Fireworks fly, tears of joy fall as Spain win Cup

(Reuters) – Tears of joy fell, fireworks exploded in the night sky and voices went hoarse in Spain after ecstatic fans watched their team beat Netherlands 1-0 to win the World Cup final for the first time on Sunday.

Andres Iniesta’s goal deep into extra time sparked the celebrations and many of the thousands watching the game at giant outdoor fan zones around the country burst into tears.

“It’s well deserved. They are a very close team of players,” Julio told Reuters in Madrid as supporters hit the streets to celebrate. “Spain tried to play football and Holland only tried to kick them,” he added.

Over 100,000 people flocked into the center of Madrid to watch the game on giant screens, faces painted in red and gold with flags wrapped round their shoulders, and the tense nature of the game made the outpouring of emotions stronger at the end.

After Spain’s goalkeeper and captain Iker Casillas lifted the trophy in Johannesburg the parties got into full swing.

Impromptu fireworks displays could be heard all over Madrid, cars screeched through the streets with flags flapping and Spaniards young and old joined the party.

Children looked slightly bemused while some of the older ones seemed lost for words.

“We’ve been waiting years for something like this (at the World Cup), said Miguel. “They are a real team and they deserve it. Iniesta was the man of the match.”

Amidst the wild celebrations a solitary Dutch fan called Anoushka, dressed in an orange dress, said: “I didn’t like the way Netherlands played, Spain deserved to win.”

Spain are expected to return to Madrid on Monday and will have an open top bus parade around the capital in the evening before a giant party on the banks of the river Manzanares.

(Writing by Mark Elkington; Editing by Ken Ferris)

Mercedes switch Schumacher’s car for Spain

Mercedes will switch Michael Schumacher’s car for next week’s Spanish Grand Prix to try and get the seven times Formula One champion back up to speed, team principal Ross Brawn said on Monday.

“It’s not a new chassis per se, it’s a chassis we used in testing,” Brawn told Reuters at a fund-raising event for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution on the banks of the River Thames.

“The one he had got damaged during the first few races and we repaired it as best we could at the races. But now we are back at base we are going to re-introduce the test chassis and he will be using that in Barcelona.”

Brawn said the wheelbase would also be changed to improve weight distribution, and Mercedes are also planning a major aerodynamic revamp for the first race of the European season after four in the Middle and Far East.

Schumacher, a winner at Benetton and Ferrari with Brawn as technical director, is making his Formula One comeback at the age of 41 and after retiring at the end of 2006 with a record 91 race wins.

The German has been outqualified and beaten in all four races to date by team mate and compatriot Nico Rosberg, with concern mounting that Schumacher is finding it hard to replicate his form of old.

Schumacher finished 10th in the latest race in China while Rosberg was third after leading early on.

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Justin Palmer; For any queries on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Sudan deal collapse could spark faith war: Jimmy Carter

(Reuters) – A collapse of Sudan’s elections and a related peace deal could spark a national and regional religious war, former President Jimmy Carter said as he observed the first day of voting on Sunday.

World

Sudanese voters queued up to take part in the oil-producing state’s first full multi-party ballot in 24 years, a poll promised in the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement that ended Sudan’s two-decade north-south civil war.

Carter, in Khartoum to lead a team of elections observers, told Reuters it was important Sudan got through its elections peacefully because of the country’s strategic position in the region — and the importance of the peace accord.

“I think if some violence or disruption occurs here in Sudan it might very well spill over into a large part of Africa,” he said in an interview in a hotel on the banks of the river Nile.

“There’s a potential alignment of support or animosity between and Islamic north and a non-Islamic south, with some of the adjacent countries being deeply committed to Christianity and others not. It could lead to a potential religious conflict as well as a regional conflict in this part of Africa.”

Asked what specifically could trigger such a conflict, Carter answered: “I think a breakdown in the entire electoral process that results in violence on both sides … I would say that that could happen only if the process envisioned in the Comprehensive Peace Agreement was disrupted completely which I certainly do not anticipate.”

NINE NEIGHBOURS

Sudan, Africa’s largest country, has nine neighbors including predominantly Muslim Egypt, Libya and Chad to its north and east, and Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia to its south and west, all with large Christian population.

An estimated 2 million people died in Sudan’s civil war, which pitched the mostly Muslim north against rebels from the south where most follow Christianity and traditional beliefs.

Sudan’s electoral process and the linked peace accord have come under strain in recent weeks. North-south distrust remains deep and both sides’ armies have clashed since the 2005 deal.

Incumbent President Omar Hassan al-Bashir last month threatened to pull the plug on a referendum on southern independence promised under the same 2005 peace deal if the south’s former rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) refused to take part in the elections.

At the time, the SPLM and a loose coalition of opposition parties were threatening to boycott the elections in protest over fraud accusations. The SPLM eventually only went ahead with a partial boycott.

Analysts have warned there is a risk of return to conflict if Khartoum does anything to disrupt the south’s prized referendum. Southerners are widely thought to want independence.

Carter said his observers had reported some delays and difficulties in polling stations across Sudan, but he was encouraged by what he had seen in Khartoum on Sunday morning.

“It is quite good … no violence, no intimidation, no effort to disrupt the orderly process of the election.”

He criticized Bashir for making two speeches in which the Sudanese president threatened to expel and chop the fingers off observers who called for a delay in elections. Carter Center observers had said a short delay might be necessary.

“It was a serous mistake on his part.” He said Bashir’s aides had since assured him the threats were made in the heat of a campaign speech, and that Bashir himself welcomed the Carter mission in a subsequent address.

(Editing by Giles Elgood)

High pollution level in Yamuna River kills thousands of fish

Agra, Sept 18 (ANI): High level of pollution in the Yamuna River is killing thousands of fish in Agra.

The river is already in a pathetic condition with its water unfit for even bathing, leave alone drinking. Adding to its deplorable state are the hundreds of dead fish floating on the surface of the river.

Residents are concerned as some have been collecting these fish and selling them in the market which could lead to hazardous results and even spread of diseases.

Due to the discharge of untreated effluents upstream from open drains and barrages, the quality of water has deteriorated drastically.

“The chemicals mixed with the river water are the cause for the fish dying in the river in large numbers. It is unfortunate that the residents living on banks of the river are taking these fish and selling them in the market. This could lead to spread of diseases,” said Deepak Kahre, a counselor.

Some of the fish that have died are really big in size, luring the residents more into taking and selling them.

“We have been seeing that numerous fish are dying, Some of them are really big, that could weigh two to two and half kilogram even,” said Danish, a resident.

According to a Central Pollution Control Board report, around 70 per cent of the pollution in the Yamuna is human excrement.

A major pollutant of Yamuna is Delhi, which contributes 3,296 MLD (million litres per day) of sewage falling into the river. Only half of the sewage produced in Delhi is treated effectively.

Sewage discharge from Delhi and major towns like Mathura, Vrindavan and Agra has irreversibly altered its ecology. The river has been termed as incapable of supporting any aquatic life whatsoever.

Environmentalists have also been highlighting the damage caused to human health by allowing the discharged sewage to re-enter the human food chain via the agricultural produce watered by it in Uttar Pradesh and Haryana.

The Yamuna Action Plan started in 1993 with the aim of conserving the river has met with little success, despite billions being spent on it. By Brijesh Kumar Singh (ANI)

Majuli Island inhabitants pray to stop soil erosion

Majuli (Assam), Sep 12 (ANI): The inhabitants of Majuli Island in Assam perform a Hindu ritual to check the rapid soil erosion near the banks of the river Brahmaputra.

Swelling water of river Brahmaputra river has eroded the land and the residents fear that their houses near the banks of the river might get washed away.

“We mainly depend on the divine spirit, so we have come to the shore of the river to pray to the divine spirit which has caused us to surrender ourselves having no other means to save ourselves and the holy land,” said Bhabhananda Dev Goswami, Benganati Satradhikar.

He added that the erosion has continued. Majuli is home to many wild birds and animals. Due to the rapid erosion this monsoon, the existence of a famous Benganati Satra (a holy shrine) is in danger. The shrine is among the oldest of its kind.

“People of this land believe and depend on this kind of ritual for their existence and survival. We do believe in modern technologies, but religious rituals are above all. So, today all the satradhikars along with the followers of Majuli have gathered here to pray to the divine god to save this place from rapid erosion,” said Pitamber Dev Goswami, Aunati Satrdhikar.

Every year, torrential monsoon rains create panic in Assam, causing the mighty river and its tributaries to breach embankments, displacing thousands of families. (ANI)

SC committee: Halt Noida park construction

New Delhi, Sep 4 (ANI): The Supreme Court appointed Central Empowered Committee (CEC) has recommended on Friday to halt the construction of Ambedkar Park in Noida with immediate effect.

The Mayawati Government is constructing the Bhimrao Ambedkar Park in Noida with an estimated cost of Rs.550 crore on the banks of the River Yamuna.

The committee has sighted the violation of environmental laws as the reason for such recommendation.

According to sources, the committee headed by former Union Environment Secretary, P.V. Jayakrishna has conveyed the apex court that the project does not have the required environmental clearance.

The court is expected to give its opinion on the recommendations next week.

The Uttar Pradesh government on Thursday accused the Central Government of obstructing the dream projects of Mayawati.

The project came into the spotlight after a residents’ association of Noida moved a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) before the apex court raising environment issues against the construction

The apex court constituted the CEC to look into the issue following which the committee visited the site Aug 12. (ANI)

Villagers organise age-old stone pelting festival in Madhya Pradesh

Chindwara (Madhya Pradesh), Aug 22(ANI): Hundreds of people in Madhya Pradesh’s Chindwara district hurled stones at each other as part of a centuries ritual to mark the annual festival known as Gotmar Mela on Saturday.

In the festival, men from Pandhurna and Sawargaon, villages, located on opposite banks of the river Jamuna, hurl stones at each other.

“As per the ritual, when people of the Pandurana village try cutting a Palash tree and sneak it away, people from the Sawargaon would pelt stones on them. This year, however, Sawargaon people put the tree in the centre of the village. They offered prayers to the Palash tree and then they prayed at the temple of the Goddess Chandi,” said Nikunja Srivastava, District Magistrate of Chhindwara district.

The Madhya Pradesh Government and Human Rights Commission discourage the tradition of stone pelting citing the ritual as “inhuman and criminal”.

However, the festival, which claims many lives and leaves people injured, was subdued this year as compared to previous years following the Government efforts to discourage the practice.

Despite the measures taken by the administration to keep away any untoward incident, about 48 people, including two policemen, were injured and about 65 people were arrested.

“Administration and representatives of people have been creating awareness among people that this is an inhumane ritual. They should certainly celebrate the festival with full spirit but not hurl stones at each other. This is against the rules of Human Rights Commission. And I can see positive changes taking place in people this year,” Srivastava said.

“The administration banned the ritual following directives of the state Human Rights Commission and offered the participants its full support in holding any other cultural and religious event,” e added. By Sachin Pandey (ANI)

Archaeologists discover London’s oldest “boardwalk”

London, August 18 (ANI): Archaeologists have found London’s oldest known timber structure, which dating back to 5,700 years, could be the city’s earliest “boardwalk”.

According to a report by BBC News, the structure was found in an ancient peat bog next to the Belmarsh prison in Plumstead, a suburb of East London near the banks of the River Thames.

“It is definitely man-made, and a very rare find,” said team member Jon Sygrave of the Institute of Archaeology at University College London.

At the time the timbers were laid down, the Thames was made up of numerous interweaving tributaries and channels, which flowed through a vast marshland.

The structure was most likely built to keep people’s feet dry as they ventured across the soggy ground near the river.

“It probably provided access into a resource-rich area full of birdlife and plants and [was] close to the river for fishing,” Sygrave said.

The newfound platform is about 5 feet (1.5 meters) by 6.5 feet (2 meters). It was made from split alder or hazel logs that were each about four inches (ten centimeters) wide.

The wood beams were found 15 feet (4.7 meters) underground near the remains of a now dry river channel, according to the team.

But, it’s not clear how far people might have traveled to reach this boardwalk, the excavation team said, since no prehistoric settlements have been found nearby.

Further analysis of the structure as well as ancient preserved plant material found around it should help clarify the trackway’s purpose.

Archaeologists found the structure during excavations carried out before construction of a new prison building.

The structure may extend farther into the ancient bog, but the complexity of the excavation meant it would take too much time and money to investigate further.

Instead, any additional timbers will remain buried, and the excavated area will be preserved under special glass flooring in the new building. (ANI)

Rod Stewart, Suggs urge musicians to busk for charity

London, May 26 (ANI): Rod Stewart and Madness frontman Suggs have urged fellow musicians to take to the streets and start busking to help raise funds for charity.

The duo is initiating “Busking Cancer”, a “concert” to encourage artists across Britain to perform in public and gather money from audience to help Cancer Research UK.

Suggs and his fellow band members are due to play their tunes on HMS Belfast, secured on the banks of the River Thames for an exclusive one-night busking show.

Meanwhile, Stewart, who battled thyroid cancer, is asking musicians to come out and play.

“Busking is how I started, in the early 60s, on the streets of Paris. It is what music is all about – just getting out there and singing or playing for the sheer joy of it,” The Scotsman quoted him as saying. (ANI)

Manmohan Singh gets unique greetings from artists

Allahabad/Ludhiana, May 22 (ANI): As Dr. Manmohan Singh gets ready for his second term as Prime Minister, artists have greeted him in their own unique way.

A youth from Allahabad city has built a sand sculpture of Dr. Singh at Sangam on the banks of the river Ganga.

“On the banks of the holy river Ganga, I have built sand sculpture of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. As he will take oath today, I am expressing my happiness in a creative way,” said Rajkapoor Chetera, Sand Artist.

The sculpture has been built at Sangam, union of three of the holiest rivers – Ganga, Yamuna and the mythical Saraswati.

In Ludhiana, another artist has created wax statue of Dr. Singh and Congress President Sonia Gandhi to greet them on their resounding electoral win.

“We feel proud that a person like Manmohan Singh who is an economist, an honest person, dedicated and a visionary is working whole heartedly for the country’s progress,” said Chander Shekhar Prabhakar, the wax artist.

Elated that Dr. Singh will continue his second term, Prabhakar distributed sweets among his relatives and friends.

He also offered sweets to the statues. (ANI)

A new deal for the stricken global economy

Washington/Berlin – The world’s big economic powers will hold an emergency summit in London next week amid a deepening sense of despair about the outlook for the world economy and with few signs that major nations have laid aside differences on how to combat the global recession. While the Group of 20 (G20) meeting of the most advanced and emerging economies will mark US President Barack Obama’s first major foray onto the world stage, tensions have emerged notably between Washington and Europe over the need for another round of fiscal stimulus packages to spur world growth.

As a result, the world leaders gathering in London’s vast new trade centre on the banks of the River Thames for the G20 summit will be facing pressure to draw up a tenable and coordinated strategy to drag the global economy out of its biggest downturn since the Second World War and to head off moves to protectionism.

The World Bank last week said 17 of the countries that make up the G20 have adopted some form of trade restricting measures as many governments look to prop up their own struggling industries.

All this has raised doubts about whether the G20 summit will be able to sign off on a concrete set of proposals for delivering what the meeting’s host British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has called a “global new deal.”

In addition to the US and Britain, the G20 summit will include the leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Australia, Indonesia, China, Argentina, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, India, Brazil, Japan, Italy, Russia, South Africa and Mexico.

Despite broad agreement on moves to tighten world financial regulation and boost funding for key international institutions, European opposition to additional fiscal packages will make it hard for the summit to propose additional public spending to spur growth.

“They will find a global solution to the regulatory system, but I am more skeptical about agreement on further stimulus measures,” said ING economist Carsten Brzeski.

This means London could prove to be the first major test of Obama’s diplomatic skills. His administration released a series of plans on long-term regulation and minimizing the effects of the financial collapse in the run-up to the G20. Obama has pushed for equally “aggressive” actions from other states.

From a slew of disastrous economic data to more anecdotal evidence of collapsing order books, cutbacks in lavish Indian weddings through to mass layoffs of miners in Africa as commodity demand slumps, all indications are that the global downturn is far from over.

The financial crisis at the heart of the downturn also shows precious little sign of stabilizing.

Credit markets are still largely frozen, major banks are still in danger of bankruptcy and developing countries are still reeling from an exodus of private investors. Despite a rally over the last week, global stock markets remain in the doldrums.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) last week forecast the global economy would shrink as much as 1 per cent this year – the first worldwide contraction in 60 years – and warned of an even “deeper and prolonged” recession if governments cannot find a way to stabilize the financial system.

“Before we redesign the firehouse, we need to extinguish the fire,” writes Stewart Patrick, a senior fellow at the Washington- based Council on Foreign Relations. “Success in London will require credible commitments to restore the global economy and to stabilize world financial markets.”

Also underscoring the sense of urgency facing the leaders as they gather in London is the risk that some national economies could lose the battle to stay afloat as the recession tightens its grip, forcing richer nations or leading international institutions to launch costly rescue plans to bail them out.

That danger has sparked one of the few points of agreement among G20 powers: More money for the IMF, which serves as an emergency lender for countries facing budget shortfalls.

On top of the wider economic threats, the G20 leaders will be meeting amid a groundswell of public anger over greedy Wall Street banks, which sparked the crisis thanks to risky investments in the US housing market but whose survival is also critical to pulling the world’s economy back from the brink.

Next week’s summit will be only the second time that the G20 leaders, which together represent about 85 per cent of the world’s economic activity, have met in the bloc’s decade-long history.

The first summit in Washington in November came against the backdrop of a global financial shock triggered by a dramatic meltdown in the US mortgage market, with the G20 leaders laying out the broad strokes of a stricter financial regulatory regime.

As was the case in Washington, the April 2 gathering in London will also underscore the growing economic and political clout of the world’s leading emerging economies – like China and Brazil – and the consequent shift in the balance of economic power away from the world’s top industrial states.

But after a long run of prodigious growth, China’s economy appears to be faltering as key exports markets dry up, consequently forcing millions of rural workers to return from the city to a tougher and less prosperous life in the countryside.

Yet the real threat looming over the G20 leaders is that without urgent action, the financial and economic crisis could transform into a jobs crisis as workers around the world are laid off in the face of plummeting economic demand.

Consequentially, with the global economic gloom deepening since November, much of the focus in London now looks set to being on the same short-term measures that dominated the Washington summit six months ago.(dpa)

A human chain on banks of Ganga marks World Water Day

Varanasi, Mar 23 (ANI): Residents formed a human chain on the banks of the Ganges river here to mark World Water Day on Sunday.

They vowed to cleanse the river of all pollutants and restore its mythological glory.Ganga is severely polluted and there is a need for joint effort. People wash clothes in the river, if things will not change then this major water source will die one day,” said Jugal Kishore, an activist.

Observed on March 22 every year, World Water Day is an initiative that grew out of the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro.

Last year, the Government declared Ganga as a “National River.”

The Ganga Action Plan (GAP) was conceived by the late Prime Minster Indira Gandhi, who requested a comprehensive survey of the situation in 1979.

Even though millions have been spent to preserve the sacred river Ganges, the pollution level in the river has reached an alarming level.

The banks of the river present an ironical picture where on one side religious activities like prayers, recital of hymns and fire-rituals take place and on the other side, heaps of garbage lies unattended to. (ANI)

Brit man trying to beat recession by raffling own pad – in Sudoku contest!

London, Jan 29 (ANI): A Brit man is trying to beat the ongoing property market slump by selling his home – in a Sudoku competition.

Dave Mackie, 49, who is planning to move to Egypt, is offering his 675,000 pounds three-bedroom home in Hambleton, near Blackpool, as top prize in an online Sudoku contest.

Dave, finance broker by profession and a puzzle enthusiast, is charging 50 pounds to enter and is hoping to land a minimum 14,000 contestants to play the game.

Participants who complete the online Sudoku will be entered into a raffle – with the winner announced in February next year, or when 14,000 entrants sign up.

He hopes that the potential 700,000 pounds raised will cover the 675,000 pounds cost of the property as well as the 25,000 pounds legal and advertising fees.

“There’s no catch. I’m looking to retire abroad and the time has come to move on. I thought this was a fun way to get rid of the old house and beat the credit crunch,” the Telegraph quoted Dave, as saying.

“It’s going to be good financial news for someone – where else would you get a dream house for just 50 pounds? I’m a bit of a puzzle fanatic myself and just love my daily Sudoku tester,” Dave added.

He bought the house, which sits on the banks of the River Wyre in the mid 1970s, however he intends to move to Egypt, as he owns properties over there.

“I don’t believe anyone has ever set up a Sudoku competition to sell their home. This way everyone’s a winner. The lucky person gets the house free from any mortgage and I get its market value,” Dave said. (ANI)