50,000 American Muslims to attend prayer meeting on Washington Mall on Sep.25

Washington, Sep.13 (ANI): At least 50,000 American Muslims will participate in a national prayer gathering for September 25 in Washington, D.C.

According to a report filed by The Star-Ledger, the gathering is taking place in the city’s National Mall area and is being organised by representatives of a mosque in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

The paper quoted Hassen Abdellah, president of the Dar-ul-Islam mosque and an event organizer, as saying: “Most of the time, when Muslims go to Washington, D.C., they go there to protest some type of event…This is not a protest. Never has the Islamic community prayed on Capitol Hill for the soul of America. We’re Americans. We need to change the face of Islam so people don’t feel every Muslim believes America is ‘the great Satan,’ because we love America.”

The Star-Ledger reports that “A permit from the Capitol Hill police, granted July 28, allows access to the area by the West Front of the Capitol building from 4 a.m. to 7 p.m. on September 25, but the main gathering will occur at 1 p.m., for the Friday prayer service.

Abdellah said he expects 50,000 people to attend, from mosques around the country, though non-Muslims are welcome, too.”

Abdellah stated the idea germinated after President Obama’s inaugural speech, and was reinforced by this summer’s Cairo address: “For the first time in my lifetime,”

Abdellah said, “I heard someone of his stature speaking about Islam and Muslims not in an adversarial sense, but in the sense of being welcome and acknowledging we are integral citizens in the society-that we’re gainfully employed, we’re educated.”(ANI)

World’s first patient implanted with smallest rechargeable neurostimulator completes one year

Washington, Sep 12 (ANI): The world’s first patient to have been implanted with the smallest ever neurostimulator for chronic pain is celebrating the one-year anniversary of his procedure today.

One year ago, former U.S. Army parachutist Adam Hammond became the first patient in the world to have been implanted with an Eon Mini neurostimulator.

Adam got the chronic pain after a skydiving accident when his parachute deployed incorrectly, leaving him in a coma with life-threatening injuries, including a severed spine, broken femur, fractured pelvic bone, and torn aorta.

Although Adam recovered from his accident, he battled chronic pain that left him dependent on a wheelchair.

But, today, the picture has completely changed and Adam is active and exercising, studying for his law degree and no longer in need of a wheelchair.

Adam also went to Washington, D.C., recently to meet with representatives and advocate for pain legislation.

However, Adam is not the only chronic pain sufferers who have been helped with neurostimulation, an FDA-approved therapy that uses electrical pulses to interrupt pain signals to the brain.

Over 60,000 St. Jude Medical neurostimulation devices have been implanted in patients in 35 countries around the world. (ANI)

Holidaying Obama sets himself grueling reading schedule of 2,300 pages

Martha’s Vineyard (Virginia, US), Aug. 26 (ANI): US President Barack Obama has kicked off his vacation by revealing that, in addition to endless games of tennis and golf, he plans to read five books or an astonishing 2,300 pages.

His summer reading list, unveiled by a White House apparently keen to emphasise Obama’s highbrow credentials, contains two heavyweight works of non-fiction and three novels, The Independent reports.

On top of the pile stacked on Barack and Michelle’s bedside table at the 28-acre estate they have rented for 35,000 dollars is “Hot, Flat and Crowded”, the climate change polemic by New York Times columnist, Thomas Friedman. Subtitled “why we need a green revolution”, it makes a leftish call to arms regarding the future of the planet.

Obama’s second choice is historian David McCullough’s magisterial biography of John Adams, the often underrated second US president, who was the subject of an award-winning HBO docu-drama last year.

The novels include two crime thrillers: Richard Price’s Lush Life, and The Way Home, a novel by George Pelecanos set in Washington, DC – which, much like Obama’s best-selling autobiography, explores the relationship between a father and his son.

Completing the set is the novel Plainsong, by a little-known writer called Kent Haruf. Set in a small town on the Colorado plains, its existence on the reading list may reassure voters that their metropolitan commander-in-chief has not ignored Middle America.

The books were unveiled to reporters on Monday afternoon, at an official press briefing.

President Obama has already spent a portion of his week so far playing golf, beating Michelle at tennis, and visiting friends.

To finish all five books, he would have to manage more than 300 pages every day – quite an “ask” when a small portion of his time must also be spent running the country. (ANI)

Pak ambassador to Washington on tax defaulters list

Washington, Aug. 9 (ANI): A list released by the local government of Washington, D.C. has placed Pakistan’s Ambassador Husain Haqqani among tax defaulters for failing to pay tax on an apartment he owned in the US capital.

A notice issued by the deputy chief financial officer of the District of Columbia government said that if Haqqani fails to pay tax, authorities would auction Haqqani’s property on September 9, The Dawn reports.

However, a spokesman for the Pakistan Embassy in Washington insisted that the misunderstanding would be resolved on Monday.

Nadeem Kiani added that Haqqani was not a tax defaulter and he would issue a clarification after determining the facts. (ANI)

Northern spotted owl loses genetic diversity with drop in numbers

Washington, June 28 (ANI): A new study has determined that with a drop in its numbers, the northern spotted owl has also lost genetic diversity.

The northern spotted owl has been a controversial conservation icon for years, ever since large swaths of old-growth forest in the Pacific Northwest were set aside to protect the threatened bird 15 years ago.
That decision angered logging companies and forced them to take a financial hit. Still, despite the extra protection, spotted owl populations have continued to decline.

Now, according to a report in Discovery News, a new study helps explain why: With a drop in numbers, the birds have lost genetic diversity.

In addition to habitat loss and competition from other owl species, this type of genetic bottleneck makes the species more vulnerable to inbreeding problems and less resilient in the face of disease, climate change, and other challenges.

“It provides additional evidence that spotted owls are not doing great right now,” said Chris Funk, a population geneticist at Colorado State University in Fort Collins.
“It also points out that we might have to think about another threat to spotted owls, which is the threat from loss of genetic variation,” he added.

Northern spotted owls live in old-growth forests throughout the Pacific Northwest, from southwest British Columbia to northwest California.

The owls have brown feathers with white spots, deep dark eyes, and a nearly 4-foot wingspan. Their distinctive hooting helps define the untouched forests of the Pacific Northwest.
“It’s a species that a lot of people like and enjoy,” said Robert Fleischer, an evolutionary and conservation geneticist at the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington D.C.

“It’s hard to put a value on something like that, but it would be a far less rich experience to have Pacific Northwest woods that were lacking spotted owls,” he added.
The owl’s numbers have been dropping by 3 to 4 percent each year.
Habitat loss remains a problem, too. Funk and colleagues suspected that genetic bottlenecking might also add to the owl’s woes.
For their study, the researchers scanned DNA from more than 350 northern spotted owls across the animal’s range.

Then, they ran a bottleneck test, which looks for the loss of certain rare gene-forms, or alleles.

Analyses showed signs that populations of northern spotted owls had indeed shrunk, especially in the Cascade Mountains of Washington.
The loss of genetic diversity is an added blow to the loss of individual birds.
“We knew from census data that there was a problem,” Fleischer said. “We didn’t know it was something that we would see in genetic variation at this stage,” he added. (ANI)

Beyonce dedicates “Single Ladies” to Obama girls

Washington, June 26 (ANI): Barack Obama’s kids Malia and Sasha got a loud shout out from their role model and R and B star Beyonce Knowles at her concert in Washington, D.C.

US first lady Michelle Obama and her daughters were the special guests of the show at the Verizon Centre.

According to the Washington Post, the Bootylicious singer even dedicated her “Single Ladies (Put a Ring On It),” to the teen girls, reports Usmagazine.

“This is for Sasha and Malia — and all my single ladies!” she said.

Beyonce told Vogue magazine that Michelle considered her a role model for her girls.

“She told me she was very happy that her girls have someone like me to look up to,” Beyonce said.

“And I’m like, ‘Oh, my God.’ You have to feel fortunate to be one of the people whom parents don’t mind their children looking up to,” she added. (ANI)

Meet Barack Obama, the comedian!

New York, June 20 (ANI): US President Barack Obama sent the crowd into stitches with his jokes at the 65th Annual Radio and Television Correspondents Association Dinner.

The popular leader made other politicians, the economy, health care reform, his own White House team and other problems facing the nation the butt of his jokes during the Washington, D.C. affair.

Obama scored enough laughs while referring to a picture of Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel riding a camel in Egypt.

“I admit, I was a little nervous about the whole situation. I said at the time, “This is a wild animal known to bite, kick and spit. And who knows what the camel could do?” the New York Daily News quoted him as saying.

Speaking about the attempts to reform health care, he said: “I have gained the support of the American Medical Association.”

He then added, “It proves true the old expression that it’s easier to catch flies with honey. And if honey doesn’t work, feel free to use an open palm and a swift, downward wrist motion.”

Obama then told those present that efforts were being made to help restore financial institutions and auto companies gain back their strength.

He added: “But you probably wouldn’t understand the concept of troubled industries, working as you do in radio and television.”

And when he realised, that may stir a commotion, the President grinned and said: “W-h-a-a-t! I can’t joke about that.”

He later declared: “I have no ambition to run an auto company.”

Obama did not even spare Secretary of State Clinton’s fractured broken elbow, saying the “Secret Service spotted Richard Holbrooke spraying WD40″ all over the driveway where she fell.

He joked: “Now on top of the cost of health care and the recovery plan we have another fiscal problem. Fortunately, the lawyers tell me Hillary is ready to settle.” (ANI)

Rise in CO2 levels 200 mln yrs ago led to sudden collapse in plant biodiversity

Washington, June 19 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have found that a rise in carbon dioxide (CO2) levels 200 million years ago led to a sudden ancient collapse in plant biodiversity.

The evidence for the collapse in the plant biodiversity was unearthed by scientists in the form of 200 million-year-old fossil leaves collected in East Greenland.

The researchers were surprised to find that a likely candidate responsible for the loss of plant life was a small rise in the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, which caused Earth’s temperature to rise.

Global warming has long been considered as the culprit for extinctions, but the surprise, according to this research, is that much less carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere may be needed to drive an ecosystem beyond its tipping point than previously thought.

Until this research, the pace of the extinctions was thought to have been gradual, taking place over millions of years.

It has been notoriously difficult to tease out details about the pace of extinction using fossils, scientists say, because fossils can provide only snap-shots or glimpses of organisms that once lived.

Using a technique developed by scientist Peter Wagner of the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., the researchers were able to detect, for the first time, very early signs that these ancient ecosystems were already deteriorating, before plants started going extinct.

The method reveals early warning signs that an ecosystem is in trouble in terms of extinction risk.

“The differences in species abundances for the first 20 meters of the cliffs (in East Greenland) from which the fossils were collected are of the sort you expect,” said Wagner.

“But, the final 10 meters show dramatic loses of diversity that far exceed what we can attribute to sampling error: the ecosystems were supporting fewer and fewer species,” he added.

By the year 2100, it’s expected that the level of CO2 in the modern atmosphere may reach as high as two and a half times today’s level.

“This is of course a ‘worst case scenario,” said Jennifer McElwain of University College Dublin, the research paper’s lead author. “But it’s at exactly this level (900 parts per million) at which we detected the ancient biodiversity crash,” she added.

“We must take heed of the early warning signs of deterioration in modern ecosystems,” she said.

According to the scientists, the majority of modern ecosystems have not yet reached their tipping point in response to climate change, but many have already entered a period of prolonged ecological change. (ANI)

Roemer nominated as US envoy to India

New Delhi, May 28 (ANI): President Barack Obama has announced his intent to nominate Timothy J. Roemer as the new U.S. Ambassador to India.

Announcing nominations to several key administration posts on May 27, the President said “I am grateful that these distinguished Americans have agreed to help represent the United States and strengthen our partnerships abroad at this critical time for our nation and the world. I am confident they will advance American diplomacy as we work to meet the challenges of the 21st century. I look forward to working with them in the years and months ahead.”

A statement issued by the US Embassy in New Delhi said Roemer is President of the Center for National Policy (CNP) in Washington, D.C.

Before joining the CNP, he represented the 3rd District of Indiana for six terms as a U.S. Congressman, from 1991 to 2003.

Congressman Roemer served as a member of the 9/11 Commission, as well as the Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction, Proliferation and Terrorism. He currently serves on the Washington Institute for Near East Policy’s Presidential Task Force on Combating the Ideology of Radical Extremism, and the National Parks Second Century Commission.

As a distinguished scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, Congressman Roemer works with Members of Congress and staff to improve public policy outcomes by teaching on the legislative branch and policy analysis.

Congressman Roemer holds a B.A. from the University of California, San Diego and a M.A. and PhD. from the University of Notre Dame.(ANI)

US should increase commitment to improve health of developing nations, says report

Washington, May 22 (ANI): A new report has said that the United States of America should reaffirm and increase its commitment to improving the health of developing nations.

The report, from the Institute of Medicine, determines that the United States should increase its funding for overseas disease prevention and treatment to 15 billion dollars per year by 2012 to achieve this goal.

In addition, scale-up of existing preventive and therapeutic interventions and a boost in research on health problems that are endemic to low- and middle-income countries will be required.

The U.S. government, along with other nations, academia, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), private foundations, and other partners, should lead efforts to build the health care work forces and facilities in resource-limited countries.

Many have critical deficits that hamper delivery of care even when it is available.

The report adds that public and private donors need to engage individuals and organizations in these nations as respected partners to ensure accountability and sustainability of aid initiatives.

The committee that wrote the report supports US President Obama’s recent announcement of plans to make health a pillar of U.S. foreign policy, a recommendation the committee made in its interim report released in December.

According to the new report, the president should underscore this commitment by creating a White House Interagency Committee on Global Health headed by a senior White House official to plan, prioritize, and coordinate budgeting for the nation’s global health programs and activities.

“It is crucial for the reputation of the United States that we live up to our humanitarian responsibilities and assist low-income countries in safeguarding the health of their poorest citizens despite current pressures on our economy,” said committee co-chair Thomas R. Pickering, vice chairman, Hills and Co., Washington, D.C., and former undersecretary of state for political affairs.

“America should act in the global interest, recognizing that long-term diplomatic, economic, and security benefits will follow,” he added.

“The U.S. government and American foundations, companies, universities, and nongovernmental organizations together have an unprecedented opportunity to improve the health of millions,” said co-chair Harold Varmus, president, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York City, and former director of the National Institutes of Health.

“Now more than ever, the knowledge and technologies to tackle the health problems of developing nations are within reach. A new generation of philanthropists, students, scientists, and business leaders is eager to make a difference in our global community,” he added. (ANI)

14yr-old Indian-origin boy bags second spot in National Geographic Bee contest

Washington, May 21 (ANI): Arjun Kandaswamy, a 14-year-old boy of Indian origin in Oregon, has won second place in the annual National Geographic Bee geography contest, and bagged a 15,000-dollar college scholarship.

He is an eighth grader at Meadow Park Middle School in Beaverton.

Seventh grader Eric Yang, 13, of Griffin Middle School in The Colony, Texas, won the toughest National Geographic Bee to date during a tie-breaker round.

Third place and a 10,000-dollar college scholarship went to North Carolina’s Shantan Krovvidi, 13, a seventh grader at Ligon Middle School in Raleigh.

The Google-sponsored event was held at National Geographic Society headquarters this week in Washington, D.C.

Bee director Mary Lee Elden revealed that the finalists prepared more vigorously than in previous years, prompting organizers to make the questions more difficult for the national finals.

Yang said that this year’s questions were “challenging”, but he didn’t change his strategy.

“I just built on what I already knew,” National Geographic News quoted him as saying.

His father William Yang was “very excited” about his victory.

He described Eric as a “very independent boy”.

“We try to provide all the support we can, but most of the time he spends his time by himself,” William said.

The teen enjoys history books, cookbooks, and travel guides. (ANI)

47-mln-yr-old fossil “missing link” between humans and lemurs

Washington, May 20 (ANI): The analysis of a 47-million-year-old fossil, dubbed “Ida”, has led paleontologists to suggest that it is a critical “missing link” species in primate evolution, which connects humans and lemurs.

According to a report in National Geographic News, in a new book, documentary, and promotional Web site, paleontologist Jorn Hurum, who led the team that analyzed the 47-million-year-old fossil, suggests that the fossil bridges the evolutionary split between higher primates such as monkeys, apes, and humans and their more distant relatives such as lemurs.

“This is the first link to all humans,” said Hurum, of the Natural History Museum in Oslo, Norway. “Ida represents the closest thing we can get to a direct ancestor,” he added.

Ida, properly known as Darwinius masillae, has a unique anatomy.

The lemur-like skeleton features primate-like characteristics, including grasping hands, opposable thumbs, clawless digits with nails, and relatively short limbs.

“This specimen looks like a really early fossil monkey that belongs to the group that includes us,” said Brian Richmond, a biological anthropologist at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.

Richmond noted that there’s a big gap in the fossil record from this time period.

Researchers are unsure when and where the primate group that includes monkeys, apes, and humans split from the other group of primates that includes lemurs.

“Ida is one of the important branching points on the evolutionary tree, but it’s not the only branching point,” Richmond said.

At least one aspect of Ida is unquestionably unique: her incredible preservation, unheard of in specimens from the Eocene era, when early primates underwent a period of rapid evolution.

“From this time period there are very few fossils, and they tend to be an isolated tooth here or maybe a tailbone there,” Richmond explained.

“So you can’t say a whole lot of what that (type of fossil) represents in terms of evolutionary history or biology,” he added.

In Ida’s case, scientists were able to examine fossil evidence of fur and soft tissue and even picked through the remains of her last meal: fruits, seeds, and leaves.

What’s more, the newly described fossil was unearthed in Germany’s Messel Pit.

According to Richmond, Ida’s European origins are intriguing, because they could suggest-contrary to common assumptions-that the continent was an important area for primate evolution. (ANI)

Simpson once again forgets lyrics to her song ‘Remember That’

Washington, May 12 (ANI): American singer Jessica Simpson once again forgot the lyrics to her song ‘Remember That’ while performing onstage in California recently.

The 28-year-old star had badly performed her Dolly Parton tribute song at the Kennedy Centre Honours in Washington, D.C. in 2006, and then she made the same mistake twice this year.

The singer then tried to play down the error with humour, and told the California audience that it was a Simpson thing.
“I always forget this,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying.

“I didn’t write it.

“It just comes with the whole Jessica Simpson thing,” she added jokingly. (ANI)

‘Insolent’ Meghan McCain ‘plays party pooper’ at Correspondents Dinner

New York, May 11 (ANI): Senator John McCain’s daughter Meghan reportedly played party pooper at the recent Correspondents Dinner in Washington D.C. when she was stopped by security for lacking a ticket for one friend.

The political blogger was said to have had only two tickets but got two friends at the prestigious annual event and later allegedly bragged about her background.

“The security guard sent her to talk to someone to sort out the situation, but Meghan got bratty and nastily told him, ‘We’ll just stand here then,’ like an insolent child,” the New York Daily News quoted a source as saying.

And after dealing with the guard, “She muttered to her friends, ‘Does he even know who the f— I am?’” the source added.

An insider further said: “Those tickets were harder to get than gold dust and Meghan blatantly only had two and thought she didn’t have to follow the same rules as everyone else.”

And once inside, the blonde was later heard “complaining about everything from the air-conditioning to the wait,” added the source. (ANI)

‘Made up’ Susan Boyle says she’s like any other woman

London, May 11 (ANI): Britain’s Got Talent star Susan Boyle defended her recent makeover on The Oprah Winfrey show, insisting that it was just a little “tidying up”.

The 48-year-old, who had stunned all with her jaw-dropping performance of the song ‘I Dreamed a Dream’, had taken up a new look after dyeing her frizzy grey hair and mending her bushy eyebrows.

The church volunteer from Scotland had come under critics’ fire for her new wardrobe, while the talent show’s bosses were left enraged since they wanted her to be a complete natural.

But the singing sensation told chat queen Oprah that she was like any other woman.

“I’ve just tidied up a bit like any woman would,” the Sun quoted her as saying.

Susan may soon become the world’s biggest internet star since the overnight star’s debut performance had already gathered 186million hits on You Tube, making it the fifth most watched video.
She was recently reported to have turned down the chance to meet US President Barack Obama at the prestigious annual Correspondents Dinner in Washington D.C.

The singer was apparently too nervous to take up the offer to be in the presence of the President and other high profilers at the five-star Hilton Hotel. (ANI)

Warm weather may not halt swine flu

Washington, May 10 (ANI): New data from Mexico and case numbers so far suggest that if the spread of H1N1 “swine flu” continues elsewhere as it has in the Americas, the virus could infect more than a billion people by July.

The data also suggests that summer temperatures in temperate countries may not slow the virus. However, it spreads slowly enough to respond to the “social distancing” measures used in Mexico.

H1N1 has been circulating, geneticists estimate, since last autumn, but it was first recognised in Mexico in April, New Scientist reports.

New data released by the Mexican health ministry (pdf) reveals disturbing similarities with the last H1N1 pandemic, in 1918.

Health officials have expressed hopes that summer weather in the northern hemisphere will stop H1N1, as it does ordinary flu. But “pandemic flu doesn’t seem to be as sensitive to warm weather,” says Lone Simonsen of George Washington University in Washington, DC.

A relatively mild first wave of the 1918 pandemic spread through the northern hemisphere in the spring and summer. (ANI)

Porn star eyes Louisiana Senator seat with ‘Listening Tour’

Washington, May 2 (ANI): Porn star Stormy Daniels is set to launch her “Listening Tour” across the state of Louisiana in the US for a probable chance of running against Senator David Vitter.

The 29-year-old would “meet with Louisiana men and women and listen to the issues and concerns they struggle with everyday”.

Daniels is yet to have a party affiliation but that has not dampened her spirits.

“I wanted to take over the world and I guess ‘senator’ is a good place to start, right? I’ve been handed a golden opportunity and I should take advantage of it,” Politico quoted her as saying.

Meanwhile, she is allegedly crossing her fingers that her porn star past would not block her possible political career, especially considering Vitter has had a sexual past of his own.

Vitter’s phone number had been found in the published phone log of the “D.C. Madam”, Deborah Jeane Palfrey in July 2007.

Though he never confessed any specific wrongdoing, he admitted, in a statement: “a very serious sin in my past for which I am, of course, completely responsible.” (ANI)

New Internet magazine linked to al Qaeda seeks to lure Americans to jihad

Washington, May 2 (ANI): Jihad Recollections, a new English-language Internet magazine linked to al Qaeda, focuses on the terrorist group, its founder Osama bin Laden and how to commit jihad.

The Internet magazine also predicts the demise of the United States, FOX News reported.

“This is designed for Americans,” says noted terrorism expert Steven Emerson, founder of the Investigative Project on Terrorism in Washington, D.C., and author of the book “American Jihad: The Terrorists Living Among Us.”

“It’s not for Brits, not for Germans, not for jihadists in the Middle East. It’s designed for Americans and it’s designed to get them to convert to Islam or to carry out jihad acts of terror,” he said.

“What started off as some angry kids in their basement has transformed over the past several years into a robust al Qaeda propaganda outlet right here in our backyard,” says Jarret Brachman, an al Qaeda specialist and author of the new book, “Global Jihadism.”

It is not clear what connection, if any, the magazine has to al Qaeda or its followers. Yet “Jihad Recollections” certainly highlights the terrorist group and the goals of Islamic jihad in a sophisticated and graphically slick presentation.

The magazine includes the speeches and writings of bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri. Articles range from “Four Practical Steps to Expand the Global Jihad,” to “The Science Behind Night Vision Technology” and “Principles of Guerrilla Warfare.”

“The magazine is quite startling,” said Emerson. It is “a veritable manual on how to carry out terrorism. It’s quite shocking, and the question is whether it violates the law or not.”

“Jihad Recollections” appears to prepare followers to engage in jihad. One section teaches aspiring jihadists how to stay in shape by doing exercise without weights.

Articles with photographs of men dressed in white robes with their faces covered encourage them to exercise at home and stay away from American gyms because “they are full of music, semi-naked women, free mixing.”

It warns of the dangers of “showing off” during a workout and even observes that protein shakes are too expensive and not worth the money. (ANI)

Furious Obama orders probe into New York flyover photo flop

Washington, Apr.29 (ANI): A furious President Barack Obama has ordered an internal investigation into a photo-op featuring the presidential jet that sent thousands of New Yorkers running for their lives.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Tuesday Obama was “furious” when he heard about the incident and has ordered a deputy chief of staff of find out “why that decision was made and to ensure that it never happens again.”

The 747 plane, with an F-16 escort following close behind, circled the Statue of Liberty and the skyline near the World Trade Center site for about a half-hour. Offices were evacuated. Emergency call centers were inundated.

Witnesses reported that the planes were flying dangerously low.

Only military personnel were aboard the 747, Gibbs said. The photo-op cost 328,835 dollars, which includes personnel, maintenance and fuel costs, according to the Air Force, which said the hours would have been flown regardless and the expenses accrued on a different mission.

But the site evoked memories of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks and left White House Military Office Director Louis Caldera accepting responsibility and apologizing late Monday for permitting the exercise that infuriated New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who had not been alerted to the flyover.

Obama, who was meeting with FBI Director Robert Mueller and other senior officials at the FBI on Tuesday, called the photo-op “a mistake.”

One White House official told FOX News that all future photo-ops with the Air Force One backup plane have been banned, but another White House official would not confirm to FOX News that a reported flyover of Washington, D.C., with the U.S. Capitol as a backdrop scheduled for May 5-6 had been scrubbed. (ANI)

Barack Obama has yet to get his spy-proof BlackBerry

Washington, Apr 25 (ANI): Contrary to previous rumors, President Barack Obama hasn’t gotten his super-secure BlackBerry.

According to The Washington Times, the American leader will have to long for his souped-up smartphone for a little while, and has instead been forced to use an ungainly hybrid.

As for the reason why it is so: the National Security Agency still needs a few months to test out its replacement: a souped-up BlackBerry 8830 equipped with software called SecurVoice made by Washington, D.C.-based The Genesis Key, Inc, reports FOX News.

“We’re going to put his BlackBerry back in his hand,” Genesis Key chairman Steven Garrett told the Washington Times.

Engineers from BlackBerry maker Research In Motion, based in Waterloo, Ontario, have helped with the upgrade.

The president was forced to give up his unsecured BlackBerry after Inauguration Day, amid concerns that its communications and e-mail would be intercepted by foreign governments or hackers.

In the interim, Obama has been using a patchwork of two devices, a BlackBerry and an NSA-supplied secure handheld device known as Sectera Edge. (ANI)