Malaysian lady supports husband’s ‘regular sex’ admission

Kuala Lumpur, June 6 (IANS) Admission by an award-winning teacher that he owes his day-long energy and success to ‘reading and regular sex every night’ has raised hackles in conservative Malaysia.

But his wife supports him saying: ‘He was just being honest.’

Housewife Rosmawati Abdullah, 41, says those who criticize Alias Ismail, 42, are ‘stuck with the old school of thought’, The Star said Sunday.

‘Through reading and having a cordial relationship, we managed to raise our children to be caring and disciplined. What’s wrong if my husband shares his formula with others?’ she asks.

The couple’s eldest son Mohammad Sallehuddin, 24, too supports the father.

He said his father openly discussed matters with them that are considered taboo in other families.

‘He teaches us to be humble while advising us not to indulge in illicit sexual relationships,’ he said.

‘To me, we have the best dad.’

Last Monday, Alias, a Bahasa Malaysia teacher at SMK Menerong, was the inaugural recipient of the state-initiated Tokoh Nilam award to honour an outstanding teacher.

He had then said his secret to remaining active was to read, have an intellectual discussion with his wife and have sex every night.

Alias, who insisted that he was ‘not a hypocrite’ and was encouraging ‘only legitimate sex’, said he was disappointed by certain parties who were attempting to discredit him.

He did not name the critics.

Rosmawati told the newspaper that there was nothing wrong in talking openly about sex between married couples.

‘He is being honest about sex because he is concerned that social ills among students are quite high. It’s important not to have illicit sex. People should scrap the mentality that sex education is taboo,’ said Rosmawati.

A majority of people in multi-racial Malaysia are Malays practicing Islam.

Being happier than your wife could land your marriage in trouble

London, May 20 (ANI): Married men may soon be seen trying to be less happy – a new study shows men happier than their other halves could be heading for the divorce courts.

The research, conducted by a team of economists, identified a potentially disastrous phenomenon they call “The Happiness Gap”.

The team used data from tens of thousands of relationships to find that the bigger the gap in the happiness of husbands and wives, the greater the risk of a split.

This effect was noted only when the husband was happier than his wife.

In these cases, it was more likely that the unhappy wife would initiate divorce proceedings.

Experts used the previous economic and “lifestyle satisfaction” studies of couples in Britain, Germany and Australia to arrive at their conclusions.

The happiness gap widened when wives had to do most of the housework, if they had different social backgrounds from their husbands, or higher than average incomes.

The gap was closed when couples were matched socially, if they shared a religion, if the chores were shared or if the woman was a housewife, a student or retired.

“Studies have shown that couples who marry with similar levels of schooling, age, ethnicity, religion and social background have longer marriages,” the Daily Express quoted team member Dr Cahit Guven, of Deakin University, Australia, as saying.

Guven added: “In the UK 61 per cent of women of the highest happiness tier were married to men in the same tier. In Australia the figure is 53 per cent and this number is 70 per cent in Germany.

“Our research further shows that happiness isn”t able to be redistributed between the husband and the wife for couples whose relationship ended with divorce.” (ANI)

Water shortage in Gujarat, citizens demonstrate

Surat (Gujarat), May 7 (ANI): Residents of Gujarat”s Surat city, who are facing acute water shortage protested against the Municipal Corporation.

They took to the streets on Thursday carrying empty pots on their heads and raised slogans against the corporation.

“The municipal water tanker never comes on time. Sometime it comes at 9 am and sometimes at 11 am. They don”t maintain any time. Whenever the tanker comes 4,000-5,000 people come to take water,” said Anita Patel, a housewife.

“We don”t get even get the basic supply of water. You only tell us how to cook our food,” she added.

The people here depend on water tankers, which are, however, inadequate, as there are not enough tankers for the needs of everyone.

“We call for the tanker again and again but they always give excuses that they will come as soon as possible. We don”t even have water to drink so how can we make our food,” said Kamala Patel, a housewife.

Residents complain that many times they have raised this issue to concerned officials, but the problem still remains.

Meanwhile, Ranjit Gilitwala, the Mayor of Surat city said that there is no water shortage, conceding that only a few areas are affected.

“I am not agreeing with this fact that there is acute water shortage and people are not getting water. If there is water shortage in three or four areas that doesn”t mean there is water shortage in the whole city. I am not agreeing with this fact at all,” said Ranjit Gilitwala, Mayor of Gujarat city. (ANI)

Swami Ramdev’s yoga camp concludes in Nepal

Kathmandu, Apr 1 (ANI): A six-day yoga science camp organized by the Patanjali Yoga Peeth Nepal and instructed by Swami Ramdev concluded in Kathmandu on Thursday.

The yoga camp attracted 35,000 participants including Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal.

“Yoga has been in practice as an important human science to live a healthy life by all kinds of people across the world,” President Ram Baran Yadav said at the opening ceremony of the camp last Saturday.

Swami RamDev highlighted the need of the importance of yoga in daily life, Xinhua reports.

“We have to make it our daily habit, if we are healthy the nation is healthy,” he said.

Laxmi Shrestha, a housewife from Kathmandu said: “I have sickness related to nervous system and yoga helped me a lot. That is why I came here waking in the early morning.”

This is the second yoga camp by Swami Ramdev in the Kathmandu. (ANI)

Horny ghost on the prowl in Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur, Sep 18 (ANI): A horny orang minyak, which is supposed to be a ghost in Malay culture, is said to be terrorising about 300 families in Sungai Petani, picking homes where there are young women.

According to Kosmo!, Nurshahirah, 17, revealed that she was awakened at 5.40am on September 14 after she felt a warm sensation on her left ear, and when she opened her eyes she saw an apparition with curly hair and thick moustache standing by her bed.

“I was even more shocked when the ghost took off his kain pelikat and started to fondle himself,” the Star Online quoted her as saying.

Nurshahirah, who lives in Taman Keladi, said she felt powerless to ward off the apparition who started to grope her body, and that it was as though a charm had been placed on her.

In another incident, housewife Fatimah, 42, revealed she heard her two daughters crying out when they were woken up at 5am by dark apparitions that molested them.

Her 15-year-old daughter told her that she had been “violated” by a ghost.

“At first I thought she was talking in her sleep but she insisted that she was molested by a ghost before it moved to the kitchen,” Fatimah said.

She said her 14-year-old, too, cried and ran from the living room, saying a dark apparition had molested her.

“My 14-year-old daughter said she managed to kick the ghost who wore a kain pelikat and black singlet when she felt her body being touched,” she revealed.

“She screamed and the ghost ran out of her room,” she added.

Fatimah said she gave chase with a parang but the apparition disappeared.

She also said the apparition could have placed a charm on her family because none of the neighbours heard her daughters’ screams. (ANI)

Housewife tells court she’s been off sausages after seeing naked neighbour!

London, Aug 29 (ANI): A housewife, who took legal action against her neighbour after she saw him doing chores outside naked, told a court that she has been put off by sausages for life since then.

Revolted Denise Woodgate has claimed that Paul Darlow, 53, also pleasured himself in his garden.

“Put it this way – it has put me off my sausages for life,” the Sun quoted her as telling Reading Crown Court.

However, Darlow, of Calcot, Berks, has denied the accusation of indecent exposure.

The trial continues. (ANI)

Brit housewife discovers #250k treasure with metal detector!

London, June 26 (ANI): A housewife in Britain discovered a 15th-century gold treasure depicting the Holy Trinity worth 250,000 pounds – using a metal detector.

Mary Hannaby, from Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, found the relic while on a regular six-hour Sunday detecting walks carrying the instrument with her son Michael, a 33 year-old wood carver.

The treasure had been buried four inches below the ground for around 500 years – between Ashridge and Great Gaddesden.

“You get a buzz every time you get a signal, but chances are it won’t be anything,” The Telegraph quoted her as saying.

Her son added: “This time, it popped up all of a sudden,You can literally miss things by inches. We couldn’t believe it. We always dreamed of finding treasure.”

Under the Treasure Act of 1996, finders must report potential treasure such as gold and silver objects more than 300 years old.

Finders are offered the market value for their discoveries which museums have first option to buy.

Roger Bland, head of treasure at the British Museum who thinks that the object, which at 2.8cm by 2.3cm is barely larger than a postage stamp, is an “important find” regrets the museum is short of funds to buy it.

Apparently, it is one of only three of its kind to have survived, and could be worth even more than 250,000 pounds. (ANI)

Meet the Brit woman who hasn’t ‘eaten in three years’

London, June 25 (ANI): A Brit woman has survived three years without eating a single morsel of food.rudy Sharp, 43, is suffering from digestive problems and the only thing she can consume is three cups of tea every day.

Sharp, a housewife manages to live on a liquid food being fed directly into her system at meal times.It’s not easy watching everyone else eat, while I have to get by on tea. I’d love to sit down to a really romantic three-course meal with all the trimmings and lots of wine,” the Telegraph quoted Sharp as saying.

She added: “But over the years I’ve learnt to make do with a simple cuppa. No one knows tea better than I do!”

Sharp, who is a resident of Milton Keynes, Bucks, first developed intestinal difficulties when her appendix burst as a teenager.

The problem continued all through her adulthood and reached a critical point in 2006 when doctors suggested to go under colectomy – the removal of her large and small bowel.

Ever since she has been diagnosed, she has been forced to eat liquid meals fed via a tube inserted into her neck.

Sharp, who lives with her husband Barry, 44, is also limited to drinking three cups of tea per day. A fourth cup may overload and damage her system.

And now, she is at the top of a transplant waiting list at Churchill Hospital in Oxford.

“Every day I count my blessings that I am still here. But to be honest, a life without eating food is not much of a life. I dream that one day soon a donor will be found and I will be able to lead a normal life at last,” she said. (ANI)

Life goes on as usual in Mumbai, six months after 26/11

Life goes on as usual in Mumbai, six months after 26/11Mumbai, May 26 (IANS) There were no protest marches or candles lit, no condemning banners or posters, and no human chains either. Exactly six months after 10 terrorists ripped the spirit of Mumbai, the citizens seem to have forgotten the terror attacks and consider it as a nightmare that has ended.

The city is back to its usual, familiar self. People taking life as it comes, the unending daily grind for sheer survival going on among the have-nots while the affluent are busy with their high-flying lifestyles.

“Mumbaikars want only peace, non-interference in their routine lives, because that’s the only way the city thrives. There have been so many terror attacks in the past two decades, but Mumbai has learnt to survive with or without them,” observed astrologer-cum-columnist of Borivli, Milan Thakar.

According to Thakar, Mumbaikars are such a tough and hardened community that nothing – terror attacks, floods or riots – can shake them.

Similar sentiments were expressed by a Vile Parle housewife, Mruga P. Desai, who pointed out that apart from the initial shock, Mumbai was practically on its feet within 24 hours.

“It is now six months down the line. We have to accept that Mumbai is being targeted by all and sundry. There is little point in blaming anybody or mourning over it forever,” she said, packing her bags for a family trip to the Far East.

A bitter comment came today from Kavita, the wife of Hemant Karkare, the chief of the Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) who was killed in the terror strike. Speaking to some television channels, Kavita said that nothing has really changed after 26/11 – the police continue to wait for sophisticated weapons and equipment promised to them as part of a Rs.1 billion upgradation programme.

“It has become a fashion to announce compensation for the fallen heroes after such incidents. If the police had been better equipped, such incidents would not occur,” she observed.

Fourteen of Mumbai’s police personnel, including some of the finest ones like Karkare, Additional Police Commissioner Ashok Kamte and encounter specialist Vijay Salaskar, among others, lost their lives in the 26/11 attack.

A senior police official, requesting anonymity, told IANS that proposals to modernise the police weapons and equipment are currently “underway”. He explained that there were delays due to the change of guard in the state and the general elections that followed soon after.

However, many public and private hospitals have gone ahead to implement basic security measures like installing metal detectors and closed circuit television cameras.

Even the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM) has installed CCTVs at important locations around the city, including some sensitive roads and junctions.

Similarly, luxury hotels have put in place additional security measures, including screening of guests’ baggage and deployed more security personnel.

Metal detectors and CCTVs are now a common feature at important railway stations on the entire suburban network, as also Mumbai airport and other sensitive locations.

However, for the ordinary citizen, barring the occasional road blocks and going through enhanced security measures, little has changed after 26/11.

Surrogate baby is born in India to a British couple every 48 hours

London, May 21 (ANI): A surrogate baby is born in India to a British couple every 48 hours, it was revealed yesterday.

An investigation has exposed the full extent of India’s surrogacy baby boom driven by demand from childless Westerners.

One British couple who took advantage of India’s “baby factories” have told of their joy at having twins through a surrogate.

Louis and Freya are the genetic offspring of Chris Morrison, 40, and his wife Susan, 37, but were carried by a Gujarati housewife.

Their case is expected to encourage thousands of childless couples to use Indian surrogates.

Dr Anita Soni, an obstetrician at a top Mumbai hospital, said: “I deliver babies from Indian women for British couples at the rate of more than 15 a month.”

Dr Soni spoke minutes before entering the delivery room at the state-of-the-art Dr LH Hiranandani Hospital. (ANI)

A 46-year-old housewife who wants to make boxing history

Tokyo, May 16 (ANI): A Japanese housewife, Kazumi Izaki is set to be the world’s oldest champion, if she’s allowed to fight at the age of 46.

According to The Independent, Izaki rises at 5:45 a.m., makes her daughter’s packed lunch, shops, cooks and cleans. After her husband comes home in the evening, she heads for the local boxing ring to spar for a world title shot.f she beats her Mexican opponent Ana Maria Torres, she’ll make history by becoming the oldest boxing title holder on the planet.

The odds are long. At 46, Izaki is 17 years older than her famously tough opponent and fighting not just age but officialdom.

The World Boxing Council (WBC) called off a scheduled bout for the world super flyweight title between the two in February after expressing concerns about Izaki’s ability to withstand a pounding in the ring.

But the 50kg frizzy-haired flyweight calls those fears misplaced.

“It’s natural that they worry about the age difference because it could be dangerous. But I’ve been doing this for years and I’m strong. I’m going to bring home that belt. I’m confident, I’m not afraid,” she says after a punishing two-hour evening workout.

Susumu Hanagata, her trainer, says Izaki, Japan’s oldest professional boxer, was “devastated” by the cancellation, but is training harder than ever. (ANI)

Senior citizens sashay down ramp in Delhi

New Delhi, May 15 (ANI): The senior citizens walked down the ramp thematically called ‘silver hair on the ramp’ here on Thursday.

The fashion show was organised by ‘Varishth Nagrik Kesari Club’, a senior citizens club in Delhi.

The fashion show was unique as the age of the participants and the models taking part in the fashion show ranged from 60 to 90. Everybody present in the show was thrilled to watch elderly walking and dancing on the ramp in the flashy attires.

Kavita, a housewife, one of the elder models said that she was very happy to participate in the fashion show.

“It was fun and she felt young. Instead of 60 years, she felt as if she were 16 years old,” said Kavita.

The models at the show flaunted Ritu Beri’s designer wear.

The chief guest at the show was Brij Mohan Munjal, businessman and the founder of the Hero Group and guest of honour was Nafisa Ali.

“Its spectacular. I am totally spellbound. Its important that we got together and do much for our elders and society,” said Nafisa Ali.

The fashion show also had live performance by the popular pop singer Shankar Sahney.

The lively performance by the aged models won the hearts of the people present there. (ANI)

Jewellers in Karnataka gear up for Akshaya Tritiya

Bangalore, Apr 26 (ANI): Despite the global meltdown, demand for gold has shot up as goldsmiths and jewellers in Karnataka have been stocking the yellow metal in anticipation of bountiful returns from the yearly ritual known as Akshaya Tritiya that is due on Monday (April 27) this year.

Akshaya Tritiya, as per Indian Hindu calendar comes usually during March-April.

The day is considered as auspicious by south Indians in Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala and Andhra Pradesh.

In contrast to all other festivities that were celebrated in an austere manner over the past one-year due to recession, Akshaya Tritiya seems to have no barriers.

Now that Akshaya Tritiya is round the corner, jewellers are gearing up for the sales extravaganza, capitalising on the common belief that buying precious things during this period ushers good luck and fortune.

Goldsmiths and jewellers admit that their business has improved in the past few weeks and there is more demand for the daily-wear ornaments, coins and lightweight jewellery as they are affordable.

“It (global meltdown) has affected all other companies as well as the jewellery market, but due to Akshaya Tritiya, there are so many people who have preserved their hard earned cash to buy it (gold) on Akshaya Tritiya,” said Chandrashekar, Managing Director, Davanam Jewellers, Bangalore.

“We had some fears that whether the Akshaya Tritiya will go on well or not, but if we look at the customers’ response in past two-three days, we are actually doing very well,” Chandrashekar added.

The price for standard weight of 10 grams of gold has lowered down from Rs.15000 to Rs. 13800.

These trends have encouraged prospective buyers and the resourceful families to shop for gold.

“Even though the gold rates are very high, I have been purchasing it from the last 4-5 years. On the occasion of Akshaya Tritiya, I purchased gold . So even if the gold rates are high, I like to purchase gold,” observed Gayatri, a housewife. By Sweta (ANI)

13-year-old Malay girl used as sex slave by father, brothers for 5 years

Kuala Lumpur, Apr 24 (ANI): Police have arrested a 13-year-old girl’s father and her two brothers after she claimed that she had been a sex slave to them for the last five years.

The Form One pupil confided in her teachers the trauma she had been subjected to at her home since she was 9 years old, reports New Straits Times Online.

Her teacher then took her to the police station where a report was lodged.

Police nabbed the father, aged 42, and sons, 15 and 17, at their home in Bukit Mertajam.

The girl, in her police report, claimed that her father and brother had been taking advantage of her since she was nine.

She claimed that she was nine-years-old when her father first raped her in a forest near her house.

Following that incident, she was paid between RM1 and RM2 by her father each time he sexually abused her.

The girl did not disclose this to her mother, who is a housewife, as she was afraid.

But decided to reveal all to her teacher, as she was afraid that her younger sisters, aged 7 and 9, would suffer the same fate.

State Criminal Investigation Department chief SAC II Wan Abdullah Tuanku Said said the girl was raped in her house and in a secondary forest in Berapit.

He confirmed the arrests, adding that the case was classified as rape and molest. (ANI)

It’s scorcher in Delhi, Met office says mercury to rise

New Delhi, April 20 (IANS) It is official. The sudden rise in day temperature coupled with dusty winds that has hit the national capital over the past few days is a heat wave condition, the meteorological department declared Monday.

The maximum temperature touched a high of 41.7 degrees Celsius, six notches above what is normal for this time of the year, while the minimum temperature settled at 26.1 degrees Celsius, five degrees above normal.

‘The day temperature has increased five to six degrees above normal following hot westerly winds blowing over Delhi. We have declared heat wave condition here,’ a duty officer at the meteorological office told IANS.

People could be seen standing under the shade of trees or buildings to escape the scorching sun as most of the roads in the national capital wore a deserted look. People were seen buying water and cold drinks around offices and in markets to quaffe thirst and beat the heat.

‘In 2006 and 2007 we had the maximum temperature of 42 degrees Celsius. It was only in April 1942 when the mercury had climbed to 45.6 degrees Celsius in the national capital.’

‘In May and June, we expect the mercury to cross 45 degrees Celsius,’ the official added, ruling out the possibility of rains in the near future.

Residents of Delhi have been reeling under the summer heat from the last three days with day temperature rising several degrees above normal.

‘The heat wave is likely to prevail for two to three days and the temperature is likely to rise further,’ the official said.

The Met Office has forecast that the maximum temperature will cross 42 degrees Celsius Tuesday.

‘My skin was burning as I drove to my office around noon,’ said Aakash Aggarwal, a marketing executive.

Asha Sharma, a housewife said: ‘There was no respite from the heat despite putting on the water cooler and fan. I was sweating so much that I bathed five times but it wasn’t of much use.’

Nepal to debut at Cannes film fest with ‘Chaukath’

Kathmandu, April 13 (IANS) Almost a decade after Nepal made a mark in the international film arena, a debutant Nepali director hopes to create a stir at the Cannes Film Festival starting May 13.

Journalist-turned-filmmaker Dipak Rauniyar made a splash in December when his debut film ‘Chaukath’ (Threshold) received rave reviews at the Kathmandu International Mountain Film Festival.

Now ‘Chaukath’ will be screened during the 12-day Cannes Film Festival in the non-competitive category in the short film section.

It will be Nepal’s first entry at Cannes.

The half-an-hour film, that was awarded the third prize by the jury, is about the status of women in Nepal’s conservative Terai plains in the south where sons are preferred to daughters and women are expected to stay at home and devote themselves to housework.

Rauniyar, who worked as a journalist in Biratnagar town in east Nepal, came to Kathmandu in 2001.

‘Chaukath’ revolves around two women from different backgrounds – a divorcee from the hills and a timid housewife who is not even called by her name but is known by the name of the village she hails from.

The film raises questions about the restoration of democracy in Nepal when women are still destined to live as the second sex.

Made on a budget of NRS 100,000, the film has been scripted by Rauniyar himself and Asha Magarati, who also plays one of the two central women characters.

Nepal made a mark at the Academy Awards with ‘Caravan’, the film made in mountainous north Nepal by European Eric Valli in the late 1990s, that received an Oscar nomination in the Best Foreign Film category.

In Germany, an outpost of Pompeii shows its age

Aschaffenburg, Germany – So ancient is Europe that even a “new” building often seems as battered and worn as an “old” one. East of Frankfurt, restorers have struggled to remove the scars of nearly 160 years from a reproduction Roman villa which used to offer a vision of luxury living in the Italian city of Pompeii before a volcanic eruption on August 24 in 79 AD.

Mount Vesuvius exploded, raining ash on the city, sending streams of lava racing down the mountainside and suffocating its people with toxic gases. In three days, the Italian city was covered by a 2.6- metre-thick layer of volcanic material.

In the 19th century, archaeological excavations brought much of the city back to light, inspiring not just a fascination with Roman life but also a desire to look beyond the faded frescoes, grey old stone and blank marble of Ancient Rome and visualize it in full colour.

The Pompejanum was built in the German city of Aschaffenburg as a replica of a villa in Pompeii. The rich reds, intense blues and greens of its wall paintings are a shock to anyone expecting the dullness of the ancient ruins.

“The excavations were expanding during the reign of King Ludwig I of Bavaria,” explained a Pompejanum art historian, Werner Helmberger.

Like many educated Europeans, Ludwig had made the Grand Tour to Italy and had been fascinated by the discoveries.

“He noticed how quickly the colourful Roman frescoes faded when they were brought to light,” said Georg Fahrenschon, today’s Bavarian finance minister, who oversaw funding of the replica’s restoration. That gave him the idea of building a reproduction villa.

“He never intended to live there. Its purpose was to educate Bavarians about classical architecture,” said Helmberger.

In 1843, Ludwig laid the foundation stone at Aschaffenburg, a town in the far north of his kingdom, and the replica with its colourful interior was completed in 1850. But within a century it was as much a ruin as Pompeii was.

During the Second World War, the US Army shelled Aschaffenburg. The walls of the Pompejanum were smashed and the frescoes lost. The building is close to the Main River, and dampness from the soil crept into what was left, worsening the damage, along with vandalism.

Teenagers lit campfires in the rooms or scratched hearts into the plaster. A bullet which remains impacted in the nose of the goddess Hera in a mosaic apparently dates from those violent days.

Restoration of this outpost of Campania began in the 1960s. In the decades since, fashions in historical preservation have regularly changed and each phase followed different principles. The last, intensive phase began in 1989.

In line with current principles that advocate showing a building’s many phases, parts of the Pompejanum are fully restored to their 1848 state and others seem frozen in their state of war destruction in 1945.

The Housewife’s Room, opened to the public this month when the work was completed, has largely grey walls, where the US shells wrecked the frescoes. They have only been restored at a few spots.

Restorer Armin Schmickl-Prochnow said: “We make a point of only using the materials of 2,000 years ago. They are simply earth pigments with some lime added to bond them.”

Raimund Wuensche, head of the Bavarian state antiquities collection, said the 12.7 million euros (17 million dollars) spent since the 1960s on restoring the Pompejanum had been well worth it.

“It’s a unique feeling here: the space, the frescoes, the culture, all in one place.”

Go vote, say campaigns, but are people listening?

Bangalore, April 10 (IANS) This election perhaps stands apart for the number of campaigns urging millions of reluctant, often lazy, Indians to walk that extra mile to the polling booth. But many voters say they are not impressed.

‘Where are the right leaders to vote for?’ retorts Radhika Sharma, a 22-year-old college student in Bangalore. ‘Most seasoned politicians fail to impress us as they are only good at rhetoric and not interested in public service,’ she told IANS.

‘Most politicians are interested in filling their own coffers. Only during elections do they come out and fold their hands to seek votes,’ she insisted.

Housewife Meenakshi Rani said: ‘I am not going to vote. First give us the right leaders – who have a record of bringing positive change in society – to choose from.’

Voting will take place in five phases beginning April 16. Counting is on May 16. From the Election Commission and the media to NGOs, they are all on an overdrive to nudge millions of people to vote.

The election authorities in many states have tried to simplify the procedure for registering one’s name in the electoral list and getting voter identification cards.

In Karnataka, for instance, the state election authorities opened 50 Voter Facilitation Centres (VFCs) across the state that worked through the week except Mondays for nearly a month.

Tata Tea, a Tata group company, launched the ‘Jaago Re (Wake up)! One Billion Votes’ campaign, six months back to encourage youth voters.

Janaagraha, a Bangalore-based NGO, has joined hands with it to organise rock concerts by a Bangalore rock group, Thermal and A Quarter. The band toured the metros of Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai with its ‘Shut Up and Vote’ concert. It rounded off the campaign in Bangalore.

But many remain sceptical.

‘These are mere publicity stunts, full of glitz and glamour. The real issues are not going to be solved by the song and dance about urging people to vote,’ asserts IT professional Subhas Panth, 27.

Some say politicians simply don’t have their finger on the pulse of the people.

‘Even during elections, politicians don’t talk of issues like lack of civic amenities, corruption, terrorism and a high rate of unemployment. All the parties are busy in mudslinging,’ rues Sanjay Gowda, an entrepreneur.

Such reactions are a pointer to the huge task that civil society faces in impressing upon certain sections the need to overcome their reservations and participate in the electoral process to bring about the change they seek.

In Hyderabad, hundreds have joined the LetsVote walk. Mumbai and Delhi had MumbaiVotes, DelhiVotes respectively and the IT capital saw the smartvote.in campaign on the net.

Actor-filmmaker Aamir Khan has also done his bit. He is featuring in a campaign with the slogan ‘Sache ko chune, Achche ko chune’ (Vote for integrity, Vote for good people) on television and in print.

In contrast, political parties have not launched any campaign on their own on the issue. Most have, however, set up or revamped their websites to reach out to the people through the net.

Previous voting figures show why such campaigns are needed. In the 2004 Lok Sabha elections, only 58.07 percent of the electorate voted. This time the size of the electorate is 714 million.

Thus, organisations like Janaagraha are pressing on.

‘The nation is facing several problems, with terrorism and economic meltdown being the prime ones. This is the best time for voters to vote and choose the right leaders to run the country. Staying away from elections will not solve problems,’ Vandana Krishnan of Janaagraha told IANS.

‘It is not only important to vote but informed voting is equally important.’

Terror Raids Based On ‘Very Real’ Threat

*

Greater Manchester Police have told Sky News the on-going series of raids across the North West are prompted by a “very real” terror threat. Skip related content
Related photos / videos
Terror Raids Based On ‘Very Real’ Threat
Related content

* 11 suspects in anti-terror raids Pakistani
* Terror Blunder: Ex-Chief Says Sorry To PM
* Top anti-terrorism officer quits over blunder
* Related Hot Topic: Terrorism

Have your say: Terrorism

Police have arrested 12 men in parallel raids in Manchester, Liverpool and Clitheroe in Lancashire.

Witnesses in Cheetham Hill, Manchester, described what they saw.

One woman who lives next door to a terraced house where two men were arrested said she saw a man being hauled down the street by officers.

Bushra Majid, 33, a housewife, said: “I opened the door and four or five policemen were on top of a man. They were dragging him along the street and he had no shoes on.

“They shouted at me, ‘Get inside. Get inside’. There was a policeman on each corner of the street. They were dressed in black and had machine guns.

“I heard lots of noise inside the house, like people running up and down the stairs.”

The mother-of-four said the house next door was rented and there were always people coming and going.

“There were about six or seven men living there for the last six months.

“Some were aged 45 to 50, others were aged in their 20s. They used to go to the local al Falah mosque daily.”

Witnesses at Liverpool John Moores University said two Asian men in their mid to late-20s were held by armed police outside the main library on Maryland Street.

They described how the suspects were stopped as they walked past the main entrance and ordered to lie on the ground.

Students were held inside the library for up to 30 minutes as the two men were searched by officers before being taken away.

Craig Ahmed, 24, a business student from Maghull, Merseyside, said: “Suddenly there was all shouting and commotion outside so I went to the window and saw about eight police officers.

“One of them was armed and was pointing his gun at two men who were ordered to lie face down on the ground. “For about half an hour they held the men on the floor. The police were shouting things at them but I couldn’t hear what was being said.

“They looked like students, one was wearing tracksuit bottoms and a hooded top and the other had a Puffa-style jacket on.

“The library Tannoy came on telling everybody inside to stay away from the windows and not to go outside.

“They said it was for our own safety and people inside were getting quite stressed about it. There was talk that they had a bomb and it spread like wildfire around the building.

“After some time the police then searched a satchel belonging to one of the men and a carrier bag belonging to the other one. The two men were then searched as they were on the ground and cuffed and taken away.”

In Clitheroe, Lancashire, up to 100 officers swooped on the Homebase store and arrested two security guards as stunned work colleagues looked on.

Police simultaneously raided the nearby Brooklyn Guest House in Pimlico Road where the two men were staying.

An eyewitness said: “About 50 vehicles filled the car park and the police stormed in and quickly brought the two men out.

“They seemed to know who they were looking for. It looked a well planned operation.”

Adam Howard, who lives opposite the guest house in Pimlico Road, said he was shocked at the arrests.

He said: “I saw about 15 officers go in the front and the back of the house. It was a bit of a shock. You don’t expect this to happen in a market town.”

Obama’s Islamic overtures face tough sell in Iraq

U.S. President Barack Obama’s mission to repair the United States’ tarnished reputation among Muslims will prove a difficult task in Iraq, where years of war and bloodshed have done much to damage its image.

Obama arrived in Iraq on Tuesday as part of his first major trip abroad as U.S. president, his opposition to the U.S.-led invasion of the country in 2003 a centrepiece of his election campaign.

He landed at Baghdad airport and is due to meet Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki at a nearby U.S. military base.

Divided by years of sectarian bloodshed triggered by the invasion, what Iraqis want from Obama differs greatly. But many questioned on the streets of Baghdad were clear on insisting Obama back his words with action.

“I hope he’ll withdraw the U.S. troops…We need action. If he speaks, he must act. If it’s just talk, he can stay away,” said Qableh Mahmoud, a Baghdad housewife.

About 140,000 U.S. troops remain in Iraq and Obama has pledged to withdraw all combat troops by the end of August next year. All are due to leave Iraq by the end of 2011 as part of a deal signed with Iraq by former U.S. President George W. Bush.

He visited a day after seven car bombs ripped through Baghdad, killing 37 people. Violence has fallen sharply in Iraq over the last year but insurgent attacks are still common.

Deep mistrust remains between majority Shi’ites and minority Sunnis, though all those interviewed agreed Obama was an improvement on Bush, who ordered Iraq’s invasion six years ago.

“Obama’s words are better than those of Bush, but what we want is some implementation,” said office worker Mohammed Abbas.

Obama said in Turkey prior to his visit to Iraq that the United States was not at war with Islam, and he has offered an olive branch to Shi’ite Iran, Iraq’s neighbour and till now Washington’s arch foe due to a row over Iran’s nuclear plans.

That may please Iraqi Shi’ites, but annoy Sunnis.

“We want reconciliation between Iran and the U.S.,” Iraqi soldier Zaid Firas, a Shi’ite, said.

For some Iraqis, traumatised by a war that has killed tens of thousands and wounded and displaced many more, Obama was not welcome, regardless of his new approach to the Middle East.

But there are those who disgree with a broad desire to end the U.S. involvement in Iraq’s destiny.

“If the U.S. forces leave, there will be a bloodbath,” said photographer Alwan al-Sudani, highlighting the challenges Iraq faces as it starts to plot its own future after years of war.