This nation of 1.2 billion has only a few hundred counterterrorism officials in its intelligence bureau. Its tiny, ill-paid police force has little training, few weapons and even less ammunition. The coast guard has fewer than 100 working boats for a shoreline nearly 5,000 miles long. more
giovedì 4 dicembre 2008
Lack of Preparedness Comes Brutally to Light
This nation of 1.2 billion has only a few hundred counterterrorism officials in its intelligence bureau. Its tiny, ill-paid police force has little training, few weapons and even less ammunition. The coast guard has fewer than 100 working boats for a shoreline nearly 5,000 miles long. more
Mumbai Attack Is Test of Pakistan’s Ability to Curb Militants
THE NEW YOR TIMES
By JANE PERLEZ and SONIMI SENGUPTA
Zardari: «I ricercati di Nuova Delhi? Se sono colpevoli li processiamo noi»
Pubblicato 3 dic 2008
Il presidente pakistano: «L'India ci dia le prove del loro coinvolgimento, poi ci penseranno i nostri tribunali»
NUOVA DELHI - Il Pakistan non consegnerà all'India nessun terrorista ricercato, se Nuova Delhi non fornirà prove della loro colpevolezza. Lo ha riferito la televisione indiana riprendendo una intervista del presidente pakistano Asif Ali Zardari negli Stati Uniti.Parlando al Larry King Show, Zardari aveva precisato che i terroristi di Mumbai sono apolidi e aveva detto che se ci dovessero essere prove nei confronti di pachistani coinvolti in atti terroristici o di terroristi che si trovano sul suolo pachistano, «in questo caso noi li porteremo nei nostri tribunali, li processeremo e li condanneremo nel nostro Paese». Zardari inoltre ha detto che non ci sono evidenze che l'unico terrorista sopravvissuto e arrestato negli attacchi di Mumbai, Azam Amir Kasav, sia pachistano. L'uomo, subito dopo essere stato arrestato dalle forze di sicurezza indiane, ha detto di essere pachistano. Zardari ha però ribadito l'offerta di collaborare con l'India alle indagini. more
Pakistani bloggers counter anti-India rhetoric
Posted: Dec 03, 2008
Islamabad. With anti-India talk shows being beamed regularly on Pakistani channels, anti-India blogs clocking hits in cyberspace and open letters to Indians getting several columns in newspapers, a newly formed Pakistani web group to condemn the Mumbai attacks has come as a breath of fresh air.
"All Pakistanis condemn Mumbai attacks," a group on social networking website Facebook, has already registered 1,803 members from across the globe to counter an earlier group called "India stop blaming Pakistan for terror in India", which at last count had 952 members. more
Salute Mumbai heroes by fixing the rotting system
Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, London
By D.S. SOMAN
Published 4 December 2008
Dec. 3: Hemant Karkare and other policemen who died as a result of the bullets fired at them were victims of the apathy of the government, both at the Centre and state. Terrorism is nothing new to India. Indeed, we have been facing terrorist attacks since the 1990s. The most striking attack was on March 12, 1993 when 12 bombs went off in Mumbai, shaking its very foundations. Since then there have been many attacks by terrorists from across the border - in Delhi, on Parliament, temples and vital establishments in Bengaluru, Ahmedabad, Jaipur and Surat.
Our reaction to all these attacks was to condemn them and point the finger at our enemy across the border. In general, the public were told that security is being stepped up and intelligence improved. On ground, the public hardly felt or saw any difference in the situation. The governments, both at the Centre and the states, meanwhile, continued in their laidback style. Politics took precedence over everything else and it hardly crossed their minds that something basic needs to be done to tackle the menace. Terrorist acts were treated as a law and order problem which the state concerned was expected to deal with. more
mercoledì 3 dicembre 2008
Response to terror will decide India's economic future
By JACH and SUZY WELCH
Of the 200-odd past columns posted on our Web site, few elicit more comments than "Who Will Rule the 21st Century?"—a piece we wrote in 2007 that predicted continued US economic leadership, with India and China coming into parity in a matter of decades. As for which country would offer better chances for investors, we essentially took a pass, saying that the answer hinged on how well India and China capitalized on their huge advantages and handled their complex challenges.
Since that column appeared, a week hasn't gone by without at least a dozen questions continuing to press the matter. Readers often ask where foreign direct investors should place their bets: China, India, or if both, in what measure? Usually, we just set these questions aside. There wasn't much more, we reasoned, that we could say.
Sadly, with the terrorist attacks in Mumbai this week, there now is. more
martedì 2 dicembre 2008
Analysts Say It Will Be Difficult to Shield Luxury Hotels From Terrorist Attacks
But last week’s lethal attacks on two of India’s most famous hotels — coming just two months after a huge truck bomb devastated the Marriott in Islamabad, Pakistan — have underlined the extent to which these hotels are becoming magnets for terrorists. Worse, hotel executives and security experts say that little can be done to stop extensively trained gunmen with military assault rifles and grenades who launch attacks like the ones that left this city’s Oberoi and Taj Mahal Palace & Tower strewn with bodies. more
For Heroes of Mumbai, Terror Was a Call to Action
MUMBAI, India — On any ordinary day, Vishnu Datta Ram Zende used the public-address system at Mumbai’s largest railway station to direct busy hordes of travelers to their trains.
But last Wednesday just before 10 p.m., when he heard a loud explosion and saw people running across the platform, he gripped his microphone and calmly directed a panicked crowd toward the safest exit. The station, Victoria Terminus, it turned out, was suddenly under attack, the beginning of a three-day siege by a handful of young, heavily armed gunmen. more
MUMBAI: The aftermath is even more terrifying
Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
by RASHEEDA BHAGAT
Published Dec 02, 2008
The sheer magnitude and scale of the terror strikes in Mumbai have triggered outrage from ordinary people on a scale not witnessed before. For the first time the people have strongly condemned the games politicians play and asserted that they will no longer be fooled by their antics.
One of the many rallies in protest against the Mumbai attacks, which have evoked levels of public anger and outrage not seen before.
Even as we, the citizens of India, resolve never to forget the bloody and petrifying 59-hour siege on Mumbai and take a pledge to compel those responsible for our security — not only politicians but also our intelligence agencies and others who have been lax in guarding our borders, such as the Coast Guard, and probably even the Indian Navy — what is going to be much more important is our response to the post-Mumbai events. more
I terroristi in India hanno usato Google Earth
Addestrati all'uso di telefoni satellitari e sistemi Gps
Polemiche all’indomani degli attacchi terroristici di Bombay in India per la notizia che i terroristi hanno pianificato l’azione servendosi di mappe digitali ottenute grazie a Google Earth.
Dall’inchiesta dalla polizia indiana, che ha anche potuto interrogare un terrorista arrestato, emerge che gli attentatori erano altamente addestrati e muniti di tecnologia evoluta, da telefoni satellitari a sistemi satellitari di posizionamento (Gps).
Google Earth era stato criticato in India già nel 2005 per bocca dell’allora presidente A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, che durante una conferenza aveva prospettato l’abuso delle mappe digitali nell’ambito di azioni terroristiche.
Anche altre nazioni, tra cui la Cina, hanno lamentato l’esposizione su Google Earth di installazioni strategiche e militari.
I difensori del software di Google ribattono che le installazioni attaccate in questi giorni assommano a due alberghi, un ristorante, un complesso residenziale e una stazione ferroviaria: niente a che vedere con segreti militari o installazioni strategiche e fabbricati ampiamente segnalati e rintracciabili su qualsiasi guida turistica.