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10 killed in trailer-minibus collision in Bolivia

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Desember 2013 | 17.35

LA PAZ: At least 10 people were killed and five seriously injured in Bolivia when a minibus collided with a trailer, Xinhua reported.

The accident occurred Monday at an exit along the highway linking the capital La Paz with El Alto, when the minibus rear-ended the trailer, the press said, citing Juan Luis Cuevas, chief of the Police Departments' Traffic Division.

The driver of the minibus, belonging to public transportation line 233, died in the crash.

Cuevas said 15 passengers were on board the minibus, and five were seriously injured in the incident.

Initial police reports suggest the crash may have been caused by speeding or mechanical failures, but an official report is not expected until the investigation is completed.


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Partial evacuation of US town after train carrying oil derails

CASSELTON, North Dakota: A train carrying crude oil derailed just a mile (1.6 kilometers) before it would have cut through the heart of a small North Dakota town, shaking residents with a series of explosions that sent flame and black smoke skyward. No one was hurt, but officials were evacuating as many as 300 people as a precaution.

The mile-(1.6-kilometer)long BNSF Railway Co. train left the tracks about 2.30pm on Monday, and up to 10 cars caught fire. They were still burning four hours later as darkness fell, and authorities said they would be allowed to burn out.

Casselton has about 2,400 residents and is about 25 miles (40 kilometers) west of Fargo.

Authorities hadn't yet been able to untangle exactly how the derailment happened, but a second train carrying grain was involved.


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5.4-magnitude earthquake hits eastern Japan, rocks buildings in Tokyo

TOKYO: A shallow 5.4-magnitude earthquake hit eastern Japan on Tuesday, rocking buildings in Tokyo but there were no reports of any damage, seismologists said.

The quake hit at 10.03am (0633 IST) in Ibaraki prefecture, 160 kilometres northeast of Tokyo, and some 80 kilometres southwest of the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, according to Japan Meteorological Agency.

The tremor was 10 kilometres deep, the agency said, and was followed eight minutes later by a very shallow 3.6-magnitude quake in the same area.

The initial quake was strong enough to gently rock high-rise buildings in the capital.

Tokyo Electric Power said the quakes did not affect the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, where crews are working through the holiday season to cool reactors crippled by the 2011 tsunami.


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Bangladesh orders arrest of factory owners for deadly fire

DHAKA: A Bangladesh court on Tuesday ordered the arrest of the owners and four others over the country's worst-ever garment factory fire that killed 111 workers, after police laid charges.

The court in Dhaka issued the warrants for Delwar Hossain and his wife Mahmuda Akter over the blaze in 2012 at the Tazreen factory, where workers stitched clothes for Western retailers.

"Dhaka's senior judicial magistrate Wasim Sheikh issued the warrants of arrest against the two fugitive owners, Delwar Hossain and his wife Mahmuda Akter, and four other company officials for the Tazreen factory fire," prosecutor Anwarul Kabir said.

The fire on November 24, 2012, shone an international spotlight on appalling safety conditions in an industry worth more than $20 billion a year.

The factory, in the Ashulia industrial district, supplied clothes to a variety of international brands including US giant Walmart, Dutch retailer C&A and ENYCE, a label owned by US rapper Sean " Diddy" Combs.

Kabir said the court accepted charges by police against all 13 implicated in the fire after officers earlier this month completed a 13-month investigation into the tragedy.

"The owners and 11 others have been charged with arson, culpable homicide not amounting to murder and death by negligence," Kabir said, adding that all the accused face a maximum life term in prison.

The six whose arrest was ordered were not in court or in custody. Police last week said it was possibly the first time a garment plant owner has been charged over a fire at one of the nation's 4,500 factories, where deadly accidents are common.

Factory owners are rarely charged over such tragedies in the sector, which is a mainstay of the impoverished country's economy, accounting to up to 80 percent of Bangladesh's exports.

The country suffered an even greater tragedy just months later in April when the Rana Plaza garment factory complex collapsed in Dhaka's outskirts, killing 1,135 people in the world's worst industrial disaster.


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Newborn baby dies in Meerut hospital due to overheating of radiant warmer

MEERUT: A newborn baby died allegedly due to overheating of a radiant warmer at a Medical College here.

The baby's father Vaseem, a resident of Muzaffarnagar, said that his wife Ishrat gave birth to a baby on December 25 at a nearby hospital. Due to premature birth, the baby was underweight and transferred to Medical College here on December 27.

Here, doctors kept him in a radiant warmer. On Monday, the radiant warmer's temperature rose up, due to which the baby's neck was burnt.

Later, a patient raised an alarm and the warmer was switched off, but by then the baby had sustained 70 per cent burns and died on Monday evening.

Medical College's principal Dr Pradeep Bharti has set up a three-member commission under the chairmanship of the chief medical officer Dr Subhash. He said that if there is any negligence, strict action will be taken against those responsible.

Meanwhile, Medical College's in charge Dr Amit Pathak has said that the incident happened due to a short circuit.


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Navy arrests four Sri Lankans for reaching India without documents

RAMESWARAM: Indian Navy on Tuesday arrested four Sri Lankans, including three members of a family, for reaching the country without proper documents and seized their fibre glass boat.

They were arrested while getting off from the boat off Dhanushkodi coast.

The arrested have been identified as Nirmalan, his wife Nishandhini, their one-year-old son Dickson and boat operator Kandhasamy.

The couple told the naval personnel that they wanted to come to India as their parents in Sri Lanka opposed their marriage. They also confessed that the boat fitted with two engines was a stolen one.

Meanwhile, the Sri Lankan navy allegedly destroyed fishing nets of more than 60 boats from Rameswaram.


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81 private schools to refund excess fees to parents: Panel to Delhi high court

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 Desember 2013 | 17.34

NEW DELHI: A judicial panel set up by the Delhi high court has recommended that more than 80 private schools have to refund the excess fees they charged in 2009 without paying salaries to their staff as per the sixth pay commission.

A three-member committee headed by former Rajasthan high court chief justice Anil Dev Singh, set up in 2011, examined the financial records of 173 schools on a random basis out of total 1,172 schools and submitted its fourth interim report before the bench headed by chief justice N V Ramana recently.

With this report, the committee has so far examined the financial records of 605 private schools in the city.

In the report, the committee said that many schools "unjustly" increased fees and recommended that all of them refund the same with 9 per cent interest to the parents.

According to the report, 73 out of 173 schools including Rukmani Devi public school, Pritampura, Kulachi Hansraj Model school, Ashok Vihar and Manav Sthali school in New Rajinder Nagar, where the committee has found the fee hike to be "unjustified, either partially or fully", and hence recommended the refund of excess fee.

About eight other schools, "where besides, finding the fee hike to be unjustified either partially or fully, the committee also found their records to be unreliable", and recommended "special inspection" in addition to refund of fee.

In August 2011, the Delhi Court had set up the committee to scrutinise the accounts of various unaided private schools to determine the validity of the city government's February 2009 notification permitting them to hike tuition fees.

This order had come on a petition filed by an NGO, Social Jurists, through advocate Ashok Agarwal alleging that schools had hiked the fees "unreasonably" but they failed to pay the salaries of the teaching and non-teaching staff as per the sixth pay commission.


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Lalu Prasad to visit camps of Muzaffarnagar riot victims today

NEW DELHI: After Rahul Gandhi, it was the turn of RJD chief Lalu Prasad to visit the camps of riot victims in Muzaffarnagar.

Prasad, whose party is expected to have an alliance with the Congress for the next Lok Sabha polls, left for Muzaffarnagar early morning.

His visit is being coordinated by Rajya Sabha member Mohammed Adeeb. Adeeb was made the member of the upper house with the support of the Samajwadi Party and the Congress.

Prasad is expected to visit half a dozen relief camps inhabited by members of the Muslim community.

Prasad is considered a popular leader among the community and his party RJD had been in power in Bihar for 15 years largely on the basis of MY (Muslim-Yadav) combination.

Prasad, who had arrested BJP leader L K Advani during the Ram Janambhoomi movement in the 1990s, has been projecting himself to be a true secular and talking about playing a larger role in halting the march of Narendra Modi-led BJP.

Lalu's visit comes a week after Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi made an unannounced visit to to the riot-hit areas of Muzaffarnagar district and relief camps to meet the affected people from both the Muslim and Hindu communities.


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Hundreds try to flee Central African Republic on emergency flights

BANGUI: Hundreds of people tried to flee inter-religious violence in Central African Republic on Saturday aboard emergency flights to neighbouring Chad, while nearby countries appealed for help to rescue their citizens from the mounting humanitarian crisis.

Tit-for-tat violence between Muslim Seleka rebels, who seized power in March, and Christian self-defence militias have killed more than 1,000 people this month in the riverside capital Bangui and displaced hundreds of thousands more.

Fighting in the former French colony has surged in recent weeks despite the presence of 1,600 French peacekeepers and nearly 4,000 African Union troops deployed under a UN mandate to protect civilians. Bangui was calm on Saturday.

The 'anti-balaka' militia have targeted Muslims they say have supported Seleka during months of looting and killing since March. With many Seleka gunmen coming from Chad, its citizens in particular have been singled out, prompting their government to charter flights this week to bring them home.

However, many of those who waited in the heat at Bangui airport were Muslim Central Africans who said they were fleeing their majority-Christian homeland for fear of reprisals.

"We have never known violence as barbaric as this," said Aishatou Abdelkarim, 31, who said she was married to a Chadian. "The devil has taken control of our country."

Chad's foreign minister Moussa Faki said some 4,000 Chadians had been transported home so far, many of whom had lived in Central African Republic their whole lives. That is just a fraction, however, of the hundreds of thousands of Chadians living in landlocked Central African Republic.

More than 800,000 people have fled their homes during this month's fighting, with about half of them seeking refuge in Bangui, the United Nations says. It appealed on Friday for $152 million to help meet emergency humanitarian needs such as drinking water and sanitation in makeshift camps.

Tens of thousands of people have sought safety at the international airport, where French peacekeepers have a base. Women and children waited beside piles of suitcases and bags.

Cameroon flew home 214 of its citizens on Friday, bringing the number evacuated this month to 926, state radio there reported. Senegal and Niger, meanwhile, have asked the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) for urgent help in extracting hundreds of their own expatriates.

Congolese killed

Many say the bloodshed has little to do with religion in a nation where Muslims and Christians have long lived in peace. Instead, they blame a political battle for control over resources in one of Africa's most weakly governed states.

"We used to live in perfect harmony with the Christians but it is Seleka and the anti-balaka who are trying to divide us," said Issa Baro, a 35-year-old Muslim trader from Chad, waiting to catch a flight home.

Chad's foreign minister Faki said toppled President Francois Bozize was responsible for the surge in violence in recent weeks and was using the anti-balaka to undermine interim President Michel Djotodia, Seleka's leader.

French President Francois Hollande told UN Secretary Ban Ki-moon by telephone on Friday he wanted greater UN involvement in Central African Republic. Ban is preparing a proposal for a possible UN peacekeeping mission.

Two Congolese peacekeepers were killed when they were attacked by unidentified gunmen late on Thursday, a day after six Chadian peacekeepers were killed, a spokesman for the African Union's MISCA peacekeeping mission said.

Two French soldiers were also shot dead in early December.


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Romanian director, writer Dinu Cocea dead at 84

BUCHAREST: Romanian director and writer Dinu Cocea, who made popular historical adventure movies before being forced into exile by the Communists, has died, his daughter said. He was 84.

Cocea died of heart failure in a hospital in Paris on Thursday, daughter Oana Cocea was quoted by Mediafax as saying on Saturday.

Born into a well-known theatrical family, he debuted with " the Outlaws" in 1966 and made 15 movies in Romania. However, he had to emigrate to Paris in 1986 after he angered Communist censors with a script about a dam that was plagued by corruption.

He said in interviews that Romanian officials never forgave him. Returning after the 1989 revolution with plans to make a movie, he said he was asked to come up with one million dollars, and the next day the sum was doubled.

The American Academy of Film gave him an award in 2000 for his work.


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Seven minor earthquakes cause collapse of Mexican highway

MEXICO CITY: Mexico says a 300-yard (metre) section of a highway near the US border has collapsed, sinking about 100 feet (30 metres) after a series of small earthquakes.

Mexico's federal highway authority says the collapse occurred about 58 miles (93 kilometres) south of the border city of Tijuana. The road leads to the port city of Ensenada, on the Baja California peninsula.

The agency, on Saturday said that the road was closed in the early morning hours, after the collapse was detected.

The agency said the collapse was caused by seven small earthquakes ranging in magnitude from 1.3 to 4.3. It said the roadway runs over a known geological fault in the area, and that it had been raining heavily. No injuries were reported.

Traffic was being diverted onto a smaller, non-toll highway.


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CBI closes case against former Army vice chief Lt Gen Nobel Thamburaj

NEW DELHI: The CBI has closed its case in an alleged land scam purportedly involving a defence property in Pune cantonment in which a former Army vice chief was named as accused.

The Mumbai branch of the agency filed a closure report before a special CBI court saying it could not find evidence which indicates criminality of Lt Gen (retd) Nobel Thamburaj.

The agency had based its probe on a complaint from the Defence ministry which had alleged that defence land in the Pune cantonment was given to a private builder in violation of the norms.

It was alleged that Thamburaj and Defence Estate Officer S R Nayyar had favoured the builder.

CBI sources said action was recommended against the accused as due process was not followed in allotment of land to the builder but there was no criminality the case.

Sources said the agency could not find evidence of any quid pro quo which could have benefited Thamburaj or Nayyar.

According to the CBI FIR, Thamburaj, who retired as vice chief in October 2009, and Nayyar had allegedly shown undue favour to the builder for a property measuring 0.96 acres in Defence Land at Pune Cantonment.

"There was a dispute going on regarding the property in question. Thamburaj and Nayyar settled the matter out of court in spite of several court orders given in favour of the Army. The duo indulged in gross misconduct," CBI had alleged.

The two officers ignored rules and policies, violated the terms of lease entered into by the ministry of defence and Kalpataru and caused the private company pecuniary gains of about Rs 46 crore, it claimed.


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Police file on Newtown massacre yields chilling portrait

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Desember 2013 | 17.34

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut: Connecticut police released thousands of pages Friday from their investigation into the Newtown massacre, providing the most detailed and disturbing picture yet of the rampage and Adam Lanza's fascination with murder, while also depicting school employees' brave and clear-headed attempts to protect the children.

Among the details: More than a dozen bodies, mostly children, were seen packed "like sardines" in a bathroom. And the horrors inside school were so terrible that when police sent in paramedics, they tried to select ones capable of handling what they were about to witness.

"This will be the worst day of your life," police Sgt. William Cario warned one.

The documents' release marks the end of the investigation into the December 14, 2012, shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School that left 20 first-graders and six educators dead.

Lanza, 20, went to the school after killing his mother, Nancy, inside their home. He committed suicide with a handgun as police arrived at the school.

The paperwork, photos and videos were heavily blacked out to protect the names of children and to withhold some of the more grisly details. But the horror comes through at nearly every turn.

Included in the file were photographs of the home Lanza shared with his mother. They show numerous rounds of ammunition, gun magazines, shot-up paper targets, gun cases, shooting earplugs and a gun safe with a rifle in it.

A former teacher of Lanza's was quoted as telling investigators that Lanza exhibited anti-social behavior, rarely interacted with other students and obsessed in writings "about battles, destruction and war."

"In all my years of experience, I have known (redacted) grade boys to talk about things like this, but Adam's level of violence was disturbing," the teacher told investigators. The teacher added: "Adam's creative writing was so graphic that it could not be shared."

The documents also fill in more details about how the shooting unfolded and how staff members looked out for the youngsters.

Teachers heard janitor Rick Thorne try to get Lanza to leave the school. One teacher, who was hiding in a closet in the math lab, heard Thorne yell, "Put the gun down!" An aide said she heard gunfire and Thorne told her to close her door. Thorne survived.

Teacher Kaitlin Roig told police she heard "rapid-fire shooting" outside of the school, near her classroom. She rushed her students into the classroom's bathroom, pulled a rolling storage unit in front of the bathroom door as a barricade and then closed and locked the door.

She heard a voice say, "Oh, please, no. Please, no." Eventually, police officers slid their badges under the bathroom door. Roig refused to come out and told them that if they were truly police, they should be able to get the key to the door - which they did.

Others weren't so lucky.

Police Lt. Christopher Vanghele said he and another officer found what appeared to be about 15 bodies, mostly children, packed in another bathroom. So many people had tried to cram inside the bathroom that the door couldn't be closed, and the shooter gunned them all down, Vanghele surmised.

In a letter accompanying the files, Reuben F Bradford, commissioner of the state Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, wrote that much of the report was disturbing but that it also showed teachers trying to protect their children, law enforcement officials putting themselves in harm's way, and dispatchers working calmly and efficiently.

"In the midst of the darkness of that day, we also saw remarkable heroism and glimpses of grace," he wrote.

Peter Lanza, who was estranged from his son, told police that Adam had Asperger's syndrome - a type of autism that is not associated with violence - and exhibited symptoms of being "slightly OCD," meaning obsessive compulsive disorder.

A former Newtown High student who was in Tech Club with Adam Lanza recalled him pulling his sleeves over his hands any time he was handed an object from someone.

A nurse at the Yale Child Studies Center who met with Adam Lanza said he had several ritualistic behaviors, including frequently washing hands and changing his socks 20 times a day, to the point his mother did three loads of laundry a day.

The nurse said that Lanza's mother declined to give him prescribed antidepressant and antianxiety medication and that she failed to schedule a follow-up visit after he missed an appointment.

In the documents, a friend told police that Nancy Lanza reported that her son had hit his head several days before the shootings. And an ex-boyfriend told police that she canceled a trip to London on the week of the shooting because of "a couple last-minute problems on the home front."

Prosecutors previously issued a summary of the investigation last month that portrayed Lanza as obsessed with mass murders, but the report concluded that Lanza's motives for the massacre might never be known.

Lanza "was undoubtedly afflicted with mental health problems; yet despite a fascination with mass shootings and firearms, he displayed no aggressive or threatening tendencies," it said.

The new files revealed chaos during the rampage, and contain sometimes-conflicting accounts from witnesses.

Lanza remained silent as he aimed and fired in Room 10, according to an officer who interviewed the mother of one of the surviving students. The woman said her son, who ran from the classroom, recalled the shooter kicking in the door and then firing.

The documents indicate investigators were gentle in their questioning of children, interviewing youngsters only if they or their parents requested it. Some of the parents thought talking openly about the shooting and getting accurate information out would help their children heal.

After the interviews, the children were given a copy of Margaret Holmes' book "A Terrible Thing Happened" to help them deal with that they witnessed.


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Zimbabwe's envoy to Australia asks for asylum: Report

SYDNEY: Zimbabwe's ambassador to Australia has asked Canberra for asylum, lashing out at her country's "illegitimate" government and voicing fears for her safety if she returns home at the end of her posting next week, reports said on Saturday.

Jacqueline Zwambila said July elections in Zimbabwe had been "stolen" by President Robert Mugabe's government and she had no intention of using her business class ticket to return home, the Canberra Times reported.

"I don't feel safe about returning to Zimbabwe at all," said Zwambila, who is aligned with Zimbabwe's opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).

"Once the elections of 31 July were stolen by the current government -- which is illegitimate -- I knew that this was the end of the line," Zwambila, whose tenure as ambassador ends on Tuesday, said in a video posted on the Canberra Times website.

"End of the line for the people of Zimbabwe... and for people like me, who were appointed by the ex-prime minister Morgan Tsvangirai."

Zwambila said she was seeking a protection visa from Australia so she can stay on in the country along with her family once her diplomatic status expires. But it was not immediately clear whether Canberra would approve her request.

Australian Immigration Minister Scott Morrison would not confirm whether Zwambila had sought asylum, saying he could not comment on individual cases.

"If or when an application for a protection visa is received it would be assessed on its merits and in accordance with the normal rules that apply in these circumstances," he said in a statement.

"The government does not provide commentary on individual cases as it can prejudice their case or, worse, place people at risk. As a result it would be inappropriate to confirm or otherwise comment on any individual application."

Mugabe, Africa's oldest leader who has been in power for 33 years, began a new five-year term after winning a landslide victory in disputed elections end of July.

His rival, opposition leader Tsvangirai, described the vote as "fraudulent", citing an unusual number of voters turned away in urban constituencies that are considered opposition strongholds.

Australia, which had offered reduced sanctions as an incentive for free and fair elections, joined the United States and Britain in questioning the credibility of the polls and called for a re-run.

But the 89-year-old veteran leader dismissed the view, brusquely telling his opponents to accept defeat.

Zwambila said that when she learned about Mugabe's victory, she saw "doom, a black cloud".

"I knew then it was the end of my term," the report quoted her as saying.

The ambassador voiced fears of indefinite detention if she returned home, saying she had been threatened with arrest in Zimbabwe after a court found that she owed several hundred dollars to a tradesman. She denied the charge.

"So many things have been done to me since I've been here in Australia, the smear campaigns and threats... There is no way I feel safe being in Zimbabwe or going back to Zimbabwe," she said.

Mugabe, who has led Zimbabwe since independence in 1980, is serving under a new constitution and has not ruled out running again when he will be 94.

Tsvangirai had shared power with Mugabe until the July elections, with his MDC party controlling the finance ministry after they forged a unity government in 2009 following violent disputed polls.

But the shaky power-sharing deal ended when the veteran president won the July 31 polls with 61 percent against his rival's 34%.


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UN General Assembly approves $5.5 billion budget for 2014-15

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations General Assembly on Friday approved a $5.53 billion UN budget for 2014-2015, down 1 percent from the total spending during the previous two years.

The new biennial budget includes a 2 percent staffing cut, or some 221 posts, and a one year freeze in staff compensation.

The so-called core UN budget that was adopted does not include peacekeeping, currently running at over $7 billion a year and approved in separate negotiations, or the costs of several major UN agencies funded by voluntary contributions from member states.

As in past years, the biennial budget negotiations were marked by a tussle between poor countries seeking to raise UN development spending and major developed countries, which are the biggest budget contributors, trying to rein in the figures as they struggle to reduce expenditures in their own national budgets.

Fiji's UN ambassador Peter Thomson, speaking on behalf of the Group of 77 developing nations, said the 2014-2015 budget "represents the best that we as member states can muster at this time of continuing austerity in the world economy."

He said the G77 bloc supported the budget "with deep concern that budgetary austerity may negatively effect the development pillar of the work of the United Nations."

Critics of the United Nations, especially in the United States, have long charged that it is a bloated and sometimes corrupt bureaucracy that wastes taxpayers' money.

US deputy ambassador Joe Torsella, who focuses on UN management and reform at the US mission, said the 2014-2015 budget marked a "new commitment to real fiscal discipline at the United Nations at a tough time for hardworking families around the world."

"Our shared goal should be to ensure that the United Nations can maximize the results that it delivers with the amount of resources that member states are collectively able to provide," Torsella said.

The United States, which pays 22 percent of the UN budget, is the biggest financial contributor to the United Nations.


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Bangladesh capital under siege ahead of opposition march

DHAKA: Bangladesh's capital was on Saturday under virtual siege with overnight stoppage of transport services with the rest of the country as main opposition BNP is set to defy a government ban on their protest march tomorrow, escalating tensions afresh.

Paramilitary troops patrolled city streets while elite anti-crime Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) and police kept a sharp vigil at Dhaka's entry points amid the political face-off between the BNP-led opposition alliance along with fundamentalist Jamaat-e-Islami and the ruling Awami League.

Transport operators said they stopped operating buses and ferries to and from Dhaka due to "security concerns" as advised by law enforcement agencies while pro-government transport associations called a two-day strike to protest vandalism during the past weeks of opposition protests.

Thick fog also halted ferry services in major waterways and highways linking the capital with major cities making it tough for opposition activists to march towards Dhaka in response to BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia's call.

"Most buses are not operating on the long routes apart from a few operators loyal to the BNP," the counter manager of a private bus service told a TV channel in Dhaka.

Zia last night urged people to rally in Dhaka tomorrow defying the ban.

But media reports said activists of BNP and Jamaat started moving towards the capital from yesterday evening well ahead of the programme fearing police interception.

The reports said many planned to reach Dhaka by tomorrow under cover of bridal parties as many wedding ceremonies are set to take place in the capital on the weekend.

The opposition BNP-led alliance is demanding formation of a poll-time caretaker government with an "acceptable figure" as its ahead replacing Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and want the shelving of the January 5 election.

The TV channels said 100 activists of Jamaat were detained alone today as they were heading towards Dhaka in several buses from central Tangail district.

Meanwhile, police detectives have arrested at least seven BNP leaders including two lawmakers in the capital while sporadic incidents of violence have left two policemen dead so far and dozens wounded.

In the latest violence, suspected opposition activists in a pre-dawn attack hurled several patrol bombs at the village home of Chief Election Commissioner Kazi Rakibuddin Ahmad in western Chuadanga today.

Police said no one was hurt in the attack as the house was vacant and an unexploded petrol bomb was recovered.


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Indefinite curfew in Assam's violence-affected villages

GUWAHATI: Indefinite curfew continued in Chokihola area of Karbi Anglong district of Assam, where Karbi Peoples' Liberation Tiger (KPLT) militants killed four people Friday, attacking a Naga village, setting fire and firing indiscriminately.

The Assam government rushed three companies of additional forces Friday night to the affected areas so violence is contained and does not spread.

A group of armed KPLT militants attacked Khoaani village near Chokihola under Bokajan subdivision of the district at dawn Friday, setting some houses on fire. The militants started firing indiscriminately, killing four people instantly. Among those killed were three Naga women.

There is also a report that a Naga militant outfit, Rangma Naga Hills Protection Force (RNHPF), had retaliated and launched a counter-attack on the KPLT militants, killing two of the KPLT militants. However, their bodies have not been recovered so far, police said.

"We have imposed indefinite curfew in the affected areas. There are no fresh incidents of violence today," state Commissioner Secretary (Home) G.D. Tripathi said Saturday.

"We have reviewed the situation today morning and search operation is on. However, we have not recovered the bodies of the KPLT militants," he said.

"Three relief camps have already been opened in Chokihola and Barpathar areas and about 500 people are taking shelter in the relief camps," he said, adding that the police and administration are trying to persuade affected people to return to their villages.

"We have intensified security arrangements in and around the affected areas. There is no need to panic and we are trying to convince the affected people to return to their villages at the earliest," Tripathi said, adding that indefinite curfew will continue for now.


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Iraq forces arrest Sunni MP, kill brother and 5 guards

RAMADI, Iraq: Iraqi security forces on Saturday raided the home of a Sunni MP who backs anti-government protesters, arresting him and sparking clashes that killed his brother and five guards, police said.
Ahmed al-Alwani's arrest and the deaths during the raid threaten to inflame widespread discontent among Iraq's minority Sunni Arab community and could compound the rampant violence bedevilling the country.

"Security forces attacked the residence of MP Ahmed al-Alwani in central Ramadi to arrest him this morning, sparking a battle with his guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades," a police major told AFP, referring to the capital of Anbar province west of Baghdad.

"Five of Alwani's guards and his brother were killed and eight others wounded, while 10 security forces members were also wounded," the major said.

A police captain confirmed the details of the raid, while a doctor at the Ramadi hospital confirmed the toll.

It was not immediately clear why Alwani, in his 40s and serving his second term as an MP, was arrested, though he is a well-known supporter of Sunni Arab anti-government protesters camped on a highway near Ramadi, and has frequently spoken at the site.

Protests broke out in Sunni Arab-majority areas of Iraq late last year after the arrest of guards of then-finance minister Rafa al-Essawi, an influential Sunni Arab politician, on terrorism charges.

The arrests were seen by Iraqi Sunnis as the latest example of the Shiite-led government targeting one of their leaders.

But the demonstrations have tapped into deeper grievances, with Sunnis saying they are both marginalised by the Shiite-led government and unfairly targeted with heavy-handed tactics by security forces.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shiite, said on December 22 that the protest site near Ramadi had become a headquarters for Al-Qaeda, and called on legitimate demonstrators to leave.

"I say clearly and honestly that the sit-in site in Anbar has turned into a headquarters for the leadership of Al-Qaeda," Maliki said in remarks broadcast on state television.

He called on "those who are with them in this place who refuse sabotage and who have legal or illegal demands... to leave these camps, and leave this place, so that Al-Qaeda stays alone," adding protesters had a "very short period" in which to leave.

Sunni discontent has been a key factor in the escalating unrest in Iraq this year, boosting recruitment for militant groups, pushing them to carry out attacks and eroding cooperation with security forces.

But while the government has made some concessions aimed at placating Sunni Arabs, including freeing prisoners and raising the salaries of anti-al-Qaida fighters, underlying issues remain unaddressed.

The last major security operation at a protest site, near the northern town of Hawijah on April 23, sparked clashes in which dozens of people were killed.

Nationwide death tolls from violence has spiked, reaching a level not seen since 2008, when the country was just emerging from a brutal period of sectarian killings.

More than 6,700 people have been killed in violence since the beginning of the year, according to AFP figures based on security and medical reports.


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32 killed as bus plunges into ravine in Thailand

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Desember 2013 | 17.34

BANGKOK: At least 32 people were killed and five critically injured today when a speeding bus plunged into a ravine in northeast Thailand.

The bus, coming from Khon Kaen was enroute to Chiang Rai province, crashed into the guard rail of a bridge in Phetachbun district and fell into the 50-metre deep ravine, police said.

The bus was carrying 40 people, they said, adding 27 bodies were found in the bus and many more outside.

Five critically injured were rushed to two hospitals where one of them died.

Information about the remaining three persons was not immediately available.

The mishap occurred as millions of Thai motorists are expected to travel during the New Year holidays.

Traffic accidents are common in Thailand. Earlier in October, at least 20 people were killed when a tour bus carrying elderly Buddhist devotees plunged into a ravine in the country's northeast.

According to a recent report by the World Health Organisation, Thailand witnessed some 38.1 road deaths per 100,000 of population, compared to an average of 18.5 in Southeast Asia as a whole.


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Maoists torch four vehicles of a construction company

GAYA: Maoists have torched four vehicles of a road construction company on Gaya-Goh road in Gaya district, a police officer said today.

About 20 armed Maoists barged into the camp office of the road construction company late last night and torched the vehicles before escaping, Additional Superintendent of Police (ASP) Ashok Kumar Singh said.

The ultras also snatched mobile phones from the workers and locked them in a room before indulging in arson, he said.

The Maoists' carried out the attack on the construction company after its proprietor Kamlesh Kumar refused to pay levy to them, the ASP said.

Raids were being carried out to nab the perpetrators, he said.


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Maoists torch four vehicles of a construction company in Gaya

GAYA: Maoists have torched four vehicles of a road construction company on Gaya-Goh road in Gaya district, a police officer said today.

About 20 armed Maoists barged into the camp office of the road construction company late last night and torched the vehicles before escaping, Additional Superintendent of Police (ASP) Ashok Kumar Singh said.

The ultras also snatched mobile phones from the workers and locked them in a room before indulging in arson, he said.

The Maoists' carried out the attack on the construction company after its proprietor Kamlesh Kumar refused to pay levy to them, the ASP said.

Raids were being carried out to nab the perpetrators, he said.


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Iranian dissidents say rockets hit their Baghdad camp, kill two

BAGHDAD: A camp of Iranian dissidents in the Iraqi capital was hit by rockets on Thursday in an attack the group said killed at least two people and seriously wounded several others.

A Shia militia claimed responsibility for the attack on the Mujahadin-e-Khalq (MEK) camp in western Baghdad, which has repeatedly been the target of mortar and rocket attacks in recent months.

The group, which calls for the overthrow of Iran's clerical leaders and fought on Iraq's side during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, is no longer welcome in Iraq under the Shia-led government that came to power after the 2003 US-led invasion.

A spokesman for the group said in a statement that two people had been killed when "Camp Liberty," located in a former US military compound, was "attacked with dozens of missiles of different types".

Several of the wounded were in a critical condition, the statement added. It accused the government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki of being behind the attack in an attempt to win support from Iran's government ahead of elections next year.

Iraqi authorities have repeatedly denied involvement in attacks on the group.

In a rare claim of responsibility for attacks on the MEK, Wathiq al-Batat, commander of the al-Mukhtar Army militia, told Reuters his group had fired 20 Katyusha rockets and mortar rounds at the camp.

"We've asked (the government) to expel them from the country many times, but they are still here," he said, accusing the group of communicating with Sunni and Shia politicians he said were linked to al-Qaida.

The US state department condemned the attack "in the strongest terms." In a statement, it urged the Iraqi government to take additional steps to secure the camp against further violence and "to find the perpetrators and hold them accountable for the attack".

Al-Mukhtar Army is a relatively new Shia militia, which has said it is supported and funded by Iran. Batat is a former leader of the more well-known Kata'ib Hezbollah militia.

Shahriar Kia, another spokesman for MEK who lives in the camp he said houses about 3,000 Iranian dissidents, said two men were killed when a rocket fell near their caravan.

"I saw two caravans set ablaze and black smoke billowing. We are still taking shelter inside the caravans out of fear of more shelling."

Police sources confirmed the camp had been targeted by mortars and said four wounded Iranians had been transported to a hospital in western Baghdad.

More than 50 people were killed at a separate MEK camp north of Baghdad in September. The attack drew condemnation from the United States and Britain.


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70 injured in carnivorous fish attack in Argentina

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina: An attack by a school of carnivorous fish has injured 70 people bathing in an Argentine river, including seven children who lost parts of their fingers or toes.

Director of lifeguards Federico Cornier on Thursday said that thousands of bathers were cooling off from 100-degree temperatures in the Parana river in Rosario on Wednesday when some suddenly began complaining of bite marks on their hands and feet.

He blamed the attack on palometas, "a type of piranha, big, voracious and with sharp teeth that can really bite''. Paramedic Alberto Manino said some children he treated had lost entire digits.

He told Todo Noticias channel that city beaches were closed, but it was so hot that within a half-an-hour, many people went back to the water.


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Kidnapped girl found in Agra, family alleges Samajwadi Party MLA's involvement

AGRA: A 14-year-old girl, who was abducted last month has been rescued from a house in Shikahabad area even as her family alleged that the kidnapper was being protected by an Samajwadi Party legislator.

The girl was kidnapped on November 13 and found yesterday by Sikandra police.

According to a report lodged by the relatives of the girl, the abduction was a result of a dispute between the family of the girl and that of the accused.

The report said the man had threatened the girl's family that he would abduct her following which she was brought from Ban to Agra to stay at her uncle's house. The accused apparently followed her here and kidnapped her, the family members alleged.

The girl's relatives claimed that the Sikandra police did not lodge their complaint because of the protection offered to the accused by a legislator. They then approached another legislator, after which the report was lodged.

According to the relatives, the girl was recovered from the house of the legislator who was giving protection to the alleged accused and the youth was also present during the time of the recovery but was allowed to escape by the police.

However, Shalabh Mathur, SSP Agra has denied allegations that the accused was allowed to escape by police.

Meanwhile, the girl has been sent to the women's police station for recording of her statement.


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Rocks, teargas fly as protests against government in Thailand heat up

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 26 Desember 2013 | 17.34

BANGKOK: Protesters seeking to halt preparations for elections in Thailand fought with police in the capital on Thursday as the country's long-running political crisis again turned violent.

Officers fired teargas and rubber bullets toward protesters trying to get into a sports stadium where candidates were gathering to draw lots for their position on polling papers, according to an Associated Press reporter at the scene. The demonstrators, some armed with sling shots, hurled rocks.

Inside the stadium, the lot-drawing process appeared to be going on unaffected.

The protesters are demanding that Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra step down. They oppose the polls scheduled for February 2 because Yingluck is seen as sure to win them.

Thailand has been wracked by sometimes violent political conflict since Yingluck's brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was toppled by a 2006 military coup. The protesters accuse Yingluck of being a proxy for Thaksin, who lives in self-imposed exile to avoid jail time for a corruption conviction but still wields influence in the country.

Thaksin or his allies have won every election since 2001 thanks to strong support in the north and northeast of the country. His supporters say he is disliked by Bangkok's elite because he has shifted power away from the traditional ruling class, which have strong links to the royal family.

On Wednesday, Yingluck announced a proposal for a national reform council to come up with a compromise to the crisis, but it was rejected by the protesters. They now plan more civil disobedience and street protests in a bid to provoke such chaos that Yingluck will be forced to resign.


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Three children die in US mobile home fire on Christmas, 7 others injured

HOUMA, Louisiana: A mobile home fire in Louisiana killed three children and injured seven others early on Christmas day, fire officials said.

Two brothers, ages 12 and 11, and their 13-year-old sister died at a trailer park in Houma, district chief Lance LaMarca of the state fire marshal's office said.

Another sibling, the children's parents and four other children were taken to a Baton Rouge burn unit, LaMarca said.

The trailer was engulfed in flames when firefighters arrived about 2.30am on Wednesday, Houma fire inspector Mike Millet said.

The children's father rescued one child after smoke came under his bedroom door, but was unable to get the other three because the fire spread so quickly, LaMarca said.

The dead children's father was the most severely burned, LaMarca said, followed by their mother. He said all the survivors are expected to recover.

The mother and another child escaped through a window, while relatives sleeping in another bedroom at the opposite end of the mobile home got out through a back door.

LaMarca said the deceased children and their parents were visiting from Alabama for Christmas, and there were 12 people in the trailer.

LaMarca said there was severe damage to the combination living room-kitchen where the children had been sleeping. He said the occupants were using space heaters and candles, which could have caused the fire. The damage was so severe, however, that it might be difficult to rule out other causes, such as electrical appliances in the nearby kitchen, he said.

There were no working smoke alarms in the trailer, LaMarca said.


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China 'seriously condemns' Japan PM's visit to Yasukuni war shrine

BEIJING: China strongly condemned Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's visit to the flashpoint Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo on Thursday, saying it glorified Japan's "history of militaristic aggression".

"We strongly protest and seriously condemn the Japanese leader's acts," Beijing's foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang said in a statement immediately after Abe's visit to the shrine.

China would make "solemn representations" to Japan over his actions, the ministry said.

Yasukuni is believed to be the repository of around 2.5 million souls of Japan's war dead, most of them common soldiers but also including several high-level officials executed for war crimes after World War II, who were enshrined in the 1970s.

"The essence of Japanese leaders' visits to the Yasukuni shrine is to beautify Japan's history of militaristic aggression and colonial rule," Qin said, adding that Abe was "brutally trampling on the feelings of the Chinese people and those of other victimised Asian countries".

China's ruling Communist Party seeks to bolster its public support by tapping into deep-seated resentment of Japan for its brutal invasion of the country in the 1930s.

Before and during World War II, Japanese forces swept through much of east Asia, where their treatment of both civilian populations in occupied areas and prisoners of war was often appalling, with the Nanjing Massacre one of the worst atrocities recorded.

According to estimates by Chinese government researchers, China lost 20.6 million people directly from the war.

Even now the history is a key element of the backdrop to the two countries' bitter dispute over islands in the East China Sea, which Beijing sees as having been seized by Tokyo at the start of its expansionism.

Qin noted the row in his statement, contending that Japan's move last year to nationalise some of the outcrops — which are called Diaoyu by Beijing and Senkaku by Tokyo — was a "farce" that had led to "serious difficulties" in China-Japan relations.

The world's second- and third-biggest economies have significant business ties, but politically their relationship is often troubled, and at times tensions over the islands have raised fears of a possible military incident.

Qin's statement came after a Chinese foreign ministry official condemned Abe's action as "absolutely unacceptable to the Chinese people".

Japan "must bear the consequences arising from this", Luo Zhaohui, director-general of the ministry's department of Asian affairs, said in a statement posted on a verified ministry microblog.

He added that the visit, the first by an incumbent Japanese prime minister since 2006, "causes great harm to the feelings of the Asian people and creates a significant new political obstacle to bilateral relations".

In a commentary issued soon after Abe's visit, the official Xinhua news agency contended that the Japanese leader "knows perfectly what he is doing and the consequences".

"Instead of a pledge against war, as Abe has claimed, the visit is a calculated provocation to stoke further tension," Xinhua wrote, adding that the visit "is the culmination of Abe's year-long policy of right-wing nationalism".

Users of China's popular social networks responded with fury to the move, with many noting that Abe made his visit on the same day that Chinese President Xi Jinping was paying tribute to Mao Zedong on the 120th anniversary of the former leader's birth.

"Today, Xi Jinping paid homage to Mao Zedong, and Abe paid tribute to the Yasukuni shrine! You both chose the same day! This is a deliberate provocation," wrote one Chinese Internet user.

"The base of Abe's power comes from his confrontation with China, so whatever upsets China, that's what he'll do," another wrote. "No matter what he says about China-Japan friendship, Asian prosperity and joint promotion of peace, it's all a facade."


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Four killed in fire mishap at Andhra Pradesh factory

HYDERABAD: Four workers were charred to death in a fire that broke out in a rubber factory in Gaganpahad area on Thursday morning.

Preliminary reports say that leakage from a pipe line supplying hot liquid chemical resulted in the blaze that spread to one of the rest rooms in the factory premises where the workers were sleeping.

"It seems the melted rubber fell on the workers and they were burnt alive. One fire tanker was sent to the area and the fire was put off at around 6.45 AM but four were left dead in the the mishap," a fire officer said.

Shamshabad police said the pipeline passed atop the roof of the rest rooms and when the fire spread some workers escaped while four were trapped in the room engulfed in flames.


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UN resolution addresses Indian concerns in South Sudan violence

UNITED NATIONS: India's strong concerns over the security and mandate of its peacekeepers in South Sudan found support from several UN Security Council members who unanimously passed a resolution that directly addresses the situation faced by Indian soldiers in the strife-torn country.

While India is not in the Security Council, it was able to "influence" the UNSC resolution in a "significant manner", as it highlighted key issues "pro-actively" with the powerful UN body.

India, which has lost seven of its soldiers this year in the world's newest country, highlighted issues related to the mandate of the UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) specially the difficult conditions in which the Indian peacekeepers work, standing in frontline of the violence.

Sources told PTI that India's views were found to be relevant by the Council, with President of the Council Permanent Representative of France Ambassador Gerard Araud referring to this in his remarks at the beginning of the UNSC meetings on South Sudan.

India was also able to work closely with the "pen-holder country", the US, in the final language of the South Sudan resolution that approved a temporary increase in the strength of UNMISS to up to 12,500 military personnel and 1,323 policemen from a current combined strength of 7,000.

India got "valuable support" for its view from Russia and troop contributing countries like Pakistan and Guatemala inside the Council.

India's main concerns related to the mandate of UNMISS based on the Security Council resolution of 2011 that focuses on responsibility for protection of civilians as part of peacekeeping.

India pointed out that the sudden upsurge of violence between the two main ethnic groupings in South Sudan has the potential of unleashing a civil war, which would "alter the terms of reference of the presence of UNMISS completely," a source said.

India noted that the main driver of the current violence in South Sudan is the inter-tribal or ethnic conflict, a concern that has been reflected in the first paragraph of the UNSC resolution.

Tensions within South Sudan, which gained independence in 2011 after seceding from Sudan, burst out into open conflict on December 15 when the government led by President Salva Kiir said soldiers loyal to former deputy president Riek Machar, dismissed in July, launched an attempted coup.

"Unless both sides agree to resolve their differences politically and peacefully through dialogue, the peacekeeping mission cannot be sustained," a source said.


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Govt clears Rs 1,912 crore of road projects in Bihar, Gujarat

NEW DELHI: The government on Thursday approved the widening of highways in Bihar and Gujarat at an estimated cost of Rs 1,912 crore.

The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) cleared projects that include the four-laning of a highway stretch in the Buddhist tourist circuit in Bihar for Rs 1,408.85 crore and the six-laning of a Vadodara-Surat section in Gujarat at a cost of Rs 503.16 crore.

"The CCEA has approved the project for the development of four-laning of 93 kms Gaya-Hisua-Rajgir-Nalanda-Biharsharif section on National Highway 82 in Bihar," an official statement said.

The Japan International Cooperation Agency will provide a loan with 100 percent financing for civil construction and supervision works for the project, according to the statement.

Of the total cost, Rs 1,216.16 crore would be spent on civil construction and supervision works and Rs 192.69 crore on land acquisition, rehabilitation and pre-construction activities. Completion is scheduled three years after signing the contract agreement.

Nalanda, the site of the ancient seat of learning known as Nalanda University, is a destination for tourists visiting Bodh Gaya. The Vishwa Shanti Stupa or Japanese Pagoda is located at Rajgir, a popular pilgrim destination for Buddhists.

The six-laning of the Vadodra-Surat section of NH-8 includes the construction of a new four-lane bridge across the Narmada River and two eight-lane flyovers, according to a separate statement.

The project cost includes Rs 17 crore for land acquisition, resettlement and rehabilitation and other pre-construction activities.

The project is aimed at expediting improvement of infrastructure in the state and reducing time and cost of travel for traffic on this stretch of the Vadodara-Surat section, the statement said.


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Two rockets land in US embassy compound in Kabul, no injuries: US

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 25 Desember 2013 | 17.34

KABUL: Two Taliban rockets landed inside the US embassy compound in Kabul early on Wednesday, causing no casualties but underlining Afghanistan's continuing security problems as many foreigners in the capital marked Christmas Day.

"At approximately 6:40 local time in Kabul, approximately two rounds of indirect fire impacted the US Embassy compound," a statement from the embassy said. "All Americans are accounted for and no injuries were sustained."


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US appeals court: No halt to gay marriages in Utah

SALT LAKE CITY: A federal appeals court has ruled that gay marriages can continue in Utah, denying a request from the state to halt same-sex weddings until the appeals process plays out.

The 10th US Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday rejected the state's request for an emergency stay on a federal judge's ruling that found Utah's same-sex marriage ban violates gay and lesbian couples' rights.

The judge who made that ruling, US District Judge Richard Shelby, refused the state's first request to put a halt to the marriages on Monday.

Utah's last chance to temporarily stop the marriages would be the US Supreme Court.

The appeals court ruling means county clerks can continue to issue marriage licenses to gays and lesbians. Nearly 700 gay couples have obtained marriage licenses since Friday, with most coming in the state's most populous county.

Utah is the 18th US state where gay couples can wed, and the sight of same-sex marriages occurring just a few kilometers from the headquarters of the Mormon church has provoked anger among the state's top leaders.

"Until the final word has been spoken by this Court or the Supreme Court on the constitutionality of Utah's marriage laws, Utah should not be required to enforce Judge Shelby's view of a new and fundamentally different definition of marriage," the state said in a motion to the appeals court.

Shelby's decision to strike down a law passed by voters in 2004 drew attention given Utah's long-standing opposition to gay marriage and its position as headquarters for the Mormon church.

It is estimated that nearly two-thirds of Utah's 2.8 million residents are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and Mormons dominate the state's legal and political circles.

The Mormon church was one of the leading forces behind California's short-lived ban on same-sex marriage, Proposition 8, which voters approved in 2008. The church said Friday it stands by its support for "traditional marriage" and hopes a higher court validates its belief that marriage is between a man and woman.

In court Monday, Utah lawyer Philip Lott repeated the words "chaotic situation" to describe what has happened in Utah since clerks started allowing gay weddings. He urged the judge to "take a more orderly approach than the current frenzy."

"Utah should be allowed to follow its democratically chosen definition of marriage," he said of the 2004 gay marriage ban.


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UN demands release of three Egyptian pro-democracy activists

GENEVA: The United Nations on Tuesday demanded the release of three Egyptian activists jailed for three years for organising an unauthorised protest, a spokeswoman for the UN Human Rights Office said.

The convictions on Sunday are "of great concern", Ravina Shamdasani said, calling for the "immediate and unconditional release of all prisoners detained solely in connection with peaceful protests, unless the authorities have solid evidence (of) recognisable criminal offences."

The convictions of Ahmed Maher, Ahmed Douma and Mohamed Adel were the first against pro-democracy protesters — as opposed to Islamists — since the July 3 overthrow of president Mohamed Morsi, whose Islamist supporters have borne the brunt of a deadly crackdown.

"Participation in peaceful protests and criticising the government should not be grounds for detention or prosecution," Shamdasani added in a statement.

The statement said "dozens of individuals, including students, have been arbitrarily detained and some convicted following what appears to be the exercise of their legitimate rights to peaceful assembly and expression" in Egypt.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also joined the chorus of criticism, saying via spokesman Martin Nesirky that the convictions were "contrary to the spirit of Egypt's revolution nearly three years ago."

Ban also "reminds Egyptian officials that freedom of assembly and expression are essential elements for credible elections," Nesirky added.


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Palestinians expel Israeli journalists from Bethlehem on Christmas eve

JERUSALEM: The Palestinian Authority has expelled Israeli journalists who came to the historic biblical town of Bethlehem to cover Christmas celebrations, a step lauded by their Palestinian counterparts who protested to stop them from entering Palestinian-controlled territories.

The PA ministry of information said that the decision was taken at the request of Palestinian journalists, who protested against the presence of their Israeli colleagues at Manger Square in Bethlehem.

Palestinian journalists praised the PA police for ordering the Israelis to leave the city, the local daily Jerusalem Post reported.

The Israeli journalists who were asked to leave Bethlehem work for Ha'aretz, i-24 News, Channel 1 and Arutz Sheva, the ministry said.

Omar Nazzal, a senior representative of the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate told Ramallah-based Wattan TV that the move was justified in wake of "restrictions" Israel imposed on Palestinian journalists.

A large group of Palestinian journalists had launched a campaign early this year to ban Israeli reporters from entering PA controlled territories in the West Bank.

The Palestinian journalists have defended their campaign by arguing that the ban was aimed at "isolating the Israeli media, which is contributing to misinformation and relaying a false and harmful image of the Palestinian reality."

PA deputy minister of information Mahmoud Khalifa accused Israel of imposing restrictions on the work of Palestinian and international journalists in the West Bank.

"Israel does not honour international laws and conventions calling for the protection of journalists," Khalifa said adding, "Israeli reporters have become accustomed to entering the State of Palestine without permission.


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Two Turkish ministers resign over corruption probe

ISTANBUL: Two Turkish cabinet ministers resigned on Wednesday over a corruption probe that has pitted the government against the judiciary and rattled foreign investor confidence, officials said.

Sons of interior minister Muammer Guler and economy minister Zafer Caglayan were among the 24 people arrested on graft charges on December 17. Announcing his resignation, Caglayan described the case as an "ugly plot" against the government. Guler stepped down shortly afterward, sources told Reuters.


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Violence continues unabated in Bangladesh, 2 killed

DHAKA: A policeman and an Awami League leader were killed in two separate incidents of violence in Bangladesh hours after the opposition's 83-hour nationwide blockade demanding the scrapping of the January 5 polls ended.

Officials said a bus carrying traffic policemen was set afire at Bangla Motor area of Dhaka by unidentified persons shortly before midnight, instantly killing a constable and injuring the driver.

"As soon as we got on board the bus, there was a huge bang and the vehicle was ablaze...I managed to get down but (my colleague) Ferdous could not and was burnt to death," said constable Faizul Islam, who survived the attack.

Inspector General of Police Hassan Mahmood Khandker said members of law enforcement agencies were being attacked under a plan to cripple the state machinery during protests by opposition parties.

In western Meherpur, an Awami League leader was hacked to death by suspected rival activists late last night, reports said. In Chittagong, two truckers were badly burned after opposition members set fire to a truck.

Meanwhile, two persons who sustained burn injuries earlier this week during the opposition blockade died today at Dhaka Medical College Hospital.

The main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) is boycotting the polls and political violence during nationwide strikes and blockades enforced by an opposition alliance have left over 120 people dead and crippled the economy since November.

Besides the BNP-led 18-party opposition alliance, a key ally of Premier Sheikh Hasina's Awami League party has also boycotted the polls. Hasina, however, insists the vote will go ahead as planned.


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I don't want to say anything: Justice Ganguly after blog by law intern

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 24 Desember 2013 | 17.34

KOLKATA: Former Supreme Court judge Ashok Kumar Ganguly, who has been accused of sexually harassing a former law intern, today said he would not comment on a post in her blog which hinted at filing a police complaint.

The intern has hit back at him for denying the charges. She wrote on her blog on 'Legally India', "Those who have been spreading rumours and politicizing the issue, are doing so out of prejudice and malice to obfuscate the issue and escape scrutiny and accountability."

Indicating that she might lodge a police complaint, the intern said, "I request that it be acknowledged that I have the discernment to pursue appropriate proceedings at appropriate time. I ask that my autonomy be respected fully."

Asked by PTI whether protests and pressure from various quarters were politically motivated, the former judge replied, "I don't want to say anything on the matter. I have no reaction."

Justice Ganguly had written an eight-page letter to Chief Justice of India P Sathasivam, denying that he had sexually harassed the intern. He has alleged that there was a "palpable design" to malign him because of the judgements he had given against "powerful quarters".

He has refused to step down as Chairman of the West Bengal Human Rights Commission.


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Fog throws normal life out of gear in Punjab and Haryana

CHANDIGARH: A thick blanket of fog across Punjab, Haryana and Chandigarh this morning threw normal life out of gear, even as minimum temperatures on Tuesday further dipped.

According to the met department here, fog reduced visibility considerably at several places including Chandigarh, Ambala, Karnal, Hisar, Bathinda, Ludhiana, Amritsar, Jalandhar among other places.

Fog during the past few days has paralyzed normal life in the region and has badly hit the road, rail and air traffic.

Meanwhile, Narnaul in Haryana was the coldest place in the two states recording a minimum of 3.3 degree C, down four notches.

Hisar also shivered at a low of 4.6 degreeree C, down two degreerees.

Amritsar was the coldest place in Punjab at 4.2 degreeree C, down one degreeree than normal. Ludhiana and Patiala recorded respective minimums of 7.6 degree C and 7 degree C.

Chandigarh recorded a low of 8.4 degreerees Celsius while neighbouring town of Ambala registered a minimum of 9.5 degree C.

Karnal also experienced a cold night at 6.8 degree C, while Bhiwani shivered at 5.4 degree C.


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Six women among Uighurs killed in Xinjiang clash: Rights groups

BEIJING: Six Uighur women were among 16 people killed in a clash in China's restive Xinjiang region last week, campaign groups said, contradicting Beijing's version of events.

The Munich-based World Uyghur Congress and Radio Free Asia, which is funded by the US government, said that police raided a house where an extended family was gathering.

Xinjiang, in China's far west, is home to the mainly Muslim Uighur minority and Chinese authorities say that "terrorists" were responsible for the incident.

But World Uighur Congress spokesman Alim Seytoff, citing information from two residents of Saybagh village, where the clash took place, said: "It was a massacre of a family who had gathered to prepare for the upcoming wedding of one of their children."

According to Radio Free Asia, one resident said that the local police chief "triggered the incident by lifting the veil of a woman during the raid on the house".

The dead included two police officers, with the other 14 all Uighurs. Xinjiang has for years seen spasms of violence that Beijing attributes to terrorism and separatism but rights groups say is triggered by cultural oppression, intrusive security measures and a wave of immigration by China's Han majority.

The violence peaked in 2009, when around 200 people died and more than 1,600 were injured in riots in the regional capital Urumqi.

China's state-run Xinhua news service said that an initial probe of the Saybagh incident revealed that the 14 "terrorists" who were shot dead were from a group promoting extremist religious ideas and making explosives for terrorist attacks.


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No files will be kept pending in environment ministry: Moily

NEW DELHI: Days after the controversial exit of Jayanthi Natarajan, Union minister Veerappa Moily, who assumed the additional charge of the environment portfolio, today said no files will be kept pending in the ministry.

His comments came amid reports that Natarajan had to exit from the ministry because of complaints from the industry that she was holding up environmental clearances to big ticket projects.

The petroleum minister, however, said that the "image" of the green regulator would never be compromised in the process of project clearances.

"I am the one who is accustomed to dispose of the files by the evening. Not even a single file will be taken home and not even a single file will be pending unless it requires yet another (look)," said Moily, who met Natarajan at her residence here just before assuming the charge.

The senior Cabinet minister also dismissed suggestions that there will be conflict of interest as he handles the portfolio of petroleum which need lot of green clearances from the environment ministry.

"Everything has its space. Petroleum has its space.... every ministry has a space....Ultimately, we have to go by the rules of the game which have been laid out by any ministry. We should not cross it. There should not be any fear or favour while discharging the duties," he said.

On the issue of conflict of interest, Moily narrated his experience as minister for law, corporate affairs and petroleum when he effectively dealt with such issues.


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South Korea warns of 'merciless' response to North Korea's provocations

SEOUL: South Korea's president Tuesday warned Seoul would react "mercilessly to any provocations" from the North, describing the situation over the border as "ominous" as she visited a frontline guard post.

Seoul and Washington have been increasingly concerned over the stability of the North Korean regime following the execution two weeks ago of Jang Song-Thaek, a high-level official and uncle of young leader Kim Jong-Un.

"The security situation on the Korean peninsula is very grave. North Korea's internal situation is ominous, raising concerns about provocations," said South Korean President Park Geun-Hye, wearing a military uniform on her first visit to the tense border since taking office in February.

"We should react sternly and mercilessly to any provocations by North Korea," she said, calling for "watertight security readiness".

Her warning came as Kim, flanked by senior military officials, visited the mausoleum of his late father in Pyongyang to pay his respects on an important anniversary.

Kim visited the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, which houses the embalmed bodies of his late father and grandfather, the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.

Kim's father, Kim Jong-Il, was formally made the country's top military commander on December 24 in 1991 -- three years before the death of his own father and the country's founding president, Kim Il-Sung.

TV news footage showed Kim, clad in a dark Mao suit, standing before the white statues of his two predecessors, accompanied by dozens of uniformed military officials who bowed deeply towards the statues.

Among the top military cadres accompanying the young ruler were Choe Ryong-Hae, the director of the military's political department, and defence chief Jang Jong-Nam, KCNA said.

The visit came 12 days after Kim executed his once-powerful uncle in the biggest political upheaval since he took power after the death of his father two years ago.

Jang Song-Thaek, once the country's unofficial number two, was executed on December 12 after being accused of corruption and plotting a coup.

The shock purge -- staged in an unusually public and dramatic fashion -- has raised concerns about potential political instability in the isolated communist state.

Jang Song-Thaek, 67, played a key role in cementing the power of the inexperienced Kim, but his increasing political influence and power was resented by his nephew barely half his age, analysts said.

His growing control over the country's lucrative mineral trades drew ire of other top officials and played a role in his downfall, Seoul's intelligence chief said Monday.

The reclusive state's propaganda mill has since gone into overdrive describing Jang as a traitor while extolling Kim's leadership.

Tens of thousands of troops pledged loyalty to him in a mass rally on the death anniversary of his father last Tuesday.

The Kim dynasty has ruled the impoverished but nuclear-armed state since 1948 with an iron fist and pervasive personality cult.


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BJP slams Mulayam's remarks on Muzaffarnagar relief camps

NEW DELHI: BJP on Tuesday hit out at Samajwadi Party for claiming that no riot victim was left in Muzaffarnagar relief camps, saying it showed the "mentality" of the party's leaders who accuse it of being communal.

The saffron party also attacked Congress for indulging in "secular tourism" in riot-hit areas of Uttar Pradesh.

BJP vice-president Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi criticized SP supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav for his remark that no riot victim was left in relief camps and Congress and BJP workers were staying there as part of a conspiracy to tarnish the SP government's image in UP.

"The SP government says the affected are not riot victims but are of a political party. Then you (SP) should identify them. This is a tamasha (drama) of playing with the sentiments of the dead and accusing BJP of doing so," Naqvi told reporters.

"SP, in the name of secularism, is playing politics. Instead of applying balm on the wounds of the affected, they are hurting them by pricking needles on their wounds. This shows their mentality," he said.

Naqvi also attacked Congress leaders for repeatedly visiting relief camps in Muzaffarnagar and accused the party of trying to "seek the sympathy" of a particular community and indulge in vote-bank politics.

In a veiled attack on Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi for making a surprise visit to Muzaffarnagar relief camps, he said the party leaders were indulging in "long holiday drives".

"The Congress party and its leaders, when they have a holiday, they feel like going on a long drive. So on this holiday long drive, they reached Muzaffarnagar this time. A few months ago, the whole family had visited the place for doing secular tourism," the BJP leader said.

The SP supremo had yesterday created a flutter by claiming that no riot victim was left in the relief camps in Muzaffarnagar and only supporters of Congress and BJP were staying there as part of a conspiracy to tarnish the image of his party's government in UP.


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Christmas special trains on Konkan Railway route.

Written By Unknown on Senin, 23 Desember 2013 | 17.34

MANGALORE: Konkan Railway will run Christmas special trains between Bandra Terminus and Madgaon and also augment 12051/12052 Janshatabdi Exp train to clear extra rush of passengers during Christmas and New Year.

Train no. 09009 Bandra (T) - Madgaon Super fast special will leave from Bandra (T) on December 24 and 31 at 12.15am and reach Madgaon at 12.30 pm the same day.

Train no. 09010 Madgaon - Bandra (T) Superfast special will leave from Madgaon on December 24 and 31 at 8pm and reach Bandra (T) at 10.30am the next day.

The train will have 18 coaches. The special train will halt at Borivali, Vasai Road, Panvel, Roha, Chiplun, Ratnagiri, Kankavali, Kudal, Sawantwadi, and Thivim stations between Madgaon and Bandra (T).

Also four additional ordinary Chair Car coaches will be attached to 12051 / 12052 Dadar - Madgaon - Dadar Janshatabdi Express train from December 25 to January 15 to clear waitlist passengers.


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JJ board orders probe against parents for selling minor in Chhattisgarh

RAIPUR: In the wake of rise in cases of girl trafficking in Chhattisgarh's tribal Jashpur district, for the first time, a juvenile justice board has asked police to lodge complaint against parents of a 16-year-old girl who had sold her to a placement agency in New Delhi four years back.

The minor girl belongs to Pathalgaon and has alleged before the juvenile justice board that her parents took her to Delhi on pretext of going for a trip and had sold her to a placement consultant four years back. In her statement she alleged that she was taken to a multi-storied apartment by the placement agent for domestic help.

"I was forced to work for more than 15 hours. Waking up at 6 am I used to do all chores for a family of five. They never allowed me to sleep before 10 pm, even when I wasn't in a good health. Later, the placement consultant shifted me to a lone woman's house. The woman used to beat me with sticks in case I failed to meet her expectations," the minor girl mentioned before the board.

The girl somehow managed to escape from the woman's clutches and was later rescued by the Delhi-based Child Welfare Committee (CWC). She remained under the care of CWC for one-and-a-half years. It is now that the CWC has presented her before the Juvenile Justice Board.

The board has asked cops to book the girl's parents under Section 317 of the IPC (abandonment of child under twelve years by parents). The board has also ordered investigation against the placement agent and those involved in assaulting the victim.

Jashpur has many such stories and cases where children, minors and youths are taken to different parts of country for several kinds of illegal work or to work as labourers in conditions akin to bonded labour system. The district is infamous for reporting trafficking incidents. Several incidents of youths being trafficked to states like Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh have been reported in the past.


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Christmas special trains on Konkan Railway route.

MANGALORE: Konkan Railway will run Christmas special trains between Bandra Terminus and Madgaon and also augment 12051/12052 Janshatabdi Exp train to clear extra rush of passengers during Christmas and New Year.

Train no. 09009 Bandra (T) - Madgaon Super fast special will leave from Bandra (T) on December 24 and 31 at 12.15am and reach Madgaon at 12.30 pm the same day.

Train no. 09010 Madgaon - Bandra (T) Superfast special will leave from Madgaon on December 24 and 31 at 8pm and reach Bandra (T) at 10.30am the next day.

The train will have 18 coaches. The special train will halt at Borivali, Vasai Road, Panvel, Roha, Chiplun, Ratnagiri, Kankavali, Kudal, Sawantwadi, and Thivim stations between Madgaon and Bandra (T).

Also four additional ordinary Chair Car coaches will be attached to 12051 / 12052 Dadar - Madgaon - Dadar Janshatabdi Express train from December 25 to January 15 to clear waitlist passengers.


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Russia sends armoured trucks to Syria to transport chemical arms

MOSCOW: Russia has sent 25 armoured trucks and 50 other vehicles to Syria to help transport toxins that are to be destroyed under an international agreement to rid the nation of its chemical arsenal, defence minister Sergei Shoigu said on Monday.

In a report to President Vladimir Putin, Shoigu said Russian aircraft delivered 50 Kamaz trucks and 25 Ural armoured trucks to the Syrian port city of Latakia late last week along with other equipment, state-run news agency RIA reported.


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J&K highway closed for vehicular traffic due to snowfall

JAMMU: The 300-km-long Jammu-Srinagar National Highway, the only surface link between Kashmir and rest of the country, was closed for vehicular traffic for second consecutive day today, due to snowfall and slippery conditions.

Fresh vehicular traffic was not allowed from both the capital cities of Jammu and Srinagar due to slippery road conditions at Patnitop, Jawahar tunnel and various places along the highway, SSP Traffic National Highway, Haseeb Mughal said.

Only stranded vehicles are being cleared today, he said.

Kishtwar-bound vehicles will also not be allowed as the road was slippery at Patnitop, he added.


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Former BJP minister booked for examination scam questioned by STF

BHOPAL: Former BJP minister Laxmikant Sharma and mining baron Sudhir Sharma reached office of special task force (STF) on Monday afternoon after dodging the agency for nearly two weeks after being booked for an alleged manipulation of results in different recruitment examinations conducted by the Madhya Pradesh Professional Examination Board (PEB).

While the former minister was questioned on alleged manipulation of results of temporary teachers, Sudhir Sharma was quizzed in cases related to Pre Medical and Post Graduate Medical entrance exams (Pre-PG) examination, Food Inspector Examination, Milk Federation Entrance Examination, Subedar-sub-inspector-platoon commander entrance examination and police constable entrance examination.

Laxmikant Sharma was booked along with 129 other people including Dhanraj Yadav, Officer on Special Duty (OSD) to Governor Ram Naresh Yadav in the FIR on December 7 alleging cheating and forgery in Samvida Shala Shikshak (temporary government school teachers) recruitment.

This FIR was submitted to Chief Judicial Magistrate Pankaj Maheshwari.

Minister's name was found in the data recovered from PEB's chief system analyst Nitin Mohindra. Mohindra used to maintain a comprehensive list of those who used to recommend candidates to him besides details of monitory transactions.

This was the most significant development in the probes on scams in examinations conducted by PEB.

There are several recruitment tests for jobs in the police, transport, food and dairy departments, in addition to Pre Medical and Post Graduate Medical entrance exams, under the scanner since July.

The STF source added that the total number of accused in all the PEB related cases is now more than 200.

Besides former minister and his OSD O P Shukla, the prominent individuals named in these cases include Congress leader Sanjeev Saxena and Deputy Inspector General of Police (Umaria) RK Shivhare.

Both Laxmikant Sharma and Saxena lost the recent Vidhan Sabha polls.


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Jammu-Srinagar highway closed for traffic due to snowfall

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 22 Desember 2013 | 17.34

JAMMU: The 300-km-long Jammu-Srinagar national highway, the only surface link between Kashmir and rest of the country, has been closed for vehicular traffic due to snowfall and slippery conditions.

Due to snowfall at Jawahir Tunnel and Patnitop, the highway was closed during the night, an officer of police control room (PCR) said on Sunday.

Vehicular traffic was not allowed today on the highway from both the capital cities of Jammu and Srinagar due to snowfall and slippery road conditions along the highway, he said.

Some vehicles were stranded at different places along the highway, he said, adding that Border Roads Organization (BRO) is working to clear the highway.

Reports from Bhaderwah, Rajouri, Poonch, Reasi, Doda and Kishtwar districts said that fresh snowfall was recorded in upper reaches of these places and light showers in Jammu and plains last night.


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BJP won Rajasthan due to Modi's 'Goebellesian' tactics: Gehlot

NEW DELHI: Narendra Modi's thoughts are threat to Indian democracy," says former Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot who accused him of provoking communal feelings in the state during the recent elections which Congress lost badly.

Noting that Modi's "Goebellesian" tactics won Rajasthan for BJP, he said that the collapse of Congress in the elections was "more than a surprise".

"It is more than a surprise. I feel that there was no anti-incumbency factor and even if it was there, the things would not have been such bad," the 62-year-old leader said in an interview with PTI.

His emphasis was "Modi's thoughts are threat to Indian democracy. It is not the defeat of the Congress but victory for the communal forces."

Congress came up with its worst performance in the elections for the 200-member Assembly winning just 21 seats, far less than the 41 it won in the post-Emergency 1977 election.

"The way attempts were made to communalise the atmosphere among the people especially the younger generation through the use of social media. It was a below the belt attack.

"It was a Goebellesian propaganda of repeating a lie hundred times so that it looks real. BJP and Narendra Modi played politics through such methods. They spread lies and baseless things. It is not in the interest of the country," he said.

Alleging that Modi adopted the Gujarat tactics in Rajasthan, he recalled that in Gujarat, BJP had not given a single ticket to Muslims and had done things that would provoke Hindus to virtually get their vote en bloc.

Besides, he says, that the issue of price rise could also be a factor. At the same time, he took the line that while prices have rose, purchasing power of people has also increased.

Rahul Gandhi is the "natural choice" as PM candidate, Gehlot said when asked as to who could be leading the Congress campaign in the polls.

As chief minister, Gehlot was instrumental in organising the Jaipur Chintan Shivir in January which saw Rahul being elevated as the party vice-president.


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Suicide bomber blasts Libya checkpoint, killing seven

BENGHAZI: A suicide bomber rammed an explosives-laden vehicle into a security checkpoint outside eastern Libya's restive city of Benghazi overnight, killing at least seven people, witnesses and security sources said on Sunday.

The blast left body parts strewn around the area, said Moetez al-Agouri, a police officer at the post, and the death toll was likely to rise.

"Seven bodies among the victims have been identified but some other bodies were torn to pieces by the explosion," said Agouri, who was working at the checkpoint at the time but escaped injury.

Eight people including civilians were wounded in the attack on the checkpoint 50 kilometres (30 miles) east of Benghazi and were taken to hospital in the nearby town of Tokra, Agouri said.

A witness told AFP the explosion had left a large crater in the ground. The security post's chief, Fraj al-Abdelli, who was wounded in the attack, said the checkpoint had received several threats since arresting four people in November who were carrying weapons, explosives, money and a hit-list.

He said a police convoy transporting the suspects to a Benghazi barracks after their arrest came under attack as it entered the city.

Four soldiers were killed and three wounded in that attack, he said. Benghazi, the cradle of the 2011 uprising that toppled long-time dictator Moamer Kadhafi, has seen a series of attacks in recent months that have killed more than 300 people.

On Friday, the head of military intelligence in Benghazi was shot dead during a visit to his family in nearby Derna.

And a day before, a man was killed in an explosion in his car in Tobruk, in the first attack of its kind in the city close to the border with Egypt.

Also on Thursday, the head of a man who had been kidnapped for ransom was found in Benghazi.

In another development reflecting the myriad security problems still plaguing the North African nation, protesters shut down Internet access in the south and west on Saturday.

Knife-wielding protesters stormed the headquarters of Libya's largest telecoms provider and forced an eight-hour shutdown.

Dozens of people calling for Prime Minister Ali Zeidan to resign occupied the Libyan Telecom and Technology (LTT) HQ in eastern Tripoli.

The service was down for about eight hours. In addition to calling for Zeidan's ouster, the group condemned the blockade of vital oil terminals in the east, LTT communications chief Mourad Bilal said.

The months-long blockade has dealt a blow to Libya's economy and slashed oil production from nearly 1.5 million barrels per day to just 250,000.

Oil Minister Abdelbari al-Arusi on Saturday issued a renewed threat of force to lift the blockade.

"The government is making every effort to hold talks with those blockading the terminals," he told journalists on the sidelines of a conference in Doha of the Organisation of Arab Oil Exporting Countries.

"But all options, including the military option, remain open to put an end to this situation."

Zeidan had already threatened to use force against the strikers but without taking action.

Since Kadhafi's overthrow in 2011, Libya's authorities have struggled to impose their authority and stem rising lawlessness.


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US man kills girlfriend's baby for crying during football game

WASHINGTON: A US man allegedly killed his girlfriend's 5-month-old baby, after the boy wouldn't stop crying, while he was watching a football match on TV.

Tre'viance Markese Walker, 22, from Oklahoma, US was looking after his girlfriend's baby for a few hours on December 7 while he watched a football match on TV, police said.

After the baby's incessant crying, Walker allegedly grabbed the baby so hard that he caused head trauma and hematoma on the brain, which autopsy revealed killed the infant, 'Fox 25' reported.

He also dropped the infant from a height of two-feet, the report said.

The boy was found four hours later "unresponsive" with bruises in his head and blood in his ear.

The infant was taken to a local hospital where he was soon pronounced dead.

A neighbour reportedly heard Walker saying he grew angry because, "the baby wouldn't stop crying", police said.

Walker was arrested and police said he initially denied that he had harmed the child but later admitted the abuse.


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SingaporeĆ¢€™s Little India riot: 200 foreign workers get police advisories

SINGAPORE: Two hundred foreign workers, including Indians, on Sunday received advisories from Singapore police for alleged involvement in the worst street violence here in 40 years.

The workers started arriving at the Police Cantonment Complex at 10am to receive police advisories at the Criminal Investigation Department.

The development came two days after 56 Indians and a Bangladeshi were deported from Singapore for alleged involvement in the riot in Little India, a precinct of Indian-origin businesses, eateries and pubs where most South Asian workers take their Sunday break.

While a police warning is usually issued "in place of prosecution" and indicates that an offence may have been committed, an advisory is given to those who have not committed offences, and face no further action, The Straits Times quoted Commissioner of Police Ng Joo Hee as saying.

He had earlier said those set to receive the advisories had played "a passive and incidental" role during the riot, compared with the ones who have been deported.

Three other Indian nationals, who had charges against them dropped, will be given advisories together with the 200-odd other workers. All of them will be allowed to stay and work in Singapore, Ng said last week, adding that their employers will have to be present with the workers during the process.

"We want the employer to be present as a witness. "The advice is given to the guest worker, so he has to acknowledge that he has received it," Ng said, adding that the advisory will be given both orally and in written form.

Meanwhile, the 28 Indians charged with rioting are set to make an appearance in court tomorrow after being remanded for investigations.

The trouble started after a private bus fatally knocked down an Indian pedestrian, 33-year-old Sakthivel Kuaravelu, in Little India. Some 400 migrant workers were involved in the rampage that left 39 police and civil defence staff injured and 25 vehicles — including 16 police cars — damaged.

Singapore previously witnessed violence on such a scale during race riots in 1969.


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Turkey removes another 25 police chiefs over graft inquiry: Report

ANKARA: Turkish authorities have removed another 25 police chiefs from their posts, media reported, widening a crackdown on the force since it launched a corruption investigation that Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has called a "dirty operation" against his rule.

Erdogan accused "international groups" and "dark alliances" on Saturday of encouraging the graft investigations and signalled the purge of people behind it would continue.

The furore has roiled markets and exposed deep rifts between Erdogan and his former ally Fethullah Gulen, a US-based Islamic preacher who wields influence in the police and judiciary.

Twenty-four people have been formally arrested under the corruption investigation, including the sons of two government ministers and the general manager of state-owned Halkbank . Scores have also been detained.

In response, about 70 police officers, including the powerful head of Istanbul's force, have now been sacked or moved to different posts since the detention of bribery suspects began last week.

Erdogan's position is under no immediate threat, but the row between his ruling AK Party and Gulen's Hizmet movement could help decide local elections due in March.

The prime minister said on Saturday the crackdown on people behind the corruption investigation would continue.

"Those who want to establish a parallel structure alongside the state, those who have infiltrated into the state institutions ... we will come into your lairs and we will lay out these organisations within the state," he said in a speech in the northern city of Ordu.

Erdogan has refrained from naming Gulen, but years of disagreements between the two men spilled out into the open last month over a government plan to abolish private "Prep" schools, including those run by Hizmet.

The schools, part of a network with global reach, are an important source of revenue and bedrock of Hizmet's influence.

One of the first moves by Istanbul's new police chief, Selami Altinok, was to ban journalists from entering police stations across the country, local media reported on Sunday.


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Police tell HC about action in power theft cases in Mumbai

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 21 Desember 2013 | 17.34

MUMBAI: Police has informed the Bombay high court that it cracks down on individuals or entities involved in stealing electricity amid increasing cases of power thefts in the city.

Whenever Brihanmumbai Electric and State Transport (BEST) and such other power distribution companies, file a complaint under the Electricity Act, 2003, police immediately registers an offence and investigates it as per the provisions of law, said Ashok Jagdale, senior police inspector, MRA Marg police station in an affidavit.

The affidavit was submitted by additional public prosecutor Aruna Kamath-Pai yesterday before the HC which was hearing a PIL against power theft.

The PIL, filed by ex-scribe Ketan Tirodkar, alleged that during Ganesh and Navratri festivals, public mandals collect huge amounts as donations for organising celebrations and despite that, they are given heavy concessions in power usage by the state power utilities.

Since 2005, 10 cases have been registered in the MRA Marg police station alone. "In all these cases accused have been arrested and charge sheet filed before the magistrate," states the affidavit.

It says that whenever police help is sought by the BEST to raid or inspect suspicious places, adequate police bandobast is provided.

The power distribution companies suffer distribution losses to a tune of 15 per cent overall and 50 per cent in some pockets. These are mainly due to power thefts resorted by 'sarvajanik' (public) mandals during festivals, the PIL alleged.

Mumbai's power demand is around 2,600 MW and the power supply companies — Tata Power Company and Reliance Energy Ltd — are able to provide only 2,300 MW at present. Besides, the state is facing power shortage of around 3,000-3,500 MW during morning and evening peak hours.

The PIL demanded that special cells be set up by the state government to crack down on such electric thefts.

A division bench of justices P V Hardas and Sadhana Jadhav adjourned the PIL for hearing in January 2014.


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Two ministers' sons charged in Turkish graft probe: TV

ISTANBUL: The sons of the Turkish interior and economy ministers were charged and placed in custody early Saturday in connection with a graft probe that has tarnished Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, television stations reported.

The managing director of state-owned Halkbank is also among those charged with corruption, fraud, trafficking in gold and embezzlement, channels NTV and CNN-Turk reported.


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Kolkata: Mysterious gas leak in court premises, three hospitalized

KOLKATA: A mysterious gas leak caused a flutter inside the Sealdah court premises on Saturday and left at least three persons including a magistrate sick, police said.

The pungent smell was felt by those present on the third floor of Sealdah civil and criminal court at around 11 am.

Many of them started coughing, while three persons including magistrate Dipali Shrivastava had to be hospitalized in NRS Medical College and Hospital.

Police and fire brigade personnel rushed to the spot but could not locate the source of the leak, which some said smelt like ammonia.

Court work was hampered as people vacated the building.


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66 J&K govt employees found absent from duty

SRINAGAR: As many as 66 government employees, including four senior officers, were found absent from duty during a surprise inspection of various offices in Kupwara district of Jammdu and Kashmir, an official spokesman said on Saturday.

Additional Deputy Commissioner, Kupwara, Abdul Aziz Bhat along with a team of officers paid the surprise inspection to different government offices yesterday and checked the attendance, the spokesman said.

Four District Officers, including Executive Engineer of Public Health Engineering (PHE) and Irrigation, Chief Animal Husbandry Officer and District Sheep Husbandry Officer were found absent from duty, the spokesman said.

In addition, 62 employees were also found unauthorizedly absent from their duties during inspection of offices of Block, PHE, Irrigation, Handicrafts, KVIB, Municipal Committee, Employment, Animal Husbandry and Sheep Husbandry departments in the district.

The departmental heads were directed to initiate action under rules against the absentees while the suspension cases were recommended against the District Officers, the spokesman said.


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Vasundhara Raje distributes portfolios, retains 46 ministries

JAIPUR: Rajasthan chief minister Vasundhara Raje on Saturday retained 46 ministries as she alloted portfolios of rural development and panchayti raj, health and mines among her Cabinet ministers.

She allotted rural development and panchayti raj ministry to Gulab Chand Kataria and health ministry to Rajendra Rathore.

Kailash Meghwal was given the mines ministry and Kalicharan Saraf was alloted the education ministry. Sanwar Mal Jat was appointed the water resources minister.

The ministries retained by Raje include finance and home. Yesterday, nine BJP MLAs were sworn in as Cabinet ministers while three others were given independent charge as minister of state in the Vasundhra Raje government.

Two of the nine cabinet ministers, Kataria and Rathore have criminal charges against them.

Kataria, former home minister in previous term of Raje, is accused in the Sohrabuddin Sheikh fake encounter case of Gujarat in which CBI has filed a supplementary chargesheet against him early this year.

A Mumbai court has granted him an anticipatory bail. Rathore was arrested and sent to jail by CBI in connection with the Dara Singh fake encounter case in which about a dozen policemen are already in jail.

A Jaipur court had discharged him in a controversial order even before charges were framed against him.


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Pervez Musharraf challenges treason trial in civilian court

ISLAMABAD: Former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf on Saturday challenged the formation of a special court to try him for high treason, saying he had imposed emergency in 2007 as the army chief and could not be tried by a civilian court.

"We have filed a writ petition in the Islamabad High Court challenging the formation of the special court. They are not competent to try Musharraf," Mohammad Ali Saif, chief of his legal team, said.

The move came three days before the 70-year-old former president was to appear before the special court.

This is the first time in Pakistan's history that a former military dictator is facing trial for treason. If convicted, Musharraf could face either life imprisonment or the death penalty.

"Being an Army officer, the Pakistan Army Act 1952 is applicable to him," Saif told PTI, explaining why the special court was not competent to try Musharraf.

The writ petition said Musharraf took the decision to impose the emergency on November 3, 2007, while he was the army chief. It said the decision was not an individual act and hence cannot be tried alone.

The petition stated that the government is pursuing Musharraf's cases to further a political agenda.

Musharraf's legal representatives in London have already submitted a report to the UN high commissioner for human rights and have appealed to the US, the UK and Saudi Arabia to help the former military ruler.

His legal team has called on the international community, in particular the British, the US and Saudi governments to intervene in support of Musharraf who has provided immense assistance to the West in its "war on terror".

The special court was set up by the Pakistan government to try Musharraf for high treason for suspending the constitution in 2007.

The former president is charged with abrogating, subverting, suspending, holding in abeyance and attempting to conspire against the 1973 Constitution by declaring emergency and overthrowing the superior judiciary.

On November 17, the government decided to initiate treason proceedings against Musharraf.

Attorney General Munir Malik has said there is strong evidence against Musharraf and he could be sentenced to death or life imprisonment.


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