WSO Saddened by Violence at Sikh Lehar Centre

OTTAWA, ONTARIO, Apr 05 (MARKET WIRE) —
The World Sikh Organization of Canada (WSO) is deeply saddened by the
violence that took place in Brampton, Ontario at the Sikh Lehar Centre on
Friday evening. In a clash at the Centre, several individuals were
injured after a demonstration against controversial preacher Prof.
Darshan Singh turned violent.

WSO Ontario Vice President Ranjit Singh Dulay said, “Violence of this
kind is absolutely unacceptable. We may have differences of opinion and
we have the right to express those differences but violence cannot be
tolerated in any event.”

WSO Senior Policy Advisor Gian Singh Sandhu said, “Violence is not the
Canadian way to express grievances. Differences of opinion must be
peacefully expressed. The Sikh community cannot and does not condone
these types of incidents.”

WSO calls upon the Sikh community and police authorities to ensure that
such incidents are not allowed to be repeated and steps are taken to
quickly defuse the situation.

The World Sikh Organization of Canada (WSO) is a non-profit organization
with a mandate to promote and protect the interests of the Sikh Diaspora,
as well as to promote and advocate for the protection of human rights for
all individuals, irrespective of race, religion, gender, ethnicity, and
social and economic status.

Contacts:
World Sikh Organization of Canada (WSO)
Gian Singh Sandhu
604-341-2755
gian@jackpinegroup.com

World Sikh Organization of Canada (WSO)
Amanpreet Singh Bal
905-567-1795 or Cell 416-677-1528
asinghbal@gmail.com
www.worldsikh.ca

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

Spanking found to have negative effects on low-income toddlers

Washington, September 16 (ANI): Spanking negatively affects the behaviour of toddlers in low-income families, according to a new study.

Published in the journal Child Development, the longitudinal study looked at how low-income parents discipline their young children.

It showed that spanking 1-year-olds leads to more aggressive behaviours and less sophisticated cognitive development in the next two years.

Verbal punishment, however, was not found to be associated with such effects, especially when it was accompanied by emotional support from mothers.

Besides, 1-year-olds’ fussiness predicted spanking and verbal punishment at ages 1, 2, and 3.

The study explored whether mothers’ behaviours lead to problematic behaviour in children, whether children’s challenging behaviours elicit harsher discipline, or both.

It looked at more than 2,500 exclusively low-income White, African American, and Mexican-American mothers and their young children, interviewing and observing them at home when the children were 1, 2, and 3 years old.

All participants’ family incomes were at or below the federal poverty level.

Using their own interpretations of spanking, mothers reported how often anyone in the home had spanked their children in the past week.

The study also looked at how often mothers verbally punished-scolded, yelled, or made negative comments-their children.

It showed that African American children were spanked and verbally punished significantly more than the other children in the study.

The authors speculated that that might be due to cultural factors, such as belief in the importance of children’s respect for elders and in the value of physical discipline to instil that respect.

Moreover, some African American mothers said that in preparing their children for a harsh, physically dangerous, and racially discriminating world, there was little room for error in their childrearing.

The study also shed light on information about the effects of such types of discipline.

“Our findings clearly indicate that spanking affects children’s development,” said Lisa J. Berlin, research scientist at the Center for Child and Family Policy at Duke University and the study’s lead author.

Specifically, children who were spanked more often at 1 behaved more aggressively when they were 2, and had lower scores on tests measuring thinking skills when they were 3.

Similar findings were made even after taking into consideration such family characteristics as mothers’ race and ethnicity, age, and education; family income and structure; and the children’s gender.

The study also found that children who were more aggressive at age 2, and had lower cognitive development scores at ages 1 and 2, were not spanked more at ages 2 and 3.

“So the mothers’ behaviours look more influential than the children’s,” said Berlin.

Unlike spanking, however, verbal punishment alone didn’t affect either children’s aggression or their cognitive development.

Interestingly, when verbal punishment was accompanied by emotional support from moms, the children did better on the tests of cognitive ability. (ANI)

Taliban now terrorise 80% of Afghanistan after eight years of war: Report

Kabul, Sep. 11 (ANI): Almost eight years after the war began in Afghanistan in the aftermath of the 9/11 carnage, the Taliban insurgency has spread across 80 percent of the country.

The violent incidents this week have drawn attention to the deteriorating security situation of northern Afghanistan, which had largely remained peaceful so far, the Christian Science Monitor reports.

The northern provinces are facing difficult times as heavy insurgent activity has spread to 80 percent of the country – up from 54 percent two years ago, the report says.

The militants’ focus has shifted to northern parts following continuous pressure from their Pakistani counterparts to attack NATO’s second supply route situated here, it adds.

“[Militants] have been trying to widen the ground for the insurgency in Afghanistan and now they have got momentum. The militants are eager to target this route to prevent a smooth supply chain from northern Afghanistan,” the report quoted Waliullah Rahmani, executive director of the Kabul Center for Strategic Studies, as saying.

Last week’s airstrike targeted two fuel tankers headed to supply NATO troops in Kabul that had been hijacked by the Taliban.

Although the increase in violence is only a recent phenomenon, the conditions had worsened long ago, the report says.

The violence can be linked to districts with large Pashtun populations, whose grievances the government has failed to address – making them sympathetic to the Taliban, who share their ethnicity and language, it adds.

“The districts which are turning violent are those which have had a very recent history of abuses against the Pashtuns.

The government has allowed these conditions to go unaddressed and this is now being addressed by the population by giving shelter to the Taliban and other insurgents,”the report quoted Prakhar Sharma, the head of research at the Center for Conflict and Peace Studies, as saying.(ANI)

Jay-Z gives full-throated reply to rap’s black critics

London, Sept 4 (ANI): Rapper Jay-Z has rubbished all criticism of hip-hop by well-known African-Americans who believe the genre degrades their ethnicity.

The superstar said the protests were only for “publicity purposes”.

Hip-hop recently generated a lot of disapproval from prominent black celebrities like Oprah Winfrey and Bill Cosby, who say it is misogynistic and frequent uses the racial N-word.

An annoyed Cosby even went on to pull off a hip-hop album that was “without the profanity, misogyny, violence and braggadocio”.

However Jay-Z thinks otherwise. The hitmaker says rap portrays important issues in its own style.

The Daily Express quoted him as saying: “Put it like this; everything is birthed from somewhere real, right? These emotions and this anger and this angst in reality rap is coming from a real place.

“People in those circles try to dismiss it, buy you can’t because it’s part of culture. They only attack hip-hop because, and I hate to sound like a cynic, but this is all done for publicity purposes, right? You don’t attack the real issue – you attack the thing that’s popular.” (ANI)

SAAF president Chuene quits over Semenya gender issue

Cape Town (South Africa), Aug 23(ANI): South African Athletics Federation (SAAF) president Leonard Chuene has quit the sport’s governing body, accusing it of being “racist” over the Caster Semenya affair.

Chuene blasted the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) for publicly announcing its decision to test the gender of Semenya before she won gold in the 800m in Berlin.

“I would quit for as long as it takes to fight this dreadful case against our young runner,” The Daily star quoted Chuene, as saying.

“Who are white people to question the make-up of an African girl? say this is racism, pure and simple,” he added.

Chuene further insisted that the 18-year-old was facing intense scrutiny due to her ethnicity and said: “If gender tests have to take place, they should have been done quietly.”

“The IAAF has let down this young child and I will fight tooth and nail to protect her,” he added. (ANI)

Musical ‘badges’ reveal people’s personality, values

London, Aug 22 (ANI): People use musical preferences to express their own identity and form opinions about others, researchers have said.

According to Dr Jason Rentfrow, of Cambridge University, musical preferences along with lists of favourite bands on profiles on social networking sites were “clear public statements of who we are and how we should be perceived, whether we are conscious of that or not”, reports The Daily Star.

Rentfrow said, sample groups of subjects regularly made the same assumptions about people’s personalities, values, social class and even their ethnicity, based on their musical preferences.

The research found that fans of jazz were viewed as friendly, emotionally stable people with a limited sense of responsibility, while rap fans were viewed as more hostile, but energetic and athletic. Classical music was linked to upper-class people and rap to people from lower class backgrounds.

Rentfrow, of the university’s department of social and developmental psychology, said: “Humans, as social beings, develop techniques that help them to predict what another person is going to be like from the moment they first meet.

“Because we can’t carry out a full psychological assessment on the spot, we ask them questions which help us to build up a picture of their personality.

“This research suggests that, even though our assumptions may not be accurate, we get a very strong impression about someone when we ask them what music they like.” (ANI)

‘Facebook for Parsees’ may help revive Zoroastrianism

London, Aug 22 (ANI): Facebook has united millions of long-lost school friends and lovers. And now, the popular social networking site has raised hopes of helping revive a religion: Zoroastrianism.

The 3,500-year-old religion, which is on the brink of extinction, is possibly the world’s wealthiest and most influential faith. However, it is losing its Midas touch, reports The Times.

Bachelors belonging to the religion, whose fire-worshipping followers subscribe to the teachings of the prophet Zoroaster, tend to marry late, and, as far as women are concerned some of them wed outside the community. As a result they’re excommunicated.

Because of this, there are only 120,000 Zoroastrians left, a third of whom are over 60.

Also, the diminishing birth rate has raised fears that adherents – known as Parsees in India, the religion’s main stronghold – are dying out.

Now, the community is counting on a website designed to create a database of its young that will encourage them to intermarry.

It is being billed as a kind of “Facebook for Parsees” that will place a heavy emphasis on matrimonial matters.

Tashan Mistree, 26, one of the Parsees behind the project, said: “The matrimonial part is important if we want to preserve our ethnicity … That we are a small community means that every individual matters.”

The site, which will be open to Parsees between 15 and 40, will foster a sense of ethnic identity among members with information about community events and will include a careers portal.

“It’s crazy, but for years this religion had not cared for the views of anybody under 75,” said Jimmy Mistry, a prominent Parsee in Mumbai.

“The young had been driven away,” Mistry added.

The social network is being developed by the youth wing of the Bombay Parsee Panchayat (BPP), a Mumbai-based governing council that is one of Zoroastrianism’s most influential seats of power. (ANI)

Higher drinking age significantly reduces binge drinking

Washington, June 23 (ANI): A study has revealed that there has been a substantial reduction in binge drinking among people of all ages, except college students, ever since the national drinking age in America was set at 21 about two decades ago.

The research from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis also found that the rates of binge drinking in male collegians remain unchanged, but the rates in female collegians have increased dramatically.

The researchers have said that while the policy initiatives aimed at lowering rates of underage drinking generally have been successful, and that binge drinking is down among young people overall, it still remains a problem on college campuses.

Led by Dr. Richard A. Grucza, assistant professor of psychiatry, the researchers analysed data gathered between 1979 and 2006 by the National Survey on Drug Use and Health.

The data covered over 500,000 subjects, and the researchers divided them into groups, according to age, sex, ethnicity and student status.

“We found that overall, binge drinking is less common than it once was. Young men account for the majority of binge drinkers, and their rates have dropped substantially since 1979. However, at the same time, the ‘gender gap’ between male and female drinkers has been closing. In this study, we found that women are drinking more, and their rates of binge drinking have risen over the last 30 years,” said Grucza.

Binge drinking is defined as having five or more drinks on a given occasion.

The researchers observed that in 2006, the last year for which the data were analysed, more than half of college-age males, and almost 40 percent of college-age females reported binge drinking.

But the researchers found reductions in binge drinking, especially among boys and young men 20 and younger.

In males ages 15 to 17, binge-drinking rates declined nearly 50 percent between 1979 and 2006, while the rates declined more than 20 percent in males aged 18 to 20 and 10 percent in males aged 21 to 23.

On the other hand, binge drinking was statistically unchanged since 1979 in women aged 15 to 20, while for women 21 to 23, binge drinking rose by about 40 percent.

The biggest surprises involved differences between college students and men and women of the same age not enrolled in college.

Binge drinking declined in young men, unless they were in college. It was up slightly in young women, but significantly higher in college women.

Among 18- to 20-year-old non-college men, binge drinking declined by more than 30 percent over the study period, whereas it was statistically unchanged among the men in college.

The study has been reported in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. (ANI)

Muslim headscarf does not increase discrimination

Madrid – Muslims continue facing high levels of discrimination in Europe, but wearing traditional or religious clothing does not increase such problems, according to a new European Union report.

The report by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) was made public in Madrid on Thursday.

The findings formed part of the first EU-wide survey on immigrant and ethnic minority groups’ experience of discrimination, with interviews of more than 20,000 people in 27 countries, including Muslims surveyed in 14 countries.

One third of the Muslim respondents said they were discriminated against in the past 12 months, and 11 per cent experienced racist crime.

About 30 per cent of the discrimination cases occurred when looking for work or at work, while 14 per cent took place at private services such as bars, restaurants or with landlords.

The Muslims surveyed did not consider religion as the main reason for discrimination.

Among the 25 per cent of Muslim respondents who had been stopped by police over the past year, 40 per cent thought they were stopped on the basis of their ethnicity, while only 10 per cent cited religion as the sole reason.

Wearing traditional or religious clothing such as the Muslim headscarf did not appear to increase the likelihood of discrimination, according to the report.

Longer residence periods reduced discrimination. Only a quarter of those who were born in the country had such experiences, compared to 45 per cent of those who had lived there for less than four years.

Nearly 80 per cent of the Muslim respondents did not report discriminatory incidents to the authorities, meaning that thousands of such cases remain invisible, the report said.

FRA director Morten Kjaerum stressed the need for accessible defence mechanisms and stronger support structures for people facing discrimination.

The discrimination levels experienced by Muslims reflected similar levels for other minority groups.(dpa)

Malay Indian party open to all Malaysians

Klang (Malaysia), May 28 (AN): The newly formed Malaysian Makkal Sakthi Party (MMSP) is not exclusively for Indians and its founders hope that Malaysians of all races will join it.

Pro tem secretary-general Kannan Ramasamy said the MMSP was registered as a party with an open membership.

“The party constitution does not classify the party as Indian-based,” The Satr quoted him, as saying.

He said the party’s open membership was in line with the Makkal Sakthi concept, which was basically about people power regardless of race and religion.

He said the party’s central working committee would have representatives of every ethnicity in the party.

However, Kannan said that due to the many unresolved issues facing the Indian community, the party’s “initial work would revolve around the community.”

“Our pilot project is to look into the problem of statelessness among Indians,” Kannan said.

Kannan also said that the party offered free membership for the first 100,000 who signed up. (ANI)

Africans are the most diverse people on Earth, suggests DNA analysis

London, May 1 (ANI): In a new DNA based study, an international team of scientists has suggested that the Africans are the most diverse people on Earth, as they originated from 14 ancestral groups that mixed freely with each other to create the distinct populations that exist today.

According to a report in Nature News, the study, which included a wide-ranging DNA analysis of Africans, revealed a detailed picture of the continent’s rich genetic diversity, as well as traces of the evolutionary history and migrations of various groups.

Modern humans first evolved in Africa about 200,000 years ago, before migrating to other parts of the world. Today, Africa has more than 2,000 groups with different ethnicities and languages.

But, genetic studies of Africans have been limited to small numbers of populations or have not covered large parts of the genome.

Although geneticists knew that Africans show more genetic diversity within groups than non-Africans do, the details of genome-wide variation in many populations remained unclear.

“We just didn’t know as much as we should about African population genetics,” said Molly Przeworski, from the University of Chicago.

A team led by geneticist Sarah Tishkoff of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia has now published research that includes DNA samples from 2,432 Africans from 113 populations, including groups in Nigeria, Cameroon, Tanzania, Kenya and the Sudan plus non-African samples from Yemen.

They looked for differences at 1,327 sites in the genome and combined the results with existing genetic data from 8 African and 59 non-African groups.

The team then ran statistical analyses to cluster the individuals by genetic similarity and determine their ancestry.

The results confirm that Africans have the highest within-population diversity worldwide, and suggest that they originated from 14 ancestral groups.

Most African populations seem to show genetic traces from multiple ancestral groups, supporting previous archaeological and linguistic evidence for migrations across the continent that would have led to mixing.

The analysis also suggests that hunter-gatherers from different regions and cultures, including pygmies in central Africa and click-language groups in southern Africa, may have descended from one ancestral population.

The genetic clusters generally aligned with ethnicity and language, although the team found exceptions in cases where groups had lost, or possibly replaced, their languages.

While the overall results are not surprising, the study gives a fine-scaled view of genetic variation across a large number of African populations, according to Noah Rosenberg, a geneticist at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, who plans to collaborate with Tishkoff.

“They show just how much diversity in Africa actually exists,” he said. (ANI)

Hirsute women have no reason to feel helpless

London, Apr 17 (ANI): Excessive hairiness can be more than just a cosmetic problem, but women shouldn’t feel helpless because of it.

British doctors have warned that hirsutism is likely to be a sign of an underlying medical condition. But, worry not, for help is at hand.

The docs said that five to 15 percent of women have excess hair, and a hormone disorder the most likely cause in many cases.

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the cause in 70 percent to 80 percent of cases.

Report author, Dr Rebecca Swingler, a specialist registrar in obstetrics and gynaecology at St Michael’s Hospital in Bristol, said the condition can be particularly upsetting for young women.

In addition to PCOS, rarer causes of excessive hairiness include certain tumours and thyroid dysfunction, as well as the use of certain drugs.

According to Swingler, mild cases can be treated cosmetically, but in moderate to severe cases, hormone therapy, such as the oral contraceptive pill and other treatments are present.

Weight loss may also help reduce high levels of the male hormone testosterone which can be an underlying factor in cases of excess hair.

“Often women have spent many years trying to cope with their hirsutism before they seek professional help,” The BBC quoted Swingler, as saying.

“Women need to look at themselves in the context of their family and ethnicity and what is ‘normal’ for them.

“If they notice a change in the pattern of hair growth or they notice they having to wax more often then they should seek help,” she said. (ANI)

Black women three times more likely to develop aggressive breast cancer

Washington, Mar 25 (ANI): Black women are three times more likely than whites to develop aggressive breast cancer, according to a new study.

The research team led by Dr Carol Rosenberg at Boston University School of Medicine has found that despite lifestyle, age and weight black women face three fold risk of developing an aggressive ‘triple negative tumour’.

During the study, the researchers focused on 415 breast cancer cases.

They looked at clinical features particularly patient age, weight and race/ethnicity, and pathological features including the triple-negative pattern – tumours that lack expression of the estrogen receptor, the progesterone receptor and the HER2 gene.

“The odds of having a triple negative tumour were three times higher for black women than for non-black women in the study,” said Rosenberg.

“Previously, it was known that pre-menopausal black women had more triple negative tumours. What we found that was new was that these tumours were just as common in black women diagnosed before or after age 50, and in those who were or were not obese.

“The higher prevalence of triple negative breast tumours in black women in all age and weight categories likely contributes to black women’s unfavourable breast cancer prognosis,” she added. (ANI)

Indians living in UK and Wales at greater risk of drink-related death

Washington, Mar 20 (ANI): Men born in India, but living in England and Wales, are twice as likely to die alcohol-related deaths as the rest of the population, according to a new study led by an Indian-origin scientist.

Conducted by the University of Edinburgh and the Office for National Statistics, the research also found that an equal number of alcohol-related deaths in England and Wales were reported among people born in Scotland or Ireland.

The findings also showed that people born in parts of Asia or Africa were at greater risk of dying from liver cancer, but generally had lower rates of alcohol-related deaths.

On reason for the higher rate of death from liver cancer could be because viral hepatitis is more common in ethnic minority communities.

For the study, the researchers used information on deaths for England and Wales from 1999 to 2003 and figures from the 2001 census to quantify the link between a person’s country of birth and the likelihood of dying from an alcohol-related condition.

The difference in alcohol-related deaths rates could be explained by cultural differences in rates of alcohol consumption.

For example, adults who are Scottish or Irish have been shown on average to drink more than the recommended limit of alcohol.

The study comes in line with recent reports that alcohol-related hospital admissions in the over 65s are rising.

“Deaths from alcohol-related conditions, liver disease and liver cancer are increasing in the UK, but little is known about the role of ethnicity or country of birth. Some ethnic groups appear to be setting an example for the population as a whole with very low rates of liver disease, almost certainly as a result of low alcohol consumption,” said Dr Neeraj Bhala, who led the study.

He added: “These findings show significant differences in death rates by country of birth for both alcohol-related deaths and liver cancer. We now need to focus on developing new policy, research and practical action to help address these differences.”

The study has been published in the Journal of Public Health.(ANI)

Sacked Muslim cop called “f***ing Paki” to sue UK police dept for racism

London, Mar. 10 (ANI): A Muslim cop has claimed that he was forced out of his job after his colleagues referred to him as “f***ing Paki”, and poked fun at his beard.

Former PC Javid Iqbal alleged that Bedfordshire police officers of white ethnicity told him that they were superior to him, and hence forced him to walk home from jobs instead of sending a police car to pick him up.

The Sun quoted Iqbal, as saying, “My beard is an important part of my religion, my identity and my life. There is no other reason for me having a five-inch beard. I am proud of it and it was never a problem in the 18 months I served as a special constable.

I devoted myself to the force voluntarily before I became a PC. I believed in putting something back into society.”

Iqbal had just returned to work after nine months leave on full pay with depression when he was given the boot for poor performance.

Bedfordshire Police stated: “A student officer’s services were dispensed with in August 2008 on grounds of capability.”

However, Iqbal claimed that he was sacked by Bedfordshire Police after fellow officers launched a “smear campaign” making complaints about his performance.

He said officers gave “negative statements” to superiors about him, including an allegation he failed to help a colleague arresting a violent man. He was cleared when CCTV showed he was dealing with other people.

“I’m disgusted I was bullied because of my beliefs. I’ve no doubt institutional racism played a part in this. White officers used to pull faces when they were asked to go on patrol with me,” he said.

He will put his case to an employment tribunal, claiming religious and racial discrimination plus unfair dismissal, saying that shortly after he joined a PC training course in 2006, he became a victim of racial abuse. (ANI)

Black students half as likely to be accepted by Cambridge as White applicants

London, Feb 14 (ANI): Figures published by the Cambridge University shows that Black students are half as likely to be accepted to Cambridge as White applicants.

The success rate in 2008 for the 202 black students who declared their ethnicity was 14 per cent. The success rate for White applicants was 31 per cent, and the overall success rate for applicants was 27 per cent.

Geoff Parks, the Director of Undergraduate Admissions, said that Cambridge is displaying a “serious commitment to try and get to the point when people stop talking about it.”

He conceded that concerns over the make-up of students at the University would not be fully resolved for many years. “I’m not sure it will happen in my lifetime,” he said, “but we could hope it would.”

Equality campaigners and senior academics claimed the statistics enhanced Cambridge’s image as an elitist institution for white, middle class students.

A record 448 minority students who declared their ethnicity gained a place this year – up from 428 in 2008, The Telegraph reported.

Soban Khawaja, chairman of Cambridge University Students’ Union Black Students’ Campaign, blamed low aspirations within some Black communities, rather than the university, for the small number of ethnic applicants.

Statistics show that some colleges are more popular with black applicants than others. Emmanuel College has 16 black students this year, while Newnham and Selwyn only have one. (ANI)

Music boosts teens’ academic performance

Washington, Feb 11 (ANI): Music lessons taken in or out of school can significantly improve reading and mathematic achievement in early childhood and adolescence, according to a new study.

Darby E. Southgate, MA, and Vincent Roscigno, Ph.D., of The Ohio State University have found music participation and parents attending concerts with their children have positive impact on adolescents’ academic performance.

During the study, the researchers analysed the patterns of music involvement and possible effects on math and reading performance for both elementary and high school students.

They found that music is positively associated with academic achievement, especially during the high school years.

The study also found that families with high socioeconomic status participate more in music than do families with lower socioeconomic status.

In addition to social class as a predictor of music participation, ethnicity is also a factor.

“This topic becomes an issue of equity at both the family and school levels,” wrote the authors.

“This has major policy implications for federal, state, and local agencies, as well as knowledge that can help families allocate resources that are most beneficial to children,” they added.

The study appears in the journal Social Science. (ANI)

Miley Cyrus says she’s not racist

Washington, Feb 6 (ANI): Teen sensation Miley Cyrus has denied poking fun at Asians, insisting that recent pictures showing pulling her eyes into a slanted position was nothing more than a “goofy” face.

The Hanna Montana star blasted the media for what she to be a move to make her look like Hollywood’s newest bad girl.

“I’ve also been told there are some people upset about some pictures taken of me with friends making goofy faces!” Fox News quoted her as saying on her official fansite.

“Well, Im sorry if those people looked at those pics and took them wrong and out of context.

“In NO way was I making fun of any ethnicity! I was simply making a goofy face. When did that become newsworthy … It seems someone is trying to make something out of nothing to me … I definitely feel like the press is trying to make me out as the new ‘BAD GIRL’”.

“I feel like now that Britney is back on top of her game again, they need someone to pick on! Lucky me,” she added. (ANI)

Kids can avoid becoming shortsighted by spending time in sun

London, January 7 (ANI): An Australian study suggests that it is a lack of exposure to sunlight, rather than too much time spent watching TV and playing computer games, that damages children”s eyesight.

Conducted by the Australia Research Council, the study suggests that children can avoid becoming shortsighted by spending a minimum of two to three hours in direct sunlight each day.

The findings of this study contrast the widely accepted belief that watching TV, reading or playing computer games ruins vision.

The researchers behind the study—experts from the Australian National University and Sydney University—said that they even did not find any link between the flickering of TV and computer screens and damaged eyesight.

They instead said that exposure to bright light could help regulate the eyeball”s growth in childhood, dramatically reducing the risk of myopia.

During the study, the researchers compared the eyesight of young Chinese Australians and Singaporeans, and found that 30 per cent of six-year-olds in Singapore needed glasses, compared with three per cent of Chinese Australians.

The researchers revealed that both groups spent the same amount of time playing video games, reading and watching TV, but children in Singapore spent an average of 30 minutes each day outside, compared with two hours in Australia.

The figures remained similar even when the team compared children of Chinese descent from both nations, allowing researchers to eliminate ethnicity as a factor.

Professor Ian Morgan, who led the study, said that shortsightedness was traditionally a problem among the highly educated who spent a lot of time indoors.

“There”s a driver for people to become myopic and that”s education. And there”s a brake on people becoming myopic and that”s people going outside,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying.

Discussing the findings of his study, he said that playing video games had the same effect on vision as reading, using the computer had a “neutral” effect, and watching television had no affect at all.

He, however, cautioned that students in their twenties, who spend a lot of time inside reading, should be aware that their eyes needed exposure to natural light to stay healthy. (ANI)

American airline apologises for booting nine Muslim passengers

Washington, Jan 3 (ANI): A US airline has apologized to nine Muslim American passengers from the Washington area who were removed from a flight out of Reagan National Airport.

But a Muslim civil rights group has said that it intends to press a discrimination complaint against the airline for its treatment of the passengers, The Washington Post reported.

“It is incumbent on any airline to ensure that members of the traveling public are not singled out or mistreated based on their perceived race, religion or national origin,” said the complaint filed with the US Department of Transportation by the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), an advocacy group.

“We believe this disturbing incident would never have occurred had the Muslim passengers removed from the plane not been perceived by other travelers and airline personnel as members of the Islamic faith,” said the complaint.

The incident took place aboard an AirTran flight to Orlando is the latest case in which Muslim or South Asian travelers have alleged that they were illegally singled out for scrutiny.

Contradictory accounts given by airline and federal aviation security authorities also highlight the difficulty of decision-making and affixing responsibility in tense situations involving a perceived threat, The Post reported.

Profiling by security agencies based on race, religion or ethnicity has concerned civil rights groups since at least 2001, when airport security escalated in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.

CAIR, for example, publishes a brochure advising Muslim passengers about how to protect their rights during air travel, including how to request respectful searches and how to avoid confrontations with airport security personnel.

Laila Al-Qatami, a spokeswoman for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, said her group tracked about 20 such reports in 2008, although the AirTran case was unusual because the airline initially refused to rebook the passengers.

AirTran initially defended its actions in removing the nine passengers after others reported their remarks about the safest place to sit on an airplane.

But as reports of the incident spread yesterday, the airline said in a statement that it had offered the group a refund for their replacement tickets and free return airfare. It also apologized to 95 other passengers whose flight was delayed about two hours. (ANI)