Gujarat minister Modi questioned at riots inquiry | ||
BBC,16:48 GMT, Saturday, 27 March 2010 The chief minister of India's Gujerat state, Narendra Modi, has appeared for the first time before a panel investigating deadly riots in 2002. Gujarat authorities have been criticised for not doing enough to prevent the violence in which more than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, died. Mr Modi, a leading member of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), denies any wrongdoing. The riots took place after 60 Hindus died in a train fire. The cause of the blaze was never clearly established. Hindu groups allege the fire was started by Muslim protesters, but an earlier inquiry said the blaze was an accident. Tight security Mr Modi told reporters he had been questioned for several hours by the Supreme Court-appointed panel, but gave no details of his testimony.
"I have said before, India's constitution and the law are supreme... no-one is above the law," Mr Modi was quoted by AFP news agency as saying. He was summoned in connection with the murder of a former Congress party MP, Ehsan Jaffrey, who was among dozens of Muslims killed in a residential complex in the state's biggest city, Ahmedabad. His widow has filed a petition accusing Mr Modi of aiding and abetting his murder, a charge that has been rejected by the chief minister's BJP party. The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi says security was tight as Mr Modi appeared before the special investigating team. Few people have been brought to justice for the 2002 riots, which were among the worst outbreaks of violence in decades, our correspondent says. The Supreme Court set up a panel to investigate the riots two years ago, after allegations that the Gujarat government was doing little to bring those responsible to justice, he adds. Mr Modi is one of more than 60 people who have been named as co-accused. In the past, the Supreme Court has criticised the government of Gujarat for failing to protect its Muslim citizens. Mr Modi's supporters have always said that under the circumstances he could have done little to prevent the violence. |
BRUSSELS -- NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen hailed Saturday a historic new nuclear arms reduction deal between the United States and Russia, saying it augurs well for alliance relations with Moscow.
Mr. Rasmussen told an audience in Brussels that the "welcome news" would not only "contribute to a safer world, it will also give impetus to cooperation with Russia in other fields including with NATO-Russia relations."
U.S. President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev on Friday finalized the agreement to cut long-range nuclear arms, which would see the number of deployed warheads reduced by a third.
The new pact, due to be signed April 8 in Prague, replaces the landmark 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START), which expired in December.
Mr. Rasmussen told top policymakers at a transatlantic conference that a "security roof" stretching from Vancouver to Vladivostok as sought by Russia should be built on missile defence cooperation between NATO and Moscow.
"I am suggesting nothing less than a radical change in the way we think about European security, about missile defence, and about Russia," he said.
"It would allow Europe to play an active role in a process which, until now, is conducted largely over their heads, by the US and Russia."
Mr. Rasmussen, who said Iran had gone "gone far beyond what is necessary for a purely civilian" nuclear program, pointed to more than "30 countries" that have or are developing missile capabilities at ever greater ranges.
As a result, "we need a missile defence system that includes not just all countries of NATO, but Russia, too," the Dane said.
A NATO summit in November represents a deadline for allies to settle plans, he said, stressing that "we also need a decision from Russia -- a decision to view missile defence as an opportunity, rather than a threat."
Anti-missile defence systems already in place within the NATO alliance fall under a US shield that has missile interceptors in the United States, Greenland and Britain.
Plans for it to be extended into eastern Europe have raised serious concern in Russia.