Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Sri Lanka cricketers arrive home

Sri Lankan cricketers return home

The Sri Lanka cricket team has arrived home from Pakistan after masked gunmen opened fire on its bus in Lahore.

Six policemen and a driver were killed in the ambush and eight members of the cricket touring party were injured.

The team's return to Colombo saw emotional reunions with anxious family members at the international airport.

Meanwhile, the police hunt for the gunmen continues in Pakistan as officials try to establish who is responsible for the attacks.

 

There were just these images of life flashing through my mind

Muttaiah Muralitharan

The attacks on Tuesday drew international condemnation. New Zealand cricket officials responded saying they expected to cancel their forthcoming tour of Pakistan.

Rehman Malik, Pakistan's Interior Ministry advisor, said the country was in a "state of war".

He called for patience but vowed to "flush all these terrorists out of the country".

Up to 14 gunmen were involved in the attack on the Liberty Square roundabout in the heart of Lahore.

The masked men opened fire as the Sri Lanka team coach approached the cricket stadium for its latest Test match again Pakistan.

None of the injured Sri Lanka team members was so seriously hurt that they could not fly back to Colombo but once they arrived, five players and assistant coach Paul Farbrace, who is British, went to a local medical centre for further checks.

Funerals

"There were just these images of life flashing through my mind; all the while bullets were being sprayed at our bus, people around me were shouting," spin bowler Muttiah Muralitharan told the AFP news agency.

Captain Mahela Jayawardene told reporters at the airport that he was relieved to be home but admitted that it will take time to get over their experience.

INJURED PLAYERS

Thilan Samaraweera

Tharanga Paranavitana

Mahela Jayawardene

Kumar Sangakkara

Ajantha Mendis

Suranga Lakmal

Chaminda Vaas

Assistant coach Paul Farbrace

 

Meanwhile, funerals for the dead Pakistani policemen took place in Lahore on Tuesday night.

Officials said Sri Lanka's Foreign Secretary Palitha Kohona had travelled to Pakistan to be updated on the investigation. Earlier, Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse condemned the "cowardly terrorist attack".

Grenades, rocket launchers and backpacks belonging to the attackers were found at the scene, police said.

Officials in Pakistan said the incident bore similarities to the deadly attacks in Mumbai in India last November.

The Mumbai bombings were blamed on Pakistan-based Islamic militants and the security forces are expected to investigate any connections to al-Qaeda and Taleban militants as well as Kashmiri jihadi groups.

"Security failures"

Pakistan is engaged in a bloody struggle against Islamist insurgents who have staged high-profile attacks on civilian targets before.

MAJOR ATTACKS

Sept 08: 54 die in an attack on the Marriott hotel in Islamabad

June 08: Six killed in car bomb attack near Danish embassy in Islamabad

Dec 07: Former PM Benazir Bhutto assassinated along with 20 others at a Rawalpindi rally

March 06: Suicide car bombing kills US diplomat in Karachi

June 02: 12 killed in car bomb attack outside US consulate in Karachi

May 02: 11 French engineers and three Pakistanis killed in an attack on Karachi Sheraton hotel

 

Meanwhile, Sri Lankan authorities are waging their own domestic military campaign against Tamil Tiger separatist rebels.

The Pakistani politician Imran Khan, a former captain of the country's cricket team, criticised the security arrangements for the Sri Lanka team.

"This was one of the worst security failures in Pakistan," he said.

Pakistani cricket was already suffering from serious security concerns.

Last month, the sports governing body, the International Cricket Council, decided not to hold the 2009 Champions Trophy there due to safety worries.

New Zealand cricket authorities have told the BBC that a proposed tour to Pakistan now seems unlikely.

The ICC is now considering whether Pakistan can co-host the cricket World Cup, due to be held across four South Asian countries in 2011.

Pakistan invited Sri Lanka to tour only after India's cricket team pulled out of a scheduled tour following the Mumbai attacks.

 

UPDATE 1-China defence budget to grow "modest" 14.9 pct in 2009

BEIJING, March 4 - China said on Wednesday its official military budget will grow to 480.6 billion yuan ($70.24 billion) in 2009, a "modest" 14.9 percent rise on last year.

Parliamentary spokesman Li Zhaoxing said the additional spending was to maintain "sovereignty and integrity of Chinese territory and would not threaten any country".

He said the defence share of the total budget was lower than in 2008 at 6.3 percent. Defence accounted for 1.4 percent of gross domestic product.

"The increased part of the budget is mainly used to raise salaries for soldiers as well as spending on military 'informatisation', counter-terrorism and internal security," Li told reporters.

In 2008, China said it would spend 418 billion yuan on defence, up 17.6 percent on 2007.

The U.S. budget for fiscal 2009, by comparison, is $515 billion, a 7.5 percent rise on the previous year. That number does not include multi-billion dollar outlays for Iraq and Afghanistan and some spending on nuclear weapons.

Many foreign analysts believe China's real military outlays are much more than the official budget, but Li denied there were any hidden outlays.

Taiwan, the self-ruled island claimed by the mainland, as well as nearby nations worry Beijing's plans to modernise its military lack openness and could stoke conflict. ($1=6.842 Yuan) (Reporting by Chris Buckley; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Nick Macfie)

 

 

Obama and Brown urge global action on economy


WASHINGTON - U.S. President Barack Obama on Tuesday urged coordinated action to fight the worldwide economic crisis, joining Prime Minister Gordon Brown's call for a global response.

A month before Obama travels to London for a summit of the Group of 20 major developed and emerging economies, the United States and Britain are grappling with turmoil in their banking sectors caused by toxic mortgage securities.

The bad debt has crippled lending and added to fears in global stock markets about a worsening recession.

Obama told reporters during his Oval Office meeting with Brown that he was "absolutely confident" his administration's plans to shore up the banking system would yield results.

In comments that gave a temporary lift to battered stock prices, Obama also said there were "potentially good deals" to be found at the market's current depressed levels.

"What I'm looking at is not the day-to-day gyrations of the stock market but the long-term ability for the United States and the entire world economy to regain its footing," he said.

"One of the things that Prime Minister Brown and I talked about is how can we coordinate so that all the G20 countries, all the major countries around the world, in a coordinated fashion, are stimulating their economies?"

Obama and Brown both called for common principles to bolster the financial regulatory structure.

On Afghanistan, where the security situation has been deteriorating, Obama said he would be making a "series of announcements" on the subject before a NATO summit to take place on April 3-4 in Strasbourg after the G20 gathering.

'GLOBAL NEW DEAL'

Brown, a former finance minister whose Labour Party is struggling politically, has faced criticism at home for what some see as his failure to tighten up Britain's regulatory structure before the financial crisis.

He was the first European leader to visit Obama since the president took office on January 20.

Before travelling to Washington, Brown called for a "global New Deal" in which countries would work together to jump-start growth, revamp financial rules and boost funding to the International Monetary Fund.

U.S. stock prices this week hit their lowest level in 12 years, in part over anxiety about whether Obama's plans to deal with the banking sector would yield success.

The summit of G20 countries will mark Obama's debut as president on the world stage. The group includes developed economies like France and Italy as well as big emerging economies such as China and Brazil.

Both Britain and the United States will be eager to show leadership on the global economic crisis but many abroad lay blame for the problems on housing bubbles that were allowed to fester in those two countries.

Brown was undaunted in his insistence that countries had to work together. "We've had a global banking failure and it's happened in every part of the world," he said. "We've got to rebuild that financial system. We've got to isolate the bad assets."

'SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP'

The meeting between Obama and Brown was followed by a working lunch. The British prime minister will deliver a speech on Wednesday to the U.S. Congress, where he plans to lead a charge against protectionism.

The high profile accorded to Brown's visit did not dispel anxiety that the traditional "special relationship" between Britain and the United States might not be as strong as it once was.

The Brown visit has raised comparisons to the relationship between Obama's and Brown's predecessors, George W. Bush and Tony Blair, who forged a close friendship in the aftermath of September 11 attacks in 2001.

Some analysts said there seemed less of a focus on Europe in the early weeks of the Obama administration than in the past.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Asia on her first trip abroad and is in the Middle East this week.

British media last week seized on a White House spokesman's use of the phrase "special partnership" as a possible indication that the relationship had been downgraded.

But Obama said his administration was as committed as ever to the alliance, adding that it was sustained by a common language and common history.

"This notion that somehow there is any lessening of that special relationship is misguided," Obama said.

Obama seeks Russian help on Iran but denies deal


WASHINGTON - U.S. President Barack Obama said on Tuesday he wanted to work with Russia to resolve a nuclear stand-off with Iran but denied reports he had offered to slow deployment of a missile defense shield in exchange for Moscow's help.

The New York Times reported that Obama had sent a letter to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev suggesting he would back off deploying a system in eastern Europe to intercept and destroy missiles, a move Russia sees as a military threat, if Moscow helped stop Iran from developing long-range weapons.

"What I said in the letter is what I have said publicly, which is that the missile defense that we have talked about deploying is directed toward, not Russia, but Iran," Obama said after meeting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

"And what I said ... was that, obviously, to the extent that we are lessening Iran's commitment to nuclear weapons, then that reduces the pressure for, or the need for a missile defense system," he said.

Obama's defense secretary, Robert Gates, said Washington wanted to reopen dialogue with Moscow on Iran. There were two options, he said -- to work together to persuade Iran not to go ahead with their ballistic missile program, or make Russia a "full partner" in the defense shield.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs stressed the linkage between the missile shield and Iran at a White House briefing.

"If working with our allies and working with Russia we can eliminate the threat, then you eliminate the driving force behind that system to combat that threat,".

Moscow, which plans to start up a nuclear reactor at Iran's Bushehr plant by the end of the year, has used its veto in the United Nations Security Council on a number of occasions to water down or defeat U.S.-led efforts to impose tougher sanctions on Iran.

The Obama administration has said it wants to "reset" U.S.-Russian ties, which deteriorated under former U.S. President George W. Bush and then Russian President Vladimir Putin, partly because of the plans to deploy the shield.

MOSCOW WILLING TO TALK

Putin's successor, Medvedev, told a news conference that Moscow was willing to talk to Washington about the shield but that it saw Iran's nuclear program as a separate issue.

"If the new (U.S.) administration shows common sense and offers a new (missile defense) structure which would satisfy European (needs) ... and would be acceptable for us, we are ready to discuss it," Medvedev said on a visit to Madrid.

"If we are talking about any 'swaps' (Iran for missile defense) this is not how the question is being put. This would not be productive," he said.

U.S. officials have said the United States will go ahead with the planned deployment of the missile shield in eastern Europe, but only if it is shown to work and is cost-effective.

The plan to site missiles and a radar tracking station in former Communist satellite states Poland and the Czech Republic has angered Moscow, which sees it as a threat, despite U.S. insistence that it is aimed at rogue missiles from Iran.

The United States and some European nations fear Iran is trying to build atomic weapons and are concerned at its development of ballistic rockets that could be used to carry any nuclear warheads great distances.

Tehran insists its pursuit of a nuclear capability is purely for the peaceful generation of electricity.

Obama has said he is prepared to offer Iran economic incentives if it abandons its nuclear program but he has also warned of tougher economic sanctions if it pushes ahead.

The United States and five other powers, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China, said on Tuesday they were committed to direct talks with Iran, a switch from Bush's policy of trying to isolate the Islamic Republic.

On Capitol Hill, a key Republican said Obama should consider engaging Iran more directly.

"Among other steps, the possibility of establishing a U.S. visa office or some similar diplomatic presence in Iran should be on the table," said Indiana Senator Richard Lugar, the ranking Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

(Additional reporting by Jason Webb in Madrid, David Morgan in Washington and Mark Heinrich in Vienna; Editing by David Storey)

Ferocious storm dumps heavy snow on East Coast

NEW YORK A ferocious storm packing freezing rain, heavy snow and furious wind gusts paralyzed most of the East Coast on Monday, sending dozens of cars careening into ditches, grounding hundreds of flights and closing school for millions of kids.
The devastating effects of the storm were seen up and down the coast. A crash caused a 15-mile traffic jam in North Carolina, forcing police and the Red Cross to go car-to-car to check on stranded drivers. The storm was blamed for 350 crashes in New Jersey, and a Maryland official counted about 50 cars in the ditch on one stretch of highway.
By Monday, the storm had moved north into New England, and most areas in the storm's wake expected to see at least 8 to 12 inches of snow. The weather contributed to four deaths on roads in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and on Long Island.
Diane Lugo, of Yonkers, N.Y., got a ride with her husband to avoid walking 10 minutes in the slush to her bus stop. "Getting out of the driveway was pure hell," Lugo said. "He got to work late. I'm obviously late."
The South was especially hard hit, dealing with record snowfalls, thick ice and hundreds of thousands of power outages in a region not accustomed to such vicious weather.
In North Carolina, Raleigh got more than 3 inches of snow; the March snowfall for the city has exceeded 3 inches only 11 times in the last 122 years. The Weather Service said parts of Tennessee received the biggest snowfall since 1968.
The 15-mile traffic jam in North Carolina caused no serious problems and authorities were able to get traffic moving again.
Travelers were stranded everywhere, with about 950 flights canceled at the three main airports in the New York area and nearly 300 flights canceled in Philadelphia. Boston's Logan International Airport had to shut down for about 40 minutes to clear a runway, and hundreds of flights were canceled there.
Philadelphia declared a Code Blue weather emergency, which gives officials the authority to bring homeless people into shelters because the weather poses a threat of serious harm or death.
Dozens of schools across North Carolina, South Carolina, New Hampshire, New Jersey and Maine gave children a snow day. Schools in Philadelphia, Boston and New York City did the same. It was the first time in more than five years that New York City called off classes for its 1.1 million public school students.
Some New York parents complained that the city waited until 5:40 a.m. to call off classes, saying they didn't have enough notice. Mayor Michael Bloomberg brushed off the criticism and praised the city's storm response, which included dispatching 2,000 workers and 1,400 plows to work around the clock to clean New York's 6,000 miles of streets.
"It's like plowing from here to Los Angeles and back," Bloomberg said at a news conference, standing in front of an orange snow plow at a garage. Central Park recorded 7 inches of snow, and more than a foot was reported on parts of Long Island, where high winds caused 2-foot drifts on highways in the Hamptons.
The storm offered a hint of irony in a couple of cities. People had to brave the snow and cold to attend the annual Philadelphia Flower Show, an indoor exhibition that provided a fragrant, spring-like glimpse of yellow daffodils, crimson azaleas and white tulips. In the nation's capital, hundreds of protesters gathered on Capitol Hill to protest a power plant and global warming during one of the worst storms of the year.
In Fairfax, Va., 8-year-old Sarah Conforti said Monday's day off was just what she'd been hoping for, and planned to "make a snowman or play in the snow with my friends," she said.
Her mother, Noelle Conforti, said Sarah and her 10-year-old sister couldn't be happier about the school-free day. "The kids are against the window, just looking out the window like a cat," she said. "It's hilarious."
Outside a medical center in New Rochelle, N.Y., Emilia Rescigna struggled to push a stroller through the snow and slush. Asleep in the stroller was her 1-year-old son Adam, who had a 9 a.m. appointment with his pediatrician.
The snow began to accumulate in New Hampshire and Massachusetts as the storm moved north, but most residents there were taking it in stride.Associated Press writers Frank Eltman on Farmingdale, N.Y.; Jim Fitzgerald in Westchester County; Ula Ilnytzky and Amy Westfeldt in New York City; Russell Contreras in Boston; Ben Nuckols in Baltimore; and Bruce Shipkowski and Samantha Henry in Trenton, N.J., contributed to this report.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Pakistan says Lahore cricket attack copycat of Mumbai

LAHORE, Pakistan - The attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Pakistan on Tuesday bore the hallmarks of the same militants that carried out the attack on Mumbai in November, a senior Pakistan official said on Tuesday.

Around dozen heavily armed assailants attacked the Sri Lankan cricket team's bus and a police escort as they drove to a stadium in the Pakistani city of Lahore.

He said the police had surrounded the area where the attackers were believed to be now holed up.

"I want to say it's the same pattern, the same terrorists who attacked Mumbai," Salman Taseer, governor of central Punjab province, told reporters at the site of the attack.

"They are trained criminals. They were not common people. The kind of weaponry they had, the kind of arms they had, the way they attacked ... they were not common citizens, and they were obviously trained."

Ten gunmen killed 179 people in Mumbai between Nov. 26-28 last year.

India has maintained the plot was hatched in Pakistan and backed by people with links to Pakistani intelligence agencies.

New Delhi has pressed for forceful action by Pakistani authorities against militants belonging to Laskhar-e-Taiba, a jihadi group it says was responsible. The group comes from Pakistan's Punjab province, whose capital is Lahore.

 

Five Sri Lankan cricketers hurt in Pakistan attack

LAHORE, Pakistan - Five members of the Sri Lankan cricket team were wounded when around a dozen gunmen attacked their bus as it drove under police escort on Tuesday to a stadium in the Pakistani city of Lahore, officials said.

Lahore Police chief Habib-ur-Rehman said five police were killed in the attack by unidentified gunmen who fired AK 47s and rockets and hurled grenades at the bus as it slowed at a traffic circle near the 60,000-seater Gaddafi stadium.

"Police are chasing the terrorists," he said. "They appeared to be trained men."

Punjab Governor Salman Taseer told reporters the assailants had been surrounded after being chased into a nearby commerical and shopping area.

"We were very fortunate to escape serious injury," a Sri Lankan player, who did not want to be identified, told Reuters by telephone.

Sri Lanka's sports minister said five players and an assistant coach were wounded, two of whom were being treated in hospital.

It was unclear whether injuries were caused by bullets, shrapnel or flying shards of glass.

The attack had echoes of one on the Indian city of Mumbai last November, which led to the Indian cricket team cancelling its planned tour of Pakistan.

"One thing I want to say it's the same pattern, the same terrorists who attacked Mumbai," said Governor Taseer.

India blamed that attack on Pakistan-trained militants and the incident sharply raised tension between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.

The group blamed by India, Lashkar-e-Taiba, came from Pakistan's Punjab province, whose capital is Lahore.

Pakistani stocks were down over 2.47 percent in early trade on Tuesday following the attack on the cricket team bus.

The Karachi Stock Exchange benchmark 100-share index was 2.47 percent, or 140.22 points, lower at 5,541.022 on turnover of 16.8 million shares by 10:40 a.m. (0540 GMT).

"This is not only an attack on the Sri Lankan team but on Pakistan as Pakistan is being put in isolation due to these attacks," said Shuja Rizvi, director broking at Capital One Equities Ltd. "Who would want to invest then in Pakistan?"

GUNMEN RUNNING THROUGH THE STREETS

Sri Lanka, which had been invited to Pakistan after India pulled out, immediately cancelled the rest of the tour.

"We are trying to bring the team back as quickly as possible," a Sri Lankan cricket official said.

Pakistan TV showed footage of gunmen with rifles and backpacks running through the streets and firing on unidentified vehicles.

"I saw them from the window of my office firing at the police escort first. When the police dispersed after the shooting, they started firing at the bus of Sri Lankan team," Mohammad Luqman told Reuters.

The driver of the Sri Lankan team coach said one of the attackers had thrown a grenade under the bus, but it did not detonate.

Another witness told Reuters he believed two police commandos were killed along with a regular policeman and a traffic warden.

Shopkeeper Ahmed Ali said the two police commandos had been driving behind the team bus when they were hit.

"It was a very heavy firing and I heard at least two explosions at the time," said a Reuters witness who had been on his way to cover the match between Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Sri lankan and Pakistan media said Thilan Samaraweera seemed to be the worst hit, suffering a thigh injury. The other Sri player admitted to hospital was Tharanga Paranavithana.

It was the second day of their second test match and being plaed at the venue where Sri Lanka won cricket's world cup in 1996, beating Australia in the final

Until this series Pakistan had gone without test cricket for more then a year because of security issues.

In 2002, a bomb exploded in Karachi while the New Zealand cricket team were touring, killing 13 people including 11 French navy experts.

The tourists, based at the Pearl Continental Hotel, were preparing to depart for the National Stadium for the start of a match when a car exploded outside the nearby Karachi Sheraton. New Zealand called off the tour within hours of the attack.

 

 

 

Obama releases secret Bush anti-terror memos

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration threw open the curtain on years of Bush-era secrets Monday, revealing anti-terror memos that claimed exceptional search-and-seizure powers and divulging that the CIA destroyed nearly 100 videotapes of interrogations and other treatment of terror suspects.

The Justice Department released nine legal opinions showing that, following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the Bush administration determined that certain constitutional rights would not apply during the coming fight. Within two weeks, government lawyers were already discussing ways to wiretap U.S. conversations without warrants.

The Bush administration eventually abandoned many of the legal conclusions, but the documents themselves had been closely held. By releasing them, President Barack Obama continued a house-cleaning of the previous administration's most contentious policies.

"Too often over the past decade, the fight against terrorism has been viewed as a zero-sum battle with our civil liberties," Attorney General Eric Holder said in a speech a few hours before the documents were released. "Not only is that school of thought misguided, I fear that in actuality it does more harm than good."

The Obama administration also acknowledged in court documents Monday that the CIA destroyed 92 videos involving terror suspects, including interrogations — far more than had been known. Congressional Democrats and other critics have charged that some of the harsh interrogation techniques amounted to torture, a contention President George W. Bush and other Bush officials rejected.

The new administration pledged on Monday to begin turning over documents related to the videos to a federal judge and to make as much information public as possible.

The legal memos written by the Bush administration's Office of Legal Counsel show a government grappling with how to wage war on terrorism in a fast-changing world. The conclusion, reiterated in page after page of documents, was that the president had broad authority to set aside constitutional rights.

Fourth Amendment protections against unwarranted search and seizure, for instance, did not apply in the United States as long as the president was combatting terrorism, the Justice Department said in an Oct. 23, 2001, memo.

"First Amendment speech and press rights may also be subordinated to the overriding need to wage war successfully," Deputy Assistant Attorney General John Yoo wrote, adding later: "The current campaign against terrorism may require even broader exercises of federal power domestically."

On Sept. 25, 2001, Yoo discussed possible changes to the laws governing wiretaps for intelligence gathering. In that memo, he said the government's interest in keeping the nation safe following the terrorist attacks might justify warrantless searches.

That memo did not specifically attempt to justify the government's warrantless wiretapping program, but it provided part of the foundation.

Yoo, now a professor at the University of California at Berkeley School of Law, did not return messages seeking comment.

The memos reflected a belief within the Bush administration that the president had broad powers that could not be checked by Congress or the courts. That stance, in one form or another, became the foundation for many policies: holding detainees at Guantanamo Bay, eavesdropping on U.S. citizens without warrants, using tough new CIA interrogation tactics and locking U.S. citizens in military brigs without charges.

Obama has pledged to close the Guantanamo Bay prison within a year. He halted the CIA's intensive interrogation program. And last week, prosecutors moved the terrorism case against U.S. resident Ali Al-Marri, a suspected al-Qaida sleeper agent held in a military brig, to a civilian courthouse.

A criminal prosecutor is wrapping up an investigation of the destruction of the tapes of interrogations.

Monday's acknowledgment of videotape destruction, however, involved a civil lawsuit filed in New York by the American Civil Liberties Union.

"The CIA can now identify the number of videotapes that were destroyed," said the letter submitted in that case by Acting U.S. Attorney Lev Dassin. "Ninety-two videotapes were destroyed."

It is not clear what exactly was on the recordings. The government's letter cites interrogation videos, but the lawsuit against the Defense Department also seeks records related to treatment of detainees, any deaths of detainees and the CIA's sending of suspects overseas, known as "extraordinary rendition."

At the White House, press secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters he hadn't spoken to the president about the report, but he called the news about the videotapes "sad" and said Obama was committed to ending torture while also protecting American values.

ACLU attorney Amrit Singh said the CIA should be held in contempt of court for holding back the information for so long.

"The large number of videotapes destroyed confirms that the agency engaged in a systematic attempt to hide evidence of its illegal interrogations and to evade the court's order," Singh said.

CIA spokesman George Little said the agency "has certainly cooperated with the Department of Justice investigation. If anyone thinks it's agency policy to impede the enforcement of American law, they simply don't know the facts."

The details of interrogations of terror suspects, and the existence of tapes documenting those sessions, have become the subject of long fights in a number of different court cases. In the trial of Sept. 11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui, prosecutors initially claimed no such recordings existed, then acknowledged after the trial was over that two videotapes and one audiotape had been made.

The Dassin letter, dated March 2 to Judge Alvin Hellerstein, says the CIA is now gathering more details for the lawsuit, including a list of the destroyed records, any secondary accounts that describe the destroyed contents and the identities of those who may have viewed or possessed the recordings before they were destroyed.

But the lawyers also note that some of that information may be classified, such as the names of CIA personnel who viewed the tapes.

The separate criminal investigation includes interrogations of al-Qaida lieutenant Abu Zubaydah and another top al-Qaida leader. Tapes of those interrogations were destroyed, in part, the Bush administration said, to protect the identities of the government questioners at a time the Justice Department was debating whether or not the tactics used during the interrogations were legal.

Former CIA director Michael Hayden acknowledged that waterboarding — simulated drowning — was used on three suspects, including the two whose interrogations were recorded.

John Durham, a senior career prosecutor in Connecticut, is leading the criminal investigation, out of Virginia, and had asked that he be given until the end of February to wrap up his work before requests for information in the civil lawsuit were dealt with.

 

HSBC in $18 billion rights issue

LONDON - HSBC launched Britain's biggest rights issue on Monday, to raise 12.85 billion pounds to help it overcome big losses in the United States and exploit the woes of weaker rivals.

 

Europe's biggest bank said it would shut most of its U.S. consumer lending business, cutting 6,100 jobs, but that it was ready for acquisitions in its traditional stronghold of Asia where many banks are pulling out to focus on their core markets.

 

HSBC said it would sell 5.1 billion shares at 254 pence each which is a 48 percent discount to Friday's close.

 

Shares in the bank were down 20 percent at 395p by 11:11 a.m. British time, but they were still comfortably above the 254p issue price. HSBC's Hong Kong-listed shares were suspended.

 

"It's always difficult for a market that's feeling jittery to absorb 12.5 billion of new stock," said Jane Coffey, head of equities at Royal London Asset Management which is HSBC's 24th largest shareholder according to Thomson Reuters data.

 

"I am not surprised the stock is down but they are doing the right thing and we are going to support the issue."

 

The stock has halved in value since Lehman Brothers collapsed in September but HSBC's relative resilience to the global financial crisis means it has outperformed European peers which have lost almost two-thirds of their value.

 

Its share price fall ranked it as the world's fourth-biggest bank, just behind JP Morgan Chase, with a market value of just over $70 billion (49 billion pounds).

AIG enters record books with $61.7 billion Q4 loss

NEW YORK - American International Group reported a $61.7 billion (43.5 billion pound) fourth-quarter loss on Monday, the largest quarterly loss in U.S. corporate history, after a revised rescue plan from the U.S. government.

 

The massive loss, equal to $22.95 a share, is the company's fifth consecutive quarterly loss, bringing the total loss over that period to in excess of $100 billion.

 

Investment losses, write downs and restructuring charges were the largest drivers of AIG's fourth-quarter loss, more than wiping out operating profits posted by its insurance subsidiaries.

 

AIG, the recipient of $150 billion in taxpayer aid last year, on Sunday reached a deal that revises its government bailout to give the company more financial flexibility, and head off rating cuts that could have triggered crippling collateral calls and termination clauses in policyholder contracts.

Thousands attend mass funeral in Bangladesh

DHAKA, March 2 - Tens of thousands of Bangladeshis attended a state funeral on Monday for dozens of army officers killed in a mutiny last week, as a think-tank warned there was still a significant risk of conflict in the country.

 

The rebellion by paramilitary troops at their Dhaka headquarters was put down within two days, but the brazen attacks highlighted the security concerns confronting the 2-month-old government.

 

The mutiny by Bangladesh Rifles (BDR) border guards, over pay and the command structure, spread to about a dozen smaller towns across Bangladesh. At least 80 people, most of them officers, were killed.

 

At a mass funeral in the capital on Monday, national and army flags were draped over the coffins. Buglers played the Last Post, and relatives wept.

 

"He has paid so dearly for all the good services rendered to the country. I only pray he gets justice from God and peace in heaven," said the wife of a dead officer.

 

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has ordered a special tribunal try the killers, and has sought help from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Britain's Scotland Yard.

 

TENSIONS SIMMER

 

The International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think tank, said "the spread of mutinies to other BDR barracks threatened to spark violence across the country amid fears of retaliation by the military, including a takeover.

 

"But steps taken by the government appear to have reduced the threat of any coup," it said. "It highlights Bangladesh as a significant conflict risk alert for March, as tensions within and surrounding the military continue to simmer."

 

The military at the weekend pledged its loyalty to Hasina, who came to office two months ago after winning a parliamentary election that brought to an end two years of emergency rule by an army-backed interim government.

 

Bangladesh has suffered several military coups since independence in 1971 but officials have said this mutiny was not politically motivated.

 

But Hasina must do more to end discontent in the rank and file of the army to secure the democracy, a government official said.

 

The mutiny came as a blow to Hasina, who must convince foreign investors and aid donors she can bring stability to a country where 40 percent of the 140 million population live in poverty.

 

"Clearly it (mutiny) was a pre-planned incident. But how it happened in an area where access of people is restricted has to be uncovered," said Arefin Siddique, Vice-Chancellor of Dhaka University.

 

Police said they had identified up to 1,000 BDR members as suspects, and some could be charged with murder.

 

"The killers were so efficient in doing their jobs and concealing (bodies) that we are finding it really hard to uncover them," said Mizanur Rahman, a fire brigade official leading the search at the BDR headquarters on Monday.

 

Sixty-five bodies of officers have been recovered from mass graves, sewers, drains and canals within the BDR complex, but at least 70 officers are still missing, believed dead.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Sachin to join sporting legends at Madame Tussauds

London, Feb 27 (IANS) Cricket maestro Sachin Tendulkar will be the latest sporting great to be featured at the internationally-renowned Madame Tussauds in London when a new wax figure of the Mumbai-born batsman joins the A-list line up in April.

Tendulkar follows in the famous footsteps of Bollywood greats Amitabh Bachchan, Aishwarya Rai, Shah Rukh Khan and Salman Khan and will join other cricket legends Brain Lara and Shane Warne to become the very first Indian sports personality to be portrayed, the waxworks museum said in a statement Friday.

The cricketing legend has already had a sitting with the Madame Tussauds studios team who last week travelled to Mumbai to capture a catalogue of reference photographs and hundreds of precise measurements.

The information they collected at the two hour session at the Taj Lands End Hotel will prove invaluable as the sculptors and hair and make up artists get to work on his figure.

'We are delighted to confirm our next Indian superstar is going to be Sachin Tendulkar; his achievements on the cricket pitch are phenomenal and he is one of the biggest names in international sport,' says Liz Edwards, Madame Tussauds PR manager.

'The Bollywood stars we have included over the past ten years have proved enormously popular with Asian guests and film fans from all over the world. We know Sachin will be just as popular for sports fans from home and abroad and are looking forward to introducing the real Sachin to his wax double soon.'

Tendulkar, the Mumbai Indians Captain will be featured in typical celebratory 'on the pitch' pose after another century marked in the scorebook.

He will be dressed in his cricket whites which he has donated.

The figure will be created at Madame Tussauds studios in West London at a cost of 150,000 pounds.

The cricket star will join the ranks of sporting greats, including David Beckham, Mohammed Ali, Tiger Woods and Jesse Owens, in Madame Tussauds interactive Sports Zone.

There will also be a cricketing challenge around the introduction of the figure, where guests can test their cricketing skills against the 'masterblaster'.

 

Man Utd win Carling Cup shoot-out

Manchester United completed phase two of their bid to secure an historic haul of five major trophies in a season as they beat Spurs on penalties in the Carling Cup final.

 

United, with the Club World Cup already won, emerged victorious from another shoot-out after an encounter low on quality finished goalless after extra-time.

 

Goalkeeper Ben Foster, given a Wembley opportunity as manager Sir Alex Ferguson rested Edwin van der Sar, was United's hero with a stunning save from Aaron Lennon in normal time.

 

Foster distinguished himself with a superb save from Jamie O'Hara's spot-kick, and when substitute David Bentley missed, Spurs' fate was sealed as Anderson confirmed United's victory.

 

Cristiano Ronaldo struck an upright seconds from the end of normal time as both defences dominated a final in which clear-cut opportunities were at a premium.

 

Ryan Giggs, Carlos Tevez, Ronaldo and Anderson were successful for United from the spot in the shoot-out, but only Vedran Corluka scored for Spurs.

 

Keeper Foster, 25, whose fledgling career has been dogged by injury, will have hugely impressed watching England coach Fabio Capello - who is not exactly blessed with quality keepers as he plans for next year's World Cup.

 

There was to be no repeat of Spurs' win against Chelsea in last year's final, with boss Harry Redknapp also denied another Wembley win after lifting the FA Cup with Portsmouth last season.

           

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It capped an almost perfect weekend for United, with their position at the top of the Premier League strengthened after Liverpool's defeat at Middlesbrough and another piece of silverware on its way to Old Trafford.

 

Ferguson will now turn his attention back to winning the title once more and progressing in the Champions League and FA Cup.

 

This was not United at their vintage best, with too much below-par passing, but once again they showed that winning mentality when it mattered and when the pressure was at its most intense.

 

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Ferguson kept to his promise to maintain faith with youngsters Darron Gibson, Danny Welbeck and Jonny Evans - but his hopes of calling on Wayne Rooney were dashed after the England striker was ruled out by a virus.

 

Spurs counterpart Redknapp was spared a selection dilemma when Jonathan Woodgate was ruled out by an Achilles tendon injury, allowing Michael Dawson to partner Ledley King in defence.

 

Gibson almost made a stunning early impact with a rising 25-yard drive that sailed just over the angle of post and bar with Heurelho Gomes beaten.

 

Keeper Gomes was called into action again after 15 minutes when he dived low at the near post to turn away Nani's effort as United dominated the opening skirmishes.

 

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Aaron Lennon's pace offered Spurs plenty of hope, and it needed a timely intervention from Rio Ferdinand to clear his cross after Corluka played him in with a pass inside Patrice Evra.

 

In an enterprising opening, Ferdinand's dipping volley landed just over the bar with Gomes again struggling to make the save.

 

As the early life went out of the final, Spurs were able to establish a foothold and create a series of promising openings down the flanks, only to fail to find the decisive final ball.

 

Spurs had successfully kept Ronaldo at arm's length, while youngster Welbeck was having a tough time making an impact in the face of the physical presence of Dawson and King.

 

Indeed, it only took Ferguson only 10 minutes after the break to decide to remove Welbeck and introduce Anderson into midfield.

 

And United came within inches of breaking the deadlock on the hour when Tevez was just off target as he tried to divert Evans' shot past Gomes.

 

Ronaldo's frustration was plain to see when he was booked for diving by referee Chris Foy in the 66th minute as he tumbled in a collision with Spurs captain King just inside the area - a decision that was a desperately close call.

Ledley King challenges Cristiano Ronaldo

Ronaldo thought he should have had a second-half penalty

 

Foster justified his inclusion with a stunning save from Lennon after 70 minutes after Benoit Assou-Ekotto's cross found him in space 12 yards out.

 

The United keeper's opposite number Gomes had been well protected, but he was called in to action to collect a shot from Anderson at the second attempt.

 

John O'Shea, who had been fortunate to escape a second yellow card for a tackle on Luka Modric that went unpunished, was replaced by Nemanja Vidic as Ferguson stiffened up United's central defence.

 

Ronaldo almost won the cup for United in the dying seconds of stoppage time when he cut inside and lashed in a shot that bounced off the upright with Nani unable to turn in the rebound.

 

It meant extra time - and the inevitable introduction of Ryan Giggs for the tiring Gibson.

 

Lennon had been at the heart of most of Spurs' best moments, but he had run himself to a standstill and it was no surprise when he was replaced by Bentley 10 minutes into extra-time.

 

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As fatigue sent in among both sets of players, it was going to take a mistake or a moment of inspiration to decide the destiny of the cup in the closing stages. Modric almost provided it after 115 minutes with a run into the box that ended with Foster saving well with his legs from Darren Bent.

 

And Evra almost did likewise at the other end with a shot that was just over the top as Gomes could only look on.

 

It was the last meaningful action as a final that was high on endeavour but low on moments of genuine quality went to penalties.

 

Giggs gave United the perfect start in the shoot-out, and Foster set up the win with a fine save from O'Hara's spot-kick.

 

Tevez and Corluka exchanged successful penalties, but Bentley sent his wide after Ronaldo had slotted his away.

 

Anderson stepped forward to complete the formalities and United had achieved the second part of their pursuit of the five major trophies on offer to them this season.