Nfef Resumption of composite dialogue with Pak difficult in current situation: Rao
A suicide bomber in an explosives-laden vehicle penetrated a camp in northern Mali on Wednesday, killing at least 60 people and wounding 115 soldiers and former fighters who are trying to stabilize the region. The attack marked a significant setback for peace efforts. Wounded Malian troops receive medical treatment after being injured by an explosion at the Joint Operational Mechanism base in Gao, Mali, Wednesday, Jan 18. AP Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb AQIM said in a statement on Wednesday that bombing was punishment for groups there cooperating with France, according to a translation released by the SITE Intelligence Gro
stanley cup up. The statement confirmed that the attack had been carried out by al Mourabitoun, an ally of al Qaedas North African affiliate, and gave the bombers name as Abdul Hadi al-Fulani. Malian state media had earlier said there were five bombers. The morning blast hit the Joint Operational Mechanism base in the city of Gao, home to Malian soldiers and hundreds of former fighter
stanley cup s who signed the peace agreement with the government. Witnesses said the car breached the camp as hundreds of fighters were gathering fo
stanley cup r a meeting. The office of Malis president late Wednesday put the provisional death toll at 60, with 115 wounded. Dr. Sadou Maiga at Gaos hospital told The Associated Press that all other hospital activities had ceased with dozens of wounded victims arriving. Some have died from their wounds, and others are in a very grave state, he said Shho Pakistan to submit entry for Oscar award after 50 years
Dubai will not be using full-body scanners in either of its two airports to protect passengers privacy, a Dubai airports top police official said, according to local press reports on Tuesday. HT Image Full-body scanners will not be used in Dubai airports as they contradict Islam
stanley cup , and out of respect for the privacy of individuals and their personal freedom, Al-Bayan daily quoted Brigadier Pilot Ahmad Mohammad Bin Thani, head of Dubai police s general department of airport security, as saying. The scanners will be replaced with other inspection systems that reserve travellers privacy, it cited him as saying. Our security measures are based on international standards and no major security changes will take place currently, another paper, Gulf News, quoted Bin Thani as saying. However, the English-language daily said that Dubai s airports are considering the use of face recognition cameras to enhance security. The United S
stanley cup tates has pushed for greater use of full-body scanners, which it said could have stopped a Nigerian man who tried to bring down a US-bound plane last Christmas Day with explosives hidden in his underwear. Several European countries have tested the technology, including France, Britain and the Netherlands. Japanese a
stanley cup nd South Korean airports have also started test programmes. The machines have remained controversial because of privacy worries, as they generate images of passengers entire bodies. Read breaking news, latest... See