Thursday, January 29, 2015

Islamic State-ISIS warned to behead US President Barack Obama and 'transform America into a Muslim State'


Since Isis forces stormed Mosul in June, life in the city has rapidly deteriorated with fear and anger commonplace, according to the many refugees who have fled into Kurdish-controlled Irbil

An Islamic State jihadi has threatened to behead Barack Obama “in the White House and transform America into a Muslim State” before slaughtering a Kurdish soldier in a ruthless video clip.

The footage titling “Bombing of Peaceful Muslims in the Mosul” showed damage from shelling allegedly carried out by Peshmerga forces in the Iraqi city earlier this month before killing the captive in retaliation.

The masked ISIS fighter warned attacks on the US, France, Belgium and the Kurds, claiming that the group’s followers will kill the American and Kurdish presidents as well as detonating car bombs and explosives in European countries that are part of the international coalition fighting against it.

He claims Peshmerga forces “shells the peaceful Muslims of Mosul with American Crusader bombs, and has poisoned dozens of them with asphyxiating gases” as images are shown of damaged buildings, bodies and injured women and children.

President Obama to Iraq Then the jihadist issues “a message to the entire world” in Kurdish, translated by the Memri Jihad and Terrorism Threat Monitor.

“This is the fate of anyone who opposes Islam. Know, oh Obama, that we will reach America. Know also that we will cut off your head in the White House and transform America into a Muslim province,” he warned

“And this is my message to France and its sister, Belgium. We advise you all infidels that we will come to you with car bombs and explosive charges and we will cut off your heads.”

The fighter then beheads the captive with a knife to cheers from the gathered crowd, threatening to send Kurdish president Masoud Barzani a soldier’s head for every missile the Peshmerga fired at ISIS.

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

A Colorado Girl trying to join ISIS jailed



(AWD)


A Colorado teenager girl arrested last year as she was heading to Syria to help ISIS militants was sentenced Friday to 4 years in prison after the judge called her a bit of a mess.
(Video)

Shannon Conley, 19, pleaded guilty in September to conspiracy to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization. An emotional Conley spoke in court on Friday, saying "Even though I supported a jihad, it was not meant to hurt anyone. It was always in the defense of Muslims." She had to pause to compose herself, and then apologized to the judge, saying she was embarrassed by her arrogance.
"I do not believe I am a threat to society and would appreciate an opportunity to prove it," Conley said.

Conley's lawyer, public defender Robert Pepin, said the Muslim convert was misled while exploring her faith. He argued that she should only spend 1 year in prison. Prosecutors argued for 48 months in prison, saying that she continues to demonstrate her defiance in jail with the guards. The judge agreed with the prosecution."That woman is in need of psychiatric help," Judge U.S. District Judge Raymond Moore asserted before sentencing Conley. "To me, it doesn't seem like she gets it."

 Pepin, referring to Conley by her Muslim name, said she deeply regrets the decision to try to join ISIS. "Halima is fully aware that the fact that she was arrested may very well have saved her," Pepin said. "Like all of us, Halima has been horrified to learn of the slaughter and oppression at the hands of those controlling (the so-called Islamic State). It was never her vision to have any role in such horror."
 "Is the solution to send her to prison? Absolutely not," Pepin said. Conley will get credit for the time she has served so far -- about 9 1/2 months.
Conley was also sentenced to 3 years of supervised release, when she will have to perform 100 hours of community service.  Conley had faced a maximum penalty of five years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.
According to the stipulated facts in her plea agreement, between Feb 2014 and April 8, 2014, Conley and a co-conspirator worked with others to provide material support and resources, including personnel and expert advice, to a foreign terrorist organizations -- Al-Qaeda and its affiliates, including al-Qaeda in Iraq, aka the Islamic State of Iraq (ISIS), aka the Islamic State of Iraq and Al Sham (ISIS), aka the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
Conley was arrested April 8 at Denver International Airport after telling FBI agents she was traveling to Syria to use her American military training to aid Islamic militants waging jihad or holy war, according to federal court records. She said "legitimate targets of attack" included U.S. military bases, government employees and public officials, the documents say.
 Against her parent's wishes, Conley planned to marry a Tunisian man, who was fighting in Syria for the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). She had met the man online and communicated with him on Skype. They agreed that Conley would travel to Syria to join her new fiancé but before traveling to Syria, she would refine and obtain additional training and skills in order to provide support and assistance to any AQ and/or ISIS fighter.  Conley also intended to fight if it became necessary to do so, according to court documents.

As part of the conspiracy, Conley joined the U.S. Army Explorers (USAE) to be trained in U.S. military tactics and in firearms.  She traveled to Texas and attended the USAE training.  She also obtained first aid/nursing certification and National Rifle Association certification.
Conley knew that ISIS was a designated foreign terrorist organization and what she was doing was illegal.  In fact, on numerous occasions, Special Agents with the FBI met with her in attempts to persuade her not to carry out her plans to travel overseas to provide support to a foreign terrorist organization and to engage in violent jihad.
On March 29, 2014, Conley's fiance, together with others, arranged for an airline ticket to be purchased for Conley to travel to Turkey, departing from Denver on April 8, 2014.  On April 8, 2014, Conley traveled to Denver International Airport and attempted to board the flight to Turkey.  She was then arrested by FBI agents.
During a subsequent search of her home, federal agents found DVDs of lectures by Anwar al-Awlaki, an American-born Islamic terrorist, and videos by other jihadists, according to a press release by Jeffrey Dorschner, spokesman for U.S. Attorney John Walsh.
Agents also found shooting targets labeled with the number of rounds fired and the distance they were fired on.
Authorities began investigating Conley on Nov. 5, 2013, after they received a call from the pastor at Faith Bible Chapel in Arvada who saw Conley taking notes and drawing a sketch at the church.
Church officials have a heightened awareness about security because Faith Bible Chapel was the scene of a shooting in December 2007 when a man named Matthew Murray opened fire at the church's Youth with a Mission Training Center, killing two missionaries.
"Conspiring to providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization is a serious federal crime," said U.S. Attorney John Walsh.  "The defendant in this case got lucky.  The FBI arrested her after determining that she had been radicalized and planned to travel to Syria to support the brutal foreign terrorist organizations operating there.  Had she succeeded in her plan to get to Syria, she would likely have been brutalized, killed or sent back to the United States to commit other crimes.  Today's sentence underscores the seriousness of defendant's conduct, but pales in comparison to the penalty she would have paid had she not been stopped."
"This sentencing highlights the rapidly changing, shrinking nature of the world and the implications for law enforcement and public safety," said Special Agent in Charge Thomas Ravenelle.  "Terrorist groups now have the ability to directly attract and even recruit U.S. residents to commit violence or provide other support on their behalf.  Anyone in our community who takes deliberate steps to commit federal crimes in support of a declared terrorist organization will have those steps disrupted and will be arrested and prosecuted whenever appropriate and necessary in order to preserve the safety of our community."

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

ISIS Expelled From Kobani according to Kurdish Fighters

Beirut- Lebanon - Kurdish fighters snatched full control of the Syria's northern town of Kobani on Monday, repulsing Islamic State militants out as US led airstrikes helped them in battle,

The tough battle for the border town had symbolic significance as it was within sight of the Turkish border. It became the most ostentatious in the US led coalition’s war against the ISIS, which has wrested large areas of Syria and Iraq, and the terrorist group’s defeat in Kobani teared apart the aura of invincibility it wanted to propagate. But even as the Kurds celebrated, some fighters said clearing the town was no big achievement, as it took more than 700 airstrikes to do it, nearly 1/3 of all the allied strikes in Syria so far, and that Kobani was a relatively non-significant border city with a population of about 45,000. Improved coordination between Kurdish infantry and the US-led air raids made it possible to destroy ISIS occupation in the city, the commander told. But the battle illustrated different story, the extremists’ ability and wish to withhold and sustain on for months in the wake of punishing and disastrous air strikes, even in territory with limited strategic importance.

Monday, January 26, 2015

Recap of India-US deals after Obama Visit

**Joint production of military hardware including advanced unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV)
**Defence Technology and Trade Initiative (DTTI) to focus on four pilot projects, explore aircraft carrier manufacturing technology (sharing and design), and explore future cooperation on development of jet engine technology.
**DTTI, will become the hallmark of the Modi government’s ‘Make-in-India’ initiative.
Indo-US  joint naval exercise MALABAR.
**Cooperation between their law enforcement agencies, particularly in the areas of extradition and mutual legal assistance, to counter transnational criminal threats such as terrorism, narcotics, trafficking, financial and economic fraud, cybercrime, and transnational organized crime.
10-year Defence Framework Agreement and agreed in principle to pursue joint development and production projects
**New vision for Asia Pacific.
**The US has offered India 17 hi-tech products of military hardware for co-production and co-development under DTTI. Of the 17, India is understood to be interested in five, including unarmed unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and aircraft landing system for aircraft carriers.
**China  much worried about Obama visit to India, recalls the moment when PM Modi was persona non grata in USA just year before and there was tension between two countries after expulsion of diplomat from New Delhi

**Civil nuclear cooperation  between India and USA

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Hindu Population goes below 80%, Muslim Population increased-Reveals Census 2011 Figures


(Indian Express)

Still the topic of Ghar Wapasi is hot enough and new census figures are expected to stir the hornets nest once again, as for the first time Hindu Population has slipped below 80% in the history of Hindus and history of India.
The share of Hindus in India’s population has shown the sharpest dip in a decade since Independence and has dropped below 80 per cent.
According to figures of the religion census of 2011, yet to be officially released, Hindus comprised 78.35 per cent of the total population of 121.05 crore, compared with 80.45 per cent of the total population in 2001. In absolute terms, however, the Hindu population increased 14.5 per cent from 82.75 crore to 94.78 crore during the period (2001-11).
The 2011 religion census data also shows that the share of Muslims in the population has risen 80 basis points (one basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point) from 13.4 per cent in 2001 to 14.2 per cent with some border states showing a high increase. This decadal increase in share, however, is lower than the 1.7 percentage points increase registered in the previous decade, 1991-2001.
In absolute terms, the number of Muslims increased 24.4 per cent to 17.18 crore from 13.8 crore during the period 2001-11. And during the previous five decades — 1951 to 2001 — their share rose from 9.8 per cent to 13.4 per cent.
The share of Hindus over the previous five decades — between 1951 i.e. post-partition and 2001 — dropped 3.65 percentage points from 84.1 per cent to 80.45 per cent of the total population. Again in absolute terms, the Hindu population more than doubled (172 per cent increase) from 30.36 crore to 82.75 crore during the 50 years till 2001. The drop in share of Hindus, due to a steady dip in the rate of growth of the Hindu population, comes on the back of rising education and income levels of the majority community.
Last Wednesday, Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh had announced that the religion data of census 2011 would be released soon. The data was ready in January 2014 but the UPA government, facing a resurgent BJP, took the decision not to release the data ahead of the Lok Sabha elections. In normal course, the data from the religion census is released within three years of the census enumeration exercise being completed. By this yardstick, the data should have been out by March 2014.
The share of other religious groups like Sikhs and Christians in the total population remained steady at a little over 2 per cent each, roughly in the same range as in the 2001 census.
The Census 2011 data shows that since independence, the share of Hindus has dropped by 5.75 percentage points while the share of Muslims has risen by slightly more than 4 percentage points. According to the 1951 census, Hindus comprised 84.1 per cent of the population post partition, after the inflow of Hindus from Pakistan and the outflow of Muslims at partition changed in the country’s demography. Hindus comprised just about 66 per cent of the population of India before partition.
Registrar General of India C Chandramouli briefed the Home Minister again on Thursday about the findings of the religion census before it is finally released. However, home ministry sources said with the dates for Assembly elections in Delhi and bypolls in six states already announced and the poll code of conduct in place, the announcement could be pushed to next month or even to after the Budget session of Parliament. Chandramouli, the officer who has dealt with the religion data since it was collated in 2011, was given a three-month extension in December 2014.

Japan terms apparent killing of Hostage outrageous and impermissible

TOKYO: Japanese prime minister told Sunday it is highly outrageous and impermissible act after an online video purported to show one of two Japanese hostages of the radical Islamic State group had been killed and promised to save the other.
Shinzo Abe said on NHK TV that the video was likely authentic and offered condolences to the family and friends of Haruna Yukawa, a 42-year-old adventurer taken hostage last year.
He declined to comment on the message on the latest video demanding a prisoner exchange for journalist Kenji Goto. Abe said in an earlier statement that Japan will not give in to terrorism.
President Barack Obama condemned what he called “the brutal murder” of Yukawa, saying he stood by Japan to get Goto released.
No one could verify the contents of the message, which varied greatly from previous videos released by the Islamic State group, which now holds a third of both Syria and Iraq.

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Obama's India Trip-Nuclear, Defense and Arms Deal to be finalised

Stage is set for US President's maiden appearance in India's Republic Day Celebration. During this visit scores of the agreements are to be signed between two countries

Ahead of US President Barack Obama's arrival in India, a specific US demand seeking "flag rights in perpetuity" for any material or equipment used in a US-built reactor has thrown, to use an American expression, a monkey wrench into the nuclear contact group meeting underway in London.

It is learnt that it is the main sticking point preventing the two sides from announcing successful conclusion of the talks, something which both the sides wanted to achieve as the main takeaway from the visit. This was even as some progress was made over the liability issue.

India and the US will sign a new defence framework during President Barack Obama's visit to New Delhi on the Republic Day, but the two mega purchases for Chinook heavy lift and Apache attack helicopters will have to wait for some more time.

The defense acquisition council had cleared the purchase worth over $2.5 billion but the final stamp of approval is still awaited from the Cabinet committee on security.

Sources said the proposals are yet to be cleared by the finance ministry before it is placed before the Cabinet. An official said no arms contract will be signed during the presidential visit.

The rapprochement, after the estrangement following the

 1998 Pokhran-II tests, led to the first 10-year Indo-US defence framework in 2005. It promised a lot, from collaboration on multinational operations in their "common interest" to ballistic missile defence. But not everything translated into reality.

The framework did lead to arms deals, combat exercises, intelligence-sharing and counter-terror cooperation. The momentum slowed with A K Antony, UPA defence minister for eight years, blocking a full strategic clinch.

The military ardour will be reinvigorated with the signing of the new 10-year framework during Obama's visit. It'll be "more ambitious" than the earlier one, but won't impinge on India's strategic autonomy. It'll be "a statement of intent", charting out the road to boost defence ties. From stepped-up maritime security collaboration in the Asia-Pacific, intelligence-sharing, drive against terror and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction to increasing the scope of joint exercises, it'll have all.

"But it's not a treaty binding on either side," said an official. India will upgrade its high-end Malabar naval exercise with America, both looking at including others like Japan and Australia more often. Despite its worries over China, India doesn't want to act as "linchpin" in the "rebalance" of US military forces towards the Asia-Pacific.

Friday, January 23, 2015

2011 Census shows Sharp rise in Muslim population in Assam- Far more than National average

(Agency)


 NEW DELHI, Jan 22 – In a development that is bound to stir controversy in the State, the Muslim population in Assam has recorded the highest growth rate of 34.2 per cent in the country up from 30.9 per cent recorded in the 2001 census.
Muslim Woman
According to a report in a national daily, though the overall Muslim population in the country has decreased to 24 per cent from 29 per cent, Assam has emerged as the only state in the country, which has witnessed an increase in population. However, Muslim population is still higher than the average national growth rate of 18 per cent.

The religion data of the census report of 2011, has so far been kept under wraps on the orders of the previous UPA Government. But the NDA Government has reversed that decision and cleared its publication. The figures are now expected to be released shortly by the Home Ministry. Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh last week approved the proposal of the Registrar General of India and Census Commissioner C Chandramouli in this regard.
Muslim Woman

“The most rapid rise in the share of Muslims in the total population was witnessed in Assam,” the national daily reported, quoting sources.

The report said that Assam recorded the highest increase in share of Muslims, from 30.9 per cent of the state’s population to 34.2 per cent, while Manipur was the only state to show a fall in Muslim population. Lowest rise was in Meghalaya, Odisha and Arunachal (0.1 percentage points).

Other states that showed high increase in share of population are Uttarakhand (2 percentage points), Kerala (1.9), West Bengal (1.8), Goa (1.6) and J&K (1.3).

Jammu and Kashmir (68.3 per cent), Assam (34.2 per cent) and Bengal (27 per cent) have the largest share of Muslims. Significantly, Tripura, another state bordering Bangladesh, has recorded a marginal growth of 0.6 per cent from 8 per cent in 2001 to 8.6 per cent in 2011.

The daily reported that the most rapid rise in the share of Muslims in the total population was witnessed in Assam. While no reasons were cited for the sharp increase of Muslim population in Assam, illegal infiltration from Bangladesh is expected to be the prime reason behind the unusual decadal growth rate.

The neighbouring infiltration-hit West Bengal has also registered a rise in the share of Muslims in total population from 25.2 per cent in 2001 to 27 per cent in 2011.

The latest census figures are likely to stir the hornet’s nest in Assam, as illegal migration from Bangladesh is a hotly debated political issue in the State. The matter has reached the Supreme Court as well.

The high growth of Muslim population in Assam has been intensely debated and has been a source of political confrontation. Recently the Supreme Court finalised the schedule of update of the National Register of Citizens (NRC), considered an essential tool for detection and deportation of the illegal migrants, who entered the State after the cut-off date of March 25, 1971.

Understanding the gravity of the situation, the Supreme Court has asked the Centre to curb the influx of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

“The Centre shall take all steps to complete fencing of the Indo-Bangla border. Vigil along the riverine boundary will be effectively maintained by continuous patrolling and installing floodlights. Such part of the international border, which has been perceived to be inhospitable on account of the difficult terrain, will be patrolled and monitored at vulnerable points, which could provide means of illegal entry.

The completed part of the border fencing will be maintained and repaired so as to constitute an effective barrier to cross-border trafficking,” the Supreme Court said last month.

Earlier, the Supreme Court while scrapping the controversial
IM(DT) Act in 1998, had described the illegal migration as an external aggression.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Haqqani network, Jamaat-ud-Dawa banned by Pakistan


(TOI)


Pakistan has banned the Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and the Haqqani network after the US insisted it do so, a media report said on Thursday.

"The US has sought a ban on the Haqqani network and the Jamaat-ud Dawa but the matter was being delayed," Dawn online quoted an interior ministry official as saying.

The Pakistani government took action against militant organisations without making a distinction between the good Taliban and the bad Taliban after the attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar December 16 by Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan, the report said.

Apart from Haqqani network and JuD, the ministry has also banned Harkat-ul-Jihad Islami, Harkat-ul-Mujahidin, Falah-i-Insaniat Foundation, Ummah Tameer-i-Nau, Haji Khairullah Hajji Sattar Money Exchange, Rahat Limited, Roshan Money Exchange, Al Akhtar Trust, Al Rashid Trust.

The official said the government had already directed the departments concerned to take immediate steps to freeze the assets of the banned outfits.

The Haqqani Network, founded by Jalaluddin Haqqani, has been blamed for some of the most
heinous attacks on the US-led foreign forces in Afghanistan. It was designated as a terrorist organization by the US in September 2012.

The US and India have both always considered JuD, run by Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, a sister organisation of the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba, a militant outfit blamed for masterminding the 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai.

Congress leader Janaradhan Dwivedi Prases PM Narendra Modi- Congress Leaders furious



Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Islamic State hostage Haruna Yukawa an enigma in a war-torn country



(SMH)


Haruna Yukawa is far from your average hostage. Over the past 10 years, Yukawa, 42, has lost his business, gone bankrupt and mourned the loss of his wife to lung cancer.

In that time he was also homeless, once attempted to cut off his genitals and altered his name so it sounded more feminine, reports Reuters.

He is not a journalist nor an aid worker, but rather an enigma in a war-torn country, being held captive by Islamic State militants who are demanding $200 million for his release and that of freelance journalist Kenji Goto. The Islamic State group issued a video online showing the two men kneeling and demanding the enormous bounty from the Japanese government within 72 hours to save the men's lives.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Tuesday condemned the act as "unacceptable" and said the international community should not give in to terrorism.

"The international community needs to respond firmly and co-operate without caving into terrorism," Mr Abe said.Since August, IS has murdered three Americans and two Britons.

Journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, American aid worker Peter Kassig and British aid workers Alan Henning and David Haines were all beheaded,

Islamic State posted grisly video footage of their executions.

Yukawa's background is in stark contrast to those of the previous hostages taken by the group.

According to a Japanese news website, Yukawa opened a military goods shop in Chiba, near Tokyo, after leaving high school. He married in 2000, five years later his business shut down.

About 2008 he tried to kill himself by cutting off his genitals before his wife rushed him to hospital to save his life.

He likened the act to the ritual suicide of a samurai and said in a blog post: "I thought if I failed I would live as a woman and leave the rest to destiny."

His wife died of lung cancer two years later and an online journal that Yukawa maintained said he lived in a public park for a month at one point.

He dabbled in extreme right-wing Japanese politics and eventually borrowed enough money to travel to Syria where he claimed to be a security consultant to large Japanese companies in dangerous parts of the world.

But according to his Facebook page and blog posts, he never did any work as a consultant. The firm he created existed only on the internet.

It was in August that Yukawa's strange antics came to the surface when footage emerged of his apparent interrogation in Syria by Islamic State militants. It was supposed to be his last solo trip to Syria.

Lying on the ground, wearing a black T-shirt as blood trickled down his face, Yukawa tried to explain to his captors who he was and why he was in such a high-risk area.

He said he was a "photographer" and a "half doctor" but most definitely not a soldier. His captors thought he was lying and placed a long knife to his chest. He has remained in captivity since.

Finding a sense of self has also been a priority for Yukawa, even if it has been done in an unconventional manner.

He decided to change his name from Masayuki to the feminine-sounding Haruna, because he believed the change of characters would herald a shorter life.

Yukawa also believed he was a reincarnation of a cross-dressing Manchu princess who spied on Japan in World War II, and talked about working with the Free Syrian Army, wanting to make his "mark on history".


Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Islamic State- ISIS demands $200 milions to free Japanese Hostages

A video released on internet to show the Islamic State threatening to kill 2 Japanese hostages if they not given $200 million ransom in the next 3 days

Video is made by the IISI's al-Furqan media arm and posted on websites associated with the ISIS. The terrorist in it directly addresses Japanese PM Shinzo Abe, now on a six-day visit to the Middle East with. Talking in Jerusalem, Abe vowed to save the captives, identified by the ISIS as
Kenji Goto Jogo and Haruna Yukawa. He appealed the Islamic State group to immediately release both hostages

"Their lives are the precious," Abe said. He further said "Terrorism and Islam are totally different things."
"To the prime minister of Japan: Although you are more than 8,000 and 500 kilometers (5,280 miles) from the Islamic State, you willingly have volunteered to take part in this crusade," says the knife-brandishing militant in the video, who resembles and sounds like a British militant involved in other filmed beheadings. "You have proudly donated $100 million to kill our women and children, to destroy the homes of the Muslims."

Japan's Foreign Ministry's anti-terrorism section has seen the video and analysts are assessing it, a ministry official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of department rules.

Speaking in Tokyo, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga declined to say whether Japan would pay the ransom.

"If true, the act of threat in exchange of people's lives is unforgivable and we feel strong indignation," Suga told journalists. "We will make our utmost effort to win their release as soon as possible."

In August, a Japanese citizen believed to be Yukawa, a private military company operator in his early 40s, was kidnapped in Syria after going there to train with militants, according to a post on a blog kept. Pictures on his Facebook page show him in Iraq and Syria in July. One video on his page showed him holding a Kalashnikov assault rifle with the caption: "Syria war in Aleppo 2014."

"I cannot identify the destination," Yukawa wrote in his last blog post. "But the next one could be the most dangerous." He added: "I hope to film my fighting scenes during an upcoming visit."

Yukawa's father, Shoichi, who lives in Chiba, just outside Tokyo, expressed shock over the news in an interview with Japanese public television station NKH.

"I don't understand this," he said. "I'm quite confused."

Goto is a respected Japanese freelance journalist who went to report on Syria's civil war last year and knew of Yukawa.

"I'm in Syria for reporting," he wrote in an email to an Associated Press journalist in October. "I hope I can convey the atmosphere from where I am and share it."

The Islamic State group has beheaded and shot dead hundreds of captives — mainly Syrian and Iraqi soldiers — during its sweep across the two countries, and has celebrated its mass killings in extremely graphic videos. A British-accented jihadi also has appeared in the beheading videos of slain American hostages James Foley and Steven Sotloff, and with British hostages David Haines and Alan Henning.

Kashmiri Pandits Commemorated 25 years of their Mass Exodus from Kashmir Valley

Kashmir : 25 years of mass exodus, Kashmiri Pandits staged a symbolic protest in Shrinagar on Monday, requesting the central and state governments to come out with a white paper on detail planning on their reestablishment to the Kashmir valley.

"We are arranging a huge protest at Jantar Mantar in Delhi to focus our problems. As we belong to Kashmir which is our birthplace, we decided to hold a symbolic sit-in here," Vinod Pandit told

President of the all parties migrant coordination committee (APMCC), narrated journalists: "It was same day in 1990 that a forced exodus of Kashmiri Pandits started."

Pandits were horded by a many activists in the protest.

This was held to commemorate 25 years of Pandits' mass exodus from Kashmir in 1990 when terrorists violence compelled thousands of them to vacate their homes.

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

China declares ban on Burqa-Islamic veil in Uighur Muslim majority Western province of Xinjiang

(Agency)
Muslim burqa
China declares ban on Burqa-Islamic veil in Uighur Muslim majority Western province of Xinjiang.
The Uighur ethnic Muslim community of China's turbulent Western province of Xinjiang faces yet another restriction on ostentatious religious garb used by Muslim women worldwide. Earlier France had banned veils in public places drawing flak from Islamic world and another European country Switzerland had banned minarets on mosques terming it as a symbol of supremacy of Islam.
Chinese Uighur Muslims are most persecuted community among world.

Burqa clad woman

Burqa wearing Muslim

burqa woman

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Putin Signs New Military Doctrine: Core Elements Unchanged




President Vladimir Putin has introduced a new Military Doctrine in the context of the Ukraine crisis, deteriorating relations with the United States, the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), as well as shifts within the international security environment. However, the doctrine appears innately defensive in its tone and content, offering some adjustments to the 2010 Military Doctrine, but retaining most of its core elements. The new doctrine notes Russia’s strategic interests in the Arctic and introduces a reference to non-nuclear deterrence (2014 Military Doctrine, December 26, 2014).

According to the presidential website, the decision to order a new Military Doctrine was taken on July 5, 2013, during a meeting of the Russian Security Council. Therefore, the revision of the 2010 Military Doctrine began prior to the Ukraine crisis and could not have been driven solely by that crisis. On the other hand, Putin’s instruction to the Security Council in September 2014 to complete the drafting of the new doctrine within three months was most likely influenced by the Ukraine crisis and the US and NATO response—including the Western-imposed sanctions regime, the exclusion of Russia from the G20, and the North Atlantic Alliance freezing its relations with Moscow. A meeting of the Security Council on December 19, 2014, considered and approved the new doctrine, which was signed into law on by President Putin on December 26 (Kremlin.ru, December 26, 2014).

Putin’s decision to accelerate the drafting of the Military Doctrine prompted widespread speculation concerning the intentions that might be signalled in the revised version of the security document. This included the country’s nuclear posture, threats and dangers to the state and whether the 2014 doctrine would label the US and NATO as enemies. Russian experts, however, urged caution and forecast a revision of the doctrine that would be inherently defensive. The nuclear posture would remain unchanged and only minor changes were being considered. If anything, the new incarnation of the Military Doctrine represented an opportunity to correct some aspects in line with the organizational transformation in the Russian military (Voyenno Promyshlennyy Kuryer, December 17, 2014; Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye, December 15, 2014).

On December 26, these Russian experts were proven correct in their assessment: the nuclear posture is unchanged, in fact it removes the reference to nuclear weapons in the context of regional conflict contained in the 2010 doctrine, and leaves much of the original threat assessment unchanged (2014 Military Doctrine, December 26, 2014; 2010 Military Doctrine, February 5, 2010). Viktor Baranets, a military expert and commentator for Komsomolskaya Pravda, also highlighted the defensive nature of the 2014 Military Doctrine and its consistency with the earlier version. The doctrine anticipates closer military cooperation between Russia and former Soviet Republics, as well as with China, India and Latin America. Special emphasis in this regard is placed on Belarus, Abkhazia and South Ossetia (LifeNews, December 30).

The 2010 doctrine made a distinction between opasnosti(dangers) and ugrozy(threats) facing Russia. This permitted Moscow to continue to oppose NATO enlargement (rather than the Alliance as such) and out-of-area operations without designating it as a threat. This distinction is preserved in the 2014 doctrine (2014 Military Doctrine, December 26, 2014; 2010 Military Doctrine, February 5, 2010). The 2014 doctrine describes the international security environment as follows: “World development is characterized at the present stage by a strengthening of global competition and of tension in various areas of inter-state and inter-regional interaction, by the rivalry of values and models of development, by instability of economic and political development processes at global and regional levels against the background of a general complication of international relations. There is a phased redistribution of influence in favor of new centers of economic growth and political gravitation” (2014 Military Doctrine, December 26, 2014).

To the list of external military threats the new doctrine adds: “[the] establishment of regimes in states contiguous with the Russian Federation, including as a result of the overthrow of legitimate state authorities, and having a policy threatening interests of the Russian Federation; subversive activities of special services and organizations of foreign states and their coalitions against the Russian Federation” (2014 Military Doctrine, December 26, 2014). In section II.15 on the features of modern military conflicts, it adds: “[the] participation of irregular armed force elements and private military companies in military operations; use of indirect and asymmetric methods of operations; use of political forces and public movements financed and controlled from outside” (2014 Military Doctrine, December 26, 2014).

In section III, the 2014 Military Doctrine adds, “Employment of the Armed Forces, other troops, and entities in peacetime shall be by decision of the President of the Russian Federation in accordance with the procedure established by federal legislation. The Armed Forces, other troops and entities shall be employed decisively, purposefully and comprehensively based on advance and constant analysis of the military-political and military-strategic situation taking shape” (2014 Military Doctrine, December 26, 2014).

By far the most intriguing shift in the new doctrine is found in section I.8, which refers to a system of non-nuclear deterrence: “system of nonnuclear deterrence—a complex of foreign-policy, military, and military-technical measures aimed at preventing aggression against the Russian Federation by non-nuclear means” (2014 Military Doctrine, December 26, 2014). This was signalled in earlier interviews by Army-General Yury Baluyevskiy, the former chief of the General Staff, who noted that Russia needs a system of non-nuclear deterrence; which appears to be a culmination of theoretical military thinking on “pre-nuclear deterrence” (EDM, November 18, 2014). Despite its inclusion in the doctrine it remains unclear as to how this may be developed in practical terms.

Russia’s 2014 Military Doctrine offers no tangible support to those who argue that Moscow has adopted a more aggressive military posture. The doctrinal revisions are modest, stepping back from designating the US or NATO as military threats, while expressing concern about potential crisis escalation. Since 2010, the Arab Spring, the deterioration of security in the Middle East and North Africa, as well as the NATO exit from Afghanistan influenced Russian doctrinal thinking. In terms of the Ukraine crisis and US/NATO relations with Russia, the doctrine offers some insight into how Moscow views the international order in late 2014. Nonetheless, since oil prices have fallen and the ruble has suffered decline against the dollar, it is likely that the new doctrine will prove to be largely aspirational. In short, it offers no answer to the “guns or butter” question now plaguing the Kremlin.

--Roger McDermott


Russia’s Defense Doctrine Reflects Putin’s Paranoia and Siege Mentality

Moscow published its new Military Doctrine on December 26, 2014 (Kremlin.ru, December 26, 2014). And without going into the details (see accompanying article), clearly this document reflects the mentality of a state under siege on all fronts. Moreover, almost all of the multiple threats listed in the doctrine had long since been outlined and stated in the Russian press by one or another official. Indeed, on December 10, Chief of the General Staff, General Valery Gerasimov, said, “Attempts to pressure our country are being made [by the West and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization] in all vitally important spheres.” These activities, he asserted, comprise efforts to reduce Russia’s military-economic potential, slow down its scientific-technological development in strategically important areas, and increase NATO’s military presence near Russia’s borders, among others (Interfax, December 10, 2014).
         
These, along with other identified threats found their way back into the 2014 version of the Russian Military Doctrine. Even though some are listed as “dangers” rather than “threats” (probably for political reasons), there does not seem to be any fundamental policy distinction (in fact rather than in rhetoric) between these terms. The following are listed as threats or dangers to Moscow: missile defense, or efforts to nullify the offensive potential of Russian nuclear forces; NATO’s “buildup” near Russia’s borders; the US concept of prompt global strike; activities that undermine patriotism; growth in global terrorism and radicalism; informational influence on the Russian population “with a view to undermine the historical and patriotic traditions”; threats to Russia’s Arctic energy and defense interests and installations; foreign funding of domestic political forces and public movements; private military companies on Russian borders; armed action in neighboring countries; and the weaponization of outer space (Kremlin.ru, December 26, 2014).
         
Considering this wide list of both internal and external threats, as well as Moscow’s repeated assertions that threats to the Russian state abound and are growing, the latest iteration of the country’s Military Doctrine in many ways echoes a Stalinist mentality. Besides overt and indirect allusions to capitalist or imperialist encirclements, the document also paints links between domestic and foreign enemies. Moreover, Russia’s Military Doctrine describes an ideological and strategic state of siege between the West and Russia. Not surprisingly, therefore—and quite unlike the US national security concept or defense doctrine—the Russian 2014 document devotes enormous attention to issues of mobilization of the country and economy for war (Kremlin.ru, December 26, 2014). And, in the hoary tradition of Russian proclamations, such tools and weapons are precisely those Russia has used, uses, and will use against its enemies in the West, if not elsewhere.
         
Beyond the 2014 Military Doctrine’s all-encompassing threat assessment, there are other interesting and occasionally dangerous signs for the West within this document. On the one hand, the doctrine seems to continue Russia’s trend of restricting its nuclear operations and eschews any talk of a justification for a preemptive nuclear strike. Yet, on the other hand, it does reflect Russia’s growing confidence in its newly acquired high-tech conventional arsenal by introducing the concept of “non-nuclear deterrence.” This concept, associated with several Russian thinkers like Andrei Kokoshin, means that Russia believes it no longer needs to resort as quickly to a first nuclear strike if it is thrown on the defensive (Kremlin.ru, December 26, 2014). Almost counter-intuitively, this could entail more danger for Europe if Russia’s confidence in its conventional military arm grows.

The 2014 Military Doctrine fully lives up to the Russian habit of blaming the mirror for a bad reflection. Although the document was finalized over the course of 2014, nowhere does the new doctrine talk about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Nor does the document ever mention Moscow’s military superiority in the Baltic theater. Beyond that, the 2014 doctrine also provides further reason to expect a Russian incorporation of Georgia’s provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as the document expressly discusses defense cooperation with both of them.
         
China also deserves to be discussed in relation to the new Russian Military Doctrine. The document proposes to “coordinate [Russian] efforts [with China] to deal with military risks in the common space of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization [SCO].” It also provides for the creation of joint missile defense systems. While Moscow has pursued this with the West in the past, pledges of a joint system with Beijing could serve as a warning to NATO or the US.

Analysts like Dmitri Trenin deny that Moscow is seeking an alliance with China (Cer.org.uk, February 13, 2012). However, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu explicitly said in Beijing that Russia and China confront not only US threats in the Asia-Pacific but also US-orchestrated “color revolutions” and Islamic terrorism. Therefore, the “issue of stepping up this cooperation [between Russia and China] has never been as relevant as it is today,” he noted (Interfax, November 18, 2014). Specifically, Russia’s defense minister meant enhanced Sino-Russian security cooperation (through unspecified means), both bilaterally and within the SCO. Both Shoigu and his deputy minister, Anatoly Antonov, decried US policies in Central Asia as well as East Asia, alleging that Washington was attempting to spark color revolutions and boosting support for Islamic terrorism in Southeast and Central Asia. Shoigu further stated that “[i]n the context of an unstable international situation, the strengthening of good-neighborly relations between our countries acquires particular significance. This is not only a significant factor in the states’ security, but also a contribution to ensuring peace throughout the Eurasian continent and beyond” (Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, November 18, 2014; Nezavisimaya Gazeta, November 20, 2014). According to Shoigu, “During talks with [Chinese defense minister] Comrade Chang Wanquan, we discussed the state and prospects of Russian-Chinese relations in the military field, exchanged opinions on the military-political situation in general and the APR [Asia-Pacific Region] in particular.” He added, “We also expressed concern over US attempts to strengthen its military and political clout in the APR. […] We believe that the main goal of pooling our effort is to shape a collective regional security system” (ITAR-TASS, November 18, 2014).

Defense Minister Shoigu’s words thus clearly point to Moscow’s efforts to initiate a working alliance with Beijing. On these grounds alone, the 2014 Russian Military Doctrine, which dictates just such a relationship with China, deserves more careful scrutiny by policymakers in the West.

--Stephen Blank


Regional Problems Ultimately Trump Ukraine as Defining Issue in Central Asia

Following Russia’s annexation of Crimea and its intervention in other parts of Ukraine, many in Central Asia and beyond concluded that the foreign and domestic policies of the five Central Asian countries would be radically and irreversibly changed by those events. Some saw Moscow’s actions in Ukraine leading the countries of that region to turn further away from Russia and seek expanded ties with the West or China in order to protect themselves against what many feared would be a Russian move against them. Other observers concluded that these countries would pursue the opposite strategy, seeking to protect their internal political arrangements by allying themselves even more closely with the Russian Federation (Interfax, April 4, 2014; The Moscow Times, March 19, 2014).

But those assumptions turned out to be wrong. In part, these notions largely failed to reflect the thinking of the elites in the Central Asian capitals. Even more importantly, however, five other influences, some new and some longstanding, trumped Ukraine as a defining issue in Central Asia. These five defining, long-term issues include the United States’ drawdown from Afghanistan, Chinese economic expansion, Russian economic power, intra-regional conflicts, and internal challenges to political control.

As a result, nine months after Moscow’s move into Crimea, the five countries of the region—Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan—are all following trajectories that they would most likely have chosen even if the Ukrainian crisis never happened. And this pattern is likely to continue unless there is some dramatic shift in Ukraine or in East-West relations in the coming months, or unless one or more of the five drivers of policy in Central Asia change.

What follows is a discussion that draws on year-end surveys of the countries in this region and in particular the comments of three prominent Russian experts: Stanislav Pritchin of the Moscow Institute of Oriental Studies, Dmitry Arapov, a historian at Moscow State University, and Aleksandr Salikhov, a Moscow historian who specializes in Central Asia (Novaya Gazeta, December 31, 2014).

The five drivers of Central Asia’s development are:

1. American Withdrawal From Afghanistan. The most important event in Central Asia last year was the US drawdown in Afghanistan. This development signified that the United States was less interested in Central Asia than it had been. At the same time a revived Taliban now threatens Central Asia and, beyond its borders, the Russian Federation as well. Such fears have not driven Central Asians toward cooperation with one another, however—there are too many longstanding conflicts among them (see below). Instead, these looming dangers have aroused greater concerns about unilaterally defending their own national borders and expanding cooperation with Russia to prevent challenges either from the Taliban to their security, or the West to their existing political arrangements (see EDM, July 12, 2013; February 26, 2014).

2. Chinese Economic Expansion. Chinese investment in Central Asia has skyrocketed, benefitting some of the countries in economic terms but sparking fears among the elites in many of them—and in Tajikistan in particular—that Beijing will follow up its economic expansion by seeking greater political influence. This potential rise in Chinese influence inspires local worry, especially given that the US is seen as retreating from the region and Russia is left as the only alternative as a counterbalance to China.

3. Russia’s Economic Power. The Russian economy is in terrible shape from the perspective of the West, but it looks very powerful indeed from Central Asia. As a result, Moscow analysts are unanimous that Vladimir Putin can expand the membership of his Eurasian Economic Union to include all the countries of the region, except Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan—and be successful in cultivating closer economic relations with Tashkent and Ashgabat as well. The reasons are rooted in geography: Besides northward transit through Russia, The Central Asian republics lack a sufficient alternative transit corridor for their trade. And with the US exit from the region, coupled with many of these governments’ opposition to China, the Central Asian states believe they are unlikely to obtain an alternative transit route out of the region any time soon. Furthermore, most of the Central Asian countries rely on transfer payments home from guest workers in Russia—a fact that no local leader can ignore, and something the Russian government can and does exploit to gain influence.

4. Conflicts Among the Five—Territorial and Political. The five Central Asian countries continue to fight over water, over territory—there are 286 disputed parts of their shared borders in the Ferghana Valley alone, and there are tensions over larger areas like Karakalpakia between Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan—and over pipelines and rail ways on which these countries depend for trade. Moreover, despite their Islamic heritage, the five have very distinctive national values that often put them at odds.

5. Internal Challenges to Political Control. Two of the five countries have aging leaders, two others face regional challenges to central control, and four of the five are worried that they will face challenges, from the Taliban or the West, to their authoritarian governments. Moscow is prepared to back these regimes uncritically in exchange for loyalty. That is something the West cannot or will not offer, even in the wake of the events in Ukraine. Thus, the policies of the five appear likely to continue along much the same paths they have in the past, the Ukrainian crisis notwithstanding.

None of this is to say that what is happening in Ukraine is not affecting the thinking of leaders in Central Asia. Instead, it is to point out the obvious that for them, as Arapov put it: “Ukraine is far away,” but Afghanistan, China and Russia are all nearby. Consequently, those factors more than Ukraine are going to define the future, at least the immediate one.

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

People's Liberation Army increasing size of its Amphibious Mechanized Infantry Division

China's People's Liberation Army has doubled the size of its Amphibious Mechanized Infantry Division (AMID) to boost its combat capabilities in the event of a conflict with Taiwan or in the East or South China seas.

The PLA originally had two AMIDs — one in the Nanjing Military Region and another in the Guangzhou Military Region — comprising a total of 26,000-30,000 soldiers. Between 2007 and 2012, Nanjing's 31st Army Group's 86th Motorized Infantry Division and Guangzhou's 41st Army Group's 123rd Mechanized Infantry Division were both reformed into AMIDs, doubling the total personnel to 52,000-60,000.

The four AMIDs will reportedly strengthen China's combat power as they can cooperate with the 20,000 troops from the PLA Marine Corps to conduct landing assault operations. Each AMID has three battle groups and can carry up to 300 amphibious transport vehicles.

The PLA appears to be looking to diversify the capabilities of its amphibious ground forces as opposed to simply fortifying its Marine Corps as a means to strengthen its authority in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea, where it is embroiled in a number of territorial disputes.

A Pentagon report on the Chinese military from 2008 noted that the PLA has been increasing the mobility of its troops in the event of a conflict with Taiwan. The idea of boosting amphibious battle capability was raised in the 2014 version of the report, which said that one of the PLA's strategy options is to quickly take over Taiwan before other countries can intervene.

However, not everyone is convinced that the doubling of AMIDs will necessarily pose a bigger concern to Taiwan. Former Republic of China Marine Corps colonel, Yi-Jia Shiah, said AMIDs are fundamentally different to marines and that the threat is not as serious as publicized, though increased cooperation between the two units will have to be closely monitored.

The PLA's AMIDs and Marine Corps have not yet established a joint command system, he said, adding that in a potential conflict with Taiwan, command of the AMID will still belong to its military region to as opposed to the PLA Navy, which controls the Marine Corps.

The AMIDs also have insufficient battle experience on the seas and cannot simply rely on their ZBD-05 amphibious assault vehicles to cut cross the Taiwan Strait, he said, adding that the PLA will still need its Navy's Type 071 Yuzhao class amphibious transport dock and Type 081 landing helicopter dock or amphibious assault ships to carry out a proper landing assault.

The AMID's development is based on "coast-to-coast" warfare such as crossing rivers, lakes and difficult terrain while still maintaining its combat power, he said, while the Marine Corps is focused on "sea-to-land" warfare, which is more concerned with how to project the military's combat power across the seas.

 

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Appointment of Zafar Sareshwala as Chancellor of Maulana Azad National Urdu University left Radical Muslims Fuming

(The Milli Gazette Online)

Original_3_82748
Zafar Sareshwala- Chancellor of Maulana Azad National Urdu University
Zafar Sareshwala, notorious for siding with Modi, for being face of Modi's "Muslim" support, which Modi badly needed ever since the 2002 Gujarat Anti-Muslim pogrom, has been appointed Chancellor of Maulana Azad National Urdu University, Hyderabad.
Sareshwala, was fined by The Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). They even cancelled his company’s broker registration, Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) said, "Parsoli is not a fit and proper person to act as an intermediary in the Indian securities market".
It is stupid to think that this must have been the only "reward" he must have got for being a Modi sycophant, but this "reward" hurts hard. In July 2014 Economic Times reported how Sareshwala's brother built a Rs 200 crore business in 5 years.
The Ministry of Human Resource and Development which oversees educational institutions in India has been continuously attempting or the other of saffronisation of education or displaying blatant interference in their functioning. Some see Sareshwala would be used to help this agenda of the BJP government. Others think sending Sareshwala to Hyderabad, bastion of the Owaisi brothers, may be to make political in-roads into their solid vote-bank.
Here are some reactions of netizens while Maulana Azad must be turning in his grave:
 
Urdu ka janaza hai, Zara dhoom say nikley.  New Courses to be introduced in Maulana Azad National Urdu University:
1. Certificate course in Tehseen-e-Narendra Modi.
2. Diploma in Mubalagha Ameezi.
3. Diploma in Chaploosi.
4. BA in Ilm-e-Iqtesadiyate Modi.
5. MBBS in Amal e Vedic Jarrahat.
6. MA in Qatl-e-Urdu.
7. MSc in Jaded Uloom e Zulm o Amiriyyat.
8. MSc in Shuddhi o Sanghathan.
9. PhD in Maddah Sarai e Narendra Modi.
10. PhD in Tark-e- Ahl o Ayyal.
— Abu Awwab
 
Horrendous.. save India, save the future generation — Shabnam Hashmi, Delhi
 
Corrupt businessman Sareshwala qualifying as sycophant of Modi made Chancellor of public funded Maulana Azad National Urdu University. Modi govt's assault on education expands! — Meera Ahmad, Delhi
 
5 Takeaways from Sareshwala appointment:
1. Loyalty to the great leader and not merit counts under the current dispensation.
2. The government is in no mood to placate the fears of the Muslim community.
3. The government us determined to show who is in control and wants to rub it in your face.
4. The government is not serious about promoting Urdu.
5. The appointment of a political wheeler and dealer will encourage even more corruption at MANUU.
— Ayub Khan
 
Our attitude to higher education and public institutions on full display. Both are for doling out personal favours, but we want performance of international standard.—Padmaja Shaw
 
I won't be surprised if Salman Khan is made the Vice Chancellor of AMU by the fools !!!!
Zafar Sareshwala, one of the most corrupt businessman has been appointed as Chancellor)) of Maulana Azad National Urdu University (btw, Zafar Sareshwala can't even speak in Urdu language) !!!!  — Syed Amir Abbas Rizvi, Mumbai
 
So the game that HRD Ministry has been playing with education system reaches directly campus of a minority institution. A Modi loyalist and his closest Muslim aid Zafar Sareshwala 'assigned' to do what Govt wills at MANUU. Sareshwala, a Businessman, with dubious credentials, has been appointed the Chancellor of MANU. — Mohammad Reyaz, Delhi
 
Jab ‪#‎SmritiIrani jaisi HRD Minister ho, ‪#‎Batra ji jaisa Educational Adviser ho ta ‪#‎ZafarShareshwala jaisan Chancellor (MANUU) kahe nahi ho sakta hai ji ?! Btw, Chacha Mir Taqi Mir kah gaye hain: Ibtada-e-Ishq Hai Rota Hai Kya/ Aage aage dekhiye hota hai kya ! — Mahtab Alam, Bangalore
 
He succeeds eminent intellectual Dr Syeda Saiyidain Hameed, former member of the Planning Commission. #‎BinaLayaqChamchoKoFayeda — Ovais Sultan Khan, Delhi
 
Modi ki chaplusi ka inaam...— Mohammed Nawazuddin, Dubai
 
Chullu bhar pani mei doob k marna chahiye ..chamcha giri karne se to... Khalida Parveen
 
Congratulations Mr Zafar Sareshwala for Chancellorship of MANUU. — Jasim Mohammad, Aligarh

BJP- If you are secular then support government on anti-conversion bill


(PTI)


Bengaluru: Asserting that his party was against conversions and re-conversions, BJP president Amit Shah has sought the support of the "secular parties" on bringing an anti-conversion bill.

"We are against forceful conversions and re-conversions. Neither our party nor the NDA government is involved in the 'ghar wapsi' (return home) programme. We seek support of the so-called secular parties for a strong legislation against conversions," Shah told reporters here.

Regretting that no secular party had come forward to introduce the anti-conversion bill, he said the Bharatiya Janata Party was in favour of such a law to check conversions.

"There is a need for a strong anti-conversion law to prevent conversions by anyone, be they Christians, Muslims or Hindus," Shah said while appealing to all parties to support the government in enacting a law against conversions.

Noting that the BJP had nothing to do with the 'ghar wapsi' programme of some Hindu right-wing groups, Shah said his party did not believe in such conversions.

The Dharma Jagran Samiti was allegedly behind the forceful conversions of about 250 Muslim families to Hinduism in Uttar Pradesh in November.

Later, BJP sources told IANS that the Dharma Jagran Samiti had been told to refrain from such conversions on advice from the Narendra Modi government this week.

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Pakistan's Policy Flip-Flop on Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi- Running with the Hare and Hunting with the Hounds

 Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi- The prime accused and chief conspirator of most gruesome attack on Indian soil or say 26/11 Mumbai terror attack, in which hundreds of Indian as well as foreign civilians and Indian security forces perished their lives is once again released on bail by Pakistani court. After barbaric and heinous attack on Peshawar Army School by Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan led by Mullah Fazlullah which witnessed the bloodshed of about 150 people, most of them were innocent students, the world community and especially India were expecting that some sense will return in Pakistani government machinery, but within just few hours of Peshawar Army School Attack, Pakistani court released Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi from jail citing the reason that the confessional statement of lone surviving militant in Mumbai attack, Mohammad Ajmal Qasab is not sufficient to detain and prosecute Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, as the statement was made by Qasab in front of Indian agencies.The Indian shocked to here the logic of Pakistani court and summoned Pakistani High Commissioner to apprise him of Indian concerns and anger. Pakistan sensed the situation and arrest Lakhvi under new cases. But by then Pakistani attitude of running with the hare and hunting with the hounds was totally exposed in front of whole world, which was yet to be come out of the sheer grief of Peshawar School attack.
Pakistan rearrested Lakhvi at least fearing furious public opinion prevailing in Pakistan post-Peshawar, but no sensible person on earth can deceive himself bu assuming that Pakistan is now serious in tackling terror menace on its own soil.
Pakistan suffered one more fresh jolt after TTP's latest video gone viral in which it claimed that Pakistan used Pakistani Taliban fighters in Kashmir against Indian Army.
It is the high time that now Pakistani citizen should come forward to pressurize Pakistani Army and Radical politicians which are senselessly harboring terrorist as their weapon against India in Kashmir.
If Pakistan continues to play with such bloody and  double edged sword game, there would be more Peshawar like attacks on Pakistani soil, as trigger happy terrorist are not in position to identify between 'Our's' and 'Their's'.


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