Monday, December 31, 2012

Insider attacks rise dramatically



KABUL, Afghanistan -- Violence in Afghanistan fell in 2012, but more Afghan troops and police who now shoulder most of the combat were killed, according to statistics compiled by The Associated Press.
At the same time, insider killings by uniformed Afghans against their foreign allies rose dramatically, eroding confidence between the sides at a crucial turning point in the war and when NATO troops and Afghan counterparts are in more intimate contact.
"The overall situation is improving," said a NATO spokesman, U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Lester T. Carroll. He singled out Afghan special forces as "surgically removing insurgent leaders from the battle space."

Al-Qaida carves out country for himself in mali



Deep inside caves, in remote desert bases, in the escarpments and cliff faces of northern Mali, Islamic fighters are burrowing into the earth, erecting a formidable set of defenses to protect what has essentially become al-Qaida's new country.
They have used the bulldozers, earth movers and Caterpillar machines left behind by fleeing construction crews to dig what residents and local officials describe as an elaborate network of tunnels, trenches, shafts and ramparts. In just one case, inside a cave large enough to drive trucks into, they have stored up to 100 drums of gasoline, guaranteeing their fuel supply in the face of a foreign intervention, according to experts.

Northern Mali is now the biggest territory held by al-Qaida and its allies. And as the world hesitates, delaying a military intervention, the extremists who seized control of the area earlier this year are preparing for a war they boast will be worse than the decade-old struggle in Afghanistan.
"Al-Qaida never owned Afghanistan," said former United Nations diplomat Robert Fowler, a Canadian kidnapped and held for 130 days by al-Qaida's local chapter, whose fighters now control the main cities in the north. "They do own northern Mali."
Al-Qaida's affiliate in Africa has been a shadowy presence for years in the forests and deserts of Mali, a country hobbled by poverty and a relentless cycle of hunger. In recent months, the terror syndicate and its allies have taken advantage of political instability within the country to push out of their hiding place and into the towns, taking over an enormous territory which they are using to stock arms, train forces and prepare for global jihad.
The catalyst for the Islamic fighters was a military coup nine months ago that transformed Mali from a once-stable nation to the failed state it is today. On March 21, disgruntled soldiers invaded the presidential palace. The fall of the nation's democratically elected government at the hands of junior officers destroyed the military's command-and-control structure, creating the vacuum which allowed a mix of rebel groups to move in.
With no clear instructions from their higher-ups, the humiliated soldiers left to defend those towns tore off their uniforms, piled into trucks and beat a retreat as far as Mopti, roughly in the center of Mali. They abandoned everything north of this town to the advancing rebels, handing them an area that stretches over more than 620,000 square kilometers (240,000 square miles). It's a territory larger than Texas or France — and it's almost exactly the size of Afghanistan.
Turbaned fighters now control all the major towns in the north, carrying out amputations in public squares like the Taliban did. Just as in Afghanistan, they are flogging women for not covering up. Since taking control of Timbuktu, they have destroyed seven of the 16 mausoleums listed as world heritage sites.
The area under their rule is mostly desert and sparsely populated, but analysts say that due to its size and the hostile nature of the terrain, rooting out the extremists here could prove even more difficult than it did in Afghanistan. Mali's former president has acknowledged, diplomatic cables show, that the country cannot patrol a frontier twice the length of the border between the United States and Mexico.
Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, known as AQIM, operates not just in Mali, but in a corridor along much of the northern Sahel. This 7,000-kilometer (4,300-mile) long ribbon of land runs across the widest part of Africa, and includes sections of Mauritania, Niger, Algeria, Libya, Burkina Faso and Chad.
"One could come up with a conceivable containment strategy for the Swat Valley," said Africa expert Peter Pham, an adviser to the U.S. military's African command center, referring to the region of Pakistan where the Pakistan Taliban have been based. "There's no containment strategy for the Sahel, which runs from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea."
Earlier this year, the 15 nations in West Africa, including Mali, agreed on a proposal for the military to take back the north, and sought backing from the United Nations. Earlier this month, the Security Council authorized the intervention but imposed certain conditions, including training Mali's military, which is accused of serious human rights abuses since the coup. Diplomats say the intervention will likely not happen before September of 2013.
In the meantime, the Islamists are getting ready, according to elected officials and residents in Kidal, Timbuktu and Gao, including a day laborer hired by al-Qaida's local chapter to clear rocks and debris for one of their defenses. They spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear for their safety at the hands of the Islamists, who have previously accused those who speak to reporters of espionage.
The al-Qaida affiliate, which became part of the terror network in 2006, is one of three Islamist groups in northern Mali. The others are the Movement for the Unity and Jihad in West Africa, or MUJAO, based in Gao, and Ansar Dine, based in Kidal. Analysts agree that there is considerable overlap between the groups, and that all three can be considered sympathizers, even extensions, of al-Qaida.
The Islamic fighters have stolen equipment from construction companies, including more than $11 million worth from a French company called SOGEA-SATOM, according to Elie Arama, who works with the European Development Fund. The company had been contracted to build a European Union-financed highway in the north between Timbuktu and the village of Goma Coura. An employee of SOGEA-SATOM in Bamako declined to comment.
The official from Kidal said his constituents have reported seeing Islamic fighters with construction equipment riding in convoys behind 4-by-4 trucks draped with their signature black flag. His contacts among the fighters, including friends from secondary school, have told him they have created two bases, around 200 to 300 kilometers (120 and 180 miles) north of Kidal, in the austere, rocky desert.
The first base is occupied by al-Qaida's local fighters in the hills of Teghergharte, a region the official compared to Afghanistan's Tora Bora.
"The Islamists have dug tunnels, made roads, they've brought in generators, and solar panels in order to have electricity," he said. "They live inside the rocks."
Still further north, near Boghassa, is the second base, created by fighters from Ansar Dine. They too have used seized explosives, bulldozers and sledgehammers to make passages in the hills, he said.
In addition to creating defenses, the fighters are amassing supplies, experts said. A local who was taken by Islamists into a cave in the region of Kidal described an enormous room, where several cars were parked. Along the walls, he counted up to 100 barrels of gasoline, according to the man's testimony to New York-based Human Rights Watch.
In Timbuktu, the fighters are becoming more entrenched with each passing day, warned Mayor Ousmane Halle. Earlier in the year, he said, the Islamists left his city in a hurry after France called for an imminent military intervention. They returned when the U.N. released a report arguing for a more cautious approach.
"At first you could see that they were anxious," said Halle by telephone. "The more the date is pushed back, the more reinforcements they are able to get, the more prepared they become."
In the regional capital of Gao, a young man told The Associated Press that he and several others were offered 10,000 francs a day by al-Qaida's local commanders (around $20), a rate several times the normal wage, to clear rocks and debris, and dig trenches. The youth said he saw Caterpillars and earth movers inside an Islamist camp at a former Malian military base 7 kilometers (4 miles) from Gao.
The fighters are piling mountains of sand from the ground along the dirt roads to force cars onto the pavement, where they have checkpoints everywhere, he said. In addition, they are modifying their all-terrain vehicles to mount them with arms.
"On the backs of their cars, it looks like they are mounting pipes," he said, describing a shape he thinks might be a rocket or missile launcher. "They are preparing themselves. Everyone is scared."
A university student from Gao confirmed seeing the modified cars. He said he also saw deep holes dug on the sides of the highway, possibly to give protection to fighters shooting at cars, along with cement barriers with small holes for guns.
In Gao, residents routinely see Moktar Belmoktar, the one-eyed emir of the al-Qaida-linked cell that grabbed Fowler in 2008. Belmoktar, a native Algerian, traveled to Afghanistan in the 1980s and trained in Osama bin Laden's camp in Jalalabad, according to research by the Jamestown Foundation. His lieutenant Oumar Ould Hamaha, whom Fowler identified as one of his captors, brushed off questions about the tunnels and caves but said the fighters are prepared.
"We consider this land our land. It's an Islamic territory," he said, reached by telephone in an undisclosed location. "Right now our field of operation is Mali. If they bomb us, we are going to hit back everywhere."
He added that the threat of military intervention has helped recruit new fighters, including from Western countries.
In December, two U.S. citizens from Alabama were arrested on terrorism charges, accused of planning to fly to Morocco and travel by land to Mali to wage jihad, or holy war. Two French nationals have also been detained on suspicion of trying to travel to northern Mali to join the Islamists. Hamaha himself said he spent a month in France preaching his fundamentalist version of Islam in Parisian mosques after receiving a visa for all European Union countries in 2001.
Hamaha indicated the Islamists have inherited stores of Russian-made arms from former Malian army bases, as well as from the arsenal of toppled Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, a claim that military experts have confirmed.
Those weapons include the SA-7 and SA-2 surface-to-air missiles, according to Hamaha, which can shoot down aircrafts. His claim could not be verified, but Rudolph Atallah, the former counterterrorism director for Africa in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, said it makes sense.
"Gadhafi bought everything under the sun," said Atallah, a retired U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel, who was a defense attache at the U.S. Embassy in Mali. "His weapons depots were packed with all kinds of stuff, so it's plausible that AQIM now has surface-to-air missiles."
Depending on the model, these missiles can range far enough to bring down planes used by ill-equipped African air forces, although not those used by U.S. and other Western forces, he said. There is significant disagreement in the international community on whether Western countries will carry out the planned bombardments.
The Islamists' recent advances draw on al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb's near decade of experience in Mali's northern desert, where Fowler and his fellow U.N. colleague were held captive for four months in 2008, an experience he recounts in his recent book, "A Season in Hell."
Originally from Algeria, the fighters fled across the border into Mali in 2003, after kidnapping 32 European tourists. Over the next decade, they used the country's vast northern desert to hold French, Spanish, Swiss, German, British, Austrian, Italian and Canadian hostages, raising an estimated $89 million in ransom payments, according to Stratfor, a global intelligence company.
During this time, they also established relationships with local clans, nurturing the ties that now protect them. Several commanders have taken local wives, and Hamaha, whose family is from Kidal, confirmed that Belmoktar is married to his niece.
Fowler described being driven for days by jihadists who knew Mali's featureless terrain by heart, navigating valleys of identical dunes with nothing more than the direction of the sun as their map. He saw them drive up to a thorn tree in the middle of nowhere to find barrels of diesel fuel. Elsewhere, he saw them dig a pit in the sand and bury a bag of boots, marking the spot on a GPS for future use.
In his four-month-long captivity, Fowler never saw his captors refill at a gas station, or shop in a market. Yet they never ran out of gas. And although their diet was meager, they never ran out of food, a testament to the extensive supply network which they set up and are now refining and expanding.
Among the many challenges an invading army will face is the inhospitable terrain, Fowler said, which is so hot that at times "it was difficult to draw breath." A cable published by WikiLeaks from the U.S. Embassy in Bamako described how even the Malian troops deployed in the north before the coup could only work from 4 a.m. to 10 a.m., and spent the sunlight hours in the shade of their vehicles.
Yet Fowler said he saw al-Qaida fighters chant Quranic verses under the Sahara sun for hours, just one sign of their deep, ideological commitment.
"I have never seen a more focused group of young men," said Fowler, who now lives in Ottawa, Canada. "No one is sneaking off for R&R. They have left their wives and children behind. They believe they are on their way to paradise."
___

Nuclear tests in Iran


TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iran's navy said Monday it test-fired a range of weapons during ongoing maneuvers near the Strait of Hormuz, the passageway for one-fifth of the world's oil supply.
IRNA quoted Adm. Amir Rastgari, spokesman for the exercise, as saying the Iranian-made air defense system Raad, or Thunder, was among the weapons tested, along with various torpedoes and underwater and surface-to-surface rockets as well as anti-ship missiles. The Islamic Republic said it also deployed domestically-made hovercraft during the operation.

Us woman Caitlan Coleman missing in Afghanistan with husband



The family of a pregnant American woman missing with her husband in Afghanistan have made a fresh appeal for her safe return.

Caitlan Coleman, 27, is due to give birth in January and needs urgent medical attention, her father told the Associated Press news agency.

James Coleman said she had been travelling with her Canadian husband across Central Asia.

There are fears they were abducted, but no ransom has been demanded.

No militant group has said it is holding the couple and AP says when it contacted the Taliban two months ago, a spokesman said no Taliban members were involved.

The couple last contacted their family on 8 October from what Mr Coleman described as an "unsafe" part of Afghanistan.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Afghanistan in 2013: A unified nation at stake?



This is the latest in a series of entries looking at what we can expect in 2013. Each weekday, a guest analyst will look at the key challenges facing a selected country – and what next year might hold in store.

What does 2013 have in store for Afghanistan? As NATO and U.S. forces begin leaving in the thousands, and as their combat mission ends this coming year, can the green Afghanistan National Army take up the slack? With violence now higher than in 2009 when the Obama administration’s troop escalation was decided on, can any progress be made on political reconciliation? Will President Hamid Karzai resign and hold early elections for his successor, as he has suggested? Is there any hope for a more robust economy and a semblance of good governance, as financial scandals continue to rock Kabul? How will regional powers such as Iran, Saudi Arabia, India and Russia position themselves as Afghanistan moves out of the North Atlantic sphere of influence?
The Obama administration will certainly withdraw some of the 68,000 U.S. troops currently in Afghanistan throughout 2013, though the timetable and the number to be pulled out have still not been decided. Gen. John Allen, outgoing commander of U.S. forces and of the International Security Assistance Forces in country reportedly wants to delay any further withdrawals until fall of next year. (Some 34,000 troops came out in 2012). Allen’s hand was presumably weakened in November, however, when he was reportedly investigated over inappropriate communications with Tampa socialite Jill Kelley, as part of the fallout of an FBI investigation of CIA director, David Petraeus. He will be succeeded in 2013 by another Marine, Gen. Joseph “Fighting Joe” Dunford, who spent 22 months in the Iraq War.
By summer of 2013, it is anticipated that the U.S. combat role in Afghanistan will draw to a close. By the end of 2014, only a few thousand U.S. troops will be left, and they will mainly supply close air support to the Afghanistan army when it engages in combat. Whether the some 350,000-strong Afghanistan security forces are up to the challenge of fighting the Taliban and other insurgents is a matter of great controversy. American officers in Kabul insist that the Afghanistan National Army (ANA) now takes the lead in 80 percent of operations against the enemy, up from 50 percent just last summer.  But a recent Pentagon reviewadmitted that only one of 23 ANA brigades is capable of functioning on its own, without U.S. or ISAF help. In 2012, some 300 were dying every month in battles with the Taliban and other militant groups.  The ANA has low rates of literacy (a third the rate of the general population), high rates of drug use, and high rates of desertion. It is also disproportionately drawn from the Tajik, Dari Persian-speaking minority. Only 2 percent of the troops hail from Kandahar and Helmand Provinces in the Pashtun south, the strongholds of the Taliban.
The map of Afghanistan’s provinces in the past few years has been overlain with the flags of the 49 European and other nations contributing to the ISAF mission, not counting the U.S. The 34,000 ISAF troops from NATO and other countries will begin winding down their presence in the coming year. NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen announced early in 2012, “We expect the last Afghan provinces to come under Afghan security force control by the second half of 2013,” adding, “At that point our role will begin to gradually change: from a fighting one to one more focused on formation and training.” Other ISAF contingents will just be gone.  France, which at the height of its commitment had 4,000 troops there, is pulling out by the end of 2012.  Australia’s Prime Minister Julia Gillard has announced that the 1,550 remaining Australian troops will be withdrawn in 2013. Roughly half of the 9,000 British troops will be brought home.
The drawing down of the international military presence raises questions about the long-term aid commitments of Europe in particular. European nations have pledged billions to the funding over the next few years of the Afghanistan security forces, which are far too large to be paid for by Afghanistan’s own budget. But many observers wonder whether a Europe beset by economic crises will really follow through on its pledges. Civilian aid could also decline. The Asian Development Bank is projecting a slight fall in the rate of economic growth in Afghanistan in 2013, in part because of an expectation that foreign aid will decline.
There are also serious questions about how much of the aid is spent on the purposes for which it is appropriated. Afghanistan is possibly the most corrupt nation on earth, and persistent reports suggest that millions of aid dollars are smuggled back out of the country for the purposes of private graft every year. The banking system established by the outside powers after the fall of the Taliban isunstable and subject to runs, because of embezzlement on a grand scale. Whether an economy can truly grow in the shadow of a collapsing and corrupt banking system is a question that must be asked of Afghanistan, and the bubble could burst at any moment.
Since the fall of the Taliban late in 2001, Afghanistan has only known one president, the mercurial Hamid Karzai.  That could change in 2013. Without the big foreign troop presence, holding presidential elections on schedule in fall 2014 may be a security challenge. During the last campaign, turnout was woefully light in some Pashtun-majority provinces because the Taliban and other insurgents had threatened voters with reprisals. There were also charges of ballot-tampering on behalf of election officials biased toward Karzai, placing a taint on his third and final term, which is now drawing to a close. Karzai has suggested that it might be desirable to move the presidential election up to 2013, so that the country can profit from the greater security afforded by ISAF troops. This plan suggests a certain lack of faith in Afghan security forces on the part of the president.
Ironically, the draw-down of Western forces may make it easier for warring Afghan factions to begin serious negotiations with one another over the shape of the future. The United States has reportedly given up on attempting to play a role in those talks, and is bequeathing the task of achieving a negotiated settlement to the Afghans themselves and to Pakistan. The Taliban and other insurgent groups have repeatedly said that the end of the foreign troop presence is a precondition for any serious talks. Perhaps light at the end of that tunnel will be enough to at least begin behind-the-scenes discussions. It is also possible, however, that the radicals will attempt to improve their eventual bargaining position by taking more territory from Karzai and his successor.
Another troubling possibility is that the old Mujahidin warlords may become impatient if the ANA is seen to falter in its fight against the Taliban, and may reactivate regional and tribal militias of the sort that made the country a political and security patchwork in the early 1990s Ismail Khan, the former warlord of Herat, has pledged to bring back the Mujahidin after ISAF withdraws.
Finally, Afghanistan in the aftermath of the departure of the Europeans and Americans will be an arena for regional jockeying. The Tajiks of the north have a strong relationship with India and many resent Pakistan as a patron of the Taliban. Indian aid and diplomatic clout may grow in Kabul.  The Pashtuns of the south and east are often friendly to Pakistan, which has a history of whipping up fundamentalist Islam as a vehicle for Islamabad’s influence. The eastern Herat region is an appendage of Iran, and Iran may increase its influence with the Hazara Shiites in the center of the country.  Russia, which is attempting to reassert itself in Central Asia, has a profound fear of the debilitating effects of smuggled Afghan heroin on Russian youth. While Moscow has no intention of becoming embroiled in a military adventure, it is likely to expand its covert presence and to develop regional and local allies in a bid to stop the drug trade.
The year 2013 will be a turning point for Afghanistan, as Western military power wanes, and as regional powers assert their influence. The transition to a new presidential leadership could well occur a year early, with all the uncertainties it will bring. It is questionable whether the country can afford its bloated security apparatus, and further uncertain whether that apparatus can contain Muslim fundamentalist groups who are expanding their influence in the Pashtun areas.
Corruption and bank scandals will discourage international investment and perhaps even aid donors.  The very existence of a unified Afghan state could be at stake if the country’s elite and foreign patrons make the wrong policy choices.

Sinopec Group Sets Up New Oilfield Service Unit in Beijing



State-owned China Petrochemical Corp., also known as Sinopec Group, has set up a new oilfield service company in Beijing as it seeks to tap the rise in Chinese and overseas exploration and production activities.
Exploration and production companies hire oilfield service providers to perform specialized tasks required to extract oil and gas from the ground. China, the world's largest energy consumer, is increasingly demanding more such services to extract resources from domestic and overseas projects.
The new company, Sinopec Oilfield Service Corp., is providing oilfield services not only in China, but also in international markets such as North America, Middle East, Africa, Central Asia and South East Asia. This will help its parent gain a further foothold in the oilfield services market, strengthening its competitive edge in China as well as overseas.
At present, China's oilfield services market is dominated by the three largest oil giants including Sinopec, China National Petroleum Corp. and China National Offshore Oil Corp., which account for over 80% of the market share, with the remaining divided between 1,200 domestic oilfield services providers including Anton Oilfield Services Group (3337.HK).
Sinopec Oilfield Service Corp. was set up in Beijing with total fixed assets of 76.6 billion yuan (US$12.2 billion) through the restructuring of Sinopec Group's oilfield engineering firms, Sinopec Group said in a statement Friday.
The new unit is estimated to receive CNY95 billion of revenue this year. It has already chalked up 480 contracts in 43 countries worth US$14.2 billion.
Sinopec Group has been ramping up efforts to expand overseas ever since Chairman Fu Chengyu joined the refining giant last year after leaving Cnooc Ltd. (CEO), a company with a history of making aggressive moves outside China.

North Korea readying new nuclear test?

http://video.foxnews.com/v/2061015653001/north-korea-readying-new-nuclear-test

Experts study new satellite photos

Sinopec Group Sets Up New Oilfield Service Unit in Beijing



State-owned China Petrochemical Corp., also known as Sinopec Group, has set up a new oilfield service company in Beijing as it seeks to tap the rise in Chinese and overseas exploration and production activities.
Exploration and production companies hire oilfield service providers to perform specialized tasks required to extract oil and gas from the ground. China, the world's largest energy consumer, is increasingly demanding more such services to extract resources from domestic and overseas projects.
The new company, Sinopec Oilfield Service Corp., is providing oilfield services not only in China, but also in international markets such as North America, Middle East, Africa, Central Asia and South East Asia. This will help its parent gain a further foothold in the oilfield services market, strengthening its competitive edge in China as well as overseas.
At present, China's oilfield services market is dominated by the three largest oil giants including Sinopec, China National Petroleum Corp. and China National Offshore Oil Corp., which account for over 80% of the market share, with the remaining divided between 1,200 domestic oilfield services providers including Anton Oilfield Services Group (3337.HK).
Sinopec Oilfield Service Corp. was set up in Beijing with total fixed assets of 76.6 billion yuan (US$12.2 billion) through the restructuring of Sinopec Group's oilfield engineering firms, Sinopec Group said in a statement Friday.
The new unit is estimated to receive CNY95 billion of revenue this year. It has already chalked up 480 contracts in 43 countries worth US$14.2 billion.
Sinopec Group has been ramping up efforts to expand overseas ever since Chairman Fu Chengyu joined the refining giant last year after leaving Cnooc Ltd. (CEO), a company with a history of making aggressive moves outside China.

Internet censorship, restrictions around the globe



  • ITU logo.jpg
    May 16, 2012: Sun Yafang, chairwoman of the board of Huawei Technologies listens to a speech before receiving a World Telecommunication and Information Society Award at the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) headquarters in Geneva. (REUTERS/Denis Balibouse)
Envoys in Dubai signed a new U.N. telecommunications treaty Friday that a U.S.-led delegation says endorses greater government control of the Internet. 
The U.S. and more than 20 other countries refused to ratify the accord by the 193-nation International Telecommunications Union.
Here is a look at Internet restrictions and availability at selected countries and regions around the world:
'What is clear ... is that many governments want to increase regulation and censorship of the Internet. We stand with the countries who refuse to sign this treaty.'
- Google statement to FoxNews.com on the UN resolution
NORTH KOREA
Internet use is extremely restricted with many of North Korea's 24 million people unable to get online. Some North Koreans can access an internal Intranet that connects to state media. Members of the elite, resident foreigners and visitors in certain hotels are allowed full access to the Internet.
IRAN
Most Western social media sites such as Facebook and Twitter are blocked in Iran, as well as political opposition and sexually explicit websites. But proxy server sites and other methods are widely used to get around the official restrictions. 
Iran has announced plans to create its own domestic Internet with fully monitored content, but international experts question whether such a complete break from the worldwide Net is possible. Earlier this week, Iran accounted it had developed its own YouTube-style video sharing site.
CHINA
There are more than 500 million Chinese online but they contend with an extensive Internet filtering and censorship system popularly known as the "Great Fire Wall." Censors police blogs and domestic social media for content deemed pornographic or politically subversive and delete it. 
Many foreign websites, including YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and the New York Times are blocked. Searches for controversial topics such as corruption scandals or jailed Nobel Peace Prize winner Liu Xiaobo return error messages. Users evade controls using proxy servers.
CUBA
Tight control, slow connections and high costs mean only around 5 percent of Cubans have access to the global Internet, with another 23 percent relying instead on a government intranet with very limited content. Web access is mainly via public facilities where people must first register with identification.
GULF ARAB STATES
Political sites deemed threats to the state are often blocked. Since the Arab Spring, authorities across the Gulf have stepped up arrests of bloggers and others for posted considered offensive to rulers or advocating political reforms.
CENTRAL ASIA
Internet censorship is prevalent across former Soviet Central Asian republics, but the strongest restrictions have been recorded in Iran's authoritarian neighbors to the north, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Controls are strictest in Turkmenistan, where social networking sites Facebook and Twitter are out-of-bounds, as is video-sharing site YouTube and numerous news websites. 
Uzbekistan has taken a less extreme approach, but sites critical of the government are blocked as a matter of course. Tajikistan, which is like those countries also ruled by an unchallenged strong-man ruler, has twice this year barred access to Facebook after web-surfers used the site to post material critical of government officials.
ERITREA
The government restricts access to the Internet and closely monitors online communications. The U.S. State Department's latest human rights report said the Eritrean government monitored email without obtaining warrants as required by law, and that all Internet service users were required to use one of the three service providers owned directly by the government or controlled through high-ranking members of the country's sole party. 
But the vast majority of people do not have Internet access.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Afghanistan, Pakistan to press ahead with peace efforts despite attack on Afghan spy chief



The leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan are determined to press ahead with peace efforts after a meeting in Turkey, the country's president said Wednesday, despite an attack that wounded the Afghan intelligence chief.
President Abdullah Gul described the bombing, which Afghanistan believes was planned in Pakistan, as an attempt to derail dialogue between the two countries
At the end of a meeting aimed at easing tensions and increasing cooperation between the governments in Kabul and Islamabad, Gul said both had "renewed trust and are determined to work together." He was flanked by counterparts Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan and Asif Ali Zardari of Pakistan.
Afghan intelligence chief Asadullah Khalid was seriously injured last week when a suicide bomber posing as a Taliban peace envoy detonated an explosive, dealing a setback to fragile efforts to reconcile with the Taliban and find a political resolution to the war in Afghanistan.
Karzai has said the attack was planned in Pakistan, but stopped short of directly holding Islamabad responsible for the explosion that was claimed by the Taliban.
Karzai said Wednesday the two leaders had "very good conversations" about the assassination attempt, but refused to go into details. Afghan officials said Karzai would present evidence to Zardari during their meetings about the attack.
"Hopefully the fight against extremism and terrorism will take itself to a conclusion where the populations of the two countries are not threatened by these attacks," Karzai said.
"The environment of dialogue is better than it has been," Karzai said. "At the same time, we are seeing unfortunate incidents of terrorism both in Afghanistan and Pakistan."
For his part, Zardari distanced his country from the attack on Khalid.
"They (terrorists) don't want us, the governments to get together and to be able to lead the nations to peace," he said.
"It is in the interest of Pakistan that Afghanistan prospers," he said. "It is in my interest that peace returns to Afghanistan and Pakistan."
Pakistan is seen as a key player in the Afghan peace process. Pakistan helped the Taliban seize control of Afghanistan in the 1990s, providing funding, weapons and intelligence, and the Afghan government and the U.S. have accused Islamabad of continuing to support the group.
Pakistan has denied the allegations, but many analysts believe the country continues to see the Taliban as an important ally in Afghanistan to counter archenemy India.

On Syria border, Turkey faces challenge of removing its own land mines, a legacy of the 1950s

For two people walking into a Turkish minefield, they looked awfully assured.
The pair strode in from Syria on a recent afternoon, following a faint track across the grassy plain. They slipped into Turkey through a fence near a vacant military watchtower and vanished into an olive grove.
Such hazardous crossings are a smuggler's tradition at the border, where Turkish plans to clear a vast belt of land mines have been clouded by Syria's civil war. Last week, Turkey asked NATO allies to deploy Patriot missiles as a defense against any aerial attacks from Syria after shells and bullets spilled across the border, killing and injuring some Turks.
Starting in the 1950s, Turkish forces planted more than 600,000 U.S.-made "toe poppers" — mines designed to maim, not kill — and other land mines along much of its 900-kilometer (560-mile) border with Syria, which runs from the Mediterranean Sea to Iraq. The aim was to stop smugglers whose cheap black market goods undercut the Turkish economy and later to thwart Kurdish rebels from infiltrating Turkey's southeast.
However, the mines also killed and maimed civilians, took arable land from Turkish farmers and are now considered by many as a crude method of policing.
Turkey says it plans to clear anti-personnel mines on the Syria border by 2016, missing a March 2014 deadline required by the international Mine Ban Treaty. The International Campaign to Ban Landmines, a Geneva-based group that won the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize, has criticized Turkey for its slow progress.
The European Union has committed €40 million ($52 million) to demining and surveillance equipment near Turkey's borders with Iran and Armenia on the basis that Turkey could eventually become the EU's most eastern border. Turkey, adjacent to the Middle East and Central Asia, has long been a drug trafficking route and a transit point for migrants who enter Europe illegally.
Since last year, nearly 200,000 Syrian refugees have crossed into Turkey, mostly through border posts or areas known to be free of mines. A Syrian man and two children were reported killed in August, however, by an explosive in an area of Mardin province that had been mined by the Turkish military. Syrian forces last year were also suspected of laying some mines, possibly to punish refugees seen as sympathetic to the rebels.
A Turkish smuggler in the border village of Akinci, south of the city of Gaziantep, said he has charged Syrian refugees up to 25 Turkish lira ($14) each to lead them through Turkish minefields. He has also acted as a lookout, monitoring shifts of Turkish military sentries and telling another smuggler who escorts Syrian clients, usually before dawn.
"I don't know where they are going. I don't care," said the gaunt man, who would not give his name and claimed he was desperate for cash. "I know it's risky for me, but I have to do it."
According to lore, villagers used to enter the Akinci mosque, which lies beside a minefield, for prayers and then sneak out the back into Syria for business.
On foot, mule or motorcycle, smugglers traditionally brought in items from Syria, including tea, gasoline, cigarettes, electronics and livestock, to sell for a profit in Turkey. The Syrian war has disrupted but not extinguished the trade among communities that were abruptly divided when the border was drawn in the last century.
Some smugglers try their luck at border posts, which became easier to cross when visa requirements were removed in 2009 after the warming of ties between Turkey and Syrian President Bashar Assad, now an enemy because of his attacks on the Syrian opposition. A few weeks ago, a Syrian man was detained while trying to enter Turkey with gold bars in his waistband.
Approved traffic moves the other way, as Turkey and other nations that oppose Assad send logistical and humanitarian aid to Syrian rebels and civilians. While Turkey says it is not arming the insurgency, Syrian rebels have told The Associated Press they receive some weapons and ammunition from the Turkish side with only sporadic interference from border patrols. According to rebels, these weapons are bought with funding from rich Syrians or sympathetic Gulf Arabs.
Fences are down and cars can cross in some parts adjoining Syria's Idlib province, an opposition stronghold.
The first mines on the Syrian border were planted after smugglers killed two customs agents in 1956. Turkey laid more mines in the 1980s and 1990s, at the height of its war with the rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, which was backed by Syria. Turkey is again worried about possible infiltration by Kurdish rebels who are cheered by an autonomy grab by their ethnic brethren in Syria.
The Turkish defense ministry told the AP it started evaluating bids from demining companies in July and would sign contracts once the assessment is complete.
"Developments in Syria to this day have not affected our plans or work," the ministry said. NATO said it is assisting with "technical preparations" for the mine clearance.
Cenk Sidar, managing director of Sidar Global Advisors, a Washington-based consultancy, said he believed that Turkey would sign contracts but wait until the Syrian civil war is resolved.
"According to plans, the government will build electronic border surveillance systems simultaneously with the demining. Even this seems too risky at this point," Sidar wrote in an email. "It may take a few years, and some qualified/selected firms may change their pricing or conditions due to the increasing instability."
Between 2010 and 2011, a Turkish firm, Nokta, and a partner from Azerbaijan cleared more than 1,200 mines around an archaeological site, Karkemish, on the Syrian border. They found anti-tank mines and M14 mines known as "toe poppers." It was hard to work with metal detectors because the soil also contained remnants of coins and other ancient fragments; some mines had to be dug out by hand rather than detonated to avoid damaging cultural treasures.
There is no reliable data for casualties from mines laid by the Turkish military, whose fight with the PKK has claimed tens of thousands of lives. The rebels, who regularly target security forces with mines and roadside bombs, took up arms in 1984 in the name of Kurdish rights; Turkey and the West label them terrorists.
Residents around Akinci recalled a villager who lost a limb to a mine several years ago while cutting trees for military sentries. Halil Kaya, 64, said he had heard of several dozen people over the decades who were killed or injured by mines. A deep furrow runs down Kaya's right forearm from a Turkish military bullet in his days as a smuggler.
Mehmet Dagdeviren, 49, said the Turkish military had softened and now might only fire warning shots at smugglers. He interrupted the chat to take a phone call, then rushed to a car and drove away.
A delivery from Syria needed collection.

(Ashley T)

Ukraine fights worst HIV epidemic in Europe, as cases increasingly spread to heterosexuals

Andrei Mandrykin, an inmate at Prison No. 85 outside Kiev, has HIV. He looks ghostly and much older than his 35 years. But Mandrykin is better off than tens of thousands of his countrymen, because is he receiving treatment amid what the World Health Organization says is the worst AIDS epidemic in Europe.
Ahead of World AIDS Day on Saturday, international organizations have urged the Ukrainian government to increase funding for treatment and do more to prevent HIV from spreading from high-risk groups into the mainstream population, where it is even harder to manage and control.
An estimated 230,000 Ukrainians, or about 0.8 percent of people aged 15 to 49, are living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Some 120,000 are in urgent need of anti-retroviral therapy, which can greatly prolong and improve the quality of their lives. But due to a lack of funds, fewer than a quarter are receiving the drugs — one of the lowest levels in the world.
Ukraine's AIDS epidemic is still concentrated among high-risk groups such as intravenous drug users, sex workers, homosexuals and prisoners. But nearly half of new cases registered last year were traced to unprotected heterosexual contact.
"Slowly but surely the epidemic is moving from the most-at-risk, vulnerable population to the general population," said Nicolas Cantau of The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, who manages work in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. "For the moment there is not enough treatment in Ukraine."
Stigma is also a big problem for those with HIV in Ukraine. Liliya, a 65-year-old woman who would give only her first name, recently attended a class on how to tell her 9-year-old great-granddaughter that she has HIV. The girl, who contacted HIV at birth from her drug-abusing mother, has been denied a place in preschool because of her diagnosis.
"People are like wolves, they don't understand," said Liliya. "If any of the parents found out, they would eat the child alive."
While the AIDS epidemic has plateaued elsewhere in the world, it is still progressing in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, according to Cantau. Nearly 21,200 new cases were reported in Ukraine in 2011, the highest number since the former Soviet republic registered its first case in 1987, and a 3 percent increase over 2010. As a result of limited and often delayed treatment, the number of AIDS-related deaths grew 17 percent last year to about 3,800.
Two years ago, Mandrykin, the prisoner, was on the verge of becoming part of that statistic, with his level of crucial CD4 immune cells — a way to measure the strength of the immune system — dropping to 11. In a healthy person, the CD4 count is usually over 600.
"I was lying in the hospital, I was dying," said Mandrykin, who is serving seven years for robbery, his fourth stint in jail. "It's a scary disease."
After two years of treatment in a small prison clinic, his CD4 count has risen to 159 and he feels much better, although he looks exhausted and is still too weak to work in the workshop of the medium-security prison.
The Ukrainian government currently focuses on testing and treating standard cases among the general population. The anti-retroviral treatment of more than 1,000 inmates, as well as some 10,000 HIV patients across Ukraine who also require treatment for tuberculosis and other complications and all prevention and support activities, are paid for by foreign donors, mainly the Global Fund.
The Global Fund is committed to spending $640 million through 2016 to fight AIDS and tuberculosis in Ukraine and then hopes to hand over most of its programs to the Ukrainian government.
Advocacy groups charge that corruption and indifference by government officials help fuel the epidemic.
During the past two years, Ukrainian authorities have seized vital AIDS drugs at the border due to technicalities, sent prosecutors to investigate AIDS support groups sponsored by the Global Fund and harassed patients on methadone substitution therapy, prompting the Global Fund to threaten to freeze its prevention grant.
Most recently, Ukraine's parliament gave initial approval to a bill that would impose jail terms of up to five years for any positive public depiction of homosexuality. Western organizations say it would make the work of AIDS prevention organizations that distribute condoms and teach safe homosexual sex illegal and further fuel the epidemic. It is unclear when the bill will come up for a final vote.
AIDS drug procurement is another headache, with Ukrainian health authorities greatly overpaying for AIDS drugs. Advocacy groups accuse health officials of embezzling funds by purchasing drugs at inflated prices and then pocketing kickbacks.
Officials deny those allegations, saying their tender procedures are transparent.
Much also remains to be done in Ukraine to educate people about AIDS.
Oksana Golubova, a 40-year-old former drug user, infected her daughter, now 8, with HIV and lost her first husband to AIDS. But she still has unprotected sex with her new husband, saying his health is in God's hands.
"Those who are afraid get infected," Golubova said.

Oil Futures Up In Asia, Ahead of OPEC, FOMC Meetings


Crude oil futures were slightly higher in Asian trade Tuesday, but prices remained rangebound for much of the day as investors were cautious ahead of key events this week.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, or OPEC, is due to meet in Vienna starting Wednesday and officials are expected to leave output quotas unchanged despite signs of a growing oversupply in the market because of sluggish global demand and rising non-OPEC supplies.
Brent crude prices have almost tripled from the lows four years ago, when the oil cartel was spurred into a massive output cut in late 2008 in response to a plunge in oil prices in the midst of the global economic crisis. This time around, though, the group faces dwindling demand for its oil and rising production in the U.S, the world's largest oil consumer.
In any case, Brent crude prices remain well above the $100-a-barrel mark, the level that OPEC's largest producer deems desirable, which is sapping impetus for a cartel-wide change in output quotas.
But ahead of the meeting, commodity pricing agency Platts reported OPEC's production in November fell by about 90,000 barrels a day to 31.17 million barrels a day. While this remains a million barrels above the group's output ceiling of 30 million barrels a day set last year, the production number was the lowest since February, suggesting a global supply glut could prompt member countries to lower output further.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, light, sweet crude futures for delivery in January traded at $85.70 a barrel at 0643 GMT, up $0.14 in the Globex electronic session. January Brent crude on London's ICE Futures exchange rose $0.20 to $107.53 a barrel.
Crude prices will also take cues from Wednesday's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, where the policy setting panel of the U.S. central bank could decide to launch fresh steps to stimulate the U.S. economy. The decision could move the U.S. dollar against other currencies and affect oil prices, which tends to move in the opposite direction of the dollar.
U.S. oil inventory data due out Wednesday could also impact prices this week. Crude oil stockpiles likely fell 1.7 million barrels last week as refiners boosted operations, according to a Dow Jones Newswires survey of analysts. The figures also are expected to show snug gasoline and distillate (diesel/heating oil) inventories rose by 2.5 million and 1.5 million barrels, respectively.
Nymex reformulated gasoline blendstock for January--the benchmark gasoline contract--rose 36 points to $2.6017 a gallon, while January heating oil traded at $2.9078, 116 points higher.
ICE gasoil for December changed hands at $900.00 a metric ton, down $3.75 from Monday's settlement.

ASIA MARKETS: Asia Stocks Mostly Higher After Fed

Asia stocks mostly gained on Thursday, with Japanese shares jumping to a fresh multi-month high, after the U.S. Federal Reserve announced new policy targets and an expansion to its asset-buying program.
Japan's Nikkei Stock Average surged 1.6% after closing at its highest level since April on Wednesday, while South Korea's Kospi rose 0.4%, and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index edged up 0.1% after reaching its best level for around 17 months on Wednesday.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose 0.2% to extend highs not seen since mid-2011, although the Shanghai Composite Index bucked the regional gains to slip 0.4%, paring its month-to-date advance to just under 5%.
In U.S. trading overnight, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) and S&P 500 (SPX) ended little changed, after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke warned that the Fed does not have the ability to shield the economy from the fiscal cliff of large potential tax hikes and spending cuts.
The U.S. central bank chief made the comments at a news conference Wednesday to discuss the Fed's newly announced plan to expand its asset-buying program and to hold rates close to zero until unemployment falls below 6.5% or until inflation accelerates.
"[Asia] sentiment has been boosted by the Fed's confirmation of outright purchase of long-dated Treasurys, which translates into a bigger asset-purchase program," said Frances Cheung, strategist at Credit Agricole.
"Flows into Asian markets are likely to continue," she said.
An important after-effect from the Fed meeting for Asian investors was a sharp climb in the dollar against the Japanese yen.
In overnight trading, the dollar (USDJPY) shot above the �83 mark for the first time since April 2, after sitting in the low �82 range the previous day.
While the move partly stemmed from a steeper Treasury curve, according to BNP Paribas currency strategists, "at the same time markets remain clearly focused on the Bank of Japan's policy" ahead of Japanese leadership elections this weekend, they said.
The currency move spurred fresh gains for Japan's exporters, with technology firms and auto makers among the best-performing sectors Thursday.
Advantest Corp. (ATE) rose 5.4%, TDK Corp. (TTDKF) added 4.6%, Canon Inc. (CAJ) improved by 3.1%, Pioneer Corp. (PNCOY) rallied 3.8% and Panasonic Corp. (PC) gained 6.5%.
Mazda Motor Corp. (MMTOY) drove 5.2% higher, and Honda Motor Co. (HMC) advanced 1.9% despite its Canadian unit announcing a recall of some vehicles.
Japanese banks also got an uplift, with Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. (SMFJY) rising 2.7%, and Nomura Holdings Inc. (NMR) ahead by 3.4%.
Over in Hong Kong, transport firms saw some share-price strength, with ports operator Cosco Pacific Ltd. and airline Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd. each rising 1.6%.
Aluminium Corp. of China Ltd. (ACH) advanced 1.7% in Hong Kong, but fell 0.6% in Shanghai, while PetroChina Co. (PTR) was flat in Hong Kong but down 0.7% in Shanghai.
South Korean shares got support from gains for technology companies, with Samsung Electronics Co. (SSNLF) extending its recent all-time highs with another 1.7% rise Thursday.
In Australian trading, retailers gained, with Super Retail Group Ltd. up 2.3%, and Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd. rallying 3.3%.

Eight killed in taliban suicide bombing

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan (Reuters) - Four Taliban suicide bombers attacked a police station in northwest Pakistan on Monday, killing at least eight police and local residents, security officials said.

Kyrgyzstan could be ‘new Afghanistan’

 
 
 
 
 
The president of Kyrgyzstan warned in his first visit to the West on Tuesday his central Asian republic would suffer the kind of turmoil seen in the south of the region unless it consolidated democratic reforms, Reuters reports.

Kyrgyzstan: News Agency sues government over“Illegal” Ban

One of Central Asia’s most respected independent news outlets is taking a government agency in Kyrgyzstan to court for blocking its website. The trial is scheduled to begin in Bishkek later this week.
Moscow-based Fergana News claims Kyrgyz authorities unconstitutionally banned its website – Fergananews.com, formerly known as Ferghana.ru. The ban was imposed by a parliamentary resolution, not a court ruling, as is required under the country’s media law.
Fergana News was one of many prominent outlets to voice criticism about authorities’ response to ethnic violence between Kyrgyz and minority Uzbeks in southern Kyrgyzstan in June 2010. A year later, on June 9, 2011, after weeks of heated debate over the causes of the violence, parliament voted 95-0 to block the site, passing a resolution that labeled Fergana News “extremist.”

South stream pipeline



The proposed South Stream pipeline route, according to Gazprom

Russia's Gazprom said construction would begin last week on the underwater section of its South Stream pipeline, which will carry natural gas beneath the Black Sea and into the European Union.

But is this really the case?

Gazprom CEO Aleksei Miller announced last month that the final investment decision for the project had been reached. Miller attended a groundbreaking ceremony near the town of Anapa on Russia's Black Sea coast on December 7.

However, as Jonathan Stern, head of the Natural Gas Research Program at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies notes, Gazprom hasn't yet ordered pipe or organized the lay barge for the pipeline and "cannot start laying the offshore section until 2014 [at the] earliest".

Killing of 15 in Kazakhstan

A Kazakhstan court Tuesday handed down a life sentence to a former border guard convicted of killing 15 people this summer at an outpost near the Kazakh-Chinese border.



Vladislav Chelakh, a 19-year-old draftee, was convicted of shooting dead 14 fellow border guards and one civilian in May. The victims' remains were found in a burned-out barracks near Chelakh's border post.

Will Diminishing Agricultural Inputs Hinder Our Ability To Feed A Growing Population?



Over the past three years, we've seen corn prices nearly double, soybeans climb more than 66%, and wheat jump 50%, as challenging farming conditions in major growing areas like the United States, South America, and Russia have kept farmers from satiating growing consumption. Over the near to medium term, we believe normalizing weather and slowing demand (principally because of lower growth in U.S. corn-based ethanol production) will drive crop prices lower. But looking beyond the next three to five years raises provocative and important questions surrounding farmers' ability to produce at the levels necessary to meet global demand.
We've highlighted five key areas of concern: water availability, soil quality, the abundance of fertilizers, development of seed technology, and potential equipment advancements. We think the world's growing population and increasing demand for high-quality proteins will lead to demand gains and is worth examining as another potential driver of elevated food prices over the long run. We believe the trends suggest the continuing rise of key inputs into the agricultural complex, and firms with economic moats should benefit in particular.

Typhoon ‘Pablo’ toll: 714 confirmed dead, 890 missing

Soldiers unload another victim of typhoon Bopha as retrieval operations continue at the hardest hit New Bataan township, Compostela Valley in southern Philippines Sunday Dec. 9, 2012. The number of missing in the wake of a typhoon that devastated parts of the southern Philippines has jumped to nearly 900 after families and fishing companies reported losing contact with more than 300 fishermen in the South China Sea and Pacific Ocean, officials said Sunday.

The death toll brought about by typhoon “Pablo” continued to rise with 714 persons confirmed dead by the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) yesterday while those missing ballooned to 890 as massive search, retrieval and relief operations continue in the typhoon-ravaged areas in Mindanao.
Undersecretary Benito Ramos, executive director of the NDRRMC, said that as of latest count, there were 714 recovered bodies, 257 of them remained unidentified, while 890 remained missing and 1,906 were injured due to the havoc wrought by “Pablo.”
Ramos said that affected families also increased to 486,554 composed of 5,408,900 persons coming from 30 provinces from Regions IV-B, VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII and Caraga hit by typhoon “Pablo” last Dec. 4.
Of the number of affected families, a total of 25,812 families or 116,404 individuals remained inside 134 evacuation centers.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Kidnapped doctor rescued in Afghanistan

US soldiers kill seven Taliban fighters in pre-dawn raid to rescue an American doctor in Surobi district, NATO says.

General John Allen said the rescue mission exemplified the US' commitment to defeat the Taliban [AFP]



US soldiers have killed seven Taliban fighters in a pre-dawn raid to rescue a kidnapped American doctor in eastern Afghanistan, the NATO force in the war-torn country said.

The mission was launched when intelligence showed that Dr Dilip Joseph was in "imminent danger of injury or death", NATO's International Security Assistance Force said in a statement on Sunday.

A US service member was also killed in Sunday's rescue mission, White House officials said.

"Yesterday (Saturday), our special operators in Afghanistan rescued an American citizen in a mission that was characteristic of the extraordinary courage, skill and patriotism that our troops show every day," the White House said in a statement.

"Tragically, we lost

School for a dollar

One man is leading a mission to wipe out illiteracy in Nepal with low cost private education.


For many in Nepal, a good education remains an unattainable luxury. And despite a rapid expansion of education facilities in recent decades, adult literacy is still less than 50 per cent.

Nepal has over seven million students enrolled in primary and secondary school education, but only one in four children reach the 10th grade. Despite spending 17 per cent of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) on education, government school facilities in Nepal are poor and dropout numbers are high, especially among girls.

One third of the country's population live

US envoy to leave Afghanistan-Pakistan post

Marc Grossman, who took over after the death of Richard Holbrooke in 2010, will step down in December.

Grossman assisted his predecessor, Richard Holbrooke, in the Dayton peace talks that ended the Bosnian war [EPA]


The US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan is set to step down from his post in December, his spokeswoman said in statement.

Laura Lucas told the AFP news agency on Wednesday Marc Grossman, who has been in the job for two years, would return to private life.

Grossman was appointed by Hillary Clinton, the outgoing secretary of state, after the sudden death of veteran diplomat Richard Holbrooke in December 2010.

"After almost two years in the position, and with Secretary Clinton's agreement, he will return to private life," the statement said.

Clinton thanked Grossman for building "a diplomatic surge" and

Deaths in US drone strike in Pakistan

Missile attack kills at least three suspected Taliban fighters in tribal region near the Afghan border, officials say.



A US drone attack has killed at least three people in a compound in the restive Pakistani tribal region near the Afghan border, officials said.
Sunday's strike took place in Tabbi village, 5km north of Miranshah, the main town in North Waziristan, which is known as a bastion of Taliban and al-Qaeda-linked fighters.

"US drones fired four missiles on a militant compound, killing three rebels," a senior security official told AFP news agency on condition of anonymity.

Another security official confirmed the attack and casualties but said

Monday, December 3, 2012

Afghanistan Taliban attack US base in Jalalabad

Afghanistan Taliban attack US base in Jalalabad


 
The BBC's Orla Guerin says the incident involved multiple suicide attackers

 
Taliban suicide bombers have killed four Afghan soldiers and wounded Nato troops in an attack on a joint US-Afghan airbase in eastern Afghanistan.

A local police chief told the BBC that two civilians had been also killed in the attack on the base in Jalalabad.

Afghan intelligence officials said nine suicide attackers had been involved in the assault, and all had been killed.

Nato said the attackers had failed to penetrate the base. It is unclear how many of its troops were injured.

This was an ambitious co-ordinated assault involving explosive-laden vehicles and suicide bombers on foot.
A Nato spokesman said the assault had clearly been planned for some time, but both Nato and Afghan officials said it was a failure because the militants did not penetrate the base.
But the fact that the Taliban managed to get as far as the perimeter will raise questions, as there are checkpoints on the approach routes.
The attack has demonstrated, once again, that the militants retain the capacity to strike, in spite of regular claims from Afghan and Nato officials that they have been weakened.

The BBC's Orla Guerin in Kabul said the attack appeared "co-ordinated and complex".

She added that this was not the first time the Taliban had targeted the air base, which is used by US and Nato forces. In February Taliban killed nine people in a similar attack.

Nato is gradually handing security over to Afghan forces ahead of the departure of most combat troops in 2014.
Counter claims
The Afghan officials said the first four attackers had arrived in explosive-laden cars and targeted different entrances to the airfield early on Sunday, Others who had followed on foot battled security guards.

The force of the explosions is reported to have blown out windows a kilometre away.

Nato forces then responded with helicopters, and both Nato and Afghan officials said the attackers had not managed to enter the base itself.

map

Local police told Reuters news agency that bodies in Afghan police and military uniforms were scattered around the entrance to the base, but it was unclear whether they were Taliban attackers in disguise.

In addition to the member of the Afghan security forces who was killed, several Nato troops were wounded, a Nato spokesman said.

The Taliban later said they had carried out the attack.

The insurgents have been battling Nato and Afghan troops for 11 years and still control parts of the east and south.

Nato - which currently has some 130,000 troops in Afghanistan - is due to withdraw combat forces in Afghanistan by the end of 2014, with only training troops remaining.

India cash transfer announcement questioned

India cash transfer announcement questioned


Unemployed educated Indian women wait to register themselves at the Employment Exchange Office in Allahabad, India. The government says cash transfers will be a game-changer

 
India's election authorities have sought an explanation from the government over its recent announcement of a plan for a cash payout of subsidies to the poor from 1 January.

The demand followed protests against the move by the main opposition BJP.

The party said the announcement had come at a time when two states were holding elections and had violated the election code of conduct.

Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh are holding polls in November and December.

The BJP had written to the Election Commission saying the government should withdraw the announcement of the plan until the polls were over in the two states.

Polling is scheduled to end on 17 December and the votes will be counted three days later.

The party said it appeared that the announcement "appears to be the sinister intention of the government to use this for influencing voters in Gujarat" and was a "violation" of the election code of conduct.

The Election Commission has sought an explanation from the government by Monday evening, failing which it would take "appropriate action".

Under the scheme, money meant for recipients of 29 welfare programmes - mainly related to scholarships and pensions - will be transferred to bank accounts linked to their unique identification numbers in 51 districts spread over 16 states from next January.

If all goes well, the scheme will cover the entire country by the end of 2013.

Authorities say it will be a potential game-changer, bringing the country's poorest citizens into the mainstream.

But opposition parties have accused the government of "bribing the voters" ahead of the 2014 general elections.

Karachi cleric killing sparks backlash in Pakistan

Karachi cleric killing sparks backlash in Pakistan


Pakistani paramilitary soldiers stand guard during an Ashura ceremony to mark the death of Hussein, the grandson of Prophet Mohammad in Karachi November 25, 2012 Karachi has been blighted by growing sectarian violence


Gunmen have shot dead a senior cleric of a prominent Islamic seminary in the Pakistani city of Karachi, in what police say could be sectarian attack.

Maulana Mohammad Ismail was killed while he was on his way to the Sunni Jamia Ahsanul Uloom seminary.

His death sparked angry protests as protesters took to the streets, setting vehicles on fire and pelting security forces with stones.

The killing comes amid growing sectarian violence in the port city.

In recent weeks, several Shias have been killed in drive-by shootings blamed on Sunni militant groups.

And on 10 November, at least seven students from Maulana Ismail's seminary were gunned down by unidentified gunmen at a tea stall nearby.

Police say it is not clear why this particular school has been targeted twice in recent weeks.

Security forces remain on high alert ahead of the funeral of Maulana Ismail, expected later on Monday.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Pakistani Taliban promise more blasts

Pakistani Taliban promise more blasts


Taliban vow more attacks, just hours after blast near Shia Ashoura commemoration in Dera Ismail Khan.


Two people died in bomb blast near a Shia Mosque in Karach [EPA]
Just hours after a roadside bomb killed at least seven people near a Shia procession in Pakistan, the Taliban have claimed responsibility and vowed that more attacks will come.
Security forces were on high alert over fears of large-scale attacks on the minority sect across the country after an attack occurred on Saturday in the city of Dera Ismail Khan in Pakistan's northwest.
The Pakistan Taliban claimed responsibility for the attacks in a telephone call to AFP news agency.
"The government can make whatever security arrangements it wants but it cannot stop our attacks"
- Ehsanullah Ehsan, Pakistan Taliban spokesman

"We carried out the attack against the Shia community," spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan told AFP by telephone from an undisclosed location after the explosion.
He said the group had dispatched more than 20 suicide bombers across the country for attacks against the minority community.
"We have 20-25 fidayeen [suicide bombers] in the country to launch bomb blasts and suicide attacks," Ehsan said.