Frank says will revive bank tax proposal

(Reuters) – Democratic Representative Barney Frank said on Wednesday that he would revive a proposal to tax banks and other large financial firms that had been stripped from a landmark overhaul of financial regulations.

Frank’s proposal would move separately from the sweeping financial regulation bill, which the House is expected to approve imminently.

“The committee that I chair will, I hope, bring out a bill that revives that assessment,” Frank said in debate on the House floor.

(Reporting by Andy Sullivan and Kevin Drawbaugh; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Pak group calls for protection of persecuted Hindu scheduled castes in country

Islamabad, May 18 (ANI): Lending a voice to the long-standing demand of the suppressed Hindu minorities, the Scheduled Caste Rights Movement (SCRM) has urged the government to table a parliamentary legislation in the National Assembly which would ensure the legal protection of fundamental rights of the people belonging to that community.

The SCRM would put forth its demands during a policy forum, which would be held today (May 18) here, during which members of the movement from across the country and other minority leaders would discuss and hold a debate over recommendations for providing legal protection to basic rights of Hindu minorities in Pakistan, The Daily Times reports.

Due to the government’s apathy and faulty policies, scheduled caste Hindus, who form a good part of the population, are unable to obtain National Identity Cards, which denies them an access to other basic rights.

Since partition, the community has been the worst affected in Pakistan, as they have been denied even the basic civil rights. In most parts of the country, local landlords and politicians have illegally occupied religious seminaries, graveyards and land belonging to people of scheduled castes. (ANI)

Govt defers solarium debate

The ACT Greens have attacked the Government for delaying their bill tightening restrictions on solariums.

The proposed laws would stop people under 18 and those with very fair skin from using solariums.

The Government has adjourned debate, saying it is planning to introduce national regulations.

Greens MLA Amanda Bresnan says that is a poor excuse.

“The national regulations have been promised for over two years, New South Wales and Victoria got sick of waiting, they went ahead with their own regulations and legislation,” she said.

“This is a preventative health measure ready to go but I don’t think it would have mattered what we put forward.

“The Government wouldn’t have supported it because they want to claim credit.”

Nationals converge on Albany

The National party will hold its annual state conference in Albany this weekend.

Delegates will discuss and debate party policy and hear from guest speakers, including the party’s WA leader Brendon Grylls.

The Nationals’ state president, Colin Holt, says more than 100 people are expected to attend the conference.

“We’ve got over 120 members coming down to Albany, we’ve also got a number of supporters … and corporate supporters coming along and we expect that at our conference dinner we’ll have 160 to 170 people,” he said.

Greens demand role in any asylum debate

The Greens say any political leaders’ debate on border protection should include them.

Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott wants to debate the Prime Minister next week about asylum seekers.

A United Nations report says the number of people applying for asylum in Australia almost trebled last year at a time when numbers worldwide were stable.

The Opposition says it is due to a softer federal policy, but the Government rejects that.

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young says the major parties both need to be challenged on the issue.

“[We must be] able to put forward a real solution, an Australian solution, that is fair, humane, practical and long-term because that’s what we need,” she said.

“These issues are not going to go away. They never have gone away. It’s how they’re used by politicians for political mileage.”

Pollution plan looks to end 40yr debate

The Western Australian Government has released its air quality and noise management plan for Port Hedland.

The strategy calls for a reduction in emissions by industry, better planning residential development locations and privately-funded, ongoing air monitoring programs.

The plan fulfils a Government election promise to try and resolve a 40 year debate between residents and industry over pollution and noise levels.

The Parliamentary Secretary for State Development, Bill Marmion, says the plan will make the town a more attractive place to live and invest.

“One of the main problems has been the uncertainly in terms of developments pushing ahead,” he said.

“There’ll now be certainty for people to invest money and so hopefully they can develop nice apartment-style living with ocean views.”

Leaders accused of overlooking rural doctor shortage

The Rural Doctors Association of Australia says yesterday’s federal leaders’ debate offers little new information about how either party’s health plan will affect country areas.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says he would consider changing the funding model for regional hospitals, but offers no guarantees.

The association’s chief executive, Steve Sant, says the leaders missed an opportunity to set their plans apart by addressing the shortage of country doctors.

“To date we’ve seen a lot done on education by both this Government and the previous government, but we haven’t seen the other side of the coin really addressed, which is how we attract and retain those doctors and nurses in rural Australia once they’ve gone through the education system,” he said.

“If we’re not careful then we’ll end up with a situation where we have lots of doctors and nurses but they’re all going to be in the city and we’re still going to have shortages in rural Australia.”

Bligh, Langbroek debate on asset sales rejected

Queensland Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek says Premier Anna Bligh has “squibbed” his challenge for a debate on asset sales.

He put the idea to Ms Bligh in Parliament this morning.

But she said she is happy to debate him in Parliament or in a State election year.

Mr Langbroek says by the time the next election comes around, assets will already be sold.

“This is a sale year,” he said.

“Whilst it might be a Federal election year, this is the year when these assets are going to be sold and I think it’s very telling that the Premier squibbed at a chance to debate Labor’s privatisation plans.”

Ms Bligh says she will take on Mr Langbroek when he has some alternative ideas.

“I’m happy to debate John-Paul Langbroek in the Parliament on any day of the week,” she said.

“It’s actually six weeks since he moved any motion on this issue.

“He’s not serious about a debate.

“I will debate John-Paul Langbroek when he’s got a policy – what’s the point of a debate when he doesn’t even have a policy?”

Hearing to debate vegetation laws

A Senate committee investigating the effects of native vegetation laws will hold a public hearing in Perth next month.

The inquiry is analysing the impact of the laws on land values and productivity.

Western Australian farmers want the laws changed to relax the restrictions on the clearing of the native vegetation on their land.

The committee’s Perth hearing will be held on April 20.

Submissions to the committee closed March 5, with a final report due on April 30.

Waste dump debate a ‘health issue’

The Senate committee in charge of the inquiry into the Federal Government’s proposed nuclear waste dump legislation is expected to decide today whether to visit Tennant Creek.

The inquiry has received more than 200 submissions.

Public hearings will be held in Darwin and Canberra and a decision is expected to be made today on whether the Senate committee will also visit Tennant Creek, the nearest major town to the proposed site for a waste dump.

The chief executive officer of the Public Health Association, Michael Moore, says if the committee does not go to Tennant Creek it will disempower people, and could even affect their health.

“When you don’t have procedural fairness, there is disempowerment, and people who are disempowered, have poor health outcomes,” he said.

“The reality is that we already have a significant health issue with Indigenous people.

“This is likely to exacerbate it.”

Abbott says no plans for new taxes

Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says he does not intend to promise any more new taxes.

This week Mr Abbott promised a six-month parental leave scheme that would be paid for by a new tax on big business.

Now he has told Channel Nine he is not planning to announce any other plans for new taxes before the election.

“I don’t like higher taxes,” he said.

But Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard says Mr Abbott announced his tax plan for parental leave not long after after a previous “no new taxes” promise.

“The problem with your tax pledges is they last about a fortnight, and then they’re gone,” she said.

Mr Abbott says the Government should release the Henry tax review so people can see and debate its plans.

Manmohan Singh to reply to debate on ”Motion of Thanks”

New Delhi, Mar 5 (ANI): Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh will reply to the debate on the ”Motion of Thanks” to President Pratibha Patil for her address in both houses of Parliament today.

Parliamentary Affairs Minister P K Bansal on Thursday said, “Dr Singh will reply to the debate on the Motion of Thanks to the President for her address in both Houses of Parliament today,” adding that he will speak in the Lok Sabha soon after the Question Hour and do the same in the Rajya Sabha at 5 PM. (ANI)

Karzai unlikely to claim Afghan election victory soon

Washington, Sep.17 (ANI): With accusations of vote fraud piling up around Afghanistan’s presidential election, incumbent Hamid Karzai is unlikely to claim victory any time soon.

At the very least, a national electoral complaints commission investigating fraudulent voting will take weeks to determine how much of Karzai’s officially declared 54.6 percent of the vote will be tossed out, reports the Christian Science Monitor.

At the other extreme, a potential need for a runoff vote could end up stretching Afghanistan’s political turmoil into next spring – presenting President Obama and other NATO leaders with an unsettled and deteriorating climate just as crucial policy decisions are under review.

Marvin Weinbaum, a former State Department intelligence specialist in Asian affairs now at the Middle East Institute in Washington, said:. “We face a possible constitutional crisis that, if not resolved, becomes a disaster for us, and a partner [Karzai] acting in ways that in effect raise questions as to whether he should be in there or not.”

Aside from a runoff vote, which could be declared if investigations show Karzai’s total falling below 50 percent, some parties are calling for a coalition government, while others support the idea of a nonpolitical transitional government.

That debate has crystallized in a row between foreign officials over the best way to address Afghanistan’s political predicament. Peter Galbraith, a senior US official working in Kabul as the deputy special UN representative for Afghanistan, abruptly left the country after clashing with his boss, Kai Eide, over what path forward to advocate.

Galbraith favors a larger recount of votes, even if it leads to a runoff between Karzai and his main political rival, Abdullah Abdullah, and an extended period of political uncertainty. (ANI)

Clark hopes next generation of Oz cricketers value country above the dollar

Sydney, Sep.17 (ANI): Experienced Australian seamer Stuart Clark has warned that he can only hope the next generation of Australian cricketers values playing for their country ahead of chasing the almighty dollar on offer in the Indian Premier League and next month’s Champions League.

Skipper Ricky Ponting, who said he expected more people to follow in the footsteps of English all-rounder Andrew Flintoff and pursue the shorter version of the game, backed up Clark.

According to the Daily Telegraph, former one-day star Michael Bevan also weighed into the money-v-country debate when he questioned how much longer cricketers would be prepared to support the Test scene now that there were lucrative alternatives.

“What scares me the most is where does it leave the game if people just go chasing large sums of money for a bit of hit-and-giggle,” Clark told The Big Sports Breakfast.

“I think we as players all owe it to Test cricket to try and keep it afloat. I know the administration is working hard at it, but I personally hold grave fears for where the game is heading,” he added.

Clark said he had noticed youngsters at NSW getting excited about the money at next month’s Champions League in India, which offers a three million dollar purse to the winner and could earn the players 130,000 dollars each – the equivalent of a top-end state contract.

Ponting said more players could snub Test cricket to copy Flintoff.

“I think it probably could happen more and more especially with guys retiring from Test match cricket and wanting to play only the shorter versions of the game,” he said.

Bevan, who scored nearly 7000 runs in 232 one-dayers for Australia, told The Daily Telegraph: “I’d like to hope there is a strong allegiance shown by the players to Test cricket, but up until what point they continue to do that I’m not sure.” (ANI)

‘Zero tolerance’ policy has zero effect

Washington, Sep 17 (ANI): Amid an ongoing debate about changing the drinking age from 21 to 18 in the US, a Sam Houston State University economist has raised voice against a related law- the “zero tolerance” policy.

Darren Grant studied data from 30,000 fatalities in nighttime accidents involving drivers under 21, and concluded that zero tolerance laws have zero effect.

“Both in terms of the number of accidents and the blood alcohol of the drivers in those accidents, the research consistently showed that zero tolerance laws had no effect. Other factors matter, but not these laws,” said Grant.

Zero tolerance laws became prevalent during the 1990s, when the US Congress threatened to withhold highway funding from states that didn’t comply.

Grant has now said that the logic behind zero tolerance laws is suspect.

“The idea was, since drivers under 21 are not supposed to be drinking, you should be guilty of drunk driving if you are caught driving with any amount of alcohol in your system,” said Grant.

“Because you must sacrifice more to comply with the law, we should expect some people will just give up trying to satisfy the law and drink more,” he added.

But he found that this did not happen.

“Instead, among drivers involved in traffic accidents, there is the same fraction of heavy drinkers, the same fraction of mild drinkers, the same fraction of nondrinkers. It’s just not changing,” he said.

Grant also compared the blood alcohol distributions of involved drivers in the two years before zero tolerance laws were established in each state, and again in the two years after.

It was found that the two distributions were also virtually identical.

“That’s a sign that this law is essentially inert; if it’s affecting the amount of drinking that people do, these distributions should look different,” he said.

The study has been published in the journal Economic Inquiry. (ANI)

Flintoff’s ECB contract rejection threatens Test cricket, but he plays it down

London, Sep.17 (ANI): All-rounder Andrew Flintoff may have unwittingly incited the break-up of international cricket by his refusal of an England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) incremental contract, but he has played down reports of a possible backlash.

Flintoff has assured that his rejection of an England increment contract, a second tier deal offered to him because of his retirement from Test cricket, did not lessen his commitment to England. The all-rounder, who is Dubai undergoing rehabilitation after knee surgery, made it clear that he has no intention of missing any England games should they clash with matches in the various Twenty20 franchise competitions he also hopes to be part of.

Although Flintoff has put all negotiations on hold while he recovers he is known to have been in preliminary talks with teams in Australia, where their revamped Twenty20 competition is to be called the Big Bash and South Africa, where the Pro20 is easily the most popular professional cricket in the country.

Sean Morris, the chief executive of the Professional Cricketers’ Association, said yesterday that other players would join Flintoff in rejecting national deals and that there may be a rash of early retirements from international cricket.

“I think there will be a lot of serious discussion in Johannesburg later this month among the parties and between the parties. I can’t overestimate its importance. In the space of a few weeks we have had two leading players withdrawing from components of the international game, Andrew Flintoff from Tests and Ricky Ponting, from Twenty20 internationals,” The Telegraph quoted Morris, as saying.

Flintoff’s move may stimulate more than debate.

England captain Andrew Strauss was mildly surprised by the decision.

“I’m not going to sit in judgement of him because we don’t know the reasons. We need to sit down and speak to him about why he’s done this and we’ll then make an informed decision about what that means to his availability for England,” he said. (ANI)

Extremely tough to win a Grand Slams now, says Murray

London, Sep.17 (ANI): World Number three Andy Murray is of the view that winning a Grand Slam title in the present day and age is far more tougher than it was before, given the kind of talent on show in the tennis circuit.

He said that when players are competing against the likes of Roger Federer, Raphael Nadal and now Juan Martin Del Potro, winning a title was not easy.

“It’s really, really tough to win the slams now so Del Potro’s effort was pretty good. There’s no question that Roger (Federer) and Rafa (Nadal) are two of the best ever. Roger’s people say he’s the best of all time; that’s not really up for debate. And Rafa, providing he stays healthy, I’d expect to get to double figures on slam wins,” The Telegraph quoted Murray, as saying.

“That’s better than any two rivals have managed together and then behind them the standard is very high. There are guys like (Andy) Roddick who’s only managed to win one slam right at the start of that career and he’s a great player,” he added.

Murray, who exited from the US Open in the fourth-round, also said that he wanted to take his mind off his disappointment and move on.

For the moment, he is only concerned about defeating a couple of Polish journeymen to provide Britain with the platform for a victory which would ensure they do not get demoted to the Davis Cup’s third tier for the first time in 13 years. (ANI)

British troops far from defeating Taliban, says Brit Defence Secretary

London, Sep.16 (ANI): British troops are a long way from winning the battle against a resilient Taliban in Afghanistan, and the conflict in the country could lead to “major shifts” in military spending, said British Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth.

“We are facing a resilient enemy which we are far from succeeding against yet,” he told an audience of defence experts at King’s College London.

“I reject the proposition we are not making progress. I also reject the proposition a reduced military presence will lead to less Taliban success,” The Telegraph quoted Ainsworth, as saying further.

A leading thinktank warned earlier that the presence of large numbers of foreign troops in Afghanistan made it harder to achieve a political settlement to the conflict.

The International Institute for Strategic Studies said western forces in Afghanistan needed a “more cunning” strategy if they were to achieve their aims.

Ainsworth said a military failure in Afghanistan would have “profound consequences for our national security” and “undermine the Nato alliance”.

He also called for an open debate about future defence policy and how money for the military should be spent before the government publishes a defence review green paper in advance of next year’s general election. (ANI)

Giant eagle filled the role of a predator on Kiwi island 750 years ago

Washington, September 12 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have determined that the role of a predator, before humans colonized New Zealand about 750 years ago, was filled by a giant, extinct raptor known as Haast’s eagle.

Although the bones of Haast’s eagle have been known for well over a century, the behavior of these giants has been a point of debate.

Owing to their large size – these eagles weighed up to 40 lbs., larger than any modern eagle – some scientists believe they were scavengers rather than predators.

The new study, by Paul Scofield of the Canterbury Museum in New Zealand and Ken Ashwell of the University of New South Wales, used computed axial tomography (CAT/CT) scans to reconstruct the size of the brain, eyes, ears and spinal cord of this ancient eagle.

These data were compared to values from modern predatory and scavenging birds to determine the habits of the extinct eagle.

The results indicated not only that Haast’s eagle was a fearsome predator that probably swooped on its prey from a high mountain perch, but also that it evolved over a relatively short period of time from a much smaller-bodied ancestor.

“This work is a great example of how rapidly evolving medical techniques and equipment can be used to solve ancient mysteries,” said Ashwell, co-author of the study.

It is also an example of how the oral traditions of ancient peoples and scientific research can sometimes reach the same conclusion.

“This science supports Maori (native New Zealander) mythology of the legendary pouakai or hokioi, a huge bird that could swoop down on people in the mountains and was capable of killing a small child,” said Paul Scofield, lead author of the study.

Haast’s eagle became extinct a mere 500 years ago, probably due to habitat destruction and the extinction of its prey species by early Polynesian settlers. (ANI)

Tendong Lho Rum Faat festival celebrated by Lepchas of Sikkim

Gangtok (Sikkim), Sep 9(ANI): Hundreds of people came together in Gangtok recently to celebrate Tendong Lho Rum Faat, which is a festival of the indigenous tribe of Sikkim “The Lepchas”.

During the festival, Lepchas offer prayers and worship Mount Tendong; the Kanchenjunga mountain range, that they believe saved them from destruction by floods.

“This festival is more than worshipping the mountain. It shows a strong connection and affinities of Lepchas with Nature. This is not something recent. They have been carrying on this, the worshipping of Nature since time immemorial,” said Sheba Sasm, a local.

To mark the day, quiz, debate and flute competitions were also organised.

Norzang Lepcha, the organiser, said that through the festivals they want to educate youngsters about to try and respect nature as well as to save it.

“Through these festivals and seminars what we are trying to inject in the minds of young generations is to save the nature and to plant more trees, so that the temperature can be maintained. We can come to the natural level of temperature,” Lepcha said.

The festival falls on the 3rd lunar month each year. By Tashi Pradhan(ANI)