�Indian appearance� baby found abandoned on Sydney street

Sydney, May 18 (ANI): A toddler, most probably of Indian origin, was found walking unsupervised in Western Sydney on Tuesday morning.

Two off duty ambulance officers spotted the kid who is aged around three, and was seemingly distressed when the officers found him wandering alone on the busy street.

The police are having a hard time in tracing the boy�s parents or guardian as he offered little clue as to where they could be, and the police are finding it difficult to communicate with the kid who has a limited vocabulary.

They have also reconnoitered the area�s pre-schools but to no avail.

��We canvassed the nearby area, a number of pre-schools and local schools and shopkeepers and met with a negative response. We showed a photo to people in the local area but no one knows anything about him,� the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Penrith Police duty officer Inspector Cox as saying.

The boy, who has not told the police his name, is of Indian appearance with an olive complexion, 80- to 90-centimetres tall and thin with short brown hair and brown eyes.

He was wearing a brown jacket with grey lining, a red jumper featuring a picture of a “hungry dinosaur”, light grey tracksuit pants, grey socks and brown sandals, the paper reports.

The police have issued a notice with the helpline number of �Crime Stoppers�, for anyone who might provide information about the little boy. (ANI)

Urgent appeal after woman, baby abducted

Police are seeking urgent public help to find a 11-month-old girl and a 24-year-old woman who were abducted from Wagga Wagga in the New South Wales Riverina this morning.

Detectives say that about 10.25am (AEDT) a man in a sedan with one male passenger pulled up next to the woman and baby outside a home in Titchborne Crescent in Kooringal.

The man was driving a white 1993 model Ford Fairmont sedan with NSW registration AGG28K.

Witnesses saw the man grab the woman and force her into the car.

Police say the child is missing from the scene and is believed to be in the vehicle.

The car was last seen heading west on Titchborne Crescent.

The man is described as being of Aboriginal appearance, 190-195 cm tall, 30 years old, medium build, hazel eyes, black hair, and wearing a yellow shirt.

The woman is described as being of Aboriginal appearance, 160 cm tall, 24 years old, thin build, brown eyes, brown hair and wearing an orange singlet and green track pants.

The 11-month-old girl is described as being of Aboriginal appearance and wearing a purple top.

Police believe the car may have left the Wagga Wagga township and is heading west towards Narrandera or Lockhart.

They are asking the public to be on alert and report any sightings of the man or the car by dialling 000.

DNA ‘can reveal eye colour’

Washington, Mar 10 (ANI): As part of a breakthrough in human genetics, Netherlands scientists can now predict with 90 percent accuracy if a person has blue or brown eyes by analysing DNA from only 6 different positions of the genome.anfred Kayser of the Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam led the study.

Human eye colour, which is determined by the extent and type of pigmentation on the eye’s iris, is what geneticists call a ‘complex trait’. This means that several genes control, which colour the eyes, will ultimately have.

Over the past decades a number of such ‘eye-colour genes’ have been identified, and people with different eye colour, will have a different DNA sequence at certain points in these genes.

Such differences are known as single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).

The researchers analysed the DNA of over 6000 Dutch people whose eye colour had been scored. They determined the sequence at 37 SNPs in 8 eye colour genes for each of these and found that the eye colour of a given individual can be predicted with over 90 percent confidence already with the best 6 SNPs from 6 genes, as long as the persons’s eyes are blue or brown.

For the intermediate colour, shown by about 10 percent of the people tested, the accuracy is lower at about 75 percent.

The study has two-fold implications-firstly, it is a proof-of-principle that complex traits can be predicted from the genome sequence alone, provided that genes with strong effects on the trait exist and are known. This can have implications for predicting disease risks based on DNA, before the disease breaks out.

Also, the findings have direct relevance in the forensic sector.

The study is published in the journal Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. (ANI)