South Africa’s Polokwane readies for football extravaganza

Polokwane, May 23 (IANS) South Africa’s Polokwane city is abuzz with activities as it gears up to host eight matches of the FIFA World Cup starting in June in the country.

Deputy president Kgalema Motlanthe is impressed with the city’s preparations for the World Cup.

Teams from France, Argentina, Paraguay and Mexico will play their matches at the city’s Peter Mokaba Stadium.

Motlanthe, who chairs an inter-ministerial task group on the World Cup, Saturday visited the project sites to get a first hand information on the preparation, BuaNews reported.

The city infrastructure is being upgraded for the benefit of the visitors coming for the event.

A ‘cultural village’ is also being developed for the visitors.

Organisers said 10 different African countries would showcase their heritage and culture at the village. The aim is to strengthen ties among the African countries beyond the World Cup.

‘I am highly impressed with what I’ve seen and I’m convinced Polokwane will produce excellent shows during this World Cup,’ Motlanthe told reporters.

Thousands of visitors are expected in South Africa for the month-long event.

Gorkhas hold separate state demand torch rally

Salugara (West Bengal), May 15 (ANI): The Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM) held a torch procession at Salugara town in West Bengal”s Jalpaiguri District in support of their demand for a separate state.

“The Siliguri land is ours. History has witnessed our fight for our survival here.

Therefore, this is our land. The Bengal government should leave this land. It should not capture the land forcefully. Therefore, today, we have taken out this torch rally to protest against this,” said Arjun Pradhan, a central committee leader of GJM.

Earlier on April 9, GJM chief Bimal Gurung met Union Home Minister P Chidambaram in New Delhi, who assured him that he would talk to the Government of West Bengal and Trinamool Congress about the new territory.

The GJM had agreed during the fifth round of tripartite talks in New Delhi to the constitution of Interim Council by next year prior to the creation of a separate state.

The Gorkhas are demanding a separate state to protect their culture and heritage.

The Gorkha population in West Bengal is estimated to be around a million. (ANI)

Shutdown in Siliguri against separate state demand

Siliguri (West Bengal), May 14 (ANI): A regional non-political group, Bangla O Bangla Bhasha Bachao Committee, called for a 24-hour shutdown in West Bengal”s Siliguri District on Friday to protest the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha”s (GJM) demand for a separate state of Gorkhaland.

Opposing the demand of the GJM, the members of the committee said that West Bengal is for Bengalis, and the Gorkhas residing in the hills are outsiders.

“Bangla O Bangla Bhasha Bachao Committee called a 24-hour strike throughout West Bengal to protest and oppose the interim self-government as demanded by the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha, which amounts to partition of the state,” said Mukunda Majumdar, President of the Bangla O Bangla Bhasha Bachao Committee.

The streets wore a deserted look and only a few government buses were plying during the shutdown.

The marketplaces and establishments belonging to supporters of the protest also remained closed during the shutdown.

Police personnel were deployed across the city to prevent any clashes.

“We have allowed them to carry out their agitation peacefully. But if they become unruly or stop vehicles and threaten drivers, then we are forced to take action against them,” said Aloke Dasgupta, Inspector in-charge at Siliguri Police Station.

“We have arrested about 12 persons, who indulged in some sort of violence, and have sent them to the police station,” he added.

Gorkhas, who are ethnic Nepalese, have been demanding a separate state in Darjeeling hills, to help them protect their culture and heritage. (ANI)

GJM chief accuses West Bengal government of creating hurdles

Champasari Block (WB), May 5 (ANI): Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM) chief Bimal Gurung has charged the West Bengal Government with creating hurdles in the democratic movement of his party.

Speaking to reporters here on Tuesday, Gurung termed this act of the Left Front as follies similar to its mistakes in Singur and Nandigram, which would wipe out the ruling alliance in the 2011 assembly elections.

“We know that the police will intercept us everywhere…the policemen blocked us our agitations which is not good. This very policy will wipe out the state government. The government had followed this policy in Nandigram and Singur and it is the main reason of the fallout of CPI (M) in the province and I hope that in the forthcoming 2011 assembly elections the party would be wiped out completely,” Gurung said
The sixth round of tripartite talks between the GJM, the Central and West Bengal Governments”” is to be held on May 14.

The GJM had agreed during the fifth round of tripartite talks in New Delhi to the constitution of Interim Council by next year prior to the creation of a separate state.

The Gorkhas are demanding a separate state to protect their culture and heritage.

The Gorkha population in West Bengal is estimated to be around a million. (ANI)

Traditional owners lose drilling injunction

An exploration company has been cleared of any unauthorised drilling at Bryah Basin in the Upper Gascoyne.

The Jidi Jidi Aboriginal Corporation had accused Alchemy Resources of breaching the conditions of its Indigenous Land Use Agreements at a gold and copper site, north of Meekatharra.

The corporation says the company did not carry out heritage surveys before drilling.

A spokesman for the Department of Mines and Petroleum says Alchemy did not breach its tenement conditions or carry out any unauthorised works.

The spokesman says the Federal Court determined that native title in the area had been extinguished.

Alchemy says it has not received any demand from the traditional owners to stop drilling in the Bryah Basin.

Irrigators urged to attend Berri forum

Irrigators are being encouraged to attend a meeting in Berri this afternoon to discuss water issues, including the basin plan and the water buyback program.

Representatives from the federal and state water departments, the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Centrelink, the Murray-Darling Basin Authority and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission will be there.

Tony Slatyer from the Department of Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts says it is a great opportunity for people to ask questions.

“The purpose of these sessions is to provide us an opportunity to set out the details of just how the Commonwealth’s policies and programs in water are working and how people can access those programs and also to provide us a chance to get feedback from the local community about the issues of importance to them,” he said.

The meeting is being held at the Berri Resort Hotel and begins at 2:30pm (ACST).

Group says skate park assessment lacking

Newcastle council has been accused of focusing on getting federal funding for a massive new beach-side skate park, rather than carrying out adequate social and environmental assessments.

The Government has allocated more than $400,000 to build a 1,000 square metre skate park at Empire Park and council is holding workshops on the issue this week.

The Protect Empire Park group has commissioned a report by development consultants Paradigm Planning.

Group spokesman Reilly Carroll says it found a lot more assessment is needed.

“The report also found that there needs to be a site analysis plan, a traffic impact assessment, parking assessment, visual impact assessment, acoustic assessment, heritage impact assessment and a social impact assessment because at the moment this is just going forward with consultation from the skaters, not enough, we feel, from the local community,” he said.

Stakeholders gather for final gas hub meet

The Department of State Development will today host the final of three stakeholder meetings related to the proposed Kimberley gas hub.

The meetings bring together representatives from a range of sectors to identify possible gaps in the information being presented to the Federal Government on the project.

A series of impact studies will soon be submitted to the Commonwealth as it considers whether to grant environmental and heritage approvals.

The first two meetings focused on the effects of the project on the land and sea.

Today’s meeting will look at its social impacts.

Land buy gives threatened birds space to spread wings

Endangered animals in Western Australia’s great southern will benefit from the purchase of 1,000 hectares of land by a national conservation organisation.

Bush Heritage Australia yesterday announced its purchase of the land at Monjebup North.

The organisation wants to revegetate about 400 hectares previously cleared.

Heritage ecologist Angela Sanders says it will give a boost to endangered native animals, including the carnaby’s cockatoo.

“We’re starting to incorporate their food plants into the revegetation, so that will give them more feeding grounds,” she said.

“It will give them larger areas they can actually collect food from.

“What we’re also doing is we’ve put up some artificial nest pipes, called cokatubes, because a lot of the larger trees out there have been cleared for farming.”

Military style motel gets green light

The Rockhampton Regional Council has approved a multi-million dollar military-themed motel development.

The $26 million facility, including 115 rooms, a convention centre and restaurant, will be built at a heritage-listed Army barracks.

Project designer Russell Winnett says the motel will incorporate the site’s history.

“It will have staff that will have military type uniforms, not literally military uniforms, but will have that feel about them,” he said.

“The decor in the place will have some sort of military feel about it without that going overboard.

“We’re looking to retain that feel right throughout the hotel so even the rooms will have some small design features.

“It’s just something very very different, instead of your normal run of the mill hotel or motel accommodation.

“It’ll attract all sorts of guests, everywhere from people that are just normally requiring accommodation in the Rockhampton district to people choosing to stay at an interesting place, we expect it will be a destination in its own right.”

Terrorists have no religion: Nitin Gadkari

New Delhi, Mar 23 (ANI): Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president Nitin Gadkari has said that a terrorist has no religion and can”t be classified as a Hindu or a Muslim.

“It is unfortunate that we identify people involved with certain terrorist activities according to their religious affiliations,” said Gadkari, adding that a terrorist has no caste, creed or religion.

Gadkari further said, “A god fearing Hindu will not kill an innocent Muslim and similarly, a god fearing Muslim will not kill an innocent Hindu, and if he is doing so, then he is a terrorist who does not belong to any religion.”

The BJP president on Monday stressed on the need for a modern idiom to articulate ”Hindutva” for the youth, adding that the Supreme Court”s 1995 description of Hindutva must be the standard.

“Hindutva cannot become any political party”s agenda. It was more a way of life,” said Gadkari.

The Supreme Court of India in a judgement ruled that ”no precise meaning can be ascribed to the terms ”Hindu”, ”Hindutva” and ”Hinduism”; and no meaning in the abstract can confine it to the narrow limits of religion alone, excluding the content of Indian culture and heritage.

The Court also ruled that ”Hindutva” is understood as a way of life or a state of mind and is not to be equated with or understood as religious Hindu fundamentalism. (ANI)

Architecture students consider hospital site options

A team of architects and students has started work on possible future community uses for the old Mildura Base Hospital.

The hospital has been empty for more than a decade and there has been mounting pressure to find a use for the site.

About 20 RMIT architecture students are looking at options for the heritage-listed building.

Their brief requires them to include low-cost older persons’ housing, facilities for not-for-profit community groups and accommodation for medical students and professionals.

Protests turn violent after royal tomb burnt

Ugandan police have opened fire on protesters, killing at least two people.

The clashes took place at royal tombs which had been destroyed by fire.

Thousands of demonstrators turned out at the tombs near the capital Kampala to prevent president Yoweri Museveni from visiting the site.

He was trying to see the damage fire had caused to the tombs at Kasubi, a heritage site built in the 19th century for the kings of the Baganda region.

The Baganda people are one of Uganda’s main tribal groups and their current king is bitterly opposed to the president.

It is suspected the fire at the royal mausoleum was deliberately lit.

The Bagandan demonstrators accuse the president of being responsible for the fire.

Police claim they shot into the air to try to disperse the protesters, but at least two people were shot dead.

Outfit seeking separate Gorkhaland state slams WB Government

Siliguri, Mar 8 (ANI): Madan Tamang, the leader of the ethnic Akhil Bharatiya Gorkha League, seeking creation of separate state of Gorkhaland slammed West Bengal Government for “discriminating against the Nepali-speaking people”.

“Gorkhaland is nothing but aspirations of people, demand is genuine. There is disparity. There is discrimination that is why we are demanding separate state. We have tried our best but the West Bengal government whether it is CPM-Left, whether it is Congress or Trinamool (Congress), they have one policy to discriminate (against) Nepali-speaking people,” Tamang said here on Sunday.

Gorkhas have been demanding a separate state, to be carved out of West Bengal, to protect their culture and heritage.

The Gorkha population in West Bengal is estimated to be around a million. (ANI)

Ludhiana hosts seminar on Sufism

Ludhiana, Sep 19(ANI): Ludhiana recently played host to a national seminar on Sufism. This time, the theme was the influence of Sufism on modern times.

The Sahitaya Academy of New Delhi and the Punjab Sahitaya Academy organized the seminar.

The seminar also focused on the ‘pain of separation from God’ and intellectuals, poets and Sufi singers.

“Sufism says that God, whom a man looks for all over, is within him. And once he realizes this fact, he will be free of his ego and will find happiness,” said Vaasthe Mohi, a Sindhi poet from Ahmedabad.

While, Gulshan Majith, a poet from Jammu and Kashmir, said: “When God is everything, so what is the importance of religion and caste discrimination, this is the message of Sufism. Shaivaism, Buddhism and Sufism give same message to the world and consider this world as the manifestation of that supreme power and do not make a distinction with the other. There are no boundaries. Everybody in this world is equal for God.”

The participants also put forth the argument that many Punjabi poets make use of themes from popular Punjabi culture. r. Chandraprakash Deval, a poet from Rajasthan, said Sufism is the paramount method to fight terrorism.

“Sufism is the best way to fight terrorism. If the minds of people can be changed, they will start respecting other religions, humanity and the feeling of brotherhood and secularism will increase, terrorism will be finished then. So to fight terrorism it is important to popularize the way shown by Sufism, adopt and follow that way and spread the feeling of brotherhood,” Deval said.

Sufi singer Balbir Kaur, who also teaches singing at Guru Nanak College in Ludhiana, held the audience spellbound and she also highlighted that school students must be made aware of the great cultural heritage, traditional folk art and literature of the Sufi saints, to promote Punjabi language.

Associating Sufism with any one religion is against its very basic tenets. Underlining this basic fact, renowned Sufi singers Idrim Khan and Skakur Khan from Rajasthan sung the verses of Bulle Shah, Guru Nanak, Kabir and Sajjan Shah. By Karan Kapoor (ANI)

Jagger’s daughter paints herself red, white and blue for hot photoshoot

London, Sept 16 (ANI): Rolling Stones star Mick Jagger’s daughter showed off her patriotic colours by painting herself red, white and blue for a hot photoshoot.

The 17-year-old Georgia, youngest daughter of Jagger and Jerry Hall stripped to bra and jeans painted red, blue and white for American denim brand Hudson.

She is seen gracefully reclining on the backdrop of a Union Jack and pouts provocatively at the camera in the photos.

The campaign is Georgia’s first big shoot since being snapped up by a modelling agency last year.

“It’s all about the heritage of having Mick Jagger as a dad and Jerry Hall as a mum,” the Daily Star quoted Hudson spokesman David Lipman as saying

“More than anything, it’s her spirit that captivates me,” he added. (ANI)

US Navy ship sunk in World War II battle located

Washington, September 11 (ANI): A research mission has located and identified the final resting place of the YP-389, a US Navy patrol boat sunk approximately 20 miles off the coast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, by a German submarine during World War II.

Six sailors died in the attack on June 19, 1942. There were 18 survivors.

The wreck is located in about 300 feet of water in a region off North Carolina known as the “Graveyard of the Atlantic,” home to US and British naval vessels, merchant ships, and German U-boats sunk during the Battle of the Atlantic.

NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) and its expedition partners mapped and shot video of the wreck using high-resolution camera equipment, multibeam sonar and an advanced remotely operated vehicle deployed from the NOAA ship Nancy Foster.

Researchers were able to locate and positively identify the YP-389 by reexamining data from the Duke Marine Laboratory expedition that discovered the USS Monitor in 1973.

Today, the relatively intact remains of the YP-389 rest upright on the ship’s keel.

The wreck site is home to a variety of marine life. Much of the outer-hull plating has fallen away, leaving only the intact frames exposed.

“She rests now like a literal skeleton, a reminder of a time long ago when the nation was at war,” said Joseph Hoyt, Monitor National Marine Sanctuary archaeologist and principal investigator for the project.

Built originally as a fishing trawler, the YP-389 was converted into a coastal patrol craft and pressed into service after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

The ship was equipped with one 3-inch deck gun to protect the ship from enemy aircraft and surfaced submarines and two .30-caliber machine guns.

However, on the day of the attack by the German submarine U-701, the ship’s deck gun was inoperative, and the YP-389 could return fire only with its machine guns.

Weeks after the attack on the YP-389, the U-701 was sunk by Army aircraft in the same vicinity as the YP-389.

According to Rear Admiral Jay A. DeLoach, USN (Ret), director, Naval History and Heritage Command, “The US Navy considers the YP-389 discovery a grave site and, by law, it is to be left undisturbed.” (ANI)

Saving the historical monuments to preserve cultural heritage of Punjab

Amritsar, Sep.10 (ANI): An endeavour is underway to preserve various heritage buildings of Punjab State in a bid to treasure the cultural heritage including historical monuments, which can help in boosting tourism in Punjab.

The palaces and Havelis across Punjab bespeak glorious heritage. These historically important buildings include religious places belonging to different faiths and can attract tourists to Punjab.

The Sheesh Mahal and Qila Mubarak at Patiala, Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s summer palace at Amritsar or ancestral home of Shaheed Bhagat Singh at Khatkar Kalan – they are important sites that need to be preserved for the coming generations.

“Every community, society has a very precious heritage which has to be and can be transferred to the next generation and this is the responsibility of any civil society to transfer that heritage to the coming generation if you don’t perform that duty, that is a sin, that’s crime,” said Dr. Sukhdev Singh, Punjab State convener, Indian National Trust For Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH).

To spread awareness about preservation of these heritage sites, the Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage recently organized a workshop on the theme ‘Cultural Heritage and Media’ in Amritsar.

The event highlighted the fact that popularizing existing heritage buildings and protecting sites of cultural importance, presently in ruins due to negligence and development activities, ought to be the main priority.

There were proposals to convert heritage sites into museums and heritage hotels for tourists to get a glimpse of Punjab’s rich cultural heritage.

It was suggested that the restored monuments could be commercially used on public-private partnership basis.

“Nuclear families have become more common than joint families and it has resulted in a big change in the whole system. Like in our system, the kids are taught to respect elders and follow the path of honesty. People get equal share in all institutions like in home, office and agriculture but today they are aware of especially one aspect of their lives,” said Paramjeet Singh , Prof. Of Architechture, Gurunanak University, Amritsar.

“There is a significant relation between tourism and the heritage sites because some tourists surely have some interest in what’s the history of people and what’s the culture of people. They don’t come here just to see the huge marble buildings. They don’t want to see the modern architecture, which infact is mostly western, they come here to know about the past of this place, so it surely encourages tourism,” said Dr. Sukhdev Singh.

Amritsar is the heritage city of Punjab. The city is known globally for the revered Golden Temple, one of the pilgrimage centers, which stands intact and was built nearly 400 years ago.

The heritage tour in Amritsar remains incomplete without visiting the old city, known for its traditional market and centuries old residential houses.

Be it the historic Jallianwala Bagh or the Summer Palace, the royal residence of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, they take every visitor here to the era they stand testimony of. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

1st century A.D. colossal statue of Greek God Apollo unearthed in Turkey

Washington, September 9 (ANI): Italian archaeologists have unearthed a 1st century A.D. colossal statue of Apollo, the Greek god of the sun, light, music and poetry, from white calcified cliffs in southwestern Turkey.

Colossal statues were very popular in antiquity, as evidenced by the lost giant statues of the Colossus of Rhodes and the Colossus of Nero.

Most of them vanished long ago, with their material re-used in other building projects.

“This colossal statue of Apollo is really a unique finding. Such statues are extremely rare in Asia Minor. Only a dozen still survive,” team leader Francesco D’Andria, director of the Institute of Archaeological Heritage, Monuments and Sites at Italy’s National Research Council in Lecce, told Discovery News.

Split in two huge marble fragments, divided along the bust and the lower part of the sculpture, the 1st century A.D. statue was unearthed at the World Heritage Site of Hierapolis, now called Pamukkale.

Founded around 190 B.C. by Eumenes II, King of Pergamum (197 B.C.-159 B.C.), Hierapolis was given over to Rome in 133 B.C.

The Hellenistic city grew into a flourishing Roman city, with temples, a theatre and popular sacred hot springs, believed to have healing properties.

Standing at more than four meters (13 feet) in height, the newly discovered statue, which is missing the head and the arms, might have been one of the most impressive sights in the city.

“It depicts the Greek god Apollo sitting on a throne and holding the cithara with his left arms. The god wears a wonderfully draped tunic. The cloth has a transparency effect to reveal mighty muscles,” said D’Andria.

Inspired by the great classical masterpieces, the artist did not pay the same peculiar attention to the back of the statue.

“This shows that the sculpture was placed against a wall and was supposed to be seen only frontally,” D’Andria noted.

Standing in all its massive regality, the statue was particularly important for the city, since Apollo was venerated as Hierapolis’ divine founder.

The colossal statue was probably the main sculpture at the sanctuary of Apollo, which was intentionally built over an active fault.

“Hierapolis is a unique site, and archaeologists are bringing to light incredible findings each year. As with all the other ancient buildings, the statue will be virtually reconstructed in full detail,” Francesco Gabellone, an architect at the National Research Council in Lecce, told Discovery News. (ANI)

Kashmir’s heritage garden all set to get a facelift

Srinagar, Sep 7 (ANI): Kashmir’s heritage Emporium Garden is all set to get a facelift with the state government planning to spend rupees 15 million to restore the garden to its lost glory.

Located in Srinagar, the garden used to be under the British residency during the state’s erstwhile Dogra era, and the Britishers had planted many exquisite plants and flowers in this garden, which used to be a major tourist attraction before insurgency broke out in the valley.

Now once again, the authorities are working hard to beautify and renovate the garden.

“We have instructions to beautify the garden as fast as we can. And after a month you will see the garden in a new form. We have divided the work into three phases. Short term, where we can work immediately, mid term, where we can work on enhancing the garden all through the year and long term, that entails all the work that we can do in long term, to beautify the garden further and to present this garden to the people.

The people can come and witness for themselves how the garden has been restored to its lost glory,” said Ghulam Sarwar Naquash Director, Floriculture.

With the renovation work in full swing, residents hopes of seeing the garden restored to its lost glory are revived.

“Earlier lots of tourists used to come here, there used to be a fair as well but the deterioration in the situation in the valley also took toll on the garden as people stopped coming here. But now the work is being done to restore the garden and again we hope that once again the tourists will start coming here and fair will be held like it used to be in the earlier days,” said Shabir Ahmed, a resident.

The beautification plan focuses on the integrated development of the garden complex, with landscaping of the lawns, repair of the drainage system.

The authorities hope that the restoration of the Emporium Garden will help to develop the site as a hot spot for tourists. (ANI)