Gen Kapoor flags in all-women Army team that scaled Siachen’s highest peak

New Delhi, Sep 9 (ANI): Army Chief General Deepak Kapoor flagged in the first ever women expedition team for army corps of engineers to Indira Col, Siachen, today at Army Headquarters here.

The Indian Army has achieved another milestone in the history of Indian mountaineering by undertaking an ‘All Women Officers Expedition’ to Siachen glacier.

The Corps of Engineers in consonance with its spirit of adventure has organised this unique expedition to the highest and coldest battlefield in the world, Siachen Glacier, a junction point of three countries – India, China and Pakistan.

The expedition led by Major Megha Astagikar summitted Indira Col, located at an altitude of 20,187 feet, after trekking 103.10 kilometers on August 15, which coincided with the 62nd Independence Day.

Enroute to Indira Col, the team halted at eight camps to carry out acclimatisation, training and build-up of essential logistics. Braving inclement weather and extremely difficult terrain conditions, Indira Col was summitted well before the planned schedule.

The team traversed across the most treacherous high altitude terrain characterised by high avalanche-prone snow bound area with deep crevasses, steep ice-walls and scarce oxygen.

The 17 women officers expedition team was flagged-off by the Vice Chief of Army Staff, Lt General Noble Thamburaj on August 3.

Prior to undertaking the expedition, a detailed planning and rigorous training in basic ice-craft and mountaineering skills was carried out by the team at the Army Mountaineering Institute, Siachen Base Camp.

Major AR Ramakrishnan, the trainer of the expedition team, inspite of being a battle casualty during ‘Operation Vijay’ summitted Indira Col alongwith the team making the achievement of the expedition spectacular and creditable. (ANI)

Photo exhibition showcasing 128-year-old past of heritage railway in Darjeeling

Siliguri, Aug 26 (ANI): To create awareness regarding the history and evolution of the heritage railway especially amongst schoolchildren, the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway (DHR) in collaboration with the Siliguri Science Centre has organised a week-long photo exhibition showcasing its glorious past of 128 years, in Siliguri.

The exhibition, which will conclude on August 30, depicts the evolution of the DHR from its inception to the modern times.

The DHR is an important landmark on the Indian tourism map especially after UNESCO declared it a World Heritage Site in 1999.

The DHR’s 82 kilometres of journey from Siliguri junction to Darjeeling is an enchanting journey offering a majestic view of the Darjeeling Himalayas.

The organisers believe that the exhibition will make young generation aware of the history of the DHR, an important part of their heritage.

“We have tried to display through photographs, through charts and through maps, the evolution of the DHR and also the different milestones and important events of the DHR. For example, when the Tindharia workshop (the workshop that undertakes major servicing of steam locomotives and coaches of DHR) was formed, how the monsoon disaster took place, and even the cyclone AILA has been put in,” said Subrata Nath, Director, Darjeeling Himalayan Railways.

Children, from various schools of the region, are thronging the exhibition and have been enthusiastic about it.

“It is an awesome feeling, because I have never experienced such a thing .I came here and saw the railways and the natural beauty of Darjeeling Himalayas. It was a fantastic experience,” said Rahul Sharma, a student.

The DHR toy train was the brainchild of Franklin Prestage, an agent of the then Eastern Bengal Railway, who foresaw the utility of a rail link between the hills of Darjeeling and the plains.

It was started in 1896 by the then British Lieutenant Governor Ashley Eden, offering riders an opportunity to enjoy the majestic beauty of nature along the Darjeeling hills. At the beginning, this railway was named as the Darjeeling steam Tramway Co. Later when India gained independence in 1947, the railway was renamed as the DHR.

The DHR was declared a World Heritage Site by the UNESCO on December 5 at its 23rd session. By Taruk Sarkar (ANI)

Train bogies torched in Bihar

Patna, Aug 18 (ANI): A group of students on Tuesday set four air-conditioned bogies of the Patna-Delhi Shramjeevi Express afire at the Bihta Railway station which falls between Patna and Mighal Sarai Junction in Bihar.

According to sources, the students resorted to violence after Railway Protection Force (RPF) personnel beat some of them up at the railway station during a ticket checking drive.

The group, comprising about 15 students, had boarded the train at Ara. They were spotted by RPF personnel and forced out of the coaches at Bihta station.

The security men then bolted the doors of the bogies from inside following which the students set the coaches on fire.

The situation is still tense in the area. (ANI)

Signalling pathway operational in intra-abdominal fat identified

Washington, July 15 (ANI): Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) researchers and Germany-based University of Leipzig experts have announced the identification of a signalling pathway that is operational in intra-abdominal fat, the fat depot that is most strongly tied to obesity-related morbidity.

“Fat tissue in obesity is dysfunctional, yet, the processes that cause fat tissue to malfunction are poorly understood-specifically, it is unknown how fat cells ‘translate’ stresses in obesity into dysfunction,” said Dr. Assaf Rudich, senior lecturer from the Department of Clinical Biochemistry at Ben-Gurion University.

Fat tissue is no longer considered simply a storage place for excess calories, but in fact is an active tissue that secretes multiple compounds, thereby communicating with other tissues, including the liver, muscles, pancreas and the brain.

Normal communication is needed for optimal metabolism and weight regulation, but in obesity, fat (adipose) tissue becomes dysfunctional, and mis-communicates with the other tissues.

According to the researchers, this places fat tissue at a central junction in mechanisms leading to common diseases attributed to obesity, like type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.

The researchers highlight the fact that fat tissue dysfunction is believed to be caused by obesity-induced fat tissue stress: Cells over-grow as they store increasing amounts of fat. They say that this excessive cell growth may cause decreased oxygen delivery into the tissue; individual cells may die (at least in mouse models), and fat tissue inflammation ensues.

Excess nutrients, they add, may also lead to increased metabolic demands, and cause cellular stress.

The BGU and Leipzig teams collected fat tissue samples from people undergoing abdominal surgery, and identified a signalling pathway that is operational in intra-abdominal fat, the fat depot that is most strongly tied to obesity-related morbidity.

They say that the degree of activation of a signalling pathway from these individuals was compared with those of leaner people, those with obesity predominantly characterized by accumulation of “peripheral” fat, and those with obesity with predominant accumulation of fat within the abdominal cavity.

They found that the signalling pathway was more active depending on the amount of fat accumulation in the abdomen, and that it correlated with multiple biochemical markers for increased cardio-metabolic risk.

In their study report, they have revealed that the expression of one of the upstream signaling components, a protein called ASK1, predicts whole-body insulin resistance (an endocrine abnormality that is strongly tied to diabetes and cardiovascular disease), independent of other traditional risk factors.

The researchers have also shown that although non-fat cells within adipose tissue express most of this protein in lean persons, the adipocytes themselves increase its expression by more than four-fold in abdominally-obese persons.

“The importance of this study is not only in contributing to the understanding of adipose tissue dysfunction in obesity, but as a consequence, may provide important leads for novel ways to prevent the dangerous consequences, such as type 2 diabetes, of intra-abdominal fat accumulation,” states Dr. Iris Shai, a BGU researcher at the S. Daniel Abraham International Center for Health and Nutrition and Soroka University Medical Center in Beer-Sheva, Israel.

The study has been published in the Endocrine Society’s the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. (ANI)

Two suspected Maoists arrested in Lalgarh

Lalgarh, June 28 (ANI): Security forces on Sunday arrested two suspected Maoists and defused seven landmines from Lalgarh, while flushing out the Maoists hiding around the troubled area of West Bengal’s West Midnapore.

Five landmines were recovered from Binpur, while two more were found near Kargil junction at Bankura district, said Raj Kanojia, Inspector General of Police.

According to reports, police nabbed two men, who were hiding nearby in a bush where the landmine was planted.

“We have picked up the two men. They are now being questioned. We are probing their Maoist links,” said Raj Kanojia.

The government has deployed forces, which under the “Operation Lalgarh” are heading steadily to comb the entire area for landmines and other explosives.

The operation is expected to go on till normalcy is restored in the troubled area and a sense of security returns among the people.(ANI)

Landslides disrupt toy train service in West Bengal

Siliguri, May 28 (ANI): Landslides in West Bengal have disrupted the movement of the world famous toy train, which is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site.

The famous Darjeeling toy train runs between Siliguri and Darjeeling.

The train stopped operation from Tuesday as heavy rains and severe landslides washed away a huge portion of the railway track. A huge pile of debris has accumulated on the tracks, halting the operation of the toy train.

“In 80 km route from Siliguri junction to Darjeeling, we have got landslides at 41 spots and total amount of muds and boulders is about 3500 cubic metres. We also have tree fallen on tracks at 16 spots. Out of the 16 spots, two spots are very heavy because very big tree trunk has fallen on track. We have got one location near Ghum where a portion of our track is washed away in between two buildings,” said Subrata Nath, director, Darjeeling Himalayan Railways (DHR).

The DHR is trying hard to resume the journey at the earliest, but the service is expected to resume not earlier than seven to ten days.

“We are trying our best to resume the services between new Jalpaiguri, Siliguri to Kerseong by Saturday. That will cover around 50 km of our track. So around 60 km, we will be able to make operational by this Saturday. And for the other one it may take another seven to ten days,” added Nath.

The DHR toy train was started in 1896 by the then British Lieutenant Governor Ashley Eden, offering riders an opportunity to enjoy the majestic beauty of nature along the Darjeeling hills.

At the beginning, this railway was named as the Darjeeling steam Tramway Co. Later when India gained independence in 1947, the railway was named as the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway (DHR).

DHR was declared a World Heritage Site by the UNESCO on December 5 at their 23rd session. (ANI)

40,000 railway passengers stranded in Punjab

Chandigarh, May 26 (ANI): At least 40,000 train passengers have been left stranded inside and outside railway stations across Punjab following disruption of railway traffic by supporters of a Sikh outfit.

Public unrest and violence in the state has also affected the movement of buses.

The Guwahati-Jammu Himgiri Express was the first train that passed through Ludhiana on Tuesday morning.

The Dadar-Amritsar Express, the Mumbai-Amritsar Deluxe and the Shaheed Express, bound for Punjab and Jammu have been terminated at Ambala junction.

Three other trains, the Amritsar-Nanded Sachkhand Express, the Amritsar-Jansewa Express and the Meerut-Ludhiana Superfast, have also been cancelled.

Meanwhile, protestors have set up barricades on roads. (ANI)

Resuscitation at birth ‘raises low IQ risk’

London, Apr 21 (ANI): Newborns who were not breathing at birth and had to be resuscitated are likely to have a low IQ by the age of eight, new research suggests.

The study, by Bristol’s Southmead Hospital, has been published in the Lancet

To reach the conclusion, scientists compared babies who were resuscitated at birth with those who had a problem-free delivery.

The study was based on children who were part in a long-term research project known as the Children of the 90s study. The researchers defined a low IQ as being less than 80, reports The BBC.

The research team found that children who were resuscitated, but required no further treatment, had a 65 percent increased risk of a low IQ compared with those who were not. The risk of a low IQ for children who were resuscitated and also required further treatment for signs of brain damage, known as encephalopathy, was six times higher than babies delivered without any problem.

Damage caused during labour is due to the brain being starved of oxygen, a phenomenon known as hypoxia.

Writing in the prestigious journal, the researchers said: “Infants who needed resuscitation, even if they did not develop encephalopathy in the neonatal period, had a substantially increased risk of a low full-scale IQ score.

“The data suggest that mild perinatal physiological compromise might be sufficient to cause subtle neuronal or synaptic (nerve cell junction) damage, and thereby affect cognition in childhood and potentially in adulthood.” (ANI)

Thai Muslim community wants Dubai emir to expel ex-premier Thaksin

Bangkok – The leader of a Muslim community in central Bangkok plans to ask the emir of Dubai to eject fugitive former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra after his supporters attacked people and property during anti-government protests, a newspaper reported Tuesday. Manit Saengthong, leader of the Darrulaman Mosque community, told the Nation that it would ask Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum through the United Arab Emirates ambassador to bar Thaksin because he uses Dubai “as a springboard to attack Thailand.” It would also attempt to have Thaksin blacklisted in other Muslim countries, he said.

Thaksin supporters ran wild in the community Monday, trashing shops and cars and damaging a mosque, after being chased away from a key road junction by soldiers in a military crackdown.

Thaksin, who instigated the protests, is widely believed to spend much of his time in Dubai, where he has powerful contacts in the business community.

He is welcome in only a limited number of countries after being found guilty of abuse of power by a Thai court and sentenced to two years in prison. He was ousted from power in a 2006 coup.

Local residents in several Bangkok communities fought running battles with the pro-Thaksin demonstrators Monday during the army crackdown. Two local people in one market community were shot dead when residents objected to protestors setting fire to a bus.

The three-week protest ended Tuesday when its leaders surrendered to police. (dpa)

Tamil demonstrators protest continues outside Oz PM’s house

Sydney, Apr 13 (ANI): Hundreds of Tamil demonstrators protesting outside the Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s Sydney residence say that they will stay there until the Australian Government urges the Sri Lankan Government to call for a ceasefire with the Tamil Tigers.

Protester Geetha Mano, 24, said the rally would continue until they got some response from Rudd or Foreign Affairs Minister Stephen Smith.

More than 1000 Tamils, including three hunger strikers, staged an all-night rally outside Kirribilli House as part of a global protest aimed at brokering a ceasefire between the Sri Lankan army and the Tamil Tigers, The Sydney Morning Herald reported.

The protest group, which began as a three-man hunger strike in Parramatta on Saturday, continued to grow even though Prime Minister Kevin Rudd was not inside.

The sombre protest turned noisy before 9 a.m. today with the group chanting “Australia, save the Tamils,” “We want ceasefire” and “Stop genocide”.

Men, women and young children waved red Tamil flags and banners saying: “Impose sanction on Sri Lanka.” Many had been lying on mats and pillows on the road early in the morning.

The protesters, mostly families with small children, staged a sit-down protest blocking the junction of Kirribilli Avenue and Carabella Streets on Sunday.

Sri Lanka’s Government says it is in the final stages of defeating the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, who launched a campaign in 1972 to create a separate Tamil homeland on the Indian Ocean island.

The remaining Tigers are trapped in the “no-fire” zone, in the island’s north-east, along with thousands of civilians.

The Government is under pressure to agree to a ceasefire, amid claims that 3500 civilians have been killed in the first three months of this year.

Sri Lanka has resisted calls for a fresh truce, saying it would only help the Tigers when they are near total defeat. (ANI)

40 percent of Italians at risk from quakes

London, April 7 (ANI): Scientists have said that Italy is prone to earthquakes because it sits at the junction of two tectonic plates, leaving 40 per cent of the population of the country at risk.

Seven years ago, 30 people died – including 27 schoolchildren and their teacher – during a quake centred on the southern town of San Giuliano di Puglia.

Central Umbria was shattered by a disturbance 12 years ago, which killed 13 people and destroyed hundreds of historic buildings.

In 1980, a terrifying quake near Naples killed more than 3,000, injured 9,000 and made more than 30,000 homeless.

Italy’s biggest killer came in 1908 in Messina, Sicily, and measured 7.2 on the Richter scale and killed more than 70,000 people.

“The whole region is riddled with faults,” Open University lecturer David Rothery told the Daily Express. (ANI)

Youth dies in stampede in theatre

VISAKHAPATNAM: A 19-year-old fan was crushed to death at a theatre when hundreds of fans of actor Prabas rushed to buy matinee tickets of his
latest movie `Billa’ at Kancharapalem here on Saturday.

The police identified the victim as Kamesh, a painter by profession. The film was running for the second day on Saturday and long queues had gathered at the Urvasi theatre much before showtime. As the counters opened, the mob surged to get the tickets resulting in a stampede. Kamesh was at the Rs 10-a-ticket counter when he lost his life. He was a resident of the nearby colony Siddartha Nagar in ITI Junction. Due to the death, the theatre management cancelled the matinee show.

Plea to junk elevated expressway project

CHENNAI: Beach-goers, fisherfolk, environmentalists and residents of Foreshore Estate, Olcott Kuppam and Orur Kuppam in Besant Nagar on Friday
demanded that the state government abandon its proposed 7.5-km six-lane elevated expressway along the beach from Marina to East Coast Road.

Under a newly formed forum, Save Chennai Beaches, an awareness and protest rally was held on Eliots beach. Members of the forum alleged that the project would disrupt fishing activity, displace coastal residents, disturb nesting turtles and damage ecologically sensitive areas such as the Theosophical Society and Adyar estuary, besides changing the face of residential areas.

Arun from Students Sea Turtle Conservation Network (SSTCN), a voluntary group, said that the construction of the expressway would disrupt the nesting spots of the Olive Ridley turtles, an endangered species listed in Schedule I of the Wildlife Act. SSTCN has been working since 1980 along the coastline, spreading awareness about the species and the need to conserve it. “We have so far saved more than 8,000 turtle hatchlings and released them safely into the sea. The proposed expressway will make it hell here,” he said.

After consultant Willbur Smith Associates Pvt Ltd, appointed by the highways department, conducted a detailed feasibility study last year, the government planned to start work on the corridor construction, from the Lighthouse to Foreshore Estate, crossing Adyar estuary and beyond, up to Ururkuppam. The alignment joins Besant Nagar Fifth Avenue Road near Eliots Beach, before the second phase in Kottivakkam takes over.

According to Madras high court senior advocate Sriram Panchu, both phases violated environmental rules and the coastal regulation zone (CRZ) notification, 1991. He added: “The proposal is a subversion of the masterplan, as it finds no mention in the document. Given the magnitude of the legal issues, I only hope and trust the government should realise the legal implications and withdraw the project.”

Theosophical Society general manager S Harihara Raghavan said the expressway would badly affect the fragile ecology in the Society grounds. “There were more than 160 migratory and native birds in the society, but it has come down to 80 now. The population of birds will be further affected in case the elevated expressway takes shape. The government should also think about the broken bridge near Srinivasapuram, which was washed away 30 years ago due to soil condition.”

M G Devasahayam, managing trustee, SUSTAIN, an NGO, said that various plans proposed by government agencies to reduce traffic congestion – upgradation of roads near Foreshore Estate, linking Greenways Road to Durgabai Deshmukh Road, reclamation of the four-lane carriageway on L B Road by removing encroachments and construction of a grade separator-cum-subway at the Tiruvanmiyur junction – should be implemented soon.

Members of Save Chennai Beaches plan to make a representation to the state government soon

Lily Allen: Media attention makes me feel like a caged animal

London, Mar 28 (ANI): Lily Allen has revealed that the intense glare of paparazzi has left her feeling like a “caged animal”.

While in an exclusive interview with The Independent magazine, Allen, 23, expressed her relief after obtaining a court injunction that protects her from paparazzi harassment.

“I already know that it’s going to change my life … I’m beyond happy. It’s like I’ve been allowed to have success and a life, because sometimes it makes you feel like a caged animal,” she said.

Few weeks back, the singer was snapped kicking a photographer who had apparently driven into the back of her car.

Allen said: “Seven cars had been chasing me since I left home. I turned into a T-junction and they all ran a red light, then tried to overtake on the inside. A woman had to slam the brakes on her car as they cut in. She had two children in the car, a baby in the back seat, a six-year-old in the front. I braked too, of course, and this guy ran into the back of me. I got out of the car. I was shaken up. There was a lot of force. I was really angry. I went up to him and said, you know, ‘What the f*** are you doing? You can’t do this’.

“Instead of talking to me like a decent human being would at a decent human level, he got his camera out and started taking pictures, and I just thought, ‘I’ve had it with the press’… It was mental. And I got back into the car and called my lawyer.” (ANI)

Victorian opener Chris Rogers backed to be an Ashes team player

Melbourne, Mar.13 (ANI): After scoring over 1000 first class runs in the 2008-09 season and being recognized as Australia’s One Day Player of the Year, Victoria’s Chris Rogers is being rated as a possibility for the upcoming Ashes tour in England.

If he scores again in the Sheffield Shield final against Queensland starting at the Junction Oval today, he could make the national grade as the third opener in the Ashes touring party – a position his coach Greg Shipperd and skipper Cameron White agree is Rogers for the taking.

Shipperd, according to the Herald Sun, has also cleared up the misconception that Rogers hasn’t been picked for Australia because he is a dressing room loner.
“Our estimation of him is that he’s a true professional and a real giver in the dressing room. He’s been an outstanding acquisition to our team,” Shipperd said.
White agreed entirely.

“He (Rogers) would be the obvious choice. Knowing that he’s done well over there in all forms of the game over the past number of years,” White said.

“He’s experienced and played in English conditions for six or seven years now and done exceptionally well opening the batting.”

“So if they are after someone in form in Australia and making lots of runs, opens the batting and knows England, it would make a lot of sense to choose Chris Rogers. As far as Chris fitting into our group, he’s only bettered it – on and off the field.

“He’s given us a lot more than the thousand runs you’ve seen on the field, he’s embraced our culture and improved our group on and off the field. He’s a quality player and a quality bloke.” (ANI)

Physicists prove the existence of magnetically charged “spin battery”

Washington, March 12 (ANI): An International team of physicists has been able to prove the existence of a “spin battery”, a battery that is “charged” by applying a large magnetic field to nano-magnets in a device called a magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ).

Developed by researchers at the University of Miami and at the Universities of Tokyo and Tohoku, in Japan, the new technology is a step towards the creation of computer hard drives with no moving parts, which would be much faster, less expensive and use less energy than current ones.

The device, created by University of Miami Physicist Stewart E. Barnes, of the College of Arts and Sciences and his collaborators, can store energy in magnets rather than through chemical reactions.

Like a winding up toy car, the spin battery is “wound up” by applying a large magnetic field.

“We had anticipated the effect, but the device produced a voltage over a hundred times too big and for tens of minutes, rather than for milliseconds as we had expected,” Barnes said.

“That this was counterintuitive is what lead to our theoretical understanding of what was really going on,” he added.

The secret behind this technology is the use of nano-magnets to induce an electromotive force. It uses the same principles as those in a conventional battery, except in a more direct fashion.

The energy stored in a battery, be it in an iPod or an electric car, is in the form of chemical energy.

When something is turned “on”, there is a chemical reaction which occurs and produces an electric current.

The new technology converts the magnetic energy directly into electrical energy, without a chemical reaction.

The electrical current made in this process is called a spin polarized current and finds use in a new technology called “spintronics.”

The new discovery advances our understanding of the way magnets work and its immediate application is to use the MTJs as electronic elements which work in different ways to conventional transistors.

Although the actual device has a diameter about that of a human hair and cannot even light up an LED (light-emitting diode), the energy that might be stored in this way could potentially run a car for miles. (ANI)

Pakistani papers reject foreign hand theory

New Delhi, Mar 4 (ANI): Prominent Pakistani papers have outrightly rejected Interior Advisor Rehman Malik’s statement of a “foreign hand” in the terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team, suggesting India’s role in the incident.

“The democracy of the country has been undermined. Pakistan is under continuous aggression and the foreigners have been targeted with the view to bring a bad name to the country, and I do not overrule a foreign hand in it,” said Malik.

The News in its editorial said: “The culture of instinctive denial clicked into gear immediately, fingers were as quickly pointed and assumptions, none of them backed by a shred of empirical evidence, were made.”

“The reality is that this is just as likely to be an attack made by our own home-grown terrorist organizations as it is to have been made or facilitated by ‘foreign hands’. Nobody noticed that up to 14 heavily armed men were securing a road junction in the centre of Lahore? A reasonable person may infer from this that there was a failure of intelligence,” it added.

The Daily Times editorial also criticized the attempt to point fingers at India saying, “It would be a pity if Pakistan responds, like an ex-ISI boss who has already done so, by accusing India’s RAW or Israel’s Mossad for this attack, as some commentators did in reference to the Marriott blast when an Indo-Pak media war was sparked by the Mumbai attacks.”

India has also termed these remarks as irresponsible, and rejected the statements emanating from Pakistan that a foreign hand could be behind the attack on the Lankan team in Lahore on Tuesday. (ANI)

Kerala gets its largest lifestyle mall ‘Oberon Mall’ in Kochi

Kochi, March 1 (ANI): Oberon Mall, the largest lifestyle mall opened here for general public on Saturday.

Oberon Mall is first of its kind mall in Kerala, which aims to redefine the shopping habits of Keralites and set a trend in shopping- an entertainment rich experience in tune with the changing cultural ethos.

Located on the NH bye pass road, just a kilometer from the Edapally Junction, Oberon Mall is built over 350,000 square feet and the building stands on about two acres of land.

Oberon, with a proposed financial outlay of Rs. 1 million, has adhered to all parameters of security and safety while designing the luxurious and ultra modern shopping complex.

The Chief Managing Director of Oberon Group, M. A. Mohammed said that Oberon Mall was a dream project for him and his team.

“Kochi is the commercial capital of Kerala and we are competing with metros in providing world class shopping experience to Keralites and tourists visiting Kochi. Oberon Mall aims to fulfill this need of world class shopping experience next to your doorstep”.

Fully conceptualized, developed and promoted by the Oberon Group of Companies, India and Flora Group of Dubai is created as the ultimate shopping and entertainment-Shoppertainment opportunity for the visitor.

The fully air-conditioned and 100 percent power backed building has five storeys. The Mall houses Anchor Shops, Branded shops, Multiplex, Food Courts and Kids Gaming to name a few. By Juhan Samuel (ANI)

Brit Muslim peer jailed for motorway texting

London, Feb.26 (ANI): Labour life peer Lord Ahmed has been jailed for 12 weeks for dangerous driving by a judge who heard he sent and received a series of text messages from his car on a motorway.

According to The Telegraph, a Sheffield Crown Court was told that Lord Ahmed was involved in an accident which left a man dead on the M1 near Rotherham, South Yorkshire, on Christmas Day 2007.

But the judge made it clear the text messaging had finished before the accident took place and was not connected to the fatal incident.

Mr. Justice Wilkie heard how Lord Ahmed got on to the M1 motorway at Dewsbury in the early evening of Christmas Day 2007. The peer sent and received a series of five text messages, all of which were described as substantial, rather than a few words.

The judge said the exchange of messages with a journalist amounted to a conversation, which took place as the peer was travelling at around 60 mph over a 17.8-mile stretch of the southbound carriageway.

The judge was told the fatal accident happened close to junction 35 of the motorway.

Lord Ahmed’s Jaguar ran into an Audi. Its driver, Martyn Gombar, 28, had crashed minutes earlier and is thought to have been trying to retrieve his mobile phone from the vehicle.

The court was told that subsequent tests showed father-of-two Gombar had been drinking and crashed his car into the central reservation, spinning it round.

As Lord Ahmed approached the Audi, it was facing the wrong way, straddling the two outermost lanes in total darkness.

The court heard another car clipped its wing mirror and a further vehicle had taken such drastic avoiding action that it also collided with the central reservation. (ANI)

Fit again Watson set to make a comeback

Brisbane, Feb.24 (ANI): Injured Australian all-rounder Shane Watson will launch his latest comeback in Queensland’s Sheffield Shield clash with New South Wales starting at the Gabba on Thursday.

Finally fit after suffering a back stress fracture, Watson will play as a batsman in a match critical to the Bulls’ hopes of meeting already-qualified Victoria in the Shield final.

One of the heroes of Queensland’s weekend one-day title success, pacer Ben Laughlin, is in line for his first class debut after also earning a Bulls nod.

Laughlin finished with 23 wickets at 14.86 from his 11 one-day matches, the most by a Queenslander in a domestic limited overs season.

It eclipsed James Hopes’ 20 wicket haul in 2006-07.

Martin Love, Queensland’s all-time leading run-scorer, will make his farewell appearance at the Gabba in the New South Wales clash after announcing on Tuesday he will retire at the end of the season.

Queensland (22) are two points behind second-placed Tasmania on the Shield ladder and two points ahead of No.4 outfit Western Australia (20) with two rounds of the four-day competition left.

Leaders Victoria (40 points) is already assured of hosting next month’s final at Junction Oval.

Queensland: Chris Simpson (captain), Ryan Broad, Lee Carseldine, Ben Cutting, Chris Hartley, James Hopes, Nick Kruger, Ben Laughlin, Martin Love, Chris Swan, Andrew Symonds, Shane Watson (12th man to be named). (ANI)