Most at Guantanamo are low-level fighters – report

Most of the 240 detainees at the Guantanamo Bay prison when President Barack Obama took office were low-level fighters, with only 24 considered to be involved in plots against the United States, The Washington Post reported on Friday.

The newspaper said the report from the Guantanamo Review Task Force recommended 126 of the detainees be transferred either to their homes or a third country; 36 be prosecuted in federal court or by a military commission; and 48 be held indefinitely under the laws of war.

In addition to the 10 percent the report said were involved in plots against the United States, about 20 percent had significant roles with al Qaeda or similar groups.

The Post said the report was finished in January and sent to lawmakers earlier this week.

The Obama administration held on to the report following the attempted bombing of an airplane on Christmas Day because there was little public or congressional interest in its plan to close the facility, the paper said.

Obama ordered the widely maligned detention camp at the U.S. naval base in Cuba shut down shortly after taking office in January 2009. But his plans have been stymied by Congress, including some members of his own Democratic Party.

Former President George W. Bush’s administration opened the prison in January 2002 to hold and interrogate foreign captives suspected of links to terrorism.

There are now about 180 detainees. At its peak, the camp held about 780 detainees.

(Writing by Christopher Doering; Editing by Peter Cooney)

French searchers say crashed plane still unfound

The French accident investigation agency says a search in a new area of the Atlantic for the Air France plane that crashed en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris has turned up nothing.

The zone was located by analysing signals from the plane’s black boxes, which are still unrecovered.

The investigating agency said in a statement yesterday that nothing was found in the ocean depths.

The conclusion came just two days after the agency said the plane, which crashed June 1, 2009, could be found by Wednesday.

Investigators say they have decided to return to the original search zone, northwest of the last known airplane position while continuing to determine the accuracy of the black box signals, which long ago died out.

MJ fans to fly over court ”for justice” during Murray”s hearing

London, April 1 (ANI): A group of Michael Jackson loyalists is set to charter a plane and fly over LA to “demand justice” for late pop icon as his former personal physician appears in court.

These fans have collected 833pounds to rent an airplane that will carry the banner, “We demand justice for Michael Jackson”, reports the Daily Star.

The plane will fly over L.A. County Superior Court on April 5 as court proceeding begin with Dr. Conrad Murray accused of administering Propofol to MJ minutes before the King of Pop went into cardiac arrest and died last June.

Murray has pleaded not guilty to one count of involuntary manslaughter.

According to TMZ.com, MJ devotees will also present 100 roses to the late star”s mum Katherine Jackson to support her through the hearing and have raised cash to gift a locket to the singer”s daughter Paris who will be celebrating her 12th birthday on April 3. (ANI)

Musharraf terms his meeting with Saudi King a success

Lahore, Sep 7 (ANI): Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has said that his recent meeting with Saudi King Abdullah was a success.

“I was accorded full protocol during my visit to Saudi Arabia to meet King Abdullah, I deem him as my elder brother and can contact him whenever I want,” a private TV channel quoted Musharraf, as saying.

He said during his visit, he discussed the recent political situation of Pakistan at length with the Saudi king, adding that the king had concerns about the situation in Pakistan.

Talking to the channel, Musharraf said the army operation against the Taliban in Malakand had proven successful.

“The operation was undoubtedly successful. The Pakistan Army has always rendered sacrifices and played a vital role to safeguard the territorial integrity of the country,” he said.

Earlier, the ‘royal’ treatment being given to Musharraf during his Saudi Arabia visit has his opponents worried.

The special treatment has sparked speculations that Riyadh is trying to use its influence to ask the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) to shun its demand for Musharraf’s trial under the Article Six of the Constitution.

Sources said King Abdullah sent his special airplane to London to fetch Musharraf.

Reports regarding Saudi Arabia cracking its whip on the PML-N and other anti-Musharraf parties has probably forced PML-N to come out with clarifications. (ANI)

Musharraf’s ‘royal’ treatment in Saudi Arabia worries his opponents in Pak

Islamabad, Sep.2 (ANI): The ‘royal’ treatment being given to former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf during his Saudi Arabia visit has his opponents worried.

The special treatment has sparked speculations that Riyadh is trying to use its influence to ask the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) to shun its demand for Musharraf’s trial under the Article Six of the Constitution.

Sources said King Abdullah sent his special airplane to London to fetch Musharraf.

Reports regarding Saudi Arabia cracking its whip on the PML-N and other anti-Musharraf parties has probably forced PML-N to come out with clarificatiobns.

A PML-N spokesman denied reports regarding Saudi putting pressure on PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif.

“There has been no official message from the Saudi family to Mian Nawaz Sharif in this regard,” The Dawn quoted a PML-N spokesperson, as saying.

One of Musharraf’s close aides, Barrister Mohammad Ali Saif, who claims to be the former Army General’s spokesman, said the PML-N should think once again before demanding Musharraf’s prosecution, and see what kind of treatment he is receiving in Riyadh.

“The PML-N should see and understand how the former president is being treated by the Saudi government and forget about his (Musharraf) trial for treason” Saif said.

When asked that whether the Saudi Government has actually given Musharraf a guarantee of not being tried, Saif said : “I don’t know anything about this, but there is little possibility of Gen Musharraf facing trial only because the PML-N is asking for that.”

“I am not aware of this, but the way the former president is being treated in the kingdom means he cannot be touched in Pakistan,” he added. (ANI)

50yr-old Chinese woman planning to pull a plane with her pigtail!

New Delhi, Aug 24 (ANI): A Chinese woman, who is in her early 50s, has made plans to pull a plane using just her pigtail, after she used it to pull five cars, with a man sitting inside each, for a distance of 50 meters along a road.

Zhang Tingting, a native of Henan province, performed the feat on August 23 in Tongzhou district, Beijing, reports the China Daily.

Zhang, who will perform the airplane feat early next year, attributed her strength to the fact that she was well trained in Chinese Kungfu.

She says the art gave her mental and physical strength to pull off the stunt. (ANI)

Dad prefers cutting grass to watching an all-Williams Wimbledon final

London, July 2 (ANI): Richard Williams has said that he would rather cut the grass than watch the expected final at Wimbledon between his two daughters – Venus and Serena.

Venus and Serena are each one game away from a repeat of last year’s final, and if they both come through their games today, against Dinara Safina and Elena Dementieva respectively, their father will be on the first plane home.

Throughout their careers, Williams Senior has never wanted to watch his children fighting.

It is a good job too, as in last year’s final they were slamming 120mph serves into each other’s bodies and putting so much venom on their passing shots it was lucky nobody got hurt.

He hopes to applaud his girls to success one after the other on Centre Court this afternoon then head straight down to the travel agents and book his flight home.

“I’m sure it will be a rematch. I’ll go home because I can’t watch.

But I believe they will both definitely make it to the final. When they play each other I will never watch.

And I always tell the captain on the flight home when Venus and Serena are playing each other, ‘Please don’t tell me’,” the Daily Express quoted Richard, as saying.

“Last year, as soon as I got off the aircraft, I was walking through the terminal when someone said, ‘Heh, Venus beat her sister’.

“I would like to be back on that airplane again. That would be real good for me. It means I can drive my boat, I can get on my motorcycle, I can cut my grass – I love to cut my grass – and I can work around the house,” he said. (ANI)

What air travellers hate most while flying

Melbourne, June 26 (ANI): A survey of Australian travellers has revealed that dirty toilets, overweight passengers and rude flight attendants are among what the passengers hate the most while flying.

The Travel.com.au survey, which involved over 1700 Australian travellers, revealed flight delays as the top air travel grievance.

Other annoyances included chatterboxes, poor passenger hygiene, and reclining seats.

“The days when airplane food was the biggest bugbear of passengers are obviously gone – it didn’t even score a place in the list,” News.com.au quoted Travel.com.au’s general manager Lisa Ferrari as saying.

“Instead, nowadays it seems the biggest flying frustration comes before passengers have even boarded the plane,” she added.

The report further reveals that lack of information about a delayed flight was found to be the most annoying part for passengers.

“As far as I am concerned they can apologise for a delay all they like, but unless you tell me what’s going on and how long it’s going to take to fix it, I’m gonna (sic) get annoyed,” a survey respondent said.

The fourth most frustrating travel experience, according to air travellers, was to sit next to an overweight passenger who encroached on their own seats.

The findings reinforced the findings of a survey conducted by travel.com.au last year, which found 53 per cent of Australians thought obese people should have to purchase two economy class tickets if they couldn’t fit into one.

“Evidently this remains a contentious issue for Australian travellers,” Ferrari said.

She said that she also agreed with the 48 per cent of respondents who were frustrated by people who reclined their seats all the way back on short flights.

“Given that it can severely cut into your already limited seat space, I’d throw my support behind a decision by the airlines to regulate when you can and can’t recline your seats,” she said

“Extenuating circumstances aside, I’m just not sure it’s necessary on an hour flight,” she added.

Australian Travellers’ top 8 Flying Frustrations

1. Flight delays

2. People putting their seats back during short flights

3. Being trapped in your seat by a sleeping passenger

4. Overweight passengers who encroach on your own seat

5. The poor hygiene of fellow passengers

6. Being stuck next to a passenger who won’t stop talking

7. Dirty toilets

8. Rude flight attendants (ANI)

New aeroplane seat designs give sleepy travellers more room

Melbourne, June 23 (ANI): Sleep while you fly – that’s the inspiration behind a new range of airplane seats designed by a British designer.

Emil Jacob believes while it isn’t possible to extend the horizontal space in a plane, going vertical might just do the trick for passengers.

The source of inspiration for Jacob, a financial data analyst who also runs Jacob-Innovations LLC, was his own experience trying to sleep in long flights.

“I got the idea for the new designs from my own lack of sleep on long flights,” News.com.au quoted him as saying.

The novel designs involve elevating alternate rows of seats to give passengers more room to lean back in economy class, and the space to lie down in business class, in what Jacob sees as a move that will benefit both travellers and airlines.

He said: “Passengers and airlines will both win from using the new designs which make new space available on planes. Passengers will have more space in each of the various models and airlines will be able to offer better accommodations at better prices.”

Airbus’s communications manager, Mary Anne Greczyn, acknowledged the designer’s effort saying, ” This is the kind of out-of-the-box thinking Airbus really likes to encourage.” (ANI)

Stricken Air France plane was in agony for minutes

Stricken Air France plane was in agony for minutes Hamburg – A German aviation expert, analyzing sparse details provided so far by Air France, gave an account Wednesday suggesting several minutes of severe technical problems by the Air France Airbus before it crashed into the Atlantic Ocean early Monday.

In an interview with the German Press Agency dpa, aviation expert Heinrich Grossbongardt reviewed information which Air France has provided and which aviation experts were now analyzing.

He described a four-minute time span between 0210 and 0214 GMT in which the A330 plane apparently experienced severe technical problems before all contact was lost.

At 0210, the plane’s system reported that the crew had turned off the automatic pilot in order to fly the plane manually.

“Then there were for a span of two to three minutes a flood of malfunction messages: the navigation equipment had collapsed, the image on the onboard monitors was gone, and other things,” Grossbongardt said.

The last information sent was at 0214 GMT: “The cabin pressure had dropped.

“That was the last report that was automatically transmitted from the airplane via satellite to company headquarters,” he said.(dpa)

Japanese man sets world record for longest paper plane flight

London, May 19 (ANI): A Japanese engineer has created a new world record by managing to keep his paper airplane aloft for 27.9 seconds.

Takuo Toda, who is the chairman of Japan Origami Airplane Association, said that his achievement was merely the next step in his ambition of launching a paper plane from space.

Toda had performed his feat at a competition in Hiroshima Prefecture in April and it has now been confirmed by Guinness World Records as the longest ever flight by a paper plane.

“I had thought that the world record was impossible to break, but the key to breaking the record is how high you fly it,” the Daily Telegraph quoted him as saying.

The plane is made from a single sheet of folded paper with no cuts, measuring 10 cm from tip to tail.

He plans to use the same shape to try to break his own record at another event for paper plane enthusiasts in September, but his ultimate aim, remains having one of his aircraft launched from the space shuttle.

“Thirty years ago, I saw a space shuttle – with a similar shape to a paper airplane – returning to Earth,” he said.

Toda, who traces his hobby back to the two years he spent convalescing after a climbing accident while at university, claims to have had made a paper plane with an almost identical triangular configuration three or four years before NASA unveiled its shuttle.

“I thought it would be possible for a paper aircraft to do the same thing, but back then no-one would listen seriously to my ideas,” he said.

“If it is proven that a paper plane can re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere and glide back down safely then the scientific community could gain very valuable data about aerodynamics.

“That knowledge could even lead to improvements in the design of spacecraft in the future as it would prove that even ultra-light materials are able to withstand the demands of the upper atmosphere,” he added. (ANI)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

‘Smart turbine blades’ to improve wind power

Washington, May 3 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have developed a technique that uses sensors and computational software to constantly monitor forces exerted on wind turbine blades, a step toward improving efficiency by adjusting for rapidly changing wind conditions.

The research, by engineers at Purdue University and Sandia National Laboratories, is part of an effort to develop a smarter wind turbine structure

“The ultimate goal is to feed information from sensors into an active control system that precisely adjusts components to optimize efficiency,” said Purdue doctoral student Jonathan White, who is leading the research with Douglas Adams, a professor of mechanical engineering and director of Purdue’s Center for Systems Integrity.

The system also could help improve wind turbine reliability by providing critical real-time information to the control system to prevent catastrophic wind turbine damage from high winds.

The engineers embedded sensors called uniaxial and triaxial accelerometers inside a wind turbine blade as the blade was being built.

The blade is now being tested on a research wind turbine at the US Department of Agriculture’s Agriculture Research Service laboratory in Bushland, Texas.

Such sensors could be instrumental in future turbine blades that have “control surfaces” and simple flaps like those on an airplane’s wings to change the aerodynamic characteristics of the blades for better control.

Because these flaps would be changed in real time to respond to changing winds, constant sensor data would be critical.

Research findings show that using a trio of sensors and “estimator model” software developed by White accurately reveals how much force is being exerted on the blades.

“You want to be able to control the generator or the pitch of the blades to optimize energy capture by reducing forces on the components in the wind turbine during excessively high winds and increase the loads during low winds. In addition to improving efficiency, this should help improve reliability,” said Adams.

“We envision smart systems being a potentially huge step forward for turbines,” said Sandia’s Rumsey.

“There is still a lot of work to be done, but we believe the payoff will be great. Our goal is to provide the electric utility industry with a reliable and efficient product. We are laying the groundwork for the wind turbine of the future,” he added.

Purdue and Sandia have applied for a provisional patent on the technique. (ANI)

NASA spacecraft provides scientists with 3D view of powerful solar explosions

Washington, April 15 (ANI): Twin NASA spacecraft have provided scientists with their first view of the speed, trajectory, and three-dimensional shape of powerful explosions from the sun known as coronal mass ejections, or CMEs.

This new capability will dramatically enhance scientists’ ability to predict if and how these solar tsunamis could affect Earth.

When directed toward our planet, these ejections can be breathtakingly beautiful and yet potentially cause damaging effects worldwide.

The brightly colored phenomena known as auroras – more commonly called Northern or Southern Lights – are examples of Earth’s upper atmosphere harmlessly being disturbed by a CME.

However, ejections can produce a form of solar cosmic rays that can be hazardous to spacecraft, astronauts and technology on Earth.

Space weather produces disturbances in electromagnetic fields on Earth that can induce extreme currents in wires, disrupting power lines and causing wide-spread blackouts.

These sun storms can interfere with communications between ground controllers and satellites and with airplane pilots flying near Earth’s poles.

These ejections carry billions of tons of plasma into space at thousands of miles per hour.

This plasma, which carries with it some of the magnetic field from the corona, can create a large, moving disturbance in space that produces a shock wave.

NASA’s twin Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, spacecraft are providing the unique scientific tool to study these ejections as never before.

Launched in October 2006, STEREO’s nearly identical observatories can make simultaneous observations of these ejections of plasma and magnetic energy that originate from the sun’s outer atmosphere, or corona.

The spacecraft are stationed at different vantage points. One leads Earth in its orbit around the sun, while the other trails the planet.

Using three-dimensional observations, solar physicists can examine a CME’s structure, velocity, mass, and direction in the corona while tracking it through interplanetary space.

These measurements can help determine when a CME will reach Earth and predict how much energy it will deliver to our magnetosphere, which is Earth’s protective magnetic shield.

“Before this unique mission, measurements and the subsequent data of a CME observed near the sun had to wait until the ejections arrived at Earth three to seven days later,” said Angelos Vourlidas, a solar physicist at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington.

“Now, we can see a CME from the time it leaves the solar surface until it reaches Earth, and we can reconstruct the event in 3D directly from the images,” he added. (ANI)

Israel scrambles jets after incoming flight fails to make contact

Tel Aviv – Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport declared a state of emergency Saturday afternoon, and the air force scrambled fighter planes, after an incoming flight lost contact with the control tower, sparking fears it had been hijacked. The incoming plane, a Delta Airlines flight from New York with 105 passengers on board, managed to let the fighters know that technical problems had prevented it from contacting the Ben Gurion control tower, Israeli media reported.

The flight, escorted by two fighters, landed safely at a side runway and no injuries or damage were reported.

Incoming flights to Ben Gurion Airport, located east of Tel Aviv, must conduct a communications check at several points on the way to Israel, to confirm the airplane has not been hijacked.

Israel’s transport ministry will investigate the incident next week.(dpa)

S and P places Boeing on CreditWatch

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Standard and Poor’s on Friday placed its ratings on Boeing Co (BA.N) and its wholly owned finance subsidiary Boeing Capital Corp. on CreditWatch with negative implications after the aircraft maker said it would cut production or delay production increases on certain widebody planes next year.

The CreditWatch includes the A-plus long-term corporate credit rating on both entities. At the same time, the rating agency affirmed the A-1 short-term ratings on both entities, which are not on CreditWatch.

“The CreditWatch placement follows Boeing’s announcement that it will be reducing production or delaying production increases on certain widebody aircraft next year and will be taking a related charge in the first quarter of 2009,” Standard and Poor’s credit analyst Christopher DeNicolo wrote.

Boeing warned on Thursday that first-quarter profit would be slashed by lower-than-expected airplane prices and production cuts on its lucrative widebody planes as cash-strapped airlines deferred purchases.

The world’s No. 2 plane maker, along with rival Airbus, is being hit hard as carriers and cargo operators struggle with the economic downturn. So far this year, Boeing’s order book shows more cancellations than orders for jets.

Because of the drastic dip in demand, Boeing said production of its 777 minijumbo will fall to five from seven per month beginning in June 2010, and that it will delay previous plans to modestly increase production of its new 747-8 jumbo and 767 widebody models. No changes are planned for its best-selling single-aisle 737.

(Reporting by Ilaina Jonas; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

Sandra Bullock has special seat-belts for pet pooches

Washington, Apr 10 (ANI): Hollywood actress Sandra Bullock has apparently designed special seat belts for her pet dogs so that they don’t get hurt while riding in the car.

According to her friends, the ‘Speed’ star fears that her pooches, Ruby and Poppy, will be hurt in a collision, after her car was struck by a drunk driver recently.

And that incident, coupled with a plane disaster, which cost her pets a decade ago, has made her strap her dogs up.

“More than 10 years ago, all her dogs died when they rode cargo on an airplane. She was devastated and vowed never to let anything bad happen to her pets again,” Contactmusic quoted a source as telling Star magazine.

“A lot of people think she’s overdoing it, but she doesn’t care. At least she knows her dogs are safe,” the source added. (ANI)

Light aircraft crashes in Indonesia’s Papua

Jakarta – A light airplane crashed Thursday morning in Indonesia’s easternmost province of Papua, and all four of its crew members were feared killed, news reports and officials said.

The Avia Star aircraft was en route from the capital Jayapura to Wamena district, carrying cargo and four crew members. It crashed at about 7 am (2200 GMT Wednesday) on Pike Mountain, said Papua police chief Bagus Eko Danto.

Bagus told Elshinta private radio that so far two bodies had been founded and a search was underway for the other two. He said the plane broke into pieces.

The cause of the accident was not immediately known.

It was the second fatal air crash this week in Indonesia. On Monday, a Fokker F-27 belonging to the Indonesian Air Force crashed in West Java’s Bandung airport, killing all 24 people on board. (dpa)

US media publish first photos of returning war dead

Washington – Newspapers on Monday published the first photographs of the flag draped casket of a killed member of the military being returned to the United States since a ban on the images went into effect in 1991.

A military honour guard was seen carrying the casket of Air Force Staff Sergeant Phillip Myers off an airplane at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware late Sunday. He was killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan on Saturday.

Images of returning war dead have become a contentious issue during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan with allegations the government was attempting to hide the dead. The Pentagon had instituted the ban under then-president George HW Bush in 1991 during the first Gulf War in an effort to shield the privacy of military families.

President Barack Obama lifted the ban and the family of the deceased are now given the option of opening the arrival ceremony to the media.

Flying car takes off successfully

Washington, March 19 (ANI): An American company has successfully tested its “flying car”, which took flight and landed at an upstate New York air strip recently.

According to a report in Boston Herald, the “roadable aircraft” was made by Terrafugia Inc., which is based in Woburn.

“This breakthrough changes the world of personal mobility. It’s what aviation enthusiasts have been striving for since 1918,” said Carl Dietrich, CEO of Terrafugia Inc.

Media members were not present to witness the test flight, the culmination of six months of testing.

But, Dietrich will show a video of the flight and display the Transition aircraft at the Museum of Science.

Terrafugia claims that the vehicle can fly up to 400 miles on a single tank of gas at a cruising speed of 115 mph, and can also drive highway speeds on the road.

The vehicle has front-wheel drive, a propeller and, with the wings folded up, fits into a standard household garage. The engine takes unleaded gasoline, the kind that’s pumped at any service station.

Some have called the design a cross between a Volkswagen Beetle and the Mini Cooper.

The two-seat vehicle is designed to take off and land at airports and drive on any road. The transition from airplane to car takes the pilot less than 30 seconds.

According to Frank Berardino, president of GRA Inc., a Penn.-based aviation consulting firm, “There’s always been a dream for a vehicle like this.” (ANI)