Sunday, 3 November 2013

Obamacare woes frustrating Democrats' 2014 prospects

By Richard Cowan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The chaotic launch of President Barack Obama's healthcare law has Democrats in Congress increasingly anxious about its potential impact on them in the 2014 elections and scrambling to protect themselves if the program's problems persist.

Particularly nervous is a group of 16 Senate Democrats who are defending their seats next year, as Republicans will seek a net gain of six seats to try to take over the 100-seat chamber.

Some of the Democrats, such as New Hampshire's Jeanne Shaheen, represent states where enthusiasm has been high for the Affordable Care Act. Among other things, the law aims to provide inexpensive health insurance to many of the estimated 15 million Americans with little or no coverage.

Others, such as Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, represent conservative states where skepticism has been fueled by Republican attack ads discouraging participation.

The balky website, HealthCare.gov, has been unable to process an untold number of applications for insurance since its debut on October 1, and the frustration both types of Democrats have had with it was evident on Thursday.

White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough was summoned to the Capitol for a closed-door meeting with all Senate Democrats and peppered with "tough and pointed" questions about the program, one Senate Democratic leadership aide said.

The senators told McDonough that they wanted to see more progress in getting the site working efficiently, and that the administration had to do a better job of communicating its successes and failures in implementing the biggest legislative achievement of Obama's presidency.

Telephone calls and letters from disappointed constituents began pouring into Shaheen's offices almost immediately after enrollment in Obamacare began with a thud last month, when it immediately became clear that navigating HealthCare.gov was vexed.

Administration officials have said most of the site's problems will be fixed by November 30.

Even so, Shaheen gathered nine other Democratic senators to encourage the White House to extend the initial enrollment period beyond March 31.

"The rollout of the new law was a disaster. The administration had three years to prepare," Shaheen told Reuters. "They clearly dropped the ball."

The senator is feeling pressure from voters partly because she was a vocal advocate of the healthcare law, which could help about 130,000 uninsured people in her tiny state, as well as many others who have insurance that does not cover preexisting health conditions or that has significant limits on benefits.

Shaheen is widely seen as having a strong chance of winning a second six-year term next year. But several other Senate Democrats running for reelection, including Pryor and Landrieu, are likely to face tough challenges from conservative Republicans.

Obamacare's stumbles are a particular problem for them as they defend a landmark law they helped write and still believe in.

LIMITING THE DOWNSIDE

Several Democrats have offered proposals that could be rushed onto the Senate floor if computer wizards cannot make the healthcare site more functional within the next month - and if a controversy does not die down over revelations that some people will lose health insurance plans they like, despite Obama's earlier assurances to the contrary.

Landrieu said Wednesday that she was crafting a bill to allow anyone who is satisfied with their current insurance to retain it.

Senator Joe Manchin, a conservative Democrat who is not up for reelection next year but whose state is increasingly trending Republican, has called for a one-year delay in requiring individuals to sign up for health insurance, echoing arguments made by many Republican lawmakers.

Of the 10 Senate Democrats urging an extension of the March 31 deadline for people to sign up or face a penalty, seven, including Shaheen, face reelection next year.

"The fundamental reason for doing the Affordable Care Act continues to exist," Shaheen said. "Prices for health insurance were going up at a rate that was increasingly unaffordable. Too many were not able to get health insurance."

But the snafus have raised her and other Democrats' political antennae.

If "getting too far out on a limb" for Obamacare started to feel risky and the limb began to crack, said Dante Scala, a political science professor at the University of New Hampshire, Shaheen is "going to get closer to the trunk of the tree.

"That's what we're seeing" in the proposal to extend the Obamacare enrollment deadline, Scala said. While looking out for her constituency, "I think she's trying to limit her personal downside," too.

The frustration among Democrats is also evident in the Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives. They are not likely to win enough votes to take over the 435-seat chamber, where the Republican majority has voted more than 40 times to repeal Obamacare, claiming it will destroy jobs and raise medical costs.

Some Democrats describe feeling let down by the administrative shortcomings.

Democratic Representative Elijah Cummings of Maryland told Reuters that he offered some firm advice to Obama during a recent meeting.

"I think what the president has to do (is) ... own the problem," Cummings said. "Then he's got to say, step-by-step, exactly how it's being fixed and what kind of progress is being made."

TROUBLE AHEAD?

For now, the Democrats are mostly stuck in a wait-and-see mode, hoping the administration meets its self-imposed November 30 deadline for eliminating the website's glitches.

"If the Obama administration fixes it and people start signing up, then we're in a good spot," said a Senate Democratic aide, "and you won't see much of a liability" from the messy rollout. If they don't, "then we're going to have trouble" heading into the 2014 elections.

Democratic lawmakers have indicated it is increasingly urgent that people in their states begin to see benefits from Obamacare soon, or else the situation will feed critics' claims that the program is a failure.

Pryor is the only remaining Democrat in the congressional delegation representing Arkansas, where Obama was trounced by Republican Mitt Romney in the presidential election last year.

During an interview with Reuters, he said misperceptions about Obamacare dominate many of his conversations with constituents. Some people didn't like it, but "others who have looked at the (costs) ... are actually pleased."

He said some voters have been led to believe that the government itself is selling insurance, rather than arranging for the sale of coverage from private carriers, with government subsidies reducing costs for those with lower incomes.

By the November 2014 elections, people will have had about a year's worth of experience with Obamacare, Pryor said. He cited private studies projecting that the law will help rural hospitals and the overall economy in Arkansas.

Republicans see an opposite scenario, one they say will boost their election chances next year.

The National Republican Congressional Committee, which strives to elect Republicans to the House of Representatives, is targeting seven seats held by Democrats who represent districts that have voted for Republicans in the last three presidential elections.

Several of those Democrats proudly voted for the healthcare act, said spokeswoman Andrea Bozek. "Now it's time for them to be accountable for the failures of this law." (Editing by David Lindsey and Prudence Crowther)


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Former Congress MLA arrested for daughter-in-law's suicide

New Delhi, Nov 3 (IANS) Four people, including a former Congress MLA, were arrested in the national capital in connection with the suicide of 27-year-old Rekha, the MLA's daughter-in-law, police said Sunday.

Rekha was found hanging at her house in Delhi's Sarai Rohilla area Saturday. Her family alleged that she had been killed over dowry.

"Shadi Ram, former Congress MLA from Kamla Nagar, his wife Dharamwati, Rekha's husband Sudhanshu (30) and her sister-in-law Maneesha were arrested from their house Sunday," a police officer said.

Police said that Rekha's father Ashok Chaudhary, in his complaint, alleged that Sudhanshu and his family members used to torture Rekha over demands of dowry.

The deceased Rekha was married to Sudhanshu, the son of Shadi Ram, about two years ago.

All four accused, including the two women, have been booked under relevant provisions of the Indian Penal Code including dowry death and dowry harassment, the officer said.

A case was registered in this regard against the accused at Keshavpuram police station of northwest Delhi over the complaint of Rekha's father, Ashok.

Police said Rekha did not leave any suicide note.


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Seven victims of Andhra train accident identified

Hyderabad, Nov 3 (IANS) Seven of the eight Bokaro Express passengers who were run over by another train near Vizianagaram in Andhra Pradesh Saturday night have been identified, police said.

All the bodies were shifted to railway hospital at Visakhapatnam. "One body is yet to be identified," a police official said Sunday.

One of the two injured is in critical condition.

The dead have been identified as Alexis, 27, Shweta Singh, 33, Samhita, 10, Shaurya, 2, Tara Devi, 34, Kartik Sahu, 70, and Lokender Kumar, 28.

Police said Lokender Kumar was a soldier in the army. The dead include three members of a family.

The ghastly accident took place at Gotlam near Vizianagaram town, about 700 km from here, when some passengers of Alappuzha-Dhanbad Express pulled the chain and jumped down from the train following rumours that fire broke out on the train. They failed to notice another train coming in opposite direction on the adjacent track.

Railway officials said Alappuzha-Dhanbad train, also known as Bokaro Express was on its way from Alappuzha in Kerala to Dhanbad in Jharkhand via Bokaro Steel City.

They quoted eye-witnesses as saying that someone in S1 passenger car pulled the chain as rumours spread that an adjacent coach had caught fire. Passengers jumped down in panic but came under Rayagada-Vijayawada passenger train coming in the opposite direction on another track.

Since it was pitch dark, they failed to notice the speeding train.

The dead include three members of a family from Aurangabad in Bihar. Manoj Kumar lost his wife Shweta Singh and two children two-year-old Shaurya and 10-year-old Samhita Kumari. The family was returning to Aurangabad from Bangalore.

Railways have ordered a probe. Railway Minister Mallikarjun Kharge termed the incident as "most tragic" and instructed the officials to ensure the injured get speedy treatment.

Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Kiran Kumar Reddy, who was away in Bangalore, expressed shock. He spoke to Vizianagaram district collector and superintendent of police over phone and directed them to provide all help to the families of the victims.


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China Xinjiang military boss booted off ruling council after attack

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's ruling Communist Party announced on Sunday the removal of the military chief of restive Xinjiang from the region's governing council, following a car crash in Beijing's Tiananmen Square blamed on Islamist militants from Xinjiang.

The official Xinjiang Daily said in a brief front page report that Peng Yong had been sacked as a member of Xinjiang's Communist Party Standing Committee, and would be replaced by Liu Lei, an army veteran with more than a decade's experience in the region.

The newspaper gave no reason for the move, but the party frequently removes top officials following such incidents as it seeks to apportion blame.

The incident was especially embarrassing for the stability-obsessed party given the billions of dollars it spends every year on domestic security, not only in Xinjiang but across the country, and that the crash happened in the heart of Beijing.

Peng was appointed commander of the Xinjiang military region in July 2011. It is likely that he will also be relieved of his military duties.

Real power in China lies with party bodies rather than government ones, as that is where the key decisions are made.

The government has blamed Islamist extremists plotting holy war after a vehicle police said was laden with gasoline ploughed into bystanders outside the front entrance of the Forbidden City, on the north of Tiananmen Square.

The three people in the car died, as did two tourists. More than 40 were injured. Police have also detained five suspected accomplices.

Security has been stepped up in Beijing and Xinjiang following the incident.

Beijing party chief Guo Jinlong has urged the police to improve their capacity to collect intelligence and take precautions against further attacks, the city government-run Beijing Daily said on Sunday.

Guo urged police and security forces to "look for vulnerable links" and "learn the lessons" from the incident, the report said.

Xinjiang is home to the Muslim Uighur minority, many of whom chafe at China's restrictions on their religion, culture and language, though the government says they are granted broad freedoms.

Xinjiang has been wracked by unrest in recent years, blamed by the government on the separatist East Turkestan Islamic Movement which Beijing believes was also responsible for last week's incident.

Rights groups, exiles and some experts say, though, that there is little evidence of a cohesive extremist movement operating in Xinjiang.

In 2009, some 200 people died in Xinjiang's regional capital Urumqi during riots which pitted Uighurs against the majority Han Chinese.

(Reporting By Dominique Patton and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Ron Popeski)


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Greeks fear more violence after Golden Dawn members shot dead

By Renee Maltezou

ATHENS (Reuters) - A brazen drive-by shooting that killed two young members of Greece's far-right Golden Dawn party has shocked Greeks and prompted soul-searching about whether the crisis-hit country is slipping into a "cycle of violence".

Greece's anti-terrorism force is investigating whether Friday's rush hour shooting outside the party's offices in Athens was retaliation for a fatal stabbing of an anti-fascism rapper by a Golden Dawn supporter in September, police said.

Rapper Pavlos Fissas's death sparked protests across Greece and a government crackdown on Golden Dawn, which is widely considered neo-Nazi and is blamed for attacks against migrants.

"We cannot let this cycle of violence continue," Makis Voridis, a senior lawmaker in Prime Minister Antonis Samaras's New Democracy party, told Mega TV. "This must end here."

"Twelve bullets against democracy," top-selling daily Ta Nea wrote on its front page on Saturday. "The double cold-blooded murder was a coarse provocation against stability."

The two Golden Dawn supporters, aged 22 and 27 years old, were gunned down in a busy street during the evening rush hour. A third man was seriously injured in the chest and stomach and doctors said he remained in a critical condition.

According to witnesses and CCTV camera footage, the attacker, who had an accomplice, got off a motorbike and shot the victims at close range, police said. Twelve bullets were found at the crime scene from a 9 mm gun.

No one has so far claimed responsibility for the attack.

"The target, the place and the time of the attack are symbolic," said Mary Bossis, professor of international security at the University of Piraeus.

"This act had an audience and those behind it have succeeded in sending the message they wanted."

Golden Dawn, Greece's third most popular political force, urged Greeks to join a memorial service on Saturday evening outside its offices in the northern suburb of Neo Iraklio. Residents began gathering at the site and lay flowers.

INSTABILITY

Politicians who have in the past queued up to pour scorn on Golden Dawn united in condemning the shooting.

"This murder creates a climate of instability and targets democracy," said the leftist Syriza party.

Greece is in the sixth year of a recession that has fuelled anger against its foreign lenders and the political class, blamed by Greeks for bringing the country close to bankruptcy.

Golden Dawn, which rejects the neo-Nazi label but uses a swastika-like emblem and its leader has denied the Holocaust, stormed into parliament last year on an anti-immigrant agenda.

Since Fissas' killing, the party has seen several of its members arrested as part of an investigation into accusations it has been involved in a wave of attacks and crimes. Golden Dawn has denied any wrongdoing and said it had asked for police protection at its offices after receiving threats.

The Greek government has in the past promised to wipe out a party it describes as a "neo-Nazi gang". On Friday, it vowed to bring the killers of the two Golden Dawn supporters to justice.

Small-scale bomb attacks against police, politicians and businessmen are frequent in Greece, which has a history of leftist violence. A prominent fatal shooting like Friday's attack was last seen in 2010, when a Greek journalist was shot dead outside his home.

"Yesterday's killing marked a continuation of political uncertainty and instability in the country," said George Tzogopoulos, analyst at the Athens-based ELIAMEP think-tank.

"These kinds of killings, in the span of only 40 days, are obviously worrying for a country that is the cradle of democracy." (Additional reporting Deborah Kyvrikosaios; Editing by Deepa Babington and Gareth Jones)


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Russia's Putin approves tougher anti-terrorism laws as Sochi games loom

MOSCOW (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin has signed off on tougher anti-terrorism laws ahead of the 2014 Winter Olympics that could oblige relatives to pay for any damage caused by militants fighting a separatist campaign in southern Russia.

The February games will take place around the Black Sea resort of Sochi, a few hundred kilometres (miles) from the mountainous North Caucasus region where rebels are fighting to carve out an Islamic state.

Moscow has cracked down on the Islamist insurgency in Dagestan, the epicentre of North Caucasus violence. But an October21 suicide attack - staged outside the region but blamed on a woman from Dagestan - highlighted the threat to security.

The new law, which Putin signed on November2, according to documents published on Sunday on the Russian authorities' legal website, introduces prison terms of up to 10 years for undergoing training "aimed at carrying out terrorist activity".

"Compensation for damage...caused as a result of a terrorist act is covered... with the means of the person that committed a terrorist act, and also the means of close relatives, relatives and close acquaintances if... they obtained money, valuables and other property as a result of terrorist activity," the law also says.

The law, originally proposed to the parliament by the Kremlin, also allows for the seizure of property of relatives and close acquaintances of suspected militants if they fail to provide documents proving their rightful acquisition.

Rights activists accuse authorities of grave human rights violations in the North Caucasus and say such heavy handed tactics only fuel anger and resentment among local inhabitants.

(Reporting by Gabriela Baczynska; editing by Ralph Boulton)


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Six die, over a dozen hurt in Delhi fire

New Delhi, Nov 2 (IANS) At least six people, including four women, died and over a dozen were injured in a fire at a factory here Saturday evening, police said.

The fire broke out around 5.50 p.m. in a purse manufacturing factory in Ranjeet Nagar area.

"Seven fire tenders rushed to the spot and doused the blaze around 7.50 p.m. Over a dozen people were rescued from the factory and rushed to three different hospitals," said a fire service official.

"Six victims were declared dead while others are undergoing treatment. Some others have been discharged from hospitals," said a police officer.

All the victims were employees in the factory.

"The reason behind the fire is yet to be ascertained," said the officer.


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IOC sets up illegal betting unit to protect Games

BERLIN (Reuters) - The International Olympic Committee (IOC) will set up a special unit to tackle illegal betting and match-fixing in a bid to make sure it does not become an issue in future Games, it said on Sunday.

The IOC held a meeting in Lausanne with its stakeholders including soccer's ruling body FIFA, the governing authority of athletics the IAAF and Olympic Committee chiefs from Russia and the United States among others.

"It was agreed the IOC will set up a special unit to coordinate efforts (on match-fixing and illegal betting)," the IOC said in a statement.

"This unit will work on risk prevention and the dissemination of information and will support the harmonisation of rules of the Olympic and sports movements.

"These rules will be based on examples from some of the international federations already working on this issue, such as (FIFA) which has already applied severe sanctions."

The Olympics have been largely unaffected by illegal betting or match-fixing although last year badminton came under fire at the London Games when four women's doubles pairs from South Korea, China and Indonesia deliberately played to lose their matches in order to get a more favourable draw.

All four pairings were disqualified and banned.

Athletes and officials are forbidden from betting on the Olympics and the IOC has been co-operating with legal betting agencies in the past few Games to monitor betting patterns for any suspect or unusual wagers.

Irish sailor Peter O'Leary escaped with a warning after betting on a direct competitor to win at the 2008 Beijing Games.

O'Leary had placed two bets worth a total of 300 euros on a British boat to capture the gold medal in the Star class at odds of 12-1. (Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; editing by Tony Jimenez)


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I am not a liar: Swetha Menon

Kochi, Nov 2 (IANS) Actress Swetha Menon continued to be in a state of shock over the incidents that happened Friday at Kollam and said, "I am not a liar".

"I am in a state of shock over the incidents that happened yesterday (Friday) and I am deeply hurt in the manner in which the Kollam district collector has refuted I spoke to him about what happened," said Menon.

"I want justice because I have been picturised as a liar and I can't take this," added Menon who broke down while speaking to reporters in her home, here.

"I will write to Chief Minister Oommen Chandy on what has happened," said Menon.

Chandy earlier in the day had told reporters he had not received any complaint and if she gives one, it would be taken up.

Menon Saturday morning said let "visuals speak" after TV channels showed a lawmaker trying to cosy up to her during a boat race. The parliamentarian denied the charge.

Menon stopped short of naming the politician.

"Let the visuals speak ... I could have reacted instantly but since I am not interested in creating news, I did not," said Menon while answering a reporter's question whether the politician was Kollam Lok Sabha member and Congress leader Peethamabara Kurup.

Kurup told reporters he has been in public life for several decades. "I am not such a character and very soon I will come out with all the pictures," said Kurup, a first time Lok Sabha member.

The alleged incident took place Friday evening while Menon was one of the guests of honour at a boat race in Kollam.

TV visuals show Kurup on more than one occasion getting close to the actress.

Women activists cutting across political affiliations condemned the incident and demanded action against the lawmaker.

Former CPI-M legislator and Democratic Mahila Association state secretary K.K. Shylaja said, "The visuals speak the truth and authorities should start initiating action against him."

CPI-M central committee member P.K.Sreemathi described it as a blot on Kerala and "the need of the hour is state Home Minister Thiruvanchoor Radhakrishnan should immediately direct police for action to be taken".

Lissy Jose, state womens' commission member, said her personal opinion is that a case should be registered against the person who did this.

However, Congress leader Bindu Krishna said Kurup is known to be a very caring person and "what I am told is that there are more pictures and once that also comes out, it would be clear what has happened".

"A detailed probe will reveal everything and at the same time we are not discounting Menon's statements," said Krishna.

Actors' body AMMA is expected to discuss this issue shortly and her future course of action would depend on the outcome of the meeting. "We will take this issue up because our members just cannot be made vulnerable to these incidents because all of us do go for public functions," said AMMA president and veteran comedian Innocent.

Leader of Opposition V.S.Achuthanandan said what happened to Menon is most shameful.

"We have the recent law that has been passed in the parliament and it states that the victim's response is only needed for action to be taken. She is reported to have told the Kollam district collector after the incident happened and so far no action has be taken. All are waiting to see what the government under Chandy is going to do," Achuthanandan told reporters at a hurriedly called press conference here Saturday.

Kollam district collector B. Mohan said he had not received any complaint.


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Ring road robber arrested

New Delhi, Nov 2 (IANS) A key member of a gang that targets commuters at bus stops on the Ring Road was arrested for robberies committed at knife-point after giving lifts to passengers, police said Saturday.

Vipin Kumar was arrested near a bus stop in south Delhi's Sunlight Colony Friday when he along with his associates was on the lookout for gullible commuters.

"One of the luxury cars being used by the accused was also seized," said a police officer.

Kumar revealed he and his gang members used to park their car near bus stops and taking advantage of the duration between arrival and departure of buses, offer lifts to commuters at a low fare.

"Once a passenger was seated, the gang used to take the vehicle to an isolated place and rob him at knife point before escaping from the spot," said the officer.

Efforts were being made to arrest other accused, the officer added.


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Owner arrested after Delhi factory fire kills six

New Delhi, Nov 3 (IANS) The Delhi Police have arrested the owner of a purse manufacturing factory where a fire Saturday evening killed six people and injured 11 others.

Varun Gambhir, 27, was arrested for illegally running the two-storeyed factory in Delhi's Ranjeet Nagar area where a blaze broke out around 5.50 p.m. Saturday.

Though fire service personnel doused the flames after two hours, 17 people received burn injuries.

"Six of the injured, including four women, were declared dead in a hospital while 11 others are being treated," said a police officer.

Five of the six injured have been identified as Puja, 18, Soni, 22, Dropadi, 35, Piyush, 25, and Rahul, 25.

All the victims worked in the factory.

"The reason behind the fire is yet to be ascertained," said the officer.


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Mother refuses booze money, son ends life

New Delhi, Nov 2 (IANS) A man committed suicide at his residence here Saturday morning when his mother did not give him money for purchasing liquor, police said.

Ranjeet, 24 and unemployed, was found hanging from a ceiling fan in his west Delhi's Mangolpuri area house around 11 a.m.

Police said he was a habitual drinker.

"Ranjeet threatened his mother Saturday morning that he would take the extreme step after she refused to give him money to buy liquor. When his mother went out, he hanged himself," said a police officer.

No suicide note was recovered from the victim's possession, said the officer.


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Woman found dead in Bengal, family alleges rape

Kolkata, Nov 3 (IANS) The half-naked body of a married woman bearing a deep wound in the neck was found in West Bengal's Burdwan district, police said Sunday. Her family alleged she was raped before being murdered.

"The half-naked dead body of the woman was discovered late Saturday night. We have registered a case of murder and sent the body for postmortem. Five people have been detained for questioning," said a police official.

The victim's husband claimed that she was raped and also alleged that police refused to lodge a rape complaint.

The official clarified that a case of rape would be registered only if the offence was confirmed in the postmortem examination report.


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Three arrested for human sacrifice bid in Bengal

Kolkata, Nov 3 (IANS) Three people, including a woman, were arrested from West Bengal's Birbhum district for allegedly attempting human sacrifice, police said Sunday.

The incident happened Saturday night in Barunighata village of the district, some 240 km from Kolkata.

"We arrested three people, including a woman who practises witchcraft, for attempting human sacrifice," a police officer said.

According to police, Samrat Maal, seeking to resolve marital discord, had approached the woman, who told him that a resolution of his problems was possible if tantric rituals that required the head of a human being were performed.

Maal was also told that Saturday was an auspicious day for human sacrifice, being Kali Puja day.

In his attempt to attack a man from the village, Maal and an accomplice were caught by villagers who later handed him to the police.

The woman was arrested later, after the two men were interrogated.


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Hackers deface Philippine websites, back anti-corruption protest

MANILA (Reuters) - A group of hackers claiming ties with international activist group Anonymous defaced Philippine government websites on Sunday, calling for support for a planned anti-corruption protest in congress this week.

Calling themselves Anonymous Philippines, the group posted on its Facebook page a list of sites it had defaced with a message seking support for a protest demanding the abolition of "pork barrel funds" - money activists say is used for political patronage.

"We apologise for this inconvenience, but this is the easiest way we could convey our message to you, our dear brothers and sisters who are tired of this cruelty and this false democracy, tired of this government and the politicians who only think about themselves," read a message on the defaced websites.

A scandal over lawmakers' misuse of public funds has become the biggest crisis of President Benigno Aquino's three-year rule, tainting his carefully crafted image as a corruption fighter and undermining his ability to push economic reforms.

National and local government agencies and a Philippine embassy website were among those defaced. The group said the government "in many ways, has failed its Filipino citizens".

On its Facebook page, it indicated the defaced sites of the state postal agency, the Insurance Commission, the Optical Media Board, an anti-piracy agency, and the Sugar Regulatory Administration. Also defaced was the Philippine embassy's website in Seoul.

The attack on Philippine websites occurred after the Singapore government received a threat last week via a YouTube video put up by someone claiming to be part of Anonymous.

It threatened to bring down key infrastructure to protest against the city-state's new licensing rules imposed on websites.

The video shows an individual in Anonymous's trademark mask of 17th century British conspirator Guy Fawkes, saying: "No government has the right to deprive their citizens the freedom of information. We demand you reconsiderthe regulations of your framework or we will be forced to go to war with you."

A blog section of pro-government Straits Times newspaper was hacked on Friday morning and temporarily carried a statement complaining about how the newspaper had reported the hacking threat. The paper said it had referred the matter to the police. (Reporting By Manuel Mogato. Additional reporting by Rachel Armstrong in Singapore.; Editing by Ron Popeski)


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Amritsar kidney scam: Five doctors, police officer held guilty

Amritsar, Nov 2 (IANS) The district and sessions court here Saturday held five doctors of the Government Medical College and a policeman guilty for their role in the Amritsar kidney scam exposed by the Punjab Police in 2002.

The guilty include former college principal O.P. Mahajan and doctors Jagdish Gargi, S.K. Grover, H.S. Bhutani and Rajinder Singh.

A Haryana Police inspector, Suresh Kumar, was also held guilty of threatening a minor boy and forcing him to donate his kidney, fraudulently taken out by the doctors. Kumar was the recipient.

Police took the doctors into custody immediately after the verdict. The court will announce the quantum of sentence Nov 8.

The court held these doctors guilty of conspiracy in the kidney racket. Mahajan was the chairman and Gargi a member of the kidney transplant authorisation committee at that time. The panel allowed kidney donation and transplant despite rules not allowing donation by a minor.


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Kuwaiti woman arrested for driving in Saudi Arabia - report

KUWAIT (Reuters) - A Kuwaiti woman was arrested in Saudi Arabia for trying to drive her father to hospital, a Kuwaiti newspaper reported on Sunday, a week after Saudi women protested against a ban on female drivers.

Kuwaiti women are free to drive in their country and enjoy far more rights than those in Saudi Arabia, who are not allowed to travel abroad, open a bank account or work without permission from a male relative.

The English language Kuwait Times said the woman was driving in an area just over the border, with her father in the passenger seat, when she was stopped by police. Kuwaitis and Saudi locals regularly cross the border and communities living along the frontier are often a mix of people from both countries.

The woman, who said her diabetic father could not drive and needed to be taken to hospital for treatment, is being held in custody pending an investigation, the paper said, citing police.

The paper did not suggest that the woman was protesting Saudi Arabia's ban on female drivers.

Saudi police in the border town al-Khafji referred calls to the local traffic police, who could not be reached for comment. Officials in the Kuwaiti Interior Ministry said they could not comment on reports of incidents outside Kuwait.

Kuwaiti women gained the right to vote and stand for political office in 2005 after years of campaigning and a push by senior ruling family members.

Conservative members of the Kuwaiti parliament, including some who draw on Saudi Arabia's austere interpretation of Islam, had previously blocked the reforms, saying that Islamic law prevented women from leadership positions.

In Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah has pushed some cautious reforms to give women more employment opportunities and a greater public voice, but has often faced resistance from senior clergy. [ID:nL5N0IH0BU] (Reporting by Sylvia Westall; Editing by Sami Aboudi and Robin Pomeroy)


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Hackers deface dozens of websites in Australia, Philippines

By Manuel Mogato and Randy Fabi

MANILA/JAKARTA (Reuters) - Hackers claiming links to international activist group Anonymous defaced dozens of websites belonging to Australian businesses and Philippine government agencies on Sunday.

A group calling itself Anonymous Indonesia posted on Twitter a list of more than 100 Australian sites it had hacked, saying the action was in response to reports of spying by Australia.

The websites, defaced with a message reading "Stop Spying on Indonesia", are mainly owned by small Australian businesses and seemed to have been chosen at random.

News of Australia's role in a U.S.-led surveillance network could damage relations with Indonesia, Australia's nearest Asian neighbour and an important strategic ally.

Reports that the Australian embassy in Jakarta was being used for spying prompted Indonesia to summon the Australian ambassador on Friday.

China demanded an explanation from the United States after the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper reported Australian embassies across Asia were part of the U.S. operation.

In a separate incident, a group calling itself Anonymous Philippines said on Facebook it had hacked Philippine government sites with a message seeking support for a protest demanding the abolition of "pork barrel funds" - money activists say is used for political patronage.

"We apologise for this inconvenience, but this is the easiest way we could convey our message to you, our dear brothers and sisters who are tired of this cruelty and this false democracy, tired of this government and the politicians who only think about themselves," read the message.

A scandal over lawmakers' misuse of public funds has become the biggest crisis of President Benigno Aquino's three-year rule, tainting his carefully crafted image as a corruption fighter and undermining his ability to push economic reforms.

National and local government agencies and the website of the Philippine embassy in Seoul were among those hacked.

Last week, an Internet video by someone claiming to be part of Anonymous threatened to bring down key infrastructure in Singapore to protest against new licensing rules imposed on websites there.

A blog section of the pro-government Straits Times newspaper was hacked on Friday morning and temporarily carried a statement complaining about how the paper had reported the hacking threat. The paper referred the matter to the police.

(Additional reporting by Rachel Armstrong in Singapore; Editing by Ron Popeski and Robin Pomeroy)


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Pakistan Taliban secretly bury leader, vow bombs in revenge

By Saud Mehsud and Hafiz Wazir

DERA ISMAIL KHAN/WANA, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistani Taliban fighters secretly buried their leader on Saturday after he was killed by a U.S. drone aircraft and quickly moved to replace him while vowing a wave of revenge suicide bombings.

The Pakistani government denounced the killing of Hakimullah Mehsud as a U.S. bid to derail planned peace talks and summoned the U.S. ambassador to protest. Some lawmakers demanded the blocking of U.S. supply lines into Afghanistan in retaliation.

"The murder of Hakimullah is the murder of all efforts at peace," said Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar. "Americans said they support our efforts at peace. Is this support?"

Mehsud, who had a $5 million U.S. bounty on his head, and three others were killed on Friday in the militant stronghold of Miranshah in northwest Pakistan.

Mehsud's vehicle was hit after he attended a meeting of Taliban leaders, a Pakistani Taliban fighter said, adding that Mehsud's body was "damaged but recognisable". His bodyguard and driver were also killed.

He was secretly buried under cover of darkness in the early hours by a few companions amid fears that his funeral might be attacked by U.S. drones, militants and security sources said.

"Every drop of Hakimullah's blood will turn into a suicide bomber," said Azam Tariq, a Pakistani Taliban spokesman.

"America and their friends shouldn't be happy because we will take revenge for our martyr's blood."

Mehsud took over as leader of the al Qaeda-linked Pakistani Taliban in 2009. The group's two previous leaders were killed in attacks by U.S. missile-firing drones.

Taliban commanders said they wanted to replace him with the movement's number two, Khan Said, who is also known as Sajna.

Said is believed to have masterminded an attack on a jail in northwest Pakistan that freed nearly 400 prisoners in 2012 and a big attack on a Pakistani naval base.

But some commanders were unhappy with the choice and wanted more talks, several militants said, indicating divisions within the Pakistani Taliban, an umbrella group of factions allied with the Afghan Taliban and battling the Pakistani state in the hope of imposing Islamist rule.

The Pakistani Taliban killed an army general in September, has beheaded Pakistani soldiers and killed thousands of civilians in suicide bombings. The group also directed a failed attempt to bomb Times Square in New York.

In 2010, Mehsud appeared in a farewell video with a Jordanian suicide bomber who killed seven CIA employees at a base in Afghanistan.

"ATTACK ON TALKS"

Mehsud was in his mid-30s and had a sharp face framed by a beard and a tangle of long hair, usually flowing from beneath a traditional Afghan hat.

Despite his reputation as an uncompromising commander, Pakistan's new government had vowed to try to stop the violence through peace talks and it reacted angrily to his death.

"The U.S. has tried to attack the peace talks with this drone but we will not let them fail," said Information Minister Pervez Rashid. The Taliban said on Friday those negotiations had yet to start.

The Pakistani foreign office said in a statement on Saturday Mehsud's death was "counter-productive to Pakistan's efforts to bring peace and stability to Pakistan and the region".

Shah Farman, a spokesman for the government of the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, said provincial lawmakers would pass a resolution on Monday to cut NATO supply lines into landlocked Afghanistan. A major one passes through the nearby Khyber Pass.

The supply lines through U.S. ally Pakistan have been crucial since the latest Afghan war began in 2001 and remain vital as the United States and other Western forces prepare to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of next year.

Residents of Miranshah, the capital of the North Waziristan region on the Afghan border, said Pakistani Taliban fighters were converging on the town and firing furiously at drones buzzing high in the sky.

About eight drones were seen overhead as well as a larger aircraft that seemed to be an aeroplane or a type of drone that residents said they had not seen before.

"We thought it was a C-130 aircraft but it was a special spy plane, bigger in size," resident Farhad Khan said by telephone from Miranshah. "The militants fired from their anti-aircraft guns to hit it but couldn't."

Shops and markets were open in the town. Residents said they were worried about a possible army offensive but not Taliban reprisals. They expected the militants to launch attacks elsewhere in Pakistan.

"We feel the militants will show their reaction in major cities like they usually do," said resident Assadullah Dawar.

In May, Mehsud's deputy was killed by a drone nearby. Last month, one of his top deputies was captured in Afghanistan.

(Additional reporting by Jibran Ahmad in Peshawar; Writing by Katharine Houreld; Editing by Gareth Jones)


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PM postpones visit to Odisha, Andhra

New Delhi, Nov 2 (IANS) Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has postponed his visit to cyclone-hit Odisha and Andhra Pradesh, scheduled for Saturday, due to "scheduling issues".

The prime minister was to undertake an aerial survey of the two states, hit by cyclone Phailin Oct 12.

"The visit has been postponed due to scheduling issues," PMO sources told IANS.

The prime minister was expected to make some announcement about financial aid.

While reviewing the impact of the cyclone late last month, the prime minister had complimented the efforts of the Odisha and Andhra Pradesh governments as well as relief agencies in managing the cyclone's aftermath.


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Eight run over by train in Andhra

Hyderabad, Nov 2 (IANS) At least eight persons were run over by a train in Andhra Pradesh on Saturday after they pulled a chain and got down from another train following rumours of a fire.

The horrific mishap occurred Saturday evening near Gotlam close to Vizianagaram town in north coastal Andhra, 700 km from here. The toll may go up as it was pitch dark at the time of the mishap, making rescue work difficult.

Police said the incident occurred when some passengers of the Alappuzha-Dhanbad Express pulled chain and got down after rumours of the train catching fire. According to eyewitnesses, they came under Raigarh-Vijayawada passenger train on the adjacent track.

The dead included two women. Two passengers were injured. Railway authorities have set up a helpline at Visakhapatnam to provide information about the victims. The telephone numbers are 0891-2843003, 2843004, 2843005.

Senior police and railway officials rushed to the scene. Vizianagaram district collector Kantilal Dande is supervising the rescue and relief work.

Chief Minister N. Kiran Kumar Reddy, who is in Bangalore, expressed shock and anguish over the mishap. He directed the collector, superintendent of police and other top officials to supervise rescue and relief operations.

According to a statement from the chief minister's office, he asked officials to provide the best treatment to the injured.


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Four die as vehicle falls off bridge in Punjab

Chandigarh, Nov 2 (IANS) At least four people died and 30 others were injured when a vehicle fell off a bridge after hitting the safety wall in Punjab's Kapurthala district Saturday, police said.

The accident took place near the Subhanpur village on the Jalandhar-Amritsar national highway (NH-1).

The driver of the vehicle was among those killed. The vehicle was carrying people to a sect headquarters near Beas town, 45 km from Amritsar.

The injured were rushed to a hospital in Beas town. They told police that the driver was driving rashly because of which he lost control over the vehicle and it fell off the bridge.


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Train runs over eight in Andhra

Hyderabad, Nov 2 (IANS) At least eight people were run over by a train in Andhra Pradesh Saturday after they pulled the chain and got down from another train following rumours of a fire.

The accident took place near the Gotlam railway in Vizianagaram district station when some passengers of the Alappuzha-Dhanbad Express pulled the chain and disembarked after hearing the train had caught fire. According to eyewitnesses, they came under another train on the adjacent track.

The dead included two women. Two others were injured in the mishap.

Senior police and railway officials rushed to the scene.


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Four people injured in Saudi prison fire, riots - spokesman

RIYADH (Reuters) - Four people were injured on Saturday when a fire broke out when prisoners rioted at a prison in northern Saudi Arabia during weekly visiting hours, a spokesman for the prisons authority said.

The Saudi state news agency SPA quoted the official as saying that authorities restored order while firefighters put out the fire.

"Two security men and two prisoners were injured and were transferred to hospital for the necessary treatment," SPA quoted the spokesman as saying about the incident at the Buraidah prison.

The spokesman provided no further details and the exact sequence of events was not clear.

"Concerned authorities have began investigating the causes of the fire and the rioting that accompanied it," he said.

Saudi news website www.sabq.org said that gunshots were reported during the riot. It quoted sources at Buraidah's King Fahd hospital as saying that two inmates had been admitted with gunshot wounds, while two security men were treated for bruises and discharged.

A woman who works at the prison was also in hospital suffering from smoke inhalation, it said.

The Saudi prison official made no reference to gunfire.

Local residents said the rioting occurred at a facility in the old part of the al-Qassim provincial capital where inmates that have been jailed for criminal offences are held.

Prisoners held for security offences or involvement in anti-government political activities are held at a different facility far from the site of the riots, they said. (Reporting by Sami Aboudi and Angus McDowall; Editing by Gareth Jones and Sonya hepinstall)


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Accused Los Angeles airport shooter could face death penalty

By Alex Dobuzinskis and Dana Feldman

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The 23-year-old man accused of opening fire at Los Angeles International Airport, killing an airport security officer and wounding three other people, could face the death penalty after being charged with murder on Saturday, a federal prosecutor said.

Paul Anthony Ciancia was charged with murder of a federal officer and committing violence at an international airport, U.S. Attorney Andre Birotte told reporters a day after the shooting that touched off panic and chaos at the world's sixth busiest airport.

Ciancia carried a signed note that called Transportation Security Administration officers "traitorous" and he targeted them during his rampage at the airport's Terminal 3, FBI special agent in charge David Bowdich said.

Ciancia was dropped off at the airport, said Bowdich, who declined to say if the FBI knew who drove the suspected gunman there.

The slain TSA officer, Gerardo Hernandez, 39, became the first employee of the agency created after the September 11, 2001, hijacked plane attacks to be killed in the line of duty.

The shooting sent hundreds of travelers running for safety and some dove for cover behind luggage, as loud alarms blared through the terminal. Flights were grounded, delayed or diverted, with more than 167,000 arriving and departing passengers seeing disruption to their itineraries on Friday.

Ciancia entered Terminal 3 and pulled a Smith & Wesson .223-caliber assault rifle out of his bag, firing multiple rounds at Hernandez at point-blank range, said a criminal complaint filed in court on Saturday. The shooting occurred at a document verification checkpoint, authorities said.

The suspect then began to walk up an escalator and looked back at Hernandez who appeared to move, and returned to shoot him again, the complaint said.

Ciancia, who police say continued past the metal detectors and ran deep into the passenger boarding area at Terminal 3, shot and wounded two other TSA employees and an airline passenger, the complaint added. Two other people were hurt evading gunfire, Bowdich said.

Authorities said the suspected gunman made it down a long passageway as far as a food court in the passenger loading area, where he was shot and wounded by airport police officers. The Los Angeles Times has reported his wounds include a gunshot to the head.

"They did stop this before, we believe, what would have been a much more grave action" with more casualties, Bowdich said of the airport police.

Ciancia was "unresponsive" in a hospital on Saturday, with investigators unable to interview him, Bowdich said.

Both federal charges against Ciancia carry the maximum penalty of death or life in prison, said Birotte.

"It will be the decision of the attorney general of the United States whether or not to seek the death penalty in this case," the prosecutor added.

ANGRY NOTE

The Los Angeles Times reported that among the wounded was teacher Brian Ludmer, 29, who was shot in the leg. Ludmer teaches high school in the Los Angeles suburb of Calabasas.

In the handwritten note the suspect was carrying, he expressed malice toward TSA officers, Bowdich said.

"We found a statement where he made a conscious decision to kill multiple TSA employees," Bowdich said. "He addressed them at one point in the letter and said that he wanted to 'instill fear into their traitorous minds.'"

Late on Friday, FBI agents obtained a search warrant and combed through Ciancia's home in the suburban Sun Valley section of Los Angeles, FBI spokeswoman Ari Dekofksy said.

John Mincey, Ciancia's former roommate from another part of Los Angeles, told local television station KABC that Ciancia never displayed hatred or ties to "any hate group, or anything like that."

Hernandez, the slain officer, was born in El Salvador and came to the United States at age 15, his wife, Ana Hernandez, told reporters outside her home in a Los Angeles suburb.

The couple met when he was 19 and Ana was 16 and they had two children together, she said. He began working for the TSA at Los Angeles International Airport in 2010, she said.

"He was a joyful person, always smiling, who took pride in his duty for the American public as well as the TSA mission," Ana Hernandez said. "Gerardo was a great man who always showed his love for our family."

TRIBUTE TO OFFICER

Los Angeles police officers will be wearing black mourning bands in memory of Hernandez, Chief Charlie Beck of the Los Angeles Police Department said on Twitter.

The airport said its public art display of 100-foot (30-metre) pylons would be lit blue through Sunday to honor Hernandez.

All airlines at the airport except JetBlue were back to normal operations on Saturday afternoon, airport officials said in a statement. Terminal 3, which had been the scene of a massive investigation, was fully reopened to passengers at midday on Saturday, officials said.

Bowdich said the FBI was seeking more information about the background of Ciancia, who has family in New Jersey.

Police and FBI agents have visited the home of Ciancia's family in Pennsville Township, New Jersey.

Pennsville Police Chief Allen Cummings said he had been contacted by Ciancia's father before the shooting, prompted by a worrisome text message from the young man to his brother.

The police chief declined to reveal more about the content of the text message, but said that family members told investigators they had no previous indications that Ciancia, who moved to California about 18 months ago, was troubled.

(Additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles, Dave Warner in Pennsville, New Jersey, Noreen O'Donnell in New York and Mark Hosenball and Susan Cornwell in Washington; Editing by Edith Honan, Gunna Dickson and Peter Cooney)


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Woman teacher's death triggers protests in Odisha

Bhubaneswar, Nov 2 (IANS) The death of a woman teacher, set afire for allegedly refusing to withdraw a sexual assault complaint, triggered protests in Odisha Saturday with people staging rallies and demonstrations.

A delegation led by state Congress president Jayadeb Jena met Governor S.C. Jamir and submitted to him a memorandum demanding a probe into the incident by the Central Bureau of Investigation, while the Bharatiya Janata Party said Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik should resign on moral ground for the increasing lawlessness in the state.

Hundreds of activists of Odisha Jan Morcha (OJM), holding placards and banners came in a procession here and shouted anti-government slogans.

Demanding resignation of the chief minister, they staged a demonstration in front of the office of the police deputy commissioner.

"The teacher had asked for justice many times when she was alive. She had written to all the authorities concerned, including the chief minister seeking protection but no action was taken," Sidheswari Prasad Mishra, the president of OJM's youth wing, who led the protest, said.

Hundreds of Congress workers and leaders blocked a road in Jeypore town of Rayagada district, about 521 km from here.

People took out rallies in Cuttack, Rayagada and Puri. Women also organised candle rallies in different places.

Itishree Pradhan, 28, died Friday in a private hospital in Visakhapatnam four days after she was set on fire in a residential government school at Tikiri in Rayagada district after she reportedly refused to withdraw a complaint of sexual assault she lodged in July against local school inspector Netrananda Dandsena.

She was watching a television show along with some children when the assailant entered the school room, poured kerosene on her and set her on fire. Pradhan had sustained more than 90 percent burn injuries.

Dandsena was arrested Wednesday. The government also suspended a district inspector of school, investigating police officer and in-charge of the police station concerned.


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Ex-MLA's daughter-in-law found hanging

New Delhi, Nov 2 (IANS) A former Congress MLA's daughter-in-law was found hanging under mysterious circumstances at a house in Delhi's Sarai Rohilla area, police said Saturday.

Victim's family alleged that their daughter was killed for dowry. Her in-laws, however, claimed that she had committed suicide.

Rekha, 27, was found hanging inside her in-law's house Saturday morning.

Rekha's father Ashok Chaudhary, in his complaint, said in December 2012, he had organised her daughter's marriage with the son of former MLA Sadiram.

"A few days after the marriage, Rekha's in-laws started demanding more dowry. When I could not fulfill their continuous demand, they killed my daughter," Chaudhary said.

Sadiram, his wife and his son Sudhanshu have been arrested, police said.

"Victim's body has been sent for post-mortem to ascertain the exact reason behind the death as her family members alleged that she was killed by her in-laws for dowry," said a police officer.

"A probe in the case has been conducted and we are waiting for victim's post-mortem report before taking further action," the officer added.


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Two death sentences in absentia for war crimes in Bangladesh

By Ruma Paul

DHAKA (Reuters) - A Bangladesh war crimes court convicted and sentenced to death in absentia on Sunday two men accused of committing atrocities during the country's war of independence from Pakistan in 1971.

Britain-based Muslim leader Chowdhury Mueen Uddin and Ashrafuzzaman Khan, a U.S. citizen, were found guilty of the torture and murder of 18 intellectuals during the war, lawyers and tribunal officials said.

They said the 18 included nine Dhaka University teachers, six journalists and three doctors. Both men were 65 years old.

"Justice will be denied if they are not given death sentences for their heinous crimes," judge Obaidul Hassan told the crowded tribunal.

Lawyers representing Mueen denounced the verdict and said the court had staged a show trial.

Bangladesh has been hit in recent months by a wave of violent protests over war crimes convictions, presenting the government with a security and credibility challenge ahead of polls early next year.

The tribunal has brought down eight convictions so far, with six defendants sentenced to death.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina set up the tribunal in 2010 to investigate abuses during the conflict, during which India helped Bangladesh, then known as East Pakistan, break away from Pakistan. It delivered its first verdict in January.

The prime minister's opponents say she is using the tribunal against the two biggest opposition parties, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and the Jamaat-e-Islami.

Bloodletting has erupted across the country since the tribunal's first verdict. More than 100 people have been killed in the clashes this year, most of them were Islamist party activists and members of the security forces.

Outside the courtroom, veterans of the war were among hundreds of people who cheered the verdict.

So far, six former and current Jamaat leaders and two BNP leaders have been convicted.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch group has said the tribunal's procedures fall short of international standards.

Rejecting all charges levelled against Mueen, his international legal team said in a statement: "This is coming from a body that has been accused of gross irregularity and misconduct by human rights groups, notable figures and institutions around the world."

It accused the government of staging a "political show trial" to help the ruling party keep power in upcoming elections. It called for a halt to all trials and the convening of a full international inquiry.

INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS UPHELD: MINISTER

Law Minister Shafique Ahmed told reporters that international standards had been upheld and pledged action to bring the two men to Bangladesh.

"We know where they are living. We must do our best to bring them back and execute them," state prosecutor Tureen Afroz told reporters.

Sunday's verdicts appeared to have triggered no unrest.

But sporadic violence broke out on the eve of a new 60-hour strike called by the BNP to demand next year's election take place under a non-partisan government. Several people were injured as crude bombs went off in Dhaka and other cities.

Bangladesh became part of Pakistan at the end of British rule in 1947 but it broke away from Pakistan in 1971 after a nine-month war. Some factions in Bangladesh, including the Jamaat, opposed the break with Pakistan, but the party denies accusations that its leaders committed murder, rape and torture.

About three million people were killed, according to official figures, and thousands of women were raped. (Reporting by Ruma Paul; Editing by Ron Popeski)


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Snowden says calls for reform prove intel leaks were justified

BERLIN (Reuters) - Fugitive U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden said calls for more oversight of government intelligence agencies showed he was justified in revealing the methods and targets of the U.S. secret service.

Snowden's leaks about the National Security Agency (NSA), from its alleged mass scanning of emails to the tapping of world leaders' phones, have infuriated U.S. allies and placed Washington on the defensive.

In "A Manifesto for the Truth" published in German news magazine Der Spiegel on Sunday, Snowden said current debates about mass surveillance in many countries showed his revelations were helping to bring about change.

"Instead of causing damage, the usefulness of the new public knowledge for society is now clear because reforms to politics, supervision and laws are being suggested," the 30-year-old ex-CIA employee and NSA contractor wrote.

"Citizens have to fight against the suppression of information about affairs of essential importance for the public. Those who speak the truth are not committing a crime."

Snowden is in Russia, where he has been given asylum for at least a year.

In an open letter to Germany last week, Snowden said he was counting on international support to stop Washington's 'persecution' of him.

His revelations about the reach and methods of the NSA, including the monitoring of vast volumes of Internet traffic and phone records, have angered U.S. allies from Germany to Brazil.

Admirers have called Snowden a human rights champion. Others say he is a traitor for stealing information from the NSA after vowing to respect its secrecy policies and then fleeing first to Hong Kong and then to Russia with classified U.S. data.

Snowden declined a job offer from Russia's top social networking site VKontakte (InTouch), local media quoted one of the company's founders, Pavel Durov, as saying over the weekend.

A Russian lawyer with close links to the authorities who is assisting Snowden, Anatoly Kucherena, had said this week the American would start work in November for a "large Russian (web)site" that he refused to name for security reasons.

In the manifesto published on Sunday, Snowden said mass surveillance was a global problem that needed global solutions and added that secret services' "criminal surveillance programmes" jeopardized individual privacy, freedom of opinion and open societies.

The existence of spying technology should not determine politics, he said: "We have a moral duty to ensure that our laws and values limit surveillance programmes and protect human rights".

Society, said Snowden, could only understand and keep a check on these problems via an open, ruthless and informed debate.

He said some governments that felt exposed by the revelations had at first launched a "persecution campaign" to repress debate by intimidating journalists and threatening them with prosecution.

"At that time the public was not in a position to judge the usefulness of these revelations. People trusted that their governments would make the right decisions," he said.

"Today we know that was a mistake and that such behaviour does not serve the public interest," he said. (Reporting by Michelle Martin; additional reporting by Gabriela Baczynska in Moscow; editing by Tom Pfeiffer)


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Ostracised AIDS patient couple ends life in Tripura

Agartala, Nov 3 (IANS) Ostracised by their family and neighbours, an AIDS patient couple committed suicide in Tripura, officials said here Sunday.

"Asit Nath, 38, and his 35-years-old wife Kakali Nath consumed toxic pesticide on Oct 24. Asit died on the same day while Kakali died Saturday night after 10 days in hospital," Abhijit Saptarshi, north Tripura district police chief, told IANS.

He said: "(We) have registered a simple UD (unnatural death) case of this incident. No criminal complaint came to us so far. If any criminal complaint is registered with us, we would act accordingly."

According to the relatives and doctors, after preliminary confirmation by doctors at Dharmagar sub-divisional hospital in north Tripura several months back, the couple was found to be afflicted by AIDS at Agartala's integrated counselling and testing centre (ICTC) that is managed by Tripura State AIDS Control Society (TSACS).

"After returning home at Goalabasti village, the couple were subjected to continuous ill-treatment, hatred and abuse by family members, relatives and neighbours," said a neighbour of Asit. Goalabasti village is 225 km north of here.

He said: "In fact both Asit and Kakali suspected each other for the infection and occasionally quarrelled... we tried to convince them that the disease might have been caused by reasons other than pre- or post-marital sexual misconduct."

According to relatives, Asit, a motor mechanic and driver, after marrying Kakali in 2008 was settled in Latumbai area on the outskirts of the Meghalaya capital Shillong.

After Kakali became pregnant eight months ago, the couple started contracting diseases which could not be cured by medicines prescribed by doctors. Then they returned to their home in Goalabasti village.

"I was infected from my husband after we got married in 2008, but I accepted it as my destiny and decided to live together. Though we did not have any problem in our married life but social and family humiliation turned life miserable," Kakali was quoted by the local media as saying a few days before her suicide attempt.

"We have asked our north Tripura district AIDS prevention and control center officials to study the case and reasons behind the suicide," TSACS project director Tapan Kumar Das told IANS.

He said: "Mental support and all out compassion is needed for the HIV-positive and AIDS patients."

According to an official document of the TSACS, currently Tripura has 405 confirmed AIDS patients and altogether 1,091 HIV-positives till September.

Among the HIV-positives, 373 are females while among the confirmed AIDS patients 128 are females.

Since 2001, in all 117 people in Tripura have died of AIDS. Of the 117 dead, 98 are males, 16 females, a male child and two female children.

The TSACS is implementing many programmes to prevent the spread of HIV-positives in the northeastern state bordering Bangladesh.


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Two French journalists abducted, killed in northern Mali

By Adama Diarra and John Irish

BAMAKO/PARIS (Reuters) - Two French radio journalists were killed by gunmen in northern Mali on Saturday shortly after being abducted in the town of Kidal, French and Malian officials said.

The French government confirmed that 58-year old Claude Verlon and Ghislaine Dupont, 51, both journalists at RFI radio, had been found dead.

"The French president ... expresses his indignation over this heinous act," Francois Hollande's office said in a statement.

Kidal is the birthplace of a Tuareg uprising last year that plunged Mali into chaos, leading to a coup in the capital Bamako and the occupation of the northern half of the country by militants linked to al Qaeda.

A French-led military intervention drove out the militants but there are still pockets of insurgents and the incident dramatically highlighted the continuing security risks.

France still has about 3,000 soldiers in the country, alongside Malian troops and U.N. peacekeepers (MINUSMA), although it only has about 200 troops in Kidal and another 100 in Tessalit, several hundred kilometres away in the northwest.

A local prefect, sources from the Tuareg separatist group MNLA and Malian security services told Reuters the two reporters had been killed outside the town after their abduction.

"A few minutes after a pursuit began for the abductors of the two French, we were informed that their bodies were found riddled with bullets outside the town," said Paul-Marie Sidibe, prefect of the town of Tinzawaten, who is based in Kidal.

A senior MNLA military official said the bodies had been recovered outside Kidal and a Malian security source said the journalists were killed about 12 km (8 miles) from the town.

Full details of how the journalists died were not immediately clear, although the French forces said their bodies were found by a patrol that had been told of the kidnapping.

"At no point did our forces come into visual or physical contact with the moving vehicle," army spokesman Gilles Jaron told Reuters. "The bodies were found by the French patrol around a 4x4 that had stopped."

He said that two French helicopters had been dispatched from Tessalit to track the hostage takers, but they arrived in the area 50 minutes after the bodies were discovered. Earlier, several French media reports said a French helicopter had tracked the kidnappers's vehicles after the abduction

Jarron said at this stage there was no information as to who was behind the attack.

Hollande said his cabinet would meet on Sunday to work with the U.N. and Malian authorities to establish how they had been "assassinated."

JOURNALISTS "ADVISED NOT TO TRAVEL"

France's defence ministry said that the French army had warned the reporters not to travel to Kidal on October 29 and refused to take them to the town.

"They were advised to not travel there due to insecurity that continues to reign in the area and the rivalry between different groups operating in the area," the ministry said.

"Despite this advice, the two journalists took MINSUMA transportation to get to Kidal," it said.

The journalists were seized after they interviewed Kidal resident Ambeiry Ag Rhissa, a local official with the MNLA Tuareg separatist group.

"When they left, I heard a strange noise outside. I immediately went out to see and when I opened my door, a turbaned man pointed a gun at me and told me go back inside," Rhissa told Reuters by telephone.

"I could not see how many men were there," he said.

RFI confirmed in a news bulletin that Dupont and Verlon were kidnapped in front of Rhissa's house after the interview by gunmen speaking the local Tuareg dialect.

"They were put into a beige four-wheel drive vehicle and the kidnappers fired shots in the air and told Rhissa to go home," RFI said in the report.

"Their driver heard the two reporters protest and resist. It was the last time they were seen," RFI said.

RFI said in a statement that the journalist were working on stories on northern Mali for a special broadcast the station was planning from November 7. The broadcast has been cancelled it said.

The kidnapping happened four days after four French hostages hostages kidnapped in Niger by al Qaeda's north African wing were released following secret talks with officials from the West African country, ending three years in captivity.


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Bahrain charges top opposition leader

MANAMA (Reuters) - Bahrain's public prosecutor has charged the head of the main Shi'ite opposition group with insulting the interior ministry, state news agency BNA said on Sunday, in a move that could further unsettle the Gulf island state.

Sheikh Ali Salman, secretary-general of the al-Wefaq Islamic Association, was the most senior opposition figure charged since majority Shi'ites began protests in 2011 to demand political reform and a greater role in running the country.

The U.S. Fifth Fleet is based in Bahrain, a key regional ally of the West, which is ruled by the Sunni Muslim Al-Khalifa dynasty.

Minister of State for Information Affairs Samira Rajab said the Wefaq leader was suspected of "denigrating and disparaging the interior ministry" by alleging human rights violations by the police against protesters.

Ali Salman was released on Sunday after five hours of interrogation about an opposition display which Bahraini authorities closed down last week, saying it was illegal and incited hatred.

The Arab kingdom, strategically located between Saudi Arabia and regional rival Iran, has been dogged by unrest since security forces quelled the 2011 protests.

"After questioning Ali Salman, secretary general of the al-Wefaq society, the general prosecution decided to release him ... after filing charges of insulting the interior ministry," BNA said on its website.

Sheikh Salman said the questioning centred on a speech he made at the exhibition opening.

"Summoning the general secretary of a top political society which gained the votes of more than 60 percent of the population (in the last parliamentary election) is a clear violation of our political work and our freedom," Sheikh Salman told Reuters.

"This act is totally unacceptable and meaningless."

SMALL PROTEST

News of Sheikh Salman's questioning on Saturday sparked some protests, al-Wefaq reported on its website. A picture on the site showed small crowds marching with posters of the Wefaq leader reading: "We will sacrifice ourselves for you, We will not let you down".

"The association's exhibition showed models, miniatures and drawings alleging systematic police use of inhuman practices and human rights violations," said Rajab, the government's official spokeswoman.

"The Al-Wefaq Society secretary-general and other members (of the society?) delivered inflammatory speeches packed with lies ... which represented an affront to the status of the police," she added.

Wefaq said Al Salman's interrogation was part of a campaign of "political extortion and revenge against the peaceful opposition which is demanding democracy and rejects tyranny".

Bahraini authorities have recently summoned a number of political activists and rights campaigners for questioning over statements which they say incite violence.

Wefaq's deputy leader, Khalil al-Marzouq, was arrested in September and is on trial for inciting terrorism. He has been freed pending his next hearing on November 18.

After Marqouq's arrest, Wefaq suspended its participation in talks with the government aimed at ending the Shi'ite protests.

The talks began in February but have failed to end the political crisis, with the two sides apparently far apart on the opposition's main demand for an elected government.

Wefaq wants a constitutional monarchy with a government chosen from within a democratically elected parliament. (Reporting by Farishta Saeed; Writing by Sami Aboudi; editing by Barry Moody)


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Saturday, 2 November 2013

Hundreds of cannabis workers fall ill in Albanian village

By Benet Koleka

TIRANA (Reuters) - Doctors in Albania say hundreds of people have fallen ill from harvesting cannabis in a lawless region that for years has been out of bounds to police, Albanian media reported on Friday.

The hospital in the southern city of Gjirokaster said a total of 700 have sought treatment since June for the effects of planting, harvesting, pressing and packing the cannabis in the village of Lazarat.

"In the last two months about seven to eight people arrive in the emergency ward each day and many more have come earlier with disorders from hashish," Gjirokaster doctor Hysni Lluka told Top Channel television.

Some 2,000 people, including poor Roma who have set up a camp near Lazarat, have been working for months in the cannabis fields, where producers pay eight euros per 10 kilos of processed drug.

The illegal practice has flourished in Lazarat over two decades of turbulent transition in Albania since the end of hardline communist rule.

Lazarat has become a byword for lawlessness in Albania, with cannabis growers brazen enough to shoot at police officers who venture near their fields.

Aerial pictures suggest some 60 hectares have been cultivated in Lazarat with 300,000 cannabis plants, capable of yielding 500 tonnes or half the total cannabis production in Albania.

Lluka, the doctor, said women and teenagers, who account for some 40 percent of those working in Lazarat, had sought help for bouts of vomiting, stomach pain, irregular heart beats and high blood pressure. Last week one patient came in a critical state.

Lazarat is a stronghold of the Democratic Party, which was in power for eight years before losing a June election to the Socialist Party. The Democrats promised to tackle Albania's cannabis problem but police shied away from striking Lazarat.

Artan Didi, the new director of police appointed by the Socialists, has said the police will no longer "back down to Lazarat".

The U.S. State Department's international narcotics control report for 2013 listed Albania as a transit and destination country for cannabis, heroin and cocaine.

Authorities seized more than 21 tonnes of cannabis in 2012, double the amount of the previous year, it said, although that could reflect increased production. (Reporting by Benet Koleka Editing by Matt Robinson)


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Chinese newspaper replaces top editors in wake of scandal

BEIJING (Reuters) - The top editors of a Chinese newspaper have been replaced after one of their journalists was arrested for damaging the reputation of a major state-owned construction equipment maker, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Friday.

The wrangle over the journalist and his newspaper, the Guangzhou-based New Express tabloid, comes as the government cracks down on freedom of expression by journalists, lawyers, whistleblowers and internet users.

The reporter, Chen Yongzhou, was arrested on Wednesday after confessing on state television to accepting bribes for fabricating more than a dozen stories that said Changsha-based Zoomlion Heavy Industry Science and Technology Co. Ltd. engaged in sales fraud, exaggerated its profits and used black public relations tactics, accusations strongly denied by the company.

The editor-in-chief of the New Express, Li Yihang, and deputy editor Ma Dongjin were both removed from their posts, Xinhua said.

On Friday, the newspaper's parent publication, the Yangcheng Evening News, published an editorial from the People's Daily saying that behaviour like Chen's has "really harmed the reputation and honour of the news media and journalists, and made the whole industry suffer shame".

Chen's case caused a stir when his newspaper published two front-page commentaries last week asking authorities to "please release him" after he was detained - an unusually bold move in a country where newspapers self-censor to avoid repercussions from the government.

On Sunday, New Express recanted its support for Chen and added its own apology, saying it had behaved unethically and damaged the credibility of the news media. Shares of Zoomlion surged on Monday after the news.

Zoomlion told Reuters last week it had complained to Changsha police, who arrested Chen, leading critics to point to Zoomlion's influence over city authorities.

It is not clear who bribed Chen, but Zoomlion has in the past accused its hometown rival, Sany Group Co. Ltd. , of planting critical stories about it, accusations Sany has denied.

The feud between the two firms has sometimes turned ugly, with each accusing the other of using sleazy tactics to gain market share amid a slowdown in the industry.

Liu Hongbing, the Communist Party boss of Yangcheng Evening News Group, which owns New Express, will take over as director of the New Express. Sun Xuan, another senior group official, will take over as editor-in-chief.

(Reporting By Adam Rose; Editing by Ben Blanchard and Robert Birsel)


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Two life sentences for rape, murder that shocked S.Africa

SWELLENDAM, South Africa (Reuters) - A South African court sentenced a man to two life terms on Friday for the rape, mutilation and murder of a teenager in a case that shocked a nation with one of the world's highest levels of violent crime.

Johannes Kana confessed to raping 17-year-old Anene Booysen before she was dumped at a building site in Bredasdorp, 130 km (80 miles) east of Cape Town, in February. She had been beaten and her stomach was slit open down to her genitals.

The attack came shortly after the gang rape and murder of a 23-year-old student on a New Delhi bus at the end of 2012 that caused outcry and mass protests in India at endemic violence against women.

Booysen's murder sparked some of the biggest anti-rape campaigns in years in South Africa, with President Jacob Zuma expressing "shock and outrage" and calling for the harshest possible sentences for her attackers.

Three suspects were initially arrested but only 21-year-old Kana stood trial. He confessed to raping Booysen but denied disembowelling her.

The sentencing was met by muted clapping from Booysen's relatives and sobs from Kana supporters in the public gallery.

There are about 180 reported rapes a day in South Africa, a nation of 53 million people, although the real total is believed to be far higher. Few suspects are ever arrested and only 12 percent of cases brought to court end in conviction.

(Reporting by Alvin Andrews; Editing Ed Cropley)


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Heritage building fire destroys government press

Chennai, Nov 1 (IANS) A fire broke out in a heritage building here early Friday, destroying the British-built structure and the government printing press in it, the fire service said.

The fire, noticed around 2 a.m., rapidly enveloped the building spread over 15,000 sq feet as it was stacked with papers and printing equipment, a fire service official told IANS.

"It is a heritage building from the British period. Such buildings should have fire safety equipment like smoke detectors and water sprinklers," the official added.

He said the building collapsed due to intense heat. No one was injured in the blaze as it broke out before dawn.


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New central jail set up in Tripura

Agartala, Nov 1 (IANS) A jail with an inmate capacity of 975, arguably northeastern India's biggest jail was inaugurated Friday by Tripura Chief Minister Manik Sarkar at Bishalgarh in western Tripura's Sipahijala district.

Tripura's Jail Minister Manindra Lal Reang said that the new central jail, officially also called correctional centre, is built on 32.62 acres of land at a cost of Rs.64 crore and would accommodate 975 prisoners, including 50 women and 25 VIP detainees.

"Second after the central jail in Bangalore (Karnataka) in terms of modernity, the new central jail has been fitted with several automated close circuit televisions and quite a few modern watch towers to keep a round-the-clock check on every nook and corner of the jail complex," the minister told reporters.

Besides a 20-seat hospital, the jail will have facilities such as computerised management and supervision of jail administration and inmates' position.

It will also have separate playgrounds and physical exercise centres for male and female prisoners and various entertainment systems, built by the state-owned Engineering Projects India Limited.

"We do not want to call it a jail, we want to make it a truly correctional centre," said the chief minister.

The 139 years old existing central jail in the Agartala city with capacity for holding 355 inmates would be dismantled and a science college and a botanical garden would likely be constructed on its 17 acres.


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Director says video shows Sri Lanka army committed war crimes

By Shihar Aneez and Ranga Sirilal

COLOMBO (Reuters) - A documentary maker said on Friday video of a Tamil Tiger television presenter suggests she was captured alive and killed, rather than dying in the chaotic end of Sri Lanka's three decade war.

The footage is in the documentary "No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka", the fourth by British journalist and director Callum Macrae to allege the Sri Lankan army committed war crimes at the end of the separatist conflict in 2009.

Military spokesman Ruwan Wanigasooriya said the army never resorted to killing those captured or who surrendered, and disputed the authenticity of the video it said was an attempt to discredit Sri Lanka before it hosts a Commonwealth summit.

The footage shows Isaipriya, a celebrity news presenter at a rebel-run television station, half naked and being given a cloth to cover herself by people in military uniform who were heard saying they had found Tamil Tiger rebel leader Velupillai Prabakaran's daughter.

Isaipriya, whose body was found at the end of the war on May 18, 2009, is seen telling her captors: "No, I am not her."

"This shows the pattern of war crimes that happened in the final days of the war," Macrae told Reuters.

"They are not mistreating her and they are attempting to cover her partial nakedness with a cloth, but this footage demonstrates that she was alive and uninjured."

While the army disputes the footage, its release, on November 7 in New Delhi, will raise more questions about its actions before the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), on November 15-17.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has declined to attend because of concerns over alleged abuses, while British Prime Minister David Cameron, rejecting calls to boycott the summit, had said he would raise difficult issues at the talks.

"They have been releasing fake videos targeting Geneva human rights commission meetings and now they have come out with another fake video targeting CHOGM to discredit the army and Sri Lanka in general," the military spokesman said.

Tens of thousands of civilians were killed in 2009 in the final months the war, a U.N. panel has said, as government troops advanced on the ever-shrinking northern tip of the island controlled by Tamil rebels fighting for an independent homeland.

The panel said it had "credible allegations" that Sri Lankan troops and the Tamil Tigers both carried out atrocities but said the government was responsible for most of the deaths.

The U.N. Human Rights Commission, through two resolutions, has urged Sri Lanka to investigate into the alleged war crimes, which President Mahinda Rajapaksa's government has rejected.

Political violence has eased since Sri Lanka's army crushed the Tamil rebellion, but international human rights groups say rule of law problems persist, including abductions and attacks on media and government critics. (Writing by Shihar Aneez; Editing by Alison Williams)


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BBC DJ arrested in sex abuse inquiry - BBC

LONDON (Reuters) - Radio presenter Paul Gambaccini was arrested on Tuesday as part of a wider inquiry into alleged child sexual exploitation, his spokesman told the British Broadcasing Corporation (BBC) on Friday.

U.S.-born Gambaccini, 64, who presents music radio shows for the state-funded BBC, denied the allegations.

Gambaccini is the 15th person arrested as part of an investigation prompted by revelations the late BBC TV host Jimmy Savile was a prolific child sex abuser. The scandal has involved a number of celebrities and forced the former head of the BBC to resign.

"Mr Gambaccini was interviewed by Operation Yewtree officers about historic allegations. He answered their questions and was co-operative. He denied all allegations," Gambaccini's spokesman was quoted by the BBC as saying.

A BBC spokesperson said that Gambaccini had decided not to present his regular radio programme for the coming weeks.

Former BBC radio presenter Dave Lee Travis, 68, pleaded not guilty to 15 sex crimes earlier this month.

(Reporting By Christine Murray)


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CID, IAS officers to probe Andhra Pradesh bus blaze

Hyderabad, Nov 1 (IANS) Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Kiran Kumar Reddy Friday announced that a committee of senior IAS officers, and also the Criminal Investigation Department of the state police, would probe Wednesday's bus mishap in Mahabubnagar district.

The private bus, on its way to Hyderabad from Karnataka capital Bangalore, hit a culvert and burst into flames. Forty-five people died as the bus was reduced to cinders and a shell.

The committee comprising Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officers would suggest measures to prevent such accidents in future, a statement from the chief minister's office said.

Apart from the 45 dead, five people were injured.

The accident occurred at Palem in Mahabubnagar district of Andhra Pradesh.

The chief minister directed officials to complete the process of handing over the dead bodies to relatives within a week.

The charred remains of the victims have been preserved in Hyderabad. Officials said they were collecting blood samples of the relatives of the victims. The bodies will be identified after DNA tests at the Andhra Pradesh Forensic Science Laboratory.

Meanwhile, incidents of smoke from engines of buses caused panic among bus passengers at different locations in the state Friday.

A private bus going to Vijayawada was stopped on the outskirts of Hyderabad after the driver noticed smoke in the engine.

Passengers of a city bus in Secunderabad ran helter-skelter after fire broke out in its engine Friday evening. An alert driver stopped the bus, averting a mishap. Fire fighting personnel rushed to the scene and doused the fire.

Two buses of state-owned Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (APSRTC) were stopped in Nalgonda and Guntur districts after their drivers noticed fire emanating from their engines.


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China bans officials sending new year cards at public expense

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's ruling Communist Party on Friday banned officials from sending or printing new year cards or calendars if they have been paid for with public funds, the latest step in the government's crackdown on waste, extravagance and graft.

"The printing and production are more and more extravagant, and the waste is greater and greater," the central government said on its main website (www.gov.cn).

"This is not only an expression of formalism, but drives extravagance."

The order covers all government and party departments, state-owned industries and financial bodies, though an exception will be made for those which deal with foreigners and overseas Chinese, as long as they rein in costs, the notice said.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has sought to address growing public anger at the illegal or unethical behaviour of party officials, especially those with flamboyant lifestyles, often seen as a sign they are corrupt.

Since taking office in March, Xi has called corruption a threat to the party's survival and vowed to go after powerful "tigers" as well as lowly "flies".

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Nick Macfie)


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Pakistan Taliban secretly bury Hakimullah, vow bombs in revenge

By Saud Mehsud and Hafiz Wazir

DERA ISMAIL KHAN/WANA, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistani Taliban fighters secretly buried their leader early on Saturday after he was killed by a U.S. drone aircraft and quickly moved to replace him while vowing a wave of suicide bombs in revenge.

The Pakistani government denounced the killing of Hakimullah Mehsud as a U.S bid to derail planned peace talks and some politicians demanded that U.S. military supply lines into Afghanistan be blocked in response.

Mehsud, who had a $5 million U.S. bounty on his head, and three others were killed on Friday in the militant stronghold of Miranshah in northwest Pakistan, Pakistani security officials and militants said.

Mehsud's vehicle was hit after he attended a meeting of Taliban leaders, a Pakistani Taliban fighter said, adding Mehsud's body was "damaged but recognisable". His bodyguard and driver were also killed.

He was secretly buried under cover of darkness in the early hours by a few companions amid fears that his funeral might be attacked by U.S. drones, militants and Pakistani security sources said.

"Every drop of Hakimullah's blood will turn into a suicide bomber," said Azam Tariq, a Pakistani Taliban spokesman.

"America and their friends shouldn't be happy because we will take revenge for our martyr's blood."

Mehsud took over as leader of the al Qaeda-linked Pakistani Taliban in 2009. The group's two previous leaders were killed in attacks by U.S. missile-firing drones.

Taliban commanders voted to replace him with the movement's number two, Khan Said, who is also known as Sajna.

Said is believed to have masterminded an attack on a jail in northwest Pakistan that freed nearly 400 prisoners in 2012 and a big attack on a Pakistani naval base.

But some commanders were unhappy with the choice and wanted more talks, several militants said, indicating divisions within the Pakistani Taliban, an umbrella group of factions allied with the Afghan Taliban and battling the Pakistani state in the hope of imposing Islamist rule.

They have killed thousands of Pakistani civilians and numerous members of the security forces. They claimed the killing of an army general in September.

In Washington, two U.S. officials also confirmed Mehsud's death in a CIA drone strike. A White House spokeswoman said he was not in a position to confirm the report but if true, it would be a serious loss for the Pakistani Taliban.

In 2010, Mehsud appeared in a farewell video with a Jordanian suicide bomber who killed seven CIA employees at a base in Afghanistan.

"ATTACK ON TALKS"

Mehsud was in his mid-30s and had a sharp face framed by a beard and a tangle of long hair, usually flowing from beneath a traditional Afghan hat.

Despite his reputation as an uncompromising militant commander, Pakistan's new government had promised to try to stop the violence through peace talks and it reacted angrily to Mehsud's killing.

"The U.S. has tried to attack the peace talks with this drone but we will not let them fail," Information Minister Pervez Rashid told media, referring to the negotiations, which the Taliban said on Friday had yet to start.

Shah Farman, a spokesman for the government of the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, said provincial legislators would pass a resolution on Monday to cut NATO supply lines into landlocked Afghanistan. A main one passes through the nearby Khyber Pass.

The supply lines through U.S. ally Pakistan have been crucial since the latest Afghan war began in 2001 and remain vital as the United States and other Western forces prepare to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of next year.

Residents of Miranshah, the capital of the North Waziristan region on the Afghan border, said Pakistani Taliban fighters were converging on the town and firing furiously at drones buzzing high in the sky.

About eight drones were seen overhead as well as a larger aircraft that seemed to be a aeroplane or a type of drone that residents said they had not seen before.

"We thought it was a C-130 aircraft but it was a special spy plane, bigger in size," resident Farhad Khan said by telephone from Miranshah. "The militants fired from their anti-aircraft guns to hit it but couldn't."

Shops and markets were open in the town. Residents said they were worried about a possible army offensive, but not Taliban reprisals. They expected the militants to launch attacks elsewhere in Pakistan.

"We feel the militants will show their reaction in major cities like they usually do," said resident Assadullah Dawar said.

In May, Mehsud's deputy was killed by drone nearby. Last month, one of his top deputies was captured in Afghanistan.

(Additional reporting by Jibran Ahmad in Peshawar; Writing by Katharine Houreld; Editing by Robert Birsel)


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