Your bathroom showers are hazardous to health

Washington, September 15 (ANI): That invigorating relief and good cleansing from daily bathroom showers may bring along a face full of potentially pathogenic bacteria, warn researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Using high-tech instruments and lab methods, the researchers analysed roughly 50 showerheads from nine cities in seven states that included New York City, Chicago and Denver.

CU-Boulder Distinguished Professor Norman Pace, lead study author, says that about 30 percent of the devices were found to harbour significant levels of Mycobacterium avium, a pathogen linked to pulmonary disease that most often infects people with compromised immune systems, but which can occasionally infect healthy people.

The study showed that some M. avium and related pathogens were clumped together in slimy “biofilms” that clung to the inside of showerheads at more than 100 times the “background” levels of municipal water.

“If you are getting a face full of water when you first turn your shower on, that means you are probably getting a particularly high load of Mycobacterium avium, which may not be too healthy,” Pace said.

He pointed out that research at National Jewish Hospital in Denver indicated that increases in pulmonary infections in the US in recent decades from so-called “non-tuberculosis” mycobacteria species, such as M. avium, could be attributed to people taking more showers and fewer baths.

He said that water spurting from showerheads could distribute pathogen-filled droplets that suspend themselves in the air, and could easily be inhaled into the deepest parts of the lungs.

“There have been some precedents for concern regarding pathogens and showerheads. But until this study we did not know just how much concern,” said Pace.

In Denver, according to the researcher, one showerhead with high loads of Mycobacterium gordonae was cleaned with a bleach solution in an attempt to eradicate it, but tests conducted several months later showed that the bleach treatment ironically caused a three-fold increase in the pathogen, indicating a general resistance of mycobacteria species to chlorine.

Ask Pace whether it is dangerous to take showers, and he says: “Probably not, if your immune system is not compromised in some way. But it’s like anything else-there is a risk associated with it.”

He stresses that plastic showerheads appear to “load up” with more pathogen-enriched biofilms, and thus metal showerheads may be a good alternative.

“There are lessons to be learned here in terms of how we handle and monitor water. Water monitoring in this country is frankly archaic. The tools now exist to monitor it far more accurately and far less expensively that what is routinely being done today,” said Pace.

A research article on his study has been published in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

Ship carrying iron ore sinks off Orissa

Paradip (Orissa), Sep 11 (ANI): A cargo ship carrying around 25,000 tonnes of iron ore to China capsized off Orissa coast.

MV ‘Black Rose,’ a vessel operating under the Mongolian flag, capsized 5-6 km off the harbour after it had loaded iron ore from Paradip port.

The vessel tilted after a technical snag, and later sunk.

Indian Coast Guard and port authorities rescued 26 crew members while a Russian was still missing.

“The ship MV Black Rose had sunk off Paradip with 27 crew members on board. Twenty-six crewmembers were recovered by the port trust and the Indian coast guard ship also sailed after receiving information. The port trust has coordinated very well. One of the crewmembers is missing, ” said V.K. Verghese, a Commandant of the coastguard.

The rescued crew comprises of 17 Bangladeshis, seven Ukrainians and two Russians. (ANI)

Muhammad Ali given huge Irish hero’s welcome

Belfast (Ireland), Sep.2 (ANI): Former World Heavyweight Champion Muhammad Ali was given an Irish hero’s welcome on Tuesday at Turnpike Road from where his great-grandfather Abe Grady set out for the New World almost 150 years ago.

The former three times world heavyweight boxing champion was welcomed like a returning prodigal son when he arrived in Ennis, Co Clare, and was made its first Freeman.

Clearly moved by the fervour of the welcome, he refused to be ushered into a waiting vehicle by his security guards as the crowds chanted: “Ali! Ali! Ali!”

After unveiling a monument near the spot where his ancestral home – a two-room thatched cottage – once stood, he walked with his wife, Yolanda, to meet his fans, the majority of whom were not even born when his brilliant career was dimmed by the onset of Parkinson’s disease, reports The Times.

Today Turnpike Road is lined with primly neat council houses, none prouder than the home of the late Eileen O’Grady, whose daughter, Mary, kissed and hugged her famous distant cousin.

Eileen died nine months ago, preferring to keep her association with one of the greatest sportsmen of all time a secret.

Genealogists traced the roots of Ali, formerly Cassius Clay Jr, to Abe Grady through land registry documents, which record that Grady left Ireland in the 1860s from Cappa Harbour in Kilruch, Co Clare. He settled in Kentucky, where he married a freed African-American slave.

Their son also married an African-American and one of the daughters of that union was Odessa Lee Grady, who married Cassius Clay Sr. (ANI)

Gilani says minimum nuclear deterrence will be maintained at all costs

Islamabad, Aug. 29 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Syed Yousaf Raza Gilani has expressed optimism over the capability of the country’s military thwarting any challenge to its security and sovereignty, and urged minimum nuclear deterrence to be maintained at all costs.

Gilani said that Pakistan didn’t harbour any aggressive designs against any country.

He expressed these views during a meeting with the Chairman, Joint Chief of Staff Committee, General Tariq Majeed, on Friday.

According to sources, a host of issues came up for discussion regarding the overall security situation, Development plan of the Armed Forces 2025, war against terrorism, Pak-Afghan border situation, defense needs etc..

Gilani assured that all defense needs of the Armed Forces wouldl be fulfilled under Development Plan of the Armed Forces 2025, the Dawn reports.

General Majeed also briefed Gilani about his visit to Brunei and Vietnam. (ANI)

Muhammad Ali to visit ancestral home in Ireland

London, Aug.9 (ANI): Boxing legend Muhammad Ali is to visit his ancestral Irish home in September.

The former world heavyweight champion has accepted an invitation to see the birthplace of his great-grandfather in Ennis, Co Clare, on September 1, The Telegraph reports.

He is due to visit Dublin for a charity event the previous day

Members of Ennis Town Council are expected to make the 67-year-old, who is fighting Parkinson’s disease, the first Honorary Freeman of Ennis Town during his trip.

Mayor Frankie Neylon said thousands of visitors will come to the town to see the world famous boxer.

Ali’s great-grandfather Abe Grady emigrated from his home on the Turnpike Road in Ennis to the United States in the 1860s.

Grady sailed from Cappa Harbour in Kilrush, Co Clare, eventually settling in Kentucky, where he married an African-American woman.

Their son also married an African-American and one of the daughters of that union was Ali’s mother, named Odessa Lee Grady.

She married Cassius Clay senior, and they settled in Louisville, where their son was initially given his father’s name on his birth in 1942. He later changed his name to Muhammad Ali when he converted to the Nation of Islam after winning the world title in 1964.

Mayor Neylon said further details of Ali’s visit would be finalised during a special meeting of Ennis Town Council on Monday week. (ANI)

Swine flu virus more dangerous than previously believed

London, July 14 (ANI): In a new, highly detailed study of swine flu virus, H1N1, researchers have found that the pathogen is more virulent than previously believed.

Led by University of Wisconsin-Madison virologist Yoshihiro Kawaoka, the study has found that the H1N1 virus exhibits an ability to infect cells deep in the lungs, where it can cause pneumonia and, in severe cases, death.

Seasonal viruses typically infect only cells in the upper respiratory system.

“There is a misunderstanding about this virus. People think this pathogen may be similar to seasonal influenza. This study shows that is not the case. There is clear evidence the virus is different than seasonal influenza,” Nature magazine quoted Kawaoka as saying.

He says that the ability to infect the lungs is a quality frighteningly similar to those of other pandemic viruses, notably the 1918 virus, which killed tens of millions of people at the tail end of World War I.

The study has also found another similarity to the 1918 virus-people born before 1918 harbour antibodies that protect against the new H1N1 virus.

Kawaoka reveals that the virus could become even more pathogenic as the current pandemic runs its course, and the virus evolves to acquire new features.

It is now flu season in the world’s southern hemisphere, and the virus is expected to return in force to the northern hemisphere during the fall and winter flu season.

For the study, the researchers infected different groups of mice, ferrets and non-human primates with the pandemic virus and a seasonal flu virus.

They found that the H1N1 virus replicates much more efficiently in the respiratory system than seasonal flu, and causes severe lesions in the lungs similar to those caused by other more virulent types of pandemic flu.

“When we conducted the experiments in ferrets and monkeys, the seasonal virus did not replicate in the lungs. The H1N1 virus replicates significantly better in the lungs,” said Kawaoka.

The study also assessed the immune response of different groups to the new virus, and, surprisingly, found that people exposed to the 1918 virus, all of whom are now in advanced old age, have antibodies that neutralize the H1N1 virus.

The study also indicated that existing and experimental antiviral drugs could form an effective first line of defence against the virus and slow its spread. (ANI)

Herschel telescope obtains images of ‘whirlpool galaxy’ as first test observation

Paris, June 20 (ANI): Herschel, the largest infrared space telescope ever flown, has obtained images of the famous ‘whirlpool galaxy’ for a first test observation.

European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Herschel opened its ‘eyes’ on June 14 and the Photoconductor Array Camera and Spectrometer obtained images of M51, which is popularly dubbed the ‘whirlpool galaxy’.

Scientists obtained images in three colours, which clearly demonstrate the superiority of Herschel, the largest infrared space telescope ever flown.

This image shows the ‘whirlpool galaxy’, first observed by Charles Messier in 1773, who provided the designation Messier 51 (M51).

This spiral galaxy lies relatively nearby, about 35 million light-years away, in the constellation Canes Venatici. M51 was the first galaxy discovered to harbour a spiral structure.

The image is a composite of three observations taken at 70, 100 and 160 microns, taken by Herschel’s Photoconductor Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) on June 14 and 15, immediately after the satellite’s cryocover was opened on June 14.

Herschel, launched only a month ago, is still being commissioned and the first images from its instruments were planned to arrive only in a few weeks.

But, engineers and scientists were challenged to try to plan and execute daring test observations as part of a ‘sneak preview’ immediately after the cryocover was opened.

The objective was to produce a very early image that gives a glimpse of things to come.

To the left is the best image of M51, taken by NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS), juxtaposed with the Herschel observation on 14 and 15 June at 160 microns.

The obvious advantage of the larger size of the telescope is clearly reflected in the much higher resolution of the image. Herschel reveals structures that cannot be discerned in the Spitzer image.

These images clearly demonstrate that the shorter the wavelength, the sharper the image, which is a very important message about the quality of Herschel’s optics, since PACS observes at Hersche”s shortest wavelengths.

Produced from the very first test observation, these images lead scientists to conclude that the optical performance of Herschel and its large telescope is so far meeting their high expectations. (ANI)

Oil hunters started decimating whale populations as early as 1800

Washington, May 25 (ANI): One of several astonishing reconstructions of ocean life in olden days suggests that about the ocean around New Zealand teemed with about 27,000 southern right whales, about 30 times as many as today, before oil hunters started to whaling in the early 1800s.

The researchers set to make a presentation on the reconstruction at a Census of Marine Life conference, which runs from May 26 to 28, say that at about the same time, large pods of blue whales and orcas, blue sharks and thresher sharks darkened the waters off Cornwall, England, herds of harbour porpoise pursued fish upriver, and dolphins regularly played in waters inshore.

Census researchers are using such diverse sources as old ship logs, literary texts, tax accounts, newly translated legal documents and even mounted trophies to piece together images of fish of such sizes, abundance and distribution in ages past that they stagger modern imaginations.

They are also documenting the timelines over which those giant marine life populations declined.

Researchers James Barrett and Jen Harland of Cambridge University, Cluny Johnstone of York University, and Mike Richards of Germany-based Max Planck Institute reckon that a shift from eating locally-caught freshwater to marine fish species occurred around 1000 AD.

Their surmise is said to be consistent with analyses of scientifically-dated fish remains and historical data from England and northwestern Europe showing smaller freshwater fish and fewer species availability in early medieval times, likely caused by increased exploitation and pollution.

Meanwhile, Maria Lucia De Nicolo of the University of Bologna has established that new fishing boats and equipment invented in the 1500s made it possible to venture from coastal to deep sea fishing.

She says that the real revolution in marine fishing happened in the mid-1600s when pairs of boats began dragging a net.

Andy Rosenberg of the University of New Hampshire, a leader of the Census’ History of Marine Animal Population (HMAP) project and chair of the conference, says that new insights allowed by centuries of information are upending modern notions of “natural” marine life sizes, abundance, habitats and vulnerability, and causing authorities to revisit marine baselines.

The researchers believe that these insights may turn out to be useful for policy makers, who plan to use the results as a realistic baseline against which the current and future status of the marine ecosystem can be gauged.

Ian Poiner, Chair of the Census Scientific Steering Committee, says: “The insights emerging from this research of the past provide a new context for contemporary ocean management. nderstanding the magnitude and drivers of change long ago is essential to accurately interpret today’s trends and to make future projections.” (ANI)

Algae may harbour SARS cure

Washington, May 21 (ANI): A protein from algae might help in treating Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) infections, suggests a new study.

Researchers from University of Iowa have found that mice treated with the protein, Griffithsin (GRFT), had a 100 percent survival rate after exposure to the SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV), as compared to a 30 percent survival for untreated mice.

GRFT is believed to exert its anti-viral effects by altering the shape of the sugar molecules that line the virus’ envelope, allowing it to attach to and invade human cells, where it takes over the cells’ reproductive machinery to replicate itself.

Without that crucial ability, the virus is unable to cause disease.

“While preliminary, these results are very exciting and indicate a possible therapeutic approach to future SARS or other coronaviral outbreaks,” said Christine Wohlford-Lenane, senior research assistant at the department of pediatrics University of Iowa and the lead author of the study.

GRFT not only stop the virus from replicating, but also prevented secondary outcomes, such as weight loss, that are associated with infection.

“We are planning future studies to investigate prophylaxis, versus treatment interventions with GRFT, in the SARS mouse model in collaboration with Barry O’Keefe at the National Cancer Institute,” she said.

“In addition, we want to learn whether mice protected from SARS by GRFT develop protective immunity against future infection,” she added.

The research was presented at the American Thoracic Society’s 105th International Conference in San Diego. (ANI)

Archaeologists to reveal secrets of world’s oldest submerged town in Greece

Washington, May 13 (ANI): With the help of equipment that could revolutionize underwater archaeology, archaeologists will try to uncover the secrets of Pavlopetri in Greece, which is the world’s oldest submerged town.

The ancient town of Pavlopetri lies in three to four meters of water just off the coast of southern Laconia in Greece.

The ruins date from at least 2800 BC through to intact buildings, courtyards, streets, chamber tombs and some thirty-seven cist graves which are thought to belong to the Mycenaean period (c.1680-1180 BC).

Underwater archaeologist Dr Jon Henderson, from The University of Nottingham, will be the first archaeologist to have official access to the site in 40 years.

Although Mycenaean power was largely based on their control of the sea, little is known about the workings of the harbour towns of the period as archaeology to date has focused on the better known inland palaces and citadels.

Pavlopetri was presumably once a thriving harbour town where the inhabitants conducted local and long distance trade throughout the Mediterranean. Its sandy and well-protected bay would have been ideal for beaching Bronze Age ships.

As such, the site offers major new insights into the workings of Mycenaean society.

The aim of Dr Henderson’s project is to discover the history and development of Pavlopetri, find out when it was occupied, what it was used for and through a systematic study of the geomorphology of the area establish why the town disappeared under the sea.

According to Dr Henderson, from the Underwater Archaeology Research Centre (UARC) in the Department of Archaeology, “This site is of rare international archaeological importance. It is imperative that the fragile remains of this town are accurately recorded and preserved before they are lost forever.”

The survey, in collaboration with Elias Spondylis of the Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities of the Hellenic Ministry of Culture, will be carried out using equipment originally developed for the military and offshore oilfield market but looks set to transform underwater archaeological survey and recording.

Dr Henderson and his team will carry out a detailed millimeter accurate digital underwater survey of the site using an acoustic scanner developed by a major North American offshore engineering company.

The equipment can produce photo-realistic, three dimensional digital surveys of seabed features and underwater structures to sub-millimetre accuracy in a matter of minutes.

“The ability to survey submerged structures, from shipwrecks to sunken cities, quickly, accurately and more importantly, cost effectively, is a major obstacle to the future development of underwater archaeology. I believe we now have a technique which effectively solves this problem,” Dr Henderson said. (ANI)

Obama’s options in strife torn Pakistan are limited

Washington, May 4 (ANI): President Barack Obama has only limited options for dealing with the crisis in Pakistan, as the anti-American feeling in the country is high, and US combat presence is prohibited, according to a leading US daily.

The United States is fighting Pakistan-based extremists by proxy in order to save the PPP-led Government.

President Obama and his National Security Council were told by US intelligence that neither a Taliban takeover nor a military coup was imminent and that the Pakistani nuclear arsenal was safe, The Washington Post reports.

Security in Pakistan was deteriorating rapidly, particularly in the mountains along the Afghan border that harbour al-Qaeda and the Taliban, intelligence chiefs reported, and there were signs that those groups were working with indigenous extremists in Pakistan’s populous Punjabi heartland.

The tools most readily at hand are money, weapons, and a mentoring relationship with Pakistan’s government and military that alternates between earnest advice and anxious criticism, the paper says.

The relationship between Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and the US has restrained, after reports surfaced that the Obama Administration was wooing former premier Nawaz Sharif, Zardari’s main rival.

“What are the Americans trying to do, micromanage our politics?” a senior Pakistani official said testily. “This is not South Vietnam.”

As Zardari arrives this week for his first official visit with Obama — part of a tripartite summit with Afghan President Hamid Karzai — the Obama Administration has asked Congress to quickly approve hundreds of millions of dollars in emergency military aid for Pakistan.

That money, and billions more over the next several years, is to come with new authority for the Defence Department to decide what to spend it on.

Obama has also backed a five-year 7.5 billion dollars economic assistance package and is resisting congressional efforts to impose strict conditions on any aid to Pakistan. (ANI)

Mites living on hissing cockroach may harbour allergy cure

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): A new research has revealed how tiny mites living on the surface of cockroaches may prove to be advantageous to humans with allergies.

Mites, who thrive on the surface of Madagascar hissing cockroaches help decrease the presence of a variety of moulds on the cockroaches’ bodies, which in turn reduces allergic responses among humans who handle the popular insects.

For the study, the researchers cultured and identified fungi on the cockroaches’ body surfaces with and without mites and discovered that the presence of these mites reduced the moulds by at least 50 percent.

“We haven’t proved yet that this helps the cockroaches, but reducing the fungi present on their surface is beneficial overall. By suppressing the molds, the mites have a role in reducing allergic reactions to cockroaches,” said Joshua Benoit, a doctoral student in entomology at Ohio State University and a co-author of the study.

In a previous study on the Madagascar hissing cockroach, or Gromphadorhina portentosa, researchers discovered the moulds on cockroach surfaces.

But, as it turns out, not all colonies of Madagascar hissing cockroaches harbour the mites, a species called Gromphadorholaelaps schaeferi.

Although the researchers are unaware of the reason behind such preference, they found that the cockroaches that do harbour mites also harbour fewer moulds on their bodies.

In the study, female cockroaches with mites had 64 percent fewer fungal colonies than those lacking mites. In males, the difference was 31 percent, and in nymphs, or younger and smaller cockroaches, there were 24 percent fewer fungi.

For conforming if mites were responsible for the reduction in fungi, the researchers tested colonies with and without mites, but also removed mites from colonies that originally had mites and added mites to cockroaches that didn’t initially harbour any mites.

In all cases, the presence of mites resulted in lower levels of mould.

“The presence of the mites caused a reduction in all fungi on the surface, not just a select few kinds of fungus,” said Jay Yoder, a professor of biology at Wittenberg University and lead author of the study.

While almost 20 to 25 mites live on each adult cockroach, the scientists experimented by adding more mites to the insects’ surfaces, but found that more mites didn’t result in a more significant reduction in molds.

“The number on each insect is based on the food available,” said Benoit.

As of now, the researchers have described the symbiotic relationship as commensalism rather than mutualism, which means that just one species clearly benefits and no damage is done to the other.

The research is published in the current issue of the journal Symbiosis. (ANI)

Up to 300 boat migrants land on Sicily

Rome – Up to 300 illegal immigrants have landed on the Italian island of Sicily on Saturday, local media reported.

Italian coast guard authorities guided the migrants’ vessel into the harbour of Pozzallo, in the south of the island. Among the immigrants are thought to be more than 30 women and children.

The new arrival adds to the 340 migrants that landed on the Italian islet of Lampedusa, south of Sicily, on Thursday.

In Naples on Saturday, a demonstration of several thousand African immigrants took place, in protest at alleged racism and discrimination directed against them in Italy.

According to Italian government figures, a total of 36,900 would- be immigrants arrived in Italy by sea in 2008, a 75-per-cent increase over the previous year. Of these some 31,000 landed on Lampedusa.

Italian officials say they hope to see a decrease in such hazardous sea-journeys in May when an agreement between Rome and Tripoli involving stepped up patrols of Libya’s coastline, comes into effect.

Earlier in April, over 230 would-be immigrants are feared to have drowned in a shipwreck off the coast of Libya. (dpa)

Workers safely evacuated after fire breaks out in ferry hotel

Stockholm – Over 200 people were safely evacuated overnight after fire broke out onboard a vessel used as sleeping quarters in south-eastern Sweden, police said Friday.

There were no reports of injuries among the 238 people who were ordered to leave the Queen of Scandinavia passenger ferry, docked at the harbour at Oskarshamn.

The ferry is used as lodgings for hundreds of workers hired to conduct maintenance work at the nuclear plant at Oskarshamn.

Police and emergency services had no immediate explanation as to what caused the fire, which was traced to the engine room, local media reported. (dpa)

Nikkei gains 1.7 pct as banks, high-techs lead

Banks climb amid growing hope US lenders stabilising

* High-tech exporters up on industry hopes after Google, Nokia

* Nippon Steel surges on smaller-than-expected price cut

TOKYO, April 17 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average rose 1.7 percent on Friday as financial stocks such as Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (8306.T) climbed after reassuring earnings results from JPMorgan (JPM.N) fuelled hopes that the banking sector is stabilising.

Sony Corp (6758.T) and other high-tech shares gained after Google Inc’s (GOOG.O) quarterly profit topped expectations, while the world’s top cellphone maker Nokia (NOK1V.HE) said it saw signs of stabilising demand in the handset market. [ID:nN16272680] [ID:nLG183354]

Nippon Steel Corp (5401.T) surged after a newspaper said the steelmaker and its peers had agreed with Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) to cut steel prices by more than 10 percent this business year, a smaller-than-expected price cut. [ID:nT286976]

“Investors are beginning to harbour hopes that the high-tech industry may be bottoming out. Although demand hasn’t exactly turned positive, there are signs that contractions are slowing,” said Takahiko Murai, general manager at Nozomi Securities.

“At least until the announcement of the results of (bank) ‘stress tests’ on May 4, the market probably won’t sell off bank shares. Also, considering what we have seen so far about U.S. banks earnings, the market doesn’t expect Citigroup to post surprisingly bad figures.”

Citigroup (C.N) is due to post quarterly results on Friday.

A U.S. Federal Reserve official said on Thursday that results of “stress tests” designed to see how the 19 largest U.S. banks would fare should the recession prove unexpectedly severe, would be made public on May 4. [ID:nN16267186]

The benchmark Nikkei .N225 climbed 146.70 points to 8,901.96, while the broader Topix .TOPIX added 1.5 percent to 844.53.

On Wall Street on Thursday, the Standard and Poor’s 500 Index .SPX climbed 1.6 percent after JPMorgan’s results beat analysts’ expectations as debt trading and underwriting revenue surged. [ID:nN16542451]

That added to a string of encouraging results from other banks, including Wells Fargo’s (WFC.N) strong preliminary figures last week.

Japan’s banking shares gained, with top lender Mitsubishi UFJ advancing 2 percent to 515 yen and No.2 Mizuho Financial Group (8411.T) rising 1 percent to 194 yen.

Nomura Holdings (8604.T), the top brokerage, added 1.7 percent to 592 yen.

Exporters gained after Google’s (GOOG.O) results, though Chief Executive Eric Schmidt said the economic environment remains tough with users still searching but buying less.

Sony Corp (6758.T) jumped 4.5 percent to 2,555 yen, after Google’s YouTube said it had reached a deal to post Sony films and TV shows and was talking with other big studios to ramp up content and attract more advertising. [ID:nN16520771]

Canon Inc (7751.T) advanced 2.2 percent to 3,050 yen, while Panasonic Corp (6752.T) gained 2.4 percent to 1,343 yen.

Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) gained 3 percent to 3,820 yen and Honda Motor Co (7267.T) also rose 3 percent to 2,780 yen.

Shares of Nippon Steel shot up 8 percent to 338 yen. (Reporting by Aiko Hayashi)

Tax Day in the US: Tea Party protests and last-minute filings

Washington – As US workers rushed to meet an annual deadline to file their tax returns, demonstrators fanned out across the country Wednesday for a series of “Tea Parties” to protest their heavy tax burdens and unnecessary government spending.

The protests drew their inspiration from the 1773 Boston Tea Party, where US colonialists protested unfair British taxes by throwing tea from three ships and into the Boston Harbour.

A re-enactment of the famous protest was planned in Boston and thousands of people carried tea bags to demonstrations in other cities, warning that the United States was on a slippery slope toward European-style socialism.

“Europe has stifled growth through higher taxes,” said Cameron Aljilani, 30, from San Diego, California, who joined a few hundred people on a rainy day outside the White House. “We are now headed toward socialism.”

President Barack Obama, in his own speech on Tax Day, acknowledged that April 15 “is not exactly everyones favorite date on the calendar” and said the government would have to make the same “tough choices” about spending that is made by US households.

He touted the administration’s tax relief for middle class workers – rather than the wealthy – as one of the best means of pulling the economy out of recession, picking up on a heated debate from the 2008 presidential election.

Conservatives have derided Obama over the last few months for a series of ambitious efforts to revive the US economy that they argue are raising the federal deficit to dangerous levels.

Obama’s pledge to raise taxes on wealthier workers after 2010 and plans to expand the government’s role in health care have also brought cries of overreach and wealth redistribution, which carries very negative connotations in the United States.

“All we are saying, is give wealth a chance,” sang one group of protestors by the White House. (dpa)

Vulture fund Harbour eyes Candover -paper

LONDON, April 12 (Reuters) – London-based vulture fund Harbour Capital is mulling a bid for beleaguered private equity firm Candover, according to a Sunday newspaper report.

The Observer said it understands that Harbour, which specialises in bidding for distressed assets, is being advised by former Merrill Lynch banker Mark Devonshire.

Candover has considered going into run-off — where a private equity firm ceases investing and runs its portfolio companies until they can be sold — but only as a last resort, a source close to the situation told Reuters last month.

Like much of the private equity industry, Candover has seen the value of its portfolio companies drop because of excessive debts and weakening sales.

Candover Investments Plc CDI.L, the listed parent of Candover, said last month it would stop investing in Candover’s 2008 fund and instead concentrate on realising value from its investments in its 2001 and 2005 funds.

A spokesman for Candover declined to comment on the Observer report. (Reporting by Victoria Bryan; editing by Mike Nesbit)

Fiji president takes over, says will name new govt

Fiji’s president revoked the politically unstable South Pacific nation’s constitution on Friday, named himself to temporarily replace a post-coup interim government and called for fresh elections by 2014.

President Ratu Josefa Iloilo said he would soon appoint a new interim government but gave no firm time-frame. His actions come after an administration headed by military commander Commodore Frank Bainimarama since a bloodless December 2006 coup was declared illegal by Fiji’s Court of Appeal on Thursday.

Fiji has suffered four coups and a bloody military mutiny since 1987, mainly as a result of tensions between the majority indigenous Fijian population and the economically powerful ethnic Indian minority.

Iloilo’s plans will likely further harm Fiji’s international relations, already strained after Bainimarama went back on a promise to hold elections in the first quarter of 2009.

Fiji was suspended from the Commonwealth, a grouping of 53 mainly former British colonies, after Bainimarama’s 2006 coup. The United States and European Union imposed sanctions until the tourism- and sugar-reliant island nation held elections.

Bainimarama says Fiji must first change its racially based electoral system, which he blames for past instability.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton earlier this week urged Bainimarama to restore democracy, backing a demand by South Pacific leaders for elections this year.

Australia and New Zealand, Fiji’s main trading partners and biggest aid donors, have refused entry to any member of the Fiji military, government and their families since the 2006 coup.

Australia condemned Iloilo’s decision to abrogate the constitution and backed the appeal court’s ruling, which included a recommendation for prompt elections.

“This is the right course for Fiji and the only way forward for the people of Fiji,” Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said in a statement on Friday.

ELECTIONS BY 2014

Fiji should hold fresh elections by 2014, Iloilo said in a national broadcast from his presidential residence set in sprawling grounds overlooking the harbour in the capital, Suva.

“I am sure you will all work together with me and the soon-to-be appointed interim government to ensure that this transition to a new legal order is not only smooth but will reap many benefits for us and the future generations and resolve many of our long outstanding and systematic problems,” the ageing and ailing Iloilo said.

Iloilo appointed Bainimarama prime minister after the military leader toppled former premier Laisenia Qarase, who he accused of corruption and being soft on the leaders of another coup in 2000.

Iloilo’s election timetable and call for electoral reforms mirror those of Bainimarama, whom he is known to favour.

“It has brought about reforms. It has created opportunities for new ideas. It has adhered to my mandate,” Iloilo said of Bainimarama’s government.

“It has had a positive impact on the lives of our people in particular the ordinary citizens of our country, including those in the rural areas,” he said.

Qarase had asked the court of appeal to overturn an earlier High Court ruling that Bainimarama’s government was legal.

Iloilo sacked three judges involved in Thursday’s ruling.

Hugh Jackman lets slip he’s a bit of a twit

Sydney – Hollywood heartthrob Hugh Jackman has apologized to fans for getting staff to post bulletins on the social-networking internet site Twitter on his behalf, news reports said Thursday.

The new medium is supposed to be a way for people to spontaneously communicate their everyday thoughts and actions, but increasingly is being used by celebrities like Jackman to fake the personal and the intimate.

The Australian actor was exposed as a fraud when a posting referred to the Sydney Opera House as the Opera Center.

“Having lunch on the harbor across from the Opera Center. Loving life!” the Twitter message read.

It turned out that the person keying in the message was half a world away from Australia’s biggest city and unaware that the way the locals spell it, it’s “harbour” not “harbor” and “centre” not “center.”

“Sometimes, I don’t always get online and type,” Jackman admitted to national broadcaster ABC. “Sometimes, I talk and someone if my office says to me ‘OK what are you going to say?’ and I say ‘Well, I’m going down to Sydney.’ I like to say where I go and stuff like that,” he said.

“So I communicate that across the phone and when that got translated by someone American in my office it came out all wrong. So it was my communication but not my typing.”

Jackman didn’t say whether he really did have lunch on the harbour across from the Opera House. (dpa)

French company takes a stake in Hong Kong’s historic tram lines

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French company takes a stake in Hong Kong’s historic tram lines Hong Kong – A half share in Hong Kong’s historic tram network has been sold to a French multi-national company in a surprise deal, operators announced Tuesday.

The tram system’s operators Wharf Holdings said it had sold a 50 per cent stake in the 105-year-old network crisscrossing Hong Kong island to the French company Veolia.

The two companies will jointly operate the service although there was speculation Tuesday that the move will lead to a complete takeover of the Hong Kong tram system by the French company.

At a joint press conference Tuesday afternoon, both Wharf and Veolia declined to reveal the cost of the deal but said it ran to “double-digit million euros.”

Veolia said it had no immediate plans to raise fares and said it would study the route and the network before deciding on what changes if any would be made to the existing network.

However, the company confirmed it had already applied to build a new line on a harbour-front reclamation area where new government offices and other buildings are under construction.

Hong Kong’s iconic trams, which have run from the east to the west of the island since 1904, carry around 230,000 passengers a day for a flat fare of just 2 Hong Kong dollars (25 US cents) per journey.

Along with the Star Ferry that crosses Victoria Harbour, they are a huge attraction for tourists and the Hong Kong Tourism Board is this year launching a guide to dining along tram routes, which have stops every 250 metres.(dpa)

A Transport Bureau spokesman said Veolia had assured the Hong Kong government it would “preserve the tradition” of the tram service and consult passengers before any changes to the system were made.