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Page 1: ‘Large’ Chinese military fleet flies near Japan islesnews.kuwaittimes.net/pdf/2015/nov/29/p12.pdf · Prime Minister Khaleda Zia - an archrival of ... but returned following the

I N T E R N AT I O N A LSUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2015

NEW DELHI: Gunmen attacked a Shiite mosque inBangladesh, killing one person and wounding threeothers, in the latest in a wave of deadly assaults thisyear on foreigners, secular writers and members ofthe Shiite community in the Sunni-majority nation.

The attacks, claimed by radical Islamist groups,have alarmed the international community andraised concerns that religious extremism is takinghold in the traditionally moderate country. TheIslamic State group and a local affiliate have claimedresponsibility for the killings of two foreigners - anItalian aid worker and a Japanese agricultural worker- as well as for attacks on the country’s minorityShiite Muslim community.

Bangladesh’s government, led by Prime MinisterSheikh Hasina, has repeatedly said that IS has noorganizational presence in the country. It accusesdomestic Islamist groups along with the main oppo-sition Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its main ally,the Jamaat-e-Islami party, of carrying out the attacksto destabilize the South Asian nation for politicalgains.

A look at the main Islamic political parties andradical groups:

JAMAAT-E-ISLAMI PARTYJamaat-e-Islami is Bangladesh’s largest Islamist

party and a partner of the main oppositionBangladesh Nationalist Party, which is led by former

Prime Minister Khaleda Zia - an archrival of currentleader Hasina. The party advocates the introductionof Shariah, or Islamic laws.

Jamaat-e-Islami and its leaders openly opposedBangladesh’s 1971 war to gain independence fromPakistan. Its members formed groups and militias toaid Pakistani soldiers during the war and acted as anauxiliary force involved in kidnappings and killingsof those who supported independence. Many of itstop leaders fled the country after independence,but returned following the 1975 assassination ofindependence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

Jamaat-e-Islami was banned for a brief periodafter the 1971 war, but was revived in 1979 after amilitary dictatorship took power following a seriesof coups and counter-coups. The group gained instrength and became a serious political force by theearly 2000s.

Many of its top leaders have been accused of warcrimes. Last week, Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid, aleader during the war, was executed despite con-cerns that the legal proceedings against him wereflawed. Both its former leader Ghulam Azam andcurrent chief Matiur Rahman Chowdhury have beenconvicted of war crimes by a special tribunal set upby Hasina in 2010 to deal with 1971 crimes. Twoother senior leaders have also been executed fortheir role in the 1971 war.

Bangladesh’s High Court canceled the party’s reg-

istration in 2013, effectively barring it from contest-ing elections. The party has appealed the decision.

ANSARULLAH BANGLA TEAMAnsarullah Bangla Team came to light as an

active Islamist group in 2013, when secular bloggerAhmed Rajib Haider was killed by attackers in frontof his home in Dhaka, the capital. Detectives arrest-ed seven suspects, including students at a top pri-vate university and the group’s alleged chief,Jasimuddin Rahmani, a former imam of a Dhakamosque.

They have been indicted and are currently facingtrial. The other suspects said Rahmani’s sermonsinspired them to attack Haider. —AP

Bangladesh intelligence officials have said theytracked down the group after investigating a blogcalled “Ansarullah Bangla Team” which had fiveadministrators, including two in Pakistan. In 2014,detectives arrested a Bangladeshi man and said hewas one of the administrators. Despite the arrests ofat least 40 suspected group members, the blogremains active with other administrators who oper-ate from abroad, according to Bangladeshi intelli-gence.

The group, now banned in Bangladesh, hasclaimed responsibility for the killings of four secularbloggers this year, and has vowed to carry out moresuch attacks. It has also operated under the names

Ansar al-Islam and Ansar Bangla 7.

JUMATUL MUJAHEDEEN BANGLADESHThe group was founded in 1998 by Shaikh Abdur

Rahman, a religious teacher educated in SaudiArabia.

It came to notice in 2001 when it engaged in con-flict with an extremist communist group in Dinajpurin northern Bangladesh. On Aug. 17, 2005, it explod-ed about 500 homemade bombs at nearly 300 loca-tions almost simultaneously across the country aspart of a campaign demanding the introduction ofShariah law. Later it continued its violent campaignby attacking and killing judges and police, andthreatening journalists and women without veils. Itcreated a large network of supporters; some govern-ment officials say it has as many as 10,000 members.

In 2005, six of its leaders including Rahman werearrested and the group was banned. The six werehanged in 2007 after being convicted of the killingsof two judges.

However, it remains active and has attempted toregroup. Dabiq, a magazine of the IS group, hasclaimed Rahman was the founder of the jihadimovement in Bangladesh.

On Thursday, police said they arrested fivemembers of the group, and that one of its militarycommanders was killed in a gunfight in a Dhakasuburb. —AP

A look at key radical Islamist groups in Bangladesh

MALE: Maldivian policemen patrol the area where supporters of formerpresident Mohamed Nasheed have gathered for a mass rally in Male’,Maldives on Friday. —AP

TOKYO: Japan scrambled jets after 11 Chinese mili-tary planes flew near southern Japanese islands dur-ing what Beijing said was a drill to improve its long-range combat abilities, reports said yesterday.

The planes-eight bombers, two intelligence gath-ering planes and one early-warning aircraft-flew nearMiyako and Okinawa on Friday without violatingJapan’s airspace, the Japanese defence ministry saidin a statement released on Friday. Some of them flewbetween the two islands while others made flightsclose to neighboring islands, the ministry said.

A Chinese air force spokesman said several typesof planes, including H-6K bombers, were involved inFriday’s drill over the western Pacific, China’s Xinhuanews agency reported. Shen Jinke said such open seaexercises had improved the force’s long-distancecombat abilities, according to Xinhua.

While there were no further comments from theJapanese ministry, the Yomiuri Shimbun reportedthat it was “unusual” for China to dispatch such a largefleet close to Japan’s airspace and the ministry wasanalyzing the purpose of the mission.

Japan scrambles jets hundreds of times a year todefend its airspace, both against Russia and thesedays also against Chinese aircraft. Beijing has warned

this is heightening tensions between the two Asianpowerhouses, which are already at loggerheads overa longstanding territorial row in the East China Seaand Japanese military aggression in the first half ofthe 20th century.

The move comes with tensions running high inthe South China Sea after a US warship sailed close toat least one land formation claimed by China, whichhas rattled its neighbors with its increasingly assertivestance in territorial disputes. China transformed reefsin the region into small islands capable of supportingmilitary facilities, a move the US says threatens free-dom of navigation in a region through which one-third of the world’s oil passes.

China insists on sovereignty over virtually all theresource-endowed South China Sea, which is alsoclaimed in part by a handful of other countries.Washington has repeatedly said it does not recognizethe Chinese claims.

Online gun ringPolice in China, where gun possession by ordinary

people is illegal, have busted an online gun sellingoperation, seizing 1,180 guns and more than 6 millionbullets, the state news agency Xinhua reported yes-

terday.A seven-month investigation that started when

police happened across suspected gun parts in apackage netted 18 people involved in the sale ofguns in China via a website hosted on a US server,Xinhua said. The gun selling ring had made morethan 4 million yuan ($625,537) in profit since 2012,according to a police officer quoted by Xinhua.

The manufacture and sale of guns is strictly regu-lated in China and individuals can be sentenced to upto seven years in prison if convicted of illegally pos-sessing a gun. With such strict controls, private gunownership is almost unheard of and gun crime is rare.

In April, police found items believed to be guncomponents in a package when inspecting a courierservice, Xinhua quoted Lyu Ming, a police officer inthe northern region of Inner Mongolia, as saying.

In the following months, police traced packages tofive suspects in the central province of Hunan andraided a house they had used to sell guns, it said.

One suspect confessed that they had been in theonline gun business since 2012, using a rented serverin the United States. They posted advertisementsonline and recruited sales agents nationwide, Xinhuasaid. —Agencies

‘Large’ Chinese military fleet flies near Japan islesChina police bust online gun ring, seize 1,180 guns

COLOMBO: The Maldives’ opposition yes-terday vowed to regroup for a secondnight of demonstrations hours afterpolice broke up a planned 72-hourprotest demanding the release of thecountry’s ex-president and other politicalleaders. Maldivian Democratic Partyspokesman Hamid Abdul Gaffoor said theparty is within its legal rights to continuethe protests because police have unilater-ally withdrawn from agreed terms. Theparty is demanding the release from jailof former President Mohamed Nasheed,ex-Defense Minister Mohamed Nazimand opposition leader Sheik ImranAbdulla, as well as the withdrawal ofcourt action against 1,700 politicalactivists.

It says the actions against the leadersand activists are the result of a politicalvendetta by the current president,Yameen Abdul Gayoom. Police usedshields and pepper spray to break upFriday night’s protests as the demonstra-tors prepared for a street march. Theyalso cut off electricity for the campaignsite. Gaffoor said that during an earlierdiscussion with the party, the police hadagreed to allow a three-day protest as

long as sound systems were not usedafter midnight. However, they withdrewtheir permission after the governmentinterfered, he said.

Government officials could not bereached immediately for comment.Nasheed was sentenced to 13 years inprison for ordering the arrest of a topjudge when he was president in 2012.Nazim is serving a 10-year sentence forillegal possession of a pistol, and Abdullahas been detained for allegedly incitingviolence at an anti-government protest inMay. The Maldives, known mainly for itspristine beaches and luxury island resorts,became a multiparty democracy in 2008,but recently democratic gains have beenshrinking fast. Nasheed, the Indian Oceanarchipelago’s first democratically electedpresident, resigned four years into hisfive-year term amid protests against hisrole in the arrest of the judge. Gayoom, ahalf-brother of the Maldives’ former 30-year autocrat, defeated Nasheed in a dis-puted election in 2013. The judiciary,police and the bureaucracy are deemedhighly politicized and are accused ofbeing used by Gayoom to crack down onthe opposition. —AP

Maldives oppn regroups for 2nd night of protests

SEOUL: South Korean police yester-day banned a anti-governmentdemonstration planned in Seoul nextweek, citing concerns the protestcould turn violent, a spokesman said.

But activists vowed to push aheadwith the rally next Saturday outsideCity Hall. Police acted under a lawallowing them to ban street protestsif there is a risk of them turning vio-lent, the spokesman for the SeoulMetropolitan Police Agency told AFP.Police warned leaders of activistgroups who defy the ban would bearrested, as would participants whorefused to disperse.

Critics say the conservative gov-ernment of President Park Geun-Hye,a daughter of the late heavy-handedruler Park Chung-Hee, is slipping backinto past authoritarian rule. The banwas in line with a government warn-ing on Fr iday of zero violence instreet protests. Justice Minister KimHyun-Woong said in a televisedaddress that the government wasdetermined to “eradicate” any public

disorder and stressed that violatorswould “pay the price”.

Kim had issued a similar warningbefore a huge anti-government rallyin Seoul on November 14 that drewaround 60,000 people and spawnednumerous clashes between protes-tors and police who used pepperspray and water cannon. The focus ofthe protests is quite wide, incorporat-ing opposition to labor reforms, theopening of the agricultural marketand plans to impose government-issued history textbooks on schools.

The president condemned theNovember 14 protest as an effort to“deny the rule of law ” and urgedstrong measures against those identi-fied as inciting violence.

Park also said the wearing of masksby protestors should be prohibited,saying it was the sor t of practiceadopted by the Islamic State group,sparking angry reactions from oppo-nents. Her ruling conservative SaenuriParty on Wednesday tabled a bill inparliament to ban such masks. —AFP

S Korean police ban anti-government rally

SEOUL: North Korea apparently test-fired a sub-marine-launched ballistic missile yesterday in theSea of Japan but the test was a failure, a newsagency report said. Yonhap news agency quoted agovernment official as saying that the missile, KN-11, was fired between 2:20 pm (05:20 GMT) and2:40 pm.

“The North appears to have failed in its launch,”said the official on condition of anonymity,according to Yonhap. “The missile was not seenflying in the air only debris from its coverings wasspotted”, he said.

A South Korean defense ministry spokesmanrefused to comment on the report when contact-ed by AFP. If confirmed, it would mark the firsttime since May that the North has fired such a mis-sile. Leader Kim Jong-Un then oversaw an alleged-ly successful test-launch of what the Northclaimed was “a strategic submarine ballistic mis-sile”.

The missile appeared to have flown only about100 or 150 metres (330-495 feet) from the surfaceof the water but South’s defense ministrydescribed the launch at the time as “very seriousand worrisome”. Under UN Security Council resolu-tions, the nuclear armed North Korea is bannedfrom any test using ballistic missile technology.

North and South Korea remain technically atwar after a war ended in an armistice instead of apeace treaty in 1953. —AFP

N Korea fails in submarine launched missile test

PYONGYANG: North Koreans walk on a bridge that takes them over the PothongRiver yesterday in Pyongyang, North Korea. The Pothong River is the second largestriver that runs through the North Korean capital.—AP

CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines: ThePhilippines yesterday took deliveryof two Korean-made fighter jets -the country’s first supersonic com-bat aircraft in a decade - as itstrengthens its underfunded mili-tary amid an escalating territorialfeud with China.

The FA-50 jets touched down atClark Freeport, a former US Air Forcebase north of Manila, as Philippinedefense officials applauded and firetrucks sprayed water as a traditionalwelcome salute for the still-unarmed aircraft.

The Philippines bought 12 FA-50s, which are primarily trainer jetsthat the military converted to alsoserve as multi-role combat aircraft,from Korea Aerospace Industries at acost of 18.9 billion pesos ($402 mil-lion). The other jets will be deliveredin batches through 2017. Weaponsfor the FA-50s, including bombs androckets, will be purchased later.“We’re glad we’re finally back to thesupersonic age,” Defense SecretaryVoltaire Gazmin said.

The Philippine military decom-missioned its last fleet of supersoniccombat aircraft, the F-5, in 2005. Amilitary modernization programthat included plans for the purchaseof at least a squadron of fighter jetsand naval frigates didn’t happen forseveral years largely because of a

lack of funds. Over the years, themilitary has deteriorated to becomeone of Asia’s weakest.

Under current President BenignoAquino III, however, territorial spatswith China over islands in the SouthChina Sea have escalated andresulted in the Chinese seizure of adisputed shoal in 2012, promptingthe military to scramble to acquirenew navy ships and air force planeswith the help of the United States,

the Philippines’ longtime defensetreaty ally.

Last week, Aquino authorizedGazmin to enter into major con-tracts to acquire 44 billion pesos($936 million) worth of militaryhardware, including two frigates,anti-submarine helicopters andamphibious assault vehicles for thenavy, and long-range patrol aircraft,munitions for the FA-50s and sur-veillance radar for the air force,

Defense Undersecretary FernandoManalo said.

The new ships, aircraft and mili-tary equipment were expected tobe purchased from this year up to2018, according to Manalo. Lt. Col.Rolando Condrad Pena III, one ofthree Filipino air force pilots whoreceived training in Korea to fly theFA-50s, said that the jets could carryenough munitions payload andcould be used in air-to-air and air-to-ground combat.

“Now that we have a supersonicaircraft our reaction time will befaster,” Pena told reporters. Still, thePhilippines has ruled out a militarysolution to the territorial conflictswith its limited defense capabilities.In January 2013, the Philippinesbrought its disputes with China tointernational arbitration, butBeijing refused to participate andpressed for one-on-one negotia-tions. An international tribunal inThe Hague, however, dismissedChina’s legal arguments last monthand ruled that it has authority tohear the Philippines’ case. It said itexpects to hand down a decisionnext year on several issues raisedby the Philippines, including thevalidity of China’s sweeping territo-rial claims under the 1982 UnitedNations Convention on the Law ofthe Sea. —AP

PH gets 1st fighter jets in a decade amid sea feud

MANILA: Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI) ground crewinspect a pair of newly arrived FA-50 multirole light fighter air-craft delivered to the Philippine Air Force shortly after landingat the Clark Air Base in Angeles City, Pampanga province,north of Manila yesterday. —AFP

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