China specifies new prosecution standards for financing terror activities

New Delhi, May 19 (ANI): China has laid down new prosecution standards for the crime of financing terrorism in a new regulation by the Supreme People”s Procuratorate and the Ministry of Public Security.

It stipulates prosecution standards for a total of 86 economic offences.

According to Xinhua news agency, the regulation defined “financing” as offering monetary or in kind assistance to terrorists, or providing venues for terrorist activities.

Huang Jingping, law professor at Renmin University, said the new regulation is a judicial interpretation, further specifying crimes related to terror financing and drawing a clear-cut line between criminal and non-criminal acts, the report said.

The financing of terrorism was criminalized in 2001 with penalties of up to five years imprisonment, fines and confiscation of property. (ANI)

US tells Pak to take out terror groups radicalising people to strike against west

Washington, May 19 (ANI): The United States wants Pakistan to take on the extremist organisations which radicalise disgruntled Pakistani civilians living in foreign countries and use them for terror activities targeted at the west, particularly America and Europe.

According to sources, this would be the message that the two senior security aides of President Barack Obama, National Security Adviser General James Jones and Central Investigation Agency (CIA) Director Leon Panetta, would be giving to the Pakistani leadership during their visit.

General Jones and Panetta arrived in Islamabad on Tuesday (May 18), and are likely to meet both the civilian and military leadership during their visit.

While certain sections of the media reported that both the top US officials visit is linked with the May 1 failed Times Square bombing plot, but observers believe that the high-profile visit has more to do than what it seems.

“This (Times Square probe) is not such a sophisticated or complicated case that the White House should send its national security adviser and the CIA chief all the way to Islamabad. They are there to look at the bigger picture and to discuss with Pakistani officials the greater context of this issue,” The Dawn quoted sources, privy to the development, as saying.

The basic concept of the message that General Jones and Panetta are believed to have brought with them is the same as that of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s, sources added.

In a recent television interview, Clinton had warned that Pakistan would have to face “very severe consequences” if a successful terror attack on the US is traced back to Pakistan. (ANI)

Pak ‘terror suspect’ students win court battle against deportation from Britain

London, May 18 (ANI): Two of the twelve Pakistani students, who were arrested on terror charges in raids conducted across north-west Britain in April last year, have won their legal battle against their extradition from the country.

The Special Immigration Appeals Commission (SIAC) has upheld Abid Naseer and Ahmad Faraz Khan’s appeals against their deportation, The Telegraph reports.

British authorities who described the SIAC’s judgement as disappointing, said the government would now try and ensure that the Pakistani men do not engage in any terror activities in the country.

“We are disappointed that the court has ruled that Abid Naseer and Ahmad Faraz Khan should not be deported to Pakistan, which we were seeking on national security grounds.
As the court agreed, they are a security risk to the UK. We are now taking all possible measures to ensure they do not engage in terrorist activity,” the paper quoted Home Secretary Theresa May, as saying.

“Protecting the public is the Government”s top priority,” May added.

The British authorities had failed to bring up charges against any of the arrested men, but had decided to deport them for being a ‘security risk’.

Two of the arrested men Abdul Wahab Khan, and Tariq Ur Rehman, have already returned to Pakistan after their appeals against exclusion were rejected.

It was for the first time that Pakistanis on student visas were detained on such serious charges.

All the arrested Pakistani nationals belong to the North West Frontier Province, the hot bed of Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

British security agencies suspect that several of the men arrested were trained at religious schools in Pakistan and sent to launch suicide attacks on the West. They were planning to wreak havoc across Britain on the occasion of Easter last year. (ANI)

Shahzad’s ex-PAF chief father taken into custody for interrogation

Lahore, May 7 (ANI): Former Pakistan Air Force Chief Air Vice Marshal Baharul Haq, the father of Faisal Shahzad, who has been accused of plotting the failed Times Square bombing, has been taken into custody for interrogation.

According to The Daily Times, Pakistani intelligence agencies have arrested Haq for questioning his son’s involvement in last week’s bungled bombing attempt at New York’s Times Square.

It may be noted that Haq along with his other family members had vacated their Hayatabad house and left for an undisclosed location just hours after news regarding Shahzad’s involvement in the bombing plot was flashed.

Haq was seen vacating his house situated in a posh locality of Hayatabad town as soon as media started converging outside his residence to learn more about Shahzad, a private television channel said.

Eyewitnesses said Haq along with other male and female members of the family left for some unknown destination in a car to avoid the media glare.

None of Shahzad’s family members have spoken to the media about his arrest in New York over alleged involvement in terror activities.

Air Vice Marshal Haq had retired from the Pakistan Air Force few years ago. His brother Major General (retired) Tajul Haq reportedly served as the Inspector General of Frontier Corps (IGFC).

Shahzad, 30, was arrested on Tuesday while he was trying to board a plane to Dubai. Soon after his arrest media reports said that eight to ten people had also been arrested in Pakistan in connection with the failed bombing plot.

Earlier, US officials said Shahzad has admitted to his role in the Times Square bombing plot, saying he had received bomb-making training in Pakistan.

During interrogation, Shahzad, who had returned from Pakistan in February, said that he received training in the restive tribal region in Pakistan along the Afghanistan border, a stronghold of the Tehreeke-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), adding that he was alone in the bombing plot and didn’t receive any help from banned terror groups operating from that region. (ANI)

Times Square bomb plotter’s ex-PAF chief father flees from Hayatabad house

Peshawar, May 5 (ANI): Faisal Shahzad, the American citizen of Pakistani origin who has been accused of the failed Times Square bombing plot, is said to be the son of former Pakistan Air Force (PAF) Air Vice Marshal Baharul Haq.

According to television reports, Haq was seen vacating his house situated in a posh locality of Hayatabad town as soon as media started converging outside his residence to learn more about Shahzad.

Eyewitnesses said Haq along with other male and female members of the family left for some unknown destination in a car to avoid the media glare, The News reports.

None of Shahzad’s family members have spoken to the media about his arrest in New York over alleged involvement in terror activities.

Air Vice Marshal Haq had retired from the Pakistan Air Force few years ago. His brother Major General (retired) Tajul Haq reportedly served as the Inspector General of Frontier Corps (IGFC).

Shahzad, 30, was arrested on Tuesday while he was trying to board a plane to Dubai. Soon after his arrest media reports said that eight to ten people had also been arrested in Pakistan in connection with the failed bombing plot.

Earlier, US officials said Shahzad has admitted to his role in the Times Square bombing plot, saying he had received bomb-making training in Pakistan.

During interrogation, Shahzad, who had returned from Pakistan in February, said that he received training in the restive tribal region in Pakistan along the Afghanistan border, a stronghold of the Tehreeke-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), adding that he was alone in the bombing plot and didn’t receive any help from banned terror groups operating from that region.

Meanwhile, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is also trying to establish if there are any links between Shahzad and David Coleman Headley, the Pakistani-American man charged with scouting targets for the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks. (ANI)

Sharifs have turned Pak Punjab into terror ‘bomb’ ready to explode: Governor

London, Apr.30 (ANI): Blaming the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) for harbouring militants in the region, Pakistan’s Punjab province governor Salman Taseer has said that the PML-N under the direct guidance of its leadership (Nawaz and Shahbaz Sharif) has turned province into a ‘bomb’, which is ready to explode.

Taseer charged the PML-N of ‘tolerating’ and ‘supporting’ extremists, who he said are operating ‘openly’ in the province as witnessed in the recent attacks on minority groups in the province.

“The Sharifs are creating a potential bomb here in Punjab. These (militant) groups are armed and dangerous. There is no way you can accommodate these people. There has to be zero tolerance,” The Guardian quoted Taseer, as saying.

The extent of jihadi groups’ grip on the region can be gauged from the fact that during the recent by-elections in Jhang, PML-N leaders were seen wooing the banned sectarian group Sipah-e-Sahaba.

Punjab”s Law minister, Rana Sanaullah, was pictured on the campaign trail with the alleged head of the group, Ahmed Ludhianvi.

It is also believed that the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has deep links with the Sipah-e-Sahaba, which is blamed for the deaths of hundreds of Shias in the region.

Sheikh Waqas Akram, an opposition member of parliament from Jhang, compared Punjab’s situation with that of the Swat Valley, where the Taliban had established a virtual parallel government.

“There can be 10 Swats in Punjab, if you don”t check them (extremists),” the newspaper quoted Akram, as saying.

However, Sanaullah has countered all charges against him and the PML-N, saying that though banned terror groups operate in the region, there is no such ‘Talibanisation’ of Punjab.

“There was no ‘Talibanisation’ in Punjab.Not a single street where you can say there is a no-go area,” he said.

Sanaullah denied Sipah-e-Sahaba’s involvement in any terror activities, and blamed the extremists based in the tribal areas in country’s north-west for the recent spate of violence in the province.

“95% of the people of Sipah-e-Sahaba are not terrorists.We must persuade these persons to put aside their guns, to participate in elections. They have the right to vote, so why can”t I ask them Sipah-e-Sahaba for votes?” Sanaullah said. (ANI)

Pak took up issue of India’s ‘intrusion’ in Afghanistan with US : Gilani

Islamabad, Mar.25 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has said that Islamabad has taken up the issue of India’s ‘intrusion’ in Afghanistan with both New Delhi and the United States.

Addressing the Senate, Gilani said he had a detailed meeting with US National Security Adviser General. James Jones over India’s expanding presence in Afghanistan.

Pakistan has been blaming India for using Afghan territory to launch terror activities in Pakistan, especially in Balochistan.

Pakistani agencies have also been accusing India’s Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) of plotting terror attacks across the country using Indian consulates in Afghanistan.

Recently, Pakistani intelligence officials claimed that they had nabbed the mastermind of the Lahore serial blasts, in which over 50 persons were killed earlier this month, who revealed that the attacks were planned two months ago in an Indian consulate in Afghanistan.

Pakistani agencies also claimed that a top Indian official had visited Kabul in December and met Muzammal, who had fled to Afghanistan via Balochistan after the attack on the General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi in 2009. (ANI)

Pune terror attack is a blot on India’s record: Chidambaram

Bangalore, Mar 16 (ANI): Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram on Tuesday said that last month’s Pune terror attack is a “blot” on the country’s record, and it could have been prevented as there was enough intelligence alerts.

The bomb, which killed 11 people and wounded at least 57, is seen as the first major attack on India since the 2008 Mumbai massacre, and appeared to target Indian and foreign tourists.

“Despite intelligence sharing, it (Pune terror attack) occurred, it is a blot on our record,” Chidambaram said.

Chidambaram said crucial information about terror activities was provided to Maharashtra Government on October 9, 2009.

He also stressed that the Pune Police was given written advisory on intelligence over several potential targets in the city including the German Bakery.

The Home Minister further highlighted that the bakery’s manager was advised over a threat, but said: “Unfortunately, German Bakery did not heed this advice.”

The blast was reportedly triggered as part of what is called the ‘Karachi Project’ planned by the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT).

The details of the alleged Karachi Project were revealed by the arrested suspected Lashkar operative David Coleman Headley to the USA’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

Headley had recced areas in Pune near the blast site.

He had reportedly also recced other cities including Mumbai, Delhi, Pushkar and Goa, staying close to Jewish prayer centres in these cities. (ANI)

Pak’s ambivalence in cracking down on Saeed clear : NYT

New York, Sep.19 (ANI) : Pakistani authorities may have filed cases against Lashkar -e-Taiba (LeT) chief Hafeez Mohammad Saeed, the alleged mastermind of the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, but Islamabad’s actions are being considered as a mere ‘hogwash’.

The New York Times, while reporting the actions taken against Saeed, said the ambivalence of Pakistani authorities in cracking down on the LeT’s fouder leader was clear.

The newspaper highlighted that the Pakistan government has never been serious regarding putting a check on Saeed and his covert terror activities being run under the LeT’s charity organization Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD).

“Even after he was placed under house arrest in December, the government took steps to soften the blow, allowing him, for instance, to hold a defiant news conference before his confinement began,” it said.

While the Pakistan government has been maintaining that it is seriously carrying out the probe regarding the 26/11 massacre, and tried to show the same to the international community especially the US by booking Saeed under the anti-terrorism act, its ‘bluff’ was laid bare when Saeed’s lawyer disclosed that the case registered against his client were ‘very weak’.

“I have gone through both the FIRs against Saeed thoroughly. The charges against my client are very weak. He has expressed his views like any other Pakistani,” Saeed’s lawyer AK Dongar told a private television channel.

Pakistani authorities also revealed that they have not received any instructions for arresting Saeed despite the registration of two cases against him. (ANI)

‘Saudi charity funding pro al-Qaeda terror outfits in Pak’

Islamabad, Sep. 14 (ANI): A Saudi Arabian charity has funded 15 million dollars to a pro al-Qaeda militant organization to carry out terror attacks in Pakistan, Pakistani police has claimed.

“The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan is likely to strike major cities of the Punjab. The joint plans of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan and Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan are to target Shias,” The News quoted a report prepared by the Crime Investigation Department, as saying.

According to the report, a major chunk of funds gathered by Al-Haramain Foundation goes to fund terror activities of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan.he Al-Haramain Foundation has been banned by the UN Security Council for its links to al-Qaeda.

Hakimullah Mehsud, the successor to slain Pak-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud, has vowed to avenge his killing in a US drone attack in August, the CID report says.

“The new Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan chief Hakimullah Mehsud and his cousin Qari Hussain Ahmed have strong anti-Shia views and ties with the (banned) Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and Jaish-e-ohammed,” the report pointed out. (ANI)

fficially, Pak just can’t stomach Zardari’s ‘India no more a threat’ comments

Islamabad, June 30 (ANI): The Pakistan leadership seems to lack consensus when it comes to talking about the country’s relations with India, with the Information Minister Qamar Zaman Kaira saying that President Asif Ali Zardari’s statement that India was no more a threat for Pakistan, was blown out of context.

Addressing a joint press conference with the ISPR spokesman, Major General Athar Abbas here, Kaira asserted that Zardari’s statement was reported out of context, and what he really meant was that there was ‘no immediate threat of war’.

When enquired about India’s involvement in terror activities inside Pakistan and claims about New Delhi arming militants in tribal areas, Kaira said Islamabad can not comment on it, as it does not have enough proof regarding it.

“We will not only raise the issue but will also take an appropriate action when a solid evidence is in hand. The government is behaving responsibly,” The Dawn quoted Kaira, as saying.

Kaira also ruled out any possibility of shifting its troops from the eastern Indian border to the western border with Afghanistan.

“We cannot and will not do it. Pakistan could not remain oblivious to the conventional threat,” he said. (ANI)

Pak minister’s firm financing terror activities in Taliban infested areas ?

Islamabad, June 20 (ANI): Intelligence agencies in Pakistan have been shocked to find out that billions of rupees were disbursed to the country’s terror hit volatile regions through a federal minister’s forex company.

According to the FIA, about 15 billion rupees were transferred from 21 secret bank accounts of Lahore to different regions of the country, and a major share of the money was sent to the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) over the last seven months, where the Pakistan Army has been engaged in a fearsome battle with the Taliban.

According to sources, the money was transferred by a company, Malik Exchange, which is owned by the Minister of State for Kashmir and Northern Areas, Abdul Raziq.

It may be noted that Raziq was elected a Senator as an independent candidate. He was apparently rewarded with the minister of state’s post, as he sided with the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) government at the Centre. Raziq himself belongs to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

About 80 percent of the amount transferred by the three employees of the company was sent to Parachanar, Hangu and other troubled areas of the country, and 15 percent was sent to different areas of Kashmir. Only five percent was disbursed in areas within Lahore, sources said.

This trend of a large amount of money being sent to the restive regions had set alarm bells ringing for the concerned authorities.

“This not only a national issue as there are international dimension of this forex scam too. The outward diversion of these billions from the accounts of three employees of Malik Exchange is worrisome for me. It’s a matter of further inquiry at this stage if this money was also being sent to Afghanistan,” The News quoted DG FIA Tariq Khosa, as saying.

Raziq, however, has denied his company’s involvement in any illegal transaction.

A close aide of the minister also denied the charges, saying the allegations made against Raziq were totally without foundation.

“Those leveling the allegations have vested interests against the minister,” he said. (ANI)

Mehsud rejects Mullah Omar’s appeal of stopping terror activities in Pak

Peshawar, June 20 (ANI): In yet another incident which proves that fissures in the Taliban are getting wider, the Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud has rejected the calls of the Taliban’s supreme leader Mullah Muhammad Omar Akhund for halting terror strikes in Pakistan.

According to sources, Akhund had asked Mehsud to stop the terror acts in Pakistan and focus more on activities against the US led allied forces in Afghanistan.

“Mullah Omar is our Ameer, but like Afghanistan, we are determined to continue resistance in Pakistan,” Mehsud reportedly told a delegation of the Taliban.

Sources said the delegation asked Mehsud to shun his violent activities in Pakistan, which according to them is ‘damaging image of Taliban in Pakistan’, but Mehsud out rightly rejected the appeals of the 11-member delegation.

The top Taliban leaders who met Mehsud included Abu Yahya Al Laibi, Abdul Haq Turikistani, Siraj Ud Din Haqqani, and Abdul Hakeem Sharaee, The Nation reports.

In the past few days, Mehsud has been facing the ire of his former aides, as they have attacked the warlord for his decision to carry out terror strikes inside Pakistan.

Rival commander Qari Zainudin Mehsud recently blamed the TTP chief for all the terror strikes in Pakistan, and termed them ‘unIslamic’.

Another former close aid of Mehsud, Qari Turkistan charged Mehsud of being the biggest enemy of Islam.

“Mehsud attacked mosques and madrassas, ordered explosions in markets and the slaughtering of religious scholars and troops, it is not Islam,” Turkistan said. (ANI)

JuD has links with Al-Qaeda: Pak Attorney General

Islamabad, May 30 (ANI): Pakistan Attorney General Sardar Latif Khosa has said that the Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) has links with Al-Qaeda, and at least one of the culprit involved in the November 2008 Mumbai attacks is associated with the JuD, The News reports.

Presenting secret documents before the Lahore High Court (LHC) with regard to the house-arrest case of JuD chief Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, Khosa said the documents were related with the national security, and therefore is being tabled in a closed door session.

Saeed’s counsel AK Dogar, however, objected to close door proceedings of the court and demanded that the documents should be presented in an open session and in the presence of Saeed.

Earlier, the LHC preserved its verdict in the Saeed detention case saying it would be made public later.

It may be noted that Khosa recently told the LHC that the government had ‘enough material’ against the JuD leaders to prove that they have been involved in terror activities, but it could not produce it before a court of law. (ANI)

Hafiz Saeed’s detention verdict ready, LHC to make it public later

Islamabad, May 30 (ANI): The hearing into the detention case of the banned Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) chief Hafiz Mohammad Saeed has been completed, and the Lahore High Court has preserved its verdict which would made public later.

According to The News, secret documents related to Saeed were tabled before the court by the federal and provincial government in a closed door session.

Attorney General Sardar Latif Khosa said it was done because the documents were concerned with national security.

Saeed’s counsel AK Dogar, however, objected to close door proceedings of the court and demanded that the documents should be presented in an open session and in the presence of Saeed.

It may be noted that Khosa recently told the Lahore High Court (LHC) that the government had ‘enough material’ against the JuD leaders to prove that they have been involved in terror activities, but it could not produce it before a court of law. (ANI)

Pak has ‘enough material’ against JuD, but could not produce it in court

Lahore, May 28 (ANI): The Pakistan government has ‘enough material’ against the Jamaat-ud- Dawa (JuD) leaders to prove that they have been involved in terror activities, but it could not produce it before a court of law.

Arguing on a petition against the detention of JuD leaders Hafiz Saeed and Colonel (retired) Nazir Ahmad, Attorney General Latif Khosa told the Lahore High Court (LHC) bench that the authorities have enough evidence against Saeed, Colonel Ahmad and several other JuD leaders to prove that they have involved in certain nefarious activities, but those cannot be produced before the court.

Khosa failed to clarify why the evidences could not be made public, The Daily Times reports.

He said the government was forced to detain both Saeed and Ahmed after their alleged involvement in November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.

Under persistent pressure from India and West after the 26/11 terror strike, the Pakistan government had initiated a crackdown on the banned terror organization Lashkar-e-Toiba’s frontal outfit, the Jammat-ud-Daawa.

Twenty offices, 87 schools, two libraries, seven religious schools and six websites linked to JuD, a group now proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the United Nations Security Council were also shut down.

The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) had imposed a ban on the JuD while declaring it a terrorist organization on December 10, 2008, for its involvement in the November 26, Mumbai terror attacks, but most of the organisation’s centers are still working as they did earlier. (ANI)

CPI (M) calls for alternative anti-terror policy

Kolkata, May. 4 (ANI): CPI (M) Politburo member Sitaram Yechury has called for an alternative anti-terror policy, which can be attained only by a non-Congress and non-BJP coalition.

“An alternative policy direction is needed and that is possible only through a non-Congress and non-BJP political formation and it is this formation we want after the elections,” Yechury told reporters in Kolkata.

Pointing out that both parties did little to fight terror after showing initial concerns, Yechury demanded a shift in nation’s anti-terror policy and foreign policy.

“While the Congress came out with Federal Investigation Agency Bill after Mumbai attacks, the BJP had come out with POTA. However, the important aspect is how to prevent such terror activities from taking place and there is no thinking on this by either of the two parties,” he said.

Asserting the need of modernization of security agencies, the CPI(M) leader said that there was lack of coordination among the police, National Security Guard (NSG) and other agencies.

“No thinking is taking place on these aspects and for this a new alternative is required,” Yechury said.

He said foreign policy is another area of concern that requires a new policy direction adding “these areas will be the objectives of the new alternative and this is what we want to achieve”. (ANI)

BJP questions Cong terror pledge

THE BJP has shot off seven questions to the Congress asking it to explain the steps taken by it to counter terror in the five years of its rule. The move comes a day after Home Minister P. Chidambaram unveiled the Congress’ roadmap to strengthen anti-terror mechanism.

Once again raking up the issue of Afzal Guru – sentenced to death for attack on Parliament – BJP spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad said if the Congress was serious on terrorism, why was Guru’s clemency plea pending with the President for the two-and-a-half years? The BJP also asked why the anti-terror special law was enacted only after the 26/11 terror strikes in Mumbai. “Even then, many vital provisions like admissibility of confessions was left out.

Why?” Prasad also wanted to know why the UPA failed to follow up with Pakistan the promise it made to the Vajpayee government to not to allow terror activities against India from its soil. Even though the infiltration from Bangladesh posed a serious threat to national security, why did the UPA push the IMDT Act through the backdoor after it was quashed by the Supreme Court? Chidambaram must answer why no action was taken against the United Liberation Front of Asom after the Congress came to power in 2004.

“Was it because some elements in that group gave political support to the Congress in the state? Why are you silent on repeated killings in that state?” Prasad asked. He also sought to know why the border fencing work undertaken along the eastern borders by the NDA government was halted after the UPA came to power.

Refuting Chidambaram’s charge that the policing was weaker under the NDA, Prasad said, “Why is he misleading the nation by saying when L.K Advani was in office, the number of direct recruit in the IPS were reduced? The strength of the cadre is determined by the IPS (Fixation of Cadre) Regulation, 1995 in consultation with the states.”.

Britain’s MI6′s special Pak operation facilitated arrests of 11 alleged terrorists

London, Apr.11 (ANI): The British foreign intelligence agency MI6′s special operation to monitor terror activities in Pakistan provided the authorities important links, following which they arrested 11 alleged Pakistani terrorists from across the country.

According to a report in The Guardian, the British security officials working on intelligence inputs provided by MI6, found out that a massive terror strike was being planned in Britain itself.

Following monitoring of calls and emails, the officials ascertained that there was some link between the suspected Al-Qaida commanders in Pakistan and the people in Britain.

“There was concern Al-Qaida was directing operations, recruiting people to travel to this country, direct their operations and tell them what to do,” sources said.

Further investigations pointed to an imminent attack being planned on British soil, and all the concerned agencies firmly believed that the men under their scanner must be arrested without any delay.

Two of the men arrested were seen taking photographs of crowded places in Manchester, a necessary step terrorists take before planning an attack.

British security agencies, however, have failed to come out with something substantial regarding the arrests of 11 Pakistani nationals even after more than forty-eight hours.

Sources said the officials had failed to find any bombs, bomb-making parts, precursor chemicals to make explosives, weapons or ammunition till now.

Intelligence officials have started scanning the computer hard disks recovered from Manchester, Liverpool and Clitheroe, and a further report is awaited.

The investigators said that though the operation was still at an early stage, piecing together all the intelligence inputs and other findings may reveal the whole plot. (ANI)

BJP promises to check illegal immigrants with ID cards

Chitradurga (Karnataka), April 7 (IANS) The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will prevent infiltration and check illegal immigrants from Bangladesh by introducing identification cards to every Indian if elected to power, the party’s senior leader L.K. Advani said here Tuesday.

‘The introduction of ID card to every Indian will help the government identify illegal immigrants, especially from Bangladesh, and deport them,’ Advani said at an election meeting in central Karnataka, about 200 km from Bangalore.

The ID card will also help the government to prevent infiltration from across the borders and check the terror activities indulged by many of them, Advani told a gathering of about 15,000 people amidst tight security.

Accusing the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government of compromising on national security and failing to check infiltration or to deport illegal migrants from the north-east region, Advani said though the Supreme Court struck down the Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunals) Act (IMDTA) in July 2005, infiltration and influx of illegal migrants continued unabated from Bangladesh into north-eastern states.

‘One of the root causes for escalating terrorism is unchecked infiltration and entry of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh in thousands. We need to find a permanent solution to end this menace,’ Advani asserted.

Highlighting the salient features of the party’s manifesto and the IT vision document released for the general elections, Advani said besides computer literacy for all, the party’s IT strategy would usher in e-governance across the country to infuse transparency across every layer of administration.

Karnataka is scheduled to go to polls April 23 and 30, with 17 constituencies in the first phase and 11 in the second phase.

The BJP has fielded Janardhan Swamy as its candidate from Chitradurga parliamentary constituency, where voting will take place in the first phase (April 23).