“Slumdog Millionaire” wins big at Oscars

Rags-to-riches romance “Slumdog Millionaire” swept the Oscars on Sunday, winning eight awards including the prize for best picture in a climactic triumph for a movie that almost failed to get released.

Among the “Slumdog” honors, Briton Danny Boyle was named best director for the often dark but ultimately hopeful tale about a poor Indian boy who competes for love and money on a TV game show, and writer Simon Beaufoy won adapted screenplay.

“Slumdog” also earned Oscars for best cinematography, sound mixing, film editing, original score for composer A.R. Rahman and best song, “Jai Ho” for Rahman and lyricist Gulzar. Only seven other films in the 81-year-history of the Oscars have won eight or more awards.

Filmed in the teeming slums of Mumbai, the movie was orphaned at one point when it was dropped by financier Warner Independent Pictures, a division of giant Warner Bros. Fox Searchlight Pictures ultimately rescued the project and released the movie to critical acclaim in November.

“You’ve been been so generous to us this evening, and I want to thank you for that,” Boyle said to the Academy Award audience when accepting his trophy.

Kate Winslet was named best actress for her dramatic turn as a former Nazi prison guard who involves herself in a love affair with a teenage boy in “The Reader.”

She fought back tears when accepting her trophy and remembered a time as a child when she dreamed of winning it.

“I would be lying if I said I haven’t made a version of this speech before. I think I was probably 8-years-old and staring into the bathroom mirror,” she said.

“This would have been a shampoo bottle,” she said gesturing to the golden Oscar statuette. “Well it’s not a shampoo bottle now!”

Sean Penn, best known for tough guy roles in movies such as “Mystic River,” earned his second Oscar for best actor, portraying slain gay rights activist Harvey Milk in “Milk.”

“I did not expect this, and I want to be very clear that I do know how hard I make it for you to appreciate me, often,” he said. “I am touched by the appreciation.”

PENN GOES POLITICAL

Penn also gave one of the few political speeches of the evening, asking people to rethink their beliefs and support gay marriage.

Other top honors went to Penelope Cruz who became the first Spanish actress to win an Academy Award for her supporting role in “Vicky Cristina Barcelona.” Heath Ledger was posthumously named best supporting actor for his villainous role as The Joker in Batman movie “The Dark Knight.”

The award for Ledger, who died last year of an accidental prescription drug overdose, brought the crowd to its feet. He became only the second actor after Peter Finch to win after death. The Oscar was accepted by his father, Kim Ledger, sister Kate and mother Sally Bell.

“This award tonight would have humbly validated his quiet determination to be truly accepted by you all here, his peers, in an industry he truly loved,” Kim Ledger said.

In other awards, Dustin Lance Black won the best original screenplay Oscar for writing “Milk, and “Wall-E,” telling of a futuristic robot who finds love while on a polluted Earth, was best animated film.

“The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” walked off with two statuettes for best art direction and makeup, and “The Duchess” won for best costume design.

“Man on Wire” about a tightrope walker who dared to walk between New York’s Twin Towers was named best documentary.

In the night’s one big surprise, Japanese movie “Departures” beat the favorite, Israeli film “Waltz With Bashir,” for foreign language film.

JACKMAN ADDS MUSIC

As the ceremony began, host Hugh Jackman put the show in full musical mode with an opening routine that drew a standing ovation from the star-studded crowd.

The number covered all five of the best film nominees and had Jackman dancing hip hop, hitting high notes in a duet with Hathaway for “Frost/Nixon” and climbing to the top rope of a fake wrestling ring to crescendo his song with “The Wrestler.”

Later, he performed an old-style number in top hat and tails with Beyonce, Zac Efron and Vanessa Hudgens. Among the funnier acts was Ben Stiller doing an impersonation of a wacky Joaquin Phoenix, who has quit acting to take up hip hop music.

Jackman had been brought in to restore some fun to a show that has seen a slide in television viewership in recent years as Academy members have generally favored dark dramas.
Bob Tourtellotte

Actors’ union ousts boss in bid to avoid strike

Actors' union ousts boss in bid to avoid strike Los Angeles – The largest actors’ union in the United States has ousted its combative executive director in a backlash against his hard line negotiating style that had nearly brought the Screen Actors Guild to the brink of a debilitating strike.

The board of the union fired executive director Doug Allen on Monday night, and appointed a new chief negotiator who is expected to immediately jump start long-stalled talks with studio representatives.

The board also replaced the union’s negotiating committee with a task force mandated to secure a television/theatrical contract that can be sent to members with a “positive recommendation.”

“These much needed changes will allow SAG to chart a new course,” the 71-member board said in a statement.

The actors have been working without a contract since June and had been brought to the brink of a strike over disagreements on residual payments for work distributed over the internet and other new media. A strike would have paralyzed movie and television production in Hollywood like the screenwriters’ strike last year that was estimated to have cost the industry 3 billion dollars.

The new negotiating team is expected to accept contract proposals modeled on those reached between the studios and the screenwriters’ and directors’ guilds. (dpa)

New immigrant landings hit southern Italy

Rome – A further 448 would-be immigrants arrived Tuesday morning in southern Italy, with almost half landing on the islet of Lampedusa.

The first group of 220 – including seven women and 28 children – was rescued by a coast guard patrol and taken to Lampedusa shortly before dawn, the ANSA news agency reported.

Another group of 228, including 34 women and one infant child, was also brought to safety after the coast guard found them adrift on a boat some 30 nautical miles from the port of Pozzallo, Sicily, ANSA said.

Tuesday`s arrivals brought to 1,800 the number of would-be immigrants housed in a reception centre on Lampedusa which according to officials only has 800 beds.

Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni recently visited the islet to assure its inhabitants that there will be no repeat this year of the situation experienced in 2008 when 31,000 migrants landed on Lampedusa.

A total of 36,900 would-be immigrants arrived in Italy by sea in 2008, a 75 per cent increase over the previous year.

Maroni said a recent bilateral agreement with Libya will allow the Italian navy to patrol the North African nation`s coastline, an area from where many would-be immigrants attempt to cross the Mediterranean and reach Italy.

Maroni plans to host in May a meeting with his counterparts of the Group of Eight (G8) on Lampedusa in order to highlight the problem of illegal immigration. (dpa)

Roddick vote of confidence for new ATP boss

Roddick vote of confidence for new ATP boss Melbourne – Andy Roddick says he’s impressed with new ATP boss Adam Helfant, after meeting his fellow American at the Australian Open.

“I actually was lucky enough to have dinner with him the other night. I was pretty impressed,” said Roddick. “He didn’t come in with kind of this braggadocio attitude of what he’s done, whatever. He kind of came in and he had his notepad and his pen, and he asked questions, and he wrote down notes. He didn’t come in like a know-it- all.”

Helfant is new to tennis, having previously negotiated contracts for Nike, which brought him into contact with the elite world of major players including Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.

Critics fear that the newly chosen executive will face a steep learning curve to get a true grounding in the game. None of that bothers Roddick.

“It was an impressive meeting, that’s for sure,” he said. “After the meeting, I was glad that they had chosen him.” (dpa)

Italian mountaineers die in Mont Blanc range

Italian mountaineers die in Mont Blanc range Aosta, Italy – Four Italian mountaineers from the Piedmont region have died on the French side of the Mont Blanc massiv, Italian media reported on Sunday.

French mountain rescue services began a search for the four climbers when they did not arrive at their mountain hut on Saturday evening.

Although the circumstances of the accident are still unclear, Italian media reported that it occurred at around 3,600 metres, on Aiguille du Midi, a 3,843 metre-peak near to Mont Blanc.

The climbers’ bodies were brought to the French town of Chamonix. dpa

Obama’s ceremonial train trip brushes anti-slave trail

Wilmington, Delaware – In a series of treacherous journeys from the southern US states, abolitionist Harriet Tubman helped lead hundreds of African-Americans from slavery to freedom, years before the 1861-65 Civil War that brought an end to the practice in the United States.

One of the routes that Tubman would take was across the Christina River and into Wilmington, Delaware. It marked one of the dividing lines between states that still practised slavery in the south and free states to the north.

Some 150 years later, on the north side of the river is an Amtrak railway station. The station was passed through on Saturday by president-elect Barack Obama during his ceremonial “Whistle Stop” train journey to his inauguration in Washington.

“It’s ironic that an African-American president would stop by the same spot where slaves were freed,” remarked Louis Redden, 47, a Wilmington resident.

Tubman’s heroics are just one of many US historical nuggets from the centuries-long journey that brought Obama to Washington, where on Tuesday he will be making history of his own by becoming the country’s first black president.

Obama’s inauguration will mark a key step toward racial reconciliation in the United States. But Redden, himself an African- American, believed there was more history to be written as he watched Obama’s train leave the Wilmington station.

With Obama’s election in November, “America is really not there yet but on their way to abolishing racism,” said Redden.

“I don’t look for him to do any favours for African Americans. I look for him to do favours for all Americans,” Redden said.

Obama faces a myriad of problems and sky-high expectations at home and abroad as he takes the oath of office Tuesday in front of an anticipated record crowd of up to 2 million people on Washington’s National Mall.

Saturday’s 200-kilometre trip took nearly nine hours as the train slow-rolled through small towns, passing thousands of enthusiastic supporters who had braved minus-12-Centigrade temperatures in the hopes of catching a glimpse of the president- elect.

“He’s such an inspirational figure, he makes you want to come out in sub-zero temperatures,” said Savitha Krishna, 31, who came to the Wilmington stop along with her husband and five-month-old baby Nikhil.

Obama’s trip mirrored the inaugural journey of Civil War president Abraham Lincoln, a fellow Illinois politician who travelled by train all the way from Springfield, Illinois, for his own inauguration in 1861.

Obama began his ride in Philadelphia, the country’s first capital and site of the declaration of independence from Britain in 1776.

Three hours later in Wilmington he picked up vice president-elect Joe Biden, a veteran senator from Delaware, who continued living in his home state throughout his Senate career and famously commuted by rail to his office in Washington.

“It’s not every day you get to do your commute with the next president of the United States,” Biden joked to an estimated crowd of 7,000 that had come to the city’s station to wave their goodbyes.

Next, the train traveled to Baltimore, Maryland, where Francis Scott Key was inspired to write the country’s national anthem during the war of 1812. Key was held under British guard in Baltimore Harbour watching anxiously as US forces at Fort McHenry repelled an attack by the British Navy, and described his relief to see the US flag still waving when the smoke cleared.

An estimated 40,000 people turned out at city hall near the same harbour on Saturday to hear Obama call for a new “declaration of independence” from the political divisions of the past to address the crises currently facing the United States, including a devastating recession as well as wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

“We should never forget that we are the heirs of those early (American) patriots … who somehow believed that they had the power to make the world anew,” Obama said. “That is the spirit that we must reclaim today.”

If you ask his supporters, Saturday’s train journey may indicate Obama’s willingness to address yet another urgent problem facing the United States – its crumbling public transport system.

“We refuse to deal with public transportation in this country,” said Hal Blockson, a 69-year-old retired school counselor. “Barack and Joe Biden – especially Joe Biden – are going to change that.” (dpa)

Mumbai terror attack perpetrators need to booked: David C.Mulford

New Delhi, Jan.9 (ANI): The outgoing U.S Ambassador to India David C Mulford on Friday said that the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attacks needed to be booked.

Speaking at his farewell ceremony here, Mulford said: “The US has been pressing as India has, for deeper understanding in Pakistan of the roots of this problem, learning more and more in the hope that we can bring the people who committed this heinous act to book.”

Mulford said that the U.S was determined to work “non-stop” and “as long as it takes” to ensure that the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attacks are brought to justice.

“It was an attack which appeared to have come from Pakistani territory. It appeared to have been managed from the Pakistani territories. It appeared to have been conducted by the Pakistani people who were trained and came from Pakistan,” Mulford said.

He however, made it clear that the US did not want to make accusations against “certain parties” without evidence. (ANI)

Indian economy set to grow at about 6.5 percent

Chennai, Jan 9 (ANI): Union Minister of State for Industries Ashwani Kumar has said that India is still a good growth story, as its economic fundamentals are strong.

Addressing the session ”Building Bridges: Trade and Investment” at the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas 2009 here, Dr Ashwani said: “A GDP growth of 6.5 per cent is expected, even while most countries are suffering economic downturn.”

He stressed that the diaspora must bring funds into India. “At the same time, it should engage in skill-building activities in the country,” he added.

Gopinath Pillai, Ambassador-at-large and Chairman, Institute of Asian Studies, Singapore, said that compared to the Chinese Diaspora, Indian Diaspora has brought in less investments, but on the other hand, it has brought better skills which is also of enormous significance.

He suggested that to properly utilise the skills of returning workers, they should be involved in developmental activities.

Hari Pandey, President, Wealth Management, North American Region, ICICI Bank Group, Canada, stressed that overseas Indians must show the world how to invest in India.

Continuing the emphasis on education and knowledge exchange at the concurrent session on ”Education and Diaspora Knowledge Network”, D Purandeswari Devi, Minister of State for Human Resource Development, urged the Indian diaspora to supplement the efforts of the Indian Government to make India a knowledge-based economy.

The Minister outlined the educational initiatives of Sarva Siksha Abhiyan and Mid Day Meals Scheme, which have attracted more students to schools.

However, she urged, there is a long way to go as seven million children are still out of school and the short fall in faculty is about 25 per cent. (ANI)

Indonesia’s inflation hits 11.06 per cent in 2008

Indonesia's inflation hits 11.06 per cent in 2008 Jakarta – Indonesia’s consumer price index in December declined 0.04 per cent against the previous month, driven by lower costs of transportation and communication, a senior government official said Monday.

The 2008 annual inflation rate was 11.06 per cent, said Ali Rosidi, deputy chairman of the Central Bureau of Statistics.

Rosidi said the December deflation was due to a decrease in the price index in the group transport, communications and financial services.

Total export value reached 9.61 billion dollars in November 2008, down 11.09 per cent from 11.81 billion dollars in October. It brought total exports for January-November
2008 to 128.09 billion dollars, or up 24.17 per cent, compared with the same period of the previous year.

Indonesia’s January-November 2008 imports were valued at 120.97 billion dollars, down 10.57 per cent from the same period of 2007 at 135.27 billion dollars.

The number of foreign visitors in November stood at 524,200 persons, a rise of 9.94 per cent compared with the 476,800 foreign arrivals in November 2006. It brought the number of foreign visitors to Indonesia in the first 11 months of 2008 to 5.62 million, up 12.77 per cent from the same period in 2007 of 4.99 million, Rosidi said. (dpa)

Bangladesh leader Hasina cleared of graft charge

Bangladesh leader Hasina cleared of graft chargeDhaka – Police on Monday cleared Bangladesh’s prime minister-in-waiting Sheikh Hasina Wazed of an extortion charge brought by a businessman eight months ago, officials said.

Police said investigators found no evidence that Hasina, the head of the Awami League, extorted 440,000 dollars from businessman Tazul Islam Faruk, who lodged the case with police in April.

“We submitted a report detailing the investigation to the court for its consideration,” said a police inspector of Tejgaon police station.

A week before the December 29 general elections, plaintiff Faruk appealed to the police station where he lodged the case requesting withdrawal of the charges against the former premier.

“The case was filed under certain circumstances as a result of misunderstanding, and now I want to lift the case,” appealed Tajul, the chairman of electricity company Westmont Power Ltd.

Hasina was accused in five graft cases after the military-backed government of Fakhruddin Ahmed took over on January 11, 2007, against the backdrop of serious political violence.

She was also detained in prison for almost a year until June 11, 2008.

Two more extortion charges brought also by businessmen against Hasina were dropped by the plaintiffs prior to the elections, in which her Awami League party own a landslide victory. Proceedings of the other cases were stayed by the higher courts.

Hasina is scheduled to take over as Bangladesh’s next prime minister Tuesday evening. (dpa)

Gemma Arterton keeps changing hairstyle to dodge peeping eyes

New Delhi, Jan 05 (ANI): Hollywood actress Gemma Arterton has revealed that the fact that she keeps on changing her hair helps her dodge peeping toms.

Gemma says that most of the people fail to recognize her as she changes her hair very often, and she likes it like that, as she intends to enjoy her private life in her own way, reports the China Daily.

“I never get recognized. I think it”s because my hair keeps changing all the time. People never know it”s me!” Gemma said.

However Gemma also brought to light the fact that, she hasn’t acted in many Hollywood flicks to be followed by fans everywhere, reports China daily.

“But, to be honest, I”m not really that well known, I haven”t had that many films actually out yet,” Gemma said. (ANI)

PM asks Pak to hand over Mumbai terror ‘criminals’

Shillong (Meghalaya), Jan. 3 (ANI): Following Pakistan’s rejection to extradite any Pakistani national to India, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has asked Pakistan to hand over “criminals” responsible for the Mumbai attacks so that they can face trial in India.

Singh hoped that “some sense” would prevail in the Pakistani leadership and that it would recognise that those behind the “horrible acts” in Mumbai should to be brought to justice.

“It (Pakistan) has to take action on the demand from all civilised countries that the perpetrators (of Mumbai attacks) will be brought to book. We hope that these criminals will be handed over to us to face trial,” he told a press conference after inaugurating the annual Indian Science Congress here.

Dr. Singh also hoped that the new government in Bangladesh would not allow its land to be used for terror activities.

Singh said the government would go to any extent to root out terrorism from the nation, but those laying down arms were welcomed to have a dialogue with the government.

Referring to the terror attacks on Mumbai, Delhi and Assam, PM said, “There were some initial setbacks, but we will overcome them. The government will go to any extent to root out terrorism from the country.”

He further said insurgents and terrorists must recognise that the gun is no solution to fulfil their demands. “Once they lay down arms as Indian citizens, we are willing to talk to anybody,” he said. (ANI)

Defence journal Sainik Samachar turns 100 today

New Delhi, Jan. 2 (ANI): Defence Minister AK Antony today released a coffee table book “Soldiering On” to commemorate the centenary of the Sainik Samachar, the fortnightly journal of India’s Armed Forces, here today.

The journal had started its journey, rather tentatively, as a sixteen page Urdu Weekly on January 2, 1909, to provide to Army personnel a summary of news with a military bias. Rare photographs, memorable documents and vignettes of the heroics of the Indian Armed Forces are the hallmarks of the coffee table book.

Antony congratulated the Sainik Samachar for turning 100 today, and said the publication is doing a yeoman service to the armed forces.

He also asked the media to be cautious in its approach while reporting on the matters dealing with the armed forces.

“Soldiering On” presents a panoramic view of the major events in the life of the nation and to some extent, of the world, as reported by Fauji Akhbar/Sainik Samachar since its inception. It also reflects the trials and tribulations of some of the epoch making chapters of Indian history and world history.

The book “Soldiering On” has been divided into four chapters. The first chapter covers the trivia related to the magazine, while the second chapter covers the period from the date of its inception in 1909 till 1947 when the British soldiers left India.

This portion of the book includes archival material and photographs connected with the declaration of Delhi as capital, the First World War, the early stages of formation of all the wings of Armed Forces and its major institutions, the Second World War, the partition and India”s independence. Two rare pages of this chapter, “Down the Memory Lane” stand out for their historic value.

During its chequered history, Fauji Akhbar has travelled from Shimla, where its office was originally located and published from Allahabad, to Lahore, back to Shimla and then to Delhi.

Its popularity was at its peak during the World War-II when an overseas edition was also brought out from Cairo for the benefit of Indian troops deployed in far-off theatres. The print order of Fauji Akhbar and its special bi- weekly supplement Jang Ki Khabarein was in excess of three lakhs at that time.

The publication of Fauji Akhbar was suspended temporarily immediately after Independence due to sudden migration of Muslim staff and the printers. However, it bounced back with renewed vigour in no time. The magazine turned into a fortnightly on April 4, 1954 and re-christened as Sainik Samachar.

Published by the Directorate of Public Relations (DPR), Ministry of Defence, the magazine is now brought out in 13 different Indian languages including English.

Among the many articles and photographs, some of the memorable pages include a photograph of a young boy of ‘Kashmiri National Militia’ saluting Pandit Nehru in Rajouri in 1948 along with a banner saying “We Will Defend Kashmir with Our Blood”.

There are photographs, which show Indian troops manning a lonely post at Chushul and going on a patrol next to Pangong Lake in Ladakh in 1962. The book has dug out a rare photograph of Indira Gandhi donating all her 367 grams of gold jewellery to the national relief fund to support the 1962 war effort.

The book is a record of the indomitable courage and heroics of Indian Armed forces. The pictures and stories reinforce the fact that whenever any adversary has dared to mess up with India’s security or territorial integrity, the Indian Armed Forces have risen to the challenge and given the enemy a crushing reply.

The book features some rare pictures of Indian troops in action on foreign soil during UN peace keeping missions in Korea, Congo, Gaza , Indo-China among many such operations. (ANI)