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Monday 14 May 2012

Flash flood kills 28 in Afghan north: officials

Author / Source : Independent Online/afp

KABUL: Flash floods swept through four villages in northern Afghanistan, killing 28 people and leaving 20 others missing, officials said Friday. "Heavy rains overnight triggered flood waters that broke through four mountainous villages in Ishkamish district of northern Takhar province," Takhar provincial governor, Abdul Jabar Taqwa, told AFP.


"It hit around midnight and it was very powerful," said Taqwa.


"We have 28 deaths in Ishkamish district and 20 others are believed to be missing," the governor said.


"It is a big disaster he added," warning that the death toll was likely to rise.


Dozens of houses were washed away and roads blocked, he added. The flood-hit areas are accessible only by air.


Rescuers are trying to reach the area by helicopter, taking food, blankets and tents to the victims.


On Monday, at least 26 people were killed and more than 100 missing after flash floods hit a wedding party and three villages in Sari Pul province.


Afghanistan's harshest winter in 15 years saw unusually heavy snowfalls, and experts predicted melting snow was likely to cause floods in the mountainous north in the spring.


According to IMMAP, a data-analysis and mapping company, 15 percent of Afghanistan’s population is at high risk of being affected.


In March, the UN humanitarian office for Afghanistan said at least 145 people were missing and "presumed dead" after an avalanche hit a remote village in northeastern Badakhshan province.


Despite the billions of dollars in aid from the international community after the collapse of the Taliban, Afghanistan remains among the poorest nations in the world, weakened by decades of conflict.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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China inflation rate slows to 3.4% in April

Author / Source : Independent Online/afp

China's inflation slowed in April from the previous month, official data showed Friday, easing worries of resurgent prices and giving Beijing room to loosen monetary policy to boost slowing growth.


The country's consumer price index (CPI) rose by 3.4 percent year on year in April compared with 3.6 percent in March, the National Bureau of Statistics said, a slowdown analysts said was driven by falling food prices.


The April figure was exactly in line with market expectations, according to a poll of 15 economists by Dow Jones Newswires.


"Inflation is on a downward trend," Ren Xianfang, an economist at IHS Global Insight in Beijing, told AFP.


"As to food prices, which have a big impact on CPI, supply is quite sufficient right now. So overall, we can say that inflationary pressure this year is not big," he said.


The key food component of inflation rose 7.0 percent year on year in March -- contributing more than two percentage points to overall inflation -- but eased from a 7.5 percent rise in March, the bureau said.


China has targeted annual growth in inflation to within four percent this year as Beijing fears surging prices carry the potential to cause social unrest as citizens grumble about paying more.


The producer price index (PPI), which measures the cost of goods at the farm and factory gate and is an indicator of future consumer prices, slipped 0.7 percent in April from a year earlier, a sharper fall than the 0.3 percent in March.


Easing inflation should give China more room to ease monetary policy, including cuts in reserves for banks, to combat slower economic growth.


China's economy grew 8.1 percent in the first quarter of 2012, its slowest pace in nearly three years.


Beijing has already cut bank reserve requirements twice since December as policymakers aim to boost lending to spur growth. Analysts widely expect the government to further loosen monetary policy as it looks to boost growth.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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Sunday 13 May 2012

Philippines on alert over anti-China protest, Beijing frets

Author / Source : Independent Online/reuters

MANILA: Security was tightened in the Philippines capital on Friday ahead of anti-Chinese protests over a territorial dispute in the South China Sea, with both Beijing and Taipei warning their citizens to be on guard for violence.


Some 1,000 people from civil society and political groups were expected to march to a Chinese consular office in Manila to protest against what they say are Chinese intrusions, as tensions increase in the long-standing territorial dispute.


The row in the South China Sea is potentially the biggest flashpoint for confrontation in Asia, and tensions have risen since the United States launched a policy "pivot" last year to reinforce its influence in the region.


"The United States' shift in strategic focus to the east and its entry into the South China Sea issue has provided the Philippines with room for strategic maneuver, and to a certain extent increased the Philippines' chips to play against us, emboldening them to take a risky course," said the Liberation Army Daily, the chief mouthpiece of China's military.


The Philippines is one of Washington's closest allies in the region. The South China Sea islands, believed to be rich in oil and other resources, are claimed wholly or in part by China, the Philippines, Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei.


Beijing has warned Chinese nationals in Manila to stay indoors, avoid demonstrations and refrain from confrontations with locals. It has urged Manila to ensure the safety of its citizens. Taiwan issued a similar warning to its nationals in Manila.


In Beijing, authorities stepped up security around the Philippines' embassy, with squads of police waiting in streets near the mission and plainclothes guards also monitoring passers-by.


For China's ruling Communist Party, which is heading toward an end-of-year leadership succession, the dispute with Manila can divert attention from recent energy-sapping scandals over sacked Chongqing party chief Bo Xilai and blind dissident Chen Guangcheng.


Many Chinese, including military officers, have said popular anger could grow if Beijing remains too soft in responding to rival claims in the South China Sea. A hard approach to the dispute could underline a message of patriotic unity while serving as an antidote to domestic problems.


The Shanghai government-run website, eastday.com, published a photograph on Thursday that it said showed a reporter from a local TV station planting the Chinese flag on the main reef of the Huangyan island, the Chinese name of Scarborough shoal, where the Philippine coast guard and Chinese civilian ships are engaged in a more than month-long staring match.


Besides Manila, organizers planned protests at China's embassies and consulates in the United States, Canada, Australia, Italy and other Asian capitals. However no one showed up to a scheduled protest in Sydney.


Philippine officials said they expected the Manila rally to be peaceful.


More than 100 policemen were guarding the office tower housing the Chinese consular office, with hundreds more on standby to help with crowd control.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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Indonesian rescuers find 12 bodies at jet crash site

Author / Source : independent online/afp

JAKARTA: Indonesian rescuers found 12 bodies Friday in the mountainous terrain where a Russian Superjet with at least 45 people on board slammed into a volcano, the rescue agency said.


"Today we reached the crash site... and we found 12 victims and they were all dead. We will continue the evacuation process," said Daryatmo, head of the national search and rescue agency, who goes by one name.


"I still don't know the condition of the bodies, but we haven't been able to evacuate them. The bodies are still in body bags," he told reporters in Jakarta.


Daryatmo said that rescuers arrived at the difficult-to-reach, jungle site on the sheer face of Mount Salak, where the Sukhoi Superjet 100 slammed into the dormant volcano south of Jakarta, by foot and helicopter.


Crews used climbing equipment including ropes to ascend the near-vertical mountain face, authorities said.


Helicopters had been trying to reach the site since a chopper spotted the wreckage Thursday, but had been hampered by thick fog, according to authorities.


All aboard the flight were killed, authorities said Thursday, a day after the plane crashed during a demonstration flight that was meant to spur international sales of Russia's first post-Soviet civilian jet.


The company representing Sukhoi in Indonesia, Trimarga Rekatama, originally said 50 people were on board but Thursday revised the number to 45. Local rescue officials said the plane was carrying 46 people.


Those aboard were mostly Indonesian aviation representatives, but there were also eight Russians -- four of them crew and four Sukhoi employees -- plus an American and a Frenchman, officials said.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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Saturday 12 May 2012

'Return forever would be happier'

Author / Source : independent online/bdnews24.com

DHAKA: Celebrated contemporary Bengali fiction writer and playwright Humayun Ahmed said he was happy after arriving in Dhaka on Friday morning for three weeks after staying at New York for eight months.


"If I had returned forever after getting done with my treatment, then I would have said I am very happy. But after setting my foot in the country today, I thought one of the 20 days have gone. Only 19 days are left," he told reporters at the Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport after his arrival.


His wife Meher Afroz Shaon, two sons 'Nishad' and 'Ninit' were also with him. They headed straight for Nuhash Polli in Gazipur.


"What I missed so much is my Nuhash Polli. I missed the garden there and the trees. Then I can say that I missed my mother, my friends and relatives," Ahmed said.


Earlier, Anyaprokash Publications Ltd director Abdullah Naser told bdnews24.com that the plane carrying the Humayun family landed at 6am on Friday.


Though he returned to home for 20 days to spend some days with his friends and relatives, the doctors have proscribed not to meet with so many people for the sake of his health condition. "That's why I will spend my time with the nature and trees," Ahmed said.


He, however, said he always wished for the well-being of his legions of fans.


Following their arrival, his wife Shaon said, "The surgeries in his liver and colon will take place after we go back. Then we will return home if everything goes well."


The third cycle of his treatment would start through the operation at Bellevue Hospital in New York on June 12.


Humayun Ahmed, also a renowned filmmaker, went to New York on Sep 13 last year after he was diagnosed with colon cancer during a routine check-up in Singapore.


He took treatment at the Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Centre (MSKCC), a cancer treatment and research institution in New York.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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4 of a family among 5 killed in Gaibandha roadcrash

Author / Source : independent online/unb

GAIBANDHA: Five people including four members of a family were killed as a truck rammed a van near SP office on Gaibandha-Palash road in sadar upazila Friday morning.


The deceased were identified as Shymal Kumer,50, his wife Namita Rani,35, brother Chandan Kumer,40 and aunt Kanchanbala,59 and van driver Asad Ali.


The accident took place when Shymal along with his relatives was taking Nomita Rani to sadar hospital for treatment.


Witnesses said the recklessly-driven truck rammed the van at about 5:30 am, leaving the four members of Shymal’s family dead on the spot and the van driver injured.


Van driver Asad succumbed to his injuries on way to hospital.


The truck driver managed to escape. Police recovered the bodies.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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Photojournalist killed in Capital

Author / Source : Independent Online Report

DHAKA: A photojournalist was killed as a bus hit a rickshaw  from behind  near Ruposhi Bangla hotel in the Capital Friday afternoon.


The victim Shahiduzzaman, 38, a photojournalist of daily Matobad, a local newspaper in Barisal, came to Dhaka to attend an interview for a new job.


Police said the accident took place at about 1:30 pm when a Sadarghat-bound bus of United paribahan hit a rickshaw, leaving Shahiduzzaman dead on the spot and injured his friend Jannatul Ferdous Sohel.


The officer-in-charge of Ramna Thana Mohammad Shah Alam told The Independent that we managed to arrest the killer driver and seized the bus.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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Friday 11 May 2012

Twin car bombs in Syrian capital kill dozens

Author / Source : Independent Online/ap

DAMASCUS: Twin suicide car bombs exploded outside a military intelligence building and killed 55 people Thursday, tossing mangled bodies in the street in the deadliest attack against a regime target since the Syrian uprising began 14 months ago.


The bombings fueled fears of a rising Islamic militant element among the forces seeking to oust President Bashar Assad and dealt a further blow to international efforts to end the bloodshed.


The first car bomb went off on a key six-lane highway during the morning rush hour, knocking down a security wall outside the government building and drawing people to the scene, witnesses said. A much larger blast soon followed, shaking the neighborhood, setting dozens of cars ablaze and sending up a gray mushroom cloud visible around the capital.


Syrian state TV video showed dozens of bodies, some charred or dismembered, strewn in the rubble or still inside damaged cars. An Associated Press reporter at the scene saw medics in rubber gloves picking through the site for human remains amid the two craters that were blasted into the asphalt.


The Interior Ministry, which oversees the police and security services, said 55 people were killed and more than 370 were wounded. Officials said suicide bombers detonated explosives weighing more than 1,000 kilograms (2,200 pounds).


"The house shook like it was an earthquake," Maha Hijazi said, standing outside her home nearby.


World powers seeking to halt Syria's unrest condemned the attack and urged all sides to adhere to a cease-fire brokered by U.N. and Arab League envoy Kofi Annan.


The Obama administration condemned the attack and expressed concern that al-Qaida may be increasingly taking advantage of the country's prolonged instability.


Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told reporters that U.S. intelligence indicates "an al-Qaida presence in Syria," but said the extent of its activity was unclear.


"Frankly we need to continue to do everything we can to determine what kind of influence they're trying to exert there," Panetta said. He also lamented that a month of efforts to implement a U.N. cease-fire plan haven't worked.


British Foreign Secretary William Hague said "the onus is on the Syrian authorities to implement a full cease-fire and begin the political dialogue required by the Annan plan," while the U.N. Security Council said in a statement that "any acts of terrorism are criminal and unjustifiable regardless of their motivation."


Maj. Gen. Robert Mood, the Norwegian head of a team of observers overseeing the cease-fire, toured the site and said the Syrian people do not deserve this "terrible violence."


"It is not going to solve any problems," he said. "It is only going to create more suffering for women and children."


Annan, too, appealed for calm.


"The Syrian people have already suffered too much," he said in a statement.


The blast was the largest and most deadly yet in a series of bombings targeting state security buildings since last December. Most of these have been in Aleppo and Damascus, Syria's two largest cities, which have generally stood by Assad since the popular uprising against his rule broke out in March 2011.


The government blamed the attack on armed terrorists it says are driving the uprising, which has grown into the strongest threat to the Assad family dynasty in its four decades in power.


The Syrian Foreign Ministry sent letters to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the head of the Security Council, asking the body "to take steps against states, parties and media outlets that practice and encourage terrorism," Syria's state news service said.


Syria's U.N. ambassador, Bashar Ja'afari, told the Security Council that a second bombing in Aleppo on Thursday also killed civilians and damaged property.


The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said five intelligence officers were killed when a bomb targeted their car in Aleppo. It was unclear if this was the same event.


A leader of the Free Syrian Army, an umbrella group of anti-regime militias throughout the country, condemned the Damascus attack and denied the group was involved. Capt. Ammar al-Wawi accused the government of staging the attack to turn the world against the uprising.


There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but a shadowy militant group calling itself the Al-Nusra Front has claimed past attacks through statements on militant websites. Little is known about the group, although Western intelligence officials say it could be a front for al-Qaida's Iraq branch.


Ja'afari, Syria's U.N. ambassador, argued that the bombings were evidence of "terrorist activities" by "groups and organizations affiliated with al-Qaida." He also claimed Syria has a list of "12 foreign terrorists" killed in Syria, including one French citizen, one British citizen and one Belgian citizen and he offered the list to the 15 Security Council members.


In Washington, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said he had "no information" that al-Qaida was involved in Thursday's attacks, although he repeated previous statements that intelligence indicates the group does indeed have a presence in Syria.


The scope and mystery of the bombing raised fears that Syria's unrest is transforming from an Arab Spring-inspired call for change into a bloody Iraq-style insurgency.


The uprising began with protests calling for political reform. The government swiftly cracked down, deploying tanks and troops to quash dissent, and many in the opposition took up arms. The U.N. said weeks ago that more than 9,000 had been killed. Hundreds more have died since then.


Annan's peace plan calls for a cease-fire to allow for dialogue by all sides on a political solution. But daily violence has undermined the plan since the truce was supposed to begin April 12, with regime forces still shelling opposition areas and rebels attacking troops.


The bombings appeared to be beyond the capabilities of the known rebel groups, mostly made up of army defectors with light arms. One organizer denied that the rebels have the means or the will to plot such attacks.


"If we had the power to do this, we would have changed the equation a long time ago," said the organizer, who identified himself only as Abu Mustafa, speaking by phone from northern Syria. "We built bombs with fertilizer and now we have a hard time even getting fertilizer."


Some in the opposition blamed the Assad regime.


"It wants to convince the world that if the regime falls, only terrorism will remain," said al-Wawi, of the Free Syrian Army.


Others said the size of the attack set it apart from previous bombings.


An activist who gave only his first name of Lawrence for fear of government reprisal said he heard the booms and felt his building in Damascus shake. While previous bombings in the capital made him suspect that the government somehow staged them, Thursday's blast was different.


"Today, there is no doubt. This was not fabricated," he said, adding that although he didn't know who was behind the attack, he worried it would harm the opposition.


"This will certainly affect us, media-wise and internationally," he said. "This is not to our advantage."


The attack was the fifth to hit Damascus since December 2011, when a car bomb killed 44 people outside an intelligence compound.


On Jan. 6, an explosion at a Damascus intersection killed 25 people, many of them police. Two car bombs on March 17 killed at least 27 people, also near intelligence and security buildings. On April 27, an explosion killed nine security officers. Syrian officials said all were suicide attacks.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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7 killed as bus, truck collide in Sylhet

Author / Source : Independent Online Report

SYLHET: At least seven people including the Sylhet district Awami League senior vice-president were killed and twenty others injured in a head-on collision between a bus and a truck on the Dhaka-Sylhet highway in Osmaninagar upazila of Sylhet early Friday.


Five of the deceased among seven were identified as--- AL leader Iftekhar Hossain Shamim, Baten, Abir, Apu and Rashembor.


Shahinur Rahman Khan, officer-in-charge of Sherpur highway Police Station, said that the accident occurred when a Sylhet-bound bus of Greenline Paribahan collided head-on with a truck coming from opposite direction at Termile in Osmaninagar upazila early in the morning, leaving seven people dead on the spot, reports our Sylhet correspondent.


The injured were admitted to Sylhet Osmani Medical College Hospital for immediate treatment and the dead were shifted to hospital morgue.


The driver of the truck managed to flee.


Source: theindependentbd.com


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