2000-year-old Roman amphitheatre discovered in Israel

Washington, September 19 (ANI): A team of archaeologists has discovered a 2000-year-old Roman amphitheatre near Tiberias in Israel.

According to a report in the Haaretz newspaper, Archeologist, Doctor Valid Atrash, from the Israel Antiquities Authority, said that the remnants of the Roman amphitheatre peaks from 15 meters below ground.

The 1990 findings came as a surprise to the archeologists digging near Mount Berniki in the Tiberias hills as there are no references to such a place anywhere in scriptures.

Only at the beginning of 2009, 19-years after the primary discovery, did the uncovering of the theatre in its entirety begin.

The late Professor Izhar Hirshfeld and Yossi Stefanski, the archeologists heading the excavation, initially assessed the remains to belong to the 2nd or 3rd century CE, but quickly realized that they go all the way back to the beginning of the 1st century CE, closer to the founding of Tiberias.

“The most interesting thing about the amphitheatre is its Jewish context,” said Hirshfeld upon the discovery.

“Unlike Tzipori, which was a multi-cultural city, Tiberias was a Jewish city under Roman rule. The findings demonstrate the city’s pluralistic nature and cultural openness, a fact uncommon in those days,” Hirshfeld added.

According to Atrash, in light of the findings, Tiberias appears as particularly liberal for a city that was established over 2000 years ago.

He added that “the theatre was enormous, and being so it attracted a lot of attention. It seated over 7000 people, and appears to have been a prominent landmark for the entire area.”

Zohar Oved, Mayor of Tiberias, said that the discovery of the amphitheatre is undoubtedly “one of the most important findings in the history of the Jewish people” and is planned to open to the public as part of Tiberias archeological gardens in the near future. (ANI)

‘Two for one’ breast boosting technique not as viable as it seems

London, Sep 16 (ANI): A technology that was claimed as the ultimate solution to give a boost to women’s breasts by using fat removed from thighs is not viable as it seems, say experts.

Mel Graham, chairman of the Harley Medical Group, recently claimed that the “two for one” procedure could extract excess fat from where it was not wanted – the belly, hips or thighs – and relocate it to the bust.

However, rival cosmetic surgeons criticised the “hype” surrounding the new operation, insisting that it was “premature”.

“(This) is setting consumers up for disappointment and there are many reasons for vigilance,” the Independent quoted Dai Davies, of Plastic Surgery Partners in Harley Street, as saying.

He said that doctors have long been experimenting with innumerable aids to give women larger busts, including using body fat as a procedure.

The technique of removing fat by liposuction, and then injecting it into the chest has been tried for almost 20 years but with limited success, said Davies.

“Where you are injecting small amounts of fat into the face, which has a good blood supply, there is good evidence that it works. Most plastic surgeons would agree there is a place for it. But this involves injecting a large blob of fat into the breast area. Fat consists of living cells and living cells must have a blood supply, otherwise they die,” he explained.

In a Japanese study last year, 230 women underwent fat transfer, and it was found that, on average, half the fat injected was lost and all the women needed a second procedure after a year.

There are also fears that dying fat cells could cause micro-calcification in the breast leading to difficulties in breast screening and an increase in biopsies – an invasive procedure to remove tissue to check for cancer.

“I don’t think we should be a testing ground for all these techniques. You are feeding on a susceptible group of people. There should be controls but, sadly, the Government has decided it won’t implement regulation,” said Davies.

Professor David Sharpe, a plastic surgeon in Yorkshire and the founding chairman of the breast special interest group of BAAPS, said: “This sounds like another example of creative marketing. Breast implants are a well-tried and tested method. At the moment, I would stick with that.”

Mel Braham, chairman of the Harley Medical Group, said results of a US trial to be presented next month would demonstrate the success of the operation.

“The results will be assessed by our medical board and, if approved, the operation will be introduced next year. I don’t take risks with patients. I am confident this is a safe procedure,” he said. (ANI)

VHP leader accuses Advani of using Ayodhya issue for personal gains

New Delhi, Sep. 9 (ANI): Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader Ashok Singhal on Wednesday accused BJP leader LK Advani of taking out the Rath Yatra for personal political gain.

Advani, he said, should now think about stepping down from the post of Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha.

He also noted that the BJP had deviated from its founding policies and that is the reason for its apparent ‘sinking’.

Singhal’s statements coincide with the times when the saffron party is facing rough weather and controversies have become an order of the day.

The no-show in Lok Sabha polls, revelation on Advani’s lie on the Kandhar episode, Jaswant Singh’s controversial book on Mohammad Ali Jinnah and his subsequent expulsion from the party are the several episodes which hit the party’s image badly. (ANI)

Military rule damaged Pak Army’s image: General Abbas

Rawalpindi, Aug 24 (ANI): The rule of former Pakistan army chiefs-General Ayub Khan, General Yahya Khan, General Zia-ul-Haq and General Pervez Musharraf had badly damaged the image of the armed forces, according to Director-General Inter Services Public Relations Major- General Athar Abbas.

The views of Major- General Abbas were expressed in an article available on ISPR’s website.

“The founding father envisaged Pakistan as a sovereign, modern and democratic state based on the principles of equality and justice. The failure of successive governments to establish a tolerant political culture, viable political system and good governance has driven people to a state of disillusionment,” he writes.

“In the past we have tried various systems but have not succeeded. The stunted development of our political system is mainly due to the fact that initially our state developed as a ‘security state’ due to incomplete partition and no urgency was felt to have a constitution.

“Subsequent corruption and incompetence led to frequent near collapse situations making way for military interventions. As soon as military took over, realising that it could do better, it tended to prolong the stay in power. This led to concentration of power in one hand and eroded the system of checks and balances,” Major General Abbas adds.

The unfortunate death of Quaid-e-Azam soon after partition left a political vacuum and chaos. Commander-in-Chief General Ayub Khan’s appointment as the Defence Minister, while he was serving, was the instance of the political government voluntarily ceding authority to the army.

The result was a bloodless coup in 1958. His initial period, 1958-1961 was known as golden era. Yahya Khan’s brief period from 1969-1972 resulted in separation of East Pakistan.

During Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s regime 1972-1977 the army stayed out of politics. The rigging of 1977 elections brought the army back in politics. General Zia’s era (1977-1988) fully entrenched the army in politics and started the era of Islamisation of the society.

During the period from 1988-1999, power kept shuttling between Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif. The era where the government functioning came to a grinding halt several times and governance suffered badly due to infighting of politicians.

General Musharraf ruled from 1999-2008. It was a military cum quasi-military rule that achieved many things but resulted in a severe political turmoil and badly affected the image of Army. (ANI)

Jonathan Ross is World’s Most Influential ‘Twitterer’

London, May 7 (ANI): Despite having fewer followers, TV host Jonathan Ross has pipped US President Barack Obama and Downing Street to become the most influential ‘Twitterer’ in the world, says a new research.

Ross beat celebrity blogger Perez Hilton and comedian Stephen Fry and US actor Ashton Kutcher to nab the first position.

Brand agency JCPR produced the ‘Twitter index’, which measured influence, instead of popularity, the Telegraph reported.

With the help of a specially developed algorithm, the agency tracked famous Twitter users around the world, ranking the top 200 based on the number of followers each user had, as well as the interest their posts generated among followers. This also included the number of times their name was mentioned and how many times they were ‘retweeted’ by others.

The global top 20 included Father Ted and The It Crowd writer Graham Lineham, who came in fifth, Downing Street at 12th, Jason Bradbury, host of Channel Five’s Gadget show at 13th and Phillip Schofield, ITV’s This Morning presenter, at 14th.

Jackie Cooper, founding partner of JCPR, said: “We are always trying to help our clients understand the influence that certain celebrities have over particular sections of society. Behind all the glitz and glamour that goes with fame, it’s important to understand where real influence lies, which is often very different to mere popularity. The JCPR Twitter Index helps us define that within the hugely dynamic social media space.” (ANI)

Iceland heading to first leftist government in its history

Reykjavik – Iceland was set to get its first leftist majority government since its founding 65 years ago, latest election returns early Sunday showed.

With 82 per cent of the ballots counted, the Social Democrats and Greens had gained 52.7 per cent of the vote in Saturday’s parliamentary elections.

This would give the coalition 34 seats in the 63-seat Althing parliament.

In the last elections four years ago, the Social Democrats and Greens had garnered 41.1 per cent of the vote.

The two parties had been governing as an interim minority coalition after the previous grand coalition government under Geir Haarde, 58, resigned in January, in the wake of Iceland’s economic meltdown and mass street protests.

Haarde’s conservative Independence Party gained just 23.9 per cent backing, according to the latest returns, plunging from their 36.1 per cent showing in the last elections.

With the early returns showing her coalition heading towards victory, Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir promised a quick initiative to gain entry for the country of 320,000 people into the European Union. (dpa)

HIV positive German female popstar accused of unprotected sex released

London, April 25 (ANI): The HIV positive German pop star, who had been taken into custody on suspicion of infecting an unaware partner with the disease, has been released.

Nadja Benaissa allegedly had unprotected intercourse with three people, between 2004 and 2006, leaving at least one infected.

The 26-year-old, who rose to fame as one of the founding members of the successful all-female pop band No Angels, was claimed to have left her partners in the dark about her condition, reports the BBC.

She was arrested on April 11 in Frankfurt just before she was slated to stage a solo performance.

Her attorneys said she should enjoy the presumption of innocence and that there was no evidence that she infected anyone.

A spokesman for a court in the town of Darmstadt said her release was subject to certain undisclosed conditions.

The songwriter faces a possible count of serious bodily harm and could face up to 10 years in jail if found guilty, as per reports. (ANI)

Former IOC member, African football boss Halim dies

Lausanne, Switzerland – Abdel Mohamed Halim of Sudan, a former African football supremo and International Olympic Committee member, the IOC said on Friday. He was 99 years old.

Halim was an IOC member 1968-1982 and later an honorary member of the Olympic body.

He made a big contribution to African football as founding member of the continent’s football federation in 1957, organizer of the first African Nations Cup the same year in his native Sudan, and African football supremo 1987-1988.

He was also an executive committee member of the world governing body FIFA and in of several FIFA commissions.

“In all his activities, he promoted the Olympic values,” the IOC said in its statement. “The IOC expresses its deepest sympathy to Abdel Mohamed Halim9s family.”

Away from sport, the physician Halim was mayor of Khartoum 1953-1960, a hospital director and head of Sudan’s medical association. (dpa)

Indians in Nepal can’t be bothered to vote

Kathmandu, April 17 (IANS) They think nothing of hopping across the border to India to attend a wedding, obtain medical treatment or attend business conferences.

But tens of thousands of Indians living in Nepal can’t be bothered to make the journey home to cast their votes.

This year, as India embarked on a nearly month-long parliamentary polls from Thursday, there was a strong campaign in that country to get the inert voter to the polling booth.

However, the campaign has not trickled down to India’s northern neighbour Nepal; nor has a succession of Indian governments taken any steps to ensure Indians living in Nepal are able to cast their votes in the Himalayan republic itself.

Shiva Raj Singh Raghav, immediate past president of the Indian Citizens’ Association (ICA) in Nepal, estimates that there are about 300,000-400,000 Indians and people of Indian origin living in Nepal as long-term residents.

The 50-year-old, a hardware wholesaler from Uttar Pradesh, has himself been residing in Nepal for the last 25 years.

‘The ICA had petitioned the Indian Embassy in Kathmandu, asking for the government to enable the Indians registered with the embassy to cast their votes in Nepal,’ Raghav told IANS. ‘But the embassy expressed its inability to do so.’

In addition to the long-term Indian residents, Raghav estimates there are several thousands of Indians who come and go across the open border.

Indians living in Nepal include businessmen, professionals working for Indian organisations or joint ventures like banks, telecom and hydropower companies, embassy staffers, army personnel and teachers.

Prem Lashkari, founding president of the Nepal-India Friendship Society, says one reason for the inertia is that businessmen, whether they live in Nepal or India, prefer to stay away from politics.

His friend West Bengal lad Praksh Dugar, who owns a construction business in Nepal, is a prime example.

‘The last time I voted in my home constituency Murshidabad was eight years ago,’ says Dugar, who is now planning to return to his village Nabogram and take the plunge in politics. ‘I vote if I am home during the elections. But I have never gone home just to vote.’

Lashkari, a jeweller who has been living in Nepal since 1971, thinks the young generation could be different.

‘Now more and more young people are becoming active,’ he says. ‘They realise that businessmen too should have representatives in the government. We failed to press for postal votes or even a voting booth in Nepal. Maybe they would take up the issue one day.’

The Indian community in Nepal boasts of big names like Vikram Singh Deo, the former ruler of a principality in Rajasthan whose daughter Himani, wedded to Nepal’s former flamboyant crown prince Paras, was the crown princess of Nepal; Shalini and Rakesh Wadhwa, who head Nepal’s billion-rupee chain of casinos; and R. Saraf, who owns two of Kathmandu’s most elegant hotels, the Yak and Yeti and Hyatt.

Last year, the US government made arrangements so that Americans in Nepal could take part in their presidential elections.

New Resource Bank Appoints Vincent Siciliano as CEO

New Chief Executive Brings 30 Years of Banking Experience

SAN FRANCISCO–(Business Wire)–
New Resource Bank has tapped Vincent Siciliano, a longtime finance executive who
has held the top spot at several California banks, as its new chief executive
officer.

“We are pleased to have such a qualified and values-aligned CEO join the bank
and its dedicated staff,” said New Resource`s recently appointed Chairman of the
Board Mark A. Finser.

Mr. Siciliano brings a wealth of management experience to New Resource Bank. He
served as Chief Executive Officer at International Savings Bank, San Diego`s
largest local savings and loan; President and Chief Executive Officer of the
Danielson Trust, a $1.5 billion trust company providing investment management
services, and as Chief Operating Officer at First National Bank.

In 2001, he was hired as the CEO of 1st Pacific Bank of California. Under his
management, 1st Pacific was named the best-performing de novo bank in California
by The Findley Reports, a banking consulting firm.

A long-time environmentalist, Mr. Siciliano double majored in Human Biology and
Environmental Engineering at Stanford, and received a Master`s Degree in
Environmental Planning at the University of California at Berkeley. He also
worked for the California Coastal Commission and the federal equivalent program
in Washington, D.C. Mr. Siciliano and his wife Susan live in San Francisco.

As CEO of New Resource Bank, Mr. Siciliano says he will keep the bank focused on
providing high-level customer service and supporting clients engaged in green
and sustainable enterprises.

“I`ve learned through the years that a bank`s success is measured in the
achievements of its clients,” said Mr. Siciliano. “New Resource Bank has
established an impressive track record in a short period of time, funding some
of the most innovative, creative and sustainable businesses in California. I am
proud and excited to now be leading the effort to enhance New Resource Bank`s
stature as a new model of lending institution focused on a triple bottom line -
one that balances a commitment to the community and the environment as well as
economic interests for the benefit of all of our stakeholders.”

New Resource Bank opened in late 2006 as a bank built “by the people and for the
people” of their community. The founding organizers and initial shareholders
brought together an unparalleled blend of proven entrepreneurial success along
with banking expertise and community leadership.

Currently, the bank has over $170 million in assets and serves over 2,000
clients.

New Resource Bank received a “Reader`s Choice Award” by San Francisco Magazine
in 2008 and this year won the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency`s
Environmental Award.

For more information, visit www.newresourcebank.com.

New Resource Bank
Rosita Nunes, 415-995-8125

Copyright Business Wire 2009

Nationalist Hindu leader Advani eyes India’s top post

New Delhi – Lal Krishna Advani, who fled to India from Pakistan as a refugee and emerged as the country’s top Hindu nationalist leader, has brought about a marked transformation in India’s political scene over the past two decades.

The 81-year-old leader of India’s main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, Advani has helmed the rise of the BJP largely on the basis of Hindu-Muslim tensions and a campaign to have a Hindu temple dedicated to the Hindu god Ram built on the site of a demolished mosque in the northern city of Ayodhya.

In recent years, however, Advani, who is among India’s most versatile politicians, has attempted an image makeover from hardliner to moderate.

He has also tried to connect with young voters ahead of this year’s election, carrying out a vigorous internet campaign and writing a blog. The octogenarian recently tried out some weights at a gym in a tour aimed at youth.

A former journalist, Advani, who has been BJP president three times and a deputy prime minister, has built a reputation as an honest and strict administrator.

Born in Karachi on November 8, 1927, in what is now Pakistan, Advani started his political career in 1942 when he joined Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, BJP’s ideological predecessor. He later joined the Bharatiya Jana Sangh party and was a member of Parliament from 1970 to 1975.

Advani was instrumental in making the BJP a political force, taking it from two parliamentary seats in 1984 to forming a government 15 years later. His campaign on the Ram temple catapulted his political career as well as his party’s.

Advani travelled across India to muster support for the temple, a crusade that ended with the medieval mosque being destroyed in a frenzied attack by Hindu zealots in 1992.

The demolition triggered massive riots between Hindus and Muslims that left more than 2,000 people dead. Advani has denied allegations that he incited the mobs as the temple issue is being decided by the courts.

Advani’s hardliner image was not easily acceptable to constituents during the formation of the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance government after 1996 elections, and the Ayodhya issue led to his associate, Atal Behari Vajpayee, becoming the face of the BJP.

He served as home minister in the Vajpayee cabinet and later became a deputy prime minister until the alliance’s defeat in the last elections in May 2004.

Although Advani is criticized for communal polarization in India, BJP activists claim that he put India on a high-growth trajectory and restructured India’s relations in the post-Cold War era, which saw close ties develop with the United States and Israel.

Advani was the leader of the opposition in Parliament and has held centre stage in the party as Vajpayee’s health deteriorated.

He has tried to distance himself from his hawkish image since 2005 when he praised Pakistan’s founding father, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, and described him as secular, sparking a furore in India.

Political observers said Advani has been trying to cultivate an image as a senior statesman to widen his electoral appeal in what is likely to prove his final attempt for India’s top job.

But with the BJP asserting its agenda on the temple, the party can hardly expect support from Muslims, who account for 13 per cent of India’s 1.17 billion people.

Lately, the BJP has also been faced with internal discord among its leaders as well as problems with its coalition partners, including a breakup with a powerful ally in the eastern state of Orissa.

Lacking his predecessor’s skills in keeping political alliances together, as well as fractious politics inside his own camp, Advani could fall short in his quest for the coveted post. (dpa)

2 blasts in India leave 7 dead, 60 injured, 3rd Ld, AS

GAUHATI, India (AP) Police say a second explosion in India’s restive northeast has wounded four people. Senior police official G.M. Srivastava says the blast in Dhekiajuli town came hours after an explosion in Gauhati, the capital of Assam, killed seven and injured 56 people.

Srivastava says the separatist United Liberation Front of Asom is suspected in both attacks. He says the second blast occurred at a market in Dhekiajuli, 130 miles (210 kilometers) north of Gauhati.

The attacks came a day before the 30th anniversary of the founding of the militant group, which has been linked to many acts of terrorism in Assam and usually stages attacks around its anniversary.

Bomb blast kills at least 6, injures 20 in India, 2nd Ld-Writethru, AS

GAUHATI, India (AP) A bomb exploded in a crowded market in India’s restive northeast Monday, killing at least six people and wounding 26, police said. Authorities suspect the separatist United Liberation Front of Asom was behind the attack, the second in less than a week to hit Gauhati, the capital of Assam state, said senior police official G.P. Singh.

Singh said the bomb was likely tied to a motorbike but that police were still investigating. He said police had recently received information that ULFA was planning a major attack in Gauhati.

The blast came a day before the 30th anniversary of the founding of the militant group, which has been linked to many acts of terrorism in Assam and usually stages attacks around its anniversary. The United Liberation Front of Asom wants an independent state for ethnic Assamese and is the largest of the northeast’s dozens of militant groups.

The separatists accuse the government of exploiting the area’s natural resources while doing little for the indigenous people most of whom are ethnically closer to Burma and China than to the rest of India. More than 10,000 people have died in separatist violence over the past decade.

The March 31 blast in Gauhati left one dead and 13 wounded. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was scheduled to visit Assam on Tuesday ahead of national elections that begin later this month.

A spokeswoman for his office, Deepak Sandhu, said Singh still planned to make the trip.

Four blasts in Assam kill 8 before PM visit

Four bomb blasts killed eight people in Assam on Monday, a day before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was due to visit the region, police said.

Police said the state’s main separatist group, the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), was behind the attacks.

Singh’s visit to the state would go ahead as scheduled amid tight security, a spokesman for the ruling Congress party said.

The first bomb exploded in a crowded parking area in front of a restaurant in Guwahati, killing seven on the 30th anniversary of the founding of ULFA, police said.

“Seven people have died in the blast,” P.C. Saloi, a senior police officer in the city, told Reuters by phone.

At least 32 people were injured and several of them are in a critical condition. The death toll is likely to rise further, officials said. Several vehicles and buildings caught fire after the blast.

A second bomb went off two hours later opposite a hospital in the town of Dhekiajuli, 150 km north of Guwahati. Police said the device was planted on a bicycle. Six people were injured, three of them critically.

The third blast occurred at Jengpha, in Assam’s Karbi Anglong district, but no one was injured.

Rebels also threw grenades at a police station at Mankachar town in Dhubri district, near the border with neighbouring Bangladesh, killing one and wounding five people.

Accusing the police of not providing adequate security, hundreds of angry protesters blocked Guwahati’s main street, shouting slogans and clashing with the police.

Political parties have started campaigning in the state ahead of an April-May general election.

Last week a bomb blast killed one person in Guwahati, close to where Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee had been due to address an election rally. The rally was subsequently cancelled.

The ULFA is among more than two dozen armed groups in India’s northeast which are either fighting for an independent homeland or more political autonomy.

They accuse New Delhi of plundering the region’s mineral and forest resources, neglecting the local economy and giving them back nothing in return.

Bomb blast kills 4 in Assam ahead of PM visit

A powerful bomb blast in a crowded parking area killed four people in Assam on Monday, only a day before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was due to visit the region, police said.

Police suspect the state’s main separatist group, the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), was behind the blast.

The blast took place in Assam’s main city, Guwahati, on the 30th anniversary of the founding of ULFA.

“Four people were killed in the blast and dozens wounded. Of them three are in critical condition,” a senior police officer, who did not want to give his name, told Reuters.

“The bomb was placed in a parking area on the roadside in front of a restaurant, but we are not sure whether it’s a car bomb or it was placed on the footpath.”

Police say the death toll is likely to rise.

Accusing police of not providing adequate security, hundreds of angry protesters blocked the city’s main street, shouting slogans against police.

Several vehicles caught fire after the blast.

Political parties have started campaigning in the state ahead of an April-May general election. Manmohan Singh of the ruling Congress party was set to campaign in Assam on Tuesday.

Last week a bomb blast killed one person in Guwahati, close to where Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee had been due to address an election rally. The rally was subsequently cancelled.

The ULFA is among more than two dozen armed groups in India’s northeast which are either fighting for an independent homeland or more political autonomy.

They accuse New Delhi of plundering the region’s mineral and forest resources, neglecting the local economy and giving them back nothing in return.

Afghanistan a ‘litmus test’ for NATO, say leaders

Strasbourg (France), April 4 (DPA) Describing Afghanistan as a ‘litmus test’ for NATO, leaders of the 60-year-old alliance Saturday began talks on defeating the Taliban insurgency and preventing the warn-torn country from becoming a haven for Al Qaeda terrorists.

‘Afghanistan is a litmus test for us all,’ said German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the NATO summit’s co-host along with French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Merkel praised US President Barack Obama for his new strategy on Afghanistan and said her country was ready to contribute more soldiers, trainers and money towards ‘the Afghanistanisation’ of the country.

Sarkozy also lauded Obama’s new approach to the conflict, which involves speeding up Afghan reconstruction and involving other regional players such as India, Pakistan and Iran.

Obama and NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer then formally welcomed Albania and Croatia into the alliance, with the US president offering leaders of the two countries a copy of NATO’s 1949 founding treaty.

However, the second day of the two-day summit was marred by the leaders’ failure to agree on a new NATO chief.

Despite strong pressure by Obama, Merkel and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Turkey refused to lift its objections to naming Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen as de Hoop Scheffer’s successor.

The Turks strongly object to Rasmussen because of his handling of the 2005 and 2006 row over caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed that appeared in the Danish media and angered large sections of the Muslim world.

The controversy also caused a stir early Saturday during the ceremonial crossing of the Rhine River from Germany to France, when Berlusconi chose to call Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan rather than join other leaders on the Passerelles des Deux Rives bridge.

During the Afghan talks, Obama was expected to ask European governments to contribute more troops, at least to secure the elections, as well as additional funds, police trainers and other material.

On Friday, government officials in London said Britain would send extra troops to Afghanistan ‘subject to appropriate burden sharing’ by other NATO allies.

The ‘temporary troop increase’ would be aimed at providing security during the presidential elections.

The French daily Le Figaro reported that Europe could propose sending a 500-strong force of gendarmes to aid the Afghan police. France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Portugal and Turkey have reportedly pledged to contribute to this force.

In addition, the daily El Pais reported Thursday that Spain will beef up its troops in Afghanistan, from the current 780 to more than 1,000 soldiers.

As the NATO leaders met, groups of anti-NATO protesters skirmished with police in central Strasbourg.

Ironically singing ‘Happy Birthday, NATO’ and waving rainbow-coloured banners, the young demonstrators were met by teargas canisters fired by groups of police officers in riot gear.

Some 10,000 police officers and gendarmes were deployed in and around the city, whose downtown districts were otherwise as deserted as a ghost town.

Gandhi heir files candidacy for Indian elections, AS

SULTANPUR, India (AP) Thousands cheered and showered flower petals on Rahul Gandhi, the scion of Indian politics’ first family, as he filed his candidacy Saturday for elections that begin later this month. Gandhi, 38, a fourth-generation political leader, will run for a second term in Parliament from the Amethi district in Uttar Pradesh, India’s largest and politically most important state.

The district has been represented by his father, former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, and his mother, Sonia Gandhi, who now heads the ruling Congress party. Gandhi is not being projected as a candidate for prime minister in the elections.

That position will go to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who will serve a second term if Congress is voted back into power, party officials have said. Still, Gandhi is viewed as a potential leader and eventual candidate for the country’s top post.

The Nehru-Gandhi family and the Congress party have dominated India’s political history since it gained independence from Britain in 1947. Gandhi has remained ambiguous about his future plans.

Reserved compared to many fiery Indian politicians, Gandhi has told his supporters to be patient, arguing that leadership must be developed slowly. His great-grandfather Jawaharlal Nehru, one of the founding fathers of modern India, was the country’s first prime minister from the time of independence until his death in 1964.

His grandmother Indira Gandhi and his father Rajiv were also prime ministers. Tragedy has long been part of the family legend.

Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her own bodyguards in 1984, sparking bloody riots. Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated in 1991 by a female suicide bomber.

Rahul Gandhi first contested a seat in Parliament in 2004 and won the Amethi seat by a margin of more than 300,000 votes. His mother accompanied him Saturday in filing his papers in Sultanpur, the Amethi district headquarters.

Voting in the national elections will be held April 16, April 23, April 30, May 7 and May 13 and ballots will be counted May 16. Congress’ prospects for re-election are unclear.

The global economic slowdown has shifted the focus from its main achievement rapid growth in the last few years. It also has faced criticism for the bungled handling of the Mumbai terror attack in November, when 10 gunmen rampaged through the city for three days, killing 164 people.

However, the opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party is also in disarray. Its leadership is aging and fragmented, and its anti-terror line was criticized as too harsh in the wake of the Mumbai attacks.

The two main parties also have seen their vote banks eroded by regional parties focused on local issues or on particular castes in the country’s complex Hindu social system.

Canvera announces opening of its Chandigarh office

New Delhi, Apr 2 (ANI/Business Wire India): Canvera.com, India’s fastest growing online digital photography company, announced the opening of its sales office in Chandigarh.

This is Canvera’s 5th sales office in the country.

Speaking on the occasion Canvera’s CEO Dr. Dhiraj Kacker said, “Even though we did not have a presence in Chandigarh we already had a healthy client base from the region and the opening of this office was a natural extension of our Sales and Marketing efforts.”

The office will be headed by Ishaq Dar, the first Sales Manager hired by Canvera at its founding. Ishaq was instrumental in developing the Karnataka market and was also an integral member of the team that developed Canvera’s go-to-market strategy.

“Ishaq knows our products and services in and out and having him head the Sales and Marketing efforts in such an important market is a big win for Canvera,” added Kacker. (ANI)

US ‘Top Gun’ fighter pilot academy set up by British

London, Mar.23 (ANI): The Royal Navy elite flying instructors inspired the American Top Gun fighter pilot academy, a new book has revealed.

The British contribution of a dozen instructors was a substantial help to the Americans struggling for aerial success over Vietnam

According to The Telegraph, when British pilots arrived at Miramar airbase in California in the early 1960s, the Americans were losing a large number of dogfights in their multi-million Phantom fighters to the enemy’s relatively “cheap” MiG 21s.

The tuition from the British pilots, all graduates of the intense Air Warfare Instructors School in Lossiemouth, Scotland, led to the Americans dominating the skies, the military historian Rowland White has revealed in the book titled “Phoenix Squadron”.

Foremost among the Royal Navy pilots was Lt Commander Dick Lord’s whose work on the tactics group was the founding on which the “original eight Top Gun instructors built their course”.

The British pilot, originally from South Africa, introduced simple things such as writing notes on the knee-pad of his flying suit during air combat exercises

The Americans trusted Lord enough to give him access to a secret document that played a key part in his writing the Air Combat Manoeuvring manual for the US pilots.

Lord’s expertise was so well regarded that he was asked to give lectures to US fighter pilots all along the West Coast.

While the former Royal Navy officer, who married his British wife at Miramar, said he enjoyed the film he did not recognise the characters until his wife told him that the big-talking naval fighter pilots were most accurately depicted. (ANI)