IPWireless and Huawei Co-Operate on Interoperable Solutions for Integrated Mobile Broadcast (IMB) Technology

Interoperability Testing to Include Network Infrastructure Solutions and Devices
That Utilize IMB Chipsets
SAN FRANCISCO–(Business Wire)–
IPWireless, a pioneer in developing key enabling IMB technology, and Huawei, a
leader in providing next-generation telecommunications network solutions for
operators around the world, today jointly announced that the two companies have
signed a co-operation agreement with respect to the production of each party`s
Integrated Mobile Broadcast (IMB) technology. This co-operation will include
interoperability testing (IOT) and service provider trials. These
ground-breaking interoperability tests will assure operators that they can
confidently source IMB equipment from multiple vendors and assure handset
manufacturers that their devices will be fully compatible with all IMB networks.
IMB is capable of streaming live video and broadcasting and storing popular
content on the device for later consumption – both resulting in significant
offloading of data traffic from existing 3G networks.

IPWireless and Huawei are committed to the development of an IMB ecosystem and
ensuring readiness of the technology for market as quickly as possible. IOT will
ensure compatibility between Huawei IMB base stations and IPWireless chipsets.
Both companies are also working together on several commercial and technical IMB
pilots.

IMB was defined in the 3GPP release 8 standards, and was recently endorsed by
the GSMA as their preferred method for the efficient delivery of broadcast
services. IMB enables spectrally efficient delivery of broadcast services, in
TDD spectrum based on techniques that are aligned with existing FDD WCDMA
standards. This allows for a smooth handover between IMB and existing 3G
networks. Operators can use IMB within a spectrum band that, although already
allocated to them in connection with many 3G licenses, has hitherto been unused
due to the lack of an appropriate technology.

“For IMB to achieve its full potential it is critical that solutions based on
the technology are brought to market as quickly and easily as possible,” said
William Jones, Chief Executive Officer, IPWireless. “As a leader in this
industry, we are dedicated to the development of the ecosystem so that operators
and their hardware partners are able to confidently and swiftly deploy IMB
solutions. We are delighted to be working with Huawei in ensuring that the huge
potential for mobile broadcast is realised.”

“Our operator customers are seeing an explosive growth in mobile data traffic,
driven by consumer appetite for multimedia on the move,” said Jiang Wangcheng,
President of Huawei UMTS network. “IMB provides profitability to mobile
broadband operators for their business. We are very pleased to partner with
IPWireless to explore the approach of developing profitable mobile broadband
network, and to promote the IMB technology to matureness and commercialization.”

The companies are aiming to commence interoperability testing in Q3 2010.

About IPWireless

IPWireless is a pioneer in developing and designing 3G and 4G wireless broadband
and broadcast solutions, including chipsets, devices and complete network
infrastructure solutions, based on 3GPP, the world`s preeminent mobile standard.
The company`s high performance mobile broadband and integrated mobile broadcast
(IMB) solutions enable mobile operators, consumer electronics companies, as well
as government, public safety and military agencies to deliver a new generation
of wireless services and develop compelling new applications using untapped
global spectrum bands. The company`s mobile broadband and IMB solutions have
been deployed by some of the world`s largest mobile operators, and government
agencies including T-Mobile, Orange, New York City`s Department of Information
Technology and Telecommunications (DoITT) and more. In Q2 2010, IPWireless and
Sony announced an initiative to jointly develop 4G and Beyond Wireless
Technologies.

IPWireless is headquartered in San Francisco, California, and operates a
technology development center in Chippenham, UK. For more information, visit the
company’s Web site at www.ipwireless.com

About Huawei

Huawei is a leader in providing next generation telecommunications networks, and
now serves 45 of the world`s top 50 operators, along with over one billion users
worldwide. The company is committed to providing innovative and customized
products, services and solutions to create long-term value and growth potential
for its customers.

For further information about Huawei, please visit: www.huawei.com.

IPWireless US Media Relations
IPWireless
Suzanne McCormac, +1-415-577-9135
smccormac@ipwireless.com
or
IPWireless UK Media Relations
Temono Communications
Ed Howson, +44 7740173051
Ed.howson@temono.com
or
Huawei Public Relations
Jannie Nguyen, 972-769-3603
Public Relations Manager
214-415-0815 (cell)
jannie.nguyen@huawei.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

UPDATE 1-M&B appoints Interserve’s Tim Jones in FD rejig

LONDON, June 22 (Reuters) – British pubs and restaurant group Mitchells & Butler (MAB.L) has appointed Interserve’s (IRV.L) Tim Jones as finance director replacing Jeremy Townsend, who is joining Rentokil (RTO.L) as CFO at the end of August.

Meanwhile Interserve said Tim Jones, who has tendered his resignation to take up the role at M&B, will remain at Interserve “for an appropriate period” to ensure a smooth handover.

Interserve added it will be looking at both external and internal candidates.

(Reporting by Lorraine Turner)

Gates sees progress in Afghan war, security handover

WASHINGTON, June 20 (Reuters) – U.S.-led forces are making progress against insurgents in Afghanistan despite significant casualties and concerns about the quality of Afghan troops, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Sunday.

Gates told the “Fox News Sunday” program that U.S. General Stanley McChrystal and other military leaders are confident that the campaign against Taliban insurgents, particularly in southern Afghanistan, is moving in the right direction.

McChrystal is the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan.

“It is a tough pull and we are suffering significant casualties,” Gates said, adding that the Pentagon had expected a fierce battle in the southern city of Kandahar and other Taliban-controlled areas.

“He (McChrystal) is confident he will be able to demonstrate by December that not only do we have the right strategy but that we are making progress,” Gates said.

The U.S. defense secretary, however, said it was too early to be able to say how many U.S. troops would be withdrawn from Afghanistan and how quickly they would leave when a planned drawdown began in July 2011.

“That absolutely has not been decided,” Gates said.

President Barack Obama decided in December to send 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan as part of a revised strategy that focuses on securing Kandahar, the Taliban’s birthplace, to try to turn the tide in the nearly nine-year-old war.

Obama also announced the July 2011 date for the gradual withdrawal of troops. Transferring responsibility for security to Afghan troops in certain parts of the country is one of the linchpins of the Obama strategy.

But doubts remain that Afghan troops will be able to assert control if given broader authority next year — recent reports have suggested that Kabul’s army is poorly trained and suffers high rates of desertion.

Some top military officials have said privately that they doubt they will really know if the war strategy is working or not until next summer, around the time Obama plans to begin a troop withdrawal, conditions permitting.

White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel told ABC’s “This Week” program that the July 2011 drawdown date was “firm,” adding that Washington was seeing signs that the Afghan government was making headway on security.

“We are now at that point in Afghanistan, and in fact for the first time in eight years, nine years, they’re actually meeting their police recruitment requirements as well as their army recruitment requirements,” he said in an interview aired on Sunday.

Gates said he was confident that Afghan troops would be ready to take over primary responsibility for security in some parts of Afghanistan.

(Writing by Paul Simao, Editing by Will Dunham)

UPDATE 1-UBS CEO sees politicians backing U.S. tax deal

VIENNA, June 11 (Reuters) – UBS (UBSN.VX) (UBS.N) chief executive Oswald Gruebel expects Swiss parliamentarians to back a tax deal that would draw a line under a legal dispute that has threatened to bring the bank to its knees.

The Swiss lower house rejected the deal on Tuesday, triggering a new parliamentary debate next week and delaying a final decision on whether to allow the government to hand over 4,450 UBS client accounts to U.S. authorities. [ID:nLDE6570NF]

When asked by reporters on the sidelines of a banking event whether the Swiss parliament would back the deal, Gruebel said: “I am confident it will approve it because it is about a contract between the U.S. and Switzerland, not with UBS”.

UBS has already handed over the data to Swiss authorities for processing, as required by the United States under the agreement. “We had to fulfil certain obligations which we have done, so it’s now up to Switzerland and the U.S.,” Gruebel said.

Tuesday’s snub by the main arm of parliament came after a vote in favour of the deal by the upper house last week, meaning the two houses will have to try and agree a common text by the end of next week. [ID:nLDE65117T]

Even if Swiss politicians support the deal, they could still put it to a referendum, a scenario the lower house supported on Tuesday. That would delay the handover of data beyond the August deadline even if Swiss voters were in favour.

The U.S. government agreed last year to drop tax evasion charges against UBS after Switzerland promised it would transfer by this August the details of clients UBS helped to dodge taxes, a move that would breach existing bank secrecy laws. [ID:nLDE64B1HV]

A Swiss court in January duly blocked the data transfer, forcing the government to move to bypass that ruling with a legal patch that requires parliamentary approval by both houses. (Reporting by Ed Taylor; Writing by Jason Rhodes; Editing by Dan Lalor)

NATO warns Afghan success not yet assured

BRUSSELS, June 11 (Reuters) – NATO warned on Friday of tough times ahead in Afghanistan and said success was not yet assured in its struggle against a widening Taliban insurgency.

NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen told a meeting of defence ministers of the 28 NATO states the alliance force in Afghanistan was facing fierce resistance from insurgents in the Taliban heartlands of Helmand and Kandahar provinces.

A statement by the ministers said military operations were making “measured progress” in extending the reach of the Afghan government and marginalising the insurgency. However, it added:

“Significant challenges remain, and success is not yet assured.”

Rasmussen said NATO needed to step up its training effort to allow the start of a handover of security responsibility to Afghan forces, hopefully by the end of the year. But he said NATO’s commitment would be long term.

“There will be many difficult days ahead but a stable, sovereign Afghanistan means a safer world for all of us and we will do what is necessary for as long as necessary to make it happen,” he said.

SOBER ASSESSMENT

The sober assessment of the difficulties facing a mission now involving more than 122,000 foreign troops and worsening casualties came after the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan said a long-awaited campaign in the Taliban’s birthplace Kandahar would unfold more slowly than planned.

Citing shortcomings that set back the last big U.S.-led offensive in neighbouring Helmand, General Stanley McChrystal said on Thursday he wanted more time to shore up Afghan support for the campaign in Kandahar and to prepare local authorities to provide services when security improves.

The decision to move more slowly on what has been billed as the biggest operation of the nearly nine-year-old war adds to doubt about what can be achieved by this year’s end, when the White House is holding a review and demanding signs of progress.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said gains would need to be seen by then in order to maintain public support for the war in NATO countries, which has eroded as the death toll has risen. At least 17 foreign troops have been killed this week.

The massive military operation in Kandahar is the linchpin of McChrystal’s strategy to turn the tide this year, using the bulk of 30,000 reinforcements sent by U.S. President Barack Obama in a final “surge” of extra troops announced in December.

Obama embraced a counterinsurgency strategy devised by McChrystal last year that aims to push the Taliban from key population centres. But in agreeing to send McChrystal extra troops, the White House also set a goal of starting a gradual withdrawal in July 2011, making the next 12 months critical.

Clinton admits to shortfall of trainers for Afghan troops as exit strategy is agreed

Tallinn (Estonia), Apr.24 (ANI): U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton has admitted that Washington is aware of there being a ””shortfall of trainers”” for local troops in Afghanistan, but believes that with sufficient mentoring the latter can support themselves against the Taliban.

Her comment surfaced as NATO agreed on a road map for the future of Afghanistan.

According to The Independent, the NATO summit ended here last night without details of the framework for a handover of security to President Hamid Karzai””s forces being made public.

The Independent has learned, however, that an area will be deemed ready for transfer if serious violence has been in abeyance for a period of time, if there is access to power by different ethnic and tribal elements and if the conditions are present for development projects taking place in relative safety.

According to senior diplomatic sources, clusters of provinces, rather than individual ones, will be transferred to “provide critical mass” able to withstand the Taliban.

The decisions on the locations for handover and the timeframe involved will be made at a NATO conference later this year after talks between Western and Afghan government officials.

The start of the handover will not, however, mean that troops can start to withdraw.

British troops in particular will have to wait before pulling out as the areas in the south where they are based – the main battleground with the Taliban –– will be among the last to be transferred to Afghan control.

NATO Secretary General, Anders Fogh Rasmussen said: “The future of this mission is clear and visible: more Afghan capability and more Afghan leadership… But it will not be a pullout. It will not be a run for the exit… Our soldiers will move into a more supportive role. So, it will be a gradual process. This is conditions-based and not calendar-driven.”””” (ANI)

Allies aim to start handover of power to Afghans

Fearful of losing public support for the war in Afghanistan, the US and NATO agreed to start transferring control of the country back to its leaders by year’s end but acknowledged that achieving stability will take decades.

If successful, the transition plan approved by US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and representatives of the 27 other NATO countries would enable President Barack Obama to meet his target date of July 2011 for starting to bring American troops home.

The stakes are high. If the plan fails, public support in Europe, the US and among Afghans themselves could further erode or even collapse.

Much depends not only on improved NATO military performance but also on political reconciliation between the Taliban and Afghan’s central government. The allies must quickly improve the training and performance of the Afghan army and police, and strengthen Afghan institutions weakened by decades of conflict.

Clinton on Friday offered an optimistic assessment of the approach, which NATO hopes Afghan President Hamid Karzai will endorse in July at an international conference in Kabul.

Once approved, NATO would officially implement the plan at a summit, possibly in conjunction with a public announcement of the first provinces to be transferred to Afghan control, said Mark Sedwill, the senior NATO civilian in Kabul.

“We believe that with sufficient attention, training and mentoring, the Afghans themselves are perfectly capable of defending themselves against insurgents,” Clinton told a news conference.

“Does that mean it will be smooth sailing? I don’t think so. Look at Iraq.” Asked whether any plan to turn power over to Afghanistan’s sometimes dysfunctional, corrupt and resource-poor government was viable, Sedwill told reporters; “It’s far from certain.”

Yet he and other NATO officials said they believe that with an infusion of new military and civilian aid – including the 30,000 US troops dispatched by the Obama administration last December – success is possible.

“Increasingly this year the momentum will be ours,” said NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen. He said the transition to Afghan control is important to demonstrate not only to Afghans but also to the Western countries fighting there that an end to the war is in sight.

“Our aims in 2010 are clear: to take the initiative against the insurgents, to help the Afghan government exercise its sovereignty, and to start handing over responsibility for Afghanistan to the Afghans this year,” Fogh Rasmussen said. He added, however, that even if the transition unfolds as expected it will takes decades of additional assistance for Afghanistan to stand on its own.

Sedwill said the first provinces to be transferred to government control would likely be in the north and west, where the Taliban is less active. And he said the idea is to hand over a cluster of contiguous provinces at the same time to increase the odds of their withstanding the insurgents.

Clinton warned of a hard road ahead, but said she was not discouraged by the obstacles.

NATO is about 450 trainers short of the number it says are needed to prepare security forces for transition to an Afghan-run Afghanistan. That gap apparently remained after Friday’s session, which was not designed to elicit specific pledges of troops, trainers or other military resources.

“We have a relatively small gap that we’re still working to fill. I’m very convinced we’ll get that filled,” Clinton said, adding: “For me, the glass is way more than half full.”

Rasmussen stressed the importance of providing hope to Afghan civilians and halting an erosion of public support for the war in NATO countries.

“Citizens in Afghanistan and in all troop contributing countries are demanding visible progress, and they are right to insist on that,” he added. “We should have no illusions. Making progress will not be easy and will not be quick. But based on what we see on the ground now, it is happening.”

He added that winding down the war does not mean the allies will leave before the mission is accomplished.

“It will not be a run for the exits,” he said.

To underscore NATO’s effort to coordinate of its strategy and operations with the government in Kabul, Afghan Foreign Minister Zalmai Rassoul attended the Tallinn meeting.

The participants were briefed via video conference by US Gen.

Stanley McChrystal, Afghanistan’s top NATO commander, and in person by Adm. James Stavridis, the top NATO commander in Europe, as well as by Sedwill and other top civilian officials.

In a speech Thursday before the two-day NATO meeting began, Fogh Rasmussen called Afghanistan the most challenging military operation in NATO’s history.

“We all want to see a stable and secure Afghanistan – an Afghanistan that is no longer a threat to its region and to the rest of the world,” he said. “We will stay in Afghanistan as long as it takes to achieve that goal. We want to continue to empower the Afghans. And gradually hand over to them greater responsibility for the security of their own country when conditions permit.”

Kyrgyz opposition leader says dissolves parliament

BISHKEK, April 8 (Reuters) – The head of Kyrgyzstan’s new self-proclaimed government on Thursday said she was dissolving parliamment after forcing President Kurmanbek Bakiyev to flee the capital Bishkek.

“Under the decree on the handover of power … we are dissolving parliament,” Roza Otunbayeva, who led opposition to Bakiyev’s government, told reporters in Bishkek. (Reporting by Maria Golovnina, Writing by Conor Humphries; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Schools join forces to help disabled kids

Canberra’s public and private schools will combine resources and expertise to help students with special needs.

Education Minister Andrew Barr has established a working group consisting of representatives from all sectors to share expertise and resources.

Mr Barr says it is hoped the closer collaboration will make it easier for students with disabilities to move from one school to another.

“What we have identified is there is often a disconnect when a student with a disability leaves a school that they’ve been at for a long time and then transitions into a new school environment,” he said.

“It’s really important that those linkages and a proper handover occurs and that can be even more complex if the transition is from a public school to a non-government school and vice versa.”

Mr Barr says the working group will create closer ties and partnerships between schools.

Colombian rebels release hostage after 12 years

A Colombian soldier captured as a teenager by the country’s left-wing FARC rebels has been released after more than 12 years as a hostage.

Sergeant Pablo Moncayo was 19 when he was captured. He was a corporal at the time but was promoted while in captivity.

The Red Cross coordinated the handover that took place at a remote jungle location in the south of the country.

Sergeant Moncayo’s plight has received international media attention largely due to his father’s lobbying efforts in which he would wear chains to symbolise his son’s captivity.

But the rebels say no more hostages will be released until Colombian president Alvaro Uribe agrees to negotiate a prisoner exchange.

Mr Uribe has a hardline policy against the rebels, but says an exchange is possible if freed guerillas do not rejoin the FARC.

Colombia rebels free hostage after 12 years

Wed, Mar 31 08:36 AM

Colombian rebels on Tuesday freed a government soldier who was held hostage in the jungle for more than 12 years and symbolized those left behind in a war against Latin America’s oldest insurgency.

A Brazilian military helicopter ferried Sergeant Pablo Emilio Moncayo to a civilian airport in Florencia, 370 km (230 miles) south of the capital Bogota, after rebels handed him over to a Red Cross team in Colombia’s remote southern jungle.

His release was the second handover this week and raised hopes for a broader hostage deal with the FARC, once a powerful rebel force that has been battered by President Alvaro Uribe’s U.S.-backed war against guerrillas and cocaine traffickers.

Moncayo smiled and looked well as he stepped off a helicopter in uniform to greet family on the airport tarmac.

“I thank God and my father,” Moncayo told reporters. “You have no idea how staggering it is to return to civilization.”

Now 32, Moncayo was a teenager when he was captured by guerrillas who overran his army communications base in 1997 and marched him into the jungle. He was seen only occasionally in rebel videos during his captivity.

Guerrillas on Sunday freed Josue Daniel Calvo, kidnapped a year ago after he was wounded in combat. But they still hold 22 police and soldiers in secret camps, where they are often chained, starving and forced to run from army patrols.

Moncayo’s father lobbied for his release with from Venezuela to France, often wearing chains to symbolize his son’s captivity.

The handovers came before Colombians go to the polls in May to pick a successor for the conservative Uribe. He steps down after two terms dominated by his hard-line against the FARC, or Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

But any candidate to replace him will likely maintain his popular tough security and pro-business policies.

HOPE FOR HOSTAGES

The releases have reopened discussions about a possible broader agreement to negotiate an exchange of jailed rebels for kidnapped troops. But past unilateral hostage releases have not led to any such agreement or opened up peace talks.

Uribe, whose father was killed in a botched rebel kidnap bid two decades ago, says he is open to an exchange if freed rebels do not return to crime and if the handover does not mean demilitarizing an area that would allow rebels to regroup.

The FARC has demanded Uribe pull troops back from a zone the size of New York City to guarantee any handover, but appear to have dropped that condition. They also want to include several extradited FARC leaders held in U.S. jails in a swap.

“With this unilateral gesture, the FARC believes the road is open for an exchange of prisoners as the only way … to return prisoners in the jungles as well as guerrillas in jails in Colombia and the United States,” it said in a statement.

Once an army that bombed and kidnapped at will, the FARC has lost top commanders and seen its ranks thinned by desertions. Violence and bombings have dropped sharply. But it is still a threat in rural areas where state presence is weak, thanks to cash from cocaine trafficking.

Earlier, Venezuela’s state-backed Telesur television showed images of Moncayo with Piedad Cordoba, a Colombian senator who traveled with the Red Cross and has negotiated with rebels.

The Colombian government demanded Telesur explain how it managed to have broadcasts from the handover site, which was meant to be confidential. Telesur said it had been sent the images by e-mail as had other channels.

Hugo Chavez, Venezuela’s socialist president, has in the past negotiated with the FARC to free hostages. But Colombian officials say FARC rebels take refuge in the neighboring country, and the two governments are currently locked in a diplomatic dispute.

(Additional reporting by Enrique Andres in Caracas, Writing by Patrick Markey in Bogota, editing by Paul Simao)
Herbert Villarraga

Uribe coalition pressured after Colombia vote

(Reuters) – Colombian presidential frontrunner Juan Manuel Santos faces a struggle to secure an outright victory in May’s election after legislative election results over the weekend put President Alvaro Uribe’s alliance under pressure.

World

Uribe’s U Party, led by Santos, and the allied Conservative Party scored a majority in Colombia’s parliament on Sunday. But the solid Conservative showing is likely to dampen proposals the party join Santos under a unity candidate.

The vote was a barometer for the May 30 ballot to succeed Uribe, one of Washington’s top allies who is popular at home for his security drive against leftist guerrillas and applauded by Wall Street for his pro-investment policies.

Colombia’s peso currency closed on Monday up 0.34 percent at 1,893.5 versus the dollar as investors sold dollars purchased as a precaution before the election. It was another sign investors are expecting stability during the handover from Uribe in Latin America’s No. 4 oil producer.

Uribe’s U Party secured 27 seats in the 102-member Senate with the Conservative Party winning 23, bringing the pro-Uribe coalition a strong majority in the upper house, according to official results.

In the 166-member lower house, the U Party was set to have won around 43 seats while the Conservative Party secured 47, according to tallies from regional authorities with more than 50 percent of the vote counted.

Santos, a former defense minister closely associated with Uribe’s security successes, is ahead in opinion polls and is trying to rally the coalition around a unity candidate.

But he does not have the more than 50 percent support needed to avoid a runoff in June, polls and analysts say.

“This is a mandate from the Colombian people,” Santos told Caracol Radio. “The campaign for the presidency starts now.”

Colombia’s election race heated up after a court ruled in February that Uribe could not run for re-election after two terms highlighted by his hard line against the FARC or Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

Uribe’s coalition consists of the U Party, the Conservatives, Cambio Radical and a host of smaller parties in both houses. But Cambio Radical is also already campaigning with its own presidential candidate, German Vargas Lleras.

“There is not going to be a president in the first round,” said Jaime Castro, a former Bogota mayor who is now a political analyst. “All the parties and their candidates will go to the first round to test their strength.”

CONSERVATIVE INFIGHTING

Any candidate replacing Uribe is unlikely to steer too far from his security and free-market policies that have increased foreign investment from $2 billion when he came to office in 2002 to $10 billion expected this year.

The Conservative Party is locked in a battle to determine who will run as its candidate. Voters on Sunday were asked to chose the party’s representative in an internal ballot, but final results of that vote are still pending.

The two front-runners are Andres Felipe Arias, a close Uribe ally, and Noemi Sanin, a former defense minister. Both candidates had 42 percent of the vote, according to preliminary electoral authorities.

Arias, dubbed “Uribito” or “Little Uribe” for his style and similarity to his former boss, has suggested he could join forces with Santos to decide on a single candidate for the coalition. But Sanin says she will only run for her party.

The strong Conservative result in Congress could pressure the already divided party to abandon any ideas of an alliance with Santos and challenge him directly in May. The party meets

on March 24 for an assembly.

“This vote gives us hope of winning the presidential election,” said Fernando Araujo, Conservative Party leader. “If we end up talking about a coalition with Juan Manuel Santos, we need a way to go to the first round with a single candidate.”

(Additional reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta and Nelson Bocanegra in Bogota, Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Former astronaut, African-American, to head NASA

Former astronaut, African-American, to head NASA Washington – US President Barack Obama Saturday named Charles Bolden, a black ex-astronaut, to lead the US space agency into its next chapter that could take it back to the moon.

The retired Marine Corps general, 62, flew four times in the space shuttle in the ’80s and ’90s – two times as mission commander. His nomination must be approved by the Senate.

Former NASA head Michael Griffin stepped down in January as Obama was entering office.

The handover of leadership comes at an uneasy time at the space agency as it closes down its quarter-century-old shuttle programme in 2010. The next transporter, called Orion, is not expected to be flight-ready until 2015, leaving travel to and from the nearly completed International Space Station up to the Russian Soyuz programme.

The US space programme is now turning its attention to getting back to the moon and use it as a jumping-off platform for exploring Mars, according to NASA’s long-term objectives set by former president George W Bush.

NASA is preparing to launch two moon probes on June 17 to send data back to NASA to help scientists find the best location for a spacecraft landing to bring humans to the moon. (dpa)

Jordan bans Peter Andre from meeting son Harvey

London, May 23 (ANI): Peter Andre is heartbroken after wife Katie Price banned him from seeing their disabled son Harvey.

The 31-year-old glamour model banned Andre from meeting Harvey in revenge for snubbing her on her birthday.

While Price a.k.a Jordan consulted celebrity lawyer Fiona Shackleton, Andre 36, had an emotional reunion with the kids Princess Tiaami and Junior.

However he was devastated at being refused access to Harvey, Katie’s disabled son from her romance with footballer Dwight Yorke.

He was very close to Harvey and had even called him his “first” son.

Andre also made official moves to adopt him legally.

“Kate is still in love with Pete and wants to persuade him to give their marriage another shot,” the Mirror quoted a source as saying.

“She was desperate to be present at the handover so that she and the kids could spend time with their dad and remind him how great family life is – and, hopefully, can once again be.

“But he saw through her ploy and has reached the end of his tether following a series of increasingly hostile rows, the culmination being one at the beginning of this week.

“He wants nothing more to do with her. As far as Pete is concerned, the marriage is over.

“Now it’s all about the kids. Happily, Kate agreed Pete could see them over the bank holiday weekend, which meant the world to him.

“The only sour point was little Harvey. Pete’s been itching to see the little one ever since the couple announced their split. But Kate dug her heels in when he refused to meet her face-to-face.

“Pete had high hopes he would see Harvey on Friday and over the weekend, but now it’s looking unlikely. He is so sad.

“Katie hasn’t seen Harvey for a week though either, so she feels she has to make up for lost time – plus it’s her birthday so she wants her son with her.

It’s been an explosive cause of tension and things have never been so bad between the pair,” the source added. (ANI)

New departure terminal at IGI airport commences operation

New Delhi, Apr 19 (PTI) Flying out of Delhi may not be chaotic anymore as a swanky new departure terminal at Indira Gandhi International airport here today become operational. However, some confusion prevailed among the passengers of IndiGo, Kingfisher and Kingfisher Red airlines who arrived at either terminal 1B or 1A, from where these airlines were operating till yesterday.

“150 passengers of IndiGo’s flight (6E 201) to Guwahati were the first lot to check-in and board their plane at 5.35 am, after they were accorded a traditional welcome at the newly-built departure terminal,” a spokesperson of Delhi International Airport Limited (DIAL), the airport’s operator and developer, said. Indigo, Kingfisher Red and Kingfisher have shifted their operations to T1D from terminal 1A and 1B after their last flight took off last night.

DIAL officials present at the new building, christened T1D, presented mementos, sweets and gifts to the passengers. Cherry Williams, from Chicago, was the first passenger to enter the terminal building to take her flight to Guwahati.

Passengers were delighted to experience the new facilities of the terminal, the DIAL spokesperson said. Earlier, B S Santharaju, Chief Executive Officer of DIAL handed over a key, symbolising a formal handover of the terminal building to Udayan Banerjee, DIG CISF and Deepak Agarwal Commandant CISF. PTI.
PTI

Amateur photographer captures UFO hovering over London

London, April 8 (ANI): An ‘uncanny’ glowing disc hovering above London has been captured by an amateur photographer.hmad Zaigham, 30, took the picture of the unidentified object from his home in South Harrow, North West London.

“I was immersed in the TV programme when just by chance I saw this uncanny light in the sky and I was instantly mesmerised,” the Telegraph quoted Zaigham as saying.aigham, a computer engineer, was able to take one shot of the object as it was stationary for a few seconds.

“Then it moved rapidly up and above at incredible speed, a comparable speed to a fighter jet at full power, so fast that panning the camera in the direction was impossible,” he said.

Zaigham also said that the object made a ‘whistle kind of sound’ and seemed to ‘quickly fade in light’ after he took the picture.

“The light coming from this thing is something I have never seen the like. I dont think any aircraft has a light like this,” he said.

Zaigham has said that he may handover the photograph to NASA for further investigation. (ANI)

Lokke Rasmussen named new Danish prime minister

Finance Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen said on Sunday he would become prime minister and do his best to guide Denmark through the global economic crisis, replacing his namesake who has been appointed head of NATO.

“The Queen has asked me to form a government with the Liberal Party and the Conservatives and that is a task I have accepted,” Lokke Rasmussen told reporters after meeting Queen Margrethe at the Amalienborg Palace in Copenhagen.

He had already won the backing of his ruling Liberal Party’s coalition allies to head a new government after Anders Fogh Rasmussen stepped down to prepare for his new post as secretary-general of the western military alliance NATO.

Both the Conservatives, his junior coalition parter, and the anti-immigrant Danish People’s Party, their ally, have given 44-year-old Lokke Rasmussen their backing, enabling him to take over without calling a general election.

“I will work day and night and use the experience I have gained in more than 20 years in politics to try and guide Denmark through the international crisis,” Lokke Rasmussen said.

“I feel very humbled by this task and I will try my utmost to live up to the expectations of the Danish people.”

The two Rasmussens, who are not related, will meet at the prime minister’s office later in the day for a symbolic handover of power.

The cabinet will resign, leaving Lokke Rasmussen free to appoint a new ministerial team. He said he would not make many changes and hoped to complete the cabinet in the next few days.

Analysts are tipping Fogh Rasmussen’s key aide and party strategist, Claus Frederiksen, to become finance minister, and his successor will need a new welfare minister to replace Karen Jespersen, who resigned unexpectedly on Friday.

Lokke, one of Denmark’s youngest prime ministers, is expected to continue his predecessor’s pro-growth, tax-cutting policies and also inherits the task of leading negotiations for a global climate treaty in Copenhagen in December and steering Denmark through the economic crisis.

Incoming Malaysia PM faces uphill reform drive

Incoming Malaysian premier Najib Razak looks set to initiate aggressive political and economic reforms, but change could be slow and difficult as the country faces one of its toughest tests.

Najib, a British-trained economist, will become Malaysia’s sixth prime minister on Friday, assuming the mantle as the economy enters its first recession in a decade and the government faces the prospect of losing power to a resurgent opposition.

Outgoing premier Abdullah Ahmad Badawi handed in his resignation letter to the king on Thursday, following a tenure considered weak and ineffective by many.

“The handover and swearing in of the new Prime Minister will take place as scheduled on Friday,” a high-level government source told Reuters after Abdullah and Najib met the king separately on Thursday.

Falling foreign investment and racial tensions will push Najib to tackle corruption and review a race-based policy which has kept control of the economy in the hands of well-connected ethnic Malay tycoons.

“His major clear clarion call is a call for change from the politics to the economics side,” said Zainal Aznam Yusof, a member of a council that advises the premier on economic issues.

The 55-year old Najib has pledged to wean the economy off its reliance on low-end manufacturing, further open up the services sector and close a widening ethnic and religious divide.

REFORM EXPECTED

A source told Reuters last week that Najib would name his cabinet within a week of taking office and radically reform state-linked firms to make them more profit-oriented.

But Najib has to drive reforms while trying to steer Asia’s third most open economy through the headwind of slumping exports and rising unemployment.

A son of Malaysia’s second prime minister and nephew of the third, Najib is regarded as a capable administrator who has been groomed for over three decades for the country’s top job.

But his reputation has been sullied by allegations of corruption over a slew of defence deals and involvement in the murder of a Mongolian model.

Najib has dismissed both claims as “malicious lies”.

An immediate test would be three by-elections — one parliamentary and two state seats — on April 7.

The outcome of the polls would not alter the balance of power in parliament but it is still crucial after Najib led the ruling coalition to defeats in two recent by-elections.

“If the National Front loses… it will show that the voters have not yet seen the changes that they expect, and that they want the process of reform to continue,” said political analyst Khoo Kay Peng.

STRONG-ARM TACTICS

As Najib wrestles with a resurgent opposition, there are

fears of strong-arm tactics to stifle political dissent.

Last week opposition websites were barred from covering the annual meeting of the main political party. An opposition MP and a popular blogger have been charged with sedition, and two opposition newspapers have been banned.

“Najib is already blamed for quickly transforming the political atmosphere in the country to an increasingly gloomy and darkening landscape, coupled with grave concerns about his suitability, integrity and legitimacy,” said Lim Kit Siang, an opposition leader.

In the longer term, Najib has the tricky task of reviewing a decades-old policy favouring Malays in jobs, education and business without upsetting the main ruling party’s power base.

“I don’t think there is much appetite or political consensus to put into effect a radical reorientation of affirmative action,” said Manu Bhaskaran, a partner at U.S. advisory Centennial.

“It would probably be better to iron out the weaknesses in the affirmative action programme, to tackle specific areas where the weaknesses are particularly egregious in terms of the openings for corruption, for cronyism, for damaging, inefficient consequences.

Madagascar’s embattled Rajoelina pulls island out of SADC

Madagascar's embattled Rajoelina pulls island out of SADC Johannesburg/Swaziland – Madagascar’s embattled leader Andry Rajoelina announced Wednesday he was pulling the country out of the Southern African Development Community trade grouping after the 15- nation bloc on Monday suspended the island.

Rajoelina made the announcement in the provincial city of Fiarantsoa after a meeting with business leaders.

On Monday SADC leaders opted at a meeting in Swaziland to suspend Madagascar over Rajoelina’s ouster of the island’s democratically- elected president of seven years, Marc Ravalomanana, earlier this month.

They took their decision after a briefing by Ravalomanana, who stepped aside after being pressured to resign by the army following weeks of opposition protests.

Thousands of his supporters have held demonstrations in the capital Antananarivo over the past week to demand his return.

Ravalomanana had handed his powers to a military triumvirate, which then transferred the powers conferred on them to his 34-year- old arch-rival, Rajoelina, former mayor of Antananarivo.

SADC, the African Union, the European Union, the US and others have condemned the handover of power as unconstitutional, despite Madagascar’s constitutional court declaring it legal.

The AU has also suspended the vast Indian Ocean island, which lies off the coast of south-east Africa and is famous for its abundance of rare flora and fauna.

Rajoelina has downplayed SADC’s suspension, saying SADC is of little importance to the former French colony and that the trade ties mainly benefitted Ravalomanana.

Ravalomanana, 59, is the owner of a vast food conglomerate. (dpa)

Madagascar’s Rajoelina is inaugurated as self-declared president

Antananarivo – Madagascar’s new leader Andry Rajoelina was inaugurated as president Saturday at a stadium ceremony attended by some 50,000 cheering supporters in the capital, Antananarivo.

The ceremony, following seven weeks of violence which saw the ousting of elected president Marc Ravalomanana, came a day after the African Union suspended the country over Rajoelina’s “coup”.

AU Peace and Security Council Chairman Bruno Nongoma Zidouemba had rejected Rajoelina’s army-backed arrival to power through the streets, which he said could be considered tantamount to a “coup”.

Ravalomanana resigned as president on Tuesday, handing over power to the military, who then gave it to Rajoelina, who was confirmed as interim president by the country’s top court a day later.

Zidouemba said Madagascar had six months to organize elections or face sanctions on its leaders. Rajoelina, the former mayor of the capital Antananarivo, has given himself two years to hold elections.

The AU suspension came as a a growing number of countries vowed not to recognize Rajoelina’s leadership.

The Southern African Development Community, the 15-country regional economic grouping of which Madagascar is a member, said Rajoelina’s “illegal ousting of the democratically-elected president” was “unconstitutional” and refused to recognize it.

South Africa’s Defence Minister Charles Nqakula has said the SADC would meet later this month to discuss sanctions, even as executive secretary Tomaz Salamao led a team to Madagascar for talks with the new leadership.

The United States said Thursday it was reviewing relations with Madagascar following the “undemocratic” transfer of power.

Germany also denounced the handover and called for a return to democracy on the island while South Africa’s Foreign Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma said: “We don’t support those who take power through unconstitutional means… so we will not recognize this government.”

Rajoelina swept to power this week after the army leadership took his side in his two-month power struggle with Ravalomanana, whom the opposition accused of authoritarianism and misuse of public funds.

Over 100 people were killed in near-daily street protests, which brought the economy of the impoverished island of around 20 million people to its knees.

Ravalomanana, who was re-elected to a second five-year term in 2006, lost support over use of lethal force on protestors. His whereabouts are unknown. (dpa)