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NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
ALLEGEDLY,
TERRORISTS AND FUNDAMENTALIST ISLAMISTS OBTAIN MALAYSIAN PASSPORTS
AND VISAS TO SEVERAL COUNTRIES
Kula Lumpur, Malaysia-Malaysian
Passport holders are granted 'visa on arrival status' in European
Union. Malaysia has become The Launching Pad for non Malaysian
Terrorists to secure original Malaysian Passport through bribe. The
Bush Administration realized that it is against US interest (after
9/11) that it pressured Canada to revoked 'visa on arrival status'
for Malaysian Passport holders. Malaysia being a multi racial nation
makes it a better choice for Terrorist Groups to seek its passport.
Among such outfits are Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ezham of North Sri
Lanka, Patani Liberation Organization of South Thailand, Mindanao
Liberation Organization of South Philippines, Jemaah Islamiya of
Indonesia etc. Further claims are posted on page 28 of the website:
www.pdrm-ms.com "The Undisputed
Malaysian Corruption Champion is The Police Department. Runner Up:
Malaysian Immigration Department. It must be noted that The Late
Michael Soosai is not important and insignificant but Government
Departments like Police, Immigration etc. are essential to ensure
that our next generation lives in a better
Malaysia. If you lose
your passport and want a replacement fast without lodging a police
report and waiting for police investigation to complete, then
contact The Enterprising Immigration Officer Amar Singh at 012
2646351 (Damansara Immigration Department). No need to lodge a
police report, Amar Singh takes care of everything for RM6000/-. The
Enterprising Immigration Officer was a close friend of The Late
Michael Soosai. Amar Singh also deals through a tout, ‘Francis’: 019
3055477, who solicits clients with immigration related problems. If
you are not a Malaysian and seek Malaysian Passport for easy passage
to European Union countries, as it is visa on arrival for Malaysian
Passport holders, then Amar Singh and Associates are ever ready to
assist for a nominal charge of RM20000/-. By Dr. N. Mahadevan.
ALL THE NEWS AND HEADLINES
*Nazi
'Dr. Death' located in Spain: German magazine
*Iran
says resumed nuclear talks would benefit the West .
*South
Asia quake kills more than 30,000; Pakistani president appeals
for help. *British
anti-terror police arrest 10 in raids across England.
*Suicide
bomber wounds four Britons in attack in southern Afghanistan.
*London
to get multimillion dollar sexual 'theme park' near Piccadilly
Circus. *German
bishop whose homilies denounced Hitler's regime and condemned
anti-Semitism beatified at Vatican. *Israeli
professor shares Nobel Prize in Economics for 2005
*Putin
rethinks rocket sales to Syria despite pledge to Sharon
_______________________________________________________________________________
Thousands
march in first anti-globalization protest before WTO summit
Photo:
Indonesian women
protesters march past a huge billboard during a protest by thousands
of anti-globalization activists march Sunday.
HONG KONG- About 4,000
anti-globalization activists marched Sunday in the first mass
protest against the World Trade Organization's summit in Hong Kong.
The demonstrators, who have been coming from around the world ahead
of the five-day WTO meeting that opens Tuesday, marched from Hong
Kong's downtown Victoria Park to the government's main office...Full
story
More than
100 dead in Nigerian jet crash.
Plane carrying schoolchildren
crashes in stormy weather. PORT HARCOURT, Nigeria- A Nigerian
jetliner filled with schoolchildren going home for Christmas crashed
Saturday while landing during a lightning storm in a delta oil port.
At least 103 people were killed, officials said. A spokesman for
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo called the disaster "a national
tragedy." Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority spokesman Sam Adurogboye
said early reports indicated seven people survived the crash of the
Sosoliso Airlines' McDonnell Douglas DC-9. Flight 1145 left the
capital Abuja. "They were breathing and were taken to the
hospital...Full
story
Erroneous reports of plane crash
in N.B. prompt search and media frenzy
POCOLOGAN, N.B.-A local resident's
mistaken belief that a low-flying aircraft had crashed in the Bay of
Fundy on Wednesday prompted an intense search of southwestern New
Brunswick, followed by a flurry of urgent news reports that flashed
around the world. A search-rescue mission was launched amid reports
from radio stations that suggested a large, four-engine aircraft
went down in flames near Pocologan, a coastal community about 40
kilometres west of Saint John. Claudia Babineau, of nearby Pennfield,
later confirmed that she reported seeing a small, single-engine
plane disappear behind a stand of trees. "It was going back and
forth over the highway," she said in an interview from her home. "It
went towards Fredericton, then turned around and went towards the
water, but it was just at tree level and then disappeared, gone. I'm
assuming it went into the water but (search and rescue officials)
are saying no." "I'm pretty sure of what I saw, but if they can't
find it there's not much I can do." Pat Jessup, spokeswoman for the
military's Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Halifax, said the centre
received two phone calls from people claiming they saw a plane
flying low over the bay. Capt. John Pulchny, a spokesman for
Canadian Forces Base Greenwood, across the bay in Nova Scotia,
suggested that a large, Hercules cargo aircraft on a training
exercise probably dropped out of sight during a low-level pass,
prompting concern among those onshore. "During search and rescue,
the Hercs do fly fairly low, depending on the type of training or
search they're doing, so it's possible," he said. Horace Young,
operator of Young's Auto Body in Pennfield, said he heard the
initial emergency calls on his police scanner. "A man and women
sitting at their kitchen table watched (the plane) go in the water,"
he said in an interview. "They phoned the RCMP. We heard it over the
scanner and the guy said he could pinpoint where it went down.
. . .There's all kinds of ambulances and police and stuff out along
the highway there by the water." The reports sparked a brief but
intense media frenzy as word spread that an aircraft could have
crashed in Canadian waters. As the military and the RCMP scrambled
to confirm the reports, a coast guard cutter, a Cormorant helicopter
and the Hercules were called in to help with the search. The search
was called off a few hours after officials said they had failed to
find any evidence of a crash and all military and civilian aircraft
scheduled to be in the area had been accounted for. -By K. Bisett.
Iranian
military plane hits tall building in Tehran suburbs
At least 128 die
Photo: An Iranian soldier stands guard in front of building in which
an Iranian military transport plane crashed in Tehran Tuesday.
TEHRAN, Iran- An Iranian military
transport plane crashed into a 10-storey apartment building while
trying to make an emergency landing Tuesday, ripping open the top of
the structure and igniting a huge fire. At least 128 people were
killed - 34 from the building. The plane was carrying Iranian
journalists to cover military maneuvers in the south, and all 94
people on the aircraft were killed. In addition to the 34 residents
of the apartment building who were killed, 90 were injured, Tehran
state radio said. Flames leaped from windows as panicked residents
fled the Towhid residential complex, a series of high-rise apartment
buildings for army personnel in the Azadi suburb of Tehran. Wreckage
rained down, hitting a nearby gas station. Cars parked below were
smashed by falling debris. At the foot of the blackened building, a
pile of wreckage was in flames. Firefighters managed to put out the
fire in the building, which was damaged and charred but still
standing. Police cordoned off the area, preventing thousands of
people from getting near the site. Many were screaming, afraid their
relatives had been killed. ''It was like an earthquake,'' said Reza
Sadeqi, a 25-year-old merchant, who saw the plane hit the building.
He said he was thrown inside his shop by the force of the crash. ''I
felt the heat of the fire caused by the crash. It was like being in
hell,'' he said. The C-130 aircraft had just taken off from the
nearby Mehrabad Airport en route to the southern port of Bandar
Abbas. The plane experienced a technical problem and was returning
to the airport for an emergency landing when it hit the building,
state-run television said. Witness Iraj Mordin said the plane
appeared to be circling the airport when its tail suddenly burst
into flames, leaving a smoke trail as it plummeted.
Mordin said he thought the plane was going to crash
into a gas station and fled, but turned and saw it slam into what he
thought was the building's eighth floor. The plane, which belonged
to the army air force, carried 84 passengers and a crew of 10, state
TV reported. All aboard were killed, the mayor of Tehran, Mohammad
Bagher Ghalibaf, told The Associated Press. In April, an Iranian
military Boeing 707 with 157 people aboard skidded off a runway at
Tehran airport and caught fire, killing three people. Last year, a
Ukrainian-built aircraft carrying aerospace scientists crashed in
central Iran, killing all 44 people aboard. In 2003, a Russian-made
Ilyushin-76 carrying members of the elite Revolutionary Guards
crashed in the mountains of southeastern Iran, killing 302 people.
And in 1988, an Iran Air A300 Airbus was shot down by the USS
Vincennes over the Persian Gulf, killing 290.- By Ali Dareini.

Terrorist threatens U.S.,
allies in video seized by Indonesian police
JAKARTA, Indonesia- A masked man
believed to be one of Asia's most wanted terrorists warned the
United States, Britain and Australia in a video seized from his
hide-out: "You will be the target of our next attack." Malaysian
fugitive Noordin Mohamad Top is allegedly a key leader of the al-Qaida-linked
group Jemaah Islamiyah, which has been accused of orchestrating at
least four deadly bombings targeting westerners since 2002. "As long
as you keep your troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and intimidate
Muslim people, you will feel our intimidation and our terror," said
the man in the video obtained Thursday by Associated Press
Television News. "Our enemies are supporters of (U.S. President
George W.) Bush and (British Prime Minister Tony) Blair." National
police chief Gen. Sutanto said, judging from his accent, the man
appeared to be Noordin, who is widely regarded as Jemaah Islamiyah's
key strategist and recruiter. He has eluded police capture for more
than three years by moving from one rented house to another in
densely populated areas. Police got a tip last week that Noordin was
hiding in Semarang, the capital of Central Java province, but he
escaped before the anti-terror unit arrived, they said. He left the
video behind, together with an hour-long recording of an Indonesian
man, his face covered, giving a step-by-step bomb-making
demonstration. In a near-simultaneous siege hundreds of kilometres
away, another elite police unit killed Noordin's right-hand man,
fellow Malaysian Azahari bin Husin. Azahari
was believed to be Jemaah Islamiyah's top bomb-making expert and the
discovery of more than 30 explosives in his hide-out raised concerns
that the group may have been planning more terror strikes. The video
added to those worries. "Our enemy is America, Australia, England
and Italy," said the masked man, pointing his finger at the camera.
"You will be the target of our next attack." Later, he singled out
Australia - which last week arrested 18 Islamic terror suspects in
co-ordinated pre-dawn raids in the cities of Melbourne and Sydney.
Prime Minister John Howard and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, he
said, calling them by name, "you are bringing all the Australian
people to darkness and terrorizing the mujahedeen ... Remember
that." Downer on Thursday said Australia would not be intimidated by
a "fanatic" like Noordin. "We have to make it perfectly clear that
whatever these people do, whatever threats they make, we have got
the strength and courage to stand up to that," he told reporters in
his hometown of Adelaide. Noordin and Azahari
have been accused of direct involvement in at least four terror
attacks in Indonesia: the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people,
most of them foreign tourists; two strikes in Jakarta in 2003 and
2004 that took 22 lives; and the Oct. 1 suicide attacks on Bali that
caused 20 more deaths. The three men who carried out last month's
near simultaneous suicide attacks on crowded Bali restaurants also
appeared in the video Thursday, saying they considered themselves
holy warriors. "My brother and wife, God willing, when you see this
recording I'll already be in heaven," said a man identified as
bomber Muhammad Salik Firdaus. "Don't even think that people who
kill in the way of God ever die," he said quietly, smiling and
appearing relaxed as he sat on the floor with his legs crossed.
"They are living." Another young man, identified as Misno,
apologized to his parents, siblings and other relatives for mistakes
he made and asked that they repay any of his debts. All three spoke
in both Indonesian and Arabic, sometimes wearing red-white checkered
scarves over their heads. It is believed to be the first time
suicide bombers in Indonesia have made a video before launching an
attack, said Bali police chief Maj. Gen. I Made Mangku Pastika.
Jemaah Islamiyah, which wants to establish an
Islamic state spanning Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the
southern Philippines, has been weakened by a regional crackdown in
recent years. But terror experts warn it is still capable of
carrying out attacks. In addition to Noordin, at least three other
key members are at large. They are believed to be in the Philippines
and Indonesia. Azahari's body, meanwhile, was
flown back to Malaysia Thursday so that he could be buried in his
hometown, family members said. Robin MacDonell.
Passengers describe pirate
attack on cruise ship off Somalia's coast
Photo:
This is an undated picture provided by Seabourn Cruise Line showing
the Seabourn Spirit cruise ship.
MAHE, Seychelles- A Second World
War veteran wielding a camera found himself facing a smiling
attacker armed with a grenade launcher. Another holiday-goer escaped
injury because she was in the bathtub, not the stateroom where an
explosive landed. Passengers of the Seabourn Spirit luxury cruise
ship described moments of panic and luck Monday after docking in the
Seychelles after pirates in speedboats chased their vessel. None of
the passengers, most of whom were Americans, was hurt. Dan McTeague,
parliamentary secretary in charge of Canadians abroad, confirmed 18
Canadians were aboard. One crew member was slightly injured. Those
familiar with the security situation off anarchic Somalia's coast
said Saturday's attack fit the methods of pirates who have been
hijacking cargo ships for ransom and loot, but marked a new
boldness. Some passengers were lucky to escape with their lives,
said Charles Forsdick of Durban, South Africa. A woman survived an
explosion in her stateroom simply because she was taking a bath at
the time. Others flung themselves to the floor to avoid bullets that
were zipping through the ship, Forsdick told Associated Press
Television News. "I tell you, it was a very frightening experience,"
war vet Charles Supple of Fiddletown, Calif., recalled by phone
after the liner dropped anchor off Seychelles. The retired physician
said he started to take a photograph of a pirate craft, and "the man
with the bazooka aimed it right at me and I saw a big flash.
"Needless to say, I dropped the camera and dived. The grenade struck
two decks above and about four rooms further forward," Supple said.
"I could tell the guy firing the bazooka was smiling." Mike Rogers
of Vancouver was in his cabin at around 6 a.m. when the ship, on a
16-day trip from Egypt to Kenya, came under attack. "There were the
sounds of the bullets hitting off the side of the ship, and there
were boats trying to come alongside us," said Rogers. "And one lady
in the cabin across from us had a rocket fired right through her
cabin window and narrowly missed her." Barbara Donaldson of
Cambridge, Ont., was about to take a morning walk around the deck
when she heard an "incredible bang" above her. She said the ship's
captain, Sven-Erik Pedersen, told passengers over the intercom to
stay in their cabins and get on the floor, away from windows,
because the ship was under attack by pirates. Donaldson locked
herself in the bathroom and sat on the floor.
Soon, the captain told the
passengers to leave their cabins and go to the dining room in the
centre of the ship. Donaldson said some people cried quietly and one
woman paced around, exhorting the other passengers to pray. But most
people were quiet and surprisingly calm. "Nobody lost it, but there
were a lot of frightened people," Donaldson said Sunday night on the
phone from the ship in the Indian Ocean. The pirates came "within
feet" of the liner but didn't manage to board it, she added. Bob
Meagher of Sydney said he got out of bed and went to the door of his
cabin shortly before 6 a.m. after hearing a commotion outside. "I
saw a white-hulled boat with men in it waving various things and
shooting at the ship - at that stage it appeared to be rifle fire,"
he told Australian radio. "My wife said 'look, they're loading a
bazooka', which we later discovered was called an RPG
(rocket-propelled grenade) launcher. "There was a flash of flame and
then a huge boom - a terrible boom sound," he said, adding the
grenade hit about three metres from him and his wife. Meagher and
others praised the ship's captain and crew for the way they handled
the attack and for keeping passengers calm. The gunmen never got
close enough to board the cruise ship, but one member of the
161-member crew was injured by shrapnel, according to the
Miami-based Seabourn Cruise Line, a subsidiary of Carnival Corp. The
liner escaped by shifting to high speed and changing course. The
liner had been bound for Mombasa, Kenya, at the end of a 16-day
voyage from Alexandria, Egypt. Instead, passengers were to continue
from the Seychelles to Singapore, company officials said. Some of
the passengers who planned to tour Mombasa, however, will fly there
Tuesday aboard a chartered plane. Australian Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer told Australia radio Monday that the attackers
might have been terrorists. But others said the attack bore the
hallmarks of pirates who have become increasingly active off
Somalia, which has no navy and has not had an effective central
government since 1991. Even before the cruise ship attack, Somali
Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi Gedi had called on neighbouring
countries to send warships to patrol his 3,000-kilometre coastline,
Africa's longest. As if to underscore his country's lawlessness,
Gedi escaped an apparent assassination attempt in his capital
Sunday. In its latest piracy report, the British-based International
Maritime Bureau said in a report released Monday that the risk of
violent hijackings off Somalia's coastline was increasing. It said
19 attacks occurred between January and September, compared with
just one last year. The bureau advised ships to remain at least 240
km from Somalia's eastern coast. Armed pirates in speedboats
frequently fire on ships passing near Somalia, seeking to hijack
them and hold the crew for ransom, the bureau said. Somalia lies
along key shipping lanes linking the Mediterranean with the Persian
Gulf and Indian Ocean. Somali pirates are trained fighters with
maritime knowledge, identifying targets by listening to the
international radio channel used by ships at sea, said Andrew
Mwangura, head of the Kenyan chapter of the Seafarers Assistance
Program. -By Bishar Al Touni
Speedboats are traffickers'
tool of choice to smuggle cocaine from Colombia
Photo:
Navy sailors stand by engines seized as "go-fasts" at a Navy base in
Cartagena.
TUMACO, Colombia- Slicing through
slate-grey waters along the shores of Colombia, a coast guard vessel
slips into a mangrove-fringed inlet, on the hunt for speedboats
loaded with two or three tonnes of cocaine and ready to tear
full-tilt to coastlines hundreds of kilometres away. Missions like
this one along the perilous shores of southwest Colombia are vital
as authorities grapple with the latest twist in the clandestine
world of drug smuggling. Cocaine traffickers have largely abandoned
planes for boats to smuggle cocaine from Colombia to Central America
and Mexico for onward shipment to the United States, according to
interviews with officials and a review of government reports by The
Associated Press. One UN document estimates 90 per cent of smuggled
cocaine now moves by sea to North America. The transport of choice:
so-called "go-fasts," whose crews are the equivalent of the
rumrunners of the Prohibition era - only these modern-day outlaws
have global positioning systems, satellite telephones and
custom-made 800-horsepower fibreglass boats that can do 80 km/h.
Traffickers have set up a seamless cocaine delivery system that
stretches thousands of kilometres from the coca fields of Colombia,
the world's main producer, to the cities of the United States, the
world's top consumer. After the coca is processed in jungle labs
into cocaine, the drugs are loaded onto go-fasts, eventually to
cross the U.S.-Mexico border hidden in tractor-trailers and other
vehicles. Each cocaine-laden vehicle is a proverbial needle in a
haystack for U.S. Customs inspectors who are coping with thousands
of trucks that carry Mexican exports across the 3,060-kilometre
border each day. Launching from Colombia's isolated Pacific coast
and the more populated Caribbean shores, the go-fasts transport well
over 220 tonnes of cocaine a year, most of it bound for the United
States, according to UN reports. Maritime cocaine seizures have
correspondingly skyrocketed. Ninety per cent of smuggled cocaine now
moves by sea, most by go-fasts, the United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime said in its latest report. More than three-quarters of the
386 tonnes of cocaine destined for North America - most from
Colombia - passed through Central America and Mexico in 2003, the
report said. The Colombian military, often operating with other
countries, seized more than 100 tonnes from January to mid-October,
compared with 85 tonnes in all of 2004, then a record, according to
Admiral Jairo Pena, commander of the Pacific fleet. Since each load
is worth millions of dollars, crews often scuttle the go-fast, its
equipment and $36,000 US outboard engines after delivery and take
commercial flights home, say Colombian and U.S. authorities. "For
them, it's not a great expense," said Vice-Admiral Guillermo
Barrera, the Colombian navy's chief of operations.
The Pacific coast of southwest
Colombia, running along the edge of coca-growing Narino state, is a
drug smugglers' dream. Peasant farmers inland harvest the green
leaves of the coca bush in plantations controlled by the rebel
Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia or their paramilitary foes.
The leaves are converted into coca paste and then purified in
clandestine labs into cocaine, which is hidden near the coast. The
coast, penetrated by few roads, is bisected by inland waterways,
allowing traffickers to sail near the shore for more than 160
kilometres without having to reveal themselves in the open sea.
Raids in the area this year provide a glimpse into the scale of
operations: -In March, the coast guard seized several go-fasts and
even a small submarine that were being built at a clandestine jungle
factory. -Two months later, the coast guard netted 16.5 tonnes of
cocaine and five go-fasts in a raid at the mouth of the Mira River,
located some 30 kilometres southwest of Tumaco, Narino's biggest
coastal town. -On Sept. 10, rebels ambushed a boat on the Mira River
carrying a government drug-raiding party, killing three marines and
two officials from the district attorney's office. "This is lawless
country," said Coast Guard Lieut. Santiago Vasquez as he surveyed
the coast - a green carpet of jungle broken by soaring sand-coloured
boulders. Pelicans resting on the ocean swells took flight as
Vasquez's patrol boat sped past. When his boat nosed into an inlet
during a recent mission, its wake caused half-submerged mangroves to
sway and dance. Vasquez's men, armed with Israeli-made Galil assault
rifles, saw nothing but a dense green thicket. No go-fasts here.
Later, they patrolled the bay that fronts Tumaco - where two men
were shot dead execution-style on the main street the previous
evening - and spotted a wooden launch carrying a load of 200-litre
barrels. Go-fasts use a lot of gas. Even with two dozen 200-litre
plastic barrels of fuel on board, they often need to refuel at sea
en route to Central America and Mexico. "A go-fast is a gas tank
used to transport cocaine," Barrera said, adding that some go-fasts
rendezvous with fishing boats at sea and transfer their loads of
cocaine. A blue light atop the cabin of Vasquez's patrol boat was
flicked on, police-car style, as the coast guard vessel approached
the launch, piloted by a scowling man wearing a T-shirt, jeans and
blue cap. A coast guardsman in a bulletproof vest under his
lifejacket boarded the launch. The barrels were empty, but the man
lacked registration papers. The coast guard impounded the boat,
parking it at their base in Tumaco alongside two confiscated
go-fasts and a fishing boat recently seized with three tonnes of
cocaine aboard. "Obviously that guy was headed out to get fuel for a
go-fast operation," Vasquez said. "We have just delivered an
indirect blow to drug trafficking." -By Andrew Slesky.
NATO Rules Out Strong Role in
Middle East
NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said Oct. 12 he ruled out
any prominent role for the alliance in the Middle East in the near
future, but left the door open for partnerships with states in the
region. "NATO is not going to be actively involved in the many
problems facing this region," the chief of the 26-member alliance told
reporters in Cairo after a meeting with Egyptian Foreign Minister
Ahmed Abul Gheit. NATO has for some time been seeking stronger ties in
the region, notably through its so-called Mediterranean dialogue which
aims to boost ties with Mediterranean-rim countries including Israel.
The military alliance insists, however, that it has no designs to
become a political actor in the Middle East. De Hoop Scheffer
explained that NATO had no intention of imposing anything on the
region, but wanted dialogue and understanding. Egyptian officials said
De Hoop Scheffer's discussions with Abul Gheit also covered
developments in the region and the need to eliminate all weapons of
mass destruction. Abul Gheit said they also discussed the situation in
the Palestinian territories, Iraq, Lebanon and Syria. He added that
they also discussed how NATO can help in the effort to clear mines
planted during World War II. The NATO chief arrived in Cairo earlier
in the day at the start of a two-day visit to Egypt. He was scheduled
to hold talks on Thursday with Egyptian Defense Minister Hussein al-Tantawi.
Indian
foreign minister removed
Photo: Natwar Singh says he is shocked by the UN charge.
Indian Foreign Minister Natwar Singh has been
stripped of his post after allegations that he benefited from the UN
oil-for-food programme in Iraq. The government said Mr Singh
would stay in the cabinet. Premier Manmohan Singh assumes his role
pending an inquiry. Natwar Singh and the main party in India's
ruling coalition, Congress, were both named in a UN report into the
scandal. Both deny any wrongdoing. India's opposition has renewed
calls for Mr Singh to be sacked outright.
Natwar Singh is a close ally of Congress party chief
Sonia Gandhi and as a former ambassador to Pakistan used his
contacts to push forward the two countries' peace process. Natwar
Singh's removal from the post of foreign minister while his alleged
misdealing is investigated came at his own request, according to a
government statement. The new minister without portfolio was
summoned to an hour-long meeting with the premier on Monday and left
without making any comment. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is taking
over the foreign minister's portfolio ahead of a regional summit in
Bangladesh this weekend, his spokesman said. The government has been
deeply embarrassed by the UN report revelations and has moved
quickly to contain any political fallout. Its decision to remove
Natwar Singh is an uncharacteristically swift response to what is
one of the biggest crises it has faced since coming to power, our
correspondent says. Many observers had said the foreign minister's
position had become untenable. India's main opposition BJP party had
demanded his resignation, saying he was unfit to stay in office. It
is still pressing for him to leave the cabinet. "He has embarrassed
the government. By continuing as minister without portfolio he has
earned himself a price for silence," BJP spokesman Arun Jaitley told
NDTV television.
Claims dismissed: The UN report, published
last Thursday, was written by the former US Federal Reserve
chairman, Paul Volcker. It said more than 2,000 firms made illegal
payments to Saddam Hussein's government. Under the UN programme,
Saddam Hussein's government could sell oil as long as the proceeds
were used to buy humanitarian goods. Natwar Singh, who held senior
diplomatic posts in previous governments, was not in office in 2001
when he is alleged to have profited from Iraq oil-for-food deal. On
Saturday, Mr Singh told the NDTV television channel that the charges
had no basis. "I am dismissing [the Volcker report] here on behalf
of the Congress Party and as the foreign minister of India." On
Monday, the government said a retired Supreme Court judge, RS Pathak,
would head the judicial inquiry. Former Indian UN official, Virendra
Dayal, has also been appointed to gather information about the
charges.
The
son of a Jewish dressmaker, Harold Pinter wins Nobel literature prize
Photo: Harold Pinter.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden -- British playwright Harold Pinter,
known for his distinctive juxtaposition of the brutal and the banal in
such works as The Caretaker and The Room, won the 2005 Nobel Prize in
literature Thursday..
Read the full article
German bishop whose homilies denounced Hitler's regime and condemned
anti-Semitism beatified at Vatican
Photo:
Pope Benedict XVI is greeted by Reinhard Lettmann, Bishop of Mnster,
Germany during the beatification ceremony of German bishop Clemens
August von Galen in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican.
VATICAN CITY- A German bishop
whose homilies boldly condemned anti-Semitism and other policies of
Hitler's Nazi regime was beatified Sunday in a ceremony at St.
Peter's Basilica, moving him a step closer to possible sainthood...
South Asia
quake kills more than 30,000; Pakistani president appeals for help.
Photo:
An aerial view taken on Sunday shows the earthquake worst hit town of
Balakot, in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province.
BALAKOT, Pakistan- Villagers
desperate to find survivors dug with bare hands Sunday through the
debris of a collapsed school where children had been heard crying
beneath the rubble after a massive earthquake killed more than 20,000.
Pakistani officials said the death toll could go higher, and a
provincial official in Kashmir said more than 30,000 died in that
province alone. President Gen. Pervez Musharraf called Saturday's
magnitude-7.7 earthquake the country's worst on record ...
Suicide bomber wounds four Britons in attack in southern Afghanistan
Photo:
A Canadian soldier inspects a vehicle after it was attacked by a
suicide bomber in Kandahar, southern Afghanistan, Sunday.
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - A suspected
Taliban suicide attacker rammed a car laden with explosives into an
armoured vehicle carrying British government officials Sunday in
southern Afghanistan, wounding four of them, a U.S.-led coalition
commander said. The assault, coming three weeks after landmark
legislative elections, underscored the terrorist threat still facing
Afghanistan as it slowly moves toward democracy. It also added to
fears that insurgents here are copying tactics used in Iraq...
Bird's-eye view of Katrina's fury
Almost two weeks after Hurricane Katrina struck the US Gulf coast, Lesly Curwin accompanies an aerial reconnaissance mission to assess the damage.
The Blackhawk helicopter lifted off in a clatter from Baton Rouge airport, flown by pilots of the Texas National Guard.
We flew a hundred miles south towards the ghost city of New Orleans, its downtown skyline shimmering through the morning mist. Lines of green oily water criss-crossed much of the city.
Warehouses, car parks, power plants, highways were inundated by the filthy waters. But there were signs below of the gigantic operation to restore the city to life.
Chinook helicopters dumped huge sandbags on to the breaches in the concrete defences
which failed to protect the city...

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