Friday 9 March 2012

US tells Pakistan to leave Iran gas, look to other sources


ISLAMABAD: Suggesting exploring alternative energy sources, deputy US ambassador to Pakistan, Richard Hoagland has once again warned Islamabad against Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project,

Pledging America’s readiness to lend a hand in different projects, Hoagland said that Pakistan better start looking towards energy sources like wind, sun, biogas, and cowdungs instead of Iranian gas.

He said the US fully realizes the energy crisis in Pakistan and was trying to help it out of the present situation.

Australia flood bill mounts, more rain forecast


SYDNEY: Australia's flood crisis was set to cost in excess of Aus$500 million (US$530 million) in New South Wales alone and more rain was on the way, the state government said Friday.

Eastern Australia has endured torrential rainfall for more than a week, leaving hundreds of homes flooded, damaging roads and bridges and soaking farmland in Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria states.

"We have a damages bill at the moment that my guys are telling me is heading way north of $500 million," New South Wales Roads Minister Duncan Gay told ABC radio, adding that the state had been "horrendously hurt".

"The weather forecasters are telling me that April will be the worst that we've faced yet," due to a weather pattern known as "La Nina".

La Nina conditions typically bring higher-than-normal rainfall with Sydney on Thursday feeling the force of nature with an estimated 119 millimetres (more than four and a half inches) falling on the city -- the highest daily total since 2007.

As the waters eased in some areas across NSW, communities downstream from the floods were bracing for the surging torrents yet to pour through the Murrumbidgee, Lachlan and Hawkesbury river systems.

In Sydney, where heavy rain Thursday swept away cars and flooded railway lines, residents on the city's northwestern outskirts were being urged to prepare to evacuate their homes.

Further inland, residents of the country towns of Condobolin and Narrandera were bracing for the coming floods and people in the Victoria town of Nathalia were hoping their levee would hold.

Elsewhere, such as in New South Wales's biggest inland city of Wagga Wagga, emergency officials began the massive clean-up as flood waters began to subside. But residents were still faced with waterlogged homes and farms.

"It's fairly devastating but what else can we do? I don't think we are as bad as some people. I don't know what our losses would be," one flood-hit farmer, Lance Gillespie, told the ABC.

Hundreds of fire and emergency workers were hosing out homes, businesses and schools and clearing roads, Deputy State Emergency Operations Controller Assistant Commissioner Mark Murdoch said.

"While it's not over yet, some areas are starting the process of recovery and that generally begins with cleaning up," he said.

So far two people have died in the floods, after they attempted to cross waterways in cars

Two militants killed in Chaman clash

CHAMAN: Security forces conducted a search and clearance operation against militants in different areas of Chaman and killed two militants while four others were injured Friday, 
 
According to sources, security forces cordoned off Mizai Adda area and conducted search operation. During the operation, militants attacked the security forces with bullets and in retaliation, two militants were killed while four others were injured. Two troops were also injured during the battle.

The injured were shifted to Quetta while traffic was suspended on Quetta-Chaman highway due to operation.

6 5 soldiers killed in Afghanistan in less than 21 years old were

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'Respect Quran' Training for NATO Forces


KARACHI: Seeking to avoid new desecrations of the Noble Quran, the US-led NATO troops in Afghanistan are being trained on how to respect the Muslim holy book, according to the American newspaper.

"It's probably a little too simplistic to suggest that it's a simple matter of do's and don'ts," Lt. Col. George Robinson, a senior officer in the Marine Corps' language and culture training programs, told the Los Angeles Times on Thursday.

"It's more a matter of why is the Quran an important."

A new training program was launched last week for the US-led NATO troops in Afghanistan on how to respect the Noble Quran.

The refresher training aims to prevent any desecration of the Muslim holy book by foreign troops in the Asian Muslim country.

Under the training, soldiers are advised not to throw the Muslim holy book.
It also asks soldiers to be cautious when dealing with Arabic texts, assuming "material is sacred if there is any doubt over its religious significance." (Monitoring Desk)

Five die, 13 injured in Burewala road mishap


BUREWALA: A road mishap killed five people and injured thirteen others as a marriage bus collided with a truck near Gaggo Mandi in Burewala on late Thursday.

The bodies and injured were shifted to local hospital while police started investigation regarding the incident.

Cash was disbursed among politicians, says Col Akbar, a self proclaimed eyewitness


ISLAMABAD: Former ISI official Col (Retd) Akbar, who claims to be the eye witness of disbursement of cash among several anti-PPP politicians just before the general elections of 1990, disclosed that politicians were funded,  Thursday.

Talking to Geo News here, Col Akbar said Brig Saeed, who was associated with Military Intelligence (MI) at the time, was the man tasked with the responsibility of disbursing money among Sindh politicians.

Col Akbar, who claims to have been present on several occasions when money was being handed over to the politicians, said Brig. Saeed used to handle all the bank accounts (used in the money disbursement).

"I was present on the occasion when cash was handed over to Ghulam Mustafa Jatoi in Karachi," he maintained.

He further claimed that Pir Sahab Pagara was paid in Kingri House, Karachi and signature was taken from him.

Col Akbar said Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) Chief Altaf Hussain was also offered money but he refused to accept it.

The statement from the self-proclaimed eyewitness comes at a time when the Asghar Khan case, whose hearing was also held today, started stepping into an interesting phase.

Osama's eldest wife wanted to betray him: report


RAWALPINDI: A foreign news agency has released a report based on research of Brig. Shaukat Qadir, which claims that Osama bin Laden's eldest wife intended to betray him.

The report says that Osama bin Laden spent his last weeks in a house divided, amid wives driven by suspicions.

On the top floor, sharing his bedroom, was his youngest wife and favorite. The trouble came when his eldest wife showed up and moved into the bedroom on the floor below.

Others in the family, crammed into the three-story villa compound where bin Laden would eventually be killed in a May 2 U.S. raid, were convinced that the eldest wife intended to betray the Al Qaeda leader.

The picture of bin Laden's life in the Abbottabad compound comes from Brig. Shaukat Qadir, a retired Pakistani army officer who spent months researching the events and says he was given rare access to transcripts of Pakistani intelligence's interrogation of bin Laden's youngest wife, who was detained in the raid.

Qadir was also given rare entry into the villa, which was sealed after the raid and demolished last month.

Qadir's research gives one of the most extensive descriptions of the arrangements in bin Laden's hideout when U.S. SEAL commandos stormed in, killing bin Laden and four others. His account is based on accounts by an official of ISI who escorted him on a tour of the villa, the interrogation transcription he was allowed to read, and interviews with other ISI officials and Al Qaeda-linked militants and tribesmen in the Afghan-Pakistan border region.

The compound where bin Laden lived since mid-2005 was a crowded place, with 28 residents - including bin Laden, his three wives, eight of his children and five of his grandchildren. The bin Laden children ranged in age from his 24-year-old son Khaled, who was killed in the raid, to a 3-year-old born during their time in Abbottabad. Bin Laden's courier, the courier's brother and their wives and children also lived in the compound.

The 54-year-old bin Laden himself seemed aged beyond his years in a video footage in which he is watching TV, with suspected kidney or stomach diseases, and there were worries over his mental health, Qadir said he was told by ISI officials and an Al Qaeda member he interviewed in the border regions.

Bin Laden lived and died on the third floor. One room he shared with his youngest wife, Amal Ahmed Abdel-Fatah al-Sada, a Yemeni who was 19 when she married the Al Qaeda leader in 1999. Another wife, Siham Saber, lived in another room on the same floor that also served as a computer room, Qadir told AP.

Thursday 8 March 2012

Madhuri unveils her new wax figure


LONDON: Madame Tussauds today welcomed award-winning Bollywood actress Madhuri Dixit-Nene. Madhuri, famed for her dazzling dancing, was at the world famous attraction to unveil her stunning new wax figure in front of friends and family.

The star of hit films including Devdas, Dil To Pagal Hai, Beta and M.f Hussain's Gaja Gamini is the sixth Bollywood celebrity to be honoured by Madame Tussauds London and only the second actress following Aishwarya Rai who entered the attraction back in 2004.

On meeting her double for the first time Madhuri commented "It is hard to imagine yourself like this and meeting my wax double today is very surreal, it feels like an out of body experience. I would like to congratulate the team at Madame Tussauds London as they have done a beautiful job!"

Madhuri was completely involved in the creation of her figure, attending a sitting in Mumbai where sculptors captured a catalogue of reference photographs and hundreds of precise measurements to create this staggering likeness. Madhuri also donated the exquisite sari her figure is wearing. The figure took four months to make at a cost of £150,000.

Liz Edwards, PR Manager at Madame Tussauds London commented: "We're delighted to welcome Madhuri (and her family) here today and to be including her figure in our A-list line-up.

Nine Afghan police killed, infiltrator suspected


KANDAHAR: Nine Afghan police were killed in an insurgent attack that authorities said Thursday was believed to have been facilitated by a fellow officer and suspected Taliban infiltrator.

The attack in the southern province of Uruzgan late Tuesday follows a wave of incidents in recent weeks in which members of the Afghan security forces have turned their weapons on their NATO and US allies.

Six American soldiers, two of them senior US military advisers, were killed by their Afghan colleagues last month as the country was gripped by anti-US riots over the accidental burning of the Quran at a military base.

In Uruzgan, the rebels broke into the police post and opened fire on ten sleeping officers, killing all of them, local CID chief Gulab Khan told.

"Nine police are dead. There were 10 people in the post, we believe one of the police led the Taliban into the post and while everybody was sleeping they opened fire and killed nine police," he said.

"The 10th person has disappeared and he's believed to have gone with the Taliban after the killings," Khan added.

The Taliban, a militant group waging an insurgency against the Western-backed government of President Hamid Karzai, claimed the attack but gave a different account.

The group's spokesman, Yusuf Ahmadi, telephoned from an unknown location to say the officers were captured and later executed. (AFP)

Never said money was given to Altaf Hussain: Younis Habib


ISLAMABAD: The former head of Mehran Bank, Younis Habib said on Thursday that he never said that money was given to MQM chief Altaf Hussain.

Speaking to Geo News, Habib further said that Rs 70 million was distributed through Yousuf Memon Advocate. This money was given to those politicians who did not want to receive funds through the ISI.

Habib added that instructions were given to him by General Baig and the President. From the Rs 70 million, Yousuf Advocate gave Rs 1.5 million to Ijaz-ul-Haq, while Rs 40 million was given to Javed Hashmi.

“I was not told if payments had been made to Altaf Hussain,” Habib added.

Wednesday 7 March 2012

ECP disqualifies Waheeda Shah for 2 years, declares election void


ISLAMABAD: Announcing a landmark verdict on Wednesday, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) disqualified Pakistan People's Party's candidate Waheeda Shah for two years and declared her election on PS-53 Tando Muhammad Khan null and void.

The ECP had earlier reserved the judgment in the much talked-about case till Wednesday.

Waheeda Shah's act of slapping an Assistant Presiding Officer in a polling station of PS-53 Tando Muhammad Khan during by elections of last month was highlighted by media and the issue was taken up by the ECP.

The Chief Justice of Pakistan also took suo motto notice of it and Waheeda Shah apologized for the shameful treatment she meted out to the Assistant Presiding Officer Shagufta Memon, a government school teacher by profession.

Gilani contempt case: Nargis Sethi to appear again


ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court of Pakistan has adjourned the hearing of contempt of court case against Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani till tomorrow (Thursday), Geo News reported.

Secretary Cabinet Nargis Sethi has been ordered to appear again on Thursday.

A seven-member bench led by Justice Nasirul Mulk comprising of Justice Asif Saeed Khosa, Justice Sarmad Jalal Osmany, Justice Ejaz Afzal Khan, Justice Ijaz Ahmed Chaudhry, Justice Gulzar Ahmed and Justice Muhammad Ather Saeed heard the case.

Nargis Sethi appeared before the bench along with Aitzaz Ahsan to record her statement, as a defence witness during the proceedings.

She submitted summaries to the court about which the bench remarked that one of them was not original. The Secretary replied that the summary of 1st May 2010 is original while the other one is being retrieved from the Ministry of Law and Justice.

Aitzaz Ahsan told the court that after the instructions of the prime minister the summaries are sent back to the concerned ministries.

The apex court accepted the documents as defence's witness and numbered the 1st May summary as 01.

Nargis Sethi also presented the advice of former attorney general Anwar Mansoor Khan dated March 2010.

The apex court has indicted the prime minister on the contempt of court charges.

5 Nato soldiers among 17 killed in attack near Pak border


KANDAHAR: At least five Nato soldiers among 17 were killed and 20 civilians were injured Wednesday when a suicide bomber attacked a Nato convoy in an Afghan town near Pakistan border, police said.

"There was a bomb blast against Nato soldiers in Spin Boldak. Five soldiers among 17 were killed and 20 civilians got hurt, a police officer told.

Chaman border has been sealed for all traffic after the attack.

Child killed, 3 hurt in Peshawar blast


PESHAWAR: A nine-year-old child was killed and three other people were wounded Wednesday when a bomb planted in a sewer exploded in Peshawar, .

The blast took place in the Scheme Chowk neighbourhood of Peshawar.

"A nine-year old boy was killed and three others, two children and a man, were wounded in the bomb blast," a senior police said.

It was a remote-controlled device, bomb disposal squad chief Hukam Khan said.

The victims were shifted to Lady Reading Hospital for treatment.

A suspect was held from near the crime scene and according to sources a remote has been recovered from his possession.

Honour killing: Woman shot dead in Shikarpur


SHIKARPUR: A woman was shot dead in Shikarpur after being declared 'Kari' by the jirga,

According to details, two women were declared 'Kari' by the jirga in Dur Muhammad Shar village. Later, one of them was shot dead.

Sindh Home Minister Manzoor Wassan, taking notice of the incident, suspended DSP and SHO of the area.

Wasan also sought a report from IG Sindh besides giving orders of taking strict action against the accused.

It may be mentioned here that a couple of days ago two women and as many children of Shar clan were kidnapped by Batani community of Jatoi tribe. They were released on the interference of tribal elders.

Doctor looks to China for spinal injury 'cure'


HONG KONG: One of the world's leading researchers into spinal cord injuries says China could hold the key to a cure that he has been searching for since he met late actor Christopher Reeve in the 1990s.

US-based Doctor Wise Young first used the word "cure" in relation to his work after a conversation with Reeve, the "Superman" hero who became quadriplegic in an equestrian accident in 1995.

Reeve contacted him looking for help and the two became close friends. The actor died of heart failure in 2004 at the age of 52, having devoted his life to raising awareness about spinal cord injuries and stem-cell research.

But it was a star of a different sort, Chinese gymnast Sang Lan, who set Young on the path he believes has brought a cure closer than ever, thanks to ground-breaking clinical trials of stem-cell therapy he is conducting in China.

Sang crushed her spine during a routine warm-up exercise at the Goodwill Games in New York in 1998. She met Young as she underwent treatment and rehabilitation in the United States over the next 12 months.

"Her parents came to me and asked whether or not there would ever be a cure for her, and I said we're working very hard on it," recalled Young, who was by then one of the leading US experts on spinal cord injuries.

"When she went back to China after doing her rehabilitation in New York she cried and asked how would therapies go from the United States to China.

"In those days China was still relatively poor and backward so she didn't think that any therapy would be coming from China. So I started in 1999 to talk to all the spinal cord doctors in China."

He said the result was China Spinal Cord Injury Net, the world's largest clinical trial network for spinal cord therapies. Established in Hong Kong in 2005, it is about to expand into Europe, India and the United States

No Army operation in Balochistan – Gen.Kayani

 Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani on Saturday said that there is no military operation being carried out in Balochistan and not a single soldier is involved in any operation in the province.

Gen Kayani said this while talking to the media persons during a reception arranged by the Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani in the honour of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

The rumours about military operation in Balochistan were mere propaganda while the Frontier Core (FC) was helping out the provincial government under the article 245. The situation that appeared after the murder of a Balochi leader Habib Jalib tells enough who was behind creating law and order situation, but unfortunately the blame has been put on to the army. To a question, he said Balochistan has a great strategic importance, particularly for the Central Asian States and Afghanistan.

Pakistan successfully test Fires Ballistic Missile Hatf-II

Pakistan on Monday successfully test  fired the Short Range Surface to Surface Ballistic Missile Hatf II  (Abdali), as part of the process of validation of land based ballistic missile systems.
Hatf II (Abdali) with a range of 180 km, carries nuclear as well as conventional warheads with high accuracy. It provides an operational level capability to Pakistan’s Strategic Forces, additional to the strategic and tactical level capability, which Pakistan already possesses, says an ISPR press release issued here.
The test was witnessed by Director General Strategic Plans Division Lieutenant General (Retired) Khalid Ahmed Kidwai, Commander Army Strategic Force Command Lieutenant General Tariq Nadeem Gilani, senior officers from the Armed Forces, Scientists and Engineers of strategic organizations

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Tuesday 6 March 2012

Over 100 Yemen troops killed in Qaeda attack


ADEN: More than 100 Yemeni soldiers and at least 25 suspected al Qaeda gunmen were killed in attacks on military positions in the country's restive south, medics and local officials said on Monday.

Sunday's assault was one of the deadliest against Yemeni troops and the latest in a spate of attacks on security forces since President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi pledged a crackdown on the militants in an inauguration speech last month.

A medical official at the military hospital in the southern port city of Aden, speaking on condition of anonymity, said "the death toll... has risen to at least 103" soldiers.

He said "many soldiers died from wounds sustained in the assault" on army posts on the outskirts of Zinjibar, Abyan's provincial capital where militants linked to al Qaeda are in control.

A military official, who also declined to be identified, told AFP al Qaeda militants were responsible for the "surprise attack" which had turned into "a massacre."

Another medic said hospital staff were overwhelmed by the number of casualties.

"We were forced to use administrative offices and waiting rooms to treat the wounded," he told AFP, declining to be named. "The hospital was packed full with dead and injured" soldiers.

In Washington, a Pentagon spokesman said the United States is "very concerned" about the assault.

"We view Yemen as a very important partner on counter-terrorism efforts and we're also very concerned about the clashes that have taken place there, to include AQAP (al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula) advances in certain parts in the country," press secretary George Little told reporters.

"I think it's important to put this into some context. The Yemeni government has faced challenges in certain parts of the country for some time so I wouldn't necessarily read anything at this point into the stability of the Yemeni government," he said.

Yemeni military officials reported fierce clashes on Sunday when suspected al Qaeda militants tried to overrun an army post in Kud, just south of Zinjibar.

The violence then spread to other military positions on the outskirts of the city.

At least 25 al Qaeda gunmen were killed in the fighting and several others wounded, a local official from the nearby militant stronghold of Jaar told AFP.

He also said at least 56 soldiers were captured by al Qaeda, including seven officers and 10 wounded soldiers.

The militants, known in Yemen as the Partisans of Sharia (Islamic law), seized control of Zinjibar and several other towns in Yemen's mostly lawless south last May as former president Ali Abdullah Saleh faced mass protests.

The military official, who was at the scene during Sunday's attack, said troops from the Kud base were "surprised" to see the militants carrying army issue weapons and using military vehicles.

Soldiers who survived the attack accused some army leaders who had served under Saleh of "collaborating" with al Qaeda.

On Monday, gunmen opened fire at the police chief of the Sheikh Osman district of Aden, Colonel Abdullah al-Mawzaie, wounding him and a companion as they headed for the southern province of Lahij, a security official said.

The violence highlights the security challenges facing Hadi as he tries to restore order and unify the country's armed forces, as stipulated by a Gulf-brokered transition accord that ended Saleh's 33-year rule.

On Friday, Hadi, who will lead Yemen for an interim two-year period, named General Salem Ali Qatan to head the 31st Armoured Brigade in southern Yemen, replacing Saleh loyalist General Mahdi Maqola.

The appointment was one of Hadi's first steps as head of a new military commission tasked with restructuring Yemen's divided security forces.

Some of Yemen's most powerful army units, including the Republican Guards, are commanded by Saleh's closest aides, including his son and nephew.

Yemeni political analyst Majed al-Mabjahi said Sunday's suspected al Qaeda assault was "a show of force" by the group.

"Given the new political environment, and the fear of impending attacks" by the new government, al Qaeda wants to demonstrate that any attempt to destroy the group would "come at a high cost."

In his February 25 inaugural speech, Hadi vowed to fight al Qaeda and restore security across the impoverished nation.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton pledged firm support to Hadi as she spoke to him by phone for the first time since his inauguration.

A statement, which did not refer to Sunday's deadly assault, said she had told him that "this is a key moment in Yemen's transition." (AFP)

DCO Gwadar shot dead after spat: police


KARACHI: DIG South has said that DCO Gawadar Abdur Rehman Dashti visited his friend's house where he was shot dead after spat.

A body of DCO Gwadar was found outside a Banglow owned by a political figure of Turbat Mir Imam Bazinjo located in Khayaban e Tanzeem area of Defence.

Talking to media here late on Monday, DIG South Shaukat Ali said that alleged killer was willing to shift the body in some other area; meanwhile, servants were washing the site of the incident.

He said that police took two servants of a house into their custody while Mir Imam managed to flee.

Meanwhile, SP Sadar said that weapons have been recovered from the house of Mir Yaqoob Bazinjo. He said that Sindh-Balochistan border has been sealed.

The body has been shifted to Jinnah hospital.

US-Afghan strategic partnership talks stalled


KABUL: Doubts grew on Monday that the United States and Afghanistan could narrow sharp differences in negotiations and reach a long-term strategic partnership deal.

The Strategic Partnership Agreement, which Washington and Kabul have been discussing for over a year, will be the framework for US involvement in Afghanistan beyond 2014, when the last foreign combat troops are due to leave Afghanistan.

The Kabul government wants the United States and NATO to agree to stop carrying out night raids on Afghan homes as a precondition for signing an agreement with Washington and a timeline to assume control over detention centres.

But while the rules covering night raids and air strikes have been tightened, they continue to cause great resentment among many Afghans. Movement on the detention issue has also stalled, causing a deadlock.

"The impasse in talks could threaten the strategic partnership," said an Afghan foreign ministry official.

Relations have been heavily strained in recent weeks over the burning of copies of the Muslim holy book at a NATO base, which triggered violent protests and prompted some Afghan security forces to turn their weapons on American soldiers.

A senior Afghan government official told Reuters that Kabul has been pressing the Americans hard to hand over the detention facility at NATO's Bagram air base, where the Korans were burned.

"The United States government thinks Afghanistan does not have the ability or the international standards to run the prison and also insists that night raids can't be stopped overnight as it's a key tool against the insurgents," he said.

"The United States government believes that Afghan forces are not yet ready to take over the control of night raids from US troops," the official said.

Gavin Sundwall, a spokesman for the US embassy in Kabul, suggested a pact may not be possible. "We have always said it is more important to get the right agreement than to get an agreement," he said in a statement.

The Obama administration has been hoping it can conclude an agreement before a meeting of NATO leaders in Chicago in May.

While the document would not nail down details, it is expected to contain an agreement in principle to some sort of US military presence in Afghanistan beyond the end of 2014, when most NATO combat troops are expected to be gone.

A failure to broker a deal might strain US-Afghan relations, already complicated by the Koran burnings and a spate of insider attacks on foreign forces, even further. It would certainly raise questions about how the West can establish a stable future for Afghanistan as NATO nations bring their troops home.

In Washington, the State Department said the agreement remained an important goal.

"There have been a couple of sticking points. We are continuing to try to work through those and I don't have anything to report at this time with regard to completing the document or settling those two issues," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters.

US officials have said the night raid and detention issues may be broken out into a separate document, perhaps allowing them to conclude the strategic partnership more quickly.

One US defense official said that "any round of negotiations on agreements of this significance is bound to surface disagreements from time to time. No one should suggest that we're at the point of failure."

Ice dam collapses at Argentine glacier


BUENOS AIRES: An ice dam at Argentina's Perito Moreno glacier collapsed early Sunday, creating an impressive spectacle not seen since July 2008, although few tourists were actually awake to experience the moment.

Several tons of ice fell off the 60-meter (200 foot) ice dam into Lago Argentina at the national park in southern Santa Cruz province.

Some 5,000 tourists had been in the park Saturday awaiting the ice show, park rangers said, but the slight movement of ice which began Wednesday turned into an avalanche at around 4:00 am (0700 GMT), leaving visitors disappointed.

Only a group of rangers witnessed the collapse, which created a crash heard several kilometers away, accelerated by heavy rainfall overnight.

"The noise was very great, it was coming down in buckets," said park ranger Carlos Corvalan.

Perito Moreno, one of the biggest tourist attractions in Argentina, is one of the largest glaciers on the Patagonian ice cap.

The glacier has a travel speed of 1.7 meters (5.5 feet) per day in its central part and periodically creates an ice dam which collapses from the pressure of the advancing glacier.

The glacier was named after one of the first explorers in Argentine Patagonia.

Monday 5 March 2012

One hurt in bomb blast near Turkish PM's office: TV


ANKARA: A bomb exploded Monday near the offices of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara, lightly injuring one person, officials and media said.

The device, which was in a small plastic bottle, went off at around 0730 GMT, 20 metres (yards) from the building in the central Kizilay district, one and a half hour before a cabinet meeting to be headed by Erdogan.

"It appears that the explosive material was 150 grammes of light explosives placed inside a plastic bottle," Ankara governor Alaaddin Yuksel was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news agency.

The official however declined to comment on the possible motive of the attack that occured on the same street housing both the prime minister's offices and the supreme court of appeals.

"There's an ongoing investigation," he said.

The blast came less than a week after a remote-controlled bomb exploded in Istanbul near Erdogan's ruling party headquarters, which wounded 15 police officers and one civilian.

Police blocked access to the Ankara blast zone -- the entrance to the parking lot of the supreme court of appeals, fearing a second explosion, said private NTV television.

The injured was a court employee, it added. Security guards at Erdogan's office also rushed to the scene.

"It appears some people are attempting to re-escalate tensions in this country," Culture and Tourism Minister Ertugrul Gunay said without elaborating.

Several outlawed armed groups -- Kurds, Islamists and leftist extremists -- have carried out bomb attacks in Istanbul and Ankara in the past.

In September a powerful bomb rocked the centre of Ankara, killing three people on the spot but the death toll rose to five when two of the at least 15 who were injured died in hospital.

A radical Kurdish group, the Freedom Falcons of Kurdistan (TAK), claimed responsibility for the attack.

Turkish officials say TAK is a front used by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) which is listed as a terrorist group by Ankara and much of the international community.

The PKK has said TAK is a splinter group outside its control.

A bomb blast in May last year injured eight people near a bus stop in Etiler, an upscale district in Istanbul.

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