north east online - north east india news

north east india news, northeastindia news, north east india online resource, seven sister states of north east india, north east india news, events, galleries, stories.

UK’s RAF hunting down N. Korean nukes

Written by admin on 7:02 AM

London, May 30 (ANI): Britain has reportedly sent out a military plane equipped with a "nuke sniffer" to find out the power of the bomb tested by North Korea.

According to The Sun, the VC-10 tanker was scrambled from RAF Brize Norton, Oxon, to take air samples near the rogue state with an underwing pod.

Any fallout gathered will tell scientists what sort of nuclear material was used in Monday''''s Hiroshima-sized underground blast.

A military source said yesterday: "Once that is known, an estimate of the bomb''''s strength or ''''yield'''' can be made."

The flight crew is under strict orders not to approach any closer to the North Korean coast than 50 miles for fear of being shot down. (ANI)

lliterate Indians lured into slavery in Malaysia

Written by admin on 7:02 AM

allaca (Malaysia), May 30 (ANI): Thousands of illiterate Indians are falling prey to promises of a good life in Malaysia. Trapped between wanting a better life for their families and their eagerness to escape poverty, they fall victims to scams, managed by syndicates.

"They are like thugs, and they exert force to instil fear in us so that we dare not go against them," M Nadarajah, a victim said.

"Bala (Nadarajah''''s captor) and his brother would use demoralising and abusive words, slap, kick and even hit me with a stick if they were not happy with my work," he added after showing the scars on his back.

Insufficient food and rest make many of these illegal Indians ill, as they are made to work hard on estates in the region.

Some are tortured quite severely, reports the Strait Times.

People like Nadarajah are often threatened by their captors. Captors even threaten to sell their children to prevent them from escaping. (ANI)

Air Chief Marshal PV Naik takes over as new IAF chief

Written by admin on 6:59 AM

New Delhi, May 31 (ANI): Air Chief Marshal Pradeep Vasant Naik assumed office as the new chief of the Indian Air Force (IAF) here on Sunday. He succeeds Air Chief Marshal Fali Homi Major.

The ''change of guard ceremony'' held in Air Headquarter was attended by all the Air Officers Commanding-in-chief of the seven commands of the IAF.

The new chief reviewed a ceremonial ''guard of honour'' presented to him by a contingent of air warriors at the foyers of the Air Headquarters before assuming charge.

Naik, born on July 22, 1949 in Nagpur, is a graduate of Sainik School Satara, the National Defence Academy, the Defence Services Staff College and the National Defence College.

Commissioned on June 21, 1969, he has a long distinguished career in the IAF spanning 40 years wherein he has flown all MiG-21 variants and MiG-23-BNs.

He has held many important command and staff appointments. He was commanding a MiG-21 Bis squadron at Pathankot in Punjab. He was the chief operations officer at Air Force Station Bareilly in Uttar Pradesh.

He has also commanded Air Force bases in Srinagar and Bidar in Karnataka.

Apart from these, he has been a Directing Staff at the TACDE and the Air Combat Development Establishment as well as the Defence Services Staff College, as battalion commander at the National Defence Academy, Air-I of Western Air Command and air defence commander of South Western Air Command.

He is also a qualified flying instructor. He had been functioning as the Vice Chief of the Air Staff prior to taking over the Chief of Air Staff.

For distinguished service, Air Chief Marshal Naik was awarded the Vishisht Seva Medal (VSM) on January 26, 2003, and also appointed honorary ADC to the President in July 2007. (ANI)

Tata Motors launches 'World Truck'

Written by admin on 6:42 AM

Mumbai, May 29: Tata Motors, India's leading manufacturer of both heavy and light automobiles, launched a new line of trucks, named 'World Truck' here on Thursday, May 28.


The launching of the new series of trucks also marked the company's objective to bring international standard top quality trucks in the Indian market. The range, which comprises of multi-axle trucks, tractor-trailers, mixers and special application vehicles, is a bid by Tata Motors to prove itself as a global auto major.


"There will be various offerings coming from this. There will be tractors for taking higher levels of movements across high speed tracks. There will be tippers which will be meeting construction and mining requirements. So, it is an entire range of products which will be coming through this," said P M Telang, Executive Director, Tata Motors.

The company however has not mentioned the price levels of its latest models and the varied versions.

"It's about changing the way trucking happens in India and bringing it closer to the sort of levels that you see in more developed countries and rest of the world. So, it is a range of models and when you talk of range of models, there is no one price we can talk about," said R Ramakrishnan, Head of Marketing, Medium and Heavy Trucks, Tata Motors.

China set to launch its first Mars probe

Written by admin on 6:41 AM

New Delhi, May 29: China's first Mars probe, Yinghuo-1, is expected to be launched later in '09 according to an official of the Shanghai Academy of Spaceflight Technology (SAST).


The probe had passed test of the research phase, Zhang Weiqiang, deputy secretary of SAST Committee of the Communist Party of China, told the third Shanghai International Aerospace Technology and Equipment Exhibition.


Yinghuo-1 will be launched by a Russian carrier rocket, accompanied by the Russian aerocraft Phobos-Grunt.

"The Russian aerocraft is making a sample return mission to Phobos, one of the moons of Mars," Zhang said.

According to Zhang, Yinghuo-1 would go into Mars orbit in 2010 after a 10-month, 380-million-kilometer journey, Zhang said.

But, unlike the Russian craft, Yinghuo-1 won't land but would only orbit and observe, he added.

The Chinese probe is 75 centimeters long, 75 cm wide and 60 cm high. It weighs 115 kilograms and was designed for a two-year life, Zhang said.

"Yinghuo" means light from firefly in Chinese.

"Yinghuo-1 is expected to discover why water disappeared from Mars and explain other environmental changes of the planet," Zhang said.

The project is China's third major space exploration plan after the manned space project and the moon exploration program.

"It was also the first time that China would explore another planet," Zhang said.

ANI

Nepal celebrates first Republic Day

Written by admin on 6:41 AM

Kathmandu, May 29 (ANI): Nepal''''s first Republic Day is being celebrated on Friday throughout the nation with various programmes, exactly one year after the Constituent Assembly declared Nepal a republic on May 29, 2008 ending the 240-year old monarchy.

In his message to the nation, President Dr Ram Baran Yadav has urged everyone for consensus to reach the goals and conceded the first year was not very easy.

''''The chief goal for now is the completion of peace process and new constitution,'''' President Yadav said in the message. ''''The Republican set up will be strong only after we attain those goals.''''

In what can be seen as his answer to the Maoist demand for civilian supremacy, the president said civilian supremacy can be established only when the basics of democracy such as rule of law, press freedom, judicial independence, freedom of expression and human rights are reflected in each activity and behavior of the government.

Stating that in the past 60 years Nepal has seen a number of Constitutions, he hoped that the new Constitution would not be just another experiment.

Vice President Paramanda Jha, Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal and other political leaders have also issued messages to the nation on the occasion.

Maoist chairman Prachanda has urged for an institutional development of republicanism.

Nepal is the newest republic in the world. The 240-year long monarchy was abolished last year.

Earlier, in 2006 April, a mass uprising for nineteen days had forced the last king of Nepal, Gyanendra Shah, to give up power, Nepalnews reported. (ANI)

North Korea test fires sixth missile

Written by admin on 6:40 AM

Seoul, May 29: North Korea has reportedly test fired another short-range missile off the country's east coast, a South Korean news agency reported on Friday, May 29.


This accounts to the sixth missile test North Korea has carried out since Monday, May 25. Following the test-fire the country's foreign ministry released a statement saying that it will respond if the UN Security Council (UNSC) agreed any fresh sanctions over the tests.


"If the UN Security Council provokes us, our additional self-defence measures will be inevitable," the foreign ministry said in a statement. It said that any 'hostile acts' from UNSC will only mean the 'demolition of the armistice'.

On Thursday, May 28 the US and South Korean forces were placed on the second highest surveillance alert level, the joint forces announced.

A Raja vows to work on 3G; what about broadband?

Written by admin on 6:39 AM

New Delhi, May 29: Communications and IT Minister, Andimuthu Raja has said that apart from lowering mobile tariffs, auctioning for the 3G spectrum is on top of his priority list.


Retaining the prestigious ministry for the second consecutive term, A Raja in his interview with CNBC-TV 18 said, "Auctioning of 3G spectrum is on top of my priority list."


He said that the exercise started earlier would continue and that he aims to complete the auction in months months 'in worst case scenario'. When asked if the he saw the revenue from the auction going above the expectations considering that the markets have more or less revived, he said, "I hope so, definitely it will go up."

Apart from this the Lawyer-turned-politician's agenda consists of ensuring 'that at least in the college level, ‘a paperless governance’ should be guaranteed'.

Media reports seem to reflect that the entry of 3G and Wimax would do great things for the broadband scene in India and improve internet connectivity specially in the rural areas. However this only seems to prove that the government does not have a more concrete and feasible proposal to increase internet penetration and implementing broadband connectivity in the country.

While the government frequently releases sops but what the country ultimately has to do is sit and watch for both implementation and functioning.

Microsoft's Bing ready to take on Google

Written by admin on 6:38 AM

Seattle, May 29: Software giant Microsoft Corp in its latest effort to take on its rival Google Inc unveiled a new search engine called 'Bing'.


Bing, known as a 'decision engine' is the latest effort from the Seattle based software firm to earn some momentum in the search market. The site 'Bing.com' has been in development for several years. It will be available to users by next week.


"Search engines do a decent job of helping people navigate the web and find information, but they don't do a very good job of enabling people to use the information they find. Bing is an important first step forward in our long-term effort to deliver innovations in search," said Steve Ballmer, the Microsoft chief executive.
A key feature of the Bing, is 'guided search', which categorises searches and attempts to get users to useful information speedily. The system also integrates with a number of other technologies, bringing news and maps straight to searchers, as well as linking in to the company's Cashback scheme, which in effect pays users a small dividend every time they buy a product through the site.

CBSE Class X results of Delhi zone are out

Written by admin on 6:37 AM

New Delhi, May 29: Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) Class X board exams results were declared on Friday, May 29 in the three zones of Delhi, Guwahati and Allahabad. Girls once again outshone boys.


The overall pass percentage recorded a 1.76 pc increase from 2008. The pass percentage this year was 88.84 per cent.


The results are available in the CBSE website http://www.cbse.nic.in./. In the Ajmer, Chennai and Panchkula regions, the results had been declared on Tuesday, May 26.

In 2009 nearly as many as 8,24,421 students -3,31,922 girls and 4,73,499 boys- took the Class 10 CBSE exams in India.

Veerappa Moily assumes charge as Minister of Law and Justice

Written by admin on 6:36 AM

New Delhi, May 29 (ANI): Veerappa Moily assumed charge as Law and Justice Minister here on Friday.

He was welcomed by Secretary, T.K.Vishwanathan and other senior officers of the ministry.


Immediately, after assuming charge, Moily had a meeting with all senior officers of the ministry and reviewed the status of various programmes and issues relating to it. (ANI)

Virbhadra Singh assumes charge of Steel Ministry

Written by admin on 6:28 AM

New Delhi, May 29 (ANI): Minister for Steel Virbhadra Singh assumed charge here on Friday.

He was welcomed by Steel Secretary P.K.Rastogi and other senior officers.


Talking to reporters after taking charge, he said that one of his key priorities would be to ensure that the expansion programmes of the public sector giants the Steel Authority of India Limited (SAIL) and the Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Limited (RINL) is completed in time in a cost effective fashion.

"While the capacity of SAIL will go up to 26 million tons that of RINL will go up to six million tons after the expansion. Both the expansion programmes will involve an expenditure of over Rs.70, 000 crore," he said.

He added that steel sector in India and China have recorded positive growth during the first quarter of this calendar year while the global steel production has contracted by 23 per cent during the same period.

"Another focus area will be to bring in a rational, seamless and transparent regime for allocation of raw material resources to existing and prospective steel producers," he said. He further said, the Ministry of Mines would be requested to undertake consequential amendments to Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act 1957 to bring amendments to force.

"There is a need to restructure some of the smaller steel PSUs and for attempting mergers to capture the benefits of improved synergies. The companies under restructuring/merger mode include the Bird group of companies, the HSCL, the BRL and the SIIL," he said (ANI)

Top Billionaires Hold Secret Meeting

Written by admin on 11:21 PM

Gates, Winfrey, Buffett among philanthropists at gathering in New York

In a quiet meeting closed to the news media and the public, Bill Gates, David Rockefeller Sr., Oprah Winfrey and other leading philanthropists met in New York this month to discuss ways to promote efforts to solve growing social problems in America and abroad.

Together, the philanthropists in the room have committed a total of more than $72.5 billion to charitable causes since 1996, according to Chronicle of Philanthropy tallies.

The unusual event was held May 5 at Rockefeller University and was organized by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Among the high-profile participants were Ted Turner, Warren E. Buffett, George Soros and New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg.

Several of the people at the meeting confirmed their involvement, but declined to tell The Chronicle about what was discussed or why they gathered almost in secret.

According to a person familiar with the meeting, the wealthy philanthropists gathered to trade ideas about how to raise the level of philanthropy in the world.

According to IrishCentral.com, a Web site in New York that writes about Irish Americans and which first disclosed some of the details about the gathering, each philanthropist was given 15 minutes to talk about “how they saw the future global economic climate, the future priorities for philanthropy, and what they felt the elite group should do.”

The Chronicle of Philanthropy

What would you tell the world’s top philanthropists? Click here to post your comments and ideas.

All these philanthropists from the secret New York meeting have appeared at least once on The Chronicle of Philanthropy’s ranking of America’s most-generous donors.

Other people who attended included Eli Broad, a real-estate investor, Julian H. Robertson, Jr., a hedge-fund manager, and Patty Stonesifer, former chief executive of the Gates foundation.

Tyson's daughter on life support after found hanging

Written by admin on 11:14 PM

Phoenix (Arizona), May 25 (ANI): Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson's four-year-old daughter was on life support and in "extremely critical condition" after she was found hanging Monday morning from a treadmill cable in her family's Phoenix home, police said.

Exodus Tyson's seven-year-old brother found her on a treadmill with her neck on a cable attached to the exercise machine, police sergeant Andy Hill said, calling it a "tragic accident."


The mother sent the boy to find the four-year-old girl who was playing in a separate room. The boy found his sister in distress and got his mother, police said.

"Somehow she was playing on this treadmill, and there's a cord that hangs under the console - it's kind of a loop,"

Fox News quoted Hill as saying: "Either she slipped or put her head in the loop, but it acted like a noose, and she was obviously unable to get herself off of it."

The girl's mother took her daughter off the cable, called 911 and attempted to revive her.

Responding officers and firefighters performed CPR on the girl. She was rushed to nearby St. Joe's Hospital.

Tyson, who was in Las Vegas, flew to Phoenix immediately after learning of the accident. (ANI)

Analysis: NKorea widens threat, limits US options

Written by admin on 11:11 PM

WASHINGTON -North Korea's nuclear test makes it no likelier that the regime will actually launch a nuclear attack, but it adds a scary dimension to another threat: the defiant North as a facilitator of the atomic ambitions of others, potentially even terrorists.
It also presents another major security crisis for President Barack Obama, already saddled with wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and a nuclear problem with Iran.
Obama spoke Monday night with the president of South Korea and the prime minister of Japan, assuring both leaders that the U.S. remains committed to the defense of their nations. The White House said in a statement that Obama and South Korean President Lee Myung-bak agreed that the test is "a reckless violation of international law that compels action in response."
It's far from clear what diplomatic or other action the world community will take. So far, nothing they've done has worked.
At an earlier juncture of the long-running struggle to put a lid on North Korea's nuclear ambitions, the administration of President Bill Clinton in the mid-1990s discussed with urgency the possibility of taking military action. That seems less likely now, with the North evidently nuclear armed and the international community focused first on continuing the search for a nonmilitary solution.
Meeting in emergency session in New York, the U.N. Security Council on Monday condemned North Korea's nuclear test as a clear violation of a previous U.N. resolution banning such testing. The council said it would begin work immediately on a new legally binding resolution.
The North's announcement that it conducted its second underground test of a nuclear device drew quick condemnation across the globe, including from its big neighbor and traditional ally, China. The Obama administration, which said the North's action invited stronger, unspecified international pressure, has consistently called for Korean denuclearization but seemed not to have anticipated a deepening nuclear crisis.
Just two weeks ago, the administration's special envoy for disarmament talks with North Korea, Stephen Bosworth, said during a visit to Asian capitals that "everyone is feeling relatively relaxed about where we are at this point in the process." If so, they are no longer.
Obama, appearing Monday in the White House Rose Garden, condemned the nuclear test and North Korea's subsequent test-launch of short-range missiles. He called the actions reckless and said they endanger "the people of Northeast Asia."
North Korea conducted its first atomic test in 2006 and is thought to have enough plutonium to make at least a half-dozen nuclear bombs. It also is developing long-range ballistic missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads, in defiance of U.N. actions.
One of the first estimates of the size of Monday's nuclear explosion came from the Russian defense ministry, which put the yield at between 10 and 20 kilotons — comparable to the U.S. bombs that flattened Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan in August 1945. But a senior U.S. administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it appeared the explosive yield was much smaller, perhaps a few kilotons. The official said more technical analysis would be done in coming days.
The administration official also disclosed that North Korea notified the State Department less than one hour before the explosion that it intended to conduct a nuclear test at an unspecified time. The U.S. then notified China, Russia, Japan and South Korea, the official said.
The United States could still try to resuscitate so-called six-party talks with the North as well as work with other members of the United Nations. North Korea has vowed not to resume participation in the six-party talks with the U.S., Japan, South Korea, China and Russia.
Reflecting his view that only unified international action will compel North Korea to change course, Obama said that Russia and China, as well as traditional U.S. allies Japan and South Korea, have come to the same conclusion: "North Korea will not find security and respect through threats and illegal weapons."
The Bush administration worked hard to get China, in particular, to press the North Koreans to denuclearize, and it seems likely that Obama will push equally hard with Beijing, which sided with the North Koreans against U.S. and United Nations forces during the 1950-53 Korean War. In recent years the Chinese have openly criticized the North Koreans for the nuclear arms program.
Two of the main worries about North Korea are left unsaid: Would it use a nuclear bomb to attack a neighbor or the United States? And might it continue an established pattern of selling nuclear wherewithal and missiles to foreign buyers?
Graham Allison, an assistant secretary of defense in the Clinton administration and now director of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University, said Monday that the international community regularly underestimates North Korean leader Kim Jong Il's willingness to do the unexpected.
"Could this guy believe he could sell a nuclear bomb to Osama bin Laden?" Allison asked in a phone interview. "Why not?"

UN Security Council condemns NKorea nuke test

Written by admin on 11:11 PM

UNITED NATIONS -The U.N. Security Council swiftly condemned North Korea's nuclear test on Monday as "a clear violation" of a 2006 resolution and said it will start work immediately on another one that could result in new sanctions against the reclusive nation.
Hours after North Korea defiantly conducted its second test, its closest allies China and Russia joined Western powers and representatives from the rest of the world on the council to voice strong opposition to the underground explosion.
After a brief emergency meeting held at Japan's request, the council demanded that North Korea abide by two previous resolutions, which among other things called for Pyongyang to abandon all nuclear weapons and return to six-party talks aimed at eliminating its nuclear program.
It also called on all other U.N. member states to abide by sanctions imposed on the North, including embargoes on arms and material that could be used in its nuclear and ballistic missile programs and ship searches for banned weapons.
In an AP interview in Copenhagen, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon deplored the test as a "grave violation" of council resolutions and called on the council in a statement to send "a strong and unified message" aimed at achieving the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula and peace and security in the region.
Ban, who is South Korean, urged the North "to refrain from taking any actions which will deteriorate the situation."
Leaders in the United States, European Union and Russia also offered quick and pointed criticism. Even China's foreign ministry joined the chorus of disapproval, saying it "resolutely opposed" the test.
"North Korea is directly and recklessly challenging the international community," President Barack Obama said in a statement. "North Korea's behavior increases tensions and undermines stability in Northeast Asia."
In Brussels, the EU's foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, denounced the test as a flagrant violation of Security Council resolutions.
Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, the current Security Council president, made clear in a statement that the council's condemnation was only an initial response, and that more will follow. He said it was too early to give any specifics.
"The members of the Security Council have decided to start work immediately on a Security Council resolution on this matter," he said.
U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice said the 15-member council agreed that work on the new resolution will begin Tuesday.
"What we heard today was swift, clear, unequivocal condemnation and opposition to what occurred," she said.
France's deputy U.N. ambassador Jean-Pierre Lacroix said France wants the new resolution to "include new sanctions ... because this behavior must have a cost and a price to pay."
Japan's U.N. Ambassador Yukio Takasu, a non-permanent council member, said his country was pleased that the rest of the council agreed there should be a new resolution. But he noted that sanctions imposed against three North Korean companies after Pyongyang's missile test in April obviously had no effect.
"So therefore I think we really have to think very carefully what will be an effective way to deal with this kind of behavior," he said. "We have to do something more, and the question is what is more."
Churkin was asked whether Russia viewed the nuclear test as more serious than the North's launch of a missile in April.
"This is a very rare occurrence as you know, and it goes contrary not only to resolutions of the Security Council but also the (Nuclear) Nonproliferation Treaty and the (Nuclear) Test Ban Treaty," he replied. "We are one of the founding fathers — Russia is — of those documents, so we think they're extremely important in current international relations. So anything which would undermine the regimes of those two treaties is very serious and needs to have a strong response."
Before the council meeting, the five permanent veto-wielding members of the council — the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France — met behind closed doors for over an hour with the ambassadors of Japan and South Korea.
North Korea claimed the underground nuclear test Monday was much larger than one it conducted in 2006, which led to the first U.N. sanctions resolution. Russia's Defense Ministry confirmed an atomic explosion occurred early Monday in northeastern North Korea and estimated that its strength was similar to bombs that devastated Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II.
After the council rebuked Pyongyang for its April 5 rocket liftoff, which many nations saw as a cover for testing its long-range missile technology, North Korea announced it was quitting disarmament talks and restarting its atomic facilities. The six-party talks, which began in 2003, had involved North Korea, South Korea, Russia, China, Japan, and the United States.

Preacher dies after Vienna clash

Written by admin on 11:07 PM

Police in Austria say one of the two Sikh preachers who were shot in a violent dispute between rival Sikh groups at a temple in Austria has died.

The preacher, Sant Rama Nand, was attacked during a religious ceremony by six men armed with knives and a pistol.

The other preacher Sant Nirajnan Das, who was among 15 other people injured in the clash, was said to be stable.

Following the incident, rival Sikh groups clashed in the Indian state of Punjab.

Indian police said protesters in the city of Jalandhar set fire to vehicles and put up roadblocks.

Witnesses said the protests appeared to be a reaction to the fight at a temple in Vienna, which reportedly began when fundamentalist Sikhs attacked the preachers, who, they believed, were disrespectful of the Sikh holy book.

The fight involved five men armed with knives and another with a pistol, the BBC's Bethany Bell reports.

Sant Rama Anand died of his wounds in hospital early Monday, a police spokesman said.

"The surgeon said at first he was satisfied with his patient's condition after an emergency operation," news agency APA quoted the spokesman as saying.

"But the patient lost consciousness and died shortly after midnight (2200 GMT)," he added.

The condition of the second preacher is reported to be stable, he said.

Police spokesman Michael Takacs said the scene was "like a battlefield". Six people have been detained, and more arrests were possible.

Everybody was praying and then it started with knives and a pistol," said eyewitness Nermal Singh.

Several hundred worshippers were at the temple at the time of the attack.

The temple is situated in Vienna-Rudolfsheim, in the 15th district of the capital.

It is estimated that fewer than 3,000 Sikhs live in Austria.

The Rudolfsheim temple is run by devotees of Shri Guru Ravidas, who founded a Sikh sect called Dera Sach Khand.

Indian unrest

Meanwhile, Sikh groups clashed violently in the city of Jalandhar in the Indian state of Punjab.

People have poured out into the streets by the thousands and have been protesting since Sunday evening here, says the BBC's Asit Jolly in Chandigarh, the capital of Punjab.

The protesters set fire to vehicles and damaged government buildings.

"The whole thing has spread out of Jalandhar now, it's in all the nearby towns and a curfew has been imposed across Jalandhar city, and the latest I'm being told is that the government of Punjab has requisitioned the army to be on standby," our correspondent adds.

Cyclone Alia strength eases off

Written by admin on 11:06 PM

The cyclonic storm Aila hit the Indian city of Calcutta and nearby areas, killing more than 30 people, before weakening and heading north.

It uprooted a large number of trees in the city, seriously hampering traffic.

Meteorologists said the cyclone made landfall in south-western Bangladesh on Monday afternoon.

Hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated in Bangladesh and India to temporary shelters after wind speeds of 70km/h to 90km/h were reported.

The West Bengal state's disaster management minister Mortaza Hossain told the BBC that more than 100,000 people had become homeless.

"We have rescued more than 100,000 people and send them to safer places. We are now arranging dry food packets and drinking water pouches for them," he said.

Rescue and relief

Fierce winds, measuring 100km/h (65mph), ravaged parts of Calcutta and adjoining districts. "We were in the eye of the storm," Mr Hossain said.

The army and border guards were called out to rescue people and join the civil administration in providing relief in eight districts of the state hit by the cyclone, he said.

Twelve people died in the South 24-Pargana district that straddles the Sundarbans delta south of Calcutta.

Most deaths occurred when the cyclone flattened mud houses.

Six people died in Calcutta when huge trees uprooted by the cyclone fell on buses, cars and auto-rickshaws.

The rest of the casualties were reported from the districts of Howrah, Hooghly , Nadia , Bankura, North 24 Parganas and East Midnapore.

Calcutta police chief Gautam Moham Chakrabarty said teams from the municipal corporation were working to clear roads blocked by uprooted trees.

Calcutta Metro and train services were suspended after water flooded tracks in many places.

Massive tidal waves ravaged scores of coastal villages and the seaside resorts of Digha, Mandarmoni and Kanthi throughout Monday.

In Bangladesh, flooding and tidal surges hit coastal areas, with strong winds forcing the closure of the main ports of Chittagong and Mongla.

About 400,000 people were moved from five districts to cyclone shelters and schools before the storm hit, Bangladeshi officials said.

A further 300,000 people were stranded in coastal villages, they said.

Human skulls found in India pond

Written by admin on 11:05 PM

Authorities in northern India are digging out a pond in which hundreds of human skulls have been discovered.

The remains were found after the pond adjacent to a mortuary in the city of Aligarh dried up due to hot weather.

Around 100 skulls, several bones and two skeletons have been recovered in the past three days, police say.

Reports say the remains belong to bodies of unclaimed corpses brought to the mortuary, but police say they are not making any assumptions.

'Thousands'

"Since the place is near to mortuary and there are marks similar to post-mortem on a few skulls, so as per primary investigation we can say that this might be related to mortuary," inspector Asim Arun said.

"But we don't want to directly reach to the conclusion. We want all the investigation process to complete and all the experts to analyse it then only we can reach some conclusion," he added.

A city resident Amit Srivastava explained how the remains were discovered.

"Children were playing and came here to get their ball. A child saw a skull. He got scared and ran away. We then came here and saw that behind the jail there is not one but thousands of skulls here.

"Digging is continuing... let's see how many more will be found," he said.

The authorities say around 100 human skulls, several bones and two skeletons have been recovered so far.

They say special equipment has been brought in to dig up the area in case more remains are found.

According to Indian law, after post mortem examinations are complete, police have 72 hours to remove the remains of unclaimed bodies.

Lower level officers, morgue sweepers and some rickshaw pullers are brought in to do the job.

It is believed that somewhere along the line some of these workers may have ditched the remains in the pond and pocketed the cash meant to pay for the cremations or burials.

Chennai Region Tops in CBSE XII Exam

Written by admin on 3:43 AM

New Delhi, May 23 : Having achieved a remarkable overall pass percentage of 92.06, the Chennai region has finished on top in the Central Board of Secondary Education’s Class XII examination. The results for the Delhi, Guwahati and Allahabad regions were declared on Friday, while those for Ajmer, Chennai and Panchkula were announced on Wednesday.

Like last year, the Ajmer region bagged the second position with a pass percentage of 86.93, Delhi came third with 84.25, followed by Panchkula, Allahabad and Guwahati.


Girls outclass boys in all the six regions
Overall 0.09 percentage point rise in pass
In all, 637,976 candidates registered for the Class XII examination this year.

There has been an overall increase of 0.09 percentage points in the pass percentage compared to last year. The overall pass percentage is 81 this year, up from 80.91 in 2008, with girls having outclassed boys in all the six regions.

The overall pass percentage of girls is 85.94 against the boys’ 77.40.

Not surprisingly, the all-India toppers are also girls. Tannvi Aggarwal from Apeejay School in Faridabad and Mrittika Sen from Rajhans Vidyalaya in Mumbai have scored 98.4 per cent. Tannvi is a Commerce student, while Mrittika is from the Science stream.

The regular students have achieved a pass percentage of 82.69 compared with 49.72 of private/patrachar candidates.

The pass percentage for candidates from the Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas was the highest among all the other institutions standing high at 94.09 compared to 92.44 per cent in 2008.

Kendriya Vidyalayas are not far behind, having secured an overall pass percentage of 91.32, marginally improving from 91 per cent last year. The Central Tibetans have done well to improve from 85.81 per cent in 2008 to 91.15 this year.

The government and private schools have bettered their performance with a pass percentage of 82.81 and 49.72 respectively. It stood at 81.96 and 37.77 in 2008.
Foreign schools

It has been a good showing by foreign schools, who have secured a pass percentage of 92.38 this year, improving from 92.15 per cent in 2008.

However, both the government-aided and independent schools have registered a decline compared to last year. The pass percentage for the former has come down to 75.68 this year from 78.61 per cent in 2008, while the independent schools have fallen from 81.68 to 80.94 this year.

As many as 3,40,876 students, including 161,139 girls, have scored 60 per cent and above. The number of girls securing 60 per cent or more has been increasing every year.

However, the pass percentage of Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes has slipped this year. The pass percentage of SC candidates has fallen from 81.44 last year to 80.75 this year. The result of ST students has registered a decline from 66.04 to 64.28 per cent.

A total of 1,034 students appeared for the examinations in the disabled category, achieving a pass percentage of 88.59 improving from last year’s 86.46. Of this, 11 differently-abled candidates have scored above 90 per cent.
Merit certificates

The CBSE will this year award merit certificates to 5,248 students, including 4,348 to candidates from independent schools. The maximum certificates are for candidates from the Allahabad region (1,581), followed by Chennai (1,152) and Delhi (903).

The number of students who have secured more than 90 per cent in Class XII is 15,839 (comprising 8,059 girls), which is almost double than last year’s 8,253.

The number of candidates scoring 95 per cent and above has witnessed a three-time increase from 384 in 2008 to 1,020 (including 544 girls) this year. The maximum number of students scoring more than 90 per cent and 95 per cent are from independent schools.

Manipur State Boxing Meet

Written by admin on 3:43 AM

Imphal, May 23 : Out of eight title bouts in the junior boys category, Imphal West district pugilists claimed three gold medals on the third day of the State Level Boxing Championship at Khuman lampak Boxing Arena today.

Churachandpur and Imphal east districts shared two of the gold medals on offer while Bishnupur bagged one.

In E-32 group final, Ch Wilson Singh of Imphal West-A defeated Y Purnanda (IE-A) with Lakpati Singh representing IW-B out-smarting his E-40 opponent L Bikananda Singh of IE-B and T Robertson (IW-B) adding the third gold winning the E-36 final against Sh Anit Kumar (IW-A).

The Ccpur winners were M Yaiphaba Singh, who defeated Kh Maiken of Bishnupur-B in the E-38 title bout, and Ng Anand Singh (D-42) who overcame K Anandajit of IE-A.defeating IE-B’s N Bishorjit Singh in the D-38 title bout, A Luckyson Singh claimed Imphal East-A’s first gold medal before M Nongpoknganba (IE-B) added the second with victory over Y Gyandas of Thoubal-B in the D-44 class.

Bishnupur’s only gold came in the E-34 group when N Raju Singh outclassed Thoubal-B’s O naresh Kumar.

Sri Lankan army deaths revealed

Written by admin on 3:38 AM

Sri Lanka says more than 6,200 security personnel were killed and almost 30,000 wounded in the final three years of the war with the Tamil Tigers.

Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa revealed the figures on state TV - the first such official statement.

It is thought at least 80,000 people have been killed in the 26-year war.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon arrived in Sri Lanka on Friday to discuss the plight of about 275,000 internally displaced people.

Sri Lanka officially announced an end to the war this week, after its troops took the last segment of land held by the rebels, and said it had killed the top Tamil Tiger leadership, including its chief, Velupillai Prabhakaran.

'Reconciliation'

Mr Rajapaksa, brother of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, told the state-run Independent Television Network the final phase of the operation against the rebels had begun in August 2006.

"Since then the security forces, including the army, navy, the air force, police and the civil defence force, have lost 6,261 personnel killed and 29,551 wounded," Mr Rajapaksa said.

"We made huge sacrifices for this victory."

There are no official figures for the number of Tamil Tiger rebels killed in the civil war, although estimates vary from between 15,000 and more than 22,000.

The UN says 7,000 civilians have died since January alone, although the government disputes this figure.

The focus will now shift to the resettlement of the internally displaced.

On Thursday, two visiting Indian envoys met the president and said they had been told Sri Lanka would resettle most of the displaced Tamils within six months.

The issue will be top of Mr Ban's agenda.

Aid groups complain their access to the displaced camps has been greatly restricted.

Mr Ban will visit the Manik Farm area in Vavuniya, where most of the displaced are held.

He has sent his own envoy, Vijay Nambiar, ahead of him and on Friday Mr Nambiar said there had to be a political reconciliation.

"The process of national reconciliation, we feel, must be all inclusive so that it can fully address the legitimate aspirations of the Tamils as well as other minorities," he said.

"It is important that victory becomes a victory for all Sri Lankans."

Mr Nambiar said he had flown over the conflict zone to assess it.

"We were not able to see any civilians. What was truly striking was the almost total absence of human habitation... it was almost eerie."

He would also not rule out possible investigation of war crimes.

"Where there are grave and systematic violations of international humanitarian law, these are things which should be looked at by the international community, by the United Nations," Mr Nambiar said.

UN to press for Sri Lankan access

Written by admin on 3:37 AM

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is to press Sri Lanka to ensure unrestricted access by aid agencies to displaced people in the north of the country.

Mr Ban said more than 300,000 people who had fled the fighting between Tamil Tiger rebels and government forces were in need of food, water and sanitation.

He is the first senior world figure to visit since the government said it had ended the 26-year insurgency this week.

Mr Ban said it was extremely important to initiate talks with minority groups.

A BBC correspondent travelling with him says he will later urge the Sri Lankan government to win the peace as well as the war.

'Humbled'

On Saturday, the UN secretary-general saw at first-hand the main government-run camp for refugees at Manik Farm, near Vavuniya, where an estimated 220,000 displaced people are being held.

"I was humbled by what I saw," he told reporters afterwards.
Humanitarian agencies complain that access to the refugees has been restricted and that the distribution of aid has been hampered by a ban on vehicles from the UN and other groups.

The government says it needs more time to find any Tamil Tiger members hiding in the camps, and is suspicious of some agencies which it has accused of helping the rebels. It plans to resettle most refugees with six months.

"We will try to work hard to keep that promise realised," Mr Ban said. "They need to be resettled as soon as possible."

"There clearly seem to be some limitations in [the camp's] capacity."

Mr Ban will later fly over the conflict zone where the military declared a final victory over the Tamil Tigers, before holding talks with President Mahinda Rajapaksa at his residence in Kandy.
On the plane to Sri Lanka, the UN chief said his first priority would be "unimpeded access to the sites of the displaced by international, humanitarian organisations, including the United Nations."

Mr Ban said he would also appeal to Mr Rajapaksa to open political reconciliation talks between the majority Sinhalese and the Tamil minority.

"It's time for Sri Lankans to heal the wounds and unite without regards for religious and ethnic identity," he added.

Without a political settlement that gives Tamils real rights, UN officials believe the fighting will begin anew, says the BBC's Laura Trevelyan, who is travelling with Mr Ban.

Senior UN officials acknowledge there is a risk that Mr Ban's visit could be used by the Sri Lankan govt to give international approval to its victory, our correspondent says.

Mr Ban told the BBC this would not happen, and that he was here to convey the concern of the international community.

Sri Lanka officially announced an end to the war this week, after its troops took the last segment of land held by the rebels and had killed the Tamil Tiger leadership, including its chief, Velupillai Prabhakaran.

War toll

It is thought at least 80,000 people have been killed in the war.

The UN says 7,000 civilians have died since January alone, although the government disputes this figure.

At a rally before Mr Ban arrived, Mr Rajapaksa dismissed any attempt to take him to an international war crimes court.

"There are some who tried to stop our military campaign by threatening to haul us before war crimes tribunals.

"I am not afraid. The strength I have is your support. I am even ready to go to the gallows on your behalf."

In the first official statement on casualties among the government forces, Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa said more than 6,200 security personnel were killed and almost 30,000 wounded in the final three years of the war.

There are no official figures for the number of Tamil Tiger rebels killed in the civil war, although estimates vary from between 15,000 and more than 22,000.

GOP: Alternative energy alone won't meet US needs

Written by admin on 3:37 AM

WASHINGTON -Democrats will increase energy costs and make the U.S. more dependent on foreign oil if they focus solely on alternative energy, the Republicans say.
In the party's weekly radio and Internet address Saturday, Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., said Republicans support a more comprehensive energy plan that would increase funding for energy research, develop U.S. oil and gas resources and promote clean coal and nuclear power.
"Democrats have focused solely on what they call green jobs. Those are jobs from alternative energy. I support green jobs, but why discriminate?" Barrasso said. "American energy means American jobs, which is why I support red-white-and-blue jobs."
He said renewable energy such as wind and solar power is important, noting that Wyoming has world-class wind resources. But Barrasso said wind and solar only account for about 1 percent of U.S. electricity, far below what is needed to meet the nation's energy needs.
Barrasso also said Democrats were misguided by ruling out the use of U.S. oil in places such as the Outer Continental Shelf and Alaska.
"There's enough oil shale in the Rocky Mountain West alone to power America for the next hundred years," he said. "As a nation, we need to be more energy independent. It is a matter of energy security, as well as national security."
"As we approach this Memorial Day, it is my hope that the Democrats can work with us to develop solutions to make our energy supply clean, affordable and reliable," he said.

Peace hopes grip Sri Lankans

Written by admin on 6:05 PM

The national flags are out. They are decking the streets, sold in clusters on street corners, fluttering from the auto rickshaws, waved by men in a pick-up truck.

On the streets of Colombo there is jubilation and smiling faces as the firecrackers are lit.

"I'm very very happy. After 30 years we've won… victory, I suppose!" says a young woman in Pettah, an old market area near the city centre, almost in surprise.

She says she is proud of the president and intends to go home and put out flags.

Not only Sinhalese but also Tamil, Muslim and other people tell the BBC they are relieved.

For decades they had feared boarding buses or visiting temples, some said, for fear of bombs. Now they hope there will be peace.

'Pride'

There is patriotic satisfaction, too, in website postings by Sri Lankans.

"Sri Lanka Rockz," says one.

Some take pride in the military. "Every time we all are with you, our great warriors... One nation - One flag - Sri Lanka."

The army says its operations are ended, that rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran is dead and troops now hold all of the island's territory for the first time since 1983.

Such news will have been greeted almost with disbelief by Sri Lankans, many of whom were born into war or barely remember the time before it.

"We're part of history!" says another posting. "Today is the first day of my life I'm living in a Sri Lanka where there is no war."

A taxi driver expresses the view that, with the top Tamil Tiger leaders out of the picture, bomb blasts really will become a thing of the past.

But will they?

End of the road

Some commentators have predicted that, after their military defeat, the Tigers will concentrate more on their hallmark bombing tactics - saying this will be made possible by the cells they maintain.
But one expert tells the BBC he does not accept that argument.

Maybe there will be stray cases, he says, but with so many of the top LTTE [Tamil Tigers] leaders reportedly killed by the army, he does not see what Tamils would want to kill themselves for.

After all, according to Prabhakaran's biographer MR Narayan Swamy, for the Tigers he was "their brain… their heart… their god… their soul".

Indeed, asked whether they would continue the guerrilla war, the LTTE's foreign-based international relations head, S Padmanathan, told Britain's Channel 4 television on Sunday he believed in a peaceful solution for the Tamil people.

The war started by the LTTE has left humanitarian suffering on a huge scale - including in its final stages.

Dealing with the suffering of the refugees, the wounded and the bereaved will loom high on Sri Lanka's agenda in the immediate future.
Almost a month ago, the United Nations said it feared 6,500 civilians had been killed and twice the number wounded in the war zone since January - civilians who, it alleged, were forcibly held there by the LTTE (although the rebels always denied that) and were caught in heavy crossfire.

It described more recent violence in the small rebel-controlled zone in the north-east of the country as a "bloodbath".

Doctors working in the area described hundreds of deaths and injuries at their makeshift clinics, having to abandon the facilities in the last days.

The government said it doubted their information, as they might have been speaking under LTTE pressure - but the UN trusted them as an impartial source.

Even on Monday the UN refugee agency's head in Sri Lanka, Amin Awad, said he was worried civilians might have been killed within the past 48 hours.

Ongoing grievances

Hundreds of thousands of traumatised, emaciated people have poured out of the combat zone in the past few weeks and now stay in difficult conditions in government-run camps.

The UN and humanitarian agencies will be hoping for better access to them now that the war is over.

The UN has also said it is concerned about the welfare of the doctors who are believed to have escaped the fighting but have not been heard from since.

The government says political reforms will also be on its agenda, reforms that will perhaps aim to tackle some of the grievances of Tamil citizens who, as an ethnic minority, feel discriminated against or marginalised by the state.

There have also been calls, both from within and outside the country, for a process of reconciliation and healing, and for the government to be magnanimous in victory.

One Sri Lankan exile, also posting on the web, says he is concerned that a "hunt for Tigers and traitors will continue" - reflecting on the hard line the government has often taken towards dissenting voices and those it accuses of giving comfort to the rebels.

"We shouldn't be triumphalist," a Sinhala woman, who largely supported the government's campaign against the LTTE, told the BBC.

Lalu says Congress leaders humiliating him

Written by admin on 6:04 PM

New Delhi, May 18 (ANI): Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) Chief Lalu Prasad on Monday complained to Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh that some Congress leaders had been humiliating him and some other coalition leaders during television debates.

Lalu gave the example of former Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh's statement that the Congress should go it alone in the Assembly elections in the state.

"It is an insult of Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) Chief Sharad Pawar," he added.

Earlier in the meeting, Lalu and Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) Chief Ram Vilas Paswan complimented Manmohan Singh, saying he had done a good job in his five-year term as Prime Minister and the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) would reach its pinnacle in the coming years the way it is progressing.

"The mission of the coalition is to finish the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)- led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), which it has achieved in the Lok Sabha elections," Lalu added. (ANI)

Karunanidhi seeks Centre's intervention to save Lankan Tamils

Written by admin on 6:04 PM

Chennai, May 18 (ANI): Hours later the Sri Lankan Army claimed that it has won the final battle in a separatist conflict seen as one of the world's most intractable wars, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi on Monday sought Central Government's intervention to ensure the safety of those trapped in the conflict zone.

"We want the safety of the remaining Tamils and stressing this, I have spoken to Union Home minister P. Chidambaram in this regard," Karunanidhi said at a press conference here.

Prabhakaran's reported death comes shortly after soldiers stumbled upon the bodies of several key LTTE leaders, including his son Charles Anthony, who headed the group"s IT wing and was being groomed to take over his father's mantle.

The deaths sparked frenzied celebrations in the capital Colombo and large parts of the Sinhalese populated central and southern provinces as people poured out of their homes, waved national flags and distributed sweets.

Prabhakaran founded the LTTE in 1976 and built it into an awesome military machine that at one point controlled a third of Sri Lanka"s land territory and two-thirds of its coastline. (ANI)

Sri Lanka declares end of war against LTTE after killing Prabhakaran

Written by admin on 6:03 PM

Colombo, May 18 (ANI): Sri Lanka on Monday formally announced the end of war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam after chief V Prabhakaran was shot dead while trying to flee in an ambulance from the war zone in northern Sri Lanka.

The three-decade long fight by the LTTE for a separate homeland for Tamils came to end after the death of Tamil Tigers chief.

Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse told President Mahinda Rajpakse on Monday in a nationally televised ceremony that Sri Lanka's war against Tamil Tiger rebels has "ended successfully." We have successfully ended the war," he told the President, who is his brother and commander-in-chief of the Sri Lankan armed forces.

Sri Lankan military commanders also lined up and shook hands with him before starting closed-door talks.

The meeting came as state television and defence officials announced that Tamil Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran and the entire rebel leadership had been killed on Monday by government troops.

According to the military, the Tamil Tigers tried to evacuate its leaders early this morning in two vehicles. Army special soldiers of 53 Division intercepted the vehicles moving north and destroyed the convoy after fierce fighting.

The military said it had found 150 bodies of LTTE cadres so far and they are in the process of identifying them.

Prabhakaran was shot dead as he tried to stage a dramatic breakout from the army encirclement, a military spokesman said.

The news of Prabhakaran's death also came along with reports of bodies of his son Charles Anthony and three other top leaders -- Pottu Amman, Soosai and Nadesan being found. (ANI)

Prabhakaran, LTTE & Ethnic Tamils; A retrospection

Written by admin on 6:02 PM

Here is a retrospection on Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) who have spend past 26 years engaged in a bitter battle for a homeland.

Colombo: It was in 1972, that 18-year-old Velupillai Prabhakaran, angered by the discrimination faced by the Tamil minority in Sri Lanka, set out to with just a revolver in hand to form a group to fight for Tamil cause. This group eventually morphed into Tamil Tigers or LTTE who was since then fighting for an independent Tamil land in the Sinhalese nation. More than 70,000 had lost their life in this battle for survival.

In its course of struggle LTTE bagged a new title of being a 'terrorist organisation' from 32 nations including India. It was the first group which used women in suicide attacks. Federal Bureau of Investigation claims that it was the Tamil Tigers who invented the suicide belt.

LTTE is the only terrorist outfit which has the infamous credit of assassinating two world leaders.

On Friday, May 15 the Tigers offered to 'silence' their guns after claiming that they were for peace and are stopping war at the cause of innocent trapped civilians. However the Sri Lankan army continued their mopping operation and later on Monday, May 18 claimed that Prabhakaran, the LTTE supremo and his son Charles Anthony and other key leaders of the rebel group are dead. A formal announcement is yet to come from the President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Will this mark the end of Tamil struggle in island nation? Only time will say!

Who are Ethnic Tamils?

The ethnic Tamils in Sri Lanka constitute about 12 pc of the population (ie of about 12 million) and are mostly concentrated in the northern and eastern party of Lanka. Most of them follow Hinduism and speak Tamil. This separates them from the Sri Lanka's majority group, the Sinhalese, who make up 74 pc of the population. They speak Sinhala and follow Buddhism.

The internal fight between the Ethnic Tamils and Sinhalese date back to the time of colonization by the British. At the time, the country was known as Ceylon. Many Sri Lankans regarded the Tamils as British collaborators and resented the preferential treatment they received.

But when Lanka won Independence in 1948 the Sinhalese majority dominated the government. It was the Tamils then who claimed they were being discriminated against in politics, employment and education. Tamil politicians began to demand separate state for Tamils called 'Tamil Eelam' since 1970. It was this period which witnessed the rise of Velupillai Prabhakaran. He soon emerged as the leader of Tamil cause.

More on Vellupillai Prabhakaran?

Operating secretly from the north-eastern part of the Island nation, Prabhakaran, remained elusive figure for years, even to many Tigers. The LTTE chief was known for wearing a cyanide capsule around his neck, 'to swallow rather than risl capture.' Same was followed by his troops. As a result, few Tigers have been captured alive.

Though Sri Lankan government describes Prabhakaran as a war criminal with disregard for civilian casualities, he is a hero for his supporters. He is wanted by Interpol on charges including terrorism and organized crime.

In 1975, three years after forming his group, Prabhakaran was accused of fatally shooting the mayor of Jaffna, his birthplace.

Prabhakaran is also accused of masterminding the killing of then-Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in 1991 in the Tamil-dominated Indian state of Tami Nadu. Sri Lankan authorities allege that Prabhakaran was avenging Gandhi's decision to send Indian peacekeepers to Sri Lanka.

Two years later, a Tigers' suicide bomber, allegedly acting under Prabhakaran's orders, detonated explosives that killed Sri Lanka's then-president, Ranasinghe Premadasa, during a rally.

Who are Tamil Tigers?

Unemployed youth in Tamil-dominated areas are recruited to the Tiger cadre. Tigers officially began their armed struggle in July 1983 when they killed 13 Sinhalese soldiers. So far hundreds of Tamils were killed and thousands left homeless and more that 1,00,000 fled to South India, in the fierce battle between Sri Lankan army and Tamil Tigers.

The Tigers are infamous for suicide bombings, with men and women strapping on suicide vests for more than 200 attacks against Sri Lankan citizens and dozens of high-profile political leaders.

Peace Deal:

Occasionally the fighting was stopped as a result of peace accords. In 2002 the Tigers dropped their demands for a separate homeland in exchange for a power-sharing deal with the government. Norway and some other nations agreed to be the negotiators of peace deal.

However in Jan 2008, the Sri Lankan announced it was annulling the nearly six-year-old truce with the rebels, declaring that it would crush the rebels. The fighting intensified with security forces driving the rebels from their strongholds in the east and north of the country.

Rebels vowed to fight even after government ordering them to lay down arms. Thousands of civilians became homeless and were killed after being trapped in the war zone. International aid groups expressed concern that both the government and the rebels disregarded civilian safety even in no-fire zones and hospitals. Both sides blamed the other for civilian casualties and exaggerated accounts of their victories. With journalists not allowed into the battle zones, their claims could not be independently confirmed.

On Sunday, May 17 the Tamil tiger posted an 'urgent statement' on a pro-rebel website saying that the battle had reached its 'bitter end'. "We have decided to silence our guns," the statement said.

The army continued its mopping operation even after LTTE declaring 'silence'. On Monday, May 18 Sri Lanka confirmed the death of LTTE supremo V Prabhakaran. With this three decade old war came to an end in Sri Lanka

In the past, the Tigers have emerged from near-defeat. But if Prabhakaran's death is confirmed, what will be the fate of LTTE? Will the cause of Tamils be ever addressed? Or will more militant group rise from the ashes of LTTE to fight the sufferings of Tamils in Island nation or will it provide a peaceful life to the Ethnic tamils?

We must wait and watch!

New Rs 20, Rs 1,000 notes soon: RBI

Written by admin on 6:02 PM

Mumbai, May 18: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is all set to issue new currency notes in denominations of Rs 20 and Rs 1,000.

Other than change in the inset letter, the design of these notes to be issued now is similar in all respects to those issued earlier in Mahatma Gandhi Series says the RBI statements. All notes in these denominations issued by the RBI in the past will also continue to be legal tender.

ICSE and ISC examination results on May 20

Written by admin on 6:01 PM

Bangalore, May 18: CISCE aka The Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations based in New Delhi, will declare the results of the 2009 ICSE and ISC examinations results on May 20 at around 11:00 hrs IST.

Students can pre-register on www.cisce.org to get their results through email or SMS. Pre-registration closes at 6 am that day.

This is the first time the CISCE is hosting results on its own website and not through any service provider.

CBSE exam results b/w May 20-29

Written by admin on 6:01 PM

Bangalore, May 18: Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) are set to announce the results of Class 10th and Class XII examinations in between May 20 and May 29.

The results will be available in CBSE official website http://www.cbse.nic.in/

Satyam to layoff 12,000 employees

Written by admin on 6:00 PM

Hyderabad, May 18: The fraud-hit Satyam Computer Services, which is now controlled by Tech Mahindra is planning to layoff about 12,000 to 14,000 of its employees.

A formal announcement was made by the new management before senior management personnel on Thursday, May 18 on the issue of reducing manpower by up to 14,000 people.

Satyam at present has a total staff of about 40,000 employees, of which 19,000 are 'billing employees' and about 20,000 are 'non-billing employees'. Satyam sources said that those employees who are currently on the 'bench' are in danger of losing job.

Jaya Ho! Amar Singh not to resign

Written by admin on 5:59 PM

The curtains fell on the 15th Lok Sabha polls after introducing to the nation the resounding victory of UPA.

It's jai ho for Manmohan Singh. Its jai ho for Sonia Gandhi. Its jai ho Rahul Gandhi, for sure.

But shifting the spotlight to Samajwadi Party, it can be said that it is 'JAYA HO' for its general secy Amar Singh.

Expressing happiness at his party’s Rampur sitting MP Jaya Prada retaining her seat, the SP leader said, “Her victory is a slap on the face of those people, who indulged in cheap tactics and those who don’t respect women. I am more happy than Jaya Prada on her victory.”

Singh was indirectly referring to his party colleague Azam Khan’s anti-Jaya Prada campaign in Rampur during the run-up to the elections to the Lok Sabha.

Amar Singh threatens to quit SP

Locked in a bitter tussle with party colleague Azam Khan, SP leader Amar Singh has said earlier promised to resign from active politics after the the Lok Sabha elections . It was Amar Singh who took Jayaprada Samajwadi and gifted Rampur seat from where she was elected in 2004 and 2009.

Amar Singh is now mum on his promise. Earlier he had sited some 'kidney problems' for his decision to retire from politics. But it seems that his 'kidney problem' is now sorted out.

There is nothing shocking in and surprising in it . The politicians in India break their promises because the public here tolerates dishonesty.

But I thought Amar Singh was little different. The only difference was that he has been a little more candid about the nature of his politics. He was frank enough enough to disclose his relationship with corporate men and bollywood. "If Amitabh and Anil Ambani are my friends, why should I hide it from the world? If I play Holi with Shilpa Shetty, why should I be ashamed of it!" he said once.

The Samajwadi party leader has few compunctions of being identified with a corporate group, but the fact is that there are many more of our politicians who are also batting for specific business interests, only they will not admit as much in public.

Forget it guys ! In the muck of Indian politics, there are no Mahatmas left any more. Politics has also become one of the best industries to make money, name and fame... and what not.

Indian stock market surges on decisive vote result

Written by admin on 5:59 PM

Mumbai, May 18 (ANI): India's main stock market is booming after the people gave a thumping mandate in favour of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) in the Lok Sabha polls, dispelling fears of a fractured mandate.

The main stock market leapt by nearly 15 percent on Monday, triggering a temporary trading halt, after the ruling coalition sealed a decisive election victory that calmed fears of political uncertainty.

The Indian rupee gained by moving more than two percent to four-month highs against the dollar while the benchmark bond yields fell as the win boosted hopes a strong coalition would be able to push through economic reforms that would boost the much needed foreign investment in the country.

The investors and market analysts are upbeat and believe that the Congress-led UPA government will push the reforms needed to boost the economy in times of recession and will provide a stable government.

"I am overjoyed for the simple reason that we have been facing a lot of problems for the last two years when the market was down. The government has come with a thumping majority and the government will come up with further reforms. They will come up with banking reforms, they will come up with infrastructure benefits, and they will come up with public sector divestment. So the overall trends for the long term market are bullish, because the government will rule for five years," observed Manish Debrawal, a Market Expert.

The investors are hopeful that the Congress led UPA will now fast track the process of economic reforms without any pressure, which in turn will boost the economy.

"When in 2004 the UPA government was formed with the Left Front support, then because of the Leftists, the markets had fallen by over 800 points.

The picture is completely different in today's scenario. The new government will be without the Lefts' support. So the reform bills in the insurance, foreign direct investment and banking sector which had been blocked by the Left will now be tabled and passed in the parliament, which is very good for the overall economy and from the market point of view," opined Siddharth Kuwala, an investor. (ANI)

Gelato, a fat-free ice cream in Chandigarh

Written by admin on 5:58 PM

Chandigarh, May 18 (ANI): It's summer time and most of us are drawn to ice creams. And, in these calorie conscious times, many are scared of gaining weight. But people in Chandigarh have found a solution.

In Chandigarh, you can enjoy a variety of ice creams without worrying. Nik Bakers in Chandigarh have launched Gelato ice creams. The term gelato is derived from the Italian world gelare, which simply means frozen.

With Nik Bakers, those who want to skip regular ice creams and want gelatos, ice-cream sandwiches and fruity mixes, now they have an alternative in Chandigarh city.

"Before customers actually buy it, they can do a sampling. They can have all the flavors of gelato. Like there is a spoon here. They will give you a flavor to taste some.

But its price is definitely expensive because all the ingredients are made of Italian ingredients like the flavors and other ingredients, the price range can be between 400 to 500 a kilogram. I am just talking about the ingredients. Then we make ice cream with these ingredients, so as compared to the market ice creams, which you get for 100 -150 rupees per liter, this one starts from 600 rupees per liter and goes up to 1200 rupees per liter. Hence, there's a huge difference. But when you try it, you come to know why it is so expensive," said Nikhil Mittal, owner of NIK bakers.

People in Chandigarh are queuing up to savor the cold dessert that is somewhat similar to ice cream, yet different. It is made of fresh fruits, natural ingredients and skimmed dairy products.

Gelato is produced daily to ensure the product is always fresh, unlike normal ice cream, which is manufactured and stored for long periods.

That's not all, Gelato has no gelatin and is without air too.

Apart from fat-free ice creams, outlets like Nik Bakers, Giletos', and Baskin Robbins in Chandigarh offer Sorbets, that are absolutely fat free and are made from fruit pulp.

"If you compare the difference between a branded ice cream and just a normal ice cream, the difference is huge. They are smoother, more aerated and definitely the taste is better," said Jasmine, an ice cream enthusiast.

"We really enjoy having ice cream in summer. Even in winter also we enjoy it. There is no as such rule that we just take ice cream in summer. We love to have it in winters. I think that kind of thing, we can have anytime. It's a pleasure to have ice cream every time," said Ritu Bhatia, another ice cream enthusiast.

After sunset and especially after dinnertime, one can notice many people heading for a quick cool bite of it. While most often it includes a stroll down to the branded ice-cream cart at the roundabout, the other option is an ice-cream parlor.

Each summer, ice-cream manufacturers are coming up with new flavors and varieties. And to woo the customers they even organize ice-cream festivals. By Sunil Sharma (ANI)

Obama linking auto emissions and mileage standards

Written by admin on 5:58 PM

WASHINGTON -President Barack Obama, seeking to end a stand-off between states and the auto industry, plans to issue new national emission limits and mileage requirements for cars and trucks.
Obama plans to announce on Tuesday that he will couple pollution reduction from vehicle tailpipes with increased efficiency on the road. It would be the first time that limits on greenhouse gases were linked with federal standards for passenger cars and light trucks.
New vehicles would be 30 percent cleaner and more fuel efficient by 2016, according to officials familiar with the administration's discussions. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the formal announcement had not been made.
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs would not release details of the announcement on Monday, although he said the administration has been working with states, businesses and environmental groups on a deal.
California, 13 other states and the District of Columbia have urged the federal government to let them enact more stringent standards than the federal government's requirements. The states' regulations would cut greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent in new cars and trucks by 2016 — the benchmark Obama planned to unveil at the White House for vehicles built in model years 2011 and beyond.
The proposal is expected to coordinate two separate standards for fuel efficiency and greenhouse gas emissions from vehicles, aiming for cars that achieve higher miles per gallon and have lower polluting air conditioning systems, said Roland Hwang, the vehicles policy director for the Natural Resources Defense Council. The environmental group has discussed the upcoming changes with the White House in recent weeks, he said.
Hwang said he expected the greenhouse gas standard would be set to an equivalent of nearly 35 miles per gallon for the vehicle fleet by 2016.
A 2007 energy law requires car makers to meet at least 35 mpg by 2020, a 40 percent increase over the current standard of about 25 mpg. Passenger car requirements have remained unchanged at 27.5 mpg since 1985, drawing complaints from environmental groups that the government has been slow to push automakers to produce more fuel-efficient vehicles.
Obama's move also would effectively end litigation between states and automakers, who sought to block state-specific rules. The new federal rules would prompt automakers to drop their lawsuit. Two car companies who have been part of the litigation, General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC, have received billions in government loans during a dramatic downturn in car sales and weakened economy.
Auto industry executives, including GM CEO Fritz Henderson, were expected to participate in the announcement along with United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger, industry officials said.
Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat who is being considered for the Supreme Court vacancy, will be at the White House for the event, said an administration official who spoke on condition of anonymity because details of the event had not been announced.
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, will be in Washington for the announcement, spokesman Aaron McLear said. Schwarzenegger issued a statement Monday describing the agreement as historic and one that would lead to cleaner air and greater economic security.
"California's relentless push for greenhouse gas reductions from automobiles is paying off not just for our state, but for all Americans, for our environment, for automakers and our economy," Schwarzenegger said.
A March 2008 decision prevents states from setting their own limits on greenhouse gas emissions from automobiles, but Obama has ordered the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to reconsider the ruling. California officials expect the EPA to grant the state's waiver from federal rules, which would allow it to set its own emission standards.
If it is granted, California regulators have agreed to modify their standards to comply with the new federal fuel-efficiency and greenhouse gas rules, according to sources at the California Environmental Protection Agency who are familiar with the agreement.
California would begin to implement its standards this year, but they wouldn't be as tough in the initial years. The proposed federal program would meet California's target of a 30 percent emissions reduction by 2016.
The EPA was already working toward establishing federal greenhouse gas emissions standards for new motor vehicles when it made a preliminary determination in April that six greenhouse gases — four of which are released from automobiles — endanger human health and welfare.
The White House announcement will make sure efforts by states, the EPA and the Transportation Department will occur in unison, said David Bookbinder, the Sierra Club's chief climate lawyer.

Astronauts finish repairs on Hubble space telescope

Written by admin on 5:57 PM

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -Spacewalking astronauts completed repairs to the Hubble Space Telescope on Monday, leaving it more powerful than ever and able to peer even deeper into the cosmos — almost to the brink of creation. The last humans to lay hands on Hubble outfitted the observatory with another set of fresh batteries, a new sensor for precise pointing and protective covers.
That equipment, along with other improvements made over the last five days, should allow the telescope to provide dazzling views of the universe for another five to 10 years.
"This is a very important moment in human history," Hubble senior project scientist David Leckrone said in Houston. "We will rewrite the textbooks at least one more time."
It was the fifth and final spacewalk for the shuttle Atlantis crew, and the final visit by astronauts ever to Hubble.
As the spacewalk drew to a close, Hubble's chief mechanic, John Grunsfeld, accidentally bumped one of the telescope's antennas and knocked off its cap with his backpack.
"Oh, I feel terrible," he groaned.
Mission Control quickly assured the astronauts the antenna was fine.
"Sorry, Mr. Hubble, have a good voyage," Grunsfeld said after he covered up the tip.
"Consider it a goodbye kiss, John," one of his crewmates said.
The astronauts planned to set Hubble free from the shutte's cargo bay on Tuesday.
During this emotional last house call, astronauts gave Hubble two state-of-the-art science instruments and fixed two others.
The $220 million worth of new instruments should allow the telescope to gaze farther back into time — within 500 million or 600 million years of the first moments of the universe.
Prior to the repairs, Hubble was able to look back to within 800 million years.
Hubble program manager Preston Burch acknowledged that the telescope still has some original parts, but noted "in many ways it is a brand-new observatory and far, far more capable than the Hubble of 1990."
Mission Control congratulated the astronauts for successfully completing "electronic brain surgery" Monday during a spacewalk that lasted more than seven hours.
In addition to the batteries and the sensor, Grunsfeld and Andrew Feustel installed steel foil sheets to protect against radiation and the extreme temperature changes of space.
It was messy work. Pieces of the old insulation broke off and floated harmlessly away.
"I was hoping to retrieve those for memories," said Grunsfeld, an astrophysicist who has spent more time working on the orbiting Hubble than anyone. He's visited Hubble twice before, and plans to use the telescope once he's back on Earth to study the moon.
As he applied the new insulation with a roller, a voice from space sang "rollin', rollin', rollin'" to the theme song from the TV show "Rawhide."
But the total 37 hours of spacewalks were by no means routine. The astronauts had some trouble removing an old camera and had to install a refurbished pair of gyroscopes after a brand-new set refused to go in.
Sunday's spacewalk was particularly exasperating: a stuck bolt almost prevented astronauts from fixing a burned-out science instrument. Brute force saved the day.
During the mission, the four spacewalkers, two per team, managed to fix two science instruments that had broken down years ago and were never meant to be tinkered with in orbit.
They also replaced a faltering science data-handling device and installed a docking ring so a robotic craft can latch on and steer the telescope into the Pacific sometime in the early 2020s.
"We pulled it off," an ecstatic Feustel said after the final spacewalk.
All told, this visit to Hubble cost more than $1 billion.
"We have a saying ... 'Science never sleeps,' and our work is just beginning,'" said Jon Morse, NASA's director of astrophysics. "And we can't wait to get out there and use Hubble for its intended purposes."
NASA hopes to crank Hubble back up by summer's end, following extensive testing of its new parts.
But already scientists have gotten more than they expected out of Hubble when it was launched in 1990 with a projected lifetime of 15 years.
Once its blurred vision was corrected in 1993 and NASA's reputation was restored, the telescope began churning out breathtaking images: among other things, stars in the throes of birth and death.
Back at the launch site, NASA maintained its vigil in case another shuttle needed to rush to the rescue. Atlantis escaped serious launch damage a week ago, but was susceptible to all the space junk in Hubble's 350-mile-high orbit. The astronauts will perform one last survey of their ship after releasing the telescope.
NASA took unprecedented steps to have Endeavour on the pad as a rescue ship, because the Atlantis astronauts have nowhere to seek shelter if they cannot return to Earth because of shuttle damage. The space station is in another, unreachable orbit.
The increased risk prompted NASA to cancel the mission five years ago in the wake of the Columbia accident. It was reinstated two years later.
With NASA's three remaining space shuttles set for retirement next year, there will no way for astronauts to return to Hubble. The new spacecraft under development will be much smaller and less of a workhorse than the shuttle, and lack a big robot arm for grabbing the telescope.
Hubble's replacement, the James Webb Space Telescope, will be launched in 2014 by an unmanned rocket and placed in an orbit inaccessible to astronauts.
NASA officials said the farewell to Hubble would be bittersweet.
"We all recognize we've gotten almost 20 years of service out of it. And it will be cranking along there for another five years," said Burch, the program manager. "Maybe it is time to move on."

the battle of imphal

Written by admin on 1:34 AM

gallery_picture22

The Battle of Imphal took place in the region around the city of Imphal, the capital of the state of Manipur in North-East India from March until July 1944. Japanese armies attempted to destroy the Allied forces at Imphal and invade India, but were driven back into Burma with heavy losses. Together with the simultaneous Battle of Kohima on the road by which the encircled Allied forces at Imphal were relieved, the battle was the turning point of the Burma Campaign, part of the South-East Asian Theatre of World War II.

Air Operations at Imphal By mid-1944, the Allied air forces enjoyed undisputed air supremacy over Burma. The last major effort by the Japanese Army Air Force had been over the Arakan in February and March, when they had suffered severe losses. During the Imphal and Kohima battles, they were able to make barely half a dozen significant raids. IV Corps enjoyed close air support from fighter-bombers and dive bombers. Allied fighter bombers and medium bombers shot up and bombed enemy concentrations, supply dumps, transport, roads and bridges all the way to the Chindwin river. The monsoon in no way diminished their activity. The Third Tactical Air Force (TAF) increased their sortie rate to 24,000 sorties during the worst four months of the monsoon, nearly six times the figure of the previous year’s record. However, the most important contribution to the Allied victory was made by both British and American transport aircraft. The Allies could fly men, equipment and supplies into the airstrips at Imphal (and Palel also, until the onset of the monsoon rains) so although cut off by land, the town was not without a lifeline. Allied aircraft could also parachute ammunition, rations and even drinking water to surrounded units. Several thousand mules, many shipped from the Argentine, were used to carry food ammunition, and light guns to outlying outposts, for example 17th Indian Division up the Bishenpur trail. During the siege animal fodder also had to be flown in. At the start of the battle, South East Asia Command had 76 transport aircraft (mainly C-47 Skytrain) available, but many others were dedicated to supplying the Nationalist Chinese under Chiang Kai-Shek, or to establishing USAAF bomber bases in China, via "the hump". Not even Lord Mountbatten, the Commander-in-Chief, had the authority to commandeer any of these aircraft, but at the crisis of the battle in the middle of March he nevertheless did so, acquiring 20 C-46 Commando. He was supported by American officers at SEAC and the American China-Burma-India Theater headquarters.[9] By the end of the battle the Allied air forces had flown 19,000 tons of supplies and 12,000 men into Kohima and Imphal, and flown out 13,000 casualties and 43,000 non-combatants. War Cemetry After the war, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission set up cemetries in Imphal and Kohima to commemorate the memories of the British and the Indian soldiers who died during the Second World War.[10] Stalemate From the beginning of April, the Japanese attacked the Imphal plain from several directions: • 33rd Division attacked from the south at Bishenpur, where they cut a secondary track from Silchar into the plain. Yanagida, its commander, was already pessimistic and depressed by the failure to trap the Indian 17th Division. He had also been rattled by a garbled radio message which suggested that one of his regiments had been destroyed at Milestone 109. He therefore advanced cautiously. By doing so, he may have lost a chance to gain success while the Indian 17th Infantry Division was resting after its retreat and Bishenpur was held only by Indian 32 Brigade (from 20th Division). Mutaguchi removed him from command. • Yamamoto Force attacked the Shenam Saddle on the main road from Tamu into Imphal. The Shenam Saddle was ideal defensive terrain. Despite using heavy artillery and tanks, Yamamoto could not break through Indian 20th Division's well-sited defences. The INA's Gandhi Regiment or 2nd Guerrilla Regiment, of two battalions led by Inayat Kiyani, later joined this attack and suffered heavy casualties in the assault on Palel airfield. • 15th Division encircled Imphal from the north. Its 60 Regiment captured a British supply dump at Kangpokpi (also known as "Mission" from a church there) on the main Imphal-Dimapur road, but once again, the depot had already been emptied of food and ammunition. 51 Regiment seized the vital Nunshigum Ridge, which overlooked the main airstrip at Imphal. This was a major threat to IV Corps, and on April 13 the Indian 5th Division counter-attacked, supported by massed artillery and the M3 Lee tanks of the 3rd Carabiniers. The Japanese regiment had no anti-tank weapons, and their troops were driven from the ridge with heavy casualties. The situation At the start of 1944, the war was going against the Japanese on several fronts. They were being driven back in the central and south west Pacific. In south east Asia, they had held their lines over the preceding year, but the Allies were preparing several offensives from India and Yunnan into Burma. In particular, the town of Imphal in Manipur on the frontier with Burma was built up to be a substantial logistic base, with airfields, encampments and supply dumps. Imphal was held by the Indian IV Corps, commanded by Lieutenant-General Geoffrey Scoones. The corps was in turn part of the British Fourteenth Army under Lieutenant General William Slim. Because the Allies were planning to take the offensive themselves, the corps' units were thrown forward almost to the Chindwin River and widely separated, being vulnerable to being cut off. • Indian 20th Infantry Division occupied Tamu. The division was untried but well-trained. • Indian 17th Infantry Division occupied Tiddim, at the end of a long and precarious line of communication. The division, which had two brigades only, had been intermittently in action since December 1941. • Indian 23rd Infantry Division was in reserve in Imphal. It had served on the Imphal front for two years and was severely understrength as a result of endemic diseases such as malaria and typhus. • Indian 50th Parachute Brigade was north of Imphal, conducting advanced jungle training. • 254th Indian Tank Brigade was stationed in and around Imphal. Japanese plan Main article: Operation U-Go Late in 1943, the Japanese command in Burma had been reorganised. A new headquarters, Burma Area Army, was created under Lieutenant-General Masakasu Kawabe. One of its subordinate formations, responsible for the central part of the front facing Imphal and Assam, was Fifteenth Army, whose new commander was Lieutenant-General Renya Mutaguchi. From the moment he took command, Mutaguchi forcefully advocated an invasion of India. His motives for doing so appear to be complex. He had played a major part in several Japanese victories, ever since the Marco Polo Bridge incident in 1937 and believed it was his destiny to win the decisive battle of the war for Japan. He may also have been goaded by the first Chindit expedition, a raid behind Japanese lines launched by the British under Orde Wingate early in 1943. The Allies had widely publicised the successful aspects of Wingate's expedition while concealing their losses to disease and exhaustion, possibly misleading Mutaguchi and some of his staff as to the difficulties they would later face. Mutaguchi planned to exploit the capture of Imphal by advancing to the Brahmaputra River valley, thereby cutting the Allied supply lines to their front in northern Burma, and to the airfields supplying the Nationalist Chinese under Chiang Kai-shek over "The Hump". Although the staff at Burma Area Army HQ and at Southern Expeditionary Army Group HQ had reservations over the scale of his proposed operation, they were eventually induced to support it when War Minister Hideki Tojo and Imperial Army HQ favoured attacking India. Mutaguchi intended to cut off and destroy the Allied units in their forward positions and then capture Imphal. His plan was name U-Go, or Operation C. In detail:

 gallery_picture24 gallery_picture32 gallery_picture33 grub (1) grub indiantroopsimphal_small malta-hill_small road_burma stuart-irrawady_small the 14th tank regiment's shinhoto chi-ha captured near imphal usa-c-india-0 17th 200px-imphalradio 200px-subhas_bose 300px-imphalgurkhas ariba keithel baileycatwalk (1) baileycatwalk bishenpur-recce_small gallery_picture2 gallery_picture4 gallery_picture6 gallery_picture10 gallery_picture11 gallery_picture13 gallery_picture17 (1) gallery_picture17 gallery_picture19 gallery_picture21

Bangalore Royal Challengers beat Chennai Super Kings by two wickets

Written by admin on 8:28 PM

Durban, May 14 (ANI): Bangalore Royal Challengers beat Chennai Super Kings by two wickets in their Indian Premier League (IPL) match here on Thursday.

Chennai Super Kings skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni won the toss and elected to bat first. Chennai got to a good start after openers Matthew Hayden and Murali Vijay added 32 runs for the first wicket.

Hayden once again played a fine knock and scored 60 runs off 38 balls with four fours and three sixes.

Apart from Hayden's inning, no other player could bat for a long time at the crease. ]

The only partnership of substance for Chennai was of 45 runs that came between Hayden and captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni for the third wicket.

Dhoni scored 18 runs off 20 balls with one four hit to the fence.

Chennai Super Kings scored 129 runs for the loss of seven wickets in 20 overs.

For Royal Challengers, skipper Anil Kumble, R. Vinay Kumar and Jacques Kallis took two wickets each.

Chasing a victory target of 130, Bangalore Royal Challengers got off to a poor start when opener Jacques Kallis was adjudged leg before wicket off Albie Morkel.

Royal Challengers had lost three wickets at a total of 30 runs, but Virat Kohli and Ross Taylor took their team to a total of 86 runs. Kohli and Taylor added 56 runs for the fourth wicket.

Kohli scored 38 runs off 35 balls with four fours and two sixes. After Kohli's dismissal, Royal Challengers lost wickets on quick succession.

R. Vinay Kumar took two runs on the third ball and hit the fourth delivery of the last over for four to register a thrilling victory.

For Chennai, Albie Morkel and Jacob Oram took two wickets each.

Ross Taylor was declared 'Man of the Match' for his match-winning inning of 46 runs. (ANI)

Uttar Pradesh Government withdraws NSA against Varun

Written by admin on 8:27 PM

Lucknow, May 14 (ANI): Mayawati-led Uttar Pradesh Government on Thursday revoked the National Security Act (NSA) invoked against Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Varun Gandhi for allegedly making hate speeches.

UP Government's decision came hours after the Supreme Court ordered the State Government to revoke the NSA against Varun Gandhi.

Varun was arrested under the NSA on March 29.

Earlier in the day, the Supreme Court revoked the NSA invoked against Varun Gandhi for making an alleged 'hate-speech' in Pilibhit.

Varun had challenged the imposition of the NSA by the Uttar Pradesh Government in the apex court and demanded compensation of rupees 10 lakh from Chief Minister Mayawati.

The imposition of NSA on Varun has also been termed invalid by the Uttar Pradesh Advisory Board appointed by the Allahabad High Court to go into the merits of the case.

The government argued that the Advisory Board's decision was incorrect, as it had ignored several cogent evidences against Varun.

Varun had submitted his representation before an Advisory Board in the Lucknow bench of the Allahabad High Court on April 28 against slapping of the NSA over his alleged hate speech in Pilibhit.

As the ultimate statutory authority on the NSA, the Advisory Board has the right to approve or revoke the government order invoking the act against Varun.

The verdict of the Advisory Board is final and if it chooses to revoke the NSA, Varun would be set free with immediate effect.

Varun was charged for making highly inflammatory anti-Muslim utterances during his poll campaign in Pilibhit. (ANI)

Left parties not to support Congress-led Government

Written by admin on 8:27 PM

Kolkata, May 14 (ANI): Forward Bloc General Secretary Ashok Ghosh on Thursday said that the Left parties would not support a Congress-led Government at the Centre.

"In no circumstances will the four Left parties - the CPM, the Communist Party of India (CPI), Forward Bloc and the Revolutionary Socialist Party (RSP) will support a Congress-led government at the Centre from outside. If necessary, we will sit in the opposition. This is our decision," Ashok Ghosh told reporters here.

When asked if the Congress emerged as the single largest party would his party abstain from voting in the event of a trust voter in the Parliament to enable such a government to survive to prevent the BJP from coming to power, Ghosh said the stand of the Left parties so far was not to support a Congress-led government.

Gosh, however, added that he could not say anything what would happen in a changed scenario. (ANI)

President felicitates three young girls in New Delhi

Written by admin on 8:26 PM

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): President Pratibha Patil on Thursday felicitated three young girls from Purulia District of West Bengal for their progressive outlook which helped them to resist their early marriage in favour of further education.

The three girls - Afsana Khatun, Rekha Kalindi and Sunita Mahato, showed great grit and determination when asked to wed at such a tender age by their parents.heir stories of courage impressed the President so much that she invited them to Delhi.

At the felicitation, President applauded the girls and presented them a cash award of Rs. 10,000 each.

"These girls are very brave. They said 'no' to their parents and refused to get married. With the help of their friends and teachers, they convinced their parents that early child marriage is not good. I am very glad that their parents have also agreed," Pratibha Patil said.

On meeting the President, the trio beamed a big smile and said that they think this event would usher a wave of change in their lives as well as the society.

Thirteen-year-old Afsana Khatun has been a student of the Dhobadi Special School, run under National Child Labour Project since August 2007. Prior to enrolment in the school she was working as a domestic help to supplement her parents' meagre income.

When Afsana's parents decided to discontinue her schooling and even fixed her marriage in early September, she resolved not to accept her fate as her elder sister had done.

Her sister too was married off when she was just 13 years in age.

Nonetheless, Afsana sought help from her classmates who jointly asked the Assistant Labour Commissioner, coordinating the National Child Labour Programme (NCLP) in Purulia to intervene.

Similar have been the saga of the other two girls Rekha Kalindi (11) from Jhalda Block and Sunita Mahato (13) from Joypur.

All the three young girls study in the same Dhobadi Special School in Purulia.

Rekha and Sunita also protested when their parents arranged their marriage to persons very much elder to them.

They too asked the NCLP authorities to help them and through their intervention succeeded in convincing their parents to put off their marriages till they attained the age of 18.

Rekha Kalindi recalled how she refused despite the parents' adamant attitude until the officials of the Labour Commissioner emerged on the scene and rescued her.

Child marriage is a social evil and also a penal offence in India. (ANI)

LK Advani will become PM predicts Shivalinga Swamy

Written by admin on 8:26 PM

Bangalore, May 14: While the exit polls predict an edge to Cong-led government, divine astrologer and healer Shree Shivalinga Swamy of Bangalore seems to see quiet the opposite in Advani's furture. Based his calculations and intuition, he portends LK Advani from Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) taking over the Prime Ministerial seat post May 16.

Saturn dasha and Saturn bhukti are the hurdles that are slowing him down right now but in spite these obstacles, the divine astrologer predicts Advani emerging as the Prime Minister. His prediction also indicates that he will face troubles in his administration.


Read: ಕನ್ನಡದಲ್ಲಿ
The planets aligning to give him the 'Kingly' position are his Jupiter in 11th house (transiting from moon), and Rahu and Ketu in 3rd and 9th house (transiting from ascendant), and transiting Saturn in Leo.

The astrological prediction also expects the senile leader to put some concentrated effort in the direction of acquiring power.

We apologise to Indian passengers: Air France

Written by admin on 8:25 PM

New Delhi, May 14: Air France on Thursday, May 14 apologised to its passengers especially to Indian passengers for 'all inconveniences', due to a long delay in a Paris-Mumbai flight Sunday, May 10.

"Air France apologises for the ill-treatment meted out to passengers and understands the annoyance expressed by some of them. Exceptional circumstances made the situation particularly difficult," the airline said in a statement.

The Air France Airbus-A330 flight AF 218 was delayed after the pilot noticed some vibrations coming from the cargo hold. Indian passengers who reached Mumbai on Tuesday, May 12 had complained of 'ill-treatment' and alleged racial bias on the part of the airline employees.

"The airline did not give any reason for the delay and dumped all Indians in a small room," an Indian passenger said after landing in Mumbai.

However, the airlines said that its staff made sure that all the passengers were served and comfortable.

SC orders NMIH to pay 1 cr to Infy engineer

Written by admin on 8:25 PM

New Delhi, May 14: The Supreme Court on Thursday, May 14 directed Hyderabad's Nizam’s Medical Institute to pay a hefty compensation of Rs 1 crore to a software engineer who suffered permanent disability due to the negligence of the hospital staff.

Prashanth S Dhananka, employee of Infosys from Bangalore was paralysed waist downwards after a surgery at the government-owned institute. The surgery has rendered him permanently disabled and incapable of performing everyday chores.

The supreme court bench comprising of Justice B N Agrawal, Justice G S Singhwi and Justice H S Bedi hiked the compensation from a Rs 15 lakhs awarded by the Andhra Pradesh High Court to Rs one crore making it the highest compensation ever awarded.

Office worker spooked by UFO flying over Bristol

Written by admin on 8:25 PM

London, May 14 (ANI): A Brit office worker, who managed to videotape a UFO flying over Bristol, has been left spooked by it.

Andy Hadlington, 36, a computer game writer, witnessed the mysterious triangular-shaped object silently hovering above a residential neighbourhood in the West Country city on May 10.

In the video, a spinning grey object gliding around the village of Knowle - without making a sound, could be seen.

"It was the freakiest thing I have ever seen in my life. I was sitting in my office and saw it out of the corner of my eye," the Sun quoted Hadlington as saying.

"It was quite exciting - it sort of hovered past the houses. There was no sound. I ran downstairs and out of the garden to see where it went but I couldn't see anything.

"My fiancee was out at the time but I'm sure other people must have seen it. It was so clear," he added.

UFO experts have since been clambering to verify the sighting and are hoping to speak to more witnesses about the eerie episode.

Denis Plunkett, 78, of the British Flying Saucer Bureau, based in Winterbourne, near Bristol, was unable to comment on the video but said there were ways to verify its authenticity.

"There are ways to sort out good from bad. Firstly they are silent, there will be no noise," he said.

"They can also become invisible. They can go in and out of MoD radar. They can change speed, direction and height in seconds.

"The best thing is if there are multiple witnesses to the sighting. If more people saw this I'd be very interested," he added. (ANI)

Manipur Launches Schools U11 League

Written by admin on 12:11 AM

Imphal, May 14 : Vision India Project Manipur took another step forward this week with the start of the Ukhrul District Grassroots School League.

Manipur already has a strong state league at the elite level and the launch of the school league, for under-11 players, provides a starting point for youngsters keen to play competitive football.

The league is part of the AFC Vision India Project Manipur initiative and feature eight school teams in the Ukhrul district.

The schools taking part are: Cambridge School, Little Angels English School, Alice Christian Higher Secondary School, Sacred Heart Higher Secondary School, Kariphung Govt High School, Blossom Tutorial Academy, Springfield School and Galaxy Christian School.

KSO Decries UNLF Remarks

Written by admin on 12:11 AM

Imphal, May 13 : The KSO Churachandpur has disapproved and denounced the provocative remarks made by the proscribed UNLF in the wake of the reported arrest of one Kh Megha by AR at Moreh, conveyed a press release issued by its general secretary Seiboi Haokip.

“Unlike the appreciable press statement of the RPF, the contemptuous and hate-filled propaganda of the UNLF revealed their true nature”, it asserted.

Censuring the press statement which contained such terms as “wicked Kukis, Kuki scoundrels, to murder Meiteis, to drive off Meiteis etc”, the KSO observed that the statement has the tone of whipping up passions and thus to sharpen communal polarisation.

Saying that the issue should not be communalised under any circumstances, the KSO noted the need for an impartial enquiry.

Once again, the student body denounced the alleged mass rape of Hmar women at Parbung area followed by mass exodus to Mizoram and the mass kidnapping of civilians to Myanmar.

It further decried the alleged failed attempts to control and create communal tension at Moreh, threats to the people of Heirok and of late the diktats intimidated to MU authorities and students regarding MUSU election imbroglio.

The KSO also called upon the people to weed out those pseudo-nationalists.

Intel hit with $1.45 billion fine in Europe

Written by admin on 12:06 AM

SAN FRANCISCO -Intel Corp. was fined a record $1.45 billion by the European Union on Wednesday for using strong-arm sales tactics in the computer chip market — a penalty that could turn up the pressure on U.S. regulators to go after the company, too.
The fine against the world's biggest chip maker represents a huge victory for Intel's Silicon Valley rival, Advanced Micro Devices Inc., or AMD, the No. 2 supplier of microprocessors to PC makers.
AMD has sued Intel and lobbied regulators around the world for the past five years, complaining that Intel was penalizing PC makers in the U.S. and abroad for doing business with AMD.
Although the U.S. Federal Trade Commission is also investigating, AMD seems to have found its most sympathetic ear in Europe.
EU Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said Intel has harmed millions of European consumers by "deliberately acting to keep competitors out of the market."
"Intel did not compete fairly, frustrating innovation and reducing consumer welfare in the process," she said.
The commission told Intel to immediately stop some sales practices in Europe, though it wouldn't say what those were. Intel said it was "mystified" about what it was supposed to change but would comply while it appeals the fine.
The Santa Clara, Calif., company also defended its sales practices — which include rebates to big Intel customers — as legitimate.
"This is really just a matter of competition at work, which is something I think we all want to see, versus something nefarious," Intel CEO Paul Otellini said in a conference call with reporters.
AMD Chief Executive Dirk Meyer said the decision was "an important step toward establishing a truly competitive market."
"We are looking forward to the move from a world in which Intel ruled, to one which is ruled by customers," Meyer said in a statement.
The biggest previous fine levied by the European Union for anticompetitive behavior was $1.3 billion, brought against Microsoft Corp. last year.
Whether Intel could face punishment in the U.S. remains to be seen. But the EU's fine against Intel could push the issue to the forefront for the Obama administration.
"If there was ever a time not to appear to be a large firm behaving badly, this would be it, as the financial collapse has the U.S. and EU competing for which government is the most proactively protecting consumer rights," warned Rob Enderle, a technology industry analyst. "This judgment makes Intel the ball in what is likely an international game of one-upmanship."
The Obama administration signaled this week that antitrust enforcement would be pursued more vigorously than in the Bush administration, whose Justice Department filed only three anti-monopoly cases, all involving mergers. Yet the Justice Department has been silent on whether it is investigating Intel.
The Federal Trade Commission investigation of Intel could result in the agency asking a court to order Intel to alter its practices. A spokeswoman for the FTC declined to comment.
Stephen Kinsella, a lawyer specializing on European antitrust law, cautioned that Europe is known for its aggressive antitrust enforcement and that a case brought against Intel in the U.S. or elsewhere might be milder.
The EU fine is "hugely significant because it's Intel, and the amounts at stake are enormous," he said. But "it is known that the commission takes a very hard line on this type of behavior."
The Intel-vs.-AMD fight exposes an ugly part of the business for microprocessors, which essentially are the brains of personal computers.
Unlike other parts of the PC industry that have lots of competitors, microprocessors come from only two sources. Intel has about 80 percent of the market, and AMD — headquartered a few miles away in Sunnyvale — has the rest. That means a victory for one is a defeat for the other.
The process of getting a chip into a computer and onto the shelves has two main steps, and AMD has cried foul about Intel's behavior at both stages.
First, a computer maker has to agree to buy the chips. In that stage, AMD has alleged, Intel has illegally used its dominant position by offering huge rebates to PC makers that promise to buy lots of Intel's chips. AMD argues that the discounts can effectively make some chip orders free, and that it would have to lose money on sales in order to keep up.
The case before the European Commission alleges that Intel illegally undermined AMD with computer makers Acer, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo and NEC.
In AMD's U.S. lawsuit against Intel, set to go to trial next year in Delaware, executives from Gateway complained that Intel's threats of retaliation for working with AMD beat them "into guacamole." The lawsuit also quotes Toshiba officials saying Intel's financial incentives amounted to "cocaine."
Second, chip makers help persuade stores to carry PCs with their processors inside, and pay the retailers to help promote the machines. In the case before the EU, regulators said Intel paid Germany's biggest electronics retailer to stock only Intel-based computers at its MediaMarkt superstores — even in Dresden, where many AMD chips are made.
Kinsella, the specialist on European antitrust law, said "loyalty rebate" programs are common, but become a problem when dominant companies use them. In a similar European case, tire maker Michelin was fined in 2001 over its rebate program in France.
Kinsella said the accusation that Intel paid companies specifically not to use AMD's products would set this case apart from others.
"If that's true," he said, "that would be pretty far out there in terms of examples of abuse."
Investors were expecting the Intel fine and seemed unfazed. Intel stock lost 8 cents to close at $15.13. AMD was up 3 cents at $4.38.

Gorillas might be the smartest apes on the planet

Written by admin on 1:18 AM

Washington, May 13 (ANI): A new research, which involved a trial and error test, has suggested that gorillas maybe the smartest apes on the planet.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the research was done at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, US.

Four years ago, scientists there attached a touch-screen computer terminal to the side of the enclosure of a female gorilla named Rollie.

As the gorilla approached, it saw the numeral one displayed on the screen. When Rollie touched the symbol, a chime sounded and the machine dispensed a frozen blueberry.

It did not take long for the gorilla to work out that pressing the number had benefits.

After a while, the computer screen presented Rollie with two symbols, the numerals one and two. Through trial and error, Rollie learned to press them in the right order to receive a blueberry.

Last year, zoo primatologist Steve Ross reported that Rollie could sequence up to seven numbers at a time, and that chimpanzees at the facility were taking twice as long to learn the sequence.

"Gorillas rarely use tools and have rarely been cognitively studied as a result. So, we did not expect them to perform very well at this," Ross said.

Despite Rollie's success, Ross and his colleagues wondered whether the gorilla was just one very sharp ape, or if such intellect could be found in other gorillas.

The scientists started testing other gorillas at their facility.

The youngest of the group, a five-year-old named Azizi, is also proving to be a quick study.

So far, the male gorilla has only learned to sequence five numbers at a time, but has progressed as rapidly as Rollie.

In Japan, similar studies are being conducted with chimpanzees, mandrills, and gibbons. None have made it past the number five.

"This is the first study demonstrating gorilla intelligence like this," said Tetsuro Matsuzawa, director of the Primate Research Institute at Kyoto University. "I am eager to see how further research with these gorillas progresses," he added. (ANI)

Gorillas might be the smartest apes on the planet

Written by admin on 12:28 AM

Washington, May 13 (ANI): A new research, which involved a trial and error test, has suggested that gorillas maybe the smartest apes on the planet.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the research was done at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, US.

Four years ago, scientists there attached a touch-screen computer terminal to the side of the enclosure of a female gorilla named Rollie.

As the gorilla approached, it saw the numeral one displayed on the screen. When Rollie touched the symbol, a chime sounded and the machine dispensed a frozen blueberry.

It did not take long for the gorilla to work out that pressing the number had benefits.

After a while, the computer screen presented Rollie with two symbols, the numerals one and two. Through trial and error, Rollie learned to press them in the right order to receive a blueberry.

Last year, zoo primatologist Steve Ross reported that Rollie could sequence up to seven numbers at a time, and that chimpanzees at the facility were taking twice as long to learn the sequence.

"Gorillas rarely use tools and have rarely been cognitively studied as a result. So, we did not expect them to perform very well at this," Ross said.

Despite Rollie's success, Ross and his colleagues wondered whether the gorilla was just one very sharp ape, or if such intellect could be found in other gorillas.

The scientists started testing other gorillas at their facility.

The youngest of the group, a five-year-old named Azizi, is also proving to be a quick study.

So far, the male gorilla has only learned to sequence five numbers at a time, but has progressed as rapidly as Rollie.

In Japan, similar studies are being conducted with chimpanzees, mandrills, and gibbons. None have made it past the number five.

"This is the first study demonstrating gorilla intelligence like this," said Tetsuro Matsuzawa, director of the Primate Research Institute at Kyoto University. "I am eager to see how further research with these gorillas progresses," he added. (ANI)

Gorillas might be the smartest apes on the planet

Written by admin on 12:26 AM

Washington, May 13 (ANI): A new research, which involved a trial and error test, has suggested that gorillas maybe the smartest apes on the planet.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the research was done at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, US.

Four years ago, scientists there attached a touch-screen computer terminal to the side of the enclosure of a female gorilla named Rollie.

As the gorilla approached, it saw the numeral one displayed on the screen. When Rollie touched the symbol, a chime sounded and the machine dispensed a frozen blueberry.

It did not take long for the gorilla to work out that pressing the number had benefits.

After a while, the computer screen presented Rollie with two symbols, the numerals one and two. Through trial and error, Rollie learned to press them in the right order to receive a blueberry.

Last year, zoo primatologist Steve Ross reported that Rollie could sequence up to seven numbers at a time, and that chimpanzees at the facility were taking twice as long to learn the sequence.

"Gorillas rarely use tools and have rarely been cognitively studied as a result. So, we did not expect them to perform very well at this," Ross said.

Despite Rollie's success, Ross and his colleagues wondered whether the gorilla was just one very sharp ape, or if such intellect could be found in other gorillas.

The scientists started testing other gorillas at their facility.

The youngest of the group, a five-year-old named Azizi, is also proving to be a quick study.

So far, the male gorilla has only learned to sequence five numbers at a time, but has progressed as rapidly as Rollie.

In Japan, similar studies are being conducted with chimpanzees, mandrills, and gibbons. None have made it past the number five.

"This is the first study demonstrating gorilla intelligence like this," said Tetsuro Matsuzawa, director of the Primate Research Institute at Kyoto University. "I am eager to see how further research with these gorillas progresses," he added. (ANI)

Gorillas might be the smartest apes on the planet

Written by admin on 12:25 AM

Washington, May 13 (ANI): A new research, which involved a trial and error test, has suggested that gorillas maybe the smartest apes on the planet.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the research was done at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, US.

Four years ago, scientists there attached a touch-screen computer terminal to the side of the enclosure of a female gorilla named Rollie.

As the gorilla approached, it saw the numeral one displayed on the screen. When Rollie touched the symbol, a chime sounded and the machine dispensed a frozen blueberry.

It did not take long for the gorilla to work out that pressing the number had benefits.

After a while, the computer screen presented Rollie with two symbols, the numerals one and two. Through trial and error, Rollie learned to press them in the right order to receive a blueberry.

Last year, zoo primatologist Steve Ross reported that Rollie could sequence up to seven numbers at a time, and that chimpanzees at the facility were taking twice as long to learn the sequence.

"Gorillas rarely use tools and have rarely been cognitively studied as a result. So, we did not expect them to perform very well at this," Ross said.

Despite Rollie's success, Ross and his colleagues wondered whether the gorilla was just one very sharp ape, or if such intellect could be found in other gorillas.

The scientists started testing other gorillas at their facility.

The youngest of the group, a five-year-old named Azizi, is also proving to be a quick study.

So far, the male gorilla has only learned to sequence five numbers at a time, but has progressed as rapidly as Rollie.

In Japan, similar studies are being conducted with chimpanzees, mandrills, and gibbons. None have made it past the number five.

"This is the first study demonstrating gorilla intelligence like this," said Tetsuro Matsuzawa, director of the Primate Research Institute at Kyoto University. "I am eager to see how further research with these gorillas progresses," he added. (ANI)

Prehistoric fishing tackle found in Egypt

Written by admin on 12:25 AM

Abu Dhabi, May 13 (ANI): An Egyptian archaeological team has found prehistoric fishing gear, sewing equipment and jewellery all made from animal bones, as well as pottery and coins, near an oasis south of Cairo.

"An Egyptian archaeological mission working near El-Karn island on Lake Qarun in Fayoum has found a large amount of fishing tackle, sewing equipment and jewellery made from animal bone dating back to prehistoric time," Culture Minister Faruk Hosni told Khaleej Times Online.

"The mission also found caves used by prehistoric man," he said.

"The most important item is an awl made of animal bone and granite, which shows that prehistoric man devised many ways to sew leather," Khaled Saad, who headed the mission, was quoted as saying.

The team also found ancient pottery, coins, whale vertebrae and fossils of seals, sawfish as well as crocodile and turtle parts, Saad added.

"Medical equipment and weapons made of animal bone were also unearthed," he said.

The site was used by many civilizations, antiquities chief Zahi Hawass was quoted as saying.

"During excavation, the mission found antiquities from the Pharaonic, Greek, Roman and Islamic periods," Hawass said.

The team also found a rare block which dates back to 3150 BC depicting the mythical leader known as the Scorpion King, as well as colourful mosaic plates with engravings of the Fatimid caliph Al-Zafir. (ANI)

World's oldest teak trees dying in Kerala

Written by admin on 12:22 AM

Nilambur (Kerala), May 13: Two teak trees, believed to be the oldest in the world, are dying. The trees are located at the plantation, about 40 kilometres from Malappuram town in Kerala.

As per forest officials here, two out of the 117 plants are in the dying stage, they have died almost 90 percent. But the officials have still retained in the plantation and tourists are allowed to watch it.

These trees have started forming wrinkles and some of the them are already half-dead.

The plantation is named in honour of HV Conolly, the then Collector of Malabar during the British rule, who was instrumental in planting teak in the entire Nilambur area with the help of Shri Chanthu Menon, a forest officer under him.

The plot extends across 2.31 hectares beside the Chaliyar river at Aruvakode and a hanging bridge is one of the attractions among the tourists.

This plantation is about 163 years old. The planting was done between the year 1842 -1844.

The plot has also been acclaimed for having the oldest living teak tree (girth 420 cms and height 46.5 meters) and Shri Chanthu Menon, was laid to rest in this very teak garden, Conolly's plot, as a mark of honour.

Accused soldier's father says son 'broke'

Written by admin on 12:20 AM

SHERMAN, Texas -The Army sergeant accused of killing five fellow soldiers in Iraq was typically not a violent person, but counselors "broke" him before the gunfire erupted in a military stress center, his father said Tuesday. Wilburn Russell, 73, told reporters that his son, Sgt. John M. Russell, was treated poorly at the stress center and had e-mailed his wife calling two recent days the worst in his life.
"I hate what that boy did," said the elder Russell, speaking in front of the two-story suburban home his son is buying with his wife. "He thought it was justified. That's never a solution."
The 44-year-old soldier has been charged with murder and aggravated assault in the Baghdad slayings Monday, which his father said came just weeks before the end of his third tour of duty in Iraq.
His father said the younger Russell, an electronics technician, was at the stress center to transition out of active duty. He said his son was undergoing stressful mental tests that he didn't understand were merely tests, "so they broke him."
"His life was over as far as he was concerned. He lived for the military," the elder Russell said. "We're sorry for the families, too. It shouldn't have happened."
The soldier's son, John M. Russell II, said Tuesday that he has communicated with his father by e-mail regularly. In the last message he received from him, on April 25, his father sounded normal and planned to be back in Texas to visit in July.
"He's not a violent person," he said. "For this to happen, it had to be something going on that the Army's not telling us about."
Sgt. Russell grew up in rural Grayson County and graduated from high school in 1985. He entered the Army National Guard in 1988 and served until going on active duty in 1994.
He lives with his wife in Germany, where he's been for the better part of the past 10 to 15 years but comes home a couple times a year, his father said.
Russell's ex-wife filed for divorce in 1991 and obtained a temporary restraining order against him, alleging in the petition that he committed "acts of family violence."
The petition also cited an alleged incident in which he had a confrontation with Denise Russell's mother.
"During this time, respondent physically attacked my mother, age 58, hitting her on the shoulders and about the head," a petition affidavit stated.
There was no response Tuesday to a telephone call and a visit to Russell's ex-wife.
In 1993, a month after the divorce decree was issued, Russell was charged with misdemeanor assault but the matter was dropped, records show.
Jack McGowen, listed as Russell's attorney for the divorce as well as the threat case, said Tuesday he can't recall either matter.

Pope calls for Palestinian homeland

Written by admin on 12:19 AM

BETHLEHEM, West Bank -In a pilgrimage to Jesus' traditional birthplace, Pope Benedict XVI called Wednesday for the establishment of a Palestinian state and acknowledged Palestinian suffering during decades of Mideast turmoil.
The pontiff stood alongside Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas as he delivered his strongest public support yet for Palestinian statehood.
"Mr. President, the Holy See supports the right of your people to a sovereign Palestinian homeland in the land of your forefathers, secure and at peace with its neighbors, within internationally recognized borders," the pontiff said.
The Palestinians hoped that the pontiff's visit would highlight the harsh conditions they endure living under Israeli military rule. Benedict acknowledged their difficulties, though stopped short of naming Israel.
"I know how much you have suffered and continue to suffer as a result of the turmoil that has afflicted this land for decades," he said.
Earlier Wednesday, the pontiff's motorcade drove through a crossing in Israel's towering West Bank separation barrier to reach the cradle of Christianity. Israel says it built the barrier to keep out Palestinian attackers, while Palestinians denounce it as a land grab because it dips into areas they claim for a future independent state.
Later, he was to tour the Church of the Nativity, built over the traditional birth grotto and visit a Palestinian refugee camp.
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat says the pope's visit amounts to "a call to end injustice and end occupation."
Christians are a dwindling minority among Palestinians. Christians in Bethlehem say they hope the pope's visit will discourage further Christian emigration.

Shot Mumbai policeman testifies

Written by admin on 12:18 AM

An Indian court has heard dramatic new evidence against the alleged sole surviving gunman of the Mumbai attacks, Mohammad Ajmal Amir Qasab.

Sanjay Govilkar, a police officer who was present during the battle to capture Mr Qasab, told the court how he and his colleague had been shot.

He and the other police officer were fired on by Mr Qasab before he was overpowered, Mr Govilkar said.

Mr Qasab is charged on 86 counts, including waging war against India.

He is also accused of murder and possessing explosives. Last week he pleaded not guilty to all the charges he faces.

'He fired'

Mr Govilkar said his confrontation with Mr Qasab had taken place overnight on 26 November at a checkpoint in Mumbai.
"There were about 12 to 13 police officers [at the checkpoint] when a Skoda [car] approached it," he said.

"The vehicle did not stop and took a u-turn crashing into the divider... We rushed to the vehicle.

"As we came, Qasab got out of the car with his weapon. We tried to snatch the weapon and grab him. But he fired and Tukaram Omble [the other police officer] and I were injured."

Mr Omble later died from his injuries.

Mr Govilkar - who was injured on the right side of his waist - said that he had helped police to overpower the suspect with batons despite his injuries.

Both he and his colleague were rushed to hospital after Mr Qasab's arrest, he said.

During cross-examination, he denied claims that he had been "instructed beforehand" on the nature of his evidence.

Smiling in court

The judge in the case on Tuesday afternoon again warned Mr Qasab to refrain from smiling in court.

He was reprimanded after lunch during the evidence of the third witness, Hemant Bavdhankar, who was narrating how Tukaram Omble was shot.

Special judge ML Tahiliyani was evidently annoyed with the defendant's behaviour and reacted sharply, says the BBC's Prachi Pinglay, who was in court.

"I have noticed he [Qasab] always laughs when Omble's name is mentioned and the incident is talked about," the judge said.

More than 170 people died in the attacks, including nine gunmen.

Two Indians, Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed, are also on trial accused of being members of the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group and of scouting for the attacks.

They too have pleaded not guilty to conspiracy to commit the same offences as Mr Qasab.

In an earlier hearing, Mr Qasab retracted a confession, saying it had been coerced.

It will be up to the judge to weigh the evidence at the trial and decide whether the confession should be taken into account.

India has accused Pakistan-based fighters from Lashkar-e-Taiba of carrying out the attacks, which took place from 26-28 November.

Pakistan has admitted they were partly planned on its soil and the two countries have suffered seriously strained relations.

The case continues.

Film-makers attacked in Pakistan

Written by admin on 12:17 AM

A film-maker from Greater Manchester fled Pakistan after his crew were attacked and shot at near the Afghanistan border.

David Whitney was in the middle of shooting Kandahar Break, a film about Taleban-rule in Afghanistan, when the team was attacked just outside Quetta.

The 31-year-old believes they came under Taleban fire. His crew were flown out of the country within 24 hours.

"Fortunately we all survived, but it was terrifying," Mr Whitney said.
The Horwich-born director landed in Manchester the day after the attack, relieved but disappointed he could not carry on filming.

"Four members of our crew were shot but they escaped without serious injury," he said.

"We were flown straight out of Quetta, landed in Islamabad and then onto Manchester.

"I was really disappointed though, we were at a crucial point in the filming."

With three-quarters of the production finished, Mr Whitney managed to get financial backing and ended up shooting the rest of it in Tunisia.

Having just finished filming, he has just returned to Manchester and the film is now in the post-production stage. He hopes to release it in July.

Based in Afghanistan in 1999, it follows the journey of four British mine experts working for the Taleban and what happens when one of them disobeys the strict regime.

Mr Whitney added: "It has consumed two years of my life, we all wanted to complete it, at one point after the guys got shot we were pretty broken, that almost finished us.

"But we managed it."

UK, US plea over Sri Lanka crisis

Written by admin on 12:16 AM

The US and UK have urged Sri Lanka's government and Tamil Tiger rebels to stop fighting "immediately" and allow an evacuation of trapped civilians.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her UK counterpart David Miliband also expressed alarm at the large number of reported civilian casualties.

The top UN aid official said the situation in the conflict zone in north-eastern Sri Lanka was "awful".

The rebels earlier accused the army of killing 49 people in a hospital.

The Tamil Tigers said the makeshift hospital in Mullivaikal in the rebel-held enclave was hit on Tuesday morning.

The Sri Lankan government denied the army had caused civilian casualties or used heavy weapons in civilian areas, but said it had pierced rebel defences.


See a map of the conflict region

As it advanced south, the army also said that all voices speaking from the Tiger-held zone amounted to misinformation.

The claims are impossible to verify as reporters are banned from the area.

More than 400 people were killed and over 1,000 injured over the weekend in what the UN has described as a "bloodbath".

The UN estimates that about 50,000 civilians are trapped by the conflict, in a three-sq-km strip of land. Most of this area has been designated by the government as a safe zone which will not be attacked by air or by heavy weapons.

'Political solution'

Mrs Clinton and Mr Miliband issued a joint statement on Sri Lanka, following their talks in Washington.

The statement urged all sides in Sri Lanka to "end hostilities immediately and allow for the safe evacuation of the tens of thousands of civilians trapped within the safe zone".

It also said London and Washington were alarmed "at the large number of reported civilian casualties over the past several days in the designated 'safe zone'".

The two top diplomats called for "a political solution that reconciles all Sri Lankans, and establishes a meaningful role for Tamil and other minorities in national political life".

Their appeal was the latest in a series of calls by the international community to try to end the fighting on the Indian Ocean island.

Aid shipment abandoned

Earlier on Tuesday, UN humanitarian co-ordinator John Holmes said intransigence by both the Sri Lankan government and the rebels had created an "absolutely awful situation".

"The LTTE [Tamil Tigers] are clearly still holding onto that population against their will, using them as human shields," he said at a news conference in Geneva.

"The government have said they are not using heavy weapons. But the evidence suggests that they are continuing to do so, at least to some extent."

Meanwhile, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Tuesday abandoned an attempt to deliver aid by sea to the enclave and evacuate many sick and injured civilians.

An ICRC spokeswoman said the fighting was too fierce and another attempt would be made on Wednesday. The last evacuation was on Saturday.

The Tamil Tigers have fought for an independent homeland for Sri Lanka's Tamil minority since 1983.

More than 70,000 people have been killed in the war.

India election starts final phase

Written by admin on 12:15 AM

India has entered the final phase of its marathon election, with 107 million voters eligible to cast ballots.

Voting is in 86 constituencies across nine states and territories, including Tamil Nadu in the south and most parts of the city of Calcutta.

The main fight is between the ruling Congress party-led alliance and parties led by the BJP, although there is a host of regional opposition.

Results are announced on Saturday and an outright majority is unlikely.

A series of exit polls is expected after polling closes at 1700 local time (1130 GMT).

Calcutta violence

The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi says that the final phase could well prove decisive as the swing state of Tamil Nadu, with nearly 40 parliamentary seats, has heavily influenced federal politics in the past few elections.

Voters in the states of Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal are also casting ballots on Wednesday, the final day of voting.

Polls are also being held in the federally-administered territories of Chandigarh and Pondicherry.

The BBC's Subir Bhaumik in Calcutta says there have been election clashes in seven places in and around the city, with one person reported dead and 17 injured. There were similar clashes there in last week's voting phase.

All 39 constituencies in the southern state of Tamil Nadu are voting.

Tamil Nadu - where voters tend to hand big victories to one or other of the state's two main parties - is expected to play a crucial role in the formation of the government in the coalition talks that are almost certain to follow the election.

The last five governments have been formed with the winners in Tamil Nadu.

Former state chief minister, J Jayalalitha, head of the AIADMK party and one of India's most colourful and controversial politicians, has cast her vote in the state capital Madras (Chennai) and complained of election irregularities.

She said some election machines were not working properly and in some places paramilitaries were nowhere to be seen.

In Jammu and Kashmir, some separatist groups have called for a boycott of the elections and there has been a two-day strike in the Muslim-majority Kashmir valley.

A former separatist and head of a faction of the regional People's Conference party, Sajjad Lone, has broken ranks to stand for election from Baramullah.

The BBC's Altaf Hussain in Srinagar says turnout in the region is so far very low.

A large number of police and paramilitary troops have been deployed in the capital, Srinagar, to prevent anti-election demonstrations, our correspondent says.

Among the other candidates facing the electorate on Wednesday are Varun Gandhi and Mohammad Azharrudin.

Mr Gandhi, who has been accused of making a controversial anti-Muslim speech, is standing for the Bharatiya Janata Party in Pilibhit in Uttar Pradesh.

Ex-cricketer Azharruddin stands for Congress in Moradabad in the same state.

The first round of the general election on 16 April was marred by Maoist attacks in eastern and central India which killed at least 17 people. Later rounds were less violent.

About two million security personnel are being deployed for the five-phase vote.

The new parliament has to be constituted by 2 June.

Afghan suicide bomb 'kills seven'

Written by admin on 12:14 AM

A suicide car bomb explosion near a US military base in eastern Afghanistan has killed seven civilians and wounded several others, the US military says.

The attack took place near the eastern town of Khost. Most of the casualties were believed to be local labourers working at the base, Camp Salerno.

There are no reports of casualties among coalition forces.

Khost was struck by several suicide blasts on Tuesday which left up to nine Afghans dead.

Simultaneous attacks

The provincial police chief in Khost, Abdul Qayoum Baqizoi, confirmed that Wednesday's attack was a car bomb.

US military official, Specialist April Campbell, quoted by the AFP news agency from the main US base at Bagram, north of the capital Kabul, said: "Twenty-one local nationals were wounded and seven were killed."

Local officials said the toll of dead and injured could rise.

A man claiming to be a local member of the Taleban claimed responsibility for the attack.

The blast comes a day after nine people were killed in simultaneous attacks on government buildings in Khost.

On Tuesday, a spokesman for the militants, Zabihullah Mujahid, said: "Thirty of our fighters armed with suicide cars, suicide jackets and guns have entered the city."

Officials have not been able to confirm the number of militants involved.

Khost has witnessed frequent clashes between coalition forces and the Taleban.

In recent months militants have carried out attacks targeting several locations simultaneously, a sign of their increasing sophistication, analysts say.

Only Congress can give a strong govt. to the country: Sonia Gandhi

Written by admin on 2:07 AM

Dehradun, May 9 (ANI): Congress President Sonia Gandhi on Saturday asserted that only a Congress-led government could give a strong government to the people of the country and treat all sections of society equally.

"The country needs a strong government at the centre, a truthful government at the centre who would treat equally all sections of the society. Only Congress party can give you such a government led by Dr Manmohan Singh," said Sonia Gandhi, during an election rally here.

Sonia also reminded the public how there was no 'India Shining' taking place at the time when it was being so much popularised by the National Democratic Alliance in the previous government.

Countering the BJP's consistent mention of the present national security being flimsy, Sonia said it was public to see how the previous NDA government handled terrorism (in Kandhar airplane hijack incident) by submitting before the terrorists' demands and how the Congress handled it under its regime in last five years.

All the five seats of Uttarakhand go to polls on May 13, in the fifth and final phase of Lok Sabha elections in the country.

The election campaigning ahead of the last phase of the elections has intensified, as each party wishes to garner maximum seats in the bitterly contested ongoing elections.

The main contest is between the Congress-led United Progressive Alliancend the main opposition BJP-led National Democratic Alliance.

The results of the overall elections will be declared on May 16. (ANI)

Advanced mechanical horse may revolutionise hippotherapy

Written by admin on 2:06 AM

Washington, May 10 (ANI): Baylor University researchers have built a custom mechanical horse that can help improve the quality of life for children and adults with physical and mental impairments by providing them with the same benefit as hippotherapy, without having to get on to a real horse.

This advancement attains significance as it will remove the difficulty that therapists often face while getting some patients onto the horse.

"Our vision is that the mechanical horse can provide better access and can act as a complementary tool to actual therapeutic horse riding," Science Daily quoted Dr. Brian Garner, a biomechanics expert who is an Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering, as saying.

"If the patient is afraid of horses or it may not be safe for the patient to ride a horse, the mechanical horse can act as stepping stone to build the patient up to a level of stability so they can get onto a live horse," he added.

Hippotherapy repetitively produces three-dimensional rhythmic movements that, according to preliminary research, simulates the movements of the human pelvis while walking. It promotes many physical benefits like increased circulation, development of balance and improved coordination.

Scientists believe that therapeutic riding can help children and adults with various impairments or delays in development, including those with cerebral palsy, spina bifida, Down syndrome and autism.

Dr. Garner insists that the prototype mechanical horse developed at Baylor University mimics a real horse by using a three-dimensional system.

The device, though stationary, has a moving saddle surface that can move in virtually all directions in a cycling pattern, and, thus, replicates as precisely as possible the movements of an actual horse.

For creating it, Baylor engineering students took video-motion photography of several real horses walking, and used the data to create the mechanical horses' movement patterns.

Garner says that the mechanical horse can also differ in speed, from a slow walking pace to a fast walking pace, and is the width of a normal horse.

He adds said that it can be used with or without a saddle and can simulate bare-back riding. According to him, the saddle also simulates real therapeutic riding saddles that have adjustable handle bars.

He and his colleagues will next study the biomechanics of hippotherapy using the horse. (ANI)

India no longer threat to Pakistan: Zardari

Written by admin on 2:06 AM

Islamabad, May 10: Asif Ali Zardari, the Pakistani President taking United States line said that India is not a threat to Pakistan and it is facing danger from the 'terrorists inside the nation'.

"Well, I am already on record. I have never considered India a threat," Zardari said in an interview on the PBS news channel's popular show "Newshour With Jim Lehrer" on Saturday.

"I have always considered India a neighbour, which we want to improve our relationship with. We have had some cold times and we have had some hard times with them. We have gone to war thrice, but democracies are always trying to improve relationships," Zardari said while responding to a question about "which being the greatest threat to Pakistan? India, or the militants."

When asked about moving troops from Indian border to the NWFP areas to fight terrorists, Zardari said, "Pakistan has already done so."

Kasav a well-trained fidayeen: Ujjwal Nikam

Written by admin on 2:05 AM

Mumbai, May 10: Ujjwal Nikam, the public prosecutor of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks case said that by observing the behaviour of Ajmal Kasab aka Azam Amir Kasav, the Pakistani national and his statements in court proves that he isa 'fidayeen' who had undergone rigorous training both physically and psychologically even to evade the clutches of law.

Nikam who was talking to media said on Saturday, May 9 that Kasav was not only trained in terror attacks but was given intelligence training to escape law by 'dishonest' means. "From what he has told the court, it is clear that he is 'misguiding'. He has been misleading from time to time in regard to his age so that he can go in for a trial under Juvenile Justice Act, which does not attract rigorous punishment like the one prescribed under IPC," Nikam said.

Swine flu is windfall for some top tourism spots

Written by admin on 2:04 AM

The cruise Zenaiva Cervantes booked was to stop in sun-drenched beach cities on the Mexican Riviera. The cruise she took? That landed her in Seattle, where she pulled her arms tightly to her chest as she debarked on a damp, 50-degree morning.
"We wanted to relax in the warmth," the 61-year-old Tijuana, Mexico, resident said in Spanish Thursday. "If someone had told me I'd be in Seattle eight days ago, I wouldn't have believed them."
At the peak of the swine flu outbreak, major cruise operators Carnival Corp. and Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. — desperate to avoid passenger illness and lost revenue — decided to reroute Mexico voyages until mid-June.
So even though fear has receded, once-sun-seeking passengers like Cervantes are finding themselves in San Francisco, Seattle and Victoria, British Columbia, in Canada. Cruise companies are compensating passengers for the switch with onboard credit plus vouchers for a future cruise. Passengers also had the choice to stay home and get a full refund, but most passengers are choosing to travel when they planned, the cruise lines said.
What they're losing in sunshine and tan lines, their new destinations are gaining in millions of dollars of business. In San Francisco, the 16 additional swine flu-related landings will boost the year's port traffic 31 percent and bring 49,000 new visitors, said Michael Nerney, San Francisco's maritime marketing manager. Each call could mean $1 million in sales for city businesses and together they'll produce $500,000 in revenue for the port.
"This is highly unusual — shocking, really — as the cruise lines set their sailing schedules 12 to 18 months in advance, and even minor changes are rare," Nerney said.
The great number of alternative ports in the Caribbean makes it far easier to swap stops there. Instead of Cozumel in Mexico, companies are opting for Ocho Rios or Montego Bay in Jamaica, Nassau or Freeport in the Bahamas, the Virgin Islands' St. Thomas, St. Maarten or Key West, Fla., or points across the Caymans and Turks and Caicos.
The Bahamas is happily awaiting diverted ships. Customs receives $15 for each passenger, and island clothing and jewelry shops, bars and cafes depend on tourist dollars, said tourism minister Vincent Vanderpool-Wallace said.
Analysts think the benefits may be fleeting for these ports because the outbreak hasn't been severe.
"I think it's a short-term bump that may already be dissipating," said Michael McCall, a hospitality research fellow and lecturer at Cornell University.
Jan Freitag, vice president of global development at Smith Travel Research, noted that, in addition to swine flu, Mexico travel has been affected by fear of heightened drug violence in border states. He sees business travel to Mexico remaining steady and swine flu having minimal impact on leisure traffic unless the virus worsens.
Hotel operators are seeing travelers postpone plans. The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company and Four Seasons Hotel and Resorts said virtually all guests booked at two of their Mexico resorts in late April and early May will come a few months later instead. Starwood Hotels & Resorts Inc. expected the flu to cost it $4 million to $5 million in revenue but said it could recover much of it from guests rebooked at its U.S. or Caribbean resorts.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now says only 10 percent of infected Americans picked up the virus in Mexico, not one-third as previously estimated. But it maintains its warning against nonessential travel to Mexico.
Michael Crye, vice president of technology and regulatory affairs for the Cruise Lines International Association, called that restriction damaging and unnecessary, because areas hit hardest by the flu's spread are inland and the flu season is almost over.
Crye pointed to lessons learned from several rounds of bad publicity after gastrointestinal illnesses like the "Norwalk" virus broke out and said new passenger screenings ensure ships don't help spread the H1N1 virus, which causes swine flu.
"We believe ... we've got a good story to tell, and that you're probably at less risk going ahead with your destination than you would be in virtually any other public place," Crye said.
Eric Brey, head of the Center for Resort and Hospitality Business at the University of Memphis, predicted tourists would have no problem returning quickly to Mexico.
"Outside of this summer, I don't see it being that big a deal," Brey said.
In Charlotte Amalie on St. Thomas, a place hit hard as tourism has fallen amid the recession, it is usually quiet this time of year. But taxies zipped abundantly by the docks last week.
"(The swine flu) is a good problem for us," said Edward Thomas, CEO of the West Indian Company Dock.
Despite the lack of sunshine, Cervantes, her husband and the thousands of other passengers who ended up in the Pacific Northwest with them enjoyed Seattle's blocks of boutiques and Pike Place Market, where vendors famously sling fish.
"We thought we'd be in our bikinis and bathing suits," said Philipe Tabet, a 53-year-old restaurateur from Albuquerque, N.M., traveling with his wife. "We just had to pack a little bit different, that's all. Unpack, and pack again."

Sri Lankans arrest UK news team

Written by admin on 2:02 AM

A British Channel 4 News team has been arrested in Sri Lanka after reporting allegations of abuse in camps for displaced Tamils, the broadcaster said.

The Sri Lankan Defence Minister ordered Asia correspondent Nick Paton-Walsh, cameraman Matt Jasper and producer Bessie Du to leave the country.

The report contained claims that dead bodies were left where they fell and allegations of sexual abuse.

The Sri Lankan government has denied the allegations in Tuesday's report.

Mr Paton-Walsh said the crew was being driven to Sri Lanka's capital, Colombo, with a police escort.

Investigations

Police spokesman Ranjith Gunasekera told reporters the trio were arrested in the eastern city of Trincomalee on Saturday. He said investigations were continuing.

A spokesperson for ITN, which produces Channel 4 News, said: "We will be seeking an explanation from the Sri Lankan government for this decision."

The Channel 4 team had been covering fighting between the government and the Tamil Tiger rebels.

Its report looked at the conditions in camps that had been set up by the government for the refugees who had fled the northern war zone.

It explored allegations of sexual abuse as well as shortages of food and water.

The United Nations estimates that about 50,000 civilians are trapped by fighting as government troops attempt to oust the Tamil Tigers from their strongholds across the north.

The rebels have been driven back into a small pocket of land on the north-eastern coast.

The Tamil Tigers have fought for an independent homeland for Sri Lanka's Tamil minority since 1983. More than 70,000 people have been killed in the war.

Sri Lankan shelling 'kills 257'

Written by admin on 2:02 AM

Sri Lankan government forces have been accused of killing dozens of Tamil civilians in a night of shelling in the country's northern war zone.

The pro-rebel Tamilnet website and government health officials said 257 civilians were killed and 814 hurt.

But the Sri Lankan military denied that any shelling had taken place.

The Tamil Tiger rebels and the military regularly accuse each other of atrocities in the civil conflict - claims that are impossible to verify.

Foreign reporters are banned from the war zone.


See a map of the conflict region

The Tamilnet website reported that heavy shelling had started late on Saturday and continued into Sunday.

It said doctors in a makeshift hospital in Vanni district had taken in 814 wounded people, and cited one doctor as saying 257 people had been killed.

The injured told the doctors "dead bodies are scattered everywhere", according to the site.

'Propaganda' claims

The BBC's Charles Haviland, in Colombo, said health officials confirmed that 257 people had died.

They said two hospitals were struggling to cope with the casualties, and that people were hiding in bunkers and many makeshift tents had been burnt.

They added that among those killed was a government nursing officer.

But the military denied the allegations.

Sri Lankan defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella told the BBC the accounts were "propaganda" of the Tamil Tigers and that there had been neither shelling nor air attacks on the civilian zone.

"That is a fact," he said.

He said the guerrillas were "holding people to ransom" in their area, and accused the rebels of killing nine civilians who were trying to escape their zone on Saturday.

The UN estimates that about 50,000 civilians are trapped by the conflict.

The Tamil Tigers have fought for an independent homeland for Sri Lanka's Tamil minority since 1983.

More than 70,000 people have been killed in the war.

Karzai urges US to stop strikes

Written by admin on 12:13 PM

Afghan President Hamid Karzai has called on the US to halt air strikes in his country, following an attack that reportedly killed scores of civilians.

Mr Karzai, who is in Washington, told CNN air strikes were "not acceptable".

Afghan officials say more than 100 civilians died when US jets attacked targets in the western Farah province.

The incident overshadowed a summit on Wednesday between the President Barack Obama, Mr Karzai, and his Pakistani counterpart Asif Ali Zardari.

"We demand an end to these operations... an end to air strikes," Mr Karzai told CNN.

He said the deaths were "definitely" the result of US air strikes and not Taleban militants, as some US military officials had suggested.
"We believe strongly that air strikes are not an effective way of fighting terrorism, that air strikes rather cause civilian casualties and does not do good for the US, does not do good for Afghanistan," he said.

US military and Afghan officials are investigating the attacks and trying to ascertain how many of those killed were insurgents.

The US says the Afghan estimate is "grossly exaggerated" but has not released its own figures.

At their summit in Washington, the US, Afghan and Pakistani presidents discussed their joint operation against al-Qaeda and the Taleban.

Pakistani forces are currently engaged in fierce fighting with Taleban insurgents in the north-west of the country.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she "deeply, deeply" regretted the deaths, adding that the US would work hard to avoid such "loss of innocent life".

Pakistan 'fighting for survival'

Written by admin on 12:13 PM

Pakistan's military is fighting "for the survival of the country" against Taleban militants in the Swat valley, its prime minister says.

Yusuf Raza Gilani was speaking as the army tried to retake Swat's main town, Mingora, where a curfew is in force.

The government signed a peace agreement with the Swat Taleban in February, allowing Sharia law there, which was heavily criticised by Washington.

The militants then moved towards the capital, Islamabad.


See a map of the region

Up to 15,000 troops have been deployed to take on 4-5,000 militants.

The army said it had killed 55 more militants on Saturday, having said that more than 140 militants had died in earlier clashes.

The fighting has already displaced some 200,000 people, while a further 300,000 are estimated to be on the move or about to flee, the UN says.

Sitara Imran, minister for social welfare in North West Frontier Province, called the exodus "one of the huge displacements, internal displacements in the world".

'Feeling helpless'

"This is not a normal war," Prime Minister Gilani told reporters on Saturday, Reuters news agency reports, "this is a guerrilla war."

"This is our own war. This is war for the survival of the country," he said.

The BBC's Mark Dummett in Islamabad says that for the first time since the military launched the offensive against the Taleban in the Swat valley, the fighting has spread into the centre of Mingora.

An indefinite curfew is preventing people from fleeing the area.

"We are feeling so helpless, we want to go but can't," Mingora resident Sallahudin Khan told Reuters news agency.

"We tried to leave yesterday after authorities relaxed the curfew for a few hours, but we couldn't as the main road leading out of Mingora was literally jammed with the flood of fleeing people."

The army has also accused the Taleban of holding the civilian population hostage and blocking their exit.

Mobile phone networks, water and electricity have all been cut in the town which is normally home to half a million people. There are fears that food and medicine will run out if the fighting does not end soon.

Our correspondent says the government is hoping for a quick victory, while it still has the support of the Pakistani people.

The US says the militants in northern Pakistan pose a direct threat to its security, and has demanded they be confronted.

Pakistani military spokesman Gen Athar Abbas said the military's objective was to eliminate the militants from the Swat valley and also the neighbouring districts of Dir and Buner.

Pakistan launch Cup legal action

Written by admin on 12:12 PM

Pakistan's cricket board are to take legal action against the International Cricket Council for stripping them of hosting 2011 World Cup matches.

Pakistan were co-hosts for the tournament with India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh but the security situation in the country prompted the ICC to act.

PCB chairman Ijaz Butt said: "The ICC didn't consult us before this decision. We have sent them a legal notice.

"We don't think the ICC decision is sound on legal grounds."

Seven Sri Lanka players were injured when gunmen attacked their team bus on the way to the Gadaffi stadium on 3 March.

The security concerns over playing in Pakistan saw the country's recent series against Australia played in Abu Dhabi.

India has also been the target of terrorists when more than 170 people were killed in attacks on the city of Mumbai.

Butt added: "If the ICC say the security situation in Pakistan prompted this decision then the security situation in India and Sri Lanka is also not good.

"There was no proper security assessment of Pakistan nor of the other co-hosts of the 2011 tournament.

"We believe that more could and should have been done to review the actual situation to deal with the matter on a non-discriminatory basis."

'Sea battle' near Tamil war zone

Written by admin on 12:11 PM

Sri Lanka says its navy has killed at least 14 Tamil Tiger fighters in a sea battle close to the remaining area of fighting on land.

The Tigers, who have been driven back into a small pocket of land by a government offensive, denied having any boats in the area.

The government has told civilians still inside the war zone to move to a smaller "safe zone".

The UN estimates that about 50,000 civilians are trapped by the conflict.


See a map of the conflict region

The defence ministry also said that soldiers had recovered the bodies of 35 rebels killed in fighting on Friday.

The Tamil Tigers have fought for an independent homeland for Sri Lanka's Tamil minority since 1983.

More than 70,000 people have been killed in the war.

'Safe zone'

Sri Lankan naval special forces sank two Tiger boats carrying 14 rebels off the coast of Mullaittivu at about 0300 on Saturday (2130 GMT Friday), according to the military.

They destroyed one "suicide boat" and one "attack craft", as well as capturing a second "suicide boat".

A rebel spokesman said that in fact the army had attacked fishing boats and that no rebels were killed in the sea encounter although, he added, on land there was "fighting all over the place".

He said the rebels' naval wing, the Sea Tigers, still controlled "vast areas of the sea".

The military announced on Friday it had demarcated a new "safe zone" in the conflict area and was asking civilians to move there for their own protection.

A Sri Lankan military official told the BBC the zone was 3 sq km and inside a small strip of coastal land still under the control of the Tigers.

A military official said troops would attack rebel positions outside the new zone to rescue civilians.

Tamil Tigers described the move by the military as propaganda.

They accuse government forces of firing heavy weapons into the no-fire zone causing a high number of civilian casualties. The military has denied the charges.

The UN earlier rejected the term "safe zone".

The International Committee of the Red Cross has told the BBC that because of the volatile security situation, its plans to evacuate more sick and wounded people and deliver food by ship could not be carried out on Friday.

In an earlier statement from Geneva, it said the lives of patients and its workers in the war zone were being put at great risk by heavy fighting. It wants to carry out evacuations on a daily basis.

Witness identifies Mumbai suspect

Written by admin on 12:10 PM

The first witness in the Mumbai attacks trial has identified the lone surviving gunman, Mohammad Ajmal Amir Qasab, in court, the prosecution has said.

Police officer Bhaskar Kadam told the court he was at Girgaum Chowpatty sea front in south Mumbai on the night of 26 November 2008 when Qasab was caught.

Mr Qasab is charged on 86 counts, including waging war against India, murder and possessing explosives.

He has pleaded not guilty to all the charges.

More than 170 people died in the attacks, including nine gunmen.

Mr Qasab is the sole surviving suspected attacker.

Two Indians, Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed, are also on trial accused of being members of the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group and of scouting for the attacks.

They too have pleaded not guilty to conspiracy to commit the same offences as Mr Qasab.

First witness

Special public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam told the BBC that Mr Kadam described in court how a police officer, Tukaram Omble, had caught Mr Qasab.

Mr Omble was among the more than 20 police officers who lost their lives during the attacks.

Mr Kadam is the first witness to appear before the court.

His examination will continue on Monday, after which the defence lawyers will cross-examine him.

Mr Nikam had earlier told the court that the prosecution would examine witnesses and evidence in a sequence of events starting from Mr Qasab's arrest.

On Wednesday, the defendant confirmed his name to the court and said he was a labourer from Faridkot in Pakistan's Punjab province.

The presiding judge, ML Tahiliyani, read out the charges at the special prison court.

Mr Qasab said that he understood the charges against him.

If convicted, he could face the death penalty.

In an earlier hearing, the accused retracted a confession, saying it was coerced.

It will be up to the judge to weigh the evidence at the trial and decide whether the confession should be taken into account.

India has accused Pakistan-based fighters from Lashkar-e-Taiba of carrying out the attacks, which took place from 26-28 November.

Pakistan has admitted they were partly planned on its soil and the two countries have suffered seriously strained relations.

Lumley in public clash on Gurkhas

Written by admin on 11:27 PM

Ms Lumley has spearheaded the campaign for Gurkha settlement rights

Joanna Lumley says the immigration minister has "reassured" her over Gurkhas' rights to settle in the UK, in an unscheduled and dramatic meeting.

The actress and Phil Woolas came face-to-face in highly-charged scenes at the BBC's Westminster office and then held an impromptu press conference nearby.

It followed the rejection of appeals by five Gurkhas for residency, rulings which Ms Lumley said were "shocking".

Opposition parties said government policy had become a "shambles".

Extraordinary scenes

Mr Woolas said the cases of the five Gurkhas, one of whom was badly injured during the Falklands War, would be reviewed.

He indicated campaigners and opposition parties would have a say in the formation of new regulations on residency rights, forced by Labour's Commons defeat on the issue last week.

Ms Lumley said: "I have met Mr Woolas now and I am reassured again. Because I know we are going to assist Mr Woolas in making the strongest guidelines possible.

"We have to believe in this. This is all we've got to believe in. We wish this campaign was over now."

But she urged the government to act more quickly, saying the issue could be settled by next week.

The 1,500 Gurkhas whose applications for permanent residence were currently being considered should "be received with open arms", she said.

"There is nothing more to think about and consider," she said, adding that the government had been sending out "blurred messages" about its policy.

Mr Woolas said immigration policy could not "be determined on a whim" and residency rules for Gurkhas had to be considered within a legal framework.

But he said ministers were respecting the will of Parliament in reviewing the regulations, after Labour's recent defeat on the issue, and he believed that the Gurkhas would be "pleased" with the outcome of the review.

The meeting between Ms Lumley and Mr Woolas came about after Ms Lumley arrived at the building in which the BBC studio is based to host a press conference.

As Ms Lumley, who has spearheaded the campaign for Gurkha settlement rights, prepared for her press conference Mr Woolas began a live television interview inside - Ms Lumley stood outside watching.

Once his interview ended the two, surrounded by reporters and television crews, made their way to an office to hold talks.

The BBC's Political Editor Nick Robinson said he had rarely seen scenes of such a kind, with Ms Lumley appearing to be leading the government a merry dance on the issue.

Although the meeting had not resulted in a change of policy, it showed just how powerful the Gurkha campaign had become and how crucial Ms Lumley's involvement was.

Rejection letters

The day's events were triggered by letters sent to four Gurkhas informing them that their residency applications had been turned down.

Ms Lumley said the decisions were an "enormous shock", coming a day after she met Gordon Brown and was assured he would deal personally with the row over residency rights.
Some 36,000 Gurkhas, a brigade of Nepalese soldiers who serve in the British Army, were denied UK residency because they left before 1997.

Ms Lumley has long argued for Gurkha soldiers to be granted the the same settlement rights as soldiers from Commonwealth countries who have fought for the UK.

Ministers eased the residency rules for Gurkhas earlier this year after the High Court said its policy was not sufficiently clear.

Under the current rules, ministers argue that more than 4,000 Gurkhas will be able to settle in the UK but campaigners have said the figure will be closer to 100.

However, the rules are to be reviewed again after the government was defeated in a Commons vote on the issue.

The cases of the four Gurkhas were considered under the existing rules and Mr Woolas stressed their request for settlement had not been rejected once and for all.

The UK Border Agency - which considers residency applications - said their cases would be "reconsidered when the next stage of reform has been finalised".

No 10 says it will to publish revised rules by the end of July and consider all existing applications by the end of the month.

'Strong campaign'

Officials point out that more than 100 Gurkhas have been granted rights of settlement in the last few days as the backlog of outstanding cases are dealt with.

Mr Woolas said Ms Lumley and other activists had run a "strong campaign" but denied ministers had been "outmanoeuvred".
However, opposition parties said the rejected applications flew in the face of government commitments to review the system following its embarrassing parliamentary defeat.

Tory leader David Cameron said the "left hand of this government doesn't know what the right hand is doing".

"The prime minister has absolutely got to get a grip on this issue," he told a meeting of party supporters in Derbyshire.

The Lib Dems described the latest rulings as "astonishing".

"At worst this is a betrayal and at best it is a monumental shambles," said its home affairs spokesman Chris Huhne.

Pakistan 'to eliminate militants'

Written by admin on 11:24 PM

Pakistan's PM says he has ordered the army to "eliminate militants and terrorists", apparently referring to operations against the Taleban.

Yusuf Raza Gilani made the announcement in an evening TV address to the nation.

Fighting has intensified in recent days in the Swat Valley and other parts of the north-west, and thousands of civilians are leaving the area.

Meanwhile US envoy Richard Holbrooke said there had been progress in getting Pakistan and Afghanistan to co-operate.

"I hope the American public sees that we're making progress in the question for real cooperation between Afghanistan and Pakistan, because without that cooperation, success is not achievable," Reuters news agency quoted him as saying.
Mr Holbrooke was speaking after a meeting with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and US senators.

He said another summit would be held between the Afghan and Pakistani leaders and US President Barack Obama after Afghan presidential elections in August. The three leaders met on Wednesday.

Mr Zardari said the international community was coming to the realisation that the problem of militancy in Pakistan and Afghanistan was a worldwide one.

Earlier US defence secretary Robert Gates said he was satisfied with Pakistan's anti-Taleban moves.

He said there was "very little chance" of the Taleban achieving the kind of success in Pakistan that they would need to get access to the country's nuclear weapons.

At least 10 soldiers have been killed and nine wounded in the fighting in the past 24 hours, the Pakistani military says.



At least seven of them were reported to have died when a troop carrier was ambushed near Mingora.

Appeal for help

Mr Gilani said efforts by the militants to disrupt peace and security had reached a point where the government had to take "decisive steps".

"In order to restore honour and dignity of our homeland, and to protect people, the armed forces have been called to eliminate the militants and terrorists," he said.

"The time has come when the entire nation should side with the government and the armed forces against those who want to make the entire country hostage and darken our future at gunpoint," he added.

He also appealed to the international community to help Pakistan look after people displaced by the fighting.

A curfew has been lifted to allow civilians to leave Swat, prompting thousands to flee and join those already in camps or staying with relatives further south.

But around half a million people remain in Mingora, the main town of Swat, where there is no water or electricity.

Residents say at least 24 civilians have lost their lives in the past two days.

Some died when their houses were hit by artillery, while others were reportedly shot for defying a curfew.

The BBC Urdu service's Riffatullah Orakzai says that eyewitnesses in the Kanju area near Mingora have seen militants setting up checkposts on the main roads and not allowing people who want to flee the fighting to pass.

Witnesses say a large number of people, including women and children, are now stranded there.

Resistance to troops

The International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC) says the humanitarian crisis in Pakistan is intensifying.

In a statement the ICRC said that it no longer had access to the areas most affected by the conflict and that precise statistics of the displaced were difficult to ascertain.

The BBC's M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says troops moving into Swat face resistance all along the 40km (25-mile) road that heads in a north-easterly direction from Malakand to Mingora.

Our correspondent says that fighting has not only erupted in several areas around Mingora, but there are also reports of more clashes in the neighbouring area of Buner.

In another incident, militants overran a paramilitary fort in the Chakdara area of Lower Dir, officials say.

Three paramilitary soldiers were killed in the attack and 10 policemen were taken away as hostages.

Delhi 'passes poll turnout test'

Written by admin on 11:20 PM

Voter awareness campaigns in India's capital, Delhi, appear to have had some success, with turnout on Thursday up on the last election.

Delhi's turnout was 53%, six points up on 2004, the Election Commission said.

A series of adverts had urged citizens to vote following Mumbai's disappointing 43% last week.

Overall turnout for Thursday in Delhi and seven states that also voted was about 57%. Counting in the marathon five-phase election is on 16 May.

The main fight is between the ruling Congress-led coalition and the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party. Neither is expected to win outright and the role of smaller regional parties may be key.

'Satisfactory'

Deputy election commissioner R Balakrishnan said: "Comparing the previous three phases, the commission marked that the voter turnout is more.
"Polling was by and large peaceful barring a few stray incidents of violence, particularly in West Bengal. The commission would like to define Thursday's poll process as satisfactory."

The capital's pro-vote campaign included adverts on television, radio and in the press, setting Delhi a turnout test.

Citizens groups and activists also joined the campaign with candlelit marches and signature campaigns.

The drive appeared to have had most success in upscale and middle-class districts. They scored a higher turnout than rural areas that traditionally have heavier balloting.

Delhi has more than 10 million registered voters but over the years, voter turnout has been steadily declining - in 1993 it was 65.7%; in 1998 it came down to 49% and in the 2007 civic elections it was 43%.

West Bengal recorded the highest turnout on Thursday at 75%, followed by Punjab (65%), Haryana (63%), Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh (both 50%) and Bihar (37%).

Srinagar in Indian-administered Kashmir was lowest at 24% amid an election boycott call by separatists who argue the election legitimises Indian rule.

However, the turnout was higher than the 18% in 2004.

There were a number of incidents of violence on Thursday.

The worst were in West Bengal, where two people were killed and more than 15 injured in three separate clashes between rival supporters.

The first phase of voting on 16 April was the most violent - with at least 17 people killed in Maoist attacks in eastern and central India.

The new parliament has to be constituted by 2 June.

N Korea preparing for more nuclear tests: Reports

Written by admin on 1:25 AM

Seoul, May 7: Days after threatening to conduct another nuclear test, heightened activity has been reported from the nuclear test site in North Korea as per a media report released on Thursday, May 6.

South Korea's mass-circulation Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported that the South Korean authorities have detected 'brisk' activities of personnel and vehicle movements at the North's nuclear site in the northeastern county of Kilju.

The paper quoted an unnamed government source saying that N Korea is preparing for a Nuke test. But, it did not state how the counrty obtained the intelligence.

However, the South Korea's Defense Ministry, Foreign Ministry and the National Intelligence Service, the country's main spy agency said they cannot confirm the report.

Another singer slashed on 'Idol,' leaving 3

Written by admin on 1:23 AM

LOS ANGELES -"American Idol" finalist Allison Iraheta has a reason to cry.
The flame-haired 17-year-old high school student from Los Angeles, who crooned Janis Joplin's "Cry Baby" for her rock performance this week, was revealed Wednesday to have received the fewest viewer votes, leaving three singers in the popular Fox singing competition.
Iraheta seemed to take her dismissal in stride, belting out an energized "Cry Baby" reprise then razzing the last three dudes standing — Kris Allen, Danny Gokey and Adam Lambert. Throughout the competition, judge Simon Cowell chided Iraheta for not showing off more of her personality, but she finally lashed back at the acerbic British judge on Tuesday.
"He was asking for it," she said.
Before the results were revealed, the final four were joined by this week's mentor, former Guns 'N Roses guitarist Slash, for a frantic rendition of Alice Cooper's "School's Out." Also taking the "Idol" stage — for the first time ever! — was judge Paula Abdul in a smokey pre-taped performance of her new single, "I'm Just Here for the Music."
Tuesday night's pre-show drama didn't seem to linger during the lead-up to Iraheta's elimination. The behemoth "Idol" logo which toppled over was back — and glowing — in place above the audience. And that moving staircase was also operational Wednesday after a crew member was sent to the hospital following a reported 20-foot fall from the top Tuesday.
However, Seacrest still seemed a little shaken up following all of the tumultuous tumbling, especially after No Doubt singer Gwen Stefani strutted down the steps, behind the judges' table and through the crowd while belting out "I'm Just a Girl" for an elimination episode performance. Seacrest joked she was making him nervous running around the stage.
"It's been a high-risk place this week," he said.
The finalists left in contest are Lambert, a 27-year-old theater actor from San Diego; Gokey, a 29-year-old church music director from Milwaukee; and Allen, a 23-year-old college student from Conway, Ark.
This week, the three singers will travel to their hometowns before performing two songs next week: one of their choosing, another from the show's judges.
The next "Idol" will be crowned May 20.

Millions of kids begin returning to Mexico schools

Written by admin on 1:21 AM

SAN MIGUEL TOPILEJO, Mexico -As if marshaling for war, Mexico's government mobilized thousands of education officials and parents across the country to swiftly disinfect schools and monitor millions of returning students for signs of swine flu.
High schools and universities open Thursday after a two-week closure intended to curb the spread of the virus. Younger children were ordered back to class on Monday.
Secretary of Public Education Alonso Lujambio called on Mexicans to show "strength of spirit," trying to assuage worries that it's too early to reopen schools after the flu outbreak that killed 42 people in Mexico and sickened more than 1,100.
Parents expressed relief that their children, shuttered too long in homes, could return to class. But they also worried that the virus could surge back once 40 million young people gather in groups again.
"My 17-year-old daughter is afraid. She knows she must go back but doesn't want to," said Silvia Mendez as she led her 4-year-old son, Enrique, down a narrow street in San Miguel Topilejo, a town perched in forested mountains near the capital.
Mendez and her son wore masks as they walked to the tiny roasted chicken restaurant she owns. Enrique spoke adoringly of his teacher and seemed impatient to get back to kindergarten.
Working parents have struggled to provide child care during the shutdown. It forced many to stay home from work, bring their youngsters to their jobs, or leave them at home.
Isabel Garcia had to leave her 11-year-old son, Charlie, behind while she sold vegetables below a red-domed church in San Miguel Topilejo's central plaza.
"I'm nervous about him going back to school on Monday. But he will wear a mask and I have instructed him to stay away from any children who appear sick," Garcia said as customers squeezed past her stall, a colorful tableau of radishes, carrots, green onions and other fresh produce.
This swine flu seems to have a long incubation period — five to seven days before people notice symptoms, according to Dr. Marc-Alain Widdowson, a medical epidemiologist from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now tracking the flu in Mexico City. And that means the virus can keep being spread by people who won't know to stay home.
Government-mandated "filter" teams, composed of parent volunteers and school officials, will check the returning students for any respiratory ailments.
"If the least suspicion exists, the boy or girl can't remain and the Health Department will be notified," Cecilia Landerreche Gomez Morin, director-general of Mexico's Family Welfare Agency, announced Wednesday.
The government also created an online manual, "What to do to restart classes without risk?"
It calls for parents and school employees to clean classrooms, cafeterias and other areas with water, soap and chlorine, and to provide running water for hand-washing.
Each school, Mexican officials said, must be cleaned and inspected this week. Complicating the task: Many schools are primitive buildings with dirt floors and lack proper bathrooms. It was unclear how students attending those schools, especially in outlying regions of the country, could adhere to the government's strict sanitary conditions.
The government promised detergent, chlorine, trash bags, anti-bacterial soap or antiseptic gel and face masks to state governments for delivery to public schools. But some local districts apparently didn't get the word.
Guillermo Narro Garza, acting secretary of education for Ciudad Juarez, along the border with Texas, said only chlorine would be used — and that parents have to supply it.
"We're trying to follow what's happening through newspapers and radio," said an administrator of a school in San Miguel Topilejo.
Mexico's public education department said students must complete the yearly requirement of 800 hours in class, but did not say if the term would be extended because of the shutdown.
U.S. health officials are no longer recommending that schools close because of suspected swine flu cases since the virus has turned out to be milder than initially feared. But many U.S. schools have done so anyway, including the school of the Texas teacher who just died.
In a tentative first step toward normalcy, Mexicans returned to work Wednesday after a five-day shutdown which the government said reduced the spread of the virus.
The capital's health secretary announced later that all places of business — including sports arenas, dance halls, movie theaters and restaurants — will be allowed to operate Thursday.
But establishments must follow government-ordered hygiene rules including screening for any sick people and making surgical masks mandatory for employees and customers alike.
Deaths have slowed as the country mobilized an aggressive public health response to the epidemic that has sickened thousands in 24 countries. Sweden and Poland were the latest countries to confirm swine flu cases, both in women who had recently visited the U.S.
The fear of contagion was so great that even impoverished Haiti refused to accept a Mexican navy ship carrying 77 tons of rice, fertilizer and emergency food kits, said Mexico's ambassador, Zadalinda Gonzalez y Reynero.
In San Diego, Calif., the U.S. Navy canceled the deployment of the USS Dubuque, an amphibious transport ship, after a crew member was confirmed to have swine flu. About 50 others were suspected cases, and all crew members were being treated with antiviral drugs.
In Washington, CDC officials said they identified genetic characteristics of the virus and were in position to produce a vaccine if one is needed. Dr. Dennis Carroll, a special adviser on pandemics with the U.S. Agency for International Development, said investments to stave off an avian flu epidemic aided the quick swine flu response.
Canada, meanwhile, said researchers at the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg, Manitoba, genetically sequenced three samples of the virus from Mexico and Canada, a breakthrough they hope will answer questions about how it spreads and mutates.

Obama applauds Afghan and Pakistan cooperation

Written by admin on 12:51 AM

WASHINGTON -President Barack Obama is applauding Pakistan and Afghanistan for their commitment to helping the U.S. fight terrorists holed up in their territory, but he also is cautioning that the path to success is slow and unsure.
"The road ahead will be difficult," Obama said Wednesday after a series of meetings with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari that yielded few announced new commitments. "There will be more violence, and there will be setbacks."
Obama added, "The United States has made a lasting commitment to defeat al-Qaida, but also to support the democratically elected sovereign governments of both Pakistan and Afghanistan. That commitment will not waver, and that support will be sustained."
Obama's national security adviser, Gen. Jim Jones, told reporters later that Obama was clear in his support for Zardari, who has come under heavy U.S. criticism for doing too little to combat a Taliban insurgency. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, for example, told Congress last week that Pakistan was "abdicating" to the Taliban extremists.
"The president pledged to do whatever we could, to do what we can as quickly as possible to help the Pakistani government, and said this type of aid would not just be restricted to military," Jones said. "Miracles will not happen, so this won't happen quickly. But with a common focus, we can make strides hopefully in the near future."
Wednesday's meetings, which began at the State Department and then moved to the White House, had the added complication of reports that U.S. airstrikes on Sunday had killed dozens of civilians in western Afghanistan. The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan suggested that the Taliban might be to blame, but Obama and Clinton felt compelled to respond sympathetically.
Obama expressed U.S. regret, promising to "make every effort" to avoid further tragedies as allied forces press the fight against a rising Taliban insurgency.
Obama also used the occasion to laud "unprecedented cooperation" between Afghanistan and Pakistan, which share a long, poorly demarcated and porous border.
"Along the border, where insurgents often move freely, we must work together with a renewed sense of partnership to share intelligence and to coordinate our efforts to isolate, target and take out our common enemy," Obama said in a statement delivered at the White House with Karzai and Zardari at his side.
Obama took no questions from reporters and neither of the other leaders spoke. Obama met separately with Karzai and Zardari, followed by a three-way session.
The latest report of Afghan civilian casualties came at an especially awkward time for the administration, which is stepping up its military campaign inside Afghanistan while also seeking to emphasize the importance of nonmilitary efforts to stabilize the country. The administration has pledged, for example, a major increase in civilian expertise in farming and other specialties.
Obama's strategy, unveiled in late March, already is threatened by setbacks to his goal of strengthening a shaky Pakistani government, eliminating al-Qaida and Taliban sanctuaries on the Pakistan side of the Afghan border and fighting Afghan government corruption. Claims of U.S. culpability for civilian deaths in Afghanistan are an added burden.
Jones told reporters that the president began his meeting with Karzai by addressing the reported civilian deaths Sunday. Jones said Obama commented "with great sympathy" and expressed regret for the loss of innocent life. Earlier, before her meetings with Karzai and Zardari at the State Department, Clinton said the U.S. "deeply, deeply" regrets the loss of civilian lives.
Both Obama and Clinton stopped short of accepting U.S. blame for the deaths.
Obama told Karzai that investigations "will be pursued aggressively with full intent to discover what in fact did happen, how it happened and how we can make sure that things like that do not happen again. And it was clear that President Karzai was moved by that ... and he thanked the president for starting off the meeting with that expression of condolence."
Karzai did not ask that U.S. airstrikes be suspended or reduced in intensity pending the outcome of the investigation, Jones said.
Nor did Zardari raise an equally sensitive topic on his side of the border — the use of U.S. Predator aircraft to attack extremist targets, Jones said. Pakistanis have strongly protested those attacks, saying they have killed innocent civilians.
In Afghanistan, the U.S. forces commander said it wasn't a certainty that Sunday's deaths were a result of U.S. military action. Gen. David McKiernan said American forces came to the aid of Afghans who may have been ambushed by the Taliban. He said the Taliban beheaded three civilians, perhaps to lure police.
"We have some other information that leads us to distinctly different conclusions about the cause of the civilian casualties," McKiernan said. He would not elaborate.
Karzai, whose public criticism of U.S. airstrikes has grown increasingly indignant, thanked Clinton politely for her concern.
"We appreciate that," Karzai said.
In his remarks at the White House, Obama emphasized the progress he said was achieved in the Washington meetings.
"We have advanced unprecedented cooperation," Obama declared. "We will work for the day when our nations are linked not by a common enemy but by a shared peace and prosperity."
Veteran diplomat Richard Holbrooke, the administration's point man for Afghanistan and Pakistan and a participant in the meetings, was upbeat in brief remarks after Obama summarized the day's talks. "It was a day that exceeded our expectations," Holbrooke said. "We turned a corner" in improving coordination with Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The stakes couldn't be higher, Obama said.
"We have learned time and again that our security is shared," the president said. "It is a lesson that we learned most painfully on 9/11, and it is a lesson that we will not forget."

Associated Press writers Anne Gearan, Jennifer Loven and Ben Feller contributed to this report.

Taliban trap civilians in Pakistani war zone

Written by admin on 12:50 AM

MINGORA, Pakistan -Taliban militants blocked roads with rocks and trees, preventing terrified civilians from fleeing a Pakistani valley Thursday as the army stepped up a ground and air assault on the guerrillas that has been applauded by the U.S., witnesses said.
Destabilizing violence is flaring in Pakistan just as its embattled president is appealing in Washington for more help to reverse the extension of Taliban-held territory to within 60 miles (100 kilometers) of the capital. The U.S. is particularly concerned by the unrest because its troops are fighting an increasingly virulent insurgency in Afghanistan fed from militant havens in Pakistan's lawless border area.
Officials are bracing for a mass exodus from the Swat Valley, a former tourist destination where fighting has resumed after the breakdown of a controversial peace deal earlier this week. The military claimed to have killed more than 80 militants in the region on Wednesday. There has been no official word on civilian casualties.
More than 500,000 Pakistanis driven out by fighting in other regions of the northwest are already living in makeshift camps or with relatives, adding a growing humanitarian crisis to the country's daunting security, economic and political problems.
With Taliban militants roaming the streets of Mingora, Swat's main town, on Thursday and troops launching artillery and airstrikes on militant targets from helicopter, many residents hunkered down in their homes.
The army announced it was relaxing its blanket curfew in the area, but some of those who tried to make a swift exit said militants blocked their way.
Ayaz Khan, a 39-year-old from the Kanju area of Swat, said he loaded his family into his car early Thursday but that rocks, boulders and tree trunks has been laid across the roads, forcing him to turn back.
"I am helpless, frustrated and worried for my family," he told an Associated Press reporter by telephone from his home. He appealed to authorities to clear the barriers and let people move to safety.
A health worker living in Mingora said militants had warned her to stay in her home.
"During the whole of last night, I heard firing, and again this morning," said the woman, who would only give her first name, Maryam, for fear she could be targeted for speaking with a reporter.
"I don't know when some weapon will hit our home and kill us," she said.
Washington has said it wants to see a sustained operation in Swat and surrounding districts, mindful of earlier, inconclusive offensives elsewhere in the Afghan border region. Eight years after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the area remains a haven for al-Qaida and Taliban fighters blamed for spiraling violence in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
But uprooting the insurgents from the valley will mean civilian casualties, property damage and massive disruption which could sap the resolve of the government, which is struggling to convince the nuclear-armed Muslim nation that fighting the militants is in its interests as well as those of the U.S.
President Barack Obama and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari met Wednesday in Washington to explore ways to boost the country's antiterror fight, seen by many as the most pressing foreign policy issue facing the U.S. administration.
"Pakistan's democracy will deliver," Zardari said in Washington.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the military offensive against the Taliban was a positive sign.
"I'm actually quite impressed by the actions the Pakistani government is now taking," she said. "I think that action was called for, and action has been forthcoming."
The Swat accord began unraveling last month when Taliban fighters moved from the valley into the nearby district of Buner, even closer to Islamabad, prompting an operation that the military says has killed more than 150 militants but has yet to drive them out.
The Swat Taliban are estimated to have up to 7,000 fighters — many with training and battle experience — equipped with rocket-propelled grenades, explosives and automatic weapons. They are up against some 15,000 troops who until recent days had been confined to their barracks under the peace deal.

Matthew Lee in Washington and an AP reporter in Mingora who was not identified for security reasons contributed to this report.

Tamils should get separate Eelam in Lanka: MK

Written by admin on 12:48 AM

Chennai, May 7: Now the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) supremo and the Tamil Nadu chief minister M Karunanidhi joined the bandwagon of leaders demanding separate 'Eelam' for Tamils in Sri Lanka.

On Wednesday, May 6 to match his competing rivals Karunanidhi said that he would make all efforts for the creation of a separate homeland for Tamils in the island nations. "We have ensured a fair quantity of relief for Sri Lankan Tamils. As a next step, they should get Eelam and I assumed responsibilities of making all efforts to ensure that 'Eelam' is created", he said in an appeal to DMK workers.

Taking a dramatic U-turn opposition party AIADMK's Jayalalithaa had earlier pitched for a separate homeland for Tamils in Lanka and assured to send Indian army to Sri Lanka to create 'Eelam' if she was voted to power.

Manipur Tired of Militancy

Written by admin on 12:45 AM

People of Imphal were angered by the bomb attack on the residence of an Executive Engineer in Manipur. The protest was organised under the aegis of Model Club, was held at Chingmakha Community Hall in Imphal.

Unidentified persons attacked the residence of L. Gourakishore, an Executive Engineer in Minor Irrigation Department.


Last year too, this engineer’s house was attacked twice by bombs.

People of Imphal are agitated that in spite of the tight security, militants continue lobbing grenades and attacking people when their monetary demands are not met.

The explosions at the residence of Gourakishore has created fear about personal safety among engineers who engaged in building the infrastructure in the State.

“We are supposed to implement new projects and plan development works. We are keen to take up new technologies, but very frankly we are unable to do so. All the time we are concerned about our safety .We often hear that our staff have been threatened at gunpoint, which creates tension ” said L. Gourakishore Singh, Executive Engineer, Manipur.

“We are even scared to go out. We fear that if any unknown person enters the house, something might happen. We are always tensed,” said Thokchom Kamla Devi, wife of engineer.

Though security forces have been conducting regular combing operations to check and prevent such incidents in the state, engineers are soft targets and are attacked by militants in Manipur when their extortion demands are not met.

People of the state are coming out openly against such attacks and they want an end to such activities.

“We are protesting against the gun culture in the state and we want an end to this. Throwing of bombs has become very common in all parts of the state. We are really unhappy and do not want this to happen,” said S. Shyama Devi, local resident of Manipur.

“The public has suffered a lot in the past. There is a limit to our patience A time will come when the public might react mot in a peaceful manner but in a violent way,” said L. Sangita Devi, local resident in Manipur.

Delhi's turn in Indian election

Written by admin on 12:39 AM

Polling is under way in the fourth stage of India's marathon five phase general election with the capital, Delhi, one of the key battlegrounds.

Millions of voters in 85 constituencies across seven states and in Delhi are casting ballots on Thursday.

Neither the ruling Congress nor main opposition BJP are expected to win outright and other parties could play a key role after counting on 16 May.

The fourth phase voting has seen no major incidents of violence so far.

However, clashes in West Bengal have left six people injured.

Early turnout in most of the areas voting was reported to be fairly strong.

Shutdown

Delhi has all seven seats up for grabs on Thursday. Congress won six of them last time.

The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder in the suburb of Gurgaon says that many of the bankers and IT staff who work there have not registered to vote, but villagers queued up early at booths.

Initial reports from Srinagar, in Indian-administered Kashmir, were of deserted streets amid an election boycott call by separatists who argue that the vote legitimises Indian rule.

The call was generally being heeded, although the BBC's Altaf Hussain said that at one polling booth in the Repora area voting was very brisk and the atmosphere almost festive.

There had been a two-day shutdown ahead of the vote in the Muslim-majority Kashmir valley.

However, in state elections in Jammu and Kashmir last year many voters defied a boycott call and cast ballots in unexpectedly large numbers.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) did well in Rajasthan in 2004's general election, winning 21 of the 25 seats but analysts say that in a tight battle nationwide the switch of even a few seats could be crucial in the coalition talks that are sure to follow the election.
The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder in the suburb of Gurgaon says that many of the bankers and IT staff who work there have not registered to vote, but villagers queued up early at booths.

Initial reports from Srinagar, in Indian-administered Kashmir, were of deserted streets amid an election boycott call by separatists who argue that the vote legitimises Indian rule.

The call was generally being heeded, although the BBC's Altaf Hussain said that at one polling booth in the Repora area voting was very brisk and the atmosphere almost festive.

There had been a two-day shutdown ahead of the vote in the Muslim-majority Kashmir valley.

However, in state elections in Jammu and Kashmir last year many voters defied a boycott call and cast ballots in unexpectedly large numbers.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) did well in Rajasthan in 2004's general election, winning 21 of the 25 seats but analysts say that in a tight battle nationwide the switch of even a few seats could be crucial in the coalition talks that are sure to follow the election.

Pakistan pounds Taleban positions

Written by admin on 12:38 AM

Pakistani helicopter gunships and warplanes have been bombing suspected Taleban militants in the north-western Swat Valley, the military says.

Thousands of civilians continue to flee the area, with fighting especially heavy in the town of Mingora.

A son of the cleric who brokered a deal aimed at ending clashes is reported killed in shelling in a nearby area.

On Wednesday, US President Barack Obama vowed to "defeat al-Qaeda" and its allies in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

He was speaking after talks in Washington with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari.

'Mortar'

Cleric Sufi Mohammed acted as a mediator between the government and Taleban forces in the north-west.


See a map of the region

He organised a recent peace deal in the Swat valley which has now broken down amid heavy fighting.

Family members say that Kiffayatullah was killed in the Daro area of Lower Dir late on Wednesday night.

"My brother was in his house when a mortar fell on it and he was killed," another son, Zia ul-Islam, told the BBC.

Sufi Mohammed's son-in-law was also injured in the attack.

There has been no word from the military or the Taleban in relation to the death.

The BBC's Syed Shoaib Hasan in Islamabad says that the death of Kiffayatullah is likely to exacerbate an already tense situation in the north-west.

2nd swine flu death in Texas; Mexico set to reopen

Written by admin on 9:44 PM

MEXICO CITY -Mexico emerged from its swine flu isolation Tuesday as thousands of newspaper vendors, salesmen hawking trinkets and even panhandlers dropped their protective masks and joined the familiar din of traffic horns and blaring music on the streets of the capital.
There were still signs, however, of the virus that set off world health alarms. A Texas woman who lived near a popular border crossing was confirmed as the second outside Mexico and the first U.S. resident to die after contracting the virus. Mexico's Health Department later announced three more confirmed deaths, raising the country's total to 29.
Across Mexico, people were eagerly anticipating this week's reopening of businesses, restaurants, schools and parks, after a claustrophobic five-day furlough.
"We have a lot of confidence nothing is going to happen," said Irineo Moreno Gonzales, 54, a security guard who Tuesday limited takeout customers to four at a time at a usually crowded downtown Starbucks. "Mexicans have the same spirit we've always had. We're ready to move forward."
The Texas woman, the second confirmed person to die with swine flu in the U.S., lived not far from the Mexico border and had chronic medical conditions, as did the Mexico City toddler who died of swine flu last week during a visit to Houston, Texas, health officials said.
The 33-year-old woman was pregnant and delivered a healthy baby while hospitalized, said Leonel Lopez, Cameron County epidemiologist. She was a teacher in the Mercedes Independent School District, which announced it would close its schools until May 11.
Mexico's government imposed the shutdown to curb the flu's spread, especially in this metropolis of 20 million where the outbreak sickened the most people. Capital residents overwhelmingly complied, and officials cautiously hailed the drastic experiment as a success.
But by Tuesday, pedestrians — many wearing protective masks, many not — were back to dodging the familiar green-and-white VW taxis cruising for fares and noisy heavy trucks bearing bottled water.
Some officials worried about a sudden rush toward normalcy.
"The scientists are saying that we really need to evaluate more," said Dr. Ethel Palacios, the deputy director of the swine flu monitoring effort here. "In terms of how the virus is going to behave, we are keeping every possibility in mind. ... We can't make a prediction of what's going to happen."
Palacios acknowledged the enormous responsibilities that come with balancing the public's health and economic welfare.
"One of most the important things is that you need to know that these measures do have an impact not only on health but also on other aspect of life and society," Palacios said.
With 942 people sickened in Mexico at last count, public celebrations of Cinco de Mayo were banned, and politicians' homage to the soldiers who fought off the French 147 years ago were subdued.
For the first time in decades, Mexico canceled the popular re-enactment of its May 5, 1862, victory over invading French troops in the central state of Puebla. Another traditionally boisterous Cinco de Mayo party in Mexico City's central plaza, the Zocalo, will wait for another year, as will military ceremonies across the nation.
Cinco de Mayo celebrations generally attract bigger crowds in the U.S., where many Mexican-Americans gather to embrace their heritage. These crowds prompted concerns Tuesday about spreading the virus.
Denver's annual festival, which typically draws 400,000, will be held as planned this weekend, with hand sanitation stations installed at the urging of city health officials. Los Angeles won't skip its weekend celebration on historic Olvera Street. But in Chicago, the Mexican Civic Society of Illinois canceled its annual festivities because of flu concerns.
Swine flu has now sickened more than 1,700 people in 21 countries, including more than 600 in the United States. The World Health Organization said it was shipping 2.4 million treatments of antiflu drugs to 72 countries "most in need," and France sent 100,000 doses of antiflu drugs worth $1.7 million to Mexico.
Mexican Finance Secretary Agustin Carstens unveiled plans Tuesday to stimulate key industries and fight foreign bans on Mexican pork products. He said persuading tourists to come back will be a top priority.
Carstens said the outbreak cost Mexico's economy at least $2.2 billion, and he announced a $1.3 billion stimulus package, mostly for tourism and small businesses, the sectors hardest hit by the epidemic. Mexico will temporarily reduce taxes for airlines and cruise ships and cut health insurance payments for small businesses.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he will ask governments to reverse trade and travel restrictions lacking a clear scientific basis.
About 20 Chinese businessmen and students, each wearing surgical masks, left Tijuana zon Tuesday on a Chinese government flight after being stranded when China canceled all direct flights to Mexico.
Mexico, meanwhile, was collecting more than 70 Mexican nationals quarantined in China with its own charter flight.
Four U.S. citizens were quarantined in China, the U.S. Embassy in Beijing said Tuesday, and about 200 passengers who flew from the United Kingdom were under quarantine in a Brunei hospital after three of them arrived with fevers.
Mexico City recovered a bit of its ebullient self Tuesday, one day before the official reopening of stores, restaurants and factories. Only essential services like gas stations and supermarkets have been allowed to operate since April 27, and the weekend's professional soccer games will again be staged in empty stadiums.
High schools and universities were being scrubbed down to reopen Thursday. Younger children return to school on Monday.
Many people shunned their surgical masks Tuesday; a boy selling music CDs on a subway train planted a wet kiss on the unprotected cheek of a girl hawking tiny flashlights. A fruit salad vendor dished up slabs of freshly cut mango and coconut without mask and gloves.
The government is requiring businesses to keep a distance of 2 meters (yards) between customers to prevent the disease from spreading. The rule seemed unlikely to survive in the overcrowded capital.
"It's a little senseless, that people ride into town all jammed together on the subway, and the minute they enter a restaurant, they have to be 2 meters apart," said Nahum Navarette, manager of Yug, a vegetarian restaurant that was still serving only takeout on Tuesday, its dining room deserted.

Nation's first face transplant patient shows face

Written by admin on 9:42 PM

CLEVELAND -Five years ago, a shotgun blast left a ghastly hole where the middle of her face had been. Five months ago, she received a new face from a dead woman. Connie Culp stepped forward Tuesday to show off the results of the nation's first face transplant, and her new look was a far cry from the puckered, noseless sight that made children run away in horror.
Culp's expressions are still a bit wooden, but she can talk, smile, smell and taste her food again. Her speech is at times a little tough to understand. Her face is bloated and squarish, and her skin droops in big folds that doctors plan to pare away as her circulation improves and her nerves grow, animating her new muscles.
But Culp had nothing but praise for those who made her new face possible.
"I guess I'm the one you came to see today," the 46-year-old Ohio woman said at a news conference at the Cleveland Clinic, where the groundbreaking operation was performed. But "I think it's more important that you focus on the donor family that made it so I could have this person's face."
Up until Tuesday, Culp's identity and how she came to be disfigured were a secret.
Culp's husband, Thomas, shot her in 2004, then turned the gun on himself. He went to prison for seven years. His wife was left clinging to life. The blast shattered her nose, cheeks, the roof of her mouth and an eye. Hundreds of fragments of shotgun pellet and bone splinters were embedded in her face. She needed a tube into her windpipe to breathe. Only her upper eyelids, forehead, lower lip and chin were left.
A plastic surgeon at the Cleveland Clinic, Dr. Risal Djohan, got a look at her injuries two months later. "He told me he didn't think, he wasn't sure, if he could fix me, but he'd try," Culp recalled.
She endured 30 operations to try to fix her face. Doctors took parts of her ribs to make cheekbones and fashioned an upper jaw from one of her leg bones. She had countless skin grafts from her thighs. Still, she was left unable to eat solid food, breathe on her own, or smell.
Then, on Dec. 10, in a 22-hour operation, Dr. Maria Siemionow led a team of doctors who replaced 80 percent of Culp's face with bone, muscles, nerves, skin and blood vessels from another woman who had just died. It was the fourth face transplant in the world, though the others were not as extensive.
"Here I am, five years later. He did what he said — I got me my nose," Culp said of Djohan, laughing.
In January, she was able to eat pizza, chicken and hamburgers for the first time in years. She loves to have cookies with a cup of coffee, Siemionow said.
No information has been released about the donor or how she died, but her family members were moved when they saw before-and-after pictures of Culp, Siemionow said.
Culp said she wants to help foster acceptance of those who have suffered burns and other disfiguring injuries.
"When somebody has a disfigurement and don't look as pretty as you do, don't judge them, because you never know what happened to them," she said. "Don't judge people who don't look the same as you do. Because you never know. One day it might be all taken away."
It's a role she has already practiced, said clinic psychiatrist Dr. Kathy Coffman.
Once while shopping, "she heard a little kid say, `You said there were no real monsters mommy, and there's one right there,'" Coffman said. Culp stopped and said, "I'm not a monster. I'm a person who was shot," and pulled out her driver's license to show the child what she used to look like, the psychiatrist said.
Culp, who is from the small town of Unionport, near the Pennsylvania line, told her doctors she just wants to blend back into society. She has a son and a daughter who live near her, and two preschooler grandsons. Before she was shot, she and her husband ran a painting and contracting business, and she did everything from hanging drywall to a little plumbing, Coffman said.
Culp left the hospital Feb. 5 and has returned for periodic follow-up care. She has suffered only one mild rejection episode that was controlled with a single dose of steroid medicines, her doctors said. She must take immune-suppressing drugs for the rest of her life, but her dosage has been greatly reduced and she needs only a few pills a day.
Also at the Cleveland Clinic is Charla Nash of Stamford, Conn., who was attacked by a friend's chimpanzee in February. She lost her hands, nose, lips and eyelids, and will be blind, doctors said. Clinic officials said it is premature to discuss the possibility of a face transplant for her.
In April, doctors at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston performed the nation's second face transplant, on a man disfigured in a freak accident. It was the world's seventh such operation. The first, in 2005, was performed in France on Isabelle Dinoire, a woman who had been mauled by her dog.

Thousands flee Pakistan valley as truce crumbles

Written by admin on 9:42 PM

MINGORA, Pakistan -Black-turbaned Taliban militants seized government buildings, laid mines and fought security forces Tuesday in the Swat Valley, as fear of a major operation led thousands to pack their belongings on their heads and backs, cram aboard buses and flee the northwestern region.
The collapse of a 3-month-old truce with the Taliban means Pakistan will now have to fight to regain control of the Swat Valley, testing the ability of its stretched military and the resolve of civilian leaders who until recently were insisting the insurgents could be partners in peace. The government feared the refugee exodus could reach 500,000.
The developments brought Islamabad's faltering campaign against militancy into sharp focus as President Asif Ali Zardari was preparing for talks Wednesday in Washington with President Barack Obama and Afghan President Hamid Karzai on how best to counter an increasingly overlapping spectrum of extremist groups behind surging violence in the neighboring countries.
The Obama administration hopes to build a strong and lasting regional alliance, linking success in Afghanistan with security in Pakistan. Toward that end, the administration is encouraging Pakistan to confront — not make peace with — the Taliban and other militants.
"These violent extremists need to be confronted head on," State Department spokesman Robert Wood said. "We will be supportive."
Fearing that war could consume the region, thousands fled the main Swat town of Mingora on Tuesday, witnesses said. Refugees clambered onto the roofs of buses after seats and floors filled up. Children and adults alike carried belongings on their heads and backs.
"I do not have any destination. I only have an aim — to escape from here," said Afzal Khan, 65, who was waiting for a bus with his wife and nine children. "It is like doomsday here. It is like hell."
Shafi Ullah, a student, said the whole town was fleeing.
"Can you hear the explosions? Can you hear the gunshots?" he said, pointing to a part of town where fighting was continuing.
It is far from certain that the Pakistani public has the stomach for a long battle in Swat. Given that the militants have had time to rest and reinforce their positions in the three months since the truce took effect, any operation would involve fierce fighting in an urban setting and almost certainly cause significant civilian casualties and damage to property.
In recent days, however, there have been signs of a turn in mood against the Taliban. Many commentators now say the movement's true nature was exposed by its refusal to go along with the peace deal despite the government's best efforts.
Pakistan agreed to a truce in the valley and surrounding districts in February after two years of fighting with militants who had beheaded political opponents and burned scores of girls schools in their campaign to implement a harsh brand of Islam modeled on their counterparts in Afghanistan.
As part of the agreement, the government imposed Islamic law last month in the hope that insurgents would lay down their arms — something they did not do.
Last week, the Taliban moved from their stronghold in the valley into Buner, a district just 60 miles from the capital. That caused alarm at home and abroad.
The army responded with an offensive it says has killed more than 100 militants and was "progressing smoothly" Tuesday, according to a brief statement.
Fighting, which had been rising in Swat in recent days, escalated Tuesday in Mingora and the neighboring town of Saidu Sharif, according to Associated Press reporters in the towns and an army statement. There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Militants wearing turbans were deployed on most streets and on high buildings in Mingora, and security forces were barricaded in their bases. Khushal Khan, the top administrator in Swat, said insurgents were laying mines in the town to hinder any army advance.
Late Tuesday, several dozen militants surrounded a police residential compound and an adjoining station in Saidu Sharif after occupying the offices of the police chief and the civil administration, said an officer who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.
"The limited forces inside the police building cannot survive for long unless the militants are engaged from outside," he said from inside the station. "We are in war conditions and need reinforcements and supplies."
Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the information minister for the North West Frontier Province, said up to 500,000 people were expected to flee the valley. Swat is already struggling to house half a million people driven there by fighting from other northwestern regions over the last year.
Hussain said authorities were releasing emergency funds and preparing six new refugee camps to house them.
Neither the military nor the central government was available to comment Tuesday on whether a fully fledged offensive was planned in the valley.
Before the peace deal, the militants were estimated to have about 4,000 well trained and heavily armed fighters in the valley. It is unclear how many security forces are already stationed there. Under the terms of the truce, the army was not required to pull out of the region.
Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan said the militants were in control of "90 percent" of the valley. He said they were merely responding to what he called army violations of the deal — attacking insurgents and adding troops. He accused the government of caving to U.S. pressure in moving into Buner to counter the Taliban.
"Everything will be OK once our rulers stop bowing before America," Muslim Khan, the Taliban spokesman, told AP by cell phone, adding that the peace deal had "been dead" since the operation in Buner.
The United States and other Western nations have opposed the peace deal with the Swat Taliban, warning that other deals had broken down and given the militants time to regroup.
Pakistan has waged several offensives in the border region against al-Qaida and Taliban militants in recent years. Most have ended inconclusively or with peace deals amid public anger over civilian casualties and distaste for taking on fellow Muslims. The army has long focused on the threat posed by longtime rival India and is not used to the demands of guerrilla warfare.

Associated Press writer Riaz Khan in Peshawar and Ashraf Khan in Karachi contributed to this report. An AP reporter in Mingora who was not identified for security reasons contributed to this report.

Swiss girl, 7, finds condom in McDonald's Happy Meal!

Written by admin on 9:39 PM

Melbourne, May 05 (ANI): A mother had to call the police after her seven-year-old daughter discovered a condom in her McDonald's Happy Meal.

The girl found the condom in McDonald's French fries, reports the Daily Telegraph.

Fribourg state police in Switzerland said that an investigation is going on to find out where the condom came from and how it got into the Happy Meal.

They said an analysis was being done to determine if the condom posed a health risk. (ANI)

Court to frame charges against Kasab on Wednesday

Written by admin on 9:38 PM

Mumbai, May 5 (ANI): A trial court on Tuesday obtained sanctions from the Centre and the Maharashtra Government to prosecute prime accused in Mumbai terror attack case Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab and two others.

The court on Wednesday will frame charges against Kasab, Faheem Ansari, Sabauddin Ahmed, and 35 others accused believed to be in Pakistan.

Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam on Tuesday filed "sanctions" that pertain to offences such as waging war against the nation, violation of Customs Act (by illegally bringing firearms to India), infringement of Explosives Act and Explosives Substances Act (using explosives) and Arms Act (opening fire with sophisticated weapons.

The Judge M L Tahaliyani accepted the "sanctions" and said the court would frame charges against the trio after considering the material against them.

Nikam informed the court that the prosecution had obtained sanction from the Customs Department to prosecute Kasab under Customs Act.

Kasab and his Pakistani associates had brought arms illegally to India to strike terror in Mumbai, the prosecutor said.

Union Government has also given sanction to prosecute Kasab and others under IPC for "waging war against the nation".

If found guilty, the accused may face punishment ranging from death sentence to life imprisonment and fine. (ANI)

Mahindra kick-starts two-wheeler foray with Flyte

Written by admin on 9:37 PM

Chennai, May 5 (ANI/Business Wire India): Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd. (M and M), part of the US 6.7 billion dollars Mahindra Group, today introduced the Flyte as its first two-wheeler offering across all markets in India.

This is part of the company's strategy following the acquisition of the business assets of Kinetic Motor Company in late 2008.

With this foray, M and M now caters to customers across a wide portfolio of product categories ranging from two wheelers and three wheelers to utility vehicles, commercial vehicles and passenger cars.

The two-wheeler products will cater to the personal mobility requirements of customers across the country.

Mahindra and Mahindra's stringent quality standards, which are a part of its customer centric approach, will be reflected in the Flyte.

Anoop Mathur, President - Two-wheeler Business, Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd, said, "The introduction of the Flyte marks the beginning of our two-wheeler foray. It will be our endeavour to present customers with more products that carry the quality and legacy of the Mahindra Group. We use the design and engineering services of all our affiliates including the Italy based Engines Engineering in all our product development work to give technologically superior products to our consumers."

The Flyte is a 125cc automatic scooter that boasts of several class-defining features such as front fuelling, the largest storage space in its class and 4-in-1 anti-theft key.

It has a powerful 125 cc engine and telescopic suspension which ensure a smooth ride. It will be available at 238 dealerships in tier 2 and 3 cities as the flagship model from Mahindra. This network will be increased over a period of time.

Mahindra is already the market leader in utility vehicles in India and makes a wide range of vehicles including MUVs, LCVs, passenger vehicles and three wheelers.

The company offers customers over 20 models including new generation utility vehicles like the Scorpio and the Bolero. Over the years, Mahindra has been steadily growing in st