Saturday, 31 August 2013

Trust honoured for educating the girl child

Source : IANS
Last Updated: Sun, Sep 01, 2013 10:40 hrs


New Delhi, Sep 1 (IANS): The Jagadguru Kripalu Parishat Education has bagged the Mother Teresa Excellence Award for exceptional work in the field of educating the girl child.

Instituted by the non-profit Economic Growth Society of India, the award honours both individuals and organizations for their contributions to India's economic and social growth.The award, consisting of a momento and citation of excellence, was presented here this weekend to Vishakha Tripathi, president of the Jagadguru Kripalu Parishat Education that imparts free education to over 5,000 girls from the pre-primary to post-graduation level through its institutions at Pratapgarh in Uttar Pradesh.

The students also receive free transportation, including free distribution of bicycles to those who travel long distances, along with free uniforms, school bags, and other school-related requirements.The institution's aim is to remove any obstacle to girls' education.The efforts of the institution have been well recognised. In the past year, it received the Rajiv Gandhi Global Excellence Award and the Nari Shakti Award instituted by the Jagran group.

Others recognised with the institution included Sunil Kumar of Astha Speech and Hearing Care, Aditya Mukherjee of Solace Group, Vandita Singh of Certified International Image Consultant, Tushar Mehta of Mangalam Alloys and Anup Talwar of Mindcare Counselling.

"We have instituted the awards to honour individuals and organizations who have made selfless contribution towards growth of India," said G.S. Sachdeva, general secretary of the Economic Growth Society of India.

Those present at the event included V.N. Sehgal, a former director of the Central Forensic Science Laboritory; Acharya Yeshi Phunthosk, member of the Tibetan parliament- in-exile; Surinder Khanna, former cricketer; Mahant Surendra Nath, president of Shri Kaalika Peeth Trust, and Seema Chakraborty of the National Women Council.

Bad guys are always more fun: Mel Gibson (Interview)

Source :IANS
Last Updated: Sun, Sep 01, 2013 10:50 hrs


New Delhi, Sep 1 (IANS): Cop, folk hero, journalist, a mentally challenged young man. In his almost four decades in filmdom, Mel Gibson has donned myriad roles. But the Hollywood actor-filmmaker says he has a soft corner for playing the 'bad man', and admits he'd love to play a superhero some day.The Academy award winner believes there's a certain "fun" in essaying negative characters."Bad guys are always more fun! And if you find the bad in the good guys, it's more fun," Gibson told IANS in an email interview from Los Angeles.

The 57-year-old lived this 'fun' while playing a villain in the upcoming action exploitation film "Machete Kills", which is being released in India by Picture Works in October.

"I play a villainous arms dealer who is an evil genius. It is a pretty interesting character," he said of his role in the movie, which is a sequel of 2010 film "Machete".In Sylvester Stallone's action-legend sequel "The Expendables 3" also, Gibson is likely to play a villain.As much as Gibson is enjoying the bad guy acts, he wouldn't mind donning masks to play a superhero on the big screen some time soon."I would have loved to play a superhero. It would be exciting and something out of this world," said Gibson.

While shooting for "Machete Kills", the 'fun' doubled up for Gibson as he shared the frame with popular actor Danny Trejo, who plays the title role in the film.

"Well, working with Danny Trejo was really fun and it was a great experience. He is so full of life and energised all the time," said Gibson, who also stars with Lady Gaga, Jessica Alba, Vanessa Hudgens and Charlie Sheen in the same film.

Gibson, who was born in the US and raised in Australia, started his tryst with cinema as an actor. His debut big screen project, "Summer City", an Australian film, released in 1977. Thereafter, he featured in TV series, and eventually made inroads into Hollywood, making his mark with films "Tim", "Lethal Weapon", "Signs", "Bird on a Wire", "Hamlet", "Braveheart" and "What Women Want".The actor takes pride in being called an action hero.

"I have always loved doing action movies. It's good to know that people call me an action hero," said Gibson.As much as he likes being in front of the camera, Gibson has also tasted success for his skills at direction. He has helmed films like "The Man Without a Face" (1993), "Braveheart" (1995), "The Passion of the Christ" (2004) and "Apocalypto" (2006).

The action-filled epic "Braveheart" was nominated for 10 Academy Awards at the 68th edition of the prestigious event. It won five, including the best picture and best director Oscar for Gibson. His epic drama film "The Passion of the Christ" was also nominated for the Oscar.

"Direction was something that was on my mind for quite some time. It was a new experience, and I got to learn a lot from it," said the multifaceted star.It goes without saying that paparazzi is no stranger for someone with the popularity that he enjoys. So, Gibson merrily admits that he has often disguised himself to avoid unwanted attention."They try to follow you around everywhere and it gets a bit uncomfortable. Yes, there are times where I have disguised myself," said Gibson.

Delhi gang rape: Minor gets three years in reform home

Source :IANS
Last Updated: Sun, Sep 01, 2013 07:11 hrs


New Delhi: Eight-and-a-half months after a young paramedical student was gang-raped in a moving bus here, the first punishment was handed out when a juvenile court ruled that an 18-year-old, who was claimed by the police to be the "most brutal" of all the six accused, be confined to a reform home for three years.

The youth, who was then a minor but turned 18 in June, was not named. The first judgement in the case, however, left the family members of the victim angry, who said they wanted harsher punishment for him.

The maximum punishment that can be awarded under the Juvenile Justice Act in India is three years.

The Juvenile Justice Board, presided over by Principal Magistrate Geetanjali Goel, pronounced the verdict and convicted the 18-year-old for gang rape, murder and other charges. The board, however, acquitted him of some of the charges for which he was booked. Details were not disclosed as media was not allowed inside the court.

The minor was also acquitted from attempt to murder charges of victims' male friend and the sole eye witness of the case.

The prosecution has called the minor, as the "most brutal of the six". He was the one who had called the victim and her male friend to the bus on Dec 16 night by giving them wrong information. He along with five other men had gangraped the girl in the moving bus and had then thrown both of them out - without clothes - on the streets in the cold December night.

The police had said that apart from sexually assaulting the 23-year-old physiotherapist trainee, the minor had also ripped out her internal organs with a rod. The girl died later.

The brutal gang rape sparked massive protests in New Delhi and other cities, with people demanding death for the accused persons.The board refused to reveal all the charges for which the minor accused had been convicted and acquitted.After the order was announced, the victims entire family - father, mother and two brothers - said they were happy."We are not satisfied with the verdict," the victim's mother said with tears in her eyes.

"If minors do such things and get away so easily, how will the law work? It cannot be done like this. We will move the higher court against the judgment," she said.The father of victim also expressed his dissatisfaction over the verdict.

"Our daughter has died and now after listening to this verdict we also have virtually died. This will only encourage the crime," the father said."I was hoping that the juvenile accused will be given life imprisonment, but he was given only three years (in special home," said the victim's father.

"The court by giving a lighter punishment of three years has actually encouraged the other juveniles to commit crime. The law must be changed.The board also said that a period of around eight months that the minor has spent in juvenile observation home will be deducted from his punishment of three years in the special or reform home.

The minor's lawyer said his conduct at special home will be observed and the sentence would be reviewed.

"The board will observe his conduct during his stay in reform home and can review its sentence order and there is a possibility that he could come out early," Rajesh Tiwari, advocate of juvenile, told reporters.As the gang rape had hit international headlines and raised concerns about women's safety in the country, the area around the board was packed with media persons, onlookers and activists. More than 150 media persons from national and international newspapers and television channels had gathered from early morning to cover the case.

The board was to pronounce its verdict at 10 a.m. in the morning but it came only at 3.30 p.m.

After the order was pronounced, some protestors raised slogans outside the board and sought death penalty for the minor.Shouting "hang the rapist", the protesters expressed their displeasure on the "lighter punishment" they thought the minor has got.But child rights activists said the minor should get a chance to re-integrate with society.Shireen Vakil Miller, director of Save the Children, said: "The most important step is to ensure that there is a comprehensive rehabilitation package for the juvenile that includes counseling, and a provision for vocational training. This would help the juvenile to re-integrate into the society once he has completed his sentence."

A native of Uttar Pradesh, the minor had moved to Delhi at the age of 11 and was doing odd jobs. He was arrested after the incident from Anand Vihar in east Delhi as he was trying to flee to his village in Uttar Pradesh.

Six people, including the minor, were arrested in the case. While accused Ram Singh, Mukesh, Pawan Gupta, Vinay Sharma and Akshay Thakur faced trial in fast track court in Saket in south Delhi, the juvenile's case was heard by the board.

The case against Ram Singh was dropped after he was found dead, hanging in his cell in Tihar Jail.

15 more villages to beef up Hyderabad area

DC | M. Roushan Ali | 4 hours 28 min ago

Hyderabad: The state government on Saturday issued orders for the expansion of the city by merging 15 gram panchayats, which are prime real estate areas, with the GHMC. Greater Hyderabad will now cover 750 sq. km, from 625 sq. km earlier, though the increase in population would be only five lakh.

The expansion coming at this juncture fuelled speculation that it has been done to protect the interests of realtors, builders, developers and political leaders from Seemandhra who own large tracts of land in the HMDA area and that a bigger Hyderabad city would present a stronger case for a Union Territory.

Telangana protagonists alleged that approximately eight lakh acres is owned by people from Seemandhra in the HMDA area spread over 7,100 sq. km. “This looks like a move by the state government to protect the land and properties of Seemandhra people.

In case the Centre takes over law and order, land and revenue, taxation and civic administration of the GHMC, this expansion will be used to protect the land and properties of Seemandhra contractors and also share revenues,” Telangana Political JAC convener Prof. Kodandaram told this correspondent. He opposed the city’s expansion and said a delegation will meet Governor E.S.L. Narasimhan and demand withdrawal of the merger.

BJP, MIM, TRS oppose 15-village merger deal

Municipal administration principal secretary Adhar Sinha downplayed the issue stating it was proposed long back and the order (GO 407) was issued after court cases were disposed of.

Sources in the municipal administration department said 21 more gram panchayats that are contiguous with the GHMC would also be merged with the state capital in about three weeks, taking its geographical spread to 1,000-sq km. In all, 38 gram panchayats are proposed to be merged with the GHMC.

BJP state president G. Kishan Reddy termed it as an irresponsible move by the government. “Utter chaos is prevailing. What is the need to issue orders for merger of 15 villages with the city at this critical juncture,” he said.

Hyderabad MP and MIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi said the expansion orders will create more controversy in the light of the Congress decision to bifurcate the state. “A delegation of MIM leaders will meet CM N. Kiran Kumar Reddy and municipal administration minister M. Maheedhar Reddy seeking withdrawal of orders to merge villages with the city,” he said. Owaisi said the government should have respected the resolution passed by the GHMC’s elected body.

TRS MLA T. Harish Rao said it is a move to protect real estate interests of Seemandhra people. “There is no public interest involved in it as neither the people nor other political parties have been consulted. The TRS will oppose it tooth and nail,” he added.

States: Andhra Pradesh

I’ll solve problems in 6 months: Chandrababu Naidu


DC | 4 hours 24 min ago

Hyderabad: Telugu Desam president N. Chandrababu Naidu on Saturday challenged the Congress to dissolve both Lok Sabha and AP Assembly and take fresh mandate from the people to address the crisis-like situation.

He said the TD will return to power in the state and will solve the bifurcation issue as well as the country’s financial mess within six months. Naidu, who is set to launch his ‘Atma Gourava Yatra’ on Sunday from Guntur, told newsmen at his residence, “It is the Congress that created the crisis and wanted to fix the TD, but I am the seniormost politician from the state, I know how to play the game, I have my own counter strategies to take on the Congress, I will do that”.

Naidu accused the Congress of creating a crisis in AP like they did in Assam, Punjab and Jammu & Kashmir. “The Congress is solely responsible for the present crisis, they have divided the Telugu people, they have created such a situation that people of both regions could not sit and talk for a while, all these dramas will be exposed to the public,” Naidu said.

States: Andhra Pradesh

Tallest Ganesh has Facebook a/c, email id

DC | 4 hours 16 min ago

          People having a look at the 59-foot Ganesh idol which is being erected at Khairatabad in the city on     Saturday. —DC

Hyderabad: The mammoth 59-foot Khairatabad Vinayakudu, built by more than 125 workers from all over India, will be open for public viewing from September 5 onwards, however darshans will begin only on September 9 (Monday).

According to the organisers, to the right of the Khairatabad Ganesha, a 20- feet Sri Rama Pattabhishekam idol is being installed and towards the left, Bhuwaneshwari Matha along with Lord Shiva, Vishnu, Brahma, Rudrudu, Lakshi and Saraswathi idol are being stationed.

M. Sudarshan, founder and chairman of the Khairatabad Utsava Samiti said, the theme adopted this year is Gonaga Chathurmukha Vinayakudu. Devotees will see two cows on both sides of lord Ganesh with five snakes and four faces of the god.

The huge idol that took nearly 50 days to complete, costs Rs 40 lakh. The plastering work is almost complete and painting will start soon. The idol will be ready by September 3.

About 10 CCTV cameras and additional door frame metal detectors will be installed during the 11-day festivities, the committee has also requested for women security guards.
This year, the committee has created a Facebook account of the idol.

“People living abroad can mail us at ganepathideva@gmail.com and send in their prayer requests, following which pujas will be conducted,” said Raj Kumar, committee member.
The Utsava Samiti is conducting its 59th Ganesh Chaturthi celebrations.

States: Andhra Pradesh

NIMS doctors end Jagan Mohan Reddy’s deeksha

DC | Amar Tejaswi | 3 hours 30 min ago

            Doctor checks YSR Congress chief Y S Jaganmohan Reddy at a hospital in Hyderabad - PTI

Hyderabad: The indefinite fast of YSR Congress president Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy was technically broken on Saturday as doctors at the Nizam’s Institute of Medical Sciences forcibly administered fluids intravenously.

Doctors said they were left with no choice but to administer fluids as Jagan’s health was rapidly deteriorating. He would have to remain in the hospital for at least two more days to recover. The CBI court, meanwhile, allowed his wife Y.S. Bharati to be with him as long as he is in the hospital.

Reddy’s mother Y.S. Vijayalakshmi reached the hospital in the afternoon. Reddy began his fast in Chanchalguda Jail a week ago. He was shifted to the Osmania General Hospital on Thursday when his health deteriorated, and then to Nims on Friday.

At 1 pm doctors informed jail authorities about his deteriorating health. Authorities then issued orders to forcibly inject fluids under Sec-tion 593 of the Prison Act.Speaking to mediapersons in the evening, Ms Bharati confirmed that Jagan Mohan Reddy’s fast was broken.“His fast has been broken now with the IV fluids injection. We were very scared about his health and tried convincing him to break his fast but he did not budge. Doctors had to use force,” she said.

She said doctors were giving him antacids and antibiotics. He will be given IV fluids again on Sunday morning as it is not advisable to eat immediately after a long gap.  A team of three doctors are attending to Reddy in the hospital.

States: Andhra Pradesh

DC debates: Is pain less if rapist is minor?

DC | 3 hours 25 min ago


Dr Sunitha krishnan, social activist and co-founder, prajwala

The verdict: Three years in special juvenile home for the fifth Delhi rapist, is a complete mockery of all the pain and agony suffered by the victim. Crime is a crime, whether it is a minor or a major who commits it. The impact of the crime on the victim cannot be negated or diluted by the age of the perpetrators.

Will a victim say that ‘I have been raped by a minor, so the pain is less or the humiliation was not too much?’ The basic point is, when a crime is committed, the victim needs justice. She has the right to it, for all the humiliation she has gone through, irrespective of the profile of the accused.

India does not have a victim-friendly justice system, unlike abroad. The system needs to ensure that the punishment is proportionate to the enormity of the crime, for when a person is raped or murdered a life is lost, and it cannot be revived if the accused is a minor.

The punishment should be equivalent to the victim’s trauma, and not less just because the perpetrator is a minor. My question is: Who will compensate for the injustice done to the victim? How do we create a deterrent for such horrific crimes? Our judiciary has taken no step to deter crime against women, that is why such perverted men fearlessly attack women.

In case of theft or robbery, a correctional facility can help change the mind-set of the criminal, but when it comes to  dreadful life-taking crimes like murder and rape, in my view, there should be no relief.Awarding a three-year correctional facility is nothing but a derision of the hurt and pain of the victim and the trauma her family has gone through. Also, let us not forget the  whole nation that stood up for her 'in one voice'.

And, therefore, we as a community, believe that there should be zero tolerance to such crimes. The punishment should instill fear and deter the perpetrators and the message has to go out loud and clear that this will not be tolerated. I hope  the judicial system is listening.

At the age of 15, the writer was gangraped by eight men. This event served as an impetus to what she does today.

Juveniles must be given chance

V. Padmavathi, chairman, child welfare committeee, RR dist.

The eagerly awaited Delhi rape case judgement has come at last. Everyone was curious about the punishment that would be meted out to the juvenile accused.

Many people have been of the opinion that the nature of the crime committed by the juvenile is so gruesome and “adult” in nature that he should be judged as an adult and not as a juvenile.
But the court, in all its wisdom, has treated the juvenile accused as a minor and given him the maximum punishment of three years in a correctional home under the Juvenile Justice Act.

I support this judgement for the following reasons:

l. Each case is unique and each case must be judged on its own merits.

2. The juvenile accused is a minor and below the age of 18. He has his entire life before him. Yes, his crime is unpardonable, yet one should take into consideration the fact that the crime was committed while in a group and not personally. So there must have been group pressure.
3. The rest of the group being adult, the group pressure must have been that much greater. People have demanded that the age of juveniles be reduced to 16. That again would not be right as many children would be affected who may have committed minor felonies, not necessarily because they are criminals but because of circumstances.

In fact, instead of correcting them, we would be doing them, as well as our society, a great disservice because when these young adolescents are treated as adults and lodged along with hardened adult criminals, they too will become like them.

The juvenile accused in the Delhi rape case is 17 years old, just a year away from being treated as an adult. People may ask if one year will make a difference in the maturity of a human being. It is said that even six months can make a difference. Every juvenile, however big a crime he or she may have committed, should be given the opportunity to correct himself/herself.

In the present case, the juvenile accused has been remanded to a correctional home for three years and he is to be put under close supervision of an expert panel of doctors, psychiatrists etc. to monitor the changes in him.

At the end of three years, this expert panel must evaluate him to see if he is fit to be set free in society. And even after setting him free he should be under close observation for any errant behavior. If there is any recurrence of criminal behavior he should be arrested.

The juvenile accused may or may not be a threat to society. We will have to take that risk. But we cannot take away the one chance that he has of correcting himself and leading a normal life.

States: Andhra Pradesh

Police quells anti-Jagan mob

DC | 3 hours 11 min ago





Y.S. Bharathi, right, wife of Y.S. Jagan, visited him at the Nims hospital along with Shoba Nagireddy, left. —DC

Hyderabad: The city police on Saturday foiled a protest by Osmania University JAC against Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy in front of Nims. The cops arrested 13 students, who were shouting slogans against the YSRC leader, who has been admitted at the hospital following his decision to fast indefinitely. The protesters alleged that Jagan Mohan Reddy’s fast was worsening the law and order situation in Telangana.

Earlier in the day, OUJAC members also declared that they will go ahead with the proposed Million March-2, and will confront the planned Samaikyandhra rally at LB stadium on September 7.

“We have been informed that Samaikyandhra supporters are planning a meeting at the LB stadium on September 7 without police permission. We will confront them even if the cops don’t allow us to do so. We will not allow any public meetings against Telangana in Hyderabad,” said M. Krishank, OUJAC leader.

Later, towards noon, scores of OUJAC protesters reached Nims hospital and started shouting slogans against Jagan. But a police team soon rushed to the spot and arrested the protesters as a preventive measure. The detained agitators were then shifted to Shah Inayat Ganj police station, and were released later.

“We demand law-enforcing bodies to shift Jagan Mohan Reddy from Hyderabad to Tihar Jail (in New Delhi). And, since he is also facing serious criminal allegations, the government should not waste its money by giving him medical treatment,” said Krishank.

States: Andhra Pradesh

Was bombmaker Yasin linked to Gokul, Lumbini blasts?

DC | 2 hours 58 min ago

Hyderabad: Was the bombmaker Yasin, who figured in the confession statements of the accused Indian Mujahideen operatives arrested in the Gokul Chat and Lumbini Park blast cases, the same person as Yasin Bhatkal, alias Zarar Ahmed Siddibapa? The question now bothering the state intelligence agencies is: How was Yasin’s name missed in the accused list while filing the chargesheet?

The argument gained significance in the wake of Yasin Bhatkal claiming during NIA interrogation that he had supplied explosives and bombs in almost all the blasts that took place in the country after 2007.

Mohammed Akbar Ismail Choudary of Pune, one of the accused, had said, “It was Yasin who trained us in a Mangalore terror camp. Yasin had an airgun and we did practised firing. He used to tell us about explosives. Yasin brought explosive material in boxes and bags. It was Yasin who opened the boxes and made boat-shaped wooden frames. He had shown us how to use adhesive in plastic bags to spread ball bearings.”

Yasin’s name also figured in the interrogation reports of Anique, alias Khaled, named as Accused No. 1 in the Gokul Chat blast case. Only seven names figure in the chargesheet of Lumbini Park blast, including the two Bhatkal brothers —Riyaz Bhatkal and Iqbal Bhatkal.

A senior police official said, “The terror operatives use different alias names. The accused had said that it was Yasin, alias Waseem. So we can’t confirm which Yasin he meant. Unless we take Yasin Bhatkal into custody, we will not know whether he is the same man who figured in the interrogation reports or not. When the Lumbini Park blast took place, Yasin Bhatkal name was not that popular. Most of the operatives then arrested were in touch with other Bhatkal brothers.”

States: Andhra Pradesh

Tougher curbs on seat blocking

DC | 2 hours 52 min ago
Hyderabad: The state government has decided to further tighten the norms to check multiple blocking of seats in top engineering colleges under the management quota.

The AP State Council of Higher Education on Saturday convened a meeting with the managements of top engineering colleges to discuss on the measures that need to be taken to check the menace of blocking of seats.It has been a common practice to block the management quota seats by using meritorious students who score very well ranks in JEE (Main), Eamcet or those who score high marks in Inter (10+2) exams.

Various educational consultants and brokers are involved in this trade. They lure toppers with handsome amounts to block the seats and vacate them after seat allotment to enable managements to allot those vacant seats to students of their choice by collecting hefty donations. They block seats by asking the same toppers to apply for seats in different colleges.

“We have asked the managements to prepare merit lists from among the applicants and the vacant seat has to be allotted to the next best students in the order of merit. They should not deviate from the merit list and allot seats to someone else,” said P. Sathi Reddy, secretary, APSCHE. The managements sought two-weeks time to put in place a system to check multiple blocking of seats.

States: Andhra Pradesh

AP approaches HC, seeks time to hold polls

DC | 2 hours 46 min ago

Hyderabad: The much-awaited polls to municipalities and municipal corporations expected to reflect the ground-level strengths of political parties ahead of the Assembly and Parliament elections in 2014 may not be conducted in united Andhra Pradesh.

The state government has approached the High Court to seek additional time to conduct elections to civic bodies. Earlier, it had given an undertaking to the court to complete the process for conducting polls by September 3, 2013.Officials said the atmosphere in Andhra and Rayalaseema regions is emotionally charged at the moment. Even the law and order situation in Seemandhra region is not conducive to elections.

Commissioner and director of municipal administration B. Janardhan Reddy said the government has filed an affidavit seeking more time to conduct polls, which will come up for hearing in a day or two.
Municipal administration minister M. Maheedhar Reddy said the government will seek postponement of elections to municipal bodies until the atmosphere cools in Seemandhra regions.

State Election Commissioner P. Ramakanth Reddy said, “We have already conducted polls to village panchayats. But now the situation is different as government staff have joined the strike. We need nearly 1 lakh staff, employees and officers from almost all departments including civic bodies to conduct polls, in addition to the large number of police personnel required. I doubt whether a huge number will be available in the present situation,” he added.

States: Andhra Pradesh

Neta’s Natter: RG reports, SG decides

DC | 2 hours 40 min ago

AICC vice-president Rahul Gandhi has became the key person making party policy. He played an important role in deciding the Telangana issue, holding several discussions with Seemandhra and Telangana Congress leaders.

For every important issue, Rahul gathers the information and reports it to AICC president Sonia Gandhi, who takes the final call. Just as news channels these days end every news bulletin with the phrase: “We report, you decide”, in Congress circles it is “Rahul reports, Sonia decides”.

Dr Geeta’s prescriptions

All the Telangana ministers set aside their differences and stood by their colleague Dr J. Geeta Reddy in her hour of need. The industries minister was questioned by the Central Bureau of Investigation in the Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy illegal investments case. The CBI did not call her to their office for questioning but instead did so in her home.

This gave Dr Reddy’s political managers the idea of inviting all the Telangana ministers to her residence to coincide with her questioning, so that the focus could be shifted. The ministers obliged and came to her residence to discuss the Telangana issue.

It may be to further divert attention that Dr Reddy made the controversial remark that there is nothing wrong if APNGOs hold a public meeting in Hyderabad, and no obstacles will be put in their way.

Separation stir boosts airlines biz in state
The only business that is doing well in the state in the last three years is the airline business. The Telangana agitation affected all businesses with frequent bandhs and other protests. Some days it was the separate Telangana agitation and some days the Samaikyandhra agitation that quite literally made businesses “sick” and investment in the state have dropped.

But airlines have done very well as politicians from all parties shuttle frequently between Hyderabad and Delhi, conferring with party leaders, giving their respective views and opinions on the separate statehood issue and generally trying to convince the government of the justness of their respective causes.

The TRS of Seemandhra

In the Telangana region, the Telangana Rashtra Samiti is the strongest political party, whose aim of achieving a separate Telangana state has been achieved. The Seemandhra region has no party exclusively devoted to the region.

The main political parties, the Congress, Telugu Desam and the YSR Congress, have cadres in both areas and are unable to take a strong decision either for a separate Telangana or Samaikyandhra, because they will suffer in one region or the other if they do so.

The best placed, though, is the YSRC because in the Telangana region almost all the leaders expect a few left the YSRC. The YSRC has lost all hopes in Telangana and has concentrated on Seemandhra. So we can call the YSRC the TRS of Seeemandhra.

Will CM bell the CAT for Dinesh?
Chief Minister N. Kiran Kumar Reddy and Director General of Police V. Dinesh Reddy enjoy a very good working relationship. While the Chief Minister gave the police boss a free hand in several issues, the latter did his bit in restoring law and order in the state in the post December 2009 developments.

Recently, the DGP, who will retires in September, applied to the state government to extend his service so that he completes two years in the post of the DGP. He also approached the Central Administrative Tribunal seeking a direction to the state government to accede to his request. All eyes are now on the Chief Minister who has two weeks time to act on the CAT order.

Lucky postings

Praveen Prakash is a lucky IAS officer. In his eagerness to move away from the state, he chose to work as personal secretary to minister of state K. Kriparani. CM N. Kiran Kumar Reddy’s principal secretary Binoy Kumar tried to persuade him to remain in AP and handle the health portfolio, but Prakash opted for Delhi.

He soon realised that the post did not suit him. Fortunately, he was promoted as joint secretary and made mission director, National Mission on Higher Education under the ministry of human resources development.


States: Andhra Pradesh

Yoga tied to better sleep after cancer

Reuters | 12 hours 15 min ago

Practicing yoga may help people who have had cancer sleep better and reduce their use of sleep aids, according to a new study.

Researchers found study participants, mostly women with a history of breast cancer, reported significant improvements in sleep quality and sleep duration when they attended yoga sessions twice per week.

The study's lead author called it "the kind of study that doctors typically look to when changing the standard of care with patients."

"One of the biggest messages from the trial is yoga worked," Karen Mustian, from the James P. Wilmot Cancer Center at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York, said.

"Regardless of whether people had mild sleep disruption or a clinical diagnosis of insomnia, people who participated in yoga experienced the same amount of sleep improvement," she told Reuters Health.

Mustian said between 30 and 90 percent of cancer survivors report some form of sleep disturbance.

That can be due to anxiety about a cancer diagnosis, related health problems or side effects of treatments including surgery, chemotherapy, radiation and hormone therapy.

Studies suggest yoga can lower blood pressure and improve anxiety, depression and insomnia. The program used in this study included Gentle Hatha yoga, which focuses on physical postures, and Restorative yoga, with an emphasis on relaxation, breathing and meditation.

The study included 410 people with a history of cancer who were recruited from 12 U.S. cities. Participants were 54 years old, on average. Almost all were white and female, and three quarters had had breast cancer.

Participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups. Half of them attended a standardized yoga program for cancer survivors that met for 75 minutes twice a week, in addition to receiving standard care. The other half received only standard care.

The researchers assessed participants' sleep quality before and after the four-week study period on a questionnaire and using actigraphy, a sensor that detects movement and is worn like a wristwatch at night.

People in both groups improved on measures of overall sleep quality and several other sleep-related variables. Relative to the control group, however, those who did yoga saw greater improvements in sleep quality, daytime sleepiness and the amount of time actually spent sleeping while in bed.

On a scale of general sleep quality - measured from 0 to 21, where lower scores indicate fewer problems - yoga participants improved from a 9.2 to a 7.2 during the study. Those in the comparison group improved from a 9.0 to a 7.9, on average, according to results published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

What's more, yoga participants reduced their use of sleep medication by 21 percent per week, on average, and those not assigned to yoga increased use of sleep aids by five percent per week.

"What's exciting about this study is that it brought yoga out to people where they're receiving care and still showed that there's benefits to yoga participation," Dr. Donald Abrams, an oncologist at the University of California, San Francisco Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, told Reuters Health.

Abrams, who was not involved in the new study, said it's not clear why people in the comparison group improved on sleep measures, albeit to a smaller extent than those who did yoga. He also wondered whether the results would apply to other groups of patients.

"The data from other studies is quite clear that yoga improves quality of life for breast cancer patients, and this study confirms that," he said. "We still don't know how it works in men with colon or prostate cancer, for example, because those patients are never really involved in these trials."

Still, he said he often recommends yoga to his patients with cancer.

"People can do it at home, or they can take a class," Abrams said. "The cost is not enormous, and it's definitely better than taking sleeping pills."

Controversy strikes yet again on day of awards

DC Correpondent | Harpreet Kaur Lamba | 2 hours 42 min ago

                                                                   Ronjan Sodhi
Shooter Ronjan Sodhi receives Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award from the President of India, Pranab Mukherjee.

If the build-up to the national sports awards was marred with controversy, the Arjuna Awards ceremony at the Durbar Hall of Rashtrapati Bhavan here on Saturday was no different.

Sodhi conferred Khel Ratna; Arjuna awards for 14 others

Renjit Maheswary's Arjuna Award put on hold

As top sportspersons from across the country gathered for the glittering ceremony , the sports ministry was left redfaced following the row over triple jumper Renjith Maheshwary, who is alleged to have tested positive during the national open athletics championships in 2008, thus making him ineligible for the award.

Shooter Ronjan Sodhi was the star of the ceremony, picking up the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award, for his back-toback World Cup triumphs. Under the eligibility rule (4.2), a sportsperson found to have tested positive for use of drugs banned by the International Olympic Committee in any laboratory accredited by the IOC is not eligible for an Arjuna Award. The development left the sports ministry and officials embarrassed.

Sports minister Jitendra Singh was quick to order an inquiry saying it was an “unfortunate incident“, while sports secretary P .K. Deb said Maheshwary was picked for the award following a “clean chit“ from the AFI. It is, however, learnt that Maheshwary failed a dope test during the National Open Athletics Championships at Kochi in September 2008, which was kept under wraps by the AFI.

“At that time, the National Dope Testing Laboratory was not accredited by Wada and we took the sample and sent it to the SAI laboratory,“ an AFI official was quoted as saying. Maheshwary was suspended for three months, even though a dope offence calls for a sixmonth ban.

Said AFI president Adille Sumariwala: “I spoke to Maheshwary and he said he had taken some medicines and it may be a result of that. We have also put in a request to the Sports Authority of India for test details, but even they don't seem to have them.“

Maheshwary , who was in the capital along with his wife, sisters and children, said he had been asked to wait till Monday .

The 27-year-old had clinched bronze in the 2010 Commonwealth Games and also bagged golds in the 2007 and 2013 Asian Championships. LIST OF AWARDEES Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna: Ronjan Sodhi (shooting) Arjuna

Awards: Chekrovolu Swuro (archery), Kavita Chahal (boxing), Rupesh Shah (billiards & snooker), Virat Kohli (cricket), Abhijeet Gupta (chess), Gaganjeet Bhullar (golf), Saba Anjum (hockey), Rajkumari Rathore (shooting), Joshna Chinnappa (squash), Mouma Das (table tennis), Neha Rathi (wrestling), Dharmender Dalal (wrestling), Amit Kumar Saroha (athleticspara). Dronacharya Awards: Poornima Mahato (archery), Mahavir Singh (boxing), Narinder Singh Saini (hockey), K.P. Thomas (athletics), Raj Singh (wrestling). Dhyan Chand Awards: Mary D'souza Sequeira (athletics), Syed Ali (hockey), Anil Mann (wrestling), Girraj Singh (para sportsathletics)

Defiant Srinivasan set to make a comeback 

DC CORESPONDENT | 2 hours 57 min ago

                                                                    N Srinivasan

N Srinivasan's return to the BCCI was stalled after the cricket body Working Committee meet was called off following Supreme Court refusing to stay a Bombay High Court order that termed the BCCI probe panel on spot fixing illegal.

Indian cricket is at its favourite “will-he, won'the“ game again over N Srinivasan, who had sidelined himself from the presidency of the BCCI in the aftermath of the spot fixing and conflict of interest scandals that roiled the sixth edition of the Indian Premier League.

Spotlight on Srinivasan again as BCCI WC meets tomorrow

The Tamil Nadu strongman, was back in the news on Friday after the Supreme Court deferred hearing his petition against a Bombay High Court order that had called a two-member investigation committee into the Indian Premier League scandals insitiuted by the board “illegal and unconstitutional“. Indian cricket is at its favourite “will-he, won'the“ game again over N.

“It's a blow for Srinivasan as the Supreme Court has issued the notice in his name among others,“ a BCCI official admitted.

With the BCCI working committee set to meet in Kolkata on Sunday, the issue of whether or not Srinivasan will chair the meeting is back on centrestage, and indications are that while he will attend the meeting, interim chief Jagmohan Dalmiya will continue to be in the chair.

Board sources indicated that Srinivasan would be in Kolkata in his capacity as the TN Cricket Association president and would not attempt to make a comeback as head of the BCCI as yet in the wake of the Supreme Court putting back the date of hearing his petition to September 11.

Though Srinivasan was keen to return to the BCCI presidency, especially after the fiasco of the Delhi working committee meeting on August 2, that may now not transpire yet, it was learnt. “I've no idea about it.
Please don't ask me anything about the meeting, these are tricky and sensitive issues. You'll come to know after the meeting tomorrow,“ Dalmiya was said on Saturday .

US to take military action against Syrian regime: Obama

PTI | 9 hours 6 min ago

President Barack Obama stands with Vice President Joe Biden as he announces the decision to take military action against Syrian regime in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington on Saturday - AP

Washington: US President Barack Obama on Saturday announced his decision to take military action against the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria for its alleged use of chemical weapons.

Though he announced his decision to bypass the UN Security Council, which he alleged has been paralysed, Obama said he would seek the US Congress' approval for his administration to take military action against the Assad regime for using chemical weapons against internationally-established norms.

But Obama did not announce a time frame for the action.

India asks its nationals to move out of Syria

In an address to the nation from the Rose Garden of the White House, Obama accompanied by Vice President Joe Biden, urged Congress to debate and vote for his decision on military action against the Syrian regime.

"After careful deliberation, I have decided the United States should take military action against Syrian targets. I'm confident we can hold the Assad regime accountable for their use of chemical weapons," Obama said.

"This attack is an attack on human dignity and it risks making a mockery of the global prohibition of the ban on chemical weapons," he said. "In a world with many dangers, this attack must be confronted. The US should take military action," he asserted.

"I will seek authorisation for the use of force by the representatives of the US people, the members of the US Congress," he said urging lawmakers to put aside their differences to vote for military action against Syrian regime.

"Some things are more important than partisan differences or the politics of the moment. Today I'm asking Congress to send a message to the world that we are united as one nation," he said.

Presenting his case to the American people and the Congress, Obama said the US 'cannot and must not turn a blind eye' to what happened in Damascus.

"America must keep its commitments," he said.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel immediately came out in support of Obama. Hagel, "supports" Obama's decision on "congressional authorisation for use of force in Syria, agrees we cannot turn blind eye to Syrian chemical weapons use," his spokesman George Little, said.

The remarks by Obama came a day after his administration released its intelligence assessment blaming the Assad regime for using chemical weapons against its own people that killed 1,429, including at least 426 children.

Obama said on Friday that the US would not send its 'boots on the ground', but is looking for a 'limited' military action, with the sole purpose of holding Assad's regime accountable for the use of chemical weapons, which is in gross violations of the well-established international conventions.

                                         An anti-Syria war protest in Sydney, Australia - AFP

Later on Saturday, Senior administration officials were scheduled to hold unclassified conference calls with senators as part of their effort to continue consultations regarding the Syrian regime's alleged use of chemical weapons during the August 21 attack.

National Security Advisor Susan Rice, Secretary of State John Kerry and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel were among others set to attend the briefing. Top Republican Senator John Cornyn demanded that Obama should take Congressional approval for any military action against Syria.

"Before any military action is taken in Syria, the president should call Congress back into session and ask for a vote on the authorisation to use force," he said.

In his hurriedly convened Rose Garden speech, Obama said the military attack against Syria would not be an open-ended intervention.

"We would not put boots on the ground. Instead our action would be designed to be limited in duration and scope. But I'm confident we can hold the Assad regime accountable for their use of chemical weapons, deter this kind of behaviour and degrade their capacity to carry it out," he said.

Asserting that a military attack on Syria could happen at any time, Obama said the US military has positioned assets in the region.

"The chairman of the Joint Chiefs has informed me that we are prepared to strike whenever we choose. Moreover the chairman has indicated to me that our capacity to execute this mission is not time-sensitive. It will be effective tomorrow or next week or one month from now. And I am prepared to give that order," he said.

Obama said his administration would provide briefing to every member of the Congress.

"All of us should be accountable as we move forward, and that can only be accomplished with a vote," he said.

"Yet while I believe I have the authority to carry out this military action without specific congressional authorisation, I know that the country will be stronger if we take this course and our actions will be even more effective. We should have this debate, because the issues are too big for business as usual," he added.

British Prime Minister David Cameroon was quick to come in support of military action by Obama.

"I understand and support Barack Obama's position on Syria," he said on Twitter. Senator Bob Corker, ranking member of the Foreign Relations Committee, also welcomed the decision by Obama to seem Congressional authorisation of his military action.

"At this point in our country's history, this is absolutely the right decision, and I look forward to seeing what the administration brings forward and to a vigorous debate on this important authorisation," he said. In the past several days, lawmakers have been urging Obama to seek approval from the Congress on any military action against Syria.

Petrol price hiked by Rs 2.35 a litre, diesel by 50 paise; bigger hikes soon

PTI | 15 hours 15 min ago





New Delhi: Petrol price was on Saturday hiked by a steep Rs 2.35 per litre and diesel by 50 paise ahead of a bigger increase in rates that may also include subsidised LPG planned for next month as falling rupee made imports costlier.

The increase in petrol price, the sixth hike in 3 months, and diesel, eighth since January, are excluding local sales tax or VAT and are effective midnight tonight, oil firms said.

Next month after Parliament session ends, diesel prices may see a one-time hike of Rs 3-5 per litre, kerosene of Rs 2 and LPG of Rs 50 per cylinder as Oil Minister M. Veerappa Moily urged Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to take steps to tackle a record Rs 180,000 crore of losses arising from dipping rupee and surging oil rates.

Diesel prices may be hiked by Rs 3-5 a litre

Following Saturday's decision, petrol price in Delhi will go up by Rs 2.83 to Rs 74.10 per litre while it will cost Rs 81.57 per litre in Mumbai as against Rs 78.61 currently. In sixth hike since June petrol price has gone up by a massive Rs 9.17 per litre, excluding VAT.

Price of petrol in Delhi has gone up by Rs 11.1 per litre after including state tax since June 1. In a parallel move, diesel price was hiked by 50 paise, excluding VAT, in line with the January decision of the government allowing oil companies freedom to raise prices in small doses every month to wipe out mounting losses.

Diesel price in Delhi has been hiked by 57 paise to Rs 51.97 per litre while it would cost Rs 58.86 in Mumbai from tomorrow as compared to Rs 58.23 currently. Today's hike in the eighth since the January 17 and most of the losses on diesel sales should have been wiped out by now to make the fuel market priced. But the fall in rupee, around 25 per cent since April, has worsened the situation and oil firms are losing Rs 12.12 per litre despite prices being raised by a cumulative Rs 4.75 this year.

Alongside, oil firms also raised rates of non-subsidised domestic cooking gas (LPG) that households buy after exhausting their quota of 9 subsidised or cheaper cylinder. Price in Delhi was hiked by Rs 57.50 per 14.2-kg cylinder to Rs 932.50.

Oil firms had on June 1 raised petrol prices by 75 paise, excluding VAT, and followed it with a Rs 2 per litre increase on June 16, a Rs 1.82 increase on June 29, Rs 1.55 hike on July 15 and 70 paise increase from August 1.

Announcing the price increase, Indian Oil Corp (IOC) said deteriorating exchange rate has led to widening of losses on diesel from Rs 10.22 in first fortnight of August to Rs 12.12 per litre loss. The same has also led to widening of under-recoveries on kerosene to Rs 36.83 per litre from Rs 33.54 at the beginning of the company and on LPG to Rs 470 per cylinder from Rs 411.99.

Moily, who had on Thursday met Finance Minister P. Chidambaram on the issue, on August 30 wrote to Singh saying without a price increase the government will have to shell out a record Rs 97,500 crore to subsidise diesel and cooking fuel.

"If the present position persists, the total under- recovery (revenue loss) would reach to a level of Rs 180,000 crore in the current financial year as compared to Rs 161,000 crore during 2012-13," he wrote to the Prime Minister.

A 25 per cent drop in rupee value has resulted in losses on diesel sales widening to Rs 12.12 per litre despite prices being raised by 50 paise a litre every month since January.

This coupled with losses on kerosene and LPG, the total revenue loss this fiscal comes to Rs 180,000 crore, he said adding even after upstream firms like ONGC chip in Rs 70,500 crore, a gap of Rs 97,500 crore would be left.

Moily, who sent an almost identical note to Chidambaram, said a one rupee increase in diesel price will cut loss by Rs 4,522 crore in remainder of current fiscal while a Rs 3 per litre increase would trim losses by Rs 13,565 crore. If rates are raised by a one-time Rs 5 per litre, the losses would be cut to Rs 29,390 crore.

The hikes proposed are one-time and are outside monthly revision in rates of 50 paisa happening since January. Similarly, a Rs 50 per cylinder increase in LPG rates would trim cooking gas losses by Rs 2,604 crore. Besides, a possible Rs 2 per litre hike in kerosene price would cut losses by Rs 1,014 crore. The price increases in the 3 items together would bring down government's subsidy outgo to Rs 50,928 crore, he argued.

 Revised prices of petrol and diesel in four metros

PETROL

Current Price; Revised Price ; Increase  (All rates in Rs/litre)

Hyderabad: 77.85; Rs 80.93; 3.08

Delhi : 71.28; 74.10; 2.82

Kolkata: 78.64; 81.57; 2.93

Mumbai: 78.61; 81.57; 2.96

Chennai: 74.49; 77.48; 2.99

DIESEL

Hyderabad: 56.04; 56.65; 0.61

Delhi: 51.40; 51.97; 0.57

Kolkata: 55.74; 56.33; 0.59

Mumbai: 58.23; 58.86; 0.63

Chennai: 54.76; 55.37; 0.61

Snowden awarded whistleblower prize

Agencies | 47 min 20 sec ago

Berlin: Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden has been awarded this year’s German ‘Whistleblower Prize’ worth $3,900 in absentia.

The biennial award was given to Snowden, 31, at a ceremony in Berlin on Friday in recognition of his “bold efforts to expose the massive and unsuspecting monitoring and storage of communication data, which cannot be accepted in democratic societies,” organisers of the prize said.

In a message from his asylum in Russia, Snowden warned against the dangers of a surveillance state. “We should never forget the lessons of history when surveillance took the upper hand,” he said in a statement read out at the meeting.

He also reminded governments that they must be accountable to their citizens for their actions.

Meanwhile, fresh reports claimed that the British government had asked The New York Times to destroy all the documents leaked by the former NSA contractor.

Srivari Padalu ‘breaks’

DC | Sandeep Raghavan | 33 min 40 sec ago

Tirupati: The left big toe of the revered holy feet of Lord Venkateswara at Srivari Padalu, about 7 km from the main temple, came apart.

Srivari Padalu is considered as the place where Lord Ven-kateswara first landed from Vaikuntam in search of his abode, which is now the sanctum santorum of the Balaji temple. It is one of the holiest of the places of worship atop Tirumala.

TTD unaware how toe broke off:

Tirupati: Devotees were shocked to notice the toe of Srivari Padalu having detached from the feet on Saturday. It is not known how the toe broke off.

The TTD said it was unaware of the incident. Pilgrims make it a point to visit Srivari Padalu and perform special pujas by touching the feet of the lord. However, the Srivari Padalu is largely neglected by the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams Board.

According to sources, the TTD staff who were at the spot complained to the vigilance staff. They were asked to put it back in place. They complied, and the toe was was covered with turmeric and kum kum.

States: Andhra Pradesh

USEFUL AND HANDY USES OF SALT !!!!




1. If you drop a whole egg on the floor, pour salt all
over the egg, let it sit for awhile, then use
dustpan, the egg will come right up, without all
that mess.
2. Soak stained hankies in salt water before
washing.
3. Sprinkle salt on your shelves to keep ants away.
4. Soak fish in salt water before descaling; the
scales will come off easier.
5. Put a few grains of rice in your saltshaker for
easier pouring.
6. Add salt to green salads to prevent wilting.
7. Test the freshness of eggs in a cup of salt
water; fresh eggs sink;bad ones float.
8. Add a little salt to your boiling water when
cooking eggs; a cracked egg will stay in its shell this
way.
9. A tiny pinch of salt with egg whites makes them
beat up fluffier.
10. Soak wrinkled apples in a mildly salted water
solution to perk them up.
11. Rub salt on your pancake griddle and your
flapjacks won't stick.
12. Soak toothbrushes in salt water before you
first use them; they will last longer.
13. Use salt to clean your discolored coffee pot.
14. Mix salt with turpentine to whiten you bathtub
and toilet bowl.

DON'T FORGET TO SHARE IT ..

Earthquake kills 3 in China

International » World
BEIJING, August 31, 2013
Updated: August 31, 2013 11:28 IST


Homes of 22 families collapse, four buses stranded, 17 tourists trapped.

An earthquake hit a mountainous area in south-western China on Saturday morning, killing at least three people injuring several more, according to state media and the China Earthquake Administration.

The quake, which measures 5.9 on the Richter scale by the administration and 5.8 by the U.S. Geological Survey, shook several counties in Yunnan and Sichuan provinces, including the scenic Shangri-La county. A Chinese report said the epicentre was in a village in Shangri-La, but the USGS put it in Benzilan, a small town in a neighbouring county

The China Earthquake Administration said two people were killed in Benzilan, where homes for 22 families collapsed, and that a driver died on a highway in Shangri-La, where falling rocks hit a tour bus and stranded three more buses. It said a total of 17 tourists were trapped.

The party-run People’s Daily also reported three fatalities and said six others were seriously injured.

The administration said another major quake hit Shangri-La three days ago, and the U.S. Geological Survey recorded three major aftershocks on Saturday.

China’s mountainous areas in its southwest are prone to earthquakes. In May 2008, a powerful quake in Sichuan left nearly 90,000 people dead or missing. In April this year, another quake in Sichuan killed 193 people.

Mandela remains in hospital, condition unchanged



                               
Nelson Mandela remains hospitalized in a critical but stable condition, the office of South Africa’s President said on Saturday.

The statement from the office of President Jacob Zuma denied reports that Mr. Mandela had been released from the hospital.

The update on the 95-year-old anti-apartheid hero’s condition is unchanged from last week, when Mr. Zuma said Mr. Mandela showed “great resilience.”

“Madiba is still in hospital in Pretoria, and remains in a critical but stable condition,” the statement said, referring to Mr. Mandela by his clan name. “At times his condition becomes unstable, but he responds to medical interventions.”

Mr. Mandela was admitted to a Pretoria hospital on June 8, with what officials said was a recurring lung infection.

Mr. Mandela remains very fragile, and the few details released about his condition are tightly controlled by his family and Zuma’s office. Mr. Zuma last week urged South Africans to pray for Mr. Mandela and to keep him in their thoughts at all times.

Mr. Mandela spent 27 years as a prisoner under apartheid and then emerged to negotiate an end to white minority rule before becoming president in the country’s first all-race elections in 1994.

Gunmen kill 5 Sunni worshippers in Iraq

Baghdad, August 31, 2013

unrest, conflicts and war

Iraqi authorities say that gunmen have stormed a Sunni mosque in Baghdad, killing five people.

Police officials said the attackers entered the building in Baghdad’s southeastern neighbourhood of New Baghdad and shot at Sunni worshippers who were performing Saturday’s dawn prayers.Police said the gunmen used weapons fitted with silencers.They said two other worshippers were wounded.

Medics in a nearby hospital confirmed the casualty figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.Most attacks on civilians in recent years have been the work of Sunni extremist groups such as al-Qaeda.But attacks on Sunni mosques have been on the rise in recent months, raising fears that Shiite armed groups are starting to retaliate.


India's parliament passes land acquisition bill

Source :     REUTERS
Last Updated: Thu, Aug 29, 2013 22:10 hrs

By Shyamantha Asokan and Krishna N Das


NEW DELHI, Aug 29 (Reuters) - India's lower house of parliament approved land reforms on Thursday that boost farmers' rights but are opposed by other businesses who say the new law will thwart efforts to revive the floundering economy.

The government says the bill, which will replace a muddled law dating back to the 19th century, will help speed up industrial investment by making the rules clearer.

With the rupee's value tumbling along with other vulnerable emerging market currencies, India is struggling to finance its current account deficit and its leaders are desperate to promote economic growth.

But many are sceptical about the land bill, which is seen as a vote winner for the governing United Progressive Alliance (UPA) coalition because it will give farmers up to four times the market rate for land bought for industry and infrastructure.

"We believe that the land bill strikes a fair balance," India's finance minister P. Chidambaram told reporters.

"Land has to be made available, but while land is being either purchased or acquired to make land available for industry, we must also keep in mind that those who are deprived of land are in most cases deprived of the only asset they have."

Another bill, passed on Monday, offers subsidised food to two-thirds of India's 1.2 billion population, fuelling criticism that lawmakers are more concerned with elections due by May 2014 than in building a strong economy.

"It's populist. They want to appease the farmers," said Paras Adenwala, MD and Principal Portfolio Manager, Capital Portfolio Advisors. "The UPA is making ground for election by these bills."

Indian shares fell by more than 3 percent the day after the food security bill was passed, on worries the scheme would overshoot the government's annual cost estimate of $20 billion.

Both pieces of legislation must be passed by the upper house before becoming law.

Farmers protesting against what they see as unfair land acquisitions have stalled projects in recent years.

The bill's pricing rules would oblige developers to pay up to four times the market rate for land in rural areas and twice the rate in urban areas. Displaced people must also be given homes and jobs.

"This bill will protect farmers and the rights of farmers," said Dushyant Naagar, the head of a farmers' lobby group in Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. He predicted that the generous pricing would help unclog project bottlenecks.

Other farmers' groups say the bill does not provide adequate compensation.

However, businesses say the new rules will raise costs and could even slow down acquisitions because of a requirement that four-fifths of all landholders concerned in a sale give their consent before any land is acquired for a private project.

For joint public-private projects, 70 percent of landowners must consent.

"In the present scenario of economic crisis, this bill will further hit investment and growth of industrialisation, employment and infrastructure," said Vikash Sharan, the director of the Indian unit of Posco, a South Korean steelmaker.

Posco has faced years of protests from farmers opposed to a steel mill in the eastern Indian state of Odisha that would be the country's largest single foreign investment project.

In a statement, business lobby group the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (Assocham) said getting consent from 80 percent of land-holders "will be very difficult, if not impossible."

India's economic growth slowed to a decade low of 5 percent in 2012-13 and the rupee has lost over 20 percent of its value during the last three months. It hit an all-time low of 68.85 against the dollar on Wednesday.

Gross domestic product (GDP) figures for the first quarter of 2013-14 are due to be released on Friday. (Additional reporting by Abhishek Vishnoi in MUMBAI. Writing by Shyamantha Asokan; Editing by Frank Jack Daniel/Ruth Pitchford)

US launches probe against Indian trade practices

Source : PTI
Last Updated: Sat, Aug 31, 2013 14:03 hrs
New U.S. trade halt to last 5 mins if stock freefalls


Washington: A US Federal agency has launched an investigation into Indian trade policies which allegedly discriminate against the American trade and investment.

The investigation, 'Trade, Investment and Industrial Policies in India: Effects on the US Economy', was requested jointly by the Senate Committee on Finance and the House Committee on Ways and Means.The United States International Trade Commission (USITC) will report on the recent policies and measures in India that affect US exports and investment and evaluate the effects of such barriers on US firms and the economy, the federal agency had said in a statement on Thursday.

In its examination, the USITC will enumerate the restrictive trade and investment policies that India maintains or has recently adopted, determine which sectors of the US economy are most affected by these policies, and describe the competitiveness of Indian firms in these sectors.

It will provide several case studies of US firms or industries that have been particularly affected by India's restrictions. As requested by the Congress, the USITC will also perform a quantitative analysis of the effects of such measures.The USITC will survey a sample of US firms to measure the perceptions of India's policies and the impact of those policies on firms' strategies toward India.

The survey results will complement the quantitative analysis of the effects of these policies on trade, investment, and the US economy.The USITC will deliver the report to the Committees by November 30, 2014, the statement said, adding that it will hold a public hearing in connection with the investigation on February 13, 2014.

BJP questions Delhi, Rajasthan governments on Asaram

Source :IANS
Last Updated: Sat, Aug 31, 2013 15:00 hrs


New Delhi, Aug 31 (IANS): The BJP Saturday condemned the attack on journalists by Asaram Bapu's supporters and questioned the Congress governments in Delhi and Rajasthan on the controversy surrounding the alleged sexual assault case against him.

"Asaram, what or who is stopping the investigative agencies from taking necessary lawful action? FIRs in Delhi and Rajasthan. Both Congress," tweeted the Bharatiya Janata Party's national spokesperson Nirmala Sitharaman.

Asaram Bapu's followers gathered Saturday at his ashram in Jodhpur in Rajasthan and attacked mediapersons covering developments in the sexual assault case lodged against the spiritual guru.

Condemning the attack, Sitharaman added: "Shocking. Nothing can justify such attacks. Condemn violence."

Juvenile in Delhi gang rape should be hanged: Victim's mother

Source :PTI
Last Updated: Sat, Aug 31, 2013 14:47 hrs






Delhi gangrape: SC nods to minor order

"We are not bothered about minority or majority status of the accused. All we want is justice," the mother of the 23-year-old December 16 gangrape victim said today, ahead of the Juvenile Justice Board's verdict in the case involving a minor.

"Like the four adult accused are expected to get death sentence, he (juvenile) should also be hanged," she said.She was asked if the maximum sentence of three years under the Juvenile Justice Act, if awarded, is commensurate with the crime."This day reminds me of the morning of December 17 when we heard of the crime committed with our daughter," she said arriving at the JJB in morning today.

The victim's mother said, "Earlier, we were praying with folded hands before doctors and God for our daughter's life. Now we are praying before JJB to convict her assaulter and award maximum sentence."

The girl died in a Singapore hospital on December 29.

The victim's mother also said she was satisfied with the proceedings and was sure to get justice for her deceased daughter.Large number of mediapersons are awaiting the verdict of the Board, which according to sources, has typed the judgement and will pronounce the same after lunch.The public in and around the JJB and relatives of juveniles accused in other cases could be seen waiting for the same.The Board is expected to deliver the verdict as the apex court had on August 22 allowed it to pronounce the judgement in the case against the juvenile, who according to the police, was the "most brutal" of all the six accused persons.

The Board, which convicted the juvenile for robbing Ramadhar, a carpenter, who had boarded the bus on the night of December 16, 2012 and was thrown out before the girl and her friend were assaulted, is also expected to pronounce the sentence in the robbery case. The juvenile had denied all charges against him, claiming he was not a participant in the horrendous crime.While the juvenile faced inquiry before the JJB, the other four adult accused--Mukesh, Pawan Gupta, Vinay Sharma and Akshay Thakur--are being tried before a fast track court.Key accused Ram Singh was found hanging in Tihar Jail in March and the proceedings against him stand abated.

They have been charged with gangrape, murder, criminal conspiracy, unnatural sex and robbery besides other sections of IPC.

The case had sparked intense debate on anti-rape laws and whether the juvenile age should be lowered.

The next step is to smash IM network

DC | 22 min 1 sec ago

The arrest of Indian Mujahideen kingpin Yasin Bhatkal along with a prominent accomplice on Thursday marks the stage for the potential disruption of the most important outfit run by Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence on Indian territory. The work of the country’s intelligence establishment and its successful coordination with the Bihar police are to be lauded in this regard.

We are dealing with slippery customers who are highly trained sabotage and terrorist operatives of a foreign government. The IM co-founder, who was picked up after painstaking work in the India-Nepal border area, has given the Indian authorities the slip on more than one occasion. This has to be guarded against.

A quick trial and appropriate punishment for high-profile terrorist incidents suggests itself. But more, on the basis of the information gleaned from the captured terrorists, we need to take the logical next step of ensuring the disintegration of the IM and similar outfits.

In June we were able to persuade Saudi Arabia to deport Abu Jindal to India to face trial after furnishing firm evidence. This Indian national was living on a fake Pakistani passport in that country, and his transfer to India was firmly opposed by Pakistanis. This is a measure of the importance that Islamabad attaches to key terrorist operatives.

Only a few days earlier, we netted Abdul Karim Tunda, another Indian who had been living in Pakistan for years and had reached command levels of the Lashkar-e-Tayyaba. And now the authorities have succeeded in capturing the commander of all IM operations in India.

All the above breakthroughs were the result of diligent work by our intelligence and security personnel. It is a pity that petty bickering among our political parties scuttled the Centre’s effort to bring sensible legislation that would have made possible seamless coordination between Central and state agencies, as well as between state governments, in tackling terrorists and criminals.

We hope that this matter will be put right in the not too distant future, especially after seeing the result of fruitful cooperation between Central agencies like the RAW, IB, SSB and NIA and the Bihar police. Seeing the profile of the dangerous persons captured, we can only hope that amateur human rights activists do not go out in search of flimsy alibis for the accused and put the judicial system under undue pressure.

The larger perspective is that the spurt in extremism and terrorism in recent years in India is also linked to the playing out of communal politics and the violence spawned by it. As a people, we need to guard firmly against this.

Auto strike adds to Visakhapatnam commuters’ woes

DC | 26 min 1 sec ago

                    Four people ride a bike as the public had a tough time due to the autorickshaw strike.

Visakhapatnam: Commuters in the city faced a trying time on Friday due to the two-day strike by Visakhapatnam Autorickshaw Union against the proposed bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh. Office-goers and students found commuting tough as about 20,000 autorickshaws kept off the roads.

People, who lack individual vehicles, were forced to walk on the roads to reach their destination on Friday as the buses of the APSRTC remained at the depots since August 13, due to the strike by recognised union of RTC in support of united Andhra Pradesh and the autorickshaw strike added woes to the commuters. Among the most severely hit were passengers arriving at Vizag railway station, many of whom were taken completely by surprise.

Meanwhile, thousands of people, who want to reach places like hospitals, offices and few other places in the city, faced extreme hardship to reach their targeted places. Leaders of the Visakhapatnam Autorickshaw Union said that all the auto unions in the city participated in the strike demanding the Congress party to keep Andhra Pradesh as united and the strike will observed till Saturday midnight peacefully. They also demanded the leaders of Seemandhra region should quit their posts and to join the Samaikyandhra stir in the interest of the people in the region.

The usually bustling areas in the city like Jagadamba Junction, Maddilapalem, Daba Gardens and few other places looked unusually calm with thin traffic flow with the autos off the roads.
Only some private vehicles and bikes could be seen.

States: Andhra Pradesh

No salaries for 60,000 staff

DC | P.N. Srinivas Rao | 27 min 41 sec ago

Vijayawada: With almost all the state staff, including that of the treasury department, about 60,000 government employees in Krishna district will not receive their salaries for the month of August.

As per service rules, all government employees should receive salaries on September 1. The stir by the staff has meant that there is no one to settle the financial matters for the working period.
Over 60,000 employees, attached to 53 government departments in the district had joined the Samaikyandhra stir.

A major chunk of employees, about 50,000, come under the banner of the APNGOs, while 1,000 ministerial staff of the VMC and 7,000 RTC employees in Krishna region are on strike.
According to officials, nearly Rs 100 crore in salary payments has been stopped due to the stir.

However, the staff on emergency services in the VMC, who are not on strike, too may not receive their salaries in the absence of the accounts department staff. RTC ED Naga Raju said that the payments issue would be settled in the future. Meanwhile, nearly 30,000 pensioners in the district are likely to get their pensions.

States: Andhra Pradesh

'Walking' shark discovered in Indonesia

AFP | 14 hours 51 min ago

                                                           The 'walking shark'. AFP

Jakarta: A new species of shark that "walks" along the seabed using its fins as tiny legs has been discovered in eastern Indonesia, an environmental group said Friday.

The brown and white bamboo shark pushes itself along the ocean floor as it forages for small fish and crustaceans at night, said Conservation International, whose scientists were involved in its discovery.

The shark, which grows to a maximum length of just 80 centimetres (30 inches) and is harmless to humans, was discovered off Halmahera, one of the Maluku Islands that lie west of New Guinea.

Bamboo sharks, also known as longtail carpet sharks, are relatively small compared to their larger cousins, with the largest adult reaching only about 120 centimetres (47 inches) in length.

They have unusually long tails that are bigger than the rest of their bodies and are found in tropical waters around Indonesia, Australia and Papua New Guinea.

Conservation International said the discovery of the shark, which was first disclosed in the International Journal of Ichthyology, "should help draw diver interest to this mega-diverse but largely undiscovered region".

Ketut Sarjana Putra, Indonesia country director for the group, said the Hemiscyllium halmahera shark could "serve as an excellent ambassador to call public attention to the fact that most sharks are harmless to humans and are worthy of our conservation attention".

Conservation International, whose scientists discovered the shark along with colleagues from the Western Australian Museum, added it came at a time when Indonesia was increasing its efforts to protect shark and ray species.

World cannot let 'thug and a murderer' Assad get away, says Kerry; report says 1,429 killed in August 21 chemical attack

Reuters | 11 hours 17 min ago

Members of the local Syrian community march in protest against the United States' involvement in Syria on Friday in Allentown, Pennsylvania in the US - AP

Washington/Paris: U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry made clear on Friday that the United States would punish Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for the 'brutal and flagrant' chemical weapons attack that it says killed more than 1,400 people in Damascus last week.

Kerry said it was essential not to let Syria get away with the attack, partly as a sign to those who might consider using chemical weapons in the future. He said the United States was joined by allies including France, 'our oldest ally', in its determination to act.

"It matters here if nothing is done," Kerry said in a statement delivered at the State Department.

He said that if a "thug and a murderer like Bashar al-Assad can gas thousands of his own people with impunity," it would be an example to others, such as, he said, Iran, Hezbollah and North Korea.

"Will they remember that the Assad regime was stopped from those weapons' current or future use? Or will they remember that the world stood aside and created impunity?" Kerry said.

Kerry laid out a raft of evidence he said showed Assad's forces were behind the attack, and the U.S. government released an unclassified intelligence report at the same time including many of the details.The report said the August 21 attack killed 1,429 Syrian civilians, including 426 children.The intelligence gathered for the U.S. report included an intercepted communication by a senior official intimately familiar with the August 21 attack as well as other intelligence from people's accounts and intercepted messages, the four-page report said.France said on Friday it still backed military action to punish Assad's government for the attack despite a British parliamentary vote against a military strike.An aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin, a close Assad ally, seized on Thursday's British 'no' vote which set back U.S.-led efforts to intervene against Assad, saying it reflected wider European worries about the dangers of a military response.

Assad's government has repeatedly denied carrying out the chemical weapons attack, blaming rebels who it suggested were trying to provoke intervention.

Syrian state television, which did not carry Kerry's speech live, reported that Kerry said the 'first and last' aim of any action the Obama administration will carry out in the Middle East was to 'guarantee the security of Israel'.Any military strike looks unlikely at least until U.N. weapons inspectors leave Syria on Saturday.Kerry said their report would only confirm that chemical weapons were used, and he made clear that would not change much for Washington since 'guaranteed Russian obstructionism' would make it impossible for the U.N. to galvanize world action.

"The primary question is really no longer, what do we know. The question is, what are we - we collectively - what are we in the world going to do about it," Kerry said.

He said the president had been clear that any action would be "limited and tailored" to punishing Assad, that it would not be intended to affect the civil war there and Washington remained committed to a diplomatic solution to the crisis.The timing of any strikes may be complicated by Obama's departure late on Tuesday for Sweden and a G20 summit in Russia. He was not expected to order the strikes while in Sweden or Russia.Kerry made clear Washington would not be swayed from acting either by the opinions of other states: "President Obama will ensure that the United States of America makes our own decisions on our own timelines, based on our values and our interests."

Shifting alliances


Kerry was speaking the day after British Prime Minister David Cameron failed to win parliamentary backing for military action in Syria.Finance minister George Osborne, one of Cameron's closest allies, accepted that the vote had raised questions about Britain's future relations with its allies."There will be a national soul-searching about our role in the world and whether Britain wants to play a big part in upholding the international system," he said.French President Francois Hollande told the daily Le Monde he still supported taking 'firm' punitive action over an attack he said had caused 'irreparable' harm to the Syrian people, adding that he would work closely with France's allies.

Hollande is not constrained by the need for parliamentary approval of any move to intervene in Syria and could act, if he chose, before lawmakers debate the issue on Wednesday."All the options are on the table. France wants action that is in proportion and firm against the Damascus regime," he said.Britain has traditionally been the United States' most reliable military ally. However, the defeat of a the government motion authorising a military response in principle underscored misgivings dating from how the country decided to join the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Russia, Assad's most powerful diplomatic ally, opposes any military intervention in Syria, saying an attack would increase tension and undermine the chances of ending the civil war.Putin's senior foreign policy adviser, Yuri Ushakov, said the British vote represented majority opinion in Europe."People are beginning to understand how dangerous such scenarios are," he told reporters. "Russia is actively working to avert a military scenario in Syria.Even a limited strike risks causing unintended consequences.Syrian ex-soldiers say that military sites in Syria are packed with soldiers who have been effectively imprisoned by their superiors due to doubts about their loyalty, making them possible casualties in any U.S.-led air strikes.

US intelligence report

Kerry said the U.S. intelligence community had carefully reviewed and re-reviewed information regarding this attack. "I will tell you it has done so more than mindful of the Iraq experience. We will not repeat that moment."

Laying out the evidence, Kerry said Assad's government has the largest chemical weapons program in the Middle East and was determined to rid the Damascus suburbs of the opposition.

"We know that for three days before the attack, the Syrian regime's chemical weapons personnel were on the ground in the area, making preparations," Kerry said.

"And we know that the Syrian regime elements were told to prepare for the attack by putting on gas masks and taking precautions associated with chemical weapons."

He said rockets were launched from Assad-controlled areas and fell only on opposition-controlled areas, and he pointed to the thousands of reports and videos on social media from 11 sites in Damascus showing the impact of the attacks.

"We saw rows of dead lined up in burial shrouds, the white linen unstained by a single drop of blood," he said.

"We know that a senior regime official who knew about the attack confirmed that chemical weapons were used by the regime, reviewed the impact, and actually was afraid that they would be discovered," Kerry said.

"In all of these things that I have listed, in all of these things that we know - all of them - the American intelligence community has high confidence, high confidence. This is common sense. This is evidence. These are facts."

'Global conflagration'

Some allies have warned that military action without U.N. Security Council authorisation may make matters worse.

Russia holds veto power as a permanent U.N. Security Council member and has blocked three resolutions meant to press Assad to stop the violence since a revolt against him began in 2011.

Western diplomats say they are seeking a vote in the 15-member Council on a draft measure, which would authorise 'all necessary force' in response to the alleged gas attack, to isolate Moscow and show that other nations back military action.

But China said there should be no rush to force a council decision on Syria until the U.N. inspectors complete their work.

"Before the investigation finds out what really happened, all parties should avoid prejudging the results, and certainly ought not to forcefully push for the Security Council to take action," Foreign Minister Wang Yi told U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in a phone call, Xinhua reported.

The United Nations said its experts had completed the collection of samples and evidence from last week's attack.

U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said all the analysis of the samples must be completed before conclusions can be drawn and it was not clear how long that would take.

Elaborate bio-metric analysis of blood, hair or urine samples is expected to be done in laboratories in Sweden and Finland, which are among 22 used by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in 17 countries.

U.N. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Angela Kane left Damascus on Friday via Beirut and was expected to stop in Istanbul before heading for New York.

U.S. says 1,429 Syrians killed in August 21 chemical weapons attack:

Washington: A Syrian chemical weapons attack killed 1,429 Syrian civilians, including 426 children, an unclassified report by U.S. intelligence agencies concluded on Friday.

President Barack Obama is using the report to make the case for retaliation against the Syrian government.

The report, based partly on intercepted communications, said U.S. authorities have a high degree of confidence that the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad was responsible, which it said is the strongest position the U.S. intelligence community can take short of confirmation.

A central piece of intelligence included a communication that was intercepted from "a senior official intimately familiar with the attack," who confirmed that chemical weapons had been used by the government on August 21 and was "concerned with the U.N. inspectors obtaining evidence" about it.

The report said a nerve agent was used in the attack, which took place in the Damascus suburbs and was aimed at ridding the area of those trying to topple the Assad government.

The death toll given by the report was the first precise number and far larger than previously estimated. A senior administration official who briefed reporters said the number could rise.

The report said the conclusion was based on human, signals and satellite intelligence as well as a significant body of public material, such as amateur videos.

The report said three hospitals in the Damascus area received some 3,600 patients showing symptoms consistent with nerve agents in less than three hours on the morning of August 21.

Rejecting claims by the Syrian government that the Syrian opposition conducted the attack, the report said the rebels had no capability to fabricate all of the videos and the physical symptoms verified by medical personnel.