Wednesday 29 February 2012

Tension prevails in Gilgit, Hunza Nagar post Kohistan killings


GILGIT: Tension has gripped different areas in Gilgit and Hunza Nagar after 16 passengers were brutally killed in Kohistan on Tuesday,

Meanwhile the funeral prayers of 15 identified victims was held on Tuesday, while curfew has been imposed in Gilgit.

Local residents were already restricted to their houses while thin transport was observed on the roads.

Sixteen people were killed in a sectarian attack when unidentified gunmen forced them to disembark from four Gilgit-bound passenger buses and sprayed them with bullets in Kohistan district on Tuesday.

District Police Officer, Kohistan, Muhammad Ilyas said the armed men hiding on both sides of the road intercepted many buses in the Harban Nala area early in the day and ordered more than 100 passengers to get off the vehicles.

Violence erupted in Gilgit as a result of the attack, claiming at least one life.

The deceased has been identified as Ubaidullah, who was shot dead near the public school roundabout in the Joeyal area.

All government and private offices, educational institutions and business centres across Gilgit-Baltistan were shut down after the news of attack reached the area.

Security in the six districts of Gilgit-Baltistan was put on red alert.

All exit and entry points to Gilgit have been completely sealed on the directives of the deputy commissioner.

Section 144 has also been imposed banning assembly of four or more persons and the display of arms.

Educational institutions have also been closed in Gilgit for three days as a precautionary measure in the wake of a posible violent reaction by the victim community members.

Five bodies recovered from Karachi house


KARACHI: Five dead bodies were recovered from a bungalow situated in Askari II area of Karachi on Wednesday,

According to SP Clifton Traiq Dharejo, five members of a family were found dead from a bungalow in Askari II.

The victims include a couple, their son and his wife and a child.

Police said that it is not yet confirmed that whether they were killed due to enmity or resisting in an armed robbery.

US drawing up new UN resolution on Syria: diplomats


UNITED NATIONS: The United States is drawing up a new draft UN Security Council resolution on Syria demanding humanitarian access to protest cities where thousands have been killed, diplomats said Tuesday.

If put to a vote it would be the third time Western nations have tried to get a Security Council resolution on the 11 month old crisis.

Britain, France and Germany, with Arab support, took the lead on the last two resolutions, which were vetoed by Russia and China.

"This resolution will concentrate on humanitarian access to the cities, but it will indicate that the government is the cause of the crisis," one diplomat said.

"At the moment there are just tentative contacts on the resolution," another Security Council diplomat said, confirming work on the outline. "It has not been sent to the whole council and we don't know when this will happen."

The United Nations says that more than 7,500 people have been killed in Syria since the eruption nearly one year ago of popular protests against the Assad family's 40-year reign.

Western nations hope that focusing on the humanitarian crisis will persuade Russia and China not to use their powers as permanent members of the 15-member council to veto any resolution. (AFP)

Tuesday 28 February 2012

Coalition- Qurans improperly burned at Afghan base


Taliban bomber kills nine at Nato base over Quran


KABUL: A Taliban suicide car bomber targeting a Nato base at Jalalabad airport in eastern Afghanistan killed nine people on Monday, following days of deadly anti-US protests over the burning of the Quran.

Six civilians, an Afghan soldier and two local guards were killed, police said, but there were no reports of Nato casualties, according to a spokesman for the US-led International Security Assistance Force.

Taliban insurgents claimed responsibility for the blast, saying it was in revenge for the burning of Qurans at a US military base, taking the toll in six days of violent protests across the country to around 40 people.

"The foreign forces have insulted our religion and this attack was revenge," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told.

SHO, police official injured; four accused held


QUETTA: Two policemen including SHO were injured when a police team raided a house to arrest a gang involved in kidnapping for ransom.

Talking to 'Geo News', CCPO Quetta Ahsan Mehboob said Saryab police station team headed by SHO Raja Abdul Qayyum conducted raid at a house located at Munir Mengal road when it was attacked by the accused as a result SHO other police official were injured.

Later, heavy contingent of police arrived and arrested four accused. Police also recovered huge quantity of arms and ammunition.

CCPO further said more raids were being conducted to arrest other accomplices of the accused.

Monday 27 February 2012

Shooting at Ohio school, suspect in custody: police


WASHINGTON: A suspect was in custody in Ohio Monday after a shooting at a high school, police said.

A report in the Cleveland Plain Dealer said four students were injured at Chardon High School in northeast Ohio.

The Geauga County Sheriff's office said a suspect was being held after the shooting in the city of Chardon but provided no additional details.

"There was a shooting. They have the suspect in custody," a sheriff's spokeswoman told AFP.

Television images showed the school on lockdown with armed security forces on site, and parents were seen gathering on the school grounds

5 killed, 24 injured in Nowshera blast


NOWSHERA: A blast hit the site where Awami National Party (ANP) was holding a public rally. Five people were killed while 24 others, including four policemen were injured.

The bomb went off soon after chief minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Amir Haider Hoti, and other ministers in his provincial cabinet had left the meeting in the town of Nowshera.

According to police, a remote-controlled bomb fixed in a motorcycle hit the ANP rally venue after the public address concluded.

Approximately three kg of explosives were used in the blast, police said. The site of the blast was cordoned off after the blast.

Speaking to Geonews, ANP leader Zahid Khan said the target of the attack was ANP leadership and workers.

Provincial Information Minister Mian Iftikhar said that the leadership of the ANP was informed about the blast when their helicopter had left the site.

Ifthikhar said initial reports indicate that the device was detonated by remote control.

Sharmeen Chinoy's ‘Saving Face’ wins first Oscar for Pakistan


LOS ANGELES: Pakistani filmmaker and first-time Oscar nominee Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy won an Academy Award on Monday for her documentary about acid attack victims, a first for a Pakistani.

In her acceptance speech, Chinoy dedicated the award to the women of Pakistan. "All the women in Pakistan working for change, don't give up on your dreams, this is for you," she said.

Directed by Daniel Junge and produced by Sharmeen Chinoy, the film follows British plastic surgeon Dr. Mohammad Jawad, who returns to his homeland to help victims of acid burns.

More than 100 people, mainly women and girls, are disfigured in acid attacks every year in Pakistan, although groups helping survivors say many more cases go unreported.

"The women who decided to be a part of the documentary did so because they wanted to make their voices heard and wanted to bring attention to this form of assault," Chinoy said in an interview conducted before she won the Oscar.

"The main reason that they are in 'Saving Face' is to make their stories heard and have an impact."

Many victims are women attacked by their husbands, and others assaulted for turning down a proposal of marriage. One girl in the documentary describes how she was burned after rejecting the advances of her teacher. She was 13 at the time.

Another woman featured in the film is 25-year-old Rukhsana, whose husband threw acid on her and her sister-in-law doused her in gasoline before her mother-in-law lit a match and set her on fire.

Chinoy said she hopes the cases in her film will resonate for others in Pakistan.

"It is a story of hope with a powerful message for the Pakistani audience. I felt this would be a great way to show how Pakistanis can help other Pakistanis overcome their problems," she said.

Chinoy's films have won international acclaim. Her 2010 documentary, Pakistan's Taliban Generation, won an International Emmy Award.

The documentary competed against "God Is the Bigger Elvis," a Rebecca Cammisa and Julie Anderson film about a mid-century starlet who chose the church over Hollywood; "The Barber of Birmingham," a Gail Dolgin and Robin Fryday film that follows the life of 85-year-old barber James Armstrong and the legacy of the civil rights movement; James Spione's war film "Incident in New Baghdad"; and "The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom," a film by Lucy Walker and Kira Carstensen that follows survivors of Japan's 2011 earthquake and their struggle to recover from the wave that crushed their homes and lives.

Case registered against Waheeda Shah


TANDO MOHAMMAD KHAN: A case has been registered against Waheeda Shah, a Pakistan People's Party candidate in Saturday's by elections who slapped a female Assistant Presiding Officer at a polling station here.

On the directives of the Provincial Election Commissioner, Retuning Officer Ali Asghar went to the police station in Tando Mohammad Khan and after an investigation the case was registered against Waheeda Shah.

According to the police the case was filed under 86/3 b. Under this clause Shah will be tried for interfering with official affairs and can face a prison sentence of three months.

Sindh Home Minister Mansoor Wasan said the incident was being investigated

Attabad Lake blockade demolished


ATTABAD: The temporary embankment of the new spillway of Attabad lake was demolished through bombing Monday,

A high alert was declared in Hunza and people in nearby villages were evacuated. The local residents moved to higher grounds while police force was deployed at routes leading towards lower areas and River Indus.

Karakoram Highway was closed for traffic and boat service was also suspended in the lake.

According to the Commissioner Hazara Division, the water level in the River Indus can rise due to the opening of the spillway.

Official sources state that with the opening of the spillway, 50,000 cusecs of water will be released which may lead to floods.

Section 144 was imposed in the district, educational institutions were closed and holidays was declared in government offices as precautionary measures.

US envoy in Kabul urges calm, redoubling of peace efforts


WASHINGTON — The American ambassador to Afghanistan vowed Sunday to "redouble" efforts despite an insidious Taliban attack at the interior ministry in Kabul that killed two US military officers.

NATO pulled all its advisors out of government ministries after the shootings on Saturday, which were blamed on a rogue Afghan intelligence official and claimed by the Taliban as a response to a recent Koran burning incident at a US base.

"Tensions are running very high here and I think we need to let things calm down, return to a more normal atmosphere, and then get on with business," said Ambassador Ryan Crocker, on a sixth day of violent anti-American protests.

"This is not the time to decide that we're done here. We have got to redouble our efforts. We've got to create a situation in which Al-Qaeda is not coming back," he told CNN's "State of the Union" program.

The two slain American officers, working as NATO advisors, were in the interior ministry on Saturday when "an individual" turned his weapon against the pair, the military alliance said, without giving further details.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the shootings, saying it was in revenge for the burning of the Korans -- an incident that forced President Barrack Obama to apologize to the Afghan people.

The toll since the Koran burning incident at the Bagram airbase north of Kabul, which inflamed anti-Western sentiment already smoldering in Afghanistan over abuses by US-led foreign troops, rose Sunday to more than 30.

Senator John McCain, also speaking to CNN, said he understood the "anger and frustration and sorrow" that the American people feel at the "terribly unfortunate situation" in Afghanistan but urged them to stay the course.

"Have no doubt, that if Afghanistan reverts to a chaotic situation, you will see Al-Qaeda come back and it again be a base eventually of attacks on the United States of America," warned McCain, a celebrated Vietnam veteran who lost out to Obama in the 2008 presidential race.

A US-led coalition invaded Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States that left almost 3,000 people dead, hoping to ensure that Al-Qaeda would never again have safe haven to plot such destruction.

Nearly 90,000 US troops remain deployed in Afghanistan, propping up the government of Western-backed President Hamid Karzai. There are plans for the force to decline to 68,000 by the end of September.

Top Afghan officials and American commanders have suggested the United States will likely retain a military presence in Afghanistan after 2014, when Afghan army and police are due to take over security for the whole country.

Karzai has repeatedly invited the Taliban for direct talks with his government, urging neighboring Pakistan -- where many insurgents hide out in the rugged border areas -- to help facilitate negotiation efforts.

Oscars ceremony begins in Hollywood


HOLLYWOOD: Hollywood's biggest night got under way on Sunday with the start of the 84th Academy Awards ceremony, as two odes to
film-making -- "The Artist" and "Hugo" -- go head-to-head for Oscars glory.

"The Artist," a silent black-and-white tribute to American cinema, earned 10 Oscar nominations, just one fewer than Martin Scorsese's "Hugo," a 3D family film that looks at the work of a early French film pioneer.

Billy Crystal, in his ninth appearance as Oscars host, opened the show with a comic video montage of scenes from films nominated for best picture and others from 2011 that earned warm applause from the A-list audience.

Following months of campaigning and a flurry of lesser prizes, Tinseltown's annual awards season has reached its high point with the most prestigious honors of them all -- the coveted golden Oscar statuettes.

Hundreds of millions around the globe were expected to tune in for the ceremony, after A-listers strutted their stuff down the most-watched red carpet in the world. (AFP)

Slapped APO defends Waheeda Shah at press conference


TANDO MUHAMMAD KHAN: Waheeda Shah, the Pakistan People's Party's candidate who slapped an Assistant Presiding Officer (APO) in a polling station Saturday, held a press conference and got the humiliated officer to speak in her favor,( batkhela -movies)

Waheeda Shah had the APO accompany her to the press conference held today and got the latter to give a statement in the former's support.

However, the people from Waheeda Shah's own constituency said the woman in Burqa was not the one who was slapped and humiliated yesterday.

Nothing could be said with certainty whether the woman at press conference was the same woman who was subjected to the ill treatment on Saturday. Even if it is believed the woman was the same, her defending the wrongdoer may lay bare the helplessness of the officer but it cannot give Waheeda Shah a clean chit.

It clearly appears to be a case of the powerful Waheeda Shah, a big landlord of the area, getting the poor teacher named Shagufta to give a statement against the herself (Shagufta) and in the former's defence.

Perhaps Shagufta would have thought that if Waheeda Shah could beat her in front of cameras what worse she must be capable of doing in their absence.

Memogate: Mansoor Ijaz says court to analyze evidence submitted


KARACHI: Mansoor Ijaz, the central figure in memo scandal, on Sunday said he had presented all the evidence before the Judicial Commission probing the issue and now it was court's job to analyze it,

Speaking to Sana Bucha in a Geo News program 'Lekin', Ijaz said his counsel Akram Sheikh's cross examination could get lengthy and that perhaps the latter may not say yes to.

He said he had presented his account before the memo commission in a fearless manner and submitted all the relevant evidence before it.

Osama Bin Laden’s Abbottabad house demolition completed


ABBOTTABAD: The Pakistani home of al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, the place where he was killed after the biggest manhunt in history, is no more.

Pakistan security forces completed the demolition of bin Laden's compound on Sunday, erasing a symbol of humiliation for Pakistan's military that has marked one of the most difficult periods in U.S.-Pakistan ties.

Bin Laden was killed in the house in Abbottabad on May 2, 2011 by U.S. commandos in a daring night raid that left the Pakistani military angry it had not been consulted. While much of the world cheered the death, Pakistan fumed over what it called a violation of its sovereignty.

"The process of demolishing the compound on Saturday evening has been completed on Sunday night," a senior security official said in Abbottabad, requesting anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

"The whole structure of the building has been razed to the ground. It actually took some time as the process of demolition and removing the wreckage was going on simultaneously."

Why Pakistani authorities decided to demolish the structure now is unclear.

During the demolition, security forces cordoned off the compound and restricted nearby residents' movements. Life in the rest of the military town continued as normal, with children playing cricket and flying kites, and couples strolling or shopping.

The Pakistani military and local security forces had begun moving heavy machinery into the area on Saturday evening.

Residents had complained of problems due to security measures since the killing of bin Laden, with many saying it was better to remove the building and let people live their lives.

On the moonless night of May 2, Navy SEALs swooped in on specially modified Blackhawk choppers, forced their way to the top floor of the house and killed bin Laden with shots to the head and the chest.

One helicopter was damaged and forced to land, leaving the SEAL team to pile into a remaining chopper along with the al Qaeda chief's body. The Pakistani army says it knew nothing of the operation until it was over.

The United States has said it kept the raid secret because it feared elements within Pakistan - possibly connected with its spy agency or military - could tip off bin Laden.

The relationship has never recovered. It deteriorated further after an attack by NATO helicopters on a Pakistan border post in November left 24 Pakistani soldiers dead.

Pakistan has closed off NATO supply routes to troops in Afghanistan. A Pakistani doctor who helped the United States verify bin Laden's location in Abbottabad is in a military prison facing possible treason charges for working for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.

Sunday 26 February 2012

Mandela seen leaving hospital in good health


JOHANNESBURG: Former South African president Nelson Mandela was comfortable in hospital on Saturday after undergoing a "diagnostic procedure" for abdominal pains, the government said, telling people not to panic about the health of the 93-year-old anti-apartheid leader.

A statement from President Jacob Zuma said Mandela, who is popularly known by his clan name, Madiba, should be discharged on Sunday or Monday after being checked out for a "long-standing abdominal complaint".

"Madiba is fine and fully conscious and the doctors are satisfied with his condition, which they say is consistent with his age," it said.

"He was in good health before admission in hospital but doctors felt the complaint needed a thorough investigation.

"We are happy that he is not in any danger and thank the doctors for their hard work and professionalism."

Although short on medical details, the openness and speed of the government response stood in contrast to a year ago when Mandela was admitted to hospital with respiratory problems.

Then, Zuma's office took hours to confirm media reports of his declining health, leading to a scrum of local and international reporters outside Johannesburg's Milpark hospital.

The government has not said where Mandela is, although security has been tightened at Pretoria's "1 Military" hospital, which is officially responsible for the health of sitting and former presidents.

Amid earlier unconfirmed reports that Mandela was undergoing a hernia operation, a spokesman for the ruling Africa National Congress (ANC) went on television to tell South Africa's 50 million people there was nothing to worry about.

"There's no need for panic," ANC spokesman Keith Khoza told the e-News channel. "It was not an emergency admission. It was planned."

Mandela has been in poor health since his hospitalisation a year ago, and has not appeared in public since. He has spent his time at his home in Johannesburg's northern suburbs and his ancestral village of Qunu in the impoverished Eastern Cape.

As South Africa's first black president, Mandela occupies a central position in the psyche of a country that was ruled by the 10 percent white minority until the first all-race elections in 1994.

Earlier this month, Zuma and the central bank issued a new set of bank notes bearing his image.

However, he has long since withdrawn from active participation in politics and public life in Africa's biggest economy, having stood down at the end of his first term in office in 1999.

His last major public appearance was in July 2010 at the final of the World Cup in Johannesburg's Soccer City stadium. (Reuters)

Kasur: NA-140 results run into controversy


KASUR: The by-polls in constituency NA-140 have run into controversy after the initially declared results were changed late in the night,  reported.

According to sources, earlier an independent candidate Azeem Lakhvi was reported to have won the seat defeating another independent runner, Malik Rasheed Khan, but the tables seemed to have been turned in the favour of the latter after the final tally.

Upon this Azeem Lakhvi’s supporters protested and staged a sit-in, which was in progress till the filing of report.

Election Commission of Pakistan has offered a recount in the Sunday afternoon (today) in the presence of both parties to settle the matter.

US drone crashes in North Waristan


MIRANSHAH: A US drone crashed in North Waziristan near the Afghan border late Saturday, officials said.

The unmanned reconnaissance aircraft came down in the mountainous Machikhel area about 30 kilometres (20 miles) east of Miranshah, the main town in North Waziristan region, which is frequently targeted by drone strikes against Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants, military and security officials said.

"A US drone crashed, apparently due to some technical fault," a military official in the northwestern city of Peshawar told AFP.

Security officials in the region confirmed the crash saying it fell in the mountains.

The crash site has been surrounded by militants, one security official said, refusing to confirm claims by some Taliban that the drone was shot down by insurgents.

Militants had taken away parts of the wreckage, a security official said.

President Barack Obama last month confirmed for the first time that US drones target Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants on Pakistani soil, but American officials do not discuss details of the covert programme.

At least 13 militants were killed in two drone attacks on February 16 in North Waziristan and a week earlier Badar Mansoor, described as the "de facto leader of Al-Qaeda in Pakistan" was killed in a missile strike, also in North Waziristan.

The United States says Pakistan's tribal belt provides sanctuary to Taliban fighting in Afghanistan, Al-Qaeda groups plotting attacks on the West, and Pakistani Taliban who routinely bomb Pakistan, and other foreign fighters.

The US strikes are deeply unpopular among the Pakistani public, who see the attacks as a violation of sovereignty and who blame the government's US alliance for much of the violence plaguing the country.

US diplomatic cables leaked by WikiLeaks in late 2010 showed that Pakistan's civilian and military leaders privately supported the attacks, despite public condemnation. According to an AFP tally, 45 US missile strikes were reported in Pakistan's tribal belt in 2009, the year Obama took office, 101 in 2010 and 64 in 2011.

The programme has dramatically increased as the Obama administration looks to withdraw all foreign combat troops from Afghanistan by the end of 2014. (AFP)

Osama compound demolition underway


ABBOTABAD: The demolition of Osama bin Laden's compound is underway and so far 70 percent of the structure has been brought down,  Saturday.

Heavy machinery has been deployed to raze Osama bin Laden's compound situated in Bilal Town, Abbottabad. A large number of security personnel is also present at the location.

Earlier, flood lights had been installed around the compound and all the routes leading to it were sealed.

Saturday 25 February 2012

Evacuations in Syria as diplomatic pressure mounts


AMMAN/BEIRUT: The first wounded and sick women trapped in the most embattled district of the Syrian city of Homs have been evacuated, and talks were held to evacuate more on Saturday, while pressure mounted on President Bashar al-Assad's government to call a ceasefire and let in humanitarian aid.

Assad's forces killed 103 people in Syria on Friday in the bombardment of the besieged city of Homs and in attacks on the countryside of Hama and the east and north of the country, the activist group Local Coordination Committees said.

Most of those killed were civilians, including 14 children and one woman, it said.

The killings continued the same day that Western and Arab nations meeting in Tunis mounted the biggest diplomatic push in weeks to end Syria's 11-month-old crackdown on the opposition.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned Assad -- and his backers inside Syria and abroad -- that they will be held to account for the crackdown on opponents and what she described as a humanitarian catastrophe in Syria.

Addressing her comments to Russia and China, which vetoed tough action on Syria in the United Nations, she said: "They are setting themselves not only against the Syrian people but also the entire Arab awakening."

"It's quite distressing to see permanent members of the Security Council using their veto when people are being murdered - women, children, brave young men -- houses are being destroyed. It is just despicable."

"I am convinced Assad's days are numbered, but I regret that there will be more killing before he goes," she said.

President Barack Obama, speaking in Washington, said: "It is prime time to stop the killing of Syrian citizens by their own government."

"All of us seeing the terrible pictures coming out of Syria and Homs recently recognize it is absolutely imperative for the international community to rally in sending a clear message to President Assad that it is time for a transition."

Diplomatic moves are hamstrung, so far at least, because there is little appetite for military intervention in Syria and attempts to ease Assad out via the United Nations Security Council have been stymied by Russian and Chinese vetoes.

Beijing and Moscow declined invitations to attend the meeting in Tunisia.

In a tacit acknowledgement that the scope for pressuring Assad through diplomacy is limited, some of the delegates at the conference -- especially Gulf states long opposed to Assad -- pressed for an international peacekeeping force in Syria and favored arming the Syrian rebels.

The Syrian opposition, meanwhile, appeared to be taking matters into its own hands, saying it was supplying weapons to rebels inside Syria while Western and other states turned a blind eye.

Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal led the hawkish camp, saying that arming the Syrian rebels would be "an excellent idea."

EVACUATED TO SAFE AREA

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said the Syrian Arab Red Crescent initially brought out seven women and children from the besieged Baba Amro district of Homs and took them to a hospital in elsewhere in the city.

A further 20 uninjured women and children were evacuated later and taken to "a safe area," ICRC chief spokeswoman Carla Haddad said. Foreign journalists trapped in the area were not among them.

"It's a first step forward," Haddad told Reuters. "The priority now is evacuating the seriously wounded or sick.

"We are continuing discussions to resume the operation tomorrow morning."

With the bombardment of opposition-held neighborhoods in Homs entering its fourth week on Friday, the ICRC has been negotiating with the Syrian government and opposition forces to bring out the sick and wounded from Baba Amro.

But foreign journalists trapped in Baba Amro, two of them badly wounded, refused to leave the besieged neighborhood without an ICRC and foreign diplomatic presence, and a commitment to a full humanitarian ceasefire, it said.

Two of the journalists, Edith Bouvier and Paul Conroy, need urgent medical care. The bodies of slain journalists Marie Colvin and Remi Ochlik, killed this week, remain in Baba Amro.

A Syrian Foreign Ministry official, quoted by the state news agency, said attempts to bring the journalists out of the area had been obstructed by opposition groups.

"Authorities in Homs sent a number of notables of the city and ambulances from the Syrian Arab Red Crescent to receive the foreign journalists who had entered Syria illegally," the official said.

"Despite continuing this effort for several hours with armed groups in Baba Amr, these groups refused to hand over the wounded and the bodies - putting the life of the wounded French woman in danger and hindering the return of the bodies (of the two dead journalists) to their respective countries."

A French and ICRC plan to get international medical teams in to extract the foreign journalists and tend to the neighborhood's most badly wounded was rejected by the Assad government, activist group Avaaz said.

With the wounded being taken only as far as a hospital in Homs, it was unlikely men would agree to leave the area for fear of falling into the hands of Syrian security forces.

"Baba Amro is being hit with 122mm artillery directed at it from surrounding villages. A father and his 14-year-old son were among those killed. They were trying to flee the shelling when shrapnel hit them in the street," resident Mohammad al-Homsi said.

Activists also said Syrian security forces lined up and shot dead at least 18 people in a village in the central western Hama province. A video uploaded by activists showed people wrapping the bloodied bodies of children and at least four adults. Several had been shot through the head. (Reuters)

US state's biggest lobster returned to Atlantic Ocean


PORTLAND: The biggest lobster ever caught in Maine, a 27-pounder (12.25 kg) nicknamed "Rocky" with claws tough enough to snap a man's arm, was released back into the ocean after being trapped in a shrimp net last week, marine officials said.

The 40-inch (one-meter) male crustacean, about the size of a 3-year-old child, was freed in the waters of the Atlantic Ocean, said Elaine Jones, education director for the state's Department of Marine Resources.

"All the weight is in the claws," Jones said. "It would break your arm."

The lobster was caught near the seaside village of Cushing and brought to the Maine State Aquarium in West Boothbay. The state restricts fishermen from keeping lobsters that measure more than 5 inches from the eye to the start of the tail.

Because he became acclimated to the water near the aquarium, the lobster was released in West Boothbay rather than where he was caught.

Scientists are unable to accurately estimate the age of lobsters of this size, said Jones.

The marine lab has no record of a larger lobster being caught in the state, she said. The world's largest recorded lobster was a 44-pounder (20-kg) caught off Nova Scotia in 1977, according to the Guinness Book of World Records.

Maine lobstermen hauled in a record 100 million pounds (45.4 tons) of lobsters last year, due in part to overfishing of predators such as haddock, cod and monkfish.

Railway tracks blown up in parts of Sindh


NAWABSHAH/HYDERABAD: Lengths of railway tracks were blown up in Nawabshah, Hyderabad, and Pud Eidan somewhere before and after dawn stopping the up and down traffic, Geo News reported.

According to police two blasts were heard before they found out a sizable part of the main track, going through Long Khan Kairio village area of Nawabshah, has been damaged.

Later a couple of similar blasts were also reported from Qasimabad area of Hyderabad, where 1-2 feet long rail tracks came off in the wake of explosions. To boot, blasts near Latifabad area also reportedly damaged the rails taking the tally to four in Hyderabad alone that too within hours.

Moreover, culprits, also targeted rails near Pud Eaidan area using the same modus operandi i.e. two IEDs planted close by detonating one after another.

Reports of a similar sabotage also came from Kotri and Ghotki.

All the up and down trains have been stopped to safety.

Fortunately no passenger/cargo train was anywhere near the blast sites, otherwise major casualties could have been the outcome of these perpetrations.

Police have condoned off the site to launch an investigation as well search for probable explosive devices or the culprits hiding nearby.

President Zardari meets Governor Balochistan Zulfiqar Magsi


KARACHI: President Asif Ali Zardari held a meeting with Governor Balochistan Nawaz Zulfiqar Magsi.

During the meeting President Zardari tasked Governor Magsi to eliminate the grievances of disgruntled Baloch leaders.

The President also summoned the National Assembly session on March 1 an said he to was willing to talk to disgruntled Baloch leaders.

On Thursday, Interior Minister Rehman Malik and announced that cases against exiled Baloch leaders would be withdrawn.

The announcement was however not welcomed by Baloch leaders.

Prime Minister Gilani, DG ISI Pasha discuss security situation


ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Gilani met with DG ISI Lt.General Shuja Pasha on Friday.

During the Pasha informed the Prime Minister Gilani about the security situation in the country and the region.

Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir was also present during this meeting.

According to the PM house press release, the situation in Afghanistan was also discussed during this meeting.

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