Palin hopes women GoP�s or �mama-grizzlies� will help her win November polls

London, May 15 (ANI): Sarah Palin has compared Republican women supporters to �mama grizzlies� who are going to help the Republicans reclaim their former glory by electing anti-abortion lawmakers.

In yet another one of Palin�s colourful allegorical references, the vocal pro-life campaigner and ex-Alaska Governor exhorted women to display their fierce side. She also recalled a previous speech in which she had likened herself to a pit-bull.

“You don”t want to mess with moms who are rising up. If you thought pit bulls were tough, you don”t want to mess with mama grizzlies.” The Telegraph quoted her, as saying.

Addressing an anti-abortion group, Palin said she could relate to the dilemma faced by pregnant women because of her personal experiences as the mother of a child afflicted by Down�s Syndrome and parent of an unwed teen mother.

She even admitted how she had considered abortion for a �fleeting moment� after she learned of her son�s Down�s Syndrome prognosis, nevertheless she chose not to terminate the pregnancy, as it was contrary to her core beliefs.

Palin said that carrying the foetus its full term �may not be the easiest path, but it”s always the right path,” the paper reports. (ANI)

Asian woman stabs anti-knife campaigner UK MP in London

London, May 15 (ANI): In a bizarre attack, prominent anti-knife campaigner MP Stephen Timms was stabbed in the stomach by a young Asian woman. Curiously she was not motivated to commit the act.

The 21- year-old woman, wearing an orange head-scarf nonchalantly plunged the knife twice into Timm�s stomach. Timms was saved by his fearless aide, Andrew Bazeley, who wrestled the woman down and disarmed her.

According to police sources, Timms should thank his lucky stars that the knife missed his vital organs.

“He could easily have been killed. The knife missed his vital organs. But an inch or two either way and it would have been curtains,” The Sun quoted police as saying.

Meanwhile, the authorities have failed to pinpoint the motive for the woman�s attack. According to eyewitnesses, she appeared composed and did not have a history of mental illness.

The Asian community has expressed its support for Timms, a devout Christian. Local community worker Rahman Fazlur described Timms as “an excellent MP” and said he had first-rate relations with the Asian community. (ANI)

Warsi is Chairperson of UK’s Conservative Party

A prominent Asian Baroness Sayeeda Warsi was today appointed as the new Chairperson of the ruling Conservative Party in the UK.

Baroness Warsi is a leading campaigner for awareness and stronger legislation on issues like forced marriages, female genital mutilation and the chewing of Khat.

She has been politically involved from her early college days when she was elected as the Vice President of the Students Union at Dewsbury College.

Sayeed was a member of Cameron’s shadow Cabinet, a former Vice-chairman of the Conservative party and adviser to Michael Howard.

After qualifying as a Solicitor, she worked for John Whitfield, the last conservative Member of Parliament for Dewsbury, at Whitfield Hallam Goodall solicitors and then went on to set up her own specialist practice, George Warsi solicitors in Dewsbury.

Sayeeda has worked overseas on a research project for the Ministry of Law in Pakistan and is currently chair of the Savayra foundation, a women’s empowerment charity based in Pakistan.

Dominic Grieve has been appointed the new Attorney General.

Other appoints included Eric Pickles (Communities Secretary) and Jeremy Hunt (Culture/Olympics).

Brit kids feel safer in mum”s taxi than when dad is behind the wheel!

Melbourne, April 30 (ANI): Most British children prefer being in mum”s taxi than when dad is behind the wheel, says a survey.

The British Guild of Experienced Motorists survey found that a lot of children feel their fathers drive too fast.

Apparently, six out of 10 children aged five to 16 are happier and more relaxed when their mother is driving.

The survey claimed that 39 per cent of the kids were too scared to comment when their fathers drove rashly. Only 26 per cent asked dad to slow down and 22 per cent gripped the seat nervously.

On the other hand, 70 per cent of children said their mums happily sang their heart out while driving and 52 per cent said they talked non-stop to keep the family entertained.

Meanwhile, Australian road safety campaigner Russell White insists there is a difference between the way men and women drive.

“Women are more neutral in their views of the external environment while men are more aggressive. It”s one of the reasons kids get car sick,” the Couriermail quoted him, as saying.

He added: “Kids exposed to poor driving copy that behaviour. They are a product of their parents.

“They watch everything that is going on and those seeds that are planted early come to fruit in their teens.” (ANI)

Kidnapped ex-ISI official in Punjabi Taliban’s captivity: Family

Islamabad, Apr.22 (ANI): A day after kidnapped former Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) official Khalid Khawaja’s wife blamed the Central Investigation Agency (CIA) for her husband’s abduction, a press release from Khawaja’s family has stated that he along with his former colleague Colonel Imam and British filmmaker, Asad Qureshi, were taken up by the Punjabi Taliban.

All the three men were kidnapped from North Waziristan while they were shooting a documentary film in the restive region.

According to the press release issued by Khawaja’s family, they visited the tribal region on the “precise invitation of the High Command of Tehrik-e-Taliban of North and South Waziristan as their respected guests for the purpose of making a documentary highlighting the present situation in the area and its impact on the indigenous population.”

The statement also revealed that a man who identified himself as Usman Punjabi had called Khwaja’s family to put forth the abductors demands, The News reports.

It is pertinent to mention here that on Monday a group calling itself the ‘Asian Tigers’ released videos of Khawaja and others who were kidnapped, saying that they were in the Taliban’s custody.

Khwaja’s former colleague Colonel Imam is credited for creating the Taliban in the 1990s.

It is said that both Colonel Imam and Khawaja, worked with the mujahideen resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, in the 1980s.

Since retiring from the ISI, Khawaja had turned into a human rights campaigner. He has defended Al-Qaeda suspects and filed petitions against extradition of the Taliban’s second man in command Mullah Baradar to Afghanistan.

Khawaja remained more active on the domestic front. He had once claimed that he hosted Al-Qaeda chieftain Osama bin Laden prior to 9/11. He had also claimed that Laden had visited his Islamabad residence often.

Col. Imam is said to have a closer relationship with the Afghan Taliban, and he worked on behalf of the Pakistani authorities. (ANI)

Kidnapped ex-ISI official’s wife accuses CIA of ‘picking up’ her husband

London, Apr.21 (ANI): The wife of former Inter-State Intelligence (ISI) official, Khalid Khwaja, who was kidnapped along with his former colleague and a British filmmaker from North Waziristan earlier this month, has alleged that her husband has been picked on the Central Investigation Agency’s (CIA) directives.

Shamama Khalid rejected the notion that the Taliban has abducted Khawaja, saying she did not believe her husband had been captured by insurgents.

“We heard some groups there are supported by the CIA. My husband is against this American war so maybe the Americans want to remove him from the fray,” The Daily Telegraph quoted Shamama, as saying.

It is pertinent to mention here that on Monday a group calling itself the ‘Asian Tigers’ released videos of Khawaja and others who were kidnapped, saying that they were in the Taliban’s custody.

However, the United States has rubbished Shamama’s allegations, terming them as baseless.

“If the allegation is that the US was involved in the abduction of these individuals, then I can say that is baseless and patently untrue,” a US Embassy official said in Islamabad.

Khwaja’s former colleague Colonel Imam is credited for creating the Taliban in the 1990s.

It is said that both Colonel Imam and Khawaja, worked with the mujahideen resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, in the 1980s.

Since retiring from the ISI, Khawaja had turned into a human rights campaigner. He has defended Al-Qaeda suspects and filed petitions against extradition of the Taliban’s second man in command Mullah Baradar to Afghanistan. (ANI)

Kyrgyz opposition say about 100 people dead

Kyrgyzstan’s opposition said on Wednesday about 100 people had been killed in clashes in the capital Bishkek.

“What kind of negotiations with the government can we talk about when they are killing our people?” prominent opposition and human rights campaigner Toktoaim Umetaliyeza told Reuters.

A doctor at a Bishkek hospital earlier told Reuters dozens had been killed in the clashes between government troops and thousands of protesters, who are demanding political change.

(Reporting by Maria Golovnina, writing by Amie Ferris-Rotman)

Kyrgyz protesters storm provincial government HQ

Kyrgyz protesters demonstrating against President Kurmanbek Bakiyev stormed a government office in the northwestern town of Talas on Tuesday and there were conflicting reports on the fate of the regional governor.

A local opposition leader and witnesses told Reuters that governor Beishen Bolotbekov had been taken hostage when opposition demonstrators seized a local government office.

But Kyrgyz Prime Minister Daniyar Usenov denied to reporters in the capital, Bishkek, that the governor had been captured, although he confirmed that protesters had entered the building.

“At the same time there are a lot of people outside the building trying to storm it,” Usenov told reporters. He said the government would send 100 additional police to Talas and use all available means to restore law and order in the city, but added that the situation was largely under control.

Discontent in the former Soviet Central Asian nation has been on the rise due to what the opposition says is growing public frustration with corruption, nepotism and high prices.

The opposition, which supported Bakiyev when he came to power five years ago, is now demanding that he crack down on corruption, fire his relatives from senior government positions and abolish high utility fees.

The clashes in Talas came three days after United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited Bishkek and called on Kyrgyzstan to protect human rights, after protesters shouted “help us” as he drove to the country’s parliament.

Possible unrest in Kyrgyzstan is of particular concern to the United States which operates a military air base there to support operations against the Taliban in nearby Afghanistan.

TEAR GAS USED

Ban’s first tour of Central Asia highlighted human rights issues in the vast Muslim region run by authoritarian leaders and emboldened local rights defenders to speak up.

Addressing reporters and members of parliament in Bishkek, Ban said in unusually forthright terms: “Quite frankly, recent events have been troubling, including the last few days. I repeat: all human rights must be protected, including free speech and freedom of the media.”

Koisun Kurmanaliyeva, the local representative of the opposition Ata-Meken party, told Reuters about 5,000 activists were protesting on the streets of Talas, a town tucked away in a picturesque valley on the Kyrgyz border with Kazakhstan.

“The building (government headquarters) has been taken over. The governor is here. He has been taken hostage,” she said.

Bolotbek Sherniyazov, the main opposition politician in Talas, told Reuters by telephone from inside the building:

“The entire building is under protesters’ control. We will stay here for the night. There is no police. There are thousands of people on the square (outside).”

Witnesses said police used tear gas to disperse protesters after they broke into the headquarters building during an opposition rally on the main city square.

“They got into the building. It’s been completely taken over,” Tatty Jumanaliyev, a local rights activist, told Reuters from the scene.

Two witnesses said they heard gun shots but that could not be independently confirmed.

Rakhmatillo Akhmedov, a police spokesman in the capital Bishkek, said: “Law enforcement agents took measures within the law to maintain stability and security.

“A chaotic crowd did break into the building. The crowd failed to take it over.”

He gave no other details but said the situation was under control.

Gulbara Imankulova, a press freedom campaigner, said from the scene in Talas that a separate crowd was headed towards a local police headquarters to free a group of activists detained during a separate rally on Monday.

Last month, Kyrgyzstan marked the fifth anniversary of a violent revolt that toppled its previous president and brought Bakiyev to power.

(Writing by Maria Golovnina; Editing by Paul Taylor)

NZ woman starves herself to death

A disabled New Zealand woman who sparked a debate over the right for people to commit suicide has died after refusing to eat for 16 days.

Margaret Page, a 60-year-old who used to love scuba diving, kayaking and teaching karate to children, had been severely disabled since suffering a brain haemorrhage in 1991.

Ms Page, who lived in the capital Wellington, needed help to eat and shower and had moved into a care centre in 2001.

She told the Dominion Post newspaper a week ago she no longer wanted to live and had refused food since the middle of the month, taking only occasional sips of water.

Ralph La Salle, chief executive of the St John of God Trust, which ran the centre where Page lived, said staff and residents were deeply saddened by her death on Tuesday.

The past weeks had been “exceptionally difficult and emotional for Mrs Page, her family, other residents, staff and everyone who knew her”, he said.

“Mrs Page maintained her resolve to refuse food until the very end of her life.”

People in New Zealand who are mentally sound have the right to refuse food or treatment but the case has revived the debate over euthanasia. It is illegal to help someone die under local law.

Ms Page’s estranged husband, Barry, had said last week his wife should be admitted to hospital and forced to eat, because she needed treatment for depression.

Australian euthanasia campaigner, Philip Nitschke, said Ms Page’s death was a tragedy.

“It is disgusting that the only option Margaret had left was to deny herself fluids and food and engage in a macabre process of slow torture and death,” he was quoted as saying by the New Zealand Press Association.

Mr Nitschke said people should have the right to end their lives in the least traumatic way.

“When their quality of life gets so bad that death is their chosen course, they need simply to go to the cupboard and legally take the drugs that will give them a peaceful and reliable death,” he said.

- AFP

Police called as koala sighting halts Mumbulla logging

Police have been called to the site of an anti-logging protest in the Mumbulla State Forest, on the New South Wales far south coast.

Conservationists say the timber harvesting which began this week will harm a key koala colony.

The program was halted yesterday after evidence was found that a koala was two kilometres from the site.

Forests New South Wales says a pause in the logging will allow for further investigation into evidence of koalas in adjoining areas.

Anti-logging campaigner Harriet Swift says around 70 people are at the protest site, and a barricade was in place this morning until the police intervened.

“We held up loggers and log trucks going into the logging area for about four hours this morning, but eventually they did pass through,” she said.

“But they’ve given us an undertaking that they won’t actually be logging, they’ll just be processing and transporting trees already cut.”

Ports boss denies dredging causing crab increase

Gippsland Ports’ CEO Nick Murray is adamant an increase in the number of european shore crabs in the Gippsland Lakes is not the result of recent dredging.

Long-time lakes campaigner, Ross Scott, says the dredging at Lakes Entrance has increased the flow of saline water into the lakes.

He says the increased salinity has killed lake-side vegetation, increased the range of crabs and changed the lakes’ environment.

But Mr Murray says scientific research has found the increase in crab numbers was happening before the recent dredging.

“The life cycle and the reproductive cycle of the crabs is such that the concept of the 2008 [dredging] campaign and the 2009 campaign have been the cause of the proliferation of crabs, is not scientifically tenable,” he said.

Driver survivor plans

A north coast road-safety campaigner will launch a 10-point Driver Survivor Plan this weekend.

Lyndal Denny will place 465 pairs of shoes by the roadside in Ballina on Sunday to draw attention to the road toll.

She says the plan includes recommendations for P-platers to undergo psychological testing and trucks to clearly display the owner’s name and number.

Ms Denny says dangerous speeders should have their vehicles modified.

“Some people just don’t learn the lesson,” Ms Denny said.

“Anybody caught driving 20 K’s over the limit we feel should have speed limiters fitted to their vehicles and the fines that they would normally pay would go to pay for the costs of those speed limiters , then with random checks to ensure those vehicles haven’t been tampered with,” she said.

Call for Port Macquarie catheterisation lab

A health campaigner on the New South Wales mid-north coast is hopeful that funding will be made available so cardiac patients can be treated in Port Macquarie.

Anne Meister is concerned about the number of patients who have to travel to Sydney to have catheterisation done when they have a heart attack.

She says there are three cardiologists in Port Macquarie but there is no catheterisation lab for them to do the procedure.

Ms Meister has discussed the issue with the State’s Opposition spokeswoman for health, Jillian Skinner.

“Ms Skinner said basically what most politicians say – that she will help as much as she can,” she said.

“She was well aware of everything and she had a lot of paperwork on it and she was very aware of our health problems here in Port Macquarie, so hopefully something will come out of it eventually.

“With the cost of the planes – which is over a million and a half dollars a year – it’s a lot of money to be sending people away when we have the expertise here in Port Macquarie.”

Inmate wins reprieve an hour before execution

The United States Supreme Court has stayed the execution of a convicted murderer in Texas less than an hour before he was due to die after a plea to allow further DNA tests.

Henry ‘Hank’ Skinner, 47, was convicted in 1995 for the 1993 New Year’s Eve killings of his girlfriend and her two sons in his home.

Skinner, who is now married to a French anti-death penalty campaigner, says new DNA tests will prove he did not commit the triple murder.

Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Jason Clark says Skinner “felt weak in the knees” upon hearing news of his reprieve.

“He felt like he really won,” he said. “He said he didn’t expect to get a stay. He expected to be executed.”

Skinner had been scheduled to be executed by lethal injection at 6:00pm local time at the prison in Huntsville, Texas.

In a brief decision, Supreme Court justices said the court must now decide if it will take up the case on the merits, otherwise a new execution date will be decided.

Skinner’s defence attorney Rob Owen says the stay “suggests that the court believes there are important issues that require closer examination”.

“We are relieved that the US Supreme Court has intervened to prevent Mr Skinner’s execution,” he said.

“We remain hopeful that the court will agree to hear Mr Skinner’s case and ultimately allow him the chance to prove his innocence through DNA testing.”

Skinner, who has proclaimed his innocence since his arrest, claims DNA testing on items that were not examined during his trial will clear him.

Some DNA evidence was presented during his trial to ascertain that he had been present in his home in the Texas town of Pampa when the murders were committed – a point the defence never contested.

But he says a third person must have committed the murders because he had passed out under the influence of anti-anxiety medication, painkillers and alcohol at the time.

Blood tests confirmed the presence of the drugs in his bloodstream.

Skinner’s defence insists he was physically incapable of killing his girlfriend Twila Jean Busby, 40 – who was beaten with an axe handle – and her two sons, aged 20 and 22, who were stabbed to death.

French support

Skinner is married to French anti-death penalty campaigner Sandrine Ageorges-Skinner, who enlisted some high-profile support.

Earlier this week the French ambassador in Washington contacted Texas governor Rick Perry urging a stay of execution.

French president Nicolas Sarkozy and foreign minister Bernard Kouchner have also expressed their support to Skinner’s wife.

France abolished capital punishment in 1981.

In recent years, 17 US death row prisoners have been released after DNA tests proved their innocence.

-AFP

Clubs exaggerate community contributions, says campaigner

An anti-gambling campaigner who has joined 14 New South Wales clubs to access their annual reports claims registered clubs are exaggerating the benefits they provide to community groups.

With the Federal Government considering the Productivity Commission’s report into gambling, the clubs have argued that any reforms to poker machine laws could impact on their ability to fund charities, sporting clubs and other non-profit organisations.

But Paul Bendat has told ABC1′s Lateline that his research shows clubs are not as generous as they make out.

“I found that the donations weren’t quite as magnanimous as first represented,” Mr Bendat said.

“As a general rule of thumb they seem to spend three to four to five times more on marketing than they do on donations back into the community.

“That says to me that spruiking themselves is actually more important than doing something for the community.”

Anthony Ball, the CEO of Clubs Australia, has told Lateline that clubs have a huge impact on the community.

“Clubs give to the community, and we know that because of what clubs do in the suburbs and townships around New South Wales and Australia,” Mr Ball said.

“We also know it because IPART (The Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal) has measured it very recently at $811 million a year.”

The IPART report was based on figures provided by the clubs themselves in 2007.

Of that $811 million, $676 million is made up of goods and services provided to club patrons such as discounted food and drink, sporting facilities and room hire.

Another $44 million is calculated as the value of volunteer hours provided by club members and staff.

Clubs NSW say they also directly donated $91 million to charities and sporting groups that year.

Clubs Australia have extrapolated that $811 million to provide a national figure of $1.2 billion.

Last month, the then Clubs Australia CEO David Costello said “It is the not-for-profit status of clubs that underpins the enormous social work they do which measures $1.2 billion annually.”

Paul Bendat has criticised the clubs for using the term “social work”.

“The phrase is a misnomer. What the vast amount of this social contribution is the discounts they give on snooker tables, schooners of beer, function rooms – it’s not real money that goes back into the community,” he said.

But Anthony Ball from Clubs Australia maintains that “social work” is an accurate term.

“One of the great strengths of clubs is the ability to provide affordable food and beverage facilities out in the suburbs and towns. If you lived in Dubbo, if you lived in Lightning Ridge you can only to go to the club – they don’t have the options of the people of inner-Sydney, so absolutely it is,” he said.

Betty Con Walker, a former senior NSW Treasury official who has written about the clubs in her book Casino Clubs NSW, says the club’s claims need more scrutiny.

She says that once you take out the tax breaks and in-kind donations, clubs in NSW donate around one per cent of the $3.3 billion they make from poker machines each year.

“Once you take all that into account you’re left with at best $30 million of cash contributions to the community at large,” Ms Walker said.

But charities such as Youth Off The Streets (YOTS) say these kind of donations make a big difference to what they do.

Father Chris Riley of YOTS told Lateline “We wouldn’t have been in Aceh, we wouldn’t have set up one of our most successful programs, if it hadn’t been for clubs who instantly came and gave us a couple of hundred thousand to kick us off.”

Betty Con Walker argues the clubs receive more money in tax breaks than they return to charity.

“When you look at the government’s own budget papers in the current financial year they have costed the tax concession to the club industry at $600 million in this financial year alone,” she said.

“If clubs were paying the same tax rates as hotels, the government would have another $600 million in its coffers to spend on health, education and so on.”

One NSW MP who wished to remain anonymous told Betty Con Walker that when clubs hand over cheques to community groups, “The actual cheque should be accompanied by a statement like ‘this money is forgone by the taxpayer raised for this bunch of boofheads who choose to give it to you’.”

Anthony Ball from Clubs Australia says tax breaks are given to the clubs in recognition of the role they play in the community.

“You call it a tax concession, I say it’s recognition that clubs are not-for-profit organisations that send all their money back to its members and members of the community in one way or the other,” Mr Ball said.

The Rudd government is expected to release the Productivity Commission’s report into gambling in June.

Madrid govt urged to add siesta to list of protected Spanish cultural icons

London, March 15(ANI): A lawyer is calling upon Madrid””s conservative government to add the siesta to list of protected Spanish cultural icons.

The appeal follows the announcement made earlier this month by Esperanza Aguirre, the President of Madrid””s regional government, that the bullfight would be included in the catalogue of items of “special cultural value” that were protected by law.

The decision had come under fire from animal rights activists.

Now Daniel Dorado, a lawyer and animal rights campaigner, has filed an application for the afternoon nap to be declared a protected art form.

“The siesta is a cultural fact of special relevance and significance, an art which deserves protection,” the Telegraph quoted Dorado, as saying in the request application presented last week.

He added: “It has been part of Mediterranean and Spanish culture for time immemorial.”

According to Dorado, the siesta – traditionally a post lunch snooze of up to an hour – was being fast disappearing due to the demands of modern working practices. He said its loss could lead to the downfall of the Spanish nation and that the Madrid government should even consider putting up beds on the streets. (ANI)

Forum airs water, forestry conflict concerns

A forum in Launceston has heard claims conflicts of interest are dogging the Tasmanian environment.

The water and forestry governance forum was organised by the lobby group Our Common Ground to debate the issues before next week’s poll.

Concerns about water quality dominated debate, after claims by St Helens GP Dr Alison Bleaney that the George River is contaminated by tree toxins.

The Director of Environment Tasmania, Dr Phill Pullinger, told the forum the controversy proves Tasmania needs a dedicated Environment Department.

“The same minister that has responsibility of looking after water also has responsibility for forestry and industries which are operating in conflict with the protection of clean, healthy drinking water,” he said.

Tasmania is the only state without a stand-alone Environment Department.

ABC gardening personality, and anti-pulp mill campaigner, Peter Cundall told the forum there was a conspiracy of silence between the Labor and Liberal parties to avoid the pulp mill before the election.

But both parties have rejected the claim, saying the pulp mill is explicitly mentioned in their forestry policies.

Greenpeace hits Samsung for delaying toxic phase-out

International environmental group Greenpeace hit out at Samsung on Wednesday for reneging on a promise to remove harmful substances from its electronics products.

At issue is the presence of Brominated Flame Retardants (BFRs) in Samsung gadgets. The toxic chemicals have the potential to damage the environment and harm human health and their elimination has been a major goal of Greenpeace in the electronics sector.

Samsung was one of the first companies to publically voice support for a phase-out, and in 2004 issued a joint-statement with Greenpeace saying it would work to rid them from its products. The pledge earned Samsung points in Greenpeace’s Guide to Greener Electronics and by 2006 the company was promising it would end use of BFRs by Jan. 1, 2010.

But that never happened.

In November 2009, less than two months before the self-imposed deadline, Samsung e-mailed Greenpeace to say that it wouldn’t be able to deliver on the commitment, according to the group.

A delay wasn’t unique to Samsung. Dell, Lenovo and LG Electronics had pledged to rid their products of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and BFRs by the end of 2009 but have delayed this until 2011 or beyond, according to Greenpeace.

What’s different with Samsung is that the notification came less than two months before the self-imposed deadline.

“Most of the companies that committed to end of 2009 or 2010 timelines for eliminating these substances confessed to Greenpeace at least one year before the deadline that they would be unable to meet the timelines,” said Iza Kruszewska, an electronics campaigner at the organization.

“Despite repeated opportunities for Samsung to come clean, including a face-to-face meeting in Korea in July 2009, Samsung continued to communicate to Greenpeace, and on Web site, that it would meet its timelines,” she said. As of time of writing, Samsung’s European Web site continues to show the 2010 goal.

The company now says it will remove BFRs from MP3 players and digital cameras by June 1 this year and from laptop computers by Jan. 1, 2011.

That late notification meant that Samsung avoided attracting a penalty point in the Greenpeace electronics guide until the last moment. It’s got one now and Greenpeace threatened to remove another point if it doesn’t speed up its progress in removing BFRs and PVC.

“Samsung is lagging far behind in the mobile phone and PCs product range, not offering a single model that is even partially free of PVC and BFRs,” Greenpeace said in a statement. “If Samsung is serious about its green intentions, it needs to play catch up with competitors like Nokia and Sony Ericsson and Apple.”

Cut down the coffee

We all know that there’s really nothing to beat that curiously intoxicating smell of freshly ground coffee beans as well as that addictive first cup to jump-start your day. But it’s not just the morning a steaming cup always comes in handy while driving negotiations, initiating great conversations or even kicking back next to a log fire.

It even gets a nod from researchers like Thomas H. Lee, a Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston. Attributing the benefits to large, long-term studies, Lee says that “long-running research shows that drinking coffee cuts the risk of dying early from a heart attack or stroke, and the bean improves productivity, too.”

Now, before you make a manic sprint to the nearest store for a cappuccino machine, you may want to listen to what Upasna Kamineni, Vice Chairman, Apollo Charities, and an active campaigner for health issues, has to say. “Coffee is both a health and a social hazard, and the cons far outweigh the pros,” she says. Kamineni, also the Director of Lifetime Wellness RX, an Apollo Group body that conducts health talks, assessments and camps and also undertakes research-based projects on lifestyle disorders, thinks that it’s best one stays away from the brew altogether.

“The excessive caffeine in coffee can boost your blood pressure and can leave you dehydrated. Add milk and sugar, and it becomes a recipe for disaster, that is bound to add extra pounds, she adds. Aerated drinks and canned fruit juices also get a thumbs down from her.” Aerated drinks and canned fruit juices have a high concentration of sugar and should be avoided in the mornings. Try jasmine and green tea or even lemon water as the three are rich in antioxidants. Kamineni recommends switching over to juices and lemon soda by afternoon.

“Buttermilk is easy on your digestive system, too, and goes well with most Indian foods,” she says. And for those of you who just can’t kick the coffee habit, she suggests skipping milk. Taken black, both coffee and tea are calorie-free and full of antioxidants. Not a bad option for the coffee-crazy but health-conscious folks out there.

Heather Mills ready to make £1.4m profit selling new posh pad

London, September 13 (ANI): Heather Mills is hoping to make a profit of 1.4 million pounds by selling a luxury flat she bought just 10 months ago.

The ex-wife of former ‘Beatle’ Sir Paul McCartney bought the swish three-bedroom London apartment for 2.35 million pounds.

The 41-year-old English campaigner was seldom there, and the flat in an exclusive area of north London remained empty.

She now reckons that the property can sell for 3.75 million pounds.

Heather is said to be planning to use the cash to expand her vegan food company into the US.

“Heather realises she has more homes than a person could ever need, so selling the flat makes sense. And if she can make a 50 per cent profit why shouldn’t she?” the News of the World quoted one of her friends as saying.

This week Heather put the apartment up for sale.

She is selling it furnished, complete with a silver Buddha in the marble hall and king-sized bed in the main, gold-clad bedroom.

Ever since her divorce in February last year, Heather is said to have spent up to 15 million pounds on properties, holidays and staff wages.

However, despite the recession, she denies being hard-up.

Her friend said: “She has decided to speculate to accumulate.” (ANI)