Thursday, September 2, 2010

Butt, Amir, Asif dropped from Pakistan side

The three Pakistan cricketers at the centre of a betting scandal have been dropped from the squad for the remainder of the tour of England, team manager Yawar Saeed said Thursday.

The three, Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Amir and test captain Salman Butt, will be meeting Pakistan Cricket Board and government officials today. But while these players have been dropped from the side, Yawar Saeed has clarified that not all might be suspended.

“Great players come and go but cricket must move on. We have asked the board to provide alternate players,” Yawar said.

Pakistan would also seek replacements for the five one-day limited overs games againstEngland, Saeed added, denying the trio had been suspended.

“The T20 squad will remain what it is here this morning, ie 13 people,” Saeed said. “When we play the one-day internationals we will be asking for replacements to make the squad up to 16.

Saeed added he could not comment about the trio's state of mind, saying: “They are still here. I cannot answer anything on their behalf because investigations are being made by Scotland Yard and the ICC (International Cricket Council) and others.

“The game must go on, cricket will be played at its best.”

NASA drone to overfly hurricane threatening US

LOS ANGELES: A pilotless NASA aircraft is set to overfly Hurricane Earl on Thursday, in a scientific first to gather data about the potentially-deadly storm front bearing down on the US east coast.

After taking off from Edwards Air Force base in California, the converted Global Hawk drone plane will use a battery of instruments to study how hurricanes develop into awesome forces of nature.

“This is a real adventure for this airplane,” said Commander Phil Hall, who will remotely control the plane from the military base near Los Angeles on the US West Coast.

“Going over a hurricane, for any airplane, is a bit risky, and we are kind of breaking a new frontier with this flight,” he told AFP.

Thousands of people have evacuated North Carolina's barrier islands as Hurricane Earl threatened to pound large areas of the US East Coast with heavy winds and rough seas.

The strongest Atlantic storm of 2010 was on a path to lash the North Carolina coast and then move north, wreaking havoc on the end-of-summer US Labor Day holiday weekend that usually draws millions to the beaches.

The Global Hawk proved its mettle last week when it overflew Tropical Storm Frank off the coast of Mexico but Earl, with speeds of up to 140 miles (220 kilometers) per hour, is in a different league.

Originally built to take photos for military reconnaissance missions, the aircraft “is not designed for turbulence or for bad weather,” Hall said.

“We have to take a lot of extra steps to make sure we don't exceed the performances of the aircraft... But we have a very good vibration system. So if we get that kind of turbulence, we'll know right away.”

The plane may be fragile, but NASA is expecting a lot from it. The space agency's three aircraft are part of its Genesis and Rapid Intensification Processes (GRIP) hurricane research mission.

The NASA mission aims to learn more about why and how storms gain or lose power, growing into mighty hurricanes or fizzling out to mere strong winds, over the course of sometimes only a few hours.

“Certainly there are many good tools already on other airplanes but this one allows us to develop satellite-like instruments,” said Gerry Heymsfield, a NASA research meteorologist.

“We are trying to understand what does lead to the intensification of the storms, because if we can understand some of these processes, we will be allowed to forecast better.” One key asset of the Global Hawk is that it can stay continuously aloft for 30 hours.

“We can take this airplane from here, in California, to the North Pole, and about 10 hours after, come back here in one flight,” said Hall.

“That's why this aircraft has capabilities that are so interesting to scientists.”In the near future, NASA hopes to move the planes' base to the East Coast closer to where many storms develop over the Atlantic to make even better use of its long flight time.

The GRIP program will notably give NASA a better understanding of how sand and dust from Africa's Sahara desert feed into storms.

“The general theory is that Saharan dust inhibits the formation of storms.

But it's not always the case,” said Heymsfield.

“The big picture is to help improve the forecast. So for the public, it allows us to increase safety and warnings,” added Hall. – AFP

Another 100 Indian fishermen released

KARACHI: Another batch of 100 Indian fishermen was released on Thursday by Malir jail authorities.

According to jail officials, the fishermen were released in the morning to facilitate their travel to Wagah border where they will be handed over to Indian officials.

The fishermen were arrested for violating Pakistani territorial waters.

The government has ordered the release of 442 Indian fishermen as a gesture of goodwill. First batch of 100 fishermen was released on August 30 from Malir jail.

The remaining fishermen will depart for India on September 4 and 6 respectively. — APP

China says reports of troops in Pakistan wrong

BEIJING: China on Thursday dismissed reports saying troops of the People's Liberation Army are in a disputed area of Pakistan.

The New York Times ran an opinion piece last week which said up to 11,000 soldiers of the People's Liberation Army were in Gilgit, a northwest area of disputed Kashmir.

''The story that China has deployed some military in the northern part of Pakistan is totally groundless and out of ulterior purposes,'' Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at a regular briefing.

''Some people are making fabrications to destroy relations between China, Pakistan and India but their attempt will arrive nowhere,'' she said.

The piece by Selig Harrison, director of the Asia program at the US-based Center for International Policy, said China wants control of the region to get clear road and rail access to the Gulf through Pakistan. It said many of the soldiers are working on a railway link.

The article comes amid reports of military unease between China and India.

Earlier this week China said it had not received word from New Delhi that it had suspended military exchanges, despite Indian media reports that relations had been put on hold after Beijing refused to grant a visa to a top Indian army general from the Indian-controlled part of Kashmir.

An anonymous senior Indian official was quoted in the Hindu newspaper Saturday as saying that future military exchanges and a joint exercise between Indian and Chinese defense forces would remain suspended until China resolves the issue.

China's Ministry of National Defense said in a statement faxed to The Associated Press that it had not suspended the exchanges nor received word from India about any suspension.

Indian media reports said the suspension was New Delhi's response to Beijing denying a visa for Indian army Lt. Gen. B.S. Jaswal, who was scheduled to join a military delegation to China.

Jaswal was denied a visa because he is responsible for army operations in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir, the reports said.

Jiang said such reports were untrue and that Beijing had no intention to interfere in the Kashmir dispute. ''As a neighbor and friend of both countries, China believes that the issue should be left to the two countries so that it can be properly handled through dialogue and consultation.''

India and Pakistan, an ally of China, both control part of the Himalayan region while claiming all of it. China also claims part of northeastern Kashmir that it says is part of Tibet.

While relations between China and India have improved in recent years, they are still testy over territorial claims dating back to a brief border war in 1962.

In recent years, India and China have held more than a dozen rounds of talks on settling the border dispute but have made little progress.

Beijing is also highly critical of India's support for the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet in 1959 and set up a government-in-exile in the northern Indian hill town of Dharmsala. – AP

Iran hardliners attack opposition leader’s home

TEHRAN: Hardline “thugs” surrounded the home of opposition Iranian leader Mehdi Karroubi, pelting the building with rocks to prevent the cleric from attending a rally on Friday, his website said.

In the latest such incident, members of the Islamist Basij militia “violently attacked” the building where the opposition cleric lives, the sahamnews.org website said.

The militia, “in a coordinated and pre-planned action, gathered in front of the building which houses Mehdi Karroubi,” the website said.

“The Basij thugs... with the support of police... disrupted public order and peace. They threw stones, sprayed the building with paint and stole security cameras of the building” in northern Tehran, the report said.

It said the Basij had been gathering outside the building every night since Sunday, and that the harassment was meant to prevent the opposition leader from attending annual nationwide rallies marking Quds Day, or Jerusalem Day.

They were “intimidating and terrorising public opinion, especially to prevent Karroubi from participating in the Quds Day rally,” Sahamnews said.

Every year Iran organises pro-Palestinian marches across the country on the last Friday of Ramadan, an event started by revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as a protest against arch-foe Israel.

At a similar rally last year supporters of Karroubi and fellow opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi staged demonstrations against the hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his government.

Karroubi, along with Mousavi, have remained steadfast in rejecting the re-election of Ahmadinejad last year. They continue to claim that his victory was the result of massive vote rigging.

Their opposition to Ahmadinejad has deeply divided Iran's ruling clergy, in turn threatening the very pillars of the Islamic republic.

The Sahamnews report said Karroubi's wife Fatemeh has already written a letter to Iran's hardline supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, complaining about the siege of their home.

“What have differences between my husband and your highness on issues which we all know about got to do with the right of my family to live?,” Fatemeh Karroubi wrote in the letter, according to the website.

Opposition websites claim that the two opposition leaders have been previously attacked by hardliners during public rallies, and that Karroubi has been surrounded and harassed by supporters of Iran's hardline faction on other occasions. – AFP

Wealthy landowners accused of diverting floods to villages

ISLAMABAD: Wealthy landowners in Pakistan have allegedly diverted waters from the country's devastating floods away from their own properties and into villages, the country's UN ambassador said Thursday.

Abdullah Hussain Haroon called for an inquiry into claims that embankments had been allowed to burst to protect commercial crops.

“Over the years, one has seen with the lack of floods, those areas normally set aside for floods have come under irrigation of the powerful and rich,” Haroon told the BBC's HardTalk programme.

“It is suggested in some areas, those to be protected were allowed, had allowed, levies to be burst on opposite sides to take the water away. If that is happening the government should be enquiring.”

A month of catastrophic flooding has killed 1,760 people and affected more than 18 million, according to the UN, and large areas of Pakistan, especially in the Sindh province, remain under water.

More than 3.6 million hectares of productive farmland have been destroyed by the floods.


Lahore mourns triple bombing as death toll rises

LAHORE: The death toll from suicide attacks that targeted a busy procession in Pakistan's eastern city of Lahore rose to 31 on Thursday as six people succumbed to their injuries, officials said.

Three suicide bombers targeted a Shia mourning procession made up of thousands of people on Wednesday at the moment of the breaking of the fast in the holy month of Ramazan, wounding hundreds.

It was the first major attack in Pakistan since devastating floods engulfed a fifth of the volatile country over the past month in its worst disaster yet.

“Thirty-one people have died and a total of 281 were injured,” Fahim Jehanzeb, a spokesman for Lahore's rescue agency told AFP, adding that he feared more would die from their injuries.

Sajjad Bhutta, a senior local administration official, also confirmed the new death toll.

A mass funeral was hastily arranged for later in the day with police and paramilitary providing tight security, while local authorities announced a day of mourning with all public and private institutions closed.

An AFP reporter said that all markets were closed and the roads were quiet on Thursday, after the attacks provoked an outpouring of fury in the city a night earlier, with mourners trying to torch a nearby police station.

Police fired tear gas to force back the surging crowd as furious mourners beat the bodies of the suicide bombers with sticks and shoes, while others beat their own heads and chests at the site of the attacks in frustration.

The emotional crowd chanted slogans against the police and the provincial government over their failure to protect the Shia procession, an AFP correspondent on the scene said.

Lahore, a city of eight million, has been increasingly subject to Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked attacks in a nationwide bombing campaign that has killed more than 3,600 people in three years.

The procession hit by the blasts was being held to mark the anniversary of the martyrdom of Hazarat Ali, who is revered by Shia Muslims and is the son-in-law of the Prophet Mohammed.

Shias account for around 20 per cent of Pakistan's mostly Sunni Muslim population of 160 million.

Religious violence in Pakistan, mostly between Sunni and Shiite groups, has killed more than 4,000 people in the past decade, and it is not the first time Lahore has seen bombers target religious gatherings. – AFP

Obama declares emergency ahead of Earl

MIAMI: President Barack Obama says an emergency exists in North Carolina and has ordered federal agencies to help state and local officials with handling any problems caused by Hurricane Earl.

The president’s action Wednesday authorizes the Department of Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to coordinate all disaster relief efforts.
Specifically, FEMA can mobilize equipment and other resources.

Forecasters say Hurricane Earl's winds gusted to about 140 mph (225 kph) as it steamed toward the Eastern Seaboard.

Communities all along the East Coast are keeping a close eye on the storm and several states have already declared emergencies.

US authorities ordered the evacuation Wednesday of thousands of tourists and residents in North Carolina as Hurricane Earl, the strongest Atlantic storm of 2010, wreaked havoc on Labor Day holiday plans.

Briefed by top disaster response aides, US President Barack Obama said officials were preparing for the “worst case” scenario and would do all they could to protect vulnerable east coast communities.

On the final weekend of the US summer holiday, thousands who had planned end-of-season trips were forced to abandon the North Carolina beaches as the coastal region braced for the arrival of the category three storm.

Experts said Earl – once a potentially “catastrophic” category four storm – would spin northeast of the Bahamas on Wednesday, taking aim at coastal North Carolina, with landfall possible early Friday.

At 11:00 am (1500 GMT) the storm was centered about 725 miles south-southeast of the beach retreat of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, and packed winds of 125 miles (205 kilometers) per hour.

Projections from the Miami-based National Hurricane Center showed there was a chance Earl could make landfall as far north as New England before it peters out.

News reports said authorities as far north as Long Island, just outside New York City, were also weighing an evacuation order.

Craig Fugate, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), told ABC television that numerous towns and cities in the storm’s path would face similar tough evacuation decisions in the coming days.

“It’s really based upon each community,” Fugate said, adding that the key was to issue the orders early enough so residents actually had time to flee before the violent weather arrived.

“Unfortunately, it sometimes means the evacuation may start with blue skies and clear weather, and people don’t get that sense of urgency.”

Earl, which brushed past Puerto Rico on Tuesday, has already pummeled the Bahamas and eastern Caribbean with rain and heavy winds that downed trees, damaged homes, blocked roads and snapped power lines.

Throughout the day on Wednesday, the Bahamas were due for large swells that “could cause dangerous surf conditions and rip currents,” the NHC warned.

About 174,000 people lost power in Puerto Rico and 33,000 were left without water, while thousands more lost power on the French islands of Saint Martin and Saint Barthelemy.

Earl comes on the heels of Hurricane Danielle, blamed for rough surf and riptides in New York and New Jersey last weekend.

Meanwhile, tracking closely behind Earl is Tropical Storm Fiona, which was expected to pass over or close to the northern Leeward Islands later Wednesday, packing top winds of 45 miles (75 km) per hour. – Agencies

Hauritz, Hughes in Australia Test squad for India

SYDNEY: Wicketkeeper Brad Haddin was not included in the 15-man squad named on Thursday for Australia’s two Tests in India next month.

Haddin has an elbow injury and will stay behind to rehabilitate ahead of the home Ashes Test series against England later this year, officials said.

“Brad is making good progress with rehabilitation of his elbow tendon injury,” team physiotherapist Alex Kountouris said in a Cricket Australia statement.

“He is due to commence restricted batting in the next few weeks but will not be available to play in the Test component of Australia’s tour of India.

“He is on track to be available for club cricket and for New South Wales with the possibility of being available for selection in the India or Sri Lanka one-day international series.”

Opening batsman Phillip Hughes returns to the Australian squad from a dislocated shoulder, while young fast bowlers, Peter George and Josh Hazlewood, have been selected.

Australia will take two recognised spinners, off-spinner Nathan Hauritz and legspinner Steven Smith, to India.

“India is ranked number one in Test cricket and there is no harder assignment in Test cricket at the moment than playing India on their home soil,” chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch said in the statement.

“The Australian squad is really looking forward to the challenge.

“The Australian team had a very successful home summer last year and an away series win against New Zealand.

“While it was disappointing to draw the series in England against Pakistan, the squad reflects the good performances of the team over the last 12 months as we continue to prepare for the Ashes.”

Hilditch said the selection of Hughes, Smith, George and Hazlewood have the potential to be key players in future Australian teams.

“All these exciting young players have the potential to have a big impact in international cricket for many years and the selection panel is confident they will all equip themselves well if the opportunity presents itself on this tour,” he said.

As the first one-day international of the Indian tour is not scheduled until October 17, Hilditch said the selection panel will monitor the fitness of injured players before making a decision on the squad for the one-day series.

Australia play India in Tests in Mohali (October 1-5) and Bangalore (October 9-13).

Australia: Ricky Ponting (captain), Michael Clarke (vice-captain), Doug Bollinger, Peter George, Nathan Hauritz, Josh Hazlewood, Ben Hilfenhaus, Phillip Hughes, Michael Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Simon Katich, Marcus North, Tim Paine, Steven Smith, Shane Watson.

Slow funding hits 'unprecedented' relief effort

THATTA: Relief efforts in flood-ravaged Pakistan are being stretched by the “unprecedented scale” of the disaster, with the flow of international aid almost at a standstill, the UN said Thursday.

A month of catastrophic flooding has now killed 1,760 people and affected more than 18 million, including eight million who are dependent on aid handouts to survive, it said.

Although the initially slow pace of aid had improved since a visit by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in mid-August, the UN said it has “almost stalled” since the beginning of last week, rising from 274 million dollars to 291 million dollars - about two thirds of funding needs.

“Given the number of those in need, this is a humanitarian operation of unprecedented scale,” Manuel Bessler, head of the UN's coordination agency OCHA said in a statement.

“We need to reach at least eight million people, from the Karakoram Mountain Range in the north to the Arabian Sea in the south.”

Thousands of people were trapped by floodwaters in towns in the southern province of Sindh, while others are complaining of going without food or water for days, some forced to live in the rubble of their ruined homes.

The World Bank raised its emergency funding for Pakistan to one billion dollars amid dire warnings about the threat to the country's food supplies.

The floods have ruined 3.6 million hectares (8.9 million acres) of rich farmland and the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said farmers urgently needed seeds to plant for next year's crops.

“Unless people get seeds over the next few weeks they will not be able to plant wheat for a year,” Daniele Donati, director for FAO emergency operations in Asia, the Middle East and Europe, said on Wednesday.

“Food aid alone will not be enough. If the next wheat crop is not salvaged, the food security of millions will be at risk,” Donati warned.

The World Food Programme has warned that Pakistan faces a triple threat to food supplies - with seeds, crops and incomes hit.

In southern Pakistan, hundreds of hungry and desperate families from a relief camp in the city of Thatta blocked the highway to Karachi for three hours Wednesday, demanding the government provide more food and shelter.

“No food or water has been provided to us for the past two days,” Mohammad Qasim, a 60-year-old resident of the flooded town of Sujawal, told AFP.

The protest came as under-fire Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani warned the country faced inflation of up to 20 per cent and slower economic growth because of the floods, warning of job losses and social unrest.

Gilani said an inflation target of 9.5 per cent for 2011 would now likely be in the range of 15-20 per cent, spurred by food shortages, while GDP growth would also slide to 2.5 per cent from the predicted 4.5 per cent.

World Bank chief Robert Zoellick announced an extra 100 million dollars to add to an existing 900 million dollar loan as he met Pakistan's Finance Minister Hafeez Shaikh in Washington on Wednesday.

Zoellick said he and Shaikh discussed plans for institutional and governance reforms in Pakistan in the wake of the disaster.

The World Bank pledged to help Pakistan set up systems for tracking aid flows, and monitoring and evaluating the whole process to tackle waste and corruption.

Floodwaters moving south through Sindh province on their way to the Arabian Sea entered the town of Jati and threatened nearby Choohar Jamoli town on the east bank of the swollen Indus.

Several thousand people were trapped in the two towns, city official Hadi Bakhsh Kalhoro told AFP, and power cuts were hindering rescue efforts.

Most of the 300,000 population of Thatta have returned home, according to officials, after troops saved the city by fixing a breach in river defences.

Sindh is the worst-hit province, with 19 of its 23 districts ravaged as floodwaters have swollen the Indus to 40 times its usual volume.

One million people have been displaced over the past few days alone.

Initial relief efforts are still underway in the country's militant-troubled northwest, nearly two weeks after torrential rains stopped in the region.

The head of the UN refugee agency in Peshawar, the main city in the northwest, said shelter would be provided by next week for 80,000 people cut off from their villages by flooded roads and damaged bridges.

Khalid bin Waleed, a resident of Charsadda, said most of the 350 homes in the village had been destroyed and no government help was forthcoming.

“Now people are living on the rubble of their houses and those better off are camping on their roofs,” Waleed said.

“We have not received any help from the government yet. Only charities are helping people in our area and they are doing a really good job.” – AFP