Saturday, July 25, 2009

Afghan woman MP lists 'enemies'


Malalai Joya, file photo
Malalai Joya says she has survived five attempts on her life

Afghanistan's people are trapped between powerful enemies, according to Malalai Joya, an outspoken member of the Afghan parliament.

Ms Joya named those "enemies" as Nato forces who bomb from the sky, the resurgent Islamists of the Taliban, and the country's "warlords".

Speaking to anti-war activists in London she insisted Afghans were capable of governing themselves.

But she dismissed next month's presidential election as a "deception".

Ms Joya technically remains an MP, but has been suspended since 2007, on charges of insulting the parliament after she compared it to a zoo.

She has been called "the bravest woman in Afghanistan", and is well known for her opposition both to the Taliban and to the warlords who backed the American-led campaign to overthrow the Taliban in 2001.

She says she has survived five assassination attempts.

In her address to supporters of the UK's Stop the War Coalition in London, Ms Joya was scathing about Nato operations in Afghanistan. She said the actions of Nato were serving only to further the misery of ordinary Afghan people.

She called for Western taxpayers not to support a situation which she said was causing the death of Afghan civilians and emboldening the Taliban.

She said that under the watch of Nato, drug production in the country had flourished - and that its proceeds were funding the Taliban.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Scores held in US corruption probe




The arrests came as part of a 10-year investigation dubbed 'Operation Bid Rig' [AFP]

More than 40 people, including politicians, officials and prominent rabbis, have been arrested in connection with corruption, money laundering and organ trafficking in the US state of New Jersey.

The sweeping investigation, which saw 44 people arrested in raids on Thursday, is believed to be one of the biggest such actions in a state long associated with corruption.

Authorities said the arrests were part of a two-pronged 10-year investigation called "Operation Bid Rig".

Five rabbis were among suspects arrested, along with the mayors of Hoboken, Secaucus and Ridgefield, prosecutors said.

Ed Kahrer, an assistant special agent in charge of the FBI's white collar crime and public corruption programme in New Jersey, called corruption "a cancer that is destroying the core values of this state".

"New Jersey's corruption problem is one of the worst, if not the worst, in the nation," Kahrer, who has worked on the investigation since it began in July 1999, said.

"It has become ingrained in New Jersey's political culture."

Organ trading

Investigators used an informant, a real estate developer charged with bank fraud three years ago, to uncover a money laundering ring and organ trafficking, as well as corruption by politicians who exploited loopholes in state law to disguise bribes as campaign contributions.

Among those arrested

Peter Cammarano III, mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey, accused of accepting $25,000 in cash bribes

Dennis Elwell, mayor of Secaucus, New Jersey, charged with taking $10,000

Anthony Suarez, mayor of Ridgefield, charged with agreeing to accept an illegal $10,000

Leona Beldini, deputy mayor of Jersey City, charged with conspiracy to commit extortion by taking $20,000 in illegal campaign contributions

Daniel Van Pelt and L Harvey Smith, both state assemblymen, accused of taking payoffs

The politicians arrested in the investigation were not accused of any involvement in the money laundering or the trading in human organs.

The money laundering network is alleged to have laundered tens of millions of dollars through Jewish charities controlled by rabbis in New York and New Jersey.

They laundered some $3m for the undercover witness between June 2007 and July 2009, authorities said.

Investigators raided several synagogues and among those arrested was Saul Kassin, the chief rabbi of Syrian Jews in the US.

Those arrested also included Levy Izhak Rosenbaum, a Brooklyn rabbi, who was charged with conspiring to arrange the sale of an Israeli citizen's kidney for $160,000 for a transplant for the informant's fictitious uncle.

Rosenbaum was quoted as saying he had been arranging the sale of kidneys for 10 years.

'Public corruption'

Ralph Marra, the acting US attorney, told a press conference that the sweep demonstrated "the pervasive nature of public corruption in this state".

"The politicians willingly put themselves up for sale," he said, while "clergymen cloak their extensive criminal activity behind a facade of rectitude".

US television footage showed FBI and tax agents bringing a stream of handcuffed suspects, including the rabbis wearing traditional Orthodox Jewish garb, into custody in the city of Newark.

Most of the defendants facing corruption charges were released on bail.

The money laundering defendants faced bail between $300,000 and $3m, and most were ordered to submit to electronic monitoring.

New Jersey has long been notorious for official corruption and organised crime and is best known as the setting for the popular television show "The Sopranos".


New lizard species found in India


Cnemasspis Kolhapurensis
Cnemasspis Kolhapurensis is endemic to parts of India's Western Ghats

Scientists have discovered a new species of lizard in the lush Western Ghats mountain range in the Indian state of Maharashtra.

The small reptile is a form of gecko and was found by taxonomist Varad Giri in the Kolhapur district. It has been named Cnemasspis kolhapurensis.

Mr Giri and his co-workers published their findings in this month's edition of the Zootaxa journal.

It is the third new species of lizard recently discovered in the area.

Mr Giri, a curator at the Bombay Natural History Society, told the BBC that the Western Ghats has never been surveyed for amphibians and reptiles.

"A gecko of this particular character has not been recognised elsewhere in the world," he said.

Iridescent sheen

Mr Giri said he first noticed the lizard in 2005 during a survey of one of the forests in the area.

Key road A9 re-opens

Bus on the A9 near Medawachchiya check point on Wednesday (photo: Dinasena Rathugamage)
Passengers could travel through A9 without LTTE check points after 19 years
The main highway in Sri Lanka linking the northern Jaffna peninsula to the south has been opened to civilian traffic after years of conflict.

The road (the A9) came under government control this year during the final onslaught against Tamil Tiger rebels.

Before that it had been rebel-controlled for more than twenty years.

The highway was ceremonially opened to the public by Basil Rajapaksa, MP and Senior Advisor to the President, the government information department said.

It said 210 passengers were transported from Jaffna to Medawachchiya in five buses provided by the government.

Monday, July 13, 2009

British PM defends Afghan offensive





US troops have 120 Chinook helicopters, while the UK has 10 in Helmand [AFP]

The British prime minister has been forced to defend his country’s military role in Afghanistan.

Speaking on the British Forces Broadcasting Service on Sunday, Gordon Brown admitted it had been a "difficult summer" and would continue to be so.

"We are making progress ... [and] showing signs of success," he said, amid widespread criticism in the UK of the US-led offensive in Helmand province.

His comments came after 15 British soldiers were killed in just 10 days during combat with the Taliban in the southern province - more than UK forces suffered in Iraq.

Military experts have criticised the government, saying British forces have been disadvantaged by a lack of proper equipment and support.

'Tremendous bashing'

Tom King, a former British defence minister, said a lack of adequate air support was causing the high casualty rate.

In depth


Video: Bureaucratic battlefield hurdles for US
Video: US forces chase elusive foe in Afghanistan
Video: Afghans flee US offensive in Helmand
Video: US strives to overcome Afghan hostility
Video: US troops engage Taliban in major battle
Riz Khan: Seeds of terror
Focus: Switching sides in Afghanistan

"Some of the equipment is getting a tremendous bashing out there,” he said.

"Where there really is a critical shortage is helicopters."

The 5,000 British troops in Helmand have just 10 Chinook helicopters compared to the US marines’ 120 in the centre and south of the province.

British troops having to move overland are at greater risk from roadside bombs and improvised explosive devices as a result.

Amadshah Aamadzai, a former prime minister of Afghanistan, told Al Jazeera that the Helmand operation would achieve "nothing but casulaties, killing and bloodshed".

"The only solution is that they should begin negotiations towards peace. No one will gain through fighting, not American, not Afghan, not Taliban," he said.

"This is the right time for both sides to start negotiations and talk about peace."

Serious casualties

Colonel Peter Mahoney, the director of a field hospital at the main British base in Afghanistan, said that seriously injured soldiers were being flown back to the UK for treatment.

More than 30 soldiers were taken off the battlefield and treated at the hospital over the weekend, with doctors working round the clock.

"There's no doubt it has been wearing," he said.

He added that medical staff had been warned before the start of Operation Panther's Claw at the beginning of July and extra staff had been mobilised in anticipation of a surge in casualties.

Barack Obama, the US president, said on Saturday the military offensive in Afghanistan had "a long way to go".

"We knew this summer was going to be tough fighting ... we still have a long way to go," Obama told Britain's Sky News channel in an interview.

Ambush kills 29 Indian policemen

--BBC--


Maoist rebels in Chhattisgarh
Maoists have a presence in 182 districts of India

The number of policemen killed in an attack by suspected Maoist rebels in India's Chhattisgarh state has risen to 29, police say.

The attack took place in Rajnandgaon, 90km (56 miles) from capital Raipur.

Two officers were killed initially, and a larger force sent to the scene was then attacked, according to police reports

The district police chief was also killed in what is said to be one of the worst attacks by rebels in the state.

Maoist rebels are fighting for communist rule in a number of states. The conflict has killed more than 6,000 people in 20 years.

Convoy ambushed

The first attack took place in Madanwada early Sunday morning in which two policemen were killed.

Superintendent of police for Rajnandgaon, Vinod Kumar Choubey, was killed when he was leading police reinforcements to the area, the deputy inspector general of police, Pawan Dev, said.

His convoy was ambushed between Khoregaon and Karkoti villages.

Between 200 and 300 rebels attacked the police convoy.

The two sides fought a fierce gun battle in which Mr Choubey and several other policemen were killed, Mr Dev said.

A total of 29 bodies had been recovered and search operations were continuing in the area, he said.

Cranes crashed at Delhi Metro site


Cranes which crashed at a Delhi metro rail construction site on July 13, 2009
One of the cranes malfunctioned, leading to the accident

Three cranes have crashed trying to lift a collapsed steel girder at the Delhi metro rail construction site, a day after a deadly accident there.

The truck-mounted cranes had lifted the girder off the ground when they buckled under the weight.

Nobody was injured but television footage showed people at the site running away to avoid the debris.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Obama warns of long Afghan battle




The US offensive in Afghanistan is being tested
by the Taliban's "guerrilla tactics" [AFP]

Barack Obama, the US president, has said the military offensive currently under way against the Taliban in Afghanistan has "a long way to go".

"We knew this summer was going to be tough fighting ... we still have a long way to go," Obama told Britain's Sky News channel in an interview on Saturday.

The southern province of Helmand is the focus of the current operation where thousands of extra US marines have been brought in to drive out the Taliban fighters.

Marines are concentrated in the southern tip of Helmand province, around the districts of Garmsir, Khanashin and Nawa.

US special forces are also working with Afghan commandos around the Baramsha border crossing with Pakistan, in an attempt to cut off the Taliban's main supply route.

Taliban territory

Since the start of July, 40 foreign soldiers have died, including four killed "as a result of improvised explosive device (IED) strikes from insurgents" on Saturday, officials said.

In depth


Video: Bureaucratic battlefield hurdles for US
Video: US forces chase elusive foe in Afghanistan
Video: Afghans flee US offensive in Helmand
Video: US strives to overcome Afghan hostility
Video: US troops engage Taliban in major battle
Riz Khan: Seeds of terror
Focus: Switching sides in Afghanistan

Qari Yousef Ahmadi, a Taliban spokesman, told Al Jazeera on Sunday: "We have been successful. The enemy has been suffering heavy casualties.

"It is a guerrilla war and those are our tactics. We will resist them in Helmand, and will attack them all over Afghanistan."

A high-ranking government source in Helmand told Al Jazeera that the offensive was proceeding slowly, and in central Helmand, the enemy was in fact much stronger.

Zeina Khodr, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Kabul, said: "The Taliban has been ambushing troops; they have been laying improvised explosive devices and roadside bombs. So, the [coalition forces'] advance really is slow."

"This is a guerilla war, it is not going to end soon and it is highly unlikely that the Taliban will give up territory such as Helmand, such a strategic area."

"A Taliban spokesman told us that the outcome of this operation 'would tell us who is actually the man, and who is the woman'," our correspondent said.

Diplomacy and development

President Obama said the US and its allies needed to combine their military efforts in Afghanistan with diplomacy and development "so that Afghans feel a greater stake and have a greater capacity to secure their country".

Obama said Afghanistan's police and army needed development after the poll [AFP]
After Afghanistan's planned election next month, "we need to start directing our attention to how do we create an Afghan army? An Afghan police? How do we work with the Pakistanis effectively so that they are the ones who are at the forefront of controlling their own countries?" Obama said.

Al Jazeera's correspondent said this is something the Afghan officials have been saying for months, if not years.

"The US still needs to develop the Afghan security forces, and that will take some time."

"Government forces lost the district of Nuristan on Thursday because they didn't have enough local security forces," our correspondent said.

"The governor at 5am [0030GMT] this morning confirmed that they had regained that district from the Taliban, but holding it will be a difficult fight."

Helmand province, where the US is joined by around 6,000 British forces, is the source of most of Afghanistan's opium crop - the world's largest - which finances the Taliban.

Zahir al Azimy, an Afghan defence ministry spokesman, told Al Jazeera: "Once we take over an area where there is poppy cultivation, we cut off the Taliban's revenue."


New military posts created

--BBC--

Gen Fonseka being appointed by President Rajapaksa (photo: Chandana Perera)

Sri Lanka has announced the overhaul of its military structure, creating for the first time the posts of chief of defence staff (CDS) and national security adviser to the president.

The present army commander, Gen Sarath Fonseka - who was widely credited with winning the war against the Tamil Tiger militants - becomes the new CDS, with responsibility for all the armed forces and overall military strategy.

The powerful post was recently established by a parliamentary act after the defeat of the LTTE by Sri Lanka military.

A less powerful similar post was held by Air Marshall Donald Perera until the new appointment.

Maj Gen Jagath Jayasuriya is appointed by President Mahinda Rajapaksa as the new commander of the SLA.

Admiral Karannagoda being appointed by President Rajapaksa (photo: Chandana Perera)

Current SLA chief of staff, Maj Gen CA Chandrasiri on Sunday took oaths as the new governor of the Northern Province.

He replaces Dixon Dela, who was appointed as the Ambassador to Maldives by the president.

Maj Gen Chandrasiri is also the Competent Authority for the Internally Displaced Persons in the North. It is not clear whether he still holds the post after the new appointment.

The president has also made changes to Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) hierarchy.

Serving SLN Commander, Admiral Wasantha Karannagoda was appointed as National Security Advisor to the President; Rear Admiral Thisara Samarasinghe takes over as new SLN chief.

The changes, were made, as he put it, to meet the needs of a post conflict situation, a military official said.

There were no new appointments announced in Sri Lanka Air Force.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Ethnic riots spread in China's west; 140 killed


Over 100 reported dead in riots China's restive Xinjiang
Play Video AFP – Over 100 reported dead in riots China's restive Xinjiang

URUMQI, China – Riots and street battles killed at least 140 people in China's western Xinjiang province and injured 828 others in the deadliest ethnic unrest to hit the region in decades. Officials said Monday the death toll was expected to rise.

Police sealed off streets in parts of the provincial capital, Urumqi, after discord between ethnic Muslim Uighur people and China's Han majority erupted into violence. Witnesses reported a new, smaller protest Monday in a second city, Kashgar.

The unrest is another troubling sign for Beijing at how rapid economic development has failed to stem — and even has exacerbated — resentment among ethnic minorities, who say they are being marginalized in their homelands as Chinese migrants pour in.

Columns of paramilitary police in green camouflage uniforms, helmets and flak vests marched Monday around Urumqi's main bazaar — a largely Uighur neighborhood — carrying batons and shields. Mobile phone service was blocked, and Internet links were also cut or slowed down.

Rioters on Sunday overturned barricades, attacked vehicles and houses, and clashed violently with police in Urumqi, according to media and witness accounts. State television aired footage showing protesters attacking and kicking people on the ground. Other people, who appeared to be Han Chinese, sat dazed with blood pouring down their faces.

There was little immediate explanation for how so many people died. The government accused a Uighur businesswoman living in the U.S. of inciting the riots through phone calls and "propaganda" spread on Web sites.

Exile groups said the violence started only after police began cracking down on a peaceful protest demanding justice for two Uighurs killed last month during a fight with Han co-workers at a factory in southern China.

Thousands of people took part in Sunday's disturbance, unlike recent sporadic separatist violence carried out by small groups in Xinjiang. The clashes echoed the violent protest that rocked Tibet last year and left many Tibetan communities living under clamped-down security ever since.

Tensions between Uighurs and the majority Han Chinese are never far from the surface in Xinjiang, a sprawling region rich in minerals and oil that borders eight Central Asian nations. Many Uighurs (pronounced WEE-gers) yearn for independence and some militants have waged a sporadic, violent separatist campaign.

Uighurs make up the largest ethnic group in Xinjiang, but not in the capital of Urumqi, which has attracted large numbers of Han Chinese migrants. The city of 2.3 million is now overwhelmingly Chinese — a source of frustration for native Uighurs who say they are being squeezed out.

Kakharman Khozamberdi — leader of a Uighur political movement in Kazakhstan, where the Uighur minority has its largest presence outside China — said machine gun fire was heard all night long. One witness told Khozamberdi 10 bodies were seen near a bazaar, including those of women and children.

In Geneva, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged China and any country with violent protests to use extreme care. He urged all government to "protect the life and safety of civilians."

About 1,000 to 3,000 Uighur demonstrators had gathered Sunday in the regional capital for a protest that apparently spun out of control. Accounts differed over what happened, but the violence seemed to have started when the crowd of protesters refused to disperse.

The official Xinhua News Agency reported hundreds of people were arrested and checkpoints ringed the city to prevent rioters from escaping. Mobile phone service provided by at least one company was cut Monday to stop people from organizing further action in Xinjiang.

Internet access was blocked or unusually slow in Urumqi on Monday. Videos and text updates about the riots were removed from China-based social networking sites such as Youku, a YouTube-like video service, and Fanfou, a Chinese micro-blogging Web site similar to Twitter.

A Fanfou search for posts with the key word Urumqi turned up zero results while Twitter, which is hosted overseas, yielded hundreds of comments in Chinese and English. Major Chinese portals such as Sina.com, Sohu.com and 163.com relied solely on Xinhua for news of the event and turned off the comment function at the bottom of the stories so people could not publicly react.

Witnesses said the protests spread to Kashgar, a second city in Xinjiang, on Monday afternoon. A Uighur man there said he was among more than 300 protesters who demonstrated outside the Id Kah Mosque. He said they were surrounded by police, who asked them to calm down.

"We were yelling at each other but there were no clashes, no physical contact," said the man, who gave his name as Yagupu.

Calls to Kashgar's public security bureau rang, then were disconnected.

Uighur activists and exiles say the millions of Han Chinese who have settled here in recent years are gradually squeezing the Turkic people out of their homeland.

But many Chinese believe the Uighurs are backward and ungrateful for the economic development the Chinese have brought to the poor region.

Wu Nong, director of the news office of the Xinjiang provincial government, said more than 260 vehicles were attacked or set on fire in Sunday's unrest and 203 shops were damaged. She said 140 people were killed and 828 injured in the violence.

She did not say how many of the victims were Han or Uighurs.

Uighur exiles condemned the crackdown.

"We ask the international community to condemn China's killing of innocent Uighurs. This is a very dark day in the history of the Uighur people," said Alim Seytoff, vice president of the Washington, D.C.-based Uyghur American Association.

Chinese officials singled out the leader of the association — Rebiya Kadeer, a former prominent Xinjiang businesswoman now living in Washington — for inciting the violence.

"Rebiya had phone conversations with people in China on July 5 in order to incite, and Web sites such as Uighurbiz.cn and Diyarim.com were used to orchestrate the incitement and spread propaganda," Xinjiang Governor Nur Bekri said on television early Monday.

Xinjiang's top Communist Party official, Wang Lequan, called the incident "a profound lesson learned in blood."

"We must tear away Rebiya's mask and let the world see her true nature," Wang said.

Seytoff dimissed the accusations against Kadeer. "It's common practice for the Chinese government to accuse Ms. Kadeer for any unrest" in Xinjiang, he said.

The clashes in Urumqi echoed last year's unrest in Tibet, when a peaceful demonstration by monks in the capital of Lhasa erupted into riots that spread to surrounding areas, leaving at least 22 dead. The Chinese government accused Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, of orchestrating the violence — a charge he denied.

Seytoff said he had heard from two sources that at least two dozen people had been killed by gunfire or crushed by armored police vehicles just outside Xinjiang University.

Mamet, a 36-year-old restaurant worker, said he saw People's Armed Police attack students outside Xinjiang University.

"First they fired tear gas at the students. Then they started beating them and shooting them with bullets. Big trucks arrived, and students were rounded up and arrested," Mamet said.

China labels some Uighur separatist groups as terrorists.

Four Uighur detainees at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba were recently released and relocated to Bermuda despite Beijing's objections because U.S. officials have said they fear the men would be executed if they returned to China. Officials have also been trying to transfer 13 others to the Pacific nation of Palau. The men were captured in Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2001, but the U.S. later determined they were not "enemy combatants."

Previous mass protests in Xinjiang that were quelled by armed forces became signal events for the separatist movement. In 1990, about 200 Uighurs shouting for holy war protested through Baren, a town near the Afghan border, resulting in violence that left at least two dozen people dead.

In 1997, amid a wave of bombings and assassinations, a protest by several hundred Uighurs in the city of Yining against religious restrictions turned into an anti-Chinese uprising that left at least 10 dead.

In both cases pro-independence groups said the death tolls were several times higher, and the government never conducted a public investigation into the events.

Nato troops die in Afghan blast


map

Four foreign soldiers with Nato-led forces have been killed in a bomb blast in the northern Afghan town of Kunduz, Nato and Afghan officials have said.

Local Afghan officials said the four victims were American nationals but this was not immediately confirmed by the US military.

Earlier, at least two people were killed in a suicide bombing near a Nato base in southern Afghanistan.

The attacker blew up his vehicle at a checkpoint outside Kandahar airfield.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Lanka land 'becoming scarcer'

--BBC--


Sri Lanka map
The survey was carried out in 18 districts including war affected areas
A survey has found that seventy per cent of the people in Sri Lanka are facing problems associated to land related issues.

The survey conducted by the Praja Abhilasha and People to People Dialogue on Peace and Sustainable Development Network say land is becoming scarcer and is also the most important burning issue in Sri Lanka.

The survey was carried out in eighteen districts including war affected areas.

State policy making, natural and man-made disasters, and war have been identified as the main causes for the land related issues.

"We have learned of and experienced the struggles people have faced and continue to face within these land issues, including those still affected by the 2004 tsunami" the report said.

Every household

At a meeting held at the Land Commissioner’s office last week, deputy land commissioner Hapuhinna said almost every household in Sri Lanka is embroiled with some sort of land related problem.

Representatives from different areas of the country detailed their problems at the meeting.

“The plantation workers do not have any right to land where they live,” a representative from the plantation sector said.

Sri Lanka IDPs
Government has decided to allocate 20 perches to IDP families, say activists

“We have nowhere to cultivate as authorities have declared a sanctuary in Thabbova farmland,” a woman said.

The report says that there are people in every district who are facing problems regarding ownership of land, who are affected by other natural disasters such as sea erosion, those affected through development activities and those affected with the problem of wild elephants.

The study reveals some of the problems are related with unprecedented natural disasters but many problems have risen due to unplanned activities of the responsible authorities or the affected people.

It was revealed that the absence of strengthened civil organisations and lack of awareness about laws and regulations were the major reasons for the difficulties to find sustainable and favourable solutions for many of the problems
Survey report

"It is observed that the affected parties have taken several steps to overcome the problems, although the efforts are in ad-hoc nature. It was revealed that the absence of strengthened civil organisations and lack of awareness about laws and regulations were the major reasons for the difficulties to find sustainable and favourable solutions for many of the problems", the report further said.

Herman Kumara, convenor of National Fisheries Solidarity Movement, told BBC Sandeshaya that the displaced people from the north are to be allocated 20 perches by the government.

“The question is if all these 300,000 people are to be allocated only 20 perches, what happens to the other land? Won’t it, the land issue, be more complex if this policy is implemented?” he questioned.

The study says that the problems are still aggravating the communities and the affected people are continuously suffering by having to adapt to the situation.

Floods in China wreak deadly havoc





Flooding has made roads in dozens of towns and cities in southern and central China impassable [AFP]

At least 16 people have died, dozens of others are reported missing and 320,000 people have been displaced as rainstorms sweep southern and central China, the state-run Xinhua news agency says.

In central Hunan province three days of downpours have left eight people dead and forced 140,000 to relocate, Xinhua said on Sunday.

Elsewhere in Hunan one person was killed and six others are missing after a ferryboat capsized early on Friday.

The boat travelling to Yongzhou City was overturned by the torrential flow of the river after a night of heavy rains.

Five people were killed and two others remain missing in the southeast province of Fujian.

Xinhua said that flooding had caused at least 287 rural houses to topple in the Jiangxi region where the Rongjiang river has overflowed its banks, forcing more than 70,000 people in the region to relocate.

The county government estimated the damage at $31 million.

China's national flood prevention office has estimated total damage costs of around $1.58bn.

'Worse weather' ahead

Since the start of the rainy season in April, more than 100 deaths have been attributed to the monsoon-like conditions and officials say worse weather may be on the way as the peak of the wet season nears.

In Guizhou province dozens of roads have been damaged by torrential rain, while traffic in dozens of towns and cities has been brought to a standstill as roads become impassable.

Heavy rainfall also triggered a mudslide in the city of Chongqing, blocking a main road there.

Emergency workers have been clearing stretches of the Yangtze river to keep water levels from increasing too much.

On Wednesday a flood relief drill was held in Anhui province to prepare soldiers for the peak of the flood season.

Earlier in the week, Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, experienced its heaviest rainfall in 27 years, with 147mm falling in 24 hours up to 8am on Monday.


UK spy chief 'exposed' on Facebook




The incident follows a series of security blunders that have embarrassed Gordon Brown's government [EPA]

The wife of the designated head of Britain's premier spy agency posted pictures of her husband, family and friends on Facebook, the popular internet networking site, causing shock among security experts and calls for an enquiry.

Sir John Sawers was chosen last month to take over as head of the Secret Intelligence Service, the agency popularly known as MI6, in November.

The agency has adopted a more public image in recent years, but its employees are still bound by strict secrecy rules.

In what the Mail on Sunday weekly called an "extraordinary lapse" in judgement, the new spy chief's wife, Lady Shelley Sawers, posted family pictures and details of where they live and take their holidays and who their friends and relatives are.

The published details, accessible by any of the many millions of Facebook users around the world, were immediately removed once authorities were alerted by the newspaper's enquiries.

Security breach denied

David Miliband, Birtain's foreign secretary, made light of the incident and denied there has been a security breach, giving Sawers his full support.

"It's not a state secret that he wears speedo swimming trunks," Miliband said. "For goodness' sake, let's grow up!" Miliband told the BBC.

But security experts remained shocked.

"It is a most distressing and unfortunate security lapse that will take a great deal of money to put right," Professor Anthony Glees, director of Buckingham University Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies, said.

Glees said that the children may now require an additional security detail and that the family may need to move to a new home.

The incident is one of a series of security blunders that have embarrassed the government of Gordon Brown, coming less than two weeks after the British prime minister launched Britain's first national cyber security strategy.

The Mail on Sunday, which published the story on its front page and pictures on a double-page spread, said the information "could potentially be useful to hostile foreign powers or terrorists."

Several government officials called on the government to launch an inquiry into the matter and have since questioned whether Sawers was the right man for the job.

Yousuf was back for Pakistan


Mohammad Yousuf
Yousuf has spent 18 months out of the Pakistan side

Mohammad Yousuf scored a century on his return to the Pakistan side to help the tourists earn the initiative in the first Test in Sri Lanka.

Yousuf was back for Pakistan after a spell in the unsanctioned Indian Cricket League and helped them recover from an overnight 15-2 to 342 all out.

He was given good support by Misbah-ul-Haq (56) before eventually being run out on 112 after his 24th Test ton.

Sri Lanka, with a 50-run deficit, were 0-0 off one over before the close.

The hosts appeared in a strong position on the second day when they took the wickets of nightwatchman Abdur Rauf and Younus Khan.

Rauf made 31 of Pakistan's first 40 runs in the morning session and put on a third-wicket partnership of 50 with Khan before being caught by keeper Tillakaratne Dilshan off the bowling of Nuwan Kulasekera.

606: DEBATE

Dilshan also caught Khan, who fell for 25, as debutant Angelo Mathews grabbed a wicket in his first over to leave Pakistan on 80-4.

But that only brought Misbah to the crease and, along with Yousuf, the pair put on a 139 run fifth-wicket stand.

Misbah struck nine fours in his total before edging to Mahela Jayawardene in the slips off left-arm spinner Rangana Herath.

Yousuf was then kept company by Shoaib Malik but was run out as his 186-ball innings came to an end.

Kulasekara struck late on in the day to bowl Malik and Umar Gul as Sri Lanka quickly polished off Pakistan to limit the tourists's advantage.

Sri Lanka had one over to negotiate before the end of the day's play and did so without scoring or losing a wicket.

Lanka 'getting closer' to China

--BBC--


Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama
Sri Lanka says China 'remained a friend at times of difficulty'
After being roundly criticised by some of its traditional Western friends over its conduct of the recently ended war, Sri Lanka is getting even closer to its allies within Asia such as India and China.

Some economic analysts feel that Beijing may just have the edge over Delhi where business ties with the island nation are concerned.

Sri Lanka's foreign minister concludes a four-day visit to China this weekend and has told his hosts that “China has remained a friend of Sri Lanka at times of difficulty”.

Economic impact

Chinese military aid helped Colombo defeat the Tamil Tiger rebels; and China, with India, Pakistan and others, helped this country stave off a Western-sponsored motion of criticism at the UN human rights council.

I think China is pretty fast off the mark and they are very quick to do deals because it is state financing that is coming and they are giving it straight to the SL government-owned because on pretty good terms
Asantha Sirimanne, LBO

Beijing is also making a big economic mark.

Chinese companies are developing a vast new port in the president’s home town of Hambantota.

And on the west coast Beijing is financing a major coal-fired electricity plant.

Asantha Sirimanne of Lanka Business Online points out that this project is ahead of a smaller Indian one in the north-east that is not yet under way, and thinks Indian ministers are getting a little uneasy.

Chinese leader, Hu Jintao
Analysts say China may have the edge over India

“I think China is pretty fast off the mark and they are very quick to do deals because it is state financing that is coming and they are giving it straight to the SL government-owned because on pretty good terms. So I think it is Chinese probably fast and more eager than India,” he said.

This week there has been further satisfaction for Beijing.

Sri Lanka’s Board of Investment signed a deal with a Chinese conglomerate, Huichen, to let it build infrastructure in a pre-existing special economic zone and market it exclusively to Chinese companies.

The government said it was the first time a foreign country was being given a specific tract of investment land to develop.

Politically, militarily and economically this country is looking for new allies.