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The ugly world of Kashmir's online rebels

“I know I'm sexy,” Srinagar resident Junaid Rafiqi proclaims on his Facebook page, below a professionally lit photograph that, among other things, shows off his possession of an expensive pair of Ray-Ban sunglasses.

He goes on with an enthusiasm unfettered by punctuation, spelling and grammar: “I got the looks that drives the girls wild I got the moves that really move them. I send chills up and down their spines” [sic., throughout and below].

Facebook users like Rafiqi have been sending chills down the spines of the police in Jammu and Kashmir for much of this summer. Much to the dismay of the authorities, social networks backing the cause of the Islamist-led protesters have proliferated on the Internet.

There is no evidence that social networks have been used to organise or fund the protests — but their content underlines concerns at the growing influence the religious right-wing has over the educated young people in Kashmir.

“We Hate Omar Abdullah,” a network Mr. Rafiqi often participates in, gives some insight into the world of Kashmir's Facebook rebels. The network hosts a collection of political satire. There is, for example, a digitally-manipulated image of Paul, the celebrity octopus, picking a dead donkey over the Chief Minister in response to a question who has “more guts.”

But much of the satire is venomously communal. Mr. Abdullah is repeatedly referred to as “Omar Singh” — a derisory reference derived, evidently, from the rumour that his wife is Sikh. The former Chief Minister, Farooq Abdullah, is shown offering respects at a Hindu temple, while another image caricatures the Chief Minister and his wife as pilgrims to the Amarnath shrine. The administrators of the “We Hate Omar Abdullah,” quite clearly see politicians' efforts to reach out to multiple religious communities as a betrayal.

“The Dalla [broker] family,” the Ray-Ban wearing Rafiqi asserts in one post on the Facebook page, “should be hanged publicly.” Elsewhere, he refers to Mr. Abdullah as a kafir, or unbeliever. In another post on the page, a member asserts that Mr. Abdullah has been denied permission for pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia because of his marriage — a canard circulated by Islamists soon after he took power.

Some networks host express calls to violence. “Everybody,” exhorts the administrator of “Times Now is Anti-Kashmiri,” “[the] next time you see any Times Now correspondent pick up a stone and throw that on their face!.” Arnab Goswami, the channel's editor-in-chief, one user asserts, “should be killed.” Ethnic-Kashmiri anchor Mahrukh Inayet comes in for unprintable abuse targeting her gender.

Barkha Dutt, arguably India's best-known English-language television journalist, also draws flak. “We hate Barkha Dutt” contains claims that her reportage on the clashes lacked balance. Much of it, though, consists of personal invective — and threats. “Hell is meant for her,” writes network member Faizan Rashid, “but she should have some kinna punishment in this world as well...‘stoned to death'...wot say?”

Facebook's terms of use prohibit content that is hateful, threatening or incites violence. Little infrastructure, though, seems to be in place to enforce those terms.

Not all protest-linked networks promote these kinds of invective. Barring the odd comment about “Indian dogs,” “I Protest Against the Atrocities on Kashmiris” has no abusive language. Most posts on this network address questions of media bias and political grievances, not individuals.

Even networks like this, though, are remarkable for the complete absence of the very kinds of serious commentary and debate they believe is wanting in India's mainstream print and electronic media.

There is no way of telling just who the participants on these sites are: users contacted by The Hindu, including Mr. Rafiqi, did not respond to requests to be interviewed. For the most part, though, users seem to be English-speaking and Kashmiri. Judging by their clothing and cultural idiom, are middle-class. Despite the aggressive religious chauvinism evident on the site, there is nothing to suggest substantial numbers of users support established Islamist clerics.

The police say most young people held on the charge of throwing stones do not have a high-school education, and are either unemployed or semi-employed — a class quite distinct from that of the Facebook radical.

More likely than not, official concerns at these networks is exaggerated: their scale and reach is tiny. “I Protest Against the Atrocities on Kashmiris” has 810 members — small numbers compared, for example, with the Palestine solidarity page “Palestine Freedom,” which has 101,178. “We Hate Omar Abdullah” has 675 members and “Civil Disobedience 2010-Quit Kashmir Movement” 134. “Bloody Indian Media,” set up to protest the reportage of the street violence in Srinagar, has 58.

It is possible, though, that the ideas they propagate reflect new ideological trends among some sections of young people in Jammu and Kashmir — a prospect which, if true, holds out a real reason for concern.

PM takes up with Krishna his ‘unnecessary’ criticism of Pillai

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is understood to have taken up with External Affairs Minister S M Krishna his public criticism of Home Secretary G K Pillai’s remarks on the involvement of the ISI in the 26/11 attack.

Government sources told The Sunday Express that Krishna was told that his public statements, made on July 21, were inappropriate and unnecessary. The PM conveyed the message after the meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) on Friday morning. The CCS met to discuss India’s strategy on China and Bhutan.

Krishna had told The Indian Express that “the timing of Pillai’s remarks could have waited for my arrival from Pakistan as India-Pakistan talks are too sensitive”. He had, however, also said that there was “nothing wrong with what Pillai had said”, and that “Pillai is one of (India’s) finest civil servants”.

In remarks made at the Idea Exchange programme at The Indian Express earlier this month, Pillai had said “the ISI... (was) literally controlling and coordinating (the attacks) from the beginning till the end”.

CBI likely to seek 'jail & trial outside Gujarat' for Amit Shah

AHMEDABAD: The Central Bureau of Investigation is likely to seek not only imprisonment of outgoing minister of state for home Amit Shah in a jail outside Gujarat, it is also determined to get the trial of the Sohrabuddin-Kauserbi killing shifted outside the state.

Shah has been on the run for the last three days, attempting to evade arrest till Monday when his lawyers will probably move an anticipatory bail application before the Gujarat High Court.

The arrest will happen sooner or later and, after a period in CBI custody, the investigating agency plans to move the court with a request that a person who had himself been the jail, home and law minister should be imprisoned outside the state so that he is not able to influence the case.

Not only that, the CBI is reported to have taken the Best Bakery line to get the case transfered outside Gujarat.

With the Supreme Court monitoring the case, they may just happen, as there is already the precedent of the Best Bakery and Bilkis Bano cases of 2002 riots which got moved to Mumbai.

If this happens, this would be further blow to the legal prospects of Shah who could be in for a long period of rather uncomfortable incarceration.

Police officers D G Vanzara and others have spent nearly 40 months in jail and their bail applications have been denied at every level because they were seen to be powerful enough to influence the case.

In the chargesheet that was filed on Friday, CBI has clearly stated that Shah has tried to influence witnesses in the fake encounter case and this argument, supported by evidence, is likely to be presented to the SC for the transfer of the case outside Gujarat.

Ayub confesses to raping 17-yr-girl

HYDERABAD: Parkwood International School director Mohammed Salauddin Ayub has reportedly confessed to police that he had raped the 17-year-old girl on several occasions and also made a vain bid to rape a foreign student.

According to sources, Salauddin Ayub confessed that he used to stay on the third floor of Princes Court Block, where girls used to stay on the school campus.

Every day he used to call girl students from the first floor to the penthouse and urged them to stay even during late hours, sources said, quoting the confession statement drafted on a laptop on Thursday last. In March, the girl went to his room at 9.30 pm to clear some doubts. At that time, he hatched a plan and mixed a sedative in her cool drink and gave it to the girl, who after drinking it fell unconscious. He then raped the girl and also threatened her with his licensed 0.32 pistol that if she reveals to anybody he would kill her, the sources said.

Salauddin Ayub confessed that he took the girl to two hospitals. He first took her to a corporate hospital in Banjara Hills on May 5 suspecting pregnancy. He stood outside the hospital and sent the girl inside by giving her the required money. After that, he took the girl to a private nursing home at Lower Tank Bund for subsequent treatment. A lady doctor at the hospital gave her some pills for abortion.

Sources said he also confessed that he had the habit of taking photographs and videos of girl students at various times and used to see them during night. He also stated in the confession that he used to take the girls outside the school premises without noting in the security register.

"On July 1, some girl students came to my room to see a movie on TV. The foreign student slept in my room while watching TV. I asked the other students to leave the girl in my room. When all the girls went away I touched her ...and tried to remove her clothes...But she resisted and cried loudly. Then I changed my mind and threatened the girl not to reveal this to anybody," Ayub admitted in the confession.

In a related development, the state government has recommended to the CBSE to cancel recognition of the school.

Muttiah Muralitharan the magician puts his critics in a spin

He came skipping to the crease to bowl the fateful delivery. The Indian tail-ender plunged artlessly forward, the ball took the edge of the bat, first slip snaffled the catch and a thousand firecrackers exploded in celebration. Muttiah Muralitharan’s 800th Test wicket was the happiest moment of the sporting week, perhaps of the entire sporting summer.

And joy was universal, since Murali is a man of gentle dignity, a player who wears his genius lightly. Who could fail to be affected by the joy which erupted in the town of Galle, at the ground he has made his own?
The history man: Muttiah Muralitharan hoists his arms aloft after the dismissal of Indian cricketer Pragyan Ojha - his 800th Test wicket

The history man: Muttiah Muralitharan hoists his arms aloft after the dismissal of Indian cricketer Pragyan Ojha - his 800th Test wicket

Certainly not John Howard, the former Prime Minister of Australia, who announced, with only the merest hint of the bleeding obvious: ‘I think Muralitharan is a wonderful bowler.’

And not Bob Willis, the former captain of England, who recently observed: ‘No praise is too high for Muttiah Muralitharan, a spinner for whom the adjective “great” is entirely just... Although he’s had to put up with a lot through his career, he’s always played the game with a smile on his face.

‘Unfortunately, there will always be a cloud over his action in some people’s minds but over the years the ICC has relaxed the rules over the degree of bend in a bowler’s arm and Murali’s action is nothing other than legal.’

Yet even that testimonial paled by comparison with Nasser Hussain’s valediction: ‘One of the all-time iconic cricketing figures... a lovely guy... I believe that bowlers with unusual actions add something to the game, make it more interesting, and none is more interesting than Murali. Give me him rather than an orthodox offspinner any day.’

Now it seems almost offensive to doubt such sincerity. But doubt we must. In 2004, in a typical piece of populist prattle, Howard derided Murali as ‘a chucker’.

Of course, we should not expect consistency from a fourth-rate politician. Rather, we should be thankful his subsequent attempt to become president of the ICC has been so splendidly sabotaged.

Willis is a more serious case. In 2004, a body of former Test players urged a relaxation of the laws which govern throwing. They had been persuaded that it is virtually impossible to bowl with a completely straight arm.

Consequently, they recommended a tolerance level of 15 degrees, which would render Muralitharan totally legitimate. Willis was unimpressed.

‘Most good judges of cricket can tell whether there’s something wrong with a guy’s bowling action,’ he said.

‘You can take or leave the scientific stuff. Muralitharan and Shoaib Akhtar have supposedly had their actions remodelled and been cleared but I can’t see anything different in them at all.’

In other words, do not try that ‘scientific stuff’ on our Bob. He is ‘a good judge.’ He can tell.

Aamir Khan satire for film festival

Acclaimed actor and producer Aamir Khan's Peepli Live, the first Bollywood film to compete at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival, premiered at Suncoast Cine Centre last night.

It is a satire based on the lives of Indian farmers who, after losing their land because of unpaid government loans, contemplate suicide so that their families can receive government compensation. It will be re-screened today and Friday.

Bollywood legend Amitabh Bachchan donned his producer cap in The Well (Vihir), in which a young man must learn the meaning of life after the death of a cousin. It will be screened at Suncoast tomorrow. It wasdirected by Umesh Vinayak Kulkarni.

The Window (Janala), Bengali filmmaker Buddhadeb Dasgupta's latest offering, tells the story of a young man about to be both married and a father who embarks on a trip of rediscovery. It will be screened at Suncoast on July 28 and 30, as well as August 1.

Short films include Homecoming, which explores the challenge of balancing modernity and traditional Indian values, and The Floating Position, which deals with a young man caught between his caste identity and his high economic status.

Modi aide Amit Shah quits, but remains untraceable

New Delhi: Gujarat Minister of State for Home and one of Narendra Modi's closest confidante, Amit Shah, has decided to quit but still remains elusive.

Modi announced his resignation to reporters on Saturday. "Amit Shah has sent in his resignation to my bungalow and I have accepted his resignation," he said. (Read: Gujarat minister Amit Shah resigns, Modi says Shah is not guilty)

The Gujarat Chief Minister has forwarded his resignation to the Governor but it's still unclear where Shah is. However, one thing is clear - the CBI is on the lookout for Shah and it's just a matter of time before he is questioned. (Read: Who is Amit Shah?)

Shah's resignation comes a day after CBI charged him with kidnapping and murder of alleged gangster Sohrabuddin Sheikh and his wife Kauser Bi in November 2005. (Read: Who is Sohrabuddin Sheikh)

The Gujarat Chief Minister, however, insists Shah is innocent. (Watch: Allegations against Amit Shah politically motivated: Modi)

"Shah is completely innocent and the charges against him are fabricated. The CBI is being misused by the Congress against its political rival. During the 2007 elections, our opponents had made a hero out of Sohrabuddin," Modi said on Saturday. (Watch: Govt shamelessly misusing CBI, says Jaitley) | (Read: Chidambaram slams BJP for questioning CBI probe)

He may have resigned, but Shah hasn't decided to show up yet. Despite the summons by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the chargesheet, there's still no sign of him.

Sources tell NDTV that in the chargesheet filed by the CBI, the agency has said Sohrabudin was killed as he was becoming a nuisance for the marble manufacturing lobby in Rajasthan.

The chargesheet also states that during October and November 2004, Sohrabudin had threatened owners of R M Marbles and Sangam Textiles in an attempt to extort money.

However, the two traders who were quite well connected approached political leaders as well as police officers of Rajasthan for Sohrabuddin's elimination.

This is perhaps what makes the BJP uncomfortable - the chargesheet hints at links between Amit Shah and the marble lobby which wanted Sohrabudin eliminated.

Sources also tell NDTV that Shah, along with two other accused, tried to hamper the probe and threaten witnesses.

Shah directed Ajay Patel and Yashpal Chudasama, his close confidants and accused, to "convince, coerce, threaten and influence witnesses on his behalf to conceal the truth from CBI about the fake encounter of Sohrabuddin", they add.

For now, Amit Shah remains elusive. But his options seem to be running out. The BJP leader is expected to approach the High Court for relief. (Read: Will Amit Shah be arrested?)

For the CBI, if its hunt continues to draw a blank, the next step is to get the court to declare Shah an absconder - something which is sure to embarrass the BJP further.

What the CBI wants to ask Amit Shah

The CBI has refused to give Amit Shah's lawyer the questions it wants to put to the minister. However, CBI sources told NDTV that the questioning will revolve around these lines:

* Do you know Sohrabuddin Sheikh was killed by the Gujarat Police?
* Was the killing sanctioned by you?
* If not, when and how did you learn about his death?
* How was Sohrabuddin's wife, Kausar, killed?
* Did you know Kausar was in police custody when Sohrabuddin was killed?
* Who killed Kausar and how?

Stampede at German Music Festival Kills 18

BERLIN — A stampede inside a tunnel at a popular techno music festival killed 18 people and injured dozens more on Saturday, police officials said.

Multimedia
Photographs
Stampede at German Music Festival
Video
Deaths in German Stampede
It was unclear exactly what set off the panic among the throngs of young people squeezing into the tunnel leading to festival grounds in the western German city of Duisburg, but the police said they had tried to close off the area because of overcrowding just before the stampede.
The police reported telling the crowd to turn around and walk in the other direction before the panic broke out.
The scene was so chaotic that other festival attendees, unaware of the deaths, kept dancing and listening to music for some time, news services said.
Rescuers reported delays in reaching injured people because of the size of the crowd. News reports said more than a million people were attending the festival.
“It’s a horror situation, especially because rescuers cannot get through to those injured,” Thomas Muenten, a reporter for ZDF, the German public television channel, said in the early evening. “The people literally trampled each other on the way into this tunnel.”
Photos and television images of the scene after the crush showed many young people looking dazed, with personal items that had been left behind scattered around them.
“There were piles of injured on the ground, some being resuscitated, others dead and covered with sheets,” said Isabel Schloesser, 18, according to Reuters. “It was way too full in the afternoon. Everyone wanted to get in.”
The music event, called the Love Parade, is one of Europe’s biggest electronic music gatherings, attracting young people from many countries.
Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed her condolences and said she was “horrified that young people went to party and were instead met by death and injuries.”
The police said thousands of young people were still waiting to get into the festival when officers closed the area. At one point, according to witnesses, it was impossible for people to move forward or backward in or near the tunnel.
As people felt stuck, the witnesses said, they panicked. “At some point the column of people got stuck, probably because it was closed up front and we saw that the first people were already lying on the ground,” Udo Sandhöfer told the N-TV commercial television channel.
But an emergency services official, Wolfgang Rabe, told ARD television that some people had tried to enter the area by climbing a fence along a ramp and fell, possibly starting the panic, Reuters reported.
The Love Parade, started in 1989 as a peace demonstration, was held for years in Berlin, but has been held in the industrial Ruhr region of western Germany since 2007.
In 2000, at least eight people were crushed to death and scores more were injured at a rock festival in Roskilde, Denmark, when fans rushed the stage during a Pearl Jam concert.

Abu Salem attacked in jail

Mumbai: Extradited underworld don Abu Salem, a key accused in the 1993 Mumbai blast case, was attacked inside the high-security Arthur Road Jail on Saturday by Dawood Ibrahim-aide Mustafa Dossa.

Dossa, also an accused in the case, injured Salem in the morning with a sharp spoon, Ramesh Bagwe, Minister of State (Home), told journalists outside the jail. The incident took place after 6 a.m., when convicts are usually brought out of the prison briefly.

“His [Dossa's] intention was to kill Salem. The immediate provocation for the attack will be known only after an investigation. The two were accused in the same case. They would be together most of the time and even at meals,” he said.

Senior police inspector Vasant Tajne pointed to the old rivalry between Salem and Dossa as the reason behind the assault. Salem sustained superficial injures on the nose, cheek, neck, hand and ear and was treated at a hospital. “A probe will be conducted to find out how the spoon made its way to the jail. Action will be taken against officers responsible.”

Late at night, Salem and Dossa were shifted out of the Arthur Road Jail, DIG (Prisons) Bipin Bihari told The-Hindu. He declined to disclose where they were taken.

Unconfirmed reports said Salem was taken to the Taloja jail and Dossa to the Thane jail. Police have registered a case of attempt to murder and criminal intimidation against Dossa and his associate Abdul Karim Sheikh.

Put a ring on it

Actress Bipasha Basu says that beau John Abraham is her diamond supplier. She says that all the jewellery that she owns has been gifted to her by John.

“All the jewellery comes to me from John. He is my diamond supplier,” Bipasha said. So, what kind of engagement ring does she want? “The
engagement ring comes from the other side. You have to ask this to the other side. I hope it’s just the right size for my finger.”

Each of us has our own place in the sun: Katrina Kaif

Mumbai: Actor Katrina Kaif has faced constant comparisons with the leading ladies in Tinseltown, and is often referred to as Bollywood’s lucky mascot, but is unmoved by such reports.

Known for her record number of hits in back-to-back movies, Katrina is happy in the space that she is currently in her career today. She is also unfazed by criticism and rumours.

Katrina says, “I am known for my fun roles. Each of us has our own place in the sun as far as Bollywood is concerned and we are not at all competing with one another.”

After the runaway success of Rajneeti which saw Katrina in a serious role sans her glam doll image, she is ready to take on some adrenaline pumping stunts in Zoya Akhtar’s Zindagi Milegi Na Dobara and rib-tickling comic role in Farah Khan’s Tees Maar Khan.

With plenty of versatile roles in her kitty now, ask her if she has anything on her wish-list and she shoots, “I am keen on being a part of romantic comedies like When Harry Meets Sally.”

Very few know that Bollywood’s leading lady loves to dance and is always keen on learning new styles of dance. Katrina says, “I enjoy dancing immensely.”

Though her last two releases Ajab Prem Ki Ghazab Kahani and Rajneeti didn’t see her in out-and-out dance numbers, she is ready to get back to her passion in director/choreographer Farah’s movie.

Katrina will be seen shaking a leg to a foot-tapping number in the film especially choreographed for her by Farah.

A source says, “In the song Sheela Ki Jawani you will see Katrina Kaif belly dancing under the training of a Brazilian expert. Since she is so passionate about dancing, Farah has decided to show audiences how good a dancer she really is.”

Dubai World urges creditors to accept restructuring

Dubai World, which is one of the emirate's biggest business groups, held a meeting of creditors yesterday at the Atlantis Hotel on the Palm Jumeirah, to explain the restructuring process.

The creditors were told that an independent tribunal was being set up to hear their grievances, but also to persuade them to accept the terms of the restructuring which includes extending the debt maturities to between five and eight years.

In May, Dubai World agreed the terms with a co-ordinating committee of seven leading creditor banks, chaired by the Royal Bank of Scotland. The banks on the committee hold around 60pc of the company's debt.

The rest of the debt is owned by 73 banks, many of which sent representatives to the meeting yesterday. Dubai World said the meeting was informal and no resolution was reached. The group hopes to have an agreement in place by the autumn.

Sir Anthony Evans, a British judge who is Chief Justice of the Dubai International Financial Centre Courts, has been appointed to the special tribunal. The judge, who formerly sat on the Commercial Court of the High Court of Justice in the UK, will listen to creditors views but will ultimately be tasked with getting the agreement through.

The creditors were also told that Dubai World would seek to sell assets to fund the debt repayment. However, the company insisted that the terms of the restructuring would mean that it could wait to sell assets at the best time rather than start a fire-sale. The process of selling assets has already started with the potential off-loading of Inchcape Shipping Services, a port and shipping agent.

In November, Dubai World, which owns Dubai Ports, the owners of P&O, and Nakheel, the property arm, shocked global markets by asking for a "stand-still" agreement on its large parts of its $60bn debts.

Typhoon lashes southern China, killing 2

BEIJING — Two people were killed as Typhoon Chanthu made landfall in southern China's Guangdong province, sending debris flying through the air and bringing rain that could aggravate the country's worst floods in a decade.

Winds, which reached 78 miles per hour (126 kilometers per hour) at the storm's center, knocked over a wall in Guangdong's Wuchuan city, killing two people, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

By Friday morning, the storm had moved north to Nanning, the capital of the Guangxi region and been downgraded to a tropical storm, the China Meteorological Administration said in a statement on its website.

Chanthu comes as China grapples with severe flooding that has left more than 701 people dead and 347 missing so far this year, according to the flood prevention agency. The death toll is the highest since 1998, when more than 4,000 people died. Damages are in the tens of billions of dollars.

In Guangdong, floods have killed more than a dozen people and forced the evacuation of tens of thousands, Xinhua has said. Landslides triggered by heavy rains crushed homes and floods have wiped out crops across the province since June.

State broadcaster CCTV's noon broadcast Thursday showed intense winds tossing around large pieces of debris and objects such as pipes and shingles in Maoming prefecture. Two people were killed in southern China last week by falling debris from Typhoon Conson.

More torrential rains are expected across China this week, in provinces ranging from Yunnan in the southwest to Jilin in the northeast.

Israel urges Lebanon to block ships for Gaza

UNITED NATIONS — Israel is urging Lebanon and the international community to prevent two ships from sailing to Gaza from a Lebanese port to break Israel's blockade of the Hamas-ruled Palestinian territory. It warned that the vessels will be stopped.

Israel's U.N. Ambassador Gabriela Shalev accused organizers of the aid ships Junia and Julia of seeking "to incite a confrontation and raise tensions in our region."

A deadly Israeli commando raid on a Turkish ship trying to bring aid to Gaza on May 31 killed nine activists and focused international attention on Israel's blockade of Gaza, imposed after the Islamist militant and anti-Israel Hamas violently overran the Palestinian territory in June 2007.

In letters to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council obtained Thursday by The Associated Press, Shalev said, "Israel reserves its right under international law to use all necessary means to prevent these ships from violating the ... naval blockade."

She called on Lebanon's government "to demonstrate responsibility" and prevent the two ships, Junia and Julia, from departing.

Israel and Lebanon remain "in a state of hostility," Shalev said, and "such action will prevent any escalation."

Shalev said it can't be ruled out that the Junia and Julia are carrying weapons "or individuals with provocative and confrontational intentions."

The killing of the eight Turks and one Turkish-American on May 31 put Israel under growing pressure to open Gaza's borders.

Under the old blockade rules, only basic food and medicine were allowed into Gaza. In a first step after the flotilla raid, Israel decided to let in most consumer goods but said Gazans would continue to be banned from travel and exporting goods for the time being.

Egypt also decided to ease its closure of Gaza after the flotilla raid, opening its borders to restricted travel and limited humanitarian convoys. The move restored a link to the outside world for at least some of Gaza's 1.5 million Palestinians.

Shalev highlighted "that all goods that are not weapons or material for war-like purposes are now entering the Gaza Strip through appropriate mechanisms that ensure their delivery as well as their civilian nature."

In the latest challenge to the blockade, a Libyan aid ship blocked by Israeli missile ships from steaming to Gaza arrived in the Egyptian port of el-Arish on July 14. Its cargo was to be unloaded and handed over to the Red Crescent to deliver to Gaza.

Serbia rejects UN legal ruling on Kosovo's secession

Serbia has said it will never recognise Kosovo's independence after UN judges ruled that its secession in 2008 had not broken international law.

Their non-binding decision found no reason to prohibit the Serbian province's declaration, made after nine years of de facto independence.

Belgrade, which lost Kosovo after a Nato bombing campaign, argues the move violated its territorial integrity.

The US welcomed the ruling and urged European nations to unite behind it.

Kosovo's government hopes the result will prompt many countries that have not recognised an independent Kosovo to follow the 69 states that have done so.

The decision by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague opens up the possibility that Serbia will fight in the UN General Assembly to solve the dispute through negotiations, the BBC's Mark Lowen reports from Belgrade.
Related stories

* Kosovo's struggle not over yet
* Serbia and Kosovo react to ICJ ruling
* Q&A: Kosovo's future

Other countries facing their own secessionist problems, from Spain to China, may view the result with concern, our correspondent notes.

"Serbia will never recognise the unilaterally proclaimed independence of Kosovo," Serbian President Boris Tadic told reporters in Belgrade after the ruling.

Mr Tadic, a reformist, stressed that Serbia would not resort to violence and would prefer to negotiate a compromise with Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leaders.
Analysis
Continue reading the main story
Jonathan Marcus BBC diplomatic correspondent

This opinion will not change any facts on the ground. Kosovo will still regard itself as independent. Serbia will still want what it sees as its territory back.

But the decision will nonetheless have significant ramifications. There is nothing more sensitive in international affairs than sovereignty and borders.

If Kosovo's independence is in accordance with international law, Moscow may ask, why shouldn't Abkhazia and South Ossetia's independence from Georgia be viewed in the same way?

Indeed, why shouldn't other disputed border questions be revisited? Bosnia's borders may be a case in point.

The implications will make any country with separatist movements worry about the future.

He acknowledged the ruling was "a difficult decision for Serbia" but said Belgrade would continue to try for a UN resolution that would urge both sides to start a dialogue.

Russia, which has historic ties with Serbia, said its position of not recognising Kosovo's independence remained unchanged.

In Spain, the biggest of the five EU states not to have recognised Kosovo, a foreign ministry spokesperson said Madrid respected the court ruling. The spokesperson would not be drawn on whether it would lead Spain to reconsider its decision on non-recognition.

Cyprus reaffirmed its support for Serbia's sovereignty and territorial integrity "which includes the Kosovo and Metohija province".
Diplomatic victory

Kosovan Foreign Minister Skender Hyseni said there was no alternative for Belgrade but to work together with Pristina "on a joint European and Nato perspective".

"This is the time for co-operation and constructive approaches rather than for the destruction that we used to see," he said.

Our correspondent says memories of that destruction - the 1990s war in Kosovo between Serb forces and ethnic Albanian separatists - are still raw in the region.
map

And he adds that although Kosovo has never truly recovered - its economy is weak, unemployment chronically high and its infrastructure still devastated - it has just scored a major diplomatic victory and now has the momentum.

Kosovo Albanians have been celebrating in the streets, waving the flags of both Kosovo and neighbouring Albania.

Serbian troops were driven out of Kosovo in 1999 after a Nato bombing campaign aimed at halting the violent repression of a separatist campaign by the ethnic Albanian majority.

Kosovo was then administered by the UN with the support of the Nato-led peacekeepers (K-For) until February 2008, when its parliament voted to declare independence.

Storm Threat Forces Ships to Leave Work at Oil Spill Site

As the threat of a storm stalled efforts to permanently seal BP’s blown-out well in the Gulf of Mexico, the government said Thursday that the well would be left closed off and unattended if ships had to leave the area.

By late Thursday evening, Thad W. Allen, the retired Coast Guard admiral who leads the federal response effort, said many vessels at the well site were preparing to leave now that a tropical depression had developed into a tropical storm, Bonnie, that was headed into the gulf.

Among those preparing to evacuate, he said, was a drill rig that is working on a relief well, which is considered the ultimate way to seal the well. It was beginning the process of disconnecting a riser pipe from the rig to the seabed and pulling it up, a process expected to take up to 12 hours.

The decision to leave the well capped, which was made at the recommendation of Energy Secretary Steven Chu, means that scientists with the government and with BP think that the well is undamaged and that there is little risk it would deteriorate if kept under pressure, as it has been since valves on a new cap were closed a week ago. Reopening the valves would mean that oil, which has not flowed since they were closed, would once again pour into the gulf.

“We have enough confidence to leave the well shut in,” Kent Wells, a senior vice president of BP, said in a conference call with reporters in Houston.

At the well site, 50 miles off the Louisiana coast, most work was halted during the day in advance of the storm’s arrival.

“While this is not a hurricane, it’s a storm that will have some significant impacts,” Admiral Allen said.

Mr. Wells said the storm would delay operations 10 to 12 days, depending on its severity and how close it passed by the site. That would push back completion of a relief well to the middle of August, he said.

The drill rig that is working on the relief well is most likely to be among the first to leave because it travels very slowly. Other ships that are better able to handle higher seas and travel faster would leave later, Admiral Allen said. Support ships for submersibles that have been monitoring the well would be among the last to leave, so the well would probably be unattended for only a few days, he said.

The relief well has been temporarily plugged because of the weather worries, Admiral Allen said. If the decision is made that the rig evacuate, it would take 8 to 12 hours to detach a riser pipe from the seafloor and pull it back up so the rig could move.

“We would be watching the weather closely,” he said. “If conditions allow us to resume, we would do that.”

On Thursday, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency, telling reporters that some low-lying coastal communities might need to be evacuated. But did not order a mandatory state evacuation.

By Thursday afternoon, though, BP and the Coast Guard had already started moving some surplus materials and equipment from low-lying areas into secure staging areas in Louisiana, Florida, Alabama and Mississippi, Rear Adm. Paul Zukunft, the federal on-scene coordinator, said at a news conference in New Orleans on Thursday.

Admiral Zukunft said that officials were “re-positioning and re-anchoring” the protective boom in some areas. Only the boom that was staged and waiting to be used would be moved to higher ground, he said.

But this actions prompted heated debate in some of Louisiana’s coastal parishes.

Kevin Davis, the president of St. Tammany Parish, was upset that the Coast Guard told him it was planning to move inland barges that had blocked oil from entering Lake Pontchartrain. He issued an executive order saying that anybody who would move such equipment could be arrested.

In St. Bernard Parish, officials worried about whether the protective boom would be moved too far away to be re-deployed quickly after the storm passes. Admiral Zukunft said that moving supplies and equipment was necessary to protect resources so they can quickly be re-deployed after the storm. “We don’t want to lose this material,” he said.

Once the storm has passed, officials can resume their work on drilling the relief wells.

And when the rig is back in place and operating, about two days of work are needed to install and cement a last section of steel casing pipe in the relief well. After that, BP plans to first try another well-sealing procedure, called a static kill, in which heavy drilling mud would be pumped into the well in an effort to permanently stop the flow of oil and gas.

If the static kill is successful, the only need for the relief well may be to confirm that the well is permanently sealed. If the results from the static kill are ambiguous, though, it would then take at least several days, and perhaps several weeks, to permanently shut the flow from the bad well by pumping mud down the relief well.

The National Weather Service said Thursday that the tropical depression, the third in what is expected to be a busy hurricane season, had formed in the Bahamas. Now a storm, its track was expected to run to the northwest into the gulf.

A spokesman for the private weather service AccuWeather said the storm would probably reach the area of the well site late Saturday or early Sunday.

Liz Robbins contributed reporting from New Orleans and Campbell Robertson contributed from Hopedale, La.

Four more H1N1 cases in city

KOLKATA: Four new cases of H1N1 were reported in the city on Thursday, taking the total number of swine flu-affected in the state to 31 this monsoon. Seven persons had tested positive on Wednesday. Virologists fear there would be a further rise in H1N1 cases as the climate was favourable for the virus to thrive.

Fifteen people are currently receiving treatment for the influenza and the condition of two, who are admitted in private hospitals, continues to be critical. Both the patients are in their 20s. Though one person has completed the Tamiflu dosage and treatment, his condition has not improved due to renal failure.

"The chronic renal failure patient at a private hospital has undergone the full course of treatment. His follow-up
swab report confirms he is now H1N1 negative. But his condition continues to be critical due to other ailments," said Dr Asit Biswas, state swine flu nodal officer.

Virologists say the H1N1 virus is more virulent this time. Also, unlike the outbreak last year — when the influenza was largely restricted to people aged between five and 35 years — this time it is attacking people from all age groups. H1N1 had affected 130 people in the state last year and there were no deaths.

Though swine flu can prove dangerous for all, the most vulnerable are those with chronic ailments as their immune system has become weak. People with cardio-vascular diseases, respiratory distress and cancer fall in the high-risk category.

While vaccine for swine flu can play a preventive role, so far the vaccine from the health department is made available only to doctors and health workers. An Indian vaccine manufacturing company launched an intra-nasal vaccine for swine flu a few days ago. But chemists in the city said due to lack of information, the response to the vaccine had been lukewarm

Source : timesofindia

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