Ancient book of Buddhism chantings found in Korean temple

Seoul, September 16 (ANI): Archaeologists have uncovered an ancient Chinese book of Buddhism chantings in a Korean temple.

According to a report in Korea Times, the Hangeul copy of an ancient Chinese book, which contains the notes of the Joseon Kingdom (1392-1910) scholar Kim Si-seup, was discovered at Baekryunam, Haein Temple.

The book was originally written by a Buddhist master from the Tang Dynasty (618-907) and dates back to the 16th century.

“We discovered the ‘shiphyeondam eonhaebon’ while we were examining the library of Ven. Seong Cheol (1912-1993) at Baekryunam, Haein Temple, in April this year,” Ven. Won Taek said at a press conference at the Jogye Order, northern Seoul.

“It’s a rare book ? perhaps even the only copy ? that is not included in the Natural Treasures list nor on the lists of national libraries and university libraries,” he said.

An eonhae copy, or eonhaebon, is a book or writing that contains the literal translation of a sentence in Chinese to Hangeul, or Korean.

It is different from the normal translation books as it features a word-for-word translation, and is far removed from the Hangeul sentences used today.

‘Shiphyeondam’ refers to the 10 songs and poems made to praise Buddha’s teachings, written by Tang Dynasty Buddhist master Dongan Sangchal of the Jodong Order of Zen Buddhism, a sect of the religion in China.

The songs are comprised of seven Chinese characters and contain the traditions and the practices of the Jodong Order.

Ven. Won Taek explained that the discovery was meaningful as the book was from the 16th century. Most of the eonhaebons known today are from the 15th century.

“We found many precious ancient books and eonhaebons while examining the library and we will apply these artifacts as Natural Treasures after examining the value of them. We will also make photo prints of the eonhaebons for ancient hangeul and writing experts to use them as research material,” he said. (ANI)

How females control sperm storage to pick the best dad

Washington, Sept 9 (ANI): University of Exeter researchers have found new evidence to explain how female insects can influence the father of their offspring, even after mating with up to ten males.

In the study, boffins found that female crickets are able to control the amount of sperm that they store from each mate to select the best father for their young.

According to researchers, the females may be using their abdominal muscles to control the amount of sperm stored from each mate.

The study has been published in the journal Molecular Ecology.

Female crickets mate with several different males, including their closest relatives. In general, offspring produced with close relatives are more likely to have genetic disorders.

Different animals employ a range of behaviours to avoid this, such as not mating other animals from the group they grow up in. Crickets do not avoid mating with relatives, but this research shows that they produce more offspring fathered by males that are unrelated to them.

In order to reach the conclusion, researchers bred field crickets in the laboratory. They used new DNA-based techniques to determine the quantity stored by each the female. hey found that the females stored a higher content of sperm from unrelated males. They then tested young crickets to determine their paternity.

The results showed that, regardless of the order in which they had mated, an unrelated mate was more likely to become a father. This must have been under female control, because the methods the team used meant that males could not influence the amount of sperm they passed to the female.

Though the study focused on field crickets, the findings are likely to be relevant in other insect species and possibly other sections of the animal kingdom.

Lead author Dr Amanda Bretman of the University of Exeter said: “Our study shows that even after mating, female insects control who fathers their offspring. We’re only really just beginning to understand the reasons for the different mating strategies in the insect world and that is thanks to new techniques.” (ANI)

Sharifs soften stance against Musharraf trial under Saudi pressure

Islamabad, Sep 7 (ANI): The Sharif brothers and top leadership of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) are believed to have softened their demand for the trial of former President Pervez Musharraf owing to international pressure by his guarantors, including the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Well-placed party sources said that the PML-N central leadership would take the party hierarchy into confidence about the pressure for softening their anti-Musharraf stance and to chalk out the party’s new plan of action to prepare it for next elections at party’s scheduled CEC meeting in Murree on Monday.

Sources attach great importance to Nawaz Sharif’s visit to Saudi Arabia in next few days where apart from performing Umrah he is expected to meet the Saudi high-ups in the backdrop of Musharraf’s recent visit to the Kingdom and his meeting with the King Abdullah.

The Nation quoted sources as saying that Saudi authorities have already conveyed to the Sharifs to take soft stance on Musharraf’s trial as the Kingdom regards him needy for help and cooperation as they were while out of power.

The meeting, sources further said, would discuss and evolve a comprehensive strategy to hold party’s elections but after pushing it through an intense process of restructuring and reorganization at grass root level in all parts of the country.

The CEC meeting would decide about the election timeframe either by the end of this year or early next year.

The meeting would also take host of political issues for consideration including PML-N, PPP relations, law and order situation in Balochistan, fate of Local Bodies and implementation of Charter of Democracy by the PPP-led coalition government, they added. (ANI)

Foreign tourists join Onam celebration in Kerala

Kochi, Sep 3 (ANI): Foreign tourists in Kerala took part in the ten-day long harvest festival ‘Onam’.

The Homestay Operators Association organised Onam celebrations for the foreign tourists staying in the association’s homes.

Many foreigners participated in a simple procession in Kochi along a floral carpet on a street.he foreigners enjoyed sumptuous traditional meal with a variety of delicacies prepared in coconut oil and served on Banana leaf.

“I feel very lucky to be here to be a part of the Onam celebrations today by joining in arranging the flowers and also in the parade. It is a very beautiful experience for me so I feel lucky,” said Claire, a tourist from Australia.

Onam, a harvest festival, is celebrated in Kerala when young girls and women make flower patterns called “Pookalam” in local parlance to welcome the mythical King Mahabali.

Onam recalls the story of the mythical king Mahabali who created a kingdom in what is now Kerala.

The festival falls during the month of Chingam (August-September as per the Gregorian calendar), the first month of the Malayalam calendar and lasts for ten days.

Traditionally celebrated as a harvest festival, mythologically it is linked to Malayalee-Hindu folktales. (ANI)

Musharraf’s ‘royal’ treatment in Saudi Arabia worries his opponents in Pak

Islamabad, Sep.2 (ANI): The ‘royal’ treatment being given to former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf during his Saudi Arabia visit has his opponents worried.

The special treatment has sparked speculations that Riyadh is trying to use its influence to ask the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) to shun its demand for Musharraf’s trial under the Article Six of the Constitution.

Sources said King Abdullah sent his special airplane to London to fetch Musharraf.

Reports regarding Saudi Arabia cracking its whip on the PML-N and other anti-Musharraf parties has probably forced PML-N to come out with clarificatiobns.

A PML-N spokesman denied reports regarding Saudi putting pressure on PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif.

“There has been no official message from the Saudi family to Mian Nawaz Sharif in this regard,” The Dawn quoted a PML-N spokesperson, as saying.

One of Musharraf’s close aides, Barrister Mohammad Ali Saif, who claims to be the former Army General’s spokesman, said the PML-N should think once again before demanding Musharraf’s prosecution, and see what kind of treatment he is receiving in Riyadh.

“The PML-N should see and understand how the former president is being treated by the Saudi government and forget about his (Musharraf) trial for treason” Saif said.

When asked that whether the Saudi Government has actually given Musharraf a guarantee of not being tried, Saif said : “I don’t know anything about this, but there is little possibility of Gen Musharraf facing trial only because the PML-N is asking for that.”

“I am not aware of this, but the way the former president is being treated in the kingdom means he cannot be touched in Pakistan,” he added. (ANI)

President greets nation ahead of Onam

New Delhi, Sep 1 (ANI): President Pratibha Patil today greeted the nation ahead of Onam, which is being celebrated tomorrow.

In her message, she said, “On the joyous occasion of Onam, I extend my warmest greetings to everyone especially to all my brothers and sisters in Kerala.”

“May this auspicious harvest festival, which underlines the importance of agriculture in our country, inspire us to work for the progress and prosperity of our nation and to promote harmony and compassion in our country,” she added.

Onam, a harvest festival, is celebrated in Kerala when young girls and women make flower patterns called “Pookalam” in local parlance to welcome the mythical King Mahabali.

Onam recalls the story of mythical demon king Mahabali who created a kingdom in what is now Kerala.

The festival falls during the month of Chingam (August-September as per the Gregorian calendar), the first month of the Malayalam calendar and lasts for ten days.

Traditionally celebrated as a harvest festival, mythologically it is linked to Malayalee-Hindu folktales. (ANI)

‘Free sex shows’ turn NY hotel tourist attraction

New York, Aug 25 (ANI): The plush Standard hotel in New York has become a tourist attraction as randy guests are performing sex acts in front of the floor-to-ceiling hotel windows.

Guests at the hotel have been spotted romping, drying off and even pleasuring themselves in full view of onlookers.

People strolling in the newly opened High Line urban park near the hotel are witnessing a free peep show and now more people are flocking to the area to catch a glimpse.

Andre Landeros Michel, 34, a Chelsea designer, who regularly ventures over to view randy Standard guests having sex in front of the massive floor-to-ceiling windows in full view of the park, said that it’s a

“It’s a little peep show-but instead of being on 42nd Street, it’s down here at the High Line,” the New York Post quoted Landeros Michel as saying.

A Parks Department worker said that plenty of people come to the park specifically to watch the erotic exhibitionism.

Harlem resident Aaron Lipman, 34, a media research analyst who works near the park, said: “I think it’s healthy and fun — it’s flirtatious. It’s like ‘Wild Kingdom.’ (ANI)

Israel assured of Saudi support in future Iranian nuke raid

London, July 5 (ANI): Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been assured by the chief of the country’s intelligence agency Mossad, Meir Dagan, that Saudi Arabia would turn a blind eye to Israeli jets flying over the kingdom during any future raid on Iran’s nuclear sites.
Dagan held secret talks with Saudi officials to discuss the possibility of such a raid earlier this year.

There were unconfirmed reports in Israeli press that high-ranking officials, including former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert held meetings with Saudi colleagues.

“The Saudis have tacitly agreed to the Israeli air force flying through their airspace on a mission which is supposed to be in the common interests of both Israel and Saudi Arabia,” The Times quoted a diplomatic source, as saying.

Although the countries have no formal diplomatic relations, an Israeli defence source confirmed that Mossad maintained “working relations” with the Saudis.

John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations who recently visited the Gulf, said it was “entirely logical” for the Israelis to use Saudi airspace.

“None of them would say anything about it publicly but they would certainly acquiesce in an overflight if the Israelis didn’t trumpet it as a big success,” Bolton, who has talked to several Arab leaders, said.rab states would condemn a raid when they spoke at the UN but would be privately relieved to see the threat of an Iranian bomb removed, he opined.

An Israeli intelligence expert said: “The Saudis are very concerned about an Iranian nuclear bomb, even more than the Israelis.”

The Israeli air force has been training for a possible attack on Iran’s nuclear site at Natanz in the centre of the country and other locations for four years. (ANI)

Success of Inca civilization a result of global warming that lasted for 400 years

Lima (Peru), July 2 (ANI): In a new study, a team of scientists have determined that the success of the Inca was boosted by a period of global warming that lasted more than four centuries.

The new study is called “Putting the Rise of the Inca within a Climatic and Land Management Context” and was prepared by Alex Chepstow-Lusty, an English paleo-biologist working for the French Institute of Andean Studies, in Lima, Peru.

The Inca Empire was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America. It began as a support group in the Cuzco area, where the legendary first Sapa Inca, Manco Capac founded the Kingdom of Cuzco around 1200.

According to a report in Living in Peru, a team of English and US scientists has analyzed pollen, seeds and isotopes in core samples taken from the deep mud of a small lake not far from Machu Picchu to determine that the success of the Inca was underpinned by a period of warming that lasted more than four centuries.

The four centuries coincided directly with the rise of this startling, hyper-productive culture that at its zenith was bigger than the Ming Dynasty China and the Ottoman Empire, the two most powerful contemporaries of the Inca.

“This period of increased temperatures allowed the Inca and their predecessors to expand, from AD 1150 onwards, their agricultural zones by moving up the mountains to build a massive system of terraces fed frequently by glacial water, as well as planting trees to reduce erosion and increase soil fertility,” said the scientists.

“They re-created the landscape and produced the huge surpluses of maize, potatoes, quinua and other crops that freed a rapidly growing population to build roads, scores of palaces like Machu Picchu and in particular the development of a large standing army,” they added.

According to Alex, the report “raises the question of whether today’s global warming may be another opportunity for the Andes.” (ANI)

Novel robotic rat to search for survivors through rubble and burning buildings

London, July 1 (ANI): Rescue teams are all set to get a run for their money, for scientists have now unveiled a pioneering robotic rat that could search through rubble and burning buildings for survivors – using only its whiskers.

Called the Scratchbot, the robot used latest state-of-the-art technology to hunt through pitch black or smoke-filled rooms.

Scratchbot does all this only via touch sensors located on a set of whiskers, reports The Scotsman.

The robot could have huge implications in search and rescue missions by picking its way through rubble and debris or help in mine-clearing operations.

The device is the brainchild of researchers from the University of Bristol and University of Sheffield, who have spent six years and 500,000 pounds to research and designing the robotic rat that could revolutionise rescue missions.

The project was inspired by the use of touch in the animal kingdom – specifically how rats explore their environments using whiskers in poorly lit places. (ANI)

Orlando Bloom’s mum sells off his belongings

London, June 19 (ANI): Hollywood actor Orlando Bloom’s mother is auctioning off her son’s clothes, slippers and a wet suit, in a bid to clear out his room before she moves house.

Sonia Copeland-Bloom will also be selling off costumes worn by ‘The Lords of the Ring’ star during the filming of the trilogy.

The money raised from 32-year-old star’s unwanted possessions will go to charity.

“I have spoken to Orlando who is quite happy for me to get as much as I can for charity,” the Telegraph quoted Mrs Copeland-Bloom, who lives in Kent as saying.

“There are some real collector’s items among them and they will all be authenticated by me by letter,” she added.

The collection includes a bodyline wet suit used by Orlando, when he filmed a scene with Elijah Wood in The Return of the King and a poster signed by the entire cast, a pair of Moroccan slippers and boots he wore in The Kingdom of Heaven.

Gucci shoes, Puma trainers, polo shirts and a hooded waterproof Gap jacket belonging to the star is also up for sale.

“We are inviting people to send us bids of which the top ones will be invited to see the items before submitting a further sealed bid,” said Copeland-Bloom.

The money raised will be divided between four charities, UNESCO, the New Marlow Theatre, cancer charity Odyssey and the UKC Music Scholarships. (ANI)

Archaeologists discover largest mud-brick temple yet found in northeastern Egypt

Washington, May 5 (ANI): Archaeologists have found a 3,000-year-old carving in the largest mud-brick temple yet found on northeastern Egypt’s northern Sinai Peninsula.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the carving shows ancient Egyptian pharaoh Ramses II offering gifts to Geb, God of earth.

The temple is among four ancient places of worship discovered at a site near the Egyptian border near the Suez Canal, the country’s archaeology agency announced on April 21.

Found among the ruins of a fortified city, the temples would likely have been the first stop in Egypt for travelers from ancient Palestine and other points east.

Designed to impress on visitors Egypt’s grandeur and might, the city appears to have been the Egyptian military’s headquarters during the New Kingdom (1539-1075 B.C.), a time of war and conquest (ancient Egypt time line).

“This temple was very, very beautiful. Visitors would understand this temple is a good example of Egyptian culture,” said Mohamed Abdel-Maqsoud, who made the discovery for Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities.(ANI)

Politician killed by colleague’s husband in Lesotho

Johannesburg/Maseru – A politician in Lesotho was shot dead, allegedly by the husband of one of his colleagues, police in the southern African mountain kingdom said Tuesday. Dominic Motikoe, the head of the National Independent Party was gunned down while on his way back from Parliament on Monday, police spokesman David Mphana was quoted as saying in a report by the South African Press Association.

“Motikoe dropped off his female colleague at her home. Her husband then ran out of the house with a pistol and fired five shots at him,” according to Mphana.

The man said he suspected the politician was having an affair with his wife, he added.

The shooting was the second in less than a week involving a politician in the tiny country that is landlocked with South Africa.

Last week, Prime Minister Pakalitha Mosisili reportedly escaped an apparent attempt on his life by an unknown armed group. The group stormed his residence in the capital Maseru, but his bodyguards intervened, killing two of the men.(dpa)

Archaeologists stumble upon largest New Kingdom temple ever discovered in Egypt

p
Cairo, April 27 (ANI): Archeologists have uncovered the remains of what is believed to be the largest New Kingdom temple ever discovered in Egypt./pp
According to a report in Al-Ahram Weekly, the temple was found by an Egyptian archaeological mission at Tel-Hebua, known in Pharaonic times as Tharo, the area from which the ancient Egyptian army embarked on military campaigns along Egypt’s eastern borders./pp
The temple, which covers an area of 80×70 metres, is built of mud brick decorated with paintings. /pp
It consists of four rectangular halls containing a total of 34 columns, three limestone purification basins, and a number of secondary chapels, suggesting that the temple was an important religious centre on Egypt’s eastern front. /pp
The site is heavily fortified and surrounded by a four-metre-thick wall. /pp
Paintings featuring Horus, Hathor, Tefnut, Montu and Renenutet were unearthed within the temple walls along with others showing kings Tuthmosis II and Ramses II./pp
On the east and west of the site are two groups of storehouses consisting of 13 rooms each, which probably date to the reigns of Seti I, Ramses II and Seti II. /pp
They contain thousands of inscriptions and seal impressions of the three kings. /pp
One of them is particularly important, points out mission director Mohamed Abdel-Maqsoud. It depicts Ramses II before the god Set, patron deity of the Hyksos capital Avaris, now known as Tel Al-Dabaa, some 50 kilometers from Tel Hebua in the eastern Nile Delta./pp
Zahi Hawass, secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), described the discovery as the most important to date in Sinai. (ANI)/p

New Issue-Spain’s ICO sells 50 bln yen in Samurai bonds

TOKYO, April 17 (Reuters) – Spain’s Instituto de Credito
Oficial (ICO) [ICO.UL] sold 50 billion yen ($503.2 million) in
Samurai bonds in two tranches, lead manager Daiwa Securities SMBC
said on Friday.

Details are as follows:

1. Five-year fixed-rate bond:

Issue amount: 22.9 billion yen

Coupon: 1.67 percent

Issue price: par

Maturity date: April 23, 2014

Coupon payments: April 23, Oct. 23

Payment date: April 23, 2009

Lead managers: Daiwa Securities SMBC

Mitsubishi UFJ Securities

Mizuho Securities

Ratings: Aaa (Moody’s)

AA+ (S and P)

AAA (Fitch)

Spread: 60 basis points over yen swaps

2. Five-year floating-rate bond:

Issue amount: 27.1 billion yen

Coupon: 0.68 pct point above 3-month yen Libor

Issue price: par

Maturity date: April 23, 2014

Coupon payments: Jan. 23, April 23, July 23 and Oct. 23

Payment date: April 23, 2009

Lead managers: Daiwa Securities SMBC

Mitsubishi UFJ Securities

Mizuho Securities

Ratings: Aaa (Moody’s)

AA+ (S and P)

AAA (Fitch)

ICO, which is guaranteed by the Kingdom of Spain, provides
financial backing to small and medium-sized businesses.

Samurai bonds are yen bonds issued in Japan by non-Japanese
entities.
(Reporting by Naoyuki Katayama and Hiroyasu Hoshi: writing by
Rika Otsuka)

Nepal’s nod to Gurkha recruitment angers other Maoists

Kathmandu, April 15 (IANS) When he led a 10-year guerrilla war against the kingdom’s powerful monarchy, Maoist supremo Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda pledged to stop the ‘shameful’ recruitment of Nepalis as mercenaries in the British and Indian armies.

However, his turning back on the promise after becoming Nepal’s first Maoist prime minister has now angered the Maoist parties in other countries, especially in violence-torn Afghanistan.

The underground Communist (Maoist) Party of Afghanistan has begun a campaign against the Nepali Maoists in the global Maoist community, including the Revolutionary International Movement (RIM), of which the Nepal Maoists are a proud member.

‘Currently, the chairman of the (Unified) Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) is the prime minister of Nepal,’ the Afghan Maoists wrote in an open letter of protest to the Nepal Maoists.

‘The Ministry of Defence belongs to a leader of the Nepal Maoists. The Ministry of Finance and other critical positions in the cabinet belong to it. In short, the coalition government is under the leadership of the party.

‘However, the citizens of this government are part and parcel of occupying forces in Afghanistan and in Iraq (and) a party that led the People’s War for 10 years in Nepal now shamefully agrees with the occupation forces and implements their plans.’

The Afghan Maoists are objecting to the deployment of Gurkha soldiers from Nepal in the UN contingents deployed in Afghanistan as well as the British Army.

They are also criticising the employment of hundreds of Nepalis as armed security guards.

‘(Previously), Nepalis in Afghanistan worked only with the American private security companies,’ the protest letter said. ‘Now, in Shindand Airport (in western Afghanistan) they are under the direct command of US ‘Special Forces’. In Kandahar, they ‘work’ with Canadian forces, at the Provincial Reconstruction Team headquarters, in Ghazni they are associated with Polish forces, in Kabul and other regions they are linked with American private security companies.’

The Afghan Maoists have raised the issue at various Maoist platforms, like RIM and the Coordination Committee of Maoist Parties of South Asia, focusing on the poll pledge by the Nepal Maoist leaders last year that ‘the shameful tradition like Gurkha recruitment centre, in which Nepali citizens are recruited in foreign army, should be ended and reverent and productive employment should be arranged for them within the country.’

Nepal’s ruling party is now likely to face fresh anger from its peers across the globe over the ongoing visit of British Undersecretary of State for Defence and Minister for Veterans Kevan Jones.

Jones arrived in Kathmandu Tuesday on a five-day visit for talks about the British Gurkhas.

Prachanda and his party were condemned as ‘revisionists’ by other Maoist parties in February after he assured a delegation of British parliamentarians headed by John Stanley that his government would not ban Gurkha recruitment in the British Army and, instead, called it another factor that strengthened bilateral ties between Nepal and Britain.

Temple in Turkey sheds light on so-called ‘Dark Age’

Toronto, April 16 (ANI): A remarkably well-preserved monumental temple in Turkey, believed to be constructed during the time of King Solomon in the 10th/9th-centuries BC, is shedding light on the so-called Dark Age.

Uncovered by the University of Toronto’s Tayinat Archaeological Project (TAP) in the summer of 2008, the discovery casts doubt upon the traditional view that the transition from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age was violent, sudden and culturally disruptive.

Ancient sources, such as the Homeric epics and the Hebrew Bible, depict an era of widespread famine, ethnic conflict and population movement, most famously including the migrations of the Sea Peoples (or biblical Philistines) and the Israelites.

This is thought to have precipitated a prolonged Dark Age marked by cultural decline and ethnic strife during the early centuries of the Iron Age.

But, recent discoveries – including the Tayinat excavations – have revealed that some ruling dynasties survived the collapse of the great Bronze Age powers.

“Our ongoing excavations have not only begun to uncover extensive remains from this Dark Age, but the emerging archaeological picture suggests that during this period Tayinat was the capital of a powerful kingdom, the ‘Land of Palastin’,” said Timothy Harrison, professor of Near Eastern Archaeology at the University of Toronto and the director of the project.

“Intriguingly, the early Iron Age settlement at Tayinat shows evidence of strong cultural connections, if not the direct presence of foreign settlers, from the Aegean world, the traditional homeland of the Sea Peoples,” he added.

Excavations uncovered the temple’s southern approach, which once faced a broad stone-paved courtyard, and consisted of a monumental staircase and porticoed-entrance, supported by a large, ornately carved basalt column base.

In addition, fragments of monumental stelae – stone slabs created for religious or other commemorative purposes – carved in Luwian (an extinct language once spoken in what is now Turkey) hieroglyphic script, were found.

They are thought to have once stood on stone platforms in the courtyard.

“The building’s central room was burned in an intense fire. It was filled with heavily charred brick and wood, as well as a substantial quantity of bronze metal, including riveted pieces and carved ivory fragments – clearly the remains of furniture or wall fixings. Fragments of gold and silver foil were also found along with the carved eye inlay from a human figure,” said Harrison.

The temple’s inner sanctuary will be the focus of the 2009 field season which begins on July 1. (ANI)

Bahrain pardons opposition leaders after protests

Pardon follows increased international attention

* Move eases political tensions to focus on economy

* Shi’ite scholars negotiated release

(Adds reaction from Al-Wefaq opposition, background)

By Frederik Richter

MANAMA, April 12 (Reuters) – Bahrain’s king has pardoned 178 people charged with breaching state security, including two Shi’ite opposition leaders whose arrest sparked violent protests and whose trial has drawn international scrutiny.

A government source, who declined to be named, said on Sunday those pardoned included Hassan Mushaima, leader of the mainly Shi’ite opposition movement Haq, Shi’ite cleric Mohammed Maqdad and 33 other defendants on trial with them.

“You are now obliged to cooperate for the security of this country,” Bahrain’s news agency quoted Interior Minister Sheikh Rashed bin Abdullah al-Khalifa as telling the prisoners.

Regular night time battles between police with teargas and youths with bottles and burning barricades have contrasted sharply with efforts by the Gulf Arab kingdom to present itself as a stable place for international investors.

Jalila Sayed, a lawyer for the defendants, said this was not the first time Bahrain had pardoned opposition figures.

“We have this kind of play from time to time, except this time the magnitude is bigger, there are more people involved and the accusations are more serious,” Sayed said.

Mushaima had been in custody for a few hours in 2007, but was pardoned before his trial started, she said.

Nabeel Rajab, head of the Bahrain Human Rights Center, said the pardon followed unprecedented international pressure on Bahrain, whose government had underestimated the degree of popular opposition to Mushaima’s arrest.

“This will help ease the tension for the coming weeks,” Rajab said. “But if this is not followed by measures to end the … political and human rights crisis, which is the discrimination against the Shia, (this kind of) situation will come back.”

The Shi’ite opposition has attributed the unrest to grievances such as their marginalisation in jobs and services, a charge government officials deny.

INVESTOR SIGNAL

Jasim Husain, member of parliament for the Shi’ite opposition party Al-Wefaq, said the pardon would send a much needed signal to investors that Bahrain is able to solve its problems during the ongoing financial crisis.

Bahrain, a regional banking centre and small oil producer, is competing with other Gulf Arab states, particularly regional commercial hub Dubai, over investments in banking, infrastructure and logistics to diversify its economy.

“Bahrain cannot afford social and political problems at this moment,” Husain said.

Bahrain’s parliament, in which Al-Wefaq has 17 out of 40 seats, only approved the government’s 2009-2010 budget in March after tussling for months over government social spending.

The delay threatened to slow outlays and delayed the issuance of government bonds to finance the country’s fiscal deficit and spending on housing projects.

In 1995, Shi’ites led a series of violent protests to demand reforms. The disturbances abated in 1998 after King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa launched landmark political and economic reforms, including pardoning political prisoners and activists in exile.

Unlike most other Gulf Arab states, Bahrain has a lively parliament, consisting of an elected lower house and an upper house whose members are appointed by the king. (Reporting by Frederik Richter and writing by Inal Ersan; Editing by Thomas Atkins and Sophie Hares)

Lady GaGa’s ‘The Fame’ tops UK albums chart for second week running

London, April 13 (ANI): Lady GaGa has maintained her hold over the UK albums chart, notching up a second week at number one with ‘The Fame’.

The highest new entry of the week comes from Cheshire trio Doves, who debut at two with fourth album ‘Kingdom of Rust’.

Kings of Leon fall to three with ‘Only By The Night’, while Annie Lennox slips to four with ‘The Collection’, reports the BBC.

However, Dance pop artist Calvin Harris has ended Lady GaGa’s three-week reign at the top of the UK singles chart.

‘I’m Not Alone’, the Scottish dance star’s first solo single since 2007, debuts at number one this week, relegating GaGa’s ‘Poker Face’ to second place.

The top ten in UK albums chart are:

1. Lady GaGa: ‘The Fame’

2. Doves: ‘Kingdom of Rust’

3. Kings of Leon: ‘Only By The Night’

4. Annie Lennox: ‘The Collection’

5. Bat For Lashes: ‘Two Suns’

6. Lily Allen: ‘It’s Not You, It’s Me’

7. Ronan Keating: ‘Songs For My Mother’

8. Akon: ‘Freedom’

9. Yeah Yeah Yeahs: ‘It’s Blitz’

10. BeyoncĂ©: ‘I Am… Sasha Fierce’

The top ten in UK singles chart are:

1. Calvin Harris: ‘I’m Not Alone’

2. Lady GaGa: ‘Poker Face’

3. AR Rahman and Pussycat Dolls: ‘Jai Ho! (You Are My Destiny’

4. La Roux: ‘In For The Kill’

5. Noisettes: ‘Don’t Upset The Rhythm (Go Baby Go)’

6. Ciara ft. Justin Timberlake: ‘Love Sex Magic’

7. BeyoncĂ©: ‘Halo’

8. Metro Station: ‘Shake It’

9. Flo Rida ft. Ke$ha: ‘Right Round’

10. Taylor Swift: ‘Love Story’ (ANI)

In Germany, an outpost of Pompeii shows its age

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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