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Archive for March 11th, 2009

The mass-murderer killed by police – Germany

Posted by African Press International on March 11, 2009

BERLIN, March 11 (Xinhua) — The gunman who killed 15 people at a German school was shot dead on Wednesday by police after the shooting spree, police said.

The death toll has risen from previous 10, including nine students and one teacher at the school.

A shootout broke out afterwards when the police tried to catch him, backed by helicopters. Two additional passers-by were killed and two policemen seriously injured, bringing the total death toll to 16 including the gunman, a police spokesman said.

In early reports, the German mass circulation newspaper Bild reported on its website that the attacker killed himself at a park house of a shopping center at about 12:35 local time. His parents reportedly have 18 guns in house.

The killing, which local authorities said was the worst school shooting in Germany in seven years, occurred at 9:30 a.m. local (0830 GMT) time at the Albertville high school in Winnenden near Stuttgart. The gunman later fled the school to the centre Winnenden, a town of 28,000, an eyewitness said.

Earlier reports said the killer, 17-year-old, is a former student of the school with 1,000 students. The school was evacuated immediately after the shooting.

At least ten helicopters are hovering over the scene amid a mass police search, German television reports said.

Police is searching the parents’ house of the suspect, the German televion n-tv reported.

Germany has seen several school shootings in past years.

In April 2002, a gunman killed 17 and eventually himself at a high school in the eastern city of Erfurt, which was the worst school shooting recorded in the country.

source.chinaview

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Nine students between 14 and 15 years old and three teachers were killed after the shooter, identified as Tim K., entered two classrooms and started the shootout – Germany

Posted by African Press International on March 11, 2009

BERLIN, March 11 (Xinhua) — Germany was shocked by a tragic school shooting on Wednesday which killed 16 people, including the 17-year-old gunman apparently killing himself in a standoff with police.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel described the shooting spree as an appalling crime, adding that Wednesday is a day of sorrow for the whole of Germany.

The gunman, reportedly a former student of the school, went on shooting spree around 9:30 a.m. local time (0830 GMT) at the Albertville high school in the town of Winnenden near the southwestern German city of Stuttgart.

Nine students between 14 and 15 years old and three teachers were killed after the shooter, identified as Tim K., entered two classrooms and started the shootout, local officials said at a press conference. Police said that earlier reports that another student died of her wounds in the hospital were incorrect.

On fleeing the school, the attacker also shot dead an employee of a clinic near the school.

The gunman then hijacked a car and forced the driver to drive him to another town called Wendlingen. He shot dead another two people at a car dealership in an industrial zone and injured two police officers before shooting him to death during a standoff, local official said at a press conference.

It was the worst school shooting in Germany since April 2002 when a 19 year-old high school student went on rampage and killed 17 and eventually himself at a high school in the eastern city of Erfurt.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed shock at the shooting spree, describing it as an appalling crime.

”It is hard to understand that within seconds students and teachers were robbed of their lives by an appalling crime,” Merkel said in a televised statement.

She also expressed deep sympathy with families and relatives of the victims and promised whatever helps needed.

“This is a day of sorrow for the whole of Germany,” she said.

German President Horst Koehler also expressed sympathy with families and friends of the victims.

The German government announced that government buildings will fly flags at half mast on Thursday and the day of funeral service.

Local officials said, father of the gunman, a local businessman and member of a sport-shooting club, possesses 15 registered weapons. The gunman apparently had taken one of the pistols and over 100 rounds of munitions with him for the crime.

The motive of the gunman is still unknown. While pointing out that the victims are mainly female, including eight girls and three female teachers, local officials said it might be a coincident.

Neighbors said that the shooter, who graduated from the school in 2007, was reserved and a loner who liked to play shooting at the basement of his parents’ house. He also had a large collection of horror videos.

source.chinaview

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The Sudanese will not yield – NGOs must leave

Posted by African Press International on March 11, 2009

Sudanese gov’t sticks to expelling foreign NGOs despite pressures

KHARTOUM, March 11 (Xinhua) — The Sudanese government has so far seemed to stick to its decision to expel 13 foreign nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) working in Darfur, after accusing them of engaging in activities endangering the security of Sudan.source:Chinaview – Editor: Yan

Among international pressures, U.S. President Barack Obama has imposed the latest one that criticized Khartoum’s decision to expel the NGOs and warned of a humanitarian disaster in Darfur.

But the Sudanese government insisted that it was in its sovereignty to make the decision which was “irreversible”. It has prepared itself for all possibilities, and did not rule out an escalation in the international decision-making circles, which could end up with a withdrawal of all the other organizations in Darfur in order to increase pressure on Khartoum.

Gotbi Mahdi, a prominent figure in the ruling Sudanese National Congress Party (NCP) headed by President Omar al-Bashir, told a press conference on Wednesday that “all the organizations working in Darfur would pull out in order to increase pressure on Sudan.”

”We are counting for all the possibilities, we are expecting all the scenarios, and we will march along the road which we have mapped out despite the increasing pressure,” Mahdi noted.

The Sudanese government has sent teams to assess humanitarian needs in Darfur, stressing that the expulsion of these organizations would not result in a gap in the field of human services as it had taken necessary measures to meet the shortage of urgent needs.

Now the expulsion of the NGOs has apparently entered a new phase as it may be entitled a confrontation between Sudan and the new U.S. administration.

During a meeting on Tuesday with Mohamed Mandor Al-Mahdi, secretary of political relations in NCP, U.S. Charge d’Affaires in Khartoum Alberto Fernandez expressed Washington’s concern over expulsion.

Obama met with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday at the White House to discuss the Darfur crisis following expulsion of the foreign organizations from Darfur in western Sudan.

The Sudanese government has accused Ban of delivering false information to the U.S. administration about Khartoum’s decision to expel 13 foreign organizations working in Darfur.

In a statement issued on March 5, Ban has called on President al-Bashir to reconsider the decision, saying that the operations of these NGOs are key to helping 4.7 million people in the largest country in Africa in terms of area.

The Sudanese government has ordered the expulsion of 13 out of 85 NGOs working in Sudan and enlightened through the media the justification for the expulsion of these organizations out of the country.

The government has announced that it took the step on the basis of clear and conclusive evidences against the deported organizations.

Minister of State in the Sudanese Ministry of Information Kamal Obeid said that the government was updating the evaluation of the existence of foreign organizations in Sudan.

He warned that any organization found to exceed the mandate would face the same fate of its precedents.

Mutrif Sadig, undersecretary in the Sudanese Foreign Ministry, said that the decision to expel organizations was not irreversible because the organizations violated the laws of the country.

He noted that more than one hundred organizations operating throughout the country would not face any problem as long as they abide by the laws.

Source.chinaview – editor/Yan

Sudanese gov’t sticks to expelling foreign NGOs despite pressures

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Before US elections API projected that If Obama got the job he will dialogue – Now he has started

Posted by African Press International on March 11, 2009

Barack Obama, the US president, has hinted at holding talks with “moderate” elements of the Taliban, but are they willing to engage?

The Pakistani Taliban, black-turbaned and bearded, stand in full view of the public.

One grips a rocket launcher, and casually leans against a wall. Another, his AK 47 assault rifle slung underneath his arm with the safety trigger off, smiles.

These are men who would like you to think, at least, that they are prepared for anything.

But are they prepared for peace?

This was the scene I saw on a recent trip to the Swat valley. Once a tourist haven, it is now controlled by the Pakistani Taliban and visited, very rarely, by journalists.

But more than anything else, this ancient valley and what happens here could have crucial effect on the US’s fortunes in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Barack Obama, the US president, has said success in Afghanistan involves more than just troops. He talks of reaching out to people who are, in his words, “Islamic fundamentalists”.

That is exactly what has happened in the Swat valley and Bajaur; key battlegrounds in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province.

The Pakistanis, involved in a bitter battle with the Taliban for a number of years, have began to realise that military force alone will not win the war.

Stalemate

According to most experts in Pakistan, the battle was at a stalemate. So, in a move that surprised and concerned Pakistan’s friends in Washington, they reached out to the Taliban in the Swat Valley through the use of intermediary Mullah Sufi Mohammed.

It was a risky gesture. The mullah had spent time in jail for commanding fighters in cross-border raids into Afghanistan. He is avowedly pro-Taliban and religiously conservative – exactly the type of man who has made life difficult for the Americans in the past.

Yet the Pakistanis took the decision to engage. They found in Sufi Mohammed a moderate cleric they could do business with. He in turn sat down with Mullah Fazlullah, leader of the Pakistani Taliban in the Swat valley, and talked.

Sufi Mohammed had an advantage; Mullah Fazlullah was his son in law and here that relationship matters.

However, according to General Talat Masood, a retired Pakistani army lieutenant, the Pakistanis had little choice. They had to do something as their war in the Swat Valley was losing support domestically, as well as draining resources for very little return.

“At least three times the Pakistan launched a major offensive in the Swat Valley, but it was the follow up that was poor and after each offensive when the army left the Taliban came back, and came back in major strength,” he says.

After intense negotiations a peace deal was signed and Pakistan breathed a little more easily.

Fragile truce

So far it has been a fragile truce with one journalist killed and the government’s top administrator kidnapped briefly. It could yet fall apart over a key sticking point – the implementation of Sharia, or Islamic law, in the valley and what form that could take.

The peace deal has also attracted criticism from those who believe Pakistan has given up too much and that the armed group has won.

Crucially, though, the ceasefire is holding. The markets are busier and people forced to flee their homes are returning slowly to rebuild lives. The Pakistani army is now in a reactive, rather than aggressive, mode and policemen are back out on the streets.

According to Swati resident Nawab Ali the peace deal is welcome: “It’s something. If the Taliban stick to it then yes, I am hopeful, I hope it lasts.”

It is a hope shared by many.

Moderates’ fears

The US has beenwatching this deal closely. But can they replicate it in Afghanistan? Are there “moderate” Taliban they can reach out to?

Talat Masood, the retired army lieutenant, is sceptical: “The leadership of the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan is in the hands of people who are not moderate.

“There are moderate Taliban but they won’t talk for fear of offending the senior leadership, and this is the problem the Americans face.”

There is also mounting evidence that the peace deal struck in the Swat valley and the neighbouring Bajaur agency may conceal another – for the US at least – dangerous agenda.

Three of Pakistan’s top Taliban leaders have come together to form what they have called a  The Council of United Holy Warriors.

The men were once bitter rivals: Baitullah Mehsud, Hafiz Gul Bahudar and Maulvi Nazeer fought Pakistani troops and favoured their Jihad against them.

Together they control huge swathes of North and South Waziristan, The lawless tribal region that sits next to the Paktia, Paktika and Khost Provinces in Afghanistan.

That is a region that has seen some of the most intense fighting between the Taliban and US and Coalition  forces.

Exporting the fight

In Bajuar, Maulvi Faqir Mohammed, a Taliban spokesman, has told Al Jazeera that they will take their fight to Afghanistan instead of the Pakistani army.

The reason for this change in tactics? Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar.

Omar has reportedly been watching events in Pakistan with concern. He is said to have dispatched a high-level delegation to Taliban fighters with a simple message: “Unite and fight not your own people, but the occupiers of Afghanistan.”

It would appear that message has now being heeded and that may be the real reason the Taliban have decided to engage in the Swat valley and Bajuar.

This is a real issue for the Americans who want to reach out to the Taliban.

According to Masood, the US is weak. “It’s in no position to negotiate with anyone. The Taliban have made it clear that peace talks cannot take place without the occupier first leaving Afghanistan.”

Perceptions

It is that perceived weakness that many say has led the US president to talk of alternative strategies.

It may not be that easy, however. Any peace deal with the Taliban has to include men like Mullah Omar and Baitullah Mehsud. Hardliners who are no mood to compromise.

By wondering aloud whether there are moderates he can talk to, the US president has shown he is taking advice from those who have long advocated a more reconciliatory approach.

But, rather predictably, peace in Afghanistan and Pakistan is more complicated than just talking to the Taliban.

It is a widely held view here that Pakistan needs the Taliban to remain strong in Afghanistan in order to thwart any plans their traditional rival India has in the region.

The US has long accused Pakistan of playing a double game when it comes to the Taliban – one that sees them publicly back the so called “war on terror” but privately need the Taliban as a strategic asset. It is a charge the Pakistanis deny.

Experts also say the Pakistanis are well aware that one day the US and coalition forces will leave Afghanistan. Pakistan will need all the influence it can muster if it is to have a say in future Afghan affairs.

Sources have also told Al Jazeera that despite the peace deal in the Swat Valley, the Taliban still have training camps and are sending young men into Afghanistan to fight. That is something the US has long feared would happen under any peace deal.

Facing challenges

The US now has a serious challenge on its hands. Finding moderates to talk to will be difficult and the US may well be asking for too much. It will want the Taliban to lay down arms, drop its support for al-Qaeda and participate in the democratic process it hopes will take root in Afghanistan.

All things the Taliban on both sides of the border may not be willing to do.

As the drone attacks continue in Pakistan and Taliban fighters mount raids on US forces and both Pakistan and Afghanistan face political crises at home, domestic conditions for dealing with the Taliban are rapidly deteriorating.

It would seem the US has made a bold leap in its thinking. Translating that into action, however, may prove to be difficult.

Source.Al Jazeera

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