

“We have yet to formulate a political system that could effectively close the avenue of military intervention. The people, however, become tired of democratically-elected governments and start yearning for military rule. This is unfortunate,” she said. (ANI)

Jamal Bana Death – Jamal Bana Pictures – Jamal Dana Death Photos – jamal Bana Dead – Jamal Bana Photos – Jamal Bana shot – Amal Bana Pictures – Family learned over Internet That Son was Killed

Jamal Bana Death – Jamal Bana Pictures – Jamal Dana Death Photos – jamal Bana Dead – Jamal Bana Photos – Jamal Bana shot – Amal Bana Pictures – Family learned over Internet That Son was Killed

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota : Since November 2008, Jamal Bana ,20,had been missing from his Minneapolis home, he disappeared without any warning, later called and told his parents that he was in Somalia.

The family received a phone call on July 11, informed them to look on the Internet.

Jamal Bana’s father broke down in tears when he saw Jamal Bana death pictures show a bullet wound on one side of his headposted, on a Somali Web site.

Mia Farrow says measures taken to help Darfur not enough

London, June 24 (ANI): Actress and activist Mia Farrow has condemned the British and American Governments for not having taken enough measures to stop the genocide in Darfur.

While speaking at the Rotary International Convention at Birmingham’s National Exhibition Centre, the UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador said that it was “unacceptable” not to do more when “this level of humanitarian disaster” was ongoing.

“What message have we sent to the people of Darfur? Only that they are completely dispensable,” the Daily Express quoted Farrow as saying.

Farrow, 64, explained that Darfur had dropped out of the worldwide political agenda since humanitarian agencies were expelled from the region.

She urged that world leaders should do more to tackle the situation.

“After the expulsion of the humanitarians, Darfur simply slipped from the news,” she said.

“Great Britain and the United States could certainly do more. We haven’t heard anything recently from Gordon Brown, or anyone really. We have heard very little from President Obama since he was elected, except to deny the findings of his special envoy, who seemed to diminish the conflict.

“President Obama, my president of whom I am extremely proud, has not been so active on Darfur as we hoped he would be. I hope that ‘yes we can’ – we can help the people of Darfur.

“Undeniably, genocide has occurred and is occurring in Darfur. The question is, and it is a defining moment for all of us: ‘What do we do about it? Is it ok to simply watch?’ It is unacceptable to watch this level of humanitarian disaster.”

“I think there is no political will because it is not in any national interest except those in the neighbourhood. It is I think without precedent for a world to get involved in a regional conflict unless there is a national interest. That is sad and I don’t know if we can continue with that concept.

“It serves no one to have a collapsed state. If we are seeing Darfur become more and more like Somalia and if, indeed, we are supposedly fighting the war on terror and the idea of international terrorism is one that strikes a chord, then that’s a national interest – a compelling one – for all nations to get involved,” she added. (ANI)

African force authorized to stay in Somalia another eight months

African force authorized to stay in Somalia another eight monthsNew York – The UN Security Council on Tuesday authorized the African Union peacekeeping mission to remain in Somalia until January in order to pursue its mandate of restoring stability in the troubled nation.

The mission currently is composed of more than 4,300 military troops provided by African nations, below the ceiling of 8,000 troops allowed by the council. Both Somalia and the AU have called for the deployment of a UN peacekeeping operation, but the UN leadership said the time is not appropriate for a broader international force.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said in a report on Somalia to the council that while the council is considering the deployment of an international force it should extend the African force’s mandate.

“The present political progress and opportunities for peace in Somalia are real and have been hard won,” Ban said. “They deserve the international community’s thoughtful, generous and sustained effort.”

Ban said the deployment of a UN force, if it is agreed to by the council, would be done incrementally, with clearly defined objectives and security permitting.

The UN has given wide support to the current transitional government in Mogadishu headed by President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, who has recently survived a coup launched by military opponents who are opposed to his reconciliation and political programmes.(dpa)

Somali Britons trained by al Qaeda pose serious threat to UK

London, May 23 (ANI): Al Qaeda’s franchise in East Africa, and notably Somalia, has become a greater focus of attention for the international counter-terrorist agencies, as a growing number of young Somali Britons who have received “global jihad” training pose a terrorist risk to the United Kingdom.

“Somalia has some of the characteristics of Afghanistan in 2000 and 2001 – a country of ungoverned space which AQ can exploit,” The Times quoted a senior Whitehall official, as saying.

For Britain, the evidence of spreading Qaeda training camps in Somalia is particularly alarming because of the large Somali community in the UK. About 70,000 live in London, 10,000 in the borough of Tower Hamlets.

Jonathan Evans, the Director-General of MI5, has emphasised that three-quarters of the agency’s international counter-terrorism resources still have to be devoted to Pakistan because of the 400,000 Pakistani-Britons who travel back and forth to Pakistan every year.

Most of the terrorist plots uncovered since 9/11 were connected in some way to Pakistan, the paper reports.

Somalia has moved up the agenda and is viewed increasingly as a terrorist haven and growing resource for AQ’s global ambitions.

Although it is believed that the motivation for young Somali Britons may principally be to receive instruction so that they can fight in Afghanistan or join jihad in Somalia, Whitehall officials accept that some might decide to use the expertise they have acquired in the camps to return to Britain and start planning attacks. (ANI)

US Senator wants aid to Pak to be used exactly what it is meant for

Washington, May 22 (ANI): Worried over reports about Pakistan rapidly adding to its stockpile of nuclear weapons, and speculations about Islamabad misusing the US aid meant for carrying counter insurgency operations, a senior US Senator has moved an amendment to a bill before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that requires Pakistan not to redirect American aid for expansion of its nuclear establishments.

Addressing the Committee, Democrat Senator Jim Webb said the amendment was primarily aimed at ensuring that Pakistan does not misuse the assistance.

“The purpose of the amendment was to ensure that none of the money provided by the US would go to ‘build, help, or support’ the country’s nuclear programme. It can only be used for the purpose it’s intended for,” The Dawn quoted Webb, as saying.

Webb said the Obama administration must attach the amendment to the bill authorizing US assistance to Pakistan.

However, the Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen did not supported the amendment saying conditioning all the money meant for Pakistan could prove counter-productive for America’s aims.

“It was not possible to impose this requirement so quickly, and I would like to ensure that the conditions were ‘not so rigid’ that we cannot get started,” said Admiral Mullen.

He also noted that Al-Qaeda was expanding its nefarious activities in other countries of the world with the primary aim of targeting America.

“Al-Qaida, which continues not to be just in Pakistan, but is now moving into Yemen, is connected very well in Somalia, and in other parts of the world.Their strategic objectives remain the same – to threaten us, to threaten the west,” Admiral Mullen said. (ANI)