Suspected Jakarta bombing ‘mastermind’ was trained in Pak

Jakarta, Sep.9 (ANI): In yet another case which determines that terror is Pakistan’s principle export, it has been revealed that the prime suspect of the July 2009 Jakarta hotel attacks received military training in Pakistan.

Indonesia’s national police chief General Bambang Hendarso Danuri disclosed that Mohamad Jibril, who allegedly provided funds for the terror group responsible for the bombings, received training in Pakistan during 1999-2000.

“Jibril received military training from several Jemaah Islamiyah activists for about a year, from 1999- 2000,” Bambang told the House of Representatives.

“The training was conducted in Pakistan while he was studying there,” he added.

Mohamad Jibril alias Mohamad Rizky Ardhan alias Muhammad Jibriel Abdul Rahman was arrested two weeks ago.

He is believed to have played a key role in raising funds for the terrorist group led by Noordin Top, who belongs to Malaysia.

The Indonesian police suspect that the money was coming from Middle Easte countries such as Saudi Arabia and Yemen, however, it is yet to arrive on any conclusion.

Officials said they are still working to find more solid evidence against Jibril, who was nabbed after his cell phone number was found in Ali Muhammad bin Abdullah’s mobile phone.

Ali is a Saudi Arabian who was arrested a few days before Jibril, the jihadwatch.org reports.

It has also been revealed that Jibril’s uncle, Irfan S Awwas, was the chairman of a radical Islamic organization , Indonesia Mujahidin Council (MMI). (ANI)

Suspected Maoists kill two people in West Bengal

Sakhabanga Village (West Bengal), Aug 23(ANI): Two members of the Maoist Resistance Committee (MRC) in Sakhabanga village, 50 kilometres from Lalgarh in West Bengal’s Midnapore district were found dead on Sunday.

It is suspected that Maoists killed the two, who were active members of the recently formed committee to resist Maoist activities in the area.

Karan Murmu and Lal Murmu, went missing on Saturday night (August 22), were found dead in a pool of blood on Sunday with bullet wounds on their bodies. The two were active members of the MRC.

Rupali Murmu, wife of Karan Murmu said that she was worried when her husband, having gone for a walk after dinner, did not return home till midnight.

Murmu further said she had no knowledge on who would have killed her husband and his accomplice.

Meanwhile, Maoists have called for a 48-hour shutdown, beginning Monday in Jharkhand, Bihar, Orissa, West Bengal and Chhattisgarh in protest against the arrests of two Maoists in Bihar on August 19. (ANI)

Suspected Taliban storm central Kabul bank, surrounded by police

Kabul, Aug.19 (ANI): At least three gunmen, all reported to be members of the Taliban, stormed a central Kabul bank on Wednesday morning, and are currently surrounded by police.

A web site-W A Today-confirmed a short while ago that police have entered the building and were engaged in a gun battle with the attackers. It also said that dozens of security forces and intelligence agents have gathered in the area.

This morning’s attack came as the Afghan capital was converted into a virtual fortress, being placed under tight security ahead of Thursday’s presidential and provincial council elections. The increased security was necessitated because of a Taliban suicide bombing on Tuesday that killed 10 people, and a rocket attack on the presidential palace.

Interior ministry spokesman Zemarai Bashary said the three bank attackers were “robbers or thieves” and played down a Taliban claim that it was an insurgent attack.

“We don’t know whether these are Taliban or insurgents because when they entered the bank, they must have intended to steal,” Bashary was quoted, as saying.

“As they got into the bank, since we have very tight security in Kabul, police were able to get to the area in seconds and they (the gunmen) are surrounded by police,” Bashary added.

“The situation is under control,” he said. He did not comment on any casualties for the police.

The area is close to a bazaar and about 1.5 km south of the city centre, which was quiet with many businesses closed for a public holiday.

A spokesman for the Taliban, Zabihullah Mujahed, claimed that four of the militants were in the building in a standoff with police that had left several dead.

They were among around 20 Taliban who had entered the city and were waiting orders to attack, he told AFP by telephone.

Meanwhile, Afghanistan’s 17 million voters go to the polls on Thursday to choose a president for only the second time in its history.

The Taliban have threatened to directly attack the polling stations and warned voters not to cast their ballots.

The threats to sabotage the election have raised concerns that voter turnout could be low, compromising the legitimacy of the 223 million dollars exercise in democracy.

The government on Tuesday appealed for an Afghan and international media blackout on reporting any attacks Thursday “in view of the need to ensure the wide participation of the Afghan people”.

Earlier, the Afghan government appealed for a local and international media blackout on reporting extremist attacks during this week’s elections in a bid to maximise voter turnout.

Taliban insurgents have escalated threats to derail the elections, warning people not to vote and thereby make themselves a victim of attacks.

Dozens of extra foreign journalists have poured into the country in order to help cover the elections, which mark the second time in history that Afghans will elect a president. (ANI)

Suspected militants torch CPI (M) offices

Jhargram (West Bengal), June 23 (ANI): As Central paramilitary forces along with local police continue action against Maoists in Lalgarh area of West Bengal’s Medinipur district, ultras and some anti-social elements elsewhere in the region attacked and set afire the office premises of the ruling Communist Party of India (Marxist) on Monday.

The attack was carried out during the night at Jhargram in West Medinipur district in which certain Maoist factions set afire the local office premises of the CPI (M).

However, CPI-M functionary of Jhargram alleged that the goons who ransacked the party office and indulged in arson belonged to the rival Trinamool Congress (TMC) party.

“Yesterday night some anti-socials came around 12 in the midnight, wrecked our party office and set it on fire. However, they are not Maoists. They are Trinamool Congress (TMC) party goons who came from nearby areas,” said Rabi Sarkar, a local party functionary of CPI (M), Jhargram.

Besides, in the neighbouring Purulia district, the office premises Centre for Indian Trade Union (CITU), the labour union wing of CPI-M was also targetted and set on fire.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, in Lalgarh area, the security forces remained on alert waiting for the Maoists to emerge out of the jungle areas.

The Maoists confined to their camps at Banspahari jungles which overlap the districts of Bankura and Purbi Medinipur and also from Purulia, are impatiently waiting for the right moment to strike at their opponents – the security forces active in Lalgarh.

With covered faces, the Maoists seem to have prepared themselves for guerrilla warfare, from the jungles, which they have made their homes.

This, in turn, has placed around 18 police stations in these three districts to be on red alert and counter the threats posed by the Maoists.

The security forces have been deployed on the fringes of the forests, along the highways.

Commenting on these developments, Sameer Mitra, a former Deputy Inspector General of Border Security Force presently residing in Kolkata said that the Maoists would strike only when the security forces offer themselves up as soft targets.

“They will never come into direct confrontation until and unless they have found a soft target, like during the movement of a particular patrol which has been sent to collect information or to seek them out. If the patrol gets smaller in size and is not very vigilant and alert, the Maoists can certainly take them on,” said Sameer Mitra, retired Deputy Inspector General, Border Security Force (BSF).

The State and Central security personnel were compelled to start the combing operation to flush out Maoists from Lalgarh, after the ultras in the guise of supporting the People’s Committee against Police Atrocities (PCAPA), torched a police station and offices of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) killing several of their party activists. (ANI)

Suspected Zemi Naga men set ablaze 21 Dimasa houses in Assam

North Cachar Hills (Assam), June 20 (ANI): Suspected Zemi Naga men fired at a group of Dimasa tribe and set ablaze 21 houses in Assam’s strife-torn North Cachar Hills district on Saturday.

The latest incident took place five days after the killing of 15 people in the district.

According to the police, the incident took place when some inhabitants, who had abandoned their huts due to ethnic clashes, returned to take stock of cattle and other possessions at Dibal Wasling Dimasa village, they were fired upon by suspected Zemi Naga tribes and their houses set ablaze.

Police officials said at least 21 houses in the village were gutted in the arson.

It is believed that the attack has been carried out in retaliation to the killing of 15 Zemi Naga tribals, including eight children, and burning down of more than 50 houses at Mechidui, about 23 km from the district headquarters of Haflong, on 16th June, Police said.

Earlier on June eight and 10th June, two Dimasa-inhabitated villages were attacked by suspected Zemi Nagas where nearly 50 houses were set ablaze.

A number of persons have died due to the ongoing clash between the rival Dimasa and Zemi Naga tribes since April last. (ANI)

Suspected militants kill five persons in Manipur

Bishnupur (Manipur), May 12 (ANI): Suspected militants killed five people, all outsiders, in Manipur on Monday.
The bodies of the victims were found inside the Keibul Lamjao National Park in Bishnupur district where the security forces had conducted a flush-out operation in April.

Acting on reports that some armed persons had taken nine non-Manipuri people inside Loktak Lake area, a team of media persons and villagers conducted a search operation in the marshy area and discovered the bodies.

Reportedly, the team discovered the bodies floating on biomass.

According to the search party, out of the five victims, only one had bullet wounds, while the rest had been hacked to death by the assailants.

The incident created a panic among the residents who fled the area fearing violence.

“We heard the sound of gunshots. As we had faced such incidents before, out of fear, we decided to flee from this place to a safer area to save our lives. We had suffered a lot. When asked from where the sound of gunshots came, we were told that it came from the northern side. We also heard five to six rounds of gunshots,” said Bembem Devi, a resident.

It is believed that the assailants had abducted nine persons and brought them to the park. All nine are feared dead though the bodies of only five have been discovered so far. The search continues to flush out more bodies from the area.

Although no group has come forth to take the responsibility for the incident, the police suspects complicity of a militant group. The killings are latest in the spate of attacks on non-Manipuri residents in the state.

Earlier, five migrant labourers were killed in separate incidents between February and March in Manipur this year. These attacks have forced many labourers to flee the state. (ANI)

Militants burn down 10 houses in remote Assam village

Haflong (Assam), May 8 (ANI): Suspected militants have reportedly set afire more than ten houses in remote Jorai village near Haflong in the North Cachar Hills District of Assam.

The incident took place at around 5:30 a.m. this morning when militants went to Jorai village, which is located about nine km from the district headquarters of Haflong, and set ablaze the houses, agency reports said.

No casualty has been reported so far.

This is the second incident in 10 days. In a similar incident last month, militants burnt down a village and killed three people. (ANI)

Suspected cases of Swine Flu in India found negative

New Delhi, May 2 (ANI): All six samples that were sent to National Institute of Communicable Disease for suspected cases of Swine Flu have turned out to be negative. ealth screening of passengers coming from affected countries is continuing in 18 International airports at Ahmedabad, Amritsar, Bangalore, Calicut, Chennai, Cochin, Coimbatore, Delhi, Goa, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kolkata, Lucknow, Mumbai, Nagpur, Pune, Srinagar and Trichy. Besides, screening of passengers at Varanasi will start tomorrow. A total of 33,936 passengers have been screened. 126 doctors and 71 paramedics have been deployed to man 51 counters at these airports.

The World Health Organization, meanwhile, has reported 615 laboratory confirmed cases of influenza A/H1N1 infection with 17 deaths from fifteen countries.

The global body said that 13 countries have now reported laboratory confirmed cases.

Mexico has begun its 5-day shutdown to curb the and has raised its confirmed swine flu death toll from 15 to 16, adding that the total number of confirmed cases of the virus had risen to 397.

Mexico is observing complete shut down of its economy in a bid to slow the spread of the flu virus.

The nations across the globe are taking extra precautions to curb the menace of epidemic.

According to the latest WHO figures released late on Friday, the United States has 141 cases and 1 death.

Canada has 34 cases, Spain 13 and Britain 8. New Zealand and Germany have 3 confirmed cases each, Israel has two, and Austria, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Denmark, South Korea and Hong Kong have a case each.

Swine Flu or the H1N1 virus is a genetic re-assortment of swine influenza, avian influenza and human influenza strains. The diagnosed human cases suggest extended human-to-human transmission.

The World Health Organization has raised the pandemic alert to its second highest level. (ANI)

Government reviews preparedness for Swine Flu

p
New Delhi, Apr 27 (ANI): After keeping in view the reported human cases of Swine Influenza A (HINI) caused by a re-assorted Swine flue virus, the Government has instituted a series of preventive actions that include surveillance at Ports and International Airports. /pp
The Health Ministry is keeping watch on the situation through Integrated Disease Surveillance units in the states and has issued travel advisory for those traveling to the affected areas to defer their plan./pp
The states have been advised to review their preparedness to investigate and contain any suspected cluster of influenza like illness. The Central Government would be supporting the states in terms of guidelines, experts, material logistics and laboratory support. /pp
The 24×7 call centre has been set up under Integrated Diseases Surveillance Project to attend calls from the public regarding reporting of influenza like illness. /pp
The World Health Organization (WHO) has reported human cases of Swine Influenza A (HINI) caused by a re-assorted Swine flue virus. /pp
The cases first noticed in Mexico has spread to neighbouring United States and Canada. Suspected cases are also being reported from New Zealand, Spain, France and UK. /pp
As on date there are about 1200 suspect cases reported with about 86 deaths. The WHO has officially designated this outbreak as public health emergency of international concern. However, the WHO has yet not caused the pandemic alert phase. (ANI)/p

Suspected suicide bomber held in Islamabad

Islamabad, April 20 (IANS) A suspected suicide bomber has been arrested in this Pakistani federal capital, Geo TV reported late Monday.

The arrested person has been identified as Khurram Shahzad, it quoted sources as saying.

The police have also seized an explosive-filled jacket from him.

Shells hit Baghdad’s Green Zone after 3-month lull

Suspected militants shelled Baghdad’s protected Green Zone on Sunday in the first such bombardment in more than three months.

The back-to-back strikes reverberated across the Tigris River to a popular promenade, sending families packing up from fish restaurants and abruptly halting a party at a club.

Violence across Iraq remains sharply down compared with past years, but attacks and bloodshed have edged up in recent weeks and brought worries that it could slow the return of nightlife and commerce to parts of Baghdad.

The US military said the Green Zone was hit by two “indirect fire” rounds – which typically means either rockets or mortars – but there were no casualties or damage reported.

A police official says the rounds were fired from predominantly Shiite eastern Baghdad. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to media.

The attack came during a light sandstorm, which prevents helicopter patrols and gives militants cover.

The Green Zone was last targeted by rockets or mortars on January 15, leaving one person injured. The attacks are usually blamed on Shiite militias. The area contains the US and British embassies and key Iraqi government offices.

Pakistani troops kill three militants near Afghan border

Islamabad – Pakistani security forces repelled overnight militant attacks on their positions in the troubled north-west, killing at least three insurgents, an official said Monday. The clashes occurred Sunday when rebels targeted checkpoints in Wana, the main town of South Waziristan tribal region bordering Afghanistan.

The area is the stronghold of top Pakistani Taliban commander Baitullah Mehsud, who has been blamed for dozens of deadly attacks, including the one that killed former prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

“Militants armed with rocket-propelled grenades and heavy arms attacked two posts in Wana, forcing the troops to retaliate with artillery and mortar fire,” a security official said on condition of anonymity.

“At least three attackers were killed and several more were injured,” he said. Suspected militant hideouts on nearby hills were also hit.

The troops did not suffer any fatalities, but one paramilitary soldier was wounded in the exchange of fire, according to the official.

Government administrators in the region confirmed the incidents, but provided no details.

Pakistan’s lawless tribal region comprising seven districts is believed to be full of militant enclaves, which are used as by Taliban militants to attack US and NATO troops in Afghanistan.

Western powers say the fight against Taliban cannot be won unless these sanctuaries are tackled. The US has recently increased its drone strikes on Pakistani tribal region to eliminate the hideouts.

Separately, a bomb-disposal expert was killed Monday while defusing an explosive device near the town of Bannu in the adjoining North West Frontier Province, police said.

The bomb was planted beneath a bridge connecting the restive town with neighbouring districts. (dpa)

Peruvian rebels kill 13 troops in coca region

LIMA, April 11 (Reuters) – Suspected leftist rebels killed 13 troops in two ambushes in a mountainous region of Peru where security forces are fighting cocaine traffickers, the government said on Saturday.

Defense Minister Antero Flores said both attacks took place on Thursday in Ayacucho province, a coca-growing area and the birthplace of the Maoist Shining Path guerrilla group.

Flores told a news conference the rebels used grenades and dynamite to attack army patrols as they passed. In the first attack one soldier was killed, while 12 troops died in a second ambush.

The attacks bring to 11 the number of assaults on security services by suspected Shining Path rebels since the start of the year.

Peru’s government says the Shining Path has all but abandoned its fight from leftist ideological in favor of running drugs in Peru, the world’s No. 2 cocaine producer.

The rebel group led a nearly two-decade rebellion until its leadership was captured and it collapsed in the early 1990s. But some members of the group are still active, especially in the country’s main coca-farming regions.

Some government officials have said an upswing in violence stems from eradication efforts and the growing influence of Mexican drug cartels that buy cocaine in Peru.

Like his Colombian counterpart, Alvaro Uribe, Peruvian President Alan Garcia receives anti-drug money from the United States and supports programs to eradicate coca fields. (Reporting by Marco Aquino; Writing by Helen Popper, editing by Todd Eastham)

People want peaceful polls in Manipur

Imphal, April 10 (ANI): People in Manipur fear that with political parties gearing up for the 15th Lok Sabha elections, militants are trying to vitiate the atmosphere and create a fear psychosis amongst political leaders and workers.

Suspected militants recently bombed the residence of Congress worker and the President of Imphal West District Jilla Prishad Soibam Subhaschandra at Ningombam village under Singjamei police station.

Though Subhaschandra was not at home at the time of blast, his wife Binodini sustained splinter injuries on her head.

A number of residents have registered protest against the bomb attack.

The incident has created panic among people and family members of victims.

“Such activities that disturb the public are hampering the work we are doing for the welfare of the society. It is my appeal that we shun the path of violence and live together in harmony. This is my earnest appeal,” said Soibam Subhaschandra Singh, Adhayaksha, Imphal West.

“I feel really unhappy and such incidents like throwing of bombs at the residence should not occur.” Sotinkumar Singh, victim’s Son.

Local residents staged a sit-in-protest at the community hall at Ningombam in Imphal, condemning the attack and demanded that such attacks should be stopped immediately.

“As public, we are really deeply unhappy and concerned about such incidents. We fear that we may be targeted and shot. We also fear for the lives of our children. We are really troubled,” said Prabha Leima Devi.

Workers of various political parties have condemned frequent targeting of the political leaders and workers in the state.

“This present situation, attacking, killing and threatening the candidates and political workers is a matter of great concern,” said Dr. H. Borobabu Singh, President, BJP, Manipur Pradesh.

The violence unleashed by militants has been strongly condemned by the people. It has severely disrupted the economic growth of the region. (ANI)

Suspected Islamic terrorists kill three in Algeria

Algiers – Three guards working on a foreign construction project in Algeria have been killed by suspected Islamic terrorists, local media reported on Thursday.

The three brothers were traveling in their car near the eastern port city of Jijel when they were confronted by a group of armed men, who shot the victims before slitting their throats.

The incident occurred late Wednesday, on the eve of elections that are expected to return President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to office for an unprecedented third five-year term.

Dozens of people have died in terrorist-related violence in the weeks preceding the vote. (dpa)

Suspected US drone strike kills four in Pakistan

Islamabad, April 8 (DPA) A suspected US missile strike killed four Taliban militants Wednesday in Pakistan’s tribal region near the Afghan border, an intelligence official said.

Two back-to-back missiles fired by a pilotless drone aircraft hit a vehicle in Ganjikhel area of South Waziristan tribal district, a stronghold of Taliban and Al Qaeda militants launching cross-border attacks on US-led international forces in Afghanistan.

‘The missile destroyed the vehicle and killed all four Taliban in it, while it damaged the nearby house, leaving five civilians injured,’ said an intelligence official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The strike came a day after Pakistani leaders told visiting US officials, special envoy to Pakistan Richard Holbrooke and chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen, that the drone attacks on its soil were of great concern.

Pakistan says such attacks are counter-productive because they fuel anti-US sentiments and increase public support for militants in the tribal districts.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi Tuesday told a press conference after meeting with with Holbrooke that the interests of the two countries converged, but there existed a ‘gap’ as far the use of drone attack was concerned.

‘We can only work together if we respect each other and we trust each other,’ Qureshi said. ‘There is no other way, nothing else will work.’

But US authorities say the war in Afghanistan cannot be won without eliminating the terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan’s lawless tribal region.

More than three dozen US airstrikes have targeted suspected militant hideouts in tribal belt since August 2008, killing more than 300 people, including a number of lower-tier Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters.

Dozens of non-combatants have also been killed in the strikes.

Suspected virus kills a score of Peacock in Indore

Navda Pandha (MP), Mar 25 (ANI): Around twenty peacocks have died at a village near Mhow in Indore following outbreak of suspected virus.

Ten peacocks were found dead at Navda Pandha village while ten more dead peacocks were located in other parts of Indore distrct.

However, the concerned authorities claimed to have saved the lives of two peacocks by rushing them to the Government Veterinary College, Mhow.

Reportedly, these two peacocks are now out of danger.

A post mortem is being conducted on all the birds to determine the exact cause of the peacocks death.

“We are conducting the post mortem and once it is done on all the birds, then only we can come to any conclusion,” said Dr. D K Garg, Professor of Pathology, Veterinary College, Mhow.

According to the Divisional Forest Officer (DFO) of Indore Range, consequent to this mishap, a close eye is being kept on birds and the water bodies have been chemically treated to prevent any virus from spreading.

“I went to the same village again and another case of peacock death has been reported, which means that the virus is still among the birds. We then added certain antibiotics in the water to prevent the peacock from dying further,” said L Krishnamurthy, Divisional Forest Officer (DFO), Indore Range.

Meanwhile, it is believed that symptoms of Raniketh (an avian disease) have been found in some of the birds. (ANI)

Suspected militants hijack postal service cargo in Manipur

Imphal, Mar 23 (ANI): A postal service cargo, worth tens of thousands of rupees was hijacked by suspected militants of the Revolutionary People’s Front (RPF) recently.

The RPF is believed to be an armed wing of the proscribed Peoples’ Liberation Army (PLA).

The incident took place when the postal van was on its way to the Head Post Office in Imphal. It was intercepted by four miscreants and taken to Nepram Major in Imphal.

The miscreants fled with around 51 parcels, which mostly included electronic items containing computer sets and Xerox copier machines addressed to an electronic shop in Imphal.

“This is a very sad and unfortunate incident. Such incidents should not occur again as public depends on post office for sending letters and money. It will create problems and will be a fearful factor for everyone” said L. Devendra Singh, a local.

Postal Service employees in Imphal condemned the incident. They sought better security for cargo carrying vehicles. (ANI)

Top official abducted in Pakistan’s Swat Valley

Mingora (Pakistan), Feb 22 (IANS) Suspected Taliban militants Sunday abducted a top government administrator and six guards in Pakistan’s Swat Valley, officials said.

District administrator Khushal Khan was going in his car to Mingora, the main town of Swat, when he was abducted by the suspected militants, The News reported.

The abductors have also kidnapped six of Khan’s bodyguards who were accompanying the official.

Khan was transferred to Swat only two days ago.

The kidnappings have dealt a blow to the peace efforts in the region, as the government and Taliban militants have pledged a ceasefire in the region.

Pakistani authorities last Monday entered into a deal with Taliban militia to restore sharia, or Islamic law, for peace in Swat, a idyllic valley where Pakistani military has been engaged in an unending war with Islamist militants.

A journalist working for a local television channel and newspaper was abducted and killed Wednesday as he covered a ‘peace march’, led by radical cleric Maulana Sufi Mohammad who was freed by the government to negotiate peace with Taliban militants.

Last Sunday, Islamist militants announced a 10-day ceasefire in the valley as a ‘goodwill gesture’ towards the peace talks.

Pakistan said Saturday the government and the militants have agreed to a ‘permanent truce’, but a Taliban commander said their ceasefire would be reviewed on its expiry Wednesday.
Indo Asian News Service