12 June 2011

Gunrunners of Northeast

Chinese agents smuggle arms to revive militancy in north-eastern India

By Sandeep Unnithan

Dimapur/Guwahati, Jun 12 : China is reviving a flagging militancy in north-eastern India with arms and military training. In return, it wants militants to spy on nuclear missiles and military formations deployed in the North-east. And, by charging market prices for the weapons, it is looking to make a fast buck too. "The logic seems to be: keep the North-east on the boil and simultaneously profit from arms sales," says a senior military intelligence official. This marks a departure from the 1970s when China supplied weapons and training free.

With the arrest of three key insurgent operatives, intelligence agencies are piecing together China's subversive agenda for the North-east. A recent charge-sheet filed by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) against Anthony Shimray, chief arms procurer of the Isak-Muivah faction of Nationalist Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN-IM), specifically mentions Norinco, one of China's largest state-owned weapons manufacturers. Bangkok-based nscn-im rebels had allegedly paid $100,000 to Norinco to buy 10,000 assault rifles, pistols, rocket-propelled grenades and ammunition. A United National Liberation Front of Manipur (UNLF) delegation that went to Ruili in China's Yunnan province in 2009 was given rate cards for weaponry but could not afford the high prices: $1 million for a rocket-propelled grenade 'package' comprising 20 launchers and 2,000 rockets. For training, it was $512,000.

Cadres of Kuki national front

Cadres of Kuki national front with their arms in Imphal, Manipur

Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) officials call Norinco or the China North Industries Corporation a front for China's military intelligence, supplying weapons to buyers ranging from African dictators to Asian rebel groups. Norinco's name first surfaced during the 2004 haul at Chittagong where Bangladeshi security agencies intercepted a consignment of 4,930 firearms, including rockets, grenades and assault rifles, meant for the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) and nscn-im. India has not taken up with China the issue of a legitimate entity supplying arms to non-state actors. A Chinese-made AK-56 is easily available in Dimapur for Rs 2 lakh, a sophisticated Austrian Glock pistol for Rs 3 lakh. "Chinese guns are sold illegally like sweets. With such easy availability of arms, anyone can start an 'insurgency'," says Binalakshmi Nepram of the Control Arms Foundation of India. The fresh revelations come at a time when India has resumed military exchanges with China following the recent visit of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. A recurring theme of two joint Sino-Indian military exercises have been 'anti-terrorist drills'.

Militancy is on the wane in the North-east. The total fatalities in the region were down to 322 deaths in 2010 from 853 in 2009. But with China reviving its support to north-eastern guerrillas and using them as spies, a new chapter has been added. "In view of the current Sino-Indian relations, China considers the North-east more important than other parts of India," a senior unlf member noted during a debrief of his visit to China.

Senior police officials say that China has displaced the traditional markets of South-east Asia as the number one hub for weapons. "Assam militants have been going to China for their arms," confirms Khagen Sharma, Additional Director General of Assam Police (special branch). Home Secretary G.K. Pillai hints that the Chinese state may be unaware of the middlemen who operate in South-east Asia. "There is a lot of smuggling by Chinese arms agents who come to India through Myanmar and Bangkok. Most insurgent groups get weapons of Chinese origin through these agents," he says.

Ulfa commander-in-chief Paresh Barua

Ulfa commander-in-chief Paresh Barua with his cadres.

Sanctuaries are being offered by the Chinese security establishment. ulfa chief Paresh Barua operates out of Yunnan reportedly with the blessings of the Chinese military. The Chinese intelligence services have links with other rebel groups as well. The first indications emerged in August 2009 when Manipur police captured Ronny, a 'sergeant' in the banned insurgent group, the People's Liberation Army (PLA). He confirmed to his police interrogators that "Sixteen pla platoons (around 300 men) returned after training in China." The breakthrough, however, came in August last year with the arrest of Rajkumar Meghen, the head of the UNLF. Meghen, the charismatic scion of the Manipur royal family, was captured in a joint Indo-Bangladeshi operation in Dhaka and transported by road to Bihar where he was formally arrested by the nia. His arrest was preceded by the capture of 18 unlf operatives in Guwahati. Recovered from the militants was a laptop with detailed accounts of their operations and links with China. The establishment of an arms line from China in the 1990s meant that the north-eastern guerillas could buy their weapons instead of snatching them from security forces. "The establishment of a full-fledged arms supply line means it is only a matter of time before these arms flow into the Indian mainland," says an nia official. The unlf was in contact with Maoists operating in central India. A unlf note prepared for the Chinese says that the Maoist movement has spread to over 25 per cent of the Indian land mass. "If we have sufficient supplies of arms and ammunition, the Maoist struggle will achieve a qualitative development," it says.

Since the 1962 border war with India, China has held out twin threats to India's North-east. The first, a conventional military thrust down from Tibet into the 20-km-wide "Siliguri corridor" that could sever the entire region from India. The second, covert assistance to insurgent groups to tie down Indian troops in prolonged counter-insurgency operations. As part of the second strategy, China has provided sanctuaries, arms and training to Naga, Manipuri and Mizo insurgent groups. In the 1960s Naga leader Angami Phizo and others embarked on a "Long March" to China-a move that cemented their ties with the People's Republic. In 2009, a delegation of unlf leaders embarked on a second "Long March" to China where the agents demanded intelligence on Indian missile movements (see Long March to China).

The arrest of Shimray in October 2010 gave the clearest lead to China's role in the north-east. Shimray was arrested in Patna, though it is believed he was picked up in Nepal and brought by road to Bihar. (His lawyer Worso Zimik says Shimray was part of the NSCN-IM delegation that was conducting talks with the Indian government and terms his arrest illegal.)

Chinese arms are loaded at Beihei port, Qingdao or Shanghai in 20ft shipping containers and offloaded at Cox Bazar in Bangladesh. These are loaded in small fishing trawlers and later transferred to trucks.

Currently an undertrail in Tihar jail, Shimray was negotiating a massive arms consignment of nearly 10,000 weapons from China, enough to equip a division of troops. Not all of it was for the nscn-im whose fighting strength is estimated at 4,500 guerrillas. nia officials believe a large percentage of the arms were meant to be sold to other North-eastern groups. Shimray told intelligence operatives that the Chinese suggested that the north-eastern guerillas came together under one organisation to facilitate better interaction. The nscn-im, which is currently in a cease-fire with the government since 1997, was planning to go a step further. A letter dated August 2010 from Isak Chishi Swu, one of its top two leaders, states that the nscn-im planned to appoint a representative in Ruili. The issue of Chinese arms flowing into India has been repeatedly raised in military-to-military talks. "The Chinese are always sheepish when we confront them about arms in the North-east. They tell us that they have trouble accounting for their arms stored in warehouses in Yunnan province," says a military intelligence official. The Chinese version isn't convincing. "It is hard to believe that a communist dictatorship like China would have problems accounting for its weapons," says Major General (retired) G.D. Bakshi. Unaccounted-for weapons may be just the beginning of India's north-eastern nightmare.

11 June 2011

That's Not A Plank ... This Is A Plank'

Planking (Facebook and Wiki for the NooB) has been taken to a whole new level…
Aussies are crazy, but we love it…More planking please

Woman photographed planking on top of a Northern Territory crocodile

Crocodile planking
Silly stuff ... Margi' planking on a croc at the Darwin Crocodile Farm. Picture: The Daily Telegraph
  • Photo shows woman planking on a croc
  • Biggest one caught in Territory this year
  • Crocodile 4.65m long, weighing 600kg
A young Northern Territory (of Australia) woman was lucky this crocodile was tied down and muzzled when she took the new craze of "planking" to a dangerously new level.
Otherwise she might have been munched for lunch.
The plank-ee is believed to be a woman by the name of Margi.
She didn't think her stunt was cruel.
The 4.65m, 600kg saltie was powerless to stop the plank prank at a crocodile farm.
It was taken to the farm after being caught in a permanent trap in the Katherine River last month.
The bull was so big that rangers had to use a four-wheel-drive to drag it out of the water.
It is the biggest croc caught in the Territory this year.
Ranger and crocodile catcher Tommy Nicholls said the saltie would become a "show croc", rather than a stud, because it was too big to breed.
"An animal that big usually ends up killing the females," he said.
NT police commissioner John McRoberts last month warned Territorians not to plank after a man fell seven storeys to his death from an apartment block in Brisbane0.
He said the craze was "no harmless fun".
Planking, being photographed lying face down in unusual and often dangerous places, has spread throughout the world this year.

24,000 Pages of Palin Emails Published

Alaska publishes more than 24,000 pages of Sarah Palin's emails from her time as Governor of Alaska

US-FLAGOP

The former Alaskan Governor is a potential Presidential candidate.

APTOPIX Palin Emails

Reporters load boxes containing thousands of pages of Sarah Palin's emails from her time as Alaska's governor. Picture: AP

  • More than 24,000 Palin emails released
  • Messages document political issues, family life
  • Readers asked to sift through documents

Journalists and others have begun rifling through thousands of emails by or to Sarah Palin, published in response to a freedom of information request into her correspondence as Alaska governor.

The northwestern US state released the mails in print form yesterday to a number of media outlets, keen to find nuggets as speculation grows that the Tea Party favourite and former Alaskan governor will run for the White House next year.

More than 24,000 pages of emails were published, although 2415 pages the state deems privileged, personal or otherwise exempt will remain under wraps.

The media are not the only ones seeking nuggets in the Palin emails: the New York Times has asked its readers to help it sift through the huge mass of mostly banal material.

News outlets including ABC News America and The Guardian have been live-blogging the event.

The emails detail:

Media organisations including CNN and the Anchorage Daily News asked for Palin's emails to be released in 2008, after Palin became the surprise running-mate of Republican presidential candidate John McCain.

At the time officials said they could not be released because of the antiquated electronic databases they were stored on, complicated by the fact that Palin commonly used a Yahoo account to conduct state business.

The release comes as speculation mounts over whether Palin will run for the Republican nomination in next year's election against Democratic President Barack Obama.

Palin has kept the media guessing, including during a "One Nation'' bus tour when journalists had to scramble to follow her, with no details given in advance about her travel plans.

Read all of Sarah Palin's emails at the LA Times

The Dazzling Irina Shayk

Million dollar smile

Million dollar smile
Model Irina Shayk attends the 9th annual Russian Heritage Festival at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on June 9, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images)

Model Irina Shayk attends the 9th annual Russian Heritage Festival at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on June 9, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images)

Model Irina Shayk attends the 9th annual Russian Heritage Festival at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on June 9, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images)

'Look Like You Give a Damn' wet and wild Las Vegas pool party

A model attends Nivea For Men and Esquire "Look Like You Give a Damn" Weekend - Nivea For Men Poolside Lounge at the Liquid Pool Lounge at the Aria Resort & Casino at CityCenter in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images for Esquire)

Party time!

Party time!
Guests attend Nivea For Men and Esquire "Look Like You Give a Damn" Weekend - Nivea For Men Poolside Lounge at the Liquid Pool Lounge at the Aria Resort & Casino at CityCenter in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images for Esquire)

A general view of atmosphere at Nivea For Men and Esquire "Look Like You Give a Damn" Weekend - Nivea For Men Poolside Lounge at the Liquid Pool Lounge at the Aria Resort & Casino at CityCenter in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images for Esquire)



Bhindi Baazaar Inc: Vedita Pratap Singh's Raunchy Debut

The actress is seen in two sex scenes

The actress is seen in two sex scenes
Lucknow girl Vedita Pratap Singh has shot two bold scenes in her debut film 'Bhindi Bazaar Inc.' The actor said she has already warned her mother about the lovemaking sequences.

Vedita will be seen as Shabana, an over-ambitious girl who can go to any limit to achieve what she wants in life.

She has two intimate scenes, one with actor Pawan Malhotra and the other with Prashant Narayan in the movie.

She had initial inhibitions about shooting the lovemaking scenes and said she was a bit taken aback because she had not done anything of this sort before.

Set in Mumbai, 'Bhindi Bazaar Inc.' is about pick-pocketing, an art which helps many earn their bread and butter.

Bhindi Baazaar Inc. is a thriller directed by Ankush Bhatt and produced by Karan Arora, starring Kay Kay Menon, Piyush Mishra, Prashant Narayanan, Deepti Naval, Shilpa Shukla, Pawan Malhotra.

The film is set in the underbelly of Mumbai, between the infamous by-lanes where crime is prevalent as a way of life. The film was announced at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival.

'Bhindi Baazaar Inc.' is the story of a pawn and his calculated moves to reach the other end of the chessboard. Revolving around vicious crime syndicates, the film starts with a game of chess being played between two characters: 'Shroff' and 'Darzi'.

70,000 Children Infected By HIV in India

An estimated 70,000 children are infected with HIV in India and the ailment is caused to most of them by parent-to-child-transmission.

70,000 children are infected with HIV in India - AFP

70,000 children are infected with HIV in India - AFP

New Delhi, Jun 11 : An estimated 70,000 children are infected with HIV in the country and the ailment is caused to most of them by parent-to-child-transmission (PTCT), according to a recent finding by the National AIDS Control Organisation (NACO).

Participants of a UNICEF-state AIDS Prevention and Control Society seminar here said, quoting NACO estimates, that a small proportion of these children are infected by unsafe injections and blood transfusions.

"UNICEF supports the government in its effort to halt and reverse the HIV/AIDS outbreak in India to reduce the transmission of HIV from infected mothers to their children," the country chief of UNICEF, HIV and AIDS, Ivonne Camaroni told the media on the sidelines of the seminar on Thursday.

With 21,000 children infected every year through PTCT, the UNICEF wanted to provide strategic supplies of drugs and commodities, improve the capacity of staff by developing innovative communication approaches for prevention and care and helping to improve monitoring and reporting systems.

The possible factors behind infection of children were mother-to-child transmission, blood transfusion and HIV positive mothers not having availed prevention facility during pregnancy, Camaroni said.

"In West Bengal, UNICEF tied up with the organisation 'Bengal Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS' for a study which surveyed 995 HIV affected families," another UNICEF official said.

The survey was on families who were HIV positive and have HIV/AIDS infected or exposed children, another UNICEF official said. The number of children affected with HIV was high in districts like North and South 24 Parganas, Kolkata, East Midnapore, Jalpaiguri and Darjeeling.

Economic profile of the families show that 72.3 per cent fall in the BPL category, with most belonging to the unorganised sector and daily wage earners. "The report findings give us a glimpse into the harsh reality faced by the families and children living with HIV and AIDS," UNICEF West Bengal chief Lori Calvo said.

The finding showed that 29 per cent of fathers and 33 per cent of mothers of the surveyed children were illiterate.

"The study underscores the need to improve existing services in terms of access to appropriate medicine, nutrition and additional services like free transportation based on the socio-economic condition of the families," Camaroni said.

Sharapova Shows Off Abs

Sharapova shows off her washboard abs in sizzling sports bra shoot

File photo - Maria Sharapova

Maria Sharapova

London, Jun 11 : Tennis queen Maria Sharapova has long been known for her pretty face and her oomph factor so required for success in modeling, and the former world No. 1 used it to good measure to sizzle in her new Nike’s ‘Make Yourself’ campaign, where she posed in a tiny sports bra alongside a bevy of fellow female sports stars.

The Russian tennis player, who was ousted in the French Open semifinal earlier this month by the eventual winner Na Li, rejoiced flaunting her rock hard abs and bulging biceps during an Annie Leibovitz photo shoot, reports the Daily Mail.

The stunning 24-year-old showed off her washboard stomach in tiny blue hot pants and a white sports bra while holding an abdominal crunch position.

The advertisements will appear in upcoming issues of Seventeen, InStyle and Glamour magazines.