Indian ruggers confident after NZ, Fiji tours: Davey

New Delhi, Jun 5 (PTI) Rugby India”s Development Manager Greg Davey feels the recent training-cum-competition trips to New Zealand and Fiji have helped iron out flaws in the team”s preparation for this year”s Commonwealth Games. “New Zealand and Fiji tours have given boys the confidence required at the international level.

They trust themselves more, they believe in their strengths. They have learned to take decisions quickly on the field and have rectified their mistakes,” Davey told PTI. “They were exposed to some great teams during the tour.

Now I would like to see the boys applying these skills in tournaments like Shanghai Sevens, Buenos Aires Sevens and the big Delhi Commonwealth Games,” he added. During their three-week trip, the 23-member Indian contingent met former champions and legends of the game, visited state-of-the-art gymnasiums, world class pitches and fitness professionals and competed in a few practice matches.

“The trip was very important keeping the Commonwealth Games in mind. Boys need to step up their performance and produce good results in front of home crowd.

What matters is attitude and aggression. They have the killer instinct in them and need to show that on the field against opponents,” said Davey.

On the Indians” performance in the just-concluded Asian5 Nations Rugby tournament where they finished runners-up after losing to lowly ranked Philippines 12-34 in the summit clash, Davey said it was disheartening to see the team lose after coming so close to the title triumph. “We had prepared hard for the tournament and that showed in our performance.

But we faltered at the last hurdle. Anyway the tournament has given us many positives and we hope to continue our good form” he said.

The New Zealander said inclusion of youngsters in the team was a positive step taken by the national federation and “it will pay rich dividends in the future.” “It”s a good step taken in right direction.

It”s good for the overall development of the team. But the young guns need to prove their talent to retain their place in the side,” he said.

In Davey”s native New Zealand, rugby is the most popular sport and he foresees the sport to become as popular in cricket-mad India as well. “I think in two-three years, we can have 50,000 players, a good scenario for India.

There is a need to build the strong foundation at the school and college level. I believe Rugby has what it takes to appeal to sport loving Indians,” he said.

Davey is aiming to put in place a proper coaching and administrative infrastructure to ensure all-round growth of the sport.

Optimism grows in Argentina as World Cup nears

Thousands of Argentines cheered on the national team as it departed for South Africa on Friday on their quest to win the country’s third World Cup.

The send-off marked the latest sign of growing confidence in coach Diego Maradona, who has had a turbulent tenure since taking over the team more than 18 months ago.

Chanting fans crowded a highway leading to the Buenos Aires international airport as a bus carrying the team moved slowly towards their flight.

“We’re all with Diego,” said Martin Bertaina, a 39-year-old horse trainer who rode his horse 20 kilometers to see the team.

“Maybe a few months ago we weren’t, but Argentines are like that. One day we love you, the next we don’t. But Maradona is special.”

Argentina, World Cup champions in 1978 and 1986, are widely seen as one of the tournament’s most talented teams led by striker Lionel Messi, who was voted Europe’s player of the year.

Maradona, one of the game’s greatest players, had a wobbly start as coach. His side advanced to the World Cup finals after winning their last qualifying match, narrowly avoiding a playoff.

However, two wins in friendlies against Germany and Canada, and strong showings by many of the team’s top players with their club teams in Europe, have raised expectations for the team in South Africa.

“We possibly have some of the best players in the world,” said 68-year-old clothing store owner Carlos Paradela, who cheered the team while carrying his five-year-old grandson Joel on his shoulders. “Diego is going to lead us to the championship.”

Argentina have been drawn in Group B for the World Cup finals along with Nigeria, South Korea and Greece.

(Writing by Kevin Gray; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

‘Will run naked if Argentina win Cup’

Diego Maradona has promised to run naked through the centre of Buenos Aires if Argentina win the World Cup. The Argentina coach made the promise during a radio show. The unpredictable Maradona was speaking a day after Argentina defeated Canada 5-0 on Monday in their final warm-up match before the World Cup.

“If we win the World Cup, I’ll get naked and run around the Obelisk,” he said, referring to the tall monument that marks the centre of the city and serves as its most famous landmark.

Maradona’s response came after a reporter asked him in the interview what he would do if his team returned to Argentina with their third World Cup title.

In the same interview, Maradona said he had to explain to Lionel Messi why he did not play against Canada. Messi is the reigning FIFA player of the year, but sat out the match to protect him against any possible injury. “If something would have happened to you in that match, I’d have been shot – you know where,” Maradona said he told Messi.

Argentina play in Group B, opening against Nigeria on June 12. The team also face Greece and South Korea.

No pressure, says Messi

Meanwhile, Messi has said he doesn’t feel any pressure to deliver at the World Cup.

Messi heads to the tournament in South Africa having won a string of personal honours and titles with Barcelona, largely due to his extraordinary playmaking and scoring prowess. “I don’t feel the pressure,” Messi said. “The truth is I’m arriving in good shape. I have a strong desire to do as well as I can, as do my teammates. We want to give our best for Argentina and we hope things turn out well.”

Ex-Colombian beauty queen arrested on drug charges

A former Colombian beauty queen suspected of leading a band of young women who smuggled cocaine from Argentina to Europe was arrested on Wednesday in Argentina, a judicial source said.

Police arrested Angie Sanclemente Valencia, 31, at a youth hostel in Buenos Aires, the source told Reuters, asking not to be named because the investigation is ongoing.

The ex-model and actress won one of Colombia’s top beauty pageants in 2000 but was later dethroned after it was revealed she had lied about being single.

She vanished several months ago amid an investigation by Argentine authorities into accusations she headed up a group of women who transported cocaine on flights from Buenos Aires to Europe via Mexico.

Colombia is the world’s No. 1 cocaine producer.

Authorities say Valencia employed young, attractive women who reportedly often traveled first class to smuggle the drugs.

She has repeatedly denied the charges. Her lawyer has said Valencia refused to turn herself in out of fear she could be abused in jail.

(Reporting by Karina Grazina; Writing by Kevin Gray; Editing by Xavier Briand)

England win warm-up, coach blows hot and cold

England enjoyed a triumphant home send-off to the World Cup when an unfamiliar team packed with reserves outmuscled a skilful Mexico side 3-1 in their last home friendly at Wembley on Monday.

Manager Fabio Capello may have learned little that he didn’t know before a contest in which England recovered from a ragged first half showing to ensure win.

But for the Italian, it was a night to ink over a few pencilled ticks against certain names and etch a line across others as he finalises the decisions that will cut his 30-man squad to 23 for the finals in South Africa. “I wasn’t too concerned. It was very important to know where we are now – physically and mentally – and I think when we play on the counter, we look really dangerous. But we can’t just play on the counterattack.”

Goals from defender Ledley King, with a well-placed header, and striker Peter Crouch, with what appeared to be his right arm, put England 2-0 ahead before striker Guillermo Franco pulled one back from close range three minutes into first half added time. England goalkeeper Robert Green made two outstanding saves and saw another Mexican shot hit a post before the interval as England struggled to survive against spells of good possession and sharp attacks from the visitors. “The manager told us what he thought at halftime – we had to be a lot more aggressive and get in their faces,” said Steven Gerrard.

Argentina thrash Canada

In Buenos Aires, Maxi Rodriguez scored two goals and Argentina defeated Canada 5-0 on Monday in the Gauchos’ final tuneup before their World Cup opener on June 12. Argentina’s farewell match was played with FIFA player of the year Lionel Messi on the bench as coach Diego Maradona decided to rest the Barcelona playmaker.

Midfielder Javier Pastore started up front with Carlos Tevez and Gonzalo Higuain. Rodriguez scored in the 16th and 32nd minutes and Angel Di Maria added another in the 37th. Tevez scored in the 63rd and Sergio Aguero added his in 71st, seconds after coming on as a substitute.

Australian guide killed in Argentina crash

A 32-year-old Victorian man, Simon Buckley, has died in Argentina.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has confirmed the death, in the city of Rio Grande, in the country’s south, on Wednesday.

It is believed the man, who is a tour guide, died in a motorcycle accident.

A department spokeswoman says consular officials and the Australian Embassy in Buenos Aires are helping the man’s family.

Italian police seize Maradona’s diamond studs

Rome, Sep 19 (ANI): Beleaguered football legend Diego Maradona had to hand over his diamond studs to police as part payment for the millions he owes the Italian tax authorities.

Italian officials paid the holidaying Argentinean coach a visit at the luxury hotel he was staying in and seized the earrings worth nearly 4,000 pounds, Sky News reports.

Police claimed that Maradona still owes some 20 million pounds, dating back to his seven-year stint at the Italian club Napoli, where he frequently failed to pay income tax.

After fleeing Buenos Aires on Monday following Argentina’s four defeats in five matches of 2010 World Cup qualifier, Maradona, 48, is currently staying at a spa in the town of Merano in north-eastern Italy, where he is trying to lose weight.

Italian authorities had seized two of his Rolex watches worth 11,000 pounds in 2006, when he was staying near Naples.

In 2005, they seized the money he was to receive for taking part in a TV dancing show.

Four years earlier, he was met by 20 police officers as he got off a plane in Rome.

Italy’s Supreme Court ordered the ex-footballer to pay 36 million euros in unpaid taxes.

According to the association of Italian taxpayers, Maradona still has 22.4 million euros to pay.

Recently, Brazilian legend Pele took a blow at Maradona, saying he feels another Argentine-born player, Alfredo di Stefano, is the best player ever.

“Maradona was a great player, but he could not kick with his right foot and did not score goals with his head.

The only time he scored an important goal with his head, it turned out he had used his hand,” Pele said referring to Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ goal against England in 1986 World Cup. (ANI)

Maradona insists he won’t quit, instead will work hard like crazy

Buenos Aires (Argentina), Sep 7(ANI): Argentina coach Diego Maradona, who faces the axe if his team fails to qualify for next year’s World Cup in South Africa, has said that he will not quit rather he would “work hard like crazy”.

The two-time World champions was beaten by South American rivals Brazil, and are currently fourth in their group, just two points ahead of Ecuador and Colombia.

“This won’t break me. I will work hard like crazy. To lose to Brazil is always ugly. We were very motivated about winning and moving closer towards the World Cup. But now we can’t sit back because qualifying will be tough,” The Sun quoted Maradona, as saying.

Maradona further accepted to take the responsibility of defeat against Brazil, and said that Messi should not be blamed for it, as he wasn’t the only on playing.

“I won’t complain about my players, because I threw everything at Brazil. Unfortunately we just couldn’t turn the game,” he said.

Maradona also said that there was now huge pressure on the team ahead of the next qualifier, which will be played against Paraguay on Thursday. (ANI)

Iran’s ‘wanted’ defence minister warns Israel not to attack its N-facilities

Jerusalem, Sep. 4 (ANI): Iran’s controversial new Defence Minister Ahmad Vahid has warned Israel not to attack the country’s nuclear facilities.

“Every move from the Zionist entity against Iran will be met with a harsh and powerful response from Iran,” The Jerusalem Post quoted him, Vahidi saying.

Vahidi also said that the overwhelming support he had garnered in the parliamentary vote on his appointment “attested to the anti-Zionist spirit of the Iranian parliament and people.”

Vahidi is a wanted by Interpol for masterminding the Buenos Aires Jewish centre bomb blast in 1994 that claimed 85 lives.

Buenos Aires has called General Vahidi’s inclusion in Ahmadinejad’s new Cabinet “an affront to Argentine justice and to the victims of the brutal terrorist attack”.

US President Barack Obama has termed Vahidi’s inclusion in the Cabinet as “disturbing”.

Vahidi gained support earlier this week when lawmakers said they would not bow to foreign pressures to reject him.

The chairman of the Iranian foreign policy committee, Alaeddin Boroujerdi, said the allegations “will not have any negative impact on the assessment” of General Vahidi’s suitability for the job.

“Rather, it may increase his vote,” he noted.

Ahmadinejad has faced questions about the experience and expertise of some of the choices for his 21-seat cabinet. But on Thursday, he managed to win approval for many key posts that included the foreign, interior, intelligence ministries and Ahmad Vahidi as defense minister.

The parliament also backed Marzieh Vahid Dastjerdi as health minister, making her the Islamic republic’s first female minister since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. (ANI)

Argentine mistress of Governor Sanford admits being woman in his life

New York, June 30 (ANI): The Argentine mistress of South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, Maria Belen Chapur, has admitted that she was the woman who drew the rising GOP star away from the country for six days earlier this month.

Aides to the Republican governor had explained his absence by saying that he was hiking the Appalachian Trail.

She issued a short statement to Buenos Aires’ C5N TV station, tacitly admitting to the affair.

“Of my private life I won’t speak, not now or in the future. It’s been made public enough already, a fact that causes me terrible discomfort,” the statement said.

Chapur, a 41-year-old mother of two, said she had firm suspicions of who hacked into her e-mail and leaked steamy exchanges between her and the governor, who had been a rising star in the GOP.

The State newspaper of Columbia, S.C., obtained the e-mails in December, the Daily News reports.

“Since I don’t have sufficient proof and live in a state of law, I’m obligated to keep their identity anonymous. I am not the judge of anyone; I leave all that in the hands of God,” Chapur’s statement said.

Sanford’s e-mails to Chapur have fascinated both hopeless romantics and serious politicos alike.

If reports are to be believed, the emails are colorful, descriptive, and unabashedly romantic, at times to the point of being schmaltzy and embarrassing.

“Do you really comprehend how beautiful your smile is? Have you been told lately how warm your eyes are and how they softly glow with the special nature of your soul?” the Politico quoted Sanford as having written.

In between the mushy parts, the two of them write about everyday events.

While Maria talks about taking a lazy day trip and reading an Alan Greenspan book, Sanford writes about meetings in New York, the National Governor’s Conference and an invitational with then-presidential candidate Senator John McCain.

According to reports, the letters give the impression that Sanford was a real romantic with a knack for writing.

“The most cherished gift a lover can give and receive is a love letter from the heart,” says romance coach Leslie Karsner, who sells prewritten love letters through a website called ‘Love Letters Now’. (ANI)

Eliot Spitzer claims he’s not like Mark Sanford

New York, June 29 (ANI): Former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer says that he is not similar to South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford.

Spitzer had resigned in March last year, after it was reported that he was a client of a prostitution ring under investigation by the federal government.

On the other hand, on June 24, 2009, Sanford resigned as chairman of the Republican Governors Association, when it was revealed he was in an extramarital affair with an Argentinian, Maria Belen Chapur.

And thus, at a lunch meeting with LMDC executive director Avi Schick at Solo in the Sony Building on Madison, Spitzer was overheard as saying that there’s a huge difference in what he did and what Sanford has done.

“I didn’t fall in love with any of them,” the New York Post quoted him as telling Schick.

Besides, Spitzer didn’t use any taxpayer money on his trysts, while Sanford is reimbursing the state about 12,000 dollars for travel expenses to Buenos Aires. (ANI)

Rising GOP star Sanford admits being unfaithful to wife

Washington, June 25 (ANI): South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, who rose through the Republican ranks over the past decade, from congressman to governor to potential 2012 presidential candidate, has tearfully admitted having an affair with an Argentine pen pal, diminishing his future GOP chances.

Sanford, after pulling off a bizarre vanishing act this week, reappeared on Wednesday to admit that he was having an affair that involved secret visits with his mistress in Argentina.

South Carolina’s Governor arrived home from a secret six-day trip to Buenos Aires to tearfully admit he has been having an affair with an Argentine pen pal.

“I spent the last five days of my life crying in Argentina,” Sanford said at an extraordinary, rambling press conference in Columbia, S.C.

Sanford, who was until this week one of the GOP’s most promising rising stars, resigned as chairman of the Republican Governors’ Association but did not step down from his job running South Carolina.

His staff initially told reporters that he had left town on Thursday to go hiking on the Appalachian Trail, but the Governor returned on Wednesday morning on a flight from Argentina.

“I’ve let down a lot of people. That’s the bottom line. I’ve been unfaithful to my wife,” Fox News quoted Sanford, as saying.

E-mails obtained by The State, a South Carolina newspaper, capture deeply personal exchanges between the Governor and the woman, whom the newspaper called only by her first name, Maria.

“My heart cries out for you, your voice, your body, the touch of your lips, the touch of your finger tips and an even deeper connection to your soul,” Sanford wrote in one of the e-mails, dated last summer.

The newspaper said a McClatchy correspondent reached Sanford’s mistress, but she declined to be interviewed.

Sanford’s wife, Jenny, who apparently had known about the affair for five months, had asked him to leave home two weeks ago and to stop talking to her and their children. In a written statement, she said the couple needed a trial separation, but that her husband had since “earned a chance to resurrect our marriage.”

The Governor apologized profusely to his family, his staff and the people of South Carolina. He said he’s let down his four sons in a “profound way,” though he said his wife had known about the affair for five months and they were trying to work through it. (ANI)

Argentinian fathered seven children with his daughter

Buenos Aires – DNA tests have revealed that an Argentinian man fathered seven children with one of his daughters, law enforcement officials in Mendoza province said on Wednesday.

The man, dubbed the “Monster of Mendoza” by the media, has been in custody for three weeks.

He has admitted raping his now 35-year-old daughter for the first time when she was 8 years old. She first became pregnant at 15 and her children are now aged between
2 and 19.

In a similar case, Austrian Josef Fritzl imprisoned his daughter in a basement dungeon for 24 years and fathered her seven children. The victim in Mendoza was not locked up but her father threatened her constantly, according to several statements.

The result of the DNA tests has undermined his defence that his daughter consented to sex as they have proved that she was underage when she gave birth to her first child by her father.

The man has a total of 21 children: eight from his first marriage, six with his current partner and seven with his daughter. An investigation into whether he abused his other daughters is ongoing.(dpa)

DNA test confirms ‘Argentine Fritzl’ fathered seven kids with daughter

London, May 28 (ANI): Armando Lucero, the 67-year-old Argentine man accused of raping his three daughters over two decades, has fathered seven children with one of them, DNA tests have confirmed

Lucero was placed in a maximum security prison on May 11 for “aggravated and repeated sexual abuse”. It is believed that he raped the three girls from early childhood.

The tragic drama unfolded in the city of Mendoza, about 620 miles west of Buenos Aires, reports The Telegraph.

Police officials are currently waiting for the results of psychological exams of Lucero, who has come to be known as the “Monster of Mendoza” in a case chillingly drawing similarities to the Austrian incest case of Josef Fritzl.

In that case, Fritzl, 73, was sentenced in March to life in prison for imprisoning his daughter in a secret dungeon for 24 years, and for the death of one of the seven children he had with her.

Lucero faces a maximum penalty of 50 years in prison. The woman at the center of the drama, now 35, fled her family home to obtain protection from the local authorities.

The woman decided to break her silence, she said, because her father threatened to sexually abuse one of her daughters. (ANI)

Australia’s Qantas ditching first class on some routes

Sydney – Passengers can travel in the first-class cabin of some Qantas jets for the price of a business-class ticket, Australia’s leading airline announced Monday.

A 25-per cent reduction in demand for luxury travel has prompted Qantas to suspend the first-class option on routes to London, Buenos Aires and San Francisco.

“We’ll sell it as a business-class service so they’ll get business-class product and service but some people will be sitting in a first-class seat,” a Qantas spokeswoman told The Australian newspaper.

Although fewer than one in 10 passengers travels either business class or first class, the industry standard is that a quarter of revenue accrues from the pointy end of the plane.

Qantas said it had moved to suspend first class on some flights because demand had collapsed despite deep discounting. (dpa)

Mexico seeks solutions in London for crisis, violence

Buenos Aires – Mexican President Felipe Calderon is likely to press a double demand when he attends the G20 summit in London next month, with the global crisis and the wave of violence that hits Mexico giving him many headaches in recent months.

On the one hand, as the leader of the 13th-largest economy in the world, he will be seeking to curb the severe effects that the international financial and economic crisis is having on Mexico, a country that is very heavily dependent on its northern neighbour, the now-troubled United States.

On the other hand, Calderon will make yet another attempt to turn drug-trafficking – at the heart of the violence that left some 6,300 dead last year in Mexico, and killed more than 1,000 others since January – into a global problem, with illegal-drug-consuming countries like the United States and the members of the European Union taking more responsibility for the fight against drug gangs.

Mexico sends over 80 per cent of its exports to the United States. Moreover, it also exports labour to its northern neighbour, and these workers send money to their families back home when they do well.

In the current context of severe crisis, Mexico is not only seeing its main – indeed, almost exclusive – export market shrink but it is also experiencing a 3-per-cent fall in remittances in 2008 and the return of many workers who once travelled across the border in search of a better life.

Some 80,000 Mexican migrants returned to their native country from the United States during 2008, according to researcher Ruben Sandoval, of the University of Baja California. The estimated number of returning migrants is expected to soar to 250,000 in 2009, and Sandoval stressed that their return is bound to have a strong economic, social and cultural impact on Mexico as well as an effect on family life and security.

The phenomenon of returning migrants and falling remittances which once helped many families out of poverty is common to Mexico and many Central American and Caribbean countries. The leaders of smaller nations with this problem have made it clear that they expect help from Washington, since they cannot handle the influx on their own.

“The strong fall in aggregate demand and employment in the United States is having a negative impact on economic activity in Mexico,” the Mexican central bank said in late February.

The bank estimates that Mexico’s GDP will decrease by 0.8-1.8 per cent during 2009.

Calderon has been busy courting foreign investors. That is why he was displeased when Mexican telecommunications tycoon Carlos Slim – the third-richest man in the world, worth some 35 billion dollars according to Forbes’ most recent list – said Mexico’s economy was on the brink of collapse.

“I do not want to be alarmist, but we have to get ready to look ahead and not look at the consequences afterwards and cry,” Slim said in February.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos in January, Calderon stressed that Mexico’s banking system is in fine health, and he highlighted Latin America’s potential as an outlet for investment at a time of crisis.

At the time, he stressed “common interests” among Latin American countries, and he is bound to team up with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva – the leader of the 10th-largest economy in the world – in London.

Amidst the financial crisis, Mexico has another open front in organized-crime violence. And – just as Lula and others demand a greater commitment from Washington to help smaller economies cope with the crisis generated in the northern giant – Calderon would like to see greater cooperation from abroad in the fight against violence.

Earlier this month, he demanded from the United States both solidarity and “explicit support that is reflected in resources, cooperation and intelligence-generating information” as Mexico seeks to curb drug violence.

Calderon has called upon the United States – which he pointedly termed “the world’s main drug market” and “the main weapons market for the criminal organizations that operate on both sides of the border” – to contain demand for illicit drugs and stem the flow of money and weapons to the hands of Mexican gangs. (dpa)

Developing true passion for opera likened to falling in love at first sight

Washington, Mar 18 (ANI): An upsurge of intense attraction and enduring physical effects, similar to what one feels in love at first sight, is how fans begin to develop a true passion for opera, according to a researcher.

To shed light on what it takes to develop a true passion for opera, Claudio Benzecry from the University of Connecticut in the USA observed and interviewed middle class opera fans who stand on the upper floors of the Colon Opera House in Buenos Aires.

He studied how the fans learnt to feel, believe, and behave in opera, which parts of the experience they highlighted and how they invested themselves once the initial moment of discovery subsided.

A majority of the fans described the intense attraction they felt the first time at the opera house as something explosive, which had intense and enduring physical effects, not dissimilar to love at first sight.

It’s after the initial attraction that the learning begins and Benzecry has described the three ways in which fans learn about opera.

In all three cases, contact with other participants who already enjoy the experience is the cornerstone.

Passionate fans learn to enjoy opera internally first, responding to parts of the music that demand an emotional reaction, and then externally by reacting publicly in the appropriate way.

Firstly, they learn informally in the surrounding, non-musical moments of the performance like ticket and door lines, intermissions and bus trips to other opera houses. Before a performance and during intervals, opera fans gather to wait, talk, compare and justify their impressions and experiences of opera.

Secondly, fans learn more formally from the ‘maestros’ by attending classes, lectures and conferences that make explicit what fans should be looking for in opera, what features of the experience they favour, and how they should act during a performance.
astly, fans learn at the opera house from more experienced, elder passionate fans, who transmit opera etiquette including when it is appropriate to boo, sit silently or clap.

The study shows that passionate opera fans enjoy opera not because they are moved by it in their ignorance, but rather because they believe that opera is something that should be learned so that one could properly appreciate it.

Benzecry concluded: “Fans get hooked when they are still outsiders, before having an active apparatus to interpret the experience, or are thoroughly socialized in what constitutes the enjoyment and how they should decode it…..Learning through interaction happens not at the beginning, as expected, but as the logical continuation that helps to shape the initial attraction.”

The findings have been published online in Springer’s journal Qualitative Sociology. (ANI)

Maradona may face year jail term in Buenos Aires hit and run case

London, Feb.25 (ANI): Veteran football champion, Diego Maradona may be headed for jail as a judge has ordered him to appear before the court in connection with a hit and run case.

Maradona may face a year in jail term for ramming his car into a telephone booth in which two persons were severely hurt two weeks ago.

According to The Sun, witnesses claimed that Maradona fled from the accident site in the Buenos Aires without giving his personal details.

However, the ‘Hand of God’ legend has claimed that he was not behind the steering wheel of the car which was involved in the incident. (ANI)

Venues and schedule confirmed for ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier

Dubai, Feb.10 (ANI): The ICC today confirmed the schedule for the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier 2009 to take place from 1 to 19 April in South Africa.

With three ODI venues being used, including Willowmoore Park in Benoni and Potchefstroom for group and Super Eight matches and Centurion for the final on 19 April, the event will enjoy first-class facilities.

In total there are nine venues being used for 54 matches played over 19 days with 12 teams fighting it out for the four qualification places on offer in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011.

The ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier, formerly known as the ICC Trophy, incorporates Divisions 1 and 2 of the Pepsi ICC World Cricket League and is the gateway for the top Associate and Affiliate teams into the premier one-day tournament in the world.

“It looks like it’s going to be a great event,” said ICC President David Morgan.

“Many of the top Associates are very evenly matched and I am expecting some thrilling matches during the tournament. We know from experience that South Africa is a perfect place to host big multi-team tournaments such as this and I know the teams will have some of the best facilities at their disposal,” he said.

“Four years ago, Scotland deservedly overcame the opposition in Ireland so I’m sure they’ll be anxious to hang on to the title. It’s not going to be easy though. Many of the other Associates have made big strides since then so it’s going to be a hard-fought tournament.”

Day one of the event offers up perhaps the most eagerly awaited fixture of all with defending champion Scotland taking on fierce rival Ireland in an ODI at Willowmoore Park in what will be a repeat of the final in 2005.

Among the teams will be Afghanistan and Uganda, which both qualified from January’s Pepsi World Cricket League Division 3 event in Buenos Aires. The WCL was created to provide a clear pathway for teams outside the top 10 towards improvement and ultimately, the ICC Cricket World Cup. This global event gives ICC Associate and Affiliate Members the opportunity to play similarly ranked sides in meaningful competition regardless of where they are located in the world.

The 12 teams taking part in the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier are split into two groups of six teams. Ireland, Scotland, Canada, Oman, Namibia and Uganda make up Group A while Kenya, Netherlands, Bermuda, UAE, Denmark and Afghanistan form Group B.

Each side plays the other teams in its group once with the top four from the groups progressing to the Super Eight stage. The teams each play four Super Eight matches against the sides they did not meet in the group stage. All points won in the groups will be carried over to the Super Eight stage apart from those gained against the bottom two from each group.

The top two teams in the Super Eight stage will contest the final to be played at Centurion on 19 April. The third and fourth-placed sides will play-off at Potchefstroom, the fifth and sixth-placed sides play off at Willowmoore Park while the seventh and eighth-placed teams play off at Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp.

The top four sides at the event qualify for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011. The top six teams secure ODI status until 2013 and also qualify automatically for the ICC Intercontinental Cup 2009-10.

The bottom two teams from the CWCQ, which incorporates Divisions 1 and 2 of the Pepsi ICC World Cricket League, will be relegated to Division 3.(ANI)

Israel fears Hizbullah strike in revenge for Mughniyeh’s assassination

Jerusalem, Jan.21 (ANI): Israel has expressed its concern that the Hizbullah will launch a terror attack against an Israeli or Jewish target ahead of the first anniversary of arch-terrorist Imad Mughniyeh’s assassination.

Mughniyeh, the commander of Hizbullah’s military forces, was assassinated on February 12, 2008 in a car bombing in Damascus.

While Israel did not claim responsibility for the assassination, Hizbullah has declared its intention to avenge Mughniyeh’s death by striking at Israel.

According to the Jerusalem Post, the latest Israeli intelligence assessments suggest that the Hizbullah is planning a retaliatory terror attack.

Hizbullah is believed to have extensive terror infrastructure in Africa and South America and was allegedly behind the Buenos Aires bombings in 1992 and 1994.

Hizbullah, the intelligence community believes, has been deterred from launching an attack along the northern border, since it is scared of Israel’s potential response.

The two recent Katyusha rocket attacks on the North are believed to have been carried out by a Palestinian terror group.

Israel believes that African and South American countries are the most vulnerable to Hizbullah attacks due to the relatively weak regimes there and the strong Muslim – particularly Shi’ite – populations, which Hizbullah uses to establish its infrastructure.(ANI)