Indian-origin NY boy enters Scripps National Spelling Bee final round

New York, June 04 (ANI): Indian origin boy Arvind Mahankali, 10, of Queens, New York has entered the decisive round of the Scripps National Spelling Bee.

The fifth-grader from the Forest Hills Montessori School spelled “manciple” (servant or steward) and “pergelisol” (similar to permafrost) to land himself a spot in the next league.

Arvind”s competitor, Thomas Dumbach, 14, of Whitestone, Queens, an eighth-grader at Hunter College High School in Manhattan, also spelled his two words correctly.

However, he was eliminated on the basis of total points from an earlier written test.

“I knew them both. I feel really happy,” the New York Daily News quoted Mahankali, as saying.

He added: “I prepared a lot, I read a lot and my parents helped me a lot.” (ANI)

After the pub brawl, cricketers crawl

Mumbai, May 26 (IANS) Six Indian cricketers Wednesday apologised to the Indian cricket board for their involvement in a pub brawl in St.Lucia, West Indies, after the team’s exit from the World Twenty20.

Ravindra Jadeja and Rohit Sharma e-mailed their apology to Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) secretary N.Srinivasan while Yuvraj Singh, Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra and Piyush Chawla met a senior board official and said that in future they would restrain themeselves from involving in any such incident.

In an e-mail to the BCCI secretary, Jadeja wrote: ‘I very much regret that the board has to send me a notice for the incident in the West Indies, and please accept my apology. I beg to inform you that I had gone to the restaurant (pub) for dinner along with other Indian team members. Some other guests which I presume were (of) Indian origin of USA also come to the restaurant and on seeing us they started abusing us, this may be because they were unhappy with our poor performance. We requested them not to abuse us but they did not stop despite of our repeated request. No way I was involved in any ugly brawl and I went to the pub only to have dinner with my teammates.’

Jadeja added: ‘If the board still thinks that I have brought any disrespect to the game of cricket or our board and our country, I once again sincerely tender my unconditional apology and assure you that I will take care that in future no way my name will be involved in any such incident.’

�Indian appearance� baby found abandoned on Sydney street

Sydney, May 18 (ANI): A toddler, most probably of Indian origin, was found walking unsupervised in Western Sydney on Tuesday morning.

Two off duty ambulance officers spotted the kid who is aged around three, and was seemingly distressed when the officers found him wandering alone on the busy street.

The police are having a hard time in tracing the boy�s parents or guardian as he offered little clue as to where they could be, and the police are finding it difficult to communicate with the kid who has a limited vocabulary.

They have also reconnoitered the area�s pre-schools but to no avail.

��We canvassed the nearby area, a number of pre-schools and local schools and shopkeepers and met with a negative response. We showed a photo to people in the local area but no one knows anything about him,� the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Penrith Police duty officer Inspector Cox as saying.

The boy, who has not told the police his name, is of Indian appearance with an olive complexion, 80- to 90-centimetres tall and thin with short brown hair and brown eyes.

He was wearing a brown jacket with grey lining, a red jumper featuring a picture of a “hungry dinosaur”, light grey tracksuit pants, grey socks and brown sandals, the paper reports.

The police have issued a notice with the helpline number of �Crime Stoppers�, for anyone who might provide information about the little boy. (ANI)

Malay-Indian MP receives death threats for highlighting corruption in sand-mining project

Kuala Lumpur, May 16 (ANI): An Indian-origin MP in Malaysia has received death threats for alleging that there is corruption in the running of government owned sand mining companies.

S. Manikavasagam found his wife’s car splashed with red-paint at his home in Meru.

Three bags containing red paint were hurled into his house, one of them had a warning attached to it, in an A4 sized paper that said, “Jangan campur issue pasir. You mati.” (Don”t get involved in the sand mining issue. You will die.)

He ascertained that the bags must have been thrown after 4 in the morning, as this was the time his mother-in-law retired for the night, The Star reports.

The Parti Keadilan Rakyat politician has received such threats on the telephone prior to this incident also. (ANI)

Murdered Indian-origin liquor store owner”s family makes peace with Auckland Police

Auckland (New Zealand), May 15 (ANI): Family and friends of murdered Indian-origin liquor store owner Navtej Singh have decided to make peace with Auckland”s law enforcement authorities over what they initially labelled a flawed investigation report.

On Saturday, they said that the report”s conclusions would not bring Navtej back, and hoped it would prevent the police from making similar mistakes in the future.

Aucland Police had earlier dismissed the idea that they had failed in their “duty to protect”.

The New Zealand Herald quoted family spokesman Daljit Singh, as saying: “It was not a single mistake by any one department, but a procedural failure. The district commander came to us this morning and apologised to the family. Navtej will not come back with this report. However, it will not happen with anybody else in future.”

The New Zealand Sikh Society had described the delay in getting to Navtej Singh as “a complete disaster”.

However, Deputy Commissioner Rob Pope rejected the authority”s suggestion that the police failed in their duty of care.

“A regrettable series of events came together to create a delay and ideally we should have got to him sooner. We have apologised to the family for this. However, we should not lose sight of the fact that it was Anitelia Chan Kee who pulled the trigger and is now serving a 17-year prison term for Mr Singh”s murder,” the paper quoted Pope, as saying.

Pope further said the police had already made changes after investigating their handling of the case.

“We looked at all aspects of our response and identified several improvements, particularly in regard to the way we take command ofserious incidents and control the response of our staff in the field,” he said, adding that extra staff were now working in Counties Manukau as a result of a Government initiative were helping ease some of the pressures.

Staff were working with store owners in the area to reduce the risk of their becoming targets of crime.

Police are now required to make a formal response to the authority”s recommendations. (ANI)

Indian origin worker dies after being dragged into machine

London, May 13 (IANS) An Indian origin worker was killed in a British factory after he was dragged into a machine that he was operating alone.

Mitesh Prashar, 24, who was working at Duco International in Slough, suffered severe injuries after his left arm and shoulder were crushed between two rollers of the heavy-duty machinery.

Witnesses have said that Prashar may have become caught in the machine while checking giant sheets of rubber for imperfections.

He was pronounced dead on the factory floor.

An inquest jury was told Wednesday that Prashar had expressed concern about using the machine without supervision.

Prashar’s family was present at the hearing in Windsor, Berkshire.

The victim had been working at Duco International Ltd based in Slough since January 2007 and the incident took place Jan 15, 2008, Daily Mail reported Thursday.

At about 2 a.m. on that fateful night, colleagues heard a strange noise before realising that something was wrong.

‘I heard what sounded like a loud sigh more than a scream. It wasn’t a cry for help. It was between a cry and a sigh and there were not any words. It wasn’t somebody in pain,’ team leader Richard Nugus was quoted as saying.

‘I was surprised that Mitesh was put on the night shift unsupervised without another inspections operative. It seemed to be quite a short period before he was allowed to run it (the machine) single-handedly.’

Prashar’s colleagues ran to help him and saw that his arm and shoulder had become trapped between metal rollers on the machine.

Paramedics declared him dead.

Nurse says Patel called Bundaberg Hospital”s ICU ”third world”

Brisbane (Australia), May 11 (ANI): The Supreme Court in Brisbane has been told that Indian-origin surgeon Dr. Jayant Patel was reluctant to transfer his patients to Brisbane despite describing Queensland’s Bundaberg Base Hospital”s intensive care unit as a “third world country”.

According to The Age, nurse Karen Stumer told the court that on a number of occasions in 2004 she had overheard Dr Patel being critical of the intensive care unit (ICU) at the regional facility.

“A couple of times he said that the Bundaberg ICU was a third world country,” Stumer said.

Dr Patel, 60, has pleaded not guilty to manslaughter charges.

The charges relate to his time as director of surgery at the hospital between 2003 and 2005.

The trial continues. (ANI)

India has reason to smile

London, May 7 — The wheels of fortune turned for Indian-origin candidates in the British elections as a suave 42-year-old Sikh businessman won a parliamentary seat once represented by an MP who promised “rivers of blood” over immigration. Conservative candidate Paul Uppa ousted his fancied rival, the sitting Labour MP Rob Marris, by a razor-thin margin of 691 votes to take the Wolverhampton Southwest seat. He was among a record eight Indian-origin candidates – half of them fresh faces – to make to the British parliament. The city of Wolverhampton, located in west-central England and home to one of the largest Sikhs communities in Britain, became notorious when the local Conservative MP, Enoch Powell, made an infamous speech on immigration on April 20, 1968. “As I look ahead,” said Powell, “I am filled with foreboding; like the Roman, I seem to see ‘the River Tiber foaming with much blood.’” Powell was sacked as a member of the shadow cabinet after the speech prompted outrage around the world, but as recently as in 2007 a Conservative candidate in the region was forced to stand down after claiming Powell was “right” when he gave his anti-immigration speech. Also making their entry into the House of Commons were the first Indian-origin women – Valerie Vaz, Labour (sister of Britain’s longest serving MP of Indian origin Keith Vaz), Priti Patel, Conservative. “This is long overdue,” Patel, 37, said. Introduced to politics by former Conservative heavyweight Cecil Parkinson, Patel has few family links left in India although her parents were originally from Gujarat. The fourth debutant is Alok Sharma of the Conservative party, who won Reading West, a Labour seat for over a decade. Other winning candidates of Indian origin were the sitting MPs Keith Vaz (Labour, Leicester East), Shailesh Vara (Conservatives, Cambridgeshire northwesh), Marsha Singh (Labour, Bradford west), and Virendra Sharma (Labour, Ealing Southall).

Rushnara Ali, 35, became the first Bangladeshi woman to be make to the House of Commons.

‘Distraught’ Kiwi Indian Navtej Singh’s widow says living life of dead person

Wellington, May 8 (ANI): The widow of Indian-origin south Auckland liquor storeowner Navtej Singh, Harjinder Kaur, has described the impact of her husband’s killing by saying that she is living a life of a dead person.

An intoxicated Antilea Chan Kee (21) shot Singh at his Manurewa liquor store on June 7, 2008. He had been handing over cash to the robbers at the time he was shot. Chan Kee has been sentenced to life imprisonment for killing.

Kaur told Chan Kee’s sentencing hearing in the High Court at Auckland that her family is still struggling.

“Although it looks like we’re living our lives, in reality our lives have been destroyed. It’s as if I’m living my life as a dead person and there is so much pain in my heart. My life has been destroyed. All my dreams have been shattered,” the NZ Herald quoted Kaur, as saying.

Kaur wondered if Chan Kee knew what it meant to separate a husband from his wife, a father from his children and a son from his parents.

Singh was a hardworking man and a loving father. She said their three daughters, aged 7, 5, and 2, still asked where their daddy was as they stood in front of his picture.

The oldest child has asked her mother “why daddy got shot even though he was giving the money. Why did they shoot him?”

Kaur tried to run the family liquor store after the murder but the children never wanted her to go there.

She told the court her grandfather died of shock the day after the killing when he heard the news, and her husband’s father, Nahar Singh, was so overcome with grief that he tried to kill himself by jumping from an overbridge. He fractured his limbs when he landed on the Southern Motorway.

The suicide attempt came after he watched a video of his son’s funeral service. (ANI)

Virendra Sharma wins in Ealing Southall

London, May 7 (IANS) Indian origin Labour candidate Virendra Sharma, formerly a bus conductor, Friday retained the Ealing Southall constituency in the British general election.

Sharma polled 22,024 votes, defeating closest rival Conservative Gurcharan Singh (12,733 votes). Liberal Democrat candidate Nigel Bakhai stood third.

The others in the fray but who lost badly were Green Party’s Suneil Basu, Christian Party’s Mehboob Anil and English Democrats’ Sati Chaggar, BBC reported.

Sharma was first elected as MP from Ealing Southall in July 19, 2007 during a by-election called following the death of the sitting Labour MP, Piara Khabra.

Born in India, Sharma speaks fluent Punjabi, Hindi and Urdu apart from English. The grandfather-of-three came from India in 1968 and started out as a conductor on the 207 route.

He enrolled in the London School of Economics on a Trade Union Scholarship.

The Ealing Southall constituency covers Dormer Wells, Ealing Broadway, Ealing Common, Elthorne, Greenford Broadway, Lady Margaret, Norwood Green, Northfield, Southall Broadway, Southall Green and Walpole.

According to the 2001 census, the constituency has a high British Asian population – around 39 percent, the majority being of Indian origin.

Islamabad, May 7 (IANS) Pakistan’s English media Friday front-paged but did not lead with the death sentence awarded to Ajmal Amir Kasab for his role in the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, focusing instead on an emerging dispute between the government and the judiciary on reopening a graft case against President Asif Ali Zardari.

London, May 7 (IANS) Indian origin Labour candidate Manish Sood, who called his Labour party leader Gordon Brown ‘the worst prime minister’, has lost badly in the Norfolk North West constituency in Britain.

Sood had hit out at Brown a couple of days before balloting. But the offensive did not help him in Thursday’s balloting. According to the BBC, Sood got 6,353 votes and finished third.

The seat was won by Conservative Henry Billingham who polled 25,916 votes while Liberal Democrat William Summers stood second.

Sood had said during campaigning: ‘Immigration has gone up which is creating friction within communities. The country is getting bigger and messier. The role of ministers has gone bureaucratic and the action of ministers has gone downhill – it is corrupt.

‘The loss of social values is the basic problem and this is not what the Labour Party is about. I believe Gordon Brown has been the worst prime minister we have had in this country. It is a disgrace and he owes an apology to the people and the Queen,’ Lynn News newspaper had quoted him as saying.

Following his comments, David Collis, chairman of the North West Norfolk Constituency Labour Party, had called Sood a ‘dreadful candidate’.

It is my duty to lead Britain: Brown

London, May 7 (IANS) Labour leader Gordon Brown Friday expressed confidence in staying on in No.10 Downing Street as prime minister despite a cliffhanger election and said it was his ‘duty to the country’ to play his part in having ‘a strong, stable and principled government’.

Brown said he was proud of what his Labour government had achieved over the last 13 years after winning his seat with an increased majority.

He said he was deeply honoured to have been re-elected and said: ‘I will not let you down.’

He said at his Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath constituency: ‘The outcome of this country’s vote is not yet known, but my duty to the country, coming out of this election, is to play my part in Britain having a strong, stable and principled government, able to lead Britain into sustained economic recovery.’

‘I’m proudest of all to have been returned as MP for Fife now seven elections in a row by the people who know me best, know who I am, what I stand for and what I went into politics to achieve,’ Daily Mail quoted Brown as saying.

The campaign period had not been easy for Brown, specially after a chance encounter with a 65-year-old widow, who he called ‘bigoted’. That’s not all. Indian origin Labour candidate Manish Sood has described Brown as the ‘worst prime minister ever’.

Brown, who succeeded former prime minister Tony Blair, vowed to fight every inch of the way.

The Telegraph quoted Downing Street sources as saying that Brown would insist on his right as prime minister to try to form an administration even if his party didn’t emerge as the single largest party in the House of Commons.

Keith Vaz wins in British polls

London, May 7 (IANS) Indian-origin MP Keith Vaz held the Leicester East constituency for the Labour party in the British general election.

He defeated Conservative candidate Jane Hunt and Liberal Democrat candidate Ali Asghar.

Indian filmstar Sanjay Dutt had campaigned for Vaz in his constituency, that has a large population of South Asians, where he secured 53.8 percent of the vote. Vaz’s parents were from Goa and the family migrated to Britain from Yemen in 1965.

Keith has been a member of parliament for Leicester East since 1987. On July 26, 2007, Vaz was elected chairman of the influential Home Affairs Select Committee.

Indian Kiwi Navtej Singh’s killer sentenced to life-imprisonment

Wellington, May 7 (ANI): Indian-origin Navtej Singh’s killer, 21-year-old Antilea Chan Kee, has been sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum 17-year non-parole period.

Singh was shot at his Manurewa liquor store by an intoxicated Chan Kee on June 7, 2008, he died in the hospital the next day. He had been handing over cash to the robbers at the time he was shot.

In an emotional high-court sentencing that ended an excruciating two-year long quest for justice, a teary-eyed Mrs Harjinder Singh said her life had been destroyed and her dreams shattered by the shooting.

Mr Singh”s widow, Harjinder Kaur, 35, wiped away tears as she quietly read aloud a victim impact statement to the court.

“In reality our life has been destroyed. It”s as if I”m just living my life as a dead person. No-one can see there is so much pain in my heart.”

She said her three daughters, aged seven, five and two, repeatedly asked her where their father had gone.

“I can”t understand what has happened to me. He was a very good and loving human being and had never hurt anyone,” Stuff.co.nz quoted Mrs Singh as saying.

Relating her predicament in the aftermath of her husband’s death, Mrs Singh told the court her grandfather died “from shock” the day after he heard of the killing.

Coming down heavily on the murderer, Justice Lang said Chan Kee had left a family without a father, son and husband with his “reckless killing”.

“I have lost two members of my family as a result of this incident,” she said.

Crown prosecutor Kieran Raftery said the killing of Singh had been “callous”.

“There was absolutely nothing that Mr Chan Kee needed to do in order to achieve that robbery. Yet he deliberately pulls the trigger and kills him.”

Following Singh’s demise there were allegations by the Sikh community in Auckland of the police delaying the ambulance carrying Singh by forty minutes, though the community did not issue any official statement or complaint regarding the same. (ANI)

Kasab’s conviction must not lead to complacency

New Delhi, May 6 (ANI): Mohammad Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone Pakistani terrorist caught alive in the aftermath of the 26/11 terrorist attack at Mumbai has been found guilty of 80 out of 86 charges by the special court of Judge ML Tahilyani and has been sentenced to death.

The trial that was completed in a record 525 days has been hailed as a triumph for of the Indian judiciary since every possible opportunity of defence, including a lawyer, was provided to the accused whose complicity in the terror strike was well established at the very outset.

The fact the two alleged co-conspirators of Indian origin, Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed, have been acquitted on grounds of lack of evidence adds to the stature of the honourable Court.

The euphoria being generated with respect to the judicial process and the high moral threshold attained by Indian democracy are justified.

However, this is an apt time to determine whether we are more secure and better prepared now than we were when the attack took place.

P Chidabaram, who took over as Home Minister after the debacle, has worked hard to revitalize the internal security apparatus of the country.

His effort deserves appreciation, but the attack on the German Bakery at Pune serves as a grim reminder of the fact that we are a long way from attaining foolproof security.

The pressure exerted on Pakistan in the aftermath of the attack had a salutary effect for some time.

The country put a top commander of LeT, Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, under arrest and some effort was made to contain the activities of terrorist groups targeting India. Unfortunately, subsequent events and action bear testimony that the efforts were temporary face-saving gimmicks.

Top leaders like Hafiz Saeed, Syed Salahuddin and Mohd Azgar are not only roaming free, but are also propagating anti-India sentiment with impunity.

On February 6, on the occasion of the so-called Kashmir Solidarity Day celebrated every year across Pakistan, the banned Jamat-ud-Dawa was allowed to hold public rallies in Lahore, Islamabad and Rawalpindi.

Banners in support of Jihad were openly hung along the Mall Road in Lahore and CD’s in favour of Jehad were freely distributed.

None other than Hafiz Saeed whose arrest has been repeatedly demanded by India addressed the participants. All this was happening just a few days after the proposal for foreign secretary level talks was mooted at the behest of none other than Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, this not an exception but a common place happening in Pakistan.

Many precious lives have been lost in the last few months due to aggressive bids by terror organizations operating, in concert with the Pakistan Army, to increase infiltration along the line of control in Jammu and Kashmir and to revitalize terror groups operating within the state.

Terror is terror, and while articulating its effect, no distinction can be made between Mumbai and Kashmir or any other part of the country.

Kasab got what he deserves, but the challenges that the country faces due to export of terrorism from Pakistan will not abate with his conviction.

In fact, we have to be prepared for a possible retaliation. Pakistan’s professed determination to stop the proliferation of terror from its soil is no more than lip service, and the situation in Jammu and Kashmir is testimony to this fact.

Under the circumstances there is no room for complacency while addressing internal security challenges. (ANI)

Indian-origin Brit student’s new method can help find tiny traces of drugs

London, May 5 (ANI): A science student of Indian-origin in the UK has come up with a novel way to find tiny, previously undetected, traces of cocaine on surfaces.

The research, carried out at the University of Derby using a new method of forensic analysis, may help police find minute traces of drugs.

Sonica Devi, 22, a final year student at the university, tested her method on samples taken from telephone boxes across Derby.

The university said she used an ultra sensitive Gas Chromatographic technique, which allowed her to find cocaine at picogram levels – one million millionth of a gram – from forensic swabs.

Gas Chromatography linked to a mass spectrometer (GCMS) is an established technique for separating complex mixtures of compounds and detecting them down to very low amounts.

The new breakthrough makes detection of the drug possible even at a million millionth of a gram.

A picogram is one thousand times smaller than a nanogram and a thousand thousandth times smaller than a microgram (a millionth of a gram).

””I had no idea what I would find through this study as no trace of drugs could be seen in the phone booths with the naked eye – I was surprised at what the research found,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

””I am keen to take this research forward and would be keen to work with other agencies or organisations to develop this further,”” she added.

The study is now being presented at a number of forensic science conferences across the UK. (ANI)

Indian origin climate researcher, partner say Copenhagen Accord objectives an uphill task

San Diego US, May 4 (ANI): Two climate change researchers have warned that the goals spelt out in the Copenhagen Accord will be a “Herculean” task.

Indian origin Veerabhadran Ramanathan and Yangyang Xu, climate researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego are advocates of fast-action climate change strategies.

“Without an integrated approach that combines CO2 emission reductions with reductions in other climate warmers and climate-neutral air-pollution laws, we are certain to pass the 2-degree C and likely reach a 4 degree C threshold during this century,” Ramanathan said.

“Fortunately there is still time to avert unmanageable climate changes, but we must act now,” he added.

Using a synthesis of National Science Foundation-funded research performed over the last 20 years, Ramanathan and Xu have outlined three steps that must be taken simultaneously to avoid the threshold, and stressed that carbon dioxide control alone is not sufficient.

Recommended steps include stabilizing CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere, and fashioning warming-neutral pollution laws that will balance the removal of aerosols that have an atmospheric cooling effect with the removal of warming agents such as soot and ozone.

Finally, the authors advocate achieving reductions in methane, hydrofluorocarbons and other greenhouse gases that remain in the atmosphere for short periods of time.

According to the scientist, aggressive simultaneous pursuit of these strategies could reduce the probability of reaching the temperature threshold to less than 10 percent before the year 2050. (ANI)

Riot squad called in after brawl at DJ Bally Sagoo’s dance party

London, May 3 (ANI): Riot police was called to a hotel after the licensee threw 1000 people out of a dance party featuring British-Indian DJ Bally Sagoo.

Eight police cars and around 30 officers rushed to the Art House Hotel in Pitt Street a little after 2 am in response to a frantic call by the licensee. He shut down the venue following the skirmish.

The disgruntled partygoers were mostly of Indian origin. They had waited for several hours to watch Bally Sagoo in action.

“We were here especially for him, all of a sudden, people started fighting and suddenly there was a shout and everyone was chucked out,” finance worker Kevin Sunni told The Daily Telegraph.

Sagoo is a prominent Brit-Indian DJ who ushered in the Bhangra craze with his thumping remixes. (ANI)

`Dr. Death’ Patel threatened to quit when patient transfer was arranged

Brisbane, Apr.30 (ANI): Brisbane’s Supreme Court has been told that controversial Indian origin surgeon Dr. Jayant Patel went purple with rage when a dangerously ill patient was transferred from the Bundaberg Hospital to Brisbane.

The court was told that he told a junior doctor that he would leave the hospital if the transfer of the patient took place, forcing medical staff to reconsider.

This information came out as the crown (prosecution) presented leading evidence about an operation on James Grave, even though Patel is not facing any charge involving his surgery.

Prosecutor Ross Martin told the court it was important the jury heard evidence about Mr Grave, who had oesophageal cancer, because the case was a “warning” to Patel to not perform the complex oesophagectomy operation, reports The Courier Mail.

The court was told that Grave was diagnosed with oesophagectomy on early June 6, 2003, but deteriorated and was eventually transferred to Brisbane.

Dr Carl Kennedy said he was in his second year as a doctor at the Bundaberg Hospital when Grave was a patient in the intensive care unit.

He said, as a junior, rather than having input into the treatment of patients, he would follow instructions from senior medical staff.

Dr Kennedy explained that Patel had recorded several times that Grave was improving and, by June 12, after six days in the ICU, Patel made a note that Grave was doing very well after surgery to repair his operation wound.

Dr Kennedy said that, after 11 days in the intensive care unit, Grave was not doing very well. He had had two further operations on a seeping wound and twice had tubes inserted to drain off excess fluid.

“I thought as a junior house officer, (Mr) Grave was getting sicker and needed much more support. He needed to go to Brisbane where there were much more facilities and where they were able to deal with such patients,” he said.

Dr Kennedy said he understood the Bundaberg ICU was only for short-term patients and Grave had been there for much longer.

“It wasn”t a case where it was staff could no longer do for this gentleman. It looked as though he would need long-term ventilation and support of his heart. It was a more complicated case than Bundaberg would normally handle,” he added.

Dr Kennedy said there was always a risk such patients might not receive the degree of care they could at larger centres.

He said he took administrative steps to have Grave moved and he found a bed for him at the (then) Royal Brisbane Hospital..

However, Patel found out and confronted Dr Kennedy.

“He was quite upset that the patient was going and said to me: `If that patient leaves, then I leave the hospital,” Dr Kenendy said.

After discussions between senior staff it was decided to keep Grave at Bundaberg for a further 24 hours.

Patel, 60, has pleaded not guilty to the manslaughter of Phillips, 46, Mervyn Morris, 75, and Geradus Wihelmus Gosewinus Kemps, 77, and causing grievous bodily harm to Ian Rodney Vowles, 62, on various dates between March 2003 and April 2005.

Grave eventually recovered in the ICU at the Brisbane”s Mater Hospital before being returned to the Bundaberg Hospital where he was eventually discharged. He died in January 2004.

The trial continues. (ANI)

The secret behind Indian-origin Masterchef champs’ win

London, April 29 (ANI): Dhruv Baker, 2010 Masterchef winner, beat off tough competition with his Indian-influenced take on Western dishes.

Baker, who left his job as a sales director for a career in kitchen, won the judges over with his exciting and imaginative fusion of Indian and Western flavours.

John Torode described his recipes as ‘the most amazing fusion food I”ve ever tasted’ while Greg Wallace said he had ‘the palate of an angel’.

Baker revealed that he kept the news of his victory a secret from loved ones since filming of the 2010 series finished six months ago.

“I”ve been keeping the result a secret since filming finished six months ago. I didn”t even tell my mother,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying.

Baker has been getting professional kitchen experience in preparation for opening his own restaurant in 18 months” time.

Before that there are plans for a pop-up restaurant with the other finalists. (ANI)