Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Rocket attacks on UC Nazim house, police checkpoint in Peshawar


Rocket attacks on UC Nazim house, police checkpoint in Peshawar PESHAWAR: The unidentified persons fired more than 20 rockets on UC Nazim house and police checkpost in Peshawar but no causality was reported.

According to details, militants fired several rockets at UB Nazim Abdul Malik’s house late on Wednesday night that landed in nearby fields. Rockets also targeted a police chck point in the area. However, no loss of life was reported.

The attackers were managed to flee from the scene. Police has cordoned off the area and search operation has been launched.

Blasts destroyed Mardan’s CD market


Blasts destroyed Mardan’s CD market MARDAN: Three simultaneous blasts in CD market in Takht Bhai area of Mardan destroyed 20 shops, however no loss of life was reported.

Mardan police told Geo News unidentified militants planted explosives at three places in a market of 20 shops that went off with a bang late on Wednesday night. The entire market was destroyed in the blasts but no causality was reported.

The blats rocked the area and residents came out from their houses in panic. Takht Bhai police has confirmed the incident.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Sri Lankan team arrives home


Sri Lankan team arrives home LAHORE: The Sri Lanka cricket team has arrived home on early Wednesday, Geo News reported. The Sri Lankan players were also accompanied with three Pakistani doctors on flight.

Relieved relatives gave the tour party an emotional welcome as the 25-member contingent was led from a specially chartered Sri Lankan Airlines Airbus A320 by team manager Brendon Kuruppu.

Earlier, the Lankan team, following the Lahore attacks, had left Pakistan for home on Tuesday afternoon after it was taken from the Gaddafi Stadium through helicopter to the airport.

Special arrangements were made for bringing the tourists to the airport and a special helicopter of the Pakistan Air force took them from the Gaddafi Stadium to the Lahore airport. Following which, they were sent through a chartered flight to Sri Lanka via Abu Dhabi.

Chairman PCB Ijaz Butt, Director National Cricket Academy Aamer Sohail, chief operating officer Saleem Altaf and other officials saw-off the Sri Lankan players and the officials at Gaddafi Stadium

Star batsman Thilan Samaraweera and Tharanga Paranavithana, who both received hospital treatment in Pakistan, were placed in an ambulance and taken to a private medical facility in Colombo, a senior official said.

Spin bowler Ajantha Mendis was seen leaving the aircraft with a plaster behind his right ear. A total of seven players and an assistant coach were hurt in the attack, which left eight people dead. Vice-captain Kumar Sangakkara, who was another wounded in Tuesday's gun and grenade assault, told reporters that the players had been asked by team management not to speak with reporters.

Sri Lanka sports minister Gamini Lokuge also met the team at Bandaranaike International Airport, where security was tight, the official said.

There has been no claim of responsibility for the attack, but some Sri Lankan officials fear a possible link with the military offensive against ethnic Tamil rebels in the island's north.

Sri Lanka were airlifted from Gaddafi Stadium by helicopter before flying out of Lahore late Tuesday, abandoning a tour which was only arranged when India refused to visit their troubled neighbour.

At least a dozen men ambushed Sri Lanka's cricket team with rifles, grenades and rocket launchers on Tuesday, converging on the squad's convoy as it drove through a traffic circle near Gaddafi Stadium.

Seven players, an umpire and a coach were wounded, none with life-threatening injuries, but six policemen and a driver died.

The attackers struck as a convoy carrying the squad and match officials reached a traffic circle 300 yards (meters) from the main sports stadium in the eastern city of Lahore, triggering a 15-minute gunbattle with police guarding the vehicles.

'We were all tucked under the seats,' Sri Lanka captain Mahela Jayawardene said when the team arrived home in Colombo early Wednesday. 'Our guys were getting hurt and screaming but we couldn't help each other.

We were just hoping that we will not get hit. None of us thought that we would come alive out of the situation.' The assault, just ahead of the resumption of the second cricket test, was one of the worst terrorist attacks on a sports team since Palestinian militants killed 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics.

By attacking South Asia's most popular sport, the gunmen guaranteed themselves tremendous international attention while demonstrating Pakistan's struggle to provide its 170 million people with basic security as it battles a raging Islamist militancy.

Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani said the incident 'has humiliated the country' and the head of the Interior Ministry, Rehman Malik, declared Pakistan was 'in a state of war.' Malik told media that authorities were investigating whether the attackers wanted to take hostages.

'We are looking at the possibility the gunmen wanted to hijack the bus and take it to a nearby building and create a drama,' Malik said. 'The way they came prepared and in large numbers indicates such a plan.'

Tuesday's attackers melted away into the city, and none was killed or captured, city police chief Haji Habibur Rehman said. The attackers abandoned machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and plastic explosives, Punjab IG Khwaja Khalid Farooq said.

They carried backpacks stuffed with dried fruit, mineral water and walkie-talkies - provisions also abandoned at or near the scene, officials said.

Authorities did not speculate on the identities of the attackers, but the chief suspects will be Islamist militants, some with links to al-Qaida, who have staged high-profile attacks on civilian targets before.

The bus driver, Mohammad Khalil, accelerated as bullets ripped into the vehicle and explosions rocked the air, steering the team to the safety of the stadium. The players - some of them wounded - ducked down and shouted 'Go! Go!' as he drove through the ambush.

Authorities cancelled the test match against Pakistan and a special flight carried the Sri Lanka team - including two players who had been hospitalised - home, where the players were immediately sequestered to a private meeting with their families.

Bill for FATA development tabled in US congress


Bill for FATA development tabled in US congress WASHINGTON: A bill for the development in Federally Administrated Tribal Areas (FATA) in Pakistan has been tabled in US congress here on Tuesday, Geo News reported.

According to bill, reconstruction opportunity zones in FATA will be formed.

Sources said the bill was financed by Democratic Senator Maria Cantwell, which was forwarded to Congress finance committee.

Senator Robert Gates and Senator Orrin Hatch are other co-sponsors from Democrates, sources added.

Former US president Bush made announcement to form reconstruction opportunity zones in Pakistan and Afghanistan tribal areas during.

NATO secretary general terms Swat deal as Pakistan’s internal issue


NATO secretary general terms Swat deal as Pakistan’s internal issue BRUSSELS: NATO Secretary General Jaap De Hoop has said that the Swat peace deal is Pakistan’s internal matter.

Talking to media in Brussels, Hoop said NATO forces had no intention to enter Pakistani borders. He said Pakistani routes for NATO supplies still carried importance despite the start of NATO supply to Afghanistan through Russia. Hoop said cultivation of opium and smuggling were becoming major reasons for terrorism in Afghanistan.

Sri Lankan team attack also rocks bourses

Sri Lankan team attack also rocks bourses KARACHI: Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) along with the other two stock exchanges of the country rocked by the Sri Lankan team attack this morning in Lahore went nose-dive, as the investors in great panic sidelined from business and seen glued with the TV channels, which continued pouring horrifying details of the gory incident for hours.

Following the terror incident in Lahore today, KSE opened down by 60 points and on one occasion KSE-100 index was seen eroded by 150 points plummeting the index to 5500 points.

Lahore Stock Exchange (LSE) being the epicenter of the terror attack felt the similar shock, which saw the index in initial trading shed by over 30 points to peg at 1535 points, while in Islamabad bourse was no exception.

New Zealand cancel planned tour of Pakistan


New Zealand cancel planned tour of Pakistan WELLINGTON: New Zealand have cancelled their tour of Pakistan scheduled for later this year in the wake of Tuesday's attacks on the Sri Lankan team.

New Zealand Cricket chief executive Justin Vaughan said there was no way the trip could go ahead.

"The tour has been called off," Vaughan told New Zealand radio on Wednesday. "We are not going, I think that's pretty clear."

"Now we've seen that cricket can be a target and I think it creates a whole new set of issues and raises the security issue to a whole new level," he added.

New Zealand called off the tour, scheduled to start in November, after militants armed with grenades and guns ambushed Sri Lanka's players in Lahore Tuesday.

New Zealand officials are expected to meet their Pakistani counterparts in international meetings in April or June, where they are likely to discuss moving the tour to a neutral venue.

“I think the options will probably revolve around playing them at a neutral venue. They have played previous games in the Gulf states, in Abu Dhabi," Vaughan said.

The New Zealand cricket team cut short their 2002 tour to Pakistan after a suicide bomber blew up a bus outside the team's hotel in Karachi, killing at least 12 people.

News of the Lahore attack broke Tuesday during a one-day international between New Zealand and India in Napier. After the innings break, both teams wore black armbands in a show of respect for the victims.

New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said he was outraged by the attack and condemned it as a "despicable terrorist act."

"I am very concerned at this turn of events, where an international sports team has been targeted by terrorists," Key said.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Militant sanctuaries pose biggest Afghanistan threat: Gates


Militant sanctuaries pose biggest Afghanistan threat: Gates WASHINGTON: Defense Secretary Robert Gates said his biggest concern in the war in Afghanistan is the threat posed by sanctuaries for Islamic militants near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

The threat is from “safe havens on the Pakistani side of the border, not just for al-Qaeda, but for the Taliban” and other groups “working together,” Gates said on a US news channel.

“After all, 20 years ago I was on the other side of that b

President promulgates new ordinances on speedy justice, vocational training


President promulgates new ordinances on speedy justice, vocational training ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari has promulgated two ordinances to set up mobile courts to provide speedy justice to the people at their doorsteps and to provide for regulation, coordination and policy direction for technical and vocational education training.

Both the ordinances promulgated by the President on February 27 have come into immediate effect all over the country.

Under the Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Ordinance, 2009, speedy justice will be provided to the masses on their door steps. Magistrates of first, second and third class will be appointed.

The first class magistrates may be asked to work as a Mobile Court to try any offence or such offences as may be determined under the code. The presiding officer of the Mobile Court shall send a daily return to the Sessions Judge containing the details of each case that has been dealt with.

The National Vocational and Technical Education Commission Ordinance 2009 aims at providing for an autonomous organization for regulation, coordination and policy direction for technical education and vocational training.

Under the Ordinance National Vocational and Technical Education Commission will be established to prepare national training plans, programmes and projects for capacity building in the field of technical education and vocational training; development of national occupational skill standards, curricula and trade testing certification systems for all sectors.