‘Most Wanted’ Taliban commander killed in US drone attack

Peshawar, Sep.17 (ANI): The United States has confirmed the death of top Taliban commander Ilyas Kaashmiri in a drone attack conducted earlier this month.

According to US intelligence sources, Kaashmiri was killed in a missile attack carried out by unmanned aircrafts in South Waziristan on September 7.

Kaashmiri was the founder leader of the Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) based extremist group Harkatul Islam.

He was once arrested and sent to jail for plotting an attack on former President General Pervez Musharraf, but was subsequently released as the authorities failed to substantiate the case against him.

After the elimination of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud, Kaashmiri became the top most wanted terrorist in the region followed by Hakeemullah Mehsud and Qari Hussain Mehsud, The News reports. (ANI)

Global warming threatens existence of tropical species

Washington, August 26 (ANI): A new research has determined that global warming threatens the existence of tropical species, the ecosystem and its by-products.

The research was done by herpetologist Laurie Vitt, curator of reptiles and George Lynn Cross Research Professor at the University of Oklahoma’s Sam Noble Museum of Natural History.

Vitt has studied the ecology of lizards in rain forests around the world and, for the past 20 years, as part of a biodiversity project in the Amazon.

As a fellow researcher on a study funded by the National Science Foundation, Vitt investigated the affects of global warming on tropical lizards and the diversity of the ecosystem.

“We depend on these tropical lizards and other species of animals and plants for food, materials, and pharmaceuticals, but we are losing these species as a result of global warming,” Vitt said.

Tropical species are affected more by the very narrow temperature range of their typically warm climate than are ectotherms living where the temperatures fluctuate in greater degrees.

Even the smallest change in the tropics makes a difference to the tropical species most susceptible to climate change.

“Climatic shifts are part of our natural history, but years of research indicate global warming has increased the rate at which climate change is taking place,” said Vitt.

As populations grow around the world, so does consumption. In the densest areas of the world, the elimination of animals that feed on disease vectors, such as mosquitoes and flies, adds to our growing human health problem.

“The loss of these predators, like tropical species, upset the natural biodiversity of the ecosystem,” said Vitt. “The effects may not be so obvious in the short term, but the long-term effects will be irreversible,” he added.

“Our ability to connect with nature and better understand tropical lizards is important because these animals serve as model organisms for detecting the effects of global warming,” Vitt summarized.

“Ecosystems are complex and interdependent. When one species becomes extinct, the entire system is affected. The long-term effects on human health can be dramatic,” he said. (ANI)

Now, take your pick with baby sex selection method in Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur, August 9 (ANI): Companies in Malaysia are openly offering couples with baby sex selection methods, saying the procedures to have the desired gender are entirely “natural”.

“Choice Baby” offers to prepare a conception chart based on the analysis of data taken from selective parents like their blood type, date of birth and other personal information.

Jennifer Chin, the company ‘s sales manager, said the demand for gender selection had shot up over the years and her company enrolled more than 30 clients per month

“The gender chart will show the favourable days to attempt conception,” the New Straits Times Online quoted her as saying.

She added: “For those with two or three boys and want a girl or viceversa, this is an opportunity to get what they desire.”

However, certain religious groups and spiritual leaders have raised objections over the practice saying it interferes with the working of God.

Hindu Sangam president Datuk A. Vaithilingam said: “Whether it is using technology or natural methods, early identification and elimination are against nature. It’s not in line with the way of life. Gender selection can lead to unnecessary calamities, like gender problems.”

Harcharan Singh, vicepresident of the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism and Sikhism, said: “It is God who creates, so this practice is clearly against the order of nature”. (ANI)

Taliban may regroup, says NWFP chief minister

Peshawar, June 30 (ANI): The Chief Minister of Pakistan’s North Western Frontier Province, Amir Haider Hoti, has said that the Taliban has not been eliminated from Swat and warned that they may try to re-group in the future.

“We have taken a resolve of complete elimination of militants from society because they are the enemy of people and nation and have committed inhuman crime which is not tolerable in any society,” The Nation quoted Hoti, as saying.

He acknowledged that the weak civil administration in the Malakand division allowed the Taliban to reorganize in the region.

The government has decided to set up more police stations in Malakand besides recruiting ex-armymen as Special Security Force, he added.

Hoti assured that the return of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) from the Malakand division would start very soon and repatriation would occur in a phased manner.

Addressing a ceremony held in connection with the distribution of cheques of 30,000 each among 227 displaced journalists of the Malakand division, Hoti said the government is concentrating on strengthening infrastructure before the return of IDPs.

He said return and rehabilitation of displaced persons is a hard task for the government as compared to providing them relief.

In order to revamp the damaged infrastructure of the Malakand division, the governemnt requires about two billion dollars, he added.

Hoti said his government would ensure the complete implementation of Nizam-e-Adl Regulations (Sharia law) in letter and spirit. (ANI)

Too early for Pakistan to declare victory in Swat: Holbrooke

Islamabad, June 29 (ANI): The US special envoy to Pakistan and Afghanistan, Richard Holbrooke, has said that it is too soon for Pakistan to declare victory in the Swat Valley, where the Army has purportedly put the Taliban insurgents on the back foot.

Holbrooke, attending a G8 conference on stabilizing Pakistan and Afghanistan in Italy, said in an interview that it was too early for Pakistan to announce victory in Swat.

“The true test is when the refugees go back to Swat. Will they have security? Will they be protected?” The Nation quoted Holbrooke, as saying.

“Will the Army be able to keep the Taliban from coming back down over the hills? And the bill for reconstruction in Swat is going to be enormous – over a billion dollars, maybe over 2 billion.

“We’re very gratified that the Army led the charge back into Swat and that they’ve driven the militants out of the Swat Valley. But we have a long way to go before we know the end of the story. So there is a lot left in this saga,” he added

Asked about whether he knew about the number of civilians killed in Swat during the ongoing offensive of the Pakistan Army against the Taliban, Holbrooke flatly replied “No.”

Responding to another question on whether there would be more casualties after the hike in US troops in Afghanistan, he said: “I don’t know if the increased troops will lead to increase casualties. It happens often, but I’m not going to concede that. We have a new commander, a brilliant new commander, Gen. (Stanley) McChrystal, and he is devising new strategies and tactics.”

“The Taliban are going to be put under pressure like they’ve never seen before. And coupled with our elimination of things like crop eradication so we don’t alienate the people, coupled with Gen McChrystal’s new rules over the use of airpower in an attempt to reduce civilian casualties, we may find that things go much better than expected.”

The 45 nations and multilateral organisations at the G8 conference issued a statement pledging to look at ways to boost humanitarian aid to Pakistan, where fighting has displaced nearly two million people. (ANI)

Most Lankan Tamils wary of Rajapaksa’s outreach

Pune, May 20 (ANI): Several Sri Lankan Tamils based in India have responded warily to President Mahinda Rajapaksa outreach after the elimination of the LTTE and its chief Vellupillai Prabhakaran.

Mariasoosai Sakkariyas is one such. He and his family fled Sri Lanka 29 years ago in a flimsy boat across choppy waters to Tamil Nadu. He longs for the day he can return to his homeland.

“I will only return if there is evidence that all Tamils displaced by the recent fighting are rehabilitated, and are given a free, democratic space to exist. I don’t want to return to a forced democracy where Tamils have no voice,” Sakkariyas told the Christian Science Monitor.

He was not impressed by President Rajapaksa’s promise to protect the Tamil-speaking people of Sri Lanka.

Sakkariyas’s skepticism hints at the uphill battle Sri Lanka faces in achieving political reconciliation now that the conventional phase of the war between the military and Tamil rebels has ended.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) had fought for a separate homeland for the island’s Tamil ethnic minorities.

Some Tamils in Sri Lanka also viewed Rajapaksa’s conciliatory tone warily.

“If the president’s speech had announced a tangible political package for Tamils, I would be a million times happier,” says Chris Kamalendaran, a Colombo-based reporter of Tamil origin, adding that other Tamils he had spoken with echoed his dismay that the president didn’t offer a more concrete political vision.

“After 26 bloody years, the conflict is over – that’s great,” continues Kamalendaran, noting that he had never supported the LTTE. “But the cause of the conflict still persists.”

The resentment between Sri Lanka’s ethnic Tamil minority (who make up 18 percent of the population) and the Sinhalese majority (74 percent) stretches back decades.

P. Radhakrishnan, a Tamil politician and a deputy minister in Rajapaksa’s government, offers a more optimistic take on Sri Lanka’s future. He hails the president’s message as a “confidence-building speech.”

The end of the war could allow Tamil politicians to work more actively to improve conditions for the Tamil community, Radhakrishnan says in a phone interview. (ANI)

Chelsea’s Lamps wants to end Champions League KO curse

London, May 5 (ANI): Chelsea and England forward Frank Lampard is very keen to beat the curse that haunts the team in the Champions League.

Tomorrow night at Stamford Bridge, Barcelona stand in the way of the Blues reaching a second consecutive final, and Lampard admits being the nearly men of the European Cup in the past five years is a tag they want to get rid of.
Chelsea lost three semi-finals before making it to Moscow last year only to be beaten by Manchester United on penalties.

Having won everything in domestic football, Lamps is determined to add European glory to his list of achievements.

The Sun quoted the England star, 30, as saying: “We have basically achieved everything else domestically, so Europe is always the one that’s been hanging over us.”

Lamps revealed the fear of elimination is something that drives him and his team-mates on in their quest to win the competition. (ANI)

Gilani says poppy cultivation in Afghanistan causing conflict in Pak

Islamabad, May. 1 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani has said that poppy cultivation and drug trafficking in Afghanistan are the main cause of terrorism menace in Pakistan.
Gilani urged the NATO and ISAF to effectively deal with poppy cultivation, which still remains the main source of funding for extremists and terrorist elements.

“This has led to exporting numerous problems to Pakistan and stressed that the elimination of poppy cultivation is the key for defeating the menace of terrorism in the region,” The News quoted Gilani, as saying.

Gilani was talking to an eight-member delegation of the British Select Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Commons headed by Mike Capes.

On the UK Policy on Afghanistan and Pakistan, Gilani urged for careful examination and further clarifications of the policy.

“The policy acknowledges Pakistan’s position that military option alone cannot resolve the problems of insecurity, insurgency and terrorism while placing emphasis on the development dimension which his government has been advocating since long,” he said.

He stressed that the policy must also recognize that the problems faced by Pakistan today are rooted in decades old conflict in Afghanistan. Pakistan and Afghanistan have distinctly different political and institutional traditions and hence they must not be bracketed together for finding solutions of the problems faced by them, he added.

Gilani urged the British parliamentarians to not deport the arrested Pakistani students in UK, as no evidence was found against them.

He also demanded them to play their role in ensuring that the people of Pakistani origin are not discriminated against in any way. (ANI)

New guidance on global malaria elimination released

Washington, Apr 25 (ANI): Health experts from around the world have launched new guidance for countries and policy leaders on how and when to eliminate malaria.

The announcement would pave the way for the potential global eradication of the deadly disease.

The Malaria Elimination Group, a global body of researchers, policy experts and country program managers, by the Global Health Group of UCSF Global Health Sciences, is behind the launch of new guidelines.

“The international community has provided relatively little guidance to countries on elimination to date. The documents published today are intended to change that,” said Sir Richard Feachem, KBE, DSc(Med), PhD, director of the Global Health Group, and chair of the Malaria Elimination Group.

He added: “Much of the world’s attention has rightly focused on controlling malaria and reducing deaths caused by the disease. However, 39 countries around the world have embarked on the next step of elimination in the pursuit of eventual global eradication. They deserve our full support and encouragement.”

Feachem will officially announce the release of two publications, ‘Shrinking the Malaria Map: A Prospectus on Malaria Elimination’, and its companion, ‘Shrinking the Malaria Map: A Guide on Malaria Elimination for Policy Makers’, during a press conference in Geneva, Switzerland, jointly sponsored with the Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Partnership to commemorate World Malaria Day 2009.

The Prospectus would help those working on the front lines of malaria control and elimination and reviews the operational, technical and financial decisions that should be considered for an elimination program.

The Guide is a policy digest of the Prospectus, intended for leaders and policy makers.

“The Malaria Elimination Group has made a valuable contribution at a crucial moment, by providing countries, policy makers and investors the information they need to make informed decisions about investment in malaria elimination,” said Raymond G. Chambers, the United Nations Secretary General’s Special Envoy for Malaria.

He added: “We applaud the success of the countries that are pursuing elimination today, and all those countries in Africa that are working hard to achieve the Secretary General’s goal of universal coverage of preventive and treatment measures by the end of 2010.

“The international community must work together to ensure that all of these countries have the political and financial support to sustain implementation and achieve their goals. (ANI)

Indian American aides to help Obama cut unnecessary spending

Lalit K Jha Washington, Apr 18 (PTI) US President Barack Obama today revealed his blue print to fulfill his election promise of providing transparent, efficient and effective governance, a task in which two young Indian Americans will play a key role. Aneesh Paul Chopra Shah, whose appointment as the Chief Performance Officer, was announced today and Vivek Kundra, the Chief Technology Officer of the President are among the top three key Obama aides who will assist him in revamping the administration.

The appointment of Chopra along with Jeffrey Zients, as his Chief Performance Officer, was announced today by Obama. “Together with Chief Information Officer Vivek Kundra, they (Chopra and Zients) will help give all Americans a government that is effective, efficient, and transparent,” Obama said in his weekly radio address today.

While Zients will work to streamline processes, cut costs and find the best practices throughout the government, Chopra will promote technological innovation to help US meet its goals from job creation, reducing health care costs and protecting the homeland, Obama said. The US President also announced the nomination of Indian American Raj Shah as the Under Secretary for Research, Education and Economics in the Department of Agriculture.

In the coming weeks, Obama said he will be announcing the elimination of dozens of government programmes shown to be wasteful or ineffective. PTI.

Two troopers, two guerrillas killed in Kashmir gunfight

Srinagar, April 7 (IANS) Two soldiers and two guerrillas were killed in a three-day long gunfight that ended Tuesday in a Kashmir forest area, police said.

The army and Special Operations Group (SOG) of the Jammu and Kashmir police launched an operation in Maidanpora forest, around 110 km from here, in the frontier Kupwara district Sunday.

The security forces came under a heavy fire from the hiding militants, which was retaliated. The gunfight continued till Tuesday in which two armymen and two guerrillas were killed, a police officer said.

The soldiers died Monday after sustaining bullet injuries while the two militants were gunned down Tuesday.

The operation ‘has ended with the elimination of the two hiding militants’, the police officer said.

Violence in the Kashmir Valley, particularly in its north close to the border with Pakistan, has escalated ahead of the Lok Sabha polls.

Last month, the army intercepted a group of infiltrators in the Shamsbari mountain range of the district. At least 17 guerrillas and eight army troopers were killed in the six-day-long battle in the mountain range.

State police chief Kuldeep Khuda has said Taliban guerrillas have moved closer to the border and may try to disrupt the Lok Sabha polls in the state.

Over five in ten Americans support military elimination of North Korean nukes

Washington, Apr.6 (ANI): Following North Korea’s launch of its controversial Taepodong-II missile, a majority of American voters have said that they would support a military approach to eliminate North Korea’s nuclear capabilities.

According to a Rasmussen Reports survey released Sunday morning, 57 percent of all voters support such a response, while just 15 percent oppose it.

A military response is favored by a majority in both parties – 66 percent of Republicans and 52 percent of Democrats – and by 57 percent of both men and women, said the survey that was conducted in the two days prior to the test missile launch.

According to Politico, 51 percent of the respondents oppose the U.S. offering economic aid to North Korea in exchange for it agreeing to dismantle its nuclear program.

On Sunday, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich told “Fox News Sunday” that he would have disabled the long-range missile before North Korea was able to launch it.

In what seemed to be a swipe at the Obama administration’s response, he warned, “One morning, just like 9/11, there’s going to be a disaster,” adding, “I have yet to see the United Nations do anything effective with either Iran or North Korea.”

The telephone survey of 1,000 likely voters has a three-percentage-point margin of error. (ANI)

Al-Qaeda planning to attack US using Pak soil: Obama

London, Apr.1 (ANI): A day after the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud threatened to carry out a spectacular strike on Washington, US President Barack Obama has expressed fears that Al-Qaeda was planning to attack the United States from Pakistani soil.

Addressing a joint press conference with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown here, Obama vowed to defeat and dismantle the terror network across the world.

He said Washington would not allow Pakistan and Afghanistan to become a safe haven of Al-Qaeda.

“The elimination of Al-Qaeda was in the greater interest of both the countries,” The News quoted Obama, as saying.

Earlier, Mehsud while claiming responsibility for the strike on the Police Training Academy in Lahore,warned of a attack on Washington in near future.

He also said that the attack in Lahore was in reaction to the US drone strikes in Pakistan’s Tribal Areas.

Mehsud is already wanted by the United States, and it had also announced a reward of five million dollars to anyone revealing his whereabouts. (ANI)

Holly Madison suffers rib injury on ‘Dancing With The Stars’

Washington, Mar 27 (ANI): Hugh Hefner’s ex-girlfriend Holly Madison has suffered a rib injury while rehearsing for U.S. reality TV series ‘Dancing With The Stars’.

But the ‘Girls Next Door’ star has vowed to continue competing on the show.

She was called up as a late replacement for singer Jewel, who was diagnosed with tendinitis after collapsing in rehearsals.

However, Madison has now suffered an injury of her own, after a fall left her with a painful rib injury.

“After experiencing pain in her rib area, Holly received medical attention. While she is not suffering from a broken rib, she does continue to feel a great deal of discomfort and was prescribed pain medication,” Contactmusic quoted a representative for the star as saying.

However, Madison is determined to dance on next week’s show.

“She is committed to the show and her partner, Dmitry, and will rest when she can. She fully hopes and, at this time, expects to dance on Monday,” said the rep.

Holly survived elimination with partner Dmitry Chaplin on the March 24 show. (ANI)

Comprehensive global malaria map may help eliminate the disease

Washington, Mar 24 (ANI): An international team of researchers has created a global map that shows the proportion of malaria infected population at locations throughout the globe – a development which can act as a key tool to help in the control and elimination of the disease.

For developing the map, the researchers used data from nearly 8000 local surveys of rates of infection by Plasmodium falciparum.

The map shows that areas where a high proportion of residents are infected are common in Africa, but the ratio is not uniform throughout the country.

However, lower prevalence levels are found in the Americas and Central and Southeast Asia, although pockets of intermediate and high transmission remain in some parts of Asia.

Malaria is one of the most common infectious diseases in the world.

Researchers, led by Simon Hay from the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford, have shown that global malaria endemicity is substantially lower than would be predicted from inspection of historical maps.

Still, the map indicates that, in 2007, almost 60 percent of the 2.4 billion people at any risk of malaria were living in areas where malaria is constantly present – 0.69 billion people in Central and South East Asia, 0.66 billion in Africa, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia, and 0.04 billion in the Americas.

The new map is a part of the Malaria Atlas Project and reflects the use of model-based geostatistics to incorporate data obtained across space and time.

It also provides an important new resource by indicating areas where malaria control can be improved, as well as areas where malaria elimination may be possible.

And because of the statistical methods used to construct the new map, it is possible to quantify the uncertainty in the results.

“The state of the P. falciparum malaria world in 2007 represents an enormous opportunity for the international community to act. This cartographic resource will help countries determine their needs and serve as a baseline to monitor and evaluate progress towards interventional goals,” said the authors.

The study is published in the latest edition of PLoS Medicine. (ANI)

Sharif wants 17th Amendment to be abolished

Lahore, Mar 18 (ANI): Pakistan Muslim League-N chief Nawaz Sharif has said that Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani has been conveyed that 17th Amendment should be abolished.

Speaking to reporters here on Wednesday, he said that supremacy of law, elimination of poverty and outdated system are his top priorities.

“We have talked to Prime Minister and now 17th Amendments will be abolished,” he said.

The PML-N chief said that restoration of judges was the only objective for joining the lawyers’

Long March. Otherwise, we could have gone to Islamabad for withdrawal of governor rule.

Sharif said that he was ready to fight any battle for the people interest and would never ignore those who stood by his party in difficult times.

He also said that restoration of judiciary is not the victory or defeat of any individual and it is the victory of Pakistan and rule of law.

Sharif praised the whole nation for its struggle in the restoration of judiciary, and lauded the media too for playing a leading role in the lawyers’ movement.

“Following the restoration of judiciary, 17th Amendment and other controversial issues should be resolved through implementation of the charter of democracy (CoD),” he added.

To a question, he said that Punjab’s mandate had been crushed and there was no justification for the governor rule in Punjab.

Commenting on the disqualification, he said that nobody had accepted this verdict, The News reported. (ANI)

Sharif says that Gilani has been told to repeal of 17th Amendment

Lahore, Mar.18 (ANI): Former Pakistan Prime Minister and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif said Wednesday that Prime Minister Gilani has been told to repeal the controversial 17th Amendment.

Sharif told reporters here that the supremacy of law, elimination of poverty and outdated system were his top priorities.

“We have talked to the Prime Minister and now 17th Amendment will be abolished,” he said.

The Constitution (Seventeenth Amendment) Act, 2003 was an amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan passed in December 2003, after over a year of political wrangling between supporters and opponents of Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf.

Through this amendment, many changes were made to the Constitution of Pakistan, especially those relating to the office of the President and the reversal of the effects of the Thirteenth Amendment.

The major points of the Amendment were as follows:

President Musharraf’s Legal Framework Order (LFO) was largely incorporated into the constitution, with a few changes.

Article 63(1)(d) of the Constitution was made operative after December 31, 2004. The intent of this was to prohibit a person from holding both a political office (such as that of the President) and an “office of profit” – an office that is typically held by a career government servant, civil or military – such as the office of the Chief of Army Staff.

Although this was supposed to separate the two types of office, a loophole – “.. other than an office declared by law ..” – allowed Parliament to pass an ordinary law later in 2004 – permitting the President to hold on to the office of Chief of Army Staff, an option that President Musharraf then exercised.

Should the President win a majority in a vote of confidence in the electoral college within 30 days of the passage of this amendment, he shall be deemed to be elected to the office of President. (On January 1, 2004, Musharraf won 658 out of 1,170 electoral-college votes – a 56% majority – and was thereby deemed to be elected president.) The President regains the authority to dissolve the National Assembly – and thus effectively to dismiss the Pakistani Prime Minister – but the power to do so is made subject to an approval or veto by the Supreme Court of Pakistan.

A Governor’s power to dissolve a Provincial Assembly is similarly subject to Supreme Court approval or veto.

Article 152A, which dealt with the National Security Council, was annulled. (The legal basis for the NSC is now an ordinary law, the National Security Council Act of 2004.)

Ten laws had been added by the LFO to the Sixth Schedule, which is a list of “laws that are not to be altered, repealed or amended without the previous sanction of the President.”

After this amendment, five of those laws will lose their Sixth Schedule protection after six years. Laws to be unprotected include the four laws that established the system of democratic local governments. (Those in favor argued that it would enable each province to evolve its own systems. Opponents feared that authoritarian provincial governments could disempower or even dismantle the system of local democracies.)

Sharif said that restoration of judges was his only objective for joining the Long March. (ANI)

Prince Charles’ detox food dubbed ‘outright quackery’ by scientist

London, Mar 11 (ANI): Prince Charles has been accused of ‘financially exploiting the gullible’ with his herbal detox tincture of globe artichoke and dandelion produced by his company Duchy Originals.

Prof Ezard Ernst, from Peninsula Medical School, who has dismissed the herbal mixture as ‘quackery’, claims that the Prince of Wales is exploiting people at a time hardship, and dubbed the company as ‘Dodgy Originals’.

The scientific community has been criticising the method of detoxing as it lacked credible evidence, but Prince Charles on the other hand is a strong supporter of the complementary therapies and alternative medicine and has even called for wider access to the treatments on the NHS.

His brand, Duchy Originals, has produced a range of herbal preparations including the Detox Artichoke and Dandelion Tincture, which is sold for 10 pounds for 50ml in Boots and Waitrose.

“Prince Charles contributes to the ill health of the nation by pretending we can all overindulge, then take his tincture and be fine again,” the Telegraph quoted Prof Ernst, the first professor of complementary medicine in the UK, as saying.

“Under the banner of holistic and integrative health care he thus promotes a ‘quick fix’ and outright quackery,” he stated.

He said detox is based on the idea that toxins accumulate in the body until it becomes overloaded and that certain products can speed up the elimination of these substances.

“The body has a powerful mechanism to deal with itself and there’s no evidence that dandelion or artichoke will improve these functions,” he said.

“If a patient has a diseased kidney and cannot eliminate toxins via their kidney, then they need serious medical help.

“Products like this are a dangerous waste of money.

“Charles is exploiting people during hard times,” he added.

A spokesman for Duchy Originals has defended its product saying that it is safe.

“Duchy Herbals Detox Tincture is an excellent and safe product, traded as a food supplement and compliant with all of the relevant sections of both UK and European food laws,” he said.

“It is a natural aid to digestion and supports the body’s natural elimination processes. It is not – and has never been described as – a medicine, remedy or cure for any disease.

“There is no ‘quackery’, no ‘make believe’ and no ‘superstition’ in any of the Duchy Originals herbal tinctures. We find it unfortunate that Professor Ernst should chase sensationalist headlines in this way rather than concentrating on accuracy and objectivity,” he added. (ANI)

East Pakistan like situation in Swat: Imran

Abbotabad, Feb 13 (ANI): Former cricketer Tehreek-i-Insaf chief Imran Khan on Friday said the PPP-led government has created East Pakistan like situation in the Swat valley by launching military operation there.

Talking to party workers and media here, he said the government has been lying to the nation.

“If the Parliament is independent then it should conduct an inquiry into the drone strikes,” The News quoted Khan, as saying.

He termed the military operation in Swat as a serious mistake on part of the government, saying police and FC who are already present in Swat would have been sufficient to establish peace there.

Khan described as shameful the statement of the US senator in which he said that the drone attacks are being carried out from within Pakistan.

He also called for holding of fresh general elections in the country.

Meanwhile, a high level meeting presided over by President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani has decided to continue the military operation in Swat for elimination of militancy and restoring writ of the state in the area.

A detailed briefing about Swat and FATA situation was given during the review meeting and the participants expressed contentment over the ongoing action in these areas for elimination of militancy.

President Zardari in his address to the meeting said there is no other option left to the government except for using force to root out the scourge of terrorism and militancy. (ANI)

India signs agreement with World Bank on health project

New Delhi, Feb 13 (ANI): India has signed a Financing Agreement of National Vector Borne Disease Control and Polio Eradication Support Project with the World Bank, here today.

The agreement is for a total assistance of approximately 518 million dollar as part of IDA allocation to India.

The project aims at enhancing the effectiveness of government response to control malaria, eliminate Kala Azar and eradicate polio. This will be achieved by increasing the number of people benefiting from effective prevention, diagnosis and treatment services for malaria and Kala Azar, and vaccination against polio.

The project will have four components including., “Improving Access to and Use of Services for Control of Malaria”, “Improving Access to and Use of Services for Elimination of Kala Azar”, “Policy and Strategy Development, Capacity Building and Monitoring and Evaluation” and “Improving Polio vaccine availability”.

The agreement was signed by Dr. Alok Sheel, Joint Secretary, Department of Economic Affairs on behalf of Government of India and. Rachid Benmesssaoud Operations Adviser, World Bank (India), signed on behalf of the World Bank.

The closing date of the project is December 31, 2013. (ANI)