A daily exclusively reports the impacts of militancy and the problems of displaced people
11.March.2010.Thursday
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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.
V B Rajan
posted on 29 august 2009
..........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........
By: Komalam Nair
29/09/2009
.........In the name of faith and beliefs people are torturing and killing all over the world. This is not peculiar with present day life. Days are more bad in earlier. But sometimes our days are proved worst. The tragic story of Marwa al-Sherbini, a 32-year-old Egyptian-German is one among to that category of brutality.........


Taliban demands 6 million as tax exodus of Hindus from Battagram An unidentified caller claiming to represent the Taliban demanded Rs 6 million as "jiziya" from the minority Hindu community of Battagram district in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province on Sunday.


India has accused Pakistan-based fighters from the banned Lashkar-e-Toiba of carrying out the attacks. Pakistan has admitted they were partly planned on its soil and the two countries have suffered seriously strained relations.


The head of a leading Russian human rights group accused the presidents of Russia and Chechnya of complicity in murdering their top activist in Chechnya.
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5 killed and 26 injured

KABUL, Afghanistan :A suicide car bombing Monday at the Kandahar airport killed two and injured 16, Afghanistan's military said.
           The explosives, loaded in a minivan, detonated at the airport gate where cars are stopped for security checks, said military commander Sher Mohammad Zazai.Troops engaged in small-arms fire with insurgents, NATO Lt. Commander Christopher Hall said in Kabul, but he did not have further details.Kandahar is east of Helmand province, where a U.S.-led operation is under way to oust the Taliban from their strongholds.The U.S. military wants to gain and hold ground in the perilous region ahead of Afghan national elections in August.If security can be put in place before the fall harvest begins, farmers may feel safe enough to resist planting poppies, and plant wheat instead. That would be a success, the military has said. The commander of a British regiment has become the country's highest-ranking soldier to be killed in action since 1982's Falklands War after he was killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan.Lt. Col. Rupert Thorneloe was killed when a roadside bomb denotated in Helmand province. 1 of 2 Lt. Col. Rupert Thorneloe, 40, was killed along with trooper Joshua Hammond, 18, Wednesday as they were traveling along a canal in Lashkar Gah, in Afghanistan's southern Helmand Province, the British Ministry of Defense said.
           Thorneloe, a commanding officer who oversaw more than 1,000 men, had left the battle group headquarters on the resupply convoy so he could visit his men, because they were conducting a major operation in hostile territory, the ministry said.He and Hammond, a tank driver, were killed despite traveling in an armored vehicle, the ministry said.Britain's Prince Charles knew Thorneloe and said he was "completely mortified" to learn of his death. Charles is the regimental colonel of the Welsh Guards, where Thorneloe served.
           "It's a wonderful family, the regiment, so everybody knows everybody," he said. "And being involved for 34 years I start to see the sons and the grandsons of people I first met 34 years ago coming into the regiment, so you can imagine the shock and horror." Watch Prince Charles speak Defense Secretary Bob Ainsworth called Thorneloe's death a "hard blow" to the army and the military's operations in Afghanistan."I knew him myself, as a man of incisive thought, enormous professionalism and the greatest decency, who could not wait to leave the high-profile post in the Ministry of Defense where he had performed so impressively in order to take command of his battalion on operations," Ainsworth said in a statement."He saw it as the best job he would ever do, but I know that his genuinely exceptional abilities would have ensured him a brilliant career," Ainsworth added. "He led his men with energy, care, and pride -- and he died leading his men." Thorneloe spent two years at the Ministry of Defense, during which he was the military assistant to the secretary, before he assumed command of the 1st Battalion Welsh Guards last October, the ministry said.He leaves behind a wife and two young daughters.
           Hammond enlisted in the army when he was 16 and deployed to Afghanistan a month ago, said Lt. Col. Marcus Simson, his commanding officer. He was a week away from his 19th birthday, Simson said"He had a glint in his eye and a wry smile which always made one feel that you were in on the joke," said Major Charlie Burbridge, his squadron commander. "He was professional and capable and was only just getting into his stride as a soldier. Only days before his tragic death he had said how much he was enjoying the job."My words will do little to console his mother or fiance whom he planned to marry on his return from Afghanistan, but our prayers are for them. 'Hammy' was a Tankie, through and through; I am proud to have served alongside him and we will never forget him."
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