Sunday, 28 April 2013

2 police officers hurt in shooting outside Italian PM's office...


2 police officers hurt in shooting outside Italian PM's office

By Hada Messia, CNN

Gunman opens fire in Italy


(CNN) -- Two national police officers were wounded Sunday when a gunman shot at officers outside the Italian prime minister's office, authorities said.
The gunman, described as a 49-year-old man, fired six shots at police before being taken into custody, said a national police officer who was not authorized to speak to the media.
The officers didn't suffer life-threatening wounds, and the shooter was also hospitalized -- though not wounded, the source said.
Francesco Puglisi, a journalist for Il Tempo newspaper, heard the shots from his office, then saw police tackle the man.
He ran to the scene and said the face-down suspect appeared calm and was complying with police.
The gunman wanted to commit suicide after the attack but ran out of bullets, Italian Interior Minister Angelino Alfano said in a televised statement.
The shooting took place in front of the prime minister's office, but Enrico Letta was being sworn in as prime minister at the time at the president's palace a short distance away, state-run news agency ANSA said.
The agency also reported that prosecutor Pierfilippo Laviani said the shooter had confessed and was hoping to shoot politicians but found none so he struck out at police.
Security at key government buildings was strengthened after the attack, though officials said they thought it was an isolated incident.
The shooter, who is unemployed, lives in the southern region of Calabria, officials said.
On Saturday, Letta, a center-left politician, accepted a mandate to form a government from President Giorgio Napolitano.
The 46-year-old former deputy prime minister and his ministers were sworn in Sunday, and parliament is expected to confirm his government through a vote of confidence Monday.
Letta's acceptance of the leadership role is expected to limit the uncertainty that has gripped the nation since February when elections left none of the candidates with enough support to form a government.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called Letta a trusted friend of Washington.
"We wish him the best as he promotes reform at home and ensures continued Italian leadership abroad, and we look forward to continuing our close cooperation with Italy on many pressing issues all over the world," Kerry said.

Bosnian court has ordered the detention of its president...


Zivko Budimir arrested in Sarajevo. 26 April 2013 Zivko Budimir was arrested along with at least 17 others

 Bosnian court has ordered the president of the autonomous Bosniak-Croat Federation to be detained for a month on corruption charges.
Zivko Budimir was arrested on Friday along with at least 17 others.
On Sunday, prosecutors said Mr Budimir and four other officials had taken bribes to arrange pardons for convicts. They demanded his detention in case he tried to flee the country.
Lawyers for the accused said they would appeal against the ruling.
The court said it was detaining Mr Budimir and his co-accused aide, Petar Barisic, because of the danger of flight.
Mr Budimir's Party of Justice and Trust has accused state prosecutors of "meddling in politics".
It has described his arrest as a "show of strength put on for the sake of the public".
The Bosniak-Croat Federation, together with the Republika Srpska, make up Bosnia-Herzegovina. Each has its own president, government, parliament, police and other bodies.
Bosnia was split into two autonomous regions - joined by a relatively weak central government - under a US-brokered peace deal that ended the 1992-95 war.

Tuesday, 23 April 2013

Photograph of Car bomb explodes at French embassy in Libya...

Car bomb explodes at French embassy in Libya

Two guards injured in apparent car bomb attack in Tripoli, according to security officials.

BBC

Two guards were wounded in the attack, according to French officials [Photo: Twitter user @Eh4b10]
France's embassy in Libya was hit by what appeared to be a car bomb on Tuesday, injuring two guards in the first such attack in the Libyan capital since the 2011 war that ousted Muammar Gaddafi.
"There was an attack on the embassy. We think it was a booby trapped car," a French official told Reuters. "There was a lot of damage and there are two guards wounded."
In Paris, foreign minister Laurent Fabius condemned what he called a heinous attack and said everything would be done to find the perpetrators.
"I send my solidarity and deepest sympathy to the two injured French guards and my wishes for their recovery," he said in a statement.
One resident living less than 100 metres from the embassy said his windows shook when the first blast occurred.
A witness who lives near the embassy, Asad Naeeli, told Al Jazeera that the bomb went off around 7am [0500 GMT].
“This is a big concern as a Libyan. You hear about things happening in different cities and now it is close to home," he said. "It is a big concern for the security of Libya, it will delay many things."
Diplomatic missions have been targeted in Libya, most notably an attack on the US mission in the eastern city of Benghazi last September that killed the US ambassador and three other Americans.
However Tuesday's attack is the first such serious assault on an embassy or foreign mission in the capital, Tripoli.
Libya's new rulers are still struggling to impose their authority on a country awash with weapons and a myriad of armed militias who often do as they please.

European Union Offers 31.5 billion to Support Cameroon Banana Sector....


European Union Offers 31.5 billion to Support Cameroon Banana Sector

European Union Offers 31.5 billion to Support Cameroon Banana Sector
(Business in Cameroon) - European Union Ambassador, Raul Mateus Paula made the revelation in Douala on Monday April 16, 2013 at a seminar EU organized to launch support measures codenamed Mab for banana exporting countries of the African, Caribbean Pacific Group of States.
Out of the ten countries to be supported, three are in Africa: Ghana, Côte d'Ivoire, and Cameroon. Through this programme EU wants to increase productivity, and also improve the working conditions of workers in the sector.
It is a concern for the EU especially in these three African countries,” Raul Mateus Paula said. Mab will also integrate environmental protection as the EU wants to preserve the natural environment where the crop is grown.
Cameroon currently exports 225,000 tons of bananas yearly but wants to increase the figure to 500,000 tons by 2019. 

Monday, 22 April 2013

French embassy in Libya hit by 'car bomb' ....


French embassy in Libya hit by 'car bomb' in Tripoli

Map
A car bomb has exploded outside the French embassy in the Libyan capital Tripoli, officials are quoted as saying.
The blast is reported to have wounded two guards and badly damaged part of the embassy and surrounding buildings.
The BBC's Rana Jawad, at the scene, said the embassy's reception area had been completely destroyed as well as parts of neighbouring homes.
One official told Reuters news agency: "We think it was a booby-trapped car."
The explosion happened shortly after 07:00 (05:00 GMT) in a smart, residential area of Tripoli.
The blast took place in a small side street, causing extensive damage to the buildings and parked cars, our correspondent said.
She said neighbours were upset and shaken up by the attack, and told her they no longer wanted to live beside an embassy.

Fighting between Nigeria's military and Islamist extremists killed at least 185...


Nigeria violence kills at least 185

Fighting between Nigeria's military and Islamist extremists killed at least 185 fishing community members on Friday
Nigeria violence kills at least 185 Nigeria
Nigeria: the unrest saw insurgents fire rocket-propelled grenades and soldiers spray machine-gun fire into local neighbourhoods. Photograph: Sunday Alamba/AP
Fighting between Nigeria's military and Islamist extremists killed at least 185 people in a fishing community in the nation's far northeast, officials said on Sunday.
The fighting in Baga began Friday and lasted for hours, sending people fleeing into the arid scrublands surrounding the community on Lake Chad. The unrest saw insurgents fire rocket-propelled grenades and soldiers spray machine-gun fire into neighbourhoods filled with civilians.
By Sunday, when government officials felt safe enough to see the destruction, homes, businesses and vehicles were burned throughout the area.
The assault marks a significant escalation in the long running insurgency Nigeria faces in its predominantly Muslim north, with extremists mounting a coordinated assault on soldiers using military-grade weaponry.
Authorities said they had found and buried the bodies of at least 185 people as of Sunday afternoon.
Brigadier General Austin Edokpaye said the extremists used heavy machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades in the assault, which began after soldiers surrounded a mosque they believed housed members of the radical Islamic extremist network Boko Haram.
Edokpaye said extremists used civilians as human shields during the fighting – implying that soldiers opened fire in neighbourhoods where they knew civilians lived.
"When we reinforced and returned to the scene the terrorists came out with heavy firepower, including (rocket-propelled grenades), which usually has a conflagration effect," the general said.
The burned bodies of cattle and goats still filled the streets on Sunday. Bullet holes marred burned buildings.
"Everyone has been in the bush since Friday night; we started returning back to town because the governor came to town today," grocer Bashir Isa said. "To get food to eat in the town now is a problem because even the markets are burnt. We are still picking corpses of women and children in the bush and creeks."
The Islamic insurgency in Nigeria grew out of a 2009 riot led by Boko Haram members in Maiduguri that ended in a military and police crackdown that killed some 700 people. The group's leader died in police custody in an apparent execution. From 2010 on, Islamic extremists have engaged in hit-and-run shootings and suicide bombings, attacks that have killed at least 1,548 people before Friday's attack, according to an AP count.
Boko Haram, which means "Western education is sacrilege" in the Hausa language of Nigeria's north, has said it wants its imprisoned members freed and Nigeria to adopt strict Shariah law across the multiethnic nation of more than 160m people. While the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan has started a committee to look at the idea of offering an amnesty deal to extremist fighters, Boko Haram's leader Abubakar Shekau has dismissed the idea out of hand in messages.
Despite the deployment of more soldiers and police to northern Nigeria, the nation's weak central government has been unable to stop the killings. Meanwhile, human rights groups and local citizens blame both Boko Haram and security forces for committing violent atrocities against the local civilian population, fuelling rage in the region.

Mystery remains over motive of Boston Marathon bombing...


Boston Marathon bombing: Mystery remains over motive

A hush fell over Boston as the victims were remembered on Monday
He could be sentenced to death if convicted on either count.
At the hearing, he managed to speak once despite a gunshot wound to his throat sustained during his capture.
Mr Tsarnaev, 19, said the word "no" when asked if he could afford a lawyer. Otherwise he nodded in response to Judge Marianne B Bowler's questions from his bed at Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
The next hearing in his case has been scheduled for the end of May.
The charges mean Dzhokhar Tsarnaev could face the death penalty if convicted.
It has been decided he will be tried in a normal criminal court, not by a military tribunal. He will not be treated as an "enemy combatant", which would mean he wouldn't be allowed the right to remain silent but would be interrogated to gain intelligence about the background to the attack.
The first decision is not particularly controversial, the second is. Several Republican politicians have already attacked the decision saying that it will limit the authorities' ability to gather vital intelligence.
President Obama made it clear shortly after he came to office that people would no longer be treated as unlawful enemy combatants - a term invented by the Bush administration as a new category for terrorists and al-Qaeda supporters fighting in Afghanistan who were not to be given the rights of either prisoners of war or criminals.
His 26-year-old brother Tamerlan, who is suspected of carrying out the attack along with him, was killed during a manhunt last Friday.
Boston observed a moment of silence for the victims at 14:50 local time (18:50 GMT) on Monday, exactly a week after the attack.
The twin bombs which exploded near the finishing line killed three people and injured more than 200.
Of those injured, 13 lost limbs. More than 50 people remained in hospital on Monday, three of them in critical condition.
Motive sought
The 10-page criminal complaint filed against Mr Tsarnaev sets out the attack in detail.
It seeks to locate both suspects at the scene of the bombing and then pieces together the operation to intercept them three days later, as they drove a hijacked car near the city, hours after images of their faces were broadcast by the media.
No mention is made of their possible reasons for attacking the marathon.
However, speaking on condition of anonymity, two US officials told the Associated Press news agency on Monday that the brothers had been motivated by religion.

The Tsarnaev brothers

Tamerlan Tsarnaev (L), 26, and his brother Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19
  • Sons of Chechen refugees from the troubled Caucasus region of southern Russia
  • Family is thought to have moved to the US in 2002, from Russian republic of Dagestan
  • They lived in the Massachusetts town of Cambridge, home to Harvard University
  • Dzhokhar, 19, (right) was awarded a scholarship to pursue further education; he wanted to become a brain surgeon, according to his father
  • Tamerlan, 26, was an amateur boxer who had reportedly taken time off college to train for a competition; he described himself as a "very religious" non-drinker and non-smoker
Both men are known to be Muslims, with origins in the troubled republic of Chechnya in southern Russia. They had been living in the US for about a decade at the time of the attack.
AP's sources said they did not appear to have been linked to any Islamist militant groups.
Little has emerged to suggest the younger brother was a religious militant but the older man appears to have been drawn to radical Islam.
FBI officials interviewed Tamerlan Tsarnaev in 2011 at the request of the Russian government based on such concerns. However, it appears no further action was taken.
Last year, he spent six months in Dagestan, another mainly Muslim Russian republic bordering Chechnya. During the visit, he also reportedly spent two days in Chechnya itself.
An investigation by Radio Liberty has found evidence suggesting he lived on his own in Dagestan for two months, contrary to earlier reports that he was with his father the whole time.
'A little jolly girl'
The funeral was held on Monday of 29-year-old restaurant worker Krystle Campbell, one of the three people killed in the bombing.
She had been at the marathon finish line after going to watch the race with a friend.
Lu Jun attends his daughter Lingzi's memorial service in Boston, 22 AprilLu Jun attended his daughter Lingzi's memorial service in Boston
A memorial service was also held for Chinese graduate student Lu Lingzi, 23, at Boston University.
Her father, Lu Jun, thanked everyone for helping the family over the recent dark days.
"She was the family's Shirley Temple, if you will, the little elf and a little jolly girl, bringing everyone in the family ceaseless laughter,'' he said, speaking through an interpreter.
Ms Lu's roommate, Jing Li, addressed her words to her dead friend: "You need us to be strong and brave.
"We will keep running to finish the race for you and we will try to realise your unfinished dream."
A silence was observed across the state of Massachusetts, to be broken by the tolling of church bells.
In New York, stock exchange traders paused out of respect and commemorative events were held as far away as the Canadian capital Ottawa and French capital Paris.

Saturday, 20 April 2013

Terror, murder charges to be filed against Boston suspect...


Terror, murder charges could be filed against Boston suspect

By Lateef Mungin, CNN

Legal rights of the suspect bomber

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Federal terrorism charges could be filed soon, Justice Department official says
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to get details from U.S. on bombing suspects
  • If physically able, suspect could be in court this weekend, expert says
  • Two U.S. senators say Dzhokar Tsarnaev should be questioned without a lawyer
(CNN) -- Federal terrorism charges against Boston Marathon bombings suspect Dzhokar Tsarnaev could be filed soon, even as he remains hospitalized, a Justice Department official told CNN on Saturday. The 19-year-old could also face murder charges at the state level.
Federal prosecutors are at the heavily guarded Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, where Tsarnaev remains in serious condition while in federal custody, and they are working on formulating the charges.
This development comes amid questions as to what's next for the suspect in the Boston Marathon bombing.
"There are still many unanswered questions," Obama said Friday night. "Why did these young men who grew up and studied here as part of our communities and our country resort to such violence? How did they plan and carry out these attacks? And did they receive any help? The families of those killed so senselessly deserve answers."
The long night of terror comes to an end
Breaking down the Boston bomber capture
Suspect 2: Dzhokar TsarnaevSuspect 2: Dzhokar Tsarnaev
Tracing the suspected bombers roots
Tsarnaev and his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, are accused of setting off bombs at the marathon Monday, killing three people and leaving more than 170 wounded.
On Thursday night, they allegedly killed a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer before the older brother was killed in a shootout with police.
Dzhokar Tsarnaev was captured alive Friday night after he was found hiding in a boat in a Watertown, Massachusetts, backyard.
When will the suspect be in court?
If he is physically able, Tsarnaev could be in a courtroom for an arraignment as early as Saturday.
"In normal circumstances, someone arrested on Friday night would not be arraigned until Monday morning, but because of the extraordinary circumstance here he may be arraigned on (Saturday)," said CNN senior legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin.
Ordinarily at an arraignment, the suspect is provided a lawyer, and the defense and prosecution try to make a case to release him on bail.
"He will not get bail obviously," Toobin said, referring to Tsarnaev. "They will set a preliminary hearing that could happen in the next 30 days. He will be indicted with the grand jury. And that's when the case will begin."
Should bomber suspect get a lawyer?
For now, the government is invoking the public safety exception, a designation that allows investigators to question Tsarnaev without reading him his Miranda rights, a Justice Department official told CNN on condition of anonymity.
In ordinary cases, a suspect is told by police he has the right to remain silent and he has the right to a lawyer.
But this is not an ordinary case, say U.S. Sens. John McCain and Lindsey Graham.
They urged that Tsarnaev be held as an "enemy combatant," a designation that allows a suspect to be questioned without a lawyer and without being informed of his Miranda rights.
"Now that the suspect is in custody, the last thing we should want is for him to remain silent. It is absolutely vital the suspect be questioned for intelligence gathering purposes," the senators said. "Under the law of war we can hold this suspect as a potential enemy combatant not entitled to Miranda warnings or the appointment of counsel."
Alan Dershowitz, a prominent defense attorney and Harvard law professor, scoffed at the senators' statement.
"Impossible. There's no way an American citizen committing a domestic crime in the city of Boston could be tried as an enemy combatant," he told CNN's Piers Morgan. "It could never happen. And that shows absolute ignorance of the law."
Dershowitz also said statements made by police in Boston seems to contradict the government's reasons for invoking the public safety exception.
"The police have said there's no public safety issue; it's solved, it's over," Dershowitz said. "There are no further threats. But the FBI is saying there's enough further threats to justify an exception."
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani said the federal government may have known about international threats about which state officials were not aware.
"You would have to know the internals of what they have before you can assess whether there is a sensible invocation or not," Giuliani said.
If the government had prior knowledge of Tsarnaev's activities, it hasn't disclosed it. It did say that Tamerlan Tsarnaev was on the FBI's radar in the past.
FBI agents interviewed Tamerlan two years ago and also looked at his travel history, checked databases for derogatory information and searched for Web postings. The agency found no connection with terror groups, an FBI official told CNN.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who was not a U.S. citizen, traveled to Sheremetyevo, Russia, in January 2012, according to travel records provided by a U.S. official. He returned six months later.
Federal or state trial?
Dershowitz said there are many arguments that can be made to try the case in state court. It may be hard for a prosecutor to prove which crimes were committed by Tsarnaev or his older brother, Dershowitz said.
"If he says my intent was to please my brother, they could raise the question of federal jurisdiction," Dershowitz said.
This fight over federal or state jurisdiction could mean life or death.
Massachusetts does not have the death penalty.
There's another big question: The National Defense Authorization Act of 2012 requires mandatory temporary military custody of certain terror suspects, but Dzhokar Tsarnaev is a U.S. citizen, and the act doesn't apply to Americans.
U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz said Friday her office is ready to get started on the case.
"My journey and my office's journey begins," Ortiz said. "And this investigation continues. And as the days continue you will get answers."
What is the reaction in the suspects' homeland?
Tsarnaev's family lives in the Russian republic of Dagestan, which is next to the suspects' homeland of Chechnya, located in the North Caucasus region of southern Russia.
Russia's investigative committee in Dagestan said it will not engage with the Tsarnaev family unless there is "an order from above" to do so, spokesman Rasul Temerbekov told Russian state news agency RIA Novosti on Saturday.
A spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin said Saturday that Russia wants to get official information from the United States about the bombing suspects, and he wants there to be contact between investigators in both countries.