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Morsi son arrested in Egypt drugs case

By - Mar 01,2014 - Last updated at Mar 01,2014

CAIRO — The authorities in Egypt arrested a 19-year-old son of ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi Saturday, accusing him of possessing hashish cigarettes, a charge denied by his brother.

Security officials said police found two joints on Abdullah Morsi and a friend who were in a car parked by the roadside in Qalyubia province north of Cairo.

The two were arrested for questioning, they added.

Morsi’s other son, Osama, dismissed the allegation.

He said Abdullah was stopped at a police checkpoint while on his way home.

“He has been arrested. They are fabricating the case. My brother doesn’t even smoke,” Osama, a lawyer, told AFP.

“This is a clear attempt to defame the family of president Mohamed Morsi. This incident is part of a series of violations committed by the state against us.”

Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood have been target of a relentless government crackdown since the Islamist was ousted last July after just a year in office.

Amnesty International says more than 1,400 people have been killed, mostly Morsi supporters, in street clashes since his ouster.

Morsi himself and several Brotherhood leaders have been put on trial.

Iran says troops abducted, taken to Pakistan, now free

By - Mar 01,2014 - Last updated at Mar 01,2014

TEHRAN — Five Iranian soldiers who were abducted in early February by Sunni extremists and taken across the border into Pakistan have been released, the army’s deputy chief of staff said Saturday.

They were kidnapped in the restive southeastern province of Sistan-Baluchestan, scene of unrest in recent years by the Jaish-ul Adl militant group.

“The five Iranian soldiers kidnapped and taken to Pakistan have been freed,” said General Massoud Jazayeri in remarks carried by the Fars news agency.

Jazayeri gave no further details about the release of the soldiers.

But earlier on Saturday, Pakistani officials said they had rescued 11 kidnapped foreigners — eight Iranians, two Tunisians and one Yemeni — in the southwest town of Turbat near the Iranian border.

The security officials told AFP that those freed did not include the Iranian soldiers.

Their abduction infuriated authorities in the Shiite Islamic republic of Iran, and strained relations between the neighbouring states.

Iran warned in mid-February that it could send troops across the border to secure the release of the kidnapped soldiers, and denounced what it called Pakistan’s inability to secure its own borders.

The foreign minister summoned a senior Pakistani diplomat and demanded that Islamabad “act firmly against the leaders and members of the terrorist group who have fled to Pakistan”, media reported at the time.

Jaish-ul Adl, whose name in Arabic means Army of Justice, was formed in 2012 and has since claimed several operations targeting Iranians in Sistan-Baluchestan.

Rouhani tells Iran generals to cut hostile rhetoric

By - Mar 01,2014 - Last updated at Mar 01,2014

DUBAI — President Hassan Rouhani urged Iran’s military leaders on Saturday to let diplomacy prevail in dealing with potential foreign threats, in a clear reference to efforts to end the nuclear dispute and decades of hostile relations with the West.

“It is very important to formulate one’s sentences and speeches in a way that is not construed as threat, intention to strike a blow,” Rouhani said in a meeting with Iran’s top military echelon.

“We must be very careful in our calculations. Launching missiles and staging military exercises to scare off the other side is not good deterrence, although a necessity in its proper place,” the official IRNA news agency quoted him as saying.

“A misfire could burst into flames and wreak havoc to everything.”

A moderate elected by landslide last June, Rouhani has broken with tradition and pursued compromise with the United States and its allies on uranium enrichment, a sensitive issue that resulted in global economic sanctions against Iran.

But these efforts run counter to belligerent slogans from Islamic hardliners who dominate the elite Revolutionary Guards and the regular army to a lesser extent.

While Iranian nuclear negotiators were haggling with world powers in Vienna last month, many generals were beating war drums at home and flexing their military muscles.

“Our forefathers primed us for the final epic battle,” said the chief commander of the Revolutionary Guards, Mohammad-Ali Jafari last month.

Such belligerence was absent from Rouhani’s speech on Saturday.

“Our foreign policy is based on detente and trust-building with the world. This is not just a slogan,” he said

“Iran is sincere in saying it is not out to attack anyone. Aggression is our red line. Weapons of mass destructions are our red line.”

British ex-Guantanamo inmate denies Syria-related terror charges

By - Mar 01,2014 - Last updated at Mar 01,2014

LONDON — A British man once held at Guantanamo Bay turned human rights campaigner told a court in London on Saturday he would plead not guilty to providing training and funding terrorism in Syria, police said.

Moazzam Begg, 45, who was released without charge from the US military prison in Cuba in 2005, was detained at his home in Birmingham in central England last week and charged with terrorism offences dated between October 2012 and April 2013.

He appeared at Westminster magistrates court on Saturday and was remanded in custody to appear at London’s Old Bailey criminal court on March 14.

It is the first time he has ever faced any charges.

Begg was held by the US government at Bagram detention centre in Afghanistan, then Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, for nearly three years after being arrested in Pakistan in February 2002 suspected of being a member of Al Qaeda.

After his release, he founded Cage, a human rights organisation that campaigns for the rights of people detained during counter-terrorism operations.

Cage accused British authorities of “retraumatising” Begg by refusing to grant him bail, saying this was part of a campaign to criminalise legitimate activism.

“This is a politically motivated arrest and very much bears the hallmarks of trying to criminalise legitimate Muslim activity by reinforcing a climate of fear,” said Asim Qureshi, research director of Cage.

Begg was one of four Britons arrested last Tuesday in central England on suspected Syria-related terrorism offences.

Another of those, 44-year-old woman Gerrie Tahari, also appeared in Westminster magistrates court on Saturday charged with facilitating terrorism overseas.

“When asked to give an indication of how they intended to plead they both replied not guilty,” said a statement from West Midlands police.

Tahari was also remanded in custody to appear on March 14.

Two other men, aged 20 and 36, who were arrested the same day, remain in police custody, police said.

The arrests came as concerns mount in Britain over the number of its nationals travelling to Syria to help rebels fighting President Bashar Assad.

Police fear they may become radicalised by Islamists or attend terrorist training camps before returning to Britain where they could pose a security risk.

British police had already arrested 16 people on suspicion of terrorism offences related to Syria this year, some as young as 17, compared to 24 such arrests in all of 2013. .

Security assessments estimate that up to 500 Britons have gone to Syria in the past two years of which about half are thought to have returned home. This number includes those engaged in aid or humanitarian efforts.

British law was changed last year to make it easier for the government to confiscate the passport from anyone whose “actual or suspected” activities are deemed contrary to the public interest.

Main US pointman on Syria, Robert Ford, steps down

By - Mar 01,2014 - Last updated at Mar 01,2014

WASHINGTON — Robert Ford, the US ambassador to Syria who has been Washington’s main pointman in efforts to end the war working with opposition leaders battling President Bashar Assad, stepped down Friday.

“Robert Ford is retiring from the foreign service today after nearly 30 years of distinguished service,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters.

She admitted that the departure of Ford, who over the past three years has built up extensive contacts with the opposition leaders and was instrumental in helping to bring them to the Geneva peace talks, would be a loss.

“His extraordinary leadership has guided our response to one of the most formidable foreign policy challenges in the region,” Psaki said.

“From the outbreak of the crisis, Ambassador Ford has worked tirelessly in support of the Syrian people in their pursuit of freedom and dignity.”

A fluent Arabic speaker, Ford became Washington’s first ambassador to Damascus in five years when he was named in late 2010.

But just a few months into his post, Ford was abruptly pulled out of the country in October 2011 amid fears for his safety when he became a vocal critic of the Assad regime and its crackdown on the pro-democracy uprising that erupted in March that year. He never returned full-time to Syria.

Ford was increasingly criticised by the regime, which accused him of helping incite violence and was angered when he visited protest hubs outside the capital in a show of solidarity with pro-democracy demonstrators.

In late September 2011, Ford was blocked inside a building for a few hours during a meeting with opposition member Hassan Abdel Azim when nearly 100 angry pro-regime protesters tried to storm the offices.

Washington decided to close the embassy in 2012 as the uprising descended swiftly into a bloody civil war.

Since then, Ford has shuttled between the United States and Turkey, spending hours huddled with opposition leaders based out of Istanbul as he sought to help them form a more cohesive and inclusive body.

 

Legacy to guide bid 

to end war

 

Ford has also spoken passionately and angrily about the mounting atrocities in the war, which will enter its fourth year next month and in which more than 136,000 people have been killed and millions displaced.

A career foreign service officer, Ford also served as deputy chief of mission in Baghdad from 2008-2009. He was ambassador to Algeria from 2006 to 2008 and had postings in Bahrain, Cairo and Yaounde.

But he often spoke of his love for Syria, its culture, heritage and people.

“There’s no question that his departure is a loss, not just because of his contacts, but because of his expertise, because of his knowledge,” Psaki said.

She announced that for the time being, as the White House mulls a replacement for Ford, Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary Lawrence Silverman would take up the helm.

“There will be a continuity, given that there [is] a range of officials who will still be in place,” Psaki said.

“Obviously, part of what I’m sure will be looked at is the role that the next person will play in terms of their engagement with the opposition.”

The UN-led Geneva II peace talks broke down on February 15 and no new date has yet been set for them to reconvene.

But Psaki insisted that as the United States seeks to prepare for “a new Syria”, Ford’s “legacy will guide our efforts to support Syrians and lay the foundation for a more hopeful future”.

“The president and the secretary [John Kerry] of course are both incredibly grateful for his service.”

Confusion in Libya after Qadhafi son trial hearing not held

By - Feb 27,2014 - Last updated at Feb 27,2014

ZINTAN, Libya — There was confusion Thursday over the trial of Seif Al Islam, son of slain Libyan dictator Muammar Qadhafi, after a scheduled hearing on charges of threatening national security did not take place.

Seif, whose charges stem from the 2011 uprising that ousted his father, last appeared in court in the western city of Zintan on December 12.

His lawyer said then that the next hearing was scheduled for Thursday, and prosecution spokesman Seddik Al Sour confirmed that as recently as Wednesday.

But Sour retracted that Thursday. He said the hearing had actually been scheduled for last Thursday but had then been postponed because it coincided with voting for an assembly tasked with drafting a new constitution.

“It is up to the Zintan court to fix a new hearing date,” he said.

On October 24, a Tripoli court indicted Seif and 36 other Qadhafi aides for a raft of alleged offences during the uprising.

But Zintan rebels refused to have him transferred to the capital, despite a request from Libya’s prosecutor general and even though the authorities say his jail is under state control.

Seif, Qadhafi’s former heir apparent, is still wanted for trial by the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity during the uprising.

In May, the ICC rejected Tripoli’s request to try him in Libya because of doubts over a fair trial. Tripoli has appealed the decision.

Earlier this month, Human Rights Watch called on Libyan authorities to provide proper defence counsel to Seif and his codefendants to ensure they receive a fair trial.

The New York-based watchdog said that during visits by its staff last month, both Seif and former spy chief Abdullah Senussi had complained they had no representation at all during interrogations and pre-trial hearings in their prosecution for gross abuses during the uprising.

The charges include murder, kidnapping, complicity in incitement to rape, plunder, sabotage, embezzlement of public funds and acts harmful to national unity.

Iran nuclear negotiations ‘going well’ — foreign minister

By - Feb 27,2014 - Last updated at Feb 27,2014

NEW DELHI — Iran’s nuclear negotiations are “going well”, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Thursday, ahead of a crucial meetings to negotiate a comprehensive nuclear deal.

Iran and a group of world powers agreed last week on a timetable and framework for the negotiations for an accord that would allay Western concerns about Iran’s nuclear programme in return for the lifting of crippling sanctions.

Under a landmark interim deal clinched in November, Iran agreed to curb parts of the programme for six months in exchange for limited sanctions relief. The agreement came into effect on January 20.

“The [nuclear] negotiations are going well ... I’m hoping by the first deadline [July 20] we will reach an agreement,” Zarif told reporters on the sidelines of an event in New Delhi.

Leading a high-ranking delegation, Zarif is scheduled to hold talks with top Indian officials to open a “new chapter” with New Delhi on his two-day visit that began Thursday.

Negotiators hope to reach a final accord by July 20, when the interim agreement reached in November is due to expire.

A top Iranian negotiator told IRNA news agency that Iran and world powers would hold technical talks on the sidelines of a meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s board of governors next week.

He did not specify dates, but the board is set to meet in Vienna from March 3 to 7.

Political directors from the P5+1 group of world powers — the United States, Britain, France, China and Russia plus Germany — are set to resume talks with Iranian nuclear negotiators on March 17 in Vienna.

Western nations and Israel have long suspected Iran of pursuing a nuclear weapons capability alongside its civilian programme, charges denied by Tehran.

“From our point of view it is essential for the world to accept that Iran’s nuclear programme is exclusively peaceful,” said Zarif in his speech at the New Delhi event.

“We do not have an interest in possession of nuclear weapons.”

Scenes of death in South Sudan: ‘No humanity here’

By - Feb 27,2014 - Last updated at Feb 27,2014

MALAKAL, South Sudan — House after house has been burned to the ground. Hospital patients have been shot by armed rebels while lying in their beds. Dozens of corpses litter the streets.

“This is about revenge now. There is no humanity here,” said Col. Jan Hoff, an officer in Norway’s army who has served in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.

South Sudan, he said, is the worst he’s seen.

“It’s absolutely horrific,” Hoff said this week as he led a heavily armed UN convoy through the streets of Malakal, the capital of oil-producing Upper Nile state. “This is tribe against tribe. In Syria it was foreign fighters against the government. Here I don’t think it’s about the government.”

A corpse nearby is already a skeleton wrapped in a soldier’s uniform. Hoff said he counted 30 bodies on a recent day. A colleague had counted 70. The dead include both civilians and soldiers.

Human Rights Watch said Thursday that both government and rebel forces are responsible for serious abuses that may amount to war crimes for atrocities committed in Malakal and Bentiu, another capital of an oil-producing state, despite a ceasefire signed in January. Reprisal killings, based on ethnicity, are common place.

“Armed forces from both sides have extensively looted and destroyed civilian property, including desperately needed aid facilities, targeted civilians, and carried out extrajudicial executions, often based on ethnicity,” said Human Rights Watch, which called the destruction and violence against civilians “shocking”.

A week ago forces loyal to former vice president Riek Machar retook Malakal in a bloody assault that forced the government army to make what it labelled a tactical withdrawal.

Government officials this week said they would retake the town, but on Wednesday, as the UN convoy drove through, there was no sign of South Sudan’s army. The only talk was how rebels were pushing north towards the oil fields that provide the world’s newest nation it’s only income.

After the UN personnel alighted from their vehicles to tour the Malakal hospital, the smell of death and sight of destruction overwhelmed. The hospital, now filled with heavily armed rebel soldiers, is ransacked and empty of patients. Inside is a scattering of dead bodies, including those clearly executed in their beds. Flies are everywhere.

The UN has classified South Sudan as a Level 3 emergency that puts it on par with Syria’s crisis. As South Sudan’s rainy season approaches there are fears that the hundreds of thousands displaced by fighting will not be able to plant crops, an event that the UN aid chief here says could precipitate a famine.

Church leaders, analysts and government leaders have played down the ethnic dimension to the conflict, but more often than not the violence is being carried out by one ethnic group against another.

Human Rights Watch said that despite the ceasefire both rebels and government have launched attacks, and that credible reports indicate government forces supported by Uganda’s military have attacked locations in Unity state. The group said it has credible reports that rebel fighters killed civilians at the Malakal hospital, where Doctors Without Borders on Wednesday said it found 14 dead bodies.

“A clear pattern of reprisal killings based on ethnicity, massive destruction, and widespread looting has emerged in this conflict,” Human Rights Watch said.

At Christ is King Malakal Catholic Church, where three white UN tanks guard people — mainly from a group called Shilluks — Ko Aduk Peter said no one is safe regardless of tribe.

“Yesterday some soldiers took our girls by power. Six women, about 20 years, from the church,” he said. “Now we don’t know where they are.”

Toby Lanzer, the UN’s humanitarian coordinator in South Sudan, who travelled to Malakal on Wednesday, said the town is in a “terrible state that was really quite shocking”.

The UN camp in Malakal has hosted up to 20,000 people since fighting broke out in December. Ethnic conflict broke out inside the camp at one point, resulting in the deaths of 10 people.

While Lanzer was promoting peace talks, the UN has been preparing for more fighting in the north, near South Sudan’s oil fields.

“The conflict in South Sudan is far from over, with civilians still at risk of further abuse even inside UN compounds,” said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Military commanders from both sides have an obligation to immediately and unequivocally order their forces to stop attacking civilians and civilian property, and the commanders need to hold abusive soldiers to account.”

Twelve dead in Qatar restaurant gas explosion — news agency

By - Feb 27,2014 - Last updated at Feb 27,2014

DOHA — Twelve people including two children were killed on Thursday when a gas tank exploded at a Turkish restaurant in the Qatari capital Doha, authorities in the Gulf Arab state reported.

About 30 others were injured in the blast at the Istanbul Restaurant that one security source said was accidental.

Another security source at the scene said two Asian children were among the dead.

Major General Saad Bin Jassim Al Khalifi, Qatar’s head of public security, said non-Qatari Arabs, Asians and one Qatari were among the dead and wounded.

Preliminary investigations suggested a gas tank exploded, setting off a fire and causing part of the building to collapse, he told a news conference. But investigations were continuing to discover why the gas tank exploded.

“It was a very big blast,” he said. “It blew away cars and shrapnel was scattered 50 to 100 metres away.”

Chunks of masonry, metal debris and shattered glass lay outside the restaurant in a northwestern district of the city. Cars nearby were apparently crumpled by the explosion.

The incident was the deadliest in Qatar since May 2012, when at least 19 foreign nationals, including 13 children, were killed by a fire in an upscale shopping mall.

In a separate incident on Thursday, medics and security sources at the Hamad medical city in Doha said dozens of people were hurt in the afternoon due to a gas leak at a chemical plant in an industrial area near Doha.

They gave no figures or details on their condition, but said helicopters were despatched to fly victims of the leak to the Hamad medical centre quickly as ambulances had been caught in heavy traffic caused by the restaurant incident.

The gas- and oil-rich Gulf Arab state with an estimated national population of at least 200,000 has one of the highest standards of living in the world. The bulk of the two million population of Qatar are foreigners.

The restaurant is on the outskirts of the capital near Landmark mall, a well-known shopping complex usually busy with families.

“I was eating in a restaurant close by and suddenly heard a big [blast] and everything around me exploded,” Abdul-Rahman Abdul-Kareem, an Indian driver, told Reuters at Hamad Hospital. “I have too much damage now, my legs are broken and my head is [wounded].”

Pakistan denies plans to arm Syrian rebels

By - Feb 27,2014 - Last updated at Feb 27,2014

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan on Thursday strongly denied it had any plans to send weapons to Syrian rebels, following reports that Saudi Arabia was holding talks with it about arming the opposition.

A Saudi source said Sunday that Riyadh was seeking Pakistani anti-aircraft and anti-tank rockets for forces fighting to topple President Bashar Assad.

But Sartaj Aziz, the Pakistani prime minister’s adviser on foreign affairs, denied the claim, telling reporters Pakistan has not considered such a proposal.

“The reports about arms supply to Syria are totally baseless,” Aziz said.

Rebels have long sought anti-aircraft rockets to defend themselves against Syrian warplanes, which regularly bomb rebel-held areas with barrels loaded with TNT and other ordnance.

The United States has opposed arming the rebels with such weapons, fearing they might end up in the hands of extremists.

But Syrian opposition figures say the failure of peace talks in Geneva seems to have led Washington to soften its opposition.

Pakistani foreign ministry spokeswoman Tasneem Aslam said at a regular briefing that Islamabad did not supply arms to “entities”, meaning rebel groups, and respected Syria’s sovereignty.

“The policy guidelines for the sale of arms that we have are in line with the adherence to the purposes and principles of the UN Charter,” she said.

Pakistan recognised the right of all states to protect their security, she said, and wanted an end to the bloodshed in Syria.

She stressed that “regime change from outside by any means is something that Pakistan has persistently and very strongly opposed”.

“We also have what is known as end users’ certificate which ensures that our weapons are not resold or provided to a third country,” she said.

“Our position on Syria has been very clear and has been articulated again and again.”

The nearly three-year conflict in Syria has torn the country apart, killing more than 140,000 people including some 50,000 civilians, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Aslam said Pakistan had taken note of the humanitarian situation in Syria and wanted to see the Syrian people getting the supplies they needed.

Russia, a key ally of Syria, on Tuesday warned Saudi Arabia against supplying the rebels with shoulder-launched rocket launchers, saying it would endanger security across the Middle East.

On Wednesday, Syria shipped out a consignment of mustard gas for destruction at sea under a disarmament deal approved by the UN Security Council to dispose of its chemical weapons.

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