Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Arrests made over India bus assault as sisters lauded for bashing culprits

Video posted online shows the two young women fending off three men on crowded bus in Haryana state

Pakistan struggles to cope with growing internal refugee crisis

Violence has displaced more than half a million people from Khyber to Peshawar, where funding and aid are scarce

The female faces of Hyderabad tech companies

Although men still dominate the field in India, women are catching up

Kabul police chief resigns after spate of attacks

Afghanistan's capital has seen eight deadly suicide attacks in the last 16 days

Monday, December 1, 2014

‘Progress made' as Iran nuclear talks deadline extended


Latest update : 2014-11-24

US Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian President Hassan Rohani said that progress had been made in the latest round of Iran nuclear talks, which were extended after diplomats in Vienna failed to reach a comprehensive deal by Monday’s deadline.

Speaking to reporters, Kerry said that “substantial progress” had been made towards reaching a final deal during the most recent round of talks but that negotiations would remain tough in the coming months.
“If we can [get a deal] sooner, we want to do it sooner,” Kerry said. “These talks are not going to get easier just because we extend them. They’re tough. They’ve been tough. And they’re going to stay tough.”
Kerry said that although some obstacles remained, now was not the time to walk away from negotiations with Iran.
Iranian President Hassan Rohani echoed Kerry’s comments, according to Iranian state television.
“During the talks in Vienna many gaps were narrowed, and our positions with the other side got closer,” he was quoted as saying.
Twelve-year dispute
Earlier in the day, British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond announced that diplomats had failed to reach an agreement in the latest round of negotiations by a Monday deadline, adding that talks had been extended until June 30, 2015. Others set the deadline for July 1, 2015.
Iran and six powers – the US, China, Russia, Britain, France and Germany – have been engaged in intense talks, the second round this year, to resolve a 12-year dispute over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
The group reached an interim deal, called the Joint Plan of Action (JPOA), in Geneva a year ago, under which Tehran halted higher level uranium enrichment in exchange for a limited easing of sanctions, including access to some frozen oil revenues abroad.
The six world powers want Iran to scale back its nuclear programme in return for the lifting of sanctions. Tehran says it is not seeking nuclear weapons, but wants to produce atomic energy.
The Vienna talks, which are due to resume next month, aimed for a deal that could transform the Middle East, opening the door to ending economic sanctions on Iran and to start bringing a nation of 76 million people in from the cold after decades of hostility with the West.
Iran’s regional foes Israel and Saudi Arabia have been closely monitoring the talks, with the regional Sunni power and nuclear-armed Israel nervous about the security implications of the talks. Israel refuses to confirm or deny it has nuclear weapons, but is widely presumed to possess them.
Key sticking points
The main sticking points in the talks have been the scope of Iran's enrichment programme, the pace of lifting sanctions that have crippled Iran's economy and the duration of any deal.
So far, Western officials said Tehran has refused to budge on its demands to continue to operate most of its enrichment centrifuges currently in operation. Tehran blames the West for the deadlock, accusing it of making excessive demands on the Islamic Republic.
It became increasingly clear during a week of intensive negotiations between the top US and Iranian diplomats that what officials close to the talks had been predicting privately for weeks is proving to be correct: a final deal remains too far off to hammer out by the parties' self-imposed deadline.
Several Western officials have questioned the value of extending the talks again, saying there is little reason to expect the Iranians will show the flexibility needed to end the impasse in the weeks and months ahead. They have also questioned the Iranian leadership's desire to compromise.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP, REUTERS)
Date created : 2014-11-24

Officials: Afghan president to fire leaders in volatile provinces

News of shakeup among Afghan civilian, military leaders follows another suicide bombing that killed nine people
Facing an intensified Taliban insurgency, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani plans to fire senior civilian and military leaders in the country's most volatile provinces to reinvigorate the fight against insurgents, officials told The Associated Press.
The news came on the heels of a suicide bombing Monday at a crowded funeral that left two policemen and seven civilians dead. 
With Afghan security forces suffering high casualties in the run-up to the official Dec. 31 end of the U.S. and NATO combat mission, the newly elected president is eager to chart a new course. But the question remains what impact the firings will ultimately have in a war-torn country mired in corruption and riven by complex ethnic rivalries.
Ghani plans to replace officials in the northern provinces of Kunduz and Baghdis, Ghazni and Nangahar provinces in the east bordering Pakistan and Helmand in the south, presidential spokesman Nazifullah Salarzai told the AP.
"Senior government officials will be replaced," Salarzai said.
The provincial sweep will roll out over the next two to three months and will begin soon, he said.
Areas of all five provinces have been under Taliban control for years, and security forces have suffered record-high casualties as they come under regular attack by insurgents. 
The attacks put pressure on Ghani's new administration, which earlier this month ordered a top-to-bottom review of the country's military and security strategy. The review, which officials say will examine everything from battlefield strategy to the rules of engagement for Afghan security forces, is expected to be completed within six months.
Meanwhile one major resignation came Sunday when Kabul Police Chief Gen. Mohammad Zahir stepped down following a string of attacks in the capital over three days that killed four foreigners — including an employee of the British embassy — and several Afghan civilians. On Monday, however, police spokesman Obidullah, who goes by one name like many Afghans, said that the Interior Ministry rejected Zahir's resignation.
Taliban insurgents have stepped up attacks across Afghanistan in the run-up to the official end of the U.S. and NATO combat mission on Dec. 31, raising concerns about whether local security forces will be able to protect the country as foreign troops shift to a supporting role.
Taj Mohammed Taqwa, chief of the Burka district in the Baghlan province north of Kabul, said that Monday's suicide bomber appeared to be targeting police and local officials, including him, who were among some 1,000 people attending the funeral.
Afghanistan faces a looming challenge as U.S. forces will be reduced to 9,800 by the end of this year, a figure expected to be cut in half by the end of 2015 before a planned complete withdrawal at the end of 2016.
Ghani left Monday for Brussels, where he will meet with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and the foreign ministers of NATO countries. He later will travel to London for a crucial conference to showcase his administration's first efforts to reform the country.
But Ghani's security push also may have had an unintended consequence. Moderate members of the Taliban that Ghani himself hoped to negotiate with may have been sidelined because of it, political analyst Wahid Mozhda said.
"Those we call the moderate Taliban have lost that hope," Mozhda said. "More extremist leaders have taken over and believe that war is their only option."
Al Jazeera and The Associated Press

Hundreds march in New Delhi for gay pride in Modi's India

The march was the first since the country reinstated a ban on gay sex
Hundreds of people danced, sang and cheered in a gay pride parade in New Delhi on Sunday, the first since the country's top court reinstated a ban on gay sex in the world's largest democracy.
Multi-coloured balloons, masquerade masks and wigs, a huge rainbow flag and a St. Bernard dog ushered in the seventh Delhi Queer Pride parade, with many shaking their hips to drum beats.
Participants chanting "Azaadi" (freedom) and shouting slogans such as "I'm gay, that's OK" carried banners and placards demanding their right to love.
"We are making a statement that we exist. We are not a minuscule minority. Deal with it," said Mohnish Kabir Malhotra, 27, a publicist and one of the organizers of this year's event.
In December, India's Supreme Court threw out a 2009 ruling by a lower court that had decriminalized gay sex, saying only parliament could repeal Section 377 of India's penal code which bans sex against the order of nature.
The British colonial-era law is widely interpreted to mean homosexual sex, and can be punished with up to 10 years in jail. Many choose to hide their sexuality for fear of discrimination.
Some participants said they had little faith that Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government would revoke Section 377, despite having a majority in the lower house of parliament.
Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is a right-wing nationalist outfit perceived to be more conservative than the previous Congress-led government.
Modi has not publicly commented on the issue of homosexuality, although his colleague Rajnath Singh had called gay sex "unnatural" in the wake of the December court ruling. Some BJP politicians such as Arun Jaitley have said that gay sex should be decriminalized.
Al Jazeera and Reuters