Malaysia pays homage to British era South Indian workers with a monument

Malaysia, Apr 28 (ANI): A monument to commemorate South Indian workers who migrated to Malaysia to work in British Colonies has been erected in Jalan Depo, Port Klang.

Jalan Depo has a historical significance since it was the gateway through which Indian workers would first enter Malaysia. Homebound Indian workers would also take the same route back.

At the time of boarding the ships, over five hundred workers would reside in Jalan depot at any one time reports The Star.

The monument has immense sentimental value as it is symbolic of the hard work and cultural assimilation of the South-Indian migrants who were the progenitors of the Malay Indian community.

Tourists enjoy fresh snowfall in Himachal Pradesh

Rohtang Pass (Manali), Sep 10 (ANI): Tourists enjoyed fresh snowfall in the high peaks of Rohtang Pass above Manali in Himachal Pradesh.

The 13,050 feet high Rohtang pass, covered with six inches thick cover of snow, has had an unusually early snowfall this year.

Tourists made merry on the snow-covered slopes.

“We came here for snowfall and we have finally got to see it. We never saw snowfall in our life and this was like a dream come true. Rohtang is a very good place and I would love to come here again and again,” said Vinod, a tourist.

Thousands of tourists visit Rohtang Pass every year and enjoy the snowfall.

The pass is the gateway to the remote and rain shadow Himalayan region of Ladakh. (ANI)

26/11 attackers had left notes saying “this is pointer to war”

Mumbai, Sep.9 (ANI): Police inspector Prakash Bhoite on Wednesday told a special trial court here that the terrorists involved in the 26/11 attacks on Mumbai, had planted two powerful bombs with timers in metal boxes at different places near the Taj Hotel with notes scribbled in Urdu saying “this is pointer to war”.

Bhoite told Special Public Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam that one of the boxes in which these bombs and notes were found was located near the hotel where renovation work of Gateway of India was in progress. The second box was located near the Gokul Hotel behind Taj Hotel.

Both boxes contained eight kg of RDX with timers.

Nikam said that the version of the witness fortified the case of the prosecution that the aim of terrorists was not only to create terror in Mumbai but also to wage a war against India.

Bhoite said he was on duty at the Colaba Police station on the day of terror attacks when he heard the shots being fired outside.

He said he rushed outside and learnt that two persons had entered Taj Hotel after firing at customers inside and outside Cafe Leopold.

Bhoite further said he was asked to look for explosives, and during the search, he found two boxes near the Taj Hotel laden with explosives.

The bomb detection and disposal squad was immediately summoned which defused the bombs, he told the trial court. (ANI)

Bombay HC accepts Ansari’s petition challenging POTA court verdict

Mumbai, Aug 28(ANI): The Bombay High Court Friday admitted an appeal filed by suspected Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) member Ashrat Ansari challenging capital punishment awarded to him by a POTA (Prevention of Anti Terrorism Act) court.

The POTA court had sentenced Hanif Sayed Anees (46), his wife Fahmida (43) and Ashrat Ansari (32), for their role in implementing the plans of LeT.

They were also sentenced for creating terror in India through bomb attacks.

The 2003 bomb blast near Gateway of India and Zaveri Bazar and in a bus killed over 50 people.

The bench of the High Court comprising of Justice Bilal Nazki and Justice A R Joshi asked the Maharashtra government to produce Ansari and two other convicts Hanif Sayed and his wife Fahmida on the next hearing.

The bench fixed the next hearing after eight weeks.

Meanwhile, the POTA court has made a reference to the High Court to confirm the death penalty awarded to the three convicts.

The bench has also directed the Maharashtra Government to produce the case papers and the verdict of the POTA court before it. (ANI)

Genome duplication responsible for more plant species than previously thought

Washington, August 13 (ANI): In a new research, a team of scientists has found that extra genomes appear, on average, to offer no benefit or disadvantage to plants, but still play a much more important role in the origin of new species than previously thought.

The research was done by scientists from Indiana University Bloomington and three other institutions.

Plant biologists have long suspected polyploidy – the heritable acquisition of extra chromosome sets – was a gateway to speciation.

But, the consensus was that polyploidy is a minor force, a mere anomaly that accounts for 3 or 4 percent of the world’s flowers and ferns.

Now, the first direct, comprehensive survey of polyploid speciation in plant evolution severely challenges that notion.

“In the present paper, we make it clear that it is a common process,” said evolutionary biologist and lead author Troy Wood, who began the research during graduate training at IU Bloomington.

“Fifteen percent of flowering plant species and almost a third of fern species are directly derived from polyploidy,” he added.

The scientists’ exhaustive survey of published phylogenetic and genomic data also shows that plant lineages starting with a polyploid ancestor appear to be no more successful at spawning species than diploid plants, which have two sets of chromosomes.

“The fact that polyploidy seems to have no effect on diversification rates should reduce the number of enthusiastic commentaries about the ‘advantages of polyploidy’,” said IU Bloomington evolutionary biologist and paper coauthor Loren Rieseberg, who supervised the research.

“However, our diversification rate analyses only examined recent polyploids. A future area of research should be to ask whether more ancient polyploidy events have increased diversification rates,” he added. (ANI)

EAMCET 2009 Notification ~ EAMCET Education Notification ~ EAMCET Counselling Notification ~ EAMCET 2009 Counselling Dates ~ EAMCET 2009 Counselling Schedule ~ www.apeamcet.org ~ Andhra Pradesh EAMCET 2009 Notification

EAMCET 2009 Notification ~ EAMCET Education Notification ~ EAMCET Counselling Notification ~ EAMCET 2009 Counselling Dates ~ EAMCET 2009 Counselling Schedule ~ www.apeamcet.org ~ Andhra Pradesh EAMCET 2009 Notification

Engineering Agriculture and Medicine Common Entrance Test is conducted by JNT University on behalf of APSCHE. This examination is the gateway for entry into various professional courses offered in Government/Private Colleges in Andhra Pradesh.

EAMCET Results are available on http://www.apeamcet.org/results.html

EAMCET 2009 Notification

Latest Notification about EAMCET 2009 is available on http://www.apeamcet.org/

Toshiba Corporation set to enter Indian thermal power industry

Tokyo, July 8 (ANI/Business Wire India): Toshiba Corporation announced that Toshiba JSW Turbine and Generator Pvt. Ltd., a joint venture with JSW that will manufacture and market steam turbines and generators in India, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the government of Tamil Nadu.

The MOU allows Toshiba JSW to lease land for the construction of manufacturing facilities on a site in Chennai.

Established in September last year, Toshiba JSW will manufacture and market mid- to large-sized steam turbines and generators, ranging in size from 500-megawatts (MW) to 1,000MW, for highly efficient super-critical thermal power plants in India.

Located about 18km north of downtown Chennai, the major gateway to south-east India, the site has a ground area of some 400,000 square meters, and Toshiba JSW expects to invest some US160 million dollars in plant and manufacturing equipment over five years from fiscal year 2009.

Facility construction is scheduled to start in this month, and manufacturing is expected to start in January 2011. Keihin Operations, Toshiba’s power equipment production facility in Yokohama, will support Toshiba JSW in ramping up manufacturing, and in working toward establishing an independent production scale of 3,000MW a year. Toshiba JSW anticipates sales of US$400 million by the end of fiscal year 2015.

Toshiba JSW will now begin to recruit staff, and expects to have 500 employees by 2014.

With support from the government of Tamil Nadu, Toshiba will build a state-of-the-art heavy equipment manufacturing facility in Chennai, and hopes to contribute to the further development of local industry and to help India in its efforts to promote stable electricity supply.

Strong Growth in the Indian market for thermal power generation equipment driven by strong economic growth, the Indian power generation equipment market is expected to see demand growth of 15,000-16,000 MW a year for the next decade, according to the Eleventh (2007-2012) and Twelfth (2012-2017) Five- Year National Electricity Plans published by the Indian government.

Coal-fired thermal power stations will account for over 60 percent of the capacity growth, far surpassing other energy sources, and 80 percent of those power stations will be highly efficient super-critical thermal power plants.

Consistent with its long-term growth strategy of enhancing its thermal power plant business in India, Toshiba India Private Ltd. will establish a new in-house company in Gurgaon, Haryana state in August, which will initially provide engineering capabilities for thermal power plants in India.

With time, the new company is expected to provide a full engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) functions for the thermal and hydro power plant business in India, and to support customers in Southeast Asia and the Middle East.

The new company will work closely with Toshiba JSW and with another Toshiba Group company in India, TPSC (India) Private Limited in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, a wholly owned subsidiary of Toshiba Plant Systems and Services Corporation that undertakes construction of power plants, and will be charged with channeling Toshiba’s comprehensive capabilities in thermal power plant toward meeting growing demand in India. (ANI)

How practice improves zebra finch’s singing performance

Washington, July 7 (ANI): A study on zebra finches conducted by neuroscientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has shed some light on how practice improves performance.

The researchers say that studying the chirps of zebra finches helped them determine that as these tiny songbirds fine-tune their songs, their brains initially store improvements in one brain pathway, before transferring this learned information to the motor pathway for long-term storage.

They believe that their findings may further scientists’ understanding of the complicated circuitry of the basal ganglia, brain structures that play a key role in learning and habit formation in humans.

The basal ganglia are also linked to disorders like Parkinson’s disease, obsessive-compulsive disorder and drug addiction.

“Birds provide a great system to study the fundamental mechanisms of how the basal ganglia contributes to learning. Our results support the idea that the basal ganglia are the gateway through which newly acquired information affects our actions,” said senior author Michale Fee, an investigator in the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT.

The researchers point out that young zebra finches learn to sing by mimicking their fathers, whose song contains multiple syllables in a particular sequence.

Like the babbling of human babies, young birds initially produce a disorganized stream of tones, but after practicing thousands of times they master the syllables and rhythms of their father’s song.

Studies conducted in the past have identified two distinct brain circuits that contribute to this behaviour in zebra flinches.

A motor pathway is responsible for producing the song, and a separate pathway is essential for learning to imitate the father. The learning pathway, called the anterior forebrain pathway (AFP), has similarities to basal ganglia circuits in humans.

“For this study, we wanted to know how these two pathways work together as the bird is learning. So we trained the birds to learn a new variation in their song and then we inactivated the AFP circuit to see how it was contributing to the learning,” said first author Aaron Andalman, a graduate student in Fee’s lab.

With a view to training the birds, the research team monitored their singing and delivered white noise whenever a bird sang a particular syllable at a lower pitch than usual.

“The bird hears this unexpected noise, thinks it made a ‘mistake’, and on future attempts gradually adjusts the pitch of that syllable upward to avoid repeating that error. Over many days we can train the bird to move the pitch of the syllable up and down the musical scale,” Fee said.

On a particular day, after four hours of training in which the birds learned to raise the pitch, the researchers temporarily inactivated the AFP with a drug. The pitch immediately slipped back to where it had been at the start of that day’s training session – suggesting that the recently learned changes were stored within the AFP.

The research group, however, observed that over the course of 24 hours, the brain had transferred the newly learned information from the AFP to the motor pathway. The motor pathway was storing all of the accumulated pitch changes from previous training sessions. (ANI)

New York Police uses cricket to bond with communities

New York, June 29 (ANI): The New York Police Department has chosen cricket as a way to foster relationships with newer immigrant communities.

The Police Department established a cricket competition for young men in the city last summer. The project was a success, and on Tuesday, play began for another season, reports the New York Times.

Interest has expanded, with 10 teams and 170 players involved this year, compared with six teams last year.

Matches are played at the Gateway Cricket Ground in Brooklyn, a grass oval tucked in by the Belt Parkway, in the shadows of the towers of Starrett City and beneath the flight path of Kennedy International Airport. This (New York) is the most diverse city in the world,” said Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly.

“We don’t have uniform relationships with all communities. This (cricket) opens the door, allows us to interact with them on the sport field,” he added.

The police have long organized athletic programs as a way to keep teenagers out of mischief, especially in the summer, when schools are closed, days are long and it is easy to get into trouble.

Last year, a soccer competition aimed at immigrants in the city was popular with Eastern Europeans and some Latinos, but the police believed they needed to make inroads with other groups.

So, the police decided to experiment with cricket, a game with a huge following across the Caribbean and South Asia. The response has cut across community lines.

Tuesday’s opening match pitted the SuperStars – made up largely of players from Guyana – against the KnightRiders, a predominantly Pakistani team.

It remains to be seen if the Police Department is able to nurture cricket talent in the way that other law enforcement agencies have. (ANI)

South Korea Incheon is World’s Best Airport – Photo Shoot

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

South Korea’s Incheon International Airport was voted the best in the world for 2009 in an annual survey dominated by Asian airports. The survey, by British-based consultancy Skytrax, covered more than 190 airports and is based on the results from 8.6 million passenger questionnaires completed from 2008 to 2009. ‘Incheon is an airport that has been in the global top 5 ranking for the World Airport Awards during the past 5-6 years, and it is a great achievement for them to secure this premier mark of customer satisfaction,’Skytrax CEO Edward Plaisted said. (Text courtesy: Reuters)

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

Incheon narrowly beat Hong Kong International Airport, last year’s number one which came in second. The Hong Kong airport is an important transit point and the gateway to China. The Hong Kong airport has infact won seven Skytrax World Airports Awards.

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

Singapore’s Changi, fell to third place this year from number 2 in 2008. Skytrax said in a statement that the final margins between the top three airports were so narrow that at one stage the company thought it would have a three-way tie for first place in the “World Airport Awards’.The survey evaluates traveller experiences across 39 different airport service and products, ranging from check-in, arrivals, transfer through to departure at the gate.

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

Japan’s Kansai is among the top 10. Japan’s Kansai Airport is located in the middle of Osaka Bay on an artificial island. This airport has consistently been among the top Airports in the world by Skytrax.

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

Malaysia’s Kuala Lumpur airport also comes in the first 10. Malaysia’s main airport KL International Airport is situated in Sepang. It’s among the world’s busiest airports and is capable of handling around 35 million passengers annually.

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

New Zealand’s Auckland airport, which was also voted the best in the Australia-Pacific region, rounded up the top 10. New Zealand’s top airport is located in the western suburb of Manukau City. Auckland airport handles 5-15 million passengers annually.

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

Japan’s Centrair Nagoya airports was also among the top 10. A new entrant to the list of the best airports in the world, Centrair Nagoya airport is a first class airport that is also built on an artificial island in Ise Bay region.

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

Tel Aviv was voted the Middle East’s best airport. Also known as the Ben Gurion International airport is Israel’s largest and busiest airports that handled over 11.5 million passengers last year.

South Korea Incheon is World's Best Airport - Photo Shoot

Cape Town is the best in Africa. A major gateway to tourists, South Africa’s second largest airports Cape Town International Airport is also a hub for the South African national carrier.

Jet Airways, Kerala Tourism announce the launch of ‘Jet2Kerala’

Kochi, May 13 (ANI): As part of its ongoing effort to boost tourism within India, Jet Airways and Department of Tourism, Government of Kerala, have announced the launch of ‘Jet2Kerala’, a new domestic travel initiative at the Trident, Nariman Point, Mumbai.

Jet Airways and Kerala Tourism, two super brands, will leverage their respective brand equities to boost tourist traffic into ‘God’s Own Country’.

With its stunning natural beauty and rich cultural heritage, be it the sandy beaches of Kovalam, blue Lagoons at Veli, hill stations at Munnar, backwaters of Kollam and Alappuzha, spice plantations in the high ranges of Wayanad, wildlife, high mountain peaks, picturesque valleys, magnificent forts and intricately decorated temples, Kerala has emerged as arguably the leading travel destination in India.”

The package offers travelers unmatched pan-India connectivity from all major parts of the country to three key cities in Kerala – Thiruvananthapuram, Kochi and Kozhikode.

Travelers can enjoy a range of accommodation options to suit every budget- from luxury properties to budget hotels and houseboats.

According to Sudheer Raghavan, Chief Commercial Officer, Jet Airways, said, “Jet Airways has always sought to promote tourism both internationally, as well as within India, by leveraging its unmatched pan-India and growing international network.

We are delighted to partner with Kerala Tourism to launch our new ‘Jet2Kerala’ initiative, as part of our ongoing efforts to boost domestic travel and tourism. We are confident that the compelling value proposition on offer will spur more travelers to visit Kerala this year.”

Dr. V Venu, Secretary (Tourism), Government of Kerala, said, “Kerala has been positioned as an upmarket and high quality international destination. Despite the challenges posed by the global economic downturn, the international tourist arrivals continue to be impressive, with a 16.11 per cent increase in visitors in 2008.

The new Kerala packages will further complement the range of exciting domestic and international JetEscapes holiday packages already on offer by the airline.

International travelers to and from Kerala may connect onto Jet Airways’ daily, direct services to Kuwait, Doha and Muscat in the Gulf, as well as to several destinations in North America, Europe, Asia and the Gulf via the airline’s three international gateway cities in India – Mumbai, Delhi and Chennai.

Kerala Tourism has won several prestigious international and domestic awards for its outstanding work in promoting tourism in Kerala. It is acclaimed as ‘one of the ten paradises in the world’ by the National Geographic Traveler. By Juhan Samuel (ANI)

NASA to study sleep movements on Everest

A team of NASA scientists, along with their Indian and Nepalese aides, is set to leave for the Everest base camp on Monday to carry out experiments on “sleeping and waking movements” for future space programmes.

The team of 25 scientists from NASA, who arrived in Kathmandu on Saturday in a research mission, includes doctors, pilots and scientists.

Besides the American and European scientists there also six Indian and 11 Nepalese aides in the team.

“Quality sleep is crucial to daytime alertness and performance on critical tasks, and can also impact long-term health. Lack of sleep could even affect safety,” Steve Vander Ark, Section Manager, Behavioural Health NASA said.

Chris J Johnson, who is the NASA Orion Landing System Integration Manager, is the leader of the expedition. They wanted to do some serious research to help the astronauts.

Equipped with the Actiwatch and Lab-On-a-Chip Application Development Portable Test System, the team members would record the sleeping and waking movements and light exposure of the subjects.

“Actiwatch resembles a wristwatch and records the wearer’s sleeping and waking movements. It also measures light exposure. Several members of our group will be wearing an Actiwatch during the hike. In general, these devices will show how well the hikers sleep during the trip,” Ark said.

Vander Ark is taking a device up Mount Everest to monitor what happens with the sleep/wake cycle when the human body is subjected to long periods in challenging environments.

The Lab-On-a-Chip, which can detect bacteria and fungi on surfaces inside the International Space Station, will be used to look for snow algae, he added. Former NASA astronaut Scot Parazynski has already left for Everest as a member of an expedition towards the summit.

“We expect to meet Scott at the base camp,” Chris said. If his attempt is successful, he’ll become the first person ever to have gazed up at space from the pinnacle of Earth’s tallest mountain, and gazed down on that same pinnacle from the black vacuum of space, he said.

Steve said trekking to the base camp will be comparable in some ways to what astronauts face while engaging in a long spacewalk or an excursion on the surface of the moon or Mars adding Mt Everest provides a good space analog.

The team’s research would benefit future space travellers, they claim. The outcomes of the research would aid future research projects of the NASA, he said. The research could help scientists develop efficient procedures for future field studies on moon and Mars.

The team also collected more than $1500 to support the Prisoners Assistance Nepal. The team plans to leave for Lukla, gateway to the Everest on Monday and is scheduled to return to Kathmandu on May 2.

Systech Launches Software Suite for Remote Device Management and Control Solutions

New ONDEMAND System Targets Distributed Automation Solutions
SAN DIEGO–(Business Wire)–
Systech Computer Corporation, a leading provider of IP network enabling
solutions, today announced its ONDEMAND Remote Access and Management System* for
remote device control applications. The new software product suite includes (1)
host server software and (2) remote device software that can be pre-configured
and installed on Systech`s network device server and IPG gateway products.
Systech`s NativeCOM port redirector software can be enabled to facilitate
application access to remote serial-based devices.

Managing and controlling distributed serial devices in application-specific
automation systems, such as home automation, HVAC, temperature and lighting
automation, home and plant physical security and air filtration systems, can
create costly and slow response service and support issues. According to Mark
Fowler,

Student visa scam in UK facilitated entry of Pak terror suspects

London, Apr.14 (ANI): A student visa scam has surfaced in Britain. A bogus college is reported to have sold places on fake courses to hundreds of Pakistanis seeking entry to Britain.

According to The Times, the Manchester College of Professional Studies acted as a gateway to Britain for foreigners willing to pay 50 pounds for the letter of admission that earned them a student visa.

Abdul Wahab Khan, 26, one of ten Pakistani nationals still in detention after terror raids last week in the North West, was registered at the college as an English-language student, the paper reports.

A former employee has told The Times that more than a hundred young Pakistani men, most from the country’s troubled North West Frontier Province, came to Britain after being enrolled as students at the college.

He said that no classes were taught at the college. It had only two classrooms, no genuine teachers and sat among a cluster of Asian businesses on a busy suburban road.

The college, which operated for two years, shut down last July after a Home Office raid prompted by “concerns about irregularities”, according to the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills.

The Home Office was unable last night to confirm any inquiry focusing on the Manchester campus of Bradford College of Professional Studies “due to the ongoing police investigation” into alleged terrorism. (ANI)

End terror, Guwahati’s voters urge politicians

Guwahati, April 8 (IANS) They have lived under the shadow of bomb blasts for a long time. Voters in Assam’s principal city of Guwahati, also known as the ‘gateway to northeast India’, are crying for an end to the terror trail as elections approach.

Blasts have almost become a way of life for Guwahatians, with the latest attacks – here and in four other parts of the state – having taken place as recently as Monday, claiming at least 10 lives and injuring nearly 60.

Right from columns in vernacular newspapers and journals to television debates to coffee table discussions, Guwahati residents have chosen to talk repeatedly on the issue, so that political parties are pressed to do something to end three decades of insurgency in Assam.

‘We want an end to the bloodbath. Why does the common man on the streets of Guwahati not feel safe? We have to think twice before venturing out, to avoid becoming a victim of bomb blasts,’ said popular poet and columnist Samir Tanti.

‘We want the political parties to take the issue seriously. Mere rhetoric is not enough. Moreover, not a single party, neither the Congress nor the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), has spoken anything about its stand on the issue in the coming elections,’ Tanti told IANS.

Youngsters, mostly college-goers, are aghast that major political parties – Congress, the ruling party in the state, and the AGP, which has ruled the state twice from 1985 to 1989 and from 1996 to 2001 have no clear cut agenda in place to tackle terror.

‘It is beyond our understanding as why the political parties are silent on the issue of terror in the state. Only when a bomb blast happen, the leaders of both the parties engage themselves in a dirty game of mud slinging, instead of working on a formula to end terrorism,’ said Pranab Kakoty, an undergraduate student.

Pranab’s friend, Jyoti Bora, a student of mechanical engineering in Assam Engineering College, said progress would come once terrorism comes to an end in the city.

‘We’re lagging behind in economic development in comparison with rest of the country. Terrorism is the cause of all the ills in the state. The political parties need to ensure that the city and the state at large will be peaceful and prosperous,’ said 20-year-old Bora.

Assam goes to polls in two phases on April 16 and 23 for its 14 Lok Sabha seats.

Septuagenarian social activist and scholar Anima Guha, a resident of the city for the past four decades, agreed with the views of the younger lot.

‘The young and old alike are all tired of regular incidents of terror strikes in Assam. We need peace. Only peace will lead us to progress and prosperity. It hurts to see Assam bleeding everyday – for the last 30 years. If politicians want to call themselves our leaders, they have to end terrorism,’ said Guha.

Guwahati had a brush with terror last week too, in which one person was killed and 16 were injured in a powerful explosion. The blast occurred minutes before External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukerjee was to address an election rally, close to the blast site.

Assam experienced one of its worst terror strikes when around 81 lives were lost and over 300 injured in 12 coordinated explosions in Guwahati and the western districts of Barpeta, Kokrajhar and Bongaigaon Oct 30, 2008.

Assam has long been a cauldron of violence triggered by insurgency and ethnic clashes, since the state’s first rebel group, the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) was formed in 1979. An estimated 25,000 people have been killed and hundreds more maimed for life since then.

Victorian ‘ghost’ caught on Google Street ViewVictorian ‘ghost’ caught on Google Street View

Victorian 'ghost' caught on Google Street ViewLondon, Mar 26 (ANI): Google Street View cameras have captured something that could send shivers down your spine – a ‘ghostly’ figure dressed in Victorian clothes.

The ghoul has been filmed at a former Victorian docklands, which has a dark and sinister past.

The footage appears to show a woman dressed in long skirt, crisp blouse, bow tie, blue boater hat and scarf shimmering above the pavement.

Google Street View cameras caught her in Tiger Bay, Cardiff – the scene of murders and unsolved mysteries going back 200 years.

The water sculpture seen in the picture is used as the gateway to enter the fictional world of Dr Who spin-off Torchwood.

“Apparitions have often been caught on film but are invisible to the naked eye,” the Telegraph quoted local medium Jane Cohen, 39, as saying.

“This woman is very smart – but she is dressed in clothes that you just don’t see these days unless it’s in a period drama on TV.But what is really strange is that she doesn’t appear as a full figure – you can’t see all of her,” Cohen added.

The old docklands has been redeveloped with a theatre, waterside restaurants and plush apartments.

However, according to local 8 the woman was filmed in the heart of the notorious Tiger Bay – once the busiest sea port in the world.

The image was filmed last June as the Google cameras filmed the treets and landmarks of the Welsh capital. (ANI)

New Zealander detained by Pak security forces in Peshawar

Peshawar, Feb.11 (ANI): Pakistani security forces detained a New Zealander on Wednesday who was trying to enter the South Waziristan region, an al Qaeda and Taliban militant stronghold on the Afghan border, officials said.

The man, identified as a 35-year-old New Zealander with a European-sounding name, was detained at a paramilitary checkpost on the outskirts of Tank town, about 280 km southwest of Islamabad, which is the gateway to South Waziristan, the Dawn reported.

‘He was travelling in a passenger van. He has a beard and was wearing a shalwar kamiz as a disguise,’ the top government administrator in Tank, Barkatullah Khan, told a foreign news agency.

He told the soldiers who detained him that he was going to South Waziristan to get married, Khan said.

Intelligence officials who declined to be identified said they suspected he might have links with Islamist militants. (ANI)

Venues and schedule confirmed for ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier

Dubai, Feb.10 (ANI): The ICC today confirmed the schedule for the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier 2009 to take place from 1 to 19 April in South Africa.

With three ODI venues being used, including Willowmoore Park in Benoni and Potchefstroom for group and Super Eight matches and Centurion for the final on 19 April, the event will enjoy first-class facilities.

In total there are nine venues being used for 54 matches played over 19 days with 12 teams fighting it out for the four qualification places on offer in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011.

The ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier, formerly known as the ICC Trophy, incorporates Divisions 1 and 2 of the Pepsi ICC World Cricket League and is the gateway for the top Associate and Affiliate teams into the premier one-day tournament in the world.

“It looks like it’s going to be a great event,” said ICC President David Morgan.

“Many of the top Associates are very evenly matched and I am expecting some thrilling matches during the tournament. We know from experience that South Africa is a perfect place to host big multi-team tournaments such as this and I know the teams will have some of the best facilities at their disposal,” he said.

“Four years ago, Scotland deservedly overcame the opposition in Ireland so I’m sure they’ll be anxious to hang on to the title. It’s not going to be easy though. Many of the other Associates have made big strides since then so it’s going to be a hard-fought tournament.”

Day one of the event offers up perhaps the most eagerly awaited fixture of all with defending champion Scotland taking on fierce rival Ireland in an ODI at Willowmoore Park in what will be a repeat of the final in 2005.

Among the teams will be Afghanistan and Uganda, which both qualified from January’s Pepsi World Cricket League Division 3 event in Buenos Aires. The WCL was created to provide a clear pathway for teams outside the top 10 towards improvement and ultimately, the ICC Cricket World Cup. This global event gives ICC Associate and Affiliate Members the opportunity to play similarly ranked sides in meaningful competition regardless of where they are located in the world.

The 12 teams taking part in the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier are split into two groups of six teams. Ireland, Scotland, Canada, Oman, Namibia and Uganda make up Group A while Kenya, Netherlands, Bermuda, UAE, Denmark and Afghanistan form Group B.

Each side plays the other teams in its group once with the top four from the groups progressing to the Super Eight stage. The teams each play four Super Eight matches against the sides they did not meet in the group stage. All points won in the groups will be carried over to the Super Eight stage apart from those gained against the bottom two from each group.

The top two teams in the Super Eight stage will contest the final to be played at Centurion on 19 April. The third and fourth-placed sides will play-off at Potchefstroom, the fifth and sixth-placed sides play off at Willowmoore Park while the seventh and eighth-placed teams play off at Stan Friedman Oval, Krugersdorp.

The top four sides at the event qualify for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011. The top six teams secure ODI status until 2013 and also qualify automatically for the ICC Intercontinental Cup 2009-10.

The bottom two teams from the CWCQ, which incorporates Divisions 1 and 2 of the Pepsi ICC World Cricket League, will be relegated to Division 3.(ANI)

India, Myanmar sign telecommunication cooperation pact

Mandalay (Myanmar), Feb.8 (ANI): Vice-President Mohammad Hamid Ansari today witnessed the opening of Trans-Border Optical Fiber Communication Link between Myanmar and India, which enabled the former to get its first international broadband technology gateway.

Besides the establishment of a cross-border link, India also signed an agreement with Myanmar for providing it with a telecommunication service.

The agreement was signed between Myanmar Posts and Telecommunication (MPT) and Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited, a Public Sector Unit of Government of India. The agreement was signed by Tint Lwin, General Manager, Myanmar Posts and Telecommunication and N K Jain, Group General Manager, BSNL.

The project for implemetation of optical fiber link between Moreh in India (Manipur) and Mandalay in Myanmar, together with ADSC system was signed between Myanmar Posts and Telecommunication (MPT) and Telecommunication Consultants India Limited (TCIL), PSU on March 9, 2006.

Myanmar’s Minister for Communications, Posts and Telegraphs, Brigadier General Thein Zaw said the link and the pact would enhance communication helping for the development of Myanmar IT and telecom industry. The cross border fiber link, he said, would enable Myanmar to route its internatinal voice traffic through the Indian border town of Moreh and hoped to utilize India’s internet backbone fully in future also.

Minister Zaw acknowledged India’s contribution towards IT development in Myanmar, which is abysmally low when compared to what the country’s neighbours possess.

He said that the successful project will certainly assist the broadband information and communication technology in Myanmar and it wll also encourage the good relationship that has already existed between the two countries.

TCIL Chaiman and Managing Director Rakesh Upadhyay said the company would keep working with Myanmar to provide technical support and furthering the cause in the area of telecommunication. By Ravi Shankar (ANI)

Lankan Tamil legislators urge India to initiate peace talks

Chennai, Jan.12 (ANI): A Sri Lankan lawmakers delegation belonging to the Tamil National Alliance Party, on Monday, appealed to the Tamil Nadu and Indian Governments to intervene in the military offensive against the separatist Tamil Tiger rebels in the island nation.

The team of five legislators asked the Indian leadership to mediate and save the lives of thousands of innocent Tamils.

“We (are)appealing to chief minister Tamil Nadu and central government, we are expecting to stop the war immediately otherwise our people will die, definitely they will die. So stop the war immediately and take action for peace talks,” said Sambandam, a Sri Lankan legislator.

The delegation alleged that Sri Lankan Army was regularly carrying out intense aerial bombardment and also firing multi-barrel rocket launchers at Tamil civil population, killing thousands of innocent people.

“The Sri Lankan government is unable to come up with a political solution to the Tamil question and that is the reason, why the Sri Lankan government has unleashed this process of genocide. The Sri Lanka government claims that it is conducting war against the LTTE. But the reality is that the main victims of war are non-combatant Tamil civilians. If the process continues without being stopped it is inevitable the Sri Lankan government would be successful in its genocidal programme,” said Padmini Chidambaanathan, another Sri Lankan legislator.

Legislators further added that thousands of Tamil people are living without food and clothes and most of them are living in the forest area.

Sri Lankan troops fought the shrinking strongholds of the separatist Tamil Tiger rebels on Sunday, the military said, seeking a crushing battlefield victory to end one of Asia’s longest insurgent ground wars.

The Sri Lankan military said it had killed at least 24 rebels after a series of confrontations on Saturday in the small northeastern wedge of jungle, which is all that is left of the Tigers’ self-proclaimed state.

Soldiers seized Kilinochchi, which the rebels had dubbed their capital, on Jan. 2 and a week later ran the LTTE out of Elephant Pass, the strategic gateway to the northern Jaffna Peninsula, which had been in rebel hands since 2000.

Both major victories have cleared the way for soldiers to converge on the port of Mullaittivu with the aim of ending the 25-year ground war.

The LTTE better known as Tigers contend that they are fighting to address mistreatment of minority Tamils since the Sinhalese ethnic majority took over at independence from Britain in 1948.

But many Sinhalese say Tamils enjoyed unfair advantages in colonial times and want them back.

The Tigers are on U.S., European Union and Indian terrorism lists after carrying out hundreds of assassinations and suicide bombings, including against Tamils who challenged them. (ANI)