Thursday, March 25, 2010

Landslide lake threatens massive floods N.Pakistan

Asian Defense News:

GILGIT, Pakistan - Authorities in northern Pakistan are struggling to prevent the bursting of a natural dam formed by a landslide that could affect more than 50,000 people and sever an important trade link with China.

The landslide, in early January, killed 14 people and blocked the Hunza River, creating a huge lake that inundated several villages and left about 25,000 people stranded.


Residents says the government has not done enough to get supplies and contain the threat of a breach.

"We know it's a natural disaster, but we are not satisfied with the government's belated efforts," said Mirza Hussain, a lawmaker in the district assembly.

Officials are scrambling to ease pressure on the dam by creating a spillway, and say they do not see any immediate threat of a breach. But residents say the situation is extremely precarious.

"The water level is rising every day, adding to the pressure which could lead to a breach in the lake," Hussain said.

People like Amin Khan, a resident of Aina Abad, a village where people now almost cut off above the new lake, fault the government for the slow trickle of relief supplies -- many of which now have to be airlifted.

"I have lost my house and land due to this lake, but we are not getting sufficient relief. Its really pathetic," said the 32-year-old Khan, who runs a computer shop 28 km away from his residence in a commercial neighbourhood.

"WATER RISING"

Every passing day adds more than a foot to the 226-ft .

The lake has also blocked a 1.3 km stretch of the Karakoram Highway , a road linking Pakistan and China through the Himalayas and a trade route for a significant portion of Pakistan's consumer goods.

Hussain, who is also a member of a regional commerce body, said because of the KKH blockage, nearly 300 trucks loaded with Chinese goods were stuck at a dry port upstream, with still more goods in 60 warehouses.

A senior official at the NDMA, that was formed after a October 2005 earthquake that killed 73,000 people in the country's northwest, said all precautionary measures had been taken to prevent any human loss.

"Possibilities of an outburst exist, but the chances are very remote and we are prepared for the worst," said Col. Amir Siddique.

Work is under way to remove debris and create a spillway, due for completion by mid-April, that would provide a channel into the riverbed for a controlled outflow of lake water.

But an official involved in the rehabilitation efforts, who declined to be identified, said there would still be a danger of flash floods, as the chance of a breach exists until the pressure on the blockage is reduced.

"In the worst case scenario, if the lake bursts the water will damage or destroy all bridges in the area and will damage the KKH," the official said.

He said the wave, which could be as high as 50 metres at its start, would affect nearly 11,000 people in districts of Gilgit-Biltastan and another 40,000 to 50,000 people downstream.

Indonesia closes private radio station

Asian Defense News: JAKARTA, Indonesia – Indonesian officials have shut down a private radio station that aired reports about the Falun Gong group, saying Thursday that it did not have the proper operating license.

But the director of Radio Erabaru (New Era Radio), which broadcasts news and entertainment in Mandarin and Indonesian languages from Batam island, accused government officials of bowing to pressure from the Chinese government.

Raymond Tan said he believed the Wednesday raid and seizure of radio transmission equipment by police and officials with the Radio Frequency Monitoring Office was the result of complaints made by the Chinese Embassy.

Calls to the embassy seeking comment were not answered Thursday.

China banned the Falun Gong spiritual movement more than a decade ago, calling it an "evil cult." Some of the movement's leaders and thousands of followers were arrested.

Raymond said the Chinese Embassy had sent a letter in 2007 to Indonesian authorities complaining about the radio station's broadcasts. That pressure has continued, he maintained, saying "it was clear" that Chinese intervention played a role in the station's closure.

Waving banners, about 20 members of the station's supporters held a rally outside the government monitoring office, protesting the closure of the station. "Stop China's intervention into Indonesian press freedom," and "This is Indonesian territory, not China! Why should we listen to them?" read banners unfurled at the peaceful protest.

Gatot Dewa Broto, a spokesman for the Ministry of Communication and Information, confirmed the station was shut down but denied any Chinese role. Instead, he said the radio station did not have the correct permit to broadcast.

"Such a measure of restoring law and order is a normal thing," he said.

But Raymond said the decision was unacceptable since the radio station is awaiting a court ruling on a lawsuit filed over the ministry's refusal to grant the license since 2007.

"We have told them that we are still waiting for the Supreme Court's ruling, but they didn't care," Raymond said.

The radio station's lawyer, Soleh Ali, accused the Indonesian government of refusing to guarantee the rights of its own citizens.

"In our view, the government is no longer independent," he said.

Philippine court orders arrest of 189 in massacre

Asian Defense News: MANILA, Philippines – A Manila court issued formal arrest warrants Thursday for 189 people suspected in the election-related massacre of 57 people last year, the country's largest murder case since World War II war crime trials.

Most of the suspects are former government-armed militiamen and police loyal to a powerful clan blamed for the slayings.

Manila court orders arrest of 196 massacre suspects

MANILA
Thu Mar 25, 2010 7:13am EDT
Andal Ampatuan Jr. (C), a local mayor of Maguindanao province, is escorted by National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) agents through a waiting vehicle outside the NBI headquarters in Manila February 3, 2010. REUTERS/Romeo Ranoco

Andal Ampatuan Jr. (C), a local mayor of Maguindanao province, is escorted by National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) agents through a waiting vehicle outside the NBI headquarters in Manila February 3, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Romeo Ranoco


The court also issued commitment orders which directed police to continue detaining seven others, including clan patriarch Andal Ampatuan Sr. and several of his sons, who were arrested without formal warrants on suspicion of plotting the Nov. 23 massacre in southern Maguindanao province, state prosecutor Juan Pedro Navera said.

Among those covered by the arrest warrants are 47 police officers who were placed in custody after being suspended by the national police for alleged involvement in the killings, said Francisco Don Montenegro, chief of the national police investigation and detection group.

The 142 others still at large include 99 former militiamen loyal to the clan, 16 police officers and four soldiers, Montenegro said.

Days after the massacre, police arrested Andal Ampatuan Jr. and filed multiple murder charges against him. He was the only person formally charged until prosecutors filed an indictment against his father and 195 others in February. However, arrest warrants were not issued at that time because prosecutors needed time to complete the gathering of evidence and witnesses against them.

The indictment said the clan patriarch and the others were part of a conspiracy to ambush and kill members of the rival Mangudadatu family and their supporters, who were gunned down on a hilltop in Maguindanao. The attack apparently was aimed at preventing Esmael Mangudadatu from challenging the Ampatuans' control of the province in a gubernatorial election in May.

Among those killed were 30 journalists and their staff who were covering the filing of Mangudadatu's candidacy papers.

The massacre was unprecedented even in a country known for election violence and political killings that have claimed hundreds of lives in the last 10 years. Only the war crime trials of World War II Japanese commanders in the Philippines involved a higher numbers of victims, said former Justice Secretary Agnes Devanadera.

The 69-year-old clan patriarch, a political ally of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, has denied any involvement and said the charges were fabricated.

The Ampatuans are also facing separate charges of rebellion for allegedly mobilizing armed resistance against the government after the massacre.

Indonesian zoo welcomes birth of 25 Komodo dragons

Asian Defense News:
An Indonesian zoo is welcoming the births of 25 endangered Komodo dragons, hatched after eight months in incubators.



Veterinarian Rahmat Suharta says the eggs, from three giant female lizards, hatched at the Surabaya Zoo in East Java over the past week.

He said Thursday that the babies, weighing between 2.8 ounces (80 grams) and 4.2 ounces (120 grams), brought to 69 the number of the giant lizards at the zoo, one of the largest in Southeast Asia. Eleven more eggs are expected to hatch in coming weeks.

Komodo dragons can be found in the wild primarily on the eastern Indonesian islands of Komodo, Padar and Rinca. The lizards _ thought to number around 2,500 _ can grow longer than 10 feet (3 meters) and weigh 150 pounds (70 kilograms).

Terror suspect who escaped in Kenya was wanted in Australia

Asian Defense News: NAIROBI (AFP) - – A terror suspect who disappeared from police custody in Kenya earlier this month was wanted in Australia for planning suicide attacks on a Sydney army base, a police source here said Wednesday.

Hussein Hashi Hemed Farah, who has an Australian passport, is wanted for masterminding the attacks on the Holsworthy army base in August last year, a source at Kenya's Anti-Terrorism Police Unit (ATPU) said.

"The suspect was among others who planned to execute the bombing in an army base in Australia but he managed to escape, others were arrested," the source said.

Terror suspect who escaped in Kenya was wanted in Australia

"He is part of the Melbourne terror cell group, and has been on the run for sometime now," he added.

Farah was arrested as he entered Kenya through the Uganda border on March 13, but managed to escape from custody hours later, in what authorities now believe to be collusion with police officers who were on duty at the time.

Kenyan police described Farah as being on a list of individuals barred from entering the country and a senior member of Somalia's hardline Shebab Islamist rebels.

In December, a radical Jamaican cleric on a global terror watchlist was arrested after entering the country from Tanzania, but attempts to deport him sparked riots by Muslims who protested against his arrest.

Abdullah al-Faisal was eventually deported on January 21.