Pakistan’s ‘ghost’ schools worry donors

Islamabad, Oct 30 (IANS) The World Bank and the European Union have voiced concern over the existence of “ghost” and closed schools in Pakistan’s Sindh province and absenteeism of teachers from schools.

This issue figured at a meeting between Sindh Minister for Education Pir Mazhar-ul-Haq and a joint delegation of the World Bank and the European Union (EU), Dawn News reported.

The issues concerning closure of schools and long absence of teachers were raised by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and EU officials.

The minister informed them that more funds were required to repair and renovate a large number of schools, which had been damaged in the recent floods.

He said that the Sindh government had already made a number of schools functional by appointing many new teachers.

He said he has directed the education department to introduce an effective school monitoring system so that stern action could be taken against the truant teachers.

He informed the delegation about steps taken to increase enrollment of children in government schools. The education department has also been directed to take strict action against ghost teachers and halt the funding of closed schools.

Arvind Kejriwal to take loan to settle Rs 9.27 lakh I-T dues

NEW DELHI: Team Anna member Arvind Kejriwal has decided to pay his dues to the income tax department in a bid to ensure that his application seeking voluntary retirement from the Indian Revenue Service ( IRS) is finally accepted.

The I-T department, where Kejriwal worked, has turned down his application, insisting he first clear the Rs 9.27 lakh he owes the department. “I have decided to pay the dues claimed by the I-T department. I will take a loan from a friend to pay the amount,” Kejriwal said.

While the issue had remained on the backburner for quite some time – with Kejriwal treating his association with the government to be over – the I-T department suddenly slapped a notice on him on August 6, asking him to pay up for his VRS application to be accepted.

The notice came just days before Gandhian Anna Hazare went on his hunger strike.

Child welfare under scrutiny

How do two children end up being placed in the home of a convicted sex offender, namely the man who molested their mother?

This is the question it took the ABC weeks and a series of emails and phone calls to get the Department for Child Protection to answer, and still the details are sketchy.

The situation is this.

An eight-year-old boy and his three-year-old sister are unable to be cared for by their mother. So they are placed in their grandparents home.

In 2007, the grandfather is denied a Working with Children Check card because he has a conviction of sexually abusing his daughter.

The Department for Child Protection moves in and removes the children… but just two months later, the Children’s Court overrules the move and awards the grandparents a Parenting Order.

The opposition child protection spokeswoman Sue Ellery says it appears the Department was working against itself.

“It’s completely inconsistent to me that one part of the child protection system deems this man unfit to either work in a paid position or to volunteer with children and the other part of the child protection system deems it appropriate for these children to have daily access and supervision from this man,” Ms Ellery said.

The Department says the only avenue it had was to request a protection order from the court, so it could conduct regular visits to monitor their safety.

It maintains the children were never at any risk and that the grandfather was considered low risk.

But the National Chairwoman of Adults Surviving Child Abuse Cathy Kezelman says regular checks are not enough.

“As we know, the crime of child sexual abuse is a silent crime that occurs in secrecy and in private,” she said.

“So doing checks that come and go can not actually know what’s going on in that household from moment to moment.”

Ms Ellery says under no circumstances should the children have been placed in the home of a sex offender in the first place.

“A man who committed incest with his own daughter ought not be in a position where he has close household access to his grandchildren,” Ms Ellery said.

The Department

When the ABC first contacted the Department about the issue in late March, we were told that the children were safe and were being monitored.

After further questioning, the Department, in a statement, said it was “currently reviewing the case to determine whether it needs to return to the Children’s Court to seek care and protection orders for the children which would bring them under the guardianship of the Department”.

Ms Ellery says the process had taken far too long. She says she raised concerns about it when she was the minister in 2007.

“I certainly had concerns that I discussed with the director general of the department and with various staff including local staff that a man who had a conviction of child abuse against his own daughter was to be given close, domestic access to his own grandchildren, one of whom was a girl.”

The Department has refused to be interviewed over the matter and insisted on responding to questions via email.

The minister Robyn McSweeney declined twice to be interviewed, but after the story ran on ABC radio and television, she broke her silence.

“I won’t defend the indefensible. There is no way that I would condone any child being placed with a known sex offender,” Ms McSweeney said.

And she was quick to point the blame on the opposition.

“I am the first minister to take the children away from this situation.”

And the court also copped some of the blame.

“The department applied for a care and protection order and the courts decided to put the children back with the grandparents.”

“I’m not very impressed with a court system that puts children back in the home of a known sex offender.”

But, the Department won’t confirm it’s role in the court cases and whether its officers representing the children were supporting or opposing their placement into their grandparents home.

Ms Ellery says those questions must be answered.

The interim

Questions were asked as to what the government had been doing to rectify the situation since the children were returned to the home in 2007.

While the initial responses from the Department said the children were safe, the minister later said they’d been busy compiling evidence.

“I had to make damn sure that we had enough ironclad evidence that the department had enough ironclad evidence to go back to court,” Ms McSweeney said.

“And it’s ludicrous that you have to gather evidence to go back to court.”

But Ms Ellery claims the Department was handed evidence in November last year from a community member concerned about the treatment the children were receiving.

A letter from the community members dated November 17, 2009, states they were “horrified with the screaming and shouting from (the grandfather) directed at at the children… and constant crying from the girl.”

It also raised concerns that the children were often left alone in the home with their grandfather, a known paedophile.

The Department responded on November 26, advising them the grandfather “had been assessed as low risk by multiple qualified and experienced professionals, including clinical psychologists and forensic clinical psychologist.”

The letter goes on to say “that there is no further action required from DCP in regards to their concerns… and the DCP will continue to monitor the children…”

Movement

The children were removed from the home last week.

In a statement the Department said: “While in no immediate danger, it was clear that the placement was unsustainable due to the level of care being received by the children and the future risk as the children aged, evidenced by (the grandfather’s) previous convictions.”

The children are now in temporary foster care and the Department must go back to court to get permanent custody of them… but the minister can’t guarantee the court won’t return them to the home again.

Inquiry

Ms McSweeney told a news conference she would look into the circumstances, but the Opposition has called for something much tougher.

“There must be an external, independent inquiry into the circumstances that led the department to reach the conclusion, it now appears on numerous occasions, that this was a safe placement,” Ms Ellery said.

“The minister needs to satisfy the West Australian public that the Department argued strongly that this man should not have the kind of access that he had to his grandchildren and that the department has subsequently taken every every possible legal action to ensure that this man does not have ongoing, close household access to these children.”

R&B singer Erykah Badu in trouble for naked ambition

NEW YORK (Billboard) – Erykah Badu has been charged with disorderly conduct over her nude video shoot for her latest single, “Window Seat,” according to TMZ.com.

Entertainment | People

The Grammy-winning R&B singer will be mailed a citation and faces up to a $500 fine. According to the site, a Texas woman filed an indecency complaint with the Dallas Police Department; an official announcement will be made at a news conference held by the police department soon.

The video was shot in one take at Dealey Plaza in Badu’s hometown of Dallas, where John F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1963.

Once Badu gets all the way down to her curvaceous birthday suit, a gunshot rings out and her body collapses on to the sidewalk, as blue blood spills out to form the word “groupthink.”

On the complaints about her decision to go naked on camera, Badu recently tweeted, “Funny thing is, the physical nudity is nothing lol. I been naked all along in my words actions and deeds. thats the real vulnerable place.”

BRIEF-Thai Central Plaza Hotel Q1 sales up, hurt by protest

BANGKOK, April 5 (Reuters) – Thailand’s Central Plaza Hotel CENT.BK:

Cyclical Consumer Goods

* Says first-quarter revenue rose from a year earlier; maintains its sales growth target for the year of 13-15 percent, Senior Vice President for Finance Ronnachit Mahattanapreut told Reuters

* Says it lost 4-5 million baht ($123,600-$154,500) a day since anti-government protesters occupied an area of upmarket department stores and luxury hotels from Saturday ($1=32.36 Baht)

SCENARIOS – China may be closer to changing yuan policy

The U.S. decision to delay a ruling on whether China manipulates its currency may have defused political tensions enough for Beijing to let the yuan resume appreciation as early as the next few months.

Beijing has flagged to Washington that foreign pressure may in fact stifle any yuan move, and it seems, the U.S. Treasury Department has understood that message.

China has effectively repegged its currency some 20 months ago around 6.83 to the dollar as the financial crisis spread and offshore forwards market has been reflecting expectations it will allow the yuan to rise again over the next 12 months.

Here is a look what Beijing might do in months ahead.

RESUMPTION OF GRADUAL APPRECIATION

* Probability: Likely.

Many analysts expect Beijing to let the yuan start strengthening as early as in the second quarter and allow it to climb 3-4 percent over the 12 months.

Central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan said in March that the decision to keep the yuan stable in mid-2008 was a “special policy” to cope with the global downturn and Beijing would have to let the yuan resume its rise at some point.

Offshore yuan forwards are currently pricing in 2.8 percent appreciation against the dollar over the 12 months, roughly in line with a Reuters poll last month.

However, how such a measured climb would be engineered is subject to much debate.

A gradual appreciation, possibly combined with a widening of the yuan’s daily trading band appears most likely.

But a small one-off revaluation, as in July 2005, still cannot be ruled out, though Beijing might be concerned that it could be seen as yielding to pressure from the United States.

* Market impact: Even though such scenario is largely priced in, offshore non-deliverable forwards may up the appreciation bets. The impact on commodity markets and commodity-linked currencies is harder to predict, as such a move would make imports cheaper but could also be seen as a tightening measure that would temper Chinese growth in the medium term.

DE FACTO PEG MAINTAINED THROUGHOUT THE YEAR

* Probability: less likely.

China’s reluctance to let yuan rise is, in large part, a function of deep-seated concerns about the strength of its economic recovery.

The Commerce Ministry has repeatedly said that a stable yuan has benefited both China and the world during the global crisis and the yuan should not be blamed for global imbalances.

China is expected to report its first monthly trade deficit in six years this week, giving Beijing an excuse to ignore calls for a stronger yuan.

But keeping the yuan stable runs the risk of fuelling inflation as the economy recovers, while a lack of action might lead to increased tensions between Beijing and Washington in the run-up to the mid-term U.S. elections in November.

* Market impact: Yuan rises implied by offshore NDFs, particully short-dated forwards, are likely to fall.

NEW EXCHANGE RATE REGIME

* Probability: Less likely but garnering attention

Economists have suggested that China would benefit from a new model for determining the yuan’s exchange rate.

Although the exchange rate is theoretically set against a basket of currencies, it has in practice been overwhelmingly centred on the dollar. Beijing let the yuan gain 21 percent against the dollar between July 2005 and July 2008.

Ting Lu, an economist with Bank of America Merrill Lynch, has said that Beijing should follow Singapore’s example and target a basket of currencies, keeping the basket’s composition a secret to keep markets guessing when the central bank might intervene.

Jun Ma, an economist with Deutsche Bank, advocates a “flexible crawling peg against a basket” that would generate uncertainty, as in Singaporean, but with daily and monthly volatility limits against the dollar to avoid hurting companies.

Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a top government think-tank, have suggested a policy of making it clear the yuan will appreciate by 3-5 percent each year, but in an unpredictable pattern to keep speculators at bay.

* Possible market impact: Markets may price in faster yuan rises if China allows greater yuan flexiblity, but there will be greater uncertainty about its moves.

BIG ONE-TIME REVALUATION

* Probability: Unlikely

A substantial one-time revaluation would fly in the face of Beijing’s promised policy continuity and might appear to domestic critics as if the government was caving in to foreign pressure.

Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill said Beijing could let the yuan rise as much as 5 percent, while Societe Generale expects a revaluation of 5 to 10 percent around April or May.

A big enough revaluation would, in theory, deter hot money inflows by dampening expectations of further major gains. But if it was deemed insufficient, investors might still pile into Chinese assets on expectations the yuan would rise further.

Conversely, if the adjustment was big enough to deter speculators, it might batter the very exporters that Beijing has tried so hard to support.

* Possible market impact: A major revaluation could initially boost currencies such as the yen and Australian dollar , which tend to have high correlations with Chinese growth.

But the sharper the move, the greater the risk that it would also hit commodity and equity markets due to concerns about its impact on exporters and growth.

Shares of companies geared towards Chinese final consumption, from luxury goods retailers to automakers, might rally on the hope that cheaper imports would drive China’s demand.

(Editing by Tomasz Janowski)

(For more business news on Reuters Money visit http://www.reutersmoney.in)

Saudi population not to exceed 26 million – report

The population of Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, will not exceed 26 million this year, a government official said in remarks published on Sunday.

Population growth is one of the biggest challenges for the Gulf Arab state which needs to create tens of thousands jobs and housing for its mostly young natives.

To determine exact population figures the U.S. ally is holding a rare census from this month, the first one since 2004.

The total population, including expatriates, hit 25 million last year and with an assumed growth of 500,000 is not expected to exceed 26 million this year, Abdullah Batil, deputy head of the census project, told Saudi daily al-Hayat.

He gave no further details but the Central Department of Statistics and Information put the number of Saudis of the total population of 25.37 million at 18 million.

Saudi Arabia has pledged investments worth $400 billion to diversify its economy and create new jobs outside the oil industry. It plans a mortgage law to boost home ownership.

Sebelius to Make Announcement on New Temporary High Risk Pool Program

WASHINGTON–(Business Wire)–
HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius will announce one of the first steps the
Department is taking to implement the temporary high risk pool program called
for in the new health reform law on a conference call with reporters at 12:30
p.m. EDT. The new reform law calls for the creation of a program which will help
ensure adults, who are uninsured because of pre-existing conditions, have access
to affordable insurance.

Sebelius will make brief remarks. Staff from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services will be available on the call to answer questions from members of
the media.

WHEN: Friday, April 2
12:30 p.m. EDT

DIAL-IN: 888-972-6407
PASSCODE: HHS

Please note: This call is for members of the media only.

HHS Press Office
202-690-6343

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Solar company Solyndra’s survival in doubt pre-IPO

(Reuters) – The auditor of Solyndra Inc has questioned the survival prospects for the maker of thin film solar panels, an assessment that could threaten the company’s ability to raise as much as $300 million in an initial public offering.

Deals

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP said Solyndra’s recurring operating losses, negative cash flows, $532.3 million stockholder deficit and other factors “raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.”

The assessment was disclosed in an amended registration statement filed by Solyndra last month with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Solyndra last year won a $535 million U.S. Department of Energy loan guarantee under a federal program for advanced clean energy, the first guarantee of its kind, and said it has raised about $970 million in equity financing through January 2.

The Fremont, California-based company, however, said a failure to raise new capital, generate sufficient operating cash flow, lower discretionary spending or remain in compliance with loan covenants could materially affect its ability to meet its business goals.

Solyndra did not immediately return a call seeking comment on Friday.

In the filing, Solyndra reported a $172.5 million net loss for the year ended January 2, on revenue of $100.5 million.

That compared with a net loss of $232.1 million on revenue of $6 million a year earlier.

The company began commercial shipments of its solar panel systems in July 2008. Its main stockholders include Argonaut Ventures, CMEA Ventures, founder and chief executive Christian Gronet, Madrone Partners, Redpoint Ventures, funds affiliated with RockPort Capital Partners and U.S. Venture Partners.

Goldman Sachs & Co and Morgan Stanley are arranging the IPO.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by John Picinich)

Solar company Solyndra’s survival in doubt pre-IPO

* Auditor sees “substantial doubt” about Solyndra survival

Stocks | Regulatory News | IPOs | Energy

* Company posts full-year loss, has stockholder deficit

NEW YORK, April 2 (Reuters) – The auditor of Solyndra Inc has questioned the survival prospects for the maker of thin film solar panels, an assessment that could threaten the company’s ability to raise as much as $300 million in an initial public offering.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP said Solyndra’s recurring operating losses, negative cash flows, $532.3 million stockholder deficit and other factors “raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern.”

The assessment was disclosed in an amended registration statement filed by Solyndra last month with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Solyndra last year won a $535 million U.S. Department of Energy loan guarantee under a federal program for advanced clean energy, the first guarantee of its kind, and said it has raised about $970 million in equity financing through Jan. 2.

The Fremont, California-based company, however, said a failure to raise new capital, generate sufficient operating cash flow, lower discretionary spending or remain in compliance with loan covenants could materially affect its ability to meet its business goals.

Solyndra did not immediately return a call seeking comment on Friday.

In the filing, Solyndra reported a $172.5 million net loss for the year ended Jan. 2, on revenue of $100.5 million.

That compared with a net loss of $232.1 million on revenue of $6 million a year earlier.

The company began commercial shipments of its solar panel systems in July 2008. Its main stockholders include Argonaut Ventures, CMEA Ventures, founder and chief executive Christian Gronet, Madrone Partners, Redpoint Ventures, funds affiliated with RockPort Capital Partners and U.S. Venture Partners.

Goldman Sachs & Co and Morgan Stanley are arranging the IPO. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by John Picinich)

Serbia seeks extradition of suspected Nazi from U.S.

BELGRADE, April 2 (Reuters) – A Serbian court on Friday issued an international arrest warrant for a naturalised U.S. citizen suspected of committing genocide as a Nazi officer in Belgrade during World War Two.

“Peter Egner, 88, is wanted on charges of killing 17,000 civilians, mainly Jews, Roma and political opponents between 1941 and 1943, during the German occupation,” Zorica Ristic, spokeswoman for the Belgrade higher court, told Reuters.

Egner, an ethnic German born in Yugoslavia, entered the United States in 1960 and became a citizen in 1966.

The U.S. Justice Department has asked a federal court to revoke his U.S. citizenship based on evidence of his role in a Nazi mobile killing unit that participated in the mass murder of more than 17,000 Serbian civilians.

Belgrade was occupied by German forces from April 1941 until October 1944. More than half a million Serb civilians were killed during World War Two. (Reporting by Aleksandar Vasovic; Writing by Maja Zuvela)

Himachal Pradesh Govt. moves to produce IT friendly business landscape

New Delhi, Sep.18 (ANI): Recognizing the enormous potential of Information Technology in acting as a catalyst for the Tier – II growth of Suburban India, The Government of Himachal Pradesh (GoHP) is moving to produce an IT friendly business landscape.

To close the technological gap and nab the marquee, various initiatives are being put in place by the GoHP. Tax Breaks, Exemption from various duties and levies and imports are certain defined benefits for the industry to set base at Himachal Pradesh.

The IT Park cum Township falls will come up in Solan District of Solan, about 20 kilometres from Shimla.

The total area of the project is 64.73 acres. The site is located at a distance of four kilometers from Kiarighat. Kiarighat is on Chandigarh – Shimla highway (NH-22) on midway between Solan and Shimla at an approximately equal distance of 23 kilometres.

Conceptualized as an Integrated Development – offering both residential and commercial options, the project’s developmental contours will include built-up IT space of 1.1 million square feet. Built to suit plots for IT in 9.5 acres of land, a township for of 1.31 million square feet, a project cost of 408 crore rupees.

Commercially structured on the Public Private Partnership format. The developer shall be responsible for designing,financing, constructing, operating, maintaining and development of the IT Park cum Township at Waknaghat.

The implementing agency will be the Department of Information Technology, Government of Himachal Pradesh.

To promote the project and the township, an investor Meet will be held in Delhi on September 23. A visit to the site will be organised on September 30, while a pre-bid meeting will be held on October 3, 2009.

The last date for submission of proposal is October 26. (ANI)

Scientists find meteorite that came from innermost asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter

Washington, September 18 (ANI): In a very rare finding, scientists have discovered an unusual kind of meteorite in the Western Australian desert and have uncovered that it came from the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

Meteorites are the only surviving physical record of the formation of our Solar System.

However, information about where individual meteorites originated, and how they were moving around the Solar System prior to falling to Earth, is available for only a dozen of around 1100 documented meteorite falls over the past two hundred years.

According to Dr Phil Bland from the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College London, the lead author of the study, “We are incredibly excited about our new finding. Meteorites are the most analysed rocks on Earth, but it’s really rare for us to be able to tell where they came from.”

The new meteorite, which is about the size of cricket ball, is the first to be retrieved since researchers from Imperial College London, Ondrejov Observatory in the Czech Republic, and the Western Australian Museum, set up a trial network of cameras in the Nullarbor Desert in Western Australia in 2006.

The researchers aim to use these cameras to find new meteorites, and work out where in the Solar System they came from, by tracking the fireballs that they form in the sky.

The new meteorite was found on the first day of searching using the new network, by the first search expedition, within 100m of the predicted site of the fall.

The meteorite appears to have been following an unusual orbit, or path around the Sun, prior to falling to Earth in July 2007, according to the researchers’ calculations.

The team believes that it started out as part of an asteroid in the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

It then gradually evolved into an orbit around the Sun that was very similar to Earth’s.

The new meteorite is also unusual because it is composed of a rare type of basaltic igneous rock.

According to the researchers, its composition, together with the data about where the meteorite comes from, fits with a recent theory about how the building blocks for the terrestrial planets were formed.

This theory suggests that the igneous parent asteroids for meteorites like today’s formed deep in the inner Solar System, before being scattered out into the main asteroid belt.

Asteroids are widely believed to be the building blocks for planets like the Earth, so the new finding provides another clue about the origins of the Solar System. (ANI)

Sharad Pawar says end of season rains will help winter crops

New Delhi, Sep 18 (ANI): Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar has said that late end-season rains will help India’s winter crops.

Talking to reporters here on Thursday, Pawar said, “It’s true that because paddy area transplantation has been dropped, but the late rains are very helpful particularly for Punjab, Haryana, Orissa and Chhattisgarh.”

“There would not be any pressure on food grains supply, as the stock position was good,” Pawar added.

Meteorological Department has said that since June 1, monsoon rains have been 20 percent below normal and heavy showers in the past week have reduced the total seasonal deficit by three percentage points.

Met department said the country can expect heavy rains for at least another week, but the withdrawal of the monsoon, which usually begins to wind down in early September, would be delayed.

A surge in food prices unexpectedly pushed the annual change in India’s wholesale price index into positive for the first time since late May, putting pressure on the central bank to bring forward an exit from its easy monetary policy.

The annualised wholesale price index rose by an unexpected 0.12 percent in the year to September 5, compared with the previous week’s 0.12 percent fall and analysts’ forecast of a 0.08 percent decline.

The food articles sub-index rose an annual 15.4 percent, up from the previous week’s 14.8 percent rise, as a dry spell hit nearly half of India’s districts, hurting summer crops and prompting the government to take steps to raise supplies. (ANI)

MIC chief to apologise to Dr Mahathir over ‘slipper garland’ insult

Kuala Lumpur, Sep 18 (ANI): Malaysian Indian Congress president S. Samy Vellu has said that he will personally apologise to former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad over the ‘slipper garland’ insult by a MIC member during the recent party congress.

He said he would seek an appointment with Dr Mahathir to tender his apology over the incident.

“I will meet him personally to explain the whole episode and extend my apology,” Samy Vellu said in a statement on Thursday.

The MIC chief said he and the MIC regretted the incident. “I have always had the highest respect for Tun Dr Mahathir. He is a great leader and a statesman.”

He said Dr Mahathir had brought tremendous development to the country and had united the people. “He will always be respected by us and all Malaysians,” The Star quoted Vellu, as saying.

Meanwhile, Dr Mahathir said he did not feel anything about the incident and added: “Nothing would have happened to me.”

Instead, he said he would have felt angry and saddened if Umno members had made such an insult.

“This is not the first time I have been insulted. People might have forgotten how Umno leaders had insulted me. Nazri (Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Nazri Abdul Aziz) and the previous mentri besar of Kedah wanted me expelled from Umno.

However, then no one gave any reaction. No one dared to say anything,” he said. (ANI)

Musharraf power theft scandal case: Low level workers punished

Islamabad, Sep 17 (ANI): The Islamabad Electric Supply Company (Iesco) has only punished 64 junior officers for their involvement in the power theft scandal involving former President Pervez Musharraf, Shaukat Aziz and others in the luxurious Chak Shahzad farmhouses.

The big guns in the electricity department have not even been touched, according to well-placed sources.

The list of punished employees includes 35-meter readers, 14 line superintendents and 15 sub-divisional officers, The News reports.

Sources said these personnel were those who had to implement the orders of the higher-ups and no high-ranking official has been touched in the order passed by Iesco on 10-9-2009.

The official spokesman for Iesco, Ameer Hussain Chaman, when asked about the punishment, said he was not aware of any such punishments.

“I have not been conveyed any such details, therefore, I cannot offer any comment over the issue,” he added.

Sources said Colonel Umer Hayat was conducting the inquiry and on 9-9-2009 his tenure was completed and on 10-09-2009 these personnel were punished.

They say that in this power-theft scandal the higher-ups passed all the orders and the junior officers had no option, but to obey the orders.

It is worth mentioning here that Musharraf had constructed a modern house on the farm obtained for breeding poultry and vegetables, but the ex-general has been enjoying the cheapest power tariff, D-2(1) connection, which is meant for agriculture tube wells and lift irrigation pumps. (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)

Now, ‘Australian Fritzl’ who raped daughter, fathered four kids emerges

Melbourne, September 17 (ANI): Lisa Neville, Australian Community Services Minister, has come under fire after huge number of bungling in the child protection services emerged, including a sex horror case of a man accused of fathering four children with his daughter.

Neville is expected to be faced with calls to resign after revelations of failed attempts by Victoria’s Department of Human Services (DHS) to conduct proper background checks on a known sexual predator before letting a child into his care.

The accused is said to have caged his daughter as a virtual prisoner, raping her almost daily from when she was 11 years old, reports the Herald Sun.

All the four kids bore by the woman, who is now under the care of authorities in a safe house, had health problems when delivered in major hospitals in Melbourne. One of the kids died soon after birth.

Their birth certificates do not hold the name of their fathers, prompting alarms as to why questions were not asked at the time.

The man denied the allegations, but was charged after DNA tests allegedly proved he was the father of her children. He is due to appear in court in November.

Comparisons have been drawn between the case and that of Josef Fritzl, the Austrian man who held his daughter as a sex slave for 24 years and fathered seven children with her.

Minister Lisa Neville told ABC Radio: “I was extremely appalled to see the allegations.”

“They are only allegations and are before the courts at the moment and we need to be very careful about how much detail we go into,” Neville said.

“I became aware of this from the media today and I don’t know what, or if, (there has been) any involvement of the police, the department or other agencies … over the past 30 years.

“This will be a priority to look into,” she added. (ANI)

Passport refused to footballer due tohis father’s link with militants

Srinagar, Sep 16 (ANI): The regional passport authorities of Jammu and Kashmir have denied passport to a Kashmiri youth, sighting the reason of his father’s involvement with militants in the valley.

A Nineteen-year -old youth, Basharat Bashir, was all set to fly to Spain for the soccer training, but the news of denial of passport has crushed his dreams.

“They were (passport authorities) only telling me that your case has not been recommended by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and FRO from police. I know they have denied me to give the passport because my father was a militant,” said Ahmad.

Bashir was among the 11 players selected by International Sports Academy Trust (ISAT) for training in Spain, but was dropped at the last moment because of non availablitiy of passport.

When contacted, the passport office authorities refused to talk about it.

Former Indian football captain Abdul Majeed Kakroo said it was injustice to Bashir and demanded the intervention of state Chief Minister Omar Abdullah in the matter.

“His father was into wrong things but now he has improved. Now, why should his son suffer for that? Why should he be denied the passport, and hurdles put in his way? On behalf of all the football players I would request the chief minister to help him,” Kakroo said.

Bashir also said that he was a year-and-a-half old when his father was arrested and was later released.

“He had become militant even before my birth,” Bashir said. By Parvez Butt (ANI)

Archaeologists discover gemstone carrying portrait of Alexander the Great

Washington, September 16 (ANI): An archaeological team, during excavations in Israel, has discovered a gemstone that has a portrait of Alexander the Great engraved on it.

The excavations at Tel Dor were carried out by an archaeological team, which was directed by Dr. Ayelet Gilboa of the University of Haifa and Dr. Ilan Sharon of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

“Despite its miniature dimensions – the stone is less than a centimeter high and its width is less than half a centimeter – the engraver was able to depict the bust of Alexander on the gem without omitting any of the ruler’s characteristics,” said Dr. Gilboa, Chair of the Department of Archaeology at the University of Haifa.

“The emperor is portrayed as young and forceful, with a strong chin, straight nose and long curly hair held in place by a diadem,” he added.

The Tel Dor researchers have noted that it is surprising that a work of art such as this would be found in Israel, on the periphery of the Hellenistic world.

“It is generally assumed that the master artists – such as the one who engraved the image of Alexander on this particular gemstone – were mainly employed by the leading Hellenistic courts in the capital cities, such as those in Alexandria in Egypt and Seleucia in Syria,” according to the researchers.

“This new discovery is evidence that local elites in secondary centers, such as Tel Dor, appreciated superior objects of art and could afford ownership of such items,” they added.

The significance of the discovery at Dor is in the gemstone being uncovered in an orderly excavation, in a proper context of the Hellenistic period.

This tiny gem was unearthed by a volunteer during excavation of a public structure from the Hellenistic period in the south of Tel Dor, excavated by a team from the University of Washington at Seattle headed by Prof. Sarah Stroup.

Dr. Jessica Nitschke, professor of classical archaeology at Georgetown University in Washington DC, identified the engraved motif as a bust of Alexander the Great.

This has been confirmed by Prof. Andrew Stewart of the University of California at Berkeley, an expert on images of Alexander and author of a book on this topic.

Alexander was probably the first Greek to commission artists to depict his image – as part of a personality cult that was transformed into a propaganda tool. (ANI)