الخميس، 5 يونيو 2014

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الجمعة، 30 مايو 2014

'Almost 2,000' killed by Syria barrel bombs in 2014

Almost 2,000 people have been killed by Syrian government air attacks in the northern city of Aleppo so far this year, an activist group says.
The dead included 283 women and 567 children, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).
The Syrian air force has used so-called "barrel bombs" dropped from aircraft to try to put down a rebellion against President Bashar al-Assad.
Aleppo has seen fierce fighting since a rebel offensive in the area in 2012.
The UK-based SOHR said 1,963 people had been killed in the city - Syria's largest - and the surrounding area since January.
The government has used air and ground forces to drive the rebels back, but they remain in control of some areas to the east of Aleppo.
Crude bombs
The SOHR - which has a network of activists around the country reporting on the violence - says more than 162,000 people have been killed in the three-year conflict.
line
Analysis: Jim Muir, BBC News, Beirut
The barrels, packed with explosives, are a crude weapon, rolled out of helicopters, often from high altitude.
They're extremely inaccurate; they cause a huge blast and massive damage, often devastating entire quarters in the densely-built-up areas of Aleppo controlled by rebel forces.
Underlining the complexity of the conflict now going on in Syria, the Syrian observatory has also reported that 15 Kurdish civilians, including seven children and three women, were summarily executed by fighters from the extremist Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), after they overran a village in the north-east of the country.
line
The use of shrapnel-packed barrel bombs in Aleppo and elsewhere has been condemned by international human rights groups.
The bombs are dropped from helicopters and cannot be guided or controlled.
 Fighting between government forces and rebel groups has left much of the city of Aleppo in ruins
A BBC team witnessed the effects of the weapons on Syrian civilians in rebel-held areas of Aleppo in April.
Last week government forces broke a year-long rebel siege of Aleppo's central prison.
Correspondents say the government breakthrough has cut off a major supply route for the rebels from Turkey.

India gang rapes: Outrage over police 'discrimination'

Ever since the fatal gang rape of a student in Delhi in December 2012, there have been public protests and an outcry against sexual violence

There is outrage over police inaction in a village in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh where two teenage girls were gang-raped and hanged from a tree.
The father of one victim says he was ridiculed by police when he sought help in finding his missing daughter.
He said that when policemen found out he was from a lower caste, they "refused to look for my girl".
At least three men, including one policeman, have been arrested in connection with the incident.
Relatives have complained that police refused to help find the missing girls, aged 14 and 16, who were cousins from a low caste.

"When I went to the police station, the first thing I was asked was my caste. When I told them what my caste was, they started abusing me," the father of one of the girls told the BBC.
Divisions between India's castes run deep. Violence is often used by upper castes to instil fear in lower castes.
Although both the victim and the accused belonged to a caste grouping known as 'Other Backward Classes', the victims were lower in that hierarchy.
The victims had apparently gone out to relieve themselves as they had no toilet at home.
Campaigners have highlighted the lack of sanitation in rural areas as being a risk to women's security as well as their health, as they are often attacked when having to go out to go the toilet, particularly at night.
Further suspects hunted
Police said two men had been arrested for the rape and murder of the girls.
A constable was also detained for conspiring with the suspects and for dereliction of duty, authorities said, adding they were looking for one more suspect and one constable.
line
Indian media reacts to hangings
The incident has received top coverage on India's main TV channels such as NDTV, Times Now and CNN-IBN.
"Uttar Pradesh Rape shockers", reads a ticker on NDTV, which accuses the local police of being "complicit" with the attackers and quotes relatives of the two girls saying they have "no faith" they'll receive justice.
"Lawless in Uttar Pradesh" reads a top headline on CNN-IBN, which has started its own campaign using the hashtag #StopThisShame.
"UP: 3 Rapes in 48Hrs" is the lead on the Times Now channel, which reports the growing number of rape incidents in the state of Uttar Pradesh.
"Outrage" is the word used on the front pages of several leading English-language newspapers, including The Hindu and The Indian Express.
In an editorial, The Times of India lays the blame on the government of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Singh, saying the hangings "exposes the state's slide into medieval lawlessness".
Source: BBC Monitoring
line

الخميس، 29 مايو 2014

Honour killings in Pakistan

In 2013, 869 women murdered in so called "honour killings"
• Campaigners say real number is likely to be much higher
• Of these, 359 were so called "Karo Kari" cases, whereby family members consider themselves authorised to kill offending relatives to restore honour
• Rights groups say conviction rate in cases of sexual and other violence against women is "critically low"
Source: Human Rights Commission of Pakistan annual report 2013
line
The newlyweds were only at the Lahore court to contest this case. Ms Parveen had already testified to police that she had married of her own free will.
Mr Iqbal told the BBC that when the couple arrived at the court on Tuesday to contest the case, his wife's relatives were waiting and tried to take her away.
As she struggled to free herself they dragged her to the floor, pelted her with bricks and then smashed her head. She died on the pavement.
UN human rights chief Navi Pillay said she was "deeply shocked" and urged Pakistan's government to take action.

Shahzeb Jillani, BBC News, Karachi

This murder has appalled Pakistan's small but vocal civil society. Social media activists took to Twitter and Facebook to express their shock. English-language newspapers have published strongly-worded editorials to denounce the brutal crime.
But all that is in sharp contrast to the muted reaction in the mainstream Urdu language media which, instead, chose to focus on political and security-related stories.
The killing of a woman in the name of honour remains an appalling reality in villages and towns across Pakistan.
As Dawn newspaper points out in its editorial: "The most shocking aspect of this killing, however, is that all the people witnessing the crime, even the law enforcers, were silent spectators as a woman was bludgeoned to her death."
line
Ms Parveen's father later surrendered to police but other relatives who took part in the attack are still free.
"We arrested a few of them and others are currently being investigated," local police chief Mujahid Hussain said.
Ms Parveen came from a small town outside the city of Lahore. According to reports, her family were furious because she decided to marry Mr Iqbal instead of a man they had chosen.
Her relatives then filed a case for abduction against Mr Iqbal at the High Court.
line

Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif orders action on stoning

Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has described the stoning to death of a woman by her family in front of a Lahore court as "totally unacceptable".
He ordered the chief minister of Punjab province to take "immediate action" and submit a report by Thursday evening.
Farzana Parveen, who was three months pregnant, was pelted with bricks and bludgeoned by relatives furious because she married against their wishes.
Her husband told the BBC that police simply stood by during the attack.
"They watched Farzana being killed and did nothing," her husband, Muhammad Iqbal, told the BBC.
There are hundreds of so-called "honour killings" in Pakistan each year.
This incident has prompted particular outrage as it took place in daylight while police and members of the public apparently stood by and did nothing to save her.
Mr Iqbal described the police as "shameful" and "inhuman" for their failure to stop the attack. 

"We were shouting for help, but nobody listened. One of my relatives took off his clothes to capture police attention but they didn't intervene.," he added.
Arranged marriages are the norm in Pakistan, and to marry against the wishes of the family is unthinkable in many deeply conservative communities.
line
Shahzeb Jillani, BBC News, Karachi
This murder has appalled Pakistan's small but vocal civil society. Social media activists took to Twitter and Facebook to express their shock. English-language newspapers have published strongly-worded editorials to denounce the brutal crime.
But all that is in sharp contrast to the muted reaction in the mainstream Urdu language media which, instead, chose to focus on political and security-related stories.
The killing of a woman in the name of honour remains an appalling reality in villages and towns across Pakistan.
As Dawn newspaper points out in its editorial: "The most shocking aspect of this killing, however, is that all the people witnessing the crime, even the law enforcers, were silent spectators as a woman was bludgeoned to her death."
line
Ms Parveen's father later surrendered to police but other relatives who took part in the attack are still free.
"We arrested a few of them and others are currently being investigated," local police chief Mujahid Hussain said.
Ms Parveen came from a small town outside the city of Lahore. According to reports, her family were furious because she decided to marry Mr Iqbal instead of a man they had chosen.
Her relatives then filed a case for abduction against Mr Iqbal at the High Court.




"We were shouting for help, but nobody listened. One of my relatives took off his clothes to capture police attention but they didn't intervene.," he added.
Arranged marriages are the norm in Pakistan, and to marry against the wishes of the family is unthinkable in many deeply conservative communities




الأربعاء، 28 مايو 2014

Chechen leader Kadyrov denies sending troops to Ukraine

In a statement, Ramzan Kadyrov said that as part of the Russian Federation, Chechnya had no armed forces - and that any Chechens operating in Ukraine were there in a personal capacity.
Monday saw some of the worst fighting since rebels seized much of the east.
The separatists say they lost up to 100 fighters as they tried to seize Donetsk airport from pro-Kiev forces.
Ukraine's interior ministry says the military is now in full control of the airport, although gunfire was reported in Donetsk itself on Wednesday.
A government fighter jet was seen flying over the city.
New President Petro Poroshenko has vowed to tackle the eastern uprising. "We will no longer let these terrorists kidnap people and kill them," he told Germany's Bild newspaper in an interview published on Wednesday.
Missing monitors
Many of the separatists involved in the clashes at the airport were reported to be part of a unit called the Vostok (East) Battalion, said to include fighters from the northern Caucasus.
In a statement released on Wednesday, Mr Kadyrov said: "Ukrainian sources have been circulating reports that some Chechen units from Russia have invaded Donetsk. I officially declare that this is not true."
He added: "There are three million Chechens and two-thirds of them live outside the Chechen Republic, including in the West. We cannot know and are not supposed to know which of them goes where."

Meanwhile, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe says it has lost contact with a monitoring team. Four of its monitors were on a routine mission east of Donetsk when they were stopped at a checkpoint late on Monday, the security body says.
A spokesman told the BBC the men, were Turkish, Swiss, Estonian and Danish. Danish Trade Minister Mogens Jensen said it was believed they were being held by armed separatists.
In a separate development, Poland's foreign ministry says that a Polish Roman Catholic priest who was abducted in Donetsk on Tuesday has been released.
Mr Poroshenko won an outright majority in a presidential election on Sunday.
The poll was called after President Viktor Yanukovych was deposed in February, amid mass protests against his pro-Russian policies.
Separatists in Donetsk and Luhansk declared independence after referendums on 11 May, a move not recognised by Kiev or its Western allies.
The two regions took their cue from a disputed referendum in Crimea, which led to Russia's annexation of the southern peninsula.
Kiev and the West accuse Russia of stoking separatist sentiment in eastern Ukraine - a claim President Vladimir Putin denies.
His foreign policy adviser Yury Ushakov reaffirmed on Wednesday that Moscow "respected" the will of Ukraine's voters but also denounced the Ukrainian army's "provocative military actions".

10 Things to Know for Tuesday

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Tuesday:
1. HOW NEW UKRAINE LEADER PLANS TO CONFRONT INSURGENCY
Petro Poroshenko vows to guarantee the rights of residents in eastern Ukraine, home to many pro-Russia rebels.
2. WHO POPE INTENDS TO MEET AT VATICAN
Pope Francis announces he will host a group of sex abuse victims next month at the Vatican, and declares "zero tolerance" for clergy who would violate a child.
3. 'WE MUST DO MORE TO KEEP FAITH WITH OUR VETERANS'
In Memorial Day remarks, President Obama made a reference to a widening scandal involving poor performance by the Department of Veterans Affairs.
4. ABDUCTED GIRLS LOCATED, NIGERIAN DEFENSE CHIEF SAYS
But he said he fears that using force to try to free the nearly 300 schoolgirls kidnapped by terrorists could further endanger their lives.
5. WHY THE INTENTIONS OF MASS MURDERERS ARE DIFFICULT TO PREDICT
Since killings such as the shootings in Goleta, Calif., that left seven dead are rare, scholars say there's no way to predict who will reach a breaking point and become violent.
6. FEARS RISE WITH INCREASE OF WEST COAST OIL TRAINS
The trains carry tens of thousands of barrels of crude from North Dakota oil fields, raising concerns after nine U.S. accidents in the past year.
7. DON'T PROTEST, IT'S NO USE
That's what Thai coup leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha said in his first public appearance since the military takeover, warning against demonstrations.
8. WHAT NEW OBAMACARE CONCERN VEXES STATES
Coast to coast, states are facing threats that their Medicaid costs will rise due to the federal health care law.
9. STRING OF STATE, FEDERAL COURT RULINGS BOLSTERS GAY MARRIAGE
Now there are 26 states that either allow same-sex couples to wed, or where a judge has ruled they ought to be allowed.
10. BIG SISTER HELPS WITH BUFFET'S PHILANTROPY
Doris Buffet's Sunshine Lady Foundation weighs requests for assistance that her brother Warren receives to find people who have fallen on hard times.

Fear grips Donetsk streets after bloody airport battle

As a short burst of shelling and machine gun fire subsides somewhere in the middle distance, Lera Meteiko crouches by the roadside with a few plastic bags of her possessions.
She had watched from her apartment building overlooking Donetsk airport as Ukrainian government helicopters on Monday battled rebels fighters with bazookas and Kalashnikovs in what was until then a peaceful suburban neighbourhood.
On Tuesday, the firing -- more sporadic at least -- had been rocking the area at intervals since around 7 am.
"I am leaving," says the 33-year-old railway worker. "I'm waiting for my mum and sister to come and pick me up."
"I hope that I come back home soon."
Further along, an elderly woman in a black dress carries a battered bag along the almost deserted street on her way to meet some friends she'll be staying with.
"We're now refugees in our own land," she says, refusing to give her name as an AFP journalist helps her with her luggage. "I don't trust anyone anymore."
"We'll win in the end though," she says.
"We didn't start it. It was the Kiev authorities that came here and attacked us in our own homes."
A few metres away the signs of Monday's brutal fighting are easy to spot. A green flatbed military truck -- that people say belonged to the rebels -- stands at an angle on the road with its windscreen riddled with bullet holes and one side blown apart.
- 'Everyone is very afraid' -
Around it lies the detritus of carnage: bullet casings and pools of blood. On the other side of the road there is someone's scalp. Brains are smeared on the curb.
Staring at it from a distance, shop assistant Evgenia Simonova, 28, leans on her bicycle as she smokes a cigarette.
"I'm not staying at home anymore as shrapnel hit the roof of our house yesterday and there is a hole there now. I'm staying with a friend," she says.
"The foundations of our neighb
ours' house were hit. Luckily there were no victims but everyone is very afraid."
"I'm not leaving anywhere," said her friend Anton Konstantinov, 18, defiantly. "Danger or no danger, my home is my castle."
The government claimed Tuesday it had recaptured Donetsk airport from the pro-Russian separatists after air strikes and intense firefights that officials say left at least 40 dead.
For the few local residents braving Donetsk's eerily empty streets the situation is confusing but normal life still breaks through.
Fighters are nowhere to be seen but local residents have set up barricades of tyres and bulldozers on the road into town.
Sergei and his two friends can't help laughing when a middle-aged woman and her husband stop to ask them if it's safe to head to her workplace next to the airport.
"Go to work? What are you thinking? They're shooting over there," they shout. A little further on they burst out into another peal of laughter when they spot a car waiting patiently for the traffic lights on the deserted street rubble-strewn street.
"The people around here don't know what is going on. Everyone says something different," says Sergei.
"We don't know who is in control of the airport -- the Ukraine army or the Donetsk Republic.
"It is terrifying."

الثلاثاء، 27 مايو 2014

Dozens reported killed in eastern Ukraine fighting

DONETSK, Ukraine (AP) — The eastern city of Donetsk was in turmoil Tuesday a day after government forces used fighter jets to stop pro-Russia separatists from taking over the airport. Dozens were reported killed and the mayor went on television to urge residents to stay indoors.
The city of 1 million was engulfed by fighting Monday when rebels moved to seize the airport, Ukraine's second largest. They were repelled by
government forces using combat jets and helicopter gunships. Associated Press journalists witnessed intensive gun fire throughout the day and into the night. Plumes of black smoke rose into the air and officials shut down Donetsk airport and nearby streets to traffic amid the fighting.
Donetsk mayor Oleksandr Lukyanchenko said 40 people, including two civilians, were killed in Monday's fighting. Rebel leaders, meanwhile, said the deaths could reach up to 100.
The battles came as billionaire candy magnate Petro Poroshenko claimed victory in Sunday's presidential vote, which authorities in Kiev had hoped would unify the deeply divided nation. Poroshenko, who is yet to be sworn in, has vowed to negotiate a peaceful end to the insurgency in the east, but also has called the separatists "Somali pirates" and promised he would stop them from sowing more chaos.
The bodies of about 30 insurgents were brought Tuesday to a hospital morgue in Donetsk, said Leonid Baranov of the separatist Donetsk People's Republic, who was at the Kalinin morgue. The fighters had been wounded and were being transported to a hospital in a truck when it was shot up by government forces, Baranov said.
Baranov said up to 100 rebels were probably killed in Monday's fighting, adding that many bodies had not been recovered because they were in areas under government control.
"As they (Ukrainian forces) are controlling the airport and the fight was there ... we cannot right now identify exactly how many victims we have," he said, adding that hundreds were also wounded in the fighting.
He said the morgue was too small to hold all the bodies and authorities were searching for refrigerator trucks pending identification of the dead.
AP journalists saw many dead bodies piled up at the Kalinin morgue but could not immediately count them or confirm Baranov's statements.
Another Donetsk insurgent leader, Denis Pushilin, also said up to 100 people have been killed and asserted that up to half of them could be civilians, the ITAR-Tass news agency reported.
Pushilin said government snipers were firing at people trying to evacuate the bodies. His comments also couldn't be independently confirmed.
Early Tuesday, unidentified men stormed Donetsk's main ice hockey arena and set it ablaze, according to the mayor's office. The arena, owned by a local Ukrainian lawmaker, was to host the 2015 world championships.
By Tuesday morning, the Donetsk airport was under full government control, Ukraine's acting Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said, adding that dozens of insurgents may have been killed but government forces did not suffer any casualties.
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, meanwhile, said it had lost contact with one of its four-man monitoring teams in Donetsk on Monday evening. There was no immediate claim of responsibility but rebel groups have previously kidnapped OSCE monitors in Ukraine.
In the neighboring Luhansk region, which like Donetsk has declared independence from the central government, the Ukrainian Border Guards Service said its officers repelled a group of gunmen who were trying to break through the border from Russia. It said one intruder was wounded and the border guards seized several vehicles loaded with Kalashnikov assault rifles, rocket grenade launchers and explosives.
The interim government in Kiev has pledged to press ahead with the operation against insurgents, which has angered residents, many of whom see the government as nationalists bent on repressing Russian speakers in the east.
Speaking at a televised government session on Tuesday, Vitaly Yarema, a deputy prime minister, said the "anti-terrorist operation" in eastern Ukraine will go on "until all the militants are annihilated."
In Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov voiced strong concern Tuesday about the decision to intensify the military operation in the east and called for an immediate end to fighting.
Lavrov warned Poroshenko against trying to win a quick military victory before his inauguration, saying that it would be "unlikely to create favorable conditions for a hospitable welcome in the Donetsk region." He promised that Russia will be Poroshenko's "serious and reliable partner" if he moved to negotiate an end to hostilities.
Poroshenko, known for his pragmatism, supports building strong ties with Europe but also has stressed the importance of mending relations with Moscow. Upon claiming victory, he said his first step as president would be to visit the troubled east. He said he hoped Russia would support his efforts to bring stability and that he wanted to hold talks with Moscow.
Lavrov welcomed Poroshenko's promise to negotiate with people in the east and said Moscow was ready for direct talks with Poroshenko — without the United States or the European Union as mediators.
But Ukraine's acting Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said Ukraine has no intention of talking to Russia directly.
"The government's stance is unchanged: bilateral talks without the presence of the United States and the European Union do not seem possible under current conditions," he said.
Moscow has denied accusations by the authorities in Kiev and the West that it has fomented the insurgency in eastern Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin annexed the Ukrainian Black Sea peninsula of Crimea in March but has stonewalled the eastern insurgents' appeal to join Russia.
Russia, however, has kept pushing for Ukraine to decentralize its government, which would give more power to the regions and allow Moscow to keep eastern Ukraine in its sphere of influence.
__
Nataliya Vasilyeva and Laura Mills in Kiev, Ukraine and Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow contributed to this report.