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Wreckage of Arunachal Chief Minister's Chopper, three bodies found: Sources

Reports are coming in that the missing Arunachal Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu has been found dead; the site where his helicopter crashed has also been identified. However, there has been no official confirmation so far.

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U.S. delivering F-16 jets to Egypt

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130711090352-f-16-story-topThe Obama administration tentatively plans to deliver four F-16 aircraft to Egypt, but is reviewing all U.S. military aid arrangements, according to a Pentagon official.





The planes were scheduled to be shipped by the end of August, but the delivery could be made more complicated if there is no Egyptian military plan to transition to civilian rule and the United States were compelled to formally declare a military coup had taken place, the official said.

If that declaration were made, it most likely would result in aid being halted. The official declined to be identified because of the sensitive nature of the information.

Until Thursday, all indications had been that the deliveries would go through as part of a $1.3 billion 2010 military aid package that called for 20 F-16s and Abrams tank parts to be sent to Egypt. A second Pentagon official had previously said the deliveries "were on track."

 

Read: Why Americans should care about Egypt ?


 

But at the behest of the White House, the Pentagon is now sounding a more cautious note.

"Given the events of last week, the president has directed relevant departments and agencies to review our assistance to the government of Egypt," the Defense Department said in a written statement.

Opinion: U.S. must not fail Egypt


As it measures its response to the recent events on Egypt, the U.S. needs to be extremely careful about focusing on the definition of "coup" and the legitimacy -- or non-legitimacy -- of Mohamed Morsy's election, the draft constitution, and the now-ousted Egyptian president's efforts to give himself additional powers. It needs to be equally careful about focusing on the protests that helped drive him from power, and the legitimacy of political Islam.

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If the U.S. focuses on whether or not a coup took place, it will be ignoring the fact that Egypt is a key center of the Middle East and that U.S. policy will be judged by its success in meeting the needs of Egypt's people. Egypt is a nation whose problems go far deeper than the crisis that began January 2011.
As the Arab Human Development report made clear in 2009, former President Hosni Mubarak's rule had become steadily more ineffective, corrupt, and incapable of meeting the needs of Egypt's people long before 2011. He had been in power since October 1981, but the social and economic progress he made in his first decade in power had faded into a static, incompetent regime by 2005, and one that became steadily more corrupt and unable to meet the needs of Egypt's young and growing population.

The last two years have made the situation far worse in ways that affect every aspect of day-to-day life. Mubarak's fall tore down a fragile regime that mixed a state-driven economy with crony capitalism. It was a country with a bureaucracy that could barely function without a strong leader, one with no opposition parties that had real political experience or capability to govern, and whose "reformers" were (and still are) protesters with no capability to make real reforms.

The end result is that Egypt is not an abstract exercise in political theory. It is a nation of more than 85 million people, at least 25% of whom live in dire poverty, and where unemployment and underemployment can no longer be accurately estimated but have reached the crisis level. It is a nation with over 50% of its populationunder 25 years of age, and 31% under 14, but with an education system in breakdown and much of the infrastructure frozen or losing capacity.

Egypt's foreign reserves have dropped by more than 50%and it faces a crisis in getting loans from the International Monetary Fund. It is a nation where foreign investment has critically declined, tourist revenue has dropped sharply, where many small businesses have already collapsed, and many middle class Egyptians have lost their jobs and savings. Fuel and electric power are lacking, food subsidies are uncertain and sometimes failing, the currency is increasingly unstable, and crime has skyrocketed.

U.S. policy must focus on these realities, and not just politics. The U.S., in partnership with its allies, the World Bank and other international aid agencies institutions needs to support immediate Egyptian efforts to salvage the economy and bring economic reform. It needs to focus on bringing relief and stability. No Egyptian government can succeed -- democratic or not -- that cannot meet the needs of the Egyptian people. Real political legitimacy is not determined by how a government is chosen, but by how well it can meet the needs of its people.

As for politics, the U.S. needs to work with other states to push Egypt's military to support the reforms that failed between early 2011 and Morsy's fall. This means a broad-based effort to agree on a constitution, the creation of real political parties, and help for protesters learning how to organize politically and focus on practical governance and reform. It means taking enough time for elections to be open, to include Islamic and more secular parties, and focusing on the same kind of mixed national government and consensus politics that seem to have emerged in Tunisia.

One test of a solution to a problem is that it does not make things even worse. Threatening Egypt's military, rigidly cutting off aid because of a "coup" under conditions where there is no credible replacement government, and standing aside as Egypt drifts towards internal collapse is not a strategy.

Letting today's celebration of Morsy's fall turn into civil conflict and political paralysis will be a moral and ethical failure on the part of the Obama administration and the Congress, one that will do the Egyptian people vast harm, cripple a key ally, and leave a legacy of lasting anger in both Egypt and the region.


Courtesy & Thanks: CNN
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Why Americans should care about Egypt ?

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130704174557-tsr-dougherty-why-egypt-matters-to-us-00000225-story-topWashington -- As political turmoil engulfs Egypt, Americans are watching closely -- and they should be: What happens in Egypt will directly affect Americans in many ways.

1. Travel: See the pyramids along the Nile -- NOT

Egypt, with its 5,000-year history, the pyramids and pharaohs, was always a luxury travel destination for Americans but the political and social violence that has wracked the country for 2½ years has virtually destroyed Egypt's U.S. tourist business.

Post-coup violence erupts in Egypt

Now, the State Department is warning citizens not to travel to Egypt and U.S. citizens living in Egypt to leave. It also ordered non-emergency personnel and families of Americans working at the U.S. Embassy and consulate to leave.

2. Money

Egypt is America's closest ally in the Arab world and it gets $1.5 billion a year in U.S. taxpayer money for military and civilian programs. In fact, in the last 30 years, the United States has sent more foreign aid to Egypt than to any country except Israel.

Now, that money hangs in the balance as the Obama administration decides whether to call the overthrow of President Mohamed Morsy a "coup."

Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, tells CNN: "If this were to be seen as a coup then it would limit our ability to have the kind of relationship we think we need with the Egyptian armed forces."

3. Mideast peace

The United States helps Egypt because it's one of only two Arab countries -- along with Jordan -- that made peace with Israel. If Washington pulls its aid, it could affect prospects for peace in the Middle East.

ElBaradei: Morsy's ouster was needed so Egypt cannot 'fail'

"All of these things are tied together," says CNN's Fareed Zakaria. "The aid is tied to Egypt's peace treaty with Israel, so if our aid gets cut off what happens to the peace treaty with Israel? It's a hornets' nest and that's why the administration is trying not to stir it too much."

4. Gas prices

Egypt controls the Suez Canal, a crucial sea route for more than 4% of the world's oil supply and 8% of seaborne trade. So far, the canal is running smoothly -- but increased violence could end up hitting Americans in the pocketbook.

5. The linchpin

With 83 million people, Egypt is a cultural heavyweight in the Arab world.

"The great trends that have affected the United States have come out of Egypt," says Zakaria: everything from pan-Arab nationalism of the 1950s, Islamic fundamentalism which began in Egypt in the 1970s -- even al Qaeda has its roots in Egypt and Islamic Jihad.

"Egypt is the source of all the pop music, the soap operas, the movies of the Arab world," he added, "so what happens in Egypt tends to have a much wider resonance throughout the Arab world."

Until the Egyptian military ousted Morsy, Egypt also had a claim to fame politically: a democratically elected president and his Muslim Brotherhood party. It was a message to the Islamic world that democracy just might work. Now, there's a danger the military could violently repress the Muslim Brotherhood and it, in turn, could resort to violence.

That would make the whole Mideast region more unstable -- a worrisome development for the United States.
Courtesy & Thanks: CNN
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No review of decision on gas pricing: Moily

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A technician opens a pressure gas valve inside ONGC group gathering station on the outskirts of AhmedabadIndia's decision to raise prices of locally produced gas will not be reviewed, the oil minister said on Thursday, allaying fears that New Delhi may consider a roll-back.


"No question of review of CCEA's (Cabinet Committee of Economic Affairs) decision on gas pricing," Veerappa Moily told reporters.


India last month took the unpopular step of approving a gas price rise for the first time in three years, a move which could inject much needed investment in local production, but boost imports of more costly LNG.



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Demand for gas in India far outstrips consumption, but prices have been kept low for strategic industries, deterring investment in the sector. India has few energy resources other than coal and is the world's fourth-biggest importer of fuel.

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What Real Estate Bill means for you in 10 simple points

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BuildingTo protect those buying homes from being conned by real estate developers, the cabinet has cleared an important new proposal. Here's how the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Bill could help you.


Here's your 10-point cheat-sheet:



  1. The Bill creates a regulator for the realty sector along the lines of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai), which regulates mobile tariffs.

  2. The Bill applies only to residential projects and not to commercial real estate.

  3. The Bill has provisions for tough penalty for putting out misleading/deceptive advertisements about projects. For first time offenders, the penalty could be as high as 10 per cent of project costs. For repeat offenders, there could be a jail term of up to three years.

  4. The proposed legislation makes it necessary for builders to get all important clearances before they sell apartments.  This means developers cannot pre-launch residential projects to collect funds from buyers.

  5. This comes in response to builders who regularly miss deadlines for the completion of homes.  Buyers have also complained that after making payments, they often discover that the builder in question has not cleared land acquisition permissions.

  6. Developers cannot take more than 10 per cent of the advance from buyers without a written agreement. The buyers are entitled to a full refund with interest in case of delay in projects.

  7. The government will offer details of its provisions later today in a  press conference by Union Cabinet Minister for Housing & Urban Poverty Alleviation Ajay Maken (ndtv.com will bring you all those details).

  8. The government will clarify provisions pertaining to the Bill, which is applicable for residential projects only, later today.

  9. Developers need to put aside 70 per cent of the proceeds of a particular project in a bank account according to the Bill. This will prevent developers from diverting funds meant for construction and ensure timely completion of projects, analysts said.

  10. The Bill makes it mandatory for builders to define "carpet area" of the house. Currently, most developers sell residential flats citing "super area," which is 25-40 per cent more than the actual usable area.


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Radiation poses manned Mars dilemma

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astronauts_on_mars,_computer_artwork-splNasa's Curiosity rover has confirmed what everyone has long suspected - that astronauts on a Mars mission would get a big dose of damaging radiation.


The robot counted the number of high-energy space particles striking it on its eight-month journey to the planet.


Based on this data, scientists say a human travelling to and from Mars could well be exposed to a radiation dose that breached current safety limits.


This calculation does not even include time spent on the planet's surface.


When the time devoted to exploring the world is taken into account, the dose rises further still.


This would increase the chances of developing a fatal cancer beyond what is presently deemed acceptable for a career astronaut.


Cary Zeitlin from the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and colleagues report the Curiosity findings in the latest edition o fScience magazine.


They say engineers will have to give careful consideration to the type of shielding that is built into a Mars-bound crew ship. However, they concede that for some of the most damaging radiation particles, there may be little that can be done to shelter the crew other than to get them to Mars and the partial protection of its thin atmosphere and rocky mass as quickly as possible.


At the moment, given existing chemical propulsion technology, Mars transits take months.


"The situation would be greatly improved if we could only get there quite a bit faster," Dr Zeitlin told BBC News.


"It is not just the dose rate that is the problem; it is the number of days that one accumulates that dose that drives the total towards or beyond the career limits. Improved propulsion would really be the ticket if someone could make that work."


New types of propulsion, such as plasma and nuclear thermal rockets, are in development. These could bring the journey time down to a number of weeks.


Curiosity travelled to Mars inside a capsule similar in size to the one now being developed to take astronauts beyond the space station to destinations such as asteroids and even Mars.


For most of its 253-day, 560-million-km journey in 2011/2012, the robot had its Radiation Assessment Detector (RAD) instrument switched on inside the cruise vessel, which gave a degree of protection.


RAD counts the numbers of energetic particles - mostly protons - hitting its sensors.




Radiation exposures comparison



  • Annual average (all sources, UK) - 2.7mSv

  • Whole-body CT scan - 10mSv

  • Nuclear power worker (annual, UK) - 20mSv

  • 6 months on the space station - 100mSv

  • 6 months in deep space - 320mSv


Source: UK HPA / Nasa

The particles of concern fall into two categories - those that are accelerated away from our dynamic Sun; and those that arrive at high velocity from outside of the Solar System.


This latter category originates from exploded stars and the environs of black holes.


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These galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) impart a lot of energy when they strike the human body and will damage DNA in cells. They are also the most difficult to shield against.


Earth's thick atmosphere, its magnetic field and its huge rock bulk provide protection to people living on its surface, but for astronauts in deep space even an aluminium hull 30cm thick is not going to change their exposure to GCRs very much.


The RAD data revealed an average GCR dose equivalent rate of 1.84 milliSieverts (mSv) per day during the rover's cruise to Mars. (The Sievert is a standard measure of the biological impacts of radiation.) This dose rate is about the same as having a full-body CT scan in a hospital every five days or so.


Number reassessment


Dr Zeitlin and his team used this measurement as a guide to work out what an astronaut could expect on a Mars mission, assuming he or she had a similarly shielded spacecraft, travelled at a time when the Sun's activity was broadly the same and completed the journey in just 180 days - Nasa's "design reference" transit time for a manned mission to Mars. They calculated the total dose just for the cruise phases to and from Mars to be 660mSv. The team promises to come back with the additional number from surface exposure once Curiosity has taken more measurements at its landing location on the planet's equator.


But even this 660mSv figure represents a large proportion of the 1,000mSv for career exposure that several space agencies work to keep their astronauts from approaching. Reaching 1,000mSv is associated with a 5% increase in the risk of developing a fatal cancer. There would likely be neurological impairment and eyesight damage as well. Nasa actually works to keep its astronauts below a 3% excess risk.


"If you extrapolate the daily measurements that were made by RAD to a 500-day mission you would incur exposures that would cause most individuals to exceed that 3% limit," explained Dr Eddie Semones, the spaceflight radiation health officer at Nasa's Johnson Space Center, who added that experts were reviewing the restriction.


"Currently, we're looking at that 3% standard and its applicability for exploration-type missions, and those discussions are going forward on how to handle that and what steps need to be taken to protect the crew."


All this should be set against the dangers associated with space travel in general, such as launching on a rocket or trying to land on another planet. It is a dangerous business.


It also needs to be considered in the context of the risks of contracting cancer during a "normal" lifetime on Earth, which is 26% (for a UK citizen).


Complex calculation


The space agencies have quite deliberately set conservative limits for their astronauts but it seems clear they would have to relax their rules somewhat or mitigate the risks in some other way to authorise a Mars mission.


However, the scenario for commercial ventures could be very different. Two initiatives - Inspiration Mars and Mars One - have been announced recently that propose getting people to Mars in the next 10 years using existing technologies.


Privateer astronauts that participate in these projects may regard the extra risks associated with radiation to be an acceptable gamble given the extraordinary prize of walking on the Red Planet.


Dr Kevin Fong is director of the Centre for Space Medicine at University College London, UK, and has written about the dangers associated with space exploration. He said that what Dr Zeitlin and colleagues had done was help remove some of the uncertainty in the risk assessment.


"Radiobiology is actually really tricky because how the body will respond to exposure will depend on many factors, such as whether you're old or young, male or female," he told BBC News.


"What's important about this study is that it characterises the deep space radiation environment for the first time in a vehicle whose shielding is not orders of magnitude different from that which you would expect to put a human crew inside."

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Who are India’s Maoists?

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India's PM Singh and Gandhi, chief of India's ruling Congress party, meet with victims injured in an ambush, at a hospital in RaipurA weekend ambush in the dense forests of Chhattisgarh that targeted several Congress leaders has put the spotlight on India’s Maoist rebels.


Among those killed in the attack was Mahendra Karma, a senior state leader who founded a vigilante movement against the Maoists.His was a gruesome death: media reports said Karma had 78 stab wounds and his killers danced around his body.


Here’s a ready reckoner on the Maoist movement in India.


WHO ARE THE MAOISTS?


The Maoists, also known as Naxals in India, are inspired by the political philosophy of China’s late Chairman Mao Zedong. They say they are fighting for the rights of poor farmers and landless labourers. In 2004, several Maoist groups merged to form the Communist Party of India (Maoist), which is now the largest left-wing extremist organization in the country. Their aim is to overthrow the state and usher in a classless society. The Maoists are banned in India. They are not to be confused with the mainstream communist parties in India who regularly get elected to legislatures and parliament.


ARE THEY GETTING STRONGER?
The May 25, 2013 ambush was perhaps their most brazen attack on politicians. On April 6, 2010, the rebels killed at least



 75 policemen in Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh. The same year, Maoists were blamed for a sabotaging a crowded


train in West Bengal, with around 100 passengers killed when it derailed. Maoists have also kidnapped bureaucrats and foreigners to force their demands on the state. Government data shows they have also destroyed hundreds ofschools and infrastructure such as telephone towers.


HAVE MANY PEOPLE HAVE DIED SO FAR?
It is difficult to arrive at an exact number butgovernment data shows nearly 8,000 people have been killed between 2001 and 2012.

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HOW DID THIS MOVEMENT BEGIN?
The peasant movement in Andhra Pradesh just after India’s independence was a precursor to the rise of Maoist thought. But it was an attack on a tribal man in the Naxalbari village of West Bengal on March 2, 1967 that sparked the violent, extremist left-wing movement. A police research paper says the movement was subdued for two decades till 1991.


ARE MAOISTS GETTING FOREIGN HELP?
Media reports suggest the Maoists may be getting training and support from China. There are also reports of their links with Maoist cadres in Nepal, the Philippines and Turkey.


IS THE WHOLE OF INDIA AFFECTED?
No. Maoists are mostly active in what has come to be known as the “red corridor” from Andhra Pradesh in the south to West Bengal in the east. But they do have some sort of presence in 21 out of 28 states in India.


ARE SOME AREAS UNDER MAOIST CONTROL?
Some small remote regions in eastern India are under Maoist influence. Many officials do not want to be posted in Maoist-dominated areas. The government has repeatedly referred to areas beingreclaimed from Maoist control. In these “liberated zones”, Maoists run their own people’s court (62 Jan Adalats were held last year) and levy taxes on traders.



HOW MANY MAOIST REBELS ARE THERE?
Various estimates suggest Maoist rebels could number up to 40,000. Of these, thousands may be armed with weapons ranging from AK-47s to light machine-guns raided from police stations or bought from dealers in Nepal. The cadre mostly comprises farmers, landless labourers, tribals and the extremely poor, including women and children.


WHAT IS BEING DONE ABOUT THIS PROBLEM?
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has repeatedly referred to Naxalism as India’s single biggest internal security challenge. Governments – both state and central – are tackling the problem on two fronts: development in remote areas and security. While law and order is essentially a state issue, the central government has a Naxal Management Division that provides funds, additional security forces, logistics and coordinates between states. The government’s strategy has beencriticised as being weak, ill-conceived and even unsympathetic towards tribals. There is debate over involving the army and the air force to drive out Maoists hiding in dense forests.


IS THE GOVERNMENT TALKING TO THE MAOISTS?
The Andhra Pradesh government initiated peace talks in 2004 but the ceasefire did not hold for long. The Maoists made an offer in 2010 but the central government rejected it.


(Source: Ministry of Home Affairs, newspapers and research reports)

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ICC withdraws Pak umpire Asad Rauf from Champions Trophy

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may23v21__5UXB607GNew Delhi: The ICC on Thursday withdrew Pakistan umpire Asad Rauf from the Champions Trophy, to be played next month, in wake of media reports that he was under investigation by Mumbai Police in the spot fixing case. According to a statement issued by ICC, it took the desicion of the umpire's withdrawal since it believes it was in the best interest of Rauf as well as sports. It is unclear why Rauf is being allegedly probed in the spot-fixing case and the ICC chose not to comment any further on the matter. Rauf is likely to be summoned by Mumbai police for questioning. According to reports, Rauf was in regular touch with Vindu Dara Singh and had received various gifts from the bookies.


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UK names soldier killed in London

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_67779790_67779785The soldier killed in an attack in London has been named as Drummer Lee Rigby of the 2nd Battalion the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers.


Drummer Rigby, 25, from Manchester, leaves behind a two-year-old son.


Two suspects shot by police after Wednesday's attack in Woolwich remain under arrest. A further two people have been arrested on conspiracy to murder.


The two suspects who were shot, believed to include Michael Adebolajo, were known to security services.


Scotland Yard said the latest arrests were of a man and woman, both aged 29.


Drummer Rigby's family issued a statement on Thursday, saying: "Lee was lovely. He would do anything for anybody, he always looked after his sisters and always protected them. He took a 'big brother' role with everyone.


"All he wanted to do from when he was a little boy, was be in the Army.


"He wanted to live life and enjoy himself. His family meant everything to him. He was a loving son, husband, father, brother, and uncle, and a friend to many."


'Popular and witty'


A post mortem examination was being carried out on Thursday.


The Ministry of Defence also paid tribute to Drummer Rigby.


"An extremely popular and witty soldier, Drummer Rigby was a larger than life personality within the Corps of Drums and was well known, liked and respected across the Second Fusiliers.


"He was a passionate and life-long Manchester United fan."


Drummer Rigby, from Middleton, Greater Manchester, joined the Army in 2006. He was described as a "loving father to his son Jack" and someone who would be "sorely missed by all who knew him".




In other developments:





  • The two suspects who were shot remain in separate London hospitals in stable conditions with non-life-threatening injuries



  • Six residential addresses are being searched: three in south London, one in east London, one in north London and one in Lincoln



  • Items were recovered from the Woolwich scene, police said



  • An increased police presence will be in Woolwich and the surrounding areas through Thursday night and "as long as needed", Assistant Commissioner for Specialist Crime and Operations Mark Rowley said



  • With dozens of witnesses to the killing, police are urging them to contact the Met's anti-terrorism hotline with information



  • US President Barack Obama says his country "stands resolute with the United Kingdom, our ally and friend, against violent extremism and terror"



  • Military charity Help for Heroes said since the attack people had been "spontaneously showing support for the armed forces"



  • Two men have been charged with separate attacks on mosques, in Kent and Essex, after the death of the soldier



'Senseless murder'


Drummer Rigby had taken up a post with the Regimental Recruiting Team in London in 2011.


"An experienced and talented side drummer and machine gunner, he was a true warrior and served with distinction in Afghanistan, Germany and Cyprus," said his commanding officer Lt Col Jim Taylor.




"His ability, talent and personality made him a natural choice to work in the recruiting group."


Capt Alan Williamson said: "Drummer Rigby or 'Riggers' as he was known within the platoon was a cheeky and humorous man, always there with a joke to brighten the mood."


Defence Secretary Philip Hammond said: "This was a senseless murder of a soldier who has served the Army faithfully in a variety of roles including operational tours in Afghanistan.


"Our thoughts today are with his family and loved ones who are trying to come to terms with this terrible loss."


Mr Hammond was asked if the attack showed how vulnerable soldiers were, whether they were in uniform or not.


He replied: "I think it reminds us how vulnerable we all are, but it also reminds us, by the response of the public, that we are not going to be cowed by this kind of terrorist action."


Chief of Defence Staff General Sir David Richards said: "It's always a tragedy, it's particularly poignant that it happened on the streets of this capital city of ours.


"We're absolutely determined not to be intimated into not doing the right thing - whether it's here in this country or in Afghanistan or wherever we seek to serve the nation."


David Cameron





Prime Minister David Cameron said: "We will never give in to terror or terrorism in any of its forms."

Security at Woolwich Barracks and others in London has been increased, and Gen Richards said: "I'm confident that base security is as tight as it's ever been, and necessarily so.



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"It's a very difficult balancing act. We are very proud of the uniform we wear, we have huge support around the country, this is a completely isolated incident."


Shortly after the killing, a man, thought to be 28-year-old Mr Adebolajo, was filmed by a passer-by, saying he carried out the attack because British soldiers killed Muslims every day.


Sources said reports the men had featured in "several investigations" in recent years - but were not deemed to be planning an attack - "were not inaccurate".







Video has emerged of alleged attacker Michael Adebolajo at an Islamist protest in 2007 (Left, in white clothes)

According to BBC sources, Mr Adebolajo, a Briton of Nigerian descent, comes from a devout Christian family but took up Islam after leaving college in 2001.


The BBC has uncovered its own footage of one of the alleged Woolwich attackers, taking part in an Islamist demonstration in April 2007 against the arrest of a man from Luton.


Mr Adebolajo can be seen standing in a crowd of men outside Paddington Green police station, holding a placard reading "Crusade Against Muslims".


He is standing next to Anjem Choudary, who was the leader of al-Muhajiroun, a now-banned organisation.


Mr Choudary said Mr Adebolajo was previously associated with the group, but went his own way in around 2010.


The Independent Police Complaints Commission sent 12 investigators to look at the scene.


They reviewed CCTV footage from a local authority camera, and said two officers fired shots and one officer discharged a Taser.


One of the shot men received first aid from the firearms officers.


"At this stage we are not pursuing any criminal or misconduct offences," said Commissioner Derrick Campbell.



Map showing the area of the attack



Are you in the area? Did you witness anything? Please get in touch using the form below.

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I hang my head in shame: Sports Minister on IPL spot fixing Scam

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may23v14__VJPN42FONew Delhi: With more evidences of murkier deals and subsequent arrests each day, the IPL spot fixing scam has cast a dark shadow on the future of the glamorous and money spinning IPL. Sports Minister Jitendra Singh today said that he has been forced to hang his head in shame due to the scandal. Singh also insisted that a deterrent law could have prevented the credibility crisis that cricket is facing right now. Meanwhile, Anurag Thakur, the Joint Secretary of BCCI said that the entire IPL format shouldn't be blamed for few people. Meanwhile, the Mumbai Police reached Chennai on Thursday with the objective of questioning Chennai Super Kings 'principal' Gurunath Meiyappan, the son-in-law of team owner and BCCI president N Srinivasan, in connection with the scandal.



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Have sufficient evidence against Sreesanth, Delhi Police

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sreesanthNew Delhi/Chennai/Mumbai:  The Delhi Police today told NDTV that the on-field performance of the arrested players is direct evidence of their involvement in the spot-fixing scandal. SN Srivastava, Special Commissioner, Special Cell, Delhi Police, also claimed that there is enough evidence against Rajasthan Royals player S Sreesanth, who was arrested last Thursday along with two of his team-mates, Ankeet Chavan and Ajit Chandila. Several alleged bookies have been arrested in the past one week.



Here are the 10 big developments in the case:


  1. The International Cricket Council (ICC) today dropped Pakistan umpire Asad Rauf from next month's Champions Trophy in England due to him being probed in the spot-fixing case.

  2. Indian Premier League (IPL) CEO Sundar Raman late on Thursday night met Joint Commissioner of Police Himanshu Roy at the Mumbai Crime Branch office. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is conducting an internal probe into the scandal.

  3. The Mumbai Police today visited the Chennai home of Gurunath Meiyappan, CEO of the Chennai Super Kings and son-in-law of BCCI chief N Srinivasan, as part of their investigation. Mr Meiyappan was not home and the police team has affixed summons to his door. He has been asked to appear before the Mumbai Police between 11 am and 5 pm tomorrow. Mr Meiyappan however is likely to appear only on Monday at 11 am.

  4. The police say they have some questions for Mr Meiyappan based on their interrogation of small-time actor Vindoo Dara Singh, who is one of the people arrested in the investigation.

  5. Sources claim that Vindoo has named five-six Bollywood personalities who are linked with the spot-fixing scandal. The police have however not disclosed any names, saying the details that have emerged from the actor's interrogation need to be verified.

  6. Vindoo has allegedly told the police that he helped two bookies, Pawan Jaipur and Sanjay Jaipur, escape to Dubai, sources claimed. The police conducted a search at Vindoo's residence on Wednesday and reportedly recovered three mobile phones allegedly belonging to Pawan Jaipur. They also seized Vindoo's iPad and laptop.

  7. The Delhi Police is seeking access to items found in the Mumbai hotel room where cricketer Sreesanth stayed, sources claim. Delhi Police will reportedly file a production warrant addressed to their Mumbai counterparts in court. Delhi Police have also sent teams to Hyderabad and Goa to track purchases Sreesanth, Chavan, and Chandila reportedly made with money paid to them by bookies.

  8. Sources say Delhi Police will also ask the BCCI to share raw footage of all matches that featured Rajasthan Royals in IPL-6.

  9. The police claim that Chandila was paid this Rs. 15 lakh in April as advance for spot-fixing by a bookie named Deepak in Chandigarh. This amount is separate from the Rs. 20 lakh recovered from Chandila's cricket kit bag at his relative's house in Faridabad on Monday.

  10. The voice samples of Sreesanth, Chandila and Chavan - arrested for alleged spot-fixing last week - have been collected. These samples will be matched with those in thousands of phone conversations between alleged bookies intercepted by the police during their investigations.



Courtesy & Thanks : NDTV
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Social engineering formula helped Congress win Karnataka elections

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SiddaramaiahIf the three-way division in the Bharatiya Janata Party vote was clearly the single biggest reason for the Congress’ convincing victory in the recent Karnataka Assembly elections, perhaps the most significant element in the latter’s electoral strategy was “social engineering.” The party, senior Congress functionaries say, taking inspiration from the late Devraj Urs, adopted a formula that shifted the spotlight away from the two dominant communities in the State, the Lingayats and the Vokkaligas, to the OBCs, Dalits and minorities.


Giving shape to this social combination was Siddaramaiah, the man who will be sworn in as Chief Minister on Monday: he was backed in this endeavour totally by Congress general secretary in charge of the State Madhusudan Mistry.


Mr. Siddaramaiah, who himself belongs to the nine per cent-strong backward Kuruba community, was able to consolidate the OBC vote — as Urs had in another time — along with that of Dalits and Muslims who came out in large numbers to vote for the Congress.


The fact that Union Minister Mallikarjun Kharge — who too played a significant role in these elections — and KPCC chief G. Parameshwara are both Dalits also sent out the necessary message to the community. As for Muslims, having watched the free run RSS-inspired organisations such as the Ram Sene have had in the State over the last so many years, they just lined up behind the Congress.


Mr. Siddaramaiah has christened this social combination as “AHINDA” (alpasankhyak or minorities, induliga or OBC and Dalits), much like Madhavsinh Solanki, in another era, had forged the KHAM (kshatriya, Adivasi, Muslim) line-up in Gujarat.


The writing on the wall


The election of Mr. Siddaramaiah as CLP leader on Friday was a smooth affair, not merely because he was the most popular candidate among the legislators, but because the party’s central leadership read the writing on the wall: having won a well-fought victory at a time when the party’s national credibility is so low, it could ill-afford a revolt on its hands.


Party functionaries are also attributing the selection to the party vice-president Rahul Gandhi, who, they say, threw his weight behind the popular choice, ignoring those voices who stressed that Mr. Siddaramaiah was a relative newcomer, having moved from the Janata Dal (Secular) to the Congress in 2006, after H.D. Deve Gowda sidelined him in favour of his son, H.D. Kumaraswamy. In this, Mr. Mistry too played his role.


The Congress also had the recent example of the central leadership rejecting the claims of the party’s most popular candidate in Uttarakhand, Harish Rawat, and instead making Lok Sabha MP Vijay Bahuguna Chief Minister, apparently for favours done to a key leader, if the Congress grapevine is to be believed.


Since then, Mr. Bahuguna’s son lost the Lok Sabha seat vacated by him, and the party performed poorly in the mayoral elections in many parts of Uttarakhand.


If the Vokkaligas voted largely for the JD(S), a substantial number of Lingayats, traditionally with the BJP, fell into the Congress’ lap, as their tallest leader, B.S. Yeddyurappa, was seen to have been driven out of the BJP.


Candidate selection


A section of the Congress would like part of the credit for its victory in Karnataka to go to what it describes as a new model of candidate selection, based on the belief that the party bosses in New Delhi may not be the best judge of men and matters in Karnataka’s deeply complicated caste-ridden politics.


This section claims that a conscious decision was taken to treat the local and district level voices and interests, rather than senior State leaders, as the primary key input in selection of candidates.


But the fact is that this is the traditional method of selecting candidates, allowing the names to come up from the block and district level to the State election committee, from where it goes to the central screening committee and finally to the central election committee.


In the past, senior leaders have ensured that favourites’ names are included — sometimes by influencing district committees to put such names in their panels and sometimes by introducing them at a later stage. But the selection process in Karnataka, this time, say party sources in the know, while somewhat more methodical was entirely not able to prevent relatives of senior leaders creeping in to the list.


Sons of senior leaders Mr. Kharge and Dharam Singh contested and won, while S. Bangarappa’s son lost to another son who fought on a JD(S) ticket and a sitting MLA’s ticket was cut to accommodate C.M. Ibrahim (who lost). In short, the selection of candidates was not entirely free of nepotism or manipulation, especially in the second list, but it was certainly more systematic and adhered by and large to Mr. Siddaramaiah’s AHINDA formula.


In addition, aspirants whose names did not figure in the panels could submit CVs, along with a fee of Rs. 10,000 (for general candidates) and Rs. 5,000 (for SCs and STs). A sum of Rs. 3 crore was raised from this exercise, party sources said.


That AHINDA line-up — along with the overwhelming mood against the BJP — rather than some new “merit-based” selection saw the Congress sailing through.

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ElectraCard admits system breached in global ATM heist : Exclusive

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A sign displaying ATM prepaid cards is seen at a RAKBANK branch at Dubai Marina in Dubai May 12, 2013.A Pune-based card processing company acknowledged on Monday that hackers breached its security to increase the limits on some pre-paid card accounts in a global ATM heist in December.


ElectraCard Services said no customer data was stolen from it and any tampering of ATM cards occurred elsewhere.


"To withdraw money from a pre-paid card, one needs an ATM card that has a magnetic strip, which has encoded data. You also need a PIN. The forensic report says that this data and PIN was not compromised at the ElectraCard data centre," said Ramesh Mengawade, chief executive officer of ElectraCard Services.


"However, in three or four accounts, there was a breach, where the limit of cash that can be withdrawn from a pre-paid card was increased," he said in an interview at his office in Pune.


U.S. prosecutors said on Thursday that hackers broke into two unnamed card processing companies, raising the balances and withdrawal limits on accounts that were then exploited in coordinated ATM withdrawals around the world that stole a combined $45 million from two Middle Eastern banks.


ElectraCard Services was the company that processed prepaid travel cards for National Bank of Ras Al Khaimah PSC (RAKBANK), according to a U.S. official and a bank employee who both spoke on condition of anonymity. RAKBANK suffered a $5 million coordinated heist at ATMs around the world on December 21 last year, the U.S. indictment said.


"What happened in December was an industry-wide attack," Mengawade said in his first interview since the case came to light last week. "There were pranks in India; there were pranks in the U.S., in Europe and at processors as well."


The company said the attack was external and no one inside the company was involved, and that it became aware of it within an hour and immediately notified clients and the police.


Another processing company, EnStage, which is incorporated in Cupertino, California, but has operations based in Bangalore, handled card payments for Bank of Muscat of Oman, sources have said. Bank of Muscat lost $40 million in a coordinated heist on February 19.


"Our customers were adversely affected by this sophisticated crime," EnStage CEO Govind Setlur said in a statement in the Times of India newspaper on Sunday.


ElectraCard was not associated with the February incident.


OUTSIDE INVESTIGATOR


ElectraCard hired U.S.-based Verizon Communications(VZ.N) to investigate what happened in the December heist.


Verizon is one of the largest companies that certify that companies are in compliance with payment card industry standards set by Visa(V.N) and MasterCard(MA.N). It is also one of the biggest providers of incident response services to companies that are victims of cyber attacks.


"They are saying, yes, the fraudsters entered the system but they have not found any data because we don't store the data," said Ravi Sundaram, ElectraCard's head of strategy and corporate services.


"While somebody might have accessed my data in an unauthorised way, it still doesn't mean you can do an ATM withdrawal," he added.


The company has about 100 customers globally, all of them in financial services, and said it had not lost any in the wake of the December incident.


"This incident in no way impacts or troubles us in terms of our financials," Sundaram said. "We are well protected for that."


The head of the Pune police cyber crimes cell could not immediately confirm late on Monday whether a complaint had been filed by ElectraCard in the matter.


"It's an international gang and the U.S. is prosecuting them," Mengawade said.


After the incident, operations continued as usual, Mengawade said. "We put stop withdrawal instructions on only those cards which were showing such transactions," he said.


ElectraCard was delisted from a global industry standards body after the incident, but is still authorised to conduct transactions. Mengawade said he expects to be re-certified by June.


MasterCard bought a 12.5 percent stake in ElectraCard in 2010. MasterCard, the network under which the cards used in the heist were issued, has said its security was not compromised.


ElectraCard Services is a subsidiary of Opus Software Solutions, which is also headed by Mengawade.

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SARS-like virus may pass person-to-person

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Keiji Fukuda, assistant director-general for Health Security and Environment of World Health Organization (WHO), answers a question from the media during a news conference in Shanghai April 22, 2013.

World Health Organisation (WHO) officials said on Sunday it seemed likely a new coronavirus that has killed at least 18 people in the Middle East and Europe could be passed between humans, but only after prolonged contact.


A virus from the same family triggered the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) that swept the world after emerging in Asia and killed 775 people in 2003.


On Sunday French authorities announced that a second man had been diagnosed with the disease after sharing a hospital room with France's only other sufferer.


WHO Assistant Director-General Keiji Fukuda told reporters in Saudi Arabia, the site of the largest cluster of infections, there was no evidence so far the virus was able to sustain "generalised transmission in communities" - a scenario that would raise the spectre of a pandemic.


But he added: "Of most concern ... is the fact that the different clusters seen in multiple countries ... increasingly support the hypothesis that when there is close contact, this novel coronavirus can transmit from person to person.


"There is a need for countries to ... increase levels of awareness," he said.


A public health expert who declined to be identified, said "close contact" meant being in the same small, enclosed space with an infected person for a prolonged period.


The virus first emerged in the Gulf last year, but cases have also been recorded in Britain and France among people who had recently been in the Middle East. A total of 34 cases worldwide have been confirmed by blood tests so far.


NEW DEATHS


Saudi Deputy Health Minister for Public Health Ziad Memish told reporters that, of 15 confirmed cases in the most recent outbreak, in al-Ahsa district of Eastern Province, nine had died, two more than previously reported.


Saudi Arabia's Health Ministry said in a statement the country had had 24 confirmed cases since last summer, of whom 15 had died. Fukuda said he was not sure if the two newly reported Saudi deaths were included in the numbers confirmed by the WHO.


Memish added that three suspected cases in Saudi Arabia were still under investigation, including previous negative results that were being re-examined.


The first French patient was confirmed as suffering from the disease on Wednesday after travelling in the Gulf. The second patient was transferred to intensive care on Sunday after the two men shared a room in a hospital in Lille.


Professor Benoit Guery, head of the Lille hospital's infectious diseases unit, said the first patient had not been immediately isolated becuase he presented "quite atypical" symptoms.


He added in comments broadcast by BFMTV channel the case suggested that airborne transmission of the virus was possible, though still unusual, and that the public "should not be concerned" as there had been only 34 cases globally in a year.


Fukuda, part of a WHO team visiting Saudi Arabia to investigate the spread of the disease, said although no specific vaccine or medication was yet available for novel coronavirus, patients were responding to treatment.


"The care that is taken in the hospitals, in terms of using respirators well, in terms of treating pneumonia, in terms of treating complications, in terms of providing support, these steps can get patients through this very severe illness," he said.


Fukuda said that as far as he knew all cases in the latest outbreak in al-Ahsa district were directly or indirectly linked to one hospital.


He added that Saudi Arabian authorities had taken novel coronavirus very seriously and had initiated necessary health measures such as increased surveillance systems.

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Lack of toilets 'behind Bihar rapes'

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_67493017_67493015Most of the cases of rape of women and girls in India's Bihar state occur when they go out to defecate in the open, police and social activists say.


Some 85% of the rural households in the state, one of India's poorest, have no access to a toilet, a study says.


The police reported more than 870 cases of rape in Bihar last year.


More than half-a-billion Indians lack access to basic sanitation. Many do not have access to flush toilets or other latrines.


The issue of sexual violence against women and girls in India has been under intense scrutiny since the gang rape and murder of a student on a Delhi bus in December led to widespread protests.


In March, India passed a new bill containing harsher punishments, including the death penalty, for rapists.


'Worrisome trend'


There have been a number of recent cases where women and girls have been raped in Bihar after they stepped out of their homes to defecate:




  • On 5 May, an 11-year-old girl was raped in Mai village in Jehanabad district when she was going to the field at night



  • On 28 April, a young girl was abducted and raped when she had gone out to defecate in an open field in Kalapur village in Naubatpur, 35km (21 miles) from the state capital, Patna



  • On 24 April, another girl was raped in similar circumstances on a farm in Chaunniya village in Sheikhpura district. She told the police that two villagers had followed and raped her. One of them has been arrested.


Senior police official Arvind Pandey told the BBC that such cases happen every month in Bihar.


"They take place when women step out to defecate early in the morning and late evening. It is a very worrisome trend."


Mr Pandey said that about 400 women would have "escaped" rape last year if they had toilets in their homes.


A recent study by global health organisation Population Service International (PSI) and Monitor Delloitte, done in collaboration with Water for People, said that Bihar had India's poorest sanitation indicators with 85% rural households having no access to toilets.


The report added that 49% of the households that did not have a toilet wanted one for "safety and security".


Some 45% wanted a toilet for "convenience", while 4% wanted one for "privacy".


"Surprisingly, only 1% indicated health as a motivator for having a toilet," the report said.


The Bihar government says it plans to provide toilets to more than 10 million households in the state by 2022 under a federal scheme.


A law making toilets mandatory has been introduced in several states as part of the "sanitation for all" drive by the Indian government.


Special funds are made available for people to construct toilets to promote hygiene and eradicate the practice of faeces collection - or scavenging - which is mainly carried out by low-caste people.

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“Incursion could be China’s way to bring border talks on front-burner”

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RajTamil News LogoEveryone from Prime Minister Manmohan Singh downwards might have called the three-week Chinese encampment in eastern Ladakh a “localised” problem, but it was probably anything but that. This is the conclusion Indian officials are leaning towards as they try and read the tea leaves left behind by their uninvited guests on the Depsang plain.


And though opinions still differ, a number of sources believe the incursion by the People's Liberation Army across the Line of Actual Control was China’s way of bringing the border settlement talks — which it’s previous leadership had clearly put on the back burner — back on the agenda.


The signalling by setting up tents in a disputed area was also the Chinese way of telling India to discuss the Border Defence Cooperation Agreement (BDCA) it had proposed in March. India has yet to reply to the proposals China made.


Contrary to reports in some sections of the media, the BDCA draft does not contain proposals to restrict the construction of border infrastructure. However, the reason why India is yet to respond to the Chinese text is that it wants to carefully study the draft in order to avoid any hidden spring traps that may come alive in future.


The BDCA proposals fall well short of exchanging maps — something India had been pressing for till a decade ago — and focus on expanding talks between ground level troops on the border, besides increasing communication between the two sides at various levels, sources said while not choosing to elaborate any further.


The feeling in Indian circles is that since many high level exchanges are taking place between the two sides, the Chinese intention was to bring the subject to the fore at the high political level, possibly when Premier Li Keqiang visits India. It is likely to be aired during External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid’s China trip beginning later this week.


This perception about Chinese signalling is bolstered by a curious feature about the incursion. The group of tents put up by the Chinese were isolated. There were no support structures between the tents and their forward positions over 15 km away. “We couldn’t fathom why,” confessed the sources.


But there are some doubts too about this theory. The perception that the Chinese were there for strategic reasons could be misplaced. This is because during the first round of diplomatic exchanges at various levels, the Chinese did not appear to be giving the same version. “It’s a bit of a mystery,” said the sources.


Asked if at any point there had been harsh exchanges, the sources said it didn’t come to that except when the Indian Ambassador in Beijing S. Jaishankar told the Chinese that a prolonged stay could impact on bilateral relations.

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Pakistan to hand over Sarabjit's body to family: Reports

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sarabjit_deadLahore: Sarabjit Singh, the Indian who was attacked in a prison in Pakistan where he spent 22 years after being convicted of terrorism, died early this morning at a Lahore hospital after a cardiac arrest. Pakistan has agreed to India's request that his body be sent back for last rites.


The 49-year-old was admitted at Lahore's Jinnah hospital on Friday with severe brain injuries after a group of inmates hit him on the head with bricks and pieces of tin. Doctors had warned from the start that his recovery was unlikely; he was comatose and on ventilator support. He died at 12.45 am.

An autopsy will be conducted today and India's High Commissioner to Pakistan is meeting senior officials there to work out modalities for the return of Mr Singh's body. Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde said he was making efforts since 2 pm last night, when he first heard of Sarabjit's death, to bring back the body. He met Mr Singh's family in New Delhi early this morning.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has condoled the death and regretted that "Pakistan did not heed pleas of India and Sarabjit's family for taking a humanitarian view in this case." India had unsuccessfully petitioned Pakistan to let Mr Singh, who was on death row there, be sent home for better medical treatment.



In a strong statement issued this morning, the Indian government said, "This was, put simply, the killing of our citizen while in the custody of Pakistan jail authorities."


Sarabjit's family has requested that he be accorded "a martyr's funeral". His sister, Dalbir Kaur, his wife and two daughters, who were given emergency visas to visit him, returned to India on Wednesday afternoon after being told that his coma appeared irreversible. They said they had been let down by the Indian government.

Pakistan has, over the years, maintained that Mr Singh was a terrorist. He was given the death sentence in 1991 for bombings a year earlier in Lahore and Multan in which 14 people were killed.

His sister, who had campaigned for years for his release, has said he inadvertently crossed the border into Pakistan and his conviction was a case of mistaken identity. She has also said that the attack at the Kot Lakhpat jail last week was pre-planned and that there was a threat to Sarabjit's life.












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Time Scale: Pakistan to hand over Sarabjit's body to family

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RajTamil News LogoNEW DELHI:


NEW DELHI: 11.00 am: Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde who met the family of the Indian prisoner informed the media and assured them of getting back his body to India.


He said, "We are making efforts so that his body is handed over to us as soon as possible. Our foreign ministry is holding talks with the Pakistan government. And once the body comes its funeral will be conducted as per the wishes of his family."

Pakistan back-stabbed us again: Sarabjit's sister

10.40 am: Blaming the Pakistan government for Sarabjit's death, Dalbir said, "Zardari killed Sarabjit ahead of the general elections in the country. Pakistan is a coward. They murdered Sarabjit."


10.30 am: Sarabjit Singh's sister Dalbir Kaur in an emotional address to the media said that she always doubted Pakistan's honesty and the jail authorities always kept the family in the dark. Calling Sarabjit a martyr, Dalbir said the Indian prisoner was tortured in the Pakistani jail. "First they back-stabbed Vajpayee and now they fooled Manmohan Singh. I appeal the entire nation to unite against Pakistan," said Dalbir.

Sarabjit's death a setback to Ind-Pak ties: Khurshid


10.20 am: 
Union external affairs minister Salman Khurshid expressed shock over Sarabjit's death, saying the Indian prisoner's death is a setback to the Indo-Pak ties. He said, "Sarabjit's death is a terrible, psychological, emotional setback to the Indo-Pak ties."

"Pakistan to hand over Sarabjit's body to family: Reports


10.10 am: Media reports say that Pakistan has agreed to hand overSarabjit Singh's body to his family.


Sharat Sabharwal, Indian High Commissioner to Pakistan, would be meeting the chief minister of Pakistan's Punjab province shortly to work out the modalities of bringing back Sarabjit's body, which may be flown back in a helicopter.


10.00 am: Calling Sarabjit's death as a 'cold blooded murder', the leader of the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Sushma Swarajslammed Pakistan.


"It is a cold blooded murder. This is not the way civilized nations behave. #Sarabjit Singh," Sushma Swaraj tweeted.


9.55 pm: The security of the Pakistani prisoners has been tightened in the Indian jails following Sarabjit's death.


9.50 pm: MEA however denied the report that it was consulted by Pakistan authorities on taking off the ventilator.


9.45 pm: Pakistan media reports that the decision to take Sarabjit off ventilator after consulting with the Indian High Commission.


9.40 pm: Pak Foreign Secretary accepted that 'there were lapses by jail authorities' but refused to accept that the death of the Indian prisoner was 'a conspiracy'.


9.30 am: The Indian external affairs ministry strongly condemned Pakistan over Sarabjit's death. Ministry spokesperson Syed Akbaruddin tweeted, "#India: Sarabjit's death is, put simply, the killing of our citizen while in the custody of #Pakistan jail authorities."


9.20 am: Pakistan media reports that a medical team will be formed to conduct the postmortem examination of Sarabjit.


Brave son of India: PM


9.15 am: Describing Sarabjit as the 'brave son of India', Singh said the entire nation shared his family's grief.


Full text of PM: "I am deeply saddened by the passing away of Sarabjit Singh. He was a brave son of India who bore his tribulations with valiant fortitude. The criminals responsible for the barbaric and murderous attack on him must be brought to justice. It is particularly regrettable that the government of Pakistan did not heed the pleas of the government of India, Sarabjit's family and of civil society in India and Pakistan to take a humanitarian view of this case. May his soul be granted the peace that he could not enjoy in life. Government will make the arrangements to bring his remains home and for his last rites to be conducted in consultation with his family. The nation shares their profound grief with them."

Regret Pakistan's inaction: PM


9 pm: Expressing regret over Indian prisoner Sarabjit Singh's death in Pakistan, the Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh appealed to Pakistan to punish the killers of the Indian prisoner.


8.15 am: Sarabjit's family first learnt of his death in a Lahore hospital through a media report. Dalbir Kaur, sister of Sarabjit Singh, told Geo TV that the family had not yet been officially informed about his death at Jinnah Hospital, Lahore.


8 am: The family of the Indian prisoner said that he should be given the stature of a "shahid" or, martyr.


1.15 am: Sarabjit Singh declared dead in Lahore hospital.


Indian prisoner in Pakistan Sarabjit Singh died in a Lahore hospital on Thursday morning, succumbing to severe injuries caused by an assault by jail inmates on April 26.


The head of the medical panel of the hospital was quoted as saying that Sarabjit succumbed to injuries at 12.45 a.m. (Pakistan time) or (1.15 a.m. Indian standard time).


Sarabjit's lawyer Awais Shiekh told an Indian news channel that Sarabjit's death was confirmed by hospital authorities.


Sarabjit had suffered serious head injuries after being attacked by two prisoners at Lahore's Kot Lakhpat jail April 26. He was on ventilator support since then. (With inputs from agencies)





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"Yet An Opportunity Lost, Rape law changes welcome" : UN. Special Rapporteur

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02TH_CITY_MANJOO_1445039eThe United Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence Again Women, Rashida Manjoo, on Wednesday regretted that the amendments made to the rape laws in India did not fully reflect the recommendations of the Justice J.S. Verma Committee, set up in the aftermath of the December 16 gang rape that led to the death of a young girl in the national capital.


Addressing reporters at the conclusion of her visit to India, Ms. Manjoo welcomed the Centre’s speedy response after the rape and the legislative reforms based on the Verma Committee recommendations but said it was “an opportunity lost. The Verma Committee was a golden moment to examine whether legislative measures in India were sufficient.” India had an amazing Constitution that granted equality to all but the challenge was to enforce the provisions.


Hoping that India would bring in further legislative measures to address issues such as marital rape, age of consent and rights of transgender people and vulnerable groups, Ms. Manjoo said it was “unfortunate that the opportunity to establish a substantive and specific equality and non-discrimination rights legislative framework for women, to address de facto inequality and discrimination, and to prevent all forms of violence against women, was lost.’’


“Death penalty not a deterrent”


She said the speedy developments and also the adoption of a law and order approach to sexual wrongs, now included the death penalty for certain crimes against women. “This development foreclosed the opportunity to establish a holistic and remedial framework. The new approach fails to address the structural and root causes and consequences of violence against women, she added.


The Special Rapporteur said there was no proof that death penalty was a deterrent. “One needs to look at what purpose it [death penalty] would serve. The need is transformation of society and empowerment of women.’’


Despite the numerous positive developments, the unfortunate reality was that the rights of many women in India continued to be violated with impunity. Ms. Manjoo said she had received numerous submissions to suggest this, and also testimonies to say that mediation and compensation measures were often used as redress mechanisms to address cases of violence against women, thus “eroding accountability imperatives, and further fostering norms of impunity.”


Sexual violence and harassment in India were widespread, and perpetuated in public spaces, in the family and in the workplace.


ARMED FORCES ACT


On the issue of conflict-related sexual violence, Ms. Manjoo said it was crucial to acknowledge that these violations occurred at the hands of both state and non-state actors.


The Special Rapporteur’s report would be officially submitted to the United Nation’s Human Rights Council in June 2014.

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Prime Minister must quit: Sarabjit's family

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Sarabjit Singh's sister said she will fast from today till his brother, who is battling for life after a brutal assault in a Pakistani jail, is shifted to India or abroad for better treatment.




"I am upset with the Indian Government as it never took stern step to save my brother...I will not eat food till he is repatriated to India or shifted to a hospital abroad for a better treatment," said Dalbir Kaur, who reached here today after meeting 49-year-old Sarabjit, who is comatose in a Lahore hospital.



Sarabjit's wife Sukhpreet Kaur, daughters Poonam and Swapandeep Kaur and Dalbir crossed over into India from Lahore through land border. The family had gone to Pakistan on a 15-day visa on Sunday, two days after Sarabjit was attacked in Lahore's Kot Lakhpat jail.


sarabjit_dead

She said Sarabjit’s life can be saved if the Indian government puts pressure on Pakistan to shift him to this country or abroad for better treatment.


"I want the Government to immediately step in. I want to bring him back. If Malala (Yousafzai) can be treated abroad, why not my brother? I have doubts about the treatment they are giving to him but I have full confidence in the doctors back home," Kaur said.


The family will travel to Delhi and meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi, External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid, Union Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde and urge them to help save Sarabjit's life by taking necessary steps.

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கலவர கும்பல் மீது தடுப்பு காவல் சட்டம் : போலீஸ் தீவிரம்!

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gallerye_233348126_703798பா.ம.க., நிறுவனர், ராமதாஸ் கைது செய்யப்பட்டதை தொடர்ந்து, வட மாவட்டங்களில் ஏற்பட்டுள்ள பதற்றத்தை தணிக்க, போலீசார் குவிக்கப் பட்டு உள்ளனர். கலவர சம்பவங்களில் ஈடுபடக்கூடிய கும்பல்களை கைது செய்து, தடுப்பு காவல் சட்டப்படி, "உள்ளே' தள்ள, போலீசாருக்கு உத்தரவிடப்பட்டு  உள்ளது. இருப்பினும், நேற்று முன்தினம், இரவில் இருந்து, வட மாவட்டங்களில், அரசு பஸ்கள் தொடர்ந்து தாக்கப்பட்டதால், பதற்றமான சூழல் உருவானது. இதை மேலும் வளரவிடாமல் தவிர்க்க, போலீசார் தீவிர நடவடிக்கை எடுத்து வருகின்றனர்.


பின்னணி :


மரக்காணம் கலவர சம்பவத்தில், வி.சி., கட்சியினர் மற்றும் போலீஸ் நடவடிக்கை எடுத்த விதத்தை கண்டித்து, நேற்று முன்தினம், விழுப்புரத்தில் ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் நடத்த முயன்ற பா.ம.க., நிறுவனர், ராமதாஸ் மற்றும் சில கட்சி பிரமுகர்கள் கைது செய்யப்பட்டு, சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டனர். கலவரம் ஏற்படாமல் தடுக்க, விழுப்புரம் மாவட்டத்தில், 144 தடை உத்தரவு பிறப்பிக்கப்பட்டது.


இதைத் தொடர்ந்து, நேற்று முன்தினம், இரவு முதல், சேலம், கிருஷ்ணகிரி, வேலூர், திருவண்ணாமலை, காஞ்சிபுரம், கடலூர் மற்றும் விழுப்புரம் மாவட்டங்களில் ஆங்காங்கே கலவரம் நடந்தது.


போக்குவரத்து பாதிப்பு


அரசு பஸ்கள் மீது கல் வீச்சு சம்பவங்கள், நேற்று முழுவதும் தொடர்ந்து நடந்தன. தர்மபுரி மாவட்டத்தில், இரண்டு தனியார் பஸ்களும் தாக்கப்பட்டன. இந்த சம்பவங்களில், ஒரு பஸ் ஓட்டுனர் உட்பட பல பயணிகள் காயமடைந்ததாக காவல் துறையினர் தெரிவித்தனர்.


சில இடங்களில், உருட்டுக்கட்டை போன்ற பயங்கர ஆயுதங்களோடு சில கும்பல்கள், பஸ்களை மறித்து அடித்து நொறுக்கினர். மேலும் சில இடங்களில், இந்த கும்பல்கள், பஸ்களின் மீது பெட்ரோல் குண்டு வீசி, பஸ்களை எரித்தனர்.


gallerye_233348126_70379870 லட்சம் ரூபாய்க்கு நஷ்டம்

கலவரத்தால், கடந்த இரண்டு நாட்களாக, மொத்தம், 193 அரசு பஸ்கள் சேதமடைந்து உள்ளன. இதில், போக்குவரத்துக் கழகங்களுக்கு, 70 லட்சம் ரூபாய்க்கு நஷ்டம் ஏற்பட்டு உள்ளதாக, போக்குவரத்து துறை அதிகாரிகள் தெரிவித்தனர்.


மேலும், ஏழு பஸ்கள் தீக்கிரையாகின.இந்த பதற்றமான ‹ழலால், கிராமப்புறங்களுக்கான இரவு நேர பஸ் சேவையை, போக்குவரத்துக் கழகங்கள் ரத்து செய்தன. நேற்று ஏராளமான திருமணம் மற்றும் சுப நிகழ்ச்சிகள் நடந்தன. ஆனால், பஸ் போக்குவரத்து இல்லாததால், உறவினர்களின் சுப நிகழ்ச்சிகளுக்குச் செல்ல முடியாமல் நேற்று முன்தினம், இரவு முதல், மக்கள் பெரும் சிரமத்திற்கு உள்ளாகினர்.


காஞ்சிபுரம் மாவட்டத்தில், கலவர கும்பல்கள், பல இடங்களில், மரங்களை வெட்டி சாய்த்து, சாலைகளை மறித்ததால், தனியார் போக்குவரத்தும் கடுமையாக பாதிக்கப்பட்டது.


பிரச்னை வர வாய்ப்பு உள்ளது என, நினைத்தவர்கள், முன்னெச்சரிக்கையாக பஸ் பயணத்தை தவிர்த்து விட்டு, முன்பதிவில்லாமல் ரயில்களில் பயணம் செய்தனர்.இப்படி, விழுப்புரம் மற்றும் செங்கல்பட்டு ரயில் நிலையங்களில் இருந்து, தென் மாவட்டங்களில் இருந்து சென்னை வந்த ரயில்களில், பயணிகள் அதிகளவில் வந்தனர்.


இதனால், பலர் படியில் தொங்கிக் கொண்டு பயணம் செய்யும் நிலை ஏற்பட்டது. அதே போல், சென்னை, கோயம்பேட்டில் இருந்து, நேற்று காலை, வெளியூர்களுக்கு பஸ்கள் இயக்குவதில் தாமதம் ஏற்பட்டதால், சென்னை எழும்பூர் மற்றும் தாம்பரம் ரயில் நிலையங்களுக்கு, வழக்கத்தை விட அதிகளவில் பயணிகள் வந்ததாக ரயில்வே அதிகாரிகள் தெரிவித்தனர்.




இதர சம்பவங்கள்


* நேற்று காலை, 7:00 மணிக்கு, விழுப்புரம் மாவட்டம், வளவனூர் அருகே வாணியம்பாளையத்தில், சாலையோரம் இருந்த இரண்டு குடிசைகள் தீ வைத்து கொளுத்தப்பட்டன.நேற்று முன்தினம், இரவு, 1:00 மணியளவில், விழுப்புரம் மாவட்டம், கச்சிராயபாளையம் அருகே வடக்கநந்தல் ஊர் நடுவே உள்ள டாஸ்மாக் கடை எண். 11455 கிரில் கேட்டின் கீழே உள்ள இடைவெளியில், சிலர் பெட்ரோலை ஊற்றி தீவைத்துவிட்டு சென்றனர்.


* விழுப்புரம் மாவட்டம்,கரடிசித்தூரில் டாஸ்மாக் கடை எண். 11704யில் தீ வைத்த சம்பவம் நடந்தது.


* கரடிசித்தூரில் உள்ள அரசு கிளை நூலகமும் நள்ளிரவில் பெட்ரோல் ஊற்றி தீ வைக்கப்பட்டது



7 பிரிவுகளில்   205 பேர் கைது : காவல் துறை அதிரடி


இத்தகைய சம்பவங்களால், வடமாவட்டங்களில் இயல்பு வாழ்கை பாதிக்கப் பட்டு உள்ளது. இது தொடராமல் இருக்க, போலீசார் தீவிர கண்காணிப்பிலும், ரோந்து பணியிலும் ஈடுபட்டு உள்ளனர். விழுப்புரம் போன்ற அதிக பதட்டம் நிலவிய மாவட்டங்களில், வெளிமாவட்டங்களில் இருந்து சிறப்பு படை மற்றும் ஆயுத படை போலீசார் வரவழைக்கப் பட்டனர்.


"வன்முறையை அரசு சகித்துக் கொள்ளாது; வன்முறை கும்பல்கள் மீது தடுப்பு காவல் சட்டம் பாயும்' என, சட்டசபையில் முதல்வர் ஜெயலலிதா எச்சரித்து இருந்தார். அதன்படி, வன்முறையில் ஈடுபடுவோரை கைது செய்து தடுப்பு காவல் சட்டப்படி உள்ளே தள்ள போலீசாருக்கு உத்தரவிடப்பட்டு உள்ளது.


போலீஸ் நடவடிக்கையால், இதுவரை,7 பிரிவுகளில், வழக்கு பதிவு செய்து, 205 பேர் கைது செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளனர். இதுதவிர, சாலை மறியலில் ஈடுபட்ட, 3,500 பேர் கைது செய்யப்பட்டு உள்ளனர்.




மாவட்டம் எரிந்த பஸ்கள் சேதமான பஸ்கள்

சேலம் - 27
கிருஷ்ணகிரி 2 10
வேலூர் 1 50
திருவண்ணாமலை 1 11
காஞ்சிபுரம் 3 22
விழுப்புரம் - 50
கடலூர் - 19
சென்னை புறநகர் - 4



புதுச்சேரியில் நாளை பந்த்


வன்னியர் சங்கம் சார்பில், பா.ம.க., நிறுவனர் ராமதாசை கைது செய்யப் பட்டதை கண்டித்து, நாளை புதுச்சேரியில் பந்த் நடக்க உள்ளது.நேற்று, புதுச்சேரியில் பல்வேறு இடங்களில் நடந்த கல்வீச்சில் சம்பவங்களில்,10க்கும் மேற்பட்ட பஸ்கள் சேதமடைந்தன. இதில், அரசு பஸ் ஓட்டுனர் ஒருவர் காயமடைந்தார்.


வாடகை கார் சேவையும் பாதிப்பு


கடந்த இரண்டு நாட்களாக நிலவும் கலவர சூழலால், சென்னையில் இருந்து சாலை வழியாக விழுப்புரம் மற்றும் கடலூர் மாவட்டங்களுக்கு செல்வதற்கும், புதுச்சேரிக்கு செல்வதற்கும், "கால் டாக்சி' நிறுவனங்களால் சேவைகளை அளிக்க முடியவில்லை.

இது குறித்து, சென்னை டூரிஸ்ட் கார் ஆபரேட்டர் அசோசியேசனின் பொது செயலர், பெருமாள் கூறுகையில், ""மரக்காணம் கலவரத்தால், கடந்த இரு நாட்களாக, கிழக்கு கடற்கரை சாலையில், வாகனங்களை இயக்கவில்லை. போலீஸ் பாதுகாப்புடன்ஒரு சில வாகனங்கள் மட்டுமே இயக்கப்படுகின்றன. இந்த கலவரத்தால், "கால் டாக்சி' தொழில் பாதிக்கப் பட்டு உள்ளது,'' என்றார்.


"காவேரி டிராவல்ஸ்' நிர்வாகி, ராமன் கூறுகையில், ""விமான நிலையத்தில் இருந்து, விழுப்புரத்துக்கு இன்று (நேற்று) "டிரிப்' செல்ல வேண்டி இருந்தது. அந்த மாவட்டம் முழுவதும், பதற்றமாக இருப்பதால், "டிரிப்'பை ரத்து செயது விட்டோம்,'' என்றார்.இப்படி பல்வேறு வாடகை கார் நிறுவனங்களும் குறிப்பிட்ட ஊர்களுக்கு தங்கள் சேவையை ரத்து செய்தன.


பேருந்து ஓட்டுனர்கள் புலம்பல்

கலவரத்தில் பேருந்துகள் குறிவைக்கப் படுவதால், பேருந்து ஓட்டுனர்கள் பயத்துடனே பேருந்தை இயக்கும் சூழலுக்கு தள்ளப்பட்டனர். இது குறித்து, பேருந்து ஓட்டுனர் ஒருவர் கூறுகையில், ""பேருந்துகளில் செல்லும் போது, எப்போது கலவரம் ஏற்படுமோ என்ற பயத்துடனேயே, பேருந்தை இயக்கி கொண்டிருக்கிறோம். இதனால் பேருந்துகளில் பாதுகாப்பை பலப்படுத்த வேண்டும்,'' என்றார்.

ராமதாஸ் ஜாமின் மனு இன்று விசாரணை

தான விழுப்புரம்: பா.ம.க., நிறுவனர், ராமதாஸ் ஜாமின் மனு மீதான விசாரணை, விழுப்புரம் கோர்ட்டில் இன்று நடக்கிறது.விழுப்புரத்தில் அனுமதியின்றி ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் நடத்த முயன்ற ராமதாஸ் சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டு உள்ளார்.

அவரை, ஜாமினில் விடக்கோரி, நேற்று முன்தினம் மாலை, வழக்கறிஞர் துரைமுருகன், விழுப்புரம் இரண்டாவது மாஜிஸ்திரேட் முகிலாம்பிகை முன், மனு தாக்கல் செய்தார். நேற்று அரசு விடுமுறை என்பதால், விசாரணை, இன்று நடக்கிறது.
நமது நிருபர் குழு
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