”Salwa Judum” activists condemn Dantewada massacre

Bijapur/ Raipur, May 20 (ANI): The ”Salwa Judum”, a local militia formed to fight Maoists, took out a peace rally in Bijapur on Wednesday to condemn the Maoist attack that killed over 30 people in Chhattisgarh”s Dantewada District.

“To condemn the heinous attack carried out by Maoists, we have gathered here. We paid condolences to the deceased civilians and carried out an anti-Maoist rally,” said Hanif Khan, a leader of a ”Salwa Judam” chapter.

He also said that their group, which has been carrying out peaceful protests against the Maoists, was not getting adequate support from the government and in turn the very objective has been subjugated.

Meanwhile, in Raipur, locals have voiced their concern over increasing violent attacks by rebels.

“Naxalism is the biggest problem for Chhattisgarh and requires full attention of the central government. The crimes in Chhattisgarh, Jagdalpur and Dantewada have become the major issue of concern for India,” said Ravi Kumar Sharma, a resident.

Vikas Sathe, another resident, felt the rebels should be attacked directly through an air-borne strike and wiped out completely.

“The airborne strikes which they are talking about like the Americans do an air-strike on Taliban, a similar one should be carried out here on the Maoists. Their strength will be broken. The arms supply to them should also stop,” he said.

He also noted that all routes of food and arms supply to the Maoists should be blocked so that once they are helpless they would ultimately surrender.

In the latest of such violent attacks, the Maoists targeted a bus and detonated a landmine killing over 30 persons, including police personnel near Dantewada in Chhattisgarh.

The Maoists claim they are crusading for poor, marginal farmers and landless labourers.

They have spread their influence into rural pockets of 20 of India”s 28 states. (ANI)

Shoot-to-kill order after school knifings

A Chinese city has ordered police to shoot to kill anyone attempting to harm school students following a spate of violent attacks against children that have stunned the nation, state press said.

The south-west municipality of Chongqing, a city of more than 30 million people, issued the order after China’s public security ministry called for stepped-up security around schools and kindergartens nationwide.

“The police have clear regulations in these odious cases where direct attacks occurring at or in the vicinity of schools have injured students or children,” the Chongqing Evening News reported.

“If they cannot contain the violent acts, police can shoot to kill in accordance with the law.”

The order comes after a series of attacks on children last week.

On Friday, a farmer armed with a hammer injured five children and a teacher at a primary school in the eastern province of Shandong before setting himself on fire.

A day earlier, a jobless man, apparently angry over a series of personal and professional setbacks, slashed 29 children and three adults at a kindergarten in the eastern city of Taixing armed with a knife used for slaughtering pigs.

That attack came two days after a 33-year-old teacher placed on sick leave for mental problems injured 15 students and a teacher in a knife attack at a primary school in southern China’s Guangdong province.

On that same day authorities in Fujian province in the south-east executed a former doctor for stabbing to death eight children and injuring five others in March in a fit of rage after he broke up with his girlfriend.

The attacks underscore how China, which has enjoyed lower violent crime rates than the West, faces a growing public safety threat from disgruntled individuals amid rising mental illness rates and looser social controls.

Racial attacks: Shane Warne mingles with Indians to allay fears

MELBOURNE: Australian spin legend Shane Warne on Tuesday stepped in to mend his country’s fractured ties with India, attending a picnic here with the Indian community, which has been targetted in a series of violent attacks in the past few months.

Warne met the community members of Victoria state, talked to them, posed for photographs and tried to allay fears of the students, saying Australia is a “great” place to live in.

“I think the state sells itself, it’s just such a great state, it’s a great city to live in. I’ll keep pushing the message across over there, I love India, I love Rajasthan when I play cricket there, so to me it was a natural thing,” Warne said.

“I want to listen, really, to hear what the students have to say and see what these guys, how they’re feeling about things,” said Warne, who is quite popular among the Indian diaspora here.

Victorian government had asked the iconic cricketer to help them boost the state’s image in India after recent attacks on Indian students in Melbourne tarnished its reputation.

The leg-spinner, also dined with the Indian students on the occasion and told the crowd: “It’s important for me as a Victorian… to keep building the relationship with India and Australia, and in particular Victoria.”

Warne will leave for India on Thursday to lead the Rajasthan Royals in the Indian Premier League commencing March 12.

Meanwhile, Victoria Premier John Brumby, who was also present at the picnic, hoped Warne’s presence in India for the IPL would help improve Australia’s image.

“Shane’s been great in the support that he’s given the State just over the last year, particularly in relation to the bushfires, and where the sort of support that he can provide is so important in lifting spirits and giving people hope for the future,” Brumby said.

“We need to bear in mind all the great things about our state and we are a very warm, open, welcoming state. We love sport, we’re very multicultural, we’ve got nearly half of our population born overseas and with one of their parents born overseas, and we’ve got a good story to tell about all of us, about the great multicultural society that is Victoria, so we just need to get a bit of balance back into this debate,” Brumby added.

Impartial inquiry sought into war crimes against Lankan Tamils

Chennai, Aug 28 (ANI): An NGO in Chenai has demanded impartial international inquiry into war crimes against Tamils in Sri Lanka.

The activists of “WE” held a press meet in Chennai city on Friday, condemning violent attacks on Tamils by Sri Lankan security forces. The NGO works for the uplift of the Tamils in the region.

The latest controversial video that is being shown on news channels and is posted on the website, shows inhuman behaviour by Sri Lanakan armed forces towards Tamils. Several young naked Tamils are brutally tortured and killed in an unabashed manner.

This has agonised and worried Tamil activists in the state.

“Very credible reports are coming that young able bodied Tamil men are separated from others they are tortured and many of them are killed. So I think what we demand is that International impartial inquiry into war crimes committed by both the parties,” said Jagath Casper, activist and member of the WE.

“Secondly, dismantling of the illegal detention centres immediately for which I think India’s foreign policy should become more stronger , affirmative and also proactive,” said Casper.

The organisation has further asked the state government and union government to help Tamils in Sri Lanka.

Sri Lankan Tamils have historical and cultural links with about 60 million Tamils in southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu and their fate has political repercussions in India.

The Sri Lankan government declared victory over LTTE in May, ending one of Asia’s longest conflicts.

Sri Lanka has pledged to resettle the bulk of the displaced within six months — a tall order given the thousands of landmines that have to be cleared across former Tiger territory. (ANI)

Nine out of 10 Australians believe racial prejudice exists in the country

Sydney, June 24 (ANI): Australians are in two minds about multiculturalism, and a long-term survey has found that nine out of 10 Australians believe that racial prejudice exists in the country.

They believe cultural diversity is good for the country but they’re worried that cultural differences will stop everyone from getting along.

An 11-year study by a collaboration of Australian universities has found 85 per cent of Australians acknowledge racial prejudice occurs in the nation, and one in five has been a victim of racist verbal abuse.

The study found that 6.5 per cent of the 16,000 Australians surveyed were against multiculturalism, The Sydney Morning Herald reported.

Professor Kevin Dunn, from the University of Western Sydney’s school of social science, said the study revealed that the majority of Australians are pro-multiculturalism but are anxious that the diversity will not be managed well.

“Over 40 per cent of those surveyed feel that cultural differences pose a threat to societal harmony. So if you take that alongside the 87 per cent that are pro-multiculturalism, clearly you’ve got a third of the nation that tolerate cultural diversity, but are concerned at the impact it will have on society,” Professor Dunn said.

“The Cronulla riots and the recent attacks on people of Indian descent are an example of this. The figures show that 85 per cent of Australia acknowledge there is racial prejudice in the country,” he added.

Dunn believes previous governments have done nothing to address the issue for the past decade, with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Justice Commissioner Tom Calma spending only part of his time dealing with race discrimination.

“For the last decade, the government hasn’t appointed a full-time Race Discrimination Commissioner. Take the issue of the Indian students recently. There’s no way that the commission is resourced enough to deal with their (the Indians’) reports (of violent attacks on them), and to offer support and advice,” he said.

The survey also found that at least one in five Australians experience verbal abuse such as offensive slang names for different cultural groups, or swearing and offensive gestures, while 11 per cent feel they don’t belong or are inferior.

The study is part of the “Challenging Racism Project”. (ANI)

New Delhi condemns attacks on Indian students in Australia

New Delhi, May 27 (IANS) Condemning allegedly “racist” attacks on Indian students in Melbourne, the government Wednesday said it will impress upon the Australian authorities that such attacks should not be permitted and the culprits should be brought to justice.

“I have been appalled by the attack on our students in Melbourne. Our consulate general in Melbourne has been in touch with the students affected and with the state police,” External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna told reporters.

“We will also impress upon the Australian authorities that such attacks should not be permitted and that it is their responsibility to ensure the well-being and security of our students in Australia,” he said.

India’s High Commissioner to Australia Sujatha Singh has rushed to Melbourne to ensure that Sravan Kumar Theerthala, an Indian student who is now battling for his life in the intensive care unit after a racially motivated assault, receives the best possible treatment. The Indian envoy is expected to send a report on the incident to New Delhi in a couple of days.

India will ensure that “that the culprits are brought to book”, Krishna said, while conveying his concern over the latest bout of violence directed against Indians in Australia.

The 25-year-old Theerthala, who went to Melbourne to study two years ago, was among the four students from India assaulted by a group of Australian teenagers this week. The attackers allegedly hurled racist abuses at them and hit them with a screwdriver.

The assault was the latest in a spate of violent attacks on Indian students.

The Australian authorities plan to launch a telephone helpline Friday for Indian students facing discrimination and violence.

Incidents like these can affect the popularity of Australia as an education destination for Indian students.

According to Australian Education International, the enrolment of Indian students in Australian universities showed an increase of 38.9 percent from last year as on March 2009. Australian universities, as of March 2009, had 75,000 Indian students enrolled in various courses.

Women and girls to blame for one in four violent attacks in UK

London, May 26 (ANI): More than half a million assaults were either carried out by a girl or woman last year or involved a female as part of a group – and the trend is increasing, the Daily Telegraph can disclose.

Women and girls were responsible for 13 per cent of all violent attacks in 2007/08, according to the British Crime Survey, which was the equivalent of 281,320 assaults, robberies and muggings, compared with 11 per cent in the previous year.

A further 11 per cent of incidents – or 238,040 crimes – involved both male and female offenders, the figures from the Home Office show.

Females were also either directly responsible for or involved in 21 per cent of all woundings, the equivalent of 98,070 offences, and 28 per cent of all assaults involving a minor injury.

The grim statistics leave grave questions over Labour’s promise to make the streets safer and to tackle alcohol-fuelled disorder.

Chris Huhne, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said: It is indicative of how appalling habitual violence is on our streets that so many women are involved.

A Home Office spokesman said: “The Government is committed to tackling all violent crime – whoever perpetrates it. (ANI)

Pakistan nabs Taliban leader’s close aide

Islamabad, April 13 (Xinhua) Pakistan police have arrested a close associate of Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud in the southern port city of Karachi, a police officer said Monday.

Badshah din Mehsud, close aide of Baitullah Mehud, was arrested from Sachal Goth area of Karachi, Fayyaz Khan, a senior superintendent police told Dawn TV channel.

According to the report, Badshah din Mehsud was in charge of providing arms and explosives to Taliban militants and was on the most-wanted terrorists list of Pakistan’s security agencies.

Baitullah Mehsud, top militant leader of the banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), has strongholds in northwestern Pakistan’s South Wazirisitan tribal agency bordering Afghanistan.

The dreaded militant has claimed responsibility for many violent attacks in Pakistan, including the assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, and is believed to have been providing safe haven for Al Qaeda militants in the tribal agency.

The US has announced a $5-million reward for Baitullah Mehsud.

Maoists kill two policemen in central India ambush

RAIPUR, India, April 12 (Reuters) – Maoist militants killed two policemen and a civilian in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh on Sunday, a senior police officer said, as the rebels stepped up violent attacks ahead of a general election.

Deputy Inspector General Pawan Deo said about 40 armed Maoist rebels ambushed members of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and local police in a forested area of Bijapur district, some 500 km (310 miles) south of Raipur.

Six Maoist militants were also killed in two separate encounters with the CRPF in the state’s restive Bastar region, Deo said.

The Maoists, who say they are fighting for the rights of poor farmers and landless labourers, have called for a boycott of the polls that get underway this week and threatened to chop off the hands of those who cast their votes.

Voters in mineral-rich Chhattisgarh are due to go to the polls on Thursday.

Thousands have been killed in the Maoist insurgency which began in the late 1960s and now stretches throughout rural areas of east, central and southern India.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the insurgency as one of the gravest threats to India’s internal security. (Reporting by Sujeet Kumar; Editing by Rina Chandran and Sophie Hares)

Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi in hot water over rape comments

London, Jan 26 (ANI): Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has fuelled a furore yet again by saying that women in the country were so beautiful that they needed military escorts to avoid being raped.
And now, the Itlalian premier has landed in soup over his comments, which came in response to questions about his proposal to deploy 300,000 soldiers in the streets to fight crime.

The move came in line with a series of violent attacks, including a rape in Rome on New Year’s Eve and another outside the capital.

However, the PM said that crimes like rape could happen even in a militarised state, as Italian women are so pretty.

“You can’t consider deploying a force that would be sufficient to prevent the risk,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying.

He added: “We would have to have so many soldiers because our women are so beautiful.”

But, Berlusconi’s comments did not go quite well with opposition lawmakers like Giovanna Melandri of the Democratic Party, who said that the remarks were “profoundly offensive”.

Melandri also said that the pain of rape could never be joked about in such a way.
Vittoria Franco, the shadow equality minister, accused Berlusconi of being flippant about a very serious matter.

“Berlusconi ought to refrain from saying offensive things about women. Basically what he is saying is that if women leave home alone they run the risk of being raped or attacked because it is not possible to make the country safe,” she said.

However, on his defence, Berlusconi said that he was complimenting Italian women “because there are only about 100,000 people in law enforcement, while there are millions of beautiful women.”

While he stressed that rape was a serious and “disgraceful” crime, he added that his comments were in pure “levity and good humour,” and should not be taken otherwise.

Berlusconi, a billionaire media-mogul-turned politician, has a history of gaffes and his fondness for flirting with women has earned him public reprimands from his wife. (ANI)