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Blast kills Kandahar mayor
Ghulam Haidar Hamidi Victim was a US citizen and one of the close allies of President Karzai
Kandahar, July 27
A suicide bomber killed the mayor of Afghanistan's Kandahar city today, two weeks after the assassination of Afghan President Hamid Karzai's brother in the same city created a power vacuum in the country's turbulent south.

Fai admits receiving money from ISI
Out on bond but put under house arrest with a radio tag for e-surveillance
Ghulam Nabi FaiWashington, July 27
Kashmiri separatist Ghulam Nabi Fai has admitted to receiving funds from Pakistan's ISI to influence law makers on Kashmir in a Virginia court, which released him on a bond but put him under house arrest with a radio tag around his ankle for electronic surveillance.

Deposed Egyptian President refuses to eat solid food
Hosni Mubarak Cairo, July 27
To go on trial next week on charges that could carry the death penalty, deposed Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is refusing to eat solid food in jail and is suffering from "severe infirmity", official news agency MENA reported.


EARLIER STORIES



Floodwaters submerge cars on a road after heavy rains hit the Seoul region on Tuesday

Road or river!

 



Floodwaters submerge cars on a road after heavy rains hit the Seoul region on Tuesday. Torrential rain pounding South Korea triggered landslides killing 32 persons and flooding hundreds of homes. — AFP





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Blast kills Kandahar mayor
Victim was a US citizen and one of the close allies of President Karzai

Kandahar, July 27
A suicide bomber killed the mayor of Afghanistan's Kandahar city today, two weeks after the assassination of Afghan President Hamid Karzai's brother in the same city created a power vacuum in the country's turbulent south.

The death of Mayor Ghulam Haidar Hamidi, a US citizen, is the latest in a string of assassinations of Karzai allies. While it is unclear if all were the work of insurgents, the killings have stoked instability as foreign troops begin withdrawing ahead of Afghan forces taking full security control by the end of 2014.

Hamidi, 65, was killed and another person wounded when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives in a corridor near Hamidi's office, said Zalmay Ayoubi, the spokesman for the

Kandahar provincial governor. "It appears the bomber was carrying the bomb in his turban," Ayoubi said.

Kandahar province is the Taliban's birthplace and a focus of recent efforts by a surge of US troops to turn the tide against the insurgency in the decade-long war. More than half of all targeted killings in Afghanistan between April and June were in Kandahar, according to a UN report.

Two of Hamidi's deputy mayors were killed in attacks by insurgents last year. Kandahar Police Chief Abdul Razaq said Hamidi was meeting elders from a district of Kandahar city when one of them got close to the mayor and detonated a bomb hidden in his turban.

The mayor wanted to speak with the elders after they accused city staff of killing a woman and two children when they destroyed some houses and shops in their district on Tuesday, Razaq said. The buildings were unplanned, he said.

Taliban spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahmadi initially said it was too early to tell what had happened but later claimed responsibility for killing Hamidi on behalf of the militant

Islamist group. Ahmadi said the mayor had been on the Taliban's hit-list and that the main motivation for the attack was the deaths of the woman and children on Tuesday when the buildings were destroyed. The Taliban are normally very quick to claim responsibility for the deaths of high-profile political figures.

US Ambassador to Afghanistan Ryan Crocker condemned the killing of Hamidi, but warned there should not be a rush to judgment over who carried out the attack. "There was a demonstration in front of the mayor's office over a road-building incident that resulted in the deaths of one or two young girls. This could turn out to be a murder that didn't have anything to do with the Taliban," he said.

"It is another indication again of both the challenges Afghanistan faces, but also the extraordinary resilience of the Afghan government and people," he said. The U.S. embassy in Kabul confirmed Hamidi was a US citizen.

His death comes at a time when experts say a dangerous power vacuum has been created in Afghanistan's south by the assassination of Karzai's brother Ahmad Wali Karzai. Ahmad Wali Karzai was head of the Kandahar Provincial Council, a largely consultative role, but his power came from his family and tribal connections, and his fortune. He was killed by a guard at his home in Kandahar city on July 12. — Reuters

death field

  • Ghulam Haidar Hamidi escaped an attack on his car in 2009, though his last two deputy mayors were both shot dead in 2010
  • Afghan President's half-brother Ahmed Wali Karzai, known as the 'king of Kandahar' was shot dead in his home in the city by a security guard two weeks ago
  • Wali Karzai's death was followed by the assassination of Jan Mohammad Khan, a senior adviser to Karzai
  • The Kandahar province police chief and its deputy governor have also been killed this year

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Fai admits receiving money from ISI
Out on bond but put under house arrest with a radio tag for e-surveillance

Washington, July 27
Kashmiri separatist Ghulam Nabi Fai has admitted to receiving funds from Pakistan's ISI to influence law makers on Kashmir in a Virginia court, which released him on a bond but put him under house arrest with a radio tag around his ankle for electronic surveillance.

Fai, a Kashmir-born US citizen, who was arrested by the FBI last week on charges of working for the Government of Pakistan, in particular its spy agency, told the court yesterday through his Attorneys that he took money from ISI.

US Attorney Gordon Kromberg alleged that Fai has been an ISI agent for the past two decades. He told the court that during his interrogation after his arrest on July 19 Fai has acknowledged to his links with the ISI and having received money from the Pakistan's snooping agency.

During FBI questioning, Fai had lied to the federal agents that he had any connection with the ISI.

This fact was acknowledged by Fai's two attorneys, Nina J Ginsberg and Khurram Wahid, but they argued that taking money from ISI does not mean that he toed their line. "He (Fai) denied that (he received money from ISI before arrest....There are many many reasons, it may be that could justify why he is not wanting that information (receiving money from ISI) to be public," Ginsberg said.

At his detention hearing, Magistrate Judge Rawles Jones at US District Court in Alexandria, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, ordered that Fai be released from prison on a personal bond of USD 100,000 and put under house arrest with electronic surveillance.

He has been asked to stay with his wife at the Fairfax residence in Virginia. Both he and his wife Chang Ning Ying Q, who is of Chinese origin, have been asked to surrender their passports. — PTI

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Deposed Egyptian President refuses to eat solid food

Cairo, July 27
To go on trial next week on charges that could carry the death penalty, deposed Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is refusing to eat solid food in jail and is suffering from "severe infirmity", official news agency MENA reported.

It quoted Mohammed Fathallah, the head of the hospital in the Red Sea resort town of Sharm El Sheikh as saying that Mubarak was only partaking liquids and had lost weight.

Mubarak, 83, has been in hospital in the resort town, near his summer home, since he complained of heart pains when first interrogated after being detained on April 1. "He completely abstains from food and intakes only some liquid and juices", the doctor was quoted, adding that his condition was becoming "precarious".

Mubarak is scheduled to stand trial on August 3 with his two sons and former interior minister Habib Al-Adil and six police commanders. — PTI

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