Saturday, 24 March 2012

Sri Lankan dailies go to town over India's UN vote

Colombo, March 23 (IANS) India's vote against Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council grabbed the headlines here Friday.
India Thursday voted for a US-backed resolution urging Sri Lanka to probe rights abuses in the war on the Tamil Tigers.
Sri Lanka expressed outrage after the resolution won majority support at the UN Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva. The UNHRC adopted the resolution with 24 votes in favour, 15 against and eight abstentions.
The Daily News said: "Only one vote majority for resolution; 24 say 'yes', 23 decline to support".
Calling it "misconceived, unwarranted and ill-timed resolution", the daily said: "Those who live in glass houses are best advised to exercise caution before throwing stones."
"Geneva: Lanka fails to beat the odds," was the headline at infolanka.com
Another website news.lk said that voting at HRC was "determined by strategic alliances and domestic issues".
"It is a matter of great satisfaction to us that 15 countries voted with Sri Lanka, despite the intensity of pressure, in a variety of forms, exerted on them all," it said.
The headline in the Island daily said "Geneva: Lanka fails to beat the odds".
It mentioned that the resolution amended again at India's behest to include key operative words, "in consultation with and with the concurrence of the government of Sri Lanka".
The report noted that although "India succumbed to US pressure to vote for the resolution, key Asian countries, including those representing SAARC and two UN Security Council members voted against it".
"Lanka defiant despite losing vote," said the Sunday Leader.
It said that the Sri Lankan government remained defiant despite losing a key vote at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.
External Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris said that most countries which voted with Sri Lanka were acutely conscious of the danger of setting a precedent which enables ad hoc intervention by powerful countries in the internal affairs of other nations.
"The most distressing feature of this experience is the obvious reality that voting at the Human Rights Council is now determined not by the merits of a particular issue but by strategic alliances and domestic political issues in other countries which have nothing to do with the subject matter of a resolution or the best interests of the country to which the resolution relates.
"This is a cynical negation of the purposes for which the Human Rights Council was established," he said in a statement.

US working with India to reduce dependence on Iran oil

washington, March 23 (IANS) The United States has said it's "working hard" with India to see if it can help reduce its dependence on Iranian crude and find alternative sources of supply, but no decision has been taken on imposing financial sanctions.
"Our conversations continue with all the other countries that want to talk to us who continue to have issues with the amount of Iranian crude that they import," State Department spokesman Victoria Nuland told reporters Wednesday when asked about the status of India, China and 10 other nations excluded from an exemptions list.
"India is one of those countries. And we are working hard with India to see if we can help with regard to reducing India's dependence and the dependence of any of the other countries on Iranian crude, and looking at alternative sources of supply as well," she said.
Iranian crude oil accounts for about 12 percent of India's current oil imports, the second largest supplier after Saudi Arabia.
Asked if the US was contemplating any action against the holdout nations, Nuland said: "I don't have anything to announce, and our bilateral consultations continue with a whole raft of countries that have not yet been exempted."
The United States Tuesday exempted Japan and ten European nations - Belgium, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, and the United Kingdom - from US sanctions for having significantly reduced purchases of Iranian crude oil.

Suburban tensions fester as France debates shooting

TOULOUSE, France (Reuters) - In the aftermath of a killing spree that shocked the nation, France's Paris-based politicians and national media are deep in debate about its impact on the upcoming presidential election and the need for tighter security.
In the drab Toulouse suburbs where gunman Mohamed Merah killed seven people before being cut down by police commandos, the talk is more of bubbling tensions between ethnic and religious communities and how solutions are nowhere in sight.
The gap is not just between the capital to the north and Toulouse in the southwest. In the gritty outskirts of Paris, within sight of the Eiffel Tower, an "us and them" mentality still haunts the streets rocked by immigrant riots in 2005.
"Politicians in France love to talk about harmony, how there are no communities and everybody lives together," said Georges Dray, 72, a retired Jewish bar owner who came to Toulouse in the wave of French settlers who left former colony Algeria on its independence in 1962.
"That is pure cinema. They should say how things really are," he said.
The Toulouse killings claimed the lives of three soldiers, three Jewish children and a rabbi, before gunman Merah died in a shootout with police.
An hour later, conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is campaigning for re-election in the April-May poll, proposed tougher security measures, such as sanctions for people whose frequent viewing of jihadist websites could mean links to radical Islamism.
"This is going to raise questions about our system of integration, our approach to (Islamic) fundamentalism and our tolerance of certain practices here. You're going to hear a lot about that in the weeks to come," a senior Sarkozy campaign adviser said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Lahsen Edbas, 29, a Muslim grocery store worker in the eastern Paris suburb of Le Raincy, echoed a widespread scepticism about the Paris elite: "Why is all this happening now, just before an election?"
TOUGHER CAMPAIGN TO COME
Sarkozy's re-election campaign has already hammered away at those issues, calling for tighter controls on immigration and tougher access to social benefits for foreigners settling here.
Muslim and Jews here, many of them born in France and well integrated, saw these as code words and terms aimed against them. There are about 5 million Muslims and 600,000 Jews in the 63 million population of metropolitan France.
When Prime Minister Francois Fillon suggested in early March that Muslims and Jews should give up the "ancestral traditions" of halal and kosher meat, leaders of those minorities said they were being stigmatised so Sarkozy could win far-right votes.
Debates like that over halal and kosher slaughter practices or the killings in Toulouse - where there were both Muslim and Jewish victims - have brought national leaders of the two communities closer together.
But the gap between majority and minority, and between Jew and Muslim, seems to be growing at the grassroots level.
Mohamed, a Toulouse construction worker in his 30s, noted Merah reportedly turned to radicalism after being rejected twice by the army. "You think that's only because of the dumb things he did as a kid?" he asked. "Your name and the colour of your skin also count."
Mohamed said divisions in French society were widening. "There are also big tensions between the communities," he said, referring to Muslims and Jews. "This sort of event, given how it's distorted in the media, will make that worse."
MUSLIM-JEWISH STRAINS
Dray said Jews had encountered prejudice in the past from French anti-Semites but now suffered it mostly "from the Islamists" and said it had got worse over the years.
"They talk about being brothers, but they are only brothers among themselves and full of hatred for Jews and everyone else."
Roger, a 50-year-old supporter of the anti-immigrant National Front, said violence, crime and the number of mosques had all been on the rise for years in Toulouse.
"In France, we keep a lid on things," he said. "But I'll tell you one thing; France is at a boiling point, and some day, it's going to explode."
Amairi Messaoud, 55, a Tunisian-born fast-food restaurant manager in Le Raincy, had more confidence in his non-Muslim neighbours: "I don't think it will affect relations, not in France, because the French know what Islam is really about."
Analysts pondering the effect of the killings on French society did not expect copy-cat attacks.
Roland Jacquard, head of the International Terrorism Observatory, told Reuters Television that very few young Frenchmen had gone for training in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
"There may remain about 10 of them in France," he said.
Antoine Basbous, a terrorism expert at the Observatory of Arab Countries, also stressed the apparent "lone wolf" nature of Merah's attack. "Right now this does not represent a threat to social peace," he said.
But Basbous said France still had a problem with its minorities. "A country that no longer can integrate its immigrants and treat them correctly is a problem," he said.

Suburban tensions fester as France debates shooting

TOULOUSE, France (Reuters) - In the aftermath of a killing spree that shocked the nation, France's Paris-based politicians and national media are deep in debate about its impact on the upcoming presidential election and the need for tighter security.
In the drab Toulouse suburbs where gunman Mohamed Merah killed seven people before being cut down by police commandos, the talk is more of bubbling tensions between ethnic and religious communities and how solutions are nowhere in sight.
The gap is not just between the capital to the north and Toulouse in the southwest. In the gritty outskirts of Paris, within sight of the Eiffel Tower, an "us and them" mentality still haunts the streets rocked by immigrant riots in 2005.
"Politicians in France love to talk about harmony, how there are no communities and everybody lives together," said Georges Dray, 72, a retired Jewish bar owner who came to Toulouse in the wave of French settlers who left former colony Algeria on its independence in 1962.
"That is pure cinema. They should say how things really are," he said.
The Toulouse killings claimed the lives of three soldiers, three Jewish children and a rabbi, before gunman Merah died in a shootout with police.
An hour later, conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is campaigning for re-election in the April-May poll, proposed tougher security measures, such as sanctions for people whose frequent viewing of jihadist websites could mean links to radical Islamism.
"This is going to raise questions about our system of integration, our approach to (Islamic) fundamentalism and our tolerance of certain practices here. You're going to hear a lot about that in the weeks to come," a senior Sarkozy campaign adviser said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Lahsen Edbas, 29, a Muslim grocery store worker in the eastern Paris suburb of Le Raincy, echoed a widespread skepticism about the Paris elite: "Why is all this happening now, just before an election?"
TOUGHER CAMPAIGN TO COME
Sarkozy's re-election campaign has already hammered away at those issues, calling for tighter controls on immigration and tougher access to social benefits for foreigners settling here.
Muslim and Jews here, many of them born in France and well integrated, saw these as code words and terms aimed against them. There are about 5 million Muslims and 600,000 Jews in the 63 million population of metropolitan France.
When Prime Minister Francois Fillon suggested in early March that Muslims and Jews should give up the "ancestral traditions" of halal and kosher meat, leaders of those minorities said they were being stigmatized so Sarkozy could win far-right votes.
Debates like that over halal and kosher slaughter practices or the killings in Toulouse - where there were both Muslim and Jewish victims - have brought national leaders of the two communities closer together.
But the gap between majority and minority, and between Jew and Muslim, seems to be growing at the grassroots level.
Mohamed, a Toulouse construction worker in his 30s, noted Merah reportedly turned to radicalism after being rejected twice by the army. "You think that's only because of the dumb things he did as a kid?" he asked. "Your name and the color of your skin also count."
Mohamed said divisions in French society were widening. "There are also big tensions between the communities," he said, referring to Muslims and Jews. "This sort of event, given how it's distorted in the media, will make that worse."
MUSLIM-JEWISH STRAINS
Dray said Jews had encountered prejudice in the past from French anti-Semites but now suffered it mostly "from the Islamists" and said it had got worse over the years.
"They talk about being brothers, but they are only brothers among themselves and full of hatred for Jews and everyone else."
Roger, a 50-year-old supporter of the anti-immigrant National Front, said violence, crime and the number of mosques had all been on the rise for years in Toulouse.
"In France, we keep a lid on things," he said. "But I'll tell you one thing; France is at a boiling point, and some day, it's going to explode."
Amairi Messaoud, 55, a Tunisian-born fast-food restaurant manager in Le Raincy, had more confidence in his non-Muslim neighbors: "I don't think it will affect relations, not in France, because the French know what Islam is really about."
Analysts pondering the effect of the killings on French society did not expect copy-cat attacks.
Roland Jacquard, head of the International Terrorism Observatory, told Reuters Television that very few young Frenchmen had gone for training in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
"There may remain about 10 of them in France," he said.
Antoine Basbous, a terrorism expert at the Observatory of Arab Countries, also stressed the apparent "lone wolf" nature of Merah's attack. "Right now this does not represent a threat to social peace," he said.
But Basbous said France still had a problem with its minorities. "A country that no longer can integrate its immigrants and treat them correctly is a problem," he said.

British doctors face jail over fake abortion consent

London, March 24 (IANS) The British government has warned that doctors who were found illegally carrying out abortions by faking consent forms would be put behind bars.
The warning was issued after it emerged that one in five clinics investigated by the health watchdog was routinely breaking the law by not complying with official guidelines, the Daily Mail reported.
The inspectors discovered that some doctors were signing consent forms allowing women to undergo abortions without knowing anything about their circumstances or why they wanted the procedure. This breaches Britain's Abortion Act.
By law, a woman can only undergo an abortion once two doctors have signed a form declaring that continuing with the pregnancy would put her physical and mental health at risk.
Over the last two weeks the Care Quality Commission, the watchdog, has been undertaking spot check inspections of around 250 abortion clinics in Britain.
In a statement to parliament, Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has pledged to take swift action and also warned that offending clinics could be shut down.
A Department of Health spokesman confirmed that doctors could face jail for breaching the Act.
Lansley ordered the inspections after an undercover investigation found that some doctors were apparently authorising abortions for women just because the foetus was a particular sex, which is against the law.

Dutch man seeks child with father's sperm

London, March 24 (IANS) A childless man in the Netherlands has turned to his father for his sperm after having failed to conceive with his wife despite three years of their marriage.
The couple has found a clinic which will honour their unusual request, the Daily Mail reported.
According to researchers in the journal Human Reproduction, while such arrangements have potential advantages over using donations from strangers, they do bring their own set of complications, such as confusion over the child's actual parent.
In this case, the child produced from this union of egg and sperm will have a "father" who is his biological half-brother and a "grandfather" who is his biological father.
There are varying views on the issue. But most experts agree so-called intra-familial assisted reproduction should not necessarily be banned.
"I don't know that laws should encompass forbidding intra-familial donation," said Adrienne Asch, director of the Centre for Ethics at Yeshiva University in New York City.
But couples who request it "should be very carefully counselled about the psychological pitfalls that could await them", said Asch.

What will you miss during foreign tour

London, March 24 (IANS) While touring a foreign country what things would you miss the most? Parents, children, or homecooked food? Britons admit to yearning for favourite television shows, home cooking and perfect cup of tea when they are abroad.
The survey, commissioned by Alison Tennant of the Believe in Gloucester campaign, found British holidaymakers start to miss home four days and 14 hours into a foreign break, the Daily Express reported.
The researchers found over half were unable to detach from their home life while on holiday. Drinking tap water without worrying was a big issue for 40 percent while one in 10 admitting missing their job.
It was found over a fifth made at least four calls home, a third ringing on the first day. Many were desperate to check on pets.
The study of 2,200 people showed one fifth of Britons moan when abroad. Swimming pools are most likely to trigger complaints, followed by mosquitoes, bad food - and other tourists.

Lok Sabha polls can happen any time after an year: Mulayam

Lucknow, March 23 (IANS) Samajwadi Party (SP) chief Mulayam Singh Yadav Friday asked his party workers to brace up for the Lok Sabha polls which he predicted could be held anytime "after an year".
Addressing a gathering at the Lohia Park in the state capital on the 102nd birth anniversary of his mentor and socialist thinker Ram Manohar Lohia, Mulayam Singh said the "government should come true to the expectations of the people" if they wanted to reap dividends in the Lok Sabha polls.
Earlier this week, at a press conference at the party office, Mulayam Singh had said that he was not joining the UPA II as there "was just one year left and there was no use of joining the central government".
Giving the present Uttar Pradesh government led by his son Akhilesh Yadav six months to "show results", Yadav said though he was not the chief minister he would be watching every step of the government, its officials and ministers.
Pointing at his son, Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav, he asked him to send a copy of the SP manifesto to every official so that the bureaucracy was aware of the priorities and promises made by the party during the recently concluded assembly polls.
"Lok Sabha elections can happen any time after an year and so the party machinery should be ready for early polls," he said while pointing out that people had very high expectations from the party this time and there was no way that they can squander the mandate.
Exhorting partymen and ministers to live up to the socialist ideology, he even took pot shots at certain speakers who, speaking before him, told the crowd to ensure that 'Netaji' became the prime minister in 2014.
"I know how one becomes prime minister, so leave that to me and work hard for the people so as to ensure an emphatic victory for the Samajwadi Party in the parliamentary elections," he mused.
Speaking on the occasion, Akhilesh Yadav said a road map for development of the state was being made and the state would soon see changes in government functioning.

Indian student says he was 'stupid', but didn't cause roommate's death

Washington, March 23 (IANS) An Indian American student convicted of spying on his gay roommate with a webcam said he did some stupid things but didn't cause the fellow pupil's suicide days after the incident.
Former Rutgers New Jersey State University student Dharun Ravi, 20, told ABC's "20/20" that he did some stupid things, but Tyler Clementi, who killed himself by leaping off the George Washington Bridge, had other problems.
"Even though I wasn't the one who caused him to jump off the bridge, I did do things wrong and I was stupid about a lot of stuff," Ravi told the news show.
The former computer science student was convicted on 15 counts of invasion of privacy, bias intimidation and other crimes after using a webcam to watch Clementi's sexual encounter with another man in their dorm room. Ravi said he did some soul-searching after Clementi's death, but concluded it wasn't his fault.
"The more and more I found out, it would be kind of obnoxious of me to think that I could have this profound effect on him," Ravi said.
Ravi said Clementi left a suicide note behind that authorities never released.
"The fact that we weren't allowed to read it, that they said it didn't have anything to do with this, that gave me comfort also because I figured if it has nothing to do with me . . . it must have been something else that was going on," he said.
"I'm very sorry about Tyler," Ravi told The Star-Ledger. "I want the Clementis to know I had no problem with their son. I didn't hate Tyler and I know he was OK with me."

World Bank offers $500 million loan for education in India

Washington, March 23 (IANS) The World Bank has offered $500 million interest-free credit to India for improving the standards of secondary education, an official statement said Friday.
The World Bank Thursday approved the credit that will help the Indian government's efforts to make good quality education "available, accessible and affordable to all young persons at the secondary level (grades 9 and 10)."
The project will support all activities as envisioned in the $12.9 billion Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan (RMSA) programme, a flagship government of India programme for gradual universalisation of secondary education, the World Bank said in a statement.
"This World Bank project will support the objectives and activities of RMSA. It will facilitate a whole set of mechanisms built around identifying what is needed to improve the quality of secondary education," said Venu Rajamony, joint secretary, economic affairs in India's finance ministry.
The project will be financed by a credit from the International Development Association (IDA) -- the World Bank's concessionary lending arm - which provides interest-free loans with 25 years to maturity and a grace period of five years.
The money will be used for setting up libraries, computer laboratories, upgrading primary schools in to secondary schools and providing training to teachers.
In addition, expansion, repair and renovation will take place in some 60,000 existing government secondary schools; some 44,000 upper primary schools will be upgraded into secondary schools; and about 11,000 new secondary and senior secondary schools will come up mainly in underserved areas.
Efforts will also be made to strengthen the role of local bodies in school management, which can, over time, lead to greater accountability and improved outcomes, the World Bank said.
"RMSA is a young programme which is expected to grow rapidly and hence it is an opportunity for the World Bank to support the government of India in building effective systems as the programme expands while improving quality," said Roberto Zagha, World Bank country director for India.
Zagha pointed out that a major concern in India these days was the issue of quality education.
"Mere improvement in access, if it is of differential quality, may not be conducive for inclusive growth. Recent international research confirms that improved quality - measured by cognitive skills - is important in determining future income and contribution to economic growth," he said.
"Hence the country needs all their young people to get good quality secondary education," Zagha added.
The World Bank's funded project is designed to meet critical needs in secondary education.
"First, to make sure that secondary education expands in such a way that quality and equity are enhanced at the same time; second, to develop and evaluate innovative approaches to secondary education; and, third, to leverage World Bank resources to help the government address systemic issues in the sector."

US court upholds award of $1.5 mn damages to Indian maid

New York, March 21 (IANS) A US court has approved a magistrate's award of $1.5 million compensation to an Indian maid who had accused a former Indian diplomat and her husband of harassment and "slavery".
US District Judge Victor Marrero "adopted in entirety" the report of US Magistrate Judge Frank Maas recommending payment of $1.5 million compensation to maid Shanti Gurung for the alleged "barbaric treatment" and "emotional distress" by Indian diplomat Neena Malhotra and her husband Jogesh.
Neena Malhotra had employed Gurung as her domestic help for three years between 2006 and 2009 when she was serving as a counsellor at the Consulate General of India in New York.
"The application of plaintiff Shanti Gurung for an award of damages is granted; accordingly, judgment is entered in favour of Gurung and against defendants Jogesh Malhotra and Neena Malhotra in an amount of $1,458,335 in accordance with the calculations and breakdown of that amount set forth in the report," Marrero said in his judgment Tuesday.
Marrero also ordered the case closed as Malhotras did not file any objections to Maas' report even though they had 14 days to do so. He said the court is not required to review any portion of a magistrate judge's report that is not the subject of an objection.
After a thorough review of the documents submitted, "the Court concludes that the findings, reasoning and legal support for the recommendations made in the report are not clearly erroneous or contrary to law and are thus warranted", he said.
"Accordingly... the court adopts the report's factual and legal analyses and determinations, as well as its substantive recommendations in their entirety as the court's ruling as to Gurung's application for an award of damages," Marrero said.
In his recommendation filed Feb 21, Maas had said Gurung should be awarded the compensation as she was a victim of "outrageous and shocking conduct".
Gurung had alleged that she was treated like a slave by the Malhotras and forced to work long hours without adequate compensation.
Marrero's ruling came just days after the Delhi High Court restrained Gurung from pursuing her lawsuit in the US.
The judgment came days after Delhi High Court in an interim order restrained Gurung from pursuing her case in the New York court as the whole concept of anti-suit injunction would be defeated if the foreign court was allowed to decide the issue at this stage.
"An Indian diplomat enjoys sovereign immunity and any order passed by the court of the US would tantamount to interfering in the rights of the government of India to determine the terms and conditions of the employment of its diplomatic officers posted abroad," the Delhi court said.

Major air disaster averted at Mumbai Airport

Mumbai, Mar.23 (ANI): A serious communication error almost caused an air disaster at Mumbai International Airport on Thursday.
It was a narrow escape for passengers travelling on three Jet Airways flights.
A Jet Airways flight coming in from Nagpur was descending to land, while another plane was waiting to take off. A third plane was also to leave the runway, putting on three planes on a possible collision course.
Air Traffic Controller (ATC), however, sounded an emergency in the nick of time.
According to a TImes Now report, the flight that landed was ordered to leave the main runway. The plane that was to take off was put on hold to allow the incoming flight to land safely.
"As advised by the ATC, flight no. 9W 2073 from Mumbai to Udaipur had to reject take off at very low speed. This was due to another aircraft that was waiting to clear runway. The estimated departure of the Mumbai to Udaipur flight was 1850hrs. The flight departed with 55 minutes delay," a Jet Airways statement said.
Jet Airways has admitted there was a delay because of the mix up on the runway. a massive disaster averted but the narrow shave raising fresh concerns over air safety. (ANI)

James Murdoch severs all ties with UK newspapers

LONDON (Reuters) - James Murdoch has severed all ties with News Corp's British newspaper business, which is at the centre of multiple investigations over phone and computer hacking and bribery, according to regulatory filings.
Murdoch is under scrutiny for his role in failing to uncover systematic illegal interception of phone calls at the News of the World newspaper, which was shut down last July, and stepped down as chairman of News Corp's UK publishing arm last month.
One document filed this week shows that Murdoch has resigned from the board of Times Newspaper Holdings, which was set up to guarantee the independence of the Times of London and the Sunday Times when News Corp acquired the titles in 1981.
Earlier documents show that Murdoch stepped down from the boards of holding companies News Corp Investments and News International Publishers Ltd shortly after resigning as chairman of News International, News Corp's UK publishing arm.
News Corp declined on Saturday to comment on the resignations.
Murdoch was recently appointed deputy chief operating officer of News Corp and is now based in New York, where he is focusing on the media conglomerate's pay-TV businesses.
This year, he gave up his directorships of GlaxoSmithKline and Sotheby's, but he remains chairman of British satellite broadcaster BSkyB, of which he was formerly chief executive and in which News Corp owns 39 percent.

Mali junta leader Sanogo denies counter-coup rumours

BAMAKO (Reuters) - The leader of a military coup in Mali, Amadou Sanogo, appeared on television on Saturday to say he was alive and well, denying rumours that he had been killed in a counter-coup days after seizing power.
"Good evening, people of Mali, good evening comrades in arms, good evening citizens, I am Captain Sanogo and I am here in good health, all is well," Sanogo said in a broadcast aired on state television in the early hours.
Rather than making an extended address, he handed over to a spokesman, who said all the Malian army was behind the coup.
It was not clear when the statement had been recorded.
Sanogo heads the National Committee for the Return of Democracy and the Restoration of the State (CNRDR), a body set up by soldiers who overthrew President Amadou Toumani Toure on Wednesday.
The coup's leaders are seeking to capitalise on popular dissatisfaction at Toure's handling of a rebellion by northern nomadic Tuaregs launched in January.
But they have looked increasingly isolated as a coalition of parties condemned the coup and urged that elections, which had been scheduled for April, be held as soon as possible.
Mali's neighbours, the United Nations, France, the United States and the European Union have all called for a return to constitutional rule.
The regional body ECOWAS said it would not recognise the junta and scheduled a summit in Abidjan on Tuesday to discuss the Mali crisis. The African Union suspended Mali's membership.
The coup has left the West African nation, a stable democracy over the past two decades, in limbo and added to fears of regional instability after the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in Libya.
FRONTLINE
The northern rebel MNLA, whose numbers have been swollen by Malian Tuaregs returning from the ranks of Libya's army after Gaddafi's fall, launched their fight for an independent north in January.
Aiming to capitalise on confusion in the capital, they have pushed south to occupy positions abandoned by government forces.
The governor of the northeastern region of Kidal told Reuters late on Friday that government troops had retreated from the frontline after they heard of the coup in Bamako.
"We are now surrounded (in Kidal city) by rebels of the MNLA. The current situation in Bamako contributed much to the weak commitment of soldiers on the frontline," Colonel Salifou Kone told Reuters by telephone.
Sanogo has said he is ready to negotiate with the rebels but that his aim is to maintain Mali's territorial integrity.
Hama Ag Mahmoud of the MNLA's political wing told Reuters in Nouakchott, the capital of neighbouring Mauritania: "We are ready to negotiate but there are conditions - the incumbent must be well-established, representative and have the political class behind him, and we must have guarantees from big powers."
Ag Mahmoud said the MNLA's ambitions did not extend beyond the occupation of three northern regions of Mali.

25 labourers in Gurgaon sent to jail on arson charges

Gurgaon (Haryana), March 24 (IANS) Twenty-five labourers in Gurgaon were Saturday sent to police custody for indulging in vandalism and arson at a construction site in the city Friday, police said.
Police also filed a criminal case against the contractors for not providing proper safety equipment to workers.
'We have filed a criminal case against the officials of Larsen and Toubro (L&T) and Alufit for forcing labourers to work without providing safety equipment. We have also sent 25 workers to jail for the vandalism and arson that they indulged in Friday,' a police official told IANS.
Angered over the death of a co-worker Babul Hasan (25) from Baghpat (Uttar Pradesh), labourers at a construction site of L&T and Alufit had pelted stones at private vehicles and torched a police gypsy Friday.

What will you miss during foreign tour

London, March 24 (IANS) While touring a foreign country what things would you miss the most? Parents, children, or homecooked food? Britons admit to yearning for favourite television shows, home cooking and perfect cup of tea when they are abroad.

The survey, commissioned by Alison Tennant of the Believe in Gloucester campaign, found British holidaymakers start to miss home four days and 14 hours into a foreign break, the Daily Express reported.

The researchers found over half were unable to detach from their home life while on holiday. Drinking tap water without worrying was a big issue for 40 percent while one in 10 admitting missing their job.

It was found over a fifth made at least four calls home, a third ringing on the first day. Many were desperate to check on pets.

The study of 2,200 people showed one fifth of Britons moan when abroad. Swimming pools are most likely to trigger complaints, followed by mosquitoes, bad food - and other tourists.

Odisha talks halted as Maoists seize legislator

hubaneswar/New Delhi, March 24 (IANS) Talks to secure the release of two Italians abducted 10 days ago by Maoists in Odisha were suspended Saturday after the rebels daringly kidnapped a ruling party legislator and killed a police officers. The two Maoist-named mediators also announced they were withdrawing from the talks.
The dramatic developments pushed the fate of all three hostages into uncertainty. The government did not say whether it will resume the talks or will it use force against the rebels.
Meanwhile, a statement from Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik's office said that the two Maoist-named mediators, tribal expert B.D. Sharma and social activist Dandapani Mohanty, have withdrawn from the talks after the latest abduction and other violent acts by Maoists.
'The state government expects that the Maoists will very soon nominate their new mediators for negotiation for the release of two Italian citizens as well as for the release of the young MLA,' it added.
The ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD) accused the Congress-led central government of not cooperating with it to free the Italians, while the Congress said law and order was a state subject.
In an unexpected development, the Maoists kidnapped BJD legislator and a popular tribal leader Jhina Hikaka, 37, early Saturday even as the government held a dialogue with the rebels through their mediators for the release of Italians Bosusco Paolo, 54, and Claudio Colangelo, 61.
Hikaka, a first time legislator who represents Laxmipur constituency, was returning from a party meeting in Koraput district when his vehicle was stopped on the road near Toyaput, a hilly area, about 500 kms from Bhubaneswar, at about 1 a.m. Saturday.
Police sources said some 100 rebels were involved in the abduction.
While holding on to him, the rebels freed his driver and his guard who were accompanying him.
After the abduction, the Maoists who had also dug the road, left behind a leaflet restating their 13 demands they have set for the release of the Italians and demanded that these should be met at the earliest, police said.
The demands include a ban on the visit of tourists to the tribal areas, halt to anti-Maoist operations, and release of several prisoners.
Hikaka's wife, Kaushalya Hikaka, said her husband is a popular tribal leader and had no enemy.
She appeared on local television channels to appeal to the Maoists to release her husband. 'Please release my husband. He has never caused harm to any body,' she said.
Chief Minister Patnaik held meetings with police and other officials. He said his government was handling the latest kidnapping on a crisis mode.
After several hours of discussion for the third consecutive day Saturday, both the government-appointed mediators and the Maoist interlocutors announced the suspension of the dialogue over the legislator's abduction.
Saying they were backing off only for now, they, however, did not specify when the talks will resume.
Mohanty and Sharma, who were named by the rebels to mediate, blamed both the government and the Maoists for the disruption.
The two told reporters that after the abduction of the Italian tourists, the state committee of the banned Communist Party of India-Maoist declared a ceasefire, while the government also promised that there would be no coercive action by the security forces.
'But the fact is that while we are discussing in Bhubaneswar, unfortunate incidents of disrupting peace continued in many parts of the state,' they said. 'We feel that this is a mockery of peaceful talks and negotiations.
'We, therefore, suggest that the negotiation be kept under suspension,' they said.
Home Secretary U.N. Behera, one of the negotiators from the government side, said the decision to suspend the talks was taken on the request of the Maoist mediators.
The two Italians were abducted from the border of Ganjam and Kandhamal district March 14.
The rebels earlier shot dead a police sub-inspector in Malkangiri, a Maoist stronghold, late Thursday even as the talks were on.
The kidnapping incident had an echo in the assembly when Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members created uproar, forcing Speaker Pradip Amat to adjourn it a number of times and finally for the day.
The BJP also asked the central government to wage a war against the Maoists.
Congress spokesperson Abhishek Manu Singhvi said the kidnapping of a legislator was a matter of serious concern.
'But the state government is competent to handle the situation and it comes under the state's responsibility. 'The centre has been providing all necessary help whenever the state has asked for it,' he added.

Married woman gangraped by six men in Ghaziabad

Ghaziabad (Uttar Pradesh), March 24 (IANS) A 28-year-old woman whose husband was away to attend a marriage function was gang raped by six men in Ghaziabad Saturday, police said.
The incident occurred at around 1.00 a.m. Saturday morning.
According to the First Information Report (FIR) lodged at the Masuri police station in Ghaziabad district, the woman's husband had gone to attend a marriage ceremony in nearby Baghpat.
The six men barged into the house of the woman situated in the Nahal locality, taking advantage of the night-time darkness.
They overpowered the woman from behind and covered her face with a piece of a cloth so that she could not recognize them. They then gang raped her one by one.
But when the woman shouted for help, the rapists fled the spot. In the meantime, the woman's daughter, who was sleeping in the adjoining room recognized two of the men. They are said to be neighbours of the woman.
When the woman's husband returned from the marriage function on early Saturday morning, he lodged a complaint with police.
Cops at the Masuri police station registered the case and sent the woman for medical examination.
'The medical report is yet to come but prima facie it seems a case of gang rape. We are trying to arrest the culprits but they are absconding as of now,' said the SP (Rural) A.K. Mishra.

French gunman's brother whisked to Paris intelligence HQ

ARIS (Reuters) - The brother of an al Qaeda-inspired gunman who murdered seven people was whisked to Paris on Saturday for further questioning and a police source disclosed he had said he was "proud" of his late sibling's killing spree.
President Nicolas Sarkozy summoned ministers and police chiefs to a meeting on Saturday to discuss the consequences of Mohamed Merah's massacre, which has raised troubling national security questions four weeks ahead of a presidential election.
Sarkozy is facing an uphill re-election battle and his chief intelligence adviser sought to head off media questions about the handling of the affair in the southwest city of Toulouse.
Abdelkader Merah, elder brother of the 23-year-old gunman who died in a hail of police gunfire on Thursday, was taken by car from police barracks in Toulouse for transfer to the capital, along with his wife, a judicial source said.
Both were arrested in the early hours of last Wednesday as negotiators sought their help in trying to persuade Merah to turn himself in. Merah's mother, arrested at the same time, was released on Friday evening, the public prosecutor's office said.
Her lawyer, Jean-Yves Gougnaud, said she told him "she saw nothing coming" and felt guilty for what had happened.
Merah was killed by a sniper after a gunbattle with police that ended a more than 30-hour siege at his Toulouse apartment, during which he admitted killing three Jewish schoolchildren, a rabbi and three soldiers in three separate attacks.
Abdelkader Merah and his wife, whose name was not given, were transferred to a detention centre at the headquarters of the DCRI domestic intelligence agency in Paris, where a judge was likely to decide in a matter of hours whether there were grounds for opening legal proceedings over possible links with Mohamed Merah's attacks.
Police have found explosives in a car Abdelkader owned, according to the public prosecutor leading the case. He was already known to security services for having helped smuggle jihadist militants into Iraq in 2007.
A police source said on Saturday that at a closed hearing in Toulouse he had declared himself "proud" of his brother's killings and had admitted helping Mohamed steal the scooter used in all seven murders. He had denied any knowledge of his brother's murderous plans, however, the source added.
DCRI head Bernard Squarcini told Le Monde newspaper on Friday that there was no evidence Merah belonged to any radical Islamist network and that he appeared to have turned fanatic alone.
Yet investigators are still trying to establish whether the young Frenchman of Algerian origin had any logistical or ideological support or really was a genuine "lone wolf."
Merah's brother, and a sister, were known to have studied the Koran in Egypt in 2010 and French police had in the past found links between them and a radical Islamist group based in southern France led by a Syrian-born Frenchman dubbed "The White Emir" by French media because of his fair hair and beard.
The shootings shifted the focus of political debate away from France's economic woes and played to the strengths of Sarkozy as he fights for re-election in a two-round vote in April and May.
Polls show that about two-thirds of voters approved of his handling of the Toulouse crisis, which reduced his challengers, chief among them Socialist frontrunner Francois Hollande, to the role of bystander.
Sarkozy's intelligence adviser, Ange Mancini, sought to head off increasing media debate about whether Merah could have been stopped before he started killing, saying the intelligence and police services had done an "exemplary" job and that it was always easy to ask after the fact if there were flaws.
"Obviously the aim now will be to dig deeper, not just to know more about the case in question, but to see whether there are other lessons, to try to identify whether anyone else might be heading down the same road," Mancini told BFM TV.
Mancini said Mohamed Merah appeared to have purchased guns and other weapons with around 20,000 euros he had seemingly got hold of from robberies or hold-ups.
Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said earlier this week that the question of any possible failings would have to be clarified in due course.
"I have a lot of respect for Alain Juppe but he is not an intelligence and intervention specialist," Mancini said.
An opinion poll released on Saturday appeared to contradict the idea that national security had shot to the top of the agenda for voters despite a week when national and international media provided round-the-clock coverage of the killings and the siege that culminated with a dramatic shootout and death of Merah.
The Ifop polling agency said 53 percent of people believed France faced a high risk of terrorist attack. It was the lowest worry score recorded since Ifop started sounding people out on the issue at the time of the suicide airliner attacks in the United States in 2001, when the number who perceived a high risk of terror attack was 78 percent, according to IFOP.

Sunday, 4 March 2012

Kendall Jenner



Nationality: American
Hair color: Brown
Eye color: Brown
Date of birth: November 3rd, 1995
Place of birth: Los Angeles, California, USA
Height: 5’9″ – 175cm
Measurements: (US) 32-24-34 – (EU) 81-61-87
Dress size: (US) 2-4 – (EU) 32-34
Shoe size: (US) 8.5 – (EU) 39 – (UK) 6
Agencies:
  • Wilhelmina Models – Miami
  • Advertisements
  • Forever 21 , Sherri Hill
Magazine Covers:
  • America: ‘American Cheerleader’ – June 2011
Fashion Shows:
  • Ready to wear – Spring/Summer 2012 {Sherri Hill}
Other:










  • Her full name is Kendall Nicole Jenner.
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