Cher cuts mansion’s price by $4M to find a buyer

Washington, July 15 (ANI): Veteran singer Cher is so desperate to sell her Malibu mansion that she has slashed 4 million dollars off the asking price.

The 14,000 square foot mansion has six bedrooms, seven bathrooms, a tennis court, private cinema, and swimming pool, reports Contactmusic.

The estate was originally priced at 45 million dollars, but the Believe hitmaker has now reduced it to 41 million dollars to help find a willing buyer.

Meanwhile, the legendary singer is asking her daughter Chastity Bono not to film her sex change surgery for reality TV.

Bono, now known as Chaz, announced he was gay in 1995.

The 40-year-old began the lengthy gender reassignment process last year (08) and friends and family have already started referring to her as a “he”. (ANI)

Wills, Kate Middleton to soon announce engagement, claims BBC

London, May 24 (ANI): Prince William and Kate Middleton will soon be announcing their engagement, according to the BBC.

The corporation is so sure that wedding bells are on the cards that it has commissioned a new documentary of the couple to be broadcast on the night their engagement is officially announced.

“Believe me, in these straightened times, we would not be spending money on this programme if we had not been assured that they were definitely going to get engaged,” the Telegraph quoted a senior BBC executive as saying.

A representative for Clarence House has said that it knows about the documentary but refused to co-operate with the producers.

Officially, the BBC is keen to dismiss suggestions that it has been tipped off.

“We plan ahead for different eventualities. The relationship is an area that our viewers are very interested in,” the spokesman said.

The spokesman refused to reveal how much the documentary will cost. (ANI)

Danielle Lloyd says she’s no serial footie dater

London, May 20 (ANI): WAG Danielle Lloyd has said she does not deliberately hunt footballers – despite being with eight in the last three years.

The British glamour model appeared to be putting her foot down after Spurs boss Harry Redknapp dubbed models who dated players “busy cows”.

The 25-year-old, who is presently involved with three-year junior Jamie O’Hara, defended herself, saying she did not pre-plan who to fall in love with.

The beauty further offered advice to other potential WAGs, saying it was not an easy job being one.

“Some of these girls think they can go out and find a footballer and that it’s a shortcut to fame. That’s not true. It can be really hard. Your boyfriend has to go away for a long time,” the Daily Star quoted her as saying.

“I get so many girls who come up to me and say: ‘I just want to be you and I want to go out with a footballer.’ I always say: ‘You should go to school and get your education and do something for yourself.’

“I was planning on going to university until I won Miss England. Believe it or not, I wanted to be a forensic scientist,” she added.

Danielle met Teddy Sheringham, 43, in 2006 but they split a year later.

She has also dated Spurs striker Jermain Defoe, 26, Liverpool’s Ryan Babel, 22, Birmingham ace Marcus Bent, 31, Arsenal full-back Armand Traore, 19, Barcelona defender Gerard Pique, 22, and Spurs defender Alan Hutton, 24. (ANI)

Carrie Prejean being encouraged to surrender Miss California title

Washington, May 9 (ANI): Miss California Carrie Prejean is being encouraged to surrender her title, in the wake of recent controversy surrounding her anti-gay marriage stance and nude photos.

Keith Lewis, the director of the Miss California pageant, has said that the 21-year-old beauty queen is giving preference to her views than what her title represents.

“We are just trying to move forward in what is the best way for the organization, the women, the titleholder and the state. Carrie is still Miss California USA, but right now she is not acting in the capacity of Miss California USA. She is acting as Carrie Prejean and working on things that are important to Carrie Prejean,” Fox News quoted Lewis as saying.

In fact, many pageant insiders and former title-holders have said that if Prejean wishes to continue her crusade in advocating her traditional views of marriage, she should first resign from her role as Miss California.

“I think it’s awesome that she’s found something that she’s very passionate about and found this voice, but if she wants to pursue that and emphasize those opinions she should do it as Carrie not as Miss California so therefore I do think she should step down,” said Miss USA 2004 Shandi Finnessey.

She added: “But I actually think it’s sad you turn on the TV and everyone is so concerned about a beauty queen and whether or not she will lose her title. But I understand it’s important because she now is Miss California USA and she has to represent that title and not necessarily herself.”

Meanwhile, Prejean did not turn up for the shooting of a PSA, titled ‘I Believe … The Beauty of California’, aimed at promoting the diversity of California. (ANI)

Chinese province says will fine civil servants who don’t smoke local cigarettes

Beijing, May 4 (ANI): Believe it or not, Chinese civil servants who refuse or fail to consume a sufficient amount of locally made cigarettes, will be fined.

An order to this effect has been passed in Hubei Province. The regulation set standards for the number and brands of cigarettes to be bought and used by its officials.

All local government agencies and institutions should aim to consume 230,000 packs of Hubei Province-produced cigarettes a year, or about 4 million Yuan (588,235 dollars). Departments that fail to consume sufficient cigarettes or consumed non-local brand cigarettes would be fined, Hubei-based Chutian Metropolis Daily reported.
According to the Global Times, the regulation will boost the local economy via cigarette tax.

The regulation included punishments but no offenders have been fined, said an unnamed spokesman at the county public relations department. The regulation is just a general guideline and does not target specific tobacco brands, an official at the county finance bureau who refused to give his name told the Global Times yesterday.

The Hubei cigarette market is dominated by Hunan brands Furongwang, Baisha and the Yunan brand Ashima according to a NetEase.com Internet user allegedly from the same county. The measure will help the brand Huanghelou survive competition.

The measure seems intended to boost the local economy but it in fact boosts the political careers of government officials, argued another former county resident on the Netease forum. In the long run, it boosts corruption and hurts the public interest, he said. (ANI)

Britain’s Got Talent star Jamie Pugh fears success

London, May 4 (ANI): Britain’s Got Talent star Jamie Pugh has in an interview revealed that just the thought of winning the TV contest leaves him quaking in his shoes.

Pugh, 38, who is a pizza deliveryman, panicked before his audition and wanted to walk out, but his loyal partner Donna Davies, 35, persuaded him to stay.

“I wanted to go home,” the Mirror quoted him as saying.

“I didn’t sleep for three days before and I’m now on 40 fags a day.

“This is going to sound really weird – I fear success but I don’t fear failure. I’ve failed at a lot of things and I fear success because I’m Jamie. I’ve got to appear on a TV show and I’m dreading it.

“I’m a wreck – I’m not a star,” he exclaimed.

More than 12 million viewers saw the South Wales valleys singer stun judge Simon Cowell and earn a standing ovation with a spellbinding version of Bring Him Home from Les Miserables.

“If you had asked me to sing any other song I wouldn’t be able to, because I don’t know many songs,” Jamie said.

“But Bring Him Home comes from my heart. It’s about what I might have lost through choices I’ve made.

“Believe me – if I’d not sung that song I would have gone to pieces,” he added. (ANI)

Slain Notorious B.I.G. is not happy with his biopic, says Lil’ Kim

London, Mar 11 (ANI): Late rapper Notorious B.I.G., real name Christopher Wallace, is unhappy over his portrayal in his recent biopic, says former girlfriend Lil’ Kim.he hip-hop star has claimed that Wallace has been appearing in her dreams since his demise in 1997.

And Lil’ Kim is adamant Biggie, who was shot dead in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles, is not too pleased with how the movie Notorious has portrayed his life story.I’m a very spiritual person and he’s come to me many times in my dreams. Biggie was so much more than what they put him out to be in that movie,” the Sun quoted her, as saying.

“And to be honest with you, I know for a fact he’s not happy. e’s not satisfied at all,” she added.im added that Biggie will make his feelings known in the future, hinting that P Diddy, ex-wife Faith Evans and his mother will all be victims of his wrath.

“Ms. Wallace doesn’t know Biggie at all and she barely knows Christopher, if you know what I mean. At all! And I was around. Even before he blew up so crazy, so I know how he felt about his mom,” she said.

“He knows who’s who and what’s what. Believe that. The way he’s feeling is going to come out later.

“You’re going to see who he really loved and the ones that’s standing up for him the right way is the ones representing him the right way,” she added. (ANI)

NEWS FEATURE: Syria, courted from abroad, remains coy

NEWS FEATURE: Syria, courted from abroad, remains coy Damascus – Presidents, important US senators, senior officials from the Arab League – lately it seems everyone is courting Syria.

In recent months Damascus has been the centre of a flurry of international diplomatic activity.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy visited. So did a delegation of European Union officials and foreign ministers. Arab League chief Amr Mussa, who hails from Egypt, a country with increasingly fraught relations with Syria, seeks Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s counsel.

But al-Assad’s separate meetings with US Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry and a second congressional delegation in Damascus on Saturday were what really made headlines.

Some Arab observers are wondering if Syria really can be pried from its uneasy alliance with Iran, as some in Washington hope, or how serious US President Barack Obama is about renewing ties with Arab world.

Al-Assad told Kerry that “dialogue is the only way” to solve problems and that “the policy of dictation has proven useless,” Syria’s SANA news agency reported on Saturday.

Kerry, on the other hand, told reporters that “unlike the Bush administration … we believe you have to engage in a discussion.”

Fine words, some Arab observers say, but will they translate into a real rapprochement?

Emad Gad, a Middle East expert at Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that both sides “are merely testing the waters to see what the other side could offer.”

Many thorny issues remain between the two countries.

The United States accuses Syria of supporting terrorism by providing a safe haven for such organizations as the Islamist Palestinian Hamas movement and Islamic Jihad. The US objects to Syria’s strategic partnership with Iran and the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah movement. US officials remain suspicious of Syria’s nuclear programme, and the US State Department routinely blasts Syria over its human rights record.

“Syria will not change its alliances in the region for the sake of mere promises,” Gad told dpa. “They will wait to hear specific and concrete offers to begin weighing a compromise.”

Among the key offers Syria would want to hear is active US support for the return of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights to Syrian control. It also wants economic and political incentives, including an end to unilateral US economic sanctions imposed in 2004.

The problem is that even if the US were willing to make concessions on these scores, it is not the only player in the region.

“With the Israeli government leaning further to the right as Benjamin Netanyahu takes power, peace talks will become even more difficult than before. Syria is thus skeptical that the US can have a great influence in peace talks,” he said.

And al-Assad has said that Syria will not stop supporting groups the US lists as terrorist organizations.

In an exclusive interview with Hezbollah-run al-Manar television in August, al-Assad said, “We do not see any interest in abandoning the resistance. Our position toward resistance against any occupation in Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine is firm and has not changed.”

Lebanese analyst Hussein Abdel-Hussein, however, believes that the new US administration would be wrong to abandon the previous administration’s policy of pressuring Syria through isolating it.

“US lawmakers should realize that if America’s isolation of Syria failed, a successful policy does not entail a reversal of whatever (former) president (George W) Bush did,” Abdel-Hussein told dpa.

Rather, he said, al-Assad manipulates democracies with his foreign policy by “playing by words.”

According to Abdel-Hussein, al-Assad gave “false impressions that he had opened an embassy in Beirut, to the joy of the amateurish French diplomatic corps.”

“Yet the embassy remains without an ambassador, a step which Assad hopes he can trade for something new, maybe this time with the Americans,” the analyst concluded.

In an interview published recently in Britain’s Guardian newspaper, al-Assad acknowledged that Syria and the US were “still in the period of gestures and signals.”

Yet the “gestures and signals” do suggest the two countries are moving closer together.

Al-Assad told the paper that he expected the US to send a full- fledged ambassador to Damascus soon, and he said that there was “no substitute” for Washington as “the main arbiter” in the Middle East peace process.

Bush withdrew his ambassador to Syria after Damascus was accused of complicity in a massive bomb in Beirut that killed former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri in February 2005.

“An ambassador is important … Sending these delegations is important. This number of congressmen coming to Syria is a good gesture. It shows that this (US) administration wants to see dialogue with Syria,” al-Assad said. (dpa)

The list of Worst All-Time “Best Song” Oscar Winners

New York, February 21 (ANI): A list of worst winners in the “Best Song” category at the Academy Awards over the years has been compiled by a leading newspaper.

The New York Daily News claims the following as the worst all-time “best song” Oscar winners:

1) 1967 “Talk to the Animals” from “Dr. Doolittle” (over Burt Bacharach’s “The Look of Love” from “Casino Royale,” no less).

2) 1974 “We May Never Love Like This Again” from “The Towering Inferno”

3) 1977 “You Light up My Life” from “You Light Up My Life” (yes, the Debbieoone atrocity).

4) 1981 “Arthur’s Theme (The Best That You Can Do)” from “Arthur” (sung by wimp of the century Christopher Cross)

5) 1984 “I Just Called to Say I Love You” “The Woman In Red” (Stevie Wonder’s sappiest song ever – which is saying something).

6) 1985 “Say You, Say Me” from “White Nights” (written and sung by Lionel ichie)

7) 1989 “Under the Sea” from “The Little Mermaid” (beginning a string of teeth-nashingly terrible songs penned by Alan Menken).

8) 1991 “Beauty and the Beast” from “Beauty And the Beast” (more Menken)

9) 1992 “A Whole New World” from “Aladdin” (a trifecta for Menken)

10) 1994 “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” from “The Lion King” (this time Elton ohn stands in for the dross-y Menken).

11) 1995 “Colors of the Wind” from “Pocahontas” (back to Menkin for a fourth ooby prize)

12) 1996 “You Must Love Me” from “Evita” (the movie’s sole bad song, written by Andrew Lloyd Weber and sung by Madonna)

13) 1998 “When You Believe” from “The Prince of Egypt”

14) 1999 “You’ll Be in My Heart” from “Tarzan” (courtesy of Phil Collins)

15) 2006 “I Need to Wake Up” from “An Inconvenient Truth” (shouted by Melissa theridge) (ANI)

Gold touches new peak at Rs 15,200

Gold touches new peak at Rs 15,200 Gold touched new heights at Rs 15,200 per 10 gram in the morning trading in Delhi, in line with significant rise in gold prices in the international market. Another reason for high price in India was decline in Indian currency and stock market.

Stockists kept on buying the precious metal, considering it as the safest investment mode amid tight financial conditions under the impact of global slowdown. Asian investors have shown high interest in the metal in order to preserve their wealth in the wake of global slowdown, fearing grimmer situation ahead.

Gold touched 960.20 dollars an ounce, the highest since July 22, in the foreign market according to Asian Pacific MSCI index. Experts believe that this trend would continue for some time due to uncertainty in stock market and deepening of global financial crisis besides large scale buying by retailers for the current marriage season.

The condition was not different for gold futures which touched Rs 15,050 per 10 gram in early deals. MCX Gold August contract was traded with increase of 2.35 percent while COMEX Gold touched a new level at $948.80 per ounce in the early Asian trades.

Swedish bishops want state to solely handle marriage registration

Swedish bishops want state to solely handle marriage registration Stockholm- As Sweden moves to introduce same-sex marriage legislation, a majority of bishops in the Church of Sweden Friday said the church should no longer handle legal registrations of marriage.

With proposed changes in marriage legislation underway, nine of the 13 bishops said “it makes sense that the state also handles the legal matters (for registration) without involving religious or civil rites.”

Writing in an op-ed article in the Stockholm daily Dagens Nyheter the bishops noted that a couple that plans to marry already must ask the Local Tax Office to investigate if there were any possible impediments to the marriage before booking a church or civil registrar.

On completion of the review, it would suffice for the tax agency to “add that the marriage is registered” and the couple could then sign a joint document to that affect, the bishops said.

After registering their marriage, the couple could opt for a religious or other ceremony.

Currently, 39 faith communities have the right to conduct legally- binding marriage ceremonies. But even if there was a clause allowing individual priests to decline to marry same-sex couples, the bishops believed that this was “untenable” in the long-term.

Within the church there were also different views on marriage that differ from the state’s, the bishops said.

Last month, three of the four parties in the ruling centre-right coalition proposed that parliament approves same-sex marriage.

Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt’s conservative Moderate Party, the Liberal Party and the Centre Party were likely to get support from the opposition but failed to woo the Christian Democrats, who remain opposed to a gender-neutral marriage law.

The proposal was likely to take effect from May.

In a related move, the board of the 31,000-member Evangelical Free Church said it would recommend its upcoming assembly to approve a decision that the Baptist-linked group be struck off as a faith community allowed to conduct legal marriage ceremonies.

“We believe that a majority in government and parliament have ignored religions and churches,” chairman Stefan Sward told Swedish radio news.

“This is an opportunity for us to say we don’t want to be part of this game,” Sward added.

Since 1995, same-sex couples have been able to form a union in Sweden via registered partnership. The law was later amended to allow them to adopt children.

Some 80 per cent of Sweden’s 9 million people belong to the Church of Sweden, a Lutheran church. It was disestablished in 2000, receiving the same “faith community” designation as other faiths, such as the Pentecostal, Baptist, Roman Catholic, Jewish and Muslim. (dpa)

ECB tipped to set the stage for March rate cut

Frankfurt – The European Central Bank (ECB) is expected to set the stage Thursday for a rate cut at its meeting in March.

ECB chief Jean-Claude Trichet has already indicated that the Frankfurt-based bank is likely to hold off on trimming borrowing costs again this week before pressing on with its rate-cutting cycle in March.

“The next important meeting is in March,” said Trichet at his press conference last month after the bank delivered another 50 basis points cut. This brought the cost of money in the 16-member eurozone down to 2 per cent.

For the moment, the ECB appears keen to sit back and assess the economic impact of the 225 basis points in rate reductions it has delivered since October last year.

However, economists are divided about the size of the rate cut the ECB’s 22-head governing council is expected to deliver in March.

While some analysts believe the normally cautious ECB will limit the March rate cut to 25 basis points, others are predicting it will deliver another more hefty 50 basis points reduction.

Analysts are also divided about how far the ECB will be prepared to go in trimming rates.

Some believe that the ECB’s benchmark refinancing rate could be at 1 per cent or even 0.5 per cent by around the middle of the year.

But others are predicting that the bank will bring the current rate-cutting cycle to an end at 1.50 per cent. (dpa)

Russians Believe Obama will improve Moscow-Washington ties

Moscow, Jan.21 (ANI): Lots of Russians believe that under President Obama, U.S.-Russia relations in the post-Cold War scenario should pick up.

“After Barack Obama becomes president, he should establish better contacts and improve ties with Russia,” CBS quoted Maxim, a young boy from the Russian city of Yaroslavl, as saying.

I would advise President Obama to telephone our President Medvedev and arrange a meeting between them,” adds Vitaly, also from Yaroslavl.

Russian officials have recently been talking most favorably of the future of the bilateral relations, significantly toning down their anti-American rhetoric which has for years been Moscow’s trademark in foreign relations.

Last November, President Medvedev made no mention at all of Obama’s victory when giving his State of the Nation address the day after the U.S. elections, claiming he “forgot.”

The Russian President seems to be showing considerably more interest in the inauguration.

Medvedev said he wanted “U.S.-Russia relations to develop intensely and constructively in all areas.” (ANI)

Obama likely to get the support of five Republicansfor his policies

Washington, Jan.21 (ANI): Though President Barack Obama’s outreach to Republicans may be generating goodwill on the other side of the aisle, his honeymoon with the GOP is likely to be short-lived.

However, there are some Republicans who have a less adversarial relationship with the new administration. According to Politico, there are at least five GOP leaders who are expected to work closely with the White House.

Here is Politico’s list of the five Republicans most likely to embrace Obama:

1.Senator John McCain (Arizona)

As curious as it sounds, Obama’s rival for the presidency could end up being a key ally.

On issue after issue, from campaign finance to HMO regulation to immigration reform, McCain has shown a willingness to reach across the aisle – a habit that hasn’t endeared him to his own party.

Indeed, former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) said he believes that McCain is prepared to launch a national rehabilitation campaign that will lead him to a strong alliance with Obama.

“I believe Obama has an ace in the hole among Senate Republicans. This unlikely ace can deliver not only the GOP moderates needed to break a filibuster but also the stamp of bipartisanship: the 2008 GOP standard-bearer, John McCain,” Santorum recently wrote in The Philadelphia Inquirer.

2. Senator Richard `Dick’ Lugar (Indiana)

Few Republicans can claim a closer personal relationship with Obama than the senior senator from Indiana. Upon arriving in the Senate, Obama sought out Lugar as a mentor when both men served on the Foreign Relations Committee.

To prove his bipartisan bona fides on the campaign trail, Obama regularly cited his work on Lugar’s signature Nunn-Lugar nuclear nonproliferation bill.

As part of their campaign to pass nuclear nonproliferation legislation, the two traveled together to Russia and Ukraine in 2005 to examine those countries’ stockpiles of conventional weapons.

Lugar, rumored to be a potential secretary of state in the Obama administration, was even named as an honorary co-chairman of the inaugural committee. “When you’ve got a president who’s trying to send a signal that he’s trying to achieve bipartisan solutions, it makes sense that Lugar’s going to play a very significant role in that,” said Indiana political analyst Brian Howey.

3. Representative Mark Kirk (Illinois)

As he mulls a run for Obama’s old Senate seat in 2010, Kirk knows he won’t get an endorsement from the president-elect. Still, whether he runs for reelection to the House or for the Senate, political imperatives demand that he work productively with the Obama administration.

Kirk’s House district delivered 61 percent of the vote to Obama, giving him a strong incentive to play nice with the new president.

One of the leading centrists in the House – and one who has repeatedly won reelection in a Democratic-leaning district by emphasizing his independence from his national party – Kirk is already inclined to work across the aisle.

4. Senator George Voinovich (Ohio)

Despite calling Obama a “socialist” in the final weeks of the presidential campaign, Voinovich may find himself agreeing with the president-elect more often than not during his final two years in the Senate.

The Ohio senator, who announced he would retire in 2010, has often been a thorn in the GOP’s side, for opposing Republican-backed tax cuts and for his high-profile opposition to John Bolton’s nomination as ambassador to the United Nations.

Now that Voinovich is in the final stage of a political career that spans more than 40 years, he will be completely liberated from pressures to conform to his party’s line.

Since his Jan. 12 retirement announcement, Voinovich has already voted with Obama on releasing the second round of bailout money, joining only five other Senate Republicans in support of the legislation. Despite his reputation as a fiscal hawk, Voinovich has said he is open to supporting Obama’s proposed stimulus package.

5. Senator Susan Collins (Maine)

Fresh off an election victory in which she touted her record of working across party lines, Collins has a chance to prove it.

She is one of the two most liberal Republican senators, according to 2007 National Journal ratings – the other is her Maine colleague, Sen. Olympia Snowe. And with Democrats just shy of the 60 seats necessary to block GOP filibusters, Collins will be one of the first Republicans Obama will look toward to break logjams.

She has already indicated that she’s eager to work with the new president on climate change and health care reform, and has chatted with Obama’s congressional budget adviser, Peter Orszag, about her legislative priorities. (ANI)

Mandela: Obama’s inauguration recalls joy at his election in 1994

Mandela: Obama's inauguration recalls joy at his election in 1994 Johannesburg – Congratulating Barack Obama on his inauguration as the first black president of the United States Tuesday, iconic former South African president Nelson Mandela said the historic event reminded him of the excitement that surrounded his own election as his country’s first democratically-elected president.

In a letter handed to Obama shortly before his inauguration on Tuesday, anti-apartheid hero Mandela, 90, said: “There is a special excitement on our continent today, Mister President, in the knowledge that you have such strong personal ties with Africa, we share in that excitement and pride.”

“You will always be in our affection as a young man who dared to dream and to pursue that dream.”

Lamenting the sense of hopelessness that gripped many parts of the world in the face of conflict and persistent injustice, Mandela praised Obama for bringing “a new voice of hope.”

Obama’s inauguration reminded him of his own emotional swearing-in as South Africa’s first post-apartheid president in 1994 after spending 27 years in jail for resisting prejudice.

“People, not only in our country, but around the world, were inspired to believe that through common human effort, injustice can be overcome and that together a better life for all can be achieved,” he said. (dpa)

Search halted for victims in Indonesian ferry disaster

Jakarta – Rescuers on Tuesday stopped the search for about 260 people still missing after a ferry sank off Indonesia’s West Sulawesi province earlier this month, an official said.

Thirty-five people were rescued, including the ship’s captain, and nine others found dead after the ship sank in stormy seas on January 11 off the port town of Majene, said Colonel Jaka Santosa, a navy officer who led the search operation.

Santosa said an estimated 262 people were still missing and believed to have gone down with the ship.

The manifest showed 250 passengers and 17 crew members were on the ship but reports from families and information from the captain indicated the total number of people on board was 306, he said.

“We believe that those who are still missing sank with the ship. It happened very fast,” he said by telephone.

The Teratai Prima ferry was en route from Pare-pare on Sulawesi island to Samarinda in East Kalimantan province on Borneo island when the accident happened.

Police said Monday they had declared the ferry’s captain, identified as Sabir, a suspect for negligence that caused loss of life. If found guilty he could face a maximum of five years imprisonment.

Transport Minister Jusman Syafii Djamal said last week there would be an investigation into why the captain set sail despite warnings about bad weather.

Maritime accidents are common in Indonesia, largely due to poor enforcement of safety regulations and overcrowding. Indonesia, an archipelago of more than 17,000 islands, depends heavily on ocean transport.

In December 2006, a ship with 638 people aboard sank off East Java province. Only 230 people survived. (dpa)

German investor confidence tipped to edge up

German investor confidence tipped to edge up Berlin – German investor confidence could edge up again this month, a key indicator to be released Tuesday is forecast to say, amid efforts from governments and central banks around the world to halt the downturn underway in the global economy.

Drawn up by the Mannheim-based Centre for European Economic Research, the ZEW index is forecast by analysts to post a marginal increase to minus 44.5 points in January after posting a bigger- than-expected rise to 45.2 in December.

An increase in January would represent the third consecutive rise in the index.

This is despite fresh evidence of the continuing turmoil in the global banking sector and the rapid contraction in world economic growth.

However, the build-up to the release of the ZEW index has been accompanied by a new wave of government economic stimulus packages announced around the world, including Germany, as well an on-going drive by central banks to cut rates.

European Central Bank (ECB) chief Jean-Claude Trichet warned in a speech in Paris on Monday that the bank’s governing council members believe that “world and European growth in 2009 will be substantially lower than the forecasts made at the beginning of December.”

This comes after the ECB last week again joined other central banks and delivered another hefty cut in borrowing costs with economists expecting the ECB to press on with its rate-cutting cycle in the coming months.

Nevertheless, many economists believe that the first signs of an economic recovery in Germany and Europe could start to emerge during the second half of 2009 paving the way for a pickup on 2010.

Based on a survey of about 290 analysts, the ZEW indicator often sets the scene for other major European economic sentiment surveys released later in the month, including Germany’s closely watched Ifo business confidence survey. (dpa)

Al-Qaeda video sends warning to Germany

Berlin – Germany was urged to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan in a video believed to have been made by a member of the terrorist network Al-Qaeda.

A German-speaker wearing a black turban and facecloth that left only his eyes visible spoke in the 30-minute video, which was posted on the internet on Saturday.

The message, delivered by a man calling himself “Abu Talha, the German,” was titled “Rescue Plan for Germany”. It contained Arabic subtitles.

It made no direct threats against Germany, but said the country was “gullible and naive” to believe it could “emerge unscathed” from having the third-biggest contingent of foreign troops in Afghanistan.

The message, dated October 2008, appeared on the same day as a car bomb killed five people, including a US soldier, near the German embassy in the Afghan capital Kabul.

Afghanistan’s radical Taliban movement claimed responsibility. for the blast, which injured 30 persons, among them a German and two other embassy staffers.

The German parliament approved legislation in October, increasing the number of German troops serving with the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan to 4,500.

The Washington-based IntelCenter, a US security organization that specializes in screening Islamist internet pages, said the video appeared to have been produced by al-Qaeda.

“This is the most significant and high-profile address by al-Qaeda to Germany and perhaps any European country,” the centre said. dpa

Pope welcomes Gaza truce as glimmer of hope

Pope welcomes Gaza truce as glimmer of hope Rome – Pope Benedict XVI welcomed Sunday Israeli’s unilateral ceasefire in the Gaza and called on the parties to take the opportunity to establish a lasting peace.

The pope in his Angelus prayers, said he stood behind all those on both sides of the conflict “who believe that there is room for everyone in the Holy Land.”

The ceasefire now provided a glimmer of hope and a chance to “resume dialogue in justice and truth,” Benedict said. “This is the only way which may truly open up a peaceful future for the sons and daughters of this beloved region.” dpa

Scientists create ‘invisibility cloak’ that shields broad range of frequencies

Washington, January 16 (ANI): A team of Duke University engineers has produced a new type of cloaking device, which is significantly more sophisticated than a prototype they unveiled in 2006 at cloaking in a broad range of frequencies.

The researchers attribute this breakthrough to the development of a new series of complex mathematical commands, known as algorithms, which helped them guide the design and fabrication of exotic composite materials known as metamaterials.

These materials can be engineered to have properties not easily found in natural materials, and can be used to form a variety of “cloaking” structures that can guide electromagnetic waves around an object, only to have them emerge on the other side as if they had passed through an empty volume of space.

Reporting the results of their latest experiments in the journal Science, the researchers revealed that once the algorithm was developed, the latest cloaking device was completed from conception to fabrication in nine days, compared to the four months required to create the original, and more rudimentary, device.

They believe that their powerful new algorithm will make it possible to custom-design unique metamaterials with specific cloaking characteristics.

“The difference between the original device and the latest model is like night and day. The new device can cloak a much wider spectrum of waves – nearly limitless – and will scale far more easily to infrared and visible light. The approach we used should help us expand and improve our abilities to cloak different types of waves,” said senior member of the team Chunlin Li. David R. Smith, William Bevan Professor of electrical and computer engineering at Duke.

Cloaking devices work by bending electromagnetic waves, such as light, in such a way that it appears as if the cloaked object is not there.

In the latest laboratory experiments, a beam of microwaves aimed through the cloaking device at a “bump” on a flat mirror surface bounced off the surface at the same angle as if the bump were not present.

Apart from that, according to the researchers, the device prevented the formation of scattered beams that would normally be expected from such a perturbation.

The researchers revealed that the underlying cloaking phenomenon was similar to the mirages seen ahead at a distance on a road on a hot day.

“You see what looks like water hovering over the road, but it is in reality a reflection from the sky. In that example, the mirage you see is cloaking the road below. In effect, we are creating an engineered mirage with this latest cloak design,” Smith said.

Smith is of the opinion that cloaks should find a number of applications with the advancement of the technology.

The researcher reckons that cloaking devices would eliminate the effects of obstructions, and thereby improve wireless communications.

Smith adds that acoustic cloaks could also serve as protective shields to prevent the penetration of vibrations, sound or seismic waves.

“The ability of the cloak to hide the bump is compelling, and offers a path towards the realization of forms of cloaking abilities approaching the optical. Though the designs of such metamaterials are extremely complex, especially when traditional approaches are used, we believe that we now have a way to rapidly and efficiently produce such materials,” said Duke’s Ruopeng Liu, who developed the algorithm.

With appropriately fine-tuned metamaterials, electromagnetic radiation at frequencies ranging from visible light to radio could be redirected at will for virtually any application, Smith said.

The researcher added that the approach could also lead to the development of metamaterials that focus light to provide more powerful lenses.

The newest cloak – measuring 20 inches by 4 inches and less than an inch high – is actually made up of more than 10,000 individual pieces arranged in parallel rows, of which more than 6,000 are unique. Each piece is made of the same fiberglass material used in circuit boards and etched with copper.

The algorithm helped the researchers determine the shape and placement of each piece. (ANI)