Sunday, March 17, 2019

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প্রথম বুটস্টাফ কনটেন্ট

মঈনুল ইসলাম রাজিব

ঝালকাঠী মফস্বল অনেক পুরাতন এক বানিজ্যিক এলাকা। এই মফস্বলের পুরাতন নাম ছিল মহারাজগঞ্জ। কালের পর কাল অতিবাহিত হয়ে এক সময় এখানে এক বাজার বসত যেখানে জালের কাঠি বিক্রি করা হতো। সেখান থেকে ঝালকাঠী মফস্বলের নাম করণ করা হয় বলে শুনা যায়। এ অঞ্চলের বালাম চাল অনেক বিখ্যাত। এছাড়াও এখানের হাতে বোনা পাটি, গামছা ইত্যাদি প্রসিদ্ধ।

ঝালকাঠী মফস্বল অনেক পুরাতন এক বানিজ্যিক এলাকা। এই মফস্বলের পুরাতন নাম ছিল মহারাজগঞ্জ। কালের পর কাল অতিবাহিত হয়ে এক সময় এখানে এক বাজার বসত যেখানে জালের কাঠি বিক্রি করা হতো। সেখান থেকে ঝালকাঠী মফস্বলের নাম করণ করা হয় বলে শুনা যায়। এ অঞ্চলের বালাম চাল অনেক বিখ্যাত। এছাড়াও এখানের হাতে বোনা পাটি, গামছা ইত্যাদি প্রসিদ্ধ।

ঝালকাঠী মফস্বল অনেক পুরাতন এক বানিজ্যিক এলাকা। এই মফস্বলের পুরাতন নাম ছিল মহারাজগঞ্জ। কালের পর কাল অতিবাহিত হয়ে এক সময় এখানে এক বাজার বসত যেখানে জালের কাঠি বিক্রি করা হতো। সেখান থেকে ঝালকাঠী মফস্বলের নাম করণ করা হয় বলে শুনা যায়। এ অঞ্চলের বালাম চাল অনেক বিখ্যাত। এছাড়াও এখানের হাতে বোনা পাটি, গামছা ইত্যাদি প্রসিদ্ধ। এখানে অনেক বিখ্যাত কবি , মনিষি, রাজনৈতিক ব্যক্তিত্ব ছিল। এই মফস্বল প্রাচ্যের কলকাতা নামেও পরিচিত ছিল। শিক্ষায়ও আমাদের এই মফস্বল অনেক উন্নত ছিল। কবি কামিনী রায়, শেরে বাংলা এ.কে ফজলুল হক প্রমুখ এই অঞ্চলেই জন্মগ্রহন করেন।

Friday, March 15, 2019

Christchurch mosque hero tackled gunman and grabbed weapon


A heroic bystander tackled a gunman and grabbed his weapon after he opened fire at worshippers at a mosque in New Zealand.
Syed Mazharuddin witnessed the terrifying moment at Christchurch’s Linwood Mosque during a terrorist attack that claimed the lives of seven people.
Mazharuddin said the gunman entered the mosque and began shooting indiscriminately at worshippers, causing them to flee.
“People got feared and there was screaming around and I tried to take cover,” he told the New Zealand Herald .
“By the time I took cover this guy came through the main entrance door and it’s a small mosque – there were about 60-70 people there.
“Just around the entrance door there were elderly people sitting there praying and he just started shooting at them.”
A young man who worked at the mosque bravely saw his opportunity and pounced on the shooter, taking his gun in the process.
“The hero tried to chase and he couldn’t find the trigger in the gun … he ran behind him but there were people waiting for him in the car and he fled.”
The fate of the unnamed hero is unclear but Mazharuddin said two of his friends died in the attack.
“I ran out and then the police came and they didn’t let me come back in again so I couldn’t save my friend, he was bleeding heavily,” he said.
“It took almost half an hour, more than half an hour by the time the ambulance could arrive and I think he must have died.”
At least 49 people have been killed and 40 seriously injured in co-ordinated terror attacks on Friday afternoon.
Innocent worshippers were shot at point blank range in during the Friday prayers.
One of the suspected gunmen – named as Australian national Brenton Tarrant – broadcast the horrific scenes live on Facebook using a GoPro camera.
Horrified witnesses have described seeing bodies everywhere, with one grieving man reportedly heard wailing: “My wife is dead.”
Police had earlier said four people – three men and one woman – had been taken into custody in relation to the devastating shootings.

Christchurch shooting: Cricketers to return home from NZ Saturday night


Bangladesh national cricket team is set return home from New Zealand on Saturday night following the cancellation of the last and final Test due to the terrorist attacks on two mosques in Christchurch.
The Tigers will leave Christchurch on a Singapore Airlines flight around 12 noon (local time) and are expected to arrive at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport here around 10:45pm (BST), reports news agency UNB citing Team Manager Khaled Masud Pilot.
The Bangladesh team initially faced some problems to get air tickets for all the members for a single flight, but it was resolved later and the cricketers are set to return home together.
Mass shootings at two mosques full of worshippers attending Friday prayers killed 49 people, including three Bangladeshis, in Christchurch.
Authorities charged one person, detained three others and defused explosive devices in what appeared to be a carefully planned racist attack.
Players and members of the coaching staff of the Bangladesh team were on a bus and approaching the Masjid Al Noor in Hagley Park when the shooting broke out. They narrowly escaped the shooting as they were just 50 yards away from the spot.
The Bangladesh team members were extremely shocked after the incident.

...............


Sunday, March 3, 2019

PM calls on army to be vigilant against internal, external threats


Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has called on the Bangladesh Army to be ready to face internal and external threats for protecting the constitution and the sovereignty of the country.
“You’ll have to be always ready to jointly face any threat, be it internal or external, for protecting the holy constitution and the sovereignty of the motherland,” the premier said on Sunday while addressing the ‘National Standard’ Awarding Ceremony to four battalions of Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (BIR) of the Bangladesh Army in Rajshahi Cantonment.
PM Sheikh Hasina conferred the ‘National Standard’ upon the 7th, 8th, 9th and 10th Bangladesh Infantry Regiments in recognition of their excellence, hard practice and dutifulness.
The PM told the audience that the army has always extended their cooperation to the government in serving people.
“I believe the army will stand beside people whenever needed during the tenure of the present government,” the PM said while thanking the army personnel for playing a significant role in upholding the democratic process by performing their duty sincerely in the 11th parliamentary election.
In addition to that, the Prime Minister also thanked the people of the country for giving her a chance to form the government for the fourth term and the consecutive third term.
The Prime Minister said the Army is engaged in nation-building activities like construction of Padma Bridge and Cox’s Bazar-Technaf Marine Drive, alongside their main duty.
She added that Bangladesh Army earned rare dignity and image for Bangladesh through their sacrifice, sincerity and professionalism in establishment of world peace and different foreign missions.
She said a process is on to modernise the Bangladesh Army following the foresighted guidelines of the Father of the Nation.
PM Sheikh Hasina said she approved in principle the formation of Bangladesh Infantry Regiment in 1999 and formally hoisted the flag of BIR on April 21, 2001.
“It’s the only regiment which was formed after the Independence of Bangladesh,” she said adding that now there are 43 units and two Para-commando battalions under the BIR.
She added that Bangladesh is marching forward and will continue on the path of development.
The PM was greeted with a perfectly timed parade of the four battalions of the BIR at the Rajshahi cantonment.
As the Prime Minister arrived at the parade ground, Chief of Army Staff General Aziz Ahmed received her.
She inspected the parade riding an open decorated jeep and took salute. The Chief of Army Staff and the Parade Commander were also with the PM at that time.
The Prime Minister handed over the National Flag to the Commanders of the respective battalions.

Fakhrul, Moudud visit ailing Quader at BSMMU


A BNP delegation, led by party Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, visited ailing Road, Transport and Bridges Minister Obaidul Quader at Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU) on Sunday.
Fakhrul—along with BNP standing committee members Moudud Ahmed and Dr Abdul Moyeen Khan went to BSMMU around 9:50pm.
They were received by the AL Organising Secretary AKM Enamul Haque Shamim and Assistant Office Secretary Biplob Barua.
Later, they were taken to BSMMU’s Coronary Care Unit (CCU) where the ailing minister is undergoing treatment.
Exiting the hospital, Moudud told the press that Quader was sedated and asleep.
“We talked to his wife, and doctors who are treating of him, and enquired about his health condition, we pray to Allah for his [Quader’s] quick recovery,” said Moudud Ahmed.
Obaidul Quader was admitted to the CCU of the hospital on Sunday morning following his breathing complications.
Later, doctors found three blockages in his coronary artery following an angiogram.
Quader is now undergoing treatment at the Coronary Care Unit (CCU) in Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University for cardiac ailment.
A medical board, led by BSMMU Vice Chancellor Prof Kanak Kanti Barua, has been formed for the treatment of the minister.

A decisive crackdown on extremist and militant organisations in the country looks imminent. “The action would soon be visible as things progress,” a source told a group of journalists at a background briefing on Sunday. The imminence of an action against extremist groups was confirmed by Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry while talking in DawnNews programme Do Raaye. He said the government had taken a firm decision that there would be a stern action against all militant groups. This, he said, was in accordance with the political consensus contained in the National Action Plan (NAP). The information minister refused to give any timeline for the operation against militant groups like Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), accused of masterminding the Pulwama attack that triggered the latest crisis with India and took both nuclear-armed rivals close to war, and Jamaatud Dawa (JuD) and its charity wing Falah-i-Insaniat Foundation (FIF). Mr Chaudhry said the timeline was something for the security forces to decide. The National Security Committee had in its Feb 21 meeting “decided to accelerate action against proscribed organisations” and ordered re-imposition of ban on JuD and FIF. Prime Minister Imran Khan had on that occasion, while emphasising eradication of “militancy and extremism” from society, said the state could not be allowed to “become hostage to extremists”. The source categorically denied that the action was in response to Indian pressure after the Pulwama incident and said the decision had been taken much before the Feb 14 attack on Indian security forces in Pulwama, although it became public later. The dossier given by India on the Pulwama attack, he maintained, contained nothing except an iteration of its narrative on alleged Pakistan-based groups. “We are taking action in our national interest. We have to correct the course. We cannot leave this mess for our next generation,” the source said, adding that the “existing political consensus within the country was an opportunity to take Pakistan on the positive track”. He said the action would help deal with the issues arising out of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) listing. Pakistan, despite making significant progress on the initial concerns of FATF, came under renewed pressure at the Paris plenary last month. The source said at the briefing that there could be law enforcement actions against JeM, JuD and FIF. However, it was clear from the conversation that Pakistan would also review its stance on the issue of listing of JeM leader Masood Azhar by the United Nations Security Council. “No individual is more important than Pakistan,” he said while responding to a question. “Pakistan won’t make it a matter of ego,” he said in response to another. “We won’t test our friends either,” he said in reference to China that has been maintaining a technical hold on Azhar’s listing by the UNSC. The United States, Britain and France — three permanent members of the UNSC with veto power — have again, after Pulwama, moved the Security Council for designation of Azhar as a global terrorist. When asked why Pakistan had in the past failed in acting against the proscribed groups, the source said the elements of NAP relating to military had been implemented, but those pertaining of civilians lagged behind because of lack of “capacity, capability and will”. He pointed to compulsions of certain political leaders as one reason, but said no one could be absolved of responsibility. “It was decided in NAP in 2014 that there would action against proscribed groups. That required strategic shift and such changes take time,” he emphasised, observing that time had now come to decisively against these groups. Talking about the latest confrontation with India in which ‘a strategic pause’ in hostilities was obvious on Sunday, he said it was in the interest of Pakistan to ‘exit’ from the face-off at this stage when it had attained “moral, diplomatic and military ascendancy” over India. However, India’s case was different, he argued, saying that it might be a tough decision for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to de-escalate at this stage because of the political cost. “That’s why they are taking time. Now that the strategic pause is there, they would have gone back to re-evaluate their options.” Inter-Services Public Relations in its update on the LoC situation on Sunday reported calm after heavy exchanges over the past few days following use of air power by the two countries. “After heavy exchange of fire on night 1st/2nd March there is relative calm along LoC with intermittent fire during last night in Neza Pir, Jandrot and Baghsar sectors,” it said. PM Modi, the source said, needed a face saving, but “Pakistan would not give one at the cost of its esteem and integrity”. He, however, stressed that Pakistan would at the same time not do anything provocative. Pakistan’s game plan, he said, was based on “rationality” and not “weakness” because any further escalation could lead to disastrous consequences.


A medical team from Singapore’s Mount Elizabeth Hospital has advised not to take Awami League General Secretary Obaidul Quader abroad now.
They entered Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU) around 7:45pm Sunday and met with Quader’s medical board.
The board said it would be risky to move him for treatment abroad in this condition.
The minister is stable but still in critical condition, his doctors said at a press briefing on Sunday afternoon at BSMMU.
Three of his coronary arteries were found blocked and his diabetes was found to be uncontrolled, doctors said.
He blinked when Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina called his name, and when President Abdul Hamid spoke to him, he opened his eyes and tried to speak, doctors said.
Quader was admitted to the hospital after he fell sick Sunday morning.
Quader had complained about difficulty regarding his breathing after the Fajr prayers.
Later, he was taken to the BSMMU.
The minister’s Personal Secretary Gautam Chandra said the minister was admitted to the hospital around 8:30am.
Quader is now undergoing treatment at the Coronary Care Unit (CCU) in Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University for cardiac ailment.
A medical board, led by BSMMU Vice Chancellor Prof Kanak Kanti Barua, has been formed for the treatment of the minister.

Pakistan plans decisive crackdown on militant outfits


A decisive crackdown on extremist and militant organisations in the country looks imminent.
“The action would soon be visible as things progress,” a source told a group of journalists at a background briefing on Sunday.
The imminence of an action against extremist groups was confirmed by Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry while talking in DawnNews programme Do Raaye. He said the government had taken a firm decision that there would be a stern action against all militant groups. This, he said, was in accordance with the political consensus contained in the National Action Plan (NAP).
The information minister refused to give any timeline for the operation against militant groups like Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), accused of masterminding the Pulwama attack that triggered the latest crisis with India and took both nuclear-armed rivals close to war, and Jamaatud Dawa (JuD) and its charity wing Falah-i-Insaniat Foundation (FIF). Mr Chaudhry said the timeline was something for the security forces to decide.
The National Security Committee had in its Feb 21 meeting “decided to accelerate action against proscribed organisations” and ordered re-imposition of ban on JuD and FIF. Prime Minister Imran Khan had on that occasion, while emphasising eradication of “militancy and extremism” from society, said the state could not be allowed to “become hostage to extremists”.
The source categorically denied that the action was in response to Indian pressure after the Pulwama incident and said the decision had been taken much before the Feb 14 attack on Indian security forces in Pulwama, although it became public later. The dossier given by India on the Pulwama attack, he maintained, contained nothing except an iteration of its narrative on alleged Pakistan-based groups.
“We are taking action in our national interest. We have to correct the course. We cannot leave this mess for our next generation,” the source said, adding that the “existing political consensus within the country was an opportunity to take Pakistan on the positive track”.
He said the action would help deal with the issues arising out of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) listing. Pakistan, despite making significant progress on the initial concerns of FATF, came under renewed pressure at the Paris plenary last month.
The source said at the briefing that there could be law enforcement actions against JeM, JuD and FIF. However, it was clear from the conversation that Pakistan would also review its stance on the issue of listing of JeM leader Masood Azhar by the United Nations Security Council. “No individual is more important than Pakistan,” he said while responding to a question. “Pakistan won’t make it a matter of ego,” he said in response to another. “We won’t test our friends either,” he said in reference to China that has been maintaining a technical hold on Azhar’s listing by the UNSC.
The United States, Britain and France — three permanent members of the UNSC with veto power — have again, after Pulwama, moved the Security Council for designation of Azhar as a global terrorist.
When asked why Pakistan had in the past failed in acting against the proscribed groups, the source said the elements of NAP relating to military had been implemented, but those pertaining of civilians lagged behind because of lack of “capacity, capability and will”. He pointed to compulsions of certain political leaders as one reason, but said no one could be absolved of responsibility.
“It was decided in NAP in 2014 that there would action against proscribed groups. That required strategic shift and such changes take time,” he emphasised, observing that time had now come to decisively against these groups.
Talking about the latest confrontation with India in which ‘a strategic pause’ in hostilities was obvious on Sunday, he said it was in the interest of Pakistan to ‘exit’ from the face-off at this stage when it had attained “moral, diplomatic and military ascendancy” over India. However, India’s case was different, he argued, saying that it might be a tough decision for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to de-escalate at this stage because of the political cost. “That’s why they are taking time. Now that the strategic pause is there, they would have gone back to re-evaluate their options.”
Inter-Services Public Relations in its update on the LoC situation on Sunday reported calm after heavy exchanges over the past few days following use of air power by the two countries. “After heavy exchange of fire on night 1st/2nd March there is relative calm along LoC with intermittent fire during last night in Neza Pir, Jandrot and Baghsar sectors,” it said.
PM Modi, the source said, needed a face saving, but “Pakistan would not give one at the cost of its esteem and integrity”. He, however, stressed that Pakistan would at the same time not do anything provocative. Pakistan’s game plan, he said, was based on “rationality” and not “weakness” because any further escalation could lead to disastrous consequences.

Dr Devi Shetty coming to visit Quader


Renowned Indian cardiologist Dr Devi Shetty is coming to Bangladesh to see the condition of ailing Road Transport and Bridges Minister Obaidul Quader, who is undergoing treatment at Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University(BSMMU).
Awami League joint general secretary Mahbubul Alam Hanif on Monday confirmed the matter.
The AL leader came up with the information while talking to reporters after visiting Quader at BSMMU around 11 am.
Hanif said, “Qauder’s condition is gradually improving. Now, the condition is somewhat better. I talked to doctors. They are hopeful over his recovery.”
The Medical Board will decide whether the Minister will be taken to Singapore. BSMMU Vice Chancellor Professor Kanak Kanti Barua will brief reporters over the decision.
Obaidul Quader was admitted to the CCU of the hospital on Sunday morning following his breathing complications.
Later, doctors found three blockages in his coronary artery following an angiogram.

Obaidul Quader’s condition improved: AL


The condition of ailing Awami League general secretary Obaidul Quader has improved, said AL Deputy Office Secretary Biplab Barua on Monday.
“There has been significant improvement in his physical condition. He has got back his full consciousness. Doctors are also now optimistic about his full recovery,” he said.
Biplab Barua shared the updates on Quader’s health condition through a Facebook post.
He urged the party leaders and activists not to crowd the hospital premises.
However, the Minister is now at Critical Coronary Unit(CCU) and doctors did not said that he is completely out of danger, he added.
Obaidul Quader was admitted to the CCU of the hospital on Sunday morning following his breathing complications.
Later, doctors found three blockages in his coronary artery following an angiogram.
Quader is now undergoing treatment at the Coronary Care Unit (CCU) in Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University for cardiac ailment.
A medical board, led by BSMMU Vice Chancellor Prof Kanak Kanti Barua, has been formed for the treatment of the minister.

Saturday, March 2, 2019

Ctg dwellers to get rid of waterlogging soon: LGRD minister


Claiming that the excavation works of all the canals in the port city are underway, Local Government, Rural Development and Cooperatives Minister Md Tajul Islam on Saturday assured the city dwellers that it will get rid of waterlogging soon.
Out of 57 canals, those are flowing through the city, several have already been re-excavated while others will be digging out in turns, said the minister while addressing a view-exchange meeting at Chattogram Circuit House.
“So city dwellers must be revealed of vexing waterlogging,” assured the minister.
The minister also said that the authorities concerned will organize more view-exchange meetings to find out a way to get rid of such an acute problem.
Mentioning that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has sanctioned TK 1,000 crore in the last ECNEC meeting for the development of the port city, the minister urged all concerned to help address city’s crisis and take prompt initiatives for its development.
Necessary arrangements will be ensured ahead of the rainy season as the water can be drained out frequently as well as the city roads will be made wider, he added.
“We must work together to make the city a spectacular and enlightened one,” he hoped.
Deputy Education Minister Mohibul Hasan Chowdhury Nowfel, Chattogram City Corporation Mayor AJM Nasir Uddin, Chittagong Commissioner Abdul Mannan, Chattogram Development Authority (CDA) Chairman Abdus Salam, among others, were present at the meeting.

Donald Trump launches furious attack on Robert Mueller


US President Donald Trump has launched a furious attack on Special Counsel Robert Mueller and on his critics at a conservative summit.
In the longest speech of his presidency, Mr Trump railed against the inquiry into alleged collusion between his campaign and Russia.
“We’re waiting for a report by people who weren’t elected,” he told a crowd of cheering conservatives.
Mr Mueller is expected to hand in his report to the attorney general shortly.
“Unfortunately, you put the wrong people in a couple of positions and they leave people for a long time that shouldn’t be there and all of a sudden they are trying to take you out with bullshit, okay?” the president said.
Mr Trump has frequently called the special counsel’s investigation a “witch hunt”.
The speech – clocking in at more than two hours – also included sharp attacks on former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, former FBI head James Comey, the Democratic Party and those critical of his approach to North Korea.
Mr Trump’s second summit with Kim Jong-un in Vietnam ended abruptly without a deal this week.
Whom did the president attack?
Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland, Mr Trump lashed out at his detractors in a wide-ranging speech.
“This is how I got elected, by being off script . . . and if we don’t go off script, our country is in big trouble, folks,” he began.
The president repeatedly said that Mr Mueller had “never received a vote”, nor had Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mr Mueller to his position.
Mr Rosenstein plans to step down by March after frequent presidential attacks.
The president alleged Mr Mueller was “best friends” with former FBI head James Comey, and mocked the accent of former attorney general Mr Sessions, whom he fired in November.
He said Mr Sessions was “weak and ineffective and he doesn’t do what he should have done”.
What else did he say?
The president’s attacks ranged widely.
He called the Green New Deal proposal – pitched by some Democrats as a radical bid to combat climate change – “the craziest plan”, saying “when the wind stops blowing, that’s the end of your electric”.
After a series of remarks on immigrants who, he said, must “love our country”, Mr Trump said, “We have people in Congress that hate our country.”
“And you know that, and we can name every one of them if you want,” he said.
He also defended his summit with North Korea leader Mr Kim, telling the crowd they had made “a lot of progress” and saying the country had “an incredible, brilliant future”.
Mr Trump also pledged to protect free speech on US university campuses with an executive order.
Conservatives have said some US universities stifle right-wing opinions.
The speech came at the end of a difficult week for the president.
Mr Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen called him a “racist”, “conman” and a “cheat” in a congressional hearing.

Protest foils mobile court’s chemical warehouse drive


A team of mobile court was forced to leave Old Dhaka on Saturday when it tried to conduct drive in chemical warehouses and factories.
The team was forced to leave the area after local businessmen protested against the drive.
Like Friday, four teams of mobile court started working in the area on Saturday around 11:00am, the second day of the month-long crackdown on chemical warehouses and factories in Old Dhaka..
They disconnected the utility lines around four buildings on Joynath road after finding factories in those establishments.
But businessmen protested the matter saying that the Dhaka South City Corporation taskforce is also cracking down on factories that do not contain any of 29 ‘dangerous chemicals’ according to a government list.
Later, the mobile court team left the spot around 12:30pm and said they would discuss the matter with the DSCC authority.

South Korea and US to end war games


The US and South Korea have confirmed plans to end large-scale joint military exercises amid efforts to thaw relations.
Smaller-scale drills will continue, but major planned war games will now not go ahead.
A number of exercises were suspended last year after US President Donald Trump met North Korea’s Kim Jong-un.
North Korea has always regarded the games as preparation for a military invasion by the two countries.
A Pentagon statement said the defence ministers from the two countries had agreed to end the Foal Eagle and Key Resolve exercises in a phone call on Saturday. It is unclear if the suspension is permanent.
Critics have said cancelling the drills could undermine US and South Korean military defences against the North, but others say those concerns are unjustified.
President Trump has previously complained of the cost of such exercises, although he has ruled out withdrawing US troops from the peninsula.
The country has about 30,000 US troops in South Korea.
Mr Trump’s second summit with Kim Jong-un in Vietnam this week ended abruptly without a deal.

India refuses to share proof of strikes in Pakistan


A top Indian minister said on Saturday the government would not share proof that “a very large number” of militants were killed in air strikes inside Pakistan this week, after doubts were raised there were any casualties in the attack that stoked tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals.
The flare up appeared to be easing on Saturday after Pakistan handed back a captured Indian fighter pilot on Friday night, amid efforts by global powers to prevent another war between the arch enemies.
However shelling across the Line of Control (LoC) that acts as a de facto border in the disputed Kashmir region, a frequent feature in recent weeks, continued, said military officials on both sides.
Hostilities escalated rapidly following a suicide car bombing on Feb. 14 that killed at least 40 Indian paramilitary police in Indian-controlled Kashmir. India accuses Pakistan of harboring the Jaish-e Mohammad Islamist group that claimed the bombing.
Indian warplanes carried out air strikes on Tuesday inside northeast Pakistan’s Balakot on what New Delhi called militant camps. Islamabad denied any such camps existed, as did local villagers in the area when Reuters visited.
Nevertheless, Pakistan retaliated on Wednesday with its own aerial mission.
Pakistan said the Indian bombs hit a largely empty hillside without hurting anyone. Some Indian opposition leaders have asked the government to share evidence of the strikes.
But India’s Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, one of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s top lieutenants, said “no security agencies ever share operational details”.
“It’s a very irresponsible stand,” Jaitley said at a conference organized by the India Today media group.
“The armed forces must have, and our security and intelligence agencies must have, a full leeway in dealing with situations, and if anybody wants operational details to be made public … he certainly does not understand the system.”
Indian Air Force officials said earlier it was up to the political leaders to decide when and how to release evidence of the Balakot strike.
Jaitley dismissed suggestions that the rapid escalation in tensions with Pakistan had anything to do with India’s domestic politics ahead of a general election due by May. Pollsters expect the ruling party to benefit from the nationalistic passion sweeping the country.
PILOT WALKS ACROSS THE BORDER
Indian Air Force Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, who became the face and symbol of the biggest clash between India and Pakistan in many years, walked across the border just before 9 p.m. (1600 GMT) on Friday in a high-profile handover shown on live television.
Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman met him at a New Delhi defence hospital on Saturday, where he was seen in his air force jumpsuit. He will undergo medical checks before re-joining active duty, officials said.
Pakistan’s military said on Saturday its air force and navy “continue to be alert and vigilant”, while two of its soldiers were killed after exchanging fire with Indian troops along the LoC. India’s military said that Pakistan was firing mortar shells across the LoC.
Pakistan touted Abhinandan’s return as “as a goodwill gesture aimed at de-escalating rising tensions with India” after weeks of unease that threatened to spiral into war.
Global powers, including China and the United States, have urged restraint to prevent another conflict between the neighbors who have fought three wars since independence from Britain in 1947.
Pakistani leaders say the ball is now in India’s court to de-escalate the tensions, though the Pakistani army chief told top military leaders of the United States, Britain and Australia on Friday that his country would “surely respond to any aggression in self-defence”.
On a visit to Jammu and Kashmir state on Saturday, India’s army chief asked soldiers to remain vigilant to “counter the nefarious designs of the enemy and anti-national elements”.