Meet Prince Charles and Camilla, the ‘wedding planners’!

London, Sept 20 (ANI): Prince Charles and wife Camilla are turning wedding planners and “loaning out” their country retreat of Highgrove House to wannabe brides and grooms.

And included in the package will be the royal couple’s shared “expertise”.

Like Charles and Camilla did at their Windsor wedding four years ago, couples will be encouraged to “keep it simple”, say reports.

As per rumours, the first pair to enjoy a “Charles and Camilla wedding” are TV babe Jenni Falconer and her actor fiancé James Midgley, reports The Daily Star.

A royal source said: “Obviously with it being their house they would want control of the event. But they also recognise what a great opportunity it would be to showcase their home.

“Highgrove is an absolutely fantastic building and would make a wonderful venue for a wedding and reception.”

The nine-bedroom country house on a 37-acre estate near Tetbury, Gloucestershire, was bought for Charles in 1980.

A source said: “Charles is hugely proud of Highgrove. It’s a wonderful property and he has spent thousands of pounds on the gardens and grounds. I’m sure by holding weddings there Charles would take great pleasure being the host.

“And he could use them to promote the Duchy Originals organic products he’s involved with.” (ANI)

Negative public opinion about foreign countries an early warning signal for terrorism

Washington, September 18 (ANI): People’s negative views toward the leadership and policies of other countries may be an indication that a terrorist act may be carried out, say researchers.

Alan Krueger, a Princeton University economist, and Jitka Maleckova, of Charles University in the Czech Republic, came to this conclusion after analysing public opinion polls and terrorist activity in 143 pairs of countries.

Writing about their findings in the journal Science, the researchers say that there is a strong relationship between attitudes expressed toward a foreign country — indicated in surveys on foreign leaders’ performance-and the occurrence of terrorism against that country.

“Public opinion appears to be a useful predictor of terrorist activity,” said Krueger, the Bendheim Professor in Economics and Public Policy.

“This is the first study to relate public opinion across countries to concrete actions such as terrorism,” he added.

He pointed out that the notion that public attitudes can contribute to terrorism has been inadequately explored to date.

According to him, the study’s findings attain significance as they suggest that public opinion may provide a valuable early warning signal of terrorism, and help researchers better understand the causes of terrorism.

The researchers carried out their study by mining public opinion polls of residents in 19 countries in the Middle East and northern Africa conducted by Gallup.

They asked the respondents whether they approved of the job performance of the leaders of nine large countries.

According to the researchers, the countries selected for the study are world powers in terms of size, population or military strength, are the United States, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Russia and the United Kingdom.

The opinions, both positive and negative, were linked to the number of terrorist attacks conducted against the nine world powers by people from the 19 countries between 2004 and 2008. The terror attacks were compiled by the National Counterterrorism Center.

Based on the findings, Krueger says that there is not a direct connection between poverty and terrorism, contrary to a popular view.

He adds that economic status has more to do with target countries than it does with the states where the attacks originate.

He says that countries with advanced economies as well as a high degree of civil liberties are most likely to be the targets of terrorism.

The researchers admits that the study does not explain whether terrorists act in response to public opinion or whether they are simply reacting just like the larger public to external events.

However, he insists that, in either case, public opinion surveys can provide a powerful indication of the likelihood of terrorist activity.

Krueger believes that greater disapproval of another country’s leaders or policies may result in more terrorist acts because it increases the number of people who provide material support and encouragement for terrorism, and increases the number of people interested in joining cells and carrying out terrorist acts themselves. (ANI)

Zia, Yahya and Ayub should be exhumed and hanged like Cromwell: PML-N leader

Karachi, Sep.11 (ANI): Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Javed Hashmi has said that all dictators including General Ayub Khan, General Yahya Khan and General Zia-ul-Haq should be tried and their bodies should be exhumed and hanged.

Talking to media persons at the Karachi Airport, Hashmi said the autocratic rulers should be treated in the same way the British treated Oliver Cromwell in 1661 to prevent the emergence of any dictator in future.

“The judiciary should try all the people in the country who had violated the constitution,” The Daily Times quoted Hashmi, as saying.

Oliver Cromwell’s, an English military and political leader,body was exhumed from Westminster Abbey, and was subjected to the ritual of a posthumous execution.

Symbolically, this took place on 30 January 1661 the same date that Charles I was executed. His body was hanged in chains at Tyburn. Finally, his disintegrated body was thrown into a pit, while his severed head was displayed on a pole outside Westminster Hall until 1685.

Afterwards the head changed hands several times, including the sale in 1814 to a man named Josiah Henry Wilkinson, before eventually being buried in the grounds of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, in 1960.(ANI)

History’s worst inventions revealed

London, July 14 (ANI): Exploding dogs, flying cars, and parachute suits are some of history’s worst inventions, according to a new book.

Authored by Eric Chaline, ‘History’s Worst Inventions’ describes some of the funniest and freakiest ideas that have gone awry.

Published by New Holland Publishers, the tome is priced at 10.99 pounds, reports the Sun.

Some of history’s worst inventions are:

Anti-tank dogs (1939-1945)

During World War Two the Russians faced the mechanical might of the German Army’s tanks, which made Soviet engineers to create canine mines or “anti-tank dogs”. The dogs, fitted with explosives, would be starved before battles and trained to search for food under vehicles, where they would explode.

But the biggest problem was the dogs often ran towards their own lines, blowing up tanks on their own side.

The Parachute Jacket (1912)

The “flying tailor” Franz Reichelt jumped from the Eiffel Tower to demonstrate his parachute overcoat. Huge crowds gathered to watch the magical event.

Sadly things didn’t go to plan, and he fell to his death.

The Flying Car (1930s)

Waldo Waterman created two Chitty Chitty Bang Bang-style flying cars between 1930-40. The American inventor’s 20ft-long Aerobile had a top air speed of 112mph and he flew it from California to Ohio.

It was never put into commercial production because of technical problems and flight regulations.

Wicker Chair Spaceship (1500)

A Chinese official named Wan Hoo dreamed up the idea of flying to the moon using 47 large rockets strapped to his wicker chair. For his first flight, he instructed his servants to light the rocket fuses ready for blast off. There was a huge explosion but when the smoke cleared Wan had disappeared.

Mythical tales told of him living in space but recent reconstructions show he was probably blown to bits.

Animal testes as cure for erectile dysfunction (19th Century)

Before testosterone was discovered, Mauritian-born Dr Charles-Edouard Brown-Sequard (1817-94) injected himself with his preparation made from the testes of guinea pigs and dogs.

He believed it would stave off old age and improve his potency, but his tests flopped.

The TWIKE (mid-1980s)

Short for two in a bike, the pedal-powered three-wheeler TWIKE looked like a kids’ toy. An updated Nineties version had an AC motor and could hit 53mph.

Despite sounding like a good idea, the Swiss firm behind the machine are said to have sold just 2,000 of their machines.

Betamax (1975)

Sony lost billions of pounds with their failed Betamax video format in 1975. It was blown out of business by the release of VHS a year later.

Sony’s 100 per cent share of the VCR market in 1975 shrunk to just 25 per cent by 1981 as a result. (ANI)

Prince Charles likens himself to ‘tree hugging’ ancestor Henry VIII

London, July 9 (ANI): Prince Charles has likened himself to Henry VIII, saying his ancestor was a tree hugger, just like him.

The Royal made the reference while urging action to stop climate change during the 2009 Richard Dimbleby Lecture in London.

“Henry instigated the very first piece of green legislation in this country. In ordering the building of a great many ships, he effectively founded the Royal Navy,” The Sun quoted him as saying.

“But there came a moment when Henry realised that creating his fleet was putting too much strain on the natural supply of wood, particularly oak,” he added.

Charles further hailed the then king’s introduction of the Preservation of Woods law in 1543, to ensure that the country did not run out of timber.

He said: “It was a simple and rather elegant piece of long-term thinking.”

He added: “What was instinctively understood by many in King Henry’s time was the importance of working with the grain of Nature to maintain a balance.” (ANI)

New sponge-like material beneficial for the environment

Washington, May 18 (ANI): A team of chemists has designed a new sponge-like material that can remove mercury from polluted water, easily separate hydrogen from other gases and is a more effective catalyst than the one currently used to pull sulfur out of crude oil.

Hydrodesulfurization is a widely used catalytic chemical process that removes sulfur from natural gas and refined petroleum products, such as gasoline and diesel and jet fuels.

Without the process, which is highly optimized, people would be burning sulfur, which contributes to acid rain.

Scientists have tried to improve hydrodesulfurization, or HDS, but have made no progress. Many consider it an optimized process.

Now, the Northwestern researchers, in collaboration with colleagues at Western Washington University, report that their material is twice as active as the conventional catalyst used in HDS, while at the same time being made of the same parts.

The material, cobalt-molybdenum-sulfur, which is black, brittle and freeze-dried, is a new class of chalcogels, a family of material discovered only a few years ago at Northwestern.

Chalcogels are random networks of metal-sulfur atoms with very high surface areas.

The new chalcogel is made from common elements, is stable when exposed to air or water and can be used as a powder.

This is the first report of chalcogels being used for catalysis and gas separation.

Mercouri G. Kanatzidis, Charles E. and Emma H. Morrison, Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, and doctoral student Santanu Bag made this catalyst using a method different from that of the conventional catalyst.

The Northwestern material is a gel made of cobalt, nickel, molybdenum and sulfur that then is freeze-dried, producing a sponge-like material with a very high surface area.

It is this high surface area and the material’s stability under catalytic conditions that make the cobalt-molybdenum-sulfur chalcogel so active.

The researchers also demonstrated that the new chalcogel soaks up toxic heavy metals from polluted water like no other material.

The chalcogel removed nearly 99 percent of the mercury from contaminated water containing several parts per million.

Mercury likes to bind to sulfur, and the chalcogel is full of sulfur atoms.

In addition to being a better HDS catalyst and a mercury sponge, the chalcogel also is very effective at gas separation.

The researchers showed that the material easily removes carbon dioxide (CO2) from hydrogen, an application that could be useful in the hydrogen economy. (ANI)

Prince Harry to pay for New York trip ‘out of his own pocket’

London, May 14 (ANI): Prince Harry will reportedly spare taxpayers thousands by paying for his trip to New York out of his own pocket.

The royal will raise money for his Aids charity Sentebale and is allegedly set to host a VIP dinner later this month, reports the Sun.

The 24-year-old will jet to the Big Apple along with a four-strong entourage in business class and the Queen will pick up the tab for his first foreign tour, as per reports.

Harry’s low-maintenance visit was said to be in a stark contrast to the pricey Stateside trips undertaken by his father Charles and uncle Andrew.

Charles and Camilla left a 330,000-pound bill after taking a private jet to New York four years ago, while Andrew raked up a 118,440 tab when he hired a plane to fly across the States last year. (ANI)

Jim Carrey’s ‘Christmas Carol’ promotional train to tour 36 American States

Washington, May 11 (ANI): Hollywood actor Jim Carrey’s forthcoming flick Christmas Carol’s promotional train, consisting of all the flick memorabilia, will tour 36 American States before its release in November.

Jim Carrey portrays Ebenezer Scrooge in the Disney flick, alongside Gary Oldman and Colin Firth, reports Contactmusic.

The ‘Christmas Carol’ Train will be decorated for the festive season, and ferry Christmas carollers across America. It will have multifarious stoppages across towns and cities.

Visitors will see footage from the film inside a large inflatable 3-D theatre, which will be erected at each destination.

American viewers will also get the chance to check out artefacts from the Charles Dickens Museum. (ANI)

US Ku Klux Klan ex-leader ordered to leave Czech Republic

Prague – Czech police said Saturday they had released David Duke, former leader of US extremist group the Ku Klux Klan, and ordered him to leave the Czech Republic by midnight. On Friday, police charged Duke with the hate crime of supporting and promoting movements suppressing human rights.

Duke had planned to give talks this weekend in the capital as well as in the country’s second largest city of Brno. He is visiting the Czech Republic at the invitation of local neo-Nazis to publicize the translation of his 1998 memoir, My Awakening.

Contrary to earlier statements, the state attorney on Saturday decided against asking the court to keep Duke in custody, police spokesman Jan Mikulovsky told the German Press Agency dpa.

While police could have held Duke for 48 hours without court’s consent, they decided to release him as he had been already questioned, the spokesman said. Upon release, the Czech Republic’s immigration police ordered him to depart the country on Saturday.

Police said they charged Duke for allegedly denying the Holocaust in a translated book he had come to promote.

“In his book he is promoting views that show signs of denying the Holocaust,” Mikulovsky told dpa.

Denying that the systematic mass murder of Jews and other minorities by Nazi Germany took place is a hate crime in the Czech Republic punishable by up to three years in prison.

Earlier this week, Prague’s Charles University banned a lecture by Duke for a class on extremism. The university said it cancelled it out of a fear that it could have been attended by neo-Nazis.

Political activities of Czech far-right groups have been on a rise in recent months, including provocative marches through Roma ghettos.

Duke, 58, is a white supremacist and a supporter of racial segregation. Aside from being a former chief of the Ku Klux Klan, he had served as a lawmaker in the Louisiana’s House of Representative and unsuccessfully ran for US president. (dpa)

Elizabeth Hurley, Prince Charles team up for organic food range

Washington, Apr 29 (ANI): Hollywood actress Elizabeth Hurley has joined forces with Prince Charles to launch a new range of low-fat organic food.

The ‘Bedazzled’ actress was reportedly motivated to foray into the catering business after reading dietary advice for women hoping to avoid breast cancer, reports Contactmusic.

Elizabeth’s range of meat and grain products will be sold by Charles’ sustainable food company, The Duchy Originals.

The food range will hit the markets in October (09).

The Prince of Wales founded the company in 1990 in a bid to promote organic food and farming. (ANI)

Spitfire found in Cape Town scrapyard will be auctioned for 2 million pounds

London, Apr. 19 (ANI): One of the world’s few remaining airworthy Supermarine Spitfires was rusting in a South African scrapyard thirty years ago.

But this week its remarkable restoration will be completed when it goes up for sale at auction. It is expected to fetch up to 2 million pounds.

The two-seater aircraft has been painstakingly reassembled, using parts from around the globe, including a propeller from Germany, the Telegraph reports.

The TR MK IX, with the serial number SM250 was built by the Vickers-Armstrong Company in 1944, and was then sold in 1948 to the South African Air Force.

In the 1970s, it was rediscovered in a Cape Town scrap yard before being sold on to a British aviation enthusiast, Charles Church.

In 2002, Paul Portelli commissioned the company Classic Aero to restore the aircraft to its former glory.

Much of the original aircraft remains, even down to the bullet proof windscreen panel and control column.

Some parts had to be sourced from scrapped aircraft or bought from dealers, before undergoing a rigorous process of safety checking and authentication, so the aircraft could be acknowledged as a Spitfire by the Civil Aviation Authority.

The engine was overhauled by a company in Gloucestershire and the propeller was built by a German firm.

Two years after Portelli died of cancer his job is now finished.

Today, just under 60 airworthy Spitfires are left around the globe, most of them outside Britain.

Of the 24 in this country, five – including the only Spitfire in the world still flying that saw action in 1940 – belong to the RAF’s Battle of Britain Memorial Flight. (ANI)

World’s top architects slam Prince Charles for interfering development

London, Apr. 19 (ANI): World’s leading architects have slammed the Prince of Wales for “using his privileged position” to interfere in the design of a controversial luxury development in London’s most attractive part.

Five Pritzker prize-winning architects alleged that Charles has “skewed” the democratic process by using his royal connections in an attempt to stop modernist plans for the former Chelsea Barracks.

In a letter to the Sunday Times, top architects Jacques Herzog, Pierre de Meuron, Lord Foster, Zaha Hadid, Renzo Piano and Frank Gehry attacked the traditional architect supporter prince.

They disclosed that the prince had been successful in persuading the Qatari royal family, who own the site, to consider having more traditional brick and stone buildings for the development at the expense of the glass and steel proposals submitted by Lord Rogers, the project’s architect.

“If the prince wants to comment on the design of this or any other project we urge him to do so through the established planning consultation process,” they write.

“It is essential in a modern democracy that private comments and behind-the-scenes lobbying by the prince should not be used to skew the course of an open and democratic planning process that is currently under way,” they added.

The prince argues that the proposed buildings would look inappropriate adjacent to the Royal hospital, Chelsea, designed by Sir Christopher Wren.

The architects, who have attacked prince, have been attributed for the “bird’s nest” stadium for the Beijing Olympics, the Gherkin and Tate Modern in London, the Pompidou Centre in Paris and the Guggenheim museum in Bilbao.

Charles seems to have a particular dislike of designs by Rogers. Rogers put in proposals for the extension for the National Gallery in 1984, which were criticized by the prince.

He famously called one of the plans “a monstrous carbuncle on the face of a much loved and elegant friend”. He also objected to Rogers’s ideas to redevelop Paternoster Square, next to St Paul’s Cathedral.

Architect and academic Richard Burdett said: “The prince is basically saying that Rogers should be fired.”

Robert’s famous designs

Lord Foster’s City Hall, housing the London mayor, was nicknamed “the glass testicle”. Boris Johnson rechristened it “the onion”.

Foster’s National Sea Life Centre in Birmingham, opened in 1996, has been called “excruciatingly dismal” by critics.

Heathrow’s terminal 5, designed by Lord Rogers, was called “a disaster” after baggage-handling chaos last year. (ANI)

Egypt offers Palestinian rivals new unity ideas

GAZA (Reuters) – Egyptian mediators trying to break the deadlock in talks on a Palestinian government of national unity have told rival groups Fatah and Hamas to cooperate on reconstructing Gaza as a first step, officials said.

Palestinian groups have been talking in Cairo for months but have so far failed to agree on a unity government which would prepare for elections. The proposal to cooperate on Gaza was an attempt to break the impasse, an official said.

“It became clear that a deal between the two sides was near impossible,” a senior Palestinian official involved in the talks told Reuters.

Palestinian elections are supposed to take place in January 2010, but a Hamas leader, Mohammed Nazzal, told a pro-Hamas website: “There will be no elections next year unless an agreement is reached in the dialogue.”

The aim of the talks is to end almost two years of enmity between the groups, who fought a brief civil war that culminated in Hamas’s seizure of the Gaza Strip in 2007.

Egypt’s new plan is for a Fatah-Hamas committee answerable to the West Bank-based government of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and his Western-backed Prime Minister Salam Fayyad to oversee reconstruction work, while the Hamas administration in Gaza provides the headquarters and logistics.

NEW SESSION

Fatah welcomed the proposal as an introduction to a solution but Hamas said it would give legitimacy to Fayyad’s government, which the Islamist group has never accepted.

Senior Fatah official Nabil Shaath, an Abbas aide, said the Egyptian leadership gave Abbas a written proposal during his visit to Cairo this week and that he was expected to respond before a new round of talks is set to start on April 26.

“Both factions must provide Egypt with answers when they return for a new session of talks,” said the official, who asked not to be named.

Talks have failed so far because of disagreement over the political agenda for the proposed unity government and the way it will handle the conflict with Israel.

Another sticking point has been Fatah’s wish to limit restructuring of the security services to Hamas-run Gaza, excluding the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Hamas official Ayman Taha told Reuters his group would probably reject the Egyptian proposal of a joint committee.

“We want to return to dialogue on April 26 but Fatah will have to change its position. Without that I do not think the new round of talks will take us anywhere,” Taha said.

An Arab diplomat said Cairo awaited an official response.

Shaath said the Egyptian proposal was a “tool” to eventually arrive at a unity government.

He said the joint committee would begin to implement whatever the groups agree in Cairo, including reconstruction of Gaza by an internationally accepted government headed by Fayyad.

Hamas insists implementation of any accord must proceed in parallel in Gaza and the West Bank.

(Editing by Ori Lewis and Charles Dick)

Italy quake destroys four ancient churches

Rome, Apr.7 (ANI): The 6.3-magnitude earthquake that struck central Italy on Monday morning has damaged at least four old churches.

The Italian Culture Ministry said the Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio, a striking pink-and-white stone-faced structure, was among the buildings severely damaged.

It is known for its architecture and for an annual pilgrimage to honor 13th-century Pope Celestine V, a former hermit who was both crowned and buried there.

One nave wall in the church, which is also celebrated for its 14th-century frescoes and lavish Gothic interior, collapsed in the quake, while the bell tower of another church, the lavish Renaissance-era Basilica of San Bernardino, collapsed, reports The Guardian.

Also damaged was a castle renowned as one of Italy’s best-preserved 16th-century fortresses.

The Forte Spagnolo, or Spanish Fort, is so called because it was built under the orders of Spain’s then king, Charles V, whose forces had defeated local rebels.

The quake was powerful enough to be felt in Rome, around 60 miles from the epicentre.

Heritage officials in the capital said the tremor had been strong enough to damage the third-century Baths of Caracalla, the Roman public baths popular with tourists. (ANI)

WWII Spitfire up for sale at £2m

London, Mar 30 (ANI): A fully functioning Second World War Spitfire has been put up for sale at 2milllion pounds.

While the plane was originally, a single-seater, it has been refitted with a passenger seat.

The 1944 Supermarine-designed aircraft was uncovered from a scrap yard by an aviation enthusiast, late Charles Church in 1970.

It was sold in 1989 to Alan Dunkerley, who eventually resold it to the late Paul Portelli in June 2002.

The plane is being sold for 1.5m-2m pounds by a private owner.

“We are greatly honoured to be entrusted with the sale of such a distinguished and historic aircraft,” the Telegraph quoted James Knight, MD of Bonhams Collector’s Motoring Department which is managing the sale of ‘G-ILDA’.

This not the first time that a Spitfire has been put on sale, last September the same auction house sold a non-airworthy 1945 Supermarine Spitfire for a record price of 1.1 million pounds. (ANI)

Prince Charles’ love letters sold for 20k pounds on eBay

London, Mar 21 (ANI): Love letters said to have written by Prince Charles to a former lover have sold for more than 20,000 pounds on eBay.

The letters, which disclose Prince of Wales’ fears of marrying the wrong woman, were bought by an anonymous buyer.

The buyer paid 20,800 pounds for six letters written by the Prince to a Canadian girlfriend in the 1970s and 1980.

One, written the year before his marriage to Lady Diana Spencer, is signed “with much love, Charles” and outlines his private secretary’s horror at “the idea of ladies in hotel rooms during foreign visits”.

The letters were received by Welsh-born Janet Jenkins, who was working at the British Consulate in Montreal in 1975, when she met the Prince.

She told Canadian television recently that she had expected the correspondence to end up in a museum.

“I was surprised to discover that they are back on eBay. I hope nobody buys them,” The Times quoted her, as saying.

Several years ago, Jenkins had sold the letters to Alicia Carroll, a Los Angeles-based royal memorabilia collector.

Carroll posted the romantic notes on eBay in 2005, with a starting bid of 34,000 pounds, but was unable to find a buyer. When her firm went bankrupt earlier this month she placed the letters back on the Internet.

In the letters Prince Charles talks of marriage and divorce and his fears of marrying the wrong woman.

He writes: “I can see that I shall just have to get married as soon as possible and then all these people might relax a little . . . ! I still think my solution of marrying a girl from each Commonwealth country is the best one.” (ANI)

Prince Charles’ detox food dubbed ‘outright quackery’ by scientist

London, Mar 11 (ANI): Prince Charles has been accused of ‘financially exploiting the gullible’ with his herbal detox tincture of globe artichoke and dandelion produced by his company Duchy Originals.

Prof Ezard Ernst, from Peninsula Medical School, who has dismissed the herbal mixture as ‘quackery’, claims that the Prince of Wales is exploiting people at a time hardship, and dubbed the company as ‘Dodgy Originals’.

The scientific community has been criticising the method of detoxing as it lacked credible evidence, but Prince Charles on the other hand is a strong supporter of the complementary therapies and alternative medicine and has even called for wider access to the treatments on the NHS.

His brand, Duchy Originals, has produced a range of herbal preparations including the Detox Artichoke and Dandelion Tincture, which is sold for 10 pounds for 50ml in Boots and Waitrose.

“Prince Charles contributes to the ill health of the nation by pretending we can all overindulge, then take his tincture and be fine again,” the Telegraph quoted Prof Ernst, the first professor of complementary medicine in the UK, as saying.

“Under the banner of holistic and integrative health care he thus promotes a ‘quick fix’ and outright quackery,” he stated.

He said detox is based on the idea that toxins accumulate in the body until it becomes overloaded and that certain products can speed up the elimination of these substances.

“The body has a powerful mechanism to deal with itself and there’s no evidence that dandelion or artichoke will improve these functions,” he said.

“If a patient has a diseased kidney and cannot eliminate toxins via their kidney, then they need serious medical help.

“Products like this are a dangerous waste of money.

“Charles is exploiting people during hard times,” he added.

A spokesman for Duchy Originals has defended its product saying that it is safe.

“Duchy Herbals Detox Tincture is an excellent and safe product, traded as a food supplement and compliant with all of the relevant sections of both UK and European food laws,” he said.

“It is a natural aid to digestion and supports the body’s natural elimination processes. It is not – and has never been described as – a medicine, remedy or cure for any disease.

“There is no ‘quackery’, no ‘make believe’ and no ‘superstition’ in any of the Duchy Originals herbal tinctures. We find it unfortunate that Professor Ernst should chase sensationalist headlines in this way rather than concentrating on accuracy and objectivity,” he added. (ANI)

Obama’s roots traced back to 17th century

London, Mar.8 (ANI): Genealogists have traced the family roots of Barack Obama, the 44th US President back to a seventeenth-century Pilgrim settler who emigrated from England to America as one of the founding fathers of the colony of Plymouth, Massachusettes.
They found that President Obama is the 13th-generation descendant of Deacon Thomas Blossom, who was born in the village of Great Shelford, Cambridgeshire, around 1580.
Research by Charles Blossom, 63, and his close family had already revealed that they, too, are related to Thomas Blossom.

After being told of the link between their ancestor and the new President, Blossom, from Wolton on the Wolds, Leicestershire, declared himself “astonished”.

“I guess it makes us distant cousins,” The Telegraph quoted Blossom, as saying.
“We have been looking at our family history quite recently after we found some old documents and diaries. We certainly have ancestors that went to America and one was called Thomas Blossom. He was on board a ship which took some of the first Pilgrims to America,” Charles said.

Experts at the New England Historical Genealogical Society traced the link between President Obama, through his white mother, Ann Dunham, to the Pilgrim forefathers.

The President, who is half Kenyan and was born in Hawaii, is the 12th-generation grandchild of Thomas Blossom.

The discovery has sparked bickering between villages in Cambridgeshire about who can lay claim to President Obama’s English roots.

Thomas Blossom was one of seven children of Peter and Annabel Blossom from Great Shelford, Cambs. After his birth the family moved to Stapleford in around 1582, where Peter is described as a “husbandman”, or small farmer, in records.

In 1605, at the age of 25, Thomas married Anne Elsdon in Cambridge. he couple fled to the Dutch city of Leiden to escape religious persecution in England along with other exiles known as the Pilgrims. During their time there the couple buried three children who died at a young age.

They first attempted to sail to the New World in 1620 on board the Speedwell, a sister ship of the Mayflower. But while the Mayflower carried America’s founding fathers across the Atlantic, the Speedwell developed a leak and had to turn back.

The original Mayflower was dismantled for scrap in 1623, but a second ship of the same name eventually took Thomas Blossom and his family to America at their second attempt in 1629.

Thomas Blossom became an important member of the Pilgrim community as the first Deacon of the Church of Plymouth, but died in 1633 from an infectious fever, probably influenza.

After his death, he left behind a daughter Elizabeth, who was nine when the family set sail, and two sons, Thomas and Peter. President Obama is descended from Elizabeth. (ANI)

Prince Charles’ love letters up for grabs

London, Mar 6 (ANI): Love letters sent by Prince Charles to a girlfriend have been put up for sale on auction website eBay.

One of the six letters to Welsh-born Janet Jenkins was penned in 1980, just a year before he tied the knot with Princess Diana, reports the Sun.

Charles and Jenkins met in 1975 when she was a receptionist at the British consulate in Montreal, Canada.

In the letter, written on official Windsor Castle notepaper, Charles complains of his frustration with the press and fear of marrying the wrong girl.

Charles writes: “I would have thought your apartment is the quietest place.

“If we went out the press would be on to it in a flash and that would be misery.”

Writing about failed marriages, he says: “Making a mistake like that is, frankly, something which concerns me enormously.”

In the last seven-page letter, he writes: “My new private secretary is horrified by the idea of ladies in hotels during foreign visits.

“I shall just have to get married as soon as possible and then all these people might relax a little!

“I still think my solution of marrying a girl from each Commonwealth country is the best one.”

The letters have an auction starting price of 25,000 pounds.

It is believed Jenkins, of Toronto, sold them to LA-based collector Alicia Carroll, whose firm recently went bust. (ANI)

Gunmen kill at least 6 football fans in Nigeria

Gunmen ambushed a busload of football fans travelling to a match in southern Nigeria on Saturday and killed at least six in an apparent revenge attack, police and local officials said.

The supporters were travelling from Yenegoa in Bayelsa state to neighbouring Delta state. Local officials said the execution-style killing appeared to be in retaliation for a nightclub shooting in Yenegoa on Friday.

“The fans coming to Delta were ambushed and shot. Eight were killed and seven were injured and are in hospital,” Delta state police spokesman Charles Muka said.

A senior Bayelsa state government official who visited the scene said he had seen six bodies being taken to the mortuary in the nearby town of Ughelli. Another local official put the death toll among the “Ocean Boys” football supporters at 13.

Bayelsa and Delta are two of the main states in Nigeria’s restive Niger Delta, where criminal gangs and militant groups regularly ambush vehicles and carry out kidnappings for ransom.

The government official said the killings appeared to be part of a feud between rival “cults”, a word often used in Nigeria to refer to university campus gangs originally sponsored by politicians to commit abuses at election time.

Detailed statistics are not available, but hundreds of people are believed to have been killed in clashes between such gangs since the early 1990s at the more than 100 federal and regional universities and polytechnics in Nigeria.

The lawlessness in a region which is home to Africa’s biggest oil and gas industry has forced many foreign companies to remove expatriate staff and scale back their operations.
Segun Owen