Terror wave in Pakistan sparks rare criticism of Saudi Arabia

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have long enjoyed close relations, but Islamabad's new-found resolve for fighting the root causes of extremism has seen the Gulf state come in for rare criticism.
The two countries, both with majority Sunni Muslim populations, are bound together by shared Islamic religious ties, financial aid from oil-rich Saudi and Pakistani military assistance to the kingdom.
But a Taliban massacre at a school that killed more than 150 people in December, mostly children, has led the government to crack down on militants and talk of bringing religious seminaries under tighter control.
Now the country's media and even government ministers have begun to question whether support from Saudi Arabia for seminaries, known as madrassas, is fuelling violent extremism — bringing tension to the relationship for the first time.
Last week, the Saudi embassy issued a statement saying that all its donations to seminaries had government clearance, after a minister accused the Riyadh government of creating instability across the Muslim world.
The Pakistani foreign ministry responded by saying that funding by private individuals through “informal channels” would also be scrutinised closely to try to choke off funding for terror groups. While the statement avoided mentioning Saudi Arabia specifically, it was widely interpreted as a rebuke.
Away from the seminaries, there has also been widespread criticism of the decision to allow Saudi royals to hunt the rare houbara bustard, prized in the Middle East for its supposed aphrodisiac properties, in the southern provinces of Sindh and Baluchistan.
Officials granted permission to hunt the bird, which is on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's “red list” of threatened species, in defiance of a court order, prompting allegations that the government prized its lucrative ties to Riyadh over its own wildlife.

Terror funding

Donors in Saudi Arabia have long been accused of quietly funding terror groups sympathetic to the kingdom's hardline version of Sunni Islam.
Leaked diplomatic cables by then-US secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2009 said Saudi Arabian donors were “the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide”.
The cable cited the Taliban, Al Qaeda and Pakistan's Sunni Muslim sectarian militants Lashkar-e-Jhangvi as examples of where funds were being channelled.
Linked to the funding is Saudi Arabia's long geostrategic struggle with Iran, the key Shia Muslim power in the region.
Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan's current prime minister, enjoys particularly close ties with the Saudi royal family, which hosted him during his almost decade-long exile from Pakistan following his ouster by then military ruler Pevez Musharraf.
And last year the government said it had received a $1.5 billion “gift “from a friendly Muslim nation, widely thought by experts to be in fact a loan from Saudi Arabia.
But Najmuddin Sheikh, a former foreign secretary and ambassador, said the December attack on an army school in Peshawar, which left 153 people dead including 134 children, had opened the door for criticism.
“This has been triggered by Peshawar and a strong feeling that much of the terrorism that is here is being financed by outside countries,” he said.
“Countries like Kuwait, UAE and Qatar must also do much more at home to curtail this. “But, he added, any efforts to cut back on foreign funding for extremist seminaries must go hand in hand with similar efforts at home.
He said this would include the state dropping its links with proxy groups that have historically been used by the military establishment to further strategic goals in Afghanistan and Indian-held Kashmir.
“Our fund collection within Pakistan remains unimpeded. If you want more from abroad you need to do more at home,” he said.
A senior government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, agreed.
“We didn't need the Saudis to radicalise us, we have geared ourselves to that,” he said.
And while the current mood may be critical of Riyadh, the official said in the long run the relationship was too important and too beneficial to jeopardise.
“There is no change in policy. Both the Sharif government and the military are very much on board with Saudis. Actual policy is not likely to change,” he said.

Nigerian woman gang-raped in New Delhi

NEW DELHI: Police in Delhi arrested four men on Friday in connection with the alleged gang-rape of a Nigerian woman in a moving car, the latest in a series of sex attacks in the Indian capital.

The 35-year-old, who has been staying in India on a tourist visa, told police the men kidnapped her after midnight on Friday morning outside a popular shopping mall in New Delhi's Saket area before bundling her into a car.

They then drove for around half an hour, during which time the alleged gangrape took place, before pushing her out of the vehicle.

The woman, who cannot be named, was finally rescued after a passerby spotted her on the side of the road in Mayur Vihar, around 20 kilometres (12 miles) away in east Delhi.

“We have received a complaint from the woman and investigations are ongoing,” Delhi police spokesman Rajan Bhagat told AFP.

“We have filed a case under relevant sections." Bhagat said the four men arrested were Indians, and the car allegedly used had been impounded.

Local media, quoting police sources, said the victim was in an inebriated condition at the time of her rescue and had suffered minor injuries but was released from hospital by Friday afternoon.

Nigerian embassy officials in New Delhi were not available for comment.

The city sealed its reputation as India's “rape capital” two years ago when a medical student died after being gang-raped on a moving bus, prompting mass protests and triggering a series of policing and legal reforms.

Last year, a driver for US-based online taxi service Uber allegedly sexually assaulted a woman passenger in New Delhi while driving her home from a dinner.

Police figures released earlier this year said 2,069 rape cases were registered in New Delhi during 2014, a 31 per cent jump compared to the previous year.

Huge blaze guts 79-floor Dubai skyscraper

DUBAI: Hundreds of panicked residents fled one of the tallest towers in Dubai early Saturday as a huge fire engulfed the skyscraper, causing extensive damage to its luxury flats.
The inferno gutted the upper part of the 79-storey Torch tower, triggering an evacuation of nearby blocks in the Dubai Marina neighbourhood, an AFP correspondent reported.
Amateur footage posted online showed fire engulfing the upper floors of the tower, home to hundreds of expatriates, with debris falling onto the road as strong winds fanned the flames.
Resident Mehdi Ansari told AFP that the fire alarm sounded at around 2 am (2200 GMT).
“I saw there was fire and pieces of the building falling down so I immediately took my wife and our baby. We took some important items and went down,” he said.
"When we went to the staircase, it was full of smoke. Later the staircase got busier and smokier, the lights went off and some people panicked."
Civil defence teams cleared the building, which at 336 metres (1,105 feet) is one of the world's tallest residential towers.
Dubai police said there were no fatalities but seven people were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation.
A civil defence department statement said the fire began on the 51st floor and swept across the tower's facade affecting 20 storeys.
Major General Rashid Thani al-Matroushi, director of Dubai civil defence, said firefighters were able to stop the fire spreading to nearby buildings.
Emergency teams used “strict protocols to break in quickly and reach the source of the fire,” he was quoted as saying by Abu Dhabi-based newspaper The National.
Firefighters battled the blaze for more than two hours, before hundreds of residents of nearby towers were allowed to return to their apartments.

'Out of control'

Ansari, who lives on the tower's 27th floor, praised the emergency services for dealing with the blaze.
“It was a big fire and the wind was making things worse. The fire was out of control,” said the 30-year-old sound engineer.
"Some people had to walk down about 50 floors and weren't in great shape, “he added. “The firefighters were outstanding. They got there very fast and medics took care of everyone."
Dubai Marina is a popular expat neighbourhood that has a high concentration of residential towers. It is also a major tourist attraction.
Dubai, known for its skyline of hugely varied skyscrapers, has seen fires at towers in the past.
In 2012, a huge blaze gutted the 34-storey Tamweel Tower in the nearby Jumeirah Lake Towers district. It was later revealed to have been caused by a cigarette butt thrown into a bin.
Also on Saturday, local media reported that 10 foreign labourers had perished in a fire that destroyed a makeshift hostel above a tyre shop in Abu Dhabi.
Eight others were injured in the blaze that gutted the two-storey building in the Mussaffah district on Friday, Gulf News daily reported, saying that the unlicensed accommodation above the shop was originally a storage area.

China lodges protest over Modi's visit to Arunachal Pradesh

SHANGHAI: China has lodged an official protest against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to a border region claimed by both countries.
China disputes the entire territory of the northeast Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, calling it south Tibet. Its historic town Tawang, a key site for Tibetan Buddhism, was briefly occupied by Chinese forces during a 1962 war.
“The Chinese government has never recognised the so-called 'Arunachal Pradesh',” a statement on the Chinese Foreign Ministry's website said on Friday, adding that Modi's visit was “not conducive” to developing bilateral relations.
Vice Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin told India's Ambassador to China Ashok Kantha on Saturday that China was firmly opposed to the visit.
“The Indian side's insistence on arranging activities by leaders in the disputed region infringes on China's territorial sovereignty and interests, magnifies the dispute on the border issue, and violates the consensus to appropriately handle the border issue,” a separate ministry statement cited Liu as saying.
Modi visited Arunachal Pradesh on Friday to inaugurate the opening of a train line and power station. He did not mention China but pledged billions of dollars of investment to develop infrastructure in the region.
“I assure you that you will witness more development in the state in the next five years than it has seen in the last 28 years,” Modi said, addressing a huge crowd.
Faster transport links and exploitation of Arunachal Pradesh's hydro-electric potential are the keys to fighting poverty and bringing about rapid development in the frontier state, he said.
In January, China objected to statements by Japan's Foreign Ministry supporting India's claim to the region.
A visit by US President Barack Obama to India in January was widely seen as a sign Modi is moving closer to the United States, to offset rising Chinese influence in Asia and, in particular, intensifying activity by the Chinese navy in the Indian Ocean.

US signals likely delay in troop pullout from Afghanistan

KABUL: President Barack Obama's new Pentagon chief said Saturday the United States was seriously considering slowing the pace of a troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, as the country faces a growing Taliban insurgency.
US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter's comments in Kabul offered the clearest sign yet that Washington was ready to delay the closure of some bases and retain more troops after appeals by Afghanistan's new President Ashraf Ghani and advice from commanders.
To safeguard “hard-won” progress, Obama “is considering a number of options to reinforce our support for President Ghani's security strategy, including possible changes to the timeline for our drawdown of US troops,” Carter said after talks with Afghan leaders.
“That could mean taking another look at the timing and sequencing of base closures to ensure we have the right array of coalition capabilities,” he said at a joint news conference with Ghani.
Apart from troop numbers, the United States and its allies would need to make “long-term commitments in resources, equipment and other support” to ensure the success of the Afghan forces, he said.
Carter's visit comes amid a sharp rise in Afghan casualties from the 13-year conflict, with the UN recording a 22 per cent increase in the number of civilians killed and injured in 2014 due to an intensification in ground fighting between government and insurgent forces.
It also comes as Obama faces a decision about the timetable for a troop drawdown in Afghanistan. Under the current plan, the 10,000-strong US force is due to drop to roughly 5,000 by the end of 2015 and then pull out altogether by the time Obama leaves office in two years.
But the Obama administration already has delayed the pace of the withdrawal, allowing 1,000 additional American forces to remain this year.
And the US commander on the ground, General John Campbell, has suggested he favours slowing the drawdown further, though the details of the possible options before Obama remain unclear.
Afghan leaders and some lawmakers have urged Obama to reconsider the withdrawal timetable, warning that an early US exit could jeopardise security and international aid.
Carter said as part of the review of the pullout plan, Washington was also was “rethinking the details of the counter-terrorism mission” that currently targets Al-Qaeda militants with raids by US and Afghan special forces and drone strikes.
He said the single most important factor that had prompted the review of the troop withdrawal timetable was the formation of a unity government last year led by Ghani, which he said had introduced “certainty” and “predictability”.
“That's something we couldn't have counted on a few months ago,” he said, calling it “major change”.
On the first day of a two-day visit, Carter held talks with the US commander in Kabul, Campbell, as well as General Lloyd Austin, head of US Central Command which oversees American forces in the Middle East and Central Asia.

Peace talks

His trip coincides with a concerted effort by Ghani to promote peace talks between Kabul and the Taliban, with Pakistan voicing strong support for the initiative.
Ghani declined to confirm whether Taliban leaders were now ready to enter into direct negotiations with his government, but he said the conditions were ripe for a potential breakthrough.
“The grounds for peace have never been better in the last 36 years,” Ghani said.
He said he was “hopeful” and “the direction is positive”. But he added: "We cannot make premature announcements."
The United States and a Taliban spokesman this week denied there were new plans to hold peace talks in Qatar, despite claims by some militant leaders.
Asked about the presence of the Islamic State group in Afghanistan, Carter played down the threat, saying some Taliban insurgents were making an attempt at “rebranding” themselves.
“The reports I've seen still have them in small numbers and aspirational, “he said.
The United States first launched military action in Afghanistan after the September 11, 2001 attacks, toppling the Taliban regime that had refused to break ties with Al-Qaeda.
A US-led Nato force eventually swelled to 130,000 troops, but last year the mission wrapped up its combat operations against Taliban insurgents.
A contingent of 12,500 foreign troops has remained to back up Afghanistan's 350,000 soldiers and police.

India insists: Obama's tree is not dead

NEW DELHI: Officials in India want to make one thing clear: The tree that President Barack Obama planted here three weeks ago is not dead. It just looks dead.
The peepal tree was awash in leaves when Obama planted it at the New Delhi memorial to Indian independence leader Mohandas K. Gandhi.
By Thursday, though, it was just a single lonely stem. The lack of leaves has been giving Indian officials sleepless nights, with the local media blasting them for allowing the tree to die.
But the reality: Peepal trees often lose their leaves this time of year. B.C Katiyar, a government horticulturist, says it's a seasonal phenomenon, after he and other officials visited the tree and pronounced it in good health.
He says it would send out shoots soon.

Afghan Taliban’s Doha office revived: Pakistan officials

ISLAMABAD: The Afghan Taliban’s office in Doha has been revived and the Taliban are now holding initial talks with the Afghan government, with Pakistan acting as facilitator, Dawn has learnt.
A top Pakistani official privy to the expected dialogue between Afghan Taliban and Afghan government confirmed the resumption of initial contacts between the two parties for devising the rules and agenda of formal talks expected to begin in March 2015.
"Yes I can confirm Taliban’s Doha office has been revived and now with the facilitation of Pakistan, Afghan Taliban are holding initial talks with senior Afghan government officials to chalk out the strategy and set rules for formal talks," the official told Dawn on condition of anonymity.
Another official said Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Raheel Sharif had given the green signal for facilitating the resumption of dialogue when he met Afghan President Ashraf Ghani in Kabul earlier this week.
The official also confirmed that the Afghan Taliban have held two rounds of talks with senior officials in Beijing, and Pakistan was taken on board by Chinese officials about the conclusion of the talks held in the Chinese capital.
Details reveal that in the initial level talks, the Afghan Taliban are being represented by Qari Din Mohammad from the Taliban political office in Doha who also went to China in late November, 2014 to discuss the situation in Afghanistan.
Qari Din Muhammad also held a meeting with senior US diplomats in Doha this week.
Islamabad, Beijing, Doha and Dubai are the possible venue for talks, and a final destination would be decided by the end of this month.
When asked for comments, Foreign Office spokesperson Tasneem Aslam said Pakistan has vital stakes in peace and stability in Afghanistan and is ready to provide whatever assistance it can.
“We are ready to facilitate the reconciliation process to the possible extent,” she confirmed.
Pakistan military’s public affairs wing had issued a rare statement on Thursday in response to the reports surfacing in the international media that Gen Raheel Sharif, during his visit to Kabul, had indicated to the Afghan leadership that Taliban might be willing to open reconciliation process.
“While onus for such negotiations to succeed lies on both parties concerned, Pakistan in all sincerity will support the process, as peace in Afghanistan will contribute to peace in the region. We hope all stakeholders will continue to act with responsibility not to allow detractors of peace to succeed,” a military spokesman had said.
However, an Afghan Taliban spokesperson had said on Thursday that the reports stating the leadership of the faction is willing to hold peace talks with US officials were fabricated. Zabiullah Mujahid denied the reports saying that reports of the faction pushing for peace talks are false.
Meanwhile, China is also making efforts to help prevent neighbouring Afghanistan from sliding into complete chaos after Western forces ended their combat mission in the mountainous nation last year.
"We will support the Afghan government in realising reconciliation with various political factions, including the Taliban," Wang Yi had said during a visit to Pakistan last week. "China is ready to play a constructive role and will provide the necessary facilitation at any time if required by various parties in Afghanistan."

Dozens dead in Somalia hotel attack

MOGADISHU: Somalia's Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab insurgents killed at least 25 people on Friday in an attack on a popular hotel in the capital Mogadishu where government ministers and officials were holding Friday prayers.
Twin explosions followed by heavy gunfire were heard from the upmarket Central Hotel, close to the presidential palace, with the Islamist gunmen reportedly blasting their way into the fortified building before storming the complex.
The attack is one of the worst in recent years.
An official at the presidential palace, known as Villa Somalia, said that at least 25 people were killed and the severity of injuries among the wounded meant the death toll was expected to rise.
Government sources said that the deputy mayor of Mogadishu and a member of parliament was killed, while the deputy prime minister and minister of transport were among the injured.
The hotel attack began with two explosions caused by a car bomb and a suicide bomber followed by gunmen who charged the building, with heavy gunfire heards as security forces took back control.
“The building was badly hit, the explosion was very big,” said police officer Abulrahman Ali.
"There were very many wounded people too, many of them seriously."

'Covered in blood'

Thick clouds of black smoke were seen pouring from the hotel as the injured were rushed to hospital.
“There were people covered in blood, I counted 10 dead bodies but that was only in one area,” said Ali Hussein, who was close to the hotel when the attack took place.
Shebab militants claimed responsibility for the attack.
“Our fighters attacked the Central Hotel,” Shebab spokesman Abdulaziz Abu Musab told AFP.
"The aim is to kill the apostate officials."
Shebab rebels have staged a string of assaults in their fight to overthrow the country's internationally-backed government. They have targeted hotels, the international airport, Villa Somalia, a United Nations compound and restaurants.
The extremists say they are targeting government officials for permitting the deployment of foreign African Union troops on Somali soil.
Shebab attacks in Somalia have targeted key government and security sites in a bid to discredit claims by the authorities and AU troops that they are winning the war.
Friday's attack comes a month after a Shebab suicide bomber exploded a car at the nearby SYL hotel, the day before a planned visit by Turkey's president.
United Nations envoy to Somalia Nick Kay condemned the “brutal terrorist attack” on the hotel.
“My heart goes out to those who have suffered. We stand firm with the Somalia people,” he said in a statement.
Britain's ambassador to Somalia Neil Wigan also condemned the attack but said it "will not derail Somalia's determination to defeat Al-Shebab's terrorism."
Somalia is due to vote on a new constitution ahead of elections in 2016, but security remains a major problem.

House collapses in north India, killing 13 family members

LUCKNOW: A newly built house in northern India collapsed early on Sunday killing 13 residents as they slept, the latest in a string of building cave-ins, police said.
The roof of the house suddenly gave way in Uttar Pradesh state, trapping the residents, four of whom managed to escape from the rubble with the help of neighbours, a police officer said.
“Thirteen people have been killed. Among the deceased are four labourers as well as the family and relatives of the house owner,” district police superintendent, Muniraj, who uses only one name, told AFP.
“Our men along with those from the local unit of the National Disaster Response Force rushed to the spot for rescue operations,” he said.
“The injured have been rushed to a hospital where they are being treated. “Police said they were searching for the building contractor after suspecting poor construction was to blame for the accident in Dulhaipur village about 32 kilometres from the city of Varanasi.
A local official said $322 would be given to the relatives of the victims as compensation for the accident. The accident is the latest in a long line of deadly building collapses in India, some of which have highlighted shoddy construction standards.
A massive influx of people to cities in search of jobs and a shortage of low-cost housing has helped fuel the construction of illegal buildings across the country, often made using substandard material. Millions also live in dilapidated old buildings, many of which cave in during rains.
In July, an under construction 11-storey apartment tower in Tamil Nadu's state capital Chennai came crashing down following heavy rains, killing 61 people, mostly labourers.
A rundown residential block in Mumbai collapsed, killing 60 people, in September 2013.

Danish police kill suspect behind Copenhagen shootings

Danish police shot and killed a man early Sunday who likely carried out shooting attacks at a free speech event and a synagogue in Copenhagen that left two people dead.
“We assume that it's the same culprit behind both incidents... that was shot by the police,” Chief police inspector Torben Molgaard Jensen told reporters.
Investigator Joergen Skov said “nothing at this point suggests there were other perpetrators” in the shootings that also left five police officers wounded.
Skov said the gunman was killed in a firefight with police in the Noerrebro district of Copenhagen. No police were wounded in that shooting.
The dramatic events that unfolded in Copenhagen stirred fears that another terror spree was underway in a European capital a month after 17 people were killed in Paris attacks.
The first shooting happened before 4 pm Saturday when police said a gunman used an automatic weapon to shoot through the windows of the Krudttoenden cultural center during a panel discussion on freedom of expression featuring a Swedish artist who had caricatured Prophet Muhammad (Peace be Upon Him).
The artist, Lars Vilks, was whisked away unharmed by his bodyguards but a 55-year-old man attending the event was killed, while three police officers were wounded, authorities said. Two belonged to the Danish security service PET, which said the circumstances surrounding the shooting “indicate that we are talking about a terror attack."
After midnight Sunday, a Jewish man was killed and two police officers were wounded in the second shooting outside the synagogue. Dan Rosenberg Asmussen, the head of Denmark's Jewish community, told Danish public broadcaster DR that the victim was guarding the entrance of a building adjacent to the synagogue.
Skov said the shooter was confronted by police as he returned to an address that they were keeping under surveillance. Investigators described him as 25 to 30 years old with an athletic build and carrying a black automatic weapon. They released a blurred photograph of the suspect wearing dark clothes and a scarf covering part of his face.
Vilks, a 68-year-old artist who has faced numerous death threats in 2007 for caricaturing Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), told The Associated Press he believed he was the intended target of the first shooting, which happened at a panel discussion titled “Art, blasphemy and freedom of expression. “
“What other motive could there be? It's possible it was inspired by Charlie Hebdo,” he said, referring to the Jan. 7 attack on the French newspaper that had angered Muslims by lampooning the Prophet.
Police said it was possible the gunman had planned the “same scenario” as in the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Oregon man admits helping people linked to 2009 ISI bombing

An Oregon man pleaded guilty on Friday to being an accessory after the fact for helping people linked to a suicide bomb attack on the headquarters of Pakistan's intelligence service in 2009 that killed about 30 people, court records showed.
Reaz Qadir Khan, a naturalised US citizen living in Portland, admitted in a plea entered in US District Court that he provided advice and financial aid to the suicide bomber's Maldives-based wives following the attack, knowing that such assistance would hinder and prevent their capture.
Khan, a 51-year-old wastewater treatment plant operator and married father-of-three originally from Pakistan, was arrested in 2013 on an indictment which accused him of using email and intermediaries to consult with and provide financial support to the Maldivian bomber, Ali Jaleel, and his family.
The indictment said the conspiracy began in 2005 and continued on through the May 27, 2009, attack on Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence headquarters in Lahore and into the following month. The attack also wounded some 300 people.
The government said at the time that the attack, believed to have been carried out by Jaleel and two other people, was in apparent revenge for an army offensive against Taliban militants in the country's northwestern Swat region.
US prosecutors said a video released by the media wing of Al Qaeda soon afterward showed Jaleel taking responsibility for the attack, as well preparing for the assault at a training camp believed to be in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan.
The US Department of Justice said in a statement that under the plea agreement, the defence and government were jointly recommending a prison term of 87 months for Khan. His sentencing is scheduled for June 8.

Indian court acquits 70 accused in 2002 post-Godhra riots case

GUJARAT: A court in India’s Gujarat’s Banaskantha district acquitted on Friday 70 accused in the 2002 post-Godhra riots that took place in Seshan Nava village for lack of evidence,The Hindu reported.
A total of 14 Muslims were killed in the riots that broke out on March 2, 2002 while two Hindus were also killed in police firing.
Addition Sessions Judge V.K. Pujara acquitted the accused on the ground that the prosecution failed to present sufficient evidence on record to prove their involvement as part of the mob participating in killings.
“The eye-witnesses in the case turned hostile and the total 109 oral witnesses did not give names of the accused and did not support the complainant’s case,” additional public prosecutor D.V. Thakor told The Hindu.
Eight of the accused persons died during the course of the trial. Mr. Thakor said 12 supplementary charge sheets were filed in this case.
According to prosecution’s case, an armed mob of around 5,000 people laid siege to the village on March 2 in the aftermath of the Sabarmati Express train burning.
They killed 14 persons of the Baloch Muslim community, including children. Gujarat is the home state of Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The state has a majority Hindu population and a history of religious conflict.
At least 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, died in Gujarat in 2002 in violence between Hindus and Muslims. Modi was chief minister of the state at the time.

Thousands gather for slain Muslim students in Chapel Hill

CHAPEL HILL: Thousands of people gathered Wednesday in Chapel Hill to mourn three Muslim students killed by an anti-religion gunman who shot them in the head, rocking the tight-knit university town.
Friends and family poured onto the University of North Carolina campus to remember Deah Shaddy Barakat, 23, his new wife Yusor Mohammad, 21 and her 19-year-old sister Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha.
The three were allegedly killed by neighbour Craig Stephen Hicks, 46, whose Facebook page espoused his anti-religious views.
The murders are being investigated by Chapel Hill police as a hate crime, and sparked outrage among Muslims worldwide. Craig is charged with three counts of first degree murder, which carries a minimum sentence of death or life in prison without parole.
The killing rattled the university town, and thousands braved cold temperatures for a candlelit vigil.
“We lost three great citizens of this world and of this country. But I think they've inspired thousands,” Farris Barakat, Deah's brother said before a tearful crowd.
He remembered his younger brother, a UNC dentistry student, as passionate about sports, his profession and the odd Chris Rock joke, as photos of the slain students flashed on a large screen. But he urged restraint and said the murder should not provoke further violence.
“Do not fight fire with fire... it is quite possible that this was an act based off of evil and a scared ignorant man, do not let ignorance propagate in your life, do not reply ignorance with ignorance,” he said.
Barakat and Mohammad were married in late December, and the new bride was set to start dental school in August. Her sister had attended the nearby North Carolina State University. Mohammad's bridesmaids remembered her plans to run a marathon, her commitment to meditation and the mosque and her love for breakfast cereal. They recalled her as a kind person.
“To speak about Yosur she was one of the most innocent, most kind human beings I have ever met in my entire life. I cannot even imagine as to why this would happen to her, and the same goes for Razan,” said Omar Abdul-Baki, president of UNC dentistry school student body, speaking before a line of dental students in white jackets.
Barakat, the son of Syrian immigrants, was remembered for his community work, offering free dental work to the needy and for raising money for a planned trip to Turkey to help Syrian refugees.
Childhood friend Abdul Salem said the crowds at the vigil were a testament to the impact that all three had.
He remembered Barakat as “always smiling, always positive and I don't mean that lightly. Obviously when tragedy hits people tend to remember the best things. But I challenge anyone to remember anything other than that about them,” speaking after the vigil, surrounded by hugging and crying mourners.
"It's an opportunity for people to stop and remember not just the positive things, to remember them and not remember them only because of this tragedy."
Chapel Hill Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt called the three “exemplars of the community” and vowed that justice would be served.
“Whatever ridiculous, unthinkable thoughts inspired this action, he is done,” he said
Craig Kleinschmidt vowed to move on from the tragedy and said the community would rebuild.
“Losing them this early in life is just, it's just unspeakably tragic."
A funeral is scheduled for all three Thursday afternoon at the Islamic Association in neighbouring Raleigh.

Did hate play a role in the killing of three Muslims?

CHAPEL HILL: Police on Thursday were trying to determine whether hate played any role in the killing of three Muslims a day earlier, a crime they said was sparked by a neighbour's long-simmering anger over parking and noise inside their condominium complex.
Craig Stephen Hicks, 46, describes himself as a “gun toting” atheist. Neighbors say he always seemed angry and frequently confronted his neighbours. His ex-wife said he was obsessed with the shooting-rampage movie “Falling Down,” and showed “no compassion at all” for other people.
The killings are fueling outrage among people who blame anti-Muslim rhetoric for hate crimes. A Muslim advocacy organisation pressed authorities to investigate possible religious bias. Many posted social media updates with the hashtags (hash)MuslimLivesMatter and (hash)CallItTerrorism.
About 2,000 people attended a candlelight vigil for the victims in the heart of UNC's campus Wednesday evening.
“We understand the concerns about the possibility that this was hate-motivated, and we will exhaust every lead to determine if that is the case,” Chapel Hill police Chief Chris Blue said in an email. His current wife, Karen Hicks, said he “champions the rights of others” and said the killings “had nothing do with religion or the victims' faith.”
Later Wednesday, she issued another statement, saying she's divorcing him.
Hicks appeared in court on Wednesday on charges of first-degree murder in the deaths of Deah Shaddy Barakat, 23, his wife Yusor Mohammad, 21, and her sister Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha, 19. He pleaded indigence and was appointed a public defender.
Officers were summoned by a neighbour who called police reporting five to 10 shots and the sound of people screaming. The women's father, Mohammad Abu-Salha, said police told him each was shot in the head inside the couple's apartment, and that he, for one, is convinced it was a hate crime.
“The media here bombards the American citizen with Islamic, Islamic, Islamic terrorism and makes people here scared of us and hate us and want us out. So if somebody has any conflict with you, and they already hate you, you get a bullet in the head,” said Abu-Salha, who is a psychiatrist.
Chapel Hill Police asked the FBI for help in their probe, and Ripley Rand, the US Attorney for the Middle District of North Carolina, said his office was monitoring the investigation. But Rand said the crime "appears at this point to have been an isolated incident".
Barakat and Mohammad were newlyweds who helped the homeless and raised funds to help Syrian refugees in Turkey this summer. They met while running the Muslim Student Association at North Carolina State before he began pursuing an advanced degree in dentistry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Mohammad planned to join her husband in dentistry school in the fall. Abu-Salha was visiting them Tuesday from Raleigh, where she was majoring in design at North Carolina State.
Imad Ahmad, who lived in the condo where his friends were killed until Barakat and Mohammed were married in December, said Hicks complained about once a month that the two men were parking in a visitor's space as well as their assigned spot.
"He would come over to the door, knock on the door and then have a gun on his hip saying 'you guys need to not park here,'" said Ahmad, a graduate student in chemistry at UNC-Chapel Hill. "He did it again after they got married."
Both Hicks and his neighbours complained to the property managers, who apparently didn't intervene. "They told us to call the police if the guy came and harassed us again," Ahmad said. The killings were "related to long-standing parking disputes my husband had with various neighbours regardless of their race, religion or creed," Karen Hicks said.
A probable cause hearing is scheduled for March 4 and police said Hicks was cooperating.

Ukraine peace roadmap agreed, but Europe sceptical

MINSK: A new peace roadmap aimed at ending the 10-month war between Ukraine and pro-Moscow rebels was agreed in Belarus Thursday, but Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that “big hurdles “remained.
Russian President Vladimir Putin emerged from the summit in the Belarussian capital Minsk, saying he, Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko had agreed on the “main” points.
Putin said a ceasefire would take effect at midnight Kiev time on Sunday (2200 GMT on Saturday) and that heavy weapons would be withdrawn from frontlines of the conflict, which has already killed at least 5,300 people and driven a million people from their homes.
Hollande, described the deal as “a comprehensive political solution”, while Merkel spoke only of a “glimmer of hope”.
“I have no illusions. We have no illusions,” she said, adding that “much work” remained.
Hollande, Merkel and Poroshenko flew from Minsk to Brussels for a European Union summit, where the French leader said that it was essential to keep up pressure to ensure the accord's success.“
The next few hours will be decisive as it could go either way,” Hollande said at an EU summit in Brussels fresh from the peace talks in Minsk, adding: “We will have to remain vigilant, to maintain the pressure and to press ahead.“
British Premier David Cameron said Putin should not expect any change to current sanctions against Moscow by the 28-nation EU unless he really changed his behaviour.
“If this is a genuine ceasefire then that would be welcome but what matters most of all is actions,” he added.

Toll mounts

The roadmap, meant to ease a crisis that has plunged the West and Russia into their bitterest dispute since the Cold War, was signed by the so-called “contact group”.
This comprises the pro-Russian separatist leaders, Russian and Ukrainian envoys, and European mediators from the OSCE.
A previous truce signed in Minsk last September quickly collapsed.
The latest talks were seen as a last opportunity for European leaders to save nearly bankrupt Ukraine from ever-widening defeats at the hands of rebels said by Kiev and the West to be armed and trained by Russia.
Even as the deal was agreed, Kiev and rebel sources said fighting over the last 24 hours had killed 14 civilians and two Ukrainian soldiers.
The Ukrainian government also accused Russia of deploying another 50 tanks across the border overnight, with fighting expected to continue around disputed railway hub Debaltseve, which rebels claim to have surrounded.
Putin said that up to 8,000 Ukraine troops were surrounded at Debalseve and rebels expected them to lay down their arms.
The Ukrainian military however denied the troops were blocked but said fighting was continuing ahead of the ceasefire.
In rebel-held Donetsk, weary residents expressed little optimism.
“I don't believe in it at all,” said Lyubov, 62, who would not give her last name. "Every time they sign an agreement, they say one thing and do another. I no longer trust anyone."

Money and guns

Beset by war and corruption, Ukraine's pro-Western government is struggling to enact legal and economic reforms that would help steer the former Soviet republic out of Russia's sphere of influence and into Western institutions.
The Kiev government got a major boost Thursday with the announcement by IMF chief Christine Lagarde of a new financial rescue plan worth $17.5 billion.
In total, Ukraine will receive $40 billion (35 billion euros) in assistance over four years coupled with bilateral loans from other sources, Lagarde said, helping to stabilise Kiev's finances after 10 months of conflict in the east.
The fate of Ukraine, however, may be decided on battlefields in the east, where heavily armed rebels have recently made big gains against outgunned government forces.
The new Minsk agreement is broadly similar to the first one, except that the new heavy weapons-free zone will be 50 to 70 kilometres (31-43 miles) wide, depending on the range of the weapon, double the width of the buffer zone agreed in September.
Kiev will also begin retaking control over the approximately 400 kilometre (250 mile) stretch of Russia's border with rebel-held Ukraine, but only after local elections are held.
The border is entirely under Russian and pro-Russian rebel control and is used, according to Kiev, as a conduit for separatist supplies. The Kremlin denies this but has opposed Ukraine being allowed to regain control of the frontier.
While heavy weapons must be withdrawn, troops and rebels can remain where they are, handing rebels de facto control of the roughly 500 square kilometres of territory they've gained in recent weeks.
Separatist-held territories will be granted a degree of autonomy to be established through talks, and the right to decide which language they use.

UAE warplanes back in action against IS militants

DUBAI: The United Arab Emirates on Tuesday launched air strikes from Jordan against the Islamic State group as an important Arab ally in the US-led anti-IS coalition returned to combat operations.
The raids came after President Bashar al-Assad said Damascus was being informed about air strikes against jihadists in Syria and that they could help his government if they were “more serious”.
Emirati F-16s that flew in to Jordan on Sunday carried out raids against IS, “hitting their targets and returning safely to base”, the UAE armed forces command said. It did not specify how many aircraft were in action, or where or what their targets were.
Following the December crash and capture of Jordanian F-16 pilot Maaz al-Kassasbeh, the UAE withdrew from the coalition’s strike missions over fears for the safety of its pilots.
The jihadists later killed the airman by burning him alive, releasing gruesome video footage of his “execution”.
Abu Dhabi wanted more done in terms of search and rescue for downed pilots in the conflict zones, the New York Times reported, and the US military later deployed aircraft and troops to northern Iraq to boost its SAR capabilities.
On Tuesday, the Pentagon said coalition aircraft carried out one air strike in eastern Syria in the 24 hours to 0600 GMT, and also pounded the jihadists in Iraq with 11 strikes.
The US-led coalition launched air strikes against IS in Syria on September 23, but has pointedly refused to coordinate with Damascus.
In an interview broadcast by the BBC on Tuesday, Assad confirmed that there was no cooperation with the coalition, members
of which he accused of backing “terrorism” — in an apparent reference to their support for other rebel groups fighting to overthrow him.“There’s no direct cooperation” with the coalition, Assad said.
Rights groups have accused Syria’s regime of indiscriminate bombardment of civilians in rebel-held areas, including with barrel bombs — crude munitions packed with explosives and shrapnel that are generally dropped by helicopter.
“Sometimes, they convey a message, a general message. There is no dialogue.
There’s, let’s say, information, but not dialogue”. Assad said such communication was through third parties.
“More than one party, Iraq and other countries,” he said.
Damascus has grudgingly accepted the air strikes against IS on its territory, saying it was informed before they started, but has repeatedly criticised the coalition for failing to coordinate with it.
It says the raids cannot defeat IS unless the international community starts cooperating with Syrian troops on the ground.
Assad said the US-led strikes had the potential to help his government, but that so far they were not sufficiently “serious” to do so.
Analysts have said the anti-IS strikes have freed up Syria’s government to focus on other rebel groups.
And Syrian opposition leaders have accused Washington of abandoning them by targeting the jihadists but not Assad’s forces.

Jon Stewart leaving Comedy Central's 'The Daily Show'

LOS ANGELES: Comedian Jon Stewart, famed for his biting television satire of politicians and the media, will leave as the host of Comedy Central's parody newscast The Daily Showlater this year, the Viacom Inc-owned cable network said on Tuesday.
Stewart, 52, has starred on The Daily Show since 1999, when he replaced Craig Kilborn as host of the late-night cable programme.
The New York-based show, which airs weeknights at 11 p.m., is expected to continue, the network said, but a replacement for Stewart has yet to be named.
There was no immediate explanation for Stewart's departure, and it was not clear whether the comedian was moving to another network or endeavor.
The announcement came after Comedy Central's other big name, former Daily Show contributor Stephen Colbert, ended his tenure as star of the companion show The Colbert Report and left the network in December.
Colbert quit Comedy Central to succeed the retiring David Letterman as host of the “Late Show” on CBS. Comedy Central said Stewart would address his exit on Tuesday's edition of the show, which has won Peabody and Emmy awards.
“Through his unique voice and vision, The Daily Show has become a cultural touchstone for millions of fans and an unparalleled platform for political comedy that will endure for years to come,” Comedy Central President Michele Ganeless said in a statement.
The Daily Show averages slightly more than one million viewers a night, a much smaller audience than his late-night competition on broadcast networks, but Stewart became disproportionately influential in US politics and culture.
His lampooning of elected and would-be office-holders, broadcast journalists and other public figures, especially on the conservative end of the spectrum, has made him a darling of the political left.
Young adult viewers make up the core of his fan base. In a 2004 poll by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, 21 per cent of respondents aged 18 to 29 cited The Daily Show as a regular source of political news.
A two-time Oscar host who has branched out into the movie industry, Stewart made his directorial debut with the film Rosewater last year.
Beginning his show business career in stand-up comedy in New York, Stewart took his satirical humor to MTV in 1993, where he hosted The Jon Stewart Show.
The Daily Show has been a career launching pad for several comedians besides Colbert, including Steve Carell and John Oliver.

Afghanistan could become haven for IS, warns ex-CIA officer

WASHINGTON: Afghanistan is in danger of turning into a sanctuary once again for extremists as the West withdraws troops and shifts its attention elsewhere, a former senior Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) official warned Tuesday.
The country could even become a refuge for Islamic State jihadists now waging war in Syria and Iraq, said Robert Grenier, the former CIA station chief in Islamabad and author of a new book.
His memoir, “88 Days to Kandahar,” recounts his harrowing experience helping to topple the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in 2001 after the September 11 attacks
“I would say if anything the future threat of an Afghan safe haven is maybe even greater than it was back before 9/11,” Grenier said at an event organised by the New America think tank.
The Afghan Taliban would not be ready to rebuff its allies in the Pakistani Taliban or other extremists — such as the Islamic State — if they asked for sanctuary, he said.
“There are groups within Pakistan that are dedicated to attacking the regime in Islamabad. They're not going to go away,” he said.
According to Grenier, the Taliban tend to see things in black-and-white terms, looking at decisions through the question: “Is it dictated by Islam or is it not?” “And they won't turn their back on people who are ideologically allied with them across the border.”
“Nor do I believe will they turn their backs on international terrorists, if once again they come back to the region in any significant numbers, as I fear they will if their fortunes take a bad turn,” he said.

Targeting Taliban chief

Grenier's book describes how US aircraft missed taking out Taliban leader Mullah Omar by “30 minutes” in 2001 and how Hamid Karzai was nearly killed inadvertently in American bombing raids.
He also described a last-ditch bid to negotiate a deal with the Taliban's number two leader in the days after 9/11, in which Grenier tried to persuade his counterpart in a hotel in Pakistan to break with Omar and stage a coup. The attempt failed.
The former CIA officer said he was sceptical that attempts to broker peace talks with the Taliban would succeed, as the insurgents still believe they can topple the government and take back power in Kabul.
He also said the group was not suited to political rule or taking part in parliamentary politics.
Grenier, who rose to other senior posts in the CIA before leaving in 2006, said his book tells the story of how America quickly won what he calls “the first American-Afghan war” in 2001, and “how we lost, or at least certainly didn't win, the second American-Afghan war. “And the book ends with a warning about “how the errors of the past may yet be revisited when once again we may be called upon to fight a third American-Afghan war.”
With a small US-led force due to withdraw in two years, Grenier said he fears that the United States and other Western governments will fail to funnel financial aid to Kabul after their soldiers leave and abandon the Afghan government.
His book offers a very grim view of the legacy of more than a decade of war against the Taliban insurgents.
“For all the billions spent and lives lost, there is little to show, and most of that will not long survive our departure,” he writes.

US, UK missions suspend operations in Yemen amid continued unrest

WASHINGTON: The United States has shut down its embassy in Yemen indefinitely and evacuated its staff and their families due to the worsening security conditions in the country, the State Department said Tuesday.
“On February 11, 2015, due to the deteriorating security situation in Sanaa, the Department of State suspended embassy operations and US Embassy Sanaa American staff were relocated out of the country,” a State Department travel warning said.
“All consular services, routine and/or emergency, have been suspended until further notice,” it added.
The Shia Muslim militia that has grabbed power in Sanaa warned Tuesday against any attempts to “destabilise” Yemen as the UN brokered a second day of talks aimed at resolving the crisis.
The country has never managed to achieve stability since longtime president Ali Abdullah Saleh stepped down in early 2012 after a bloody year-long popular uprising.
This includes battling an Al Qaeda insurgency and facing a separatist movement in the formerly independent south.
Matters worsened in September when the Huthi militia, fearful of being marginalised by a proposed new constitution, seized control of the capital and began pushing southward into Sunni areas.
UN envoy Jamal Benomar has warned that Yemen is at a “crossroads”, and has urged political leaders to “take up their responsibilities and achieve consensus” as he battles for a negotiated solution.
The United States has also pressed for progress on that front.
“We reiterate the call of the United Nations Security Council for immediate release of President Hadi, Prime Minister Bahah, and members of the Yemeni cabinet. An inclusive political process cannot resume with members of the country's leadership under house arrest,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said in a statement.
Earlier Tuesday, US officials said the embassy closure would not affect counterterrorism operations against Al Qaeda’s Yemen branch, which America views as the world's most dangerous branch of the terror group.

British embassy shuts down, evacuates staff

The British Embassy in Yemen's capital closed and evacuated its staff early Wednesday, authorities said.
In a statement, UK Minister for the Middle East Tobias Ellwood also urged British citizens still in Yemen to “leave immediately”.
“The security situation in Yemen has continued to deteriorate over recent days,” Ellwood said. “Regrettably we now judge that our embassy staff and premises are at increased risk.”
Yemen has been in crisis for months, with Shia Huthi rebels besieging the capital and then taking control.
The Huthis, who are traditionally based in northern Yemen bordering Saudi Arabia, swept into Sanaa in September and have seized other territory since. Many link the Houthis to regional Shia power Iran, though the rebels deny they are backed by the Islamic Republic.