December 11, 2023

IED blast martyrs policeman, injures two others in Balochistan’s Khuzdar

KHUZDAR A magnetic improvised explosive device (IED) explosion martyred a police official and injured two others in Balochistan’s Khuzdar district, Geo News reported on Sunday. Police said that Counter Terrorism Department’s (CTD) Station House Officer Mohammad Murad embraced martyrdom in the blast after his car was targeted on the Sultan Ibrahim road. They added that the wounded were shifted to the Khuzdar Teaching Hospital. Caretaker Federal Minister of Interior Sarfaraz Bugti, while speaking to Geo News following the incident, said that the whole nation has to fight the war against terrorism as it is becoming a great challenge. “The war against terrorism is not just CTDs but of the entire nation,” he added. In October, two people were martyred and three were wounded in a roadside explosion in Balochistan’s Chaghi area. According to the Levies force, the blast took place in Chaghi bazaar — at a distance of 60 kilometres from Dalbandin near the Pak-Afghan border — when a security forces vehicle was passing by. The attack came days after more than 60 people died in two separate suicide attacks in Balochistan’s Mastung and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Hangu city on September 29. Pakistan has witnessed a significant spike in the form of the recent wave of terrorist attacks across the country. According to a statistical report released by the independent think tank Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS), at least 271 militant attacks took place during the first half of 2023, resulting in the loss of 389 lives and injuring 656 individuals. Terror activities in the country soared by 79% during the period. In light of the increase in attacks, the interior minister announced the November 1 deadline for the illegal “aliens”, including Afghan illegal immigrants, to leave the county voluntarily. The caretaker interior minister revealed that Afghan nationals were responsible for 14 of the 24 suicide bombings in the country this year. Source:https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1136973-ied-blast-martyrs-policeman-injures-two-others-in-balochistans-khuzdar

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Australia inquiry raises hopes for six jailed over alleged Sydney bomb plot

Melbourne, Australia – More than four decades after they were convicted in one of Australia’s longest-running criminal trials, the evidence used to jail six former Yugoslav migrants is being re-examined to determine if they were victims of a miscarriage of justice. A rare judicial inquiry in the state of New South Wales (NSW) began investigating this month the convictions of six Croatian-Australian men found guilty in 1981 of plotting to bomb sites across Sydney, Australia’s biggest city. end of list A Supreme Court judge ordered the inquiry on the grounds that there were “doubts” and “questions” about the evidence provided to the trial by police officers and a key witness, who Australia’s domestic spy agency suspected may have been an informant for the state intelligence agency of the then-Yugoslavia, the Eastern European country that eventually broke up in a wave of nationalism in 1991. “The members of the ‘Croatian Six’ for whom I act have always and steadfastly maintained their innocence,” said Sebastian De Brennan, one of the lawyers representing the three men on whose behalf the judicial review application was made: Vjekoslav Brajkovic, Maksimilian Bebic and the late Mile Nekic, who died last year in Croatia. De Brennan told Al Jazeera the inquiry was “a vindication for my clients who wanted nothing more than to have their names, and those of the many other Croatian-Australians whose good reputations were tarnished by the case, cleared.” The inquiry will also examine the cases of the three other members of the “Croatian Six”: Anton Zvirotic and brothers Ilija and Joseph Kokotovic. All six men were recent migrants from Yugoslavia when they were arrested in Sydney and the NSW town of Lithgow in February 1979. After a 172-day trial in the NSW Supreme Court, in February 1981, they were convicted of involvement in a conspiracy to bomb two travel agencies, a Serbian community club, a suburban theatre and Sydney water supply pipes. They were also convicted on charges of possessing explosives and each sentenced to a maximum of 15 years in prison. They served sentences of 10 years before being released in 1991. Intelligence has been declassified for the inquiry [Courtesy of the National Archives of Australia] Multiple legal appeals and applications for judicial review were unsuccessful but in 2022, after examining new information submitted to the NSW Supreme Court, Judge Robertson Wright ordered a judicial inquiry into the convictions. Judge Wright said there were “doubts or questions as to parts of the evidence … and the guilt of the Croatian Six”, including whether a central witness gave “deliberately false” evidence in the original trial. The man, known as Vico Virkez, told police that he was a member of the largely anti-communist Croatian-Australian community and involved in the alleged bombing plot with the convicted men. His confession to Lithgow police in 1979 led to their arrests. Declassified government documents name him as Vito Misimovic or Mesimovic, a Bosnian-born migrant who was reported by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) as having links to the Yugoslav consulate in Sydney. Yugoslavia’s eventual split following the collapse of the then-Soviet Union led to the independence of several countries including Croatia. ASIO files describe the “Croatian Six” as belonging to a “Croatian nationalist movement dedicated to overthrowing the Yugoslav government and establishing an independent Croatian state”. In his decision, Judge Wright states there is a “real possibility that the Yugoslav Intelligence Service used Mr Virkez as an agent provocateur or informer, to cause false information to be given to the NSW Police, and possibly ASIO, as to the existence of a bombing conspiracy involving the Croatian Six, in order to discredit Croatians in Australia”. Investigative journalist Hamish McDonald, who has written extensively on the “Croatian Six”, expects the declassified information on Virkez’s activities to have a significant impact on the inquiry. In 2018, McDonald’s research led to the intelligence agency files being declassified and included in the application for a judicial inquiry. “The ASIO evidence shows that this information was given very early to the state police but none of it reached the defence counsel or was heard in the court,” McDonald recalled. “The Crown Counsel assured the court there was not a scintilla of evidence that Virkez was a Yugoslav agent.” In directing the inquiry, Judge Wright found that “the unavailability to the defence at the trial of the information of the type disclosed in the declassified ASIO documents may well have deprived each accused of a chance of acquittal”. McDonald believes that if any of the surviving police officers involved in arresting the “Croatian Six” appear before the inquiry, they will be questioned “about the physical evidence they claim to have found on the premises of the six Croatian Australians and why they did not do certain things that would be routine procedures now, like photographing evidence and fingerprinting. They’d be asked whether they used violence in the interrogation of the arrested men”. Four of the men alleged they were beaten while in police custody. Judge Wright said there were questions too about the evidence provided by NSW Police officers about the confessions attributed to all six men and the discovery of explosives linked to them. “The inquiry will have a wider scope than a trial and examine the convictions in a different way to an appeals court,” explained Associate Professor Mehera San Roque, an expert in evidence law at the University of New South Wales. “It is not bound by the rules of evidence. So, the judge will be able to receive evidence that might otherwise be inadmissible in a trial,” she said. At the end of the inquiry, the judge will submit a report to the chief justice of the Supreme Court and “may refer the matter to the Court of Criminal Appeal for consideration of whether the convictions should be quashed, or the sentence reconsidered”. “If the convictions are quashed, it is possible to seek compensation,” added San Roque. ‘I was innocent’ The “Croatian Six” and their families have rarely spoken publicly about the

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Israel-Hamas war live: Gaza death toll nears 18,000 amid Israeli attacks

About 18,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli bombardment since October 7. The revised death toll in Israel stands at 1,147. A special UN General Assembly session to be held on Tuesday comes after Egypt and Mauritania invoked resolution 377, “Uniting for Peace”. The WHO requests “immediate, unimpeded” access to Gaza as its chief called the current situation “catastrophic”. UN forces in Lebanon have warned of a “wider conflict” as Israel and Hezbollah escalate air raids and drone attacks. Occupied West Bank comes to a standstill amid solidarity strike Nida Ibrahim Reporting from Jenin, occupied West Bank Palestinians are closing down their shops – including pharmacies, bakeries and street vendors – and all aspects of life in various areas of the occupied West Bank in solidarity with those in the besieged Gaza Strip. Palestinians are hoping that by doing this, the world will take notice and this will translate into increased pressure on Israel. Their main demand is for a ceasefire in Gaza but they also want the world to pressure Israel to end the occupation. For Palestinians, strikes have historically been important ways to shed light on their situation. It’s also a sign of unity that they’re all united against the Israeli occupation. Click here to share on social media Gaza conflict shows need to put people first, says Somali FM Alma Milisic Reporting from the Doha Forum The situation in Gaza serves as a stark reminder of the need to put people first, Somalia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Abshir Omar Jama said in a speech at the Doha Forum. Global leaders have gathered for a second day in the Qatari capital with discussions on how to ease the humanitarian situation in Gaza and agree a ceasefire topping this year’s agenda. The Somali official emphasised the importance of involving the “international community to address the underlying causes of suppressed advocacy for the protection and dignity of the civilian population, including children and vulnerable groups who are disproportionately affected”. Click here to share on social media 142 female prisoners from Gaza detained by Israel Palestine’s Commission for Detainees’ Affairs says Israel is currently holding 142 female Palestinian prisoners, including children and elderly, who were arrested during the ground invasion in Gaza. It added that they were being detained in several prisons, including Damon and Hasharon. As of the end of November, Israel said 260 Palestinians from Gaza were held in Israel, whom it classifies as illegal combatants. Gaza residents with permits to work in Israel found themselves stuck outside the besieged enclave after Israel launched its relentless bombardment. Click here to share on social media Palestinians being killed at historic pace by Israeli bombing Hani Mahmoud Reporting from Rafah, southern Gaza The overnight bombardment across the Gaza Strip just confirmed what people have been saying: The Israeli military is targeting civilians in their homes when they’re sleeping or eating with their families. We’re seeing civilians being killed at a historic pace. Maghazi is a densely populated refugee camp in central Gaza … in a very densely populated neighbourhood. Homes were targeted overnight and 23 people were reported killed. Many were injured around those houses that were targeted. The lack of equipment for rescue crews makes it very difficult to help those who might have survived. People are using their hands to remove rubble and save as many as they can. Nuseirat – another densely populated refugee camp – was also targeted in what seems to be a war on refugee camps. Click here to share on social media Violence escalates between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah Crossfire on the Lebanon-Israel border is continuing. We’re getting reports that at least eight rockets were fired from Lebanon at the northern Israeli city of Ma’alot-Tarshiha this morning, The Times of Israel said. Footage published on social media shows rockets fired from southern Lebanon into northern Israel being intercepted by the Iron Dome air defence system. Some rockets appeared to have landed in open areas. There are no reports of injuries. In southern Lebanon, an Al Jazeera correspondent said an Israeli artillery bombardment targeted the vicinity of the towns of Naqoura, Zibqin, Yarin, Marwahin and Jebbayn. Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah have been trading fire since the war in Gaza erupted two months ago in their worst hostilities since a 2006 conflict. The violence has largely been contained to the border area. Click here to share on social media WATCH: Sirens blare in Spanish civil war town in solidarity with Gaza Protesters in Guernica form the Palestinian flag in the same market square that was bombed by Nazi and fascist forces during the Spanish civil war. Doha Forum resumes in Qatar The Doha Forum resumes today in the Qatari capital with the war in Gaza expected to top the agenda again. Speakers and panellists on the opening day highlighted the need for an urgent ceasefire and halt to Israel’s continued bombing of the besieged enclave that has killed almost 18,000 people. Our correspondents Virginia Pietromarchi and Alma Milisic are at the event and will bring you all the major developments. [Alma Milisic/Al Jazeera] Click here to share on social media Window on Israel’s war in Gaza closing Yossi Mekelberg of Chatham House believes there could be a ceasefire in the next few weeks, either before Christmas or by the end of the year, as the US becomes increasingly concerned over the death toll in Gaza. He said that for the people of Gaza, a few weeks would still be a “very long time”. Mekelberg, who is an associate fellow of the MENA programme at Chatham House, said the fighting also needs to stop if Israel wants all the captives released. “Everyone needs to go back to the negotiating table…  all of this is one big disaster,” he added. Source:https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2023/12/11/israel-hamas-war-live-who-decries-catastrophic-situation-in-gaza

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