PAKISTAN – Christians targeted: 72 dead after suicide bomber strikes Easter celebration
(London’s Daily Telegraph) – At least 72 people have been killed and hundreds wounded after a bomb ripped through a children’s play area in Pakistan where Christian families were celebrating Easter. Medical workers said the blast mainly killed women and children, while many of the wounded were in a critical condition on Sunday.
The suspected suicide bombing took place on Sunday evening at a public park in the city of Lahore, just yards away from a set of swings.
Medical workers said the blast mainly killed women and children, while many of the wounded were in a critical condition.
The splinter group Jamaatul Ahrar, a faction of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attack and said it had deliberately targeted Christians on Easter Sunday.
“We claim responsibility for the attack on Christians as they were celebrating Easter,” a spokesperson for the terrorist group said. “It was part of our annual martyrdom attacks we have started this year,” he said and warned that more attacks would follow.
“We had been waiting for this occasion… we want to convey… to the prime minister that we we have arrived in Punjab and we will reach you.”
The area was crowded with Christians celebrating the Easter holidays and many families were heading home when the blast struck, according to Haider Ashraf, a senior police official. “We are in a warlike situation,” he said, “there is always a general [terrorism] threat in Pakistan but no specific threat alert was received for this place.” He also said many of those killed were Muslims, who were also in the park at the time of the bombing.
Footage from local TV stations showed chaotic scenes as people fled the area carrying their children or cradling the wounded.
Al-Khidma, a Lahore rescue worker, told the Telegraph: “Our ambulances lifted dozens of injured people to nearby hospitals. The majority are women and children.
Another medical worker said at least three hundred people had been injured and that he feared the death toll would rise.
The Punjab government has since announced three days of national mourning and the closure of all public parks in Pakistan, vowing to bring those behind the attack to trial.
Pakistan has been struggling to control a homegrown Islamist insurgency since 2004, with the Pakistani Taliban frequently carrying out attacks in an attempt to overthrow the government.
The blast in Lahore comes just days after police in the capital of Islamabad clashed with thousands of Muslim supporters of an Islamist assassin, who was hanged earlier this year for killing a regional governor along with eight others in a bomb attack on his home.
GREAT BRITAIN – New Army cyber warriors allowed long hair
(London’s Daily Telegraph) – Highly skilled cyber specialists are being granted individual exemptions from normal military appearance rules (including allowing them to have long hair) in an attempt to attract experts who might otherwise be put off joining up, Britain’s Ministry of Defense has said.
Commanders keen to recruit specialist expertise for 21st century warfare are also considering exemptions for reservist cultural advisers, linguists, intelligence analysts and criminal investigators. They have already revealed that the Army’s new cyber warriors will not need to pass military fitness tests and will not deploy abroad, or bear arms.
But the special treatment has caused resentment among traditionalists and among some regular soldiers.
One military source said soldiers at a base in the South West had last week been angered by the sight of two Royal Signals cyber reservists in uniform with shoulder length hair. One also sported “unkempt facial hair.” The reservists had been given letters by a colonel to explain their appearance to anyone who challenged them.
He said:
“It’s causing a lot of upset among regulars. People are saying it is just disrespectful. They seem to revel in the fact that they have a letter from their colonel which says the rules don’t apply to them.”
The Queen’s Regulations, which form the basis of military discipline and conduct, state that a male soldier’s hair must “be kept well cut and trimmed” while the style and color must not “be of an exaggerated nature.”
Moustaches must be “trimmed and not below the line of the lower lip.” Beards and whiskers are only to be worn with authority and must be neat and tidy. Women must have their hair “neat and worn above the collar.”
Cyber warfare has emerged as one of the most important new threats in the defense world. China, Russia, Iran and North Korea are all believed to have developed formidable cyber warfare and espionage skills to attack computer networks. Military computer and communications systems are also a target for activists, terrorist groups and criminal gangs, who may be backed by foreign states.
Yet militaries across the world have struggled to recruit experts who can keep up with the rapidly changing threat and there is strong competition for expertise from commercial firms.
Air Chief Marshal Sir Stuart Peach, who is set to be the new Chief of the Defense Staff, last year said the military had to take “bold steps” to recruit the right talent to the new 500-strong cyber reserve, even if it annoyed “many fuddy-duddies in uniform.”
An Army source said: “Being more flexible with eligibility criteria has attracted those who could not have been considered previously, or may not have volunteered in the past.”
The waivers had to be individually created for specific posts and a decision was made on a case-by-case basis.
The military insists the strategy is paying off, and high caliber reservist recruits were being attracted from the worlds of government, academia and the public sector.
A Ministry of Defense (MoD) spokesman said: “Defense seeks to maximize talent and where people bring niche skills and valuable experience but may not meet standard eligibility criteria it may offer exceptional dispensation for employment. This may be in a number of specialist areas including cyber.”
FRANCE – French town installs ‘talking CCTV cameras’ to scare off litterbugs
NOTE: CCTV (closed-circuit television) is a TV system in which signals are not publicly distributed but are monitored, primarily for surveillance and security purposes. CCTV relies on strategic placement of cameras, and observation of the camera’s input on monitors somewhere.
(London’s Daily Telegraph) – One of the wealthiest towns on the Riviera with a crime rate close to zero has become France’s first municipality to install ‘talking’ CCTV cameras that tell off people for parking badly or dropping litter.
The home of nobility and millionaires, Mandelieu-la-Napoule is best known for mimosa trees, sunbathers and A-list pool parties at secluded villas. Now the community of 22,000 people is under fire from civil liberties campaigners over the introduction of cameras equipped with loudspeakers. The system allows people spotted failing to pick up after their dogs or engaging in anti-social behavior to be reprimanded or ordered to stop by control center staff.
For years, the French have resisted the widespread use of CCTV as an unwarranted intrusion into their privacy. Objections have diminished since the Paris attacks in November and three-quarters of medium-sized towns now have CCTV. However, many see the addition of speakers as a step too far.
According to Jean-Marie Montali of Le Parisien newspaper, it is “Big Brother in Mandelieu.” He suggested that the town had more urgent things to spend its money on than “a voice from the heavens to warn you not to step out of line.”
But the deputy mayor, Sébastien Leroy, claimed that ‘talking’ CCTV would save the local council money. “A single ‘motocrotte’ vehicle to vacuum up dog waste costs €130,00 (almost $146,000) a year,” he said, adding that the speaker system was a highly effective deterrent. “…When one person is told off, there are usually several dozen others nearby who hear the message. It has a snowball effect.”
Laurent Mucchielli, a crime researcher at the University of AIx-Marseille, said ‘talking’ CCTV is impractical. “The number of officers monitoring the cameras is likely to be quite limited at any given time. It’s very difficult to observe what’s happening on so many screens at the same time.”
Coralie, a young mother who heard a voice from above bellowing at her not to park at a bus stop, said: “I would much rather have been told by a human officer.”
Maïwenn Lesage, 22, said: “It’s horrible. The government and the politicians find plenty of excuses, like terrorism, to control us. Our liberties are becoming more and more reduced.”
Anne-Marie Costilhes, 50, also objected to ‘talking’ CCTV. “You don’t have to look around you, someone does it for you. I think we need a different society where we talk to each other.”
Two other French towns are introducing the system and 20 areas in Britain have ‘talking’ CCTV. Unlike their French counterparts, however, the British cameras also have microphones so the offenders can talk back to the control center, should they wish to explain themselves.
(The news briefs above are from wire reports and staff reports posted at London’s Daily Telegraph on March 28, March 26 and March 28.)
PAKISTAN:
Describing the moment of the blast, one man who was visiting the park with his wife and two children said he heard a huge bang before all four of them were thrown to the floor.
Another witness told the Telegraph he saw pools of blood and body parts scattered across the park after the smoke had cleared.
“It was the weekend so there were a large number of families there, women and children were in the park,” he said.
Former Lahore police captain Muhammad Usman told the Telegraph that police had recovered parts of the bomber from the scene and were seeking to identify him.
“The blast in the Lahore was a suicide attack, it was just outside the exit gate of the Gulshan Iqbal Park and a few meters away from the children’s swings,” he said.
Javed Ali, a 35-year-old who lives near the park, said: "Everything was shaking, there were cries and dust everywhere.
"After ten minutes I went outside. .... People were crying, I could hear ambulances."
He added: "It was overcrowded because of Easter, there were a lot of Christians there. It was so crowded I told my family not to go." (from the Telegraph article above)