Dial auto service launched in Chandigarh

Chandigarh, Sept 17 (ANI): In a bid to provide quick, hassle free and reasonably charged mode of transportation, a dial-an-auto service equipped with GPS navigation system has been launched for the first time in Chandigarh.

The neat and clean pink coloured motor rickshaws, known as Tuk Tuk, are changing the way people travel in the city.

The fleet of 10 dial-an-auto-rickshaw, which is only a phone call away, also boasts of two lady drivers, the first in Chandigarh.

Women passengers, who feel safer traveling with lady drivers, are appreciating their services.

“Chandigarh is one city where people are safe anyway. We have been told we are safe with the service,” said Alka Thapar, a lady auto driver.

One has to just dial 4242424 for calling an auto rickshaw to get it at your doorstep.

The autos are equipped with tamper proof fare meters to assure passengers of not being overcharged.

“We maintain our call center. Whenever any individual requires an auto he rings up and the call centre picks up the call. They record the call and then convey to the driver by selecting the vehicle nearby to pick up the customer. That’s the procedure and customer has to pay from the pick up point to the drive point only,” said VS Dhillon, Managing Director of the Tuk Tuk Auto Rickshaw Company.

The service aims at providing a quick, reliable and safe journey to people who can relax and sit back without the fear of getting fleeced by drivers.

“I’m using it for the first time It’s reasonably priced and I’m really liking it,” says Charanjit, a customer.

The new service is a welcome change for commuters. With the new service in place, passengers can hope for a change in the attitude of traditional auto drivers who are often accused of fleecing customers. By Sunil Sharma (ANI)

MJ’s doc spent 47 mins making calls after he stopped breathing

London, August 26 (ANI): Michael Jackson’s personal physician Conrad Murray has been accused of spending 47 minutes making calls to another doctor, a lawyer and a mystery associate after the singer stopped breathing.

Dr Steven Hoefflin, who treated Jackson for 25 years, alleged Murray phoned fellow medic Arnold Klein for advice on what to do as the King of Pop lay dying.

“Murray definitely called Klein because Klein taught him how to administer propofol,” the Sun quoted Hoefflin as saying.

“There were two in-state calls then one out-of-state. He was calling an attorney – he had to because Michael was dead.

“He tried to cover it up by telling everyone Michael had a weak pulse, but Michael was dead,” he added.

Hoefflin, a respected plastic surgeon, also claimed that Murray rang an attorney before informing a security guard to dial 911 and summon paramedics to Jackson’s Los Angeles home.

But a lawyer representing Murray recently denied claims that the medic left Jackson to make phone calls after giving him powerful anaesthetic Propofol.

Lawyer Ed Chernoff issued a statement seeking to clarify parts of a court affidavit unsealed in Houston, Texas.

The contents came to light as reports claimed that the Los Angeles County coroner had concluded Jackson’s death was homicide and that he had lethal levels of Propofol in his body when he died on June 25. (ANI)

CEE Kerala Entrance Results – Entrance test results today – KEAM 2009 Results – keralaresults.nic.in

CEE Kerala Entrance Results – Entrance test results today – KEAM 2009 Results – keralaresults.nic.in

Thiruvananthapuram: The results of the medical and engineering entrance examinations will be announced on Monday. The formal announcement will be made by Education Minister M.A. Baby at 9.30 a.m. Soon after the Minister’s announcement, the results will be available on www.keralaresults.nic.in, www.cee.kerala.gov.in, www.results.kerala.nic.in and www.cee.kerala.gov.in/wap (for GPRS-enabled mobile phones). An official statement said the web site of the Commissioner for Entrance Examinations www.cee.kerala.org will be provided with links to the above-mentioned web sites. The results will be available from the government’s call centres. Subscribers of BSNL connections can dial 155300. Callers from other connections can dial 0471-2115054, 2115098 to get the results, the statement said. — Special Correspondent

Pizza Hut, KFC, Costa Coffee franchisees get Delhi airport nod

New Delhi, June 8 (IANS) Three companies that run popular food and beverage outlets like Copper Chimney, Costa Coffee and Pizza Hut have been awarded contracts to set up shop at the upcoming Terminal 3 at the international airport here.

“Following a tender process, the successful bidders with Delhi International Airport Ltd (DIAL) will develop, operate, maintain and manage food and beverages outlets at Terminal 3,” said GMR, which heads the consortium that is upgrading the airport.

“DIAL will be taking 40 percent in the joint venture companies to be set up with the respective successful bidders and strong synergies are expected in the partnership,” the Bangalore-headquartered company said in a statement.

The three companies that have been awarded the four contracts are Travel Food Services that runs Copper Chimney, Devyani International that has the franchises in India for Costa Coffee, Pizza Hut and KFC, and SSP Catering that has operations in 30 countries.

Nirula’s Corner, HMS Host and Lite Bite were the other bidders.

Construction is currently on at Terminal 3, which the GMR-led consortium hopes to complete before the start of the Commonwealth Games in the capital scheduled for October 2010.

The new integrated terminal, which is part of the $2-billion Phase I upgrade of the Indira Gandhi International Airport, will be spread over 5 million sq. ft. and handle both domestic and international passengers.

The GMR consortium includes Fraport of Germany, Malaysian Airport and the India Development Fund, besides the state-run Airports Authority of India.

Coming soon, Harry Potter-style tracking device

London, May 10 (ANI): Trials of a Harry Potter-inspired tracking device which can monitor movements of family members through their mobile phones have been completed.

Microsoft’s Whereabouts Clock features a screen which has the ability to show the approximate location of an individual – such as “school”, “work” or “gym”.

The revolutionary device works by identifying which cell of a mobile phone network a family member is in at any given time. When users set up the Whereabouts Clock they have to give each cell a name, such as “work” or “school”, by downloading software onto their phone. The device recognises their location each time they enter that cell.

Users who don’t want others to know their location can switch off the application, reports The Times.

The system was installed in the homes of several families living near the company’s research laboratories in Cambridge.

The company is now looking at how to market the product.

Richard Harper, who heads Microsoft’s socio-digital systems research group, said: “We want it to give enough information to be comforting without giving so much that people feel they are being watched.”

The system is reminiscent of a device in Rowling’s novels.

The parents of Ron Weasley, Harry’s friend, own a magic clock with a hand representing each family member. The hands point to locations on a dial including “home”, “work” and “mortal peril”. (ANI)

New departure terminal at IGI airport commences operation

New Delhi, Apr 19 (PTI) Flying out of Delhi may not be chaotic anymore as a swanky new departure terminal at Indira Gandhi International airport here today become operational. However, some confusion prevailed among the passengers of IndiGo, Kingfisher and Kingfisher Red airlines who arrived at either terminal 1B or 1A, from where these airlines were operating till yesterday.

“150 passengers of IndiGo’s flight (6E 201) to Guwahati were the first lot to check-in and board their plane at 5.35 am, after they were accorded a traditional welcome at the newly-built departure terminal,” a spokesperson of Delhi International Airport Limited (DIAL), the airport’s operator and developer, said. Indigo, Kingfisher Red and Kingfisher have shifted their operations to T1D from terminal 1A and 1B after their last flight took off last night.

DIAL officials present at the new building, christened T1D, presented mementos, sweets and gifts to the passengers. Cherry Williams, from Chicago, was the first passenger to enter the terminal building to take her flight to Guwahati.

Passengers were delighted to experience the new facilities of the terminal, the DIAL spokesperson said. Earlier, B S Santharaju, Chief Executive Officer of DIAL handed over a key, symbolising a formal handover of the terminal building to Udayan Banerjee, DIG CISF and Deepak Agarwal Commandant CISF. PTI.
PTI

7yr-old Chinese girl dialled police hotline 700 times in one month

New Delhi, April 17 (ANI): A 7-year-old Chinese girl dialled a police hotline 700 times during in one month, thinking that it was fun to dial 110 and hear police talk.

Cops in Weng’an county, Guizhou province, revealed that the calls came from a mobile phone.

The police also revealed that the dialler uttered only a few soft words, reports the China Daily.

The newspaper report says that the little girl’s parents were away at work at the time, and that she lives with her grandparents.

She used her father’s mobile phone to dial the number.

She used to dial 110 several times a day, until they realised where the calls came from. (ANI)

Canfor Corporation Announces Annual General Meeting, First Quarter Earnings Announcement Date and First Quarter Results

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, Apr 14 (MARKET WIRE) —
Canfor Corporation (TSX: CFP) will hold its Annual General Meeting at
11:30 AM PDT Thursday, April 30, 2009 in Vancouver, BC at the Fairmont
Hotel Vancouver in the Saturna Ballroom.

The Company will release its first quarter 2009 financial and operating
results on Thursday, April 30, 2009.

Canfor will hold a conference call on Friday, May 1, 2009 at 8:00 AM PDT
to discuss first quarter 2009 financial and operating results. To
participate in the call, please dial one of the following numbers:

Access: 416-641-6126

Toll-Free Access: 866-542-4236

Let the operator know you wish to participate in the Canfor Corporation
conference call.

Following management’s discussion of the quarterly results, the analyst
and investment community will be invited to ask questions. Once the
analyst and investment community have completed their questions, Canfor’s
management will take questions from the media.

For Instant Replay Access please dial one of the following numbers and
enter Participant Pass Code: 5406422#

Access: 416-695-5800

Toll-Free Access: 800-408-3053

Until May 29, 2009

Video of the Annual General Meeting will be posted to Canfor’s website,
on Friday, May 1, 2009 at 4:00 PM PDT. The conference call will be
available live at www.canfor.com.

Canfor is a leading integrated forest products company based in
Vancouver, British Columbia (BC) with interests in 31 facilities in BC,
Alberta, Quebec, Washington state, and North and South Carolina. The
company produces the most softwood lumber in Canada, while also producing
oriented strand board (OSB), plywood, remanufactured lumber products and
specialized wood products. Canfor also owns a 50.2% interest in Canfor
Pulp Limited Partnership, which is one of the largest producers of
northern softwood kraft pulp in Canada and a leading producer of high
performance kraft paper. Canfor shares are traded on the Toronto Stock
Exchange (TSX: CFP).

Contacts:
Canfor Corporation
Patrick Elliott
Treasurer
Direct Line: (604) 661-5441
Patrick.Elliott@canfor.com

Canfor Corporation
Dave Lefebvre
Director, Corporate Communications
Direct Line: (604) 661-5225
Dave.Lefebvre@canfor.com
www.canfor.com

Copyright 2009, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

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Now, a mobile application to alert Muslims to prayer times

Washington, April 6 (ANI): Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a religious application that alerts Muslim mobile users when it’s time to perform the five daily prayers called salat.
The application known as Sun Dial is currently being discussed this week at the human-computer interaction conference, CHI, in Boston.

“We have to understand religion because it’s such a central part of peoples lives,” said Susan Wyche, doctoral candidate in the College of Computing and GVU Center at Georgia Tech.

The researcher also highlighted the difference between designing technological devices for religious use and making devices for traditional use in office settings.

“Efficiency and productivity tend to be driving forces when designing technology for offices, but these are not as central when designing applications for the home or religious settings. Why would you design a device that makes someone pray faster?” said Susan.

She revealed that the reason why her team chose to focus on Islam for their study was partially because of the religion’s popularity worldwide, and partially because Muslims have historically used technology like compasses and telescopes to help them determine the direction to face during prayer.

The researchers worked with seven focus groups, and determined that the greatest interest from the participants lay in prompting them when it was time to pray – not by using text, which some commercial applications use, but through imagery combined with audible alerts.

Susan revealed that the novel mobile application alerts its users to the time to pray by using an image of the sun lining up with a green circle.

When the sun lines up with the circle, it’s time to pray.

“Unlike similar systems, ours relies on graphics rather than text and graphs to communicate prayer times. Users drove this choice by telling us that tracking the sun was the most religiously valued method to determine prayer times,” she said.

Susan revealed that her team got favourable reactions when they tested their application with Muslims from Georgia Tech and the greater Atlanta area for two weeks.

The researcher further revealed that she and her colleagues were trying to implement a few design changes, such as a digital clock and a vibration alert.

The team’s aim is to finally make the application available for download.

“Sun Dial provided more than functionality or a prompt to the prayer times; it also contributed to users’ religious experience by reminding them they were part of a larger community.

More broadly, carefully considering imagery is important when developing mobile phone applications, particularly ones that support personal and emotional activities, which may be sacred or secular,” Susan said.(ANI)

100 hours to celebrate astronomy year in Jantar Mantar

New Delhi, April 4 (IANS) Jantar Mantar, the 18th century observatory in the heart of the capital, was crowded with young students Saturday as they got together to learn the use of astronomical instruments and celebrate 2009 as the international year of astronomy.

Aiming to create interest in astronomy as a fundamental science in daily life, the Science Popularisation Association of Communicators and Educators (SPACE) has been conducting ’100 Hours of Astronomy’ at the Jantar Mantar since Thursday.

The celebration, which will culminate Sunday, saw school students being taught how to use astronomical instruments like sun dials and telescopes.

Shourya Aggarwal, a Class 7 student, said: ‘I am a part of the SPACE club at my school where we learn how to use a sun dial, a telescope and a lot more. The classes are very interactive and enjoyable. I wait every week for my astronomy class.

‘I am enjoying the celebrations here since we have got a chance to learn how to use instruments that are more than 300 years old,’ he added.

In fact many astronomical instruments are still popular by their Indian names – samrat yantra (to measure time using sun’s shadow), jai prakash yantra (to trace the earth’s equator), mishra yantra, and ram yantra.

And the students learnt to use these.

‘I am a part of the astronomy club in my school and I find it very interesting. We are a group of 46 students and we do activities like ‘solar hunt’ in the club. Today, we have learnt to calculate time by following the position of the sun’s shadows using the samrat yantra,’ Shrishti, a Class 9 student, said.

According to C.B. Devgan, president of SPACE, there is no better way to celebrate the astronomy year than by initiating activities that aim to kindle interest towards the subject in youngsters.

‘The international year of astronomy is celebrated with the joint efforts of the UN and Indian astronomy unit. Many international projects are happening around the world and this five-day long event is a part of these projects.

‘Here, we have set up SPACE clubs in different schools around Delhi to develop student interest in astronomy,’ Devgan told IANS.

Nearly 500 students have been coming for the celebrations at Jantar Mantar every day, he added.

The Jantar Mantar observatory was built in the 18th century by the king of Jaipur, Jai Singh II, who was an astronomy enthusiast.

Radio Kyber emerges as an alternative to the illegal broadcasts of ‘FM Mullahs’

Washington, Mar 13 (ANI): Radio Khyber provides an alternative to hardline Islamic broadcasts with a medley of local news, talk shows, and music in Pakistan’s Tribal Areas that border Afghanistan.

Airwaves in this region are filled with the illegal broadcasts of the “FM Mullahs” who preach about the holy war and of recruiting fighters, The Christian Science Monitor reports.

Kishwar is one of 15 reporters for Radio Khyber, a rare non-extremist station broadcasting in the town of Jamrud, in the militant stronghold of Pakistan’s northwestern tribal areas.

Radio Khyber treads carefully, trying to avoid a backlash from either the militants – who criticize the playing of music – or the Pakistani Government, which dislikes its news coverage in this sensitive region.

“Until Radio Khyber started news reporting, the FM mullahs were winning the dial wars,” says Aurangzaib Khan, the manager of Media Development at Internews Pakistan in Peshawar.

Radio Khyber broadcasts for three hours each in the morning and evening. When it first started, the government – represented in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas by the FATA Secretariat – mandated that Radio Khyber simply broadcast Pakistani pop songs and use news reports from the state-owned Radio Pakistan.

The Pashto-language broadcasts of Radio Pakistan are not transmitted throughout FATA, the CSM quoted Khan, as saying.

Residents of FATA are thus forced to choose between Radio Azadi, the Afghan Service of Radio Free Europe that broadcasts from Afghanistan, and the illegal transmissions of FM Mullahs. (ANI)

The list of bizarre requests made by Jacko for comeback tour

London, Mar 8 (ANI): King of Pop Michael Jackson has made a list of bizarre requests for his comeback gigs at the O2 Arena in July.

The ‘Thriller’ hitmaker has asked that his dressing room be equipped with no fewer than four hair driers.

His requests also include 24 hand towels, ten clothing rails, a nailbrush, odourless air freshener and even raspberry-scented candles.

“This just doesn’t sound like your regular rock gig at all,” the Daily Star quoted American rock event planner Katie McCubbin, who has helped stage concerts at huge venues for megabands including the Rolling Stones and U2, as saying.

“Some bands demand never-ending supplies of exotic foods, designer booze and the most expensive luxuries that money can buy.

“Michael’s rider isn’t just modest by industry standards – it’s downright weird.

McCubbin added: “Who needs four hair driers? Who needs 24 hand towels? And who’d bother to add a fifty-cent nail brush to the list?”

Jackson made a demand of 11 dressing rooms, eight of which will be for his band, backing singers and dancers. Three will be for the singer himself and members of his inner circle.

The 50-year-old will have a direct dial international phone line with internet access as well as an entertainment system and a 42-inch flat screen TV.

And the singer is insisting on honey and fresh lemons and limes to soothe his throat.

His master dressing room must also have a dimmer switch, a trouser press and three ‘over-sized’ leather chairs.

There will also be two “holding areas” for family and friends with sushi and dim sum platters plus wines and beers. (ANI)

Freida Pinto ‘regularly pinches herself to believe her rise to stardom’

London, March 8 (ANI): Freida Pinto is yet to believe she has landed the Hollywood jackpot after starring in Danny Boyle’s mega hit ‘Slumdog Millionaire’.

The 24-year-old, who hails from the city of Mumbai, revealed she kept pinching herself to believe the astonishing success of the film which bagged eight Oscars, seven BAFTAs and four Golden Globes.

Freida recently landed herself a role in Woody Allen’s new movie while being a favourite amongst the designers running to dress her.

She was also said to have Kate Winslet’s LA agent on her speed dial while boasting of having ear of the top actress herself, Angelina Jolie.

But the actress, who has been rumoured to have sparks flying with her 6-year-junior co-star Dev Patel, insisted she was yet to be struck by stardom and was far from believing that her showbiz dreams had come true.

“It’s been six months and nothing has sunk in yet,” News of the World quoted her as saying at the Four Seasons Hotel, Beverly Hills.

“I’m still the same sensitive and simple girl who always dreamed about becoming an actress.

“The only thing that’s changed is that the girl walking around in jeans and tees has now taken to wearing designer dresses,” she added.

Her former fiancé Rohan Antao had claimed that Freida not only compelled him to stay mum about their engagement, for the benefit of the movie, but also snubbed him to be with her onscreen lover.

Dumped Antao blamed the film and Dev for putting an end to his relationship with the actress.(ANI)

Katy Perry urges fans to pray she gets well soon for tour

Washington, Feb 20 (ANI): An unwell Katy Perry has urged her fans to pray for her quick recovery from influenza so that she can make it for her European tour dates.

Perry, 24, was not well when she attended the Brit Awards in London on February 18, and her condition has not improved since then.

She is worried for her tour, scheduled to begin on February 22.

The ‘I Kissed a Girl’ singer admitted in a posting on her website that her hotel room “smells like death”, and that she is doing everything to beat the bug.

“I can’t tell you how bad I feel right now. Last night I was sweatin’ it out… I have the doctor on speed dial if the fever gets over 101/102,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying.

“I thought I was invincible and then my body decides to show me otherwise.

“I’m stuck in bed for the next couple of days as I should be… I’m gonna go back to sweatsville and try and sleep it off some more… I gotta get better; I’m starting (a) tour on Sunday here (in London)… so say a little prayer if you think of it,” she added. (ANI)

Now, a tool to keep a tab on buses via cell phone

Washington, Feb 11 (ANI): Hate waiting for your bus? Take heart, for two University of Washington students have developed a new tool that can allow you to keep a track of the vehicle using a cell phone, iPhone or computer.

OneBusAway, created by Brian Ferris, a UW doctoral student in computer science and Kari Watkins, a UW doctoral student in civil and environmental engineering since a year, already helps bus riders in Seattle to keep tabs on their buses.

OneBusAway has processed 20,000 automated phone calls since June, and the Web site gets an average of 1,000 hits a day.

People have found out about the tool on blogs, from stickers posted at a few UW campus bus stops, from a mention in a Seattle magazine and by word-of-mouth.

And to use the service Seattle, all one needs to do is dial 206-456-0609 from any phone, and hear a voice saying: “Where is your bus? Let’s find out.”

After punching in the stop number, a computer checks a database of current bus locations, and the voice announces how long until your bus arrives.

Users can also access the system online at www.OneBusAway.org or using an iPhone.

“To people who didn’t even know this data was out there, they’re like, ‘This is amazing.’ It really changes the way they use the bus,” said Ferris.

Watkins, who works on transportation issues, said that research shows that removing uncertainty cuts frustration dramatically.

She and Ferris met through a transit blog and combined their expertise to create OneBusAway, though neither receives academic credit for the work.

“When people have to wait, they think that twice as much time is passing. So if you’re standing at a bus stop for five minutes, you perceive that time to be 10 minutes,” said Watkins.

Knowing the wait time changes the situation, she said: “If I know ahead of time, I can grab that cup of coffee and be back out in time to catch my bus. And that kind of information makes taking public transit so much more livable.”

OneBusAway is built upon MyBus, an online service that Ferris calls “the great granddaddy” of bus-tracking tools, but it is a more user-friendly tool that people could access while away from their computers.

Ferris is gradually adding more features, such as over the Christmas break he added a feature for cancelled buses.

Also, they have built a prototype that integrates real-time tracking with the popular trip-planner feature now offered by King County Metro and Google Transit, and have come up with a trip planner that would adjust its recommendation depending on whether buses are running on time.

Another prototype finds businesses that can be easily accessed in a single bus trip, an idea that originally inspired the name OneBusAway.

“The goal is to one day have a whole bunch of different programs that would make transit easier to navigate. This is something the industry needs, not just Seattle,” said Ferris.

Eventually they envision offering a suite of bus-riding tools that any transit agency could connect to its database to encourage more people to use public transit.

Someday buses may be equipped with GPS antennas that would allow even better tracking.

Ferris says this project fits with his philosophy of using technology to support social causes, and it’s a chance to create something that people like to use. (ANI)

Disabled, ethnic minorities more susceptible to terrorism fears

Washington, January 22 (ANI): People who either suffer from some disability or belong to ethnic minorities, such as African Americans and Latinos, are more susceptible to terrorism-related fears than others, according to a new study.

University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) researchers have found that such people make more behavioural changes based on terrorism-related fears, such as avoiding certain activities, than others.

Revealing their findings in the American Journal of Public Health, the researchers say that these groups also tend to overestimate the threat of terrorism, perceiving the risk as high even when the U.S. Homeland Security Advisory System’s (HSAS) colour-coded alert system rates it lower.

“Just like natural disasters have been shown to affect certain groups of people more than others, we’re now seeing evidence that terrorism fears are having a disproportionate effect on some of our most vulnerable groups,” said leady study author David P. Eisenman, assistant professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine and health services research at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

“It’s important for the public to know this because it shows that terrorism’s intention to induce fear and change does work – on the most vulnerable. Terrorism affects these groups even when there has not been an event in a long time.

“It also shows,” he added, “that the HSAS color-coding is misjudged by citizens, and the same persons who have the most fear and avoid activities are also misjudging it,” he added.

The researchers came up with these findings after conducting random-digit dial surveys conducted in six languages in Los Angeles County between October 2004 and January 2005.

During the study, the respondents were asked the colour of the country’s alert level at the time, how often they worried about terrorist attacks, and how often they avoided activities because of those fears.

The researchers observed that the mentally ill, the disabled, African Americans, Latinos, Chinese Americans, Korean Americans and non-U.S. citizens were more likely to think that the HSAS alert level was higher than it was, and to worry more and change their behaviour due to those fears.

Eisenman said that the study’s findings went on to suggest that the structure of the HSAS alerts needed to be re-evaluated – in part to ensure that terrorism alerts better reach vulnerable populations.

He further said that vulnerable groups also needed assistance to help reduce their fears and avoidance, so as to ensure that structures could be safely evacuated in the event of a terrorist act, and could help reduce some of the fears among the physically disabled.

“Terrorism-related fears and avoidant behavior can be considered part of the ‘disaster burden’ – the amount of adverse health effects ranging from loss of well-being or security to injury, illness or death caused by a disaster associated with terrorism and national terrorism policies. The disaster burden associated with terrorism and consequent policies may fall disproportionately on the vulnerable groups we studied,” the researchers conclude. (ANI)

Disabled, ethnic minorities more susceptible to terrorism fears

Washington, January 22 (ANI): People who either suffer from some disability or belong to ethnic minorities, such as African Americans and Latinos, are more susceptible to terrorism-related fears than others, according to a new study.

University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) researchers have found that such people make more behavioural changes based on terrorism-related fears, such as avoiding certain activities, than others.

Revealing their findings in the American Journal of Public Health, the researchers say that these groups also tend to overestimate the threat of terrorism, perceiving the risk as high even when the U.S. Homeland Security Advisory System’s (HSAS) colour-coded alert system rates it lower.

“Just like natural disasters have been shown to affect certain groups of people more than others, we’re now seeing evidence that terrorism fears are having a disproportionate effect on some of our most vulnerable groups,” said leady study author David P. Eisenman, assistant professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine and health services research at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

“It’s important for the public to know this because it shows that terrorism’s intention to induce fear and change does work – on the most vulnerable. Terrorism affects these groups even when there has not been an event in a long time.

“It also shows,” he added, “that the HSAS color-coding is misjudged by citizens, and the same persons who have the most fear and avoid activities are also misjudging it,” he added.

The researchers came up with these findings after conducting random-digit dial surveys conducted in six languages in Los Angeles County between October 2004 and January 2005.

During the study, the respondents were asked the colour of the country’s alert level at the time, how often they worried about terrorist attacks, and how often they avoided activities because of those fears.

The researchers observed that the mentally ill, the disabled, African Americans, Latinos, Chinese Americans, Korean Americans and non-U.S. citizens were more likely to think that the HSAS alert level was higher than it was, and to worry more and change their behaviour due to those fears.

Eisenman said that the study’s findings went on to suggest that the structure of the HSAS alerts needed to be re-evaluated – in part to ensure that terrorism alerts better reach vulnerable populations.

He further said that vulnerable groups also needed assistance to help reduce their fears and avoidance, so as to ensure that structures could be safely evacuated in the event of a terrorist act, and could help reduce some of the fears among the physically disabled.

“Terrorism-related fears and avoidant behavior can be considered part of the ‘disaster burden’ – the amount of adverse health effects ranging from loss of well-being or security to injury, illness or death caused by a disaster associated with terrorism and national terrorism policies. The disaster burden associated with terrorism and consequent policies may fall disproportionately on the vulnerable groups we studied,” the researchers conclude. (ANI)