2009年2月13日星期五

Yahoo! News: Terrorism

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: Terrorism

UK: No police charges in accidental terror death (AP)

Posted: 13 Feb 2009 09:21 PM CST

AP - No police will be charged in the death of a Brazilian who was mistakenly shot by officers in the tense days following 2005 terror attacks in London, prosecutors announced Friday after a new review of the case.

Report: Over 100,000 deportees had children in US (AP)

Posted: 13 Feb 2009 05:33 PM CST

AP - More than 100,000 parents whose children are U.S. citizens were deported over the decade that ended in 2007, a Department of Homeland Security's investigation has found.

An Air Force lawyer fights to free a Guantanamo inmate (McClatchy Newspapers)

Posted: 13 Feb 2009 02:11 PM CST

McClatchy Newspapers - LONDON — A U.S. military lawyer blitzed London this week, calling for the immediate release of her client, who allegedly was trained in an al Qaida terrorist camp, from the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Police escape charges over mistaken shooting (AFP)

Posted: 13 Feb 2009 01:40 PM CST

An undated handout photo of Jean Charles De Menezes. Prosecutors will not press charges against anti-terror police officers involved in shooting the Brazilian who was mistaken for a suicide bomber in 2005, a lawyer said Friday.(AFP/HO/File)AFP - Prosecutors will not press charges against anti-terror police officers involved in shooting an innocent Brazilian mistaken for a suicide bomber in 2005, a lawyer said Friday.


Pakistan presses India over Mumbai investigation (AP)

Posted: 13 Feb 2009 10:02 AM CST

AP - India must "come clean" about those on its own soil involved in the Mumbai terrorist attacks, Pakistan said Friday, a day after it said that the assailants set out from Pakistan.

Yahoo! News: Terrorism

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: Terrorism

India welcomes Pakistan probe, wants terror camps closed (Reuters)

Posted: 12 Feb 2009 11:58 PM CST

The Taj Mahal hotel is seen engulfed in smoke during a gun battle in Mumbai in this November 29, 2008 file photo. REUTERS/Arko Datta/FilesReuters - NEW DELHI (Reuters) The government and opposition parties cautiously welcomed Pakistan's investigation into the Mumbai terror attack, but said on Friday Islamabad still needed to crush all militant camps on its soil.


Will Pakistan Arrests Ease Terrorism Tensions with India? (Time.com)

Posted: 12 Feb 2009 09:25 PM CST

Indian policemen inspect an area of the Taj Mahal hotel in Mumbai. Islamabad on Thursday admitted for the first time that the Mumbai attacks, which killed 165 people, were planned partly in Pakistan and filed a case against eight suspects, six of them in custody.(AFP/File/Pedro Ugarte)Time.com - Good news for Washington as Islamabad ends its stonewalling by arresting suspects in last year's terror attack in India


Official: Afghanistan, Pakistan losing ground (AP)

Posted: 12 Feb 2009 06:30 PM CST

AP - The governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan are losing ground to insurgents and terrorists but the most immediate threat to U.S. security interests is the festering global economic crisis, the nation's top intelligence official told Congress on Thursday.

World economic crisis is top security threat: U.S. (Reuters)

Posted: 12 Feb 2009 05:22 PM CST

A migrant worker reads a book as another sleeps as they wait for potential employers to arrive at an unofficial labor market located near a bus station in central Beijing, February 11, 2009. (David Gray/Reuters)Reuters - The global economic crisis has become the biggest near-term U.S. security concern, sowing instability in a quarter of the world's countries and threatening destructive trade wars, U.S. intelligence agencies reported on Thursday.


Pakistan admits Mumbai bombing planned on its soil (McClatchy Newspapers)

Posted: 12 Feb 2009 03:35 PM CST

McClatchy Newspapers - ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistani officials took what could be a decisive step forward in the country's fight against Islamic extremism Thursday, publicly admitting for the first time that the Mumbai terrorist attacks were planned in and launched from Pakistan.

Pakistan admits internal link to Mumbai attacks (AP)

Posted: 12 Feb 2009 12:32 PM CST

Pakistan's Interior Minister Rehman Malik shows evidences to the media during his  news conference in Islamabad, Pakistan on Thursday, Feb. 12, 2009. Pakistan acknowledged for the first time Thursday that the Mumbai terrorist attacks were launched from its shores and at least partly plotted on its soil. (AP Photo)AP - Pakistan acknowledged the Mumbai attacks were partly plotted on its soil and announced criminal proceedings against eight suspects, including three alleged ringleaders, in a sign it is heeding U.S. and Indian demands to punish those responsible for the deaths of 164 people.


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