Zardari being unnecessarily targeted for his overture to India: Editorial

Islamabad, Sep.17 (ANI): An editorial in one of the leading English dailies of Pakistan has highlighted that President Asif Ali Zardari is being unnecessarily targeted and criticized by certain quarters in the country even if he attempts to address the long pending issues with India in his bid to de-escalate tension between the two neighbour countries.

The Daily Times editorial said while Zardari is condemned for his overture to India, similar actions taken by former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif goes unnoticed in the country.

“President Zardari is pilloried if he makes a friendly overture to India; a similar overture made by Mr Nawaz Sharif is either ignored or actually praised,” the editorial said.

It also brought to light how several retired army officials and bureaucrats have suddenly jumped out of their retirement to denounce Zardari’s every action.

“Retired generals and retired bureaucrats whose ‘stand-still’ strategy with India in the past has brought Pakistan to its present crisis point, have crept out of their retirement to express their shock at how President Zardari is harming Pakistan through his diplomacy with China, the United States and the European Union,” the editorial stated.

The editorial went on to add that Zardari is right in his part to woo the international community, especially China and the US.

“Pakistan needs a lot of placatory diplomacy, not hostile ‘action’, given its past failed strategies,” it concluded. (ANI)

Musharraf may avoid noose but won’t be playing golf in Pak for long time: Editorial

Islamabad, Sep.16 (ANI): With President Asif Ali Zardari disclosing that his predecessor General Pervez Musharraf was given a ‘safe exit’ from the country, it appears, Musharraf may have avoided a high treason trial for his unconstitutional actions, but according to an editorial there is hardly any possibility of the former general returning to Pakistan in the near future.

The editorial in The Daily Times said Musharraf may be safe for the time being, but he would hardly be seen playing golf in Pakistan for years to come.

Referring to the Kargil debacle, the editorial termed Musharraf as a bad strategist, and alleged that the former general was rarely seen keeping his words during his autocratic rule.

“Neither was he a great strategist, as was proved by Kargil and his covert support of the Taliban; he was also no man of his word. He may be safe from the hangman’s noose but he will not be able to play golf in Pakistan for a long time,” the editorial said.

It also blasted the country’s political leaders for running to foreign powers for protecting their heads from ‘internal’ crises.

“Too proud to admit that there could be foreign stakeholders in Pakistan, a direct violation of state sovereignty, we can’t, however, deny that our politicians have leaned on foreign guarantors to save their careers and sometimes their lives,” the editorial said.

“Therefore, if President Zardari today absolves his party from the discomfiture of bringing Musharraf to trial, he knows that the PMLN leader Mr Nawaz Sharif too is riding in the same boat with him,” it went on to add.

However, the editorial lauded the Pakistan Army for refraining from getting involved in the demand for Musharraf’s trial, saying the armed forces, till now, had reacted sensibly.

“The one stakeholder in Pakistan that has acted less rashly than the politicians is the Pakistan Army. It has seen more clearly the risks that would have affected Pakistan’s security if the populist demand for Musharraf’s head had been met,” it concluded. (ANI)

Musharraf’s prosecution will exacerbate Pak’s existing myriad problems: Editorial

Islamabad, Sep.16 (ANI): Pakistan, which already is engulfed in numerous problems, would only be adding to its troubles if it decides to prosecute former President General Pervez Musharraf under pressure from different political parties, an editorial has said.

The editorial in The Dawn, one of Pakistan’s leading dailies said that merely trying Musharraf would not solve Pakistan’s problems, and said that the former general’s trial would create more trouble for the tattered nation rather than resolving issues.

“The country is faced with myriad problems, none of which will be solved or mitigated by trying Mr Musharraf. More crisis-solving and less crisis-creation, then, is clearly the demand of the times,” it said.

It said that if the PML-N really wants Musharraf being prosecuted for his ‘extrajudicial’ and ‘unconstitutional’ deeds, then it should accept the PPP government’s challenge to table a resolution in Parliament.

“Let parliament vote on the issue and if it decides to call for Mr Musharraf’s trial, let the chips fall where they may,” the editorial concluded. (ANI)

Top Brit doc backs call to ban alcohol ads

London, September 11 (ANI): A leading British doctor is in full support of the BMA’s call to ban alcohol advertising, as he feels that such publicity campaigns do have damaging effects on young people.

“(It is) a logical recommendation to attempt to reverse the all embracing pro-alcohol culture that has grown up in a period of deregulation and liberalisation over the last quarter of a century,” says to Ian Gilmore, President of the Royal College of Physicians and Chairman of the Alcohol Health Alliance.

Writing an editorial for bmj.com, he has even stressed the need for more public conversation about people’s attitudes to alcohol as a society.

“The problem is not just about drunk, misbehaving adolescents. We can no longer ignore the many millions of people in the UK who are quietly over-consuming cheap, readily available, and heavily promoted alcohol, storing up major problems for the future,” he concludes. (ANI)

Aptara meets increasing business growth with new delivery center

New Delhi, Sept 9 (ANI/Business Wire India): Aptara, Inc., a market leader in knowledge process outsourcing, today announced a major new delivery facility in Trivandrum, India. This leading-edge facility will be home to a Publishing Center of Excellence and to hundreds of professionals who provide advanced editorial, composition and production management services to Aptara’s key customers.

Aptara’s new center is located in Trivandrum’s Technopark, a 4 million sq. ft. campus housing over 150 global enterprises employing 20,000 knowledge workers. Aptara chose the location for its rich base of highly educated talent, state-of-the-art infrastructure, progressive business environment, and advantageous cost base. The Trivandrum operation will be the 4th of Aptara’s Indian delivery centers and will bring the company’s India headcount to over 4,000.

“Trivandrum represents an important strategic investment for Aptara,” said Dev Ganesan, Aptara’s president and CEO. “Increasing demand from our publishing clients has created the need for an additional center to provide advanced publishing services on a fully process-outsourced basis,” he added. “Building on our deep experience in serving the world’s leading publishers, the Trivandrum facility is positioned to become a global center of excellence for the kind of advanced services that publishers worldwide are now seeking from their business partners.” (ANI)

‘Twittering’, ‘hmm’, and ‘heh’ make it to Collins English Dictionary

London, Aug 31 (ANI): ‘Twittering’, ‘hmm’, and ‘heh’ are among the 267 words that have been added to this year’s Collins English Dictionary, all thanks to teenagers who use such words on social networking websites.

With teenagers increasingly using these grunts and sighs in words on Twitter and other such websites, the need to find spellings for sounds that were traditionally used only in speech has also spawned “meh” (an expression of dissatisfaction) and “mwah” (the sound of a noisy kiss).

Users of social networking sites may also be responsible for the resurgence of “heigh-ho” or “hey-ho” – an exclamation of weariness, disappointment, surprise or happiness – that went out of fashion in the early 20th century.

In fact, Twitter-the microblogging site that allows people to communicate in messages of 140 characters or less-has also been accepted as a verb by the dictionary to describe the act of using Twitter.

Other internet-derived terms include “noob” (short for newbie, a term for someone unfamiliar with web etiquette) and “woot” (an expression of joy conveying a sense of achievement).

New abbreviations used for convenience in text messages such as “OMG” (short for “oh, my God”) “soz” (short for sorry) and wtf (short for “what the f***?”) are also included in the dictionary.

Some new words in the dictionary could make many traditionalists cringe in their seats-new portmanteau words purporting to describe a new trend include “staycation” (a combination of stay and vacation, meaning to take a holiday without going abroad) and “glamping” (glamorous camping).

“Buzzkillers” (someone who stops other people from enjoying themselves), and “beer o’clock” (a time considered appropriate to start drinking) may also take many traditionalists by surprise.

“English is very good at absorbing new words. [But] in three or four years a lot of these words may have fallen out of use and might well come out of the dictionary,” Times Online quoted Elaine Higgleton, the Editorial Director for Collins, as saying. (ANI)

Naked women are acceptable on daytime TV in UK, rules watchdog

London, Aug 25 (ANI): Television watchdog Ofcom has ruled that a Channel 4 life-drawing programme, which features naked female models, is acceptable for lunchtime viewing.

The Channel 4 programme drew dozens of complains from its viewers over the content of ‘Life Class: Today’s Nude’, which had been broadcast daily at 12.30pm over a week in July.It was adult viewing, not for screening in the middle of the day,” the Telegraph quoted one viewer as saying, after tuning in to the programme in which artists guided students through various drawing techniques.

But Ofcom rejected the 37 complaints, and ruled that the channel did not breach broadcasting guidelines, and it even wrote to every complainant explaining that the nudity was justified.

“Life drawing is a well-known and respected form of art. In Ofcom’s view, although the images of nudity were broadcast for long periods of time, they were not presented in a sexualised manner and were clearly justified by the context, given the editorial purpose of the series,” the letter read.

The programme was broadcast during school term time, and was not aimed at children, the watchdog said, adding that each episode was prefaced by a warning about its content.

Clips from the show are still available on the Channel 4 website, but viewers must click a box to confirm they are over 16 before they can watch the footage.

Channel 4 declined to comment on Ofcom’s decision. (ANI)

Pak editorial claims RAW hand in funding Baitullah Mehsud

Peshawar, Aug.24 (ANI): An editorial in a Pakistani daily has claimed that intelligence outfits of India and Afghanistan funded late Tehrik-e-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud.

It says that his death in South Waziristan has sparked off a battle among various Taliban warlords to control two billion rupees worth of Taliban funds and own arms and ammunition worth another million rupees.

In an article for the Frontier Post, Shumaila Raja claims there has been a constant flow of tens of millions of dollars from foreign enemy sources that keeps the Taliban machine rolling.

According to Raja, cash pipelines for Mehsud were sustained by Indian external intelligence agency RAW and the Afghan intelligence agency. He further claims that Mehsud was paying Rs.600 million to his fighters every year.

According to Raja, extensive reactionary attacks to Mehsud’s death are inevitable given the aura that he created around himself in the wake of the assassination of former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in December 2007.

Raja is of the view that Baitullah Mehsud’s murder by a drone strike in South Waziristan could further inflame internal developments in Pakistan.

“The battle for the control of the Rs.3 billion treasure erupted within two days of Baitullah’s death,” Raja says, adding that one occasion when a Taliban commander informed Baitullah about the huge monetary offers he was receiving from the Pakistan Government, Baitullah said: “Money is not with the Government of Pakistan, money is with me, tell me how much you want.”

Officials have also conceded that Mehsud’s money power was such that it was difficult to buy off his key commanders. (ANI)

Nawaz Sharif’s mantra to make traffic jams history!

Islamabad, Aug.22 (ANI): Things can be sorted out with amazing ease in Pakistan by just making a call to the higher authorities, but yes, for raising a storm in the country’s officialdom one needs to possess power. The more the power one has, the sooner his voice is heard in the country.

This was proved recently when former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his family were stuck in a traffic jam on bridge connecting Murree and Patriata in the Punjab province.

Angered by the inadequate ‘arrangements’ made for his movement, Sharif called the chief secretary of the province, who in turn sent his subordinates to clear the traffic jam. After that things moved with astonishing speed on that stretch of the road.

A day later nearly 30 traffic officials were suspended for dereliction of duty and failing to provide smooth passage to the former premier, who also happens to be chief minister’s elder brother.

According to a Dawn editorial, it is the kind of influence that the PML-N chief exerts in the world of politics and officialdom.

Without that influence, Sharif’s car would have been stuck indefinitely in the traffic mess, the editorial said.

The editorial warned that the ‘bloody revolution’ that Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif often warns of, may indeed be witnessed if the powerful continue to flaunt their influence and ordinary citizens continue seething inside with anger.

Shahbaz Sharif should see that this trend doesn’t continues for long and empower ordinary citizens so that their voice can be heard too, it concluded. (ANI)

‘Millionaires’ Musharraf and Aziz are “true politicians” when it comes to “cheap gifts”!

Islamabad, July 7 (ANI): No matter how rich former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz are, they still cherish gifts and presentations offered to them.

Both leaders just adored the numerous gifts, offered to them by various heads of state and other officials during their visit to several countries, and that is why they took all such presentations with them after they stepped down.

The gifts, which were valued at thousands of rupees, were grabbed by Musharraf and Aziz after paying a meagre amount, according to an editorial in the The Dawn.

Neither Musharraf nor Aziz have responded to this ‘legal’ corruption, hoping that the issue will subside with time, and they will continue to live a comfortable life and relish their ‘cheap’ gifts, it adds.

General Musharraf and Shaukat Aziz, were considered to be different than other politicians in the country, and believed to have a ‘clean’ image during their days in power, but it seems both the leaders too want to enjoy life as ‘true politicians’, it concludes. (ANI)

Water should be a basic human right, say researchers

Washington, June 30 (ANI): Researchers, in a recent article in the journal PLoS Medicine Editorial, have argued that despite recent international objections, access to clean water should be recognized as a human right.

At the March 2009 United Nations (UN) meetings, coinciding with the World Water Forum, Canada, Russia, and the United States refused to support a declaration that would recognize water as a basic human right.

But, this flies in the face of considerable evidence that access to water, which is essential for health, is under threat.

The UN has estimated that 2.8 billion people in 48 countries will be living in conditions of water stress or scarcity by 2025.

Three reasons are outlined for why access to clean water should be declared a basic human right.

Firstly, access to clean water can substantially reduce the global burden disease caused by water-borne infections.

Millions of people are affected each year by a range of water-borne diseases including diarrhea, which is responsible for 1.8 million potentially preventable deaths per year, mostly among children under the age of five.

Secondly, the privatization of water, as witnessed in Bolivia, Ghana and other countries, has not effectively served the poor, who suffer the most from lack of access to clean water.

As Maude Barlow, senior advisor on water issues to the president of the General Assembly of the UN, has argued, “high water rates, cut-offs to the poor, reduced services, broken promises and pollution have been the legacy of privatization.”

Thirdly, the prospect of global water scarcity, exacerbated by climate change, industrial pollution, and population growth, means that no country is immune to a water crisis.

The United States is facing the greatest water shortages of its history, and in Australia severe drought has caused dangerous water shortages in the Murray-Darling river basin, which provides the bulk of its food supply.

According to researchers, a human rights framework offers what the water situation needs-international recognition from which concerted action and targeted funding could flow; guaranteed standards against which the protected legal right to water could be monitored; and accountability mechanisms that could empower communities to advocate and lobby their governments to ensure that water is safe, affordable, and accessible to everyone. (ANI)

Imran cannot run with the Taliban and disco in London at the same time : Pak editorial

Islamabad, June 27 (ANI): Cricketer-turned-politician, Imran Khan may have vehemently opposed the military offensive against the Taliban and other extremists in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP) terming the offensive as ‘suicidal’, but Khan apparently is unsure about what he really wants to achieve by showing a soft corner towards the extremists, an editorial in a leading Pakistan daily said.

Khan is of the view that the operation against the militants would not be successful, and said that it would only add to the country’s woes by creating more anarchy in the region, over which the government has already lost its control.

Khan had also criticized those who had raised fears about Pakistan’s Talibanisation, saying the term ‘Talibanisation’ has wrongly been projected.

He believes that the Taliban is not a part of some ideology, but it had only emerged as a reaction against the US invasion of Afghanistan, it said.

The Daily Times editorial highlighted that Khan certainly forgot that the Taliban did not emerge out of any reaction, but infact it was the “non-state actors” used by Pakistan to help the Kabul regime of Mullah Umar survive in the face of internal opposition.

All the Taliban chieftains, who are currently creating havoc in Pakistan are veterans of the Kabul conflict, and later turned against the US in 2001 after the world super-power decided to invade into their territory to seek revenge of the 9/11 incident, it went on to add.

Pakistan is suffering today because its strategies on Afghanistan have failed miserably in the past, the editorial said.

“Talibanisation is an ideological extension which rejects the Constitution of Pakistan and seeks to implement a tougher version, something which the people of Pakistan have rejected,” it added.

Rubbishing his claims of being in the know of things with regards to realities behind politics in Pakistan, it concluded by saying : “Imran Khan cannot run with the Taliban and disco in London at the same time.” (ANI)

Pak only ‘orchestrating terrorism’ by blaming India for every terror attack: Editorial

Islamabad, June 19 (ANI): While terror strikes across Pakistan continues unabated, authorities have not spared a single opportunity to blame India for creating havoc inside Pakistan, but an editorial carried out in Pakistan’s leading daily highlights the fact that Islamabad must introspect on its own deeds before putting the blame on its neighbour.

Recently, Lahore police nabbed one Zubair alias Naik Muhammad, allegedly involved in the terrorist attack on the visiting Sri Lankan cricket team.

Zubair is a member of the Punjab Taliban, an offshoot of the banned terror organisation Lashkar-e Jhangvi, which has strong ties with Al Qaeda, the editorial said.

While announcing the arrest of Zubair, and his nefarious links with several militant groups, the Capital City Police Officer (CCPO) of Lahore, Pervaiz Rathore, forgot that it was him who had held India responsible for the terror strike on the islanders immediately after the brazen incident on March 3, it added.

How many times we have seen Pakistan denying links with extremists, or providing safe haven to terrorist organizations? Innumerable, the editorial opined.

However, Pakistan, by denying the world known fact, is actually orchestrating terrorism, which is now even threatening its own sovereignty, it went on to add.

It feared that what was really disturbing was the involvement of militias based in South Punjab in different terror acts.

“Mumbai was attacked from South Punjab. Most of the suicide-bombers have been from this region which is characterised by large feudal holdings in the countryside and extreme poverty in the cities,” the editorial said.

It quoted the famous US writer, Selig Harrison, as also having raised fears about the increasing threat perception emanating from the region which stretches from Jhang to Bahawalpur, and is dotted with madrassas.

“The danger of an Islamist takeover of Pakistan is real. It comes from a proliferating network of heavily armed Islamist militias in the Punjab heartland and major cities, directed by Lashkar-e-Toiba, a close ally of Al Qaeda, which staged the terrorist attack last November in Mumbai,” said Harrison.

Apart from the madrassas, which are categorised by the people as jihadi and non-jihadi, there are mosques that supply fighters and suicide-bombers to the Taliban and Al Qaeda, the editorial said.

The trend had started during the Taliban rule in Kabul in the 1990s and has continued after the establishment of Lal Masjid as an entrepôt of warriors moving between Pakistan and Afghanistan, the editorial concluded. (ANI)

India has to exercise regional, global leadership expected of a rising power: NYT

New York, May 20 (ANI): Given the overwhelming mandate received in the 2009 general elections, the Indian National Congress-led coalition government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will now have to exercise the kind of regional and global leadership that is expected of a rising power, says a New York Times editorial.

According to the NYT, New Delhi can start off with Pakistan, arguably the most dangerous country on earth.

A key challenge would be to convince and maybe prevent Islamabad from expanding its nuclear stockpile. Washington is already legitimately asking whether billions of dollars in proposed new assistance might be diverted to Pakistan’s nuclear program. Both countries, therefore, should demand assurances from Islamabad that it will not be.

Tensions between the two South Asian neighbours remains high, as the Pakistani Army continues to view India as its main adversary. India, therefore, should take the lead in initiating arms control talks with Pakistan and China.

According to the NYT, it should also declare its intention to stop producing nuclear weapons fuel, even before a proposed multinational treaty is negotiated. That would provide leverage for Washington and others to exhort Pakistan to do the same.

Tensions with Pakistan over Kashmir, a festering sore of over six decades standing, is another challenge that New Delhi would have to address directly.

Stephen P. Cohen, a South Asia expert at the Brookings Institution, suggests – broader regional talks on environmental and water issues might be an interim way to find common ground. Ignoring Kashmir is no longer an option, he adds.

A third challenge is Afghanistan. India has played a constructive role in helping rebuild Afghanistan, but it must take steps to allay Islamabad’s concerns that this is not a plan to encircle Pakistan.

It should foster regional trade with Pakistan and Afghanistan. More broadly, India must help to revive world trade talks by opening its markets. It could use its considerable trade clout with Iran, Sudan and Myanmar to curb Tehran’s nuclear program, end the genocide in Darfur and press Myanmar’s junta to expand human rights.

India is the dominant power in South Asia, but it has been hesitant to assume its responsibilities. The Congress Party has to do better – starting with Pakistan, the editorial in the paper concludes. (ANI)

‘US-Pak-Afghan summit did not produce any new solution’

Washington, May 11 (ANI): The trilateral Afghan-Pak-US summit did not produce any new solutions or significant policy initiatives for the ongoing conflict with al-Qaeda and the Taliban, according to a leading US based news daily.

The Washington Times warned the Obama Administration against repeating President Kennedy’s mistake of ordering a military coup in Vietnam and then getting sucked into the war in Pakistan.

In an editorial, the newspaper said Obama made the US relationship with Pakistan needlessly complicated with his statements at his April 29 press conference that implied he would prefer a return to military rule in Islamabad. This, at least, was the impression many in Pakistan took away.

“The trilateral summit did not produce any new solutions or significant policy initiatives for the ongoing conflict with Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Thus far, there is little discernible difference between the Obama and the Bush Administration policies, except that Obama seems more willing to draw the US into Pakistan’s internal affairs.

“Shaheen Sehbai wrote in Pakistan’s News International that Obama’s ‘candid, frank, almost brutal’ comments regarding Mr Zardari reflected ‘the broader thinking in Washington that the Army probably is a better option’ for rule in that country,’ the paper said.

“This view was bolstered by reports that General David H Petraeus, the commander of US Central Command, told Obama Administration officials and US lawmakers that the Pakistan military was ‘superior’ to the civilian government and that Pakistan had to act decisively against the Taliban in the next two weeks if it was to survive,” The News quoted the US daily, as saying.

In the week since those comments, Pakistan essentially has declared war on the Taliban and begun an effective counter-offensive against extremist forces moving toward the capital, The News reported. (ANI)

Talibanisation of the mind in Pak a reality, says lawyer

Islamabad, May 9 (ANI): Last week a conservative schoolteacher in Rawalpindi hailed a cab to get to work in the morning. She wore a gown and had covered her head with a ‘dupatta’.

A few minutes into the journey the bearded taxi driver asked her if she was Muslim. She said she was. Then why she had not covered her head properly, he asked. She responded by explaining that she ordinarily wears a headscarf, but as she was running late that day she was unable to put it on.

Such hurry could invite punishment and result in her being dispatched to the hereafter soon, he retorted. At this point she began to shake with fear and tried to reach for her cell phone to seek help. He turned back and grabbed the cell phone.

As the taxi had almost reached the school campus, she insisted that she be let out. The driver obliged, but left her with a chilling message: if the female staff of the school failed to observe proper ‘pardah’ they would all be sent to God sooner rather than later.

According to an editorial in The News authored by lawyer Babar Sattar, this is no isolated event.

“Be it warnings delivered to the medical community in NWFP to wear shalwar qameez, or edicts issued to music shops and barbers, or threats communicated to schools, or reports regarding women being harassed in bazaars and public spaces more generally, there has been a surge in vigilante action being carried out by our self-styled moral police,” he says.

He further goes on to say that the worst justification for the Nizam-e-Adl regulation comes from liberals within the ANP and the PPP claiming that this legislation doesn’t set up a parallel system of justice, as it is merely procedural law adorned with Islamic nomenclature.

“The growing Talibanization of the mind is a real threat to our fundamental rights and liberties. Simply put it is bigotry, intolerance, obscurantism and coercion practiced in the name of religion,” Sattar says

It feeds on (a) the fear of change being ushered in by modernity, (b) confusion about the role of religion in the society, and (c) the failure of the state to provide for the basic needs of citizens, including means of subsistence the absence of which renders people desperate and a balanced education without which they lack the tools to question and resist extreme intolerant ideas, he concludes. (ANI)

Berlusconi admits his marriage is over

London, May 06 (ANI): Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has said that he is upset because his ‘finished or about to finish’ marriage is being made public.

Berlusconi’s estranged wife Veronica Lario, 52, has confirmed that she is ending her 19-year marriage because she’s tired of his womanising ways.

“It displeases me that a matter that is finished or about to finish is made so public by the newspapers when it should remain a private affair,” the Telegraph quoted Berlusconi as saying in an interview with Rai Uno.

“Frankly, I was not expecting this storm,” he added.

Meanwhile, Berlusconi has come under fire from the Catholic Church over his ‘weakness for young, flowing actresses’.

An editorial in Catholic daily Avvenire, the official newspaper of the Italian Catholic Bishops Conference, described his behaviour as ‘worrying’.

The church’s editorial said Italy deserved a leader who was a ‘mirror of the country’s soul’ and urged him to be more ‘sober and sombre’. (ANI)

Now, Silvio Berlusconi comes under fire from Catholic Church

London, May 06 (ANI): After being slammed by his wife as ‘someone who cavorts with minors’, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has come under fire from the Catholic Church.

An editorial in Catholic daily Avvenire, the official newspaper of the Italian Catholic Bishops Conference, described his behaviour as ‘worrying’, reports the Telegraph.

The church’s editorial said Italy deserved a leader who was a ‘mirror of the country’s soul’ and urged him to be more ‘sober and sombre’.

In its editorial Avvenire said: “We know that a man of the government is judged by what he achieves, for his programmes and for the quality of the laws that he contributes to passing.

“But the quality of a leader, his style and his values should also not be indifferent – they cannot be.

“Because of this we ask that the Prime Minister is more sober, sombre and a mirror of the country’s soul.”

The editorial added that it was worrying that Berlusconi had a ‘exuberance and a weakness for young, flowing actresses.’ (ANI)

PlaySpan named Gaming Category Winner at 2009 OnHollywood 100 Conference

Mumbai, May 2 (ANI/Business Wire India): PlaySpan, the leader in monetization solutions for online games, social networks, and virtual worlds, today announced that it has been selected as the Category Winner among this years OnHollywood 100 list of companies within the gaming category.

PlaySpan was selected by the AlwaysOn editorial team based on demonstration of growth, market opportunity, quality of innovation and customer traction.

“We are humbled by the Category Winner award and glad to see that our one- stop 360°monetization platform is driving higher conversions and ARPU for our publishers and developers, as well as providing an easy-to-use experience for gamers,” said Karl Mehta, Founder and CEO of PlaySpan.

PlaySpan and the other OnHollywood 100 winners were recognized at OnHollywood, April 27-29 at The Sofitel Hotel in West Hollywood.

OnHollywood is where cutting- edge technology CEOs from the back streets of Silicon Valley meet the Hollywood digital entertainment and media elite.

The OnHollywood 100 winners were selected from among hundreds of other technology companies nominated by investors, bankers, journalists and industry insiders.

The AlwaysOn editorial team conducted a rigorous three-month selection process to finalize the 2009 list.

PlaySpan’s award comes on the heels of the company’s recent acquisition of Spare Change, the leading micropayments service for social networks, and a recent partnership agreement with hi5 to power microtransactions across the social network’s 62 million member community. (ANI)

Hugh Hefner misses “love of his life” Holly Madison

Washington, Apr 29 (ANI): Although it has been months since Hugh Hefner, Holly Madison split up, the blonde still remains the “love of his life” and he would love to welcome her back to the Playboy Mansion.

In an interview with Jason Binn, editorial director of Niche Magazine’s Los Angeles Confidential, the octogenarian tycoon claimed that he still has the same feelings for the former ‘Girls Next Door’ star.

The 83-year-old Playboy boss, however, said that he still doesn’t know what future holds for his relationship with new top squeeze Crystal Harris.

“How serious, and intimate, and important that works out to be, well we’ll have to wait and see because it’s only a couple months old,” Fox News quoted Hef as saying in the upcoming issue.

But while Hef’s heart is still beating for Holly, it doesn’t look like a reunion will happen any time soon.

“I loved my time at the mansion and think the world of Hef. There comes a time in everyone’s life where they need to go their own way,” said Madison.

In the interview Hefner also revealed his two prominent regrets- his two marriages (the first to Mildred Williams in 1949 and then to Playmate Kimberly Conrad in 1989 — to whom he’s still married) and taking his empire public.

“I think the company would have been more closer to home if it had remained a private corporation,” admitted Hefner. (ANI)