Sunday 30 September 2012

KFA engineers, pilots join strike, DGCA to look into mass cancelation of flights


DGCA to look into Kingfisher crisis
DGCA to look into Kingfisher crisis
Mumbai: Aviation regulator DGCA will on Monday review Kingfisher Airline's operations in the wake of mass cancellation of its flights, even as a section of the airlines Mumbai-based pilots joined in the strike by its engineers.

"We will review the situation of Kingfisher Airline," Director General of Civil Aviation Arun Mishra told. Mishra also said that airline's situation will also be discussed with the Civil Aviation Ministry.

The engineers of Kingfisher went on a strike on Sunday to protest the non-payment of salaries since March.

"Almost all Kingfisher aircraft are grounded due to the engineer's strike....some Mumbai-based pilots have also joined in the strike today," sources told.

The airline, saddled with huge debt, is currently operating less than 50 flights with seven aircraft. Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh recently said that government will revoke KF's license if its fleet size goes down below five.

Meanwhile, Kingfisher said in a statement late Sunday night that, "We are anticipating disruptions and delays of flights on Monday, as it is likely that a section of KF employees may not report to duty due to threat by a section of engineers who are not reporting for duty."

"With a view to mitigating the impact of the anticipated disruption, we are pro-actively cancelling several flights across our network on Monday. We are monitoring the situation and continue to engage with this section of employees to see reason as such action is not only detrimental to the company but directly impact the travelling public," the statement said. 
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Mamata Banerjee to hold rally against UPA's 'anti-people' decisions today


Mamata's rally against FDI in Delhi today
Mamata's rally against FDI in Delhi today
New Delhi: After parting ways with the UPA, Trinamool Congress leader and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee will for the first time lead a demonstration on Monday against "anti-people" decisions of the Centre.

"It is an unprecedented decision by Banerjee to hold a rally at Jantar Mantar in the national capital to press the Centre to review its decisions on FDI in retail, cap on subsidised LPG and diesel price hike," Trinamool Congress MP KD Singh said.

He said the demonstration was part of the party's resolve to show solidarity with the 'aam admi' who has been hurt the most by such decisions.

"Withdrawing from the UPA was the first step. A series of protests have been planned in the coming days till the decisions are withdrawn," he said.

When asked whether Trinamool Congress would support a resolution in Parliament against FDI if it is brought by BJP, former Railway Minister Mukul Roy evaded a direct reply.

"Who brings what is not the issue. The actual issue is the decision of the government which is anti-people...the then Finance Minister (Pranab Mukherjee) had assured Parliament that any decision on FDI will be taken after consulting all stakeholders and after evolving a consensus. That has not happened," he rued.

In her Facebook post, Banerjee had recently said: "Let us fight the battle boldly and unitedly. In a democracy, people are supreme. Our voice is the voice of the people. We must raise our voice, so that the government must reconsider."

She said the party's fight for the cause of common people continued with the help of 'Maa, Mati, Manush' throughout the country.

TMC, which has 19 members in the Lok Sabha, pulled out its six ministers from the government on September 21 and withdrew support to the Congress-led UPA on these issues
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Sleeping for long hours can cut risk of diabetes in teens



Extending sleep duration may help to reduce diabetes risk in youth, a new study has claimed.

Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh have found that increasing the amount of sleep that teenagers get could improve their insulin resistance and prevent the future onset of diabetes.

"High levels of insulin resistance can lead to the development of diabetes. We found that if teens that normally get six hours of sleep per night get one extra hour of sleep, they would improve insulin resistance by 9 per cent," said lead author Karen Matthews.


The study tracked the sleep duration and insulin resistance levels of 245 healthy high school students.

Participants provided a fasting blood draw, and they kept a sleep log and wore a wrist actigraph for one week during the school year.

Sleep duration based on actigraphy averaged 6.4 hours over the week, with school days significantly lower than weekends.

Results showed that higher insulin resistance is associated with shorter sleep duration independent of race, age, gender, waist circumference, and body mass index.

Interventions to promote metabolic health in adolescence should include efforts to extend nightly sleep duration, authors said in a statement.

The study will be published in the journal SLEEP
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WC T20: India beat Pakistan by 8 wickets



India hammered Pakistan by eight wickets in a key Super Eights game on Sunday to stay in contention for the semi-finals of the World Twenty20 in Colombo.

India, who would have been knocked out of the tournament had they lost, bowled out Pakistan for 128 and then surpassed the modest target in 17 overs at the Premadasa stadium.

Australia lead group two with two wins, India and Pakistan have one each, while South Africa have lost both matches so far. The last round of group matches will be played on Tuesday.
   
Brief scores: Pakistan 128 all out in 19.4 overs; India 129-2 in 17 overs.
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India's heaviest satellite GSAT-10 successfully launched



 According to an ISRO Press release, the ISRO-built GSAT-10 is the heaviest satellite so far weighing 3,400 kg and was injected into an elliptical Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (GTO).

According to the Press release, the ISROs Master Control Facility (MCF) took over the command and control of the GSAT-10 immediately after the injection. "Preliminary checks on various subsystems of the satellite, namely, power, thermal, command, sensors, controls, etc., were performed and all the parameters were found satisfactory. Following which, the satellite was oriented towards the earth and the sun using the onboard propulsion system.


"In the upcoming days, orbit raising manoeuvres would be performed to place the satellite in the Geostationary Orbit, with required inclination with reference to the equator. The satellite would be moved to the Geostationary Orbit (36,000 km above the equator) by using the satellite propulsion system with a three-step approach," the ISRO release said.

After the completion of the orbit raising operations, the two solar panels and both the dual-gridded antenna reflectors of GSAT-10 would be deployed for further tests and operations. It is planned to experimentally turn on the communication payloads in the second week of October.

After the successful completion of all in-orbit tests, GSAT-10 would be ready for operational use by November. GSAT-10 would be positioned at 83 degree East orbital location along with INSAT-4A and GSAT-12. The operational life of GSAT-10 is expected to be 15 years nominal.

GSAT-10 Satellite has 30 Communication Transponders [12 in Ku-band, 12 in C-band and 6 in Extended C-Band]. Besides, it has a Navigation payload GAGAN that would provide GPS signals of improved accuracy (of better than 7 meters) to be used by the Airports Authority of India for Civil Aviation requirements. GSAT-10 is the second satellite in INSAT/GSAT constellation with GAGAN payload after GSAT-8, launched in May 2011.

Watch Video
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FDI decision helped Rupee bounce back: RBI Deputy Governor


India's decision to allow 51 per cent FDI in multi-brand retail has improved the market sentiment and helped the rupee to rebound, RBI Deputy Governor Anand Sinha said today.


"On the positive side, it (FDI in retail) improved sentiment as was shown in the market. Rupee has rebounded to a considerable extent. There is certainly promise," he told PTI.

Sinha said the success of FDI in retail depends on how much India gets in the end.

The domestic currency rose to five-month high of 52.49 intra-day on Friday last against the US dollar on signs of strong fund inflows. The rupee has been steadily gaining after the government earlier this month announced reform measures like allowing 51 per cent FDI in multi-brand retail.


Earlier in June, the rupee had plummeted to its lifetime low 57.15 to a dollar.

Besides, BSE benchmark Sensex is also at 14-month high of 18,762.74 points, aided by consistent FII inflows since the reforms measures were announced by the UPA government.

The government had earlier this month allowed 51 per cent FDI in multi-brand retail, 49 per cent investment by foreign airlines in aviation sector.

The slew of reforms also included raising FDI cap in broadcasting from 49 per cent to 74 per cent and allowing foreign investment in power exchanges, besides a hike in diesel prices.

Sinha is in Beijing to take part in the Regional Policy Forum on Financial Stability and Macro-prudential Supervision, where he spoke on Mitigating Procyclicality in Banking and Bank Regulation.
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Israel finance minister says Iran economy "on verge of collapse"



JERUSALEM: Iran's economy is edging towards collapse due to international sanctions over its controversial nuclear programme, Israeli Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz said on Sunday.

Israel regards the prospect of its arch enemy developing nuclear weapons as a threat to its existence, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that, although sanctions are taking their toll, they are not yet forcing Iran to abandon work that could soon lead to a nuclear warhead.

However, Israeli officials appear increasingly ready to acknowledge the effect of recent American and European sanctions designed to restrict Iran's lifeline oil exports.


"The sanctions on Iran in the past year jumped a level," Steinitz told Israel Radio, noting that as finance minister, he follows Iran's economy.

"It is not collapsing, but it is on the verge of collapse. The loss of income from oil there is approaching $45-50 billion by the year's end," Steinitz said.

The United States, Israel's main ally, says it will not allow Tehran to produce the bomb, but sanctions should be given more time to work before force is considered.

American and Israeli commentators say a military strike to destroy Iran's nuclear plants, which Iran says are designed only to develop a nuclear generating capacity, could trigger a regional war with unforeseeable consequences.

In Israel too, some prominent political and military figures question Netanyahu's warning that Iran is so close to the threshold of nuclear capability that military action will soon be the only way to stop it.

But there has been no open split in his coalition over the issue. Steinitz praised the prime minister's speech to the U.N. General Assembly last week in which he used graphics to underscore the perceived Iranian threat.

SOARING INFLATION

An Israeli Foreign Ministry document leaked last week said sanctions had caused more damage to Iran's economy than at first thought and ordinary Iranians were suffering under soaring inflation, although this did not appear to be changing policy.

On Saturday, the Iranian currency slumped to an historic low of about 28,400 rials to the dollar, a fall of about 57 percent since June 2011, meaning a sharp rise in the price of imports.

"The Iranians are in great economic difficulties as a result of the sanctions," Steinitz said.

Parliamentary opponents of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad say sanctions are not a major cause of Iran's economic problems and accuse his government of mismanaging the economy.

"The first approach today is that authorities accept their mistakes and failures, second, that they not blame their mistakes on others, and third, that they invite all the pundits and experts to find a way to solve the problems of the economy," Iranian legislator Ezzatollah Yousefian was quoted as saying by the Mehr news agency.

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told Saturday's Haaretz daily that he believed Iran's Islamic theocracy would be toppled in a revolt like the one that toppled Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak last year.

"The opposition demonstrations that took place in Iran in June 2009 will come back in even greater force," he told the paper. "In my view, there's going to be an Iranian-style Tahrir revolution. The young generation are sick of being held hostage and sacrificing their future."
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Maharashtra Governor accepts Ajit Pawar's resignation letter



In March 1998, just before I K Gujral’s government finally caved into the world of realpolitik, I asked Brajesh Mishra, then head of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s foreign affairs cell, what would be the top priorities of the BJP if it came to power.

“We will go nuclear,” Mishra said simply. Listening to me echo some of the protestations so common in the Indian press at the time, which really amounted to US warnings of what it would do to India if it mustered the political courage to split the atom, Mishra stopped me short. “Forget about them, just listen to what I’m saying.”

He was as good as his word. On May 11, barely two months later, “the Buddha smiled” for the second time in the Pokharan desert, a coded message that had been used by nuclear scientists Raja Ramanna and his team in May 1974 to tell then prime minister Indira Gandhi that their nuclear test had been successful. Then, Indira had backed down in the face of international fury, unwilling to let India face the full brunt of economic sanctions that she knew would follow. The first smiling would henceforth always be known as a “peaceful nuclear explosion.”

On May 11, when the earth shifted and Buddha smiled again, prime minister Atal Behari Vajpayee hurriedly summoned the media and informed them that the world had changed. India was now the world’s sixth overt nuclear weapons power.

In the days, weeks and months that followed, the triumvirate of Vajpayee, Mishra and then deputy chairman of the planning commission Jaswant Singh (he would become foreign minister six months later) confronted, side-stepped, cajoled, bullied and simply ignored the international brickbats that kept pouring in.

These three men would write and rewrite India’s foreign affairs and security policies as well as its nuclear doctrine and bequeath to the country the idea that it was possible to make strategic choices that allowed it to engage more than one great power at a time.

With the second nuclear test on May 13, 1998, claimed by India as a thermo-nuclear test, all hell broke loose again. The US came down with the might of its sanctions – although this would last only two years, as Jaswant Singh engaged then US president Bill Clinton’s deputy secretary of state Strobe Talbott in a conversation that would result with the famous Clinton visit to India in 2000.

Soon after the nuclear tests, Brajesh Mishra did something only he could do. Showing a rare spunk not commonly found alongside the presence of a tough spine, Mishra had Vajpayee write a letter to Clinton, explaining why India had gone nuclear.

“...because of a bitter dispute with our neighbour in the north,” said Vajpayee’s letter, referring to India’s long-standing dichotomous relationship with China, at once fearful as well as envious, with which it had fought a border war in 1962.

Bill Clinton promptly had the letter leaked to the ‘New York Times.’

The letter exposed India’s insecurities as well as its prevailing sense of bravado and the ‘Times’ hoped it would embarrass India into making amends in some way. After all, in 1995, when then prime minister PV Narasimha Rao had ordered that the nuclear site in Pokharan be prepared for a possible test, US intelligence agencies had found out and leaked the news to the ‘Times.’ Rao’s foreign minister, Pranab Mukherjee, denied the story to the international press attending a SAARC summit being held in Delhi at the time, even as Rao gave orders to fill up the hole in the Pokharan desert.

But Mishra was canny enough to understand that you had to reach out to the world’s most powerful country, while at the same time holding your ground. So when Pramod Mahajan, Vajpayee’s key political aide at the time, began making disparaging noises about the Americans, Mishra had Vajpayee tell him to quieten down.

Similarly, when then home minister minister L K Advani beat his chest and pointed out that the tests had changed the “geo-strategic” picture of the region – referring to Pakistan – Mishra realised the remarks would go down badly both in Washington and in Islamabad. Soon, Vajpayee was telling Advani to hold his peace. (Of course, Pakistan would retaliate with tit-for-tat tests in the end of May 1998.)

At the same time, overtures to the Clinton administration were being made through Naresh Chandra, India’s ambassador to the US. Soon enough Jaswant Singh was winging his way to Washington DC to charm the younger man into understanding that India’s nuclear tests were hardly about Delhi flexing its muscle in the neighbourhood, but really an assertion that the world’s largest democracy could hardly be taken for granted for much longer.

Over the next six years, Brajesh Mishra would become the eyes and ears of his prime minister, at home and abroad. He had been a career diplomat, joining the Indian Foreign Service in 1951. He was the charge d’affairs in Beijing soon after the 1962 border conflict with China when, at a May Day parade, Mao Tse-Dong, ostensibly smiled at him and passed on the message that Asia’s great powers could not remain estranged. He was India’s permanent representative to the UN in New York in 1979 when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan and Indira Gandhi famously refused to criticise the act; Mishra was forced to read out India’s statement at the UN, but he soon quit the service afterwards.

Not for nothing was he Dwarka Prasad Mishra, former Congress chief minister of Madhya Pradesh’s son. As principal secretary to Vajpayee, he was his eyes and ears, tempering the right-wing tendencies of several ministers in the government. He was at the centre of its most important decisions.

India’s relationships with its neighbourhood were its highest priority, said Mishra. When Khaleda Zia became prime minister of Bangladesh in 2001 and its Hindu citizens began to flee to India in fear, Mishra was sent with a message to Khaleda. The hand of friendship to Pakistan culminated in the bus journey to Lahore in February 1999, even as it transpired that Pakistan’s army chief Pervez Musharraf was plotting an invasion at Kargil.

Credit for persuading Clinton to force Nawaz Sharif to send Pakistan’s Northern Light Infantry (NLI) back across the Line of Control must be given to Vajpayee, Mishra, Jaswant Singh and Naresh Chandra. Sharif was called to Washington and roundly scolded by Clinton. The Kargil invasion ended as it had begun, with a whimper. Vajpayee and his key aides had been able to convince the world that a nuclear face-off between the world’s newest nuclear powers, India and Pakistan, needed to be averted by Pakistan first respecting the Line of Control.

India won that particular bout. Two years later,  in July 2001, Vajpayee was inviting Musharraf, the author of the Kargil invasion, to come to Delhi and Agra, showing it was willing to take the chance to make permanent peace with its enemies. The Agra summit failed because of Musharraf’s arrogance, but on April 15 2003, with Brajesh Mishra in Tokyo, Vajpayee undertook another visit to Kashmir, where, once again, he extended the “hand of friendship” with Pakistan.

Of course, the visit to Kashmir had been carefully plotted by Vajpayee’s key aides, including Mishra.

Brajesh Mishra was never able to persuade Vajpayee to side with the Americans in the invasion of Iraq, also in 2003, although he and Advani were said to have “promised” the Americans that India would support the US. But Vajpayee stood his ground : There was no way that Indians would hurt, injure or fire upon its old civilisational compatriots, the Iraqis, not even if Saddam Hussein was a dictator.

The BJP lost the elections in 2004, but Vajpayee’s government had succeeded in establishing several precedents that the Congress government happily took credit for. Amongst the most important was the travel permit for Kashmiris across the Line of Control that began in 2005, although successive bureaucracies have succeeded in almost killing that initiative.

The overture with the US – Vajpayee’s visit to the US in 2002 when he described the US as a “natural ally” of India – has of course been taken up with the most enthusiasm by Delhi. With Pakistan, Manmohan Singh has desired to make that trip to Islamabad (as Vajpayee and his team did in January 2004) since he became prime minister in 2004, which for a variety of reasons hasn’t materialised.

Brajesh Mishra’s combination of hard-headed realism and outspokenness ensured that he always spoke up for India – not necessarily for the BJP. So when Manmohan Singh staked his government in 2008 for the Indo-US nuclear deal, Mishra earned the ire of his partymen by openly coming out in support of the agreement.

He indicated that if the BJP had returned to power in 2004, it would have signed a similar pact with the US with the utmost alacrity – and with fewer conditions.

Mishra was awarded the Padma Vibhushan during the first Manmohan Singh government. He showed India how important it was to introduce steel in the spine, but equally important to bend like the Ashoka tree – a tree that bends, and therefore doesn’t break – both with friends as well as with those who have fallen off the path. If India wanted to become a power to reckon with, he said, it would need to show both strength and generosity.

Brajesh Mishra would have been 84 years old today. His old friend Atal Behari Vajpayee, ill at home with a stroke, cannot mourn him publicly, but in the passing of the old order one thing is certain : Brajesh Mishra was a true son of India.
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Telangana march in Hyderabad turns violent



 A series of violent incidents marred the Telangana march with supporters of statehood fighting pitched battles with the police here on Sunday.

The agitators also decided to stay put on Necklace Road, a day ahead of the XI Conference of Parties to the Convention on Biodiversity.

Apparently, the government’s strategy of allowing the march at a pre-designated place from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. backfired with Telangana leaders making it clear that they would not leave the place until they got an announcement on the road map for formation of the separate State.


Stone-throwing

Telangana supporters fought with the police on almost all routes to the venue. About 20 vehicles of the police and two belonging to TV channels were either burnt or damaged in the clash which saw the forces and the crowds going back and forth in the lobbing of teargas shells and stone-throwing.

A railway cabin straddling the track near the Necklace Road station was also burnt as also a mobile power unit and a static power junction.

The forces lobbed scores of teargas shells, both in the conflict zone and later when the crowds withdrew at nightfall. The second spell of shelling was apparently a warning to the crowds to disperse as the time allotted for the march had expired.

But, a few thousand people squatted in front of the stage as Telangana Joint Action Committee chairman M. Kodandaram and MLAs Nagam Janardhan Reddy, Komatireddy Venkat Reddy, S. Venugopalachary and others gave a call for a sit-in until the Ministers from Telangana districts arrived to resolve the problem.

A heavy downpour twice in quick succession was no deterrent for the crowd to pull out. Artists led by Vimalakka kept them engaged with songs on Telangana.

A few youth who were injured in lathi charge and the water cannon were lifted to the stage to show the leaders and participants the “atrocities” of the forces. A hundred-metre stretch bore tell-tale marks with stones littered around and burnt vehicles.

Huge bundles of barbed wire removed by the crowds to set up the clash with the forces were found abandoned on the side of the road.

The police stopped the crowds at several places en route and sent them back. The marchers converged near the Secretariat which was barricaded even as several Ganesh idols were awaiting immersion. The route for the immersion was diverted.
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Rajasthan: 22 IAS officers transferred


Jaipur: Altogether 22 Indian Administrative Service and 11 Rajasthan Administrative Service officers have been transferred by the Rajasthan Government, here.


In two separate announcements issued on Thursday night, the state government ordered transfer of 19 district collectors and district magistrates, including Jaipur district collector Naveen Mahajan.


District collectors Hemant Kumar Gera (Udaipur), Prithvi (Bikaner), Siddharth Mahajan (Jodhpur), have been transferred, sources said.

District officials from Churu, Hanumangadh, Pali, Chittorgadh, Shriganganagar, Bharatpur, Bundi, Jhalawad, Baran, Karaouli, Pratapgadh, Dausa, Badmer, Sirohi and Dholpur, were also transferred, they said.

Jaipur Municipal Corporation chief executive officer Loknath Soni has been transferred as the director of Public Relation Department, while Jagrup Singh Yadav has been appointed as the new chief executive officer.
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Akhilesh Yadav agrees to host Global Investment Summit 2012 in Agra



Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav has agreed to host the Global Investment Summit in Agra from January 27 to 29 and said that it would be an opportunity for him to build confidence in the investors to open their ventures in the state.

The Central government had decided during good old days of friendship with West Bengal Chief Minister and TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee to hold the summit in Kolkata. But after the divorce with the TMC, Anand Sharma, Union Commerce and Industry Minister, wanted to shift the venue elsewhere.


He had talked to the UP CM over telephone on Wednesday to find if he would allow the summit to take place in Agra. He had also sent a letter to Akhilesh a day before.

Sources in the department of industrial development told Mail Today that the Akhilesh Yadav has already written to the department to make arrangements for the summit and report to him.

"We see this opportunity as a reward to the SP government in the state to attract global investors. You can call it a return gift to the SP, which had saved the Congress-ruled UPA in the Centre after Trinamool's recent withdrawal of support," an officer said on the condition of anonymity.

"Although Akhilesh Yadav had recently held a meeting with some of the industrial houses and a few global investors, he had not received encouraging response from them. But since the Central government would be involved in Agra summit, we could attract some of them with the help of union ministry of commerce and industry," he said.

"Even the union minister in his letter to the CM had stated that it could be a good platform for UP to market the prospects of industrialization in the state. The CM welcomed his decision and hoped that UP would soon be on the path of industrialisation," the officer added.

Anil Kumar Gupta, Commissioner, Industrial Development, said, "We will organize the summit successfully."

The Global Investment Summit is held every year under the auspices of the Central government and Confederation of Indian Industries (CII). It was held many a times in Kolkata in past. Last year it was held in Hyderabad. The CII members claimed that since then more than two dozen big projects have been started in Karnataka with the held of foreign investors.

Alok Saxena, Chairman of CII, UP state council, said, "It is a positive sign for the industries in the state."
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"CII in UP is actively involved with the state government on various verticals. We have formed joint working groups on power and renewable energy, skills development, branding of UP, agriculture and food processing, industrial policy, infrastructure, healthcare and information technology where CII is being involved in policy advocacy to the state. We had recently held a meeting with US ambassador to India, Nancy Powell, and minister counselor for commercial affairs U.S. embassy, Judy Reinke. They had also met the CM to improve business interaction and industrial climate of UP. They want minimum risk prone regions for the investors. We hope the CM would be able to give this assurance in the summit," he added
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19 people killed as private aircraft crashes in Nepal



 All 19 people, mostly foreigners, aboard a Dornier aircraft of a private airlines were killed on Friday as the plane crashed minutes after taking off from the Tribhuvan International Airport here.

Sixteen passengers and three crew members who were heading towards Lukla, gateway to Mt Everest, were killed when the small aircraft belonging to Sita Airways crashed two minutes after it took off at 6:15 am (local time), airport officials said.


The plane had caught fire as soon as it took off and it crashed in the Manahara river in Koteshwor region, near a slum area, just 2-3 km south of the airport, the officials said.

All the passengers are said to be foreigners and most of them are Italian tourists, according to preliminary reports.

The crew members are identified as Captain Bijaya Tandukar, co-Pilot Takeshi Thapa and airhostess Ruja Shakya.
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Sandeep Patil appointed chairman of national cricket selection committee


 Sandeep Patil, former India allrounder and current Operations Director at the National Cricket Academy, has been appointed chairman of the senior selection committee for a maximum term of four years to be renewed each year by the BCCI.


He is part of a new five-member panel appointed by the Board, others being Roger Binny, Saba Karim, Vikram Rathour and Rajinder Singh Hans. Indian cricket will thus have a new set of selectors.

The earlier panel headed by K. Srikkanth had completed its tenure, except North Zone selector Mohinder Amarnath, who had completed one year and was due for re-appointment.

BCCI president N. Srinivasan explained the reasoning behind Patil as the new chairman and change in the entire senior selection panel. “We wanted a person of sufficient stature as chairman. No one can question Sandeep Patil’s credentials.”

Amarnath’s exclusion

Asked about the line of thought in excluding a player of Amarnath’s stature, despite having three years left in his term, Srinivasan said: “The issue is not about the credentials of a person, just that BCCI wants a new face. The five selectors are chosen for a maximum four-year term and elected annually. I cannot go into the reason (behind Mohinder Amarnath’s exclusion) and don’t want it to go into a public debate. Appointing selectors is a decision of the BCCI.”

Patil’s appointment as the selector from West Zone and senior chairman is one of the many decisions taken at the AGM of the Board conducted at the Cricket Centre.

Binny (South Zone), Karim (East Zone), Rathour (North Zone) and Hans (Central Zone) comprise the new panel. The selectors’ remuneration has been hiked from Rs. 40 lakh to Rs. 60 lakh in case of senior panel and Rs. 25 lakh to Rs. 40 lakh for the junior selectors.

Pandit replaces Kuruvilla

Former India wicketkeeper Chandrakant Pandit is the junior selectors’ chairman, replacing Abey Kuruvilla under whom India won the under-19 World Cup recently in Australia.

Anil Kumble, former India captain and now making a mark in cricket administration, will be the new BCCI Technical Committee chairman. Gargi Banerjee retains her post as women’s selection committee head.

The BCCI president, replying to a question about zonal basis in appointing selectors for the India seniors, juniors and women’s squad, instead of picking the best from those available regardless of zones they represent, said: “India is a large country and skills of players in all regions have to be addressed. BCCI has picked good selectors. The increase in remuneration is to make selectors more responsible and give more time. There is more interest in players becoming selectors.”

New technical chief

Former India captain and ace leg-spinner Anil Kumble is the new chairman of BCCI’s Technical Committee, Board president N. Srinivasan said after the 83rd AGM ended here on Thursday.

Orissa’s ex-Ranji player and former East Zone selector, Ranjib Biswal, is the National Cricket Academy chairman.

The BCCI president also said the Board had adopted an anti-corruption code, details of which would be circulated to all associations.

Gross income has been valued at Rs. 849 crore (as against Rs. 581 crore the previous year), surplus is over Rs. 382 crore (Rs. 190 crore previous year). During the year, Rs.160 crore were spent on infrastructure development (Rs. 130 crore earlier) and one-time benefit to former players cost Rs 80 crore.

The Indian Premier League Governing Council remains unchanged.

Other appointments:

India Seniors Selection Committee: Sandeep Patil (chairman, West Zone), Vikram Rathour (North), Saba Karim (East), Roger Binny (South), Rajinder Singh Hans (Central) and Sanjay Jagdale (BCCI Secretary).

Junior selection committee: Chandrakant Pandit (chairman, West), Arun Kumar (North), Arup Bhattacharya (East), K. Jayaraman (South), Pritam Gandhe (Central) and Anurag Thakur (Hon Joint Secretary).

Women’s selection committee: Gargi Banerjee (chairman, East), Gulshan Sharma (North), Sudha Shah (South), Amrita Shinde (West), Rita Dey (Central).
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Friday 28 September 2012

Hina Rabbani faces fatwa threat over alleged romance with Bilawal Bhutto


Hina Rabbani Khar faces fatwa threat
Hina Rabbani Khar faces fatwa threat
New Delhi: If recent reports are to be believed then Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar is likely to face the ire of fundamentalists over her alleged affair with President Asif Ali Zardari’s son Bilawal Bhutto Zardari.

Referring to a prestigious national daily — the Ittefaq, the Bangladeshi tabloid said that Islamist groups in Pakistan are likely to issue fatwa (religious decree) now, against Hina Rabbani Khar and Chairman of ruling Pakistan People's Party (PPP) Bilawal Bhutto over their illicit romantic affair, which is said to be a punishable crime under the existing law of Pakistan.

Reports also say that Khar would be expelled from her current foreign ministry post following reports of secret affair with Bilawal. Apparently, President Zardari is afraid that the disclosure of her extra-marital affairs with Bilawal Bhutto, may earn bad name for the nation and the ruling PPP.

Earlier on Thursday the media was abuzz with reports, which claimed Khar’s multi-millionaire husband Firoze Gulzar has officially moved an application seeking details of her phone calls. However officials in Pakistan completely brushed off the claimed affair.

Surprising three days after the Bangladeshi media tossed reports of the high-profile romance between Hina Rabbani and Bilawal Bhutto, both the duo and Pakistani press have remained tight-lipped on the issue.
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More woes for consumers, subsidy on remaining six cylinders may be withdrawn


More woes for consumers on subsidized LPG
More woes for consumers on subsidized LPG
New Delhi: Consumers are already exasperated following the recent decision of the government to cap the number of subsidised LPG cylinders. To add to the woes of the consumer families above poverty line, Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas is pressing for complete withdraw of subsidy on LPG cylinders.
The sources say that if the ministry’s plan allowed to go through, it is most likely that by mid-next year, the families above poverty line would be completely deprived of subsidy on LPG cylinders which has been confined to only six cylinders a year.

The sources also add that the ministry has already started to collect data regarding LPG consumer families. It will also take help of the income tax department to ascertain the income slab of the families. The mode of giving subsidy to the families could also be changed. After ascertaining the income of the consumer families, the government may directly transfer money meant for subsidy in the bank accounts of eligible consumers. This means, in the second phase of subsidy cut, even the BPL families will also have to purchase the cylinders on market price and the government will compensate them by transferring a certain amount in their bank accounts.
Government is collecting data to ascertain the number of BPL families in the country which have LPG connections. Notably, the finance minister and the Planning Commission of India have agreed to go with the proposal of the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas on complete withdrawal of subsidy on LPG cylinders.
Petroleum Ministry has estimated that the subsidy presently being given on LPG cylinders costs Rs 30,000 crore per year to the exchequer. While after the decision, which is likely to be taken next year, to confine it to only BPL families will reduce the subsidy burden to Rs 8000 a year.
According to recent decision by the Centre, the number of subsidised LPG cylinders has been capped to only six per year for each family. Subsidized cylinders presently cost Rs 400 whereas non-subsidised cylinders cost Rs 750.
Government’s data suggests that 23 percent families consume 12 LPG cylinders a year, whereas 44 percent families consume four to six cylinders a year.
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It’s clash of the Titans as India take on Australia in WT20 today


T20 WC Preview: India vs Australia
T20 WC Preview: India vs Australia
Colombo: India are likely to go in with five specialist bowlers to plug their bowling loopholes when they take on the mighty Australians in its opening 'Super Eight' fixture of the ICC World Twenty20 in Colombo on Friday.

The comprehensive victory against England and Harbhajan Singh's brilliant comeback has raised questions as to what exactly will be a winning combination against George Bailey's men who have looked good in both their group league matches against Ireland and West Indies respectively.


Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni has given clear indications that he would go in with five specialist bowlers, a move which will mean that India will have one batsman short.

In that case, either opener Virender Sehwag or Yuvraj Singh may have to sit out of the match and Dhoni admitted that it would be a "tough decision".

While the England match was won with five bowlers, it was more about testing a different combination as the result had no bearing on the Super Eights classification.

It will be interesting to see what bowling combination Dhoni would prefer for the first 'super eight' game and whether he would opt for three spinners or three pacers.

On current form, Lakshmipathy Balaji is a better bowler at the death overs than the 33-year-old Zaheer Khan mainly because of the variety of slower deliveries that he has in his repertoire.

The two key batsmen in the Australian set-up are left-handers David Warner and Mike Hussey. The presence of the duo at the top of the order certainly means that Harbhajan's inclusion is necessary because of his stupendous record against the left-handers.

Ravichandran Ashwin, who was rested against England, will also make a comeback into the playing eleven. The other certainty in the bowling department is Irfan Pathan, who has been providing the team with breakthroughs regularly.

The batting, however, bears a much more settled look with the good news being that Gautam Gambhir and Rohit Sharma are back among runs.

The only thing to worry will be Yuvraj Singh's place in batting order. The talented left-hander has been struggling with the bat.

While ODI matches give him a chance to settle down, the number of dot balls Yuvraj has played in the recent matches is something that he needs to figure out.

Although the 22-yard strip at the R Premadasa Stadium will assist the slower bowlers, the Aussie fast bowlers are likely to test the Indian batsman with short-pitched stuff.

The Indian team was seen preparing to counter the bouncers and the players were seen playing the horizontal bat shot during the nets.

A lot will depend on how Virat Kohli bats as he has been in the form of his life. Even Hussey had admitted on Wednesday that the Aussies were expecting Kohli to have one of his rare off-days against them.

Rohit's half-century has certainly boosted his confidence and the innings has come at the right time as the margin for error is too little at this stage of the tournament.

The main threat for India will be all-rounder Shane Watson who in prime form having won back-to-back MoM awards. Watson has been cleverly used by skipper Bailey as he has proved to be a potent partnership breaker.

The Indian batsmen will need to be careful against Watson. Left-arm seamer Mitchell Starc can prove to be a handful but it will be chinaman bowler Brad Hogg who will need to play a big role.

The only problem for Australia will be its middle-order which hasn't been tested in the two matches which were single-handedly won by Watson.

The all-rounder has taken full advantage of the Powerplay overs to slaughter the bowlers. With Warner and Hussey for company, the 'terrific trio' make up for a superb top-order.

On Friday's match will be a duel between two bowling units where Indian spinners are pitted against Aussie pacers in what promises to be a fantastic form.
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Thursday 27 September 2012

`OMG` is for god-fearing people: Mithun Chakraborty


`OMG` is for god-fearing people: Mithun
`OMG` is for god-fearing people: Mithun
New Delhi: ‘Oh My God’ is not against any religion but a comedy-drama that will help people to understand the need to love god, says Bollywood star Mithun Chakraborty, who acts as a godman in the film.
"I play the character of a godman in the film and I have realise that we worship god because we are afraid of him. We actually worship our superstitions lying inside us. Through this film, we want to spread the message that if we love god whole-heartedly then he will eradicate every problem of us," says the 62-year-old National Award winning actor.

The film had a low-key premiere at the Sirifort Auditorium here this evening. Other cast members including Paresh Rawal, director Umesh Shukla and script writer Bhavesh Mandalia too turned up for the event.Minister of Information & Broadcasting Ambika Soni also attended the red carpet.

Akshay Kumar, who plays a cameo in the film, could not attend the screening. His wife Twinkle gave birth to a baby girl on Wednesday.

’Oh My God’ has raised eyebrows from some quarters who alleged that it has hurt religious sentiments and a complaint has been filed in Jalandhar against the actors and producer of the film.

"We haven`t got the information yet. But the main aim of making this film was never to hurt sentiments of any religion. The film is not against any religion or god. It`s a light-hearted comedy film," says Shukla.

The film is about the life of a person, who begins to disbelieve in god after a tornado destroys his antique store. Asked about the message the film tries to give, Rawal says, "We should look for god within ourself."
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People keep asking me to recommend them for Big Boss: Salman Khan


Salman favours for a clean Bigg Boss
Salman favours for a clean Bigg Boss
Mumbai: With the sixth season of Bigg Boss almost around the corner, Salman Khan is all geared up to take up the reigns as the show’s host once again. Interestingly this time, the actor has decided to make certain changes to the show’s format to make the content more audience-friendly. However, Sallu points out that he has absolutely no hand in deciding who gets into the Bigg Boss house.
A change in format... why?
I thought that on last year’s show, there was too much screaming and shouting in the house. That is why it was pushed to the 11 pm time slot indicating that the show is damaging to our culture. I wanted it to be a family entertainer so that people from the age group of six to 60 can watch it.
Do you have a say on who gets selected for the show?
No I don’t get into that. Too many people keep asking me to recommend their names. Then it becomes difficult for me to either choose or drop them. During the last season too, I got to know people once I had shot with them.
But don’t you think certain people on the show become the victims of circumstances?
The actual personality of a person tends to come through in such situations. Some of them act, some don’t. Some former housemates have confessed to me that after two or three days in the house, they did not feel the cameras around them anymore. We are trying to bring well-behaved people on our show this time but we cannot guarantee if they will remain so inside the house.
This season will also have a common man in the house.
People who work for social causes are welcome to join the house. If you have done good work but people don’t know about it, you can apply.
Will you miss Sanjay Dutt this year?
Yes, I will miss him. Last year I got busy with my work and this year he is busy with his film commitments.
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BJP hits back against RTI activist, slaps legal notice


Gadkari slaps legal notice on RTI activist
Gadkari slaps legal notice on RTI activist
Mumbai/Surajkund (Haryana): An RTI activist has alleged that Nitin Gadkari did not want her to pursue the irrigation scam in Maharashtra, a charged dismissed as baseless on Thursday by the BJP president who slapped a legal notice accusing her of defaming him.
RTI whistleblower Anjali Damania claimed that when she met Gadkari in Mumbai the BJP chief said he would not take a stand on irrigation scam since he had a business relationship with NCP supremo Sharad Pawar. Gadkari has denied that she had met him.
    
Damania, a member of India Against Corruption (IAC), at a news conference in Mumbai in the presence of Arvind Kejriwal on Wednesday initially did not name Gadkari only alleging that "a president from the opposition party" from Maharashtra attempted to cover up the irrigation scam. Later, she named the BJP President and said she has met him thrice.
    
Damania had alleged that when she approached Gadkari to pursue the case against NCP leaders involved in the Rs 20,000 crore irrigation scam, he asked her not to go ahead.
    
She alleged that Gadkari told her he has business interests with Pawar and that they extend mutual help where required.
   
Gadkari served a legal notice on Damania for levelling allegations against him and refuting her charge that he has business relations with Pawar.
Gadkari’s counsel Shamshery & Associates served the legal notice on Gadkari’s behalf on Thursday.  In the notice, the lawyers have charged that Damania has given false statements to TV channels, which were also widely reported in newspapers.
"My client strongly denies the false, baseless and defamatory statement that he has any business relations with Sharad Pawar," the notice said while demanding that Damania retract her remarks and forthwith tender a public apology.
    
BJP rubbished the charge by Damania against Gadkari, alleging that the "dirty tricks" department of Congress is at work to derail the opposition's on-going national conclave.
"On the eve of BJP's national conclave a deliberate and planned effort is being made by the dirty tricks department of the Congress to defame Gadkari and to divert attention from the meet. We deny these baseless allegations," party spokesperson Prakash Javadekar told reporters in Surajkund where the party's National Council meet is underway, a day after the party’s National Executive meeting.
    
"There is only one case filed in the irrigation scam and that is a PIL filed by our party secretary Kirit Somaiya," Javadekar said.
Kejriwal said the Gadkari-Damania meeting did take place.
"This is unfortunate for the country. There is no opposition in the country. If the president of the biggest Opposition party has business links with the leaders inruling parties, then there is no difference between ruling and opposition parties," he said.
In New Delhi, Congress spokesperson Rashid Alvi said that Gadkari should clarify on the allegations.
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Why Prithviraj not promoting 'Aiyyaa'?


Why Rani promoting ‘Aiyyaa’ alone?
Why Rani promoting ‘Aiyyaa’ alone?
Mumbai: South actor Prithviraj is making his Bollywood debut opposite Rani Mukerji in her upcoming film. While Rani has been on her toes to promote her film everywhere, interestingly Prithviraj has been missing in action, except for attending a music event.
Prithviraj tells us, “Unfortunately I am shooting for Yashraj Studio’s next film in Delhi. However, I will be in Mumbai today and will start promoting the film. My dates are with the production house of the film and they have given me the charts well in advance.”
However, a source from the channel says, “Prithviraj will be in Mumbai but only for one day where he will be doing basic interviews and radio bytes. He will promote the film in Dubai for a day. Nothing else has been scheduled so far.”
There has been buzz that the reason behind Prithviraj’s absence is because he apparently has only a cameo in the film. However the actor clarifies, “I have shot for 70 days for the film so it can’t be a cameo.”
While the South actor will be in the city today, incidentally Rani will not be joining him in promoting the film. The actress will be busy making a solo appearance in a comedy show. Rani has appeared on several reality shows and Ganpati pandals to promote her upcoming film.
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19 people killed as private aircraft crashes in Nepal


Nepal plane crash kills all 19 on board
Nepal plane crash kills all 19 on board
Kathmandu: All 19 people, mostly foreigners, aboard a Dornier aircraft of a private airlines were killed as the plane crashed minutes after taking off from the Tribhuvan International Airport.

Sixteen passengers and three crew members who were heading towards Lukla, gateway to Mt Everest, were killed when the small aircraft belonging to Sita Airways crashed two minutes after it took off at 6:15 am (local time), airport officials said.

The plane had caught fire as soon as it took off and it crashed in the Manahara river in Koteshwor region, near a slum area, just 2-3 km south of the airport, the officials said.

All the passengers are said to be foreigners and most of them are Italian tourists, according to preliminary reports.

The crew members are identified as Captain Bijaya Tandukar, co-Pilot Takeshi Thapa and airhostess Ruja Shakya.
The reason of the accident is not yet known.

However, some airport officials speculate that bird hit might have caused the plane to burn in the sky immediately after it took off and the pilot might have tried to land into the nearby river before it crashed at the river bank.

The country has a poor record in road and air accidents with the latest fatal air crash in Nepal being the sixth in less than two years.

Earlier this year in May, Agni Air's Dornier Aircraft crashed near Jomsom airport in the north of Kathmandu killing 15 people. Those killed in that accident included 13 Indian pilgrims who were heading towards a famous pilgrimage site, Muktinath, near Tibet border.

In September last year, a small Beach Aircraft belonging to Buddha Air, carrying tourists on a mountain flight trip around Everest crashed into a hillside at Godavari village near Kathmandu, killing 19 people, including 10 Indians
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Hina Rabbani-Bilawal romance: Husband moves application for call details


Khar’s husband seeks her call details
Khar’s husband seeks her call details
New Delhi: Seems like Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar’s multi-millionaire husband Firoze Gulzar is paying heed to the media buzz, which speaks of a rumoured love tale between Hina Rabbani and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari’s son Bilawal Bhutto.

Reports claim that Gulzar has officially moved an application seeking details of Khar’s phone calls.

Their rumoured romance, which they otherwise managed to keep under the wraps, came to light when the duo was caught in a compromising position inside the President’s house by Zardari, where Bilawal also resides.

Reports have confirmed that Hina’s husband has submitted an application with Federal Investigation Agency for full call details of two ‘suspected’ numbers; however officials in Pakistan have completely brushed off the claimed affair.


President Zardari is miffed and strongly opposed to his son’s entering into marital relations with Khar — who is already married to multi-millionaire Firoze Gulzar and is a mother of two.
If reports are to be believed, apparently Bilawal has threatened to leave Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and also has strong plans to settle down with Khar in Switzerland post marriage.
The much-talked about romance between Hina Rabbani Khar and Bilawal Bhutto surfaced after a weekly Bangladeshi published the high-profile romance earlier this week.

Meanwhile, the hashtag world was abuzz on Wednesday, where Hina Rabbani Khar was touted to be a trending tale. Tweets like ‘And the word of the day is #KHAR:) Hina Rabbani Khar. Jiyo:)’ to even social messages like — ‘Hina Rabbani Khar is seeking a divorce for another man. '#Learn' is the social message’ ruled the social networking site Twitter
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