Thursday, 12 June 2014

Body formed for Karachi airport attack probe


KARACHI (Dunya News) -- An investigation team to probe Karachi Airport Attack was formed under DIG East Muneer Sheikh.
The other member of the team include SSP East, SSP Investigation Malir, SSP SIU, DSP and SHO Airport.
According Additional IG Ghulam Qadir, the team would present report on daily basis.
Banned Tehreek-e-Taliban on Monday threatened more attacks after claiming responsibility for a brazen five-hour assault on the country's busiest airport in which gunmen disguised as police guards stormed the international airport in Karachi, set off explosions.  20 people had lost their lives in the incident. 
The Taliban said the assault on the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi, Pakistan's largest city and the country's economic heart, was in revenge for the killing last November of the militant group's leader Hakimullah Mehsud in a U.S. drone strike.
On Wednesday, police registered a criminal case against outlawed Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) leaders under the Anti-Terrorism Act for carrying out deadly assault.
The FIR was registered in Karachi's airport police station under the Anti-Terrorism Act, nominating the top brass of the militant outfit including its chief Mullah Fazlullah, spokesman Shahidullah Shahid and other militants.
The case was registered on the complaint of Assistant Director of Airport Security Force (ASF).
A security official said police has launched probe to identify the attackers and their handlers in the city.
The focus of the probe is a vehicle which reportedly dropped the militants near the gate of the old terminal of the Jinnah International airport.

Palestinians seek action against Israel over detainees


  
Some 5,000 Palestinians are being held in Israeli jails with nearly 200 in administrative detention.
RAMALLAH (AFP) - A senior Palestinian official has called for international action against Israel over the detention without charge of more than 100 Palestinians who have been on a long-term hunger strike.
"I am writing on behalf of the Palestine Liberation Organisation and president Mahmud Abbas to request your immediate intervention on behalf of the approximately 130 Palestinian detainees and prisoners currently on hunger strike in Israeli prisons," Saeb Erakat said in a letter obtained by AFP Wednesday.
"We call on you to call on Israel to annul the policy of administrative detention and to condition deepening your bilateral ties with Israel pending Israel s fulfilment of all its obligations," he wrote in English.
Administrative detention is a procedure dating back to the pre-1948 British mandate under which military courts can hold suspects without charge for periods of up to six months, which can be renewed indefinitely.
The letter, issued on Tuesday, was sent the European Union s member states, Brazil, South Africa and India.
It was also sent to UN Security Council members, but not to non-permanent member Australia, which recently said it would no longer refer to annexed east Jerusalem as "occupied," infuriating the Palestinian leadership which wants it as capital of their future state.
Israel Prisons Service told AFP there were currently 250 inmates refusing food, 90 of them for over six weeks of whom 75 had been hospitalised.
IPS spokeswoman Sivan Weizman said this was the longest-ever mass hunger strike of Palestinians held by Israel.
Some 5,000 Palestinians are being held in Israeli jails, with nearly 200 in administrative detention.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon has urged Israel to either charge or release the striking prisoners without delay.
Meanwhile, Israel pushed forward with plans for a bill to enable doctors to feed hunger strikers against their will.
Parliament on Monday approved the bill in its first reading, ahead of a series of debates in a committee and two further plenum votes before it passes into law.
But the draft legislation, composed by the internal security ministry, has raised objections not only among leftwing, liberal and Arab lawmakers, but also from the Israel Medical Association which has urged Justice Minister Tzipi Livni to block the bill.
In a letter to Livni, the IMA warned the move would be "in total contradiction to internationally-accepted medical ethics" and Israel s medical ethical code.
Force feeding poses a "danger" to the health of those on hunger strike "and is against the non-maleficence principle," said the letter which was signed by IMA head Doctor Leonid Edelman and Professor Avionam Reches, chairman of its ethics bureau.
"The proposed law is wrong ethically and professionally, it won t only damage the patients and their medical condition, but also Israel s world standing," they wrote.
"We can t accept a law that places doctors in a battle they should have no part of, in total contrast to their professional and ethical duties."

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Iraq militants move nearer Baghdad in lightning offensive


KIRKUK (AFP) - Militants seized the Iraqi city of Tikrit on Wednesday but security forces thwarted an assault on Samarra as a lightning jihadist offensive launched in second city Mosul swept closer to Baghdad.
Since the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant began its spectacular assault in Mosul late on Monday, militants have captured a large swathe of northern and north-central Iraq, prompting as many as half a million people to flee their homes.
The speed with which ISIL and its allies have advanced after their seizure on Tuesday of Mosul -- a city of two million people -- has sent alarm bells ringing in Western capitals.
It has also triggered a hostage crisis for Ankara, which threatened harsh reprisals if 49 Turks seized by the jihadists at its consulate in the main northern city were harmed in any way.
Tehran and Washington, which despite their many differences have a shared interest in preventing Iraq following neighbouring Syria into all-out civil war, both pledged more aid to Baghdad.
ISIL vowed on Twitter that it would "not stop this series of blessed invasions" that has seen the fall of the whole of Nineveh province in the north and swathes of Kirkuk and Saleheddin provinces further south.
Tikrit -- hometown of executed dictator Saddam Hussein -- was the second provincial capital to fall in as many days as the jihadists and their allies captured a string of mainly Sunni Arab towns where resentment against the Shiite-led government runs deep.
"All of Tikrit is in the hands of the militants," a police colonel said of the Salaheddin provincial capital, which lies half way between Baghdad and Mosul.
Another officer said the militants had freed some 300 inmates from a prison there.
After Tikrit's fall, the operation spread down the main highway towards Baghdad, with militants battling security forces on the northern outskirts of Samarra, just 110 kilometres (70 miles) from the capital.
State television said security forces responded with air strikes, and residents said the fighting subsided without the militants entering the city.
Militants had already tried to seize the city late last week, and were halted only by a massive deployment of troops, backed by tribal militia and air power.
Samarra is mainly Sunni Arab but is home to a shrine revered by the country's Shiite majority, whose bombing by Al-Qaeda in 2006 sparked a Shiite-Sunni sectarian conflict that left tens of thousands dead.
The lightning advance poses significant challenges to Baghdad, with the New York-based Eurasia Group risk consultancy saying jihadists would be bolstered by cash from Mosul's banks, hardware from military bases and hundreds of men they freed from prison.
In his weekly address Wednesday, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki merely renewed his call to arm civilians to resist the jihadists.
Maliki urged Nineveh's residents "and its tribes to stand with the army and police."
Washington has warned that ISIL threatens the entire region and promised more aid for the Baghdad government.
State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the US was committed to "working with the Iraqi government and leaders across Iraq to support a unified approach against ISIL's continued aggression."
In Tehran, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Shiite Iran "offers its support to the government and people of Iraq against terrorism."
The swift collapse of Baghdad's control, which comes on top of the loss of Fallujah, west of Baghdad, at the start of the year, has been a blow for Western governments that invested lives and money in the invasion that toppled Saddam in 2003.
However, Foreign Secretary William Hague said there was "no question" of British troops being sent back to Iraq.
The International Organisation for Migration said sources in Mosul estimated the violence leading up to the jihadists' takeover "displaced over 500,000 people in and around the city."
On Wednesday, gunmen in military uniforms and all-black clothing guarded government buildings and banks in the city, residents told AFP by telephone.
Militants stormed the Turkish consulate and kidnapped 49 people including the head of the mission and three children, a Turkish official said.
They were in addition to 31 Turkish truck drivers seized by ISIL at a Mosul power station.
The hostage-taking drew a stark warning from Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.
"All those involved should know that if our citizens are harmed in any way, they will be the subject of harsh reprisals," he said.
Bassam Mohammed, a 25-year-old student, said he would not join the exodus of residents leaving Mosul but acknowledged deep concern about how the jihadists would run the city.
"I am afraid about freedoms, and I am especially afraid that they will impose new laws on us," he said.
Known for its ruthless tactics and suicide bombers, ISIL is arguably the most capable force fighting President Bashar al-Assad inside Syria as well as the most powerful militant group in Iraq.
In a show of its determination to unite its thousands of fighters in the two countries, the group posted photographs on the Internet of militants bulldozing the border berm to open a road.
The Syrian government said it was ready to help Baghdad in its fight against "terrorism," while the rebel Free Syrian Army called for support from Arab states for its own battle against ISIL.

Lahm, Muller extend Bayern deal


BERLIN (AFP) - Philipp Lahm and Thomas Muller have signed two-year extensions to their Bayern Munich contracts, the Bavarian giants announced on the eve of the World Cup on Wednesday.
Both are currently preparing for Germany s opening World Cup match against Portugal on June 16 in Group G which also includes Ghana and the United States.
Lahm, who joined Bayern s junior side in 1995, will remain until 2018 while Muller s deal runs until 2019.
"Both the club and my representatives felt it was the right time to discuss a contract extension," said Lahm, who will be 34 when his new deal runs out.
"It will definitely be my last contract. I will end my career with FC Bayern. That was always my wish and I m delighted I ll be able to fulfill it."
The Munich-native has played 260 Bundesliga matches for Bayern, winning six national titles with the reigning German champions.
Midfielder Muller, 24, who joined the club as an 11-year-old before making his first-team debut in 2008, ended speculation of a possible move abroad.
"I had some great discussions with those in charge at the club, who made it clear that this was the place for me to be," said Muller, who has scored goals in 165 league games since his first pro contract at Bayern in 2008
Club CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge said the pair were an important part of the team setup.
"Philipp Lahm and Thomas Muller are both very important building blocks for FC Bayern," added Rummenigge.
 

Football: Resolute Rooney determined to enjoy World Cup

RIO DE JANEIRO (AFP) - After two forgettable experiences at previous World Cups, England talisman Wayne Rooney has vowed to enjoy himself at the 2014 tournament in Brazil regardless of the outcome.
Having injured himself ahead of his maiden tournament in Germany in 2006, the Manchester United striker was sent off for stamping on Portugal's Ricardo Carvalho as England went out on penalties in the quarter-finals.
In 2010 he went to South Africa on the back of the most prolific season of his career, but again failed to impress, snarling at a television camera after England's 0-0 group-stage draw with Algeria and drifting through the 4-1 humiliation by Germany in the last 16 like a ghost.
Four years on he remains without a World Cup goal to his name, but ahead of England's opening Group D match against Italy in Manaus on Saturday, the 28-year-old is determined to relish the experience.
"I've learnt to enjoy this one because I haven't enjoyed the last ones," Rooney told a group of journalists at England's seaside training base in Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday.
"All of a sudden you're looking back and they've gone and I didn't enjoy it. This one, I'm going to enjoy it regardless of what happens. I'm going to make sure I take positive memories from this one."
Rooney cites the 2004 European Championship in Portugal, when he burst onto the international scene, as the last tournament where he felt relaxed enough to fully express himself.
In current colleagues such as 20-year-old Ross Barkley and 19-year-old Raheem Sterling, he sees glimpses of his own old fearlessness.
"That's the good thing about the younger lads in the squad: you can see that in them, in Ross and Raheem," said the stocky forward, who scored seven goals for England in qualifying.
"You can see that there's no fear with them. They'll be good players, big players for us."
Rooney's explosion as an 18-year-old at Euro 2004 sparked expectations that he would develop into one of the world's greatest players, but for all his achievements with United, he continues to face criticism.
His old club-mate Paul Scholes recently opined that Rooney may have already passed his peak and the former Everton striker seemed hurt that one of his idols had seen fit to question him in such a way.
"I'm sure he's upset a lot of people at Man United because they see me as worthy of signing a new deal at the club, so they obviously have got a different opinion to what Paul has," said Rooney, who branded the remarks "very strange".
"But you'll have to ask him. He's been a great player at Man United, but I've never had his phone number and he's never had mine.
"He's probably the best player I've ever played with, so I'm not going to knock him as a player, but I don't agree with his point."
Rooney was one of few United players to find form during a disastrous 2013-14 season and he feels that a pre-season pep talk with former manager David Moyes helped him rediscover some of his famous fire.
"He felt I had lost a bit of aggression out of my game -- which I was asked to do, by the way. He said he wanted me to find that aggression back," Rooney said of Moyes, who was sacked by United in April.
"I thought about it a lot. It wasn't really me. Maybe there are times when you have to try and lift the crowd with a tackle -- obviously not a stupid one, but a run back and tackle can lift the fans and even turn a game round."
While Rooney has never threatened to win the Ballon d'Or, he says that unlike his former United team-mate Cristiano Ronaldo, a two-time winner of the award, notions of legacy do not inspire him.
"I'm not a player who needs that," he said.
"Like Cristiano Ronaldo, he has to have that and you admire him for having that. You can see how he is. He wants his moments. It's more important for me to win trophies as a team."
Reminded that he won nothing with United last season, he replied with a smile: "No, so hopefully I can do that now."

Int'l Airlines' confidence boosted after Karachi airport attack thwarted: DG CAA

KARACHI (Dunya News) – Director General (DG) Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) Mohammad Yousaf said on Wednesday that the confidence of international airlines operating in Pakistan has boosted after terrorists had to face defeat at Karachi International Airport. He said that all airports of the country are safe and that a separate committee has been formed to probe the attack, Dunya News reported.
Talking exclusively to Dunya News Karachi Bureau Chief Rehan Hashmi, Yousaf said that the runway was secured minutes after the attack, adding that the forces defeated the terrorists in their aims by thwarting the attack.
He said that the international airlines operating in Pakistan feel more confident as the aims of the terrorists were crushed.
Yousaf said that all airports are safe, adding that the security arrangements at Karachi airport are being improved.

16 killed in two US drone strikes in North Waziristan



The last drone attack on Pakistani soil occurred on December 25, 2013.

MIRANSHAH (AFP) - The first two US drone strikes in Pakistan this year killed at least 16 militants Wednesday, as Washington resumed the controversial programme after a brazen Taliban attack on Karachi airport earlier this week.
The timing of the strikes is bound to raise suspicions of coordination between the two countries after drone attacks were reportedly suspended in December at Islamabad's request to give Pakistan space to pursue a peace process.
Pressure has been mounting on the government to launch a ground offensive in the Taliban-infested North Waziristan tribal district after a dramatic week that began with the all-night siege Monday of Karachi's Jinnah International Airport, in which 37 people, including the 10 attackers, were killed.
Those concerns were compounded by a follow-up attack Tuesday, also claimed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), in which gunmen fired upon an airport checkpoint but failed to inflict any casualties and later escaped.
Pakistani air force jets took to the skies the same day, pounding suspected militant hideouts and leaving at least 25 dead.
The US drone strikes took place within hours of each other, one late Wednesday and the second at the same site early Thursday, as militants gathered to dig out the bodies and search for the injured.
The first struck a vehicle and a compound in the village of Dargah Mandi in North Waziristan, where almost 60,000 residents have fled since May fearing a long-rumoured offensive.
An intelligence official in Miranshah, the region's main town some 10 kilometres (six miles) east of the village, said the missiles had struck a pick-up truck carrying about six militants and laden with explosives.
"Four of them were Uzbeks and two were Punjabi Taliban," he said, referring to militants from Pakistan's central Punjab province.
The official said the militants had parked their pick-up truck against the outer wall of the compound -- both of which were destroyed and remained ablaze.
Another senior security official confirmed the strike and said authorities had intercepted a radio message talking about the drone attack.
"One of the militants was asking others to reach the site and search for any one injured in the strike and also to dig out the dead bodies," he said.
The second strike came early Thursday.
"Three US drones fired six missiles on militants who had gathered to dig the debris of a compound," a local security official told AFP, referring to the compound destroyed in the earlier drone strike, and adding: "Missiles also hit two vehicles at the site."
Another security official confirmed the second strike, and said drones were still flying in the sky.
The last drone attack on Pakistani soil occurred on December 25, 2013, killing three suspected militants.
The strikes are officially denounced by Pakistani authorities as a violation of the country's sovereignty, but leaked documents have shown intelligence coordination between the countries in the past.
More than 2,000 people have been killed in drone attacks since August 2008, according to an AFP tally, with critics charging that the strikes cause many civilian casualties.

Miss Indiana praised for 'normal' body


Nia Sanchez, aka Miss Nevada, may have won Miss USA this week, but it was Mekayla Diehl, 25-year-old Miss Indiana, that grabbed Twitter's attention. Why? Because she appears to actually possess a very small amount of body fat on her stomach.
Diehl, who is also the first registered Native American to represent Indiana in the pageant, stood out during the bikini portion of the two-hour-long competition for the fact that she had 'womanly curves'.
Don't get us wrong, the 5-foot-8, size 8 beauty queen and pageant dress store attendant still has toned arms, a truly strong core as well as legs that look like they were crafted from 1,000 lunges - but, unlike the other contestants, she had some curves."I worked hard on my body without obsessing over being too skinny and I couldn't be more proud," Diehl tweeted in response to the flurry of tweets in praise of her 'normal' body.
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We worry about the rush to praise Diehl for being 'normal' - as bodies come in all shapes and sizes, and no one figure is the norm.
That said, it is refreshing to see a woman in Miss USA look slightly different from the Barbie-shaped pageant norm.
On a different, more important, note, Diehl has chosen child abuse support as her advocacy project for the time in which she wears the Miss Indiana crown, and for personal reasons.
Diehl was sexually abused when she was only eight, according to local Indiana paper Goshen News. Due to substance abuse issues, her parents were unable to give her the help and care she needed and so she and her brother were adopted by their grandparents.
"At first I was sad. And then I found my outlets. My grandmother was very encouraging. Anything that I wanted to try to do, she tried to find the best way. I had horses. We tried 4-H, I tried saddle club. Dancing was my emotional outlet. I loved to dance, and that became my emotional release," Diehl told Indiana station WNDU.
The fact that Diehl is willing to be so open about her past to help others makes her role as an advocate all the stronger.

Eric Cantor, No. 2 House Republican, loses primary in big upset


    
                       Eric Cantor's loss caught Washington watchers completely off-guard.

(CNN) -- In what's being called a political "earthquake," the No. 2 Republican in the House, Eric Cantor, lost his primary on Tuesday to a college professor and tea party neophyte.

Cantor conceded the race with 99% of precincts reporting from the Richmond-area district showing him trailing Dave Brat 56% to 44%, according to the Virginia Secretary of State's website. Turnout was low.

"Obviously we came up short," Cantor said in his concession speech.

"It's disappointing sure but I believe in this country. I believe there is opportunity around the next corner for all of us," said Cantor, whose loss is all the more shocking because he's considered very conservative.
Eric Cantor\'s loss caught Washington watchers completely off-guard.
Eric Cantor's loss caught Washington watchers completely off-guard.
Dave Brat was vastly outspent in the Virginia primary but came out on top.
Dave Brat was vastly outspent in the Virginia primary but came out on top.
Cantor failed to 'pay attention at home'

In a statement following Cantor's defeat, House Speaker John Boehner called the No. 2 Republican "a good friend and a great leader."

In his victory speech, Brat struck a populist tone.

"Dollars do not vote, you do," he said. "When I go to D.C., every vote I take will move the pendulum in the direction of the people, away from Washington, D.C.; back to the states; back to the localities; and back to you."

Mark Preston, CNN's executive political editor, said the defeat would have national implications since Cantor has been viewed as ambitious and a potential speaker.

"This came out of nowhere," Preston said.

CNN Political Analyst David Gergen called it an "earthquake" that would "send shock waves through the Republican ranks."

Reynolds High School shooting in Oregon is 74th gun incident on U.S. school campus since Newtown



Tuesday morning's fatal shooting at Reynolds High School is the 74th shooting on an American school campus since a lone gunman's attack on Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn., in December 2012.

The list of shootings, which includes 13 school shootings in the first six weeks of this year, was compiled by Moms Demand Action for Guns Sense in America.

The 73rd shooting, according to the group, was last week's shooting at Seattle Pacific University, which claimed the life of a 19-year-old Westview High School graduate.

"We continue to keep it updated," said Stacey Radnor, a spokeswoman for the organization.

Incidents are classified as school shootings when a firearm is discharged inside a school building or on school or campus grounds, according to the organization. These include assaults, homicides, suicides or accidental shootings.

Monday, 9 June 2014

British comedian Rik Mayall dead at 56

People we lost in 2014
Tributes are flowing in for much-loved British actor and comedian Rik Mayall, who died in London Monday at age 56.
Mayall, one of the leading lights of Britain's alternative comedy scene in the 1980s, is best known for starring roles in hit TV series "Blackadder," "The Young Ones," "The New Statesman" and "Bottom."
His agent, Kate Benson, of Brunskill Management, told CNN Mayall died suddenly Monday; she did not know the cause of his death.
Mayall first found widespread fame in student sitcom "The Young Ones," which ran for two years on the BBC, and was later shown on MTV in the United States.
The series, which he co-wrote, focused on the lives of four roommates at "Scumbag College." Mayall played politics-obsessed poet Rick alongside his long-term comedy partner Ade Edmondson as violent punk Vyvyan.
Edmondson led the tributes to Mayall Monday, telling Britain's Press Association news agency: "There were times when Rik and I were writing together when we almost died laughing.
"They were some of the most carefree, stupid days I ever had, and I feel privileged to have shared them with him. And now he's died for real. Without me. Selfish bastard."
Writer and comedian Ben Elton told the Press Association Mayall had "changed his life" by asking him to work on "The Young Ones." "He always made me cry with laughter, now he's just made me cry."
In cult favorite "Blackadder" -- also co-written by Elton -- Mayall was memorably cast in the guest role of the womanizing Lord Flashheart, who steals the anti-hero's fiancé from under his nose -- at the altar. His lines were regularly repeated in schoolyards and student pubs.
In the 1990s, he reunited with Edmondson for "Bottom," a slapstick-filled series about two unemployed flatmates who spend most of their time attacking each other violently with anything that comes to hand; the pair are reported to have come up with the idea for the show while starring in a production of Samuel Beckett's nihilistic "Waiting for Godot."
On Twitter, writer Hugo Rifkind suggested that fans of the show should pay homage to Mayall in true "Bottom" style: "Go home tonight, find someone you love, and hit them with a frying pan."
Mayall also branched out into movies, taking the lead role in 1991's"Drop Dead Fred," in which he played the imaginary friend of Phoebe Cates, returning years later to wreak havoc in the now grown-up Cates' life.
Mayall survived a near-fatal quad bike accident in 1998; he was in a coma for five days after the crash, on his farm in Devon, southwest England, and developed epilepsy as a result of the severe head injury he suffered when he was crushed under the bike.
In an interview several years later, he joked that he "beat Jesus" by coming back from the dead after so long. In 2006, he told Britain's Observer newspaper: "I was dead for five days. Jesus was only dead for three, so I beat him -- 17 April 1998 was the day I was sent back from heaven."
He said the accident left him "more aware of being alive."
House star Hugh Laurie, who worked with Mayall on "Blackadder," took to Twitter to recount a story about his co-star: "A young girl, stricken with terminal cancer, once asked Rik Mayall for an autograph. He wrote: 'Young Ones are never afraid.'"

Terrorists planned to destroy all aircraft parked at Karachi airport: report



            The attack at Karachi airport began just before midnight Sunday. 
ISLAMABAD (Web Desk) - Final report of attack on Karachi’s Jinnah International Airport attack has been presented to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, the state media reported on Monday. 
According to the report, the terrorists entered the old airport from two different sides and attempted to paralyze the civil aviation network. They wanted to destroy all the aircraft parked at the airport.
The Airport Security Force demonstrated bravery and stopped the terrorists from entering Quaid-e-Azam terminal.
The personnel of ASF, Army and Rangers by sacrificing their lives safeguarded the precious assets of the nation. In the joint operation, security forces killed all the terrorists.
The report said the flight operation will resume by this evening. On the directions of the Prime Minister, passengers will be facilitated in every possible manner.
Nineteen people including several ASF personnel, Rangers man, 5 PIA workers and a worker of private airline were martyred in the attack, Dunya News reported.
More than 25 injured people were rushed to Jinnah Hospital. 
The attack at Jinnah International Airport in Pakista's biggest city began just before midnight Sunday and raged until dawn, when the military said that all 10 attackers had been killed after they had stormed two areas equipped with suicide vests, grenades and rocket launchers.
The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) group said the attack was in revenge for its late leader Hakimullah Mehsud, who was killed in a US drone strike in November.
Taliban militants have carried out a series of similar raids since rising up against the Pakistani state in 2007 in an insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives.
In 2011, Taliban gunmen attacked the Mehran naval base, which lies close to the Karachi airport, destroying two US-made Orion aircraft and killing 10 personnel in a 17-hour siege.
The group also carried out a raid on Pakistan's military headquarters in the garrison city of Rawalpindi in 2009, leaving 23 dead including 11 troops and three hostages.

Heat even up NBA Finals


SAN ANTONIO — With his doubters, critics, and detractors waiting for his response to Crampgate, LeBron James once again displayed why he is premier player of this generation when the Miami Heat desperately needed his guidance.
James scored a game-high 35 points, and instead of challenging three defenders on a drive to the hoop, he shuffled a pass to a wide-open Chris Bosh for a corner 3-pointer with 1:18 left, and the Heat held on for a 98-96 victory over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 2 of the NBA Finals.   
After missing the final 3:59 of Miami’s Game1 loss with leg cramps in the searing heat of an un-air-conditioned arena, James played a team-high 37:36, including the final 9:22 when perhaps the Heat’s season was at stake.
James scored 33 of his points in the final three quarters on 13-for-18 shooting, but San Antonio had plenty of chances to eke out a victory. The key sequence occurred with 6:43 left and Tony Parker at the line for two free throws following a flagrant foul by Miami’s Mario Chalmers.“Just play the game, try to play the game the right way. However the flow of the game is going, I just try to impose my will in some kind of way,” he said afterward. “Just myself and my teammates in a position to succeed, and I was happy in the fact that I was able to make some plays to help us get the victory tonight.”
Parker, reeling from a blow to the ribs, missed both free throws. Tim Duncan was fouled on the next possession and he missed both attempts. Moments later, James coldly drained a 3-pointer from the left elbow for an 88-87 lead, completing the 7-point swing.


Nia Sanchez, Miss Nevada, Crowned Miss USA 2014


BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Miss Nevada Nia Sanchez, a fourth-degree black belt in the Korean martial art of taekwondo, was crowned Miss USA 2014 on Sunday night.
She beat out 50 other contestants from all the states and the District of Columbia for the title of 63rd Miss USA. First runner-up was Miss North Dakota Audra Mari.Erin Brady, of South Glastonbury, Connecticut, the 2013 winner, gave up her crown to Sanchez after a three-hour telecast from the Baton Rouge Civic Center in Louisiana.
Other runner-ups, judged on interviews, evening gowns and swimsuits were: home state beauty queen, Miss Louisiana Brittany Guidry; Miss Georgia Tiana Griggs, Miss Florida Brittany Oldehoff and Miss Iowa Carlyn Bradarich.
Bradarich got a second chance when the viewing audience gave her the most votes on Twitter in the pageant's first-ever "Save the Queen" option.
Sanchez will go on to represent the U.S. at the Miss Universe competition later this year.
In a vibrant red floor-length fishtail gown, Miss Nevada talked about the importance of women being able to defend themselves when asked a question about the high rate of sexual assaults on college campuses. Judge Rumer Willis, the 25-year-old daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore, said 19 percent of U.S. undergraduate women are victims of sexual assault and asked Sanchez why she thinks this is being swept under the rug and what should be done about it.
Sanchez said bringing awareness to the issue was important, as well as women taking it upon themselves to learn how to defend themselves.
The subject of sexual assault was also on the mind of Miss Pennsylvania Valerie Gatto. She made headlines this week when she said she was the product of rape. During a taped segment that aired when her name was called, Gatto said her mother was 19 when she was attacked leaving work in Pittsburgh and became pregnant.
Gatto said she is living proof "that your circumstances do not define your life."
First runner-up Mari said she overcame being bullied in high school by competing in ice hockey. The Fargo, N.D., native wore a green floor-length evening gown and in her final interview talked about the importance of getting an education and going to college.
Contestants entered the stage on a glitzy float as Louisiana native singer-songwriter Marc Broussard sang the New Orleans hits "Iko Iko" and "Hey Pocky Way" to kick off the 2014 contest. The women introduced themselves while holding Mardi Gras masks in their hands as purple, green and gold confetti fell in the background.
The pageant also included musical acts by the country music duo Florida Georgia Line, rapper Nelly and Latin pop band Camila.
Celebrity judges walked a red carpet in evening gowns and tuxedos before the start of the show, posing for pictures and talking about the qualities they would be looking for in the beauty they crown the winner.
"It's very important that she has confidence," said Barbara Palacios, Miss Universe 1986 and a coach and judge for the new Telemundo reality show, "Miss Latina Universo." ''The right attitude and perseverance are also very important."
"It's all about the eyes," said Lance Bass of the pop singing boy group NSYNC. "I just want to see a girl that is just really having a good time up there."
Others who walked the red carpet were former NBA star Karl Malone; actors Ian Ziering, Melissa Peterman and Rumer Willis; pageant show host Jeannie Mai; and Donald Trump, who owns the Miss Universe Organization, which includes the Miss USA pageant.

Friday, 6 June 2014

Football: FIFA 'confident' about World Cup - Blatter


Football: FIFA 'confident' about World Cup - Blatter

 
FIFA President Sepp Blatter has said that World Cup 2014 would be a success.

SAO PAULO (AFP) - FIFA President Sepp Blatter threw his support behind Brazil's troubled World Cup preparations on Thursday, insisting he was "confident" the tournament would be a success.
"We at FIFA, we are confident, it will be a celebration," Blatter told reporters in Sao Paulo, the city which will host the opening match of the finals on June 12.
Blatter's comments came as Sao Paulo was plunged into transport chaos after a strike by subway workers on Thursday.
It was the latest in a series of strikes and protests which have plagued Brazil in the build-up to the World Cup.
FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke also vowed to stage a successful tournament.
"We have everything ready for June 12, we have the best base camps for the teams," Valcke said.
"There are no risks for the opening weeks of the competition which are the most challenging because there are the most teams," he added. "We are in control, we have nothing to fear in the coming days."
Blatter meanwhile said he believed the febrile atmosphere of social unrest which has gripped Brazil in the build-up would subside once the competition got under way.
"I'm an optimist," Blatter said. "After the tournament kicks off I think there will be a better mood."
 

Afghan election front-runner Abdullah escapes assassination attempt


KABUL (AFP) - Afghan presidential election front-runner Abdullah Abdullah said he had escaped an assassination attempt Friday when an explosion hit his campaign motorcade in Kabul, just days ahead of a hotly-contested run-off election.
"A few minutes ago, when we left a campaign rally our convoy was hit by a mine," he told another election rally in quotes broadcast on Afghan television. He added that some of his guards were mildly wounded, while he was unhurt.
The attempt came ahead of the second-round presidential election on June 14, with Taliban insurgents threatening to disrupt the polls.
No one has so far claimed responsibility for the attack.
Abdullah fell short of the 50 percent threshold needed for an outright victory in the April first round and will face former World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani in the run-off.
"We condemn the attack on respected presidential candidate Dr. Abdullah Abdullah," Ghani said on Twitter. "This is the act of the enemies of Afghanistan to disrupt the democratic process in the country."
 

Obama makes 'no apologies' for Taliban hostage deal


BRUSSELS (AFP) - President Barack Obama vehemently refused to apologise Thursday for doing a prisoner trade with the Taliban to free a US soldier, despite a fierce political storm over the deal in Washington.
Critics, both Republican and Democratic, have asked whether the transfer of five Taliban prisoners from Guantanamo Bay for the release of US Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl was even legal, and question both the price paid and the principle of a swap.
But Obama, asked about the row raging in Washington at the G7 summit in Brussels was unapologetic, repeating that he had a duty as commander-in-chief to get Bergdahl home.
"We have a basic principle, we do not leave anybody wearing the American uniform behind, Obama said, adding that he had acted last week because the health of Bergdahl, held captive for nearly five years was deteriorating.
"We saw an opportunity and we seized it and I make no apologies for that."
Obama referred to the huge controversy on Capitol Hill which has drawn Bergdahl and his family into the political crossfire.
"I'm never surprised by the controversies that are whipped up in Washington," Obama said.
"That's par for the course."
The president also defended his decision to announce Bergdahl's release in a televised appearance in the White House Rose Garden with the soldier's parents at his side.
"This is not a political football -- you had a couple of parents whose kid volunteered to fight in a distant land, who they hadn't seen in five years," Obama said.
"I make absolutely no apologies for making sure that we get back a young man to his parents and that the American people understand this is somebody's child."
Some of the president's critics have warned that Obama, already burdened by a series of crises, has sunk deeper into political quicksand by negotiating with terrorists, keeping Congress in the dark or manufacturing a military success story in order to mask other scandals.
Democratic Party, Senate Intelligence Committee chair Dianne Feinstein, has even accused Obama of breaking US law by failing to provide lawmakers 30 days' notice before transferring prisoners out of Guantanamo.
The White House has offered several explanations for acting without congressional notification to recover Bergdahl.
At first, it argued his health and safety were in immediate jeopardy.
Later, it said a delay would interfere with the president's constitutional function of protecting Americans.
On Thursday, a senior US official embroidered the tale even further, saying that a video showing Bergdahl appearing in poor health in January added extra urgency to the bid to free him.
The official said it was not possible to divulge contents of a classified briefing for senators, but did say they were told that Bergdahl's recovery and his life would be in danger "if the detainee exchange proceedings were disclosed or derailed."
A Senate aide told AFP meanwhile that the government had "obtained credible information that, if anything about the swap became public, Bergdahl would be killed."
Complicating the defense of the swap are the questionable circumstances of Bergdahl's capture, with some soldiers accusing the 28-year-old of desertion and the US military announcing it will investigate whether he should be disciplined.
"It doesn't look good," Senator Joe Manchin winced on Wednesday ahead of a classified briefing for all 100 senators in which officials provided details on the exchange.
 

Cameron tells Putin to end Ukraine meddling




British PM David Cameron told Vladimir Putin to end Moscow's military meddling in Ukraine.

PARIS (AFP) - British Prime Minister David Cameron told Vladimir Putin to end Moscow's military meddling in Ukraine as he became the first western leader to meet the Russian president since Moscow's annexation of Crimea.
Putin, who has been cold-shouldered by the United States and its allies since the March seizure of the peninsula, met Cameron in Paris on Thursday ahead of talks later with French President Francois Hollande.
The Russian leader's return to the international centre stage, ahead of Friday's D-Day anniversary ceremony in Normandy, came on a day when Ukraine's government admitted it had lost control of part of its eastern border to pro-Russian separatists that the West suspects are being actively backed by Moscow.
Cameron arrived for his meeting with Putin directly from a Brussels meeting of G7 leaders which issued a warning that Russia faced further sanctions if it does not stop what they see as efforts to destabilise its southern neighbour.
"This was a meeting with a very clear and firm set of messages, which is that there is an opportunity for a successful, peaceful and stable Ukraine especially now there's been a presidential election," Cameron told the BBC.
"But the status quo, the situation today, is not acceptable and it needs to change."
"Russia needs to properly recognise and work with this new president. We need de-escalation. We need to stop arms and people crossing the border. We need action on these fronts but if that happens there is a diplomatic path that is open to have proper relations between Ukraine and Russia and a successful future for the people of Ukraine, which is what they deserve."
Putin will also meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Friday before the D-Day ceremony. No formal meeting is scheduled with Barack Obama but the US president signalled in Brussels that he was likely to have some kind of exchange with his Russian counterpart.
"I have no doubt that I'll see Mr Putin," Obama said. "Should we have the opportunity to talk, I'll deliver the same message as I have throughout this crisis.
"If Russia's provocations continue, it's clear from our discussions here the G7 nations are ready to impose additional costs."
The G7 leaders said they were united behind a common position on the crisis but there have been clear differences of emphasis all week over the balance between pursuing dialogue with Putin and signalling to him, and the Russian people, that they are isolated.
There is concern among some western officials that Putin's trip to France could be seen by his domestic audience as him returning to the international top table.
Obama, who had a rushed dinner with Hollande in a Paris restaurant before the French leader's late-night 'supper' with Putin, called on Russia to take concrete steps to demonstrate it was willing to respect Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity.
The US leader said Russia had to recognise Ukraine's president-elect Petro Poroshenko, withdraw troops from the Ukrainian border and stop backing pro-Moscow rebels who are destabilising eastern Ukraine.
"We will have a chance to see what Mr Putin does over the next two, three, four weeks. If he remains on the current course we've already indicated the actions we are prepared to take."
The diplomatic shuttling in France came as the Ukrainian authorities admitted they had been forced to abandon three checkpoints on the border with Russia after nightly assaults by pro-Russian separatists.
AFP reporters in the area said at least one had been taken over by the rebels.
In a signal the situation in the country's east may be about to deteriorate sharply, the government vowed to beef up its security presence to counter the rebels amid reports of continued fighting.

Seven militants killed in fresh infighting: officials


MIRANSHAH (AFP) - Fresh clashes between the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and a breakaway faction killed at least seven militants in the country's restive northwest on Friday, officials said.
The fighting erupted in the Wacha Mela area 65 kilometres (40 miles) west of Miranshah, the capital of North Waziristan tribal district.
Almost 100 militants have been killed since supporters of commander Khalid Mehsud, alias Khan Said Sajna, and the followers of the slain former Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud began fighting in April.
Khalid Mehsud's group last week split from the umbrella Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a move analysts described as a victory for the Pakistani military's strategy of sowing divisions among insurgent factions.
"The fresh clashes left seven militants dead, five of them belonging to Hakimullah group," a local intelligence official told AFP.
He said at least three rebels were wounded in the clashes.
A militant source also confirmed the clashes and fatalities.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's government began negotiations with the TTP through intermediaries in February, with a ceasefire beginning March 1 but breaking down a month later.
North Waziristan is one of the seven rugged semi-autonomous tribal areas along the Afghan border, an area long tagged by Washington as the most dangerous place in the world.
Pakistan has been battling a homegrown insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives for the past decade.

Thursday, 5 June 2014

Canada shooting: Manhunt as police officers killed in Moncton

Canada shooting: Manhunt as police officers killed in Moncton
Constable Damien Theriault: "People should stay inside and lock their doors"

A manhunt is under way in the Canadian city of Moncton after three police officers were shot dead and two hurt.
Police said they were searching for Justin Bourque, 24, who was "armed and dangerous", and tweeted a picture of a suspect with weapons.
Officials have warned people to stay inside and lock their doors.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) told the BBC the officers were shot responding to reports of an armed man wearing camouflage clothing.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has offered his condolences to those affected. "The sacrifice of these brave officers will be honoured and remembered." he said.
'Terrible loss'
Witnesses said they heard the first shots in north-west Moncton at about 20:00 local time (23:00 GMT) on Wednesday. More shots were reported about two hours later.
Moncton resident: "The lady looked like she was really hurt"
Police searched through the night and continued their operations at daybreak, with officers combing wooded areas. Schools are closed and buses are not running.
The two wounded RCMP officers were taken to hospital and are in a stable condition with non-life-threatening injuries, a police spokesman said.
Officers have blocked off a number of roads in Moncton and traffic is reported to be backed up on major routes across the city.
Drivers have been asked to stay away from the area.
Police take cover alongside a vehicle involved in the shooting
Some roads have been blocked off and buses are off the streets
A supermarket in Moncton shuts down early as the area goes into lockdown
In a statement, New Brunswick Premier David Alward said he was "shocked and saddened".
"I would ask New Brunswickers, particularly in those areas identified by police, to follow the situation as it develops and to listen to the advice of police," he said.
Moncton's mayor George LeBlanc said: "This is a terrible loss and a tragedy for the families and for all of us here in the city. [We must] pull together as a family to support those who have suffered."
Mr Harper said the incident was "a stark reminder that our men and women in law enforcement put their lives on the line in Canada every day to protect our citizens and communities".
Rare incident
Moncton resident Heidi James told broadcaster CTV that she and her husband had heard four or five shots.
They then saw a "shot-out" vehicle and what looked like a body covered with a blanket, she added.
Eyewitness Danny Leblanc, 42, said he saw the gunman in the distance wearing a camouflage outfit and standing in the middle of the road with a gun pointing at police cars.

Out of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continueMayor George LeBlanc: "This is a terrible loss and a tragedy for the families"
He said he believed it was a police officer until he heard a burst of automatic gunfire.
"That guy was standing on the road afterwards and he was looking towards us," he said.
Joan MacAlpine-Stiles told CBC she saw the gunman when she opened a window.
"I said, 'Oh my God, there he is with camouflage and the headband and a gun, and it looked like a bow he had with him. And I mean he was just through our backyard.'"
Correspondents say such violence is rare in Canada, particularly on the east coast.
According to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's Honour Roll, the last incidence of officers being shot dead on duty in New Brunswick was in 1978.