Raymond Davis case: Victim's family attacked




LAHORE:  Unidentified people attempted to kill the uncle of Shumaila, the widow who poisoned herself after her husband Faheem was gunned down by US citizen Raymond Davis on Thursday.  Shumaila’s uncle Sarwar has been admitted to hospital in critical condition.

According to eye witnesses, three unidentified men jumped over the walls of Sarwar’s house and hit him on the head repeatedly with stones. They also forcefully made him eat pesticide pills.
Neighbours intervened after hearing the noise, but the assailants fled after assaulting the neighbours. Allied Hospital MS Dr Rana Bashir has confirmed that Sarwar’s stomach had been washed and he is now out of danger.
Sarwar’s brother told Express News that some people had threatened Sarwar to withdraw from the Raymond Davis case or they would kill him. He appealed to the Punjab chief minister to provide the family justice. RPO Aftab Cheema said action would be taken against the culprits after investigation.
Pressure on both sides
According to an earlier report in The Express Tribune, the families of the two people allegedly murdered by Raymond Davis are coming under pressure from politicians and religious groups not to strike any deals that would allow for Davis’ release.
Waseem Shamshad, elder brother of Faheem, one of the young men killed, told The Express Tribune that the families are coming under conflicting pressures. He claimed that on one hand the government is pressuring the victims’ families to withdraw the case against Davis, while several religious and political groups were pressuring them not to accept any deal that would allow Davis to walk free.




SOURCE: tribune.com.pk

Raymond Davis set free.






ISLAMABAD: A Court on Wednesday freed CIA contractor Raymond Davis, who was accused of murdering two men in Lahore, after blood money (Diyat) was paid in accordance with sharia law, sources said.

"The family members of the slain men appeared in the court and independently verified they had pardoned him (Davis)," provincial law minister Rana Sanaullah told Geo News."He has been released from jail.

Now it is up to him. He can go wherever he wants," he added.

The January shooting sparked a diplomatic row with the United States, who persistently claimed Davis was an embassy employee and enjoyed diplomatic immunity, particularly after it emerged he was working for the CIA.



SOURCE:   http://geo.tv/3-16-2011/79409.htm

Japan races to cool stricken reactors





Workers at Fukushima nuclear plant return to work after high radiation forced them to briefly abandon their posts.
Last Modified: 16 Mar 2011 05:58


Workers battling to contain the crisis at Japan's quake-stricken Fukushima nuclear plant were briefly moved to a bunker because of a rise in radiation levels, local media has reported.
The level of radiation at the plant surged to 1,000 millisieverts early on Wednesday before coming down to 800-600 millisieverts.
Harry Fawcett, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Japan, said the workers struggling to avert a nuclear meltdown were allowed to return to the facility later.
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"The 70 workers who were taken into that protective bunker were able to go back and restart operations crucial to keeping this entire plant cool," he said.
"They have been pumping sea water into the reactors; the ones that were active before the earthquake and the ones which were just housing spent fuel," he added.
Yukio Edano, Japan's chief cabinet secretary, said the workers dousing the reactors in a frantic effort to cool them needed to be taken to safety after an explosion a day earlier in the complex's Unit 4 reactor led to a surge in radiation.
The blast is thought to have damaged the reactor's suppression chamber, a water-filled pipe outside the nuclear core that is part of the emergency cooling system.
Hajimi Motujuku, a spokesman for the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power Company, said the outer housing of the containment vessel at the Number 4 unit in the plant was in flames on Wednesday.
The plant, 220km north of Tokyo, has been hit by several explosions after a devastating earthquake and tsunami last Friday damaged its cooling fuctions.

Damage to reactors
Broadcaster NHK showed photographs of the reactors 3 and 4 at the plant, showing damage to both.
Later on Wednesday, a Japanese military twin-rotor cargo helicopter started dumping water onto a reactor at the plant in an effort to cool the rods, television images showed.
The Japanese authorities had earlier ruled out using helicopters to pour water into the reactors, saying it was a high risk operation.
The mission, however, was soon abandoned, NHK reported.
"I assume it hasn't worked or levels of radiation are too dangerous to be in the air near those stations," our correspondent said.
"The situation is deteriorating so badly they had to try. They are doing anything that they can."
The government has ordered some 140,000 people in the vicinity to stay indoors.

There are six reactors at the plant. The one still on fire was not in use at the time of the magnitude 9.0 quake, Japan's most powerful on record.

Water has been dumped on the reactors in an effort to cool overheating rods [Reuters]
The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency estimated that 70 per cent of the rods have been damaged at the Number 1 reactor.

Japan's national news agency, Kyodo, said that 33 per cent of the fuel rods at the Number 2 reactor were damaged and that the cores of both reactors were believed to have partially melted.
Also on Wednesday, a strong 6.0 magnitude earthquake was felt across large areas of eastern Japan, the US Geological Survey said, with the force strong enough to sway buildings in the capital Tokyo.
The quake struck in the Pacific off Chiba prefecture - 96km east of the capital. There were no reports of injuries or damage following the quake, which struck at a shallow depth of 25km at 12:52pm (0352 GMT), police and local government officials said.
No tsunami warning was issued but the Japan meteorological agency warned of a possible change in sea levels.

Rising toll
Authorities are staring at a staggering death toll following last week's twin disasters which decimated Japan's northeastern coastline.
Police say at least 5,000 people were killed as huge waves swept ashore, sweeping away everything in its path.
But officials say the death toll could top 10,000 as many more are still unaccounted for.
The devastation in the tsunami-hit areas such as the small fishing town of Minamisanriku have been huge, with the northeastern settlement missing about half of its 17,000 people.
"Ten of my relatives are missing. I haven't been able to get in contact with them," 54-year-old Minamisanriku resident Tomeko Sato, who lost her house in the disaster, told AFP news agency.
"I was very surprised by the power of the tsunami... next time, I will live on the hill and hope it never happens again."
Andrew Thomas, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Osaka, Japan, said the trouble with the tsunami is that many of those people may never be found having been washed out to sea. He also said the weather had taken a turn for the worst for any survivors."
Millions in Japan have been left without water, electricity, fuel or enough food. Hundreds of thousands more are homeless, stoically coping with snow and freezing rain in the northeast.

Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

Day of Rage in Syria :15 March



















Protesters have demonstrated in Damascus, the Syrian capital, in a rare show of dissent against the country's hardline regime.

Witnesses said 40 to 50 people gathered after midday prayers on Tuesday in the Al Hamidiya area near the city's Umayyad Mosque.

A YouTube video showed protesters clapping and chanting "God, Syria, freedom -- that's enough", and "Peaceful, peaceful", a chant heard elsewhere in weeks of protests that have swept through the Arab world.




A voice in the background says: "The date is (March) 15 ... This is the first obvious uprising against the Syrian regime ... Alawite or Sunni, all kinds of Syrians, we want to bring down the regime".

The protest was quickly broken up by government supporters, the AP news agency reported.
Bashar al-Assad, who succeeded his father as president in 2000, has said there is no chance of unrest elsewhere in the region spreading to Syria. The country has been ruled by al-Assad's Baath Party since 1963.
The regime is considered one of the most repressive in the Middle East with political opposition locked up and media tightly controlled.

New York-based Human Rights Watch has said Syria's authorities were among the worst violators of human rights in 2010, jailing lawyers, torturing opponents and using violence to repress ethnic Kurds.
Earlier this month the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 13 political prisoners had gone on hunger strike to protest against "political detentions and oppression" in their country.

One of the prisoners, 80-year-old former judge Haitham al-Maleh, was later released under an amnesty marking the anniversary of the 1963 coup which brought the Baath party to power.
Officials say political prisoners in Syria have violated the constitution and that outside criticism of the state's human rights record is interference in Syria's affairs.

Source:
Al Jazeera and Agencies

Saudi presence 'fuels' strife fears in Bahrain




The deployment of more than 1,000 Saudi troops to Bahrain could increase the Sunni-Shia divide, analysts say.


Monday's arrival of more than 1000 Saudi and hundreds of Emirati security forces with a mandate from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) to support King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa's regime in Sunni- ruled, Shia-majority Bahrain only stokes sectarian conflict and fuels the regional power politics between US-Saudi hegemony and an increasingly influential Shia-led Iran, analysts argue.
"Although it is clearly too early to know the outcome of this decision, or perhaps even the purpose - to crack down on the protesters? to intimidate the opposition into joining the national dialogue? - I will hazard to predict that the impact will be negative, even on the stability they hope to preserve," said Kristin Diwan, an expert on the Arab Gulf at the American University.

The highest-ranking member of Bahrain's Shia religious establishment, Sheik Isa Qassim, criticised al-Khalifa's claims that the mobilisation of GCC troops is a broader effort to ensure regional stability, rather than what Qassim considers to be Sunni entrenchment and a veiled challenge to Shia representation in the government.

"[T]he narrative of preserving order will be insufficient," Diwan said. "Sectarian tensions are already on the rise in the Gulf since the Iraq intervention, with Shia populations throughout the Gulf facing the rising influence of anti-Shia Salafi Islamist movements. Inflaming these communal tensions hardly qualifies as a recipe for stability."
Iranian role
Ultimately, a dialogue that avoids answering Bahraini protesters' most significant demands – which include the formation of a genuinely representative government, an acceptable solution to public property and naturalisation disputes, and a concerted effort to mitigate sectarian conflicts – will only erode the already cascading "capacity and legitimacy" of the US to encourage changes similar to those witnessed in Egypt and Tunisia, observers say.
In a seemingly unmistakable rejection of al-Khalifa and the US's proposals, the main opposition party, al-Wefaq, has refused to participate in a national dialogue and, along with other opposition groups, denounced the arrival of the GCC troops as barefaced "occupation" and an affront to unarmed citizens in a statement on Monday.

"The presence of the foreign troops plays strongly into the hard-line opposition conviction that the al Khalifa-led government is illegitimate and cannot be trusted," Diwan noted. "Inviting foreign troops to put down protesting citizens only reinforces this view. The work of the seven- party opposition and especially al-Wefaq to bring the bulk of the opposition to the table just got harder."

The GCC mobilisation into Bahrain follows an unannounced visit by US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates to the country Saturday, in which he urged the ruling family to enact sweeping reforms – not "baby steps" – to accommodate opposition protesters.

According to media reports, Gates warned the al-Khalifa government that, although there was no evidence that Iran inflamed the demonstrations in their country, continued unrest would provide fodder for exploitation by the Iranians.

Two days later, following a request by al-Khalifa, the GCC deployed troops to the island kingdom, which some observers see as a message for both Washington and Tehran to stay out of the Gulf's affairs and an expression of support for the besieged regime.

"Ironically, the decision by the al-Khalifa government may be opening the door for greater Iranian influence," Diwan noted. "By inviting in external troops, the al-Khalifa just took the first step to broadening the conflict beyond the national context."

US response
While raising the prospect of Iranian involvement, the move could also signal an affront to US influence – both symptoms of a larger trend, observers note.

"Beyond the shift in the relative distribution of power among important regional actors, the very essence of power politics in Middle East is shifting from hard military power, where America has the advantage, to soft power, where the Islamic Republic [of Iran and] its allies have the advantage," Hillary Mann Leverett, a former US State Department and National Security Council official, argued at a conference here last week.

Although the US did not explicitly condone nor condemn the GCC's latest decision to sanction the deployment of its forces into the island kingdom, the Barack Obama administration has taken a cautious approach to the growing protests there so as not to undermine the opposition parties' demands or inadvertently strengthen Iran's ability, real or imagined, to leverage the opposition leaders of Bahrain's roughly 70 per cent Shia majority.

"We urge the government of Bahrain to pursue a peaceful and meaningful dialogue with the opposition rather than resorting to the use of force," White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said in a statement Sunday. "In particular, we urge our GCC partners…to act in a way that supports dialogue instead of undermining it."

Critics point out that the GCC mandate was designed to protect the council members from foreign invasion and not for intervening in a nation's domestic affairs.

"This is not an invasion of a country," Carney argued at a press conference Monday.

However, he stressed, "stability in the region will be brought about by dialogue and political reform and it is counterproductive to that goal to, in any way, repress the expression of those desires."

A version of this article first appeared on the Inter Press Service News Agency.

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