Monday, March 30, 2009

British forces to begin Iraq withdrawal

BASRA: British forces were on Tuesday to launch their official withdrawal from Iraq, a months-long process ending a role that kicked off with the US-led invasion six years ago.

Senior American, British and Iraqi officers were expected to mark the occasion in recognition of the 179 British soldiers, airmen and sailors who have died in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion.

The British-led coalition base in Basra will lower its flag and transfer to US control, in a key transitional step towards all foreign troops leaving the country and a full return to Iraqi sovereignty.

"It is the beginning of the drawdown of coalition forces of which Britain has been an integral part," a senior British officer said.

"Although this is the start of a withdrawal, there is still work to be done and that will continue until the last British soldier has left the country," the official said.

Britain, under then prime minister Tony Blair, was America's key ally when president George W. Bush ordered his forces to invade Iraq and topple its president Saddam Hussein.

British troop numbers in the campaign were the second largest, peaking at 46,000 in March and April 2003 at the height of combat operations.

A deal signed by Baghdad and London last year agreed that the last 4,100 British soldiers would complete their mission — primarily training the Iraqi army — by June, before a complete withdrawal from the country in late July.

Tuesday's departure begins almost 50 years after its previous exit from Iraq, in May 1959, when the last soldiers left Habbaniyah base near the western town of Fallujah, ending a presence that dated back to 1918.

The British contribution to the invasion and subsequent reconstruction efforts has been praised by American and Iraqi officers.

"British forces have been our strongest ally throughout this campaign," said US Army Major General Michael Oates, who will become the senior coalition officer in Basra when the British-led unit ceases to exist on Tuesday.

"They have done an outstanding job and our task is to continue that work."

And the Iraqi army's senior officer in the province used a farewell feast at Basra's Shaat al-Arab Hotel at the weekend to praise Britain for its support in the wake of Saddam's ouster.

"I would like to thank the British nation for the assistance they have provided to help rid us of dictatorship and live in freedom and democracy," said Major General Hawedi Mohammed.

Basra, Iraq's third-largest city and a strategic oil hub, had been under British command since the invasion, but the province and its airport returned to Iraqi control three months ago.

As well as training the Iraqi army, Britain has been key in the rebirth of the war-battered country's navy.

A Royal Navy training team is based at the southern port of Umm Qasr and its role is expected to continue although a new agreement has yet to be reached between the two governments.

Relations between London and Baghdad should in theory revert to the same footing as those between other sovereign countries when British troops complete their withdrawal.

The British pullout comes as the US military also steps up preparations to leave Iraq.

Under a US-Iraqi security agreement signed last November, American troops must withdraw from major towns and cities by June 30 and from the whole country by the end of 2011.

President Barack Obama last month ordered an end to US combat operations in Iraq by August 31, 2010 but said 50,000 troops would remain under a new mission until the end-of-2011 deadline.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/British-forces-to-begin-Iraq-withdrawal/articleshow/4337801.cms

Friday, March 27, 2009

India, Israel sign USD 1.4 billion deal on air defence system

Jerusalem, Mar 27 (PTI) India has signed its biggest defence deal with Israel for the purchase of a state-of-the- art air defence system at a whopping cost of USD 1.4 billion (Rs 7,042).

Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) hasofficially acknowledgedthat the defence deal between the two countries was inked on February 27 under which Israel willdevelop and manufacture seaborne and shore-based systems against missile attack on India,business daily 'Globes' reported.

The signing of the deal comes as India is in advance stage of testing of its own anti-missile shield. The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has already successfully test-fired its advanced air defence (AAD) missile.

The two sides have agreed that part of the payment for the systems will be made during the development period and the balance will be paid during the 66 month delivery period, which is slated to begin 90 months from the date the advance payment is received, the report said.

As per the agreement, IAI has also undertaken to procure military or aviation products and services from India. It will invest in defence companies in India up to an amount equal to 30 per centof the contract.

India is currently Israel's largest arms buyer. PTI

Prachanda to visit China next month

Kathmandu, Mar 27 (PTI) Ahead of Prime Minister Prachanda's visit to Beijing, Nepal has underlined its 'one China policy', saying Kathmandu will not allow activities against its northern neighbour from its soil.

Communication Minister Krishna Bahadur Mahara said Nepal will not allow any kind of anti-China activities from its soil.

Nepal will firmly follow 'one China policy' whereby Tibet is an integral part of China, he said at a function organised by Nepal-China Media Forum in the capital.

Mahara, who is also the spokesman of the Maoists-led coalition, underlined that his party will not tilt towards any power centre, in an apparent reference to the government's policy to maintain "equidistance" between it two giant neighbours, China and India.

The Maoist government has banned all "anti-China" protests by the Tibetan exiles in Nepal during the 50th anniversary of the Tibetan uprising.

We would not accept anything that goes against our neighbours, be it India or China, Mahara underlined.

Mahara said Prachanda will visit China towards the end of April in a bid to boost Nepal's development and building of new infrastructure in the country.

Prachanda had sparked a row in Nepal last year after he visited Beijing in break with tradition where Nepalese leaders make New Delhi the first port of call after taking office. PTI

LTTE rebels killed in Lanka; 2100 Tamils cross to safety 29

Colombo, Mar 27 (PTI) Aiming to capture the entire LTTE-held territory, Sri Lankan troops killed 29 rebels in fierce clashes in the last Tiger bastions of Puthukudiyiruppu and Iranapali in the island's north, from where over 2100 Tamil civilians crossed over to the government areas.

"LTTE rebels are facing a definite defeat as government security forces have already confined the terrorist to an area about 21.5 sq km including the No Fire Zone which was declared by the Sri Lankan government to ensure the safety of the innocent Tamil civilians forcibly held by the rebels," the Defence Ministry said today.

Troops of 58 Division heavily confronted with LTTE fighters in general area of Pudukudiyirippu and Iranapali in Mullaittivu causing considerable damages to the enemy.

In a subsequent search operation conducted in the area following hours-long fighting, troops have found 13 bodies of LTTE militants killed during the confrontation.

Separately, army snipers deployed in forward defences in Puthukudiyiruppu gunned down 16 rebels ahead of the own defence line, a military report said.

A total of 2108 Tamil civilians who had been trapped by the LTTE were able to reach government controlled area "escaping terror grip yesterday" the defence ministry said.

Military Spokesman Udaya Nanayakkara said, a total of 58,000 Tamil civilians have escaped from the Tiger held areas to the government side so far.
PTI

Thursday, March 26, 2009

India, US agree to work together on climate change

Washington, Mar 26 (PTI) India and the US have decided to work together on the issue of climate change and collaborate jointly in areas of renewable energy and clean technologies, as New Delhi's first high level dialogue on the issue with the Obama administration concluded here.

Shyam Saran, Prime Minister's Special Envoy on climate change concluded his four-day trip to the US, during which he objected against attempts to club India along with "major emitters" of green house gases and warned the developed world against sneaking in "protectionism under green label" garb.

Under the Obama Administration, this was the first high level dialogue between Washington and New Delhi on climate change and energy security.

The trip, that saw Saran meeting top Obama government officials on issues of climate change and energy security, which US President Barack Obama has made a top priority.

New Delhi and Washington have decided to work together on issues of climate change and collaborate jointly in areas of renewable energy and clean technologies, officials said here.

India also sought partnership with the US in the field of clean and renewable energy and the two sides agreed to work together to ensure a successful outcome at the upcoming climate change conference in Copenhagen, also known as 15th COP (Conference of Parties). PTI

First Obama-Singh meeting to take place in London on Apr 2

Lalit K Jha Washington, Mar 26 (PTI) President Barack Obama looks forward to advancing and strengthening US ties with India, White House spokesman has said, setting a positive tone for the maiden meeting between Obama and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in London on April 2.
Developments in Pakistan and the Taliban problem in Afghanistan are expected to figure during their talks.

"The President looks forward to working with the Prime Minister to advance and strengthen the US-India bilateral relationship," Benjamin Chang, Deputy Spokesman, National Security Council, White House, told PTI.

Obama will meet Singh on April 2 in London on the sidelines of the G-20 Summit.

"This will be the President's first meeting with Prime Minister Singh and the two leaders will discuss a range of bilateral, regional, and global issues, including the Afghanistan-Pakistan strategic review, climate change, and the world economy," Chang said.

Singh is one of the few world leaders with whom Obama would be meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 summit. Obama assumed office as the 44th US President on January 20. PTI

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

France competing with US on nuke biz in India

WASHINGTON: French Prime Minister Francois Fillone has conceded that his country is in competition with the US with regard to bagging commercial deals for the civilian nuclear plants in India.

"Yes, we are competing with the United States in terms of our nuclear agreement with India," Fillone said on Monday in response to a question at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a Washington-based think tank.

"Let me tell you that this competition will go on to the end. That is to say, until one of us has won -- or both of us maybe. There could be two winners. But we are often competing with the United States," he said after his address to the Carnegie on global economic crisis.

Fillone said this means that both the countries have performing companies. Companies from both the US and France and other major powers are vying for a slice in the pie of what is estimated to be multi-billion dollar market in India.

"In terms of nuclear power, everybody knows that we are very performing. France chose a long, long time ago to use nuclear power. We have never changed. This choice of nuclear power allowed us to constantly improve on the efficiency of our nuclear systems both in terms of security and in terms of financial and energetic yield. We do not regret having made this choice today," Fillone said.

"Of course, we are going to keep on fighting and competing loyally with the United States in order to supply India with nuclear power plants for the future -- and high-speed trains," Fillone said.

"You forgot high-speed trains," the French prime minister said in lighter vein. France is known for its high speed train and is eyeing at India as the Indian Railways plans to enter the next phase of introducing high-speed trains in the country.

Following the successful conclusion of the Indo-US civilian nuclear deal and signing of India-specific safeguard agreements with India, New Delhi is now planning to thousands of megawatts of nuclear power in the next decade. It has already conveyed a letter of intent up to 10,000 MW of nuclear power reactors in India. This is expected to translate into a business of USD 150 billion worth of projects for US companies.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

S Africa denies visa to Dalai Lama till 2010 football World Cup


JOHANNESBURG: A South African peace conference of Nobel laureates has been postponed after the government's decision to deny a visa to Tibet's spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, organisers said on Tuesday.

Several Nobel peace prize winners had threatened to boycott the event over the visa ban, but the government said it was standing by its decision.

Local media said the visa was refused after pressure from China, a big investor and trade partner.

The conference, due to take place on March 27, was organised by soccer authorities in South Africa, the host of the 2010 World Cup, and was expected to use soccer as a way of fighting xenophobia and racism ahead of the tournament.

"We have decided to postpone the peace conference until further notice," said Irvin Khoza, South Africa 2010 Organising Committee chairman. He said it would be postponed until all those invited could attend.

Government spokesman Thabo Masebe had said the Dalai Lama's presence was not in South Africa's best interest at the moment.

"We stand by our decision. Nothing is going to change. The Dalai Lama will not be invited to South Africa. We will not give him a visa between now and the World Cup," he said.

The decision to refuse the Dalai Lama a visa has come under severe criticism from opposition parties in a country which has prided itself as a model of democracy and human rights since the end of apartheid in 1994.

The Dalai Lama fled Tibet in 1959 and set up a Tibetan government-in-exile in India after a failed uprising against Chinese rule.

Rioting broke out last March in Tibet's main city of Lhasa after several days of peaceful protests by monks against Beijing's rule, killing 19 people and sparking a wave of violence across Tibetan areas.

Exile groups say more than 200 people died in the crackdown. The Dalai Lama was invited to participate in the conference by fellow Nobel laureates Archbishop Desmond Tutu, FW de Klerk and Nelson Mandela.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/S-Africa-denies-visa-to-Dalai-Lama-till-2010-football-World-Cup/articleshow/4310078.cms?TOI_latestnews

US wants India to support Pak in tackling terrorism

Washington, Mar 24 (PTI) In its first substantive remarks on India, the Obama Administration wants New Delhi to support Pakistan in rooting out terrorism arguing that it has a "big stake" in the success of the democratic government in the Islamic nation.

The US also said it backed a global role for India and the central question is how the two countries can work together to address the regional, global challenges.

"I think it will be important for India to make clear that as Pakistan takes steps to deal with extremists on its own territory that India will be supportive of that," Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg said yesterday.

The American assessment of what it expects from India while dealing with the volatile situation in Pakistan and Afghanistan was given by Steinberg in his address at the prestigious Brookings Institution, a Washington-based think-tank in the first major foreign policy speech on India by a top Obama administration official.

Acknowledging India's efforts in the reconstruction of Afghanistan in the recent years, Steinberg said President Obama would set out the US strategy for the region in the coming weeks.

He said India should "look for ways to contribute to an overall environment which can then lead to further efforts to root out extremists...There is obviously a complex history between the two countries but we will encourage India to see that it has a big stake in the efforts that we will be advocating to work both with Afghanistan and Pakistan."
PTI

Monday, March 23, 2009

Pakistani Taliban asks NGOs to leave Swat

Islamabad, Mar 23 (PTI) Gaining an upper hand in the restive Swat valley in northwestern Pakistan after signing of a deal with authorities, an emboldened Taliban has told all NGOs working in the area to pack their bags, saying their activities are un-Islamic.

In a recent broadcast on his illegal FM radio station, Taliban commander Maulana Fazlullah said, "All NGOs should leave Swat because they are creating problems for peace." Fazlullah has also described all Pakistanis working for NGOs as "enemies of the country".

"They come and tell us how to make latrines in mosques and homes. I'm sure we can do it ourselves. There is no need for foreigners to tell us this," Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan said.

The Taliban are currently engaged in peace talks with the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariah Muhammadi, a group of religious hardliners that signed a deal with the North West Frontier Province government to usher in peace in Swat.

Since the signing of the peace deal, the TNSM has set up Islamic courts in Swat and appointed Qazis to preside over them. The TNSM has also said lawyers and civil judges will have no role in the Islamic courts.

Muslim Khan told IRIN, a news network run by the UN, that "NGO is another name for vulgarity and obscenity. They don't want us to remain Muslims and want to take away the veil from our women." PTI

India, B'desh talks to renew water transit protocol begins

Dhaka, Mar 23 (PTI) Indian and Bangladeshi officials began talks here today to renew an inland water transit and trade protocol for giving New Delhi easier and shorter access to its North-Eastern states and to boost bilateral trades, officials sad.

The two countries are expected to sign a deal renewing the two-year protocol scheduled to expire on March 31 this year, Shipping Ministry spokesman Jahangir Alam Khan told PTI.

The two sides began the two-day talk as shipping ministry secretary Masud Elahi and additional secretary of India's road, transport and highways ministry Vijay Chhibber leads their respective countries in the meeting, Khan said.

India wants inclusion of Ashuganj as a new port of call to make transport of good shorter and easier from Kolkata to Agartala through Bangladesh. But, so far there has been no response from Dhaka. Dhaka, in turn, wants higher levy for Indian goods transported through its soil.

The inland water transit protocol was first signed in 1980 under the bilateral trade agreement of 1980 which provides to make mutually beneficial arrangements for the use of their waterways for commerce maintaining the river routes in a navigable condition.

Under the protocol, both the countries allow transit for cargo through eight routes, counting both ways. PTI

Russia to start N-fuel delivery to India under USD 700m deal

Moscow, Mar 23 (PTI) Russia is to shortly commence the delivery of nuclear fuel to India under a USD 700 million deal reached with the Department of Atomic Energy.

A long-term contract was inked last month by the DAE and Russia's TVEL Corporation, one of the world's largest nuclear fuel suppliers.

A delegation of Hyderabad-based Nuclear Fuel Complex (NFC) today cleared the shipment of the first batch of 30 metric tonnes of uranium dioxide pellets to India, which would be used to fuel the Indian and Western-designed nuclear power plants in country.

According to 'Atomenergoprom' -- the mother organisation of TVEL Corporation, the protocols for the shipment of first batch were signed after the Indian experts had inspected it at the Machine-Building Plant in nearby town of Electrostal.

TVEL would also ensure life-cycle supply of fuel for the light-water VVER reactors of the Kudankulam nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu.

Russia is currently completing the assembly of first two VVER-1000 reactors with total 2,000 megawatt capacity at Kudankulam. Under a deal inked in December 2008 during President Dmitry Medvedev's maiden India visit, it will also build four more reactors to meet the growing requirements of the energy-hungry Indian economy. PTI

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Raise standards to compete with Indian kids: Obama

WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama urged Americans to raise their standards of education as they have to compete with the students of India and China.

Addressing a town hall meeting at Costa Mesa in California on Wednesday, Obama emphasised on the need to raise the standards of education and put more efforts in education, which he had been stressing upon since his election campaign days.

"It can't just be a single high-stakes standardised test -- but we do need to have strong, powerful measures of performance, because schools are like anything else," Obama said.

"We can't afford our kids to be mediocre at a time when they're competing against kids in China and India who are actually in school about a month longer than our kids," he said.

"So there's a whole bunch of reforms that we're going to have to do," he added.

He said that this is not the job of teachers alone and parents too have an important role to play in this regard.

"You can't put the entire burden on a teacher. If you're not making sure your child does their homework, if you're not reading to them, instilling a sense of excellence and a thirst for knowledge in them, then they're not going to do very well, no matter how good your teacher is," he said.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Raise_standards_to_compete_with_Indian_kids_Obama/articleshow/4286940.cms?TOI_latestnews

France braces for nationwide strikes, protests

PARIS: France braced for a day of nationwide strikes Thursday and a potentially huge Paris protest aimed at pressing the government to better support workers during the economic crisis.

Paris police laid out two routes through the capital, rather than one, for the expected crowds. Unions called on employees in the public and private sectors to join in the strikes.

Schools, hospitals, the postal service and public transport were among the services expected to be hit. However, Paris transport authorities said they expected buses and Metro lines to be mostly spared, even if suburban trains are not.

Workers with the SNCF train authority began their strike at 8 pm (1900 GMT) Wednesday. The SNCF predicts major disruptions for fast trains as well as suburban Paris traffic.

In a rare move, police decided to open a second route to accommodate an overflow crowd during the march from the Place de la Republique to Place de la Nation in eastern Paris.

A strike in late-January put between 1 million and 2.5 million people into French streets. Weeks later, President Nicolas Sarkozy announced measures to help people affected by the financial crisis, including special bonuses for the needy.

Sarkozy told ministers at a Cabinet meeting Wednesday that he ``understood the worries of the French,'' but said he had no plans for additional measures.

Budget Minister Eric Woerth said the measures already announced will increase social expenditures in 2009 by nearly euro10 billion (about $13 billion).

Some 200 protest marches are planned Thursday around France, according to the powerful CGT union, which has members in various sectors of the economy.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/France-braces-for-nationwide-strikes/articleshow/4285794.cms

Israel arrests Hamas political leaders

RAMALLAH, West Bank: Israeli soldiers rounded up at least seven of the Hamas movement's political leaders in the West Bank in a predawn arrest sweep Thursday, Hamas officials and relatives said.

The detentions appear to be an attempt to pressure the group after the failure of recent efforts to win the release of an Israeli soldier Hamas is holding in Gaza.

The Israeli military, which routinely arrests suspected militants in the West Bank, said 20 Palestinians had been detained overnight. But it had no information on the arrests of senior Hamas politicians.

Israel has detained dozens of Hamas politicians in the West Bank on various occasions following the capture of Sgt. Gilad Schalit, 22, in a cross-border raid in June 2006.

The detainees in the latest raid include Nasser Shaer, a former Palestinian deputy prime minister, and several Hamas lawmakers. Some have already been detained in the past and released.

Outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert had hoped to secure the release of Sgt. Gilad Schalit before a new Israeli government is formed, possibly within days. To that end, he dispatched two senior envoys to Cairo over the weekend to try to clinch an Egyptian-brokered deal with Hamas, which rules Gaza and has no direct ties with Israel.

But the envoys returned to Israel without a deal in hand, and on Tuesday Olmert declared that Israel would not free all of the hundreds of Palestinian prisoners the Islamic militants demanded in exchange.

Some were involved in attacks that killed dozens of Israelis, and Olmert insisted that there were ``red lines'' that Israel ``will not cross.''

Incoming Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is expected to partner with hawkish parties in Israel's new government, has not commented on the failed release efforts or how he plans to deal with Schalit's case.

The failure of the prisoner swap talks threatens to set off a long chain reaction of setbacks. Israel has vowed not to lift its crushing blockade of impoverished Gaza until Schalit is returned home. That could seriously impede reconstruction there after Israel's recent military offensive because building materials and equipment won't be able to enter the territory, home to 1.4 million Palestinians.

The continued blockade could also hamper efforts to cement a long-term truce between Israel and Hamas, which in turn would carry the threat of a sudden escalation in the low-level violence that has continued since the war ended on Jan. 18.

On Wednesday, Schalit's father, Noam, blamed Olmert for failing to free his son and said the family would dismantle a protest tent it set up outside Olmert's residence on Saturday, 1,000 days since the serviceman was captured.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Israel-arrests-Hamas-political-leaders/articleshow/4286172.cms

Monday, March 16, 2009

Space shuttle Discovery blasts off with crew of 7

CANAVERAL: Space shuttle Discovery is rocketing toward the international space station after more than a month of delays.
The space shuttle and its crew of seven blasted off Sunday just as the sun was setting. The shuttle is carrying a final set of solar wings for the space station that the astronauts will install.

NASA is thrilled to see Discovery finally on its way. A hydrogen leak Wednesday scrapped the first launch attempt. Before that, valve concerns kept postponing the flight that was originally scheduled to launch in mid-February.

Because of the delays, the mission has been shortened by a day and one of four spacewalks has been dropped. That's because Discovery needs to be gone from the space station before a Russian rocket lifts off to put a fresh crew at the space station March 26.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Space-shuttle-Discovery-blasts-off/articleshow/4269715.cms

Thursday, March 12, 2009

World population will be 7 billion in 2012

NEW YORK: The world's population will hit 7 billion early in 2012 and cross 9 billion in 2050, with the majority of the increase taking place in developing countries, revised United Nations estimates show.

India, United States, China, Bangladesh and Pakistan are among nine countries which are projected to account for half of the world's population increase from 2010 to 2050. The others are Nigeria, Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Tanzania.

"There have been no big changes for the recent estimates and we have not changed the assumptions for the future," Hania Zlotnik, Director of the Population Division at the Department of Economic and Social Affairs, told reporters yesterday.

"We're still projecting that by 2050 the population of the world will be around 9.1 billion," she said, as she presented the 2008 Revision of the World Population Prospects.

Zlotnik noted that current projections are based on the assumption that fertility is going to decline from the current global level of 2.5 children per woman to 2.1 children per woman from now until 2050.

The population of the 49 least developed countries (LDCs) is still the fastest growing in the world, at 2.3 per cent per year, the Population Division said.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/World-population-will-be-7bn-in-2012/articleshow/4254103.cms

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Australia lifts ban on abortion services

MELBOURNE: Australian government on Tuesday lifted a 13-year-old ban on abortion services and counselling which will pave way for foreign aid.


Foreign minister Stephen Smith has effectively followed the path of US President Barack Obama who has scrapped the policy preventing non-government organisations using official funds overseas to advise about abortions or provide services.

The current guidelines, which have been in place since 1996, prohibit any overseas development funding from being used for activities that involve the termination of a pregnancy.

"This is a difficult issue and the government recognises that there are strong views, firmly held, on all sides," Smith said.

"The government has now completed its review and I have decided to change the family planning guidelines for Australia's overseas development assistance programme," he said.

The development assistance programme is aimed at supporting the same range of family planning services for women in developing countries as are supported for women in Australia, subject to the national laws of the relevant nation concerned, he added.

He also said "avoiding terminations through family planning services and advice" will continue to be the focus of Australian-funded activities.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Australia-allows-abortion-services/articleshow/4250097.cms

15 killed in suicide attack in Sri Lanka

COLOMBO: Struggling to retain their last bit of territory in the north, Tamil Tigers struck back with vengeance today when one of their suicide bombers killed at least 15 people and injured more than 20 others, including a senior minister, outside a mosque in southern Sri Lanka.

Postal services minister Mahinda Wijesekara was battling for his life and was being airlifted to capital Colombo for emergency treatment. Among other prominent leaders injured included former southern province chief minister HG Sirisena.

"Around 10-15 people were killed as the suicide bomber struck the celebrations outside the mosque at Matara. A lot of people were blown to pieces which is making death count difficult," Matara police spokesman Ranjit Gunasekara said.

The bomber appeared to have targeted six ministers and local politicians as they walked in a procession towards a mosque in Akuressa area in Matara to mark Milad-ud-Nabi, the birth anniversary of Prophet Mohammad.

The attack came at a time when the Sri Lankan forces are on the verge of rooting out the LTTE from their last territory in Wanni region after 25 years of ethnic conflict.

The audacious strike showed that the Tigers still retained some capability to launch attacks far from their traditional strongholds in the north and east.

Military spokesman Brig Udaya Nanayakkara said the blast was a suicide bomb attack and carried out by the LTTE.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/15-killed-in-suicide-attack-in-Sri-Lanka/articleshow/4248816.cms

Monday, March 9, 2009

10 dead in plane crash in Uganda

BUJUMBURA: About 10 people died on Monday in a plane crash in Uganda, including three Burundian officers of the African peacekeeping force in Somalia, the spokesman for the Burundian army said.

Spokesman Adolphe Manirakiza said the aircraft crashed shortly after take-off from Entebbe, Uganda's main international airport.

Uganda's national police spokeswoman Judith Nabakooba earlier said that a cargo plane had crashed at the airport.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/10-dead-in-plane-crash-in-Uganda/articleshow/4244705.cms

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Jackson files lawsuit to halt auction

LOS ANGELES: Pop singer Michael Jackson has filed a law suit against Julien's Auction House for putting up thousands of his personal items under the hammer without his permission.

Jackson has demanded that the scheduled event be stopped and his belongings be returned, reported E!Online.

As per the auctioneer's website, the "Once in a Lifetime Auction," is to take place online and at the Beverly Hilton between April 22-25.

The five-day was to feature more than 2,000 of Jackson's personal items, including his American Music Award for "Thriller," a velvet cape given to him by his children for Father's Day in 1998, a pair of rhinestone-trimmed socks from 1981 and a basketball signed by Michael Jordan among others.

Jackson's complaint, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, claims that the auction house has "effectively stolen Michael Jackson's personal property" and has refused to return any of it "despite repeated demands."

The CEO of the organisation Darren Julien had spoken to Jackson's manager Tohme Tohme, and reportedly had been informed that the sale would take place only after the singer signed the inventory himself.

According to the suit, Julien had assured Tohme that Jackson would be consulted before they went ahead with the auction, but continued with the proceedings without waiting for the "Thriller" singer's final word.

Soruce:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Jackson-files-lawsuit-to-halt-auction/articleshow/4228745.cms

Prince Charles ‘world's best dressed man'


LONDON: Britain's Prince Charles has beaten off competition from US President Barack Obama to be named the world's best dressed man by Esquire magazine.

"He is perfectly turned out in a double-breasted suit. Admirably, the prince keeps his wardrobe in appropriate style: we're told he has a room laid out like a tailor's shop," the men's magazine said.

Prince Charles, 60, keeps it simple and has worn suits by Saville Row tailors Gieves and Hawkes, complete with pocket handkerchief and silk tie, for years. Esquire said he was "always incredibly well dressed".

The prince, who is heir to the British throne, beat off competition from Obama -- who came fourth in the top ten -- artist David Hockney (seventh), tennis player Roger Federer (eighth) and US rapper Andre 3000 (tenth).

Prime Minister Gordon Brown, however, was named one of the worst dressed, with the magazine noting he had once "turned up in the Iraqi desert wearing black lace-ups".

London Mayor Boris Johnson -- renowned for his slightly chaotic appearance -- was also criticised for having "jacket pockets like second-hand bookshops, and hair the result of an encounter with a ghost in a wind tunnel".

Soruce:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Prince-Charles-best-dressed-man/articleshow/4227474.cms

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Nepal minister in sex scandal

KATHMANDU: Is he a Maoist, communist or Madhesi? That’s the question on everyone’s lips in Kathmandu as police and the five-party government remain tight-lipped about the identity of a mystery minister who managed to escape being arrested in a sex sting that has netted police a lawmaker from a leading party.

On Friday, when Nepal made history by throwing open its former royal palace to the public, a constituent assembly member from the opposition Nepali Congress party also made headlines, though for a different reason.

Krishna Yadav, in his 40s, was arrested along with 33 others, including army personnel, as police raided several massage parlours in the capital that were allegedly a front for flesh trade. Yadav, who was elected from Rautahat district in the Terai plains of southern Nepal in April, beating his nearest rival from the Madhesi Janadhikar Forum party, was caught “in the act” from a private apartment behind Kathmandu’s famed Kanti Children’s Hospital, police said.

Police said they had raided the joint after complaints from neighbours. Since then Yadav, the father of two, has been released on bail while police said they would charge him under the Public Offence Act.

The ripples created by the arrest have grown with reports that Yadav was part of a pleasure-seeking group that also included a minister from the government of Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda. According to reports, the minister leapt out of the window when police raided the apartment, and fled without pausing to collect his scattered clothes.

Police came to know about the minister’s presence when they caught his chauffeur and an aide who had been told to keep guard over his car that was parked in the children’s hospital.

The issue was raised afresh by the Jana Aastha weekly Wednesday which reported that some ministers were pressuring the prime minister to disclose the identity of the involved peer, saying they were being regarded with suspicion by the public.

The tabloid is trying to ferret out the closely guarded secret by a process of elimination. Using its sources, it has ruled out 10 ministers since some of them were out of Kathmandu at that time. Another – home minister Bam Dev Gautam - is ill and under medical treatment, and the rest are women.

However, it has raised a tongue-in-cheek question. The fugitive minister’s trousers were left behind, it says. In the past, it would have definitely indicated a man. But now, with two Maoist women ministers in the cabinet favouring trousers, the abandoned pants could belong to anyone, it has argued.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Nepal-minister-in-sex-scandal/articleshow/4222710.cms

Google's top executives get hefty bonuses

SAN FRANCISCO: Four of Google Inc.'s top executives each received 2008 bonuses of more than $1.2 million for helping the Internet search leader eke out modest earnings growth during a recession that battered much of corporate America.

The bonuses disclosed in a regulatory filing Tuesday were less than the awards doled out in 2007 when Google's profit rose 37 percent, dwarfing 2008's gain of 1 percent.

The Mountain View-based company's market value plunged by about $120 billion, or 56 percent last year, reflecting concerns that the weakening economy will eviscerate the online advertising market that generates virtually all of Google's revenue.

Google’s chief executive Eric Schmidt gave investors little hope on Tuesday, when speaking at a technology conference, Schmidt described the conditions in the economy as ``dire'' and predicted things were unlikely to improve until 2010.

``We are not immune to this,'' he said. Google's stock fell $10.78, or 3.3 percent, to $314.70 in after-hours trading. It had closed the regular session down $1.68 at $325.48.

Tuesday's filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission didn't include any information about the salaries or stock compensation paid to Google's top executives last year. Those disclosures are expected within the next few weeks when Google files its proxy statement.

Following company tradition, Google didn't pay bonuses to Schmidt or co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin. Those three men are all billionaires, thanks to their large stock holdings in Google.

Jonathan Rosenberg, who oversees Google's products, received the largest bonus at $1.64 million, a 3 percent decrease from 2007's incentive award of $1.68 million.

Omid Kordestani, Google's top sales executive, and Alan Eustace, who oversees the company's engineers, each got bonuses of $1.38 million, an 18 percent cut from $1.68 million in 2007. The documents didn't elaborate on the reasons why the bonuses paid to Kordestani and Eustace were lowered more than Rosenberg's was.

Google gave a $1.24 million to its chief financial officer, Patrick Pichette, for his contributions after joining the company in August. Pichette has been widely credited for engineering a cost-cutting effort that helped Google offset its slowing revenue growth.

George Reyes, Google's CFO before Pichette, received a 2008 bonus of $675,000, down from $1.68 million in 2007 when he was with the company the entire year.

Google's top executives are eligible for annual bonuses of up to $6 million apiece. Schmidt's mostly somber presentation at Tuesday's conference made it sound as if Google's management team shouldn't expect large windfalls this year.

Although he doesn't expect it to happen this year, Schmidt said he believes the US economy will rebound if the government's stimulus package can ease concerns about sinking home values and rising unemployment.

“Once these things are done, Americans will go back to what they do best , that is, spend money,'' Schmidt said.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Business/Google-top-execs-get-hefty-bonuses/articleshow/4222555.cms

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Lankan president cuts short Nepal visit

KATHNANDU: The attack on Sri Lanka’s cricket team in Pakistan’s Lahore city Tuesday morning, in which gunmen killed at least five policemen and injured six cricketers, had repercussions at the top-most level of the island nation with Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa cutting short his Nepal visit.

Rajapaksa, who had arrived in Kathmandu on a three-day state visit Monday amidst unprecedented security, cancelled his proposed trip to Lumbini in southern Nepal Wednesday to return to Colombo Tuesday evening.

Lankan Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama, who had accompanied the 63-year-old, told journalists in Kathmandu Tuesday that the president was returning home a day ahead in view of the attack near Lahore’s Gaddafi Stadium. The Lankan foreign minister, whose government has been fighting a deadly insurgency for nearly three decades, said Sri Lanka was condemning the attack on its cricket team, just as it condemned all terrorist attacks.

The decision was taken after Rajapaksa met Nepal’s Maoist Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda in the latter’s office Tuesday morning. The president had completed his visit to the Anand Kutty monastery in Kathmandu when the news came that nearly a dozen gunmen had fired at the Lankan cricket team on its way to the Gaddafi Stadium, where it was playing the second test match against host Pakistan.

Rajapaksa, the first head of a foreign government to visit Nepal since 2002, however kept his schedule to visit the SAARC Secretariat in the Nepali capital. Sri Lanka is the current chairman of the regional grouping. He will also attend a luncheon hosted by Prachanda at the five-star Yak and Yeti hotel before flying out on a chartered flight of national carrier Sri Lankan.

The presidential delegation, that included Sri Lanka’s First Lady Shiranthi Rajapaksa and Minister for Export Development and International Trade G L Peiris, was accorded unprecedented security with a cordon of nearly 1500 security personnel chosen from police, army and armed police forces. Traffic police had been instructed to divert or halt all traffic along the routes to be taken by the presidential motorcade.

Rajapaksa, who came at the invitation of Nepal’s President, Dr Ram Baran Yadav, was briefed about Nepal’s ongoing peace process. The visit is expected to result in direct air services between Colombo and Kathmandu flights by Sri Lankan and Nepal’s national carrier Nepal Airlines as well as a joint ministerial commission to enhance educational, cultural and agricultural cooperation.

Soruce:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Lankan-president-cuts-short-Nepal-visit/articleshow/4217778.cms

Jade Goody's cancer spreads to brain

LONDON: Reality star Jade Goody's cancer has now spread to her brain as she was operated to help relieve the 'terrible pain' in her stomach and
remove a blockage in her bowel.

The terminal disease, which affected "Big Brother" star's cervix last year, has now spread to her liver, groin and bowel.

"Jade was told while in a hospice at the weekend that the cancer was travelling freely in her blood and had spread to her brain," a close friend of the star told the Sun.

The cancer on reaching the brain can show symptoms like frequent fits, excruciating headaches, vomiting and nausea.

"This is, of course, awful but not unexpected. It hasn't shortened her life expectancy, which remains in weeks. But of course it is another extremely painful reminder of what lies ahead.

"Jade still wants to go home, but won't until she can be given the correct medication to make her condition bearable. She doesn't want to see her kids upset," according to her agent.

The 27-year-old Goody was transferred in the morning from London's Royal Marsden to the nearby Chelsea and Westminster Hospital for surgery.

Soruce:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/Jade-Goodys-cancer-spreads-to-brain/articleshow/4217580.cms

Monday, March 2, 2009

US legislation for separate visa category for nurses

WASHINGTON: A resolution has been introduced in the US House of Representative, which calls for creation of a special non-immigrant visa category for registered nurses.

The legislation, if passed, would facilitate much easier and faster availability of nursing visas to registered and practicing nurses from countries like India, China and Philippines. The US is currently facing a massive shortage of nurses.

Called the "Nursing Relief Act of 2009" the legislation proposes to make provisions for the new category of visas for registered nurses with an annual limit of 50,000.

The resolution introduced by Congressman John Shadegg has been referred to House Committee on Judiciary. It is cosponsored by Congressmen Jeff Flake and Ed Pastor.

Introduced at a time when the American economy is facing deep recession and nearly 3.6 million jobs have been lost in the last 14 month, Congressional observers are skeptical that such a bill can survive the legislative process.

The legislation notes that there are more vacant nursing positions in the US than there are qualified registered nurses and nursing school candidates to fill those positions. And according to the Department of Labour, the current national nursing shortage exceeds 126,000.

While countries like Philippines, India and China have an oversupply of nurses, the legislation says that major hospital systems in the US spend hundreds of millions of dollars every year recruiting foreign nurses under its current immigration system.

"Current law, with certain limited exceptions, requires health care providers to sponsor desired nurses for permanent resident status while the nurses remain outside of the United States, which can take as much as three years," it said. Further this cost is passed on to consumers and adds to the rising cost of health care.

"Health care providers cannot efficiently and effectively recruit qualified foreign nurses through the existing immigration process. Our health care system requires an immediate modification of Federal laws relating to recruitment of qualified foreign nurses in order to operate at an efficient and effective level," the legislation says.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/