Thursday, April 21, 2016

US drone strikes outnumber warplane attacks for first time in Afghanistan

Drones are firing more weapons than conventional warplanes for the first time inAfghanistan and the ratio is rising, previously unreported US Air Force data for 2015 show, underlining how reliant the military has become on unmanned aircraft.
The data show strikes by unmanned aircraft accounted for 56% of weapons deployed by the air force in Afghanistan in 2015, up dramatically from 5% in 2011.
In the first quarter of 2016, about 300 weapons were deployed by the air force, with drones accounting for 61%.
The trend may give clues to the US military’s strategy as it considers withdrawing more troops from the country, while at the same time shoring up local forces who have struggled to stem a worsening Taliban insurgency.
In 2015, drones released about 530 bombs and missiles in Afghanistan, half the number in 2014 when weapons dropped by unmanned aircraft peaked.
The 2015 total is, however, almost double the number of bombs and missiles released by drones at the height of the “surge”, when the Nato mission expanded to well over 100,000 troops, mainly Americans, after 2009.
President Barack Obama said in 2013 the Afghan drawdown after 2014 and progress against al-Qaida would “reduce the need for unmanned strikes”, amid concerns from human rights groups and some foreign governments about civilian casualties.
On one level, that has played out; the number of missiles and bombs dropped by drones in Afghanistan actually fell in 2015, largely because the US-led Nato mission ceased combat operations at the end of 2014 and is now a fraction of the size.
Yet as the force has shrunk, it has leant on unmanned aircraft more than ever, the Air Force data reveals, with drone strikes accounting for at least 61% of weapons deployed in the first quarter of this year.
“In recent months it’s definitely flowed more,” Lieutenant Colonel Michael Navicky, commander of the 62nd Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron, said of the tempo of both drone strikes and surveillance operations.
“We’ve seen increased weapons deployment in the past few months, and the demand is insatiable,” he said from a US air base in the southern city of Kandahar.
The longer-term shift towards drones has gone largely unnoticed amid the large conventional air campaign.
The role of drones is likely to form a key part of a review underway by US General John Nicholson, head of Nato troops in Afghanistan, as he prepares to report to Washington in June on how many soldiers he thinks should remain.
Nicholson declined to discuss details of the review in a recent interview with Reuters.
The current plan is to roughly halve the US presence to 5,500 troops by 2017, most involved in counter-terrorism operations. The training and advising mission would be largely wound down.
Like much of the US military machine in Afghanistan, the drone operation had been winding down in line with plans for further withdrawals, Navicky said.
At the end of 2015, however, military commanders “hit the brakes and reversed course” on the drone reduction, and have since ordered more airstrikes, especially against Islamic State militants who pose a threat in the east, he said.
The Taliban have also forged closer links with al-Qaida, Nicholson said, potentially blurring the lines between what is a legitimate target and what is not, while the Taliban themselves have made gains in the north and south.
The data cover strikes conducted by the Air Force, which handles the majority of Afghan air operations.
The CIA, US Army, and special operations units also have smaller fleets of drones and other aircraft, so the air force data may reflect a redistribution among different organisations, although they tend to coordinate closely on missions.
Drone missions are secretive and have been widely criticised in Afghanistan and Pakistan, where locals and officials have blamed them for unnecessary loss of civilian life.
In the latest instance, residents in Paktika province complained that a series of airstrikes in April, which locals said were from drones, killed nearly 20 civilians. The US military said it was still looking into the incident.
Activists and investigators have focused on covert air operations in places such as Pakistan and Yemen, leaving Afghanistan as “really a blind spot for drone analysis”, said Sarah Kreps, a professor at Cornell University who studies unmanned aircraft.
“The strikes in Afghanistan are one of the most under-reported aspects of drones.”
In a time of troop limits imposed by leaders in Washington, the drone squadron is especially useful as only about 200 of nearly 1,000 personnel who support and operate the aircraft are deployed to Afghanistan, Navicky said.
“Remotely piloted aircraft mean more flexibility with fewer people and aircraft,” he said. “Because they are unmanned, sometimes you can accept more risk. All that is always going to be valuable.”

Iran: US Supreme Court ruling on Beirut blast a 'theft'

Iran has rejected a ruling by the US Supreme Court that clears the way for families of victims of the 1983 Marine barracks bombing in Beirut and other attacks to collect nearly $2bn in frozen Iranian funds.
The state IRNA news agency quoted the spokesman of Iran's foreign ministry, Hossein Jaberi Ansari, as saying on Thursday that "such a verdict is a theft of the assets and properties of the Islamic Republic of Iran."
From the United Nations, Ansari spoke to IRNA and said Wednesday's ruling is "tantamount to a ridicule of justice and law".


The ruling directly affects relatives of victims, including families of the 241 US service members who died in the Beirut bombing.
The lawsuit was brought by more than 1,000 Americans who have waged a long legal battle seeking compensation for attacks they say Iran orchestrated.
The plaintiffs accused Iran of providing material support to Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Shia political and military group responsible for the truck bomb attack at the Marine compound in Beirut.
Iran denies any links to the attack.
The plaintiffs also sought compensation related to other attacks including the 1996 Khobar Towers truck bombing in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 US service members.
After lobbying by the families, the Obama administration, the US Senate, and a legal group representing leaders of the House of Representatives all filed court papers backing the families.
In 2012 the US Congress passed a law stating that the frozen funds should go towards satisfying a $2.65bn judgment won by the families against Iran in US federal court in 2007.

Banks have no right to seek information about my assets abroad: Mallya

Kingfisher Airlines Chairman Vijay Mallya claimed privilege in the Supreme Court from divulging details of his overseas assets to his debtor banks, saying a Non-Resident Indian (NRI) like him is not obliged to disclose riches abroad even in “Indian income tax returns”.
In a 41-page affidavit filed in the Supreme Court on Thursday, Mr. Mallya said his lenders have no right to seek information about his assets abroad as well as the assets of his children, who are U.S. citizens, and estranged wife, who is also an NRI.
Moreover, he argued that these assets were never considered by the banks while granting loans or restructuring the loans of Kingfisher Airlines and there was no reason to grant the banks any access to them.
He however revealed that the net estimated current value of the overseas assets of himself, his wife and children aggregate to $114.571 million or around Rs.780 crore. He said specific details of these assets would be handed over to the court on April 26, the next date of hearing, in a sealed envelope.
Mr. Mallya was responding to an order passed by a Bench of Justices Kurian Joseph and Rohinton Nariman to disclose assets in India and abroad of himself and his wife and children. In the order passed on April 7, the Bench had also wanted to know when the businessman, believed to be abroad, would return and be present in the Supreme Court to kick-off negotiations to settle the carrier's debts running up to Rs. 9,000 crore.
Supreme Court versus Centre
But Mr. Mallya played the victim card, pitting the government against the apex court.
Denying that he had absconded, Mallya said the government's suspension of his passport without even hearing him first and the subsequent issuance of non-bailable warrant against him has in effect made void the Supreme Court's efforts to pave the way for his return to India and work out a settlement with his lenders.
“The very basis of the April 7 order has been obliterated by the Ministry of External Affairs by suspending Vijay Mallya's passport by its letter dated April 15, 2016. This was followed by the Enforcement Directorate obtaining a non-bailable warrant against Vijay Mallya on April 18, 2016 on a demonstrably false case against him,” the affidavit said.
Even as probe agencies are looking into whether loan amounts advanced were siphoned off, Mr. Mallya vehemently denied that he used any of his loans to “amass properties in the names of family members or relatives or friends with any intention to defeat the process of recovery of alleged dues by the banks”.
Mr. Mallya said the recent actions of the Centre only confirmed his apprehensions that he was “needlessly persecuted and wrongly prosecuted”.
He said the Centre was in “unseemly haste” to initiate “coercive proceedings” against him as a consequence of an “unfair and unfortunate media trial” against him. He said Kingfisher Airlines was a genuine commercial and business failure, “nothing more and nothing less”.
In fact, he contended that the running the business of a private airline is full of pitfalls and Kingfisher Airlines crashed due to reasons beyond the control of the management.
Kingfisher versus Air India
Denying he owes money over Rs. 9000 crore in debts, Mr. Mallya contrasted the persecution of his carrier by the banks to the lenient approach they adopted when it came to the case of the State-owned Air India.
“The banks have resorted to blatant discrimination against Kingfisher Airlines. A large number of banks, including public sector banks (the lead bank being State Bank of India) have provided a restructured facility in an amount in excess of Rs. 40,000 crore to Air India,” Mr. Mallya said.
He pointed out that despite Air India's account being one of the largest non-performing assets (bad loan) in the aviation sector, lender to Air India have chosen not to resort to any recovery measures and continue their financial facilities to it.
Demonstrating efforts by his other businesses to revive the airline's health, he said UB Group and its associates had infused large sums of money aggregating to over Rs. 6,100 crore into Kingfisher Airlines, all of which has been lost or is incapable or recovery. He said the liabilities of the airline, including the dues of the banks, amount to Rs. 15,730.86 crore as on March 31, 2013.
He alleged that the banks coerced him to sign a personal guarantee, failing which they had threatened to not re-structure his debts. He reiterated how every single one of his one-time settlement proposals have been rejected by the banks.
He even alleged how the service tax authorities, after seizing six aircrafts and two helicopters of Kingfisher Airlines, then valued at Rs. 497 crore, refused to permit the company to maintain them.

Severe drought likely in next two months: Minister

Minister for Law and Parliamentary Affairs and Higher Education T.B. Jayachandra today said the State is likely to face severe drought situation in the next two months.
He told reporters on the premises of Siddaganga Institute of Technology here that the situation has arisen due to lack of pre- and post-monsoon rains. The months of May and June will be challenging but the State government will take all necessary measures to address drought.
He said the government is expecting Rs.1,500 crore from the Centre in connection with the crop loss due to lack of post-monsoon rains. The Central team which visited drought-hit areas of the State has submitted its report to the Union government.

Chotoo, gang members surrender unconditionally to army: ISPR


Chotoo, gang members surrender unconditionally to army: ISPR



LAHORE: Leader of the infamous Chotoo gang, Ghulam Rasool, along with 13 gang members has “surrendered unconditionally to the army”, the military spokesperson announced on Wednesday.

Addressing a press briefing regarding the ongoing operation in Rajanpur area, Lt Gen Asim Bajwa said “the military has successfully completed operation Zarb-i-Ahan”.

He also confirmed that the 24 policemen taken hostage by the Chotoo gang have been rescued.

“The army will not vacate this area until all the miscreant elements are neutralised,” Bajwa maintained.

The military media-wing chief said that security forces will eliminate this ‘no-go area’ and any other such area across the country.


Earlier it was reported that members of the Chotoo gang surrendered to the Army and at least 170 gangsters were taken into custody by the armed forces.

Rajanpur District Police Officer Ghulam Mubashir Maikin had told Dawn that the return of hostages to their families was "in process".


A senior police officer earlier told Dawn that the gang had been using the hostages as a human shield to protect their women and children.

A search operation is also being conducted to secure Rajanpur's Kacha area.

Ghulam Rasool alias Chotoo
Ghulam Rasool alias Chotoo
Police launched the Rajanpur offensive after a go-ahead from the interior ministry. After seven police officials were killed and 24 others taken hostage, the Army announced on April 16 that it would be taking over the operation.

Director General Inter-Services Public Relations Lt-Gen Asim Bajwa had said a cordon was being reinforced and police and Rangers had already been deployed to participate in the operation under the Army.


The Chotoo gang, led by Ghulam Rasool, alias Chotoo, was given a deadline by the Army to surrender on Monday, failing which, the Army said it would begin a full-scale operation in the area.

A source in the police department said that Chotoo had demanded safe passage for himself, his family and some loyal accomplices to proceed to Dubai in return of safe release of the captive policemen, Dawn earlier reported.

The rise of Chotoo and his gang
Ghulam Rasool alias Chotoo, the ringleader of the Chotoo gang worked as a security guard for MPA Atif Mazari for three to five years in Rojhan, according to police officials.

He also worked for the Punjab police as an informer till 2007 and used to inform police about gangs involved in robberies and kidnapping for ransom in Rajanpur and Muzaffargarh districts.

According to locals and police, Chotoo belongs to Bakrani clan of Mazari tribe of Rojhan area. He later developed differences with police over unknown reasons and established his own gang to carry out criminal activities.

Some small and prominent gangs operating in Rojhan, Dera Ghazi Khan and adjoining districts of Sindh and Balochistan also joined the Chotoo gang. They include Bilal alias Bilali Jaakha, Baba Long, Gumani Gopang, Sindhi group, Bosans of Muzaffargrah and Khalid Kajlani.

The riverine area of Kachi Jamal in Rajanpur, a stronghold of the Chotoo gang, has a population of more than 10,000 people living in small villages. They depend mostly on rearing animals and farming. Chotoo is known for helping the locals and never carried out any criminal activity in the area. But he made it a no-go area for police who found it almost impossible to get information about him from the locals.

The biggest operation carried out by Rajanpur and Rahimyar Khan police against the Chotoo gang was in 2010 which continued for three months, but to no avail. The last operation was conducted in 2013.

During an operation in Kotla Mughlan area of Rajanpur some years ago, police, however, succeeded in recovering a doctor from the gang and killing a gangster.

Read more on the Chotoo gang here.

PM determined to clear his children in Panama controversy

PM determined to clear his children in Panama controversy

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is determined to have his three children cleared of accusations of money laundering and tax evasion in the aftermath of Panama Papers leak, quarters close to the PM’s Office told Dawn.

The prime minister seems in no mood to waste any time, whether it is through the judicial commission he had announced earlier this month, or some other forum: the government intends to complete the task sooner rather than later.

If an agreement cannot be reached with opposition parties over the formation of a judicial commission, the option of a joint parliamentary committee, as suggested by the PPP leadership, could also be utilised, aides of the prime minister and ruling party office-bearers told Dawn in background discussions.

According to the media wing of PM office, the prime minister spent the day in the family wing of the PM’s Office after his return from London overnight.

One of the federal government’s legal advisers told Dawn, “We have done our homework and the next move will be made after the PM is briefed — in a day or two — about talks with leaders of parliamentary parties that Senator Ishaq Dar has held over the past few days.”

Govt busy laying groundwork for judicial commission; may proceed even if opposition not on board
When pressed to explain the nature of this homework, the adviser said they were working to develop the question that will be laid before the judicial commission, that whether some violation of the law has taken place by those who have allegedly set up offshore companies.

For the adviser, there were definite jurisdictional issues for such a commission, because no international banking channels or financial institutions would submit to a local commission.

Talking to Dawn, a PML-N lawmaker involved in the discussion over the government’s possible response to the opposition parties’ demand, said, “The government is also brainstorming the option of formally asking for the CJP’s input if the commission can be formed under his aegis or a serving judge of the Supreme Court.”

To a question, he said that in case of a continued disagreement with the opposition, there was every likelihood that the government would go ahead with the commission.

Whatever level and forum is employed, the lawmaker added, one thing was certain: the matter of the Panama Papers will be addressed legally so that it cannot create future problems for the PM’s three children.

Hassan Nawaz Sharif, Hussain Nawaz Sharif and Maryam Nawaz Sharif, according to the leaks, are the legal beneficiaries of the offshore companies set up in British Virgin Islands.

Talking to Dawn, human rights activist Asma Jahangir said that it was more of a political than a legal issue, and hence should be handled politically, without destabilising the country.

“Everybody knows that since the Ziaul Haq years, corruption has been politicised and everybody who could, including the Sharifs, have made money and laundered it in tax heavens,” said Ms Jahangir.

Those who are raising questions about how the money was transferred to the UK or other destinations in Europe, she said, “one can see streets after streets in the UK and Spain, where people offer services to transfer money through informal channels.”

Ms Jahangir said that since it was a moral issue, politicians in the west had resigned and others had presented their tax details.

Unfortunately, in Pakistan, this has not happened, she said. “Suppose, if the present government goes home, we will have another similar lot in their place, until and unless people start hating corrupt politicians,” she said.

100 Passengers Onboard Gujarat-Bound Train Robbed In Uttar Pradesh

100 Passengers Onboard Gujarat-Bound Train Robbed In Uttar Pradesh

LUCKNOW:  Over 100 passengers travelling on the Sultanpur Express were robbed of their money and other valuables by a gang of robbers in Rampur early morning today, 290 km from here, police said.

Over a dozen heavily-armed robbers barged into the general coaches of the train moving from Sultanpur to Ahmedabad in Gujarat and looted the passengers at gunpoint before and escaped, an official said.

Government Railway Police teams in Moradabad and other stations en route have been put on alert, an official told news agency IANS.

India Generates 18.5 Lakh Tonnes E-Waste, Mumbai Worst Offender: Study

India Generates 18.5 Lakh Tonnes E-Waste, Mumbai Worst Offender: Study

BENGALURU:  India generates about 18.5 lakh metric tonnes (MT) of electronic waste every year, with Mumbai and Delhi-NCR accounting for the biggest chunk, a study says.

Also, the figure is likely to reach up to 30 lakh MT per year by 2018, growing at the rate of 25 per cent, it said.

Mumbai, with 1,20,000 MT has topped the list in generating e-waste followed by Delhi-NCR producing 98,000 MT and Bengaluru producing 92,000 MT, the joint-study by Assocham and Frost and Sullivan said.

Besides, Chennai with 67,000 MT of e-waste, Kolkata 55,000 MT, Ahemdabad 36,000 MT, Hyderabad 32,000 MT and Pune 26,000 MT have made to the list, it said.

Just 2.5 per cent of India's total e-waste gets recycled due to poor infrastructure, legislation and framework, the study said that this has lead to a waste of diminishing natural resources, irreparable damage of environment and health of the people working in industry, the study said.

Over 95 per cent of e-waste generated is managed by the unorganised sector and scrap dealers in this market, dismantle the disposed products instead of recycling it, it added.

In India, about 5 lakhs child labourers between the age group of 10-14 are observed to be engaged in various e-waste (electronic waste) activities, without adequate protection and safeguards in various yards and recycling workshops, Assocham Secretary General D S Rawat noted.

"It is a matter of concern that most of our e-waste is handled in the most unscientific way by scrap dealers, who may be inadvertently handling radioactive material, as was brought to light in the past in Mayapuri (west Delhi) case," he added.

Further, the study strongly advocates legislation to prevent a child's entry into this kind of labour which includes collection, segregation and distribution.

E-waste comprises computer equipment (about 70 per cent), followed by telecommunication equipment (12), electrical equipment (8) and medical equipment (7).

Other equipment, including household e-crap account for the remaining, it said.

The government, public and private industries contribute over 70 per cent of e-waste, while 15 per cent comes from households, the study said.

Televisions, refrigerators and washing machines make up the majority of e-waste generated, while computers make up to 20 per cent and mobile phones 2 per cent.

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Heat Wave Kills More Than 160 in Southern, Eastern India

Weeks of sweltering temperatures have caused more than 160 deaths in southern and eastern India, officials said Tuesday, warning that any relief from monsoon rains was still likely weeks away.

Most of the heat-wave victims were laborers and farmers in the states of Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Orissa, though temperatures elsewhere in India have also hit 45 degrees Celsius (113 Fahrenheit).

Schools were closed last week in Orissa until at least April 26. Officials in Andhra Pradesh were giving out free water and buttermilk to help people stay hydrated. And everywhere, people have been urged to stay indoors during the hottest hours of the day.

Y.K. Reddy, a state meteorological official, said the temperatures were about 4-5 degrees Celsius (8-10 degrees Fahrenheit) hotter than normal for April. "Normally such high temperatures are recorded in the month of May," he said.

Police have reported 55 heat-related deaths in Orissa and at least 45 in Andhra Pradesh. Sixty-six were reported in Telangana, though the state's deputy chief minister, Mohammed Mahmood Ali, said the causes of death were still being verified.

Meanwhile, a 12-year-old girl in the drought-stricken western state of Maharashtra died from the heat while fetching water, Indian broadcaster NDTV said Wednesday.

Making matters worse, India is grappling with severe water shortages and drought affecting more than 300 million people — a quarter of the country's population. Thousands of distressed farmers have committed suicide, tens of thousands of farm animals have died, and crops have perished, with rivers, lakes and ponds drying up and groundwater tables sinking.

Scrambling to deal with the crisis, officials have sent tankers of water to parched farming communities in Maharashtra, banning people from drilling deep wells and ordering farmers to shift away from growing water-guzzling sugarcane crops.

The heat wave in India coincides with record-high temperatures across the globe. On Tuesday, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said March's average global temperature of 12.7 degrees Celsius (54.9 Fahrenheit) was not only the hottest March, but continues a record 11-month streak that started last May.

For southern India, this is the second consecutive year marred by a deadly heat wave. Last year, around 2,500 people died in scorching temperatures before the monsoon rains began in the Indian subcontinent in early June.

But while heat waves are relatively common during Indian summers, authorities have done little to ensure water security or prepare urban populations for the risks. This year, Orissa's capital of Bhubaneshwar and Maharashtra's city of Nagpur joined Gujarat's Ahmedabad in launching a heat wave program to educate people on how to stay cool, provide shelters and train medical workers on dealing with heat-related illnesses like sun stroke and dehydration.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/heat-wave-kills-160-southern-eastern-india-38532692

India Will Seek Return of Huge Diamond From Britain

NEW DELHI — The Indian government has begun a campaign for the return of a historic 105.6-carat diamond that was either a gift to Queen Victoria from the maharajah of Punjab in 1849 or stolen by the British, depending on some widely divergent perspectives.

After some indecision, the Indian Culture Ministry said on Tuesday evening that it would make “all possible efforts” to arrange the return of the diamond, the Koh-i-Noor, now residing in the Tower of London, where it is a centerpiece of the British royal family’s crown jewels.

As with the Elgin marbles, the Parthenon sculptures and other artifacts that Greece has long tried to reclaim from Britain, the ownership of the diamond has been a contentious issue for decades.

For many Indians, the Koh-i-Noor — or Mountain of Light — is a symbol of colonial subjugation and three centuries of exploitation that began with the East India Company in the early 17th century, culminated in the absorption of India as a colony after a major uprising in 1857 and ended with the independence, and partition, of India in 1947.

Whether it was a gift or not, Britain says the diamond came into its possession after the defeat of Punjab in the Anglo-Sikh wars of the 1840s and was moved to Britain in 1850. As recently as 2010, Prime Minister David Cameron said the diamond would “stay put.”

But critics in India say the British version of the story has been sanitized.

The diamond originated in the Golconda mines, in what is now the state of Andhra Pradesh. It passed through the hands of Mughal, Persian and Afghan rulers before landing with Maharajah Ranjit Singh, the ruler of the Sikh kingdom in Punjab, who died in 1839.

His death led to a struggle and, in 1843, the installation of his 5-year-old son. In the power vacuum, the East India Company rapidly extended its control over the once-powerful kingdom, annexing it in 1849, after its victory in the Second Anglo-Sikh War, said Anita Anand, a journalist and a co-author of a forthcoming book on the diamond. The jewel was then surrendered, she said, as part of an agreement ending the war and signed by the boy king.

“It was a cynical exploitation, at a time of flux in the Sikh kingdom,” Ms. Anand said by telephone.

The controversy may even extend beyond India. In Pakistan, a lawyer filed a petition in the Lahore High Court in February arguing that the diamond belonged to territory that is now part of Pakistan, and that the Pakistani government should seek its return.

The issue was raised this week by a private group that was seeking a court order requiring the Indian government to request the diamond’s return. The Indian solicitor general, Ranjit Kumar, at first argued against the suit, saying that the gem was a gift and that the government had no reason to seek its return. This ignited a firestorm on social media, and did not appear to sit well with some of the judges.

“We have not colonized any other country and taken out their artifacts,” Chief Justice T. S. Thakur said, according to the Kolkata newspaper The Telegraph. “What are you worried about?” After that, the government seems to have had a change of heart.

Some Indian commentators said the issue was a political distraction. “Let it remain where it is, a shining example of our selflessness,” Pritish Nandy, a politician and writer, wrote on Twitter on Monday, calling the claim “not worth pursuing.”

Shekhar Gupta, a columnist for the newspaper The Business Standard, wrote on Twitter that the case was “a reminder to higher courts to be selective with what deserves attention.”

Most analysts say there is little chance that Britain will part with the Koh-i-Noor, which is embedded in a crown, crafted in 1937, that was most recently used by the Queen Mother, who died in 2002 at 101. Mr. Cameron said during a 2010 visit to India that if one request was yielded to, “you suddenly find the British Museum would be empty.”

Nevertheless, the Indian Culture Ministry said it hoped for an “amicable outcome whereby India gets back a valued piece of art.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/21/world/asia/india-britain-koh-i-noor-diamond.html?_r=0

Can Afghanistan Survive September?

 Tuesday morning, April 19, the Taliban carried out the first deadly attack of their spring offensive, killing over a dozen people and wounding more than 320 when a truck full of explosives – followed by gunshots – detonated near Kabul’s 10th Directorate, which is the headquarters for security personnel tasked with protecting VIP guests. According to multiple reports, it was the deadliest attack in the city since 2011. With a series of attacks across the country promised with the announced beginning of the spring offensive on April 12, Afghanistan will continue to defend against the Taliban and, as a result, faces an uncertain future for country-wide peace and security.

As a result, Afghanistan’s prospects for political stability are gloomy. The National Unity Government (NUG) struggles to govern as it fails to deliver the promises of its founding political agreement on time. On April 9, in the midst of worries about a shock in September when the NUG agreement would expire, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry visited Kabul to shore up support for the NUG, rejecting the notion that it is valid only for two years.

While marking a definite victory against the Taliban is now harder than ever, the NUG should invest its political capital in bringing long-overdue electoral reforms and constitutional amendments to win Afghan hearts. That requires bold decisions.


Guatemalan President Offers Trump 'Cheap Labor' To Build…
Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales has a laugh at the expense of Donald Trump.

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Few among Afghanistan’s political class and even fewer among the Afghan public are optimistic regarding the NUG’s governance. The Asia Foundation’s 2015 annual survey showed that almost 60 percent of Afghans think their country is heading in the wrong direction. Almost 70 percent reported fear for their personal safety, the highest in recent decades.

Ghani maintains better relations with Washington than his predecessor, President Hamid Karzai, likely bolstering the opinion of him in Western capitals.

However, despite the support he enjoys from the international community, his government is struggling on multiple fronts. Insecurity is on the rise and endemic corruption continues to hinder efficient governance. Economic growth is sluggish with a growth rate of about 1.9 percent in 2015.

Afghans are leaving the country. They are the second largest group by nationality to have fled to Europe — surpassed only by people fleeing Syria. 180,000 Afghans left the country in 2015.

While the NUG inherited many of these problems from President Karzai’s administration, it has nevertheless done little to improve the situation. Two key agencies dealing with security — the Ministry of Defense and the National Directorate of Security, Afghanistan’s intelligence service — are still led by caretakers since the parliament rejected two consecutive nominees for minister of defense and the head of NDS resigned recently after disagreements with the President. Meanwhile, the government has been incapable of controlling even its own supporters and representatives as a confrontation on March 22 between the First Vice President, Abdul Rashid Dostum, and a northern provincial governor, Atta Mohammad Noor, showed. The challenges facing the NUG and Afghanistan will come to a head in September when the deadline for complete implementation of the NUG’s foundational document arrives.

The political agreement brokered by Secretary Kerry that formed the current coalition government should be fully implemented by September 21, implying that as an expiration date. According to the agreement, the administration should by then have reformed electoral bodies and laws, issued new electronic national IDs, held parliamentary and district council elections, and convened the constitutional assembly to amend the constitution to create a Prime Minister position to be held by current Chief Executive Officer Abdullah Abdullah.

None of that has happened.

The parliament is serving an extended term since last June through a presidential decree until elections are held on the scheduled date of October 15. Barring change, in September two pillars of the government will serve on the basis of extra-constitutional authorities.

As the September deadline approaches, political rivals are preparing to challenge the NUG. Both former friends and foes of the NUG are discontented with its performance. Anwar-ul-Haq Ahadi, a strong supporter of President Ghani and a former finance minister, formed a new opposition party last year after claiming the government has disappointed him. Atta Mohammad Noor, the northern strongman and the backbone of Abdullah’s political campaign, told the New York Times recently that both leaders of the NUG have made a “mockery of the government” with their poor performances. Some, like Omar Daudzai, a former Afghan interior minister under President Karzai, are preparing to run in an early election while former Afghan President Hamid Karzai, who has spoken out against the incumbent administration’s positions on several issues, including the peace process, advocates for a traditional Loya Jirga to form an interim government.

None of the preconditions for replacing the current NUG with a fully constitutional government will be met by September. It is time for Afghanistan to make practical choices to survive the coming crisis.

The NUG is Afghanistan’s most reliable option for relative stability until 2019. Though formed through a political agreement, both parties to the government represent millions of Afghan voters who dared to walk to ballot boxes in the face of Taliban threats. No administration born out of a traditional Loya Jirga will have as strong a public base for legitimacy. Similarly, until electoral reforms are undertaken to ensure free and fair elections, an early vote will only deepen the crisis and undermine stability.

Now that the agreement is valid for three more years, the government should move decisively on electoral reforms and amending the constitution to resolve the source of the current crisis. Parliamentary and district council elections should be held as scheduled this October and for that election to be transparent, new national ID cards should be issued.

The constitutional amendment process should not only focus on incorporating a premiership position to replace the temporary CEO and share authorities of the president, but more broadly on correcting the deficiencies of the current constitution. The constitution, for example, recognizes seven types of elections from presidential to municipal councils and requires all of them to be held separately, a condition that is unfeasible given Afghanistan’s lack of resources and the insecurity it faces. The current constitution also fails to provide support for the growth and operation of political parties. With concerns over their ethnic and religious bases and President Karzai’s preference, less attention was paid to this in 2004 and afterwards. A more decentralized structure limiting the authorities of the president should be incorporated by directly electing governors and granting more concrete supervisory roles to the provincial and district councils to boost public accountability and responsive policy-making.

These reforms cannot happen only by the goodwill of the NUG leaders unless political pressure is exerted from the international community, but more importantly from the political camp Abdullah represents. The reforms were his team’s bargain to join the government, but he has not been able to influence the process. It now might be time for his camp to replace him with a stronger political figure. Nowhere in the text of the NUG agreement does it say the CEO and his deputies will necessarily be Abdullah Abdullah and his Vice nominees. Moreover, the agreement allows disputes regarding the ‘interpretation and implementation’ of it to be solved by both parties. Thus, it allows Abdullah’s camp to convince him to resign and instead introduce a new figure who can push the president for reforms.

However, equally important is the commitment of the president to the process. While his camp might not have as strong an interest as Abdullah’s in electoral reforms, amending the constitution and the division of power between central and local authorities was part of his electoral mandate. For that, he should remove from his inner circle those who try to ‘sabotage the process,’ including his National Security Advisor, Hanif Atmar, who has monopolized decision making at the Palace.

This solution lacks a strong constitutional and legal basis in the short term, but the time has passed where such a solution could be achieved before September. Taking these steps will help Afghanistan ensure that it is able to prevent such constitutional and electoral crises in the future and will boost the image of the NUG and optimism among Afghans.
http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/04/19/can-afghanistan-survive-september/


Police Officers Guarding Polio Workers Killed in Karachi, Pakistan

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Gunmen killed seven police officers guarding polio workers in twin attacks in Karachi, Pakistan Wednesday, according to officials.

Image: Karachi attack
Security personnel gather around a police van after the attack by gunmen in Karachi, Pakistan, on Wednesday. ASIF HASSAN / AFP - Getty Images
"These were trained assassins," said Feroz Shah, the city's deputy chief of police.

He said three of the officers, who were all wearing bulletproof jackets, died at the scene after being shot at close range in the head and neck. Four others died on the way to the hospital, he added.

None of the health workers were killed in the attacks, in the working-class suburb of Orangi Town, Senior Superintendent of Police Arif Meher said.

"We are treating this as a hit targeting police," he added.

Pakistan is one of the last countries where polio, which causes paralysis and death, is still endemic. Dozens of people have been assassinated in a drive by militants to prevent vaccinations. Health teams in many parts of the country travel with armed guards.

Related: Bomb Blast Kills 14 at Polio Center in Pakistan

The killings were claimed by a Taliban splinter group of the Pakistani Taliban, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan Jamaatul Ahrar (TTP-JA).

"Both the police and polio workers are on our hit list as we consider polio vaccination against the Islamic sharia and will therefore kill them wherever we find them," the group's spokesman, Ehsanullah Ehsan, told NBC News on the telephone.

TTP-JA also claimed responsibility for a suicide attack at children park in Lahore on that killed at least 73 people on March 27.

The Taliban and some clerics have come out against the vaccinations, accusing polio workers of being spies for the U.S. and claiming they are part of a Western plot to sterilize children.

Attacks on vaccination teams grew after Pakistani doctor Shakil Afridi was arrested on charges of running a fake hepatitis vaccination campaign in Abbottabad as a cover for a CIA-backed effort to obtain DNA samples from a home where Osama bin Laden was later killed by U.S. Navy SEALs.

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/police-officers-guarding-polio-workers-killed-karachi-pakistan-n559041

Death toll rises after Taliban attack in Kabul

(CNN)The death toll from an explosion in the Afghan capital rose to 64 people Wednesday, authorities said, a day after militants targeted civilians in Kabul.
The blast rocked Kabul on Tuesday morning -- the apparent work of Taliban militants targeting a security team that protects government VIPs, a police official said.
    In addition to the deaths, more than 300 people were wounded, Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi said
    Despite the target, most of the victims were civilians -- including women and children, according to Sediqi.
    A suicide bomber detonated a vehicle filled with explosives in a private parking lot behind the compound, destroying the back wall of a building, according to Sediqi.
    A second attacker then entered the building. That attacker died in a gun battle with security forces less than two hours later, Sediqi said.
    The Afghan Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack.
    "First a suicide bomber blew up his explosives-laden lorry on the gate of the department and then other armed attackers went in and started shooting on the rest of the enemies," the statement said.
    Witnesses said they continued to hear gunfire after the explosion, which occurred in a busy part of Kabul near the Afghan Defense Ministry and presidential palace.
    Afghan journalist Esmatullah Kohsar tweeted photos of what he said were windows at his office shattered by the blast. He said he could hear gunfire following the explosion.
    Afghan women's rights activist Wazhma Frogh said on Twitter she was arriving at work near the site of the attack when the blast happened.
    "There are schools in the explosion area," she tweeted. "Parents running to the doors to take their children. Sad day in Kabul."
    The attack comes a week after the Taliban declared the start of a spring offensive, designed to "employ all means at our disposal to bog the enemy down in a war of attrition that lowers the morale of the foreign invaders and their internal armed militias."
    The commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan, Gen. John W. Nicholson, said such attacks are a sign of Taliban weakness.
    "Today's attack shows the insurgents are unable to meet Afghan forces on the battlefield and must resort to these terrorist attacks," he said.
    Afghan President Mohammad Ashraf Ghani condemned the attack and said in a tweet it "clearly shows the enemy's defeat in face-to-face battle" with government forces.
    A record number of civilians died or were wounded in hostilities in Afghanistan last year, the United Nations said in February. More than 3,500 civilians died and nearly 7,500 were wounded in 2015, it said.
    An additional 5,500 Afghan security force members died last year, according to U.S. estimates.
    The U.N. Security Council condemned the attack and said it remained concerned by threats posed by the Taliban, ISIS and al Qaeda.

    Indian drought 'affecting 330 million people' after two weak monsoons

    About 330 million people are affected by drought in India, the government has said, as the country reels from severe water shortages and desperately poor farmers suffer crop losses.
    A senior government lawyer, PS Narasimha, told the supreme court that a quarter of the country’s population, spread across 10 states, had been hit by drought after two consecutive years of weak monsoons.
    Narasimha said the government had released funds to affected regions where a crippling shortage of rainfall had forced the rationing of drinking water to some communities.
    As summer hits India, reports of families and farmers in remote villages walking long distances to find water after their wells dried up have dominated local media.
    Narasimha gave the figures on Tuesday after an NGO filed a petition asking the top court to order Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to step up relief to the hardest-hit areas.
    High temperatures have hit parts of eastern, central and southern India in recent weeks, with scores of deaths reported from heatstroke.
    Every year hundreds of people, mainly the poor, die at the height of summer in India, but temperatures have risen earlier than normal, increasing concerns about this year’s toll.
    “We had never recorded such high temperatures in these months in more than 100 years,” said PK Mohapatra, the special relief commissioner in Orissa state.
    India’s meteorological department on Wednesday issued a heatwave warning for Orissa and two other states, with temperatures forecast to top 45C in the coming days.
    All schools in Orissa are closed until next week because of the heat, while there have been protests further north in the West Bengal city of Howrah over water shortages.
    “Several hundred residents of the city of Howrah on Monday blocked an arterial road to protest inadequate supply of water,” said Baren Das, an official from Howrah’s municipal corporation.
    Politicians have come under fire for water wastage as they travel to drought-affected regions, with footage on Tuesday of water tankers in Karnataka state spraying a dusty road before the chief minister’s arrival sparking outrage.
    A court this month ordered the Indian Premier League to move some cricket matches from drought-hit western Maharashtra state over concerns that water would be wasted in maintaining the grounds.
    Officials have forecast an above-average monsoon this year, offering hope for struggling farmers who rely heavily on the annual rains. India’s agriculture sector employs about 60% of the population.

    EU’s Mogherini admits ‘challenges’ with Iran nuclear deal

    The European Union's top diplomat during a visit to Tehran Saturday admitted difficulties in implementing Iran's recent nuclear deal with world powers, but maintained that the agreement was on track.

    Federica Mogherini's comments, in a joint press conference with Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, underscored tension in Tehran over the accord, which has been in force for three months.
    Under the deal, all nuclear-related sanctions were lifted but Iranian officials have accused the West, particularly the United States, of failing to honour its side of the bargain.
    Among their grievances is the contention that US government officials are scaring off European banks from investing in Iran for fear of falling foul of regulations that saw massive fines imposed in recent years.
    Mogherini, on her first trip to Iran since the nuclear deal came into force in January, said the diplomatic gains of the agreement must now be turned into "benefits in Iranians' daily lives."
    But Zarif echoed remarks from other Iranian officials about the deal not producing discernible benefits.
    "It is necessary that the other side's cooperation, especially the United States, is made good in practice, not only on paper," Zarif said, alluding to Seif's comments.
    "We warned the US and we will put some pressure on them, to pave the way for cooperation between non-US banks and the Islamic Republic of Iran."
    Mogherini sought to play down concern, saying that three months of "challenges" on the deal's implementation was nothing compared to the 12 years of diplomacy it had taken to produce the nuclear agreement.
    "We obviously have not finished the work on implementing the JCPOA," Mogherini said, referring to the nuclear deal by its official name, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, describing it as "an ongoing task".
    'Doing all that we can'
    Put to her by a reporter that the banking issues were obstacles, Mogherini countered: "There are challenges in implementation, it is true."
    She cited 50 pages of guidelines that have been issued to European financial institutions that detail how business can now be conducted with Iran.
    "We are doing all that we can to reassure our financial and banking system that all the new information on the new system is provided."
    Mogherini pointed to other evidence of cooperation, saying the EU has agreed to support Iran's bid to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) for example, and Iran will take part on a joint dialogue on human rights.
    But Mogherini also raised with Zarif the EU's concern about recent ballistic missile tests by the elite Revolutionary Guards, which a UN panel said breached Security Council resolutions.
    She said the EU did not regard the missile tests as a breach of the nuclear deal.
    "We see this as a worrying step. Any step that could pass different messages (other than cooperation) is not welcome."
    Mogherini, who personally helped negotiate the nuclear deal between Iran and Britain, China, France, Russia and the US plus Germany, was accompanied by other top EU officials.
    The six powers led by the United States agreed in July last year to lift sanctions that had locked down much of the Iran's economy for years in exchange for limits on Tehran's nuclear programme.
    The move allowed Iran to resume a higher level of oil exports when the deal was implemented, as well as opening up more trade opportunities.
    But with the US still maintaining some sanctions, including on what it says is Iran's sponsorship of designated terror organisations, Iran's access to global finance remains limited.
    Mogherini said the conflicts in Syria and Yemen, where the West has been looking for Iran's cooperation with peace efforts, as well as Iran-EU cooperation on energy production and technology were also discussed.

    Pakistan polio: Seven killed in anti-vaccination attack

    Seven Pakistani policemen, three of whom were guarding polio workers, have been killed in Karachi, officials say.
    Eight gunmen on motorcycles fired at a group of three police guards and later at a van containing four officers, officials told the Pakistan Tribune.
    Islamist militants oppose vaccination, saying it is a Western conspiracy to sterilise Pakistani children.
    In January, 15 people were killed in a bomb attack on a vaccination centre in the south-western city of Quetta.

    Reward

    Polio workers called off the vaccination drive in Karachi following the attack, despite the home minister's order to continue, the Tribune reported.
    According to Pakistan's Dawn newspaper, police have offered a reward of 5 million rupees (£33,000) for information on the killers, and 2 million rupees (£13,000) compensation to the victims' families.
    Talking to reporters at the scene, Sindh police Inspector General AD Khawaja said polio drops would be "administered to our children at all costs" and said security for polio teams would be increased.
    Pakistan is one of only two countries, along with Afghanistan, where polio remains endemic. Militants have repeatedly targeted vaccination programmes, killing nearly 80 people since December 2012.
    The country recorded more than 300 polio cases in 2014 - its highest number since 1999.
    Most of the new infections were in north-west Pakistan, where militants regularly target roving health teams, and health officials blamed the rise in cases on several deadly attacks on police workers that year.
    The number of cases fell to just 52 in 2015, largely because vaccination teams could reach areas that were previously off limits because of militancy.

    Tuesday, April 19, 2016

    India tests 1st nuclear-propelled ballistic missile submarine

    India’s first submarine capable of firing nuclear ballistic missiles, the INS Arihant, is undergoing sea acceptance trials and will be commissioned after their completion, the Navy has announced.
    "INS Arihant is now undergoing sea acceptance trails as it had already passed several deep sea diving drills. The submarine will be commissioned after completing all the sea trials," said H.C.S. Bisht, Vice Admiral of the Indian Navy.
    The 6,000-ton vessel is the first nuclear-powered submarine that can launch nuclear-capable missiles manufactured by India – the first nation to announce it has accomplished this feat after the five original nuclear powers. It was built at the Ship Building Centre in Visakhapatnam, one of 13 major ports in India, with some help from Russian specialists and launched in 2009.
    The submarine was expected to be commissioned after finishing a round of sea trials in February and participating in the International Fleet Review the same month. On February 23, it was declared ready for operations.
    Additional trials were launched in March. The Arihant reportedly fired a dummy K-4 missile on March 7 and later on March 31 test-fired a live K-4 missile from a depth of 20 meters underwater.
    The K-4 is an indigenously developed Indian intermediate-range nuclear-capable submarine-launched ballistic missile and the designated weapon for Arihant-classs submarines. INS Arihant, the lead ship of the class, can reportedly carry four K-4 missiles or 12 smaller short-range K-15 missiles.

    Koh-i-noor: India says it should not claim priceless diamond from UK

    The Indian government has told the Supreme Court that it should not try to reclaim the priceless Koh-i-noor diamond from Britain.
    The gemstone came into British hands in the mid-19th Century, and forms part of the Crown Jewels on display at the Tower of London.
    Ownership of the famous gem is an emotional issue for many Indians, who believe it was stolen by the British.
    But the solicitor-general said it was "neither stolen nor forcibly taken".
    Ranjit Kumar said the 105-carat diamond had been "gifted" to the East India company by the former rulers of Punjab in 1849.
    The case is being heard by the Supreme Court after an Indian NGO filed a petition asking the court to direct the Indian government to bring back the diamond.
    The court is still considering the issue, and said it did not want to dismiss the petition as it could "stand in the way" of future attempts to bring back items that once belonged to India.
    circa 1860: The Koh-i-Noor and Regent or Pitt diamonds seen from different angles.Image copyrightGetty Images
    Image captionDrawings of the Koh-i-Noor diamond dating back to circa 1860
    Mr Kumar, representing the Indian government, said he would consult with the foreign minister on the issue and frame a response within six weeks, the Times of India newspaper reported.
    Tushar Gandhi, the great-grandson of independence leader Mahatma Gandhi, said a few years ago that it should be returned as "atonement for the colonial past".
    However, successive British prime ministers have refused to do so. Most recently, David Cameron said that returning it would set an "unworkable precedent".
    "If you say yes to one, you suddenly find the British Museum would be empty," he told Indian media during a trip to the country in 2010.
    The diamond was last worn by the late Queen Mother and was displayed on her crown when her coffin lay in state after her death in 2002.