Flintoff’s decision to reject ECB contract will benefit Chennai Super Kings

Sydney, Sep 18 (ANI): The Indian Premier League would be benefited after Andrew Flintoff rejected the ECB contract, said Chennai Super Kings, the team the England all rounder plays for in the IPL.

Chennai Super Kings manager VB Chandrasekhar said Flintoff’s decision to reject the contract would greatly benefit Chennai, but only if he was fit.

“But the thing is,” he said, “it’s not just about what a cricketer can give on the field. ‘Fred gives us a full package – in terms of marketing he is very valuable. Last time he was of great value to our dressing room, even when he wasn’t playing; someone of that aura can lift the team,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted him, as saying.

The development comes amid bizarre reasoning by his manager, Andrew Chandler, that Flintoff rejected the ECB contract because he might have to go “bungee jumping”.

With Flintoff’s troubled injury history and the unproven results of his radical treatment in Dubai, any further damage to his knee could be career-threatening and he may be forced to pay for his own treatment.

The Super Kings pay Flintoff 1.55 million dollars a season and expressed sympathy with his plight, saying they may pay for rehabilitation depending on the circumstances, but did not guarantee it.

“There is a rule that says if it is a pre-existing injury, then the IPL team is not liable,” Chandrasekhar said.

“If you have taken a player in and if it is a serious injury and has occurred during the IPL, sometimes you have to weigh that up. We pay him on a match-to-match basis,” he added.

Under the IPL regulations, players must declare previous injuries, but Chennai is fully aware of the well-publicised knee problem that kept Flintoff out of the fourth Ashes Test.

Flintoff’s IPL future after 2010 is also in doubt, as he requires a No-Objection Certificate from the ECB. Granting him one would set a dangerous precedent for the board, as other players could follow his lead – precisely what the certificate is designed to prevent. (ANI)

Pak editorial claims RAW hand in funding Baitullah Mehsud

Peshawar, Aug.24 (ANI): An editorial in a Pakistani daily has claimed that intelligence outfits of India and Afghanistan funded late Tehrik-e-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud.

It says that his death in South Waziristan has sparked off a battle among various Taliban warlords to control two billion rupees worth of Taliban funds and own arms and ammunition worth another million rupees.

In an article for the Frontier Post, Shumaila Raja claims there has been a constant flow of tens of millions of dollars from foreign enemy sources that keeps the Taliban machine rolling.

According to Raja, cash pipelines for Mehsud were sustained by Indian external intelligence agency RAW and the Afghan intelligence agency. He further claims that Mehsud was paying Rs.600 million to his fighters every year.

According to Raja, extensive reactionary attacks to Mehsud’s death are inevitable given the aura that he created around himself in the wake of the assassination of former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in December 2007.

Raja is of the view that Baitullah Mehsud’s murder by a drone strike in South Waziristan could further inflame internal developments in Pakistan.

“The battle for the control of the Rs.3 billion treasure erupted within two days of Baitullah’s death,” Raja says, adding that one occasion when a Taliban commander informed Baitullah about the huge monetary offers he was receiving from the Pakistan Government, Baitullah said: “Money is not with the Government of Pakistan, money is with me, tell me how much you want.”

Officials have also conceded that Mehsud’s money power was such that it was difficult to buy off his key commanders. (ANI)

Ganesha Chaturthi festival charms devotees across the country

Bhubaneshwar/ Bangalore, Aug.23 (ANI): On the occasion of Ganesha Chaturthi (birthday), many devotees in different parts of the country like to pay their special obeisance to Lord Ganesha in distinct ways.

In Bhubaneshwar, an artist has sculpted Lord Ganesha idols from soap for the 10-day annual Ganesha Chaturthi which commenced on Sunday (Aug.23).

Rao sculpted different kinds of idols of Lord Ganesha to exhibit them during the festival. Till date, he has sculpted 36 idols with soap.

“Ganesh festival has arrived and so I am sculpting different models of Lord Ganesha from different soaps. During Ganesha festival people including kids will come to watch these idols. I will teach the art free of cost to kids who are interested to learn,” said L. Eshwara Rao, an artisan.

In Bangalore, a man is running a museum where he has exhibited a wide variety of Ganesha idols for people.

S.Tyagarajan is a collector of Ganesha idols and has put on display 2,000 different idols of the deity in his museum.

He started collecting Ganesha idols after the death of his wife who was a devotee of Lord Ganesha.

Tyagarajan procured some of the idols from his friends living overseas. He says that people feel rejuvenated after visiting the museum.

“I see in everybody’s face who come to see my museum happiness. And they say that there is some sort of positive energy and positive aura when they come inside the museum. And some of them say that here they get a sort of feeling that they felt when they meditated when they come in museum,” said S.Tyagarajan, owner of a museum of Lord Ganesha.

Ganesha Chaturthi is one of the most important festivals of Hindus in India.

On the concluding day of the festival, the idols are carried in grand processions and immersed in rivers or seas.

Lord Ganesha, is one of the most revered Gods of Hindus, and is worshipped at the beginning of every auspicious occasion.

Ganesha, as the God of knowledge is described as “Vinayaka”and as remover of obstacles he is called “Vighanharta”. He is worshipped at the beginning of every auspicious occasion for blessings of luck and success.

The son of Shiva and Parvati, Ganesha has an elephantine countenance with a curved trunk and big ears, and a huge pot-bellied body of a human being.

He is revered as the Lord of success and destroyer of evils and obstacles besides being worshipped as the God of education, knowledge, wisdom and wealth.

Legend has it once Goddess Parvati, while bathing, created a boy out of the dirt of her body and assigned him the task of guarding the entrance to her bathroom. When Lord Shiva, her husband returned, he was surprised to find a stranger denying him access, and struck off the boy’s head in rage.

Parvati broke down in utter grief and to soothe her, Shiva sent out his squad (gana) to fetch the head of any sleeping being who was facing the north. The company found a sleeping elephant and brought back its severed head, which was then attached to the body of the boy. Shiva restored its life and made him the leader (pati) of his troops.

Hence, his name ‘Ganapati’. Shiva also bestowed a boon that people would worship him and invoke his name before undertaking any venture. By Sarda Lahangir / Jaipal Sharma (ANI)

Jackson’s Aussie guitarist describes him as ‘beautiful spirit’

Melbourne, July 5 (ANI): Michael Jackson’s Australian guitarist has spoken about her grief over the death of the singer, describing him as “a beautiful spirit.”

Orianthi Panagaris, of Hawthorn, the blonde guitarist who featured prominently in the final video of Jackson Los Angeles rehearsal before his death, is due to perform at the King of Pop’s public memorial next week.

The South Australian-born musician had been rehearsing with the star six days a week for the last three months, reports Adelaide Now.

“He had this wonderful aura about him, a beautiful spirit. It’s been a surreal time working with him and it’s devastating what’s happened,” the Daily Telegraph quoted Orianthi as saying.

She continued: “We practised so much and knew the songs so well. Because we rehearsed so much . . . we knew the parts like the back of our hands.”

Orianthi’s mother, Sue Panagaris, told the Sunday Mail her daughter was very upset by Jackson’s death like his other fans all over the world.

She said: “She’s very sad at the moment. It’s not that she is disappointed that she won’t get to play with him, she’s just so sad that he has died.

“She said he was such a wonderful person and she wishes the world had gotten to know the same person she had come to know over the three months they had been working together.

“She said it was the best experience of her life and she’s just so very sad that the world didn’t see what the band saw every day. The world has missed out.” (ANI)

Consumers being misled on nutritional benefits of high fructose sweeteners, natural sugars: Experts

Washington, July 1 (ANI): Consumers are being misled on the nutritional differences between high fructose sweeteners and natural sugars, say experts.

Condemning the Starbucks and other brands decision to drop high fructose corn syrup from certain products, experts say that both the sweetners are nutritionally the same.

A Washington Post health reporter Jennifer LaRue Huget wrote: “…most nutrition experts now agree there’s really little material difference” between high fructose corn syrup and other caloric sweeteners.”

She added: “They all deliver about 15-20 calories per teaspoon, and the human body appears not to know one from the other.”

Food industry critic Dr. Walter Willett, of Harvard University’s School of Public Health, also wrote in a Chicago Tribune article that recent product reformulations a “marketing distraction.”

Another well-known food industry critic, Marion Nestle, commented that this type of product reformulation is a “calorie distractor.”

“The irony is that white table sugar – formerly a leading target of ‘eat less’ messages – suddenly has a health aura. Marketers have wasted no time moving in to use that aura to sell the same old products,” he said.

Audrae Erickson, president of the Corn Refiners Association, said: “Consumers are being misled into thinking that there are nutritional differences between high fructose corn syrup and sugar, when in fact they are nutritionally the same. Whether from cane, beets, or corn, a sugar is a sugar. They all contain four calories per gram.”

Erickson added: “Switching out a kind of corn sugar for table sugar is not for health and it is not for science. It is for quarterly earnings. It is unfortunate that consumers are being duped by these marketing gimmicks – gimmicks which may result in higher food prices at checkout.” (ANI)

England needs Flintoff’s ‘aura’ to win Ashes 2009, says Gilchrist

London, June 24 (ANI): Former Australian vice captain Adam Gilchrist, who was acknowledged as the greatest wicketkeeper-batsman in the history of the game, has said that he struggled to regain confidence in his batting after the battering he took from Andrew Flintoff four years ago, and “the seeds of doubt” that were planted in his mind took 12 months to settle down.

Gilchrist believes that Flintoff has paid a steep price for his heroics in that series. Whether it was the after-effects of bowling 14 overs off the reel to halt Australia’s charge at the Oval, or whether the never-ending spin cycle of the international game has caught up with him.

“To this day, Flintoff is still carrying the after-effects. Watching from a distance, it seems that he has never been able to get into a full stride again,” The Telegraph quoted Gilchrist, as saying.

“On the occasions when I have faced him since, he still had that unique something that makes him so awkward, especially for a left-hander. But it’s a physical thing now. He has been restricted by his injuries.”

If there was one image that summed up the ferocity of England’s attack in that series, it was that of Flintoff coming around the wicket at Gilchrist, The Telegraph reports.

“Every team relies on its big players. When Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath went missing for us, we came back to the field. And this summer, you would say that Australia will be relying on Ricky Ponting and Mitchell Johnson, while England have Kevin Pietersen and Flintoff. They are the big-ticket items,” Gilchrist said.

“What I admire about Flintoff is that he is in your face but not recklessly so. And he just creates the aura that he’s in control. Whether you nick one through the slips or you get a good shot away, he still has this look in his eyes and his demeanour suggests that it’s all part of a big plan.

“I’ve been fortunate to see that sort of aura at close range with a Warne or a McGrath, who generally exude those qualities, and Freddie is similar,” he added. (ANI)

England needs Flintoff’s ‘aura’ to win Ashes 2009, says Gilchrist

London, June 24 (ANI): Former Australian vice captain Adam Gilchrist, who was acknowledged as the greatest wicketkeeper-batsman in the history of the game, has said that he struggled to regain confidence in his batting after the battering he took from Andrew Flintoff four years ago, and “the seeds of doubt” that were planted in his mind took 12 months to settle down.

Gilchrist believes that Flintoff has paid a steep price for his heroics in that series. Whether it was the after-effects of bowling 14 overs off the reel to halt Australia’s charge at the Oval, or whether the never-ending spin cycle of the international game has caught up with him.

“To this day, Flintoff is still carrying the after-effects. Watching from a distance, it seems that he has never been able to get into a full stride again,” The Telegraph quoted Gilchrist, as saying.

“On the occasions when I have faced him since, he still had that unique something that makes him so awkward, especially for a left-hander. But it’s a physical thing now. He has been restricted by his injuries.”

If there was one image that summed up the ferocity of England’s attack in that series, it was that of Flintoff coming around the wicket at Gilchrist, The Telegraph reports.

“Every team relies on its big players. When Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath went missing for us, we came back to the field. And this summer, you would say that Australia will be relying on Ricky Ponting and Mitchell Johnson, while England have Kevin Pietersen and Flintoff. They are the big-ticket items,” Gilchrist said.

“What I admire about Flintoff is that he is in your face but not recklessly so. And he just creates the aura that he’s in control. Whether you nick one through the slips or you get a good shot away, he still has this look in his eyes and his demeanour suggests that it’s all part of a big plan.

“I’ve been fortunate to see that sort of aura at close range with a Warne or a McGrath, who generally exude those qualities, and Freddie is similar,” he added. (ANI)

When Becks almost lost his Motorola deal

London, May 30 (ANI): England football star David Beckham risked hanging up on a multi-million-pound sponsorship deal with Motorola when he was caught playing with a rival iPhone.ccording to the Daily Star, the England ace has starred in a worldwide ad campaign for Motorola’s new 1,400 pound Aura.

But during a lunch alone in Milan, he was found twiddling with an iPhone and had to whip under the table when he realised he was being photographed. (ANI)

Avaya GlobalConnect sees business in newer verticals

Mumbai, May 20 (ANI/Business Wire India): Avaya GlobalConnect, India’s leading enterprise business communications solutions provider today unveiled its strategic roadmap in India for 2009.

The company announced its renewed focus on technology solutions for the BFSI, Manufacturing, Healthcare, Hospitality and other verticals.

Aiding this move is the introduction of Avaya’s new technology solution, Avaya AuraT, a breakthrough architecture that easily integrates communications across multi-vendor, multi-location and multi-modal businesses.

Anil Nair, the newly appointed Managing Director of Avaya GlobalConnect, said on the occasion, “Our strategy of verticalization is of course helping us reach out to more domestic customers and expand our market base. This market traction is now fuelled by the fact that in the current economic downturn, Avaya Aura protects investments made, simplifies complex multi-vendor networks, reduces infrastructure costs and quickly delivers voice, video, messaging, presence and web applications to employees everywhere.”

This announcement coincides with Avaya GlobalConnect’s biggest annual three-day customer event iComm 2009 being held in Mumbai from May 20-22, 2009. This will serve as a perfect platform for vendors and customers to connect and demonstrate technology and solutions that spell business benefits to enterprises.

iComm 2009 will also showcase the new solution Avaya Aura among other emerging technology solutions and trends in customer service for enterprises across verticals. It will give industry professionals a real-time experience of the power of communications solutions and technology.

Avaya GlobalConnect has been recognized as the Market Leader for Enterprise Telephony and Contact Centers for seven years in a row by Frost and Sullivan. A subsidiary of Avaya Inc., the company has maintained leadership in other areas as well including Unified Communications. (ANI)

Becks warns Blues about Carlos Ancelotti’s hairdryer treatment

London, May 19 (ANI): Former England captain David Beckham has told Chelsea’s stars to beware the Carlo Ancelotti hairdryer treatment.

The England midfielder warned that Ancelotti could deliver Alex Ferguson-style blasts at anyone who does not perform.

“Ancelotti has a great presence, a great aura about him – all the top managers have that. He is a low key, private person. But there is another side to him. While I have never had the ‘hairdryer’ type treatment from him I have seen it from him. When he wants to get his point across, believe me, he does it in no uncertain terms!”, The Sun quoted Beckham, as saying.

“He is a manager who commands and demands respect,” Becks added. (ANI)

Magnetic therapy to treat chronic migraine developed

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): A new therapy that uses magnetic pulses has shown promise in treating chronic migraine sufferers, say researchers.

The new therapy is called transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS.

During the study conducted in rats, the University of California, San Francisco researchers focused on understanding the mechanism of action of TMS therapy — how the treatment interacted with the brain to produce the pain-free outcomes of patients.

They identified potential opportunities to enhance treatment strategies in patients.

The study team noted that factors such as time and peak intensity of stimulation may be important components in the brain’s response to TMS.

“The data demonstrate a biological rationale for the use of TMS to treat migraine aura,” said Peter Goadsby, lead investigator of the study, professor and director of the UCSF Headache Centre.

“We found that cortical spreading depression, known as CSD and the animal correlate of migraine aura, was susceptible to TMS therapy, with the wave of neuronal excitation blocked on over 50 percent of occasions,” he added.

The study showed that migraine aura, a condition in which a variety of mostly visual sensations come before or accompany the pain of a migraine attack, responds to magnetic stimulation.

The magnetic pulses block the wave of neuronal excitation, which is a biological system through which neurons become stimulated to fire.

TMS creates a focused magnetic pulse that passes noninvasively through the skull, inducing an electric current to disrupt the abnormal brain waves believed to be associated with migraine, including CSD. CSD in humans precedes migraine with aura.

The researchers hope that the findings give neurologists a potential new treatment option for migraine sufferers unable to tolerate medication.

The findings were presented during the annual American Academy of Neurology scientific meeting in Seattle. (ANI)

Pakistan’s parliament moves to implement governance agenda

Islamabad, April 10 (IANS) Pakistan’s political equations are set for a sea-change with the lower house of parliament Friday moving to implement the governance agenda, which envisages power being centred in the prime minister’s office, that the ruling party and its now estranged partner had agreed on before elections last year.

The National Assembly Friday unanimously approved a resolution to form a committee for implementing the Charter of Democracy (CoD), with Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani saying the nation and political forces should unite to resolve issues.

‘We will ensure the supremacy of parliament, will restore constitution of 1973 in its original form and eliminate amendments made during dictatorship,’ Gilani maintained.

Once this happens, key powers will be transferred back to the prime minister’s office from the presidency, which will then play only a ceremonial role.

These include the powers to appoint the service chiefs and the Supreme Court chief justice and also to dismiss the federal and provincial governments and dissolve the National Assembly and the provincial legislatures.

More importantly, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), which had quit the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP)-led federal coalition over the non-implementation of the CoD, could well return to the government.

The National Assembly resolution came a day after President Asif Zardari Thursday urged Gilani to ‘take appropriate steps to fulfill the promise made in my address to parliament by urgently initiating the process for implementing the Charter of Democracy (CoD) and repeal of the 17th Amendment’.

‘How best to implement the CoD is, of course, the prerogative of parliament to decide,’ Zardari said in a letter to Gilani, his first since assuming office.

Describing the charter as ‘our compass in the rough sea and a guide to the future’, Zardari said it was ‘the goal of our political endeavour and a beacon of light towards which we should seek to move’.

Former prime ministers Benzair Bhutto of the PPP and Nawaz Sharif of the PML-N had agreed on the CoD in October 2007 ahead of the general elections originally scheduled for January 2008.

Bhutto’s assassination Dec 27, 2007 pushed the polls back by a month and saw the PPP and the PML-N posting a one-two finish.

The two parties, along with smaller regional groupings formed a coalition but walked out when Zardari reneged on the promises made in the governance agenda.

One of these related to restoring Supreme Court chief justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry and the other apex and high court judges then president Pervez Musharraf had sacked after imposing an emergency Nov 3, 2007.

The other related to the repeal of 17th constitutional amendment that Musharraf had pushed through in 2003 stripping the prime minister’s office of its key powers.

The judges were restored last month after Nawaz Sharif led a high-voltage lawyers’ ‘long march’ to Islamabad.

The protest also saw Gilani emerging with the aura of a statesman at the cost of Zardari, who gave in on the issue only after the prime minister and army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kiyani read him the riot act.

On March 22, the day Chaudhry and the other sacked judges were reinstated, Gilani and Sharif met for lunch at the latter’s country villa on the outskirts of Lahore.

Thereafter, Gilani formally invited the PML-N to rejoin the government, but Sharif has said this would not happen ‘for the moment’.

England has still got a lot to prove: Ferdinand

London, Apr 1 (ANI): Defender Rio Ferdinand says England has “still got a lot to prove” despite their flying start under coach Fabio Capello which has put them on course for the 2010 World Cup finals.

England will move another step to achieving that goal if they achieve their fifth successive victory in their qualifying group by defeating Ukraine at Wembley on Wednesday night.

“We are a work in progress. We’ve won four games in our qualifying group. Loads of teams around the world win four games on the bounce. It doesn’t make us a great team. We know that we’ve still got a lot to prove,” the Daily Express quoted Ferdinand, as saying.

“We’re not in a position where the manager can say ‘Well done, you’ve achieved this and that’. We have not achieved anything,” he added.

Ferdinand admits the England camp is a happier place to be when results are favourable and how the “aura” surrounding Capello means the players are keen to make an impression.

He revealed Capello is not afraid to put his point across, adding: “Fabio is out on the training pitch and very vocal. He is very direct and straight in saying this is what I want, this is how it is going to be.”

“He’s like that on a one-to-one basis as well. He does more in a group situation but if he sees something out on the pitch, he’s not shy about grabbing you and telling you what he wants,” Ferdinand said. (ANI)

Aniston’s $56,000 hair styling is worth it, claim experts

New York, Mar 6 (ANI): Jennifer Aniston’s 56,000 dollars a week pay out to bring her hairstylist along on her ‘Marley and Me’ Europe tour might have raised many eyebrows, but elite stylists have claimed that such a fee is totally worth it.

Legendary hair stylist Edward Tricomi, co-founder of the elite Warren Tricomi salons, says that such a jaw-dropping sum for hair like Aniston’s is worth every penny.

“You can’t put any price on it – it’s priceless,” the New York Daily News quoted Tricomi as saying.

Tricomi even likened Aniston and her pricey locks to a farmer, who might need a 4,000 dollars part to repair his tractor.

He said: “For celebrities, hair, make-up and stylists are exactly like that tractor part. They are the ones who create that aura for the celebrity and her look. These people are much in demand, so they’re worth every single penny they get – and more.”

Fellow stylist Philip Pelusi seconded Tricomi’s opinion by saying: “The most important accessory that you own is your hair.”

He further said that he “can understand” why some stylists charge so much to travel with a star.

“It’s not that the hairdresser wants to overcharge, but they need to make up what they lose in the salon,” he said.

Tricomi also pointed out that stylists like Chris McMillan, who is Jennifer Aniston’s mane man, are originators and not imitators, and their styles are the ones which are copied around the world.

“We’re the people who are creating the trends. It’s short-lived and other people collect on that,” he said.

Talking of some stylists’ astronomical fees, Pelusi said: “Even I’ve cringed on occasion.”

But, in his opinion, McMillan’s fee is not outrageous, and so believes Tricomi.

“I know mostly everybody would say this is really crazy, but most people don’t have a job like this,” said Tricomi. (ANI)

Migraine, stroke and heart attacks may be genetically linked

Washington, February 17 (ANI): A group of American scientists have set out to determine whether a gene variant may affect the link between migraine and stroke or heart attacks.

Dr. Markus Schurks, of the Division of Preventive Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, revealed that the study on 25,000 women look at the genetic variant called the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) D/I polymorphism.

The study’s author said that the women answered a questionnaire about their history of migraines and migraines with aura.

Aura is usually described as visual disturbances like flashing lights or geometric patterns, according to background information in a research article published in the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

A total of 4,577 women reported a history of migraine and of those, 1,275 had migraine with aura.

Schurks said that 625 strokes and heart attacks were reported 12 years after the start of the study.

The study did not find a link between the gene variant and migraine, migraine with aura, stroke or heart attacks.

But women who had migraine with aura and also were carriers of certain genotypes, called the DD and the DI genotypes, had double the risk of stroke and heart attacks.

On the other hand, the subjects who had migraine with aura, and were carriers of a third genotype called the II genotype, were not at increased risk.

Schurks cautioned that the relationship was identified with very little information, and must be tested in other studies to determine if it is real.

“The complex relationship among this gene variant, migraine, stroke and heart disease has been the focus of many studies and the results have been controversial. Getting to the bottom of whether there is a connection and why may help to develop ways to prevent issues like stroke and heart disease, which are leading causes of death in the United States,” says the study author. (ANI)

German woman tells of “horror house” stay with creepy internet friend

German woman tells of Wellington – A German woman who flew to New Zealand to meet a man who wooed her on the internet with eloquent emails and poetry told a newspaper Tuesday of her time in a “horror house” with a stranger who was nothing like her online friend.

“He was quite intellectual and he knew the way to my heart,” the 36-year-old musician and drama teacher from Leipzig, who identified herself only as Maja, told the Otago Daily Times.

She said she realized her mistake as soon as she landed at Dunedin airport to meet the man she had formed an internet relationship with in October through his MySpace page. He was not the 33-year-old PhD student he had pretended to be, but an unkempt, unemployed man of 54 years.

“He had such a creepy aura,” she said. “I was in shock.”

Not knowing what to do, and having spent all her money on the fare to New Zealand, she went with him to his house.

“His home was really a horror house, I would say,” she told the paper. “Little roosters, cats and chickens lived in the house. There were a lot of cartons and dust and rubbish. You could not walk up the stairs and there was an ugly smell, a dead animal smell, and an ugly smell of old clothes.”

Maja said she stayed at the house because the man would not allow her to take her passport when they went out and she became more afraid as he listened in on her telephone calls and shouted at her.

She was rescued by police on Saturday after she had phoned a man she met on the plane and said she was not well. She said she couldn’t speak too much because her online pal was listening, but the man she called contacted police when she failed to meet him in the city on Thursday as arranged.

“I put much energy in keeping him calm to make him not nervous,” she said of her internet romancer. “He was really afraid that someone would come in and that I’d tell someone I was not okay.

“He was really out of reality. He lived in a complete fantasy world. I was totally afraid because he said there was no electricity there so we only had the candles at night.”

She said at night he took off his clothes and lay down in the same bed with her. “I had all my clothes on and these dirty sheets around me – I realised in that moment it was too much.” (dpa)

Time to rebuild and regroup in Australian cricket, says Ponting

Perth, Jan. 29 (ANI): Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting is confident that his team will come up trumps in 2009, but adds that he knows that now is the time to reflect, rebuild and regroup.
In an article for The Australian, Ponting says “As I look around the sporting world, there are all sorts of encouraging signs for the future which give me heart that we will soon be consistently back on the winners’ list again.”

He says that members of the team, current and those likely to come in, can take inspiration from sportspersons like Lance Armstrong, who was racing in the Tour Down Under in his comeback event after three years in retirement.

“No one can argue that the 37-year-old is one of the greatest sportsmen who has ever lived. As a multiple winner of the Tour de France his achievements have been phenomenal. His comeback was huge news and the Tour Down Under was unofficially labelled the “Tour de Lance”, such was the publicity and expectation of his return to road racing,” says Ponting.

Ponting says tennis player Roger Federer is another sportsman one can take inspiration from.

“He had a difficult 2008 battling glandular fever and losing his No1 ranking. After losing the semi-final of the Australian Open and the final at the French Open and Wimbledon there was speculation that he was past his best and on the slide. However, he came back later in the year to win the US Open and after a crushing quarter-final victory yesterday, it would be a brave observer who believes Federer cannot win a record-equalling 14th Grand Slam title,” Ponting says.

“I believe that these sporting analogies apply to the Australian cricket team. We have not been at our best and unfortunately this is partly due to a string of retirements and a spate of injuries. But this has given us a great opportunity to start playing and preparing for the future. We have played a whole lot of new players, including some pretty young guys who will continue to develop into good cricketers,” Ponting says.

“With a new generation coming through, and some of our more experienced guys returning from injury, I firmly believe that Australia can regain its aura,” Ponting says.
“We have used 26 different players in all three forms of the game since the start of the India Test series in October and there have been seven debutants, including David Warner, who is still yet to play a single first-class match.

A little more experience from the young blokes and a few more senior players returning to the team, such as vice-captain Michael Clarke for Friday’s match against South Africa in Perth, can be the difference between success and failure in big matches,” he concludes. (ANI)

Aniston and Mayer will find ‘True Love’ in 2009, says Astrologist

Washington, Jan 3 (ANI): Former Friends star Jennifer Aniston and her musician beau John Mayer will find ‘true love’ in 2009, says celeb astrologist Aura Wright.

According to Wright, the love between Aniston and Mayer is very real and deep.

“Jennifer and John have really lovely Neptune and Venus aspects, which are all true love. It”s the real thing,” Us magazine quoted her as telling Entertainment Tonight.

“It”s very romantic, it”s very sweet…it”s a very deep and passionate love affair.

“The real question is if John Mayer is ready to settle down or not — that”s really the moment of truth for them.

“Looking at their two charts together, he would be really smart to commit to Jennifer because he”s going to have a hard time finding that kind of love again,” she added. (ANI)