Monday, February 9, 2009

Washington Miffed over AQ Khan’s Release


The Bhopal-born Pakistani nuclear scientist Dr. AQ Khan is back in the media glare, as his release, from house-arrest in Pakistan, has sent ripples across the international community. Expressing concern over his release, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says the Obama Administration will have “more to say about that."

"I am very much concerned," Clinton told reporters in response to a question on the issue at a joint media availability with Philippine President, Macapagal-Arroyo, at the State Department headquarters in Washington.

"We'll have more to say about that," Clinton said in her brief response over a Pakistani court’s decision to free Khan.

Earlier in the day, the State Department made it clear that it was not pleased with the release of Khan, who is better known as the "father" of Pakistan's nuclear programme.

Terming Khan a significant "proliferation ris," State Department spokesperson, Gordon Duguid said it would be "unfortunate" if he were to be released from house arrest.

"We believe AQ Khan remains a serious proliferation risk. The proliferation support that Khan and his associates provided to Iran and North Korea has had a harmful impact on the international security, and will for years to come," Duguid said in reply to a query.

A significant section of the international community believes Khan was responsible for providing crucial assistance to the weapons programme in the two countries.

Vajpayee Serious But Stable, Doctors


Doctors tendng to former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), termed his condition as serious but stable on Saturday morning, the octogenarian Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) stalwart is suffering from an infection in the lower respiratory tract.

"He is in a serious but stable condition and continues to be on mechanical ventilation following lower respiratory tract infection," AIIMS medical superintendent DK Sharma was quoted as saying by IANS.

Vajpayee was on Tuesday admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) at the premier facility after he complained of difficulty in breathing.

He was put on mechanical ventilation Friday.

"A multi-disciplinary team of doctors is regularly monitoring his health and all his basic parameters, including blood pressure, kidney and liver, are normal," added Sharma.

26/11 Probe Report on Monday, Gilani


Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani while speaking to reporters in Lahore on Friday expressed optimism that the report on preliminary investigations into the Mumbai attacks will be submitted to him on Monday and its findings will be made public soon, reported dawn News on its website Saturday morning.

Talking to media at the Lahore airport Gilani said the findings would be shared with India and the international community.

“No fact will be kept secret,” he stressed.

Rejecting media reports that suggested an Indian diplomatic offensive, launched after the 26/11 Mumbai terror strikes, had left his country isolated. Gilani said: “The entire world is supporting our stance on the Mumbai attacks.”

He stressed that his administration was not silent on the Kashmir dispute and wanted its resolution in accordance with the wishes of the people of Kashmir.

He informed that the issue had been raised with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon during his recent visit to Islamabad and also with US Vice-President Joe Biden and at the World Economic Forum, he added.

He also sought to play down speculations of differences between his government and Kashmiri leaders on his side.

Meanwhile on Saturday Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, said Pakistan's probe into the Mumbai incident "can only reach fruition with Indian cooperation".

Qureshi was addressing "young leaders roundtable on security" in Munich.

He lamented that New Delhi’s "belligerent" response to the Mumbai terror strikes "unfortunately threw the Pakistan-India peace process back to square one".

"Democratic governments in Pakistan have always pursued a policy of friendly relations with India. We want to cooperate with New Delhi in rooting out terrorism from the region and to resolve all our differences including the issue of Jammu and Kashmir through dialogue," he said.

Analysts say Qureshi’s inclusion of the term “democratic” was significant, especially, as he represents a country with a long and oft-repeated history of military disctatorships.

Terming the Indian diplomatic action as "unfortunate” Qureshi said: “Mumbai was as much a blow to Pakistan as it was to India."

In Kolkata, Reacting to Premier Gilani’s statements, Minister for External Affairs, Pranab Mukherje said India was yet to receive an official response on the dossier it handed over to Pakistan on the Mumbai terror strikes.

"I am yet to receive any official communication from Islamabad so far," said Mukherjee while talking to he media on Saturday.

Scores Flee Lanka Conflict Zone

Over 2,500 civilians are reported to have Sri Lanka's war zone in the last two days as government forces continued to step up pressure against Tamil Tiger rebels. The civilian exodus came soon after the military on Friday announced the capture of the biggest sea base of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

The fighting is concentrated around a circle of jungle in the country's northeast, where the military says it has all but surrounded the LTTE.

Thousands of civilians - said by aid agencies, the government and a growing list of nations to be held in the war zone by the LTTE - are under grave threat of harm from the fighting.

"Today, 600 people have come up until now," Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara, the Sri Lanka military spokesman, said on Friday.
The previous day, 1,637 escaped the fighting, he said.

The international community, including US, Britain and the European Union, has urged the LTTE to surrender, and for both sides to stop firing temporarily to allow civilians out and aid into the island’s embattled north.

Sri Lanka, however, has rejected a call by international donors for it to begin negotiating with the LTTE.
While stressing that the LTTE would not accept unconditional surrender, Damien Kingsbury, a professor at Australia's Deakin University and an expert on Sri Lanka expressed fears that captured Tiger rebels would be shot down in cold blood.

"Quite clearly they fear that if they do surrender, they will be treated very badly if not killed on the spot," said Kingsbury, he was speaking to Al Jazeera.

He added: "Tamil civilians are claiming that they are being very badly mistreated in this conflict ... and this is going to widen the gap between the government and Sinhalese majority and the Tamil minority.

Sri Lankan military officials on Thursday said that following the fall of the Chalai base, the LTTE was now left with just 20km coastline in the northeastern district of Mullaittivu.
The seizure of Chalai would disrupt LTTE supplies as the sea base was used to receive arms and fuel from other countries through a widespread smuggling network.
The Sri Lankan government says that the LTTE is close to being vanquished, as the Army marches ahead towards victory in what the government has repeatedly termed a “decisive war.”
The UN and other aid agencies say more than 250,000 civilians are still trapped in the war zone.
Aid groups said the last functioning hospital there was shut down on Wednesday after being shelled for the fifth time in three days.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said staff and patients fled the hospital after the incident.

Sri Lankan troops have been engaged in an all-out offensive in recent months against the LTTE, which has been fighting for a separate Tamil heartland since 1983.

Bhujbal-Thackeray Meet amid Speculations


Key NCP leader and Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Chhagan Bhujbal met his mentor late on Saturday night, though Bhujbal termed the meeting a courtesy call, his clarifications failed to calm media houses that were abuzz with speculations of troubled times ahead for the ruling NCP-Congress alliance.

Bhujbal, accompanied by his wife and son, arrived at Matoshri - Thackeray's residence in Bandra West at around 2100 hours and spent some two hours behind closed doors with the Thackeray family.

It was the first meeting between the Sena chief and Bhujbal after a gap of 18 years.

Bhujbal had quit the Sena after differences with the Thackerays in December 1991. In October 2008, he made a unilateral gesture of withdrawing a 10-year old defamation suit he had filed against the 82-year-old Sena supremo.

After the meeting, Bhujbal, dismissed all speculation by saying that it was "a get-together" between the two families. He reiterated that the old 'bitterness' between the two leaders had ended.

Bhujbal's efforts at mending fences with the Thackerays have alarmed many in the NCP.

The meeting is said to have comprised of several emotional moments as the leaders attempted to pick up threads they had left untouched for nearly two decades.

Present on the occasion were Sena executive president Uddhav Thackeray and his wife and children.

Bhujbal, according to reports, carried several gift for his one-time mentor.

With general elections round the imminent corner, the dinner meeting was considered significant on various counts.

NCP chief Sharad Pawar too enjoys a great rapport with the Sena chief and had met him a few months ago at Matoshri.

The Sena, recently, offered to support Pawar as prime minister if such a situation develops after the next elections - annoying many within Sena’s alliance principality, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Pawar, however, played down the meeting saying: "What is wrong if Bhujbal meets his erstwhile mentor? In fact, Thackeray had invited me too, but I could not make it," he told mediapersons in Satara.

With Pawar unfazed by the development, the meeting may well set the clock ticking on the Congress-NCP alliance which has had its rough moments in recent times after a wrinkle free alliance for nearly five years and may see the Congress attempt to iron-out differences with the NCP.

Dooars Tense, Two Killed in Clashes


A Gorkha Jan Mukti Morcha supporter, Akbar Lama, and a petty trader from Chamurchi, Sunil Mandal, died when GJMM supporters clashed with activists of CPI-M, Akhil Bhartiya Adviasi Vikas Parishad and locals in the Dooars of Jalpaiguri district on Saturday.

Another GJMM supporter Sanu Dorjee was gravely injured in the clash and is fighting for his life in a Jalpaiguri hospital.

The clashes erupted during a bandh sponsored by the GJMM in the proposed areas of Gorkhaland, which includes the Dooars, Terai and Siliguri.

While the bandh was total in the Darjeeling Hills and was peaceful, people resisted it on the outskirts of Siliguri and in the Dooars in general, sparking off incidents of violence at Debidanga near Siliguri and the Dooars.

An unspecific number of people were injured in the Dooars clashes and are receiving treatment. A GJMM supporter is being treated in Kurseong hospital for injuries.

The IGP, north Bengal, KL Tamata said 15 police personnel had been injured in Saturday’s hostilities. “Additional police force is being brought in from the neighbouring districts to maintain law and order,” he added.

Jalpaiguri District Magistrate Vandana Yadav said agitators torched over 20 houses and shops at Chamurchi and Birpara.

“The agitators also burnt a number of two-wheelers. Twenty people had been arrested for the violence in Dooars. Section144 of the CrPC has been promulgated at Kalchini, Birpara, Banarhat, Malbazaar and Madarihat blocks and RAF deployed. The situation is now under control,” said Yadav.

Indian Medic Convicted for Manslaughter


Hippocrates Shamed: Priya Ramnath a 40 year old doctor of Indian-origin was given a six-month suspended jail term by a British Court after being found guilty of killing a patient by giving her a fatal injection of adrenaline against the advice of her colleagues, media reports said on Friday.

The Birmingham crown court on Friday convicted Ramnath, who worked in Britain's National Health Service, of manslaughter for her involvement in the death of Patricia Leighton at Stafford District General hospital in July 1998, reported the Guardian.

Ramnath, who lives in the US, had administered the fatal injection to Leighton, an intensive care patient against the advice of three of her colleagues. Leighton died of heart failure shortly after.

The prosecuting lawyer, Michael Burrows, told the court that within moments of receiving the jab, Leighton "jerked forward and sat bolt upright in her bed". He said she had shouted out: "What's happening to me? I am going to die."

Leighton, later, lost consciousness and her heart stopped and all efforts by the doctors to resuscitate her failed.

According to the prosecution, Ramnath failed to speak to a consultant anaesthetist at the hospital before injecting the drug into Leighton.

Ramnath, whose sentence was suspended for two years, came back from the US last February to face the charge after being threatened with extradition.

The jury, which had been considering its verdict since on Tuesday, found her guilty by a 10-2 majority.

(With Internet Inputs)

Arrests, Detentions over MLA Daughter Attack


Mangalore police on Saturday arrested two persons and detained four, a day after CPM MLA's daughter and her Muslim male friend were attacked allegedly by Sri Ram Sena and Bajrang Dal activists who beat up and kidnapped Shruti, the girl in question, for talking to Shabib, a classmate of her brother.

The identities of those arrested or detained could not be ascertained.

The incident took place at 1530 hours on Friday when Shruti, the daughter of CPM MLA Kunjambu, was on her way to Mangalore from Kasirgarh after a vacation by a bus.

The activists attacked the 12th standard student in the bus while she was talking to a Muslim male friend. They dragged the two out of the bus and beat them up before forcibly putting them in a waiting auto-rickshaw and fleeing the spot.

The girl was released after an hour, the boy is still missing.

Kunjambu had confirmed the incident saying, "My daughter was coming back to home after the vacation by a bus. The conductor of the bus belonged to BJP. He informed the Ram Sena and Bajrang Dal goons who attacked my daughter, dragged her and her friend out of the bus and kidnapped them.”

He further added, "My daughter was released after almost an hour.”

Meanwhile, condemning the incident Kerala Home Minister Kodiyeri Balakrishnan on Saturday termed the incident as “devilish”.

The Sri Ram Sene has denied any role in the attack.

B’lore Blast Case Cracked, Claim Cops


Some six months after serial explosions rocked India’s silicon valley city of Bangalore, the Karnataka police claim to have cracked the mystery with the arrest of nine persons belonging to a Kerala-based radical group, one person was killed while eight others were injured in the orchestrated bombings.

Abdul Sattar, Abdul Jabbar, Sarfudin, Sakariya from Mallapuram, Kerala and Mujeeb, Faizal, Abdul Jaleel, Manaf of Kannur, and Badruddin from Ernakulum have been arrested for alleged involvement in the July 2008 blasts, DGP Ajai Kumar Singh was quoted as saying by PTI.

Four others involved in the blasts were killed in an encounter with the Indian army in Jammu and Kashmir while they were attempting to crossover into Pakistan between October 4 and 7.

The police, however, maintained a studied silence on the identity of the radical outfit and parried queries on possible links between the group and militant outfits like Lakshar-e-Tayyeba.

The top police officer said the group was "radicalised by general feeling of perceived injustice to Muslims in India due to Babri Masjid demolition and Godhra incident and Gujarat riots," quoted PTI.