Flintoff likely to play for Queensland in Australia’s T20 Big Bash

London, May 18 (ANI): Injured all rounder Andrew Flintoff, who has still not given up hope of returning to England’s limited-overs team, is all set to play in an Australian domestic Twenty20 tournament.

Flintoff, 32, who watched England secure a historic win over the Aussies in the World Twenty20 final, is scheduled to play for Lancashire in late July.

He has been approached by three Australian states to play in the Big Bash tournament, with Queensland being his likely destination, The Sun reports.

The tournament clashes with the one-day series versus Australia in January, which builds up to the 2011 World Cup in Indian subcontinent.

But Flintoff admitted that he faces a battle to get into the England’s side following their recent success. (ANI)

Partition ‘most traumatic event’ of 20th century, India-Pak should accept reality:Singh

Lahore, Apr.17 (ANI): Former Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh has described the bifurcation of the Indian subcontinent as the ‘most traumatic event’ of the 20th century and said that both India and Pakistan must accept the reality and find ways to move ahead.

Speaking during the launch function of his controversial, yet popular book: “Jinnah: India-Partition-Independence” here, Singh said people of both India and Pakistan should accept the reality and find way to move ahead and end the animosity as envisioned by Muhammed Ali Jinnah.

Describing Jinnah as an ardent supporter of Hindu-Muslim unity, he said Jinnah wanted to separate religion from politics.

“Jinnah was a pure secularist and constitutionalist who believed in logic and wanted to separate religion from politics, but the consequences of the Lukhnow Pact of 1916 and the Uttar Pradesh elections of 1937 disheartened him so much that he quit politics and returned to England,” The Daily Times quoted Singh, as saying.

Singh said Jinnah and Mahatma Gandhi had different opinions over bringing reforms in society.

“Gandhi supported civil disobedience while Jinnah, who was five years his senior in Congress, believed in changing the society through education,” Singh said.

Responding a question over his basic aim behind writing the book on Jinnah, Singh said he wanted to help people understand the past, which he said is shared by both countries.

“We should not stumble again,” Singh said. (ANI)

Rakeysh Mehra to make biopic on Milkha Singh

London, Mar. 20 (ANI): Bollywood director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra has revealed plans to make a biographical film on the life of Indian ace athlete Milkha Singh.

“There is so much darkness in today”s society. The youngsters today are looking for too much and, here in our backyard, we have something. There are some examples, which were burning once, but for me, burning even brighter today,” Mehra said.

“His story has more relevance in today”s time then it had when he was winning all medals and breaking all world records,” he added.

Nicknamed the Flying Sikh, Milkha Singh is the only Indian athlete till date who has broken an Olympic record.

Milkha Singh won Gold medals in both 200m and 400m events at the Tokyo Asian Games in 1958. At the Cardiff Commonwealth Games held the same year, he improved his 400m timing to 46.16 seconds, and grabbed a Gold medal again.

Titled ”Bhaag Milkha Bhaag” (Run Milkha, Run) the film would portray 75 years of Singh”s life right from his childhood in Pakistan and the Partition, apart from his achievements in sports.

Singh had lost his parents during the partition of the Indian subcontinent.

Ad filmmaker and lyricist Prasoon Joshi would team up with Mehra in ”Bhaag Milkha Bhaag”, which is the first biographical film to be made on a sports icon.

“It is not a eulogy, it is not an attempt to make a documentary on him; this is an attempt to really see what goes behind the making of a great person,” said Joshi.

The duo had worked earlier in Bollywood film ”Dilli 6” and the National Award-winning movie ”Rang De Basanti”.

Mikha Singh said the film would inspire youngsters to become great players.

“I would be happy when India will produces more Milkha Singhs from its soil…I want that parents should watch the movie and inspire their kids to become more great players and make their country proud,” said Singh. (ANI)

Inhumane pushing of Gypsy families between European countries continues

Nevada (US), March 8 (ANI): Roma migrants are returned by force to places where they are at risk of human rights violations, according to Thomas Hammarberg, European Commissioner for Human Rights.

Roma reportedly migrated mostly from Indian subcontinent to Europe many centuries ago.

In his “viewpoint” published on his official website, Hammarberg says: European migration policies discriminate against Roma people. Of particular concern is the fact that some Roma who have been forcibly returned have ended up in the lead-contaminated camps of Èesmin Lug and Osterode in northern Mitrovica, inhabited for a decade now by Roma families, including children, with deeply serious effects on their health.

Expulsions of Roma have been carried out in contravention of European Union law. In other cases destruction of Roma dwellings has been used as a method to persuade Roma to leave “voluntarily”. Discrimination of Roma in migration policies has met with little or no opposition in almost every country. This may not be surprising in view of the lingering anti-Gypsyism in large parts of Europe, Hammarberg adds.

To push Roma families between countries, as now happens, is inhumane. It victimizes children – many of whom were born and grown up in the host countries before they were deported, Human Rights Commissioner points out.

Acclaimed Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that it was shocking to see how inhumanely Europe was treating its about 15 million Roma brothers-sisters.

It was clearly reprehensible, hazardous and immoral and a blatant failure of Europe to meet its international obligations. When it came to Roma, Europe frequently failed to implement its own laws distinctly mentioned in its own books.

Rajan Zed, who is president of Universal Society of Hinduism, further said that besides the absence of any serious efforts at their inclusion, Roma were being used as “punch bag” and blamed for the social ills of Europe. European neglect was trapping Roma in cycles of persecution and poverty. Roma issue should be one of the highest priorities of human rights agenda of Europe and world, thus reversing the history of persecution, Zed stressed. (ANI)

History inverted: Indian to relaunch East India Company

LONDON: A Mumbai-born entrepreneur plans to relaunch the East India Company after strenuously acquiring shares in the firm that once ruled India.

With a $15 million investment and inputs from a range of experts, from designers and brand researchers to historians, Sanjiv Mehta plans to open the company store in Conduit Street of the main Regent Street in the heart of London next month.

Describing it as an achievement, Mehta said “I have this huge feeling of redemption, this indescribable feeling of owning a company that once owned us.”

Mehta said he travelled around the world, visiting former East India Company trading posts and museums, reading up records and meeting people who understood business of that time.

“There was a huge sense of responsibility. I did not create this brand, But I wanted to be as pioneering as the merchants who created it,” he said.

The East India Company was formed initially for pursuing trade with the East Indies, but that ended up trading mainly with the Indian subcontinent and China.

The oldest among several similarly formed European East India Companies, the firm was granted an English Royal Charter, under the name Governor and Company of Merchants of London Trading into the East Indies by Queen Elizabeth 1 on December 1600.

Qaeda-backed LeT set for series of terror attacks in India, warns Israel’s NSC

Tel Aviv, Sep.18 (ANI): Israel’s National Security Council’s Counter-Terrorism Bureau has issued a terror warning for India, saying a Pakistani terror group, having close links with Al-Qaeda, is planning to carry out series of strikes across the country.

“A Pakistani terror organization affiliated with al-Qaida and responsible for the attacks in Mumbai last year is planning to carry out a string of attacks throughout the Indian subcontinent,” the notice issued by the bureau stated.

The warning said that though foreigners, especially from western countries could be targeted, and that Israelis and places where Israelis usually assemble in large numbers are on top of the terror outfit’s hit list.

The bureau rated the threat as ‘imminent and concrete’ and emphasized on the Jammu and Kashmir region, The Jerusalem Post reported.

This is probably the first time that such a warning has been issued regarding threat to Israelis in India, as India is considered a friendly country with thousands of Israelis living in different part of the nation. (ANI)

Shekhawat says Jaswant’s expulsion wrong

New Delhi, Sep 10(ANI): Senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader and former Vice-President Bhairon Singh Shekhawat on Thursday said the decision to expel Jaswant Singh was wrong.

“The way Jaswant Singh has been treated, I do not approve of it,” Shekhawat said.

Shekhawat was in the national capital. Jaswant Singh called on him, but said his visit did not have any political motive.

“I had come to enquire about his health and did not come here (Bhairon Singh Shekhawat’s residence) with a political motive. As you know, I’m not a member of the BJP and Bhairon Singh was one of the founder members of the party. So, I have come to see him,” said Singh.

Jaswant Singh was expelled from the party last month for writing a controversial book that was sympathetic to Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, but critical of India’s first Home Minister Sardar Patel and first Prime Minister Jawahar Lal Nehru for their role in the partition of the Indian subcontinent. (ANI)

Prime Minister’s daughter releases her book on history

Kolkata, Aug 30 (ANI): Upinder Singh, daughter of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and a professor of history in the Delhi University, released her book on Indian history in Kolkata.ddressing the gathering, Upinder Singh attributed her success to the support she received from her family.

“The fact that he (Manmohan Singh) has an academic background and the academics are valued in our family. Both had certainly made a difference to a kind of person I am today,” she said.

She added that her book would help the reader to visualize and understand the rich and varied remains of the Indian subcontinent’s ancient past.

Upinder’s new book ‘A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India from Stone Age to the 12th Century’ is a comprehensive book meant for students and general readers.

The book had taken five years for her to complete and offers an exhaustive overview of the subject. The book has over 350 photographs, maps, drawings and sketches. (ANI)

What ex-RSS chief Sudarshan said about Jinnah is right: Bhagwat

New Delhi, Aug.28 (ANI): Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) Mohan Bhagwat said on Friday that what his predecessor K.S. Sudarshan had said two days ago about Pakistan Founder Mohammad Ali Jinnah is right.

“What Sudarshanji said is right, RSS holds all in high esteem,” said Bhagwat

He further said that the perception of the Muslim community about RSS is changing

Surdarshan said on Monday that Jinnah was committed to an undivided India.

“Jinnah had many facets. If you look at history, he was once associated with Lokmanya Tilak and was totally committed to undivided India,” Sudarshan said when asked if he considered the Muslim League leader secular.

“And when Gandhiji started the Khilafat movement, with the idea that currently we are opposing the British and if Muslims join in then their support will help gain independence. But at that time Jinnah opposed it saying that if the Caliph in Turkey has been dethroned, what has India got to do with it. That time nobody listened to him, which saddened him. So, he quit the Congress and left for England and only returned in 1927.

“After returning in 1927, Britishers brainwashed Jinnah and prompted him to put forth the demand for a separate state of Pakistan for Muslims,” Sudarshan added.

Sudarshan said that everybody knows history, and added had Gandhiji been adamant, like when he was on giving crores of rupees to Pakistan, then the partition would not have taken place. “But he did not do it because Nehru was his weakness.”

Commenting on Singh’s expulsion from BJP, he said: “It is an internal matter of the party.”

RSS spokesperson Ram Madhav had then sought to clarify Sudarshan’s remarks, saying the former Sangh chief did not mean to say that Jinnah wasn’t responsible for the partition of the Indian subcontinent.

Bhagwat had on August 18 called for an end to factionalism in the BJP, the political wing of the Sangh Parivar, and said the party leadership should make way for younger leaders.

The expulsion of Jaswant Singh, two days after the launch of his latest book-Jinnah: India -Partition – Independence, has been criticised by senior leaders Arun Shourie and Yashwant Sinha. Shourie has called on the RSS to take over the leadership of the BJP. (ANI)

Jaswant Singh blames Nehru, Patel for partition on Pak television

Islamabad, Aug.28 (ANI): Expelled Bharatiya Janata Party leader Jaswant Singh has once again invited controversy by blaming India’s first Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru for the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947.

In an interview with the Dawn News, Singh blamed Pandit Nehru and Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel for the partition and creation of Pakistan.

Referring to Nehru’s Tryst with destiny speech, Singh said it was nothing short of double standard as Nehru himself talked of secularism while contributing to the country’s division along with Sardar Patel on grounds of so called ‘faith’.

Singh claimed that later Nehru had himself admitted of being responsible for the partition.

It is worth mentioning here that Jaswant Singh’s book ‘Jinnah: ndia-Partition-Independence’ which saw him being expelled from the BJP after serving it for nearly 30 years has received an overwhelming response in Pakistan.

Singh, in his book, has glorified Jinnah while blaming Sardar Patel for the country’s division in 1947.

The book quotes Singh as saying that Jinnah did not win Pakistan, rather Nehru and Patel conceded Pakistan to Jinnah with the help of the British.

Meanwhile, authorities have denied permission to Singh to visit Pakistan to launch his book. However, Singh’s son Manvendra Singh said his father has not applied for a visa, and as far as he knew.

He also rejected reports that there was a different Pakistan edition of the book. (ANI)

S.M Krishna says meaningful dialogue with Pakistan not possible till terror ends

New Delhi, Aug 24 (ANI): External Affairs Minister S. M. Krishna on Monday said that India has made it clear that a meaningful dialogue with Pakistan would only be possible following the fulfillment of Islamabad’s commitment not to allow its territory to be used for terrorist activities against India.

Addressing at the second Conference of Heads of Indian Missions here, he said: “Pakistan must honour the pledges made in this regard. Following the Mumbai attacks of November 26, 2008, Pakistan has taken some steps under the pressure of evidence presented to them. However, we are still to see Pakistan take effective steps to end infiltration and dismantle the infrastructure of terrorism.”

“We wish to address our differences with Pakistan through dialogue. On several occasions, we have conveyed to the Pakistani leadership our desire to engage in meaningful discussions and to develop our bilateral relations in a positive manner,” he added.

Speaking on India’s relations with all the countries in the Indian subcontinent, he said, “We share a special affinity and common destiny with our neighbours. India has strongly supported Nepal’s transition to a democratic polity. We have also been providing humanitarian assistance to Sri Lanka and hope that the IDPs would be rehabilitated soon. An encouraging development in our neighbourhood has been the return of Bangladesh to multiparty democratic politics.”

About Afghanistan where Presidential elections were held last week, he said: “We have stood firm behind the Government of Afghanistan’s efforts to stabilise the country. This is natural given our age old ties, our responsibility to a friendly country in our region and given our national security interest in a stable, independent and peaceful Afghanistan which will remain a priority.”

Terming China as largest trading partner, he said that there is congruence in our views on many global issues,but there are outstanding bilateral issues that should be resolved peacefully through dialogue.

Informing that India’s relationship with Japan has entered a new phase in the last few years, he said, with ASEAN, we have signed a Free Trade Agreement. It is another milestone in our Look East policy.

“We are adding significant elements of political, economic and security cooperation to our relationship. A new South-South partnership is being built in the IBSA framework with South Africa and Brazil,” he added.

Speaking on India’s relations with Russia and the United States, the Minister said India’s relations with Russia are time tested and we are giving them a contemporary definition in areas such as nuclear energy, space and defence.

“With the United States, we are going to build on the positive momentum of the last few years. Our new dialogue architecture would reflect the increasingly global character of our bilateral dialogue. India’s established capabilities in high technology and our unimpeachable record of using these technologies in a responsible and transparent manner are creating opportunities for upgrading our access to high technology from the major powers,” he added.

On the Doha Round of negotiations, he said: “I would like to stress that timely and successful conclusion of the Doha Round on the basis of its development mandate is even more important today particularly in the backdrop of the global economic and financial crisis to restore confidence in the global economy and markets, as also to guard against emerging protectionist tendencies and to protect the livelihoods of the poor and marginalized, particularly in our rural sectors.”

Underlining the main purpose of India’s foreign policy, he said the aim is to assist in the fulfillment of these goals (development, inclusive economic growth and alleviation of poverty) by providing an enabling external environment which ensures our security, promotes trade, nurtures our key bilateral relationships, safeguards our national interest and enhances our influence in the world.”

The Minister stressed that ‘economic work of our Missions abroad is increasing in importance as India’s engagement with the world has deepened and our global trade has grown substantially in recent years. (ANI)

PPP will not comprise with India on Kashmir issue: Pak Minister

Oslo (Norway), Aug.19 (ANI): Pakistan’s Minister for Kashmir Affairs, Qamar Zaman Kaira, today said that neither his country nor the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party would compromise with India on the Kashmir issue.

Kaira, who is also Pakistan’s Information and Broadcasting Minister, expressed these views in a meeting with Sardar Ali Shahnawaz Khan, advisor to chairman of Christian Democratic Party in Oslo, Norway.

Kaira said that Pakistan is ready for dialogue with India for a peaceful solution of the Kashmir issue, but added that Islamabad would only accept a solution that was acceptable to all Kashmiris.

Pakistan, he said, has not shied away from taking up the Kashmir issue at the diplomatic level. He said President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani had raised the Kashmir issue at all international forums.

According to the Dawn, he asked Shah Nawaz to urge New Delhi to start serious talk on Kashmir.

The Kashmir conflict refers to the territorial dispute over Kashmir, the northwesternmost region of the Indian subcontinent. The parties to the dispute are India, Pakistan, China and the people of Kashmir.

India claims the entire former Dogra princely state of Jammu and Kashmir and presently administers approximately 43 percent of the region including most of Jammu, Kashmir Valley, Ladakh and the Siachen Glacier. India’s claim is contested by Pakistan which controls approximately 37 percent of Kashmir, mainly Azad Kashmir and the northern areas of Gilgit and Baltistan. In addition, China controls 20 percent of Kashmir including Aksai Chin which it occupied following the brief Sino-Indian War of 1962 and the Trans-Karakoram Tract, also known as the Shaksam Valley, that was ceded to it by Pakistan in 1963.

India’s official position is that Kashmir is an “integral part” of India. Pakistan’s official position is that Kashmir is a disputed territory whose final status must be determined by the people of Kashmir. Certain Kashmiri independence groups believe that Kashmir should be independent of both India and Pakistan.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars over Kashmir: in 1947, 1965, and 1999. India and China have clashed once, in 1962 over Aksai Chin as well as the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh. India and Pakistan have also been involved in several skirmishes over Siachen Glacier.

The Kashmir dispute has been a part of UN deliberations since 1948. Pakistan has demanded that the dispute be resolved as per the UN resolutions of 1948 and 1949. India, however, maintains that the these resolutions are being wrongly interpreted by Islamabad. (ANI)

Partition of India weakened Muslims: MQM

Lahore, June 29 (ANI): MQM chief Altaf Hussain has said the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947 weakened Muslims, as it divided their power.

In an interview with Najam Sethi on Dunya News, Altaf said the partition harmed the Muslims, as a result of the formation of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, and divided their power into three parts.

He said there would have been no partition had the Congress accepted the Quaid-e-Azam’s 14 points.

Altaf said few people knew that even Allama Iqbal had not demanded the establishment of Pakistan in his famous Allahabad address in 1930.

“He had in fact demanded the creation of Muslim states in the Muslim majority areas,” he said, adding that Iqbal son Justice (r) Javed Iqbal could confirm this.

Altaf said that both Pakistan and India should learn a lesson from European countries and normalise their relations.

He said it was unfortunate that the ruling elite of India had always projected Pakistan as a threat to India while the Pakistani ruling elite had always ‘taught’ Pakistani masses that India was a threat to Pakistan.

He said several wars had been fought in Europe, including the First and Second World Wars, yet European countries had learnt a lesson from these wars and forged a unity, manifested in the European Union.

Altaf requested the Indian leadership and Pakistani establishment to follow the European example and work towards improving relations between the two countries. (ANI)

Archaeological site in American county predates Egypt’s first known pyramids

Washington, June 22 (ANI): A team of archaeologists, in eastern Snohomish County, US, has found a treasure trove of artifacts from the Olcott period, 4,500 to 9,000 years ago, which even predates the first known pyramids in Egypt.

“The developer accidentally bought himself one of the most significant sites in Washington State,” Allyson Brooks, the state’s historic preservation officer told The Herald.

“The site is extremely significant for our understanding of the first inhabitants of the Pacific Northwest,” she added.

Earlier, a developer in 2007 uncovered thousands of artifacts, including spear points, stone knives and scraping tools – while performing a survey on land where he planned to build more than a dozen homes.

The ancient trove, investigated with just a few small test digs, put those plans on hold.

The tools catalogued by archaeological consultants during the initial survey are probably a fraction of what remains below the soil.

Initial estimates put the artifacts at up to 9,000 years old, which is almost 4,500 years older than the first known pyramids in Egypt or the apex of the Indus Valley Civilization on the Indian subcontinent, both dated to around 2,600 B.C.

Scores of similar areas are known throughout the state. Brooks and others said this one is remarkable because it is undisturbed and rich with artifacts.

“This site gives us a lot of opportunities to discover a lot of history,” said Shawn Yanity, the Stillaguamish tribal chairman. “It’s so rich with history, it just needs to be preserved,” he added.

From 17 test holes each about the size of a small wastepaper basket, archaeology consultants dug up thousands of artifacts.

Longtime Tulalip leader Stan Jones said the find is extremely important to tribal history.

According to him, there might be a way to use some of the artifacts in a Tulalip cultural museum expected to open soon.

Yanity, the Stillaguamish chairman, hopes all of the tribes with a stake in the process can work together. The chance to rediscover their common past could also be a great opportunity to train tribal archaeologists. (ANI)

Attack on Indian students: Australian official to visit India

Melbourne, May 28 (IANS) In the wake of the attacks on Indian students in the country, an Australian police officer is to travel to India to brief prospective students on avoiding street violence in Australia, media reports said.

Police community liaison officer Senior Constable Victor Robb said that his advice would mainly cover “safety strategy tips”, Radio Australia reported Thursday.

“Probably much the same sort of information I would give my own daughter if she was going overseas,” Robb said.

Shravan Kumar, a student from Andhra Pradesh, who was attacked by a group of teenagers over the weekend in Melbourne, is at present battling for life in a hospital.

The report quoted Andrew Holloway, Victoria University’s vice-president for international students, as saying that the attacks were not racist, but reflect the fact that Indian students often have part-time jobs and hence have to use public transport late at night.

Representatives of Indian students in Australia would meet Indian High Commissioner to Australia Sujatha Singh Thursday.

Australia has about 400,000 foreign students, with a large proportion from the Indian subcontinent.

ICC to beam World T20 in record 216 countries

New Delhi, May 26 (IANS) The soaring popularity of Twenty20 cricket has prompted the International Cricket Council (ICC) to expand its base and reach a record 216 countries through television coverage in World Twenty20 beginning in England from June 5.

The inaugural Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa in 2007 was a huge success. India, the financial hub of the sport, won the Championship and soon Twenty20 cricket became the new flavour in the cricket mad nation.

It not only created a new and younger fan base for the sport but also entered the unexplored markets of China and America where there was no existence of the traditional five-day Test and One-dayers.

It also gave birth to lucrative Twenty20 tournaments like Indian Premier League (IPL). ICC is looking to cash in on the popularity and enter new markets like Russia with this year’s World Twenty20.

“We expect the ICC World Twenty20 to be the most viewed cricket event in the history of the game, which is a significant achievement considering it is just the second-ever staging of this event,” said Campbell Jamieson, ICC General Manager, Commercial.

“Through its various broadcast partners worldwide, this event can be viewed in 216 countries.”

“If the current trends are anything to go by, we expect that this event will continue to grow and become even bigger in the future. At the inaugural edition in 2007 in South Africa, the ratings were very high not just in the Indian subcontinent, which always has a huge cricket following, but across all participating countries and beyond,” he said.

“China is an important country for us and we know that Twenty20 can make cricket popular there. We would be also entering completely new destinations like Russia with this World Twenty20.

“We expect a 30 to 40 percent increase in viewership this time. Despite the economic slowdown, the game has never been in such a strong position globally as it is today. The tickets for most number of days are already sold-out.”

R.C Venkateish, Managing Director, ESPN Star Sports, ICC’s global media right and broadcast partners, said they will be aiming a wide viewer base.

“It will be telacast in 216 countries across the world. This is almost double of what we achieved in the 2007 edition. Even in terms of on-air sales, we have written 80 per cent more revenue as compared to the last edition. We have signed 10 sponsors and an additional 20 corporates for spot-buys on live as well as pre-post programming,” he said.

“We had set huge benchmarks in the inaugural edition of the ICC World Twenty20 and we are confident that we will raise the bar this time again.”

The semi-finals and finals of the ICC Women’s World Twenty20 which will run parallel to the men’s event will also be telecast live.

Former Pakistan captain Wasim Akram, who will be in commentary panel of the tournament, said that Twenty20 is the perfect vehicle for cricket to reach the global audience.

“Imagine me teaching cricket to an American, it will take me more than two months to make him understand the rules of Test cricket. Its so complex. But Twenty20 is so simple, anybody can follow it.”

He also said that back-to-back Twenty20 tournaments will not distract the viewers.

“It is just about three hours. And World T20 will be different because it will be nation vs nation. I am sure people will come out in large numbers to see the matches.”

BioReliance establishes liaison office in India

Rockville, May 13 (ANI/Business Wire India): BioReliance Corporation announced that it has established a liaison office in Bangalore, expanding its operations to address significant growth opportunities on the Indian subcontinent.

BioReliance recognizes that India has world-class biotechnology, pharmaceutical and vaccine companies and is demonstrating a strong commitment to support their growth.

BioReliance is a leading contract services company that provides biologics safety testing, toxicology, viral manufacturing and laboratory animal diagnostic services to the pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical industries worldwide.

“To date, we have successfully served the Indian biopharmaceutical marketplace through our UK offices,” said Jarlath Keating, Senior Director of Sales, North America and Asia Pacific.

“However, at this time when the Indian biomanufacturing market is growing in experience and reach, it is clear that having a local presence will be the best manner in which to support our clients for the future. We look forward to working more closely with the businesses in this important region and assisting them in growing their global presence,” added Keating.

“Opening a liaison office in India will provide a distinct business advantage for BioReliance,” said David Walker, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.

“This exciting step for our company fits well with our continuing strategy to enhance our global footprint, especially in the Asia-Pacific region. We are pleased to be able to offer our Indian customers a local point of contact to utilize and help strengthen their partnership with BioReliance,” added Walker. (ANI)

Dubai Airport Free Zone shows increased net profit reaching 84 pc in 2008

Nicosia, May 5 (ANI): Despite the global financial crisis and the recession recorded in the last months of 2008, Dubai Airport Free Zone has shown a remarkable increase of occupancy by 58 per cent in 2008 compared with the previous year.

The Zone also recorded 84 per cent increase of net profit and 59 per cent of revenues, the Chairman of the Zone Sheikh Ahmed said.

Sheikh Ahmed said he was confident that those growth rates would continue given the current expansion plans, which have allocated AED, two billion for investment in new facilities to be ready for more foreign investment flow in the near future.

He stressed that the Dubai Airport Free Zone plays a vital role in the economy of the country.

According to figures released by the country’s statistics department, Dubai’s non-oil trade grew 38 per cent in 2008, totaling AED 934.7 billion as compared to AED 678.5 billion in 2007.

This positive development augurs well for the materials handling and logistics sector which is set to gather in the emirate from May 31 to June 2, 2009, at the “Materials Handling Middle East Exhibition” to be held at the Dubai International Convention and Exhibition center.

The Materials Handling Middle East Exhibition is described as the ultimate International Exhibition for Logistics, Supply Chain, Freight and Cargo Industries, which will help exhibitors increase their market share in the Gulf, the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent and the CIS. (ANI)

Water crisis in Padampur

Padampur (Orissa), May 2 (ANI): Padampur in Orissa is facing a severe water crisis as mercury soars over the Indian subcontinent.

The water supply to the town comes mostly from the Ong River. But following a dry spell, the river has dried up causing acute water shortage.

“There is a lot of problem because of the water shortage. The water tankers provided by the government departments have given us some relief or else there would be no water anywhere. People are quarrelling over water. Sometimes, we don’t get water at all. There is a lot of trouble,” said Parvati Gohil, a resident.

On normal days, the Padampur subdivision water requirement is 11 lakh litres and the supply is as per the demand. But due to the summer season, the demand has soared and the supply is not enough.

The ground water level has shrunk from 160 feet to 230 feet.

The administration is distributing water to the residents from the bore wells near the town.

“It has not rained since September 2008. The Ong River has dried completely. There are around three or four deep bore wells outside town. So, we lift water from there in tankers and supply it in the town,” said Pravat Bhoi, Sub Collector, Padampur.

The government had a plan to meet water shortage, but it hasn’t materialized so far. (ANI)

UAE pioneering pan Arab space agency

The UAE’s efforts to develop its national space industry can help accelerate the establishment of a pan Arab space agency with the Emirates been seen as a “logical venue”, one of the organisers of a Global Space Technology Forum has said.

The second Global Space Technology Forum will take place in Abu Dhabi later in 2009 drawing representatives from space agencies and national space programmes, government officials and policy makers.

The establishment of an Arab Space Research Agency is seen as essential to combine talent, information and technology between countries in the Middle East and North Africa, and plans have already been submitted to governments across the region.

“With the UAE government already working hard to develop science and technology, the Emirates is seen as the logical venue for the agency’s headquarters”, Nick Webb, the director of Streamline Marketing Group has said.

“Regional governments have been studying plans and more detailed proposals are being formulated. The Middle East, North Africa and Indian Subcontinent as a whole are keen to enter the space age in a big way in order to benefit from the enormous opportunities offered by next generation space research and commercial space applications,” he said.