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Posts Tagged ‘South Asia’

Afghan guards held after shootout

breaking news

A provincial police chief and at least eight other police have been killed in a clash with US-trained Afghan guards in Kandahar, reports say.

The clash is said to have erupted after the guards, who are employed by US special forces, tried to remove an Afghan prisoner from a civic building.

A senior provincial official said the police chief, head of the criminal department and seven officers died.

But the situation remains confused, with Kandahar city closed off.

Kandahar province in southern Afghanistan is a Taliban stronghold.

It is a key battleground in the fight between Taliban insurgents and the Afghan government and coalition forces. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

New Bangladesh textile protests

bangladeshi workesr protesting on 280609

Thousands of textile workers in Bangladesh have clashed with police for a third consecutive day in a protest over pay and conditions.

Police fired live bullets and tear gas to disperse the demonstrators, who have set fire to at least one factory and forced the closure of many more.

Two people were killed during fierce confrontations with police over the weekend around the capital, Dhaka.

The textile industry in Bangladesh employs more than two million people.

The BBC’s Mark Dummett, in Dhaka, says strikes and protests frequently disrupt the industry, which produce clothes for some of the world’s biggest brands.

Police said that hundreds of workers attacked factories and blocked roads in a garment zone on the outskirts of Dhaka over the weekend.

The workers have said they were also protesting against the deaths of two colleagues over the weekend.

Bangladesh has more than 4,000 factories and ready-made garments account for most of the country’s export earnings.

The minimum wage in Bangladesh is less than $25 (£15) per month. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Soldier killed on Kashmir border

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An Indian soldier has been killed in cross-border firing across the Line of Control (LoC) in the disputed territory of Kashmir, officials say.

Indian army officials said the firing occurred as they foiled an attempt by a group of militants to infiltrate Indian-administered Kashmir on Sunday.

They say the attempt was "apparently backed by the Pakistani army".

Pakistan has not yet commented on the incident. The two armies have observed a ceasefire on the LoC since 2003.

"If it was fire from the Pakistani army then it can be termed as a ceasefire violation," an Indian army official said.

The army has said it will assess the situation and "will communicate disappointment to Pakistan over the incident".

The BBC’s Binoo Joshi in Jammu, in Indian-controlled Kashmir, says that if this did turn out to be a ceasefire violation, it would be the third such violation in the area this year.

Indian Defence Minister AK Antony said last year that Pakistan had violated the ceasefire more than 30 times since it had been put in place.

India and Pakistan have fought two wars over the control of Kashmir.

For much of the last two decades, separatist militancy and cross-border firing between the Indian and Pakistani armies has left a death toll running into tens of thousands.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Ambush kills 12 Pakistan troops

map

Taliban militants have ambushed a Pakistani military convoy and killed 12 soldiers, the army says.

The attack happened in North Waziristan, near the Afghan border, when militants fired rocket-propelled grenades at several vehicles.

A fire-fight then broke out in which 10 militants were killed, the military said.

The attack came as Pakistani troops prepared to launch an operation against militants in the region.

They want to eliminate the Pakistani Taliban network led by Baitullah Mehsud, whose stronghold is in South Waziristan.

The US has already put a bounty of $5m (£3m) on his head and on Sunday the Pakistani authorities offered an additional $615,000 for his capture.

The convoy was attacked in the Gharlamai region near Wachabibi village, some 45km (25 miles) west of the region’s main town of Miranshah.

Twelve soldiers were killed and 10 others were injured, the military statement said.

"An exchange of fire between security forces and terrorists continued for some time. Ten terrorists were killed," it said.

The military has been fighting militants in the Swat valley, to the north, for two months – an operation that has triggered militant attacks on both the military and towns and cities elsewhere. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Still expanding

By Charles Haviland
BBC News, Colombo

Leelawathi Mahagamaralalage

It is just over a month since Asia’s longest civil war in modern times came to an end, with the Sri Lankan government’s declaration that it had finally defeated the Tamil Tiger rebels (LTTE) on the battlefield and killed nearly all their leaders.

Yet the army chief says he wants the army, already 200,000, to increase in size by 50%.

To see what the military means to many Sri Lankans, I visited the peaceful bungalow home of Leelawathi Mahagamaralalage, set among banana trees in a village.

Taking pride of place in her front room are shelves with pictures of her family, but mostly of her second son, Nandana.

Plastic surgery

When we get out the album, she weeps. It shows his funeral. A Sri Lankan army soldier, he was killed in battle 12 years ago, aged just 20.

"This expansion of the Sri Lankan army in such large numbers gives us wrong signals"

Tamil MP Mano Ganesan

Tamil MP Mano Ganesan

She still mourns him and treasures every memento including his final letter.

She has two other sons.

Nandana’s elder brother, Chandana, was 14 years in the navy. But a year ago, in a Tamil Tiger grenade attack, he lost much of his hearing, and needed plastic surgery.

With her third son in the police, Leelawathi, despite her pain cherishes all her sons’ achievements – and cherishes the armed forces.

"I feel so sad – but proud, too," she says. "I have only the memory of one son. But I am happy because I have two more sons. Even if a family has 10 people, very often, every one of them will join the military, the same as in my family."

The wounded brother Chandana, now retired, lives next door with his family. He fully supports the government’s plan to expand the armed forces even now the war is over.

‘Searching for heroes’

"The LTTE have no leader now. So the small number of LTTE cadres who are left will try to form another organisation and will try to become leaders, as a matter of pride, and will tell the world that they are the LTTE," he believes.

"So the army must be on alert and observe everything these people are doing, and take any action needed to prevent them forming again."

"Camps will be established to see that no terrorist activities take place"

Brig Udaya Nanayakkara

Brig Udaya Nanayakkara

Boosted by that pride, which is strongest in Sri Lanka’s Sinhalese majority population, the forces are recruiting.

The capital, Colombo, has many posters praising the military. Sinhala-language television stations still carry advertisements to entice applicants, telling them their nation is "searching for heroes". And many are joining up.

The military says the ambitious plan for the massive 50%increase in size is grounded in the need to quash possible militancy and also to help with development work.

It will also step up its presence in Sri Lanka’s north, where hundreds of thousands of Tamil refugees are currently interned in camps by the government with no freedom of movement. The authorities say they are concerned about their possible LTTE links and are therefore screening them.

They say that many of the refugees are still "with the LTTE… at least mentally". But they add that 10,000 "LTTE cadres" have been separated, under tight security, within the camps.

When the people eventually return home – which the government says most will do by the end of this year – they will be accompanied by the military for an uncertain period of time.

Sri Lankan soldiers

The military spokesman, Brig Udaya Nanayakkara, told the BBC there are plans to build more military bases in the north.

"Presently two security force headquarters are established in Mullaitivu and Kilinochchi," he said.

"Under these headquarters camps will be established to see that no terrorist activities take place in those areas in the near future.

"That doesn’t mean people can’t go and settle down. People will be able to settle down. But we will have to see that the whole area activities are being monitored by some organised establishment."

That means normality in northern Sri Lanka is still a very long way away.

For many Sri Lankans, the stepping-up of military activity is too much.

‘Progressive forces’

A Colombo Tamil MP and leader of a small non-ethnic party, Mano Ganesan, worries that the military is becoming too influential in everything the government does. He fears this will mean less attention is given to political measures to secure the ethnic reconciliation which President Mahinda Rajapaksa says he wants.

Chandana

"If we’re going to expand the army more and more, what does it mean" he says.

"It’ll not only be bad for Tamils but also bad for the democratic, peace-loving Sinhalese progressive forces who want a united Sri Lanka where all the people can live equally with each other, who are against a Sinhala Buddhist hegemonic state.

"This expansion of the Sri Lankan army in such large numbers gives us wrong signals."

The root cause for Tamil extremism – he says – is "the national ethnic question. Which needs, will demand, a political solution."

The government, however, says it is necessary to bolster the military, even now.

Much of Colombo, especially the downtown business area, is still guarded by checkpoints – what some would call a ring of steel. Filming or photographing them is strictly banned.

To date, the end of the war has seen no change in this. The Sri Lankan state is attached to its military.

Slogans on the wall of the defence media centre say "It’s the Soldier, not the reporter, who has given us freedom of the press; It’s the Soldier, not the poet, who has given us the freedom of speech."

After decades of war, demilitarisation and a relaxation of security measures are not going to happen soon. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

All ears

McChrystal, right, meets an Afghan governor in Helmand, June 2009

New US commander General Stanley McChrystal is travelling Afghanistan preparing a new strategy. The BBC’s Martin Patience went with him to the west of the country.

In a traditional reception room the size of a tennis court, Gen McChrystal listened intently to an Afghan governor.

The official told the commander that he had only taken his job after being led to believe by the Afghan government that the security situation was good – but it turned out it was not.

Gen McChrystal then joked that US President Barack Obama had "done exactly same thing to me" – provoking laughs from the assembled audience.

It was a rare moment of humour from the commander known for his seriousness.

McChrystal is the man of the moment – a general tasked with changing the course of the war in Afghanistan.

He replaced Gen David McKiernan who was unceremoniously sacked in May.

Time may not be running out, but after eight years of US troops fighting here, it is certainly dragging on.

And Gen McChrystal’s job is to sort what the American envoy to the region, Richard Holbrooke, has described as a "mess".

Turning the tide

Just two weeks into his mission, Gen McChrystal has embarked on what he calls a "listening tour" to assess the situation across Afghanistan.

Italian soldiers in Herat province June 2009

The BBC accompanied him on the final leg of his tour to western Afghanistan.

By the beginning of August, he will need to present a detailed plan to the US president to turn the tide of this conflict.

It may include a request for more American troops, officials say.

The success of that plan will not be measured by any decisive military campaign – that does not happen in a counter-insurgency operation – but by the buzzword of "momentum".

This campaign is all about perceptions, as military officials will tell you – and the perception at home and abroad is that it is badly adrift.

If he can get more Afghans to believe that Americans are gaining the upper hand against the Taliban-led insurgency, then that will be a measure of real progress, say military officials.

And you do that by putting Afghans at the heart of the mission, said one McChrystal aide.

You need to give Afghans something to lose, he said, so that they choose the Afghan government over the insurgents – something that has not happened in many parts of the country.

That is the idea – but it will not easy.

Western front

There is a strengthening insurgency, particularly in the south and west of the country – and a weak and ineffective Afghan government.

Profile: Gen Stanley McChrystal

‘Shift needed’ in Afghan combat

Gen McChrystal Testifies At Senate Confirmation Hearing June 2009

And as Gen McChrystal heard, the problems are piling up in western Afghanistan, which had been relatively problem-free in the past.

Italian commanders in Herat province told him that the security situation was worsening and requested more troops.

An Afghan governor asked the general to immediately carry out an operation in a Taliban-controlled district.

Officers from the Afghan national army asked for new weapons.

Gen McChrystal said that the "situation (in the West) was serious enough that we focus on some areas that haven’t been focused on before."

He spoke of the need to root out Taliban from areas they control, before they started spreading.

There is a real sense of urgency now.

As Gen McChrystal knows, his decisions in the next 12 months could well decide the outcome of this conflict.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

India heat wave sparks protests

By Rahul Tandon
BBC News, Delhi

Protestors shout during a demonstration in Amritsar against long power cuts on June 27, 2009

Protests are growing in Delhi over power cuts as the Indian capital remains in the grip of a heat wave.

The government of the northern state of Punjab has announced that its offices will shut early as it also attempts to deal with a similar power crisis.

In Delhi, police have been called to break up demonstrations outside the offices of electricity companies.

Hundreds of people turned up at the house of a state minister demanding a solution to the problem.

As residents wait for this year’s delayed monsoon, it is getting hotter and hotter and the disruptions to power supplies are getting bigger and bigger.

‘Grim’

Most of the residents at the protests are without power for between six to 10 hours a day.

With temperatures in the mid-40s, there is an increasing demand for electricity as everyone tries to cool down.

The system here is unable to cope.

Some people are now sleeping in their air-conditioned cars.

The Chief Minister of Delhi, Sheila Dikshit, has described the situation as grim.

This city will host the Commonwealth Games next year and some say the current crisis shows that it is not ready.

The chief minister has dismissed those fears, saying two power plants are being constructed for the games.

This year’s delayed monsoon is slowly moving across India. The people of Delhi are praying it gets here soon.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

US changes tack on Afghan poppies

By Duncan Kennedy
BBC News, Trieste

Afghan farmers work in opium poppy fields in Nawa district of Helmand province, south of Kabul, Afghanistan, April 2009.

The United States is to change the way it deals with the massive poppy growing industry in Afghanistan.

Instead of destroying the crops it will spend money encouraging Afghan farmers to grow different ones.

US special envoy to Afghanistan Richard Holbrooke, at a G8 meeting in Italy, said current measures against poppy growers had been "a failure".

The conference of foreign ministers in Trieste also called for credible elections in Afghanistan in August.

Mr Holbrooke said that existing programmes of eradication had not reduced by one dollar the amount of money the Taliban earned from production.

"Spraying the crops just penalises the farmer and they grow crops somewhere else. The hundreds of millions of dollars we spend on crop eradication has not had any damage on the Taliban."

"On the contrary, it has helped them recruit. This is the least effective programme ever," Mr Holbrooke added.

‘Sad joke’

Mr Holbrooke said in future destruction of poppy fields would be phased out and the money instead redirected to farmers to grow different crops.

The move was welcomed by delegates at the G8 conference.

One said the policy of eradication had been a "sad joke".

The Italian Foreign Minister, Franco Frattini, said the G8 backed President Hamid Karzai’s appeal to the Taliban to take part in the Afghanistan elections in August.

Richard Holbrooke said the fairness of the elections would determine the legitimacy of the government.

"We have just seen a spectacularly bad example just next door in Iran", he said.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.