Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Bangladeshi Beheaded In Saudi Arabia : 2


Saudi Arabia executed two more on Tuesday for killing and theft, the local media said.
A source of Bangladesh embassy in Riyadh said the convicts collected Bangladeshi passport illegally. Actually, they are citizens of Myanmar, known as Rohingyas, who lived in Bangladesh to their deserted homes.
The statement said the Bangladeshis were executed in the city of Jazan.
Interior ministry of Saudi Arabia confirmed it.
The ministry also warned of punishment against anyone who tried to commit crimes.
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Ruhul Kabir Rizvi In Jail


A Dhaka Court fixed May 3 BNP’s joint secretary general Ruhul Kabir Rizvi for hearing the prayers by police seeking Total 15 days of remand in two separate cases.
Two cases filed against him for exploding cocktails at Bangladesh Secretariat compound and torching a bus in the Prime Minister Office area on Sunday.
Rizvi was arrested from Kakrail area of the city on Monday night.
Tejgaon police filed the vehicle torching case against 43 leaders and activists of BNP-led 18-party alliance including Rizvi Sunday night.
After hearing the prayer, Metropolitan Magistrate Mohammad Hasibul Haque fixed May 3 as the next date of hearing and asked the IO to produce Rizvi before the court with a progress report of the investigation into the case.
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Canada Closed Visa Office In Bangladesh


A. K. M. Sarwar, 2fun News – Canada has closed all 3 visa offices in Bangladesh. From 30 April they have closed all visa offices. From now Bangladeshi people have to apply for Canada visa to the Canada ambassy in Singapore. Bangladeshi people have to complete these Canda visa process through private organization VSF office in Dhaka, Chittagong, Syllhet.
Canada Govt. has taken this decision to decrese the costs. Canda has closed Visa office in Germany, Malaysia and Japan also. But those who have applied for Visa before 30 April they will get the Visa from Bangladesh.
So from now, Candadian Visa will be given from Singaporean High Commission. An officer from High commission said Bangladeshi applicants have to apply through VSF Visa processing agents. After sending the application by VSF to Canadian High commission in Singapore, Visa officers will take decision about the Visa. VSF will take 875 taka as charge for the processing.

PM urges US to allow duty-free, quata-free access




A Correspondent
Habiganj: Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Monday urged the US government to allow duty-free and quota-free access to Bangladesh products to the huge American market.


USA is a big country and a big market. We’re doing business with many countries and it is our peoples’ demand to get duty-free and quota-free access (ofBangladesh products) to the US,” she said while speaking at the inauguration of Muchai Compressor Station at Bahubal in Habiganj.
Hasina said Bangladesh got duty-free and quota-free access to European Union and many other developed countries. “Why not USA?” she asked.
With US Ambassador Dan W Mozena present at the function, the Prime Minister said that the US is allowing duty-free and quota-free access to many other LDCs except Bangladesh. “But, why (notBangladesh) I don’t know?”
She also requested the US envoy to convey this message to the US government.
Hasina said that the Awami League government in its previous tenure only found US$ 25 million US investment in Bangladesh. “Later, we’ve been able to increase this to 1 billion US dollars,”
Mentioning that her government in its previous term allowed private investment in the power sector, she said that the present government has also passed a new law for Independent Power Producer (IPP) to increase power generation in the country.
She that her government is working ceaselessly to meet the country’s growing demand for gas. “We’ve taken steps so that there is no delay in fulfilling the formalities.”
Hasina expressed strong resolve to achieve rapid progress of the country and also her optimism to continue the pace of GDP growth, which was 6.7 percent in the last fiscal.
“My strong belief is that we’ll be able to do this, as we’ve been working with honesty and also wants the country to move ahead with further development,” she said.
Speaking on the occasion, US Ambassador to Bangladesh Dan W Mozena said that the partnership between the United States and Bangladesh is strong, and it is stronger in the power sector.
He said that Bangladesh is the single largest exporter to the US and the US is also the single largest investor in Bangladesh.
The US ambassador mentioned that his country is assisting Bangladesh to fulfill its demand in the power and energy sector so that it could emerge as an economic tiger inAsia.
Finance Minister AMA Muhith, State Minister for Energy and Power Brig Gen (retd) Enamul Haque, Energy Division Secretary Mezbahuddin and Chevron President for Asia Pacific Exploration and Production Company Ltd Melody Meyer also spoke at the function.
Chevron, a US-based international oil company, has installed the gas compressor station to increase gas supply to other parts of the country.
Officials said Muchai is the first of the three compressors Petrobangla has planned toinstall to boost the gas supply to the national grid. The two other compressor stations will be installed at Ashuganj in Brahmanbaria and Elenga in Tangail.
They said the installation of all the compressor stations will facilitate smooth gas transmission across the country.

Rice-loaded truck hijacked in Gazipur


aogaon: A Chittagong-bound rice loaded truck from Naogaon was hijacked in Joydevpur of Gazipur district early Sunday.

Driver of the truck Minol Hossain, 36, and his helper Tawfik, 25, was found lying in senseless condition beside a road at Bushdia at Gawsia in Rupganj upazila of Narayanganj district in the morning. Gawsia Fari police admitted them to a Narayanganj hospital.
Police said Monoranjan Roy the owner of a rice storage at Aratdar Patti at Parnaogaon hired a truck (Bogra ‘Ta’ 02-0392 and loaded it with 280 sacks of rice worth Tk 380,626 and 60 pieces of empty plastic drums worth Tk 150,000 to carry the goods to M/s Mehraj Store at Chaktai in Chittagong city on Saturday evening.
Naogaon police and owner of the truck Shyamal Saha of Alupatti of Parnaogaon suspected that members of rice truck-hijackers` gang intercepted the truck in Joydevpur and rubbed tranquilising ointment in the eyes of the driver and helper after tying them with ropes and dumped them at Bushdia Gawsia and decamped with the rice-loaded truck.
Both Shyamal and Monoranjan lodged a general diary with Naogaon Sadar Modelthana.
May Day today
• Staff Reporter
The historic May Day will be observed today in the country as elsewhere in the world with a renewed pledge to protect the rights of workers. The day is observed across the world every year since 1886 commemorating the supreme sacrifices of workers at the Hay Market in the United States to establish the rights of eight-hour working day and with a renewed pledge to uphold the rights of working class. The day is a public holiday. Different political and labor organizations, particularly the labor wings of political parties, professional bodies and cultural organizations have chalked out elaborate programs to celebrate the day.

Stray incidents mark 2nd day hartal

Stray incidents marked the last day of the second spell of the nationwide daylong hartal yesterday enforced by the BNP-led 18-party alliance. The shutdown was enforced to protest the government’s ‘failure to return’ BNP leader M Ilias Ali and his driver who remained missing since April 17 midnight. After the expiry of the second spell of hartal, the 18-party alliance announced a countrywide demonstration pro-gram for Wednesday to protest the filing of â€Å“false” cases against their leaders and activists, and demand the re-turn of missing BNP organizing secretary M Ilias Ali. BNP joint secretary general Ruhul Kabir Rizvi announced the program at a press briefing at the party’s Nayapal-tan central office in the afternoon. According to reports from across the country, the opposition-sponsored nationwide general strike ended on Monday with stray clashes between pickets and law enforcers and detention of a few opposition activists.

Rizvi at the briefing claimed that a number of opposition leaders and activists were injured in police attacks during the hartal. Police also detained a good number of pickets, he added without mentioning the number.
In the capital, the presence of opposition leaders and activists was thin on the streets on Monday during the hartal hours.
Police obstructed BNP men as they tried to bring out a procession in front of the BNP headquarters in the morning.
Activists of Bangladesh Chhatra League, the student wing of the ruling Awami League, with the help of law enforcers also barred the opposition men from taking out a procession in the city’s Adabar area. Police detained a BNP activist from the spot.
Pro-hartal activists set fire to a pickup van near Dainik Bangla crossing in the city at about 1:30pm.
Two crude bombs were exploded at Mouchak Crossing at about 9:30am while another three near Kamalapur Railway Station at about 12:30pm.
Meanwhile, police picked up BNP’s former deputy minister for health Sirajul Haque from Nayapaltan area around 7:40am.
Police conducted a search at the residence of BNP acting secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir in the city’s Uttara area early Monday.
Besides, Fakhrul along with other leaders of the 18-party alliance has been sued inconnection with hurling bombs at the Secretariat.
Party sources said police went to the house of Fakhrul in the wee small hours and searched all the rooms of his house.
However, police made no arrest or recovery during the raid when the BNP acting secretary general was not at the house. Two cases have been filed in connection with the torching of a vehicle near the Prime Minister’s Office and hurling bombs at the Secretariat during the hartal hours on Sunday.
A case was filed with Tejgaon Police Station against 38 leaders and activists of the main opposition BNP, including Amanullah Aman and Shahid Uddin Chowdhury Annie, on Sunday night in connection with the torching of the vehicle.
Another case was filed with Shahbagh Police Station in connection with the bomb blasts near the Home Ministry at the Secretariat where 28 named leaders and activists of the BNP-led 18-party alliance and some unnamed people were made accused.
Almost all modes of vehicles, except rickshaws and a few CNG-run auto-rickshaws, stayed off the streets fearing vandalism. All educational institutions, business establishments, most shops and shopping malls in the city remained closed. But the government offices remained opened as usual.
Riot police were posted at different important points in the capital. Like the previous spell of hartal, law enforcers kept the BNP central office at Nayapaltan cordoned off since the morning. No BNP leader and activist were allowed to enter the office.
In Khulna, at least 10 people were injured as police clashed with pro-hartal activists atTV Boundary RoadHaji Mohsin Road and Daulatpur of the city in the morning.
Police detained 14 BNP ward-level leaders and activists from Kotwali and Sonadangathana areas while they were picketing. In Noakhali, police arrested nine BNP activists from different parts of the district on Sunday night. The BNP-led 18-party alliance called the dawn-to-dusk hartal for Sunday and Monday as the government has failed to rescue BNP organising secretary and ex-MP Ilias Ali and his driver, Ansar Ali, by Saturday, a deadline set earlier by BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia.
Background:
Former MP and BNP secretary M Ilias Ali and his driver Ansar Ali went missing on April 17 
midnight from the capital.
Ilias Ali's wife Tahsina Rushdir said her husband left their Banani residence on that night and has been missing since then along with his driver. His car was found abandoned on a street near his Banani residence early Wednesday.
BNP blames the ruling party men and security agencies for the mysterious disappearance’ of Ilias and his driver. But the government denies the allegation.
Earlier, the main opposition enforced hartal for three days on the trot on April 22-24 to press for the return of Ilias.
The party also held countrywide demonstrations on Thursday and Saturday.

Obama pledges end to Afghan war

Barack Obama
US President Barack Obama has pledged to "finish the job" and end the Afghan war, addressing the US public live from a military base in Afghanistan.
Speaking a year after Osama Bin Laden's death, he thanked US troops and hailed plans to end combat operations.
Obama arrived in Afghanistan on a surprise visit to sign an agreement on future Afghan-US ties with President Hamid Karzai, ahead of a Nato summit.
Hours after his speech a blast was reported in the Afghan capital, Kabul.
Witnesses said the blast was in eastern part of the city, with one report saying it hit the Jalalabad road, where several foreign military bases are located.
The Kabul police chief told BBC that two suicide bombers carried out the attack in the Pule Charkhi area of the city, but there is no word on casualties.
Earlier, Obama said signing the pact was "a historic moment" for both nations.
The visit and TV address come as correspondents say public patience with the war in Afghanistan is wearing thin.
In the speech, beamed back to prime-time evening audiences in US, the president said that at the upcoming Nato summit, to be held in Chicago, the alliance would "set a goal for Afghan forces to be in the lead for combat operations across the country next year".
Nato has already committed to withdrawing from combat operations in Afghanistan by the end of 2014.
"I will not keep Americans in harm's way a single day longer than is absolutely required for our national security," Obama said. "But we must finish the job we started in Afghanistan, and end this war responsibly."
Correspondents say Obama's words appear to be aimed at showing American voters he is pursuing a strategy to wind down the war, while reassuring Afghans in the face of a continuing Taliban insurgency.
'Path to peace'
About 23,000 of the 88,000 US troops currently in the country are expected to leave Afghanistan by the summer, with all US and Nato troops out by the end of 2014.
"It is time to renew America," Obama said towards the end of his remarks.
"My fellow Americans, we have travelled through more than a decade under the dark cloud of war. Yet here, in the pre-dawn darkness of Afghanistan, we can see the light of a new day on the horizon," Obama said.
"The Iraq war is over. The number of our troops in harm's way has been cut in half, and more will be coming home soon. We have a clear path to fulfil our mission in Afghanistan, while delivering justice to al-Qaeda."
During the speech, Obama outlined the agreement he had just signed with Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
The BBC's Paul Adams says 20 months of negotiation finally produced an agreement after differences over night raids by special forces and the handling of prisoners were ironed out.
According to the US president, the document outlines plans for training Afghan forces and supporting counter terrorism efforts, as well as "Afghan commitments to transparency and accountability".
Obama also spoke of a "negotiated peace" with the Taliban, saying that if insurgents break with al-Qaeda, and follow the "path to peace", there can be reconciliation.
He said that ahead of the Chicago meeting of Nato, he had made it clear to Pakistan that it could be an "equal partner in the process".
Pakistan and US relations soured after Mr Obama launched the raid that killed bin Laden inside the country's border.
"In pursuit of a durable peace, America has no designs beyond an end to al-Qaeda safe-havens, and respect for Afghan sovereignty."
Obama also rejected calls to leave Afghanistan before the 2014 Nato timeline, saying "we must finish the job we started in Afghanistan, and end this war responsibly".
In the wake of the agreement, the US is to designate Afghanistan as a major non-Nato ally, US officials are quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.

Nor'wester kills 4 in Thakurgaon



Four people were killed and over 50 injured as a nor'wester swept through Pirganj upazila of Thakurgaon Tuesday night.
The deceased are: Abdul Alimul, 28, Rina Akter, 8, daughter of Yunus Ali, and Sakibul, 9, son of Mohsen Ali of Jagannathpur village in Boirchuna union, and Sharifunnesa, 70, of Battala Hazirhat village in Jaborhat union of the upazila.
Of the injured, 27 were admitted to Dinajpur and Rangpur medical college hospitals, reports our Thakurgaon correspondent.
Abdur Rouf, upazila nirbahi officer of Pirganj, confirmed the correspondent that four people were killed in the storm that lashed the upazila around 8:00pm and continued for 30 minutes.
The nor’wester damaged a number of houses and a vast tract of crop field, the UNO said adding that at least 25 villages of Boirchuna and Jabarhat unions are badly affected by the storm.
Upazila administration and local government bodies are working to assess the damage caused by the storm, the UNO said.
There is no electricity in the villages since Tuesday night as a number of electric poles were topples during the storm.
The uprooted trees blocked the road suspending communication between Pirganj and the upazila headquarters

Judge embarrassed to hear BNP men's bail pleas



The April 30 file photo shows a pick-up truck set alight at Motijheel in the capital during an opposition shutdown.
A High Court judge on Wednesday felt embarrassed to hear the bail petitions of 27 BNP men including party acting secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir in connection with two cases filed for violence during Sunday's hartal hours.
Justice AKM Shahidul Huq, the junior judge of a division bench of the HC led-by Justice M Siddiqur Rahman Mia, felt embarrassed but did not mention any reason behind his feeling embarrassed.
Earlier, both the judges refused to accept the petitions for hearing since those were not enlisted in the cause list for Wednesday.
Later, Justice M Siddiqur Rahman Mia asked the defence lawyers to move the petitions before this bench on May 6 after enlisting the petitions in its cause list.
As the bench refused to hear the petitions, the pro-BNP lawyers moved the petitions before another HC bench comprising Justice M Enayetur Rahim and Justice Sheikh Md Zakir Hossain.
This bench also expressed inability to hear the petitions since it has no jurisdiction to hear any bail petition.
Twenty-seven accused leaders and workers of the main opposition BNP submitted two separate bail petitions Wednesday morning, two days after the cases were filed against him.
Police filed the cases with Shahbagh and Tejgaon police stations late Sunday in connection with Sunday's violence during hartal hours.

State minister terms Illias' wife a widow



State Minister for Labour Begum Mannujan Sufian has caused a stir when she termed M Ilias Ali's wife as a 'widow' and urged her to inform the premier about 'the killers' of her husband during her meeting with the PM this evening.
The state minister also claimed that Tahsina Rushdir Luna, the wife of missing BNP leader, knows well "who killed" her husband.
“Ilias Ali’s wife, the widow, I want to say that you know in your heart who really killed your husband”, Mannujan said.
She was addressing a May Day programme at the Osmani Memorial Auditorium in the capital on Tuesday. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was also present at the program.
“I perceive your feelings that you cannot express what is in your heart..., whenever you appeared on the television and you know well who abducted your husband, where he is now, whether alive or dead, I don’t know… Allah knows.” she said.
Refuting BNP’s allegation that the government is behind the disappearance of Ilias, she said, “Sheikh Hasina is Bangabandhu’s daughter and she could never have done this.”

Why hartal during public exams not illegal: HC



The High Court on Wednesday issued a rule upon the leaders of the major political parties and government to explain in three weeks why imposing hartal during the public examinations should not be declared illegal.
In the rule, the court also asked them to explain why they (the political leaders) should not be directed to refrain from imposing hartal during the public examinations.
The HC came up with the rule, following a writ petition filed by Advocate Md Younus Ali Akond challenging the legality of imposing hartal during the public examinations in the country.
The HC bench of Justice AHM Shamsuddin Chowdhury Manik and Justice Jahangir Hossain Selim also requested 15 lawyers to act as amicus curiae (friends of court) to place their legal opinions before the bench during hearing on the rule.
Younus Ali Akond filed the writ petition as public interest litigation on April 16 saying although hartal is a fundamental right of political parties, the academic activities of students are being hampered due to the hartal during the examinations schedule.
Appearing in the examinations is also a fundamental right of the students, the petition added.
The BNP secretary general, ruling Awami League general secretary, leader of the opposition in parliament, education secretary, home secretary and secretary to the Bangladesh Jatiya Sangsad secretariat have been made respondent to the rule.

Bengali 'hot babe' Paoli Dam gains from bed scene


After working in the much-talked about 'hot' scene in Sri Lankan famous movie maker Vimukthi Jayasundara's latest film 'Chhatrak' [Fungus], Bengali actress Paoli Dam has now rocked the entire film industry in India, including Bollywood, as Vikram Bhatt has signed her for his next movie named Hate Story. It is also indicated that few more directors from Bollywood are already eyeing on the Bengali 'hot babe' - Paoli Dam.
"Nobody from Bollywood or Tollywood has done anything like this and I had no frame of reference to work from. I did not know how to prepare for the scene," says the dusky and sensuous Paoli.
She goes on to say that she spent a lot of time with the director Vimukthi. "We discussed the film as a whole and then zeroed in on the intimate scenes. It is a political comment which goes much beyond the oral sex portrayed in it. I have complete faith in my director and that is why I did it," she adds. The film is making rounds of international film festivals beginning with Cannes this year.
On the other another heartthrob of Indian cine industry, Vidya Balan has acted in a film named Dirty Picture, where she gave total naked pose in a number of sequences. Vidya is quite at ease about portraying Silk Smitha, the item dance girl in cine circle as well as entertainment industry, who helped the box office coffers of many Southern films jingle with her oomph though with a body far removed from today's fashionable zero figure. In fact, she would be considered obese by today's standards. She was extremely popular in Telegu, Kannada, Tamil and Malayam cinema, but her films were often being classified as soft porn.
Producer of the film, Ekta Kapoor had to wait for almost two years to finalize the script of the movie. Vidya Balan posed totally nude in the film, which already created tremendous sensation in the Indian cine circle. But, possibly the bed scene of paoli Dam is even hotter, where she not only performed in a number of sequences of oral sex, but also gave the very seductive performance, being visibly swimming in the bed like a snake.
Commenting on Vidya and Paoli, cine critics say, both are young and talented actors, who definitely succeeded in giving best performances, in the most difficult sexual scenes in the movies. On the other hand, many critics expressed concern over Bollywood gradually promoting soft-porn in their movies.
Paoli Dam came into lime light following her brilliant performance in Goutam Ghosh's movie 'Moner Manush', where she played the role of a baul. Cine critics in West Bengal and Bangladesh saw 'Suchitra Sen' type brilliance and qualities in her.
Vidya Balan said, "It is no sin becoming nude in the film. This is part of our work. We do not have to be hesitant at all. I enjoyed my work. If people love to see my exposed body, let them get entertained seeing this. We are entertainers, and there is nothing wrong doing bed scenes or nude scenes."
Supporting the sexual sequences in sub-continental movies, a famous cine critic said, "In Hollywood actors even have real sex, before or after they do the bed scene for movies. It is very natural for human being to comfort their sexual desires or fires of passion, if they become hot while working. I know Jennifer Lopez or Salma Hayek directly goes into bedroom right after they do any bed scene and have sex. It is nothing wrong."

USA wants 10 most wanted Al Qaeda men


As the anniversary of the death of notorious Al Qaeda kingpin Osama Bin Laden is approaching, the United States administration and its intelligence agencies are still hinting 12 most wanted Al Qaeda men, who are still on hiding. This week marks one year since Osama bin Laden's death. We're hearing a lot about what the anniversary means for the larger struggle against Islamist violence around the world. Most assessments of the "War on Terror" fall into one of two categories -- al-Qaeda is stronger than ever or al-Qaeda is dead or dying. Whatever you think about al-Qaeda specifically, the global movement of violent Islamism is more complicated.
Analyst Seth Jones is leading the argument that al-Qaeda is doing better than we realize, that "the obituaries are premature" (Jones also has a book coming out soon taking a similar position). This argument is based in part on the idea that al-Qaeda's affiliates are part of the same larger collective as the and Pakistan-based group that Osama bin Laden helped lead. Mary Habeck says that al-Qaeda in Pakistan commands its subordinate groups in Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, and the Sahel through "broad strategic guidance and resources as needed, but not specific daily orders with daily reportage back up the chain of command." This control is not perfect, she concedes, but the arguments rests on the assumption that the groups are so similar, and so interlinked, that they can all be accurately referred to as "al-Qaeda."
Of course, lots of groups take on the role of advisers and mentors. The U.S. is fond of using proxies in many wars -- the mujahidin who defeated the Soviet Army in Afghanistan in the 1980s, for example -- but we don't assume that "mujahidin" and "American forces" are analytically interchangeable. Their goals and interests aligned for a time and thus they joined forces; they did not, however, become the same force. The relationship between Pakistan-based al-Qaeda Central (AQC) and its many affiliates is similar: they came into being separately, and only later did they reach out to the central group in Pakistan for legitimacy and support.
Terrorism is not getting worse. According to data released by the National Counter Terrorism Center on worldwide terrorist attacks, current levels of violence, though high, are far below their peak in 2006. The most recent year for which the NCTC has data, 2011, shows only a moderate reduction in violence from 2010, but it is still a reduction in violence.
Probably the most difficult challenge facing the U.S. right now is not so much al-Qaeda itself but the growing number of insurgencies reaching out to al-Qaeda for legitimacy and support. These groups are spread across the Middle East and North Africa -- coincidentally, perhaps, along the periphery of the Arab Spring, in countries that did not experience a rapturous collapse of their tyrannical regimes. They confound easy attempts at labeling, too, since they combine elements of insurgencies, terrorist movements, local concerns (and local names -- al-Qaeda in Iraq, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, and so on), and global allies.
The US administration has recently released the list of "Dirty Dozens", who are believed to be continuing jihadist activities from unknown hideouts. The most wanted dirty-dozens of Al Qaeda are:
Ayman al-Zawahiri
A physician, long time deputy to Osama Bin Laden who recently was named leader of al Qaeda following Bin Laden's death. He has been seen and heard in numerous al Qaeda videos and audio tapes on the web. He is on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list, was indicted in the U.S. for his role in the 1998 bombings of the US Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Saif al-Adel
A member of the senior leadership of al Qaeda who is believed to be in Iran. He is on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list and was indicted by the U.S. in connection with the 1998 bombings of the US Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Anas al-Liby
A computer expert for al Qaeda who is on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list, and has been indicted for his role in the 1998 bombings of the US Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Ibrahim al-Asiri
Suspected of being the chief bombmaker for AQAP, Asiri is believed to be responsible for designing the explosive devices used in the unsuccessful Christmas Day 2009 plot to blow up a US airliner as it landed in Detroit and in the cargo plane bomb plot in 2010.
Adnan el Shukrijumah
A senior leader of al Qaeda's external operations program who is on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list and has been indicted by the U.S. in the 2009 plot to attack the New York City subway system as well as targets in the United Kingdom.
Hakimullah Mehsud
A leader of the Pakistan Taliban with close ties to al Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban. He claimed responsibility for the 2009 bombing a the Khost Forward Operating Base which killed 7 CIA employees. He is on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list.
Abu Yahy al-Libi
Islamic scholar, high ranking member of al Qaeda, seen as the public face of al Qaeda, appearing frequently in internet videos.
Adam Gadahn
American propagandist for al Qaeda who is frequently seen on al Qaeda website videos. He is on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorists List and has been indicted for treason and material support for al Qaeda.
Mullah Mohammad Omar
Leader of the Afghanistan Taliban who allowed Osama Bin Laden and al Qaeda safe haven in Afghanistan when the Taliban controlled the country prior to the 9/11 terrorist attack on the U.S.
Nasser Al Wahishi
Leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), former private secretary to Osama Bin Laden. He has vowed to avenge Bin Laden's death.
Sirajuddin Haqqani
Senior leader of the Haqqani network in Afghanistan which maintains close ties to al Qaeda and who is believed to have planned an assassination attempt against Afghani President Hamid Karzai.
Wali Ur Rehman
Senior member of Pakistani Taliban who has participated in cross border attacks against US and coalition forces in Afghanistan.
Osama's last wish:
Osama bin Laden bemoaned "disaster after disaster" inflicted by the US onslaught on al-Qaeda before his death a year ago and even mulled changing his terror group's name.
What Al Qaeda's plans now (CNN):
On May 16 last year, a 22-year-old Austrian named Maqsood Lodin was being questioned by police in Berlin. He had recently returned from Pakistan via Budapest, Hungary, and then traveled overland to Germany. His interrogators were surprised to find that hidden in his underpants were a digital storage device and memory cards.
Buried inside them was a pornographic video called "Kick Ass" -- and a file marked "Sexy Tanja."
Several weeks later, after laborious efforts to crack a password and software to make the file almost invisible, German investigators discovered encoded inside the actual video a treasure trove of intelligence -- more than 100 al Qaeda documents that included an inside track on some of the terror group's most audacious plots and a road map for future operations.
Future plots include the idea of seizing cruise ships and carrying out attacks in Europe similar to the gun attacks by Pakistani militants that paralyzed the Indian city of Mumbai in November 2008. Ten gunmen killed 164 people in that three-day rampage.
Terrorist training manuals in PDF format in German, English and Arabic were among the documents, too, according to intelligence sources.
U.S. intelligence sources tell CNN that the documents uncovered are "pure gold;" one source says that they are the most important haul of al Qaeda materials in the last year, besides those found when U.S. Navy SEALs raided Osama bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, a year ago and killed the al Qaeda leader.
One document was called "Future Works." Its authorship is unclear, but intelligence officials believe it came from al Qaeda's inner core. It may have been the work of Younis al Mauretani, a senior al Qaeda operative until his capture by Pakistani police in 2011.
The document appears to have been the product of discussions to find new targets and methods of attack. German investigators believe it was written in 2009 -- and that it remains the template for al Qaeda's plans.
Investigative journalist Yassin Musharbash, a reporter with the German newspaper Die Zeit, was the first to report on the documents. One plan: to seize passenger ships. According to Musharbash, the writer "says that we could hijack a passenger ship and use it to pressurize the public."
Musharbash takes that to mean that the terrorists "would then start executing passengers on those ships and demand the release of particular prisoners."
The plan would include dressing passengers in orange jump suits, as if they were al Qaeda prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, and then videotaping their execution.
Lodin and a man called Yusuf Ocak, who allegedly traveled back to Europe with him, are now on trial in Berlin where they are pleading not guilty. Ocak was detained in Vienna two weeks after Lodin's arrest.
According to a senior Western counterterrorism official, their names were on a watch list, and when they handed over documents at a European border crossing, their names registered with counterterrorism agencies.
Both men have pleaded not guilty to terrorism charges. Ocak is also charged with helping to form a group called the German Taliban Mujahedeen, and is alleged to have made a video for the group threatening attacks in Germany.
Prosecutors believe the pair met at a terrorist training camp in Pakistan's tribal territories and were sent back to Europe to recruit a network of suicide bombers.
"We do not know what those men were up to but there are certain files of information that would make it plausible that they were probably thinking of a Mumbai-style attack," says Musharbash.
In the fall of 2010, a year after the document was written, European intelligence agencies were scrambling to investigate a Mumbai-style plot involving German and other European militants -- which sparked an unprecedented U.S. State Department travel warning for Americans in Europe.
"I think it is plausible to think that the 'Future Works' document is part of that particular project," says Musharbash.
"Future Works" suggests al Qaeda was an organization under great pressure, without a major attack to its name in several years, harried by Western intelligence. If anything, its predicament is even more dire today.
"The document delivers very clearly the notion that al Qaeda knows it is being followed very closely," Musharbash tells CNN. "It specifically says that Western intelligence agencies have become very good at spoiling attacks, that they have to come up with new ways and better plotting."
Part of the response, according to the document, should be to train European jihadists quickly and send them home -- rather than use them as fighters in Afghanistan and Pakistan -- with instructions on how to keep in secret contact with their handlers.
What emerges from the document is a twin-track strategy -- with the author apparently convinced that al Qaeda needs low-cost, low-tech attacks (perhaps such as the recent gun attacks in France carried out by Mohammed Merah) to keep security services preoccupied while it plans large-scale attacks on a scale similar to 9/11.
Those already under suspicion in Europe and elsewhere would be used as decoys, while others would prepare major attacks.
That is yet to materialize, but Musharbash believes a complex gun attack in Europe is still on al Qaeda's radar.
"I believe that the general idea is still alive and I believe that as soon as al Qaeda has the capacities to go after that scenario, they will immediately do it," he says.
While "Future Works" does not include dates or places, nor specific plans, it appears to be a brainstorming exercise to seize the initiative -- and reinstate al Qaeda on front pages around the world.
Wherefrom Al Qaeda is operating now?
It is a huge question in the minds of United States administration as well as intelligence agencies in particular and the entire international community of counter-terrorism specialist to determine the current strategies of Al Qaeda and its bases, especially after the death of Osama Bin Laden. While the international focus is still very much within Afghanistan and frontiers of Pakistan, which is still considered by the US administration as the base of Al Qaeda operations, it is learnt from a number of sources that Al Qaeda has basically spread in past few months onto rough mountainous areas in Indian and Pakistan portion of Kashmir as well as a vast track of areas in Nepal. Although Al Qaeda has been using the Nepalese land for past several years, especially considering its strategic advantages of finding easy hide-outs within various mountains in Nepal, since past five-sin months, Al Qaeda's presence in Nepal has greatly increased. It is learnt that the Al Qaeda jihadists have established a kind of unseen alliance with the Maoists in Nepal and under the protection of the Maoists; Al Qaeda terrorists are taking combat training. Al Qaeda also believed to have been making investments in various businesses in Nepal, keeping the Nepalese nationals at the forefront, which helps the Islamist terror outfit in generating fund as well as getting sympathy of the locals.