Two US tourists kidnapped in Yemen

Sana’a (Yemen), May 29 (DPA) An American tourist couple and their driver have been kidnapped by gunmen in Yemen, security and tribal sources said Saturday.

They were seized Monday by armed members of the al-Shirda tribe as they drove on a highway linking the capital Sana’a with the Red Sea port city of Houdieda, security sources said.

‘They were on a tour when armed tribesmen intercepted their car and took them,’ a police source told the German Press Agency dpa.

Tribal sources said the abductors are holding the pair now in Bani Mansour area of al-Haymah district, 45 km to the west of Sana’a.

They said the kidnappers are demanding the release of a fellow tribesman detained by police in Sana’a over a land dispute.

US State Department spokesman PJ Crowley told reporters in Washington that the abduction did not appear to be terrorism related. ‘We are working actively with local authorities to gain the release of our two US citizens,’ he said.

Police erected check points on roads leading to al-Haymah and sent armoured personnel carriers to the area to press on the kidnappers to release the two hostages, witnesses said.

An anonymous source claiming to be in touch with the gunmen said the hostages were being well-treated, the Yemen Observer weekly reported.

Last week, two young German girls were freed during a joint Yemeni-Saudi security operation. They had been seized – along with their parents, younger brother, two other German women, a South

Korean female teacher and a British engineer – last year.

Kidnapping of Westerners is a common practice by Yemeni tribes, but it often ends peacefully.

Disgruntled tribesmen from impoverished areas of Yemen often take hostages to use as bargaining chips to press the government for aid, jobs or the release of detained fellow clansmen.

In 1998, an Islamic militant group kidnapped 16 Western tourists, four of whom died in a botched rescue attempt by police forces, and in 2000 a Norwegian diplomat was killed in a similar rescue attempt.

Pak man detained for explosive residue on hands at US Embassy in Chile

Washington, May 12 (ANI): A Pakistani man, who was recently added to a US terror watch list, was detained at the American Embassy in Chile for having explosive residue on his hands and personal items.

The US State Department identified the Pakistani origin man as Muhammad Saif-Ur-Rehman Khan, aged 27.

Khan’s American visa was in the process of being revoked in accordance with US law, and he was at the embassy to discuss the matter, ABC News quoted an official, as saying.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said that the man came to the embassy for a “consular issue.”

“We have information on this individual. We had brought him — invited him to come to the embassy, you know, to clarify the information that we have on this individual. And as he came into the embassy, our explosive detectors went off,” Crowley said.

Sources said that the individual was then subjected to further swabs and searches, which also tested positive. The suspect was detained and turned over to Chilean authorities for further investigation.

Additional, more definitive testing is being done to make sure the field tests did not create a false positive for explosive residue, which is common.

“We don’t think this was a spurious hit on our detection system,” meaning it was likely an accurate detection of explosive residue, Crowley said.

The FBI is looking into what connections the suspect may have with terror groups, and, if the tests prove positive, from where he obtained the explosive material. (ANI)

US asks Sri Lanka to pursue ‘healing process’

The United States called on Sri Lanka’s new government on Thursday to use its mandate to pursue a “healing process” as the island recovers from decades of war.

Sri Lanka’s new parliament is set to convene tomorrow after Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse’s allies won just short of a sweeping two-thirds majority.

US State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said the government appeared to enjoy a “significant mandate” from the election.

“The government should use that mandate to help continue the healing process within Sri Lankan society, to bring all elements to help Sri Lanka get past the recent conflict and move forward together,” Crowley told reporters.

Sri Lanka’s military last year killed the leadership of the Tamil Tiger rebels, ending decades of ethnic bloodshed that according to the United Nations claimed up to 100,000 lives.

Political opponents and international human rights groups have accused Rajapakse of violating human rights during the final military campaign and of suppressing dissent since his resounding re-election.

The new parliament’s opposition leader, former army chief Sarath Fonseka, was placed under military arrest after losing the presidential election to Rajapakse. He is expected to be returned to detention after each parliament session.

US calls on N Korea to release activist

The US state department has called on North Korea to release an American human rights activist sentenced to hard labour for entering North Korea illegally.

Aijalon Mahli Gomes, 30, who taught English in South Korea, was arrested last January after crossing the border into North Korea from China.

The North Korean central news agency says he was tried in Pyongyang, convicted of unspecified charges, sentenced to eight years’ hard labour and fined the equivalent of $US700,000.

State department spokesman PJ Crowley says Gomes should be freed.

“We continue to believe that he should be granted amnesty and immediately released.”

Gomes is the fourth American to be arrested for illegally entering North Korea in the past 12 months.

US moves to heal rift with Karzai

The United States appears to be moving to heal a damaging rift with Afghan president Hamid Karzai over his recent criticism of foreign influence in Afghanistan.

The chill began after Mr Karzai blamed election irregularities on foreigners who wanted a puppet government in Afghanistan.

Only yesterday the White House called the remarks troubling and untruthful and officials even suggested an invitation for the Afghan leader to visit Washington next month could be withdrawn.

But the US state department says he is expected to come and spokesman PJ Crowley is playing down the spat.

“Politicians in Afghanistan and around the world sometimes will feel a need to say things of importance to their own population and that may cause us some discomfort,” he said.

Last month US president Barack Obama made a surprise visit to Afghanistan to urge Mr Karzai to do more to combat corruption.

US concern over Australian internet filter

The US government says it has concerns about Australia’s plan to introduce a mandatory internet filter.

The Federal Government wants to force internet service providers to block offensive material, including child pornography and instructions for criminal activity, from overseas websites.

The Government is facing growing pressure from anti-censorship and internet groups to drop the idea.

Now the US government has added its voice to those expressing concern.

A spokesman for the US state department says its officials have raised the issue with Australian officials but would not comment on the nature of the concerns.

Federal Communications Minister Stephen Conroy says it would be inappropriate to talk about discussions with the US government.

Internet giant Google has also expressed concern about the Government’s plan.

In a post published last December on Google Australia’s official blog, the company said the plan raised concerns about censorship.

“At Google we are concerned by the Government’s plans to introduce a mandatory filtering regime for Internet Service Providers (ISP) in Australia, the first of its kind amongst Western democracies,” the post said.

“Our primary concern is that the scope of content to be filtered is too wide.”

While Google accepted there must be some limits on internet content, it condemned the Government’s filtering approach as heavy-handed.

“We have a bias in favour of people’s right to free expression,” the post said.

Kayani’s key role in strategic talks with US shows who calls the shots in Pak: NYT

Karachi, Mar. 22 (ANI): While Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi is leading the Pakistani delegation for the Pak-US strategic talks beginning on Wednesday, it is Pak Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani who is actually in-charge of running the show.

It is well known in Pakistan that Qureshi is just the nominal head of the Pakistani delegation, and it is General Kayani who has been calling the civilian heads of major government departments, including finance and foreign affairs, to his army headquarters to discuss final details, the New York Times reports.

General Kayani’s role in organizing agendas for talks has raised alarm in Pakistan, a country with a long history of military juntas.

Pakistan’s’ leading financial newspaper, The Business Recorder, wrote: “The government needs to consolidate civilian rule instead of handing over its responsibilities, like coordination between different departments, to the military.”

“General Kayani is in the driver’s seat. It is unprecedented that an army chief of staff preside over a meeting of federal secretaries,” Rifaat Hussain, a professor of international relations at Islamabad University, was quoted as saying.

A spokesman at the American Embassy in Islamabad said that General Kayani will attend meetings at the Pentagon with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates on Monday.

He will also attend the opening ceremony of the talks between Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and Qureshi at the US State Department on Wednesday.

The most pressing issues in the talks are likely to be the eventual American pullout from Afghanistan, and Pakistan’s concerns about India, the editorial says.

The spokesman for the Pakistani military, Gen. Athar Abbas, said that Pakistan would be “conveying very clearly” its displeasure with India’s offer to help train the Afghan Army at the behest of American and NATO forces.

Another key agenda on General Kayani’s priority list would be to successfully renegotiate an aid package of 30 billion dollars with the US, the paper says. (ANI)

Kayani’s key role in strategic talks with US shows who calls the shots in Pak: NYT

Karachi, Mar. 22 (ANI): While Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi is leading the Pakistani delegation for the Pak-US strategic talks beginning on Wednesday, it is Pak Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani who is actually in-charge of running the show.

It is well known in Pakistan that Qureshi is just the nominal head of the Pakistani delegation, and it is General Kayani who has been calling the civilian heads of major government departments, including finance and foreign affairs, to his army headquarters to discuss final details, the New York Times reports.

General Kayani’s role in organizing agendas for talks has raised alarm in Pakistan, a country with a long history of military juntas.

Pakistan’s’ leading financial newspaper, The Business Recorder, wrote: “The government needs to consolidate civilian rule instead of handing over its responsibilities, like coordination between different departments, to the military.”

“General Kayani is in the driver’s seat. It is unprecedented that an army chief of staff preside over a meeting of federal secretaries,” Rifaat Hussain, a professor of international relations at Islamabad University, was quoted as saying.

A spokesman at the American Embassy in Islamabad said that General Kayani will attend meetings at the Pentagon with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates on Monday.

He will also attend the opening ceremony of the talks between Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and Qureshi at the US State Department on Wednesday.

The most pressing issues in the talks are likely to be the eventual American pullout from Afghanistan, and Pakistan’s concerns about India, the editorial says.

The spokesman for the Pakistani military, Gen. Athar Abbas, said that Pakistan would be “conveying very clearly” its displeasure with India’s offer to help train the Afghan Army at the behest of American and NATO forces.

Another key agenda on General Kayani’s priority list would be to successfully renegotiate an aid package of 30 billion dollars with the US, the paper says. (ANI)

US is ‘doing more’, and will ‘announce more’ for Pak: Holbrooke

Lahore, Mar.20 (ANI): Responding to Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi’s statement that it was now America’s turn ‘to do more’ to help Islamabad tackle the menace of terrorism more effectively, President Obama’s Special Envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, has said the US is already ‘doing more’ and will ‘announce more’ for Pakistan.

Briefing the US State Department, Holbrooke said the Obama Administration has been doing all that it could for the overall development of Pakistan.

“We are doing more, we will announce more, we want to do as much as the Congress will support, but Congress writes the cheques,” The Daily Times quoted Holbrooke, as saying.

Commenting on the upcoming strategic dialogue between Pakistan and the United States, scheduled to be held on March 24, Holbrooke said the deliberation “marks a major intensification in the relationship” between both countries.

He said the US would also discuss with the Pakistani delegation, which would be headed by Qureshi, issues related to the distribution of water and power.

“Beyond the strategic broad-range discussions, we want to move into operational things like water, energy,” he said. (ANI)

Crash prompts Pak to return ‘free’ Mi-17 choppers to US

Washington, Mar.19 (ANI): Pakistan has reportedly decided to return four Russian-built Mi-17 helicopters, which were given to it for free by the United States less than a year ago.

According to a Pentagon spokesperson, Islamabad has decided against keeping the helicopters, which were used extensively against extremists in the tribal regions, after one of them crashed in February killing at least one person on board.

“Pakistan has recently informed us of its intent to return the helicopters in accordance with the lease agreement,” The AOL News quoted the spokesperson, as saying.

The transfer of helicopters to Pakistan was technically seen to be a lease agreement between Islamabad and Washington. However, Pakistan was not asked to pay for their use.

The chopper which crashed had a problem with the tail rotor. This accident prompted Pakistan to request that the leased helicopters, at least one of which was more than two decades old, be returned to the United States.

Pakistan’s request to return the ageing choppers has also been confirmed by a US State Department spokesperson. He, however, denied to comment further on the issue and referred further queries to the Pentagon.

Pakistani Armed forces have had several crashes involving Russian helicopters in the past few years, including that of a Mi-17 accident which killed more than two dozen soldiers. (ANI)

Strategic dialogue between US-Pak should be all encompassing: Gilani

Islamabad, Mar.19 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has said that the forthcoming strategic dialogue between Pakistan and the United States should cover the full spectrum of bilateral relations between the two countries.

Speaking during a meeting, which was called to chart out a comprehensive, coherent and well-coordinated strategy for the March 24 talks, Gilani said the dialogue must include all issues concerning both the nations.

During the high-level meeting Gilani directed officials to mutually develop a review mechanism to monitor the decisions taken during the strategic dialogue, The Daily Times reports.

The United States has also been making ground for the upcoming talks with several high-ranking officials making trips to Pakistan in the recent past.

Commander of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal called on Pakistan Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani to brief him other officials on the ongoing operations in Afghanistan and the forthcoming strategic dialogue.

According to sources, the US State Department’s coordinator for counterterrorism, Daniel Benjamin, will soon be visiting Islamabad on a three-day visit to discuss matters concerning the ‘war on terror’ and the upcoming dialogue. (ANI)

Netanyahu defies US over settlement

The US State Department is trying to play down the rift with Israel, describing the two countries as strategic allies despite a dispute over Jewish settlements.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the construction of 1,600 new homes will go ahead in east Jerusalem despite US condemnation.

America’s ambassador to Israel, Michael Oren, has been reported as saying the relationship is at its lowest point in 35 years.

US State Department spokesman PJ Crowley says it is waiting for a formal response from Israel about the settlements.

“Israel is a strategic ally of the United States and will continue to be so,” he said.

The dispute has cast a cloud over indirect peace talks between the Palestinians and Israel.

Israel seals off West Bank amid heightened tension

Israel has sealed off the West Bank amid tension in Jerusalem over controversial plans to build new homes for Jewish settlers and fears of fresh violence at the al-Aqsa Mosque compound.

Israeli police also barred men under the age of 50 from prayers at the Jerusalem site of the mosque compound, which is holy to both Muslims and Jews and where clashes broke out last week.

Defence minister Ehud Barak ordered the army to seal off the Israeli-occupied West Bank until midnight on Saturday, an army spokesman said, citing a heightened risk of attacks.

Since the outbreak of the second Palestinian uprising in September 2000, Israel has sealed off the West Bank ahead of major holidays, but only rarely on other occasions.

The closure was announced one day after US vice-president Joe Biden concluded a visit of the West Bank and Israel aimed at promoting renewed peace talks but marred by an announcement that 1,600 new settler homes would be built in annexed east Jerusalem.

The announcement infuriated the US administration, ignited international condemnation and cast doubts over the outlook for the indirect talks which the Palestinians had reluctantly agreed to hold after a 14-month hiatus in negotiations.

The Arab League withdrew its support for the indirect talks and the Palestinians said Israel’s move severely damaged the peace process.

US Middle East envoy George Mitchell on Thursday called Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, who is on a visit to Tunisia, to press him to go ahead with the planned talks, a Palestinian official said, asking not to be named.

But Mr Abbas demanded the US guarantees that Israel first freeze the project to build new homes in the east Jerusalem settlement of Ramat Shlomo.

Mr Abbas told US officials that “it is very difficult for us to go to any negotiations, direct or indirect, without the cancellation of the Israeli building project,” Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat said on Friday.

The US State Department insisted on Thursday it had not heard anything to indicate the Palestinians had pulled out of the planned talks. It said the talks could still go ahead and pointed out Mr Mitchell due back in the region next week.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday apologised for the timing of the settlement announcement made as Mr Biden was holding a day of talks in Jerusalem on Tuesday.

Mr Biden welcomed a clarification that construction would not start for several years, saying this would give negotiators time to tackle the issue, but he also reiterated condemnation of Israel’s go-ahead for the project.

The Palestinians, however, dismissed the statement, saying the issue was the plan itself, not the timing of the announcement.

The international community considers all Jewish settlements in the West Bank, including east Jerusalem, to be illegal.

Under US pressure, Israel imposed in November a partial, 10-month moratorium on settlement projects in the West Bank, excluding east Jerusalem.

Israel, which seized east Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed it in a move not recognised by the international community, considers the city its eternal and indivisible capital.

The Palestinians see east Jerusalem as the capital of their promised state.

Police stepped up security in east Jerusalem on Friday, particularly around the Old City, where the al-Aqsa mosque compound is situated.

Clashes between rock-throwing protesters and Israeli police broke out at the site last week after Mr Netanyahu decided to include two West Bank holy sites on a list of Israeli heritage sites.

The hilltop compound containing al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock is Islam’s third-holiest site, after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia. Jews call the site Temple Mount and consider it their holiest site.

- AFP

Pak lawmakers refuse body scan, cut short visit to US

ISLAMABAD: A delegation of Pakistani lawmakers refused to subject themselves to a controversial full-body scan at a Washington airport, a media report said on Sunday.

The six-member group of the parliament members from Pakistan’s restive tribal region cut short their official US visit immediately to return home, the Pakistani Express News channel said. It was the first official delegation that refused to go through the body scanners since they were installed at 19 US airports last month.

Abbas Afridi, the head of the delegation, said the US state department had invited them to Washington to discuss security and development projects in the tribal region, with a promise that they would not be subjected to body scanning. “We were not scanned when we arrived on March 28 in Washington from Pakistan, but on Saturday when we wanted to travel to another city the authorities told us that we would be scanned,” said Afridi.

Pak lawmakers refuse body scan, cut short visit to US

ISLAMABAD: A delegation of Pakistani lawmakers refused to subject themselves to a controversial full-body scan at a Washington airport, a media report said on Sunday.

The six-member group of the parliament members from Pakistan’s restive tribal region cut short their official US visit immediately to return home, the Pakistani Express News channel said. It was the first official delegation that refused to go through the body scanners since they were installed at 19 US airports last month.

Abbas Afridi, the head of the delegation, said the US state department had invited them to Washington to discuss security and development projects in the tribal region, with a promise that they would not be subjected to body scanning. “We were not scanned when we arrived on March 28 in Washington from Pakistan, but on Saturday when we wanted to travel to another city the authorities told us that we would be scanned,” said Afridi.

Hillary planning to visit Pakistan

Islamabad, Sep 16 (ANI): US State Department has said that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is planning to visit Pakistan in near future, but nothing has been finalised yet.

“She looks forward to going to Pakistan and that region as well, but there’s nothing that’s been planned yet,” State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters on Wednesday.

Clinton had earlier said she would visit Pakistan in the fall, The Nation reports.

Kelly said Clinton plans to go to Russia in October for the US-Russia Binational Commission talks.

“There is also a number of other trips that are planned in the fall as well,” he said.

After becoming the Secretary of State, Clinton has made two trips to Asia.

In her first trip, she visited countries like China and Indonesia, while during her second trip in July she went to India and Thailand. (ANI)

Stunned by Musharraf’s claims, US does not know how to respond

Washington, Sep.16 (ANI): The United States is ambivalent regarding former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf’s claims that he could have deployed US military equipment against India.

The US State Department avoided any direct comment on Musharraf’s statement saying it is yet to verify the former general’s claims.

“Not that I am aware of,” State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said, adding, ” First of all, Mr Musharraf is a private citizen, he provided very few details, so we will refer you to him to get these kinds of details.”

Kelly said Washington takes any allegation regarding use of its aid very seriously, and that is the case in the present context also.

“As a general principle, we take very seriously any allegation of using US-origin military assistance for purposes other than we had intended them for,” The News quoted Kelly, as saying.

The spokesman said Musharraf’s statement had no ‘specific’ details and had a very ‘broad’ spectrum, and that the US would need to verify all aspects before commenting on such allegations.

“Musharraf’s statement is ‘very broad’ and with no ‘specifics’ that I know of and I think we will need more details. I don’t know what he was referring to,” Kelly added. (ANI)

US taxpayer money may be funding Taliban

New York, Sep. 4 (ANI): American taxpayers’ money which is meant for building roads, bridges and schools in Afghanistan, may be getting salted away into protection payments to the Taliban.

According to CBS News, US funded contractors have been spending a hefty chunk of development aid to the Taliban – for years.

“That translates into money that the Taliban are using to attack and kill American military personnel, and that’s just simply outrageous,” said Rep. Bill Delahunt.

The report quoted several contractors who said 20 percent of their budgets – or more – go to pay off the Taliban so it won’t bomb their projects, or their people.

It’s a protection racket far more sophisticated than the typical mob-style shakedown.

“The Taliban literally has an office in Kabul where it works out what percentage will be charged on these contracts. This is so open,” said Charles Sennott, the executive editor of the GlobalPost.

The US State Department has spent more than 4 billion dollars on development contracts in Afghanistan since 2002.

Contractors have good reason to fear the Taliban. As of last September, 291 State Department-funded contractors, most of them foreigners, had been killed by Afghan insurgents.

The US State Department has launched an investigation into the alleged protection payments.

“In Afghanistan, any diversion of funds for any reason makes it that much more difficult for us to achieve our objectives,” said P.J. Crowley, an assistant secretary of state for public affairs.

Especially because the public support for the war in America, which has fallen lately, could sink ever further if taxpayers fear their money is going to fund our adversaries. (ANI)

Holbrooke rejects reports about stationing Marines in Islamabad

Islamabad, Aug.19 (ANI): US Special Representative for Pakistan and Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke has rejected reports about the stationing of US Marines in Islamabad.

Sources said during his meeting with President Asif Ali Zardari, Holbrooke clarified that the massive expansion of the US embassy in Islamabad was primarily to accommodate all US staff.

Foreign Minister Shah Ahmed Qureshi also endorsed Holbrooke’s statement saying: “‘We know that no US Marine is coming to Islamabad … Some media outlets have wrongly reported in this context.”

It may be noted that media reports, based on a US State Department document, claimed that the Obama government was constructing a Marine House in Islamabad to accommodate at least 1000 marines at a cost of 112.5 million dollars.

The Obama Administration is about to spend 405 million dollars for the reconstruction and refurbishment of the main embassy building and 111 million dollars for constructing a new complex for 330 personnel. A further 197 million dollars would be spent for construction of a housing unit for about 250 personnel.

18 acres of land has already been acquired by the US for the project for a meager one billion rupees, and a Turkish firm has already built a 153-room compound for the embassy.

The US is planning to send about 1000 additional staff to Pakistan, where 750 US officials are already stationed against a sanctioned strength of only 350 personnel.

During the meeting, Zardari told Holbrooke that early adoption of legislation in the US on Reconstruction Opportunity Zones (RoZ) was necessary to bring social and political stability in the region.

Holbrooke said the prime motive of his visit was to refocus US policy on the region and to support Pakistan.

“President Obama’s decision to preside over along with President Zardari the forthcoming meeting of the Friends of Democratic Pakistan reflected the US government’s desire to support any initiative aimed at lending critical strategic and economic support to Pakistan,” the Dawn quoted Holbrooke, as saying. (ANI)