Norway gunman Breivik pleads not guilty at Oslo trial

OSLO: Right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik pleaded not guilty to charges he committed “acts of terror” when he massacred 77 people in twin attacks in Norway last July.

“I acknowledge the acts, but not criminal guilt and I claim self

-defence,” he told the court on the first day of his 10-week trial.

The judge then entered the plea as “not guilty.”

His plea came after prosecutor Inga Bejer Engh spent over an hour reading the charges against him, including “acts of terror,” and listing each of his 77 victims and and how they died.

Breivik, 33, has described his actions as “cruel but necessary” and claims he acted alone and in self-defence against those he considered to be “state traitors” for opening Norway up to multiculturalism and allowing the “Muslim invasion” of Europe.

On July 22, Breivik killed eight people when he set off a bomb in a van parked at the foot of government buildings in Oslo housing the offices of labour prime minister Jens Stoltenberg, who was not present at the time.

He then travelled to Utoeya island outside Oslo where, dressed as a police officer, he spent more than an hour methodically shooting at hundreds of people attending a Labour Party youth summer camp.

The shooting spree left 69 people dead, most of them teenagers trapped on the small heart-shaped island surrounded by icy waters, and is the deadliest massacre ever committed by a sole gunman.

Headley initially refused to entertain questions on Rana

WASHINGTON: In the first few days of his arrest, Mumbai terror attack accused David Headley refused to entertain any question on his childhood friend Tahawwur Husain Rana, as he wanted to save him.

It was only after he was informed by the FBI agents that Rana has been arrested on terror related charge that Headley agreed to respond to questions about Pakistani Canadian Rana, Headley informed a Chicago court during a recently concluded Rana trial.

“I did not want them to be affected by my case,” the 50-year-old Pakistani American told the court when asked by the government attorney when he testified before the jury during the Rana trial.

“Why not?” the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) operative was asked.

“I’m close to them. I didn’t want to,” Headley said. “Besides your wife, who’s the closest friend that you have in the world?” he was asked.

“Dr Rana,” Headley said. Headley said “Yes, I did” when the government attorney asked if he came to learn that Rana had been arrested.

And after Rana was arrested by the FBI on terror related charges, Headley said, he had conversation with the government about it.

After the conversation, the US attorney told Headley that if he was to cooperate it “would have to be complete,” and he could not refuse to talk about any individual.

“So I decided to comply with that,” he said. The Mumbai terror accused also told the court that he initially lied about Rana to the FBI investigators, but later on provided information about him.

It’s a complex issue, says US of Headley access

Washington, May 29 (IANS) The US is cooperating with India ‘very closely on this critical and very complex issue’ of providing access to Pakistani-American terror suspect David Coleman Headley, says a US official without committing whether New Delhi would get such access.

‘Let me just say on that that we are very pleased that the United States and India have been able to cooperate very closely on this critical and very complex issue,’ Assistant Secretary of State Robert O. Blake told reporters Friday when asked about ‘one of the sticking points of India-US relations.’

‘And we continue to work very hard with our Indian counterparts to move forward on that. But I don’t have anything more to say. I’d just refer you to the Department of Justice for further comment,’ he said.

Asked if he couldn’t say in so many whether US was going to give access to India, Blake said: ‘I’m not in a position to.’

‘I don’t think it’s a sticking point. I think that we’ve got – again, we’ve got a good dialogue and I think we’ll work out a way forward,’ he added when asked if this was a sticking point ahead of the inaugural US-India strategic dialogue here next week.

However, an Indian diplomat insisted that India would get access to Headley soon as promised by President Barack Obama during his meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh here last month.

TTP warns Balochistan schools against allowing students to wear ‘western’ clothes

Quetta, May 15 (ANI): The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has threatened several schools, including two girls’ school in Quetta of ‘severe consequences’ if they do not pursue its guidelines regarding the dress code.

A number of schools in the provincial capital and Mastung region have received threatening letters warning them against allowing students to wear ‘western’ clothes, and asked them to observe the ‘purdah’ system strictly.

Following the terror warning some of the schools have closed down fearing an attack from the TTP, The Dawn reports.

The threat letter also warned about the presence of ‘informants among the students and staff members.’

The threatening mail has resulted in a wave of panic sweeping among students and school administration across the province. (ANI)

Times Square bombing plot has converged Pak-US’ interests :Expert

London, May 15 (ANI): Analysts believe that following the botched Times Square bombing plot which saw the United States’ tirade against Pakistan asking it to transform its lip service into action and work to dismantle the terror breeding camps flourishing on its soil, Islamabad has begun to see and take seriously the threat posed to its government by the Taliban.

The recent arrest of two men, who are said to be the failed Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad’s accomplices shows how the US and Pakistan’s interests have converged, said Stephen Biddle, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington.

“The big change in Pakistan is they have become much more aggressive against the Pakistan Taliban because they have come to see them as a threat to their regime,” The Christian Science Monitor, quoted Biddle, as saying.

The United States, for long, has been asking Pakistan to destroy the jihadi camps running inside its territory, and has been providing all monetary and military assistance, but years of continuous demands have resulted in little ground action.

However, it seems that the Pakistan government has finally understood the seriousness of the issue, and also that if it fails to act now it would probably not be able to fix the problem ever, the paper said. (ANI)

Cheryl Cole’s brother ‘arrested following armed terror raid’

London, May 14 (ANI): Cheryl Cole is reportedly in a state of shock following her brother’s alleged involvement in a robbery case.

The singer’s sibling Andrew Tweedy has reportedly been held for questioning by the cops after a violent raid in a post office at Longbenton, Newcastle.

In the attack robbers waved a gun and machete at customers and staff before making off with thousands of pounds.

Cops arrested nine people, including one woman, in connection with the robbery.

A police spokesman said: “A vehicle and firearm have been recovered.”

Northumbria Police did not reveal the identity of those arrested, reports the Daily Express.

However, a police source confirmed that unemployed Tweedy was one of those being held for questioning.

Tweedy’s life has been marked with drugs, alcohol and solvent abuse, along with anxiety and depression. (ANI)

Times Square bomber�s mentor was let off at JFK airport

New York, May 10 (ANI): Yemen-based terror suspect Anwar Awlaki, who is said to be the mentor of the Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad, was inexplicably let off at New York�s John F Kennedy airport eight years ago after being apprehended for passport fraud. The Congress is now investigating the circumstances behind his release.

According to investigators, Sahzad was considerably influenced by Alwaki�s calls for a violent Jihad. It is also possible that he made contact with Awlaki, New York Times reports. (ANI)

Militants gun down four policemen in NWFP

Peshawar, May 8 (ANI): At least four policemen were killed and one seriously injured in a militant attack on a checkpost in Ghazi Kot town of North West Frontier Province’
(NWFP) Mansehra District.

According to senior officials, militants opened fire on policemen, who had taken refuge inside the checkpost to protect themselves from heavy rains, killing four security officials on the spot.

“Four policemen were killed on the spot, while the injured policeman is still unconscious,” The Daily Times quoted a senior police official, Zulfiqar Jadoon, as saying.

“This is a clear act of terrorism,” Jadoon added.

The militants, who had arrived in a car, fled the scene soon after the attack.

Mansehra is considered to be a relatively peaceful district in the highly disturbed NWFP. This was probably the second big terror strike in the region since March when armed militants had killed six officials during a raid on a US charity office.

Iowa senator demands Congress probe on how Shahzad became U.S. citizen

Washington, May 7 (ANI): The Republican Senator from Iowa, Charles Grassley, has sent a letter to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano asking for the “Alien” file on Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad and his family members and for everyone who has been a reference or a sponsor for the terror suspect.

Keen to know how Shahzad was granted American citizenship, Senator Grassley wants to know if this file was in the hands of the official who approved Shahzad”s citizenship.

An Alien or “A” file includes visa and travel history, financial and personal information as well as any derogatory information from law enforcement.

According to CBS News, Grassley also wants Shahzad”s arrival forms that he filled out each time he re-entered the United States and whether or not he sponsored other individuals to become citizens.

CBS news reported Wednesday that Faisal Shahzad had appeared on a Department of Homeland Security watch list between 1999 and 2008 because he brought 80,000 dollars of cash into the United States.

Grassley wants the documents by May 11, 2010. (ANI)

Pak would help US to trace Shahzad’s background: Haqqani

Washington, May 6 (ANI): Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States Hussain Haqqani has said that Islamabad would work extensively to establish and trace the background of Faisal Shahzad, the American citizen of Pakistan’s origin accused of plotting the failed Times Square bombing plot.

In an interview to the CNN, Haqqani said investigations are already on in Pakistan, and that it would do all it can to help the US agencies in their probe.

“We will retrace all his (Shehzad’s) steps. There is a major effort underway right now as we speak and there are teams working in Pakistan, which are trying to put together all kinds of evidence,” Haqqani said.

Earlier, Haqqani had described Shahzad as a “misguided individual.”

“An overwhelming majority of Pakistani Americans share the aspirations of civilized people everywhere for a terror-free world and should be seen as allies against the misguided individuals who undertake or plan acts of terror,” Haqqani had said.

Shahzad, 30, was arrested on Tuesday while trying to board a plane to Dubai. Soon after his arrest, media reports said eight to ten people had also been arrested in Pakistan in connection with the failed bombing plot. However, Interior Minister Rehman Malik has denied any arrests being made in Pakistan in the case.

US officials said Shahzad has admitted to his role in the bombing plot, and added that he had received bomb-making training in Pakistan’s restive tribal region along the country’s border with Afghanistan. (ANI)

It’s ‘premature’ to say if Shehzad had links with Pak Taliban: Pak Army

Lahore, May 6 (ANI): While US officials have said that Faisal Shehzad, the main accused behind the foiled Times Square bombing plot, received bomb making training in Pakistan’s restive tribal region of Waziristan, the Pakistan Army has said it is premature to say that he had visited the region unless a link between him and the Taliban is established.

Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) chief Major General Athar Abbas said those links are yet to be established.

“Unless a link is established, it will be premature to say that he had gone there,” The Daily Times quoted Abbas, as saying.

According to US officials privy to the investigations Shehzad, son of a former Pakistan Air Force (PAF) Chief Air Vice Marshal Baharul Haq, has already admitted to receiving terror training in Waziristan during his five-month trip to the country earlier this year.

When asked about the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) taking the responsibility for the botched up bombing plot, Abbas said : “As for the TTP claim, anybody can claim anything.” (ANI)

Experts say Times Square bomb suspect picked wrong explosive

New York, May 5 (ANI): Law enforcement sources have revealed that Times Square terror suspect Faisal Shahzad packed an SUV with the wrong explosive material, and therefore, was unsuccessful in his attempt to bomb the area and kill people.

According to FoxNews and the New York Post, investigators said they found a complicated but “amateurish-looking” homemade device, a mishmash of household and garden store products including eight bags of sugar nitrate fertilizer — but not ammonium nitrate, which can produce a dynamite-like explosion.

They said that had the device functioned properly, it probably would have created a deadly fireball — though not nearly as disastrous as an ammonium nitrate device.

Frank Doyle, a former bomb expert and 33-year FBI veteran, said he doubted Shahzad received proper training in Pakistan or elsewhere to build a bomb, particularly when it came to what type of fertilizer he used.

“I would question his degree of training or whatever he knew about it,” Doyle told FoxNews.com.

“That”s only one of a series of really serious mistakes he made,” he added.

Doyle declined to indicate what material Shahzad should have used to detonate the device he allegedly packed in an SUV in the middle of Times Square.

“As a member of this community, I don”t want to teach them how to correct it,” Doyle said.

The fact that Shahzad used the incorrect type of fertilizer for his device should be considered a “blessing, if not luck,” he said. (ANI)

Is Hakeemullah Mehsud behind Times Square bombing plot?

Islamabad, May 5 (ANI): Media reports suggests that the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chieftain Hakeemullah Mehsud may be behind the failed Times Square bombing plot.

According to The Dawn, nearly two months back Hakimullah had written a letter to Dr. Aafia Siddiqui’s sister assuring her of all help and cooperation.

In the letter, Hakimullah reportedly told Aafia’s sister that the TTP would give a memorable response to the US for detaining her and falsely charging her in terror cases.

Hakimullah also purportedly said in the letter that Pakistani leaders would also face a fitting response for failing to save Aafia, the alleged Al-Qaeda terror suspect.

The Pakistani neuroscientist has been charged for firing at American investigators in Afghanistan in July 2008, and is scheduled to be sentenced on May 6.

A New York court has found her guilty on charges related to the attempted murder and assault of US nationals and US officers and employees in Afghanistan. (ANI)

We had to protect Kasab from policemens’ anger: Maharashtra ATS chief

Mumbai, May 3 (ANI): Maharashtra Anti Terrorism Squad (ATS) chief Rakesh Maria revealed on Monday that the ATS had to protect Kasab, the lone surviving terrorist arrested during 26/11 attacks, not only from public anger but also from anger within the force.

Maria, was Joint Commissioner (Crime) at the time of the terror strike.

He has supervised Kasab’s investigation, as well as security measures for the 26/11 trial.

Maria said the anger of the men in uniform had crossed its limit after the loss of many good officers.

“There was a lot of public anger… the department had lost some of the best officers (during the attack), so we had to protect Kasab from within the department because there was anger in department also,” Maria said.

The then ATS chief Hemant Karkare, Additional Commissioner Ashok Kamte and encounter specialist Inspector Vijay Saluskar were among those who lost their lives while on duty.

Today, the country is looking forward to the special court’s verdict.

The verdict is expected to be delivered around 2 p.m. (ANI)

EU court tells UK it cannot restrict ‘terror’ families’ benefits

London, Apr.30 (ANI): Britain has been told that it is illegal for it to slap restrictions on benefits for families of terror suspects.

The controversial decision given by the European Court of Justice now allows families full access to state handouts worth tens of thousands of pounds a year, and is being seen as huge blow to Britain”s war on terrorism and violent extremists.

“The regulation ordering funds to be frozen applies only to assets that can be used to support terrorist activities,” the judges said.

They said benefits money was intended to meet “vital needs”.

The ruling came after the wives of three suspects linked to Osama Bin Laden, al-Qaeda and the Taliban launched a legal challenge.

Under current rules the Treasury can impose strict limits on how benefits are paid to families of suspects. They can order that a suspect”s wife can only withdraw 10 or 15 pounds a week in cash for each family member. Other payments can only be made via a debit card.

Families can also be ordered to give Treasury officials a detailed breakdown of how they spend their benefits. The restrictions target the spouses of people on the United Nation”s list of suspects who have had their bank accounts and assets frozen. (ANI)

Hakeemullah even if alive not in command of Pak Taliban anymore: Pentagon

Washington, Apr.30 (ANI): The Pentagon is unsure over the fate of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Hakeemullah Mehsud, but it is certain that the warlord does not exert any authority over the banned terror outfit anymore.

Speaking during a media briefing here, Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell said while Hakeemullah’s fate is still shrouded in mystery, it is believed that he is not in command of the Taliban.

“I certainly have seen no evidence that the person you speak of (Hakeemullah) is operational today or is executing or exerting authority over the Pakistani Taliban as he once did. So I don’t know if that reflects him being alive or dead, but he clearly is not running the Pakistani Taliban anymore,” The Daily Times quoted Morrell, as saying.

Earlier, a British daily quoted an Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) official as claiming that the Taliban chieftain, who was believed to have been killed in a US drone strike in South Waziristan in January, is alive.

“He (Hakimullah) is alive.He had some wounds but he is basically OK,” the official had said on conditions of anonymity.

Although neither the US nor the Pakistani agencies had confirmed Hakeemullah’s death, who was sworn in as the TTP chieftain following Baitullah Mehsud’s death in a similar missile attack in August last year, he was widely believed to have succumbed to injuries sustained during a missile hit in January. (ANI)

Facebook removes al Qaeda’s No.2 page on networking site

London, Apr 26 (ANI): Facebook has axed a page of a second fugitive al-Qaeda leader after it appeared on the networking site to spread terror messages.

Ayman al-Zawahiri, who has a 16.5 million pound price on his head equal to Osama Bin Laden, was using Facebook to reach out to extremists, The Sun reports.

Egyptian Zawahiri’s page had a photo of him with a semi-automatic rifle in the background.

Videos included a truck bombing in Afghanistan. The page could be found via a Voice of Jihad site, which included film clips calling for attacks on UK and the US.

Experts say militant groups have been scrambling in recent weeks to get on sites like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Facebook said: “These pages have been removed.” (ANI)

Muslim women stage a march against terrorism in Agra

Agra, Apr 19 (ANI): Hundreds of Muslim women took to streets in Agra on Sunday against the terror menace.

The rally was a part of the three-day National Women Muslim Conference, which concluded at Mathur Vaishya Bhavan in Agra.

carrying banners and placards with messages against terrorism, the participant said that the aim of this march is to create awareness among women especially Muslim women against the terror menace.

Shahzad Khan, organiser of the event, said that this was a three-day campaign to create awareness among the educationally backward sections of the society.

“This campaign was to create awareness among the Muslims who are educationally backward. National Muslim Front has begun this door-to-door campaign today along with Muslim women to guide children towards education,” said Khan. (ANI)

NATO unsure of effectiveness of Pak Army’s Afghan counter-insurgency measures

London, Apr.17 (ANI): The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is unsure over the impact of Pakistan Army’s offensive in country’s restive tribal regions over its own counter-insurgency measures within Afghanistan.

Interacting with reporters ahead of the two-day NATO foreign ministers conference, which will take place in Estonian capital Tallin next week, NATO spokesperson James Appathurai admitted that operations against the Taliban in both Afghanistan and Pakistan are ‘difficult’.

When asked whether the Pakistan Army’s offensive against extremists in the lawless tribal areas have been of any help to the NATO’s own anti-terror operation in Afghanistan, Appathurai said : “I have not seen an answer to that question.”

Responding to a question regarding Islamabad’s proposal to train Afghan forces, he said it was upto both countries to decide.

Appathurai also pointed out that the NATO was facing a shortage of trainers for the Afghan security forces.

“The organisation needs at least 500 trainers,” The Daily Times quoted Appathurai, as saying. (ANI)

Lashkar-e-Jhangvi claims responsibility for Quetta hospital suicide attack

Lahore, Apr.17 (ANI): The banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) has claimed the responsibility for Friday’s suicide attack in a Civil Hospital in Quetta in which 11 persons, including a senior police official and a television cameraman were killed and over 30 others injured.

An unnamed person, speaking on behalf of the terror outfit took the responsibility for the ghastly attack, The Daily Times reports.

A member of parliament from the Pakistan People”s Party (PPP), Nasir Ali Shah, was also among the scores injured in the attack outside the emergency ward of the hospital in the provincial capital.

Police said over 15 kilograms of explosives were used in the blast.

The blast was so powerful that it caused extensive damage to the emergency ward of the hospital and some nearby buildings.

Television reports said that gunshots were also heard after the blast. (ANI)