Thursday, March 25, 2010

N Korea vows 'nuclear strikes' in latest threat




SEOUL: North Korea's military warned South Korea and the United States on Friday of ``unprecedented nuclear strikes'' as it expressed anger over a report the two countries plan to prepare for possible instability in the country, a scenario it dismissed as a ``pipe dream.''

``Those who seek to bring down the system in the (North), whether they play a main role or a passive role, will fall victim to the unprecedented nuclear strikes of the invincible army,'' North Korea's military said in comments carried by the official Korean news agency.

The North Korean statement Friday specifically referred to the March 19 newspaper report. A spokeswoman said the South Korean Defense Ministry had no information.

FM Qureshi, Biden hold one-on-one meeting




WASHINGTON: US Vice President Joe Biden, saluting courage of Pakistani army and people’s nerve in combating war on terrorism, said Pakistani people and army have put up excellent show in stamping out terrorism within last two years, Geo news reported.

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and US VP Joe Biden held one-on-one meeting here in Washington on Thursday.

During the meeting, US VP, lauding Pakistan’s role in terror war, assured Pakistan of US’s all-out support and cooperation in further extending war to counter insurgency.

Earlier, FM Qureshi met with US National Security Adviser General James Jones.

The meeting was also attended by Pakistani envoy to United States Hussain Haqqani, Federal Defence Minister Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar and Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Pervaiz Kayani.

Later, Qureshi and US VP Biden held one-on-one meeting, which lasted for 30 minutes.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

UN body visits Karsaz blasts place in Karachi




KARACHI: A UN investigation team, probing into the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, arrived late here and visited the Karasaz place where several blasts hit Benazir caravan when she returned home,

Strict security measures were adopted on the occasion with heavy contingents of police and rangers’ personnel deployed at Karsaz suicide blast place.

Senior officials of Karachi police assisted UN body in collecting information and evidences related to incident, sources said.

The UN team also recreated the crime scene and was brief on various aspects of incident by police officers.

Two-way traffic on Karsaz road was cornered on service road during investigation, witnesses said.

Asthma relief in Pakistan salt mine






KHEWRA: A centuries-old salt mine in Pakistan is offering experimental asthma therapy, attracting patients from all over the world.

Khewra, billed as the world's second largest salt mine, has for centuries extracted the crucial mineral for export and has become a tourist attraction complete with a salt mosque and an electric train.

Now, the mine is cashing in on salt therapy, already a draw in the salt mines of eastern Europe and a synthetic clinic in Britain.

Clinics claim that asthma patients and sufferers of other respiratory illnesses benefit from inhaling antibacterial salt particles in a sterile environment, helping loosen mucus and clear the lung passages.

"We don't use any medicine, because the asthmatic allergy patients recover through the air, so we provide them an environment in which their breathing can improve," said Akhlaq Bukhari, head doctor at the Khewra clinic.

Although there have been few clinical studies, salt caves are seen by some as a therapeutic alternative to drugs and there are natural and synthetic salt caves springing up all over the world.

While other clinics offer treatment for bronchitis, cystic fibrosis, and even ear infections, Shah says the Khewra clinic only treats patients whose asthma is triggered by allergies.

"I have come here all the way from Canada. I could not recover there through medicine, but I am feeling better since my arrival here," said Naeem Shamsher, a civil engineer from Canada.

Shamsher had tried medicine doled out by doctors back home but felt little relief and struggled to walk far without becoming breathless, so relatives in Pakistan suggested he visit the Khewra Mines.

"Now I can run and even play soccer just after spending three days in the mine," said Shamsher, who says he feels 60 percent better after the treatment.

The mine, located 160 kilometres (100 miles) south of Pakistan's capital Islamabad, was discovered in 320 BC by Alexander's troops and first developed by British colonial rulers in 1872, mine officials say.

Located deep underground in the mine, the asthma clinic resembles an upmarket guesthouse, with 12 beds covered in white sheets and red blankets in six independent cabins separated with salt bricks and softly lit by lamps.

There is a reception area decorated with salt lamps and a lounge complete with a fountain, sofas and a television set.

The walls and roof of the clinic are made from pure salt and a fan helps maintain the temperature and humidity, creating the so-called "micro-climate" that offers patients relief, Shah says.

A 10-day course at the Khewra Mines salt therapy centre costs 5,300 rupees (62 dollars), with 11 hours a day spent in the caves while nights are spent in a nearby hospital.

Since opening in 2007, the clinic has treated about 500 patients. Shah claims that 60 percent of patients experience some relief from their symptoms and says patients have come from as far as Britain and Saudi Arabia.

But Shahid Abbas, a doctor who runs the private Allergy and Asthma Centre in Islamabad, said that although an asthma or allergy sufferer may get temporary relief, there is no quick-fix cure.

"There is no scientific proof that a person can permanently get rid of asthma by breathing in a salt mine or in a particular environment," he said.

Khaled Sajjad Khokhar, managing director of the Pakistan Mineral Development Corporation, a government body which owns the mine, says they will assess the success of the Khewra clinic before approving its expansion to 100 beds.

But some patients are returning, happy to get even temporary relief.

"This hospital is a blessing, it gave me a second life. I never had problems breathing after spending 10 days over there in 2007," said Pakistani patient Adnan Khan, on his second visit to the clinic.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Hundreds of Palestinians riot in Jerusalem




JERUSALEM: Hundreds of Palestinians clashed with police in several east Jerusalem neighbourhoods early Tuesday amid heightened religious and political tension in the Holy City.

Police fired rubber bullets and stun grenades at protesters in the Shuafat refugee camp who hurled rocks at security forces. The Palestinians dispersed after army troops moved in. Similar clashes broke out in other parts of east Jerusalem. Police said they deployed 3,000 policemen across the city.

The reopening of a landmark synagogue in Jerusalem's walled Old City on Monday further fuelled tension following several weeks of clashes.

Sri Lanka's ex-army chief faces court martial




COLOMBO: Sri Lanka's ex-army chief faced a court martial Tuesday that could see the opposition leader jailed for up to five years if convicted on charges supporters say are politically motivated.

A three-member panel of two-star generals has been named to try Sarath Fonseka, who is charged making irregular procurements and engaging in politics while he was still the commander of the army.

"The members of the court martial assembled at the navy headquarters for the hearing," an official source told foreign news agency. "General Fonseka's lawyers are also there."

Fonseka faces two charges relating to politics and military procurement rules and they will be heard separately by the same panel, which will sit behind closed doors, a defence source said.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Fighting in Somalia kills 23 civilians





MOGADISHU: Intense fighting between Somali government forces and Islamist insurgents on Wednesday left 23 civilians dead in Mogadishu,

Shebab militants, linked to al-Qaeda, used heavy artillery to target government positions in the north of the capital.

Government troops counter-attacked later in the day, buttressed by armoured vehicles from African Union peacekeepers.

Both sides claimed victory.

"We have recovered the bodies of 17 other civilians as well as 65 wounded," the head of Mogadishu's ambulance service told media.

Three other civilians were killed in crossfire, witnesses said, while officials earlier said they had collected three bodies that morning.

Among the casualties, nine were killed by an exploding shell, witness Muhidin Adan Idris said.

"There were pieces of human flesh everywhere. It was horrible," he said.

Belligerent factions in Mogadishu have been locked in a tense stand-off for weeks, amid expectations of an imminent offensive by the government and its African Union backers to wrest Somalia back from the insurgency.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Four dead in Mansehra NGO office attack




MANSEHRA: At least four people including two women were killed when some armed men attacked the office of an NGO in Mansehra,

According to police sources, the armed men attacked with firearms and blasted the office of a US-based NGO, killing at least four people in Mansehra tehsil of Aughi.

According to media reports, the exchange of fire between police and militants is currently underway at the site of NGO Vision World, which was razed to ground in the blast.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Powerful car bomb kills 12 in Lahore





LAHORE: A car bomb slammed into Pakistani offices used to interrogate suspected militants on Monday, destroying the building and killing 12 people in the latest attack to strike Lahore.

At least 66 including 13 women were wounded with people trapped under rubble of collapsed buildings when a car packed with up to 600 kilograms (1,300 pounds) of explosives struck an investigations unit in city’s posh area.

There were scenes of panic as volunteers and rescue workers dug with bare hands under the collapsed two-storey building and a severely damaged seminary founded by Dr Israr Ahmed, searching for survivors and fearing the death toll could rise.

"It was around 8:15 (0315 GMT) when I heard a deafening blast which shook my house," said Nasim-ur-Rehman who lives about 1.5 kilometres (one mile) from the scene of attack in the upmarket neighbourhood Model Town.

"When I rushed out I saw thick smoke billowing out," he added.

The blast gouged a huge crater out of the ground, crumpled roofs and littered the streets with tree branches. Bulldozers and other heavy-lifting machinery worked to clear away the mounds of rubble, witnesses said.

Flying glass wounded passers-by. A woman and her daughter were among the dead in the city of eight million, and civilians who were wounded were mostly office workers or parents returning after dropping their children at school.

"It was a police special investigation unit that was targeted. A vehicle packed with explosives hit the building. The building was used to interrogate suspected terrorists," Lahore city police chief Pervez Rathore said.

Khusro Pervez, the top administration official in Lahore, said 11 people were killed and 61 wounded.

"I fear the death toll may rise. We believe there are still people trapped under the rubble," he said.

Police said 30 to 50 people were in the building, used by police and intelligence agents, at the time of attack, which blew out a crater three metres (10 feet) deep and four to six metres wide.

"The blast also severely damaged a nearby religious school and houses. All schools have been closed in the area in order to avoid further losses or to prevent the possibility of another attack," said Rathore.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik blamed "hired killers who want to destabilise Pakistan" and pointed the finger at the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) faction holed up in the northwest of the country along the border with Afghanistan.

"In almost every blast there has been TTP involvement and they themselves have also claimed responsibility for attacks," he added.

"The ammunition and weapons are coming from Afghanistan," he alleged.

Ambulances raced to the area and the city's Jinnah Hospital declared a state of emergency as casualties were rushed into wards and rescue workers used seismic sensors to search for survivors under the rubble.

Hospitals in the city are working under emergency condition following the mishap. At least 29 injured are in critical state.

The deceased include Constable Munawwar Hasan, Constable Abdul Aziz, Amjad, Shahid, Muhammed Naveed, Habibullah, Aziz Ahmed, Arif, 40-year Ghazala and 5-year Rahila.

The relief work is underway with heavy machinery and at least 6 people have been excavated from under the ruble.

The blast also severely hit ten to 12 nearby houses, as the affected building is situated in the residential area.

Israel OKs new settlement in West Bank: minister






JERUSALEM: Israel has given the green light for the building of 112 new homes in a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank despite a partial moratorium on such construction, a minister said on Monday.

The houses will be built in the Beitar Ilit settlement near Bethlehem, Environment Minister Gilad Erdan told public radio.

Israel's continued expansion of settlements is one of the biggest obstacles to the resumption of peace talks with the Palestinians, now suspended for more than a year.

The new project came to light the day after the Palestinians agreed to indirect peace talks with Israel but warned that the US-mediated negotiations could collapse if Israel continued expanding settlements.

The Palestinians insist they will only return to direct negotiations if Israel agrees to a complete freeze on settlement construction in the occupied West Bank, including east Jerusalem.

Israel announced a 10-month moratorium on new building permits for settler homes in the occupied West Bank in late November but it excludes east Jerusalem, public buildings and works already under way.

The international community considers all Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian land illegal.