2014, സെപ്റ്റംബർ 7, ഞായറാഴ്‌ച

Over 100 killed in Punjab torrential rains, floods

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LAHORE: The Punjab government has decided to declare flood emergency and expedite relief activities in the face of floods and torrential rains which killed over 100 people.

Water level in all the rivers has surged, causing evacuation of large number of people from different areas of the country.

The Pakistan Army evacuated flood affected people form areas lying alongside the Chenab river. Met Office said the Chenab river was flowing at the level of 818000 cusecs at Head Marala.

As many as 103 people have been killed and 294 others injured in Punjab in recent rains and floods.
 

Eight-member team make away with Rs eight crore diamond

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KOLLAM: Eight-member team, who had impersonated as diamond buyers,  made away with a diamond worth Rs eight crore from a house at Iravipuram. The incident happened around noon yesterday.

According to the members of the house, diamonds were treasure trove they spotted some time ago while demolishing their family temple.

A middleman involved in the robbery has been admitted to hospital.      
The stolen item is a white silky diamond classified under Natural Rough Diamond. It weighs 25 gram and is of 24 carat, say the police.

The family members have been treating the treasure piously by lighting lamp in front of it. Recently Sindhu’s son got information from a private institution in Ernakulam that the diamonds could be precious and worth Rs 50 crore. After this, the family started thinking of selling the diamonds with the help of the son’s friend.

Coming to know about diamond collection, the eight-member team accompanied by Savia John, the middleman and a native of Neendakara approached the family a few months. The business didn’t happen as the family demanded Rs 50 crore for the diamond, while the team bargained to lower the rate to Rs eight crore. The team left after that.     

The team revisited the house yesterday and made away with the diamond after pretending to be examining the diamond. However, Savia John, while making an attempt to flee, entered into a tussle with Sindu’s son. The local people, who crowded in front of the house, caught hold of Savia and turned him in to the police. His car was also confiscated by the police.

In the midst of interrogation, Savia is said to have expressed bodily discomfort and he was soon admitted to hospital.

Meanwhile, the policemen led by Kollam Assistant Commissioner Lalji have intensified search for the burglar’s team.

2014, സെപ്റ്റംബർ 5, വെള്ളിയാഴ്‌ച

Australia ready to join US coalition on Iraq, Julie Bishop says

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Newport, Wales: The US is drawing together a coalition of nations for new military action in Iraq, including air strikes against the Islamic State extremists, and Australia is ready to play its part, Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop says.
"We are keen to play our part in ensuring that this heightened terrorist risk to Australia can be tackled head-on," Ms Bishop said.
The Australian military are already drawing up contingency plans to send forces into the region to deal with the global threat posed by Islamic State, formerly known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
However before the government gives final approval it wants to see who is in the coalition and get a firm timetable and clear objectives for the proposed air strikes so "we know what success looks like", Defence Minister David Johnston said.
The plan will be drawn up over the next few weeks.
Ms Bishop and Mr Johnston spent Thursday and Friday in meetings with allies at the biennial NATO summit in Wales.
One issue that dominated formal and bilateral meetings at the summit was the "sudden and bloody emergence of ISIL as a terrorist organisation that not only has an impact in the Middle East … but also globally," Ms Bishop said.
At a meeting on Friday morning of foreign and defence ministers, Ms Bishop spoke of her concerns about Australian fighters leaving to carry out "brutal, bloody terrorist activities in Syria and Iraq".
The meeting, hosted by US Secretary of State John Kerry and Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel, and including British Defence Minister Michael Fallon and Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, discussed "supporting a US-led coalition that will seek to tackle ISIL head on," Ms Bishop said.
"The US air strikes have had some significant impact but there is more that needs to be done to ensure that ISIL doesn't continue to grow and spread its poison beyond the region."
Ms Bishop said the meeting discussed a range of options as to how the Islamic State threat can be eliminated.
"We talked about a range of ways that the countries can assist a US-co-ordinated approach."
Australia has already helped out with humanitarian supply drops and in supplying weapons to the Kurdish Peshmerga.
"The countries that have expressed a willingness to tackle ISIL head-on have also looked at what more can be done in terms of air strikes and Australia will respond when a formal request is made," Ms Bishop said.
"The red line is combat troops on the ground. There is no interest from any country present to commit combat troops but there is much that can be done to seek to combat ISIL in other ways and Australia is prepared to play its part."
ISIL was a direct domestic threat to Australia because of "hardened homegrown terrorists" who could return to Australia after fighting in Iraq.
"This is a far greater threat than we faced after Afghanistan," Ms Bishop said.
"The bigger risk could well be doing nothing and enabling [ISIL] to spread its poison and ideology way beyond Syria, Iraq, Lebanon. That's the concern that Australia faces and we take it very seriously."
But no formal request has yet come through, Ms Bishop said, so Australia has not yet committed to joining the action.
"We would weigh the options, we would weigh the risks. There must be a clear and proportionate role for Australia, there would have to be a humanitarian objective and there would have to be a realistic assessment of what resources and assets would be required and in what timeframe."
The humanitarian element came from ISIL attacking innocent civilians throughout Iraq, Syria and beyond.
Mr Johnston said contingency planning has been under way "from a very early point" in anticipation of air strikes, however the planning is at an early stage.
"We are some distance from specific requests," he said. "But naturally in the face of this tantamount genocide the Australian Defence Force starts to be ready."
"Let's see what the combined coalition wants to do, let's see who's in the coalition, let's see the inclusiveness of the government in Baghdad and let's consult with our friends and our allies, particularly the US as to the proper way forward."
"There's a number of very strong capabilities that we have."
The plan would need clear, defined, feasible objectives with a clear duration of the operation and "some definition of what success looks like," Mr Johnston said.
"We need to see the plan … to understand the length and breadth of the plan."
Fairfax Media understands the next key dates are the formation of a new government in Iraq and then a global leaders meeting to be convened by US President Barack Obama in New York later this month, before the new session of the United Nations General Assembly.
 

One person commits suicide every 40 seconds: World Health Organisation Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/one-person-commits-suicide-every-40-seconds-world-health-organisation-20140905-10cq0s.html#ixzz3CSFqSPgp

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Geneva: One person commits suicide every 40 seconds - more than all the yearly victims of wars and natural disaster - with the highest toll among the elderly, the United Nations said on Thursday. In its first report on suicide, the UN's World Health Organisation blamed intense media coverage when celebrities kill themselves for fuelling the problem.
"Suicide is an amazing public health problem. There is one suicide every 40 seconds - it is a huge number," said Shekhar Saxena, director of WHO's mental health department, at the presentation of the report in Geneva. "Suicide kills more than conflicts, wars and natural catastrophes," she said. "There are 1.5 million violent deaths every year in the world, of which 800,000 are suicides."
Some of the highest rates of suicide are found in central and eastern Europe and in Asia, with 25 per cent occurring in rich countries, the report says. Men are almost twice as likely as women to take their own lives.
"Globally, suicide rates are highest in people aged 70 years and over. In some countries, however, the highest rates are found among the young," WHO said. "Notably, suicide is the second leading cause of death in 15-29 year-olds globally."


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/one-person-commits-suicide-every-40-seconds-world-health-organisation-20140905-10cq0s.html#ixzz3CSFyJYo8

Iraq delays delivery of RAAF arms to Kurds

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A much-needed RAAF arms delivery to Kurdish troops battling the brutal Islamic State was grounded in Baghdad for a day because of an Iraqi government delay.
Kurdish leaders in the country's north have expressed anger at what they see as Baghdad's meddling over international arms deliveries, underscoring the sensitivities in the fragmented nation, which is under threat from the onslaught by the  extremists.
The revelations came as Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Defence Minister David Johnston discussed Australia's possible military involvement in Iraq with counterparts from NATO at a summit in Wales.
Dr Rowsch Shaways, the outgoing deputy prime minister of Iraq and former Peshmerga commander, said long-standing tensions between Baghdad and the Kurdish regional government were delaying the arrival of these weapons being delivered by Australia and Western partners. He accused the Iraqi government of preventing the delivery of the weapons in order to "keep the Peshmerga weak – a policy that has been a constant of the Baghdad government for years".
An official from the Ministry of the Peshmerga repeated the allegations.
RAAF C-17 transport planes have delivered two loads of weapons and ammunition to the Kurdish city of Erbil in northern Iraq in the past week, as part of a co-ordinated international effort to bolster the Kurdish Peshmerga forces, who are bearing the brunt of fighting Islamic State in the north.
In both cases, the Iraqi government has given its approval for the deliveries. The deliveries both needed to go through Baghdad to clear customs.
But Fairfax Media understands that on the second occasion, Baghdad officials temporarily rescinded their approval, leaving the RAAF plane and its crew stuck on the ground in the capital for about 24 hours. The approval was then reinstated, allowing the delivery to Erbil to go ahead.
This is understood to have reflected Baghdad's view that Western efforts including the arms deliveries should be helping Iraq as a country, not just the Kurds in the north.
The ADF is expected to carry out further weapons and munitions drops to the Kurds in coming days.
The Abbott government is considering contributing to an expanded, US-led air strike campaign in Iraq, possibly with Super Hornet fighter planes.
The NATO leaders agreed that bigger sanctions, not direct military intervention, would be the best way to push Russia out of Ukraine.
With Nick Miller
The story Ir

Outraged By Rape And Inequality, Indian Women Seek Justice Through Entrepreneurship

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BANGALORE — In India, women are frequently mistreated, rape is so prevalent that tourists are scared to go, and female victims fear reporting violent crimes.
That’s the country’s reputation, at least — particularly since the horrific December 2012 gang rape thattook the life of a young woman.
But now, thousands of Indian women are fighting back, eager to show the rest of the world that, despite the real problems they face in India, they’re not just victims.
They’re embracing women’s empowerment — through business.
In cafes, garages and shared workspaces across Bangalore, home to India’s lucrative tech industry, they’re launching startups and growing businesses.
They’re the IT-girls of Bangalore.
Atta Galatta coffee shop is a typical scene for these pioneers. Offering frothy caffeinated drinks to its trendy clientele, the place would not look out of place in Seattle or Palo Alto. Rows of books line the walls, sofas are adorned with cushions and several tables are occupied by young women, hunched over their laptops. Despite the comfy surroundings, they mean business.
There is chat flying around about domain names, app building and investor pitches over fat-free lattes.
At one table sits 30-year-old entrepreneur Malini Gowrishankar, busy making calls while scanning her screen.
“This is my office, I come here every day,” says smiley Gowrishankar, who runs F5 escapes, an online travel business for women.
“It’s a convenient place to work and there is a creative buzz here which I like,” she adds.
As a travel site for women in India, F5 faces an uphill battle, owing to the Dehli gang rape, which revealed the systematic abuse of women in the country.
But for many women, like Gowrishankar, the brutal incident gave her the push she needed to start her business.
“I wanted to help women to understand it is safe to travel without your family. There is no tradition for solo women travelers in India and I wanted to change that, create a business which helps women feel safe whilst they are experiencing new things,” she says.
Gowrishankar’s F5 currently offers both customized and group tours to female travelers, a business idea she says is unique in India.
“Women make great entrepreneurs because we may have a better understanding of our own market segment and we have the tenacity to run the business long-term. My business is low on overheads and high on innovation,” she says.
Bangalore’s position as India’s start-up capital is undeniable. According to the World Startup Report, 41 percent of India’s startups are now based in Bangalore. Over 10,000 of them emerged from Bangalore last year alone. About one-third are run by women — the number has doubled in recent years, thanks to the shift in attitudes.
“Being an entrepreneur is now cool,” says Niti Shree, who runs Headstart Networking events for the city’s startups.
“In the past, Indian parents wanted their daughters to get married and have kids but now more and more are accepting that women want to take charge of their lives. Each event we do, we get more women coming. So much so that we will soon run women-only events,” she said.
Bangalore’s key startup hubs are located in the regions of Koramangala and Indiranagar, where thousands of innovative small businesses are emerging, powered by the enormous opportunities of a country with over 1.2 billion people and a brand-hungry middle class.
India is a nascent market for many products and services that have been around in the West for years.
That was a discovery made by the founder of another Bangalore startup, the specialist bra fitting serviceButtercups.in.
“I worked in the lingerie industry for years and measured over 3,000 women over the years and realized there were no properly sized bras available for women to buy in India,” says 37-year-old founder of Buttercups.in, Arpita Ganesh.
Her idea was ready, and there was a demand for it. She even created an app that helps women to find out their correct size, which became massively popular. But starting up her business was tough.
Convincing male investors that women need better fitting bras was often awkward. India is a conservative country where women don’t even shake hands with male colleagues. “I’ve met many investors, most of whom are men, who were genuinely interested in my business but they were simply too embarrassed to talk about it directly to me,” she says.
But Bangalore’s women are resourceful and Ganesh, a determined entrepreneur, decided to get around India’s crowd funding ban by offering her customers a chance to pre-order the products online. She raised nearly $7,000, which in India is serious money.
Finding funding for a startup is difficult for women because traditionally bank loans have been borderline impossible for women, thanks to archaic rules that often require a husband’s or father’s assets as a loan guarantee or land as a collateral.
According to a recent study by the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation, less than 30 percent of the financing needed for women-run businesses came through the traditional route of banks, cooperatives, micro lenders and financial institutions.
In comparison, male entrepreneurs get over 70 percent of their financing from official lenders.
The IFC report estimates that the total financial requirement for women entrepreneurs was $158 billion in 2012 but they only had access to around $42 billion from official lenders.
Apart from the institutions’ strict financial rules for women, investors are wary of female-run startups because the phenomena is new in India.
“A lot of female entrepreneurs have to rely on the F&F — family and friends — route of funding. Most investors are very focused on quick growth and mass products, not long-term profitability. And they can be wary of women entrepreneurs,” Ganesh notes.
Despite the challenges, the buzz and determination among the young women are tangible, and support is growing fast.
Bangalore has a wide variety of informal meetings such as Open Coffee Club and HeadStart, which help female entrepreneurs with training opportunities, pitching for investors and introductions. The city is also home for several accelerator programs run by large companies such as Microsoft and Google, and it has startup service organizations such as TiE.
With a wide network of angel investors, fast internet across the city and plenty of cheap programming talent, Bangalore is now becoming a serious rival to San Fransisco Bay Area.
And for India’s tech businesswomen, Bangalore is where it’s at.
“The city is a brilliant place to be an entrepreneur today. So many women entrepreneurs are putting themselves out there, making a go at it and breaking traditional boundaries,” Ganesh said.
This article was written by  for Global Post.
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Pastor imprisoned in Iran faces death for 'spreading corruption on Earth'

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Behnam with son.jpg
Pastor Behnam Irani is currently serving a combined six-year sentence in Ghezal Hezar Prison.courtesy of ACLJ
An Iranian Christian pastor already imprisoned for his faith now faces the death penalty after being hit with a bizarre new charge called "spreading corruption on Earth."
Supporters fear the worst for Pastor Behnam Irani, who was sentenced to six years in prison in 2011 for his Christian activities, including leading a 300-member evangelical congregation in Karaj, a city less than 15 miles outside the capital, Tehran. He is now being held in solitary confinement and suffering numerous health problems, including internal bleeding, according to advocacy group Christian Solidarity Worldwide.
CSW Chief Executive Mervyn Thomas old the website BosNewsLife.com that his group is "deeply concerned by the new charges against Pastor Irani" especially the charge of spreading corruption on Earth." 
"The charges leveled against Pastor Irani and other Christians are tantamount to an indictment of Christianity itself and mark a renewed escalation in Iran's campaign against Persian Christians under the Rouhani presidency," Thomas said in a statement.
In recent months, Irani faced brutal interrogation sessions at the hands of the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security, which threatened him with additional charges.
Iranian President Hasan Rouhani, who ran for office as a moderate a year ago, has since presided over a brutal crackdown on Iran's Christian community. Rouhani and the religious mullahs he answers to have been particularly concerned about the spread of Christianity and conversion into its Muslim population.
“There are a lot of people who are disgruntled with the government and many for comfort and peace in their lives are turning to Christianity," Jason DeMars, founder of Present Truth Ministries, which sponsors Christian churches and outreach in the Middle East, told FoxNews.com. "That’s a threat to the regime.
"The more people who turn from Islam, the fewer people they have on their side,” DeMars added.
In separate incidents, CSW reported at least five other Christians were taken into custody this week in the Iranian city of Isfahan, and authorities confiscated Bibles, computers, cellphones and other personal items.
In Iran, the punishment for apostasy, or turning from Islam, can carry the death penalty. Currently, many Christians are facing imprisonment in Iran, including Pastor Saeed Abedini, an American citizen whose wife and two young kids remain behind in Boise, Idaho.

Teen has mastectomy after docs fail to spot breast cancer because she was ‘too young’

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Cancer Cells
After two years of discomfort, a British teen was diagnosed with breast cancer— which doctors initially missed because she was “too young,” the U.K.’s Metro reported.
Morag McTiernan, 21, first went to the doctor when she was 17 because of discomfort and discharge from her right breast. She was diagnosed with an infection of the milk duct, a condition common in teenage girls.
But two years later, the pain had become intolerable. She went for a second opinion at the teenage cancer unit at Royal Victoria Hospital in the U.K. and was diagnosed with breast cancer.
“I can’t help but think that if I had been an older lady who had the same symptoms my GP would have thought about cancer,” McTiernan said. “Who knows how much the cancer could have grown in [the two years before the correct diagnosis], I might have been able to keep my breast if it was diagnosed sooner.”
McTiernan underwent a mastectomy, radiotherapy and hormone treatment. She’s expected to make a full recovery.
                                                            
“Breast cancer in young women is exceptionally rare,” said Dr. Mark Verrill, consulting medical oncologist at the Freeman Hospital in the U.K. said. “The chance of being diagnosed in this age bracket is one in 500,000, with the majority of cases being seen in much older women.”

Top CIA officer in Benghazi delayed response to terrorist attack, US security team members claim

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A U.S. security team in Benghazi was held back from immediately responding to the attack on the American diplomatic mission on orders of the top CIA officer there, three of those involved told Fox News’ Bret Baier.
Their account gives a dramatic new turn to what the Obama administration and its allies would like to dismiss as an “old story” – the September 11, 2012 Benghazi attacks that killed U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans.
Speaking out publicly for the first time, the three were security operators at the secret CIA annex in Benghazi – in effect, the first-responders to any attack on the diplomatic compound. Their first-hand account will be told in a Fox News special, airing Friday night at 10 p.m. (EDT).
Based on the new book "13 Hours: The Inside Account of What Really Happened in Benghazi" by Mitchell Zuckoff with the Annex Security Team, the special sets aside the political spin that has freighted the Benghazi issue for the last two years, presenting a vivid, compelling narrative of events from the perspective of the men who wore the “boots on the ground.” 
The security contractors -- Kris (“Tanto”) Paronto,  Mark (“Oz”) Geist, and John (“Tig”) Tiegen -- spoke exclusively, and at length, to Fox News about what they saw and did that night. Baier, Fox News’ Chief Political Anchor, asked them about one of the most controversial questions arising from the events in Benghazi: Was help delayed?
Word of the attack on the diplomatic compound reached the CIA annex just after 9:30 p.m. Within five minutes, the security team at the annex was geared up for battle, and ready to move to the compound, a mile away.
“Five minutes, we're ready,” said Paronto, a former Army Ranger. “It was thumbs up, thumbs up, we're ready to go.”
But the team was held back. According to the security operators, they were delayed from responding to the attack by the top CIA officer in Benghazi, whom they refer to only as “Bob.”
“It had probably been 15 minutes I think, and … I just said, ‘Hey, you know, we gotta-- we need to get over there, we're losing the initiative,’” said Tiegen. “And Bob just looks straight at me and said, ‘Stand down, you need to wait.’”
“We're starting to get calls from the State Department guys saying, ‘Hey, we're taking fire, we need you guys here, we need help,’” said Paronto.
After a delay of nearly 30 minutes, the security team headed to the besieged consulate without orders. They asked their CIA superiors to call for armed air support, which never came.
Now, looking back, the security team said they believed that if they had not been delayed for nearly half an hour, or if the air support had come, things might have turned out differently.
“Ambassador Stevens and Sean [Smith], yeah, they would still be alive, my gut is yes,” Paronto said. Tiegen concurred.
“I strongly believe if we'd left immediately, they'd still be alive today,” he added.
In a statement to Fox News, a senior intelligence official insisted that,  “There were no orders to anybody to stand down in providing support.”
Baier put that assertion directly to the operators.
“You use the words ‘stand down,’” Baier noted. “A number of people now, including the House Intelligence Committee  insist no one was hindered from responding to the situation at the compound…so what do you say to that?”
“No, it happened,” said Tiegen.
“It happened on the ground-- all I can talk about is what happened on that ground that night,” added Paronto. “To us. To myself, twice, and to-- to Tig, once. It happened that night. We were told to wait, stand-- and stand down.  We were delayed three times.”
In a statement to Fox News, a senior intelligence official did allow that the security team was delayed from responding while the CIA’s top officer in Benghazi tried to rally local support.
In the special, Baier also asks about the infamous YouTube video that was blamed for the violence in Benghazi.
Paronto laughed at the suggestion that the video played any role in the events of that night, saying he did not even know of the video until he was out of Libya and on his way home. “I didn't know about the video ‘till I got to Germany,” he said. “(I had) no idea about any video, no. No, sir.”
The full, first-hand account of what really happened in Benghazi can be seen when Fox News airs 13 hours at Benghazi: The Inside Story Friday night 10 p.m. (EDT), Saturday at 5 p.m. and 9 p.m. (EDT), and Sunday at 9 p.m. (EDT)

Nithari Case: Surinder Koli to be hanged on September 12

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Meerut: Nithari serial killer Surinder Koli, who has been sentenced to death for the brutal killing of a 14-year-old girl, will be hanged in Meerut Jail on September 12, Jail Superintendent SHM Rizvi has said.
"The hanging will be carried out on September 12...all the rules and procedures will be followed", he told reporters.
A warrant was issued on Wednesday by Ghaziabad's Additional sessions Judge Atul Kumar Gupta in the name of 42-year-old Koli that he should be hanged to death after the convict exhausted all his legal remedies in this case.
Koli, lodged in a jail in Ghaziabad, has been sentenced to death in connection with the killing of Rimpa Halder and in four other cases.
This will be the first execution of a death sentence convict under the new NDA government.
Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh had earlier recommended to President Pranab Mukherjee that Koli's mercy plea be rejected, barely a month after he had taken over as the minister.
The President rejected the mercy petition on July 27, paving the way for the judicial process to commence for hanging of Koli.
There are 11 cases of murder pending against Koli. The Central Bureau of Investigation or CBI had filed a charge sheet against him in 16 cases where he had allegedly killed children after sexually abusing them.
The Rimpa Halder case came to light in December, 2006 when a girl who went missing was found murdered by Koli.
Investigations into the case led the probe team into more gruesome murders of children and their skeletal remains were recovered from a drain adjacent to the house where Koli was working as a domestic servant in Nithari locality of Noida, Uttar Pradesh.
Koli was awarded death sentence by a lower court, which was upheld by the Allahabad High Court and confirmed by the Supreme Court on February 15, 2011 for the murder of Rimpa Halder in 2005.
Holding that Koli "appears to be the serial killer", the court had said "No mercy can be shown to him."
A total of 16 cases were registered against Koli. His employer Moninder Singh Pandher, who was also sentenced to death in Rimpa Halder case, was acquitted by the Allahabad High Court.
Out of 16 cases filed against Koli, he has been awarded death sentence in five of them so far and others are still under trial.