August 30, 2002
Another UK-Indian doctor accused of selling kidneys Jarnail Singh of Hillfields Health Centre, Coventry, will appear before the General Medical Council, which is hearing the case of Dr Makkar, in October.
Muslim immigrants to face tougher US regulations Immigrants and visitors from certain Arab and Muslim countries will be fingerprinted, photographed, and tracked after September 11. But civil liberties groups see this as nothing but racial profiling.
August 29, 2002
6 suspected Al Qaeda supporters indicted in US A grand jury in Detroit has charged Karim Koubriti, Ahmed Hannan, Youssef Hmimssa, Farouk Ali-Haimoud and Abdella, and another in Seattle has charged James Ujaama with supporting the terrorist organisation.
America's War on Terror: Complete Coverage
English vicar bans yoga classes in church hall Rev Derek Smith said that even if followers in the West used it just for fitness, spiritual leaders in the East insisted it was inseparable from Hindu devotional practice.
August 26, 2002
Pak shopping for nuclear equipment, UK worried Special high-grade metals from a UK-based company are believed to have reached an uranium enrichment plant near Islamabad, a report in the Sunday Times said.
August 24, 2002
Florida doctor held for plotting attacks on mosques
Robert J Goldstein allegedly had a list of about 50 mosques in apart from 15 homemade explosive devices.
August 22, 2002
Al Qaeda video gives bomb-making lessons The lessons will allow anyone to arrive at a target city unarmed and put together explosive devices using common household materials.
Britain backs India's claim to Security Council seat At a press conference in London at the end of his three-day official visit to the United Kingdom, Deputy Prime Minister Lal Kishenchand Advani conveyed India's appreciation for Britain's support.
August 21, 2002
British Hindus, Sikhs seek a holy river closer home They are seeking to use part of the Aire river in west Yorkshire for the ash immersion ceremonies.
August 17, 2002
UK Charity Commission to Probe VHP, HSS Islamic organisations in London have demanded a ban on the UK chapters of the VHP, HSS, and RSS, alleging that they were responsible for attacks on Muslims in Gujarat.
August 16, 2002
DIASPORA
US court sentences Indian in credit card fraud case Syed Gul Mohammed Shah admitted selling 15 fraudulent credit cards for up to $2,000 each in the black market. He and Mohammed Jaweed Azmath were originally held in connection with the September 11 attacks.
Gul Mohammad's family shattered by verdict 'We don't know when he will emerge from this ordeal,' elder brother Zahir Shah said.
'I hope the Indian government identifies with him' Gul Mohammad Shah's lawyer says his client was overpunished, and hopes the Indian government will be lenient towards him.
California felicitates eminent Indians Commemorating India's Independence Day, the state assembly adopted a resolution honouring Indians who have contributed to diverse fields in California.
THE WAR ON TERROR
Kin of Sept 11 victims file $116 trillion suit Some 600 family members of the victims have charged three Saudi princes, several foreign banks and charities, and the Sudanese government with financing the attack on America.
US to quiz Taliban official about IC-814 hijack India would submit to the US questions to be asked of Wakil Ahmed Mutawakil, foreign minister of the Taliban regime.
OTHER REPORTS
Racial killing leaves South Asians jittery A mob killed Bangladeshi photojournalist Mianzor Rahman on August 12 after tensions had flared up between Bangladeshis and Puerto Ricans in New York's Ozone Park area.
August 15, 2002
Vajpayee to attend 9/11 memorial Heads of State from around the world will join the ceremony in course of which an eternal flame will be lit.
August 13, 2002
Temporary work visas down sharply in US The INS issued about 60,500 H-1B visas from October 2001 to June 2002, posting a 54 per cent decline from 130,700 visas issued during the same period in the previous fiscal year, the latest data released by the INS shows.
August 09, 2002
EXCLUSIVE!
'Kargil underlined army shortcomings A Joint Intelligence Center of the US Pacific Command report said the crisis underlined Indian army's shortcomings 'in intelligence, key equipment and inter-services coordination'.
Also Read: Fernandes pleads ignorance about report
DIASPORA State Department refuses diplomatic status to Agnihotri India has given Agnihotri the title of adviser to the Indian embassy in Washington and adviser is not a diplomatic position that is recognised by the State Department.
August 08, 2002
US court allows illegal Indian worker to seek damages This decision overturns the US Supreme Court's ruling that 'an illegal immigrant who was unlawfully fired could not seek back wages for the time he would have remained working'.
US rebuts Musharraf; says Osama responsible The Pakistani president in an interview to a US magazine had said, 'I did not think it possible that Osama sitting up there in the mountains could do it'.
August 07, 2002
UK race rights campaigner fined for row with police But Gurbux Singh got a £115,000 payoff after stepping down from his post following the drunken confrontation after the NatWest Tri-Series final.
August 06, 2002
Sept 11 hate crime victim's brother killed Sukhpal Singh Sodhi, brother of Balbir Singh Sodhi, the first South Asian killed in the hate crimes following the September 11 attacks was going home in his car when someone shot him.
Tommy Franks briefs Bush on new plan on Iraq
August 05, 2002
'Osama may not be behind Sept 11' 'I didn't think it possible that Osama sitting up there in the mountains could do it', the Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf told 'The New Yorker'.
August 03, 2002
Iraq's invitation to UN weapons inspector evokes mixed reaction While the US and the UK described it as a 'ploy', France and Russia described it as a 'positive step'.
August 02, 2002
US reopens arms smuggling case involving Pak govt Initially, the US government had tried to hush up the embarrassing incident, which occurred in June 1991 in the state of Florida, pleading 'diplomatic' and 'national reasons'.
Iraq does a volte face, invites UN arms expert for 'review' Foreign Minister Naji Sabri wrote to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan asking for the chief weapons inspector to visit Baghdad and discuss the return of arms inspectors into the country.
August 01, 2002
'Rajneeshites were earliest users of WMDs' US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defence Marshall Billingslea said 'the potential for terrorists and other non-state actors gaining access to weapons of mass destruction has raised the cost of failing to contain proliferation'.
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