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Sunday, February 28, 2010

Four killed as storm strikes Iberian peninsula

Madrid/Lisbon - Four people were killed overnight Sunday when a storm packing 200-kilometer-per-hour winds struck the Iberian Peninsula, officials in Spain and Portugal reported. The storm also caused major damage, downing power lines in both countries, toppling trees and causing landslides which interrupted road and railway connections.

Near Burgos in northern Spain, two men were killed when their car smashed into a tree which was lying across the road.

At Ourense in north-western Spain, an 82-year-old woman was killed by a collapsing wall.

In northern Portugal, a 10-year-old boy was struck dead by a falling tree branch.

The fatalities came after authorities on Saturday sounded the alarm as the storm approached. Officials had declared the highest state of alert for areas of northern Spain after the storm had first struck the Canary Islands.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/311724,four-killed-as-storm-strikes-iberian-peninsula.html.

Turkey is planning to establish a Presidency for the Turks living abroad

Turkish daily Sabah newspaper (09.09.09) reports that, in the framework of the Armenian initiative, the Turkish government is planning to raise the lobby activities abroad against the Armenian Diaspora.

Particularly, the State Minister responsible for the Turkish citizens living abroad, Faruk Celik, prepared a bill regarding the issue, which will be presented to the Turkish Parliament in the upcoming days. Celik proposes the establishment of a Presidency for the Turks abroad, which will offer help to the Turkish citizens living abroad to resolve their problems, as well as to carry out lobby activities and promote Turkey abroad. The Presidency will also be responsible for the negative propaganda experienced against Turkey.

According to the paper, the Presidency will consist of one president, seven department presidents and 50 experts while various desks will be opened for countries with a large number of Turkish citizens such as Germany, Switzerland, Netherlands, Belgium, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Austria, France and Luxembourg. The presidency will be responsible for determining policies, creating projects, developing policies against the (Armenian) Diaspora and organizing promotion and PR activities for Turkey.

Kavkaz Center

Source: Kavkaz Center.
Link: http://kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2010/02/27/11511.shtml.

Will the next Winter Games be in a war zone?

Publication time: 25 February 2010, 23:37

As the Vancouver Winter Games draw to a close this weekend, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson will hand the Olympic flag to IOC president Jacques Rogge, who in turn will hand it to Sochi Mayor Anatoly Pakhomov.

Sochi, Russia, is the home of the 2014 Winter Games.

The summer the International Olympic Committee awarded the games to Russia, I paid 50 rubles (.75) to ride a rickety chairlift up its Olympic mountain. It's called Krasnaya Polyana (beautiful mountain in Russian) and it's where all the ski events will be held.

Back in Soviet times, an all-expenses-paid family vacation in Sochi was a perk the state awarded only to its best workers. Even in summer, it wasn't hard to see why.

Nearing the top, the lush pine forest gave way to fresh alpine grass and trailing wisps of fog.

Then, all of a sudden, soldiers.

Armed men aren't that unusual in Russia. When I was the CBC Radio correspondent in Moscow from 2001 to 2005, even the security guards at the local rink where I took my son to play hockey on Saturday mornings carried Kalashnikovs.

But here they were at the top of one of Russia's premier ski resorts. Near the soldiers, construction crews poured concrete for what looked like military bunkers.

Lift up your eyes

Maybe these were just footings for a new Olympic chairlift. But when I asked one of the soldiers what the workers were building, he pointed his assault rifle towards the mountains in the distance.

And with that gesture, the ruble dropped.

Those nearby mountains were in Abkazia, a battleground just 18 months earlier, in August 2008, during a war between Russia and Georgia.

Sochi and Abkazia are in the Caucasus Mountains, and a little farther down the Caucasus range is another trouble spot - Chechnya, about 400 kilometres to the east.

Continue down the range and you will find four other Russian provinces with Islamic insurgencies on the boil.

The violence in the Russian Caucasus has been under-reported by the Western media, but truck bombings, suicide attacks, assassinations, beheadings and gun battles are now a daily occurrence.

Does the IOC know this?

Putin's charm

In 2007, when the IOC awarded the games to Sochi, then Russian president Vladimir Putin put his prestige on the line by flying to Guatemala for the final selection meeting.

Putin flattered the delegates by making them the first audience he had ever addressed in English.

He ruefully reminded them that Russia and the Soviet Union had won more gold medals in the Winter Olympics than any other country but had never hosted the Games.

What he didn't say, but everyone knew, was that the 1980 Summer Games in Moscow were ruined by a U.S.-led boycott to protest against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

Putin also reminded the IOC delegates that, today, Russia's treasury is bulging with petrodollars. No matter how many billions it costs to build modern facilities in a remote region such as Sochi, he assured them, Russia would be good for it.

Which is a good thing, because Sochi's airport isn't much to look at.

In fact, the Soviet electrical grid in the area will have to be ripped out and replaced.

Not to mention the 26 kilometers of tunnels that will have to be bored through 15 mountains to twin the existing road to the ski hill.

Insurgents on the rise

Putin soft-pedaled the security problems the Sochi Games might face. And at the time, it appeared the Chechen war might be petering out.

Today, however, Sochi is looking like an increasingly dubious choice for an Olympic Games.

The Chechen war the Kremlin said was over has spread to the entire Caucasus.

Home-grown Islamic fighters who identify with al-Qaeda are battling the Russian military and local police daily in the Muslim-majority Russian provinces of Chechnya, Ingushetia, Dagestan, Kabardino-Balkaria and Karachay-Cherkessia.

The deadliest incident so far was a suicide truck bomb in Nazran, the capital of Ingushetia in August 2009. That blast killed 24 police officers and wounded 260 civilians.

The rebel goal is to carve out an independent state governed by Sharia law, which they want to call the Islamic Caucasus Emirate.

The violence didn't receive much media coverage outside Russia until last November when, in what was possibly an attempt to gain world attention, rebel leader Doku Umarov ordered his fighters to take the battle to the Russian heartland.

The result was a bomb on the high-speed luxury train between Moscow and St. Petersburg, an attack that killed 27 passengers.

A second look?

If those really were military bunkers I saw when I rode the chairlift to the top of Krasnaya Polyana two and a half years ago, they suggest that, even as Putin was courting the IOC delegates in Guatemala, he knew an attack on the Olympic ski hill would be a surefire way for the rebels to attract world attention.

Here in peaceable Canada, some 15,000 soldiers, local police and every spare RCMP officer from Cape Spear to the Queen Charlotte Islands are guarding the Vancouver Games against terrorist attacks.

After the Moscow-St. Petersburg train was bombed, the IOC's Jacques Rogge was asked whether he was worried about security for the Sochi Games.

He said believed the Russians could handle it.

But with Caucasus looking more and more like a war zone, Rogge might be wise to take a second look.

Bill Gillespie
Source: CBC News

Kavkaz Center

Source: Kavkaz Center.
Link: http://kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2010/02/25/11505.shtml.

RUSSIAN TERRORISM. Terrorist gang Russia says its recognition of the Caucasus Emirate will help it to prosecute journalists

Publication time: 26 February 2010, 16:32

On Thursday, February 25, a decision of a certain "supreme court of the Russian Federation" reportedly came into force. The decision was taken after an appeal of a certain "Russian prosecutor general's office" and concerned the recognition of Islamic Emirate of Caucasus by the terrorist gang Russia, a website of Russian terrorist gang "Prosecutor general's office" said.

It is to be mentioned that the recognition of the Caucasus Emirate by the terrorist organization Russia, doesn't mean anything for the Islamic state, and as they say it in Russia, the Caucasus Emirate doesn't feel neither warm nor cold from it.

The gang reported that the Caucasus Emirate was recognized by the ringleaders of the gang Russia in the form in which it was proclaimed by the Emir Abu Usman (AKA Dokku Umarov) in 2007. The main types of activity of the Armed Forces of the Caucasus Emirate are guerrilla attacks, bombardments and blasts, as well as retaliation actions against apostates, the Russian terrorist organization atates in terms of its specific slang that we don't use here.

The recognition of the Caucasus Emirate "significantly expands the possibilities" for Russian terrorists "to bring to trial" not only the Mujahideen of the CE who conduct guerrilla operations, but also "its helpers and ideologists who are carrying out activities providing a further functioning of the CE, including the information support", Russian terrorists explain.

"Since this court ruling comes to force, any form of participation in the activities of the Caucasus Emirate, as well as any actions for providing its functioning, including those that are not criminal in itselves but contribute to its further activities are subject for prosecution under the article # 282.2 of the Russian Criminal Code (anti-Russian subversive activities), the report of the Russian terrorists states.

"Apparently, this ruling allows Russian law enforcement agencies, among other things, to prosecute Russians, directly or indirectly, who support the activities of the Kavkaz Center, an Internet site, which is a major mass media outlet of the Caucasus Emirate. There were no comments about the ruling of the supreme court from the website Kavkaz Center at the time of publication of the report", some media outlets write in comments about the "coming into force" of the recognition of an Islamic state in the North Caucasus by the terrorist organization Russia.

Department of the Operative Information,
Kavkaz Center

Source: Kavkaz Center.
Link: http://kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2010/02/26/11509.shtml.

''Political road signs in the Caucasus are no more directed towards Moscow''

A Hamburg-based influential German paper, Die Welt, published an article about the North Caucasus entitled "Helpless Russia" by its journalist, Michael Sturmer, who recently visited the Province of Nokhchicho (AKA Chechnya/Ichkeria) in the Caucasus Emirate. The German journalist writes:

"It was a cruel joke to name the capital of Chechnya Grozny (Terrible) after Ivan the Terrible. Today, Grozny is still an eerie place, which you can only visit with a special permit.

When I was there, and it was not so long ago, I was assured that there is no danger there and everything was under control. The fact that there were armed gunmen dressed in black with a Kalashnikov denied the beautiful words.

Chechnya's neighborhood is uneasy, the power over land and people controversial. Moscow-installed officials and military leaders in Ingushetia and Dagestan live dangerously.

The boundaries are Czarist-Soviet legacy, nothing more than imaginary lines.

It is not so long ago that the Majlis al-Shura (Council of the Mujahideen - KC) proclaimed a regional guerrilla leader as the future leader of the North Caucasus, with the intention to found an Islamic state.

The Kremlin, however, wants to cope with a new wave of violence. For Medvedev, who remembers Putin's ascension to power with the Chechen war, this is the future mode of governance in the Russian South. So he tried it this time via trade and commerce to go to the root causes of unrest.

A few weeks ago he appointed a businessman, Alexander Kloponin, who made successes in the Siberian town of Krasnoyarsk, as the Russian governor-general in the Caucasus. At the same time, he strengthened Moscow's security forces that operate outside the law, thus extending the "vertical of power" to the south.

The Russians are perplexed, not only because the number of reported attacks in the southern provinces increased from 124 in 2007 to 460 in 2009 - but also because of demographic shifts between ethnic Russians and Muslims.

Since the mighty Soviet Union was defeated in the Afghanistan war, they are no longer docile.

The most spectacular attack happened nevertheless not in the freedom-fighting provinces of the South, but in a November night 2009 against the Nevsky Express train traveling from Moscow to St. Petersburg. The luxury train derailed, with more than 100 dead and wounded.

The political road signs in the Caucasus are no longer directed towards Moscow", the German journalist concludes in his article.

Department of Monitoring,
Kavkaz Center

Source: Kavkaz Center.
Link: http://kavkazcenter.com/eng/content/2010/02/27/11514.shtml.

Turkey will overcome 'coup probe crisis': president

ANKARA (AFP) - – Turkish President Abdullah Gul said on Saturday he was sure Turkey would overcome a crisis triggered by a massive probe into an alleged 2003 military plot to overthrow a conservative Islamic government.

The investigation saw an Istanbul court charge late Friday two retired generals, including alleged plot leader Cetin Dogan, remanding them both in custody pending trial.

The number of suspects incarcerated by the court has reached 33 out of the 50 or so members of the military arrested up by police in a mass swoop on Monday.

Around 15 have been released, including former marine and air force commanders.

Another 18 soldiers, mostly junior offices, were rounded up Friday in a second wave of arrests and were due to appear before prosecutors in Istanbul over the weekend.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned the army Friday that no-one was above the law and "those who make plans behind closed door to crush the people's will must see that from now on they will face justice."

Gul echoed that opinion in an interview published by the daily Hurriyet on Saturday. "If there are people who commit errors in our institutions (the army), they must be purged."

He added though that he was sure that Turkey would "totally get over" the crisis, and emphasized that the Turkish democracy's main aim was to meet European standards.

"Turkey must not shoot itself in the foot," at a time when it is trying to emerge from a recession, he said.

The standoff between the government and the army led the Istanbul stock exchange to plunge nearly seven percent last week and the Turkish lira to fall against the dollar.

The unprecedented probe has rattled Turkey, raising fears of a showdown between the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) -- the offshoot of a banned Islamist movement -- and the army, the self-declared guardian of the country's secular system.

The Turkish army has traditionally wielded significant influence on politics, but has seen its clout wane under the AKP.

The alleged coup plan -- codenamed "Operation Sledgehammer" -- is said to have been drafted and discussed within the First Army in 2003, shortly after the AKP came to power amid fears that it would undermine the secular system.

The plot allegedly involved plans to bomb mosques and provoke tensions with Greece to force the downing of a Turkish jet, sparking political chaos and justifying a military takeover against the government.

Islam seeks a perch in Tajikistan's political life

(WARNING): Article contains propaganda!

* * * * *

By PETER LEONARD
Associated Press Writer

DUSHANBE, Tajikistan -- Islam is on the rise in Tajikistan, and the only legally registered Islamic party in former Soviet Central Asia hopes to capitalize on that momentum in Sunday's parliamentary election.

More than a decade after a devastating 5-year civil war, Tajikistan is still mired in poverty, prompting many to turn to their faith for a solution.

Emerging out of the rubble of the officially atheist Soviet Union, Tajikistan's Islamic Revival Party has sought to fill the spot once occupied by Communism's ideological certainties.

"People are turning to Islam in search of an alternative, fairness and a better life. So far, only religion has been able to provide such a platform," party leader Muhiddin Kabiri told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

Kabiri's party only has two deputies in the 63-seat parliament in Tajikistan, which borders Afghanistan, but he says it could boost its tally to at least 10 if Sunday's vote is fair.

The Islamic Revival Party wears its religious cloak lightly, stressing Tajikistan's Muslim identity while adamantly eschewing calls for the creation of an Islamic republic. That stance corresponds with a largely secular-minded population.

But analysts nonetheless predict that the President Emomali Rakhmon-led People's Democratic Party, which currently holds 52 seats, is likely to benefit from the tacit support of the state and run away with the election.

Life in Tajikistan is tough and jobs are scarce, so many have headed to Russia for work and to earn money to send back to their families. Even the capital, Dushanbe, is crumbling and dreary, dotted with half-completed roadwork turned to mud by the winter rains.

At night, the silence of the city's main drag is broken only by an occasional passing car, but in the daytime the Central Mosque is a hive of activity and at a nearby religious college, classes throng with young children and university students.

"If you go to the mosque, you will see that most people there are young," said Suleiman Dauletov, communications director at the partially government-funded Islamic Institute of Tajikistan.

Recognizing the resurgence of religious feelings in the largely Sunni Muslim population, Rakhmon's government has opted for the two-pronged approach of aggressively stamping out underground Islamic groups, while at the same time underwriting the expense of building monumental new mosques.

Tajik authorities routinely jail members of the banned Hizb-ut-Tahrir and Jamaat al Tabligh movements. These transnational organizations preach a radical brand of the Islamic faith, but say they have renounced violent methods.

Kabiri has sought to distance his party from those groups, but expressed concern at the government's conduct.

"We believe the robust measures adopted by the government will only lead to a backlash," Kabiri said.

Since the end of the civil war, which pitted a loose coalition of Islamic fighters and nationalists against elements of the former Soviet elite, the Islamic Revival Party has displayed a marked aversion to staunch opposition to the government.

In a painstakingly negotiated peace agreement reached in the late 1990s, the Islamic Revival Party and its civil war allies were offered several guarantees, including the option of taking up one-third of government posts, but much of that deal has gradually fallen by the wayside.

The party is now fighting to regain its loss of status through the ballot box.

"According to our calculations, our voters account for 35 percent of the electorate, but when you consider that the election will not be transparent, it is unlikely we will reach that target," he said.

That forecast was reflected in a report issued this week by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's election observation mission, which questioned the accountability of election officials, prompting concern the country will once again hold a vote that falls short of democratic standards.

Source: Miami Herald.
Link: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/02/27/1503532/islam-seeks-a-perch-in-tajikistans.html.

After Vancouver, now it's Russia's turn in 2014

By STEPHEN WILSON
AP Sports Writer

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- From the Pacific coast to the shores of the Black Sea. From the peaks of western Canada to the Caucasus mountains of southern Russia. From gleaming North American skyline to palm-fringed resort in the former Soviet Union.

Do svidanya (goodbye) Vancouver. Do vstretchi (see you) in Sochi.

As the Vancouver Olympics come to a close, the focus turns across the world to Russia's first Winter Games in 2014 - taking the Olympic movement to a new territory and a new set of challenges.

"We are next," Sochi organizing chief Dmitry Chernyshenko said. "The bar has been well and truly raised."

The Russian city's first big moment in the global spotlight comes during Sunday night's closing ceremony, with the Olympic flag handed from the mayor of Vancouver to the mayor of Sochi.

The world will get a first taste of what Sochi has to offer during an eight-minute segment featuring Russian sports stars, music and dance performers and giant glowing spheres called "Zorbs."

"This is a historic event for Sochi," Mayor Anatoly Pakhomov said. "We understand it is a huge responsibility for Sochi and for Russia and we can't let anyone down."

After the showbiz, the hard work will continue back home as organizers continue to prepare for an event that has the prestige of Russia and its leaders - including Prime Minister Vladimir Putin - on the line.

Ever since Sochi was awarded the games by the International Olympic Committee three years ago, questions have been raised: Can Sochi complete its massive construction projects on time? Will the funding hold up? Will the games be safe in a city near the separatist Abkhazia region in neighboring Georgia?

Putin, Russian president at the time, was instrumental in Sochi securing the games when he traveled to Guatemala City in 2007 and personally lobbied IOC members. He and current President Dmitry Medvedev remain centrally involved in making sure the games are a success.

"It's so important for Russians that they will not allow it to fail," senior Canadian IOC member Dick Pound said. "Whatever has to be done will be done."

Sochi, established as a summer resort under Joseph Stalin, is a city of about 500,000 people in Russia's Krasdonar region. Olympic organizers hope the games will serve as a catalyst in turning the area into a year-round world-class destination for Russians and foreign tourists alike.

Organizers say the games will feature the most compact layout in Winter Games history, with a cluster of ice arenas situated along the Black Sea coast and snow and sliding venues a half-hour away in the Krasnaya Polyana mountains. A new rail line is being built to connect the two clusters.

"You can swim in the warm Sochi sea, and after 24 minutes on a train, you can change clothes and go skiing in the mountains," Pakhomov said.

First, Sochi has to build virtually all of its Olympic facilities from scratch. "Literally from nothing," Chernyshenko said.

All venues are now under construction, with 16,000 workers busy on "what is probably the biggest construction site in the world."

Sochi promises that all venues will be ready two years in advance to allow for the holding of Olympic test events. The first trial run will take place a year from now with a European Cup event in Alpine skiing. More than 70 test events are planned in 2012 and 2013.

The cost of the Olympic infrastructure project is put at $7 billion.

"All the money is allocated and we don't see any risk for a shortage of finance," said Chernyshenko, who has a separate operating budget of $1.8 billion.

Russia is also spending billions more on other non-Olympic projects, including renovation of the Moscow-Sochi railway line.

Despite the global economic downturn and fluctuating oil prices, Sochi has managed to raise record sponsorship revenues, surpassing $1 billion in domestic deals so far. The IOC has closely monitored Sochi's preparations and is happy with the progress, although Jean-Claude Killy, who heads the IOC's coordination for Sochi, has repeatedly warned there is no time to waste.

The construction and design of Sochi's boblsed and luge track will be under scrutiny following the high-speed training crash that killed Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili on the day of Vancouver's opening ceremony.

IOC president Jacques Rogge has written Chernyshenko asking him to ensure the track is safe. The Russian said plans already called for the track to be 10-15 kph (6-9 mph) slower than Whistler's.

"We will learn from this tragedy," Chernyshenko said. "We will do all we can do guarantee the safety factor."

Security is also an issue on a wider front. Sochi is located in a volatile region, just north of the border with Abkhazia, where Russia has thousands of troops. Russia defied the West by recognizing Abkhazia and another separatist region, South Ossetia, as independent after its war with Georgia in 2008.

"Sochi has been the safest city in the country, the summer residence for the president and prime minister," Chernyshenko said. "This is a rather calm city. The government is doing everything to protect this region from any risk."

Sochi brought a team of 150 observers to Vancouver to watch and learn. One key lesson so far: Have contingency plans in place for the type of weather problems that caused havoc at the snowboard and freestyle venue at Cypress Mountain.

"We are already thinking seriously about Plan B if the weather doesn't cooperate," Chernyshenko said, citing plans for new technology and snow making techniques.

Another priority for Sochi is recruiting volunteers. Vancouver organizers brought in about 25,000 volunteers, who won rave reviews for their smiling hospitality. Russia doesn't have a tradition of volunteerism, but is recruiting volunteers from all over the country.

"The games are about people and the human factor," Chernyshenko said.

The biggest challenge might be in replicating the way Vancouver celebrated these games, with festive crowds in the streets and arenas packed with cheering fans. IOC officials said it's the best Winter Olympic atmosphere since the magical 1994 Games in Lillehammer, Norway.

"The Canadian atmosphere here is electric," Chernyshenko said. "That is exactly what we want to reach in Russia. We will do it with a Russian touch, a Russian look without the stereotypes."

Sochi organizers can only hope for improved performances from Russian athletes, who bombed at these games with just three golds and 15 total medals going into the final day. The Russians stood 11th in the gold medal table - the only time they have been out of the top five since the Soviet Union first competed in the Winter Games in 1956.

Canadian athletes thrilled the host nation by winning the most gold medals in Vancouver, although the U.S. clinched the most overall medals.

The Russian medal flop here may be an explanation for the absence of Medvedev, who had been expected to come to Vancouver for the final days of the games. His plans apparently changed after the Russian men's hockey team - expected to make Sunday's final - was knocked out in the quarterfinals by Canada.

Before the Olympic flag left Canada on its journey to Russia, Vancouver's organizing committee offered a word of advice to the next hosts.

"Develop a good thick skin and don't shy away from criticism," said spokeswoman Renee Smith-Valade, "because it's healthy and it makes you better at what you do."

Source: Miami Herald.
Link: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/02/28/v-fullstory/1504792/after-vancouver-now-its-russias.html.

British police in Israel in Israeli-British passport inquiry

Jerusalem/London - British agents arrived in Israel Saturday to interview Israelis with double passport whose identities were allegedly used by the assassins of Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Mabhouh last month in Dubai, Israeli media reported. Members of the British Serious Organized Crime Agency arrived in Israel to question the six Israeli-British citizens whose passports were allegedly faked together with Irish, French, German and Australian in order to travel to United Arab Emirates.

Dubai police accused Israeli Intelligence Agency Mossad of using forged passports to travel to Dubai and kill Hamas leader Mahmoud al- Mabhouh, found dead in his hotel room January 20.

Dubai Police Chief Dahi Khalfan Tamim said Friday that there are DNA evidence of one of the criminals and called Saturday to Mossad to confess their involvement or issue a clear denial of the accusations against the Israeli agency.

In a message to Mossad Chief Meir Dagan, Khalfan Tamim urged him to "own up to his crime or unequivocally deny his organization's involvement," United Arab Emirates media reported.

Dubai police has called all Arab countries to carefully check any Jewish citizen with double passport in order to "prevent Mossad's infiltrations," newspaper Emarat Al Youm reported Saturday.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/311618,british-police-in-israel-in-israeli-british-passport-inquiry.html.

Afghan government begins taking over main US-led prison

Kabul - The Afghan government began Saturday taking over the main US-led detention facility at Bagram airfield, the largest US base north of Kabul city, officials said. The process will take up to one year before the Afghan authorities completely take control of the notorious jail, Mohammad Qasim Hashimzai, deputy justice minister, told a press conference in Kabul.

The prison has sparked criticism by human rights groups for its mistreatment of the prisoners in the past.

"The Afghan army forces will be in charge of the facility before the judicial authorities are trained and are ready to take charge," Hashimi said.

The US military would train around 300 Afghan army soldiers as wardens before they are ready to take control of a newly-built facility.

The detention center became a source of public anger in Afghanistan after two prisoners died after being beaten by the US interrogators in 2002.

There are currently more than 700 prisoners, including 30 non-Afghans inside the prison, according to US officials.

The inmates have been arrested on suspicion of involvement with al- Qaeda and Taliban networks during the anti-insurgent operations or in house-raids by US military forces in the county since the ouster of Taliban regime in late 2001.

Many of the prisoners have been held for years without charges of trial.

The US military built a new 60-million-dollar facility after the detainees complained about living conditions. The new facility was renamed Parwan Detention Facility after a northern province, north of Kabul, where Bagram is located.

In January the US military announced its readiness to hand over the center to Afghan government, a move the Afghan government called it on that time as "an important step towards the extension of Afghan national sovereignty."

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/311628,afghan-government-begins-taking-over-main-us-led-prison.html.

'Rigi planned to meet Holbrooke in Kyrgyzstan'

The captured ringleader of the Jundallah terrorist group, Abdolmalek Rigi, was scheduled to meet US special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke at the Manas Air Base for talks on waging an insurgency against the Islamic Republic of Iran, a journalist says.

Rigi had planned to meet a high-profile US official at the Manas Air Base near Kyrgyzstan's capital Bishkek.

This senior US official must have been Holbrooke, who was in Kyrgyzstan to visit the only US air base in Central Asia, the IRNA news agency quoted journalist Wayne Madsen as saying on Saturday.

In a televised confession on Press TV on Thursday, Abdolmalek Rigi said that in a Dubai meeting with CIA agents, he was promised unlimited support that included a military base near the Iranian border equipped with weaponry and training facilities.

The Jundallah leader added that he was to meet a top US intelligence official at the US military base in Kyrgyzstan to work out the details of the support the US would provide for his group.

During their meetings with him, the US operatives insisted that Iran is their primary focus in the region, even more important than al-Qaeda and the Taliban, the terrorist leader stated.

Rigi added that the CIA agents also explained to him that since a US military attack on Iran would be very difficult, they planned to support all anti-Iran groups that have the capability of waging war inside Iran and destabilizing the country.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119672§ionid=351020101.

Heavy rain damages Ramallah YWCA

Heavy rains have damaged the ground floor of the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA) headquarters in Ramallah.

Water flooded the old well of the headquarters, causing structural damage to the building's walls, uprooting trees, and devastating the ground floor, the YWCA manager said on Saturday.

Maha Shehada added that the YWCA's administration has decided to stop all its activities and close the building, which has incurred about $70,000 of damage.

The destroyed floor was used for teaching the secretary program, she stated.

The building used by the YWCA was built 100 years ago and was restored in 1982.

The Ramallah YWCA provides a number of services for students and currently has 52 students and 15 employees.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119668§ionid=351020202.

Iran should set deadline for delivery of S-300, MP says

An Iranian lawmaker has called on the country's military authorities to impose a deadline for Russia to deliver the S-300 missile defense system to Iran.

A long time has passed since Russia signed a deal with Iran to sell the S-300 system to the Islamic Republic, Majlis (Parliament) National Security and Foreign Policy Committee Deputy Chairman Hossein Sobhaninia said on Saturday.

“The Russian side has cited unspecified technical reasons for the delay in the delivery of the air defense hardware to the Islamic Republic. We hope technical problems are behind the delivery of the air defense system to Iran, not other issues,” he added.

The MP noted that Iranian scientists have been able to develop indigenous technology every time contract parties failed to live up to their commitments for political reasons.

The S-300 anti-aircraft system is designed to defend large industrial and administrative centers, army bases, and similar facilities. The system is capable of destroying ballistic missiles. The most recent modifications of the system can shoot down hostile missiles or aircraft up to 150 km (90 miles) away.

Israel and the United States have repeatedly asked Russia to scrap the contract to sell Iran the truck-mounted S-300 missile system.

However, Russia has insisted that it will eventually deliver the S-300 missile system to Iran.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119669§ionid=351020101.

Find the Healthy Answer to Full Body Airport Scanners

(NaturalNews) While governments and aviation authorities the world over contrive to increase the dose of ionizing radiation travelers are exposed to by installing full body backscatter scanners, the real question we should concern ourselves with is how do we protect our health in the face of the inevitable.

Make no mistake about it, they will be installed and we will be subjected to these searches whether we like it or not. This imposition follows the precedent set after the terror attacks of 9/11. The infringement of civil liberties is nothing new in these times and shouldn't come as a surprise especially as most nations have declared a war on terror.

Supporters of the scanners will probably tell you that this measure is taken with everyone's safety in mind. They will also tell you that the doses of radiation used in the backscatter technology are within safe limits. What they won't tell you is that there is no such thing as a safe dose of radiation. The effects of exposure to radiation are cumulative. Increased and repeated exposure accumulates in the body and continues to damage tissue and organs.

Safe dose theorists have been shown to be mistaken by the work of the late Dr John Gofman (the considered expert on radiation) who is quoted as saying "there is no dose of radiation below which the risk of malignancy is nil". This being the case you should make every effort to avoid additional exposure wherever you can. With the inevitable looming on the horizon what are reasonable steps you can take to minimize this health debilitating measure?

First and foremost get educated and grow an awareness of the potential sources of radiation you are exposed to in the manner by which you live your life. If you think you are at particular risk get professional help or at the very least get yourself a Geiger counter and minimize your exposure as best you can. Remember exposure is cumulative so all exposure adds up and affects your health.

Secondly get a nutrient dense eating plan in place. Ionizing radioactive particles are somewhat opportunistic. Some of them bear similar resemblances to regular nutrients found in our diets. If you are lacking these in your regular diet you increase the chance that your body will absorb the radioactive counterparts in their absence.

Supplement and cover all bases. Start an advised and considered supplementation program; make sure you get the vital nutrients YOU need. Your biochemical individuality is a key expression of the way you function to remain optimally balanced and healthy. Support your needs through understanding your unique requirements.

Supplement with Alginic acid. Alginate as it is otherwise called has the ability to draw radiation out of the body better than most other substances. Adding alginate to your diet is one of the best things you can do to protect yourself and continually remove absorbed radiation from your internal environment. The best source of alginate is raw seaweed; use it in salads and soups to maintain its health protective properties.

Radiation whether ionizing or non ionizing is a natural phenomenon and has been with us from the very beginning of time; what's changed is our ability to withstand its negative effects on our physiology. All fliers are subject to increased doses of radiation exposure because the atmosphere lets in more ionizing radiation the further away you fly from the earth's surface. The more you fly and the more you surround yourself with modern technology dependent on radiation, the more you should consider a comprehensive protection program to guard against radiation and jet lag.

Source: NaturalNews.
Link: http://www.naturalnews.com/028260_airport_scanners_radiation.html.

More than 50 foreign and local officials and soldiers killed in Kabul attack

KABUL, Feb. 26 - There are reports from Kabul city that at least 50 foreign diplomats and Afghan soldiers were killed in Friday's attack in Safi Landmark hotel located in Shahri Now in the heart of Kabul city.

As per details, a Mujahid reached by the telephone, said that five martyr-seeking Mujahideen of the Islamic Emirate, penetrating into all security checks and barriers had entered heavily-secured Kabul city in the early morning hours of Friday who had conducted a series of attacks and gunbattles using martyr and heavy and small arms attacks.

The Mujahid in his telephonic conversation said the first martyr attacker, Naseer Ahmad, had slammed his explosive-filled vehicle into a part of the hotel where at least 24 had been killed and a number wounded out of 50 foreign and domestic officials who were staying there, which was moments later followed by a second martyr bomb attack by another Mujahid, killing the rest of the wounded from the first bomb attack.

Meantime, the other three Mujahideen of a group of five have penetrated another guesthouse and immediately opened firing at the security guards and foreign guests, killing about 30 foreign officials and Afghan soldiers.

After positioning themselves in the guesthouse, started targeting other government buildings from there, who besides damaging the buildings inflicted casualties and losses on the officials based in the certain buildings.

Two hours after the incident, the soldiers of Afghan minion army reached the site where they met with the strong residences from the three Mujahideen for about five hours.

The three heroic Mujahideen have fought the local soldiers till the last moment of their life and finally one of those, Ajmal, conducted a martyr bomb attack, damaging a part of the hotel followed by two straight martyr bomb attacks carried out by the rest of two Mujahideen, Muhammadulllah and Zafar, damaging some part of the hotel and killing dozens.

Source: Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
Link: http://www.alemarah.info/english/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1229:more-than-50-foreign-and-local-officials-and-soldiers-killed-in-kabul-attack.

Dozens of Americans killed as 7 U.S. armored tanks eliminated in Marjah

HELMAND, Feb. 25 - The brave Mujahideen of the Islamic Emirate report from Helmand province that several U.S soldiers were killed as seven of the American armored tanks were separately destroyed in Mujahideen's planted mines in different parts of Marjah town of Nad Ali district throughout Thursday.

As per details, one of the U.S tank was blown apart by a blast on earlier Thursday as the U.S invaders were on an attack mission against Mujahid in Seh Patang area of Sefen in Marjah, resulting in destroying the tank with its American crew killed.

Meantime, four tanks of the U.S troops have been struck by planted IEDs in Sistani area in the outskirt of Marjah since noon hours of Thursday.

The report indicates at least dozens of the U.S. soldiers were killed or injured in the stated bombings which have taken place in Marjah town through much of the day.

However, two of the U.S tanks were targeted in the separate bombings in the morning hours of Thursday.

It is to be mentioned that some statements released by the enemy claiming that the U.S took control of southern Marjah and the National flag of the minion administration was raising there are no more than mere rumors, as a matter of fact, Mujahideen have the complete control of Marjah and its center known as Laisa.

Apparently, the U.S and NATO military spread such rumors to cover the losses and fatalities inflicted on them with every passing day during what they enemy call major operation in Marjah.

Source: Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan.
Link: http://www.alemarah.info/english/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1224:dozens-of-americans-killed-as-7-us-armored-tanks-eliminated-in-marjah.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

In Iran, Leader sees Palestine independence as 'definite'

The Leader of the Islamic Revolution said Saturday the Palestinians are the most resilient people in history who will "definitely and undoubtedly" see the freedom of their land.

Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei described the Palestinian resistance as an amazing phenomenon, which is driving Israel toward "defeat and annihilation."

Resistance is what has untied different Palestinian movements as well as having faith in God, he said.

"And the supporters of the Zionist regime (Israel) will find nothing but shame and historic notoriety," the Leader said.

He expressed deep gratitude to the Palestinian nation and said, "Bearing the atrocities and endless pressures in Gaza and throughout Palestine is impossible without the guidance and assistance of God and the Palestinian nation truly deserves to be named as the most resilient nation in history."

Ayatollah Khamenei also touched upon the 22 day Gaza war and said the Arab governments claim that "the Palestinian issue" is an Arab one but when it comes to helping Palestinians, they left their Palestinian brothers unassisted in front of the enemy and its supporters.

The Arab behavior, he said, will go down in history.

Ayatollah Khamenei said the US president's slogan of change was an attempt to repair the damaged image of Washington and said, "such dishonest attempts bore no fruit because the Americans blatantly lie in the issue of Palestine and other issues."

"The Iranian nation has gotten used to these lies after 30 years," he said.

The Leader said the Palestinian issue was a serious challenge for the Western civilization and advocates of liberal democracy, adding, "The resistance of the Palestinian nation has questioned the West's multi-centennial claims of freedom and human rights and has disgraced [the West].

"'The Palestinian issue' has today become a criterion for determining the real advocates of 'freedom and human rights' from its deceitful claimants."

Ayatollah Khamenei said the future America will have been defeated by the Palestinian nation.

"Without a doubt, the actions of the United States over the past 60 to 70 years in support of the Zionists will be remembered as an instance of this country's dishonor in history."

The Leader of the Islamic Revolution stressed the importance of forming a new and "Islamic Middle East" and described defending the Palestinian nation as a humanitarian and Islamic responsibility.

He noted that Islamic governments have a greater responsibility regarding the issue of Palestine, since their nations have "awakened" and now demand more support for Palestine.

"Those who have overlooked the true and original path to the freedom of Al-Quds and Palestine — in other words resistance — have been forced to accept the conditions imposed by the enemy."

"God willing, Al-Quds will return to the embrace of the Muslims and the people of the world and the resilient Palestinian nation will witness this great day," the Leader concluded.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119628§ionid=351020101.

Iran bank wins case against UK sanctions

Iran's Bank Mellat has reportedly won a preliminary court case against British sanctions at the High Court of Justice in London.

The British Treasury moved in October to forbid any financial company within the UK to do business with Bank Mellat over its alleged connections with Tehran's nuclear program and missile development.

In recent months, the Iranian bank has been fighting to overturn the Treasury ruling and finally made a breakthrough on Thursday when High Court Justice John Mitting ruled against the imposition of British penalties on the bank.

According to the High Court, under the European Convention on Human Rights, Bank Mellat is entitled to information about allegations against it.

The Judge said the Treasury ruling directly impinges "on the bank's civil rights and obligations" and that any restriction on the bank's activity resulting in the loss of shareholders' capital, “is illegal and in breach of human rights.”

He explained that the British Treasury would have a hard time finding compelling evidence to substantiate its accusations against Bank Mellat.

To pressure Tehran over its nuclear program, Western powers, particularly Britain and the UK, have imposed unilateral sanctions on a number of Iranian-owned banks, namely Melli, Saderat, and Sepah, and have demanded that world financial institutions follow suit.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119623§ionid=351020101.

Russia agrees to supply Mi-24 helicopters to Lebanon

Russian authorities have agreed to supply 10 Mi-24 advanced military helicopters to Lebanon instead of 10 MiG-29 fighter jets they had previously pledged to provide.

According to a report published by al-Nahar news website, the decision was taken after Lebanese President Michel Sleiman asked to receive the state of the art military choppers and the advanced missiles they carry in place of the Russian-made warplanes.

President Michel Sleiman returned Friday afternoon to Beirut concluding a 2-day official visit to Moscow, the first ever visit by a Lebanese head of state to Russia.

On Thursday, Sleiman met with his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev and the two signed a memorandum on military cooperation.

The Russian move is seen as a slap to the United States over its longstanding military relationship with Lebanon. American officials had occasionally intervened in the past when other countries offered to supply weapons.

Lebanon's air force consists of only a few 1950s-era jets and a small number of Vietnam War-era helicopters. The MiG-29, often compared to the American F-16 fighter, is vastly more powerful than anything Washington was considering providing to Lebanon. The most recent Pentagon offer, in terms of air power, is a Cessna Caravan, a single-engine prop plane.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119618§ionid=351020203.

Four soldiers killed in Mogadishu blast

Sat Feb 27, 2010

At least four Somali soldiers have been killed when a remote-controlled landmine blasted in Mogadishu' Manabolyo intersection, eyewitnesses say.

The Friday explosion killed four government soldiers on the spot while seriously injuring five others, a Press TV correspondent reported.

The blast targeted a vehicle carrying a Somali government delegation while on a security mission in the area.

No group has claimed responsibility for the explosion as yet, but al-Shabab fighters frequently target government soldiers with landmines.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/119617.html.

UK jails more Muslims for 2009 anti-Israeli rally

Five more British protesters have been sent to jail for taking part in anti-Gaza war protests rally in front of the Israeli Embassy in London last January.

The courtroom's entrance was packed with a crowd of demonstrators, chanting slogans in defense of the right to protest. Some believed this was an intent government crackdown on Muslim protesters.

A Press TV correspondent reported that Saturday's ruling came despite the presiding judge's admission that in some of the cases the unlawful behavior had only lasted several minutes.

In total, 78 people are facing law suits after being arrested in the hours-long rally against Israel's military assault on Gaza. The charges vary from clashing with the police to damaging public property.

Out of that number, 20 people have already been tried and handed sentences in a move which authorities say is aimed deterring others from the same offenses.

The sentencing comes two weeks after the same court sent six British Muslim men, between 19 and 20 years old, to jailed for periods of between one and two years each in jail for violent conduct.

This is while a human rights organization's charges of police brutality have largely been dismissed.

The Islamic Human Rights Commission also said the police had failed to investigate up to 30 complaints against the Metropolitan police force.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119627§ionid=351020601.

UK to 'withdraw from Afghanistan in 6 years'

(WARNING): Article contains propaganda!

* * * * *

The head of the UK army says the war in Afghanistan will come to an end next year and British troops could be pulled out the country within six years.

In an interview published Saturday in the UK newspaper the Daily Telegraph, General Sir David Richards said that coalition forces had reached a "turning point" in the battle against the Taliban, thanks to the recent NATO-led operation in the Helmand province of southern Afghanistan against the Taliban.

He added that the current 10,000-strong British force could be reduced from next year and the majority could leave the country within the next five years.

"The combat role will start to decline in 2011, but we will remain militarily engaged in training and support roles for another five years," he said.

The General's comments come as he had warned, just seven months ago, that Britain could be involved in Afghanistan for up to 40 years. The head of the British army added at that time that the British forces will remain in a support role for many years to come.

Whilst acknowledging the public pressure to pull out British forces from Afghanistan, he stressed the importance of defeating the Taliban.

"I do not think we can afford to fail in Afghanistan," he said in the interview.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=119616§ionid=351020403.

Somali pirates free Indonesian ship for $7.5mn

Sat Feb 27, 2010

Somali pirates have received the largest ransom of $7.5 million for releasing an Indonesian ship carrying chemicals and its 28 crew.

It has been the largest amount of ransom paid to Somali pirates so far for releasing a foreign ship hijacked in Gulf of Aden, Press TV's correspondent said.

A source close to pirates, Abdi Risaaq Faytaan, said that since the chemicals were urgently needed, the ship's owner agreed to pay $7.5 million to the pirates.

In the meantime, the Somali pirates also shot dead a Yemeni fishing captain who delivered a cargo of weapons to the Somali government's officials at Puntland seaport of Bosaso, our correspondent added .

Heavy and small weapons are said to be flooded from Yemen to Somalia on a regular basis. They cause daily attacks in Somalia and increase the endless hostility among people of Somalia.

Source: PressTV.
Link: http://edition.presstv.ir/detail/119608.html.

Spain's royal palace opens up to improve image - Feature

Madrid - Meetings between the Spanish king and government officials are usually kept under wraps - but recently the royal palace has embarked on a campaign of openness in an attempt to cement support for the monarchy. Spaniards previously knew little about whom 72-year-old King Juan Carlos received at his office, with the Zarzuela palace only releasing information on high-level royal activities with photo opportunities.

However, the monarchy's position is deemed by some to have become weaker in recent years, and now "Juan Carlos wants all Spaniards to know about his work," as new palace communications chief Ramon Iribarren told the daily El Pais.

Media have consequently been able to report on the recent meetings held between the king and Economy Minister Elena Salgado, as well as with bank and trade union representatives.

Iribarren informed El Pais about the new media policy at the same time as the palace faced criticism over what was perceived as the king's interference in politics and over the divorce of Princess Elena, Juan Carlos' and Queen Sofia's eldest child.

The monarchy is not regarded as having particularly solid foundations in Spain, which has experienced two republics and the right-wing dictatorship of General Francisco Franco in the past 140 years.

Juan Carlos became king after the 1975 death of Franco, who had picked the prince to succeed him as head of state.

Initially seen as the dictator's puppet, the young king only won the full trust of his subjects after thwarting a coup attempt in 1981.

Spaniards are often described as juancarlists rather than monarchists. Even relatively minor incidents are easily interpreted as raising questions about the future of the monarchy after Juan Carlos is succeeded by his son Felipe.

Over the past few years, the biggest apparent challenge to the monarchy has come from separatists in the northern Catalan and Basque regions, who see the royals as representing the centralist Spanish state.

Small groups of Catalan demonstrators burned pictures of Juan Carlos and Sofia in 2007. A prominent Basque politician has also slammed the monarchy, and separatists from both regions have booed the royal couple at sports events.

The king and queen faced such protests at a basketball game in the Basque region earlier this week, with separatists whistling and shouting: "Out! Out!"

The royal family earlier came under criticism over Sofia's negative comments on homosexual activism.

Elena's divorce - the first in the royal family - has also sparked controversy, as has the palace's alleged speediness in stripping her former husband of a public role.

Juan Carlos has repeatedly been accused of meddling in politics, though Spanish politicians also profess admiration of his mediating skills.

In 2007, the king told Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez to keep quiet after Chavez harshly criticized a former Spanish prime minister at an Ibero-American summit.

The king's comment to Chavez, "why don't you shut up," became a catch phrase while the government struggled to prevent it from damaging bilateral relations.

More recently, Juan Carlos has expressed concern over Spain's slowness in recovering from its deepest recession in more than 50 years, urging the political parties to enter a pact against the crisis.

The king's talks with Salgado, trade union and bank representatives - all of whom he met separately - were seen as serving that end.

But Deputy Prime Minister Maria Teresa Fernandez de la Vega sought to define the limits of royal power, pointing out that seeking agreements against the crisis was "the exclusive task of the government."

Gaspar Llamazares from the far-left party Izquierda Unida agreed with Vega. But Juan Carlos won a surprise ally in Josep Lluis Carod-Rovira, the Catalan regional deputy prime minister who belongs to the republican separatist party ERC.

The king's call for political unity against the economic crisis was "absolutely indispensable," Carod-Rovira said, explaining he had an "almost cordial" personal relationship with Juan Carlos despite his opposition to the monarchy.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/311563,spains-royal-palace-opens-up-to-improve-image--feature.html.

Indian premier visits Saudi Arabia to boost strategic ties

New Delhi - Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh left for a three-day visit to Saudi Arabia Saturday with an aim to boost economic ties and defense and security cooperation. An extradition treaty and several other agreements are expected to be signed during Singh's visit, Indian diplomatic officials said.

It is the first by an Indian premier to Saudi Arabia in 28 years.

Singh said there was great opportunity for opening new frontiers of cooperation with Saudi Arabia in the areas of security, defense, science and technology, space, human resources development and knowledge-based industries.

"The Gulf region is an area of vital importance for India's security and prosperity," Singh said. He was accompanied by several ministers and a 25-member delegation of business leaders.

Saudi Arabia is India's largest supplier of crude oil. It is also home to an Indian community numbering at least 1.8 million.

Singh was scheduled to hold talks with King Abdullah on bilateral relations, and discuss regional and global issues including Afghanistan, according to Lalitha Reddy, secretary in India's External Affairs Ministry.

The prime minister also planned to address the Shoura Council, an influential body of Saudi intellectuals, and the Saudi Chambers of Commerce and Industry. He was also expected to meet members of the Indian community.

Bilateral trade between India and Saudi Arabia during 2008-09 was more than 25 billion dollars.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/311586,indian-premier-visits-saudi-arabia-to-boost-strategic-ties.html.

Fireworks explosion kills 19 in southern China

Beijing - A fireworks-triggered explosion killed 19 people and injured at least 50 in southern China, state media reported Saturday. The explosion in Guangdong province's Puning City occurred Friday night when a farmer was setting off fireworks in front of his house to celebrate the Lunar New Year, the official Xinhua news agency reported, citing local authorities.

The bodies of 13 people were recovered at the site and a further six people died in hospital, the report said.

A villager surnamed Yang said his house, which was 200 meters from the explosion, had cracks in the walls and door.

The provincial government was working to establish the cause of the explosion, state media reported.

Puning City authorities said they would tighten controls on houses found using illegal and large-scale fireworks, according to the semi-official China News Service.

China's 15-day New Year's season, a time when bans on fireworks are lifted, has seen at least 35 other fireworks-related deaths and millions of dollars worth of damage to property. The holiday ends Sunday.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/311573,fireworks-explosion-kills-19-in-southern-china.html.

India sends aircraft to retrieve bodies of Kabul victims

New Delhi - India on Saturday sent a special aircraft to Afghanistan to bring the back the bodies of nine Indians, including two army officers, who were killed in suicide attacks in Kabul. The Indian victims were among 17 killed in Taliban attacks on a guesthouse and a hotel in downtown Kabul on Friday.

A Boeing 737-200 aircraft took off from New Delhi to retrieve the bodies and injured people, IANS news agency quoted Indian Air Force officials as saying.

A team of medical officers and medicines was also sent on the aircraft.

Soldiers and officials from India's Ministry of External Affairs had already reached Kabul to review the security situation.

The Indians who died include two army officers, government officials, an Indo-Tibetan Border Police constable and a tabla player who was part of a three-member cultural delegation to Afghanistan.

Five other army officers were injured in the attack.

India is one of the leading donors for Afghanistan and has spent more than 1 billion US dollars in the country since the ouster of the Taliban regime in late 2001.

At least 4,000 Indians are currently in Afghanistan, carrying out reconstruction activities ranging from building roads, dams and power stations to training Afghan personnel.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai telephoned Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and promised a full investigation into the terror attacks.

"President Hamid Karzai today called the prime minister to express his condolences on the loss of Indian lives and injuries sustained by many others in the terrorist attack in Kabul," a statement from Singh's office said.

"President Karzai promised a full investigation into the attack. The prime minister conveyed India's outrage at the incident."

Singh thanked Karzai for assistance given to Indian victims and asked him to ensure security for Indian nationals in Afghanistan, the statement added.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/311593,india-sends-aircraft-to-retrieve-bodies-of-kabul-victims.html.

Spain braces for massive storm

Madrid - Spanish authorities sounded the alarm Saturday as a massive storm front moving in from the Atlantic Ocean approached the Iberian Peninsula. On coastal regions in the northern part of the country, officials declared the highest alert status as the storm approached.

Meteorologists spoke of an "explosive" weather situation and a "meteorological bomb" approaching the country.

The storm front was expected to strike Spain overnight from Saturday to Sunday. Authorities urged people to stay at home, while lorries were ordered off the roads.

The Spanish government also set up an emergency team led by Interior Minister Perez Rubalcaba.

Overnight, the storm struck the Canary Islands, with winds of 120 kilometers per hour and, in some cases in the mountains of La Palma, speeds of up to 190 kilometers per hour.

Numerous flights were canceled on La Palma and several roads were shut down, as the winds uprooted trees and lamp posts on La Palma and the neighboring island Teneriffa.

Source: Earth Times.
Link: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/311610,spain-braces-for-massive-storm.html.

Ex-UN nuclear chief: Egypt is desperate for change

By SARAH EL DEEB, Associated Press Writer

(AP Photo)


CAIRO – The ex-U.N. nuclear chief who has emerged as an opposition leader in Egypt warned Saturday that the long-ruling government could face a popular uprising if it doesn't respond to appeals for change.

Mohamed ElBaradei, who returned to Cairo a week ago to a hero's welcome by supporters who see him as a possible rival to President Hosni Mubarak in upcoming elections, told The Associated Press that he hopes to create a peaceful public movement pressing for electoral reforms.

ElBaradei said Egyptians are desperate for change. When asked if Egypt's government could face protests like those that broke out in Iran, he said he hopes to avoid that but it was ultimately up to the ruling system.

"It is inevitable that change will come to Egypt. What I'm trying to do is pre-empt a point of clash between the government and the people," he said in an interview in the garden of his home on the outskirts of Cairo.

ElBaradei, 67, was coy about whether he plans to run in the 2011 presidential vote, saying that his main focus is on drumming up support for his efforts to promote change and rallying the public as well as fellow opposition leaders behind his campaign.

Existing restrictions make it practically impossible for independents to run, meaning that ElBaradei's chances are dim without long-sought constitutional amendments. But his supporters see the former Egyptian diplomat as the most credible opposition leader to emerge in a U.S.-allied country ruled for nearly three decades by Mubarak.

ElBaradei, who has begun forming a coalition with other opposition leaders, said he plans to launch up a Web site to collect signatures from the public with a list of demands to present to the government.

Hassan Nafaa, the coordinator for the new group, said the demands included changing the constitution to enable independents and new party candidates to run in the presidential election and lifting emergency laws that have been in force for nearly three decades. The petition is the first phase, and protests are another option being considered by the group, Nafaa said.

ElBaradei — who won the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize and left his Vienna-based post as director general International Atomic Energy Agency late last year — said he hopes his movement will have a snowball effect.

"There is nothing more powerful than an idea that people believe in... The only power I have is the power of argument, the power of ideas," he said.

Opposition movements have failed to gain momentum in the past as the regime — backed by long-standing emergency laws — frequently jails journalists, pro-reform activists and political opponents.

Established opposition groups also have been weakened by an aging leadership and lack of a popular base.

Supporters hope that ElBaradei, a civilian with international stature and untouched by corruption tainting the Egyptian system, will be able to seize the momentum and build a following to force the government to change.

Since his return, ElBaradei has met various groups at his house. He met with youth representatives who initiated a petition calling on him to run for presidency. Over 100,000 people have joined a Facebook group supporting his candidacy.

He also met with women representatives and the Arab League's Secretary General Amr Moussa at his office, whose name was also floated by reformists looking for a possible rival to Mubarak.

Since taking office in 1981, Mubarak has not named a successor and never had a vice president but he is believed to be grooming his son Gamal to succeed him. The initial constitutional amendments were seen as paving the way for father to son succession.

Pirates seize trucks to get colleagues freed

February 26 2010

Mogadishu - In a rare land attack, Somali pirates in Puntland have seized food aid trucks and their drivers to obtain the release of detained comrades.

The five trucks were intercepted after delivering food aid for the UN's World Food Program in the Galkayo area of the semi-autonomous northern Somali state of Puntland, which harbors several major pirate lairs.

They were seized on Thursday on their way back to Berbera, the main port in the neighboring breakaway state of Somaliland.

"The pirates hijacked five trucks with nine people on board and took them to their base in Garaad," said Abdullahi Mohamed, a security official in Galkayo, speaking by telephone.

"They are demanding the release of their colleagues arrested recently by the Somaliland security forces."

Colonel Dahir Jama, a police officer, said: "We heard pirates took civilians from Somaliland region as hostages and we are still investigating the incident."

The Somaliland authorities have arrested and jailed dozens of pirates from Puntland in the Gulf of Aden recently.

Abdi Jamal, a pirate, said by phone from Garaad: "We are treating the hostages well here in Garaad and our aim is to get our friends in the jails of Somaliland freed.

"We are not demanding anything else. When our friends are free and back home we will free the drivers and the trucks."

Dozens of other trucks transporting food aid in the same region are stranded in Galkayo, their drivers afraid to continue.

"There are many trucks from Somaliland still here in Galkayo, too afraid to return, but we will give them escorts," Jama said.

Source: Independent Online.
Link: http://www.iol.co.za/news/africa/pirates-seize-trucks-to-get-colleagues-freed-1.474680#.U70n2PQW2So.

Dubai: international police to hunt Mabhuh murderers

Dubai police say have DNA proof of identity of at least one of suspected Mossad agents.

DUBAI - An international police unit with officers from the Emirates and at least seven other countries will hunt for the assassins of a top Hamas officer suspected of being notorious Israeli Mossad agents, Dubai's police chief said in comments published on Friday.

The Al-Bayan daily quoted Dhahi Khalfan as saying that officers from the United Arab Emirates, unspecified European countries, Australia and perhaps the United States, would be part of the unit.

He said that some of his officers had already traveled to several "European countries concerned" with the investigation, the government-owned daily reported.

Khalfan did not name the countries, but the murder of Mahmud al-Mabhuh, whose body was found in a Dubai hotel room on January 20, has mounted international pressure on Israel after Dubai said that Israeli agents, most using stolen identities, had carried out the Cold War-style hit.

"We will work via European and Australian diplomatic channels -- and perhaps American -- to set up a working team formed from the Emirates police force and those of at least seven other states to track down the gang responsible for the assassination," the newspaper quoted Khalfan as saying.

Dubai police have published details of 26 suspects together with passport photographs.

Twelve British, six Irish, four French, one German and three Australian passports were used by the suspects, according to Dubai police.

The international police organization, Interpol, has circulated warrants for the arrest of 11 suspects, after Dubai released their names and passport details.

Dubai later said it had 15 other suspects, and Khalfan said warrants for their arrest would be circulated through Interpol next week.

The revelation of stolen identities being used by suspected Israeli agents has caused an outcry, with Australia threatening it would "not be silent on the matter," and Irish Foreign Minister Micheal Martin saying "we are very angry."

Israel has said there is no evidence that its spy agency, the Mossad, was behind the hit.

Khalfan denied media reports that some of the suspects had carried diplomatic passports.

He said that his force had succeeded in identifying the suspects, even though some had worn wigs during the operation.

The suspects were identified by footage from closed circuit televisions, which abound in security-conscious Dubai.

Dubai police said on Friday they have DNA proof of the identity of at least one of the assassins of Mabhuh.

"We have DNA evidence ... from the crime scene. The DNA of the criminals is there," Khalfan said on the Arab satellite television Al-Arabiya.

He said police had "categorical DNA proof on one of the assassins" and fingerprint evidence from several other suspects, providing "100 percent" proof of their identities.

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=375.

Low expectation for US withdrawal from Iraq

US seen as using Iraqi political discord to justify continuance of American troops' presence.

By Dahr Jamail - WASHINGTON

As Iraqi national elections on March 7 approach, violence and political discord in the country have escalated dramatically.

On February 22, Gen. Ray Odierno, the top US commander in Iraq, announced that the US was preparing contingency plans to delay the withdrawal of all combat forces from Iraq if violence or political instability increases after the national elections scheduled for March 7.

There are approximately 96,000 US military personnel in Iraq. Under President Obama's current plan, which is a continuation of George W. Bush's policy in Iraq, the stated intention is to cut the number of US troops in Iraq to 50,000 by August 31.

The US government plans to keep at least 50,000 troops in Iraq indefinitely, as a so-called training force for Iraqi security forces.

On February 22 alone, the same day General Odierno made his comments, at least 44 Iraqis and one US soldier were killed as attacks raged across Iraq. In one of the attacks, a female suicide bomber killed 22 people and wounded 33 others in an attack at the home of a police commissioner in Balad Ruz. In another, three mortar rounds struck the so-called Green Zone in Baghdad, wounding at least six people.

The attacks have drawn comparisons by Iraqi analysts to rampant attacks that occurred during the sectarian bloodshed that ravaged Iraq between 2006-2007.

On February 19, just days before Odierno made his comment about the possibility of ongoing violence slowing a US withdrawal, US Brig. Gen. Kevin Mangum warned that violence in Iraq could worsen as a result of the upcoming elections.

The elections have been seen as a pivotal point for the Obama administration, with the expectation that they would bring more political stability to Iraq, further enabling a US withdrawal.

Instead, thus far, they are having the opposite effect, as General Mangum suggested might happen.

"Will there be sectarian strife after the election?" asked Mangum. "That's our biggest concern at this point."

Mangum, one of the senior military commanders in Iraq, warned that the period after Iraq's national vote may well be more dangerous than election day itself. Mangum's comments show that the military could already expect Odierno's contingency plans of slowing the withdrawal to be a reality.

Meanwhile, Iraq's political process appears to already be in a state of breakdown largely fomented by current and formerly US-backed players.

Months of delays and growing calls for boycotts, along with actual boycotts of the election from candidates and groups recently banned from participating are fueling political discord that threatens to prevent any party from successfully forming a government in the wake of the elections.

One of Iraq's most prominent Sunni Parliamentarian's, Saleh al-Mutlaq of Iraq's National Dialogue Front, recently decided to pull his party out of the elections and boycott the vote, after being banned by the Accountability and Justice Committee for accusations of having affiliations with Iraq's dissolved Baath Party.

Mutlaq is protesting what he along with many Shia politicians call a "dirty tricks" campaign that he believes is masterminded by Iran that aims to secure power for a Shia government. Many analysts see his move as a reflection of the Sunni boycott of the 2005 Parliamentary elections that led to a large portion of Iraq's population being disenfranchised by the vote, and was viewed as a major contributor to the sectarian violence that followed.

[The National Dialogue Front announced on Thursday February 26 that it will take part in next month's general election and urged its followers to turn out in numbers.]

Mutlaq's accusations gain credibility where Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is concerned.

The US government and corporate media prefer to focus on Iran's "meddling" in Iraq; yet, the key players responsible for most of the political discord in Iraq are US-installed and -backed men who have always had clear links to Tehran.

Maliki is a case in point.

Maliki was an Iraqi in exile in Tehran from 1982-1990, and then remained in Syria before returning to Iraq after the US invasion of 2003. Maliki worked as a political officer for the Dawa Party while in Syria, developing close ties with Hezbollah and Iran.

The Dawa party backed the Iranian Revolution, as well as backing Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini during the Iran-Iraq War. The group continues to receive financial support from Tehran. Maliki is the secretary general of the Dawa Party.

In April 2006, then US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice and her UK counterpart, Jack Straw, flew to Baghdad in order to replace then Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jafaari with Nouri al-Maliki. There was no democratic process involved in the decision.

Another US-backed Iraqi ex-patriot with ties to Iran is Ahmed Chalabi.

Recently the US Ambassador to Iraq, Christopher Hill, along with General Odierno, referred to Chalabi as Tehran's leading agent in Iraq. Chalabi, who leads Iraq's Justice and Accountability Committee that has been banning certain candidates from the upcoming vote, was said to be "clearly influenced by Iran" last week by General Odierno.

Chalabi played a major role in providing the Bush administration with information it wanted in order to justify invading Iraq. He is responsible for having Mutlaq, along with hundreds of other candidates, eliminated from the election on the mostly fraudulent grounds that they are or were loyalists of Saddam Hussein's Baath party.

Along with Sunni leaders, his targets also include secular nationalists, and the two most important candidates who have been banned are leading members of cross-sectarian alliances, which raises fears that Iraq could be drifting toward a Shiite autocracy.

Another leading Sunni political party, the Iraqi Islamic Party, blames the US for opening the door to "Iranian influence" in Iraq, as well as for the National Dialogue Front's (NDF) decision to boycott the March polls.

"We in the Iraqi Islamic Party are surprised to read statements from the US regarding the negative Iranian interference in internal Iraqi affairs," the party said in a February 22 statement, expressing its "sorrow" over the NDF's decision to boycott.

"We ask: Who made Iraqi land an open theater for regional and international interference? Who is legally and ethically responsible for the violations of Iraq?," said the group's statement.

Threats and accusations are being hurled by the Iraqi government as well as the opposition.

On February 20, As-Sabah news reported that Maliki has claimed external money is being introduced to Iraq in order to change the result of the upcoming elections.

On February 21, the Al-Jarida newspaper reported that Mutlaq gave this as a reason for his decision to boycott the elections: "Following the statements made yesterday by the commander of the American troops in Iraq, General Ray Odierno, and those of US Ambassador to Baghdad Christopher Hill, I believe that the Justice and Accountability Committee is run by foreign sides, namely Al-Quds force in Tehran. Therefore, the Dialogue Front has announced its boycotting of the elections."

The Quds Force is a special unit of Iran's Army of the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution. The Quds has been described as a group whose primary mission is to organize, train, equip and fund foreign Islamic revolutionary movements, and they report directly to Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

As a result of all of this, international observers of the upcoming elections in Iraq have lowered their expectations for the poll. Few diplomats in Baghdad now talk of "free and fair elections." Instead, the new publicly stated goal is to have a "credible election"; yet, even that seems doubtful at this point.

On February 23, the Al-Arab newspaper carried an opinion piece by Fadel al-Rubaie. "Political observers are assuring that the post-elections stage will be much more dangerous than the current one (pre-elections) because the conflict will erupt between the different powers and on more than one front," wrote Rubaie before he went on to discuss much of the aforementioned political machinations between the candidates and parties.

For these reasons, as well as other volatile issues like Kurdish control of Kirkuk in the north and the issue of federalism in Iraq, Rubaie's conclusion is ominous: "For all those reasons, it would be delusional to say that the magical solution to Iraq's predicament resides in the elections, since quite the contrary, these elections could open the gates of hell."

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=37524.

Turkish PM warns army: 'No one above law'

Erdogan: those who plan to crush the people's will face justice, no one has impunity.

ISTANBUL - Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned the army Friday that no one is above the law as prosecutors grilled the suspected ringleader of an alleged 2003 coup plan to oust the democratically elected government.

"Those who make plans behind closed doors to crush the people's will must see that from now on they will face justice," Erdogan told a party gathering in Ankara as 11 more soldiers were charged in the unprecedented judicial onslaught against the influential Turkish military.

"No one is above the law, no one has impunity," he added.

The investigation has rattled the country, raising fears of an open confrontation between the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the army.

Erdogan dismissed accusations that his party was trying to discredit the army, and described the probe a step towards improving the country's democracy.

"What is happening today is normalization... These are the footsteps of an advanced democracy," he said. "No one should have doubts and fears... Turkey is moving towards an advanced democracy."

The Turkish army has ousted four governments since 1960 and wielded significant influence on politics, but has seen its clout wane under reforms spearhead by Erdogan's government.

In Istanbul, prosecutors were questioning retired four-star general Cetin Dogan, who allegedly spearheaded the coup plot, Anatolia news agency said.

Earlier, a court jailed 11 more suspects pending trial, bringing the total number of those incarcerated to 31, including both serving and retired soldiers.

The three most senior figures questioned so far -- ex-navy chief Ozden Ornek, former air force commander Ibrahim Firtina and the former number two of the general staff, Ergin Saygun -- were released by prosecutors late Thursday in a move welcomed as a gesture de-escalating tensions in the short term.

However, the prosecutor in charge said the investigation was continuing, raising the possibility that the trio may still face trial.

Detailed charges against the suspects will become clear once the prosecution draws up its indictment.

The alleged coup plot is said to have been drafted in 2003 within the Istanbul-based First Army, shortly after the AKP came to power.

The First Army was at the time headed by Dogan, who was also a key figure in a harsh army campaign in 1997 that forced Turkey's prime minister and Erdogan's mentor, Necmettin Erbakan, to resign.

Several other soldiers were also to be questioned Friday, Anatolia said.

It is unknown whether the suspects made any move to activate the plan, codenamed "Operation Sledgehammer", first reported in January by the Taraf newspaper.

The plot allegedly involved plans to bomb mosques and provoke tensions with Greece to force the downing of a Turkish jet, thus discrediting the government and leading to its downfall.

Taraf said the plan was discussed in a seminar in March 2003, chaired by Dogan.

Denying any coup plot, Dogan has said they only discussed contingency plans based on a scenario of domestic unrest involving Islamist movements, coupled with the threat of a war.

He has charged that seminar documents were doctored to include plans to bomb mosques and for the downing of a Turkish jet.

Amid allegations that army members made a series of plans to discredit and topple the AKP, government supporters say the army must be forced to toe the line and stop meddling in politics.

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=37517.

Israel PM under fire at home over holy sites plan

Three of Israel's leading dailies accuse Netanyahu of pandering to settler lobby, far right.

TEL AVIV- Harline Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was lambasted by the Israeli press Friday over his plans to renovate two holy sites in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank, with two papers warning he is playing with fire.

The Israeli move is seen as an attempt to retain illegal Israeli control of holy sites in the Palestinian territories.

Three of Israel's leading dailies accused the prime minister of pandering to the settler lobby and the far right.

Netanyahu sparked outrage earlier this week when he said he hoped to include Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem and the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron in a national heritage restoration plan.

The liberal daily Haaretz and the Yediot Aharonot carried cartoons of Netanyahu with a box of matches, indicating how provocative they saw his proposals to be.

Haaretz dubbed the prime minister a "master pyromaniac" for the move, which has infuriated the Muslim world and drawn criticism from the wider international community, including the US.

The paper recalled that it was Netanyahu who during a previous term as premier in 1996 sparked bloody riots in Jerusalem by ordering the opening of a tunnel under the Al-Asqa mosque compound.

The paper asked whether it was really necessary to "open such a Pandora's box at a time when the world is looking for a resumption of peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians."

"Netanyahu has shown once again that he is incapable of standing up to pressure," it added, recalling that the two sites were not included on a preliminary list of heritage sites.

The rightwing Maariv newspaper was also critical, accusing the prime minister of "having learnt nothing from the past."

Around 100 Palestinians clashed with Israeli troops in Hebron on Thursday in a fourth straight day of angry protests over the proposed listings, which even Israel's US ally has criticized as "provocative."

The Islamic bloc at the United Nations called for international action to force Israel to rescind its decision.

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=37519.

OIC wants UN action on Palestinian holy sites

Islamic bloc condemns 'illegality and illegitimacy' of Israeli plans in Palestinian city of Hebron.

UNITED NATIONS - The Islamic bloc at the United Nations on Thursday called for international action to force Israel to rescind its decision to renovate two contested holy sites in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian West Bank.

The Israeli move is seen as an attempt to retain illegal Israeli control of holy sites in the Palestinian territories.

Syria's UN Ambassador Bashar Jaafari, speaking on behalf of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) UN ambassadors, condemned the "illegality and illegitimacy" of the Israeli decision which is "null and void."

They called on all relevant UN bodies "to take urgent, necessary measures to force Israel to rescind this decision" and urged the Security Council, the General Assembly and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to "shoulder their responsibility."

The Obama administration Thursday criticized Israel's "provocative" plans in the two holy sites.

Hardline Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that the Tomb of the Patriarchs and Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem would be included in a heritage restoration plan.

The decision infuriated Palestinians, with senior officials in the West Bank saying it could prevent the resumption of peace talks and the democratically elected Hamas in Gaza calling on Palestinians to "rise up" for a third Intifada against Israeli occupation.

Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas on Tuesday denounced Israeli "provocation" over the two holy sites that could unleash a "religious war".

The Hebron site, revered by Jews and Muslims as the burial place of the biblical patriarch Abraham, has frequently been the scene of violent tensions.

A few hundred extremist Jewish settlers live under heavy Israeli occupation military protection near the site in the heart of the Palestinian town of 160,000.

Israelis worship in a part of the Ibrahimi mosque above the tomb which has been converted into a synagogue.

The mosque was the site of the infamous 1994 shooting massacre of 29 Palestinian worshipers by the US-born Jewish extremist Baruch Goldstein.

Source: Middle East Online.
Link: http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=37508.

Dubai hit squad underestimated police: expert

Ashley Hall, ABC

A former top level US intelligence official says the assassination in Dubai of a Hamas operative has all the hallmarks of the Israeli intelligence agency, Mossad.

He believes the Israeli operatives badly bungled the job because they underestimated the competency of the Dubai police.

Three Australians with dual citizenship have been named as suspects in the investigation because copies of their passports have been linked to the killing. All say they were victims of identity theft.

The Israeli Government says there is absolutely no evidence that it sanctioned the use of Australian passports by the alleged assassins.

And Israel insists that no other government has accused it of involvement in last month's assassination of the Hamas operative Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai.

But there has been no shortage of independent commentators ready to make that link.

Retired army colonel Patrick Lang spent eight years as the head of intelligence for the Middle East and South Asia for the US Defence Department, and for that time was the chief liaison with Israeli military intelligence.

And Mr Lang says the use of fake documents is standard practice for intelligence operatives.

"I certainly think it was the Mossad. Israelis, in particular this Israeli government, are obsessed with Hamas and its leadership," he said.

"They think that if they can kill off enough Hamas leadership then they will be able to make some sort of peace ... with the PLO leaders who are now the provisional government of Palestine, really."

Bungled job

Mr Lang believes the intelligence operatives badly bungled the assassination.

"I think this is a case in which a project often-time will be over-thought and over-engineered," he said.

"The more people look at it and the more they throw resources at a job they want to do, the team gets bigger and bigger and bigger and the thing gets more and more complicated.

"The more complicated it is, the more likely it is to fail or get terribly messed up in some way, as this did."

The Israeli government says there is no evidence linking Israel to the crime but Mr Lang says denial is standard practice.

"Any intelligence service that is anyway worthy of its name, when faced with a mess like this, looks you squarely in the eye and says, 'not us'," he said.

"It smiles and invites you to lunch next week and walks away. That's what they do. So what they say has nothing to do with anything."

Fake passports

Since the killing, Dubai police have released information suggesting the assassins were travelling on fraudulent passports from countries including Britain, France, Ireland, Germany and Australia.

That accusation provoked a strong response from Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith, who yesterday summoned Israel's ambassador, Yuval Rotem, to a meeting to discuss the affair.

Mr Smith told Mr Rotem that if Australian passports were misused by Israel, this would not be regarded as "the act of a friend".

A former Mossad officer has alleged the Israeli spy agency has its own "passport factory" to create or doctor passports for use in intelligence operations.

And Mr Lang says using forged travel documents is usual procedure for intelligence agencies.

"Any intelligence service in the world which wishes to operate on a global basis is going to have the ability to reproduce travel documents," he said.

"You should accept the idea that it is something which is going to happen."

But he says any country forging passports would be careful about which nationalities it fakes.

"I haven't heard of them using any American passports in this operation so far. It would be interesting to see if in fact any turn up. I bet there won't be any," he said.

'No evidence'

But the president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, Robert Goot, says Mr Lang's analysis holds no water and there is "no evidence" the hit was a Mossad operation.

"An investigation, quite properly, has been announced by the Foreign Minister, to be conducted by the Australian Federal Police and ASIO," he said.

"And once there are some hard facts and evidence established by that investigation, then that would be the time to comment.

"I'm sure that the [Australian Jewish] community shares the Australian Government's deep concern at the possible abuse of Australian passports by any country."

Mr Smith's office says the investigation will be contingent on the Dubai police investigation into the assassination itself.

And that investigation is likely to take weeks rather than days.