Trader Shot and Burned

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BENGHAZI/NALUT, Libya (Reuters) – Libya’s rebels said their military commander was shot dead in an incident that remained shrouded in mystery, pointing either to divisions within the movement trying to oust Muammar Gaddafi or to an assassination by Gaddafi loyalists.

The killing of Abdel Fattah Younes, who for years was in Gaddafi’s inner circle before defecting to become the military chief in the rebel Transitional National Council (TNC), set back a movement that was at last beginning to acquire cohesion as international pressure on the Gaddafi regime intensifies.

Mourners brought a coffin carrying the burned and bullet-riddled body of Younes into the main square of Benghazi, the rebels’ eastern stronghold, on Friday, his nephew told Reuters.

“We got the body yesterday here (in Benghazi), he had been shot with bullets and burned,” Younes’s nephew, Abdul Hakim, said as he followed the coffin through the square. “He had called us at 10 o’clock (on Thursday morning) to say he was on his way here.”

Younes was killed in mysterious circumstances on Thursday after being recalled to Benghazi from the front line near the oil port of Brega.

“It seems this was an assassination operation organized by Gaddafi’s men. Gaddafi’s security apparatus has fulfilled their aim and objective of getting rid of Younes,” London-based Libyan journalist and activist Shamis Ashour told Reuters.

“By doing that they think they will create divisions among the rebels. There certainly was treason, a sleeping cell among the rebels. Younes was on the front line and was lured to come back to Benghazi and was killed before he reached Benghazi. This is a big setback and a big loss to the rebels.”

The killing coincided with the start of a rebel offensive in the west and further international recognition for their cause, which they hope to translate into access to billions of dollars in frozen funds.

The rebels said Younes was shot dead by assailants after being summoned back from the battlefield.

Witnesses said the killing was greeted with jubilation by Gaddafi’s supporters in the Libyan capital Tripoli.

After a day of rumors, rebel political leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil said Younes and two bodyguards had been killed before he could make a requested appearance before a rebel judicial committee investigating military issues.

It was not clear where the attack took place.

Younes was not trusted by all of the rebel leadership due to his previous role in cracking down on anti-Gaddafi dissidents.

But his death is likely to be a severe blow to a movement that has won the backing of some 30 nations but is laboring to make progress on the battlefield.

“A lot of the members of the TNC were Gaddafi loyalists for a very long time. They were in his inner circle and joined the TNC at a later stage,” said Geoff Porter from North Africa Risk Consulting.

The rebels claimed to have seized several towns in the Western Mountains on Thursday but have yet to make a serious breakthrough. With prospects of a swift negotiated settlement fading, both sides seem prepared for the five-month civil war to grind on into the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in August.

A rebel official said no deal was worth talking about unless it meant Gaddafi and his powerful sons left Libya, while the veteran leader vowed to fight on “until victory, until martyrdom.”

Soon after Jalil’s announcement, gunmen entered the grounds of the hotel in the rebels’ main city of Benghazi where he was speaking and fired shots in the air, a Reuters reporter said. No one was hurt.

At least four explosions rocked the center of Tripoli on Thursday evening as airplanes were heard overhead. The city has come under frequent NATO bombing since Western nations intervened on the side of the rebels in March under a U.N. mandate to prevent Gaddafi’s forces from killing civilians.

The killing of Younes, who was involved in the 1969 coup that brought Gaddafi to power and then became his interior minister, came after the rebels attacked Ghezaia, a town near the Tunisian border held by Gaddafi throughout the war.

By late Thursday, the rebels said they had taken control of the town, from which Gaddafi forces had controlled an area of the plains below the mountains.

“Gaddafi’s forces left the areas when the attack started,” said rebel fighter Ali Shalback. “They fled toward the Tunisian border and other areas.”

Reuters could not go to Ghezaia to confirm the report, as rebels said the area around the town could be mined. But looking through binoculars from a rebel-held ridge near Nalut, reporters could see no sign of Gaddafi’s forces in Ghezaia.

Juma Ibrahim, a rebel commander in the Western Mountains, told Reuters by phone from the town of Zintan that Takut and Um al Far had also been seized in the day’s offensive.

Rebels have taken swathes of Libya since rising up to end Gaddafi’s 41-year rule in the oil-producing North African state.

They hold northeast Libya including their stronghold Benghazi; the western city of Misrata; and much of the Western Mountains, their closest territory to the capital.

Yet they remain poorly armed and often disorganized.

The fighting has settled into a stalemate in a conflict that Gaddafi has weathered for five months, despite rebel gains, mainly in the east, and hundreds of NATO air raids on his forces and military infrastructure.

A recent flurry of diplomatic activity has yielded little, with the rebels insisting Gaddafi step down as a first step and his government saying his role is non-negotiable.

Western suggestions that Gaddafi might be able to stay in Libya after ceding power appeared to fall on deaf ears.

U.S Military Fund Taliban

The disclosure is another example of the persistent difficulty the U.S. military has in keeping its massive war funding from reaching the insurgents it is fighting in the unpopular, decade-old Afghan war.

The United States is spending more than $6 billion a month in the conflict.

Pentagon officials have repeatedly warned of the need to tighten controls on U.S. contracts and last year announced the creation of a task force to crack down on misuse of funds by contractors, some of whom pay Taliban protection money.

Pentagon spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan said the discovery of the siphoning of funds from the trucking contract was part of that previously announced effort. He said the U.S. military’s Central Command, which oversees the Afghan war, aimed to sign a new trucking contract in September.

“Central Command’s contracting command is working on a new Afghan trucking contract to ensure greater transparency into subcontractors,” Lapan told reporters.

The details from the internal study by NATO forces in Afghanistan were first reported by the Washington Post.

The news came just days after Reuters reported on a study being completed by a congressional commission showing that some $34 billion in U.S. taxpayer dollars have been wasted on contracts with the private sector in the wars in Afghanistan in Iraq.

‘Iran downs US spy drone near N-site’

Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) has shot down a US spy drone which was flying over the central Iranian province of Qom, a lawmaker says.

Iran Shoots down US unmanned drone
A member of the National Security and Foreign Policy Committee of the Iranian Majlis (Parliament), Ali Aqazadeh Dafsari, said on Tuesday that the unmanned spy plane was flying near the Fordo nuclear enrichment plant in Qom province when the IRGC’s Air Defense units brought it down, Javanoline.ir reported.

The official stated that the US drone was on a mission to identify the location of the Fordo nuclear enrichment plant and gather information about the nuclear facility for the CIA, Dafsari stated.

Earlier in the day, Iran’s Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast had said that the country is installing a new generation of uranium enrichment centrifuges in the country’s nuclear facilities to enhance the Islamic Republic’s peaceful nuclear program.

As a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Iran has every right to develop and acquire nuclear technology meant for peaceful purposes.

In addition, the IAEA has conducted numerous inspections of Iran’s nuclear facilities but has never found any evidence indicating that Iran’s civilian nuclear program has been diverted to nuclear weapons production.

Afghan president’s top advisor killed


A senior advisor to Afghan President Hamid Karzai and a member of parliament have been killed in an attack in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul.

Jan Mohammad Khan, the former governor of southern province of Uruzgan was murdered in his home in the western Kabul district of Karti Char on Sunday night after at least two gunmen wearing explosives attacked his place.

Police sources said a member of parliament Mohammad Hashem Watanwal was also killed while he was visiting Khan, AFP reported.

Several security guards were killed in the incident and one of the attackers died after his explosives detonated, according to police officials and local Afghan television.

The Taliban have claimed responsibility for the assault.

“We’ve been following Jan Mohammed for a long time to carry out such an attack,” said Zabiullah Mujahed, the spokesman for the militant group.

Khan escaped an assassination attempt on August 4, 2010 when a motorcycle bomb exploded near his convoy in the southern province.

The murdered governor was from a powerful family from the Popalzai tribe in southern Afghanistan and was the president’s top advisor for tribal issues.

Sunday attack took place less than a week after the president’s half-brother Ahmed Wali Karzai was killed by his bodyguard at his home in the southern province of Kandahar.
What is going on in Afghan? We will be keeping a close eye on unfolding situations. Stay informed here Nuworld Media

US supports Greece austerity measures

Blueprint for America?


US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, during her trip to Athens, has praised financially-troubled Greece for implementing austerity measures.

“I applaud the Greek government on its willingness to take these difficult steps. Greece has inspired the world before, and I have every confidence that you are doing so again,” Clinton said on Sunday after a meeting with her counterpart Stavros Lambrinidis.

She further urged Athens to continue its effort to resolve their debt crisis, AFP reported.

The trip has been regarded as an effort to boost the popularity of the US-born Prime Minister George Papandreou.

Measures taken by Papandreou’s administration to bring stability to Greece’s troubled economy has included budget cuts and tax hikes, which has lead to waves of anti-government demonstrations that have turned violent at times, leaving scores of protesters and security forces injured.

Greece has a debt of over EUR 300 billion, which is worth more than 150 percent of its annual economic output.

Clinton said the austerity measures can be viewed as “having to take the strong medicine that tastes terrible when it goes down and you wish you didn’t have to, or the chemotherapy to get rid of the cancer” for the people of Greece.

“We believe that the recent legislation will make Greece more competitive, will make Greece more business-friendly,” she added.

Clinton also met Greek President Carolos Papoulias and Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos and will meet the main opposition leader Antonis Samaras before leavening Greece.

24,000 military files stolen: Pentagon

nuborn2001.tk

The senior Pentagon official said the US Defense Department suffered one of its worst digital attacks in history in March during a single intrusion, The New York Times reported on Thursday.

“This was significant,” Lynn told reporters.

“It was done, we think, by a foreign intelligence service. In other words a nation state was behind it,” he said.

Lynn declined to identify any suspects. “We don’t get into our understanding of exactly who it was,” he said.

The Pentagon official said that the cyber attack by hackers was “just the latest in a series” and not the largest ever on a US defense contractor.

“We’ve been getting hit for the better half of five or six years in a serious way,” Lynn said at an event during which he unveiled the Pentagon’s new strategy for cyberspace.

In the event, he mentioned that the present passive security measures for the Pentagon cyberspace do not work anymore, and talked about a new strategy for safeguarding the top secret files like the stolen ones which concern, “aircraft avionics, surveillance technologies, satellite communications systems and network security protocols.”

The Pentagon’s new strategy, which is the final official piece of a larger effort launched by the Obama administration to defend computer networks operated by the government and the private sector, calls for actively looking for attackers on the Internet rather than waiting for an intruder to attack.

The military’s new Cyber Command has been ordered to prepare for defensive and offensive operations on computer networks. Officials confirmed that the command has computer programs to carry out offensive operations in cyberspace if it is so ordered by the president. So what now? Sounds like we are about to lose some freedoms.

‘Gaddafi has suicide plan for Tripoli’

A Russian official says that Libya’s ruler Muammar Gaddafi plans to kill all people in the capital Tripoli if the city is taken by revolutionaries.

Will he Do It?

“The Libyan Premier [Baghdadi al-Mahmudi] told me: if the rebels seize the city, we will cover it with missiles and blow it up,” Russia’s special envoy to Libya Mikhail Margelov told Russian newspaper Izvestia on Thursday.

“I imagine that the Gaddafi regime does have such a suicidal plan,” Margelov added.

He said that Gaddafi still had plentiful supplies of missiles and ammunition.

The Russian envoy met with the Libyan prime minister on June 16 in Tripoli after holding talks in Benghazi earlier the same month.

In his latest televised speech on Thursday, Gaddafi said that he will not surrender to NATO forces.

The Libyan ruler also sharply criticized French President Nicolas Sarkozy for starting the war.

“This Sarkozy is a war criminal who has stained the history of the French nation and destroyed his country’s ties with Libya and Muslim countries,” he said.

NATO has been bombing Gaddafi’s forces and military sites since mid-March. The war has fallen into a stalemate, with neither side able to make progress in recent weeks.

Afghan president’s brother shot dead

Ahmad Wali Karzai, the younger brother of Afghan President Hamid Karzai has been shot dead at his home.

The younger brother of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Ahmad Wali Karzai, has been shot dead in the southern city of Kandahar, officials said.

Government sources in Kandahar said Ahmad Wali Karzai was assassinated mysteriously at his home in Kandahar on Tuesday, a Press TV correspondent reported.

Some sources report that he was shot dead by one of his bodyguards.

However, an Afghan intelligence official reiterated that he was killed by a visiting guest and not by a body guard.

The gunman has himself been killed by other bodyguards during the incident, the official said.

Wali Karzai was reportedly a powerful and well-connected figure and headed Kandahar’s provincial council.

6.2-magnitude quake hits Philippines

6.2-magnitude quake hits Philippines

A 6.2-magnitude earthquake has jolted Negros in the central Philippines, the US Geological Survey says.

According to the USGS, the quake happened at 4:47 am (2047 GMT) on Tuesday, 125 kilometers west of the island of Negros, at a depth of 19 kilometers.

The epicenter, with a depth of 10 kilometers, was initially determined to be at 9.54 degrees north latitude and 122.03 degrees east longitude.

The quake was followed by a 5.1-magnitude aftershock at 2103 GMT and a 5.0-magnitude aftershock at 2249 GMT.

No tsunami warning was issued following the quake and there were no immediate reports of casualties or damage.

Mubarak battles death in Egypt hospital

Mon Jul 11, 2011 5:42PM

Mubarak Knocking on deaths doors


Latest reports coming from Egypt suggest former ousted dictator Hosni Mubarak has suffered a heart failure and is in a serious condition.

Medics said on Monday that they restarted Mubarak’s heart using electric shocks.

Some media reports say Mubarak is in critical condition and is unable to breathe normally.

“Mubarak had suffered heart failure, which later caused him not to be able to breathe normally,” Egypt’s al-Ahram Newspaper quoted a veteran journalist as saying.

But the reports have not been officially confirmed.

Mubarak’s health has been fluctuating since he was toppled amid a nationwide uprising against his decades-long rule earlier this year.

There have been conflicting reports on Mubarak’s state of health and the reasons for his hospitalization.

He has been under arrest at a hospital in the resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh.

Mubarak is being held for an investigation into the crackdown on protesters during 18 days of anti-regime rallies that toppled him on February 11th.

The commission investigating the violence against the protesters says more than 800 demonstrators were killed.

Mubarak also stands accused of corruption.

The Mubarak family is facing allegations of corruption as well as the use of violence against protesters.

Egypt’s judicial officials say the former dictator could be executed if found guilty of ordering to shoot anti-government protesters.

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