Rantburg
Abdallah Tabarak Abdallah Tabarak Al-Qaeda Terror Networks 20030121  
  Abdallah Tabarak al-Qaeda Africa North 20060212 Link
Ghulam Mustafa Tabassum Ghulam Mustafa Tabassum Lashkar-e-Jhangvi India-Pakistan 20060105 Link
Tabaat Ozmi Suleiman Mardawi Tabaat Ozmi Suleiman Mardawi Islamic Jihad Israel-Palestine Palestinian Captured Tough Guy 20020412  
    He was imprisoned by Israel between 1994-8, where he joined the Islamic Jihad. After his release, he rose to the leadership of Islamic Jihad. In November 1998, he was detained by the Palestinian Preventative Security Services and "held" until his release in May 2000. With the outbreak of the current round of Palestinian violence in October 2000, Mardawi renewed his ties with Islamic Jihad operatives, working with senior Islamic Jihad operative Iyad Hardan, developing ties with weaponry dealers.
Tahari Shad Tabassum Tahari Shad Tabassum al-Muhajiroun Britain 20030509  
Tahir Tabasum Tahir Tabasum Lashker-e-Taiba Afghanistan/South Asia Pakistani Deceased Cannon Fodder 20020302  
    gunned down in an encounter with security forces in Magota village of Rajouri district

Bangladesh
Notorious Islamist groups HT and HuT regrouping in Bangladesh
2010-02-01
Though Bangladesh government banned the activities of notorious Islamist militancy group Hizbut Tahrir in October, 2009, defying such government order, members of Hizbut Tahrir [HT] are continuing their activities including orientation courses, publication, symposiums etc. The group is even taking necessary preparations for filling writ petition with Bangladesh Supreme Court challenging the ban order.

On the occasion of Indian trip of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Hizbut Tahrir published a 18-page pamphlet criticizing the trip and terming the ruling party in Bangladesh as 'agent of India'. Hizbut Tahrir in this pamphlet called on the people for launching massive demonstrations against the government for 'leasing out the country to India.'

Chhatra Moitri [Student's Friendship], the student wing of this notorious Islamist group has resumed the publication of its regular journal named Paribarta [Change].

According to information, HT is maintaining 10 reader's forums in Bangladesh. Dhaka University chapter of this unit sits every Saturday at 5 pm at its Central Office at 234 Khairunnesa Bhaban, Kataban, Elephant Road, Dhaka. North-South University chapter of this unit sits on every Tuesday at Banani mosque in Dhaka. Khilgaon unit of the reader's forum of Hizbut Tahrir sits every Monday at 6-30-A B/391 Khilgaon Chowdhury Para, Malibagh, Dhaka. There are a number of reader's forum of this Islamist militancy group, which is continuing their activities on a regular basis in various parts of Dhaka and the country. Members of intelligence agencies and law enforcing agencies are showing extreme reluctance in taking any action against such illegal activities of this group.

Hizbut Tahrir's kingpin in Bangladesh, Professor Mohiuddin Ahmed is still under virtual house arrest. His personal bank accounts are already freezed while his relatives are not allowed to visit him. Commenting on this 'house arrest' Hizbut Tahrir's joint convener Monirul Islam told a vernacular daily that, they will soon launch massive movements in the country to uproot democracy and establish Caliphate rule.

Meanwhile, another notorious Islamist militancy group named Hizbut Towhid [HuT], which also preaches Caliphate rule and terms democracy as 'law of devil' is getting organized in various parts of Bangladesh as well a number of cities in the world, with the goal of waging 'war against Jews and Christians'. This group's kingpin Selim Panni is continuing to publish several books and DVDs with provocative sermons thus giving instigations of Jihad [Holy War] to the people. He [Panni] terms Jews and Christians as 'enemies of Allah' and preaches his followers in killing Jews and Christians with the goal of establishing 'Allah's rule in the world'. It is reported that Hizbut Towhid members are already spreading in different parts of the world with Jihadist indoctrination. It is even learnt that Hizbut Towhid kingpin Selim Panni gives instructions to his followers in keeping sword in their possession, with the aim of getting ready for war against 'Jews, Christians and forces of democracy'.

Bangladesh government is yet to take any action against Hizbut Towhid for reason unknown. This group is allowed to continued its notorious anti-democracy activities in various parts of the country.
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India-Pakistan
Eight killed as violence flares up in Karachi
2010-01-31
[Dawn] At least eight persons -- six alone in Qasba Colony and its neighbouring Orangi Town area -- were killed on Saturday, apparently as fallout of a late-night armed clash between two political parties in the ruling coalition, paralysing life and forcing a business shutdown in the vicinity.

The latest wave of violence served as a grim reminder of the targeted killings that claimed the lives of more than 40 people -- most of them associated with different political parties -- earlier this month, as the commitment made by the ruling parties and the determination promised by the law-enforcers failed to materialise.

The daylong incidents of firing and killing were triggered when unidentified armed men opened fire in Ghazi Mohallah, within the remit of the Mominabad police station, killing Tooti Khan, said to be in his early 20s, and wounding 37-year-old Riaz Ahmed. Both victims were residents of Sohrab Goth and had come to the area for business.

A few minutes later, a shooting incident in Bukhar Colony killed 35-year-old Rasool Khan within the remit of the Bukhar Colony police station. Though the police said they were not clear about the background of the dead, an area resident said the victim was associated with the Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf.

Two bodies of young men were also found on the Shabad Ground in Sector 13 of Orangi Town. The dead were later shifted to the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital, where doctors found a single bullet wound each in the heads of the victims.

"Their ages ranged from 25 to 30 years, and they were hit from a very close range," said an official at the health facility. "We received the dead bodies at around 2pm and their conditions suggest they were killed at least three to four hours before the autopsy."

Officials at the Orangi Town police station said the two victims remained unidentified as the area people did not recognise them.

"It seems that their bodies were dropped in that area after they had been killed somewhere else," said an official at the police station.

In a similar incident, police found the body of a young man on the Aqsa Ground in Sector L of Orangi Town. The body bore multiple bullet wounds.

Thirty-three-year-old Sajid Ali was killed in Liaquatabad when two men riding a motorbike targeted him as he was coming out of a bakery near his home, police said.
"His body has been shifted to the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital and there are no further details available about him and his family," said an official at the Super Market police station.

Life was paralysed by intense firing in Orangi Town, Bukhar Colony, Pirabad and Qasba Colony. A bus of route G-27 was set on fire in Block L of Orangi Town by unidentified arsonists.

In Manghopir, 35-year-old Fahim Wajih was shot dead when he was leaving his showroom. A resident of Garden East, the victim was targeted and killed by two men riding a motorbike.

Though both the Awami National Party (ANP) and the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) condemned the killings, and blamed unnamed political parties for the fresh wave of violence, the police authorities see no solution to frequent killings until de-weaponisation of the city.

"We have been pursuing the proposal to review the law about the possession of illegal weapons and to devise a mechanism to seize such arms," said capital city police officer (CCPO) Waseem Ahmed, who confirmed seven people were killed in the fresh violence.

He said the availability of arms in the city would never be capped until a campaign against illegal weapons was launched. However, the parties in the coalition government evaded the issue of de-weaponisation when it was mentioned to them.

"An ethnic party is causing harassment to Urdu-speaking people, mainly in the Qasba Colony and Orangi Town areas," said a statement issued by the MQM quoting the party's legislators in the national and provincial assemblies.

"They killed an MQM worker on Friday night, and we demand that the prime minister, federal interior minister and chief minister order action against the killers."

Similar concerns were expressed by the ANP, which blamed a political party for the recent lawlessness in the city.

"In Qasba Colony, Aligarh and other parts of the city the same people were targeting and killing Pakhtuns," said a party spokesman. "The victims were poor people such as labourers and were on their way to work when gunmen of a political party gunned them down for no reason."
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India-Pakistan
Filipino militant not killed in Waziristan strike: report
2010-01-29
[Dawn] The Philippine military doubts reports that a Filipino terror suspect was killed in a US missile attack in Pakistan, with one senior officer telling The Associated Press Thursday that the militant was sighted last week in the Philippines' volatile south.

Pakistani military intelligence officers said last week that Abdul Basit Usman, who is wanted by the United States, was believed killed in an American drone strike on Jan. 14 on the border of Pakistan's South and North Waziristan tribal regions.

Another 11 militants were also killed in the strike on a militant compound near the Afghan border. Authorities have previously said the attack had targeted the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, Hakimullah Mehsud.

US and Philippine military officials tried to verify the report. If confirmed, it could indicate stronger ties between Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network and Southeast Asian terrorist groups than previously thought.

Philippine military spokesman Lt. Col. Romeo Brawner said their intelligence indicates so far that Usman has not left the country and is hiding in Muslim guerrilla strongholds in the south's mountainous heartland.

The military, however, will continue to investigate and will be ready to cooperate with Pakistani authorities in conducting DNA tests if tissue samples from the slain militant can be secured.

'There is a bigger probability that it's not him, than it's him,' Brawner said.

The slain militant appears to have been a different person, also named Usman, said US and Filipino military officials who oversee counterterrorism operations in the southern Philippines. Both spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of their work.

The Philippine military official told The AP that Usman was sighted near southern Maguindanao province last week, adding he was '99 percent sure that he's still here in the country.'

The US State Department's list of most-wanted terrorists identifies Usman as a bomb-making expert with links to the Philippines-based Abu Sayyaf extremist group and the Southeast Asian Jemaah Islamiyah network. It offers $1 million for information leading to his conviction, and says he is believed responsible for bombings in the southern Philippines in 2006 and 2007 that killed 15 people.

Philippine police captured Usman in 2002 for a bomb attack that killed 15 people and wounded 100 others in the southern port city of General Santos, but he escaped from jail, according to police.

Usman was among those charged for allegedly helping plot an Oct. 10, 2006 bombing that killed eight people and wounded 28 others near a Roman Catholic church during a fiesta celebration in Makilala town in southern North Cotabato province.

He also was charged in another bombing that day that wounded four people in a crowded public market in southern Tacurong city.

Usman has not been convicted of any of the crimes.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran executes 2 men accused of seeking to topple the state
2010-01-29
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran on Thursday executed two men accused of involvement in an armed anti-government group, as the public prosecutor announced that new death sentences have been issued against opposition activists involved in protests over June's disputed presidential election.

The two men, who were hanged before dawn Thursday, did not appear to be connected to the postelection protests - at least one of them was arrested before the election, according to his lawyer.
But state media depicted the two as part of the protest movement, a sign of how the government has lumped together many of its enemies with the political opposition amid its postelection crackdown. The media's depiction of the executions may aim to intimidate the opposition ahead of new street demonstrations expected in February.

In a further move likely aimed at cowing protesters, Tehran's prosecutor announced that five people have been sentenced to death for involvement in the most recent major demonstrations, on Dec. 27. That day saw the worst violence of postelection crackdown, with at least eight people killed in clashes between police and protesters and hundreds arrested. The new verdicts raise to nine the number of people sentenced to death for involvement in protests, said the prosecutor, Abbas Jafari Dowlatabadi.

He also announced that another group of the postelection detainees would go on trial on Saturday. He said the trial will demonstrate the role of "leftists, Bahais and those who were directed by foreign hands" in the postelection turmoil. He did not say how many new defendants would go on trial.
Iranian authorities regularly accuse the U.S., Britain and other foreign enemies of fueling the unrest in a bid to oust the country's clerical leaders. They have also accused followers of the Baha'i faith, which is illegal in Iran because it is seen as heretical.

The two men who were executed, Mohammad Reza Ali Zamani and Arash Rahmanipour, were convicted by a Revolutionary Court of belonging to "counterrevolutionary and monarchist groups," plotting to overthrow "the Islamic establishment" and planning assassinations and bombings, Dowlatabadi told state TV.

He said the two confessed during the trial and that an appeals court upheld their death sentences. He made no mention of the postelection protests in connection to the case.

Rahmanipour's lawyer, Nasrin Sotoudeh, told the Associated Press Thursday that the 20-year-old Rahmanipour was arrested in April on the charge of membership in an armed opposition group, the Royal Association of Iran. She said his trial and verdict were "unfair and illegal," saying his lawyer was not allowed to participate in the court sessions and he was forced to confess. She said she and Rahmanipour's relatives had not been notified of any appeal's court ruling upholding the death sentences.

Iran's English language channel, Press TV, said that among the charges against the two was that they had a role in the 2008 bombing of a mosque in the southern city of Shiraz.

Still, state TV portrayed the executions as part of the postelection crackdown. In a report aired on the channel and reported on its Web site, it said Rahmanipour and Zamani were among those sentenced to death "in the wake of the rioting and counterrevolutionary and antiestablishment acts of recent months."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Two German diplomats were held in Iran Ashura riots
2010-01-28
[Al Arabiya Latest] Iran arrested last month two German diplomats for allegedly having a hand in riots during the Ashura commemorations, state television said Wednesday quoting a top official.

"A deputy intelligence minister announced the involvement of German diplomats in the riots during Ashura," ISNA news agency said. The story was also reported by the semi-official Mehr News Agency.

" The riots on this day were pre-planned and the 'current of sedition', anti-revolutionaries and the network affiliated to Western intelligence services were involved "
Deputy minister
"Two German diplomats using fictitious names of Yogi and Ingo were arrested," during the Shiite commemoration of Ashura, the website of state television also said quoting an unnamed deputy intelligence minister. But the report did not specify whether the diplomats were still in detention.

A spokesman for the German embassy in Tehran when contacted told AFP that he "cannot comment" on the reports of arrests.

The official IRNA news agency had earlier Wednesday reported that the deputy minister spoke of the "involvement of German diplomats" in the riots on December 27, the day of Ashura.

"The riots on this day were pre-planned and the 'current of sedition', anti-revolutionaries and the network affiliated to Western intelligence services were involved," the deputy minister was quoted as saying by IRNA.

The authorities use the words "current of sedition" to describe the anti-government protest movement.

According to the report the deputy intelligence minister said that a close advisor of main opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi was identified and arrested and made "confessions."

"Available evidence and this person's confessions show that he was connected through a point man to the intelligence service of a European country and was releasing confidential information," IRNA quoted the deputy as telling reporters.

A few days after the Shiite commemoration, Iranian officials revealed they had detained a Swedish diplomat for 24 hours on the day of Ashura.

And earlier this month Tehran's chief prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi said that a German citizen was detained and later freed, apparently in connection with the Ashura riots.

At least eight people were killed in Iran during the Ashura riots when crowds of demonstrators launched protests against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in what turned into the bloodiest showdown between them and security forces since the initial post-election unrest in June.

A police website reported earlier this month that more than 40 people had been arrested on the basis of tip-offs after police circulated photographs of demonstrators of Ashura rioters.
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Bangladesh
4 cops, 7 robbers hurt in gunfight
2010-01-26
[Bangla Daily Star] A fisherman was killed and 11 people including four policemen were injured in two separate incidents of gunfight in Barguna and Cox's Bazar districts on Sunday and yesterday.

Four policemen including a sub-inspector and seven robbers received bullet injury during a one-and-a half hour-long gunbattle between the law enforcers and a gang of dacoits.

The incident took place around 9:30am at Kachuridhala area under Haldia Palong union of Ukhia upazila in Cox's Bazar yesterday morning.

Following a robbery incident on buses at Ramu Paaner Chhara Pahari Dhala on Cox's Bazar-Teknaf highway early morning Saturday, police conducted a raid in the area on Sunday, reports a correspondent from Cox's Bazar.

Rafiqul Islam, Ukhia Thana officer-in-charge, said during the raid police arrested an alleged robber Ziabul Haque, 26, alias Ziabul from Link Road area.

Following Ziabul's confession, a team of police raided a den of the robbers at Kachuridhala around 9:00am yesterday.

Sensing the presence of police, the robbers opened fire on the law enforcers prompting them to retaliate.

The injured policemen were admitted to Ukhia Upazila Health Complex.

Police arrested three bullet-hit robbers from the spot while the other injured managed to flee.

Police recovered some looted valuables, a long gun, three sharp weapons and five cartridges from the spot.

In another incident, a fisherman was killed and four others were injured during a gunfight between the coast guard and a gang of pirates at Asharchar of Patharghata upazila under Barguna district early hours on Sunday, our Patuakhali correspondent reports.

The deceased was identified as Joynal Abedin Sikder, 50, of Ghutabacha village under Pathorghata upazila of the district.

Abdul Khaleque, OC of Pathorghata Police Station, said a gang of 40 pirates in two engine boats came to Asharchar around 2:00am and looted cash and cellphone sets from the fishermen.

The gang abducted 10 fishermen from the area demanding Tk 1 lakh as ransom for each.

Four fishermen were also injured as they tried to resist the gang.

A team of coast guard chased the pirates who were fleeing after looting and abducting the fishermen.

The robbers opened fire on the coast guard prompting them to retaliate.

Abdur Rashid Khan, station commander for coast guard in Pathorghata, said around 500 rounds of bullet were exchanged during the hour-long gunfight.
Link


Home Front: Politix
Obama Administration Steers Lucrative No-Bid Contract for Afghan Work to Dem Donor
2010-01-25
Promise #385 broken
Despite President Obama's long history of criticizing the Bush administration for "sweetheart deals" with favored contractors, the Obama administration this month awarded a $25 million federal contract for work in Afghanistan to a company owned by a Democratic campaign contributor without entertaining competitive bids, Fox News has learned.

The contract, awarded on Jan. 4 to Checchi & Company Consulting, Inc., a Washington-based firm owned by economist and Democratic donor Vincent V. Checchi, will pay the firm $24,673,427 to provide "rule of law stabilization services" in war-torn Afghanistan.

A synopsis of the contract published on the USAID Web site says Checchi & Company will "train the next generation of legal professionals" throughout the Afghan provinces and thereby "develop the capacity of Afghanistan's justice system to be accessible, reliable, and fair."

The legality of the arrangement as a "sole source," or no-bid, contract was made possible by virtue of a waiver signed by the USAID administrator. "They cancelled the open bid on this when they came to power earlier this year," a source familiar with the federal contracting process told Fox News.

"That's kind of weird," said another source, who has worked on "rule of law" issues in both Afghanistan and Iraq, about the no-bid contract to Checchi & Company. "There's lots of companies and non-governmental organizations that do this sort of work."

Contacted by Fox News, Checchi confirmed that his company had indeed received the nearly $25 million contract but declined to say why it had been awarded on a no-bid basis, referring a reporter to USAID.

Asked if he or his firm had been aware that the contract was awarded without competitive bids, Checchi replied: "After it was awarded to us, sure. Before, we had no idea."

He declined to answer further questions, however, and again referred Fox News to USAID, saying: "I don't want to speak for the U.S. government."

Asked about the contract, USAID Acting Press Director Harry Edwards at first suggested his office would be too "busy" to comment on it. "I'll tell it to the people in Haiti," Edwards snapped when a Fox News reporter indicated the story would soon be made public. The USAID press office did not respond further.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said Fox News' reporting on the no-bid contract in this case "disturbed" him.

Issa has written to USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah requesting that the agency "produce all documents related to the Checchi contract" on or before Feb. 5. Citing the waiver that enabled USAID to award the contract on a no-bid basis, Issa noted that the exemption was intended to speed up the provision of services in a crisis environment.

Yet "on its face," wrote Issa to Shah, "the consulting contract awarded to Checchi to support the Afghan justice system does not appear to be so urgent or attendant to an immediate need so as to justify such a waiver."

Corporate rivals of Checchi were reluctant to speak on the record about the no-bid contract awarded to his firm because they feared possible retribution by the Obama administration in the awarding of future contracts.

"We don't want to be blackballed," said the managing partner of a consulting firm that has won similar contracts. "You've got to be careful. We're dealing here with people and offices that we depend on for our business."

Still, the rival executive confirmed that open bidding on USAID's lucrative Afghanistan "rule of law" contract was abruptly revoked by the agency earlier this year.

"It's a mystery to us," the managing partner said. "We were going to bid on it. The solicitation (for bids) got pulled back, and we do not know why. We may never know why. These are things that we, as companies doing business with the government, have to put up with."

As a candidate for president in 2008, then-Sen. Obama frequently derided the Bush administration for the awarding of federal contracts without competitive bidding.

"I will finally end the abuse of no-bid contracts once and for all," the senator told a Grand Rapids audience on Oct. 2. "The days of sweetheart deals for Halliburton will be over when I'm in the White House."

Those remarks echoed an earlier occasion, during a candidates' debate in Austin, Texas on Feb. 21, when Mr. Obama vowed to upgrade the government's online databases listing federal contracts.

"If (the American people) see a bridge to nowhere being built, they know where it's going and who sponsored it," he said to audience laughter, "and if they see a no-bid contract going to Halliburton, they can check that out too."

Less than two months after he was sworn into office, President Obama signed a memorandum that he claimed would "dramatically reform the way we do business on contracts across the entire government."

Flanked by aides and lawmakers at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building on March 4, Obama vowed to "end unnecessary no-bid and cost-plus contracts," adding: "In some cases, contracts are awarded without competition....And that's completely unacceptable."

The March 4 memorandum directed the Office of Management and Budget to "maximize the use of full and open competition" in the awarding of federal contracts.

Federal campaign records show Checchi has been a frequent contributor to liberal and Democratic causes and candidates in recent years, including to Obama's presidential campaign.

The records show Checchi has given at least $4,400 to Obama dating back to March 2007, close to the maximum amount allowed. The contractor has also made donations to various arms of the Democratic National Committee, to liberal activist groups like MoveOn.org and ActBlue, and to other party politicians like Sen. John F. Kerry, former presidential candidate John Edwards and former Connecticut Senate candidate Ned Lamont.

Sources confirmed to Fox News that Checchi & Company is but one of a number of private firms capable of performing the work in Afghanistan for which USAID retained it.

For example, DPK Consulting, based in San Francisco and with offices in Washington, D.C. and elsewhere, states on its website that it has contracted with USAID and other federal agencies on more than 600 projects involving "governance and institutional development" across five continents.

Among DPK's most recent projects are the establishment of a new public prosecutor's office in Jenin, in the troubled West Bank area of the Palestinian Authority, and the improvement of court facilities in the Kyrgyz Republic in Central Asia. Similarly, BlueLaw International, based in Virginia, was awarded a $100 million contract by the State Department in April 2008 to strengthen the "rule of law" in Iraq.

Although Obama suggested in his remarks on March 4 that he hoped particularly to address problems associated with defense contracting, an Associated Press analysis last July found that the Defense Department frequently awards no-bid contracts under the aegis of the $787 billion stimulus program, and often at higher expense to U.S. taxpayers.

According to The AP, more than $242 million in federal contracts, or roughly a quarter of the Pentagon's contract stimulus spending, was awarded through no-bid contracts. And while procurement officers say competitive bidding can actually cost the taxpayers more -- because it involves delays and can thereby subject pricing for services and equipment to inflation -- the AP analysis found that defense-related stimulus contracts awarded after competitive bidding saved the Pentagon $34 million, compared with $4.4 million when no bidding was involved.

Figures kept by OMB Watch, a non-profit research and advocacy group that tracks federal spending, show that no-bid contracts have been common under administrations controlled by both parties.

During fiscal years 2000 and 2001, for example, when Bill Clinton was president, as much as $139.2 billion in federal contracts was awarded without competitive bidding. The OMB Watch figures show that the practice appears to have accelerated sharply during the Bush administration, but the figures are not adjusted for inflation.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Plane Crash Lands in Iran, Injuring Dozens
2010-01-24
TEHRAN, Iran -- A Russian-made Iranian passenger plane carrying 157 passengers and 13 crew crash landed in northeastern Iran Sunday injuring at least 46 people, state television reported.

The broadcast said no one was killed in the accident.

The TV said the private Taban Air plane caught fire upon landing at Mashhad airport at 07:20 local time (03:40 GMT). The injured have been taken to hospitals in Mashhad, the report added. It said plane has been seriously damaged.

Iran has about a dozen Soviet-built Tu-154 airliners.

Iran has seen numerous crashes in recent years and its airlines have been plagued by maintenance problems. In part, Iranian carriers are chronically cashed-strapped and unable to buy new planes.

Iranian officials often blame U.S. sanctions that prevent it from updating American aircraft bought before the 1979 Islamic revolution and make it difficult to get European spare parts or planes as well.
Don't they have machine shops and master mechanics?
U.S. sanctions prevent Iran from updating its 30-year-old American aircraft and make it difficult to get European spare parts or planes as well. The country has come to rely on Russian aircraft, many of them Soviet-era planes that are harder to get parts for since the fall of the Soviet Union.
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Bangladesh
20 armed cadres identified
2010-01-21
[Bangla Daily Star] Police have identified 20 persons who wielded firearms and various sharp weapons during Monday's clashes between two factions of Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal on Dhaka University campus.

Among them, the three arm-wielding men seen in newspaper photos and TV footages of the clashes were identified as former leaders of JCD, the student wing of BNP.

They are former JCD organising secretary Ahsan Uddin Shipon and assistant organising secretary Abdul Halim Khokan, and Khaleda Zia Mukti Parishad leader Saiduzzaman Pasha.

Apart from the mysterious inaction of law enforcers, the whole incident now seems even more mysterious as a number of leaders and activists of Bangladesh Chhatra League equipped with firearms and sharp weapons were found involved in the clashes.

Ramna Zone Additional Deputy Commissioner Nurul Islam told The Daily Star yesterday evening that they identified around 20 persons who were equipped with firearms and various sharp weapons during Monday's clashes.

Sources said a large number of the armed activists of both the JCD factions as well as BCL are outsiders. They also alleged that all the law enforcement and intelligence agencies were aware that the violence would occur.

A senior police official of Dhaka Metropolitan Police said most of the 20 identified persons are from the rival group of JCD President Sultan Salauddin Tuku, who was severely injured by his rivals. The rest were Tuku's supporters and BCL activists.

Hailing from Kotchandpur upazila of Jhenidah district, Saiduzzaman Pasha, wearing jeans and a black muffler as shown in newspaper photos and TV footages, is a third-year student of political science at Dhaka College.

After BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia was arrested during the caretaker government's rule, Pasha put up posters at Dhaka College and surrounding area under the banner of "Khaleda Zia Mukti Parishad", of which he was the president.

Pasha is also accused in several cases filed with the city's New Market, Jatrabari and Demra police stations on charges of extortion and other criminal acts.

JCD Senior Vice-President Shahidul Islam Babul, who is one of the accused in a case filed by Shahbagh police in connection with the campus violence, told The Daily Star over phone, "I know Pasha was a leader of Khaleda Zia Mukti Parishad but he never held any post in Chhatra Dal."

Campus sources said Shipon, wearing a black leather jacket, was seen wielding a firearm in front of Surya Sen Hall. His assistant Khokan was also equipped with a firearm.

Masud, former general secretary of Jasim Uddin Hall unit JCD, was seen hurling bombs. A few witnesses said they also saw four JCD leaders wielding firearms and two others hurling bombs. The witnesses, however, could not mention their names.

Other witnesses and police sources said they saw several BCL leaders equipped with sharp weapons taking part in the clashes.

However, Dhaka University BCL unit President Sheikh Sohel Rana Tipu denied the allegations, saying none of his party men were involved in such activities.

According to campus sources, the BCL leaders and activists took part in the clashes between the JCD factions to take political advantages.

The role of law enforcers deployed on the campus also raised questions as they remained mysteriously inactive during the incident. Although the armed JCD and BCL activists clashed in front of them in broad daylight, they neither arrested anybody nor tried to stop the violence.

Asked about the allegations, DMP Commissioner AKM Shahidul Hoque told The Daily Star, "Police were busy ensuring security on the campus. It is not always possible to prevent entry of firearms into the huge campus area."
Link


Home Front: Politix
Massachusetts has estimated 116K dead voters on its rolls
2010-01-19
A new study of the nation's voter registration records finds 3.3 million dead voters are still on the rolls - including an estimated 116,483 in Massachusetts - while another 12.9 million who are ineligible also remain.

The study was done by Aristotle International Inc., a Washington, D.C. technology company that specializes in election-related programming and database services for public officials and agencies.

Not only does this raise concerns about potential voter fraud, but from the interest of campaign consultants, ineligible or expired voters could lead to a waste of resources, John Aristotle Phillips, CEO of Aristotle, told CNS News.

"Some states have bigger problems than others," Phillips said. "With deadwood exceeding one in seven votes in some counties, candidates might as well spend a day a week campaigning in the cemetery."

Other states besides Massachusetts with high numbers of dead and ineligible voters on their registration rolls include New Hampshire, Washington, West Virginia and Wyoming, according to Aristotle. North Carolina has the fewest such voters on its rolls, Aristotle found.
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Home Front: WoT
Review of Jet Bomb Plot Shows More Missed Clues
2010-01-18
The overhaul of America's intelligence apparatus in the years after the Sept. 11 attacks was intended to break information logjams and ensure that spy agencies traded secrets with one another. It established redundant layers of terrorism analysts to ensure that disparate clues to the next attack would not be ignored or overlooked.

But in the weeks before Christmas, the flaws in the structure were laid bare. No single person or unit was in charge of running down every high-priority tip.

At the National Counterterrorism Center just outside Washington, where specialists can draw on streams of information from more than 80 databases across the government, two teams of intelligence analysts worked on different parts of the same problem. Yet they never collaborated to piece together clues about the Christmas Day attack that were coming in.
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India-Pakistan
The Khaki Fidayeen
2010-01-16
As gunfire crackled in the snowscaped Srinagar chill of early January, with two fidayeen fighters--wholly rolled, strapped and sold to their 'cause'--holding Lal Chowk's Punjab Hotel under seige, a handful of Kashmir's police officers were overcome with déjà vu. And itchy fingers, that burning need to be there as part of the operation, countering terror with all they've got. Equally if not more dedicated to India's own cause, the legitimate cause of Peace in the Valley, these men in khaki are clear they have what it takes--if only the government would deploy them. Back in 1989, when the insurgency broke out, the J&K Police was ill-equipped to handle it; some policemen were even suspected of sympathy with insurgents. Today, the force actually has police officers trained in counter-terrorism. Most of them are Kashmiri Muslims, and when they say they would've wrapped up the 26/11 job in just ten hours, it doesn't sound like an empty boast. They're India's Khaki Fidayeen. Open profiles five such policemen. They've already helped steady things in J&K, and are raring for action...

JAVID AHMED

Inspector

The information was soild, "Ek dum pukhta," as the informer told Inspector Javid Ahmed. A militant had been spotted inside a college in Shopian in south Kashmir. There was no time to lose. Javid and his three men rushed immediately--as the inspector recounts.

At the college ground, Javid saw a young man near a motorcycle. As Javid approached, the young man pulled out a grenade. Unfazed, Javid jumped at him, even as two of his own men ran away. "I held his hands tightly in mine while he tried hard to pull the pin," says Javid. The third policeman, who hadn't fled, stood paralysed with fear while Javid's fight went on. It lasted for almost five long minutes before Javid finally managed to loosen the militant's hands. The grenade landed on a road nearby, beyond the college wall, but luckily did not explode.

If Javid has a charmed life, he'd rather not test it so brazenly again. "I have promised myself that I won't act so brave again," he says.

Javid comes from a policeman's family. His father was once in charge of the Tral police station in south Kashmir, a post which he has since taken charge of. During the peak of militancy in Jammu & Kashmir (J&K), it was common for policemen and their families to get threats from militants. Javid's father got many such threats, and even survived a landmine blast.

Javid's first posting after graduating from the J&K police academy in 2002 was in Shopian, a Jamaat-e-Islami stronghold and thus a tough challenge. According to a senior police officer, militancy here reigned until mid-2000; the police feared for their lives and dared not take action. Javid, however, would have none of it, vowing to resist militants every turn of the way. "From day one, I had vowed to eliminate militancy," he says.

In some four years, Javid led operation after operation in Shopian, resulting in the elimination of at least 25 top militant leaders, including the Lashkar-e-Toiba's deputy district commander. "Wherever I am, I will keep fighting militancy, no matter what," he says.

IMTIYAZ HUSSAIN

Superintendent of Police

The man opened fire the moment Police Officer Imtiyaz Hussain asked him who he was. "Tu kaun hai?" Hussain remembers shouting at the man sitting under an apple tree. It was an orchard in north Kashmir's Sopore.

Hussain had his eyes fixed on the figure in the distance when he suddenly saw metal glisten in the bright afternoon sun. Instead of revealing who he was, the mystery man, Abu Abdullah, had pulled out an AK-47 rifle. The police officer could have died that very instant had it not been for his namesake, Constable Imtiyaz Ahmed, who jumped in front of his boss and took the AK-47's bullets in his lower abdomen.

Abu Abdullah was no ordinary gunman. He was a hardcore Lashkar terrorist, sent to carry out a fidayeen attack in Srinagar. It was just hours before he was to head for the state capital that Hussain, who was then Sopore's superintendent of police, got a whiff of his plans. At the encounter in the orchard, Abdullah had fought fiercely, so fiercely that he wouldn't let the police party rescue Imtiyaz Ahmed, who lay wounded in the line of fire. Shards of apples flew in all directions.

It took Hussain an hour to get near Abdullah. And then he shot Abdullah dead from a one-foot distance. "I tilted his rifle away from myself and shot him with my pistol," recounts Imtiyaz. But Constable Ahmed, sadly, couldn't be saved.

Hussain belongs to the 1999 batch of the J&K Police. "It is called the fidayeen batch," he quips. He joined as a deputy superintendent of police in Shopian, in south Kashmir, which was then the region's hotbed of militancy. But it was from 2006 onwards in Sopore that Hussain faced the most difficult phase of his career.

At that time, Sopore was the hub of terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Toiba. Most fidayeen attacks which took place in Srinagar would be orchestrated from Sopore. Hussain's main objective was containing the Lashkar. Unless the police sent out a strong message by instilling the fear of death in militants, he felt, it wouldn't be possible to contain militancy. His big moment came in November 2006, when he successfully managed to bump off Osama Pehalwan, chief of the militant outfit Al-Mansurian. Pehalwan had led a string of attacks against the Indian Army.

In another daring operation, Hussain recalls scalping senior Lashkar commander Hafiz Nasir. On an informer's cue, Hussain and team zeroed in on the militant hiding along with two Jaish operatives in Rafiabad, near Sopore; the three were planning a fidayeen attack on the cavalcade of then J&K Chief Minister Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, according to intelligence inputs. As the team lay siege, Hussain, who was accompanied on the operation by an Army colonel, was instructed by his seniors to rush to a site where the CM was supposed to address a public rally. But once he left, the militants broke out of the cordon. Two Army soldiers were killed, and Hafiz Nasir took refuge in another house. Hussain was called right back. He was in favour of blasting the house, but the colonel wanted to be sure--and took a peep inside. Nasir shot him. "He died on the spot," says Hussain. It was only afterwards that he and his police team managed to kill Nasir.

In another input from Rafiabad, an informer told Hussain that four militants were hiding inside a house. Hussain says he sent a police party thrice into the house for a search, but the militants could not be found. Finally, when the informer called a fourth time, Hussain lost his patience, calling the informer a liar. "Cut my throat if you don't get them," the informer whispered.

This time round, Hussain accompanied the search party himself. They searched the entire house. But, like three previous attempts, Hussain couldn't find anything. He was about to call it off when he spotted a black-and-white TV set in one corner of the house. "I don't know," he says, "but I had this gut feeling that there is something there." The police officer ordered his men to dig beneath the TV set. Even after a couple of feet, they found only earth.

Sure enough, there were four militants holed up inside. Hussain asked them to surrender. They wouldn't. "Finally, we got it filled with water," says Hussain.
"Sir, there is nothing here," one of his men told him. But Hussain insisted that they keep digging. After a foot or so, they came upon another layer of concrete. And beneath it, they discovered a bunker, measuring 6 feet by 8 feet. Sure enough, there were four militants holed up inside. Hussain asked them to surrender. They wouldn't.

"Finally, we got it filled with water," says Hussain, almost cringing at the memory. It was in a similar manner that Hussain and his men were able to eliminate Sajjad Afghani, the J&K chief of terrorist outfit Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, in 2008. Afghani was hiding above a false ceiling in the residential quarters of a government hospital employee, and had been an active militant for ten years in north Kashmir. Hussain knew. "Many Pakistani boys work for us," he discloses, "providing us vital information about militant activities in Kashmir." He has also intercepted many calls from across the border, asking militants to kill certain people. "I have saved the life of at least a hundred people by shifting them to safe places."

It is on a Sunday that Hussain, a legend in these parts, finally finds time for Open. His bulletproof vehicle has broken down recently. This puts his life in danger. But there are also other hardships he must put up with in daily life. For example, he stays in rented, not police, accommodation.

The rewards are meagre. Police officers in J&K rue the fact that the men who risk their lives get a pittance as allowances--Rs 200 as risk allowance is all that a policeman gets. Compared to that, an Army soldier gets Rs 5,000 per month as risk allowance. So, at a time when so many young men of his age were crossing the border to join militant outfits, how did Hussain choose the police? "Three of our boys died in an encounter... and a militant from Multan also. Tell me, will a Kashmiri mother cry for her three boys or for a militant from Multan?" is his succinct response.

The superintendent gets a call on his mobile. And it is then that I recognise his caller tune. It's a song from a 1965 film on Bhagat Singh's life: 'Eiy watan, eiy watan, humko teri kasam, teri raahon mein jaan tak luta jaayenge...'

MOHAMMED IRSHAD

Superintendent of Police

When the fidayeen entered Punjab Hotel in the heart of Srinagar last week, one man was immediately summoned: Mohammed Irshad. Till recently the SP, Special Operations Group, he is a reclusive man who lets his personal weapon do the talking. And true to his reputation, Irshad's team eliminated both fidayeen fighters in a few short hours. "We drilled holes from the wooden roof, shielding ourselves behind iron plates and then shot them," he says.

Today, the very mention of cargo (Irshad's erstwhile office was in a building that had housed the cargo section of Indian Airlines) is enough to send shivers across the spines of militants. Inside his office, the first thing that strikes you is a big map of Kashmir. Pinned across the map are names of top militant commanders. Some of them, crossed out. Eliminated. Irshad, clearly, brooks no nonsense. His first posting was in the militant-crawling Doda region, where he is believed to have wiped out most Hizbul cadre. "Once he achieved that, the Lashkar couldn't sustain itself there in the absence of Hizbul support," says a senior police officer and colleague.

Modus operandi? In the Valley, Irshad forged a reliable network of informers, some of whom even had the guts to infiltrate militant ranks."We have our men in every tanzeem (outfit)," says Irshad. Like all other officers who dared take militants head on, Irshad has had his share of near-death experiences. Once, during an encounter in Telbal, two Lashkar militants jumped out of a window of their first-floor hideout, into a street behind where Irshad and another senior police officer were standing. The militants fired a volley of bullets which they escaped by ducking to the ground. The militants killed five police personnel and injured three others.

Irshad and his men chased them, and one of them was taken down just 2 km away from the original encounter site. "The other died in another encounter, two months later," reports Irshad.

The superintendent also remembers a search operation in the Bandipora area, where, acting on specific information about militants inside a house, they laid siege to it. On entering it, they couldn't find any. An exhausted Irshad sat with another officer on a box for almost 15 minutes, discussing what to do.

Finally, they left the building, calling off the operation. It was five days later that a militant was caught, and he revealed that he was hiding in a bunker beneath that very box all that while. "He said he was about to fire at us, but I walked away at that very moment," recounts Irshad.

Irshad does not share details of his work with his family. "Most of the time, they don't know what I have been up to, but sometimes they come to know of it through media reports."

"And then they get worried."

AFADUL MUJTABA

Senior Superintendent of Police

At first sight, Afadul Mujtaba doesn't look like a policeman. He looks more like a rich carpet dealer. But ask the separatist leadership of Kashmir, and you will hear what this man is made of. As SSP, Srinagar, Mujtaba once stirred up a fiery debate in the Valley by citing the Hadith (passed-down accounts of the Prophet Muhammad's sayings), arguing that pelting stones was un-Islamic. Such unruly mob behaviour has always been a big headache for the police, with disgruntled youth using the slightest provocation to gather at various spots in the city and turn bricks and stones into missiles (veteran mobsters could even injure cops by hurling flat stones through the cracks of their cane shields). But after Mujtaba made his Hadith reference, the separatist leadership found itself divided. Some of them agreed with Mujtaba, while others argued that stone pelting was the only weapon of the weak. It even prompted a senior separatist leader to hold a seminar on the issue.

But Mujtaba didn't leave it at that. Sources talk of his novel methods to corner some of the regular stone pelters. Under one such plan, he asked some of his plainclothes men to blend in with stone pelters, but equipped with Bluetooth hands-free mobile kits. As they joined the pelting, the undercover cops led some of them towards the police cordon. Once close, the plainclothes policemen turned on the stone pelters, pushing them towards their trap lying in wait.

Plus, Mujtaba has also been part of some of the police's fiercest encounters with militants. His colleagues swear by his agility during such high-risk operations in the Valley. He has handled many that involved terrorists on deadly suicide missions. Mujtaba himself keeps a low profile, reluctant to discuss his feats with anyone. "I am just doing my job," he says, with a smile which disappears in a second.

AASHIQ BUKHARI

Assistant Inspector General

Budgam district is the first militant-free district of Kashmir. There was a time when there were more than 200 'most wanted' militants operating in this area. Most of them were done for once Aashiq Bukhari took over the reins of the police in the district. Once posted, he lost no time in leading extensive operations against militancy, and with undaunted energy.

In one such operation, the police managed to catch a bus-load of arms coming from the bordering town of Kupwara. In another search operation, they discovered three truckloads of liquid explosives hidden in a bunker (its hatch hidden under a commode) in the Chanapora locality. "We got that damn house blasted," says Bukhari.

He has been instrumental in the killing of about 300 militants. Some top militants were even given instructions to bump off the brave police officer. One of them was a dreaded Pakistani militant married to a local woman, Ali, who was later killed by Bukhari's men.

None of the assassins could get him. "The Army is for the borders," he says, "It is only the local police which can deal with militancy." He is also against what he calls the "sarkari goondaism" (official hooliganism) of the Army. "The soldiers in the Army convoys carry these long bamboo poles and threaten people moving around. This alienates people further and creates hatred for the man in uniform," says Bukhari, shaking his head. "But, of course, the militant always fires the first shot." He fires right back.
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