Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Tulsi Gabbard, US Congresswoman calls on Modi

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 September 2014 | 17.35

NEW YORK : Tulsi Gabbard, the first Hindu American in the US Congress, called on visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi here Sunday and presented him with a ginger flower garland from Hawaii.

Gabbard, a strong supporter of Modi, is a Democrat Congresswoman from Hawaii.

The 33-year-old Gabbard is the first practising Hindu American in the Congress who took her oath on the Bhagwad Gita.

She had spoken to Modi after his victory in the Indian general elections and congratulated him and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

She has also been involved in the planning of Modi's US visit and had last month met two BJP leaders Vijay Jolly and MP Rajyavardhan Rathore in that connection.

Gabbard has always maintained that it was a "great blunder" by the US government to have denied a visa to Modi in the wake of the 2002 Gujarat riots.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=vijay jolly,Tusli Gabbard,Rajyavardhan Rathore,Narendra Modi,hawaii

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Philippines, US begin military exercises near disputed seas

MANILA: Thousands of Philippine and American soldiers began annual war games on Monday near disputed waters in the South China Sea, testing the readiness of the two oldest security allies in the southeast Asian region to respond to any emergency.

The Philippines has territorial disputes with China over the South China Sea, which is said to be rich in energy deposits and carries about $5 billion in ship-borne trade every year. The Spratlys in the South China Sea are also claimed by Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam.

Nearly 5,000 US and Filipino troops will participate in the 11-day annual exercise, to be held in the Philippines' western island of Palawan, near the Spratlys, and in the northwest province of Zambales on the main island of Luzon, just 100 miles (160 km) off Scarborough Shoal.

The joint air and marine exercises "Philippine Bilateral Exercises," or Phiblex, will focus more closely on maritime security and territorial defence operations as China continues to step up its presence and activities in the region.

"We're hoping to gain new techniques from the US marine corps," Captain Reyson Talingdan, head of the public affairs of the Philippines' 3rd Marine Brigade in Palawan, told reporters.

"If they have new doctrines, we'll be able to learn from them."

Two US amphibious ships, USS Peleliu and USS Germantown, are participating in the exercises. Besides simulating boat raids and beach assaults, they will feature aerial live fire, mechanised armour manouevers and parachute drops.

"The field training exercises will provide the Philippines and U.S marine units multiple opportunities to continue to improve their skills while sharing best practices and enhancing an already high level of cohesion," the US embassy said in a statement.

The military reported Beijing continued its reclamation work in four areas in the Spratlys despite the southwest monsoon.

China has expanded its territory in the Gaven, Johnson South, Cuarteron and Chigua reefs in the Spratlys, reclaiming land to build islands to assert its claims.

The Philippines has monitored the presence of more than 120 Chinese warships and fishing boats in the Spratlys in the first half of 2014, establishing firm control over disputed areas.

China seized control of Scarborough Shoal, a rocky outcrop north of the Spratlys, in June 2012 after a three-month standoff with the Philippines, denying Filipino fishermen access to the rich fishing ground.

In the Scarborough Shoal, the Philippines has also reported the presence of an increasing number of ships, from 11 in the last quarter of 2013 to 34 in the first quarter this year.

The annual drills between Philippine and US forces are being held under the 1951 Mutual Defence Treaty (MDT), part of a web of security alliances the United States built in the Asia-Pacific region during the cold war.

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

10 killed, 16 hurt in accident in MP's Khandwa

INDORE: Ten persons, including two children were killed and at least 16 others were injured when the pick-up vehicle they were on collided head on with a truck on Indore-Ichchapur highway in Khandwa district early Monday.

The accident happened in Chegaon Makhan area of Khandwa (100km from Indore) at around 4am, superintendent of police (SP-Khandwa) Manoj Kumar Sharma told TOI.

All the 10 deceased and 16 injured are residents of Kodla village in Bhikhangaon area of adjacent Khargon district and were returning home after participating in a garba night in Kaljiyakhedi in Khandwa district.

The deceased have been identified as Mangilal, 17, Rohit, 12, Deependra, 19, Ravi, 33, Ajay, 17, Mangal, 20, Vijay, 25, Govind, 15, Sumit, 18 and Ravi, 20.

The injured, many of whom are critical, have been hospitalized at Khandwa.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Chegaon Makhan,accident in MP

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Japan PM Shinzo Abe vows to keep cautious watch on tax hike's impact

TOKYO: Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Monday that he will carefully watch the impact of April's sales tax hike and rising fuel prices on the economy, as he must decide by year-end whether Japan can cope with a second tax increase next year.

Speaking at the opening of a parliament session, Abe reiterated his pledge to put top priority on economic policy aimed at beating nearly two decades of deflation, saying that he is still at the halfway point in carrying out regulatory reforms.

"We are aiming to revive the economy and proceed with fiscal consolidation at the same time, and ensure a virtuous cycle in the economy," Abe said.

"A major mission of the Abe cabinet is to make people in every corner of the country feel the economy's recovery."

A sales tax rise to 8% from 5% in April pushed the economy into its deepest slump in the second quarter since the 2009 global financial crisis, raising some worries that a second hike to 10% could hit the economy harder.

Abe said this month that he was neutral on whether to implement the second tax hike and that he would make a decision by examining economic data in the current quarter.

Turning to diplomacy, Abe renewed his calls for a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, and vowed to improve ties with China and South Korea, countries angered by territorial disputes with Japan and Abe's approach to Japan's wartime past.

Abe, who came to office in December 2012, has not met bilaterally with the leaders of China and South Korea since taking office. Abe is keen to meet Xi on the sidelines of a November Asia-Pacific summit in Beijing.

"In order for Japan and China to build a stable friendship, I'd like to achieve a summit at an early stage and further promote a mutually beneficial relationship based on common strategic interests through dialogue," Abe said.

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Five more lifeless bodies found on Japan volcano: Official

TOKYO: The lifeless bodies of five more people have been discovered on the Japanese volcano that erupted at the weekend, officials said, taking to 36 the feared death toll.

"We have newly found five more people in cardiac arrest on the mountain," a Nagano prefectural police spokesman told AFP.

First responders use the phrase of someone who appears dead but has not yet been certified by a doctor.

The news came as rescuers called off their search for the day because soaring levels of poisonous fumes from the continuing eruption were making it dangerous.

Mount Ontake erupted around lunchtime on Saturday, when its slopes were busy with walkers enjoying the autumn scenery.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Japan volcano eruption toll,Japan volcano eruption,Japan volcano

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Jan Dhan Yojana: Dakshina Kannada achieves 95% success

MANGALORE: Dakshina Kannada district achieves 95% of the target in the implementation of Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana by ensuring bank accounts to 4.17 families, said Amarnath Hegde, Lead Bank manager.

Banks in Dakshina Kannada have opened 1.42 lakh new bank accounts through the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana to achieve 95% of the target. While the district has 4.40 lakh families as per 2011 census, banks have succeeded in ensuring accounts for 4.17 lakh families, Hegde said.

He added that banks will hold campaigns on last Saturdays of all months to provide bank accounts for remaining 23,000 families under Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana. "Special drive will be held on last Saturdays from 8am to 8pm. Directions have been given to all banks to conduct surveys on all Saturdays to identifies families without bank accounts. Special drive should be continued till all families are provided with bank accounts," Hegde said adding that arrangements will be made for registration of Aadhar Cards during the drive.

It may be recalled that the a mega camp was held to open bank accounts for all families under Jan Dhan Yojana at Town Hall in the city on August 28 simultaneously when Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the drive in New Delhi.

In Dakshina Kannada, there are 2.26 families in rural areas and 2.14 lakh families in urban regions. The district-level committee on implementation of Jan Dhan Yojana headed by deputy commissioner AB Ibrahim has directed all banks to implement the scheme successfully before October 31, Hegde said.

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Modi invites New Jersey governor to visit India

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 28 September 2014 | 17.34

NEW YORK: Prime Minister Narendra Modi has invited New Jersey governor Chris Christie to visit India with a trade mission.

Modi extended the invitation to Christie when the latter called on him at the New York Palace hotel, where the Prime Minister is staying for attending the annual session of the UN general assembly.

Christie, a popular Republican politician and a 2016 presidential election aspirant, has accepted the invitation to visit India with a trade delegation sometime next year, said Andy Shenoy, director on the Board of United Nations Development Corporation who played a major role in coordinating this important meeting.

Modi and Christie held discussions on the hurricane Sandy's effect on business and life of people in New Jersey.

The two leaders shared their thoughts on disaster management.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Narendra Modi in US,Narendra Modi,Chris Christie

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Military vehicle bombed in Afghanistan capital day before presidential swearing-in

KABUL: A bomb hit a military vehicle in the diplomatic quarter of the Afghan capital on Sunday, a day before the inauguration of a new president.

Police said one person was wounded and no one killed by the magnetic bomb, which was attached to a military truck in Zanbaq Square, near the vast presidential palace compound and several embassies.

A Reuters witness said the bomb tore off the driver's seat door.

"At 9:15 this morning, a sticky bomb attached to an Afghan army vehicle exploded in Zanbaq Square ... only injuring the driver," Najib Danish, Interior Ministry deputy spokesman, told Reuters.

Security is tight in Kabul ahead of Monday's inauguration of new President Ashraf Ghani, who will replace long-time leader Hamid Karzai just before most foreign troops withdraw from the violence-racked country.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Kabul,Afghanistan bomb,Afghanistan blast

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

John Kerry to skip Afghan president inauguration for Modi's luncheon

NEW YORK: US secretary of state John Kerry would skip inauguration of new Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on September 29 to attend the luncheon he and Vice President Joe Biden have organized for Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Kerry, who personally invested much of his time and energy in resolving the Afghan crisis after the presidential elections and visited Kabul several times to negotiate between the two candidates - Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah - was scheduled to travel to Afghanistan to be personally present at the swearing in ceremony of the new president.

However, given the importance that the Obama administration attaches to the Modi government and its efforts to strengthen relationship with India, the secretary of state, it is learnt, decided not to travel to Kabul for the September 29 presidential inauguration.

Modi, who is currently in New York to attend the annual session of the UN general assembly, would travel to Washington DC on September 29.

On the same day, US President Barack Obama will host a dinner for him.

After the formal Modi-Obama Summit at the White House on September 30, Biden and Kerry will host a lunch for the Prime Minister at the Foggy Bottom headquarters of the state department.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Narendra Modi,John Kerry,Joe Biden

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Maharashtra assembly polls: Over 7,000 candidates file nomination

MUMBAI:As many as 7,401 candidates have filed nominations for the October 15 Maharashtra assembly polls, which is set to witness a five-cornered contest in all the 288 constituencies.

The nomination process ended yesterday with approximately 7,401 candidates filing their papers, state electoral office said.

The final list of candidates from few constituencies has not been received by the state electoral office.

The highest 91 nominations have been filed from Nanded-South constituency while the lowest nine each have been filed at Guhagar (in Ratnagiri), Mahim (Mumbai) and Kudal (Sindhudurg) seats.

Congress campaign committee chief Narayan Rane is contesting from Kudal.

On the last day of filing of nominations yesterday, chief minister Prithviraj Chavan and home minister RR Patil filed their papers.

Chavan, who resigned as chief minister after NCP pulled out of the government, filed nomination from Karad South amidst rousing welcome from supporters.

This will be Chavan's first electoral battle after he lost the 1999 Lok Sabha elections from Karad, which he represented thrice.

MNS chief Raj Thackeray, who had declared at a rally a few months ago that he would enter the electoral battle by contesting the polls, will not contest.

The Congress has fielded candidates for all the 288 seats, while the NCP has fielded 286 candidates.

BJP has fielded candidates in 257 seats, state party spokesperson Keshav Upadhye had said yesterday.

"The remaining 31 seats have been given to our allies," he said.

Shiv Sena president Uddhav Thackeray, whose name was being pitched by his party as the chief ministerial candidate, is also not contesting.

The Sena declared a list of 286 candidates. The two constituencies where the party has not fielded candidates are Parli, where Gopinath Munde's daughter Pankaja is BJP nominee, and Byculla, where Arun Gawli's daughter Geeta is nominee.

The scrutiny will take place on September 29 and last date of withdrawing the nominations is September 30.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=RR Patil,Prithviraj Chavan,Narayan Rane,Maharashtra assembly polls

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Russia's Lavrov says ties with Washington need new 'reset'

MOSCOW: Moscow wants to improve ties with Washington and is not interested in a continued "sanctions war" with the West, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said.

In an interview with Russia's Channel 5 TV, Lavrov said relations needed a "reset 2.0", referring to a previous US attempt to mend bilateral ties that has been undermined by a series of confrontations, most recently over Ukraine.

He said Russia did not feel isolated from the west but accused Washington of hurting their relationship and of applying double standards in the struggle against "terrorism".

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Israel PM Benjamin Netanyahu vows to refute Palestinian 'lies' at UN

JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu headed to New York today, vowing to expose "slander and lies" laid out by Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in his UN speech.

In a Friday address to the UN general assembly, Abbas accused Israel of carrying out a "genocidal crime" in its 50-day war against Gaza militants in which nearly 2,200 Palestinians, mostly civilians, were killed.

"In my speech to the general assembly, I will refute the lies that are being told about us and I will tell the truth about our state and the heroic soldiers of the IDF, the most moral army in the world," Netanyahu said on the tarmac at Ben Gurion airport near Tel Aviv before boarding the plane.

Earlier, an official from Netanyahu's office called the Palestinian leader's remarks "an inciteful hate speech full of lies," with Netanyahu pledging to refute it along with claims laid out in the UN speech of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

"After the Iranian president's deceptive speech and Abu Mazen's inciteful speech, I will tell the truth on behalf of Israel's citizens to the entire world," he said in a statement late yesterday, using Abbas's nickname.

"In my UN general assembly speech and in all of my meetings I will represent the citizens of Israel and will — on their behalf — refute the slander and lies directed at our country," Netanyahu said.

Netanyahu will deliver his speech to the general assembly tomorrow, then will travel to Washington to meet US President Barack Obama at the White House on Wednesday.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=UN General Assembly,Gaza militants,Benjamin Netanyahu,Barack Obama

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Protesting Hong Kong students storm government complex

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 27 September 2014 | 17.34

HONG KONG: Dozens of protesters broke through the gates of Hong Kong's government headquarters late Friday in an ongoing student demonstration against Beijing's refusal to grant the city unfettered democracy.

Six people were arrested for offences ranging from forcibly entering government property and public disorder to assaulting an officer, police said in a statement.

Around 150 people pushed into the grounds of the complex, some scaling over a tall exterior fence, as others outside yelled "open the gates".

Police repeatedly used pepper spray on the protesters, who used umbrellas, surgical masks and goggles to protect themselves, an AFP reporter at the scene said.

Officers held up red signs warning people to "stop charging or we use force". Riot police wearing helmets and carrying shields arrived to push back the crowd in the early hours of Saturday morning.

Student groups are spearheading a civil disobedience campaign along with democracy activists in a days-long protest at Beijing's announcement last month that it would vet who can stand for Hong Kong's top post of chief executive at the next election.

By early Saturday, around 1,000 people were outside the Southern Chinese city's main government complex. Numbers had earlier swelled to more than 2,000 as secondary school pupils, some wearing uniforms, joined the university students.

In a statement police confirmed they had made six arrests of Hong Kong citizens aged 16 to 29, and that around 150 students had entered the government grounds. News footage showed officers taking away prominent student leader, Joshua Wong.

Early Saturday, a government statement had "expressed regret" that protesters had stormed the complex, saying security personnel, police officers and protesters had suffered injuries but without giving details.

"We don't care if we get hurt, we don't care if we get arrested, what we care about is getting real democracy," protester Wong Kai-keung said from the front line of the charge.

Teenage pupils — many saying they had defied their parents' wishes — earlier descended on Hong Kong's government headquarters to add their voices to a class boycott kicked off by university students on Monday.

Then on Thursday night, more than 2,000 people took their protest to the residence of Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying with the hope of speaking to him. Leung has so far refused to speak to the students or meet their leaders.

Protests continued Friday morning with around 900 secondary school students as young as 13 gathering outside the city's main government complex shouting: "I want real elections not fake ones".

Chung Chun-wai, 17, said many of his friends joined the protest in defiance of their parents, highlighting the often sharp generational divide in the former British colony over its political future.

"I think secondary school students are a part of society and I consider myself a citizen of Hong Kong. That's why I think I need to bear the responsibility to care about society and to voice the real opinions of Hong Kongers," he said.

Organisers said around 3,000 people showed up to the secondary school strike.

Meanwhile around 300 people, mostly elderly retirees originally from mainland China, staged a counter-protest to support Beijing's decision in neighbouring Tamar Park, replacing students who had gathered there since Tuesday.

Occupy Central, a prominent grassroots pro-democracy group, has vowed to take over the city's Central financial district if its demand that Hong Kongers be allowed to nominate who can stand for leader is not met.

Occupy co-founder Benny Tai has previously hinted the takeover could begin on October 1, a national holiday when much of the district will be empty.

He told reporters at the city's Foreign Correspondents' Club on Friday: "After next week's action we may not be able to change the standing committee's decision immediately, but if we could have that very strong determination shown, I personally have the confidence that one day democracy will come to Hong Kong."

Last month China said Hong Kongers would be allowed to vote for their leader for the first time in 2017, but that only two or three candidates approved by a pro-Beijing committee could stand.

Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997 under a "one country, two systems" agreement that allows it civil liberties not seen on the mainland, including free speech and the right to protest.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Protesting Hong Kong students,Hong Kong protests

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Iran and six powers make little progress in nuclear talks

UNITED NATIONS: Iran and six world powers made little progress in overcoming significant disagreements in the most recent round of nuclear talks, including on uranium enrichment, Iranian and Western diplomats close to the negotiations said on Friday.

Officials from Iran and the six countries had originally said a breakthrough in New York was unlikely on a nuclear deal to end sanctions on Tehran, although they had hoped substantial progress could be made in narrowing disagreements.

That, the diplomats said, did not happen at talks this week on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly.

"On the core issues we remain pretty far apart," a Western diplomat told reporters on condition of anonymity. "On enrichment, we are not there yet. On sanctions, we are not there yet."

The diplomat said that Iran and the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China would likely meet again in the coming weeks, but no date and venue have been set. The negotiators have set a November 24 deadline for an agreement.

Iran President Hassan Rouhani said at a news conference on Friday in New York that the "progress we have witnessed in recent days has been extremely slow." Rouhani said, "We must look forward to the future and make the courageous decisions vis-a-vis this problem."

Rouhani said any deal without lifting all sanctions against Tehran was "unacceptable."

US secretary of state John Kerry told reporters in New York that an interim deal approved in Geneva last November under which Iran had halted higher-level enrichment in exchange for limited sanctions relief "has made the world safer."

Regarding the pursuit of a long-term deal, Kerry said "it remains our fervent hope that Iran" and the six powers "can in the next weeks come to an agreement that would benefit the world."

Iran and the six hope that a resolution of the more-than-decade-long nuclear standoff with Iran will reduce regional tensions and remove the risk of another war in the Middle East.

At the General Assembly earlier in the week, Rouhani said a deal that ends sanctions will open the door to deeper cooperation on regional peace and stability and the fight against militants such as Islamic State, a group that has seized parts of Iraq and Syria. The United States has made clear it will not link the two issues.

Israel has repeatedly threatened to use military force against Iranian atomic sites if diplomacy fails to defuse what it sees as the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran.

Iran rejects allegations from Western powers and their allies that it is seeking a nuclear weapons capability but has refused to halt uranium enrichment, inviting multiple rounds of US, European Union and UN Security Council sanctions. Enrichment is a process of purifying uranium for use as fuel for power plants or, if enriched to a very high purity, for bombs.

Mistrust

Senior foreign ministry officials from the six countries and Iran began meeting in New York last week. They are trying to hammer out a long-term deal that would gradually lift sanctions against Tehran in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program.

Despite a generally positive atmosphere in the negotiations, the Western diplomat said neither side has much confidence in the other.

"The level of mistrust is still pretty high," the Western diplomat said.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told reporters there had been "no significant advances" in the latest talks, prompting the parties to cancel a scheduled negotiating session on Friday.

Kerry and European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton met with Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif late on Thursday and again on Friday to discuss next steps in the deadlocked negotiations, the Western diplomat said.

In addition to enrichment, diplomats said the speed of lifting sanctions is a difficult issue, one on which Iranian and Western delegations have sharp differences.

The Western diplomat said the United States and Europeans were prepared to lift their unilateral sanctions very quickly in the event of an acceptable agreement, but UN measures would be ended gradually based on Iran's compliance with any future deal.

"What they would like to see is to get rid of the Security Council sanctions very quickly, immediately," he said. "But this is not exactly how we think." He added, however, that Iran was underestimating the speed at which the Western powers were prepared to move on sanctions relief if an agreement is reached.

The diplomat said Iran's President Rouhani, who held bilateral meetings with top European officials in New York, had nothing to offer to move the talks forward.

"There was nothing really new from him," the diplomat said. "He said we should not miss this historic opportunity over a couple of centrifuges. And by the way, we think the same way."

Iran's enrichment program, above all the number of enrichment centrifuges Tehran would be permitted to keep for the duration of any deal, is one of the major sticking points.

Rouhani, widely seen as a pragmatist, was elected last year on a platform of improving foreign relations. Rouhani and his government have adopted a more conciliatory stance compared to his hard-line predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, raising hopes there might be avenues to reach an agreement.

The head of the US delegation, under secretary of state for political affairs Wendy Sherman, said in an interview with Voice of America that "I believe we are making progress." But she added that there are "still some very crucial decisions that need to be made."

The Western diplomat echoed those remarks, saying: "We are expecting significant moves on the Iranian side" if there is to be an agreement over the next two months.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Iran nuclear talks,UN Security Council

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Security beefed up at DMK office, leaders' residences ahead of Jayalalithaa verdict

CHENNAI: Security has been increased at the DMK headquarters and residences of its senior leaders here as a special court in Bangalore is set to deliver verdict in the 18-year-old wealth case against Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa on Saturday.

On a request from DMK, security had been increased at "Anna Arivalayam", the headquarters of DMK, two residences of the former Tamil Nadu chief minister and DMK president M Karunanidhi and the residence of K Anbazhagan, party's general secretary, police said.

It was on Anbazhagan's petition that the case had been transferred to Bangalore by the Supreme Court.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Jayalalithaa,Supreme Court,DMK

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Germany supplies arms and ammunition to Kurdish forces in Iraq

BERLIN: Germany delivered arms and ammunition to the Kurdish Peshmerga forces in Iraq to boost their firepower against the Islamic State militants who have captured large swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq.

The first transport plane carrying 27 tonnes of weapons landed in the Kurdish provincial capital of Irbil.

Airlifted from Leipzig in eastern Germany, the cargo included "Milan" antitank missiles, machine guns, ammunition and other military goods.

More cargo flights will operate to Irbil in the coming weeks to ferry over 600 tonnes of weapons and ammunition intended to boost the firepower of the Kurdish Peshmerga forces, German defense ministry said.

Around 10,000 Kurdish soldiers will be equipped with the military supplies from Germany, which include "Unimog" trucks and offroad vehicles, the ministry said in a press statement.

Germany had also supplied night vision equipment, protective clothing, helmets and other military materials to the Kurdish forces earlier this month.

The German government decided on August 31 to arm the forces of the Kurdish regional government in northern Iraq, ending a longstanding ban on the export of arms and ammunition to a conflict region.

The Kurdish forces, who played a key role in the campaign against IS in Iraq, have been asking the West to provide modern weapons to counter the offensive by the jihadists, who have American tanks and other modern weapons captured from the Iraqi army.

In addition to the arms supply, Germany has sent a team of military specialists to train the Kurdish forces in handling some of the weapons and backup systems, besides offering to train Kurdish military personnel in this country.

However, it has ruled out participation in USLed air strikes against IS targets in Iraq and in Syria or sending its troops for a ground offensive.

Defense minister Ursula von der Leyen, who visited Irbil on Thursday ahead of the arrival of the first air cargo from Leipzig, assured the Kurdish leadership of Germany's longterm support in its fight against IS, which captured large territories in Syria and Iraq.

"Germany regards fight against terrorism as a longterm responsibility," von der Leyen said after a meeting with president of the Kurdish regional government Masood Barzani, the statement said.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Kurdish peshmerga forces,Kurdish forces in Iraq,Irbil

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Delhi court fixes defamation case against Smriti Irani for February 28

NEW DELHI: A Delhi court fixed February 28 next year for hearing a criminal defamation complaint filed by Congress leader Sanjay Nirupam against Union human resource development (HRD) minister Smriti Irani.

Metropolitan magistrate Dheeraj Mittal, who had earlier summoned Irani as an accused asking her to appear today, was on leave and the matter was posted for the next date.

Nirupam, a former Congress MP, had filed the complaint against Irani alleging that on December 20, 2012, when assembly election results of Gujarat were announced, the BJP leader had made "defamatory and scurrilous comments" against him during a TV debate.

"That the accused (Irani), a MP of the BJP defamed the complainant by making direct aspersions on the character of the complainant (Nirupam)," the complaint had said.

"The complainant's (Nirupam) reputation of excellence and integrity has been dented due to the scurrilous, defamatory and derogatory comments made by accused during the said debate," it had alleged.

Nirupam had said that he had sent a legal notice to Irani through his counsel on July 25 last year asking her to tender an "unconditional public apology" for allegedly making defamatory comments against him but she did not reply to it.

Earlier, Irani had also filed a defamation complaint against Nirupam for allegedly defaming her during the same debate on the private news channel and the court had framed charges against him for allegedly using derogatory and indecent language against her.

On Irani's complaint, the court had put Nirupam on trial under sections 500 (defamation) and 509 (uttering any word or making any gesture intended to insult the modesty of a woman) of the IPC.

If convicted, section 500 of the IPC entails a simple imprisonment for two years or fine or both. Section 509 of IPC carries a simple jail term of one year or fine or both.

Irani, a Rajya Sabha member, had claimed in her complaint that Nirupam had allegedly questioned her credentials to analyze poll results given her background as a TV actor.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Smriti Irani,Sanjay Nirupam,Dheeraj Mittal,Delhi court

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Police clear Hong Kong democracy protesters who stormed govt HQ

HONG KONG: Police cleared dozens of protesters who had been holding out at government headquarters on Saturday after storming the complex overnight, as a week-long protest against Beijing's refusal to grant the city unfettered democracy turned angry.

Police escorted the remaining 50 demonstrators from the building's forecourt on Saturday afternoon, hauling some of them away after they refused to leave.

Up to a thousand other protesters remained camped outside the government complex, booing the police through the fence as they began rounding up the remaining demonstrators.

"Police should catch thieves, not students!" the crowds shouted. The early hours had seen the tensest scenes yet in a string of recent protests, with riot police using pepper spray to clear out more than 100 people who had pushed into the grounds of the complex, some of them scaling a high fence.

Police had dragged many away overnight and into the morning, making 13 arrests.

Student groups have been spearheading a civil disobedience campaign this week in response to Beijing's announcement last month that it will choose who can stand in elections for Hong Kong's leader in 2017.

More than 2,000 protesters, many of them secondary school pupils and university students, had protested at the city's main government headquarters on Friday, culminating with around 150 demonstrators breaking through police lines to occupy its forecourt late on Friday night.

Police said the 13 arrested were aged between 16 and 35 and detained for forcible entry into government premises, disorderly conduct in public place and assaulting a police officer.

Among those arrested was a prominent student leader, 17-year-old Joshua Wong.

Protesters had used umbrellas to protect themselves from being pepper-sprayed by police wearing riot gear including helmets and body-length plastic shields.

"This is an amazing turning point," Suki Wong, a recent graduate who works as an accountant, told AFP.

"Hong Kongers usually just lay there and do nothing. This time we're really making an impact."

Lu Yiu, 20, said his throat and nose burned from the pepper spray. "Everyone was crying as we were pushed onto the street from the extreme use of force," said Lu, who spent nine hours caught between police lines unable to use the toilet or sleep.

In a statement, the government "expressed regret" that protesters had stormed the complex, saying security personnel, police officers and protesters had suffered injuries but without giving details.

Friday's action was supposed to be the culmination of a week of protests that began on Monday when 13,000 students gathered on a campus in the north of the city, according to organisers.

On Thursday night, more than 2,000 people took their protest to the residence of Hong Kong's leader Leung Chun-ying with the hope of speaking to him, but he has so far refused to speak to the students or meet their leaders.

The protest comes after China last month said Hong Kongers would be allowed to vote for their leader for the first time in 2017, but that only candidates approved by a pro-Beijing committee could stand.

A protest in July saw half-a-million-people — according to organisers — take to the streets to express their discontent at what they see as China's increasingly tight grip on the city.

Handed back to China by former colonial ruler Britain in 1997, Hong Kong is governed under a "one country, two systems" agreement that grants civil liberties not seen on the mainland, including free speech and the right to protest.

But tensions have been rising in the southern Chinese city over fears that these freedoms are being eroded.

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Rebel artist Ai Weiwei condemns life sentence for Uighur scholar

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 26 September 2014 | 17.35

BEIJING: Chinese rebel artist Ai Weiwei has condemned the punishment given to Uighur scholar Ilham Tohti, awarded life imprisonment for involvement in alleged terrorist activities.

"I think it's a shame. He is an intellectual and a rational person," said the artist, whose next show is due in London. Asked about the Chinese government's view that he is a terrorist, Ai said, "Oh, come on! He is not a terrorist."

Ai's remarks came as reports surfaced that Tohti, who championed the cause of the Uighur community, has decided to appeal against his sentence. The European Union has demanded Tohti's immediate release, which led to China coding EU for interfering in its internal affairs.

At the court hearing, prosecutors cited a speech in which Tohti, a university professor, said Uighurs should resist Chinese authorities in the same manner as some brave Chinese opposed Japanese repression during the Second World War. This was cited as evidence that he was inciting violence.

"As a professor, he can have all kind of views. This is personal opinion. If he is state official, he can be asked to step down from his position. But as an individual, he is free to air his views," Ai said.

"Why do you have to censor everybody who has a different view," he asked of the government. "No one should be sent to jail for this reason, not for one day."

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Uighur scholar,Rebel artist Ai Weiwei,life sentence for Uighur scholar

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Go to special court for return of passport: HC to Gutka baron

MUMBAI: The Bombay high court on Thursday directed gutka baron Jagdish Joshi an accused in a criminal case filed under a law meant to curb organised crime, to approach the special trial court for return of his passport which was impounded in 2007. The trial court must decide such a plea within two weeks after its made, Justice M L Tahaliyani ordered.

Joshi is an accused in a case filed in 2005 under the Maharashtra Control of organised Crime Act (MCOCA) and says he hasn't travelled abroad for nearly a decade, and suffered a Rs 100 crore business loss because of it. His appeal questioning his prosecution despite a lack of prior sanction is pending in the Supreme Court. Eminent counsel KTS Tulsi from Delhi who appeared for Joshi, said the businessman's right to trade and travel can't be curtailed by keeping his passport impounded indefinitely. He cited a leading SC judgment in support. But the CBI counsel opposed the plea saying Joshi could go before the trial court and pointed out that the his matter is pending in the SC.

The HC said that the special MCOCA judge must decide only that limited plea without going into other issues. The 56-year-old Joshi, had moved an application for return of his passport through advocate Omprakash Parihar. He had first moved the HC in 2009 for return of his passport when he challenged a 2007 order of the special court that had directed him to hand it over to the CBI. . But the HC has passed no orders yet and hence he said it must either grant him his passport for use during the pendency of the petition or decide the matter finally soon.

"Joshi is deprived of his freedom of movement under Article 21 of Constitution of India,'' his application said. It said right to travel abroad is part of personal liberty guaranteed under Right to life. His lawyers also said that the SC in a catena of cases had held that neither the courts nor CBI has powers to impound a passport as the impounding of passport is governed only under the Passports Act, 1967.

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Strong earthquake rattles Alaska, lingers for nearly a minute

ANCHORAGE, Alaska: A powerful earthquake shook up a large swath of Alaska, including the state's largest city.

The West Coast and Alaska Tsunami Warning Center said the quake had a 6.1 magnitude.

The quake occurred at 9.51am on Thursday, 80 miles (130 kilometres) northwest of Anchorage, where it was strongly felt, and lingered for at least one minute.

There are no immediate reports of damage or injury.

The Tsunami Warning Center said no tsunami is expected.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Strong earthquake rattles Alaska,Powerful earthquake

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Prime Minister Modi arrives in Frankfurt enroute to New York

FRANKFURT: Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived in Frankfurt enroute to a five-day high-profile visit to the US during which he will address the UN general assembly, hold talks with President Barack Obama and meet top American corporate honchos besides series of other engagements.

Modi will spend the night here and will leave on Friday morning for New York where he will have a gruelling schedule including a rally at the famous Madison Square Garden on Sunday, which is likely to be attended by around 20,000 people from Indian-American community.

In New York, Modi will deliver his maiden address at the 69th session of the UN general assembly on Saturday.

Obama will host a rare private dinner for Modi at the White House on September 29, so as to establish a personal relationship with the PM ahead of summit talks the next day. The two leaders are meeting for the first time.

The Prime Minister said he will discuss with Obama how India-US ties can be taken to a "new level" in the interest of the two countries as well as of the world.

In a pre-departure statement in New Delhi, Modi said he will call for a stronger global commitment and more concerted multilateral action in addressing challenges of fragile global economy, turbulence and tension in many parts of the world, growth and spread of terrorism in his address at the UN.

The PM will be meeting as many as 11 top corporate honchos over breakfast on September 29 apart from one-on-one meetings with six more business captains same day in New York.

They include Google's executive chairman Eric E Schmidt, Carlyle Group co-founder and co-CEO David M Rubenstein, Cargill president and CEO David W MacLennan, Merck & Co CEO Kenneth C Frazier, Hospira chairman John C Staley, Citigroup CEO Michael L Corbat, Caterpillar chairman and CEO Dough Oberhelman, MasterCard president and CEO Ajay Banga, Pepsico chairman and ceo Indra Nooyi.

The Prime Minister will also attend one-on-one meetings with six other senior executives. Besides Goldman Sachs chairman and CEO Lloyd C Blankfein, Modi will meet Boeing chairman and CEO W James McNerney Jr, BlackRock chairman and CEO Laurence D Fink, IBM chairman and CEO Ginni Rometty, General Electric chairman and CEO Jeff Immelt, among others.

In New York, Modi will pay a visit to the 9/11 memorial on Saturday following which he is expected to drive down to the United Nations headquarters to address the 69th annual session of UN general assembly. He will also meet UN general secretary Ban Ki-moon.

Modi will also be participating in a business meet, to be organized by the USIBC, expected to be attended by 300-400 businessmen in Washington on September 30.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Prime Minister Modi arrives in Frankfurt,Modi in US

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Arab resolution on Israel defeated at IAEA meeting

VIENNA: An Arab-backed resolution singling out Israel for special attention over its alleged nuclear arsenal was defeated on Thursday at an annual conference of the UN atomic agency.

Nations meeting at the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) general conference voted 58-45 against the resolution, while 27 abstained.

Backed by 18 Arab states, including Syria, the resolution expressed concern "about the Israeli nuclear capabilities," urging Israel to join the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and put its nuclear facilities under international oversight. Israel has never acknowledged that it possesses nuclear weapons.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed the outcome of the vote, calling the resolution an effort "to harm Israel."

Separately, the conference voted 117-0, with 13 abstentions, in favor of a resolution submitted by Egypt that called on "all states in the region" to join the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=International Atomic Energy Agency,Arab resolution on Israel defeated at IAEA meeting

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pakistani policeman kills Christian accused of blasphemy

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani policeman shot two men in jail on Thursday, killing one accused of blasphemy and wounding another condemned to death on the same charge, lawyers and an activist said.

Christian pastor Zafar Bhatti was killed and 70-year-old Briton Muhammad Asghar, who has a history of mental illness, was wounded in the attack in Rawalpindi, next to the capital, Islamabad.

Bhatti, who worked to protect the human rights of the country's beleaguered Christian minority, was on trial after an Islamic leader accused him in 2012 of sending text messages derogatory to the Prophet Mohammed's mother.

His family say police investigations show the phone was registered to someone else.

In recent weeks, Bhatti had received death threats in prison from both inmates and guards, his family told Pakistan-based human rights group Life for All. He was being held in the same cell as Asghar.

"This is a barbaric act. There had been threats. The court should have instructed police to ensure Bhatti's safety," said Xavier Williams of Life for All.

"Killing of a person who was falsely accused is mockery of the judicial system. The protectors of the innocent have become the predators."

Asghar, from Edinburgh, was arrested in 2010 and sentenced to death in January after a disgruntled tenant presented letters he had written saying he was a prophet.

Asghar had previously been detained under the mental health act in Britain and diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, according to documents his lawyers supplied to Reuters.

His lawyers were barred from attending the last few months of his trial.

The law firm asked not to be identified for fear of being targeted by extremists.

Blasphemy is punishable by death in Muslim-majority Pakistan.

This year has seen a record number of blasphemy accusations, according to an Islamabad-based thinktank, the Center for Research and Security Studies. Many analysts say the claims are increasingly used to settle scores or grab property.

Blasphemy charges are hard to fight because the law does not define what is blasphemous. Presenting the evidence can sometimes itself be considered a fresh infringement.

Those accused of blasphemy are often lynched and lawyers in defending those accused of blasphemy cases have frequently been attacked. Judges have been attacked for dismissing cases and many of the accused face years in jail as their trials drag on.

At least 48 people accused of blasphemy have been extrajudicially killed, including seven in prison or outside court, according to Life for All.

Earlier this year, a prominent human rights lawyer representing an English professor accused of making a blasphemous Facebook post was shot dead after prosecution lawyers had threatened to kill him in front of a judge.

Last week, gunmen shot dead a liberal professor of Islamic law in the southern city of Karachi. The killing followed years of threats from his colleagues and allegations of blasphemy.

Two prominent politicians who suggested reforming the law have been killed — one by his own bodyguard. Another politician who discussed reforming the law on television is now facing blasphemy charges.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Zafar Bhatti,Muhammad Asghar,Christian accused of blasphemy in Pakistan,attack in Rawalpindi

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.35 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cabinet nod to 5-year-long Swachh Bharat mission

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 25 September 2014 | 17.34

NEW DELHI: A week before the nationwide launch of complete cleanliness and sanitation drive, Cabinet on Wednesday cleared the plan for Swachh Bharat Mission that will cover all rural and urban areas.

While the urban development ministry will be the nodal agency responsible for monitoring and supervision of the mission in across all the 4,041 statutory towns, the drinking water and sanitation ministry will have the same responsibility for rural areas. The mission has been divided into two sub categories - gramin (rural) and urban.

The Swachh Bharat Mission for urban areas is proposed to be implemented over five years starting from October 2 and the total expected cost of the programme is Rs 62,000 crore. While Centre will provide Rs 14,623 crore assistance the rest will come from states, private players and other sources.

Budgetary provisions for the two sub-missions will be provided separately in the demand for grant of the drinking water and sanitation (for gramin) and urban development ministry (for urban).

"The programme includes elimination of open defecation, conversion of insanitary toilets to pour flush toilets, eradication of manual scavenging, municipal solid waste management, bringing about a behavioural change in people regarding healthy sanitation practices, generating awareness among citizens about sanitation and its linkages with public health, strengthening of urban local bodies to design, execute and operate systems to fulfill these objectives and creating an enabling environment for private sector participation in capital expenditure and operational expenditure," an official statement said.

It would cover 1.04 crore households, provide 2.5 lakh seats of community toilets, 2.6 lakh seats of public toilets and solid waste management facility for all towns. Community toilets will be proposed in residential areas, where it is difficult to construct individual household toilets, public toilets will be constructed in designated locations such as tourist places, markets, bus stations, near railway stations and places of public recreation wherever required.

For rural household, the Cabinet decided to increase the unit cost of individual household latrine from Rs 10,000 to Rs 12,000 so as to provide for water availability, including for storing, hand-washing and cleaning of toilets. Central share for such latrines will be Rs 9,000 while state share will be Rs 3,000. For North Eastern states, Jammu & Kashmir and special category states, the Central share will be 10,800 and the state share Rs 1,200. Additional contributions from other sources will be permitted.

Considering the bigger role of education and communication to bring behaviour change 8% percent of total project cost will be directed for this purpose.

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Edward Snowden honored with 'alternative Nobel'

STOCKHOLM: Edward Snowden was among the winners on Wednesday of a Swedish human rights award, sometimes referred to as the "alternative Nobel," for his disclosures of top secret surveillance programs.

The decision to honor the former National Security Agency contractor with the Right Livelihood Award appeared to cause a diplomatic headache for Sweden's Foreign Ministry, which withdrew the prize jury's permission to use its media room for the announcement.

Snowden split the honorary portion of the award with Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian, which has published a series of articles on government surveillance based on documents leaked by Snowden.

The 1.5 million kronor ($210,000) cash portion of the award was shared by Pakistani human rights activist Asma Jahangir, Basil Fernando of the Asian Human Rights Commission and US environmentalist Bill McKibben.

Created in 1980, the annual Right Livelihood Award honors efforts that founder Jacob von Uexkull felt were being ignored by the Nobel Prizes.

Foundation director Ole von Uexkull — the award creator's nephew — said all winners have been invited to the Dec. 1 award ceremony in Stockholm, though he added it's unclear whether Snowden can attend.

"We will start discussions with the Swedish government and his lawyers in due course to discuss the potential arrangements for his participation," von Uexkull told The Associated Press.

Snowden, who has reportedly also been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, remains exiled in Russia since leaking top secret NSA documents to journalists last year. He has been charged under the US Espionage Act and could face up to 30 years in prison.

Though the honorary award doesn't include any money, the foundation would offer to help pay Snowden's legal costs, von Uexkull said.

The announcement had been set for Thursday, but it was communicated early after a leak to Swedish broadcaster SVT.

Von Uexkull said the foundation was denied access to the Swedish Foreign Ministry's media room, where it has announced the awards since 1995, after it gave the ministry advance notice of the winners.

He provided an email sent Tuesday in which the ministry said it had closed the room to "external events" for security reasons, but said he believed the decision was linked to the fact that Snowden was among the laureates.

The ministry referred questions to Foreign Minister Carl Bildt's spokesman, Erik Zsiga, who said in an email that new security rules that took effect on September 1 mean that government buildings "cannot in the same way as previously be used for this type of event."

As late as last week, the Foreign Ministry sent a note inviting foreign correspondents to attend the news conference in the ministry's media room.

The award foundation cited Snowden's "courage and skill" in revealing the extent of government surveillance and praised Rusbridger "for building a global media organization dedicated to responsible journalism in the public interest."

In a statement, Rusbridger said he was "delighted" to share the award with Snowden "because I think he was a whistleblower who took considerable risks with his own personal freedom in order to tell society about things that people needed to know."

Jahangir is a human rights lawyer who has defended women, children, religious minorities and the poor in Pakistan, the award citation said.

Fernando, originally from Sri Lanka, led the Hong Kong-based Asian Human Rights Commission for nearly two decades and now serves as its director of policy and programs.

McKibben is founder of 350.org, a grass-roots environmental movement aimed at spurring action to fight climate change.

The Right Livelihood Award is typically announced just ahead of the Nobel Prize announcements, which this year will begin on Oct. 6. There is no connection between the two, except Jacob von Uexkull established his prize after failing to persuade the Nobel Foundation to expand the categories for its prestigious awards. A wealthy stamp dealer, he sold his collection to fund the prize.

The Right Livelihood Award foundation typically honors grass-roots activists and says it's "not an award for the world's political, scientific or economic elite."

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Swedish human rights award,National Security Agency,Edward Snowden,Asma Jahangir,Alternative Nobel

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

UN security council passes resolution on foreign jihadists

UNITED NATIONS: US President Barack Obama on Wednesday led the UN Security Council in unanimously approving a binding resolution on stemming the flow of foreign jihadists to Iraq and Syria.

The resolution requires all countries to adopt laws that would make it a serious crime for their nationals to join jihadist groups such as Islamic State and Al-Nusra Front.

Obama described the resolution as "historic" at the special session of the Council, only the sixth time in UN history that the council was convening at the level of heads of state.

The US president opened the session by voicing solidarity with France after one of its citizens was kidnapped and beheaded by jihadists in Algeria linked to the Islamic State group.

"We stand with you and the French people as you grieve this terrible loss and as you stand up against terror in defense of liberty," Obama said, turning his gaze towards French President Francois Hollande.

The resolution states that "nations must prevent the movement of terrorist or terrorist groups through their territory and ensure that domestic laws allow for prosecution of those who attempt to do so," he said.

About 15,000 foreign fighters from 80 countries have joined the ranks of jihadists in Syria, according to US intelligence estimates.

The call for action to stem the flow of foreign fighters is fueled by fears that new terror networks will emerge from the Syria-Iraq front, much in the same way that the September 11, 2001 attacks were linked to the Taliban and al-Qaida in Afghanistan.

The resolution falls under Chapter 7 of the UN charter, which means the measures could be enforced by economic sanctions or military force.

Obama appealed to countries to join the US-led coalition against the Islamic State during an address a few hours earlier to the UN General Assembly.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=UN Security Council,foreign jihadists to Iraq and Syria,Barack Obama

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Netherlands to send F-16s to fight Islamic State in Iraq

THE HAGUE: The Dutch government said on Wednesday it would deploy six F-16 fighter jets, which could be operational in a week, to support the US-led strikes against Islamic State insurgents in Iraq.

The Netherlands, a member of Nato and a close US ally, will target the ultra-radical Islamist militants in Iraq and provide training and advice to Iraqi and Kurdish regional military forces for a period of up to one year, Deputy Prime Minister Lodewijk Asscher told journalists.

"We regard IS as a grave threat, not just for the region it is destabilising, not just for the (non-Muslim) minorities who are being put through the most terrible torment, but for the whole world," Asscher said, announcing the deployment of a maximum of 380 personnel to the region.

He said the Iraqi government's request for support gave the Netherlands adequate legal justification to take part in the military intervention.

There was no such clear justification in the case of Syria, but he said the Netherlands "understood" the new US-led bombing campaign against IS and associated militants in the country neighbouring Iraq.

Defence minister Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert said the training personnel deployed to the region would not play a role in front-line conflict and would be stationed in as safe an environment as possible.

Although the Dutch mission will initially be in Iraqi air space, it could be broadened to include Syria, she said.

"We are not ruling out taking part in Syria, but for now we are limiting participation to Iraq and we will follow international developments," said Hennis-Plasschaert.

The decision was announced after a special cabinet meeting had been called by the government of Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who was expected to detail the plan at the UN Security Council in New York later on Wednesday.

The United States on Tuesday launched air strikes against militant targets in Syria for the first time after weeks of operations against Islamic State strongholds in Iraq.

The Netherlands was not among nations approached by US President Barack Obama at a Nato meeting in Wales earlier this month, when he was building a coalition of allies against the offshoot of al-Qaida.

Dutch military participation will also have to be approved by the 150-seat parliament, but a majority was expected to support the proposal put forward by the coalition government.

The Netherlands has 61 operational F-16s, which have been deployed in recent Nato operations and most recently took part in combat operations in Afghanistan.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Netherlands to send F-16s,Islamic State in Iraq,Islamic State

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Too many Israelis' ready to give up on peace, Obama laments

UNITED NATIONS/WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama lamented on Wednesday that "too many Israelis" were ready to abandon Middle East peace efforts and urged them to reflect on the matter, saying the status quo with the Palestinians was unsustainable.

As part of a broader speech to the United Nations Assembly, Obama appeared to gently chide close US ally Israel against giving up on peace a week before he hosts Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House.

While Obama used his address primarily to rally support in the fight against Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria, he also recommitted to the pursuit of a two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians despite what he called a "bleak" landscape. US-brokered negotiations collapsed in April.

"The violence engulfing the region today has made too many Israelis ready to abandon the hard work of peace," Obama said. Then, departing from printed remarks made available to reporters beforehand, he added: "And that's something worthy of reflection within Israel."

"Because let's be clear: the status quo in the West Bank and Gaza is not sustainable. We cannot afford to turn away from this effort - not when rockets are fired at innocent Israelis, or the lives of so many Palestinian children are taken from us in Gaza," Obama said.

His comments followed a 50-day Gaza war between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas that ended in late August with an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire and no clear victor.

Israel soon afterwards announced a land appropriation in the occupied West Bank that an anti-settlement group termed the biggest in 30 years, drawing Palestinian condemnation and a rebuke from its US ally.

Since the Gaza war, Netanyahu has reaffirmed his bedrock demand that Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas back away from an April unity deal with Hamas Islamists that led Israel to quit the talks on peace and Palestinian statehood.

Rocky relations

The conservative Israeli leader, who has a history of rocky relations with Obama, has also pointed to what he sees as the mounting dangers Israel faces from Islamic militants on its doorstep in Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East. Netanyahu will visit the White House on Oct. 1 after his own UN speech.

"Leadership will be necessary to address the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis," Obama said. ""So long as I am president, we will stand up for the principle that Israelis, Palestinians, the region, and the world will be more just and more safe with two states living side by side, in peace and security."

He also said violence in the Middle East should cure anyone of the illusion the Arab-Israeli conflict is the main source of the region's troubles, calling such claims "an excuse to distract people from problems at home."

Asked by Reuters to respond to Obama's remarks, Israel's UN Ambassador Ron Prosor declined comment.

The White House gave no explanation for the call for Israeli "reflection" that Obama inserted into his speech. "That message is consistent with what we've said for a long time about the status quo being unsustainable," said Bernadette Meehan, a spokeswoman for the White House National Security Council.

While Obama in last year's UN speech cited resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as one of the top priorities for the rest of his second term, he made no such assertion this time and also offered no new ideas for restarting negotiations.

Relations between Obama and Netanyahu have been strained amid tensions over failed peace moves and US diplomacy with Iran, whose nuclear program Israelis view as an existential threat.

On a visit to the Oval Office in 2011 Netanyahu famously lectured the US president on the long struggles of the Jewish people, as he sought to counter Obama's call to base any peace agreement on borders that existed before the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=West Bank,US President Barack Obama,Palestinian,Obama,israel

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

PeTA calls attack on women members in Bhopal 'double whammy'

BHOPAL: Mob attack on PeTA activists outside Bhopal's biggest mosque for demanding vegan Eid has snowballed into a raging controversy with the animal rights body demanding action against mobsters who attacked women activists on Monday. The organization has called it a double whammy — first police allowed them to launch the campaign and then booked their women members for hurting religious sentiments while letting attackers roam scot free.

PeTA India's CEO Poorva Joshipura said, "We have a tendency to blame women. Anyone who is justifying the attack is justifying violence against women. Police have the responsibility to identify and bring attackers to justice. There is no shortage of live footage of the incident." The PeTA team is working on filing a counter FIR in the case.

"We informed police about the location of our awareness programme on vegetarianism. That's the information cops sought and that's what we provided," said Joshipura.

Speaking to TOI, inspector-general of police, Yogesh Chaudhary, said, "Three PeTA activists were arrested and released." But he refused to comment on action against those who assaulted the animal rights activists.

She said PeTA had issued an invite about the invite, which was well publicised. At no point did anyone contact us or raise concern about the programme. "We would have changed the location, depending on what they were objecting to," she said.

PeTA has been critical of police investigation into sequence of events that triggered violence even as Bhopal district administration drew flak for allowing PeTA hold an event that could hurt sensitivities. Soon after the incident, Bhopal police registered a case against three PETA activists for outraging religious feelings.

"Providing information on vegetarian diet is not a crime, attacking women is. Why should it be a communal issue," said Joshipura. Asked if the programme could have sparked off violence, she said, "I cannot agree with you. That is not what it was. It's same as asking people not to celebrate Diwali without firecrackers. We were asking a community to think about an issue. If someone does not want that information they can say 'No Thank You'."

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=vegan Eid,PETA,animal rights body

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Palestinians seek $3.8 billion in aid for Gaza

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 24 September 2014 | 17.34

NEW YORK: Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah has said he has asked for $3.8 billion in urgent aid to help rebuild Gaza following its devastating 50-day war with Israel this summer.

Hamdallah told The Associated Press that Saudi Arabia has pledged $500 million and other nations have indicated they would join in.

He spoke at the end of a donor meeting lead by Norway on the sidelines of a gathering of world leaders at the UN.

The aid request comes as Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas Abbas is preparing to submit a resolution to the UN security council seeking a three-year timetable for the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the West Bank.

Palestinian officials said the resolution will be handed in immediately after Abbas speaks at the UN general assembly on Friday.

The recent Gaza war has weakened Abbas domestically, with Hamas enjoying a surge of popularity among Palestinians for fighting Israel.

He is under pressure at home to come up with a new political strategy after his repeated but failed attempts to establish a Palestinian state through US-mediated negotiations with Israel.

Abbas was meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry later yesterday and express little optimism the resolution would survive a Security Council vote.

The United States will almost certainly veto such a measure, having said the only resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is through direct negotiations between the two sides.

A day earlier, Abbas said a UN rejection of the resolution would prompt him to seek membership in international institutions and agencies.

Aides said that would include the International Criminal Court, opening the door to war crimes charges against Israel for its military actions in Gaza and Jewish settlement construction on West Bank land the Palestinians want for a future state.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=UN Security Council,Rami Hamdallah

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Tamil Nadu imposes 20% power cuts for industries, commercial users

CHENNAI: After close to four months of uninterrupted power supply , the state government has brought back power cuts for industrial users, though households have been spared.

State power utility Tamil Nadu Generation and Distribution Corporation Ltd (Tangedco) on Tuesday issued an order imposing 20 per cent cut on power supply to high tension industrial and commercial consumers during non-peak hours (10pm to 6pm the next day). High tension users are allotted power based on what they demand from Tangedco, so the power cut will be 20 per cent of the allotted capacity .

The order also said commercial and industrial units should use only 10 per cent of their allotted capacity during evening peak hours from 6pm to 10pm. The new restrictions are effective from Tuesday.

The state government's order effectively means industries and commercial establishments will have power only for lighting and security purposes, and will have to run generators to power plant and machinery .

This comes four months after chief minister J Jayalalithaa announced in May that "restriction and control measures", or scheduled power cuts, would be lifted for all customers effective June 1. While the announcement came as a relief to industrial and residential users, unscheduled power cuts started creeping in a few weeks after the announcement. Smaller districts started experiencing power cuts, though for shorter hours than last year.

The state has been experiencing a power shortage -estimated to be about 10 per cent -- for more than three years. Several industrial units have shied away from investing in the state fear ing power cuts and many units have shut shop.

"We have been having trouble because of power shortage for about three years. The state's economic growth has fallen and we stand 18th in the country ,'' said S Rethinavelu, former president of Tamil Nadu Chamber for Commerce and Industry.

Industry sources said power cuts have been re-introduced since wind energy generation has dropped while demand for power has risen. The peak wind season is April to August in Tamil Nadu and Tangedco was able to fill the gap with wind power.

"The announcement comes as a shock and surprise because we thought the state would turn power surplus," said K Purushothaman, senior director at Nasscom (an industry body for software companies).

"When the government encouraged people to set up small scale industries, should they not support them with sufficient power?'' Rethinavelu said.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=uninterrupted power supply,Tamil Nadu Chamber for Commerce and Industry,power cuts,Nasscom,industrial users

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Train services affected in New Delhi-Agra section after overhead wire snaps

BHOPAL: More than two dozen trains in the busy New Delhi-Agra railway section were severely affected when an overhead electric cable near Agra Cantonment railway station snapped.

The incident occurred around 2am on Wednesday during shunting of Jhansi Passenger Express when the cable in level crossing pole hit the train and snapped.

The trains are running late by 4 to 10 hours. Many of them are stranded at Jhansi, Morena, Gwalior stations.

According to railway sources, the down line (from Jhansi to New Delhi) was partially restored around 9am. However, the up line is yet to be restored.

The incident shows a severe lapse on the part of railways as the pole was very close to the track and during shunting the cable snapped and fell.

Railways is working on war-footing to restore the busy rail section.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Train services,New Delhi-Agra railway section

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Special trains to ease festive rush

BHOPAL: Railways has decided to introduce premium and special trains to ease the festive rush during Diwali and Durga Pooja, a railways spokesman said on Tuesday.

Among these are train nos 04406/04405 New Delhi-Shirdi-New Delhi premium superfast weekly special that will run from September 24 to October 31 via Habibganj. Train no 09411/09412 Ahmedabad-Patna-Ahmedabad weekly special train will run from October 5 to October 28 via Bairagarh (Bhopal).

Superfast special train 09571/09572 Rajkot-Rewa-Rajkot and premium superfast special train 09055/09056 Surat-Patna-Surat that would run in the month of October would pass through Itarsi in Bhopal railway division.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Special trains,Railways,Festive rush

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Drone strike kills suspected militants in Pakistan, officials say

BANNU: A US drone strike killed at least five suspected militants near the Afghan border in northwestern Pakistan on Wednesday, intelligence officials said, amid a rise in such attacks since after the military announced an anti-Taliban offensive.

Four intelligence officials said the strike killed between five and eight militants.

Six locals and two foreigners were killed in the strike in the district of Datta Khel in the mountainous region of North Waziristan, an intelligence official said.

The death toll could not be independently confirmed because North Waziristan has been off limits to journalists since the military announced an anti-Taliban offensive there in June.

Even before the operation, the military and militants often prevented journalists from visiting the sites of drone strikes.

The United States has long urged Pakistan to crack down on the Taliban stronghold in North Waziristan. The Taliban use the region to prepare bombs, hold kidnap victims, stage public executions and as a launching pad for attacks on Afghan and NATO troops across the border.

The military says it has killed hundreds of militants in its North Waziristan operation, including a senior commander that the Taliban eulogized in a press release this weekend. But no bodies, photographs or names have been provided to the media.

The United States halted drone strikes for the first six months of the year as Pakistan attempted to negotiate peace with Taliban insurgents, who want to overthrow the civilian government and put in place a strict Islamic state.

But the talks failed and drone strikes resumed a few days before the military announced its offensive. Since then, there have been at least seven attacks, excluding the one reported on Wednesday, according to the Bureau for Investigative Journalism, which tracks the strikes based on media reports.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=US drone strike,Militants in Pakistan,drone strike in Pakistan

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

EPFO's Rs 1,000 minimum pension to benefit 32 lakh immediately

PTI | Sep 24, 2014, 03.47PM IST
NEW DELHI: Government's decision to amend the Employees Pension Scheme, 1995 (EPS-95) run by EPFO to provide minimum monthly pension of Rs 1,000 will immediately benefit around 32 lakh pensioners who get less than this.

Earlier, estimates of EPFO had suggested that the immediate beneficiaries who were getting less than Rs 1,000 every month would be 28 lakh while the total number of pensioners under the Employees' Pension Scheme (EPS-95) of Employees Provident Fund (EPFO) were 44 lakh.

"Out of the present 49 lakh pensioners of EPS-95 approximately 32 lakh pensioner are drawing less than Rs 1000 per month with a large number of them drawing less than Rs 500 per month," an EPFO order said.

Though the entitlement provided by the government under the EPS-95 was made effective on September 1, the pensioners getting less than Rs 1000 per month would be paid this much amount from next month onwards.

In a bid to make the event a memorable one, the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) has asked its field offices to organise a facilitation programme on September 30.

The EPFO head offices wants the field formation to invite and felicitate those people who were issued the oldest pension payment order (PPO) by the respective offices and were paid least amount under the EPS-95.

The field officers have also been asked to participate in radio and TV programmes on social security to create awareness about the government's initiative.

The order also provides that the field office will incur expenditure on the facilitation function under the head of publicity. Moreover if the additional funds are required under the head, the matter may be taken up with the Finance Wing at the head office, the order said.

The field offices are to make an impact through this felicitation function and invite 100-150 pensioners.

Besides the field offices would have a separate time slot for redressing grievances of pensioners and pension claim applicants during the event.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mexico to free Cubans found at sea, give them residency: Report

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 23 September 2014 | 17.34

MEXICO CITY: Mexico will free 14 Cuban migrants rescued by its navy this month and will give them permanent residency, a Mexican immigration official said on Monday.

The Cubans were intercepted off the Yucatan peninsula badly sunburned and dehydrated after three weeks adrift at sea, and Mexico's government said they would likely be deported. They were without food and survived by drinking rain water.

The 14 and another 18 Cubans left Manzanillo in eastern Cuba on August 7 in a homemade boat, relatives of the survivors told Reuters. The boat's motor broke down after two days and the passengers rigged a makeshift sail.

Relatives said as many as 15 passengers died during the voyage, and their bodies were thrown overboard. Two more died after being rescued.

The Mexican immigration official said the 14 were being released on humanitarian grounds. The decision comes just days after Mexico's foreign minister visited the Communist-run island.

"Cuba did not recognize its citizens as such, so Mexico will give them a month to regularize their legal situation in the country," a spokeswoman for the Mexico's migration department INAMI said.

"They will remain in Mexico as legal residents while they wait for their permanent residency, which they are being given for humanitarian reasons," she said.

Mexico's foreign ministry had no immediate comment.

One other rescued passenger, who had a relative living in Mexico, was released earlier and is now in the United States.

"It's a huge relief," said Jose Caballero, husband of Maylin Perez, one of the women detained in Chetumal, in southern Mexico. "I haven't been able to eat. It's been a crazy few weeks. I was so worried they would be sent back to Cuba. If they did that I knew my wife would try and leave again."

Caballero took the same route by sea from Manzanillo in December, reaching Central America, before taking a bus to the US border. He spoke to Reuters by phone from Texas where he now resides.

"I spoke to my wife this morning. She is happy. Now we just want to get our children out of Cuba," he added, referring to their son and daughter, aged eight and four, back in Manzanillo, where they are being looked after by relatives.

Under the "wet foot, dry foot policy" of the United States, Cuban migrants who make it onto US soil are allowed to remain while those intercepted at sea are turned back.

Cubans seeking to flee the communist-run island are heading in increasing numbers to Central America or southern Mexico and then making a long journey overland to reach the United States.

US authorities say 16,200 Cubans arrived without visas at the border with Mexico in the past 11 months, the highest number in a decade.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Yucatan Peninsula,Mexico to free Cubans found at sea,Cuban migrants

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Biden to Hispanics: Barack Obama will act on immigration

WASHINGTON: Vice President Joe Biden told frustrated Hispanic leaders Monday that President Barack Obama is "absolutely committed to moving forward" on comprehensive immigration reforms "and he's going to do an awful lot."

Biden said Obama was determined to move ahead "with or without" Congress and "if they don't get something done by the end of this year, the president's going to do it."

Biden's remarks came as he and his wife, Jill, hosted a Hispanic Heritage Month reception Monday at their Naval Observatory residence.

He honored Hispanic education administrators and counselors, calling them "heroes in the classroom and community."

He said the "brilliance and potential of the Hispanic community" will contribute to the future of the country, noting that one in four students in pre-Kindergarten through 12th grade is Hispanic.

Guests included US Housing and Urban development secretary Julian Castro, treasury secretary Rosie Rios and voter advocate Henry Munoz. Guests enjoyed hors d'oeuvres and live music by the Army Latin Combo Band around the residence pool.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Joe Biden,Hispanic Heritage Month,Barack Obama

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Arab role may be key to US strikes in Syria, US officials say

WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama wants some Arab participation in air strikes against the Islamic State in order to expand the campaign to Syria, reflecting US concerns that any long-term campaign must count on regional involvement, US officials say.

Obama authorized air strikes against Islamic State targets in Syria almost two weeks ago and was briefed on US war plans last week by the US military's Central Command. But Obama held off on approving those plans as diplomats pushed ahead with efforts to forge a coalition.

Two US officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Arab participation was essential for Obama as he looked to expand the American campaign of air strikes to Syria from Iraq, where the US military has already carried out 190 strikes as of Monday.

Several Arab countries have offered to join the United States in air strikes against Islamic State targets, a senior US official told reporters on September 14.

But the United States has so far refused to detail which nations have given private assurances to Washington that they would join in air strikes in Syria, part of a broader strategy against the Islamic State that includes training and arming moderate Syrian opposition fighters.

US ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power said in television interviews over the weekend that other nations were willing to join air strikes in Syria.

"I will make you a prediction," Power said on ABC. "We will not do the air strikes alone if the president decides to do the air strikes."

Several Arab states have powerful air forces, including Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates. Saudi Arabia, for example, has also already agreed to host US training of Syrian opposition fighters.

But many Gulf Arab states have been reluctant to be seen aggressively joining the US campaign in Iraq and Syria, fearing in some cases reprisals by extremists or forces loyal to the Syrian government.

The White House last week declined to "telegraph" when strikes might occur or what preconditions stood in the way.

Obama will give a speech at the UN general assembly on Wednesday to make the case again for world action against Islamic State.

He will also chair a meeting with global leaders to develop a strategy for preventing foreign fighters who have sworn allegiance to Islamic State from returning to their home countries to launch attacks against civilians.

While Americans support air strikes, there is little appetite for a long campaign against the group, a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed. Still, U.S. officials suggest any campaign against the group in Syria will take years.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=US strikes in Syria,Barack Obama,Arab

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Turkey's President Recep Tayyib Erdogan indicates Islamic State prisoners swap

NEW YORK: Turkish President Recep Tayyib Erdogan has indicated that his country may have traded Islamic State group prisoners it held captive in exchange for 49 Turkish hostages held by the militants.

Asked about it in New York on Monday, Erdogan said "such things may be possible". He said Israel released 1,500 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for one Israeli hostage.

The hostages were returned to Turkey on Saturday after more than three months in the hands of the Islamic State group. The hostages were seized in Mosul, Iraq, when militants overran the city.

Turkish government officials have not revealed how they managed to secure the release of the captives. Erdogan denied paying a ransom but has been vague on whether there was a prisoner swap.

Erdogan spoke at the council of foreign relations in New York.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Recep Tayyib Erdogan,Islamic State prisoners

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

India to seek re-election to UNHRC next month

UNITED NATIONS: India will seek re-election to the UN's main human rights body for a second consecutive term in a vote to be held next month.

India is currently a member of the 47-nation UN Human Rights Council and its term ends on December 31, 2014.

It is seeking re-election to the UN body for the period of 2015-17 and the elections will be held in October during the ongoing 69th session of the UN General Assembly, according to the Indian mission to the UN here.

India will compete in the Asia group in which four seats will be up for election.

The other countries in the Asia group that will be candidates in the election are Bangladesh, Qatar, Thailand and Indonesia.

"The support of member states for India's candidature in the human rights council elections would be greatly appreciated," a note from the Indian mission said.

The council members are elected for a period of three years by the majority of members of the General Assembly through direct and secret ballot.

They have the ability to discuss all thematic human rights issues and situations that require its attention throughout the year.

Last year, the General Assembly had elected 14 countries, including China, Saudi Arabia and Russia to serve on the council.

According to the council website, the General Assembly takes into account the candidate states' contribution to the promotion and protection of human rights, as well as their voluntary pledges and commitments in this regard.

While members of the council serve for a period of three years, they are not eligible for immediate re-election after serving two consecutive terms.

The council's membership is based on equitable geographical distribution, with 13 seats each for African and Asia-Pacific states, eight seats for Latin American and Caribbean states, seven for Western European and other states and six for Eastern European states.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=UN Human Rights Council,India to seek re-election to UNHRC next month

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Israel shoots down Syria warplane on Golan Heights: Army radio

JERUSALEM: Israel shot down a Syrian fighter jet on Tuesday as it attempted to fly over the ceasefire line into the Israeli-occupied sector of the Golan Heights, army radio reported.

"This Syrian aircraft, apparently a MiG-21 (fighter jet), which was approaching the Israeli side of the Golan, was shot down by a surface-to-air Patriot missile," the radio said.

The wreckage of the aircraft landed on the Syrian-controlled side of the strategic plateau, it added.

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pope says religion can't justify violence

Written By Unknown on Senin, 22 September 2014 | 17.34

TIRANA: Pope Francis warned during a visit to Albania on Sunday that religion can never be used to justify violence, making apparent reference to the bloodshed wreaked by Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria.

The 77-year-old pontiff said majority-Muslim Albania was an "inspiring example" of religious harmony, as hundreds of thousands thronged the streets of the capital Tirana to greet him.

In a speech to leaders of Albania's religious communities -- including Muslim, Orthodox Bektashi, Jewish and Protestant — Francis took aim at extremists he accused of perverting religion for their own ends.

"No one must use the name of God to commit violence," the spiritual leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics said at the Catholic University. "To kill in the name of God is a grave sacrilege. To discriminate in the name of God is inhuman."

In an earlier speech to government officials he also praised the peaceful coexistence of Albania's Catholics, Orthodox Christians and Muslims, labelling it "a precious gift to the country".

He said it was especially important "in these times where an authentic religious spirit is being perverted and where religious differences are being distorted".

The remarks were widely seen as a reference to Nigeria's Boko Haram militants as well as the Islamic State group, which espouses a radical and brutal interpretation of Islam to pursue a dream of reviving a caliphate in Syria and Iraq.

"Let no one consider themselves to be the 'armour' of God while planning and carrying out acts of violence and oppression," the pontiff told officials at the presidential palace in Tirana.

Local authorities stepped up security after warnings from Iraq that the IS jihadists could be planning an attack on the pope, although the Holy See downplayed such concerns.

The pontiff's trip to Albania came at a sensitive time, during turmoil in the Middle East and rising religious intolerance in Europe.

Yellow-and-white Vatican flags flew alongside Albanian ones in Tirana's main streets while vast portraits of Catholic priests and nuns persecuted under Communism — when Albania became the world's first atheist state -- were strung across roads.

Some believers waved welcome banners while others chanted: "Papa Francesco! Papa Francesco!"

While celebrating mass at the central Mother Teresa square under light rain, the pope honoured those who suffered under former communist dictator Enver Hoxha, who ruled from 1945 to 1985. Under his rule, scores of priests and imams were executed or persecuted while many churches and mosques were razed.

"Albania was a land of martyrs," Francis told the crowd of up to 300,000.

Nearly 2,000 Orthodox and Catholic churches were destroyed or transformed into cinemas, theatres and dance halls under Hoxha, according to Francis, who earlier said the successful rebirth of the Catholic faith after such persecution made Albania a place where "I felt like I should go".

On the way back to the Vatican City after the trip, the pope told journalists that he had picked Albania as the first European country to visit because he "wanted to send a message, a signal to Europe".

Although he did not spell out the message, he stressed the peaceful coexistence of people with different faiths in Albania.

The revival of Catholicism in the country is due in part to the popularity of Mother Teresa, an ethnic Albanian born in neighbouring Macedonia.

Yet only about 15 percent of the population is Catholic, with Muslims in the majority with 56 percent, and the Orthodox making up 11 percent.

The Argentine pontiff travelled in the same open-topped vehicle he uses in Saint Peter's Square and stopped on several occasions to shake hands with believers or to take children in his arms.

Hysen Doli, an 85-year-old Muslim who had come to the square with 10 members of his family, told AFP: "We belong to another religion but have come here out of respect to get the pope's blessing."

Francis concluded his packed 11-hour visit with a visit to orphans in a social centre near the Albanian capital.

The Holy See hopes Albania -- with one of the youngest populations in Europe -- will be a source of converts in a largely secular continent.

Despite some speculation about a possible IS attack, the visit, secured by unprecedented security measures, ended without incident.

Some Vatican-watchers feared Francis had made himself a target by speaking out against the Islamic State organisation.

The Vatican has voiced unusual support for US air strikes in Iraq to defend persecuted Christians there.

Albania last month began sending weapons and ammunition to Kurdish forces fighting IS militants in Iraq, and security sources in the country have dismissed concern that home-grown militants might be planning an attack.

It is the second papal visit to Albania in modern times. Pope John Paul II travelled there the year after the collapse of its communist regime in 1992.

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More

Two people killed in series of blasts in China's Xinjiang region

BEIJING: Two people were killed and "many" injured by multiple explosions in China's Xinjiang, the local government said on Monday.

The blasts struck at least three locations in Luntai County in the region's south on Sunday, including a shopping area, the Xinjiang government's Tianshan web portal said.

The report did not say what caused the explosions or give a precise number of injured.

Clashes between locals and security forces in Xinjiang — located in China's far west and home to the mostly-Muslim Uighur minority — as well as attacks targeting civilians have killed more than 200 people in the past year.

Beijing blames the violence on "terrorist" groups seeking independence for the region, while rights groups say that cultural and religious oppression of Uighurs has fuelled resentment.

The attacks have grown in scale and sophistication over the last year and have spread outside the region.

Among the most shocking were a May assault on a market in the regional capital Urumqi, where more than 30 people were killed, and a deadly rampage by knife-wielding assailants at a train station at Kunming in China's southwest in March, which left 29 dead.

China launched a crackdown in the region following the Urumqi attack, detaining hundreds of people described as suspected terrorists.

Earlier this month three people who appeared to be Uighur were sentenced to death and another to life in prison for the Kunming knife attack.

Authorities in Xinjiang tightly control religious gatherings and are carrying out a campaign against Islamic veils and beards.

"China's policies have led people to resist fiercely in order to maintain their dignity," Dilxat Raxit, a spokesman for the World Uyghur Congress exile group said in a statement in response to the explosions.

Last week China put Ilham Tohti, a Uighur academic who was an outspoken critic of China's policies in the region, on trial for separatism.

A court in Urumqi is due to deliver its verdict in the case on Tuesday, his lawyers said, in a move critics say could add to tensions.

The explosions came as China's supreme court on Sunday distributed new regulations on prosecutions for terrorist cases.

"Making and showing banners and other material of religious extremism will be criminalised," the state-run Xinhua news agency said in a summary of the regulations.

The court also said that the use of insults such as "religious traitor" and "heretic", if serious, may lead to criminal conviction, it said.

Xinjiang, a resource-rich region which abuts Central Asia, is home to about 10 million Uighurs, who mostly follow Sunni Islam.

Many complain of economic inequality and discrimination. Beijing regularly accuses what it says are exiled Uighur separatist groups such as the East Turkestan Islamic Movement and the Turkestan Islamic Party as being behind attacks.

But overseas experts doubt the strength of the groups and their links to global terrorism, with some arguing China exaggerates the threat to justify tough security measures in Xinjiang.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=Uighur,China's Xinjiang region

Stay updated on the go with The Times of India's mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.


17.34 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger