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THE STANS
Pakistani bloggers accused of hate videos
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (UPI) Aug 20, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Doctored videos showing apparent violence against Muslims in Assam that created panic originated on Pakistani blogs, an Indian minister said.

Union Home Secretary R.K. Singh told The Times of India newspaper that the government believes most of the incendiary videos of atrocities allegedly committed on Muslims in the state of Assam as well as in Myanmar came from Pakistan.

"Technical investigation has established that a bulk of the incendiary images was first uploaded on blogs in Pakistan," he said.

He said the object was to incite inter-ethnic violence within India and New Delhi will be raising the issue with Pakistani officials.

"I am sure they (Pakistan) will deny it but we have fairly accurate technical evidence to show that the images originated and were circulated from their territory," he said.

"As many as 110 Web sites were involved in spreading the doctored clips. We have blocked 76 of them and are in the process of getting others deactivated," he said.

The government also is seeking cooperation from Google and other Internet search engines, Singh said.

Last week federal and state ministers as well as police authorities held their breath as Assamese Muslims living and working in Bangalore engulfed the train station after rumors of the Web site information swept through their community.

Rail authorities and train companies in Bangalore, in the southwest state of Karnataka, put on extra trains to Assam in the northeast to cope with the influx of people who said they feared an outbreak of ethnic violence.

The Times of India reported that some of the Web sites had doctored images of death and destruction caused by a cyclone to appear as if the carnage was the result of an attack on Muslims in Assam.

In other videos, bodies of victims of an earthquake that occurred months ago were altered to make it appear the people had been killed by Buddhist monks, the newspaper reported.

A report by The Hindustan Times quoted Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi saying he suspected "from the very beginning that foreign forces were behind this."

"It is not merely a clash between (the ethnic group) Bodos and minorities. The Union Home Ministry report that Pakistani elements were involved has vindicated our stand," Gogoi told the Press Trust of India.

"We will institute a probe to find out details regarding the involvement of foreign elements in the violence," Gogoi said.

Despite the tensions created by the Web sites, little violence was attributed to the videos.

However, some people from the northeast have been attacked in the cities of Pune in Maharashtra state and Hyderabad in Andhra Pradesh state. A Tibetan was stabbed in Mysore in Karnataka in what appeared to be a case of retaliation against alleged brutalities on Muslims, The Times of India said.

Last week Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh immediately called for calm as soon as the problem became known.

"All political parties must work together to give a feeling of confidence to all affected people," he told reporters at his residence in Delhi during an Iftar event -- the evening meal when Muslims break their fast during the Islamic month of Ramadan.

Thousands of people flocked to Bangalore's main train station demanding tickets back home. One day along, more than 2,000 tickets more than usual were sold to people traveling to Guwahati, the largest city in Assam.

The situation at the city railway station was chaotic as thousands of people from northeastern India and Nepal, Bhutan and Tibet nationals thronged to get tickets, The Times of India report said.

Assam, similar to other states in India's remote northeast, has an ongoing conflict between the government and several rebel groups which are demanding more autonomy or independence.

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Insiders focus of US military chief's Afghan trip
Bagram, Afghanistan (AFP) Aug 19, 2012 - The top US military officer Martin Dempsey flew Sunday to Afghanistan to hold talks with senior commanders amid a spate of attacks by Afghan soldiers on their NATO counterparts.

Before landing at the sprawling US air base in Bagram, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff told reporters that the rise in "insider attacks" would be a key focus of his meetings with US-led coalition and Afghan officers.

"As far as the insider threat, of course that's going to be a topic," Dempsey told AFP and Fox News.

Despite expanded efforts to screen recruits and preempt potential turncoat attacks, Dempsey said the number of incidents continues to increase.

"We have an eight-step vetting process that's been in place in earnest for about a year. But we haven't turned the corner on the trend," he said.

Shortly after he spoke, the International Security Assistance Force announced yet another "green-on-blue" attack, with an Afghan in police uniform shooting and killing a NATO soldier in southern Afghanistan. The attack brought the death toll to 40 this year from insider attacks.

But Dempsey said the insider violence would not alter plans for the bulk of NATO combat troops to withdraw by the end of 2014, as agreed at an alliance summit in Lisbon two years ago.

"To this point, we feel committed to the Lisbon objectives and the timetable you're familiar with," the general said.

The attacks threaten to fuel tensions between the NATO-led coalition and their Afghan partners, who are gradually taking over the lead for security as Western troops withdraw.

Dempsey suggested the Afghan government could be doing more to thwart the insider attacks, including speaking out publicly.

The general said he welcomed President Hamid Karzai's statement on Saturday on the problem, saying he hoped similar comments would be made by lower-ranking officials.

"What I would expect to see is that (statement) would be echoed down to the lowest levels," he said.

"We speak about it and we're taking measures to mitigate the risk. But I do think the more they can be as concerned about it as we are, the better off we'll all be."

On Saturday, US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta urged Karzai to bolster cooperation with ISAF forces to contain the insider threat, according to the Pentagon.

Another top American general, General James Mattis, the head of US Central Command, who oversees troops in the Middle East and Afghanistan, was due to join Dempsey for talks on Monday in Kabul.

The two were scheduled to meet the commander of US and NATO troops, General John Allen, and other senior officers, officials said.

Dempsey also said he planned to hold talks with General Shir Mohammad Karimi, the head of Afghan forces.



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THE STANS
Afghans ready to counter insider threat: top US general
Kabul (AFP) Aug 20, 2012
Afghan leaders appear ready to take decisive action to curb unprecedented "insider attacks" by Afghan recruits that have killed 40 Western troops this year, the top US military officer said Monday. "For the first time, I found that my Afghan counterparts are as concerned about the insider attacks as we are," General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, said after talks i ... read more


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