Signal, No Noise

June 15, 2010

10 Everyday Items Hackers Are Targeting Right Now

Filed under: Cyberspace — mungurk @ 07:00

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By John Brandon

Published June 11, 2010

| FOXNews.com

AP

Just when you thought it was safe to use your computer, hackers have figured out how to attack everyday items. Your printer, your cellphone — even the blender in your kitchen — can be hacked and used against you.

And in the not-too-distant future, as the medical field makes advances with machine-to-human interfaces, even your own body and brain could be at risk.

Here are 10 everyday items that are open to fresh attacks from criminals.

1. Your Car
Vehicles like the Mercedes S550 use a cellular connection that lets you lock and unlock your car remotely. The Chrysler Grand Caravan has an on-board Wi-Fi connection to the Internet. GM vehicles use OnStar to communicate with the outside world; the company even incorporates a kill switch you can use if your car is stolen.

David Perry, a virus expert at Trend Micro, notes that most cars have multiple computers on board and a network of devices that use Wi-Fi, GPS, and Bluetooth. Perry claims “white hat hackers” — the good guys who hack into systems to prove they have security problems — have shown that cars are at risk.

“The future of car theft might easily turn digital,” said Perry. “It might be possible to freeze traffic on a crowded road, stopping enough cars using a Bluetooth hack or a connected mobile phone. These attack vectors are real; what really matters is what the hacker wants to do.”

Car hacking is so new, the auto industry has not addressed the problem fully. You can request that your dealer disable some of these computer systems and wireless networks. Cellular networks protect signals by switching base stations routinely.

2. That New GPS Gizmo
GPS uses orbiting satellites to route you through traffic. According to Robert Siciliano, the CEO at IDTheftSecurity.com, hackers would have a hard time causing trouble with these satellites. But the bad guys can access a GPS device when it downloads updates over the Internet — and then can install a remote access tool and track your whereabouts.

Perry said criminals who tap into your GPS could send you to a shady location, such as an empty warehouse, and then rob you. Hackers also use GPS jammers, readily available online, that confuse the signal and can cause traffic jams and driver errors.

3. Your Cellphone
Your cellphone is an easy target for hacking. Spyware tools that infect your phone are readily available on the Internet, Siciliano says. First you receive a text message with a link offering some free service. When you click the link, the hackers gets full access to your phone.

In one deceptively simple attack, you get a free cellphone in the mail with printed materials that make it look like you can test it for a week and send back. As you test, the phone records video and audio. When you send it back, the hacker uses the personal info against you.

Perry said another dangerous hack occurred in Japan. Hackers tapped into emergency phone services and disabled emergency calling. He said it’s an example of one of the more dangerous exploits — hackers shutting down important city services.

As with any connected device, you can disable Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and even carrier service when you’re not using the phone. Also, never click text message links from unknown senders.

4. The Front-Door Security System
You bolt the door, install videocams, and add a security alarm — and still the criminals can break in! The reason: a lock bumping technique where a master key — designed for popular locks — unlocks the front door. That video signal, if transmitted over an unsecured Wi-Fi signal, is easy to compromise. And, according to security expert Winn Schwartau from The Security Awareness Company, a zap from a powerful (but expensive) electro-mechanical interference device can disable some alarm systems.

Perry said home automation systems designed for convenience (like the popular Schlage Link) make the front door hackable — criminals can simply intercept the wireless signal to unlock or lock the front door. And if a hacker steals your cellphone, he can access your home with these convenience tools.

But it’s easy to prevent: Enable the password feature that blocks access to your phone. Also, make sure you use strong encryption, such as AES, on your home wireless network.

5. Your Blender. Yes, Your Blender
That’s right: your blender is under attack! Most mixers are self-contained and not hackable, but Siciliano says many home automation systems tap into appliances such as blenders and coffee machines. These home networks are then open to attack in surprising ways: A hacker might turn on the blender from outside your home to distract you as he sneaks in a back window, he warns.

Interestingly, home automation systems such as those from Hawking Technology use wireless networks that home owners install on their own. Many folks simply don’t bother to configure the security options — it’s easier and faster to just run an open (and easy to hack) network.

6. Your Printer
Your printer is open to attack — especially if you use a model that uses a Wi-Fi connection, like the HP Deskjet 6980. That over-the-air signal is probably not as protected as computer connections, which often use industrial-grade encryption, such as AES.

Once a hacker can access your printer, Siciliano says he can read (and steal) anything you print — or the criminals can access the network and your PC to steal data directly.

7. Your New Digital Camera
Yes, even a camera can be hacked.

Any hardware gadget that has local storage, which includes video cameras, digital cameras, and even those cheap and wildly popular Flip cams, can be infected with a virus. Once you connect the cam to your computer, that virus can corrupt the device or provide remote access to spies.

Perry said TrendMicro has identified commercial malware that can run on a video camera or the webcam on your laptop. It records all activity and can be used for spying on you.

8. The Power Sockets in Your Walls
The power in your home is hackable as well, especially as the U.S. moves to a “smart grid” that lets consumers monitor and control their own power consumption.

Perry said the danger is that criminals will figure out how to steal power, use it in their own homes or businesses, and make it look like you’re the consumer. Or hackers could turn off your power, or cruelly jack up the meter to increase your bill.

For now, most of us are safe; the smart grid is more of an idea than a reality, although there are several test deployments across the country. Once the smart grid becomes common, Schwartau said filtering, a method of making sure the power is actually reaching the intended recipients, could help ensure the grid is not hackable. We’ll see.

9. The Human Body
It sounds far-fetched because most of us don’t have that computer-to-human interface installed quite yet. But researchers at MIT have shown how computers can help the disabled walk or play videogames. And it could be just a matter of time before humans are “augmented” this way.

Besides, Perry said, the idea of hacking into a pacemaker is a proven reality, since some of the devices use Bluetooth connections for control. “In several studies, it was shown that hacking a pacemaker was pitifully easy,” he said. “This might be a good example of a cyberkill.”

“I’ve given demonstrations of high power electro-mechanical interference. We had to make sure that folks with pacemakers were at least 100 meters away,” Schwartau said.

10. Even the Human Brain
The last frontier of hacking: stealing information directly from your brain. Once again, research institutions such as Harvard and MIT have shown that it is possible to tap into the brain at some level to control motor functions, such as lifting an arm or blinking.

Criminal control of your brain sounds like science fiction, but Schwartau insists that anything is hackable — even your mind. Perry said hackers already infect the human brain, using a process call social engineering. This involves tricking you into giving out a password over Facebook or revealing private info during an earnest (but fake) phone survey.

Most security experts agree: the most dangerous hacks are those that trick employees at a company or any consumer who divulges private information.

62′ High Statue of Jesus Completely Wiped Out by Fire After Lightning Strike

Filed under: Americas,Christianity,North America,Religion,USA — mungurk @ 06:58

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Last Updated: 5:41 am | Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Lightning strikes, destroys large Jesus statue in Monroe

BY JENNIFER BAKER • JBAKER@ENQUIRER.COM • JUNE 15, 2010

MONROE – Lightning struck and ignited a fire late Monday that destroyed a 62-foot-tall statue of Jesus Christ with his arms stretched toward the skies, according to Monroe police.

“It burned to the ground. The whole statue is gone,” said Kim Peace, a police dispatcher.

The large “King of Kings” statue was a Butler County landmark since it was erected in 2004 outside Solid Rock Church, 904 N. Union Rd., along northbound Interstate 75 in Monroe just north of the Ohio 63 exit.

Fire crews were called to the church at 11:15 p.m. after several people phoned 911 to report the blaze as a severe thunderstorm swept through Greater Cincinnati, producing a spectacular lightning show, Peace said.

“The lightning was just amazing,” she said, wryly adding: “It was a lot of fun in here last night.”

When fire crews arrived, they found the statue fully involved and an adjacent amphitheater burning. The fire extended into the attic of the amphitheater, destroyed equipment, before fire crews contained it, Peace said.

No injuries were reported. Fire officials are expected to release a damage estimate after 10 a.m. Tuesday.

As fire gorged the iconic statue, several motorists along I-75 pulled over to photograph the sight.

That prompted troopers from the Ohio State Highway Patrol to respond and patrol the area to prevent a traffic jam and potential accidents, according to the patrol’s Lebanon post.

June 14, 2010

Two People with weapons detained at MacDill AFB

Filed under: Americas,Counterterrorism,North America,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 23:18

source

2 people detained with weapons at MacDill AFB

The Associated Press

Posted on Monday, 06.14.10

TAMPA, Fla. — Two heavily armed people were detained after reportedly trying to enter MacDill Air Force Base without authorization.

The MacDill public affairs office reports that a man and woman, whose names were not released, tried to gain unauthorized access to base early Monday evening.

The man and woman were unable to show proper identification, and their vehicle was inspected. Security forces found military-style gear and weapons in the sport utility vehicle.

The base’s fire department and explosive ordnance disposal units were dispatched, but no explosives were found.

The individuals were taken in custody.

The incident remained under investigation.

The base’s public affairs officer said no other information was available.


June 13, 2010

Filed under: Asia,China,East Asia,Military,North Korea — mungurk @ 00:36

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North Korean border guard ‘shoots three Chinese dead’

Page last updated at 10:33 GMT, Tuesday, 8 June 2010 11:33 UK

China-North Korea bridge The four were allegedly shot close to the countries’ borderChina says a North Korean border guard shot and killed three people near the countries’ border last week.

A fourth person was reportedly injured in the incident near the north-eastern border town of Dandong.

China has made a formal complaint to North Korea, a spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry said.

The two countries are considered to be close allies and Beijing rarely makes any public criticism of its isolated neighbour.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a regular news conference in Beijing that the four residents of Dandong, in Liaoning province, had been shot “on suspicion of crossing the border for trade activities”.

“China attaches great importance to that and has immediately raised a solemn representation with the DPRK,” he said, using North Korea’s full name (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea).

Close allyMr Qin said the case was being investigated, but gave no further details. Pyongyang has not commented on the accusations.

Illegal traders regularly cross the border between North Korea and China, taking black market goods into the impoverished country.

China is North Korea’s main trading partner and the country perceived to have the most influence on the state.

MapTensions on the Korean peninsula have been high since the sinking of a South Korean warship in March with the loss of 46 lives.

An international investigation blamed North Korea for the sinking, but China has resisted pressure to condemn its ally. Instead, it has urged both the Koreas to show restraint.

Last month, the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, was reported to have visited China to seek economic and political support.

China is crucial to North Korea’s fight for economic survival, providing Pyongyang with food, fuel and much-needed investment.

Beijing is also a participant in the six-party talks on North Korea’s nuclear programme. The talks have been going on since 2003 without much progress.

In 2009, North Korea detained two US journalists on the border with China, accusing them of entering North Korea illegally.

Laura Ling and Euna Lee, who said they were detained on the Chinese side, were sentenced to 12 years’ hard labour but were freed in August after four months in captivity, as part of a diplomatic mission spearheaded by former US President Bill Clinton.

A US man, Robert Park, was also arrested in December last year, after walking into North Korea across a frozen river. He was released in February.

June 12, 2010

Africa to get broadband boost with new cable

Filed under: Africa,Cyberspace,South Africa,Southern Africa — mungurk @ 23:14

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Africa to get broadband boost with new cable

By Mikael Ricknäs
June 8, 2010 12:07 PM ET

IDG News Service – A consortium of 20 members have joined forces to build a submarine cable that will link Cape Town in South Africa to Penmarch in France.

The 17,000 kilometer long fiber optic cable — which has been named the Africa Coast to Europe (ACE) submarine cable — will be operational in the first half of 2012 and connect 23 countries, either directly in the case of coastal countries or indirectly for inland countries, key consortium member France Télécom said on Tuesday.

The cost for building the ACE cable will be about $US 700 million, according to France Télécom.

When the cable becomes operational, it will be the first time several of these countries, including Mauritania, Gambia, Guinea, Sierra

Leone and Liberia, will get Internet access via an optical cable. Today, they have to rely on satellite access, according to a spokesman at Alcatel-Lucent, which has been awarded the task of building ACE.

The cable will be based on DWDM (Dense Wavelength-Division Multiplexing) technology, which sends multiple channels of data over one fiber using different different wavelengths of light. ACE will be able to carry up to 5.12T bps (bits per second) over two fiber pairs using current technology, according to Alcatel-Lucent.

Since plans to build the cable was first announced in December 2008, the ACE project has grown and as a consequence been delayed. The original length was 12,000 kilometers and the cable was supposed to be done by 2011.

In July, a study of of the sea floor will commence and the manufacturing of the cable will also start, according to a spokesman at France Télécom.

Arrests in US, Yemen sharpen focus on ‘homegrown terrorism’

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Arrests in US, Yemen sharpen focus on ‘homegrown terrorism’

Recent arrests in New York, Texas, and Yemen could support the trend of Americans heading abroad for terrorism training. But do the US and Yemen have conflicting security interests?

Barry Bujol walks into the federal courthouse in Houston Tuesday. Mr. Bujol is accused of seeking to deliver money and equipment to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula – the same organization that claimed a role in the attempted Christmas Day bombing.

Pat Sullivan/AP

By Howard LaFranchi, Staff writer / June 8, 2010

Washington

A string of recent arrests – both in the US and in the Arabian Peninsula country of Yemen – suggest how ungoverned expanses from Somalia to Yemen’s deserts are seeing increased Al Qaeda activity.

Skip to next paragraph

Radical Yemeni-American cleric Anwar al-Awlaki is accused of providing spiritual guidance to suspected Fort Hood shooter, Nidal Malik Hasan, and the Christmas Day airplane bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.

If the arrests also end up confirming heightened activity by American citizens in extremist activities, they would also buttress US intelligence and counterterrorism officials’ intensified focus on so-called “homegrown terrorism.”

US officials on Monday confirmed the arrest of a dozen Americans in Yemen. Last week Yemeni officials reported the arrests of foreigners as part of a Yemeni roundup of individuals suspected of taking part in a surge of Al Qaeda planning and organizational activity in the desert country over recent months.

IN PICTURES: American Jihadis

Those arrests, which come as the US provides Yemen with millions of dollars in counterterrorist assistance, follow the indictment June 3 of a Texas man the FBI believes was trying to deliver money and materials to the Yemen-based Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).

The FBI says the Texas man, Barry Bujol Jr., had been under investigation since 2008, over which time he had communicated by e-mail with the American-born radical Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki seeking advice on how to contribute to “jihad.”

Mr. Bujol, who was arrested May 30 as he boarded a ship in a Texas port, is accused of seeking to deliver money and devices including GPSs and cell phone chips to AQAP – the same organization that claimed a role in the attempted Christmas Day bombing of a Detroit-bound airliner.

On Saturday, two New Jersey men were arrested at Kennedy International Airport in New York as they sought to board a flight to Egypt on their way to Somalia. Federal authorities said the men, under investigation since 2006, hoped to join Al Shabab, the Somalian extremist group aligned with Al Qaeda.

At the State Department Monday, spokesman Philip Crowley refused to discuss specifics of the arrests in Yemen of American citizens, confirmed last week by Yemeni security forces. But Mr. Crowley used the topic of what he said were 12 arrested Americans to praise US-Yemeni cooperation in the counterterrorism field.

“Together, we are doing our best to help Yemen reduce the threat posed by Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula,” he said. “That’s a threat to Yemen. It’s a threat to the United States.”

But some experts in Yemen and US counterterrorism efforts say the somewhat mixed signals coming out of the two capitals suggest the diverging interests in addressing the various factors challenging Yemen’s government.

“It seems the two sides may be reading off a slightly different script,” says Gregory Johnsen, a Yemen expert and doctoral candidate in Near East studies at Princeton University in New Jersey. “Counterterrorism means different things to different people, and I think we’re seeing that play out in the different groups the Yemeni government and the US are most interested in targeting.”

The US may be interested in weakening AQAP, and that may be the intended target of the $155 million the US Defense Department has recently approved for fighting the Yemen-based organization. But Mr. Johnsen says the Yemeni government’s focus is more the southern secessionists and Houthi rebels that challenge it.

“The US has a narrow focus on Al Qaeda, but the Yemenis have no problem with taking the material and training intended by the US for ‘counterterrorism activity’ and using it in dealing with some of these other challenges,” Johnsen says. “Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is not the existential threat the Yemeni government sees in some of these other groups and problems.”

Charles Dunbar, a former US ambassador to Yemen now at Boston University, says that a healthy skepticism is in order concerning the Americans reportedly arrested until more information is divulged about them.

“Were these really Americans involved with Al Qaeda as [the US] seems to be suggesting, or was this some kind of put-up job on the part of the Yemenis to suggest to Washington that the government is doing its bidding?” he says. “We have to remember that the one group the Yemenis would like to ignore [Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula] is the one we are most interested in.”

Princeton’s Johnsen says recent US activity in Yemen – including a stepped-up campaign of drone attacks, one of which reportedly killed a Yemeni official instead of an intended Al Qaeda target – is making more than just Yemeni officials nervous.

“This growing US campaign has short-term benefits but significant and long-term costs. All of this is being utilized very well by Al Qaeda,” Johnsen says, adding that the unintended product of the drone attacks “will be an Al Qaeda that instead of recruiting in the hundreds is able to recruit in the thousands.”

US presses China to rein in N.Korea

Filed under: Asia,China,East Asia,Military,North Korea,South Korea,WMD — mungurk @ 23:07

source

US presses China to rein in N.Korea

By Shaun Tandon (AFP) – 2 days ago

WASHINGTON — The United States is pressing China to rein in North Korea, voicing “dismay” that the Asian power has not put more pressure on its ally as tensions build over the sinking of a South Korean warship.

China has offered condolences over the March sinking of the Cheonan but has not placed blame on North Korea, which has warned of “serious” consequences if the issue is brought before the United Nations Security Council.

Admiral Mike Mullen, the top US uniformed military officer, said late Wednesday that China needed to take a greater role after the purported torpedo attack, which claimed 46 lives in one of the deadliest incidents since the Korean War.

“I’ve been encouraged by public statements made recently by Chinese leadership as to the seriousness of this incident and the need for accountability and yet dismayed by a fairly tepid response to calls by the international community for support,” Mullen said.

Mullen, speaking at a dinner of the Asia Society, indicated that the United States would soon go ahead with military exercises with South Korea which were set for early June but delayed to give a chance for diplomacy with North Korea.

“We in the United States military stand firmly by our allies in the Republic of Korea and will move forward, in keeping with international agreements, to demonstrate that solidarity in coming weeks,” Mullen said.

“I think it’s of no surprise to anyone that we are planning maritime exercises to sharpen skills and strengthen collective defenses.”

South Korea has asked the Security Council to respond to the ship’s sinking and said Wednesday that investigators would brief the body’s 15 members on the probe at the request of council president Mexico.

Seoul’s Vice Foreign Minister Chun Yung-Woo returned Wednesday from a trip to lobby China but said that differences remained.

“We agreed to keep working toward reaching acceptable solutions, based on our strategic cooperative partnership,” Chun said.

North Korea’s UN representative wrote a letter to the council urging it not to be swayed by US “lies” as it was before the 2003 invasion of Iraq, according to state media.

The letter warned that if the warship probe was put on the council’s agenda, “no one would dare imagine how serious its consequences would be with regard to the peace and security on the Korean peninsula.”

Experts have speculated widely on North Korea’s motivations for the sinking, with some believing that the communist state is trying to show its mettle as part of the succession to leader Kim Jong-Il.

China’s relations are not always warm with North Korea, with Beijing saying Tuesday it protested after border guards from its neighbor shot dead three Chinese citizens.

But analysts believe that China’s main goal is stability as it fears the prospect of North Korean refugees flooding over the border or a unified Korea with US troops right on its border.

President Barack Obama’s administration has sought broader cooperation with China. But relations between the two militaries have remained uneasy, with Beijing declining Defense Secretary Robert Gates’s requests to visit.

Gates had a tense exchange on Saturday with a Chinese general at a security conference in Singapore.

Major General Zhu Chenghu asked Gates to explain what he called a contradiction between the US condemnation of North Korea and a more cautious US reaction to a deadly raid by Israel against a Gaza-bound aid ship.

“The Chinese military is the most provincial, and I would say the most xenophobic, element of the Chinese elite,” Jeffrey Bader, Obama’s top aide on Asia, told a forum this week.

China in January cut off military relations after the United States in January unveiled a 6.4-billion-dollar arms package to Taiwan, which Beijing claims as part of Chinese territory.

Copyright © 2010 AFP. All rights reserved.

China seeks more dialogue on Iran

Filed under: Asia,China,East Asia,Iran,Middle East — mungurk @ 23:06

source

China seeks more dialogue on Iran
Li, right, China’s UN envoy, said the vote aims to bring Iran back to negotiations [Reuters]

China, which voted for the UN Security Council resolution for tougher sanctions against Iran, has called for negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear programme, saying a diplomatic solution is still the better option.

China’s foreign ministry issued the call on Thursday, a day after Beijing helped pass the resolution targeting Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, ballistic missiles and nuclear-related investments.

Despite the sanctions, Qin Gang, a ministry spokesman, said the correct way to handle the nuclear stand-off is by diplomatic means.

“China always holds that the correct way to address the Iranian nuclear issue is through dialogue, negotiation and other diplomatic means to seek a solution that satisfies the concerns of all parties,” Qin said.

“The fact that the UN Security Council passed the resolution does not mean the door to diplomatic efforts is closed.”

His comments came as Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, was due to arrive in China later on Thursday to tour the World Expo in Shanghai.

He is not expected to hold talks with senior Chinese leaders.

Intense lobbying

China had been a vocal opponent of a fourth round of sanctions against Iran for its nuclear programme.

But it chose to vote for the sanctions on Wednesday instead of exercising its veto power as one of five permanent members of the council.

Its support came about only in recent months after intense lobbying by the US and its allies.

Victor Gao, the director at the China National Association of International Studies, a government think-tank, told Al Jazeera that China’s decision to vote was mainly because the adopted resolution was a watered-down version that contains voluntary provisions.

“In this process China has repeatedly emphasised that ‘diplomacy, engagement and dialogue’ with Iran is a better solution, especially after Turkey and Brazil reached the agreement with Iran to swap nuclear materials,” he said.

“Furthermore, the key provisions in this resolution are voluntary … it basically creates a legal justification for countries who want to take those actions as specified in the resolution.”

Diplomatic aim

Gao said China has been consistent in opposing nuclear proliferation but at the same time has maintained that other countries, including Iran, should have the right to the peaceful use of nuclear material.

He said China has firmly opposed the nuclear programmes in both Iran and North Korea.

“Even today China is calling North Korea to discontinue its nuclear programme. It does not want to see nuclear proliferation programme either on the Korean peninsula or in the Middle East,” Gao said.

China, an ally of Iran and one of the Islamic republic’s major trading partners in recent years, was long reluctant to sign on to the sanctions.

Li Baodong, the Chinese ambassador to the UN, was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua news agency: “The new resolution is aimed at bringing Iran back to the negotiating table and activate a new round of diplomatic efforts.”

Source: Al Jazeera and agencies

Ten Yemen soldiers hurt in raid on militant

source

Ten Yemen soldiers hurt in raid on militant

(AFP) – 3 days ago

SANAA — Ten soldiers and four civilians were wounded in clashes Wednesday as the Yemeni army tried to arrest an Al-Qaeda suspect over last week’s murder of a top officer, tribal and medical sources said.

The troops raided the home of Hassan Abdullah Saleh al-Uqaily in Al-Himma, east of the capital Sanaa, using tank guns in an attempt to arrest him, a tribal source said.

The suspect managed to escape but clashes broke out with a group of his supporters during which 10 soldiers were wounded, a medical official said.

Four civilians were also wounded, a tribal source and witnesses said.

Uqaily’s home was completely destroyed in the clashes which lasted for several hours before subsiding, the tribal source said

Colonel Mohammed Saleh al-Shaief and two of his bodyguards were killed on Saturday when Al-Qaeda militants opened fire on their convoy south of the eastern city of Marib, military and tribal sources said.

Shaief was travelling in a convoy to inspect military forces stationed in the Safar oilfield when the attack occurred south of Marib, the sources added.

A local source identified Uqaily — a 28-year-old on a government wanted list — as the one who led the attack.

On Monday, a man suspected of being an Al-Qaeda militant behind a 2007 bombing that killed eight Spanish tourists surrendered to Yemeni authorities, the defence ministry’s 26sep.net news website reported.

Hamza Ali Saleh al-Dhayani’s “surrender (on Sunday) comes after the tightening of the noose on Al-Qaeda members” in Marib province and “painful blows they have received,” 26sep.net quoted Marib’s governor as saying.

Another, Ghalib al-Zaidi, gave himself up to authorities in the province on Saturday, a security official had told AFP.

Marib, east of the capital Sanaa, is one of Al-Qaeda’s strongholds in Yemen.

Yemen is the ancestral homeland of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and has been the scene of several attacks claimed by the group on foreign missions, tourist sites and oil installations.

Al-Qaeda has suffered setbacks amid US pressure on the government to crack down, but attacks by the group continue.

Yemeni forces have stepped up the hunt for Al-Qaeda suspects ever since the Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) claimed responsibility for a failed Christmas airliner bomb plot over Detroit in the United States.

Copyright © 2010 AFP. All rights reserved.

Mumbai Police on alert over plot to free Kasab

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Mumbai Police on alert over plot to free Kasab
Headlines Today Bureau
Mumbai, June 10, 2010

The Mumbai Police has issued an alert after a tip-off from central agencies that terrorists might try to secure the release of 26/11 case convict Ajmal Kasab.

The police have received an alert that terrorists might attempt to hijack a plane and take hostages to press for Kasab’s release.

The alert warned that the hijacking attempt could be made over the next 10 days.

On May 6, Kasab was sentenced to death by the trial court for his role in the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks. He has appealed against the verdict in the Bombay High Court.

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