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Pakistan refuses to hand over Dawood, says Krishna

Pak refuses to hand over Dawood, says Krishna
PTI 30 July 2009, 12:37pm IST


NEW DELHI: India has been asking Pakistan to hand over 42 fugitives including Dawood Ibrahim but Islamabad has refused to cooperate, foreign
minister S M Krishna told Rajya Sabha on Thursday.

Replying to questions, he said a list of 42 fugitives both Indian and Pakistani nationals, including ones involved in the 1993 Mumbai series bomb blasts and the 26/11 terror attacks in Mumbai, has been given to Islamabad.

Krishna said whatever evidence and dossier is given, Pakistan's refrain is that it is not enough and cannot be proven in court of law.

He said Pakistan has denied presence of dreaded criminals like Dawood Ibrahim, Tiger Memon, Chota Shakeel and Lakhbir Singh who are among the Indian nationals in the list.

"For Pakistani nationals, Pakistan has pointed to lack of extradition treaty and lack of evidence," he said. "We have made 11 futile attempts with Pakistan to conclude an extradition treaty," he said.

Pakistan has not responded "positively to our proposals to conclude an extradition treaty," he said.

"We have been impressing upon Pakistan that it is in the interest of both countries that we enter into a treaty of extradition," Krishna said. "Government is endeavouring to persuade Pakistan to develop a cooperative relationship with India."

Krishna said India will continue to improve relations with Pakistan despite Islamabad's reluctance.

"In spite of Pakistan's reluctance to help us to improve our relations, India's endeavour will be to continue to impress upon Pakistan that we have to have good neighbourly relations," he said.

"Our hope is that Pakistan will see sense in such kind of approach," he added.

Pak refuses to hand over Dawood, says Krishna - India - NEWS - The Times of India
 

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Nigerian forces clash with extremists, over 300 killed

Nigerian forces clash with extremists, over 300 killed

Abuja (PTI): Nigerian forces were engaged in massive combing operations in the country's Taliban-infested northern cities as they searched for the chief of an extremist Islamic sect, clashes with which have killed over 300 people in the last four days and displaced nearly 10,000 others.

Security forces, locked in a fierce struggle to crush the extremist group 'Boko Haram', raided the Maiduguri headquarters of its leader Muhammad Yusuf, who is leading a violent movement for enforcing Islamic laws across Nigeria.

The security forces on Thursday claimed to have killed 200 followers of the sect along with its deputy leader Abubakar Shekau but were looking for its leader in his northern strongholds, media reports said.

His group has attacked major northern cities carrying machetes, hand-made grenades and knives following a raid at their headquarters on Sunday.

Troops shelled the compound of the sect's mosque on Wednesdaynight to flush out the militants holed up inside, triggering a raging battle that left scores dead.

The Army said while the sect leader escaped along with hundreds of his supporters, its deputy leader was killed in the attack.

The search continued as the government started efforts to resettle some 10,000 people displaced by the clashes.

Some of the displaced victims, mostly women and children, who were allegedly held hostage by the group were also set free by the police.

Nigerian emergency management agency (NEMA) said it has dispatched relief materials for victims of the sectarian crises.

Elsewhere in Kano city, the urban development agency demolished the compound and mosque of Mallam Salisu, the fundamentalist leader in Wudil town, on a government directive to knock down all structures belonging to him.

Team leader of the State urban development agency, Mallam Uba Usman said: "I am directed by the government to lead this powerful team and we have demolished the residence and the mosque which is being used by fundamentalists known as Boko Haram which means education is sin".

The sect is opposed to Western education and believes it should be replaced with Islamic teachings.

Nigerian Police spokesman Emmanuel Ojukwu told PTI that security agencies are on top of the situation and life is returning to normal in most affected cities.

Police area commandant in Kano, Ibrahim Mohammed told reporters that his zone was calm and peaceful.

The security agencies were acting on the order of Nigeria President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua who had directed them to take all necessary actions to contain the sect before leaving for Brazil on Tuesday.

Boko Haram sect wants a wider adoption of Islamic law across Nigeria and in the process of enforcing their belief has burnt churches, attacked police stations and a prison and clashed with security forces in the northern States of Bauchi, Borno, Kano and Yobe.

The Hindu News Update Service
 

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Police car blown up during summit in Tajik capital

Police car blown up during summit in Tajik capital
Thu Jul 30, 2009 11:19pm EDT

DUSHANBE (Reuters) - A bomb blew up a police car on Thursday evening in the Tajik capital Dushanbe where the presidents of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Russia were holding security talks, an interior ministry source said on Friday.

Tajikistan, a volatile nation north of Afghanistan, was hosting a summit attended by Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Pakistan's Asif Ali Zardari and Russia's Dmitry Medvedev.

The source said a bomb planted inside a police car went off, wounding one officer. No one was killed.

"We are trying to figure out whether it was a terrorist act or a personal grudge against this particular policeman," the source said.

Medvedev was still in Tajikistan on Friday morning to attend a ceremony marking the opening of a Moscow-built hydroelectric power station outside the capital Dushanbe.

(Reporting by Roman Kozhevnikov; Writing by Maria Golovnina; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Police car blown up during summit in Tajik capital | International | Reuters
 

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Dark side of America's war on terror

Dark side of America's war on terror

Sarah Jacob, Friday July 31, 2009, Guantanamo


On his second day in office, US President Barack Obama ordered the closure of the Guantanamo detention centre and the end of the use of torture in US military camps.

However, civil rights groups say torture is still continuing in Guantanamo where detainees on hunger strike are being force-fed.

Detainees at Guantanamo have access to state-of-the-art medical facilities 24 hours a day. However, after over seven years of imprisonment, their most serious wounds are not physical.

"There are people at GTMO who are literally losing their mind by being imprisoned this way," said Christopher Anders, American Civil Liberties Union.

Detainees have repeatedly tried to kill themselves in Guantanamo, with four having succeeded, but the hospital psychiatrist surprisingly insists that the psychological problems in the camp are normal.

"These are the same problems I see in my patients in America. Anger and frustration are universal. It happens everywhere," said Lt Commander Gallant, head psychiatrist, Guantanamo Behavioural Health Unit.

Twenty six detainees are currently on hunger strike at Guantanamo in protest of their arbitrary and indefinite detention. These men are strapped to a restraint chair and force-fed, through the nose, with a four-foot long tube.

Administrators who refused to be filmed on camera proudly informed us that detainees even have a choice of flavors - from strawberry, to butter pecan and chocolate.

"Some even ask for this over their regular food. Our former admiral tried this for a week. He was biking to work and even gained four pounds," said Lt Commander Audi, nurse, Guantanamo Detention Hospital.

Both the United Nations Human Rights Council and the World Medical Association have declared the practice of force-feeding unethical.

But camp administrators dismiss suicides and hunger strikes as simply manipulative tactics to draw negative publicity to the Guantanamo.

"These detainees are on a mission to give the camp a bad name. One way to do that is to try and commit suicide," said Rear Admiral Copeman, commander, Joint Task Force, Guantanamo Bay.

Guantanamo has become a symbol of the brutality and excesses of America's war on terror, and its willingness to put itself above the law. And civil rights groups say force-feeding of detainees is yet another example of that.


Dark side of America's war on terror
 

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US, Osama had close ties till 9/11?

US, Osama had close ties till 9/11?
AGENCIES 3 August 2009, 01:03am IST


A former FBI translator has claimed that the US was on ‘intimate’ terms with the Taliban and al-Qaida and used the militants to further certain goals in central Asia.

“With those groups, we had operations in Central Asia,” said former Turkish language translator Sibel Edmonds on Friday speaking on the radio program, the Mike Malloy Show. Sibel said the US maintained ‘intimate relations’ with bin Laden, and the Taliban, “all the way until that day of September 11.”

These ‘intimate relations’ included using bin Laden for ‘operations’ in Central Asia, including Xinjiang, China. These ‘operations’ involved using al-Qaida and the Taliban in the same manner “as we did during the Afghan and Soviet conflict,” that is, fighting ‘enemies’ via proxies.

The US used the gunmen ‘as we did during the Afghan and Soviet conflict’, she added, referring to its support for Afghan fighters during the 1979-89 Russian invasion.

Luke Ryland, a prolific investigator into the claims, said the tumultuous situation resulting from extremist operations would boost US arms sales in the region while forcing “oil and gas concessions”, Press TV reported.

The US government has twice barred Edmonds’ testimony on some controversial issues. “These are the confirmed cases,” she added stating her claims were based on ‘first-hand’ information. “There are a lot of things that our government doesn’t want us to know.”

US, Osama had close ties till 9/11? - US - World - NEWS - The Times of India
 

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Colombian police foil terrorist attacks

Colombian police foil terrorist attacks

2009-08-04 01:59:53 GMT2009-08-04 09:59:53 (Beijing Time) Xinhua English

BOGOTA, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- Colombian police on Sunday foiled two terrorist attacks in the southwestern province of Putumayo which borders Ecuador, local police said Monday.

The technicians of the National Police deactivated eight explosive devices installed by terrorists against a power center in Putumayo, according to a statement released by police. Each device contained 450 gram explosive.

"The police officers hurried to the electricity-generating towers in Putumayo which connect with the power plants of Narino province, after hearing a sound of explosion that affected the infrastructure of the towers," said the statement.

If the explosive devices had exploded, the power center would be damaged seriously, and the electricity service would be interrupted in Putumayo and some areas in northern Ecuador.

Also on Sunday, police deactivated four explosive devices on the outskirts connecting the municipalities of Santiago and Colon in Putumayo. Each of the device also weighed 450 gram

Colombian police foil terrorist attacks - World News - SINA English
 

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Bomb explodes at airline office in Argentina

Bomb explodes at airline office in Argentina

August 4, 2009 -- Updated 1622 GMT (0022 HKT)

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (CNN) -- A bomb exploded early Tuesday at a Chilean airline office in Buenos Aires, causing moderate damage but no injuries, the airline and government news agencies reported.

A door, window and some furniture were damaged at the LAN Airlines ticket office in central Buenos Aires, the Argentinian-run Telam news agency said. The explosion occurred at 2:30 a.m.

Police said they had no known motive, but the owner of a pickup parked in front of the airline office was arrested, the state-operated Notimex news agency in Mexico reported. The man was not immediately identified.

A security camera recorded a hooded person leaving a package in front of the office, Notimex said.

That package contained the bomb, the news agency said


Bomb explodes at airline office in Argentina - CNN.com
 

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Blackwater chief 'killed former staff'

Blackwater chief 'killed former staff'

August 07, 2009
Article from: The Times

A SERIES of allegations including murder, weapons smuggling and the deliberate slaughter of civilians, has been levelled against the founder of Blackwater, the security company being investigated for shooting deaths in Iraq.

The accusations, including a claim that the company founder, Erik Prince, either murdered or had killed former employees co-operating with federal investigators, are contained in sworn affidavits lodged at a Virginia court on Monday night.

The company was the most prominent of an army of private security companies employed by the Pentagon and State Department to protect military convoys and guard US diplomats in Iraq.

The accusations against Mr Prince are being made by two former employees, including a former marine, who have sworn them anonymously as John Doe No 1 and John Doe No 2, who said they feared for their lives if their identities were revealed.

In one statement, John Doe 2, who worked for Blackwater for four years, alleged that Mr Prince "views himself as a Christian crusader tasked with eliminating Muslims and the Islamic faith from the globe" and his companies "encouraged and rewarded the destruction of Iraqi life".

They claimed Mr Prince and other executives destroyed videos, emails and documents and hid their criminal behaviour from the US State Department.

John Doe 2 claimed in his affidavit that -- based on information he said was provided to him by former colleagues -- "It appears Mr Prince and his employees murdered or had murdered one or more persons who have provided information, or who were planning to provide information, to the federal authorities about the ongoing criminal conduct".

The affidavits are part of a motion lodged by lawyers representing 60 Iraqi civilians who are suing Blackwater for alleged crimes. The five civilian suits were consolidated before a judge in northern Virginia.

Blackwater, which lost its multi-million-dollar State Department contract in May, denies the claims and is contesting the lawsuits. No criminal charges have been filed against Mr Prince.

In a statement, the company said it would respond "to the anonymous, unsubstantiated and offensive assertions put forward by the plaintiffs", in a brief to be filed on August 17.

The separate 72-page motion, which cites the affidavits, also accused Blackwater guards of boasting of kills, taking mind-altering drugs, steroids and using child prostitutes.

The Times

Blackwater chief 'killed former staff' | The Australian
 

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French embassy targeted in Mauritania attack

French embassy targeted in Mauritania attack
Sat Aug 8, 2009 4:42pm EDT

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By Vincent Fertey

NOUAKCHOTT (Reuters) - A suicide bomber blew himself up and slightly wounded two guards outside the French embassy in Mauritania's capital on Saturday, a French embassy source said.

The source said no group had yet come forward to claim responsibility for the attack outside the embassy walls.

It took place three days after Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, who toppled Mauritania's first democratically elected leader in a coup last year, was sworn in as president of the Islamic state promising to make the fight against al Qaeda a priority.

Defeated opponents denounced his poll victory last month as a fraud, but former colonial power France said it was ready to re-engage with the Saharan country, applauding his tough anti-terrorist stance.

Al Qaeda activity has increased in northwest Africa and the Sahara desert, but attacks in Mauritania are infrequent.

In June, Al Qaeda's North Africa wing claimed responsibility for the shooting of an American aid worker in Mauritania, saying it was in retaliation for U.S. military operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In December 2007, four French tourists were killed by group and the Israeli embassy was attacked in 2008.

France is one of Mauritania's biggest partners in both trade and aid. In 2007 it set aside 93 million euros ($134 million) in a four-year aid package, only 30 percent of which has been paid. Paris said this week it would look to release the rest.

The European Union suspended aid payments to Mauritania in protest at the military coup last August, but has since indicated it may be willing to restart cooperation.

(Writing by Mark John; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

French embassy targeted in Mauritania attack | International | Reuters
 

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Suicide blast in Mauritania capital


One person has been injured in a suicide attack outside the French embassy in the Mauritanian capital of Nouakchott, officials have said.

Police said the bomber, a young man, detonated his explosive belt near the wall of the embassy on Saturday evening.

Two French security employees, who were jogging nearby, were shocked and taken to hospital after the blast.

"The Westerners are in hospital but their lives are not in danger," a police official said.

A woman in the street was reportedly lightly wounded.

The attack comes three days after Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, who staged an internationally condemned coup a year ago, took office as president in the former French colony.

In recent years, armed groups have carried out a number of attacks in the country.

Last month a judge charged three men for the murder of a US aid worker, killed in Nouakchott.

The men were said to be connected to al-Qaeda.

The group claimed responsibility for the murder, saying it was in retaliation for US military operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In 2008, 12 Mauritanian soldiers patrolling north of the capital were ambushed and shot dead by suspected al-Qaeda fighters.
Al Jazeera English - Africa - Suicide blast in Mauritania capital
 

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India PM warns of fresh attacks

India PM warns of fresh attacks

Indian PM Manmohan Singh says his government has "credible information" that Pakistan-based militants are plotting fresh attacks in India.

Mr Singh urged the country's security forces to stay on high alert to avert any such attacks.

India has announced a number of plans to boost its security after last November's deadly attacks in Mumbai.

More than 170 people died in various attacks across Mumbai on 26 November, including nine gunmen.

Mr Singh told a meeting on internal security in the capital, Delhi, that the government had information of fresh attacks being planned.

"There is credible information of ongoing plans of terrorist groups in Pakistan to carry out fresh attacks," he told a meeting of state chief ministers.

"After Mumbai attacks, we have put in place additional measures. There is a need for continued utmost vigilance," Mr Singh said.

The prime minister said all states need to share intelligence information "to avert any terror attack".

Mr Singh said cross-border terrorism remained a "most pervasive threat".

The federal and state governments have planned several security measures following the Mumbai attacks.

Mumbai and Hyderabad have already been allocated their first dedicated elite security force headquarters.

More such security task force hubs are proposed in Jodhpur and Guwahati, to ensure that the whole country is covered.
 

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Suicide truck bomb kills at least 19 in Russia

Suicide truck bomb kills at least 19 in Russia

A suicide bomber exploded a truck at a police station in Russia's North Caucasus on Monday, killing at least 19 people and wounding nearly 70 others, officials said.

The bombing was the deadliest in months in the restive southern region, denting Kremlin claims that the area was stabilizing after 15 years of separatist fighting in Chechnya and violence in surrounding provinces.

The attacker rammed the gates of the Nazran city police headquarters, in Ingushetia province, and detonated his explosives as police officers were lining up for a morning check, said Svetlana Gorbakova of the regional branch of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Prosecutor General's office.

Police had fired shots at the truck, but failed to stop it. The blast triggered a fire that raged for hours, destroying a weapons room where ammunition detonated.

A nearby apartment building and several office buildings were also damaged, and burned-out cars littered the street.

At least 19 people were killed and 68 others wounded, including 10 in critical condition, Ms. Gorbakova said.

An Associated Press reporter saw 11 badly burned bodies at a morgue in Nazran, the largest city in Ingushetia, which borders Chechnya to the west.

Local authorities announced a three-day mourning.

Ingushetia's Kremlin-appointed president, Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, was badly wounded in a suicide bombing in June and has yet to return to his duties.

Mr. Yevkurov said Monday's suicide attack had been organized by militants trying to avenge recent security sweeps in the forests along the mountainous border with Chechnya.

``It was an attempt to destabilize the situation and sow panic,'' Mr. Yevkurov said in a statement issued through his spokesman.

Suicide truck bomb kills at least 19 in Russia @ The Hindu
 

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Terror Watch - daily updates.

Pro-Taliban militant offers to help U.S. forces

KABUL, Afghanistan (CNN) -- An Afghan militant group is willing to "help" U.S. and coalition forces, if they prepare to leave Afghanistan, the group's leader said in a statement given to CNN on Monday.

"We are ready to help with the United States and ... other coalition forces if foreign troops announce the time frame for the pulling out their troops from Afghanistan," said Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, a former Afghan prime minister and leader of the pro-Taliban Hizb-e-Islami militant group.

"I am sure Afghans will fight U.S. forces and will continue Jihad against them like they fought against Russia before if they don't leave the country," he added.

The former Soviet Union, which included Russia, invaded Afghanistan in late 1979 and fought there until 1989. Because of the extended conflict, it has been referred to as the Soviet's Vietnam.

Hekmatyar did not define what he meant by "help," but is typically understood to mean that the group would stop attacks against coalition forces, stop recruiting members and stop the intimidation of local citizens.

A maverick militant, Hekmatyar is regarded by the Pentagon as one of the top military players in Afghanistan. Ironically, he was the the beneficiary of $600 million U.S. aid during the Afghan war against the Soviets.

The militant offer comes in the midst of U.S. and British offensives launched against Taliban militants in Helmand province in the south. More than 13,000 members of NATO's International Security Assistance Force are fighting in Helmand, including 6,900 from the United States, 6,200 from the United Kingdom and several hundred from Denmark and Estonia. Afghan National Army forces are also taking part.

The forces are trying to gain and hold ground in the perilous region ahead of national elections this month.

The Islamic fundamentalist Taliban ruled most of Afghanistan before its allies in the al Qaeda terrorist network attacked New York and Washington on September 11, 2001. Though quickly toppled after the attacks, its leaders escaped and the movement regrouped in the Afghan countryside and across the border in Pakistan.

Maverick pro-Taliban militant offers to help U.S. forces - CNN.com
The Obama administration has moved about 21,000 U.S. troops to Afghanistan as it has shifted focus from Iraq.
 

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he is former ally of Americans , Leader of one of the MUJAHIDEENS forces .
 

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Rocket hits Kabul presidential palace, no one hurt

Rocket hits Kabul presidential palace, no one hurt

A rocket struck the presidential palace in Kabul and a second hit the Afghan capital's police headquarters on Tuesday, just two days before the presidential election, a police source said. No one was hurt.

The first rocket caused some damage inside the heavily fortified palace compound in the city centre. The second hit the main police headquarters nearby.

Militants have vowed to disrupt Thursday's election and have already fired rockets at the capital twice this month. Such attacks have been rare in recent years.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid, in a message sent to Reuters on a mobile phone, claimed the fighters had fired four rockets at the capital. He gave no further details.

On Saturday, militants launched the biggest attack in Kabul since February, when a suicide car bomber struck the headquarters of Western troops, killing seven Afghans and wounding scores.
 

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Inside the Taliban: 'The more troops they send, the more targets we have'

Inside the Taliban: 'The more troops they send, the more targets we have'

In the first of a series of exclusive reports in the run-up to next week's Afghan elections, award-winning correspondent Ghaith Abdul-Ahad meets a group of Taliban in their mountain stronghold

The provinces of Khost, Paktia and Paktika in south-eastern Afghanistan are dominated by one name: Jalaluddin Haqqani. A famous commander, tribal chief and cleric, Haqqani came to prominence during the war against the Soviets. In more than 20 years of fighting, he built an extensive network of influence that covered eastern Afghanistan and the tribal area of Waziristan in Pakistan, and reached as far abroad as the Gulf states, which he visited often.

Once a minister in the Taliban government, he is now aligned with their leader, Mullah Omar, but has retained independence and control over his men. His operations have struck deep into the territory controlled by Hamid Karzai's government, reaching targets in Kabul. The movement's signature attack is well co-ordinated and includes several suicide bombers, who storm into buildings before detonating their bombs.

We waited for Haqqani's Taliban in a roadside cafe not far from the Pakistani border, where old Russian trucks decorated with hundreds of little bells, painted waterfalls and eagles and religious slogans swayed under the weight of rice, sugar and flour they brought from Pakistan, and the illegally logged trees they carried in the other direction.

It was noon and we had a few hours to kill. Like everywhere in Afghanistan, there was road etiquette to respect. From nine in the morning until four in the afternoon, the government controls the country's main arteries. The rest of the time they belong to the Taliban.

The air in the cafe was filled with the potent smell of meat stew and damp feet. Bedding and cushions were piled at one end of the room, while at the other end men hastily finished their prayers, then sat cross-legged on the mottled carpets where two young boys set plates of rice and stew in front of them.

"Here, we are all of the same tribe," said a young Pashtun poet and journalist. He had a flimsy beard and eyes the colour of honey. "Ninety-five per cent of the people here support the Taliban. They give the Taliban shelter. The businessmen and traders give them money, and the five per cent who work for the government look the other way and wave you through if you are with Taliban. The tribes here are very strong. It would bring great shame on you to arrest your cousin.

"The situation is very simple here," he continued. "We are Muslims and tribal people, the Taliban are Muslim and from the same tribes, the foreign troops are non-Muslims and there was no referendum from the people to ask them to come here. God told us to fight the occupation so the people are against the occupation. The people are ideologically similar to the Taliban, so the Taliban don't hide, they live with the people."

A driver with a big bushy beard lay on his back, hugged an ageing tape player and listened with closed eyes to a melancholic Pashtun woman singing about love, longing and betrayal. His right foot drew circles in the air.

An hour later another song, loud and screechy, filled the room. A young boy chanted, drowning the driver's love songs. In front of the restaurant, in the middle of the road, an old pickup truck was parked and an old Talib with a big black turban and a chest-long beard stood next to it.

"March to your trenches, oh Taliban," the boy sang. "March to your trenches." The chant emanated from a loudspeaker on top of the car.

Several men walked over to the Talib and dropped money in his hands, donations to the Taliban. In the back of his truck three teenage Taliban sat on sacks of rice and flour donated by other villagers. The poet smiled. His point made, he went back inside to finish his tea.

The valley

Our ride arrived around five in the evening. We drove out of the village, down a steep slope, around the side of a hill and entered a valley where any pretence of government control vanished.

The only road here is a shallow river that twists between boulders and trees and is littered with rocks. We drove along it for two hours, against a muddy current that crashed down from the mountains above. Sheets of rain fell from the dark sky.

Past a bend in the river where the valley was so narrow that the trees formed a canopy over it, small terraced gardens protruded from the cliffs on each side, almost touching each other. "This is where we meet after our operations," said one of the Taliban in the car.

Villagers hopped on and off the back of the truck as we drove along, grabbing lifts, and the hum of the Taliban chants from a tape player broke through the sound of the rain and the waterfalls.

Leaving the riverbed, we drove uphill through a thick forest, past two scouts, who lay as motionless as the rocks around them, and stopped in a clearing in the wood guarded by two gunmen.

In the fading light I could make out here and there guns, hats, combat trousers, boots, a beard, another gun and a white flag. As we climbed the slope into the camp, the scattered objects became men, and by the time the stout commander with his cap pushed to the back of his head shook my hand, I could see a whole unit of more than 100 spread out on the wooded hilltop.

Instead of the trademark Taliban uniforms of turbans, eyeliner and flip-flops, these men wore Russian and Nato poncho raincoats over their shalwars, and boots and trainers. Most striking was the way they held their guns. Instead of carrying them in the standard militia style, on their shoulders or holding them like walking sticks, they wore them strapped around their chests, one hand by the trigger and the other holding the muzzle down. They stood just like the Americans.

The stout commander, Mawlawi Jalali, sat surrounded by his men. One carried the white flag of the Taliban and another a video camera, which he kept pointed at me at all times.

"We are Afghans fighting the jihad and defending our country under the leadership of Jalaluddin Haqqani," the commander said. He spoke in a schoolmasterly tone. As well as being a commander, Mawlawi Jalali is a teacher in Haqqani's madrasa.

"The Americans toppled the emirate [of the Taliban] and we are fighting to bring it back. When the Taliban were here the jihad was only in Afghanistan. Now, thanks to the Americans, the jihad has spread to many other countries."

How did he plan to pursue his holy war? "We use different tactics: mining the streets, fighting and direct attacks. Here in this camp we make all the preparations and have all the men we need for these different tactics."

What about the new American surge, I asked. Did it concern him?

"We attack the towns, like in Wazi Zadran, where there is a strong American and Afghan garrison, and mine the streets every day. We average two or three attacks a day against the Americans and their allies. The more troops they send, the more targets we have, so it's good."

Allahu akbar, the men around him murmured in response.

He went on to explain the difference between his men and the average Taliban.

"We follow Haqqani. He was a smart mujahid against the Soviets and during all his wars he taught us how to focus on training and teaching. I was taught by him and most of our men were trained by him and his commanders. We have order, because we had good teaching and good training."

By this time, night had begun to fall, dogs barked and the men melted into the darkness. Only a flicker of light from a mobile phone separated the ghosts around me from the mountain behind them.

"We have mujahideen from the time of the emirate, but we have new fighters too," Mawlawi Jalali told me. "The young are keen to join, but we tell them stay put, finish your madrasa now and then come. We can't provide for all of them now and we can't get them supplies. The government and the Americans control the streets and the cities because of the planes, but the mountains are for us."

The number of men stationed on this single mountain cliff might explain how the Haqqani Taliban have managed recently to launch bold and relatively large attacks.

The hum of a generator rose and fell in the background, sometimes drowning our conversation. I looked for signs of electricity, but apart from a few flickering oil lamps in a faraway village, there was nothing but darkness for kilometres on each side of the valley. I realised suddenly what a "generator hum" meant on a mountain in the border region between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

"Drone … plane … sky …" I mumbled my words, closed my eyes and waited for the whoosh of a missile.

The commander and his men laughed. "These are media lies, that Americans can see us," he said. "Look now, we are a big group of Taliban. There are 200 men here and they can't see us. We believe in God, so don't be scared."

Another fighter spoke up: "If you stand still in the dark and not move they can't see you. It's written in the Qur'an."

On the way to the camp I had been told of other drone-dodging techniques. If you are on a motorcycle and the drone fires a missile, jump off and the missile will follow the motorcycle. If you are with a large group, stop, like musical statues, and the drone will confuse you with the trees.

A young fighter called for prayer and the commander and half his men lined up to pray, their guns on the ground in front of them. When they had finished, the other half began to pray.

"We are Afghans, we have lived all our lives in the trenches and caves," said the commander as he shook my hand. "We tell the Americans to stop this war, we are not tired." His fatigued voice, however, told a different story.

The village

The men separated into three groups. Two headed to different villages, while the third climbed up the cliff to take up fighting positions. We followed one group down to a small village.

After half an hour we were among houses, and the men dispersed. We waited outside a green door while a Talib went in to talk to the owners. In a valley where everyone comes from the same tribe and everyone is someone's cousin, finding a shelter for the night is simply a matter of knocking on a door.

The family gave us their largest room and six of us took their places, on cushions and mattresses that were still warm. A kerosene lamp was lit and we shared a dinner of eggs, tomato, yoghurt and dry, dark bread.

"You are not the first Iraqi here," said one of the fighters. He was tall and thin and poor-looking, with a big beard and clothes that were a faded grey. "There is an Iraqi commander who is fighting in the mountains. He has been here for many years and he is very good." He scooped up bits of eggs and tomatoes with a piece of bread.

Like everyone else, the tall fighter was a graduate of madrasas. Unlike other Taliban, Haqqani's men do not divide their time between farming or working and fighting. "When we don't fight, we take religious classes with the emir [commander]," explained the tall fighter. He was a specialist in ambushes, he said, and explained his tactics. Because of the threat from planes, the fighters didn't move around in big groups any more: they travelled to the attack areas in twos and threes.

He positioned a glass and a piece of bread and a cucumber in a triangle. The glass represented the target.

"We hit them [the glass] with a mine and we position ourselves here [bread and cucumber] and shoot. Then when the attack is over we move towards the woods before the helicopters arrive."

After dinner the men wrapped themselves in their blankets and scarves and slept. We left the house soon after morning prayers as a thick mist that had settled in the bottom of the valley was chased away by the early morning sun, which filtered down the mountains through the cypresses.

Men squatted in the fields, relieving themselves. We walked in the muddy lanes. Women with heads wrapped loosely in colourful scarves walked in small groups carrying buckets of water. A young girl with wild hair and wide eyes followed us at a distance.

At the entrance to the village, local men sat on the edge of the river wrapped in their scarves and blankets and looked intently at everything that moved: the three trucks piled high with logged trees, the other villagers, and the Taliban and their guests.

We met Mawlawi Jalali again in a different field. A few of his men walked between the high grass and trees, patrolling the valley.

"The villagers are good," he said. "They feed us and give us shelter, even if we are 100 men, but sometimes their hearts are weak – they think that the foreigners bring development projects to help them, which is not true. This is why we have to forcefully stop these projects, to protect the villagers."

What about schools, and education for the villagers? "We have no problem with education, it's the curriculums that we have problems with. Under our [Taliban] government, when we taught the children the letter J it stood for jihad. Now it's jar [meaning neighbour]. So we closed the schools, but we have madrasas for the children."

As we drove out of the valley the Taliban pickup truck again gave lifts to villagers. Old women, young men and couples held on to the sides of the car as it climbed over the rocks and drove through the water.

On a mountain road outside the valley, a group of contractors and their heavily-armed security escorts were clearing the road of debris. It was the wreckage of one of their cars, an SUV that had been blown in half earlier in the week. Bits of blackened flesh lay on the road and a piece of blue cloth hung from a bush.

We drove on, down from the high mountains of eastern Afghanistan towards Kabul.

Inside the Taliban: 'The more troops they send, the more targets we have' | World news | The Guardian
 

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9 Pak men arrested in Kutch

9 Pak men arrested in Kutch

The Border Security Force (BSF) arrested nine Pakistani nationals on Sunday evening for trespassing on Indian waters in Gujarat’s Kutch region bordering Pakistan.

“Based on the information we received about a week back that there might be an infiltration bid and possibility of boats entering our region, our jawans were put on a special patrolling operation. Last evening, at about 5 pm, we intercepted a boat called Al-Kabutar near Kori Creek and nabbed nine Pakistani nationals,” a senior BSF official told Hindustan Times.

The BSF official said preliminary investigations established that six of the nine men were fishermen, and the other three, who looked suspicious, were handed over to Gujarat police for further questioning.

The boat seized from the men resembles the fishing boats commonly used by the fishermen on both sides, he added.

Superintendent of Police Bhuj Wabang Jamir told Hindustan Times that police were questioning these men on the basis of some leads.

“As we have started our interrogation in the afternoon only, there is nothing further I can reveal,” Jamir said.

Fifty Pakistani nationals were arrested in the past year for trespassing on the Indian waters. After the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks in which the terrorists used the marine route to enter the city, the Indian Coast Guard aided by the BSF has enhanced vigilance in the entire coastal corridor of the Kutch region.

“Though adverse weather, marshy conditions and waterlogging are a challenge, we are carrying out patrolling on speed boats to thwart such attempts,” an official said.

9 Pak men arrested in Kutch- Hindustan Times
 

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Tripura CM calls for extradition treaty with Bangladesh

Tripura CM calls for extradition treaty with Bangladesh

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Share Print E-mail Comment[ - ] Text [ + ]STAFF WRITER 15:52 HRS IST
Agartala, Aug 18 (PTI) Tripura Chief Minister Manik Sarkar has asked the Centre to enter into an extradition treaty with Bangladesh to get hold of the insurgents hiding in the neighbouring country.

"I feel that the time is now ripe for entering into an extradition treaty with Bangladesh for which the Central government may like to take necessary steps," Sarkar said, while addressing a conference on internal security in New Delhi yesterday.

Stressing that Bangladesh continues to be a safe haven for extremist elements active in the north-east, he said Tripura was being used as a corridor for their movement.

The state government has been sharing information on the existence of terrorist camps in Bangladesh with the Centre, he said.

Sarkar, also the Home Minister, has demanded increasing of the strength of the Border Security Force (BSF) for effective management of the 856-km long porous border with Bangladesh.

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Explosions at Paraguayan police chief’s home kill 2 daughters

August 18th, 2009
Explosions at Paraguayan police chief’s home kill 2 daughters
Posted: 09:19 AM ET

ASUNCION, Paraguay (CNN) — Explosives experts and counter-terrorism agents were investigating Tuesday whether two blasts at a Paraguayan police chief’s home — which killed two of his daughters — were an assassination attempt.

Two daughters of police chief Edgar Saucedo were killed in the Monday night fire and his wife received burns over most of her body, authorities said. The daughters were 16 and 19 years old, La Ultima Hora newspaper said on its Web site.

Saucedo is chief of police in Nemby, a suburb of the Paraguayan capital, Asuncion.

The chief told officials he believes the bombing was an attempt on his life, possibly in retaliation for the confiscation of 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of cocaine on Friday.

Explosions at Paraguayan police chief’s home kill 2 daughters – The CNN Wire - CNN.com Blogs
 

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