A daily exclusively reports the impacts of militancy and the problems of displaced people
12.March.2010.Friday
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..........They charged Noor as a police informer and started to beat him. The son interfered. It was a long struggle for life. it is known to everybody in the valley that what will happen in the end. The brutal killings and humiliation for the womenfolk before their merciless turn for death it was dark. Nobody to come for help.It seemed all at the end. Yet they are fighting.It was Rukasana make the advantage quite unexpectedly. That turned the future course of events........
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd visits to Afghanistan to spend Remembrance Day with the troops.Australia has about 1,500 soldiers in Afghanistan.Details of Mr Rudd's whereabouts have not been released, but most Australian troops are in southern Uruzgan province training an Afghan army brigade.
A three-day general strike is being held in the Pakistani town of Charsadda following a bombing on Tuesday which killed at least 32 people.Officials now say the attack, which injured 70 others, was probably aimed at the head of police in the district. He had just passed the intersection where the bomb went off.
A British soldier from 4th Battalion The Rifles has been killed in a blast in Afghanistan. Near Sangin in Helmand Province.This death brings the number of UK service personnel killed in Afghanistan since 2001 to 232.
The European Union has demanded India to ensure better cooperation for tackling terrorism, stressing that it is keeping an eye on Pakistan so that the nation does not misuse the help rendered by the EU.
A terrorist was shot dead in a gun fight with security forces in Manipur’s Imphal West district Wednesday, police here said.
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Saudi Police find Al-Qaida arms Cache

Monday, 2 November 2009 14:15
            Riyadh:Saudi police say they have found a large weaponry near Riyadh, linking it to a dismantled al-Qaeda cell.It contained nearly 300 assault rifles and some 41,000 rounds of ammunition.The weapons are believed to be linked to 44 suspected members of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, whose arrests were announced in August.
            Saudi Arabia has detained scores of suspected Islamist militants since al-Qaeda stepped up its campaign of bombings across the kingdom in 2003. The Saudi government has recently expressed its concern about the resurgence in Yemen of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which is aligned with Osama Bin Laden's international network and led by a former associate.
            The group is said to have been behind the suicide bombing in the port of Jeddah at the end of August which injured Assistant Interior Minister Prince Mohammed bin Nayef.
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