‘Slumdog Millionaire’ set to take Oscars despite ‘sliming’: expert

London, Feb 22 (IANS) Allegations that ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ is selling ‘poverty porn’ may be part of a Hollywood ‘sliming’ campaign that may yet prove unsuccessful at Sunday night’s Oscar ceremony, a leading Hollywood consultant said in a report published Sunday.

Claims by Hollywood newspapers that the film is ‘poverty porn’ and glamourises slum life appear to have been deliberately placed to play on the ‘liberal guilt of Oscar voters’, the Sunday Times quoted an unnamed Hollywood veteran as saying.

‘Someone has been spinning a barbed idea to a journalist over lunch,’ said one.

The paper said the success of ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ has activated ‘the murky world of sliming’, which was responsible for ‘Crash’ beating favourite ‘Brokeback Mountain’ for the Best Picture Oscar in 2006.

A long-time Hollywood consultant told the paper that ‘Crash’ promoters had posted 100,000 DVDs of the film to people who they thought might influence Oscar judges.

But the consultant said of ‘Slumdog Millionaire’: ‘If it does not win best picture, it will be the biggest upset since ‘Crash’ knocked out ‘Brokeback Mountain’ three years ago.’

Another act of ‘sliming’ ruined the chances of the 2001 Russell Crowe-starrer ‘A Beautiful Mind’, based on a dense book about a schizophrenic mathematician.

‘One consultant ploughed through the book and discovered that on one page – and one page only – the central figure rants against Jews. That page was duly faxed to journalists looking for an angle, and the apparent antisemitism played badly in the heavily Jewish academy,’ the paper said.

However, Tony Angellotti, a respected Oscar consultant whose clients this year include ‘Frost/Nixon’ and ‘WALL-E’, expects ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ to do well Sunday night.

‘This is a film which has come out of nowhere, no one expected this, there are no precedents for this, and yet I expect it to win big on Sunday,’ Angellotti said.
Indo Asian News Service

US offers immigrants citizenship to join army

New York, Feb 15 (IANS) The US Army is wooing skilled immigrants to join it, including those who know Hindi and Tamil, by offering them a chance to become citizens in as little as six months, a media report said.

For foreigners who live in the US on temporary visas, it often takes more than a decade to get citizenship.

As part of the army’s one-year pilot programme, to begin in New York City, it will recruit about 550 temporary immigrants who speak one or more of 35 languages, including Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Igbo (a tongue spoken in Nigeria), Kurdish, Nepalese, Pashto, Russian and Tamil, the New York Times reported Saturday.

Spanish speakers are not eligible.

Immigrants, who are permanent residents holding green cards, and have lived in the US for at least two years will be eligible to join, officials said.

‘The American army finds itself in a lot of different countries where cultural awareness is critical,’ said Lt. Gen. Benjamin C. Freakley, the top recruitment officer for the US Army. ‘There will be some very talented folks in this group.’

The programme will begin small – limited to 1,000 enlistees nationwide in its first year.

Immigrants serving in the US Army can apply to become citizens on the first day of active service, and they can take the oath in as little as six months.

If the pilot programme succeeds as Pentagon officials anticipate, it will expand for all branches of the military. For the army, it could eventually provide as many as 14,000 volunteers a year, or about one in six recruits.

Recruiters expect that the immigrants will have more education, foreign language skills and professional expertise than many Americans who enlist, helping the military to fill shortages in medical care, language interpretation and field intelligence analysis.

‘The army will gain in its strength in human capital,’ General Freakley said, ‘And the immigrants will gain their citizenship and get on a ramp to the American dream.’

The army’s programme will also include about 300 medical professionals to be recruited nationwide. Recruiting will start after the Department of Homeland officials updates an immigration rule in coming days.

Language experts will have to serve four years of active duty, and health care professionals will serve three years of active duty or six years in the reserves. If the immigrants do not complete their service honourably, they could lose their citizenship, the report said.

About 8,000 permanent immigrants with green cards join the US armed forces annually, the Pentagon reports, and about 29,000 foreign-born people currently serving are not American citizens.

Indo Asian News Service

Kadima, Likud close, but sharp pull to the right before election

Kadima, Likud close, but sharp pull to the right before electionTel Aviv – The centrist Kadima party has narrowed its gap with the hardline Likud of former premier Benjamin Netanyahu, but Netanyahu still leads amid a clear pull to the right in Israeli politics, according to opinion polls published in Israel’s leading newspapers, just days before Tuesday’s elections.

The Likud has had a lead of some 5 mandates against Kadima of Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni over the past weeks, but according to the polls published Friday, Livni has narrowed her gap behind Netanyahu to around two or three mandates.

According to the four separate polls published in Yediot Ahronot, Ma’ariv, Ha’aretz and the Jerusalem Post, the opposition Likud can count on 25 to 27 mandates in the
120-seat Knesset, against 23 to 25 mandates for Livni’s ruling Kadima.

The big winner holding the key to any new coalition is likely Avigdor Lieberman, whose ultra-nationalist Israel Beiteinu (Israel Our Home) – currently the fifth-largest party – could become the third-largest in the Israeli parliament.

According to Friday’s polls – the last to be published ahead of Tuesday’s elections – Lieberman’s party can expect to rise from 11 mandates in the outgoing Knesset, to as many as 18 or 19.

That would place him ahead even of the Labour Party of Defence Minister Ehud Barak, which for the first time ever could drop to fourth place with around 14-17 mandates. Labour has for decades been either the ruling or second-largest party in the Knesset.

The bloc of right-wing parties – a minority in the outgoing parliament – is expected to obtain a clear majority with around 65 to 67 seats, against 53 to 55 for the left-to-centre bloc headed by Kadima. That means that even if Livni manages to close her gap with Netanyahu and scores a shock victory, she could expect serious difficulties in forming a “pro-peace” coalition.

The dailies commissioned leading Israeli polling institutes, which each questioned some 1,000 adult Israelis. (dpa)

Acer Aspire 10-inch to be out soon

Acer Aspire 10-inch to be out soonAcer’s most popular netbook, the 8-inch Aspire one, has been launched. However, as they say, every rose has a thorn, this incredibly small netbook too has some flaws. For starters, many feel that an 8-inch screen would apparently be too small and they expect a netbook with at least 10-inch screen.

But it would be really nice to know that soon Acer would come out with 10-inch version of the same model. Though there has been no word on pricing or availability, it has been learnt that the machines with 10-inches screen will run on the Intel Atom N280/N270.

Some of the features of the yet to come Aspire one with 10-inch screen includes 1GB of RAM, 160GB HDD, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, optional 3G connectivity, multi-touch track pad, Windows XP and a SDHC card reader.

Nordic leaders welcome Obama, hope for cooperation

Oslo/Copenhagen  – Nordic leaders Tuesday congratulated new US President Barack Obama on his inauguration and expressed hopes for good cooperation in the future with the new administration.

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he expected “very, very close ties” to remain between the United States and Denmark, and hoped to cooperate on efforts to tackle climate change.

“We expect him to be very active in achieving a climate treaty in Copenhagen in December,” Rasmussen told Danish television news.

Rasmussen also noted Obama’s “very tough stance against terrorism” in his inauguration speech, adding that “there was no doubt that he will continue an active US policy against terrorism.”

In a congratulatory message, Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said he looked forward to cooperating with the president and the United States “to advance peace and development and meet security challenges in Afghanistan. In the Middle East, American leadership is crucial if we are to achieve peace.”

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said Obama’s speech was a “forceful message to the world” that also touched on the United States as a nation.

Bildt told Swedish television that he hoped Obama would use his political honeymoon to outline the necessary parameters for a process for a solution to the Middle East conflict. (dpa)

Try a lighthouse for that unusual weekend break

Cork, Ireland – Anyone keen on a mystical getaway should book now for what could turn out to be a genuinely spooky break in Wicklow Head lighthouse on Ireland’s east coast, about an hour’s drive south of Dublin.

The octagonal, stone tower is one of 15 properties across Ireland, restored by the Irish Landmark Trust, which are available to the public as self-catering holiday accommodation.

Guests should however expect a wait of about one year owing to the popularity of the offbeat vacation venue.

Read a couple of ghost stories and settle down for a cold, wintry night in one of six beautifully-restored, octagonal rooms while the wind howls outside. The accommodation, complete with four-poster beds, is arranged vertically, adding to the exclusivity. But, when in the grip of a spooky tale, think twice about that midnight snack. Climbing all 106 steps to the kitchen was a bit dampening.

The octagonal tower was originally one of a pair built in 1781 as a landmark to end confusion among mariners who wondered whether they were further north on the east coast at Howth or Hook Head. However, its hilltop location and the fact that it was originally lit by lanterns containing tallow candles confused mariners in dense fog. Lightning struck the tower in October 1836, gutting it entirely.

Eventually, a third, new lighthouse was built lower down on Dunbur Head and is the one now guiding mariners. Lighthouse keeper, Brendan Conway and his wife Miriam raised their family there.

“I only have good memories of it. It was a beautiful, unique place to live and we had carloads of visitors every Sunday as a result,” Miriam said.

Ireland’s lighthouses have been automated since May 1994, the year in which Brendan retired. He was later asked back to perform regular maintenance duties which he still carries out.

The Irish Landmark Trust acquired the abandoned tower in 1996 and set about restoring it.

“I never thought we would be renting out the old lighthouse,” said Miriam but in the course of doing so the couple has made friends with guests from Germany, Canada and other countries.

The lighthouse is by no means draughty since the arched windows are set in walls one metre thick, allowing visitors to enjoy the Irish Sea and the surrounding landscape in safety and warmth and spot the regular beams of light from the other tower. Hues of blue and white give it a slightly Mediterranean feel.

The tower is located in Wicklow county, which is renowned as “The Garden of Ireland”, so guests can combine culture and heritage and enjoy the magnificent coastline and mountains. Other nearby attractions include the scenic vale of Avoca, the historic Powerscourt House and Gardens and Glendalough.

For more information, see www.irishlandmark.com. Bookings can be sent to bookings@irishlandmark.com. Tel: 00353-1-6704733, Fax: 00353-1-6704887 (dpa)

Ground staff resume strike at Budapest airport

Ground staff resume strike at Budapest airport Budapest  – One of three terminals at Budapest’s Ferihegy International Airport was closed from 4 pm Monday as ground staff resumed a strike over pay and conditions.

In a repeat of the first days of industrial action six weeks earlier, crowds of hundreds of confused passengers amassed in the check-in area after security gates were closed.

Ground staff began their strike over terms and conditions on December 10.

On December 22, the unions suspended the strike for the holidays and returned to the negotiating table.

“Management has made no serious attempt in the past few weeks to solve the industrial dispute,” the two unions behind the strike said in a statement.

The airport operator Budapest Airport (BA) promptly announced that passengers should expect delays of a few hours, but sought to assure them that no cancellations would be necessary.

In the early evening, hundreds of confused travellers began to fill the check in area after the security gates closed, but checking restarted after about an hour.

As in the two-week strike in the run up to Christmas, passengers were slowed by bottlenecks at the few open security gates in just one of the airport’s three terminals.

Budapest Airport spokesman Domokos Szollar announced the closure of terminal 1 shortly after talks with union leaders broke down on Monday afternoon. All processing of passengers and aircraft was transferred to two other terminals.

“Aircraft are leaving from terminal 2B and ticketing is taking place at 2A,” said Szollar. He added that 164 of 243 ground staff scheduled to work remained at their posts despite the unions’ call for industrial action.

In their strike, ground staff are demanding that Budapest Airport (BA), a subsidiary of the German firm Hochtief, end a restructuring programme and extend an existing collective employment contract.

Other demands included backdated overtime payments and a pledge from management that there will be no job cuts before 2010 and no further outsourcing.

Although dozens of flights were cancelled in the chaotic first few days of the December strike, management managed to restore a full schedule.

All available staff were concentrated at one terminal and, in a controversial move, temporary security staff were drafted in from Greece.

“Despite the strike restarting on Monday, Budapest Airport is ready to resume negotiations at 10 am on Tuesday,” said Szollar. (dpa)

Pietersen also tried to get Flower ousted

London, Jan 9 (ANI): Andy Flower, who is tipped to be the temporary replacement for the sacked Peter Moores, was one of the backroom staff that Kevin Pietersen wanted England to get rid of.

A senior official of the England and Wales Cricket Board said: “Pietersen wanted half of them out and certainly Andy Flower. I don’t know what he was hoping to achieve but I”ve never encountered an ego quite like it in cricket. He wanted to run the show.”

Another management board member said: “I did hear that Kevin wanted Andy out.”

Flower did not expect to be named as interim coach under Pietersen for the Caribbean trip, but said: “I had heard something about this, but not enough to make a comment. I have always had a good relationship with KP, but we have not spoken in the past few days.”

A spokesman for Pietersen refused to deny the story last night, The Guardian reported.

The revelation confounds the notion that Pietersen only respects coaches with international standing. While Moores was a moderate county cricketer who was never close to international recognition, Flower was one of the finest players of his time.

One of Moores’ closest allies, Flower played for Essex between 2002-6 and became England’s assistant coach in May 2007. It was the first big decision Moores made as coach. (ANI)

Bangkok motorists caught in the act

 Bangkok motorists caught in the act Bangkok – Bangkok drivers who love to run red lights are now being captured by new traffic cameras, a report said Friday.

The almost 30,000 motorists who have been snapped jumping lights during the first week of the cameras’ operation can expect postal fines of 500 baht (14.31 dollars), said deputy city police chief police Major-General Pharnu Kerdlarpphon.

In a city where frustrated drivers frequently run red lights rather than suffer yet another lengthy wait, people may take time to alter their behaviour, he said.

Every offender will have points knocked off his or her driver’s licence, with repeat offenders temporarily losing their licence.

Some drivers already seem to be hitting the brakes rather than risk being snapped running a red light, according to the police. “I think that the number of road accidents will go down as a result,” Pharnu told the Nation newspaper.

Cameras snap details of a car’s speed and location, sending the information automatically to the Central Control Centre’s computer system along with the time and date.

Police are ready to stamp down hard on any motorists who alter their number plates rather than give up their light-jumping habits. (dpa)

Surrendered militants resort to hunger strike in Manipur

Imphal (Manipur), Jan.8 (ANI): Surrendered militants staged a hunger strike here on Wednesday over demands for proper rehabilitation and jobs.

Around 37 activists belonging to groups like the People”s Liberation Army (PLA) and the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) participated in the hunger strike.

The former insurgents claimed that they had been evicted by the police and civic officials from a relief camp that was once occupied by the Second Commando Battalion of the Manipur Police.

The authorities, however,contend that the site was earmarked as staff quarters for the police personnel.

“Eighty-four people used to stay together over here, out of which 47 people got the appointment (job) letters. But 37 persons are yet to receive any appointment letter. We want the Government to rehabilitate all of us. We want to lead a secure life with our family. We will be sitting here till the time the Government fulfills our demands,” said Mohammed Jalaluddin, a former member of the KCP.

“We are facing a difficult time. We expect that the Government should come forward to help us. We want the Government to arrange a place for us where we can live safely,” added M. Somi Singh, a surrendered PLA militant.

The former insurgents pointed out that the authorities are yet to comply with the order of the Guwahati High Court of clearing all outstanding stipends due to them within two months.

This order was passed on August 27, 2008. (ANI)

Ponting says Smith’s grit in SCG Test, the bravest thing he has ever seen

Sydney, Jan.8 (ANI): Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting has said that Graeme Smith’s decision to come out to bat on the last day of the SCG Test with a broken finger, is the bravest thing he has ever seen.

Smith had to be dressed by teammates before batting in extreme pain with a broken left hand and a busted right elbow to try to salvage a draw in an amazing climax to the SCG Test.

His incredible effort was ultimately in vain but he felt the jarring pain of 17 balls in 26 minutes before being bowled by Mitchell Johnson with only 10 balls left in fading light.

South Africa”s Captain Courageous was in so much pain he was not even able to lift the trophy after play to celebrate South Africa”s historic 2-1 series win in Australia.

Ponting went to Smith on the ground and told his opposite number it was one of the bravest things he had ever seen on a sporting field.

“I said that to him after the game. That showed a lot of courage. That”s what every team looks to from their leader. To show that fighting spirit, to stand up when needed, to get out and do a job no matter how sore or tired you might be,” the Courier Mail quoted Ponting, as saying.

Smith borrowed Jacques Kallis”s shirt and a hamburger-stained sweater from Paul Harris and revealed he had not taken any pain medication.

“I didn”t expect to go out. I think deep inside I didn”t really want to go out there. I had Morne (Morkel) dressing me and putting my shoes on and putting on my pads. I decided I was going to go and give it my best shot, if I got a first-baller at least I tried,” Smith said.

Spin king Shane Warne couldn”t believe his eyes when Smith turned up at the crease: “It was just unbelievable when he did that. That was just amazing courage to stand there for his team.”

Smith gave Australia many nervous moments before they could savour the win just six minutes from the scheduled close of play. (ANI)

Indian women”s hockey teams prepare for foreign tours

Bangalore, Jan 8 (ANI): The Indian junior and senior women”s hockey teams are training seriously in Bangalore for forthcoming international tours.

The senior team will take part in a four-nation tournament in Santiago, Chile from January 17.

The 22-member squad is expected to fly into Santiago on January 15, where they will play against Italy, Argentina and host Chile.

“A mix camp of junior and senior teams have been organised here. Our junior team is going to Australia and senior is flying to Chile and then to Argentina. The camp has been organised to achieve better understanding and to minimise our shortcomings. We want our coaches to help us in minimising the few shortcomings in us,” said Surinder Kaur, captain of Indian senior women”s hockey team.

Indian women hockey coach M K Kaushik said he had reminded the players that cent per cent commitment and mental strength is required for success.

“We work together as one unit. We expect better results in the future, but of course then 100 per cent commitment is required in this period of preparation,” said Kaushik.

After the four-nation tourney in Chile, the Indian team will fly to Argentina for a four-Test series to be played between January 24 and 29.

Although the Indian women”s hockey failed to qualify for the Beijing Olympiad in 2008, this team hopes to fare better. (ANI)

Space is closer to Earth than believed

Washington, Jan 8 (ANI): Space is not as far from the Earth’s surface as people think, for scientist have discovered that the ionosphere, the layer of electrically charged particles that comprises the outer atmosphere, is thinner than expected, and cooler too.

Knowledge of the shape and size of the ionosphere may help in determining how particularly dense regions within it may distort radio, radar and navigation signals, which can make communications and satellite-based systems less reliable.

“In order to predict how severe those distortions will be, it”s necessary to know how big those structures in the ionosphere are and where they exist,” Discovery News quoted Roderick Heelis, with the Space Sciences Center at the University of Texas in Dallas, as saying.

The researchers used a suite of NASA instruments called CINDI, which fly on the U.S. Air Force Communication/Navigation Outage Forecast System (C/NOFS) satellite between 250 miles and 530 miles around the equator.

CINDI is an acronym for Coupled Ion Neutral Dynamics Investigation, and works by separately measuring ionized and neutral particles at altitudes where the Air Force satellite flies.

During the summer of 2008, a time when the solar activity was unusually quiescent, the researchers found that the ionosphere was quite thin at those altitudes.

“It was a real fortuitous combination of low solar activity and the satellite”s [range]. We didn”t expect to be able to look at the top of the ionosphere in all places,” said Hellis.

Based on previous research, computer models had predicted the ionosphere to be about 370 miles above Earth at night and about 620 miles up during the day, which varied due to temperature and other factors.

However, using CINDI, the researchers found that the transition between the ionosphere and space was about 250 miles above Earth at night and about 500 miles up during the day.

The ionosphere is primarily caused by extreme ultraviolet energy from the sun.

The findings were presented at the annual American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco last month. (ANI)

No credible threat information related to Obama’s oath taking ceremony: DHS

Washington, Jan 8 (ANI): The US Department of Homeland Security and other federal agencies have released a bulletin reminding local law enforcement that the inauguration could present an enticing target for potential terrorists.

But the bulletin states that there is currently no credible threat information related to President elect Barck Obama’s oath taking ceremony on January 20, CBS News reported.

The DHS has no plans to adjust any of the national threat levels, but is reminding the public to remain vigilant.

The Secret Service also announced on Wednesday that bridges connecting Northern Virginia to Washington, D.C., will be closed to most traffic on Inauguration Day, and a 3.5 square miles corridor of the nation’s capital will be shut off starting on January 19, the day before the Inauguration.

The security perimeter is larger than what has been cordoned off for previous inaugurations.

Estimates have varied over the last few weeks, but officials expect two to three million people to cram into Washington to witness Barack Obama taking the oath of office. (ANI)

Blockade stops UK firm Vedanta from entry to tribal lands in Orissa

Kondh (Orissa, India), Jan.7 (ANI): A blockade mounted by more than 50 protestors stopped British mining company Vedanta entering the land of the Dongria Kondh and other Kondh tribes under cover of darkness last night.

According to a press release issued by Survival International, the FTSE 100 company plans to mine bauxite on the Dongria Kondh’s sacred mountain in the state of Orissa, laying waste to the forests they depend on for their survival.

Tuesday night’s action follows high level meetings at the weekend between Vedanta’s billionaire chairman Anil Agarwal and Orissa Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik, who backs the mine.

After the meeting, Agarwal told journalists that mining would start ‘within a month or two’.

India’s Supreme Court has approved Vedanta’s plans, but the mine is yet to receive the environmental clearance required for it to go ahead.

The stand-off between local villagers and Vedanta’s bulldozers at the blockade site continues.

Protestor Ajun Chandi, who has received a series of threatening phone calls from Vedanta, says, ‘You must let the whole world know what Vedanta is doing.’

Survival’s director Stephen Corry said today, “Vedanta won”t be able to hide its work by invading the Kondhs’ land at night. It doesn”t even have official approval. Whether or not it gets it, the Dongria aren’t likely to agree to their homeland and most sacred site being destroyed. Vedanta is trying to intimidate the tribespeople. This is an appalling way for a major British company to behave, it isn”t going to work and Vedanta must now expect international opposition to grow.” (ANI)

Drug-runner who filmed himself masturbating at 150 km/h jailed

Melbourne, Jan 7 (ANI): A drug-runner who admitted to police that he had been masturbating while driving at 150 km/h has been sentenced to two months jail.

On July 16 last year, Brendon Alan Erhardt, 39, was pulled over by police, 25km south of Daly Waters.

He told the officers he had been masturbating shortly before being stopped for speeding on the 130km/h stretch of the Stuart Hwy.

He had filmed himself travelling at a speed of 150kmh.

Erhardt was coming back to the Northern Territory from Adelaide, where he had used an inheritance from his dead mother to buy a Holden SV6 and 5kg of cannabis.

In his car, police found 10 packages of cannabis hidden in a blue esky in the boot, two cannabis plants on the back seat, two drug pipes and a loaded .22 rifle.

“(It is) conduct one might expect of a much younger immature person to engage in,” the Age quoted Magistrate Sue Oliver, as telling Darwin Magistrate”s Court.

Erhardt pleaded guilty” to six charges, including carrying an unregistered and loaded firearm, driving dangerously and driving unlicensed.

Magistrate Oliver said his behaviour was strange and humiliating, while sentencing him to two months in prison.

“The circumstances of the driving are bizarre to say the least. And I would have thought it would cause him some embarrassment to have it aired in a public forum,” she said.

Erhardt has been slapped with 2,000-dollar fine and has also been disqualified from driving for six months. (ANI)

Truckers strike pushes up commodity prices in Delhi, other parts of country

New Delhi, Jan 7 (ANI): A nationwide strike by tens of thousands of truckers entered its third day on Wednesday, pushing the prices of vegetables and fruits up mildly in New Delhi.

Although the impact of the strike was not felt much in Delhi on Tuesday, vegetable traders said prices have slightly gone up at the Azadpur Market.

“The strike has led to a hike in the prices of the vegetables,” said Ashok Kumar, a vegetable trader.

The strike has also affected the livelihood of the labourers employed by traders at Azadpur market for loading and unloading sacks of vegetables and fruits.

Due to the strike, the number of trucks coming into the market has reduced, leaving the laborers with less work.

“The strike has affected our livelihood. Earlier, we used to get enough work, but these days there is less work,” said Surender Yadav, a labourer.

On Tuesday, Union Shipping and Road Transport Minister T. R. Baalu appealed to the transporters to call off their strike and opt for a negotiated settlement.

“I can only request the transporters to currently withdraw the strike and go for negotiable settlement,” said Baalu.

In this context, Baalu said that the oil sectors have incurred losses that need to be compensated.

“The oil sectors have suffered loss for the past four to five years. The accumulated loss they have to recover, but they cannot recover overnight. And you cannot expect overnight industry reduce also,” added Baalu.

The All India Motor Transport Congress, which represents around six million truckers across the country called for the indefinite strike from Monday, demanding reduction of diesel prices and withdrawal of the service tax on truckers.

The truckers have vowed to stay off the roads until their demands are met.

Reportedly, consequent to the call for the strike, there was about 10-20 per cent of normal freight traffic in India on Monday, the transport authorities said.

Over 70 per cent of freight in India moves by road, and truckers have benefited from a booming economy that requires the transport of steel and cement for construction.

But the country”s 200,000 transport companies have been hit in recent months by a slowing economy, higher interest rates on vehicle loans and greater competition from the railways.

India cut prices of petrol and diesel on December 6 after crude oil tumbled, but the economy, has shown signs of slowing amid the global financial crisis after growing at nine per cent or more in the past three years.

Inflation is at a near ten-month low and the truckers” strike is not expected to have any long-term adverse impact. (ANI)

Will Ferrell to take ‘Bushism’ to Broadway, HBO

Washington, Jan 7 (ANI): Will Ferrell is taking his impersonation of US President George W Bush to Broadway and HBO.

The actor will star in “You”re Welcome America: A Final Night With George W. Bush” at New York”s Cort Theater, with previews in line for Inauguration Day.

The show will describe the journey of Bush from his college days and time as the governor of Texas to the 2000 race for president and his two terms in office.

Ferrell told CNN he likes that Bush “never thinks he”s wrong.”

“He”s arrogant with a school-boy attitude, and combine that with the fact that he is commander in chief — and, unfortunately, it”s very funny,” he said.

According to Ferrell, viewers should “expect the unexpected” from the show.

The show will premiere on February 5 and run through March 15.

HBO has also picked up the show, to air live on an undetermined date. (ANI)

Islamic extremists have drawn up Brit Jew hit list

London, Jan.7 (ANI): Hate-filled Islamic extremists are reported to be drawing up a “hit list” of Britain’s leading Jews.

The Sun reports British anti-terror expert Glen Jenvey as saying that he is convinced that the online forum Ummah is being used to prepare a deadly backlash against British Jews.

Jenvey’s warning came as Europe was hit by anti-Semitic attacks over Israel’s push into the Gaza Strip.

On the Ummah site, “Saladin1970” asks for help compiling “a list of those who support Israel”.

Saladin1970 gives a link to the Power 100 list of top British Jews.

“Those listed should treat it very seriously. Expect a hate campaign and intimidation by 20 or 30 thugs,” Jenvey warns.

His warning came as Al-Qaeda’s second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri called on Muslims yesterday to strike Western and Israeli targets “wherever you can”. (ANI)

Arabs renew call for UN ceasefire in conflict

New York – Arab governments on Monday called on the UN Security Council to order an end to hostilities in Gaza Strip, hoping that the group would overcome opposition by the United States for such a move.

Palestinian Authority Foreign Minister Riyad al-Malki said Arab foreign ministers attending meetings at UN headquarters in New York planned to submit a new draft resolution and ask the 15-nation council to adopt it on Tuesday.

Al-Malki said the Arab ministers were working through a “proper channel” to convince Washington to support the text.

Arab officials attending meetings at UN headquarters in New York included the foreign ministers of Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Libya and Morroco. Other Arab governments will be represented by their UN ambassadors.

Arab diplomats said they would demand that Israel reopen crossings into Gaza and that an international force be deployed in that territory in addition to the end of hostilities. Those elements will be included in a new draft resolution to be presented to the UN Security Council for a possible vote on Tuesday.

The UN said the humanitarian situation in Gaza has “dramatically deteriorated” since Israel launched the military campaign on the ground on Saturday. John Holmes, the chief of UN humanitarian operations, said Gazans are faced with a worsened living conditions and health services. The UN staff assisting Gazans have reached the state of exhaustion after days of fighting.

The US opposed a previous text submitted by the League of Arab States, branding it one-sided because it singled out and condemned only Israel in the conflict against Hamas militants in Gaza Strip.

In Washington, the US said it was pushing for a ceasefire that would require Hamas to halt rocket attacks into Israel but would also open crossings into the isolated enclave, US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Monday.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke to more than a dozen counterparts over the weekend seeking support for the proposal, which would also address tunnels used by Hamas to smuggle weapons from Egypt, McCormack said.

Asked whether Hamaas would support the new text proposed by Arab governments, Al-Maliki said: “We are really working in order to get a resolution that will be implementable. What’s important here is we are looking for the interests of the Palestinian people.”

Al-Malki said the Palestinian Authority was “disappointed” that US President-elect Barack Obama has so far failed to voice a position on the Israel-Hamas fighting. He pointed out that Obama had spoken out against the terrorist attacks in Mumbai last month.

“We expect him (Obama) to take a strong position as soon as possible,” al-Malki said.

Washington is in a transitional period with Obama expected to take over the White House January 20. Obama’s team has adopted a mantra that there is only one US president at a time.

Earlier Monday, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon renewed appeals for the international community to act to halt the fighting in the Gaza Strip.

Ban said the Security Council needs to play a central role in ending the conflict and that he will continue to work with its members to find a solution.

After the closed council meeting Saturday night, Jean-Maurice Ripert, French ambassador to the UN and current holder of the Security Council’s rotating chairmanship, said there was a strong consensus among the 15 member countries to issue an opinion on the conflict. The overwhelming majority would demand an immediate ceasefire from all sides, he said.

At the time, US Ambassador Alejandro Wolff said that it would damage the Security Council’s credibility to make demands that go ignored. He said that Israel as a member of the world community should not be equated with a terrorist organization like Hamas, the Palestinian militant movement that controls the Gaza Strip.

The Security Council has been unable to forge a resolution on the violence since an Israeli bombing campaign began on December 27, in response to stepped up rocket fire toward southern Israel by Gaza militants. (dpa)