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Monday, 1 December 2014

Maoist attack kills 13 Indian paramilitary troops

Indian security personnel carry the body of a Maoist attack victim. -AP/File
Indian security personnel carry the body of a Maoist attack victim. -AP/File
PATNA: At least 13 paramilitary troops were killed in an attack by Maoist rebels in central India on Monday, police said. R.K. Vij, a top police official in Chhattisgarh state, said the attack took place in Sukma district, 385 kilometers (240 miles) south of Raipur, the state capital.
Vij said troops from the Central Reserve Police Force were engaged in fighting the rebels in an area that is known to be their stronghold, but added that few other details were immediately available from the remote region.
The rebels have been called India's biggest internal security threat. They operate in 20 of India's 28 states and have thousands of fighters, according to the Home Ministry.
The rebels, who say they are inspired by Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong, have been fighting for more than three decades in central and eastern India, staging hit-and-run attacks against authorities as they demand a greater share of wealth from the area's natural resources and more jobs for farmers and the poor.
The rebels say they represent the poor living close to the land, including farmers and members of tribal groups who depend on forests for food, fuel and building materials for their thatched huts.http://www.dawn.com/news/1148095/maoist-attack-kills-13-indian-paramilitary-troops

Why Karachi will keep flooding

Why Karachi will keep flooding

Published about 10 hours ago
This file photo shows Pakistani soldiers rescuing a resident from an area flooded by heavy rains on the outskirts of Karachi, Pakistan. – AP/File photo
This file photo shows Pakistani soldiers rescuing a resident from an area flooded by heavy rains on the outskirts of Karachi, Pakistan. – AP/File photo
There was a time just 50 years ago when it scarcely rained in Karachi, Pakistan’s industrial and commercial hub and seaport; just a shower every few years if residents were lucky.
From the late 70s, however, rains are more frequent as are floods in the sprawling 1,400 square mile city of 21 million people, one of the world’s biggest in terms of both area and population.
Traffic stalls with roads being waterlogged and there’s serious risk of falling into open manholes and drowning. The flood may be localised when it rains in only part of Karachi, but it nonetheless disrupts the lives and livelihoods of thousands of people.

Is global warming responsible?

“Global warming exists. That’s obvious by all the changes we see and experience — consensus only varies as to its extent,” said internationally acclaimed architect, urban planner and environmentalist Arif Hasan, who is a leading authority on Karachi.
He does not find the increased frequency of rains extraordinary.
“Looking at the rainfall figures, I can say with certainty that the present floods have nothing to do with climate change. Not even minor. The figures keep going up and down. There is no regular pattern. We’ve had periods of far more intense flooding during the devastation of 2010. It rained frequently during the 70s. Karachi’s Lyari river frequently overflowed previously, but the city didn’t drown.”

Then why does it drown now?

“Major outlets to the sea were blocked,” he explained. A bypass, for instance, was built at the junction of two major natural drainage channels to replace the flood plains. It was a narrow and inadequate 60-feet-wide drain flowing into a creek leading directly to the sea. During the rains, it can’t cope with the volume.
This is in the Clifton area, adjacent to the Defence Housing Authority, home to many of the city’s most affluent who seek to live as close as possible to the ocean. As a result, the upscale residential area now dominates the city’s coastal area, covering almost 14 square miles and growing relentlessly.
The problem is that most of Karachi’s waste-water and sewage is channeled into the sea, so there’s no avoiding cutting through DHA to get there.
 In this file photo, residents hold onto a rope as they evacuate a flooded area in Karachi. - AFP/File photo
In this file photo, residents hold onto a rope as they evacuate a flooded area in Karachi. - AFP/File photo
“Another major drainage channel flows into a similar creek (Gizri creek). Its one-and-a-half kilometre wide floodplain was replaced by an 80 feet drain! The area never flooded before; now it does. Why? Because DHA converted the floodplain into a residential area. When rains occur during high tide, the water can’t get out because the tide pushes back the rainwater into the drain, blocking it from exiting,” Hasan added.
Other contributing factors are scores of encroachments in the form of ‘katchi abadis’, or informal settlements.
When it rains heavily, many of these are inundated because they are built on floodplains. The most recent case is of Saadi town which was completely submerged last year and all but disappeared.
An unsatisfactory sewerage system compounds Karachi’s woes.
Existing sewage processing plants have only one-fourth the capacity to treat what Karachi generates.
“These could process more of Karachi’s sewage — if it only reached those plants! Their capacity is 150 million gallons, but only 30 million reaches. The rest, about 400 million gallons, goes into the sea.”
Storm-water drains double as outlets for sewage which mixes with city floodwaters, creating serious health hazards.
“The city simply has to get rid of the Defence housing colony that’s encroached on a mangrove strip and the Mai Kolachi Bypass road (in Clifton)… There’s no other way,” Hasan said.
Public protests led by environmentalists have failed to save the mangroves.
The once vast mangrove forests have been progressively shrinking. The resultant heavy pollution has threatened shrimp nurseries and the livelihoods of local fishing communities.
“The whole area now stinks, and there’s no mechanism to get the sewage properly flushed out,” said Noman Ahmed, head of the department of architecture, NED University. Eventually, the smell may drive residents away.
“People who reside there or are thinking of moving into DHA reclaimed area should think twice,” warned Noman, “DHA Phase 8 alone is about 4,000 acres, the bulk of it from reclamation. To do it scientifically is very expensive. Instead, quicksand and marshy areas were consolidated by simply dumping and compacting earth. That’s not good enough. In any seismic activity, cracks may appear in buildings and infrastructure with serious consequences. Yet, now they’re thinking of reclaiming even more.”
The same mistakes were made by other major cities — Bombay, Dhaka, Bangkok and, in the nineteenth century, New York, London and Paris. Drainage channels were closed and canals and creeks built over them.
“But the big difference between those western cities and us is that those were small populations, making it easier to correct,” Hasan said. “Today, Karachi is the world’s fastest growing city.”
 In this file photo, a Pakistani girl who sells sweets to worshippers at a shrine enjoys rolling on a flooded street during a sudden heavy rain after days of scorching temperatures. -AP/File photo
In this file photo, a Pakistani girl who sells sweets to worshippers at a shrine enjoys rolling on a flooded street during a sudden heavy rain after days of scorching temperatures. -AP/File photo
“Planners know the problems but are unable to act on them for political reasons. Different parts of Karachi are controlled by various ethnic groups and political parties that don’t see eye-to-eye. Karachi comes under 13 different administrations that don’t coordinate with each other — Cantonment Boards, Port Trust, Civil Aviation Authority, industrial estates, housing societies, etc… Everything is done ad hoc.”
There are endless delays in implementing sanctioned plans. The financial constraints keep mounting with the steadily increasing population in the urban sprawl.
“There’s still no overall authority in Karachi to control construction… or to prevent damaging changes,” said architect and activist Roland deSouza.
Misbahuddin Farid, former head of the Karachi Water & Sewerage Board (KWSB), agreed.
“Nobody even considers KWSB a stakeholder, so we’re not even consulted. I’ve brought up the matter often, even with the chief minister, to no avail.”

Surely things have come to a head by now?

“It’s a political problem, not a planning one,” said Hasan, “City government planners are highly qualified and know all this. The biggest problem is that politicians are not aware and don’t inform themselves. It is ignorance and the lack of desire to know. They don’t see it because it doesn’t happen to them. The planners, the best informed, have no independence. If they assert themselves, they can be sacked or transferred to doing nothing of consequence. So they keep quiet to retain their jobs or leave for jobs elsewhere.”
“In the coming 50, 100 years, global warming may cause greater rainfall and aggravate matters. But whether there’s global warming or not, unless these problems are resolved, Karachi will keep flooding.”
Ironically, Karachi also suffers chronic water shortage, a problem that impacts the entire country. Pakistan, overall, is getting more water than ever before, from both increasing floods and rains.
“Yet our water storage can hardly meet a month of our needs,” said ecologist and energy expert Parvaiz Naim. His key concern, he stressed, was that the “lack of adequate water storage facilities exposes us to floods when we get more rains, and droughts when we get less. Pakistan needs to go for adaptation measures.”
The writer is a journalist based in Pakistan.

Angelina Jolie involved in a car accident

Angelina Jolie got into the car crash after leaving the Writers Guild Theater. - Reuters
Angelina Jolie got into the car crash after leaving the Writers Guild Theater. - Reuters
LOS ANGELES: Actor Angelina Jolie reportedly got into a car accident after a screening of her new movie, Unbroken.
The 39-year-old was returning home when her car skidded on the road due to the rain and hit a curb. As a result of the impact, two of the vehicle's tires exploded.
According to X17online.com, the accident was bad but could have been much worse.
Quoting an eyewitness, the website reported: "The car slammed into the curb at a significant speed. Jolie must have wondered if they hit another car. It was pretty bad – the tire exploded and it's amazing nothing worse happened to the car. I wouldn't be surprised if she has whiplash."
The actor had been travelling in a hired car and was picked up by another car from the same service shortly after the car accident.
Directed and produced by Angelina Jolie, Unbroken chronicles the life of Louis Zamperini, a former Olympic runner who spent 47 days afloat in the Pacific Ocean after his military plane crashed and was later captured by Japanese forces during World War II and spent two years as a prisoner of war.
The actor looked radiant at the screening at the Writers Guild Theater donning an all-white ensemble and a Louis Vuitton purse.
It is unknown whether the actor suffered any injuries.

Israel edges closer to early election: Ya'alon

Israel edges closer to early election: Ya'alon
Israeli Minister of Military Affairs Moshe Ya'alon
Israeli minister of military affairs Moshe Ya'alon says the ongoing political infighting between coalition partners in the cabinet would force the regime to hold an early election.
Ya'alon said in a Sunday interview with Israel’s Channel 2 television that it would be “better to hold an election as soon as possible” if partners in the Israeli coalition cabinet continue to bicker in public.Ya'alon is the highest ranking Israeli official to confirm the possibility of a snap vote much sooner than the one scheduled for 2017.
“The current situation cannot continue. This is a government that faces surprises every day. We have an unnatural coalition,” said the regime’s war minister.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's fractious cabinet has been racked by differences over several major issues including proposed cuts to the 2015 budget and a new bill that seeks to declare Israel as a Jewish entity.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu complained of the incessant infighting in his cabinet.
"I hope we can return to normal conduct," he said. "This is what the public expects from us. And if not we will have to draw conclusions."
This came as a Sunday poll showed Netanyahu's approval rating has halved from 77 percent in August to 38 now.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2014/12/01/388227/israel-should-hold-snap-vote-asap-yaalon/

Student Protestors Continue To Occupy Admiralty Site

Student Protestors Continue To Occupy Admiralty Site
By Chris McGrath (GETTY) – 29 minutes ago  

HONG KONG - DECEMBER 01: police remove a pro-democracy protester from her tent during clashes outside Hong Kong's Government complex on December 1, 2014 in Hong Kong. Leaders from the Federation of Students called on fellow protesters to attend a rally and come prepared for escalated action. Protesters were asked to bring masks, umbrellas and helmets in a bid to move the protests forward after police successfully cleared the Mong Kok protest site earlier this week. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

Student Protestors Continue To Occupy Admiralty Site

Student Protestors Continue To Occupy Admiralty Site
By Chris McGrath (GETTY) – 29 minutes ago  

HONG KONG - DECEMBER 01: police remove a pro-democracy protester from her tent during clashes outside Hong Kong's Government complex on December 1, 2014 in Hong Kong. Leaders from the Federation of Students called on fellow protesters to attend a rally and come prepared for escalated action. Protesters were asked to bring masks, umbrellas and helmets in a bid to move the protests forward after police successfully cleared the Mong Kok protest site earlier this week. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

Pakistan picks up 2 Golds and 3 Silvers in technology awards

Team Pakistan won five Awards at the Asia Pacific ICT Awards ceremony held in Jakarta, Indonesia. -Press release photo
Team Pakistan won five Awards at the Asia Pacific ICT Awards ceremony held in Jakarta, Indonesia. -Press release photo
JAKARTA: The Pakistan Software Houses Association for IT & ITES (P@SHA) announced on Sunday that Team Pakistan won 2 Gold Awards and 3 Silver Awards at the Asia Pacific ICT Awards (APICTA) 2014 ceremony held in Jakarta, Indonesia.
The teams won Gold Awards in the Media & Entertainment Technologies and Tertiary Student Categories and Silver Awards in the Startup, Tourism & Hospitality and Tertiary Student Categories.
Leading the way with the Gold were the teams from Eyedeus Labs for their new product “Ingrain” and Syed Osama Maruf of NUST for his product “Smart Steth”.
The Silver Awards were taken by RemoteInterview.io in the Startup Category, EatOye in the Tourism & Hospitality Category and Fawad Ejaz Bhatti of NUST for TRex Tremor Reader in the Tertiary Student Category.
The Awards ceremony was attended by Indonesia's Communications and Information Technology Minister, Rudiantara.
This year’s P@SHA delegation comprised of 30 members with19 technology products competing for the prestigious Awards.
National teams from each economy are selected after a rigorous ICT Awards competition in 17 economies.
The best of the best then compete against each other at a three-day regional event judged by industry professionals, technology veterans and thought leaders from the Asia-Pacific region.
The Pakistani delegation was finalised after the announcement of winners at the P@SHA ICT Awards earlier in November.
International APICTA Judges from 17 economies who evaluated the categories, in which Pakistan participated, spoke about the consistently high standard of technology products presented by Pakistan year after year.
This year Team Pakistan benchmarked its products against 183 products from the region.http://www.dawn.com/news/1147925/pakistan-picks-up-2-golds-and-3-silvers-in-technology-awards

Revenge-seeking England take on Sri Lanka

Revenge-seeking England take on Sri Lanka

Published about 2 hours ago
England's captain Alastair Cook and team-mate Eoin Morgan (L). — Reuters/File
England's captain Alastair Cook and team-mate Eoin Morgan (L). — Reuters/File
COLOMBO: England will look to settle scores against Sri Lanka after their bad-tempered clash earlier this year when the two sides meet in a pre-World Cup one-day series from Wednesday.
The seven-match tour has been spiced up by comments from England captain Alastair Cook that his team will try to exact revenge for the Test and one-day defeats at home.
Cook's status as captain came under heavy pressure after the 1-0 Test defeat, and tempers frayed in the ODIs when off-spinner Sachithra Senanayake controversially ran out Jos Buttler before delivering a ball.
“There is a World Cup at the end of it, but we are here to try and win this series,” Cook said on arrival. “I think we owe you (Sri Lanka) a little bit of revenge.”
The 'Mankaded' dismissal by Senanayake, since suspended for an illegal bowling action, is considered to be against cricket's spirit of fair play.
But Sri Lanka insisted Buttler was earlier warned for backing up, and senior pro Mahela Jayawardene lashed out at Cook for questioning Senanayake's run-out.
Meanwhile Sri Lanka are smarting from this month's 5-0 thrashing in India in a series that was hastily arranged after the West Indies abandoned their Indian tour over a pay dispute.
Sri Lankan captain Angelo Mathews insisted the matches will be used to recover from the morale-sapping loss and find the right combination for the World Cup starting in February.
“We need to get back into our groove,” Mathews said.
“We want to look at players whom we think need to be looked at and whom we think will go on the World Cup. It's very important that we sort out our bowlers and also the batting order. By the end of the series we should have a very clear idea of whom we want to take to the World Cup.”
Both teams are grouped together in the preliminary stage of the World Cup and will feature on the opening day on February 14, with Sri Lanka playing New Zealand and England facing Australia.
The upcoming series, which opens in Colombo, provides both teams a chance to strike form — provided the weather does not play spoilsport.
The prevailing north-east monsoon over the island has already forced one of the two warm-up matches to be abandoned, leaving the tourists short of match practice.
With more rain forecast during the series, Sri Lankan officials have set aside reserve days for five of the seven matches.
“It's not ideal, is it?” England batsman Ian Bell said.
“But I suppose, on this tour, we're going to get interrupted by rain all the way through. “
England have lost 11 of 18 one-dayers this year, including a 4-1 drubbing in Australia which co-hosts the World Cup with New Zealand in February-March.
England (from): Alastair Cook (capt), Moeen Ali, Ian Bell, Ravi Bopara, Jos Buttler, Steven Finn, Harry Gurney, Alex Hales, Chris Jordan, Eoin Morgan, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, James Taylor, James Tredwell, Chris Woakes.
Sri Lanka (from): Angelo Mathews (capt), Tillakaratne Dilshan, Kusal Perera, Kumar Sangakkara, Mahela Jayawardene, Lahiru Thirimanne, Jeevan Mendis, Thilina Kandamby, Rangana Herath, Dilruwan Perera, Ajantha Mendis, Shaminda Eranga, Dhammika Prasad, Thisara Perera, Lahiru Gamage.
Schedule: Nov 26: First ODI, Colombo (day-night) Nov 29: Second ODI, Colombo Dec 3: Third ODI, Hambantota (day-night) Dec 7: Fourth ODI, Colombo Dec 10: Fifth ODI, Pallekelle (day-night) Dec 13: Sixth ODI, Pallekelle Dec 16: Seventh ODI, Colombo (day-night)http://www.dawn.com/news/1146787/revenge-seeking-england-take-on-sri-lanka

Report sought on why transporters joined PTI rally

Report sought on why transporters joined PTI rally

Updated 16 minutes ago
A notice on the window at bus terminal notifying passengers about the suspension of transport serivce for Rawalpindi and Islamabad on the occasion of public gathering of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf in Islamabad. - Online
A notice on the window at bus terminal notifying passengers about the suspension of transport serivce for Rawalpindi and Islamabad on the occasion of public gathering of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf in Islamabad. - Online
RAWALPINDI: Officials in the Punjab government were astonished to see a large number of public transport vehicles a part of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) rallies.
A report has been sought from the Special Branch of Punjab police, inquiring where they had gotten these vehicles when the authorities concerned had convinced transporters not to provide vehicles for the rally.
According to a source, public transporters were being watched and had allegedly been convinced by the district administration not to provide public transport to the PTI - in an attempt to discourage people from participating in the protest demonstration on November 30.
The Special Branch in its report sent to the government claimed that 45,000 to 50,000 people were attending the PTI protest in Islamabad. As many as 10,000 to 15,000 people are participating from Punjab.
A senior police officer revealed that none of the vehicles carrying PTI activists were stopped by police at any check point or harassed by police as there were clear instructions from the government not to stop PTI workers from attending the rally.

A rally unlike others before it

A rally unlike others before it

Updated about 2 hours ago
Women supporters in a festive mood at the PTI rally in Islamabad on Sunday. — Photo by Tanveer Shahzad
Women supporters in a festive mood at the PTI rally in Islamabad on Sunday. — Photo by Tanveer Shahzad
ISLAMABAD: A far cry from the chaotic scenes witnessed during the early days of the sit-in on Constitution Avenue, Sunday saw a massive, yet relatively disciplined turnout at the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf rally.
Most of those who made their way to Blue Area and Parade Avenue were locals, but even youths that converged on Islamabad in cars adorned with party paraphernalia and resounding with party anthems looked quite fired up.
“We started from Peshawar in the early afternoon, but had to make several stopovers to avoid roadblocks, set up by mullahs,” said Rehmatullah, who led a group of Insaf Students Federation (ISF) activists.
The roadblocks he was referring to were set up by Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl workers, who were protesting the murder of a Sindh-based party leader.
While very few reports of violence between supporters of both parties came, no clashes were reported in the capital all day.

After its string of public meetings and sit-ins across the country, the PTI’s event on Sunday seemed far better organised than the party’s past outings in the capital


Similarly, when students from the Jamia Muhammadia gathered to protest in front of the National Press Club, blocking the road between Supermarket in Sector F-6 and China Chowk in Blue Area, PTI supporters did not look to engage with them either.
But most party workers making their way to the capital from different parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa encountered JUI-F roadblocks.
Those Dawn spoke to at the rally said that several people who were travelling to the rally with their families turned back because they did not want to get stuck on the roads.
The discipline on display was quite commendable: there was little pushing or shoving as men and women stood in line at the entrances to the venue.
Those waiting to get in would periodically take up a chant or two; cries of “Diesel, Diesel” and “Go Nawaz Go” could be heard from nearly all corners. But there was no name-calling or abuse and most sloganeers restrained themselves, ostensibly due to a large presence of women and children there.
Decked up in their Sunday best, young women, mothers with their children and even school girls added a lot of colour to the festivities.
Rubab, a first-time rally participant from Jhelum, told Dawn she had never attended a public event like this one.
“Impressed by the respect afforded to women by PTI supporters at previous events, my family agreed to bring me to Islamabad for this rally,” she said, as her mother munched on a bag of freshly roasted peanuts from a nearby vendor.
Compared to the pandemonium that ensued when the Azadi March reached the capital on August 15, Sunday’s show seemed better organised.
This event was also distinct from previous PTI outings in the capital in terms of the demographic of people who turned out.
Imran Khan’s whirlwind tour of Punjab with public rallies in nearly all major cities looked to have paid off, as an overwhelming majority of people at Sunday’s rally came from different parts of the province.
“We hired a bus to bring us here. We’re here to prove that it’s not just the people of KP who are with Imran Khan; he is our leader too,” said a charged Ghulam Mohammad, who had come all the way from Gujrat.
Lessons learnt
Taking a leaf out of the playbook of erstwhile sit-in partners, the Pakistan Awami Tehreek, PTI volunteers were out in full force on Sunday.
Stationed at different points all over the venue, they were on hand to assist those in attendance and kept a constant eye out for anything untoward. Each party worker displayed an ID badge, clearly mentioning their duty at the venue.
As it got dark, torch lights and mobile phones were used to guide women and the elderly through the crowd, helping them navigate some of the tricky terrain of Blue Area, which is currently closed for traffic due to work on the metro bus project.
Residents of the twin cities were by far the largest group at the rally. “In August, we were apprehensive of the massive police deployment and the roadblocks and containers,” said Raza Hussain, who lives in Sector F-6.
“But now, after having been to D-Chowk and seeing the daily routine, this seems normal to us,” he said.
Relief for citizens
Residents of Rawalpindi and Islamabad were especially grateful for the rally on Sunday, primarily because there was no gas loadshedding on Sunday.
Much like in August, when power outages stopped in the capital for nearly a week, this time around too, people at home could warm their toes in front of gas heaters. Parts of Pindi that have seen only dry pipelines for weeks now were also treated to full gas pressure on the weekend.
“My family is having homemade parathas for breakfast after nearly forty days because we have gas today,” said Asmat Zehra, who lives near Stadium Road in Rawalpindi.
“Ordinarily, there would be no gas from six in the morning to midnight and we’ve been forced to fetch naans from the tandoor every day. I would have to wake up in the middle of the night to prepare food and we would warm it on an LPG cylinder stove,” she said.
But PTI leader Asad Umar laughed off the move, saying, “These cheap tactics will never win hearts.”
Published in Dawn, December 1st , 2014

Kabul police chief quits after guest house attacks

Outgoing Kabul's police chief general Zahir Zahir (2nd L) visiting the site of a suicide attack in Kabul.—AFP/File
Outgoing Kabul's police chief general Zahir Zahir (2nd L) visiting the site of a suicide attack in Kabul.—AFP/File
KABUL: The Kabul police chief resigned on Sunday after three Taliban attacks in 10 days on foreign guest houses in the capital, while officials said Afghan forces had ousted insurgents who tried to seize former US and British base Camp Bastion in the south.
Taliban militants breached the perimeter of Camp Bastion in the southern Afghan province of Helmand three days ago, just one month after the base was handed over to the Afghan army.
The attacks in recent days have renewed fears that Afghanistan’s army and police are unable to secure the country.
The charity whose Kabul guest house was targeted in the latest such assault on Saturday, the US-based Partnership in Academics and Development (PAD), said on its website that three people were killed by insurgents who used guns and explosives.
They were identified as members of a South African family — a father and his two teenage children — by a colleague of the mother, who survived the attack.
Kabul’s police spokesman declined to comment on the reason for the chief’s resignation.
“We can only confirm... he will not continue his job as police chief anymore,” Hashmat Stanekzai said.

Taliban have struck three compounds used by foreign organisations in 10 days

Violence across Afghanistan has surged this year as the Taliban and their allies have stepped up their activities ahead of the scheduled withdrawal of most international troops by the end of next month.
Over the past 10 days, three compounds used by foreign organisations have been hit by attackers. In separate attacks in Kabul, two American soldiers, two British embassy workers and dozens of Afghan civilians have died.
The Taliban said on Saturday they had attacked the foreign guesthouse because they believed it to be a Christian centre. This was the second time this year the Taliban targeted a group that they said had links to Christianity.
The South African victims were members of a devout Christian family that had lived in Afghanistan for nearly 12 years, with the father running the charity and the mother working as a doctor, said the colleague at the Kabul clinic where the mother worked.
The 17-year-old son had been applying to universities in the United States. His sister was 14, said the colleague, who asked not to be identified for security reasons.
Meanwhile, Afghan soldiers finally ousted a group of Taliban from the former Camp Bastion. By Sunday, fighting at the base had ended and troops were clearing the area that had been seized by a few dozen insurgents, said Omar Zwak, a spokesman for the Helmand governor.
Further north in Helmand’s Sangin district, a smaller army post was attacked and 12 soldiers killed in fighting on Friday and Saturday, Mr Zwak said.

Indian air force sees threat from neighbours

IAF chief Air Marshal Arup Raha.—AFP/File
IAF chief Air Marshal Arup Raha.—AFP/File
NEW DELHI: India does not have territorial ambitions except to possibly reclaim land it lost to unnamed neighbours as a consequence of history, Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha said in Bangalore on Saturday.
Reports quoted him as speaking of Indian vulnerability because of a hostile neighbourhood left by colonial policies.
“India has no territorial ambition, except for recovering the territories that we lost, because of the history that we had, to our neighbours,” he was quoted by the Hindustan Times as saying. “So we might like to recover those. But otherwise we have no intention of any territory being occupied by us from our neighbours or otherwise,” Raha said.
Delivering the Air Chief Marshal L.M. Katre memorial lecture, he said: “But we have a hostile border, with the legacy of the British rule and the conflicts we have had in the past. So we are vulnerable in terms of our security.”
India had to have the capability not to wage war because its aim was to avoid conflict, “but to deter an adversary from launching operations against us or waging a war against us”, he said, adding that the air force could play a key role in it.
“So who is going to deter? What sort of capability do we re­quire which will give us this deterrence against our adversaries?”
Stating that there should be striking capability deep into the enemy’s heartland, Raha added it could be provided “through aerospace power, air forces of the country. That is how we can explore the vulnerabilities and criticalities of any adversary”.
“That means we have to build up our striking power which would deter an adversary from launching any offensive against the country,” he said. “To my mind that national instrument which will provide the best defence and deterrence would be in the shape of aerospace power of the nation.”
Speaking about the geopolitical environment which determines the role Indian Air Force should play in mitigating threats, Raha said, “If we take a broad scan we will realise that the strategic gravity has shifted in the recent times from the West to the East.”
Raha said that China was now asserting itself in making claims on international waters and island territories and the international airspace in South China Sea and East China Sea.
They are claiming new air defence identification zones, new areas of influence in the open ocean.
“It has got into conflicts with all its littoral neighbours. We are also having problems in terms of intrusion along the LAC (Line of Actual Control) in Leh-Ladakh sector as well as in Arunachal Pradesh.
So the situation is not very good for the environment that is there, and peaceful rise of China may remain a distant dream if the things go the way it is happening now,” he added.
Quoting from the article written by a prominent security analyst from Hong Kong, who mentions China is developing its capability to fight five important conflicts in the next 30-35 years that includes annexation of Taiwan, occupying Spratly Islands, annex south Tibet that is Arunachal Pradesh from India, get hold of Senkaku Islands from Japan and recover large territories in Russia and Mongolia, Raha said, “I hope it is not true, but there are doubts whether the rise of China is going to be peaceful or not”.
“But we have no option but to be prepared to meet such a challenge in the near future,” he added.
Raha said Afghanistan and Pakistan regions were also an issue. “We all know that Pakistan had been a fountainhead of terror though it is part of global war on terrorism, but it is also encouraging terrorist activities and today with the withdrawal of American and western forces from Afghanistan, I think the situation is going to be very, very delicate in terms of sub-conventional threats to India.”
He said “the ISIS which has grown with strength in Iraq and Syria and in the Middle East is going to be another challenge to the world”.