Uganda police say suicide bombers carried out attacks

July 18 (Reuters) – Twin bomb attacks in Uganda’s capital that killed 73 people last week were carried out by suicide bombers, the head of police said on Sunday.

Somali al Shabaab insurgents linked to al Qaeda have said they carried out the attacks on a crowded restaurant and a rugby club in the Ugandan capital while fans watched the World Cup final on television last Sunday.

However, it said the attacks were not the work of suicide bombers. [ID:nLDE66C0U7]

“These attacks were carried out by suicide bombers. The evidence is overwhelming … two heads have not been claimed, neither have they been identified. It can’t be a coincidence,” Inspector General of Police Kale Kayihura told a news conference.

The al Qaeda-linked group al Shabaab said it was avenging the killing of civilians by African Union peacekeepers. Ugandan forces form the backbone of the 6,100-strong contingent in Somalia. (Reporting by Elias Biryabarema, Editing by George Obulutsa and Alison Williams)

Analysis: Father Time catches up with poor Italy

(Reuters) – Father Time finally caught up with poor old Italy on Thursday when they were deposed as world champions after suffering a dramatic and shocking 3-2 defeat at the hands of World Cup debutants Slovakia.

Sports | Italy

An aging squad, debilitating injuries and the admission after the match from coach Marcello Lippi that he had not trained his men well enough for the World Cup all contributed to their woeful performance in their three Group F matches.

Their 1-1 draws against Paraguay and New Zealand and Thursday’s defeat left Italy at the bottom of the section.

Although few people expected Italy to retain the crown they won four years ago, most observers thought they would at least reach the knockout stages.

However, their inability to overcome even a relatively modest team like Slovakia illustrates just how far Italy have fallen since winning the World Cup four years ago.

The performance of 36-year-old center back and captain Fabio Cannavaro, Italy’s record caps holder, summed that up perfectly.

The world player of the year in 2006, he looked a completely different person in Ellis Park where he was again beaten for pace and lost his positional sense time and again.

STRANGE QUIRK

By a strange quirk of fate, France, who lost on penalties to Italy in the World Cup final in Germany four years ago, also finished bottom of their group.

For the first time ever, the two finalists from the previous tournament have both gone out in the group stage.

But while France’s dramatic implosion was largely unexpected, the writing has been on the wall for the Italians for some time — although few predicted they would fail so dismally.

After opening with a 1-1 draw against eventual group winners Paraguay, which was not unduly criticized back home, Italy’s campaign nosedived dramatically last Sunday when they were held to a 1-1 draw by outsiders New Zealand in Nelspruit.

The result, the greatest in that country’s soccer history, represented one of Italy’s lowest points in their long World Cup story and one of the biggest shocks in the tournament ever.

Thursday’s defeat by Slovakia, no matter how thrilling and tense it was, brought absolute confirmation, if it was needed, that Italy’s time was up.

Lippi has been criticized since returning to the job of national coach two years ago for sticking too rigidly with too many players from the World Cup-winning side of 2006.

He was not helped by injuries to goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon, or midfielder Andrea Pirlo, who came on as a second half substitute, but even with them fully fit it is doubtful if Italy would have gone all that much further.

OLD GUARD

Five of Thursday’s starting lineup were 30 or over and they gave the impression of men who had seen and done it all before and possibly took Slovakia’s threat a little too lightly.

In stark contrast, Slovakia’s mostly journeymen players, battled, ran and harried for every ball. They were far more concise in their passing and support play and, prompted by Marek Hamsik, who is with Napoli, played with a belief Italy lacked.

Robert Vittek took both his goals superbly, and Miroslav Stoch and Jan Durica more than matched the accomplished Gennaro Gattuso and Daniele De Rossi in their midfield duels.

To their credit, Italy did not go down without a fight, battling back from 2-0 and then 3-1 down to reduce the arrears and Fabio Quagliarella scored with a fabulous chip in injury time to keep Italy’s lingering hopes alive.

The match brought to a close Lippi’s second spell as Italy coach and also saw the end of the international careers of Cannavaro and Gennaro Gattuso after the trio said this would be their last tournament with the national side.

Lippi will be succeeded by Cesare Prandelli, who has left Fiorentina to take over, but the new coach is unlikely to be able to mold a world-beating team in the foreseeable future.

On the evidence of the last week or so, Italy’s young guns have yet to reach the level of the older generation.

Unless Prandelli unearths some major young talent for the Euro 2012 qualifying campaign which starts later this year, Italy could well be struggling for some time to come.

(Editing by Ken Ferris)

BP’s “top kill” on leaking well could be delayed

BP Plc will begin a process to plug a leaking undersea oil well on Wednesday at the earliest, but it could be delayed or even abandoned if tests show it would not work, a company executive said on Tuesday.

“In terms of when the actual kill might go forward, the earliest would be tomorrow and it could extend on from there,” BP senior vice president Kent Wells told reporters on a conference call, referring to the “top kill” procedure.

Under intense pressure from the Obama administration to plug the five-week-old gushing leak in the Gulf of Mexico, BP sought to manage expectations of its latest effort.

The company has failed to plug or completely corral the leak that burst after a rig drilling the well a mile beneath the water’s surface exploded and sank, killing 11 workers.

President Barack Obama and U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar have publicly scolded BP for a breakdown of responsibility and missing deadlines in sealing the well.

BP officials had said the top kill, which involves injecting heavy drilling fluids twice as dense as water into the well to stop the oil flow, would begin last Sunday at the earliest.

They subsequently pushed its start to Tuesday, then Wednesday, and Wells said it might start later as scientists finish tests to gauge its chances of success.

“In terms of timing, the pace at which we’re doing this — subsea construction — we usually spend months to do what we’ve done in days and weeks,” Wells said. “We have to be careful in terms of setting expectations.”

MAY ABANDON KILL ATTEMPT

Wells said the tests may prompt BP to abandon the top kill altogether if scientists determine it can’t be done safely or will worsen the leak.

“What we learn during this diagnostic phase will be crucial to us,” he said.

Russell Hoshman, a petroleum engineer with the Interior Department’s Minerals Management Service, said the agency is reviewing procedures to ensure they are technically sound so as to “not make this situation worse.”

Wells said the 12- to 24-hour diagnostic phase would take place “over the next day or so.” If given the go-ahead, the top kill could take half a day to two days to show results, he said.

The top kill involves injecting drilling fluids, which are heavier than oil, into the failed five-story blowout preventer at the seabed, at the rate of 50 barrels (2,100 gallons) per minute. The tests are supposed to show which of the five points of entry into the blowout preventer can be used.

The biggest risk in the procedure is that the upward pressure of the oil and gas rushing from the well would overcome the downward pressure from the mud and blow it out the top of the blowout preventer, BP executives have said.

Wells said some oil could get past the fluids and escape, but the concept is to pump them fast enough to overcome the oil and kill the well.

“JUNK SHOT” OPTION

If the fluids aren’t enough, BP could employ a “junk shot,” or pump solid materials like shredded rubber golf balls as a “bridging agent” to slow the oil flow and allow more fluids down the well.

If those options don’t work, BP can remove the bent pipe coming out of a piece of equipment on top of the blowout preventer and place a containment dome with a seal on top of it to corral the oil. The oil would be transported by pipe to a drilling ship at the surface.

BP tried such a containment dome over the leak before. Too much seawater inside mixed with natural gas coming from the leak and formed ice, known as hydrates, which blocked oil from flowing to the drillship. Wells said the seal should reduce seawater to cut potential for hydrates to form.

(Reporting by Kristen Hays and Chris Baltimore; Editing by David Storey)

Henin stunned in Madrid, Sharapova bows out

Four-times French Open champion Justine Henin’s preparations for the Roland Garros grand slam event suffered a shuddering jolt with a defeat by France’s Aravane Rezai in the Madrid Open first round on Sunday.

Henin won the Stuttgart title on clay last week and is considered a dangerous outsider in Paris later this month but said she had been suffering from sickness since the German event and was not at 100 percent.

“When I came back from Stuttgart, I wasn’t feeling well at all,” she told a news conference.

“I just tried to come and see how I felt but to practise and play a match is a different story.

“Madrid has been a difficult experience this year and I hope that next year will be better.”

Her first serve was inconsistent and Rezai, the world number 22, took full advantage with a 4-6 7-5 6-0 win as the Belgian’s game collapsed in the deciding set.

Henin beat Australia’s Samantha Stosur in the final in Stuttgart last Sunday for her first title since she ended her 19-month self-imposed exile at the start of the year.

Henin said she had been suffering infections in her nose and throat and had lacked energy on the court.

“She was at a very good level and I was probably below my capacity and it wasn’t an easy day,” she said.

“I hope I will get better in a few days and get ready for the French Open now.”

TOP-10 DREAM

Maria Sharapova was another former world number one to fall at the first hurdle on the clay in Madrid, the Russian 11th seed going down 6-4 6-3 to Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic.

“It’s a struggle trying to find the rhythm,” a philosophical Sharapova, who was playing her first tournament since pulling out of the Sony Ericsson Open in March with an elbow injury, told a news conference.

Safarova broke Sharapova’s serve four times and the Czech is on course for a possible last-16 clash with sixth-seeded Russian Elena Dementieva.

“If you win against these top players, as I have the last couple of months, then you get your confidence and you realise you can be up there,” the world number 35, who beat number two Caroline Wozniacki in Stuttgart, told a news conference.

“My dream is to be top 10 and it’s a lot about believing in yourself.”

Fourth seed Venus Williams, also a former number one, plays qualifier Stefanie Voegele in the first round later on Sunday.

(Editing by Miles Evans; To query or comment on this story emailsportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Henin shocked in Madrid first round, Sharapova exits

Four-time French Open champion Justine Henin’s preparation for the Roland Garros grand slam event suffered a shuddering jolt with a defeat by France’s Aravane Rezai in the Madrid Open first round on Sunday.

Henin won the Stuttgart title on clay last week and is considered a dangerous outsider in Paris later this month but her first serve was inconsistent and Rezai, the world number 22, took full advantage with a 4-6 7-5 6-0 win as the Belgian’s game collapsed.

Henin beat Australia’s Samantha Stosur in the final in Stuttgart last Sunday for her first title since she ended her 19-month self-imposed exile at the start of the year.

Maria Sharapova was another former world number one to fall at the first hurdle, the Russian 11th seed going down 6-4 6-3 to Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic.

“It’s a struggle trying to find the rhythm,” a philosophical Sharapova, who was playing her first tournament since pulling out of the Sony Ericsson Open in March with an elbow injury, told a news conference.

“I thought (Safarova) played really solid, good tennis and did everything she needed to win the match. More solid than me anyway,” the 23-year-old added.

“I certainly had my chances in the match and a few balls here and there that I maybe would have made if I had the matches under my belt.”

Safarova broke Sharapova’s serve four times and the Czech is on course for a possible last-16 clash with sixth-seeded Russian Elena Dementieva.

“If you win against these top players, as I have the last couple of months, then you get your confidence and you realise you can be up there,” the world number 35, who beat world number two Caroline Wozniacki in Stuttgart, told a news conference.

“My dream is to be top 10 and it’s a lot about believing in yourself.”

Fourth seed Venus Williams, also a former number one, plays qualifier Stefanie Voegele in the first round later on Sunday.

(Editing by Miles Evans; To query or comment on this story emailsportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Pakistan investigates NY bomb plot Taliban link

Pakistan is investigating whether a Pakistani-American arrested over a botched plot to bomb New York’s Times Square met Pakistani Taliban leaders in their stronghold in the northwest, a minister said on Saturday.

Pakistani investigators were trying to verify information provided by the United States that the suspect, Faisal Shahzad, 30, had visited South Waziristan, a militant bastion near the Afghan border where the Pakistani military launched an offensive late last year, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said.

“Today we received a formal request from them in which they have given the details of the charges according to which Shahzad has been visiting South Waziristan and meeting Qari Hussain and Hakimullah Mehsud,” Rehman told reporters, referring to two Pakistani Taliban commanders.

“But it all needs confirmation.”

The Pakistani Taliban last Sunday claimed responsibility for the attempted car bomb attack the previous day, but a spokesman for the militants on Thursday denied links with Shahzad.

Mehsud is the head of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, while Hussain is referred to as the mentor of the Pakistani Talbian suicide bombers.

If confirmed that the Taliban in Pakistan sponsored the attempted bombing in New York, it would be the group’s first involvement in an attack on U.S. soil.

That would also put Pakistan under renewed U.S. pressure to intensify its crackdown on the militants.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in comments released by the U.S. CBS network on Friday, said U.S. ally Pakistan had been cooperating on the investigation.

But she also said the United States had warned Pakistan of “severe consequences” if a successful attack in America was traced back to Pakistan.

VIDEO THREAT

Mehsud was widely believed to have been killed in a missile strike by a pilotless CIA drone aircraft in January but he appeared in a video posted on the internet last week in which he threatened revenge suicide strikes in U.S. cities.

Hussain also appeared in a separate tape posted on the same day taking responsibility for the attack in the United States “with pride and valour”, apparently referring to the Times Square incident.

The New York police at the time said there was no evidence to support Taliban claim.

Malik said on Thursday he thought it unlikely that Shahzad acted alone.

Pakistani security officials say Shahzad, who is suspected of driving an explosives-laden SUV into Times Square, was close to Jaish-e-Mohammad, a group fighting Indian forces in the disputed Kashmir region.

The group also has ties to al Qaeda and the Pakistani Taliban.

Pakistani security agencies have arrested at least one Jaish activist, Mohammad Rehan, as he left a mosque linked to the group in the southern city of Karachi on Tuesday.

Other associates, including Shahzad’s father-in-law, have also been detained in Karachi, according to media reports.

The United States has asked to interview Shahzad’s parents, the Washington Post reported on Thursday.

But Malik ruled that out.

“The government of Pakistan will not allow any outside investigators to investigate our people,” he said.

(Reporting by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Robert Birsel and Sugita Katyal)

Fake IPL tickets stun Nari

Former India skipper Nari Contractor, who had to return home after being stopped at the gate of the D Y Patil Stadium on last Sunday for not carrying a valid ticket for the IPL final, said that he was flummoxed and wondered how this was allowed to happen by the ticket issuing authorities.

“I was completely stumped when I was asked for a badge to accompany the ticket. I did not have the badge, as it was not given to me along with the ticket. I just turned around and went back,” Contractor said.

“I would not blame the gatekeeper. He was doing only his duty. The main issue is how the Mumbai Cricket Association issued these fake tickets (by IPL),” the former India Test opener said.

Contractor had traveled all the way from his residence in South Mumbai to Nerul in the satellite city of Navi Mumbai a distance of around 35 kms only to return home without witnessing the summit clash between eventual champions Chennai Super Kings and Mumbai Indians.

The former India skipper had not seen any IPL match this season after the MCA boycotted all home matches of Mumbai Indians that were played at the Cricket Club of India’s Brabourne Stadium.

“The final was the first IPL match I would have seen this season as no passes were issued to me (or others) by MCA for the matches held at the CCI because of the dispute,” Contractor said.

Around 200 tickets for the final were handed over by IPL authorities directly to MCA officials who, in turn, distributed them to their members and former cricketers and all were stopped at the gate.

It needed the intervention of MCA’s joint secretary Lalchand Rajput who spoke to IPL’s CEO Sundar Raman before the association’s guests were allowed into the stadium but by then Contractor had chosen to go back.

The MCA has decided it will raise the issue of humiliation inflicted on Contractor at the upcoming BCCI working committee meeting here on May 2.

“We have written a letter to BCCI that many of our guests were stopped at the gate of the D Y Patil Stadium though they had valid tickets for the final as the persons manning the entry points declared them as fake,” MCA’s joint secretary Rajput informed PTI yesterday.

“It needed my personal call to IPL CEO Sundar Raman before they were allowed in after a long wait, but Contractor had, by then, returned home,” he said.

“The matter will be taken up at the Board’s Working Committee meeting (on May 2),” Rajput said.

MCA has also demanded that in future, the staging of all IPL ties will have to be done through the respective local association, the former India opener said.

This year, for example, Mumbai Indians directly dealt with the Cricket Club of India and held all the seven home matches at the Brabourne Stadium without going through MCA and the latter, in turn, boycotted these ties.

Key Crows to front Carlton

Adelaide duo Patrick Dangerfield and Kurt Tippett have been cleared of injury and will play against Carlton on Saturday.

The key Crows suffered injuries last weekend but proved their fitness at training on Friday to front the Blues at Football Park.

Dangerfield spent two nights in a hospital after injuring his neck and Tippett hurt his left ankle in Adelaide’s loss to Melbourne last Sunday.

“Both Tippett and Dangerfield at this stage are going to play, unless something happens between now and tomorrow,” Crows coach Neil Craig said on Friday.

“Patrick feels really well – no soreness, no stiffness, no headaches. He has run the last three days and trained this morning and did some competitive work out there.

“He’s been cleared medically so he’s confident to play.”

Craig confirmed 19-year-old Phil Davis will become the fourth Crow in four matches to make his AFL debut, replacing injured centre-half back Nathan Bock (hamstring).

Defensive dasher Graham Johncock also returns for a Crows side seeking their first victory of the season against the Blues, who have dumped senior duo Bret Thornton and Jarrad Waite, whose comeback from a knee reconstruction has stalled.

“We thought Bret’s form had been below par for a player of his ability and what he had produced over the years, so he has gone back to get a little bit of form at the VFL level,” Carlton coach Brett Ratten said on Friday.

“With Jarrad, it was more that maybe our expectations were a fraction high.

“His timing and things like that, he just went under a few high balls and he was just out a little bit, so we thought it would be good for him to go back as well and get the ball in his hands, take a few marks and get that timing back.

“Both players are very important to us and the quicker we can get them into form, the more that it will help us.”

The 10th-placed Blues, with one win from three starts, welcomed back skipper Chris Judd from suspension and utility Jeff Garlett for their first games this season, and have also named Simon White for his AFL debut.

Johnson set to miss Hawks clash

Western Bulldogs coach Rodney Eade says captain Brad Johnson is likely to miss Sunday’s AFL clash with Hawthorn as he continues to recover from a virus.

Johnson missed last Sunday’s win over Richmond and Eade said he was vomiting and had a high fever that night.

The coach said Johnson’s health was improving but given the amount of time he had spent out of action the club was unlikely to risk him.

Johnson was not part of the club’s training session on Wednesday.

“He looks he’s on the mend now, he probably should be right by Friday to train,” Eade said.

“What we’ve got to decide now is because he hasn’t trained for a week or 10 days, with his lack of game preparation does he need continuity as far as training?

“Indications are we will probably err on the side of being conservative with his condition as far as energy levels and have a week’s training next week.”

Fellow veteran Nathan Eagleton is set to spend another week in the VFL after working his way back from a preseason injury.

While the Hawks have been hit with several suspensions and injuries arising from Monday’s bruising clash with Geelong, Eade said he did not feel it was a good time to be playing them.

He said the physical nature of their clash with the Cats showed the Hawks were at their competitive best.

“I’m probably more worried about that than if they played a lacklustre game,” he said.

“… The fact that it was full intensity, that’s what you’d expect from them this week, so that’s what we’re thinking.

“It probably needs to heighten our awareness of what it’s going to be like this week.”

The Bulldogs hope to gain an edge in the ruck, where Hawthorn injuries mean youngster Brent Renouf is again set to take on two opponents – Ben Hudson and Will Minson – singlehandedly.

Despite solid efforts, Renouf has been worn down late in each of the first two rounds, contributing to the Hawks being heavily outscored in the final minutes of both.

“Obviously he was fatigued in the end, but that was certainly no fault of his,” Eade said.

“I think they’ll probably give him some more help this week, whether (Jarryd) Roughead does a bit more or whether (Luke) Hodge and these sort of players, but I thought the kid battled on pretty manfully.

“Hopefully we can get an advantage, but that’s like every week we go in, we know we’ve got two very good ruckmen and we hope we can get an advantage there every week.”

Worsfold calls for interchange cap

Famous moments such as Leo Barry’s leaping mark to help seal Sydney’s epic grand final win in 2005 may become even rarer if the AFL does not step in to cap interchange rotations, according to West Coast coach John Worsfold.

Worsfold has called for a cap on rotations of about 20 per quarter after the 16 AFL clubs averaged a whopping 113 interchanges in round one this season.

The figure more than doubled the average recorded in round one of 2007 and Worsfold, who feared the number could spiral to 150 if a cap is not implemented, said the upward trend was robbing the game of traditional match-ups and spectacular pack marks.

“As players are more fatigued sometimes you’ll see the real special things in the game,” Worsfold said on Wednesday.

“You’ll see the tired long kick into the forward line where a player will find that little bit of extra energy to take a hang.

“The way it is at the moment, the way it’s zipping around, you’re not really getting to see as much of that,

“I’d like to see it (rotations) capped at some point.

“I haven’t given it a huge amount of thought but my gut feel is looking at maybe (capping it at) 20 per quarter, which gives you plenty.

“I don’t think that would put players at risk of injuries.

“You know that gives you 80 (rotations) for the game, which is sort of about where it was averaging a couple of years ago.”

But Fremantle coach Mark Harvey, whose team made 125 rotations in its 56-point win over Adelaide last Sunday, cautioned against making knee-jerk reactions.

“If you want to extend the bench then possibly (I will support a cap),” Harvey said.

“The idea (of a cap), the principle, is OK.

“The reasoning why – I’m not sure why we are looking at it.

“I thought when I looked back at round one there was some exciting football … so why are we trying to hinder the game when it’s going forward?”

However, Harvey did agree that it was in the best interests of the game to have the best players out on the field for longer.

“From our point view we’d like to have our best players out there 80, 90, 95 per cent of the time,” he said.

“In the end you don’t want your rotations just for the sake of having a rest, you want it to try to make it an advantage for you from a team aspect.”

Meanwhile, West Coast sharpshooter Mark LeCras is almost certain to miss Saturday night’s match against Port Adelaide with a hamstring complaint.

LeCras pulled up sore from the Eagles’ 32-point loss to Brisbane last week and Worsfold conceded the 23-year-old was highly unlikely to play against the Power.

“He’s still a bit sore in his hamstring so probably unlikely to play this week considering how it’s feeling at the moment,” Worsfold said.

Worsfold said he would consider shifting Beau Waters up forward to cover for the absence of LeCras, while defender Scott Selwood is a strong chance to earn a call-up after starring in the WAFL last weekend.

- AAP

Crows injury list grows with Sloane out

Adelaide’s injury list has further grown with young utility Rory Sloane sidelined for six AFL matches with an ankle injury.

Sloane strained ligaments in his left ankle during the Crows’ loss to Fremantle last Sunday.

Adelaide has 10 players on its injury list, with Scott Stevens another addition on Tuesday with concussion.

Stevens, who was also injured against the Dockers, is in doubt for Adelaide’s home match against Sydney on Sunday.

But the Crows hope forwards Chris Knights and Brett Burton, who have both been sidelined by knee injuries, will return to full training this week.

-AAP

‘On fire’ Torres will prove why he is called Europe”s deadliest finisher: Benitez

London, Mar. 27 (ANI): Liverpool manager Rafa Benitez is confident that striker Fernando Torres would prove over the last seven Premier League games exactly why he is called Europe”s deadliest finisher.

“Fernando is on fire. People will be talking about his frustration but I will be talking about his accuracy. He is doing really well and if he can keep on doing the same, we can win against anyone,” The Sun quoted Benitez, as saying.

Despite bagging five goals in a fortnight, Torres’ behaviour in last Sunday”s 2-1 loss at Old Trafford came under the spotlight.

The Spaniard headed his side in front but then angrily scuffed up the spot when United got a penalty and later earned a yellow card as his frustrations boiled over.

Still, Benitez, whose side host Sunderland tomorrow, has no fears about Torres losing his head and blowing his side”s desperate bid for a Champions League finishing spot.

“We played United, who are at the top of the table and there wasn”t a big difference,” Benitez said.

”In training he is fine. He is scoring goals and I think he can carry on like this until the end of the season no problems. He has no physical problems and he can score, while the team is stronger now, too,” he added.

The amateur psychologists were out in force when Torres missed a late chance to level against United, claiming he could have scored if he had been fully focused.

But Benitez sees it differently.

“He is a strong character and knows the only way to improve is to try again – and he will. He has enough confidence,” he said.

“Everyone knows Torres and Steven Gerrard are very dangerous and a threat to other teams. They”ll push very hard until the end and that”s a big boost for us as the other players will follow them,” he added. (ANI)

Date set for 2011 Oscars

There are only 48 weeks left until the 83rd annual Academy Awards.

In its 2011 schedule, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has slotted February 27 for its next ceremony.

The Oscars this year took place on the first Sunday in March to avoid going head-to-head with the closing ceremony of the Winter Olympics.

Next year’s show will return to the last Sunday in February – a spot on the calendar the Oscars has occupied since 2004. As a result, Hollywood’s awards season will be shortened by at least a week.

Academy Award nominations will be announced on January 25.

- Reuters

Eighth F1 title is still possible, says Schumacher

Melbourne, Mar 26(ANI): Seven time Formula One champion Michael Schumacher has said that he is aiming for his eighth title this season.

“My expectation was to fight for the championship and I still think that this is possible,” The Daily Telegraph quoted Schumacher, as saying.

“Can we win the championship this year? That is a tough question. It is a long year and I have been in much worse circumstances at the beginning of the year and still taken a championship. I am not feeling pessimistic at all. I know it is hard work and we will make a big effort,” he added.

Schumacher, who finished sixth in the season opener of F1 in Bahrain last Sunday, reckons that he will be stronger in Australia, where he has won four times.

He is also pushing the technical team, led by his former Ferrari chief Ross Brawn, to deliver a car that responds to his needs and driving style.

“I feel excited. It is a great challenge to work again and to develop projects and events. That is always where there is excitement. You never stand still, it is always an ongoing process. This is what I want to do, but I have to be motivated,” Schumacher said. (ANI)

Webber has best chance to win Australian GP: Button

Melbourne, Mar 25(ANI): Reigning Formula One champion Jenson Button has hinted that local hero Mark Webber has the best chance of winning the Australian Grand Prix this weekend at Albert Park.

Button said Webber and the Red Bull cars were extremely quick, despite their eighth place finish in last Sunday’s Bahrain Grand Prix.

“I think he will be quick here. I don”t think you saw the best of Mark in Bahrain. I think he will be more competitive here in front of the home crowd,” The Age quoted Button, as saying.

“The last race for him was not that great, but I think he”ll be quick here. He”s quick and he”s dedicated and that”s the thing about Mark. He”s focused and he won”t stop until he wins.”

“Hopefully for him he”ll have a good weekend, hopefully for me he doesn”t. You”d have to say the Red Bulls are very strong. The Red Bulls and the Ferraris were so quick in Bahrain,” he added.

The 30-year-old further said the drivers would look to have an exciting race this time, as the Bahrain race was “not the most exciting from a fan’s point of view”.

“I think we can improve it and it takes all of us to look at what happened and not get too worried about it and hope that this race is better – this one and the next race, in Malaysia,” Button said.

“After that we can”t just point fingers. We all need to work on improving the spectacle if it”s not there, but hopefully it will be,” he added. (ANI)

Button expects quick Webber in Melbourne

Formula One world champion Jenson Button has strongly hinted local hero Mark Webber has his best chance so far to win his home race this weekend.

Button says Webber and the Red Bull cars were extremely quick, despite the result in last Sunday’s Bahrain Grand Prix when the Australian finished eighth.

Button, who was seventh behind the winning Ferrari of Fernando Alonso, intimated Webber’s mistake in qualifying was the key which held him back, forcing him down the grid for what was a processional race.

“I think he’ll be quick here. I don’t think you saw the best of Mark in Bahrain,” Button said.

“I think he’ll be more competitive here in front of the home crowd.

“The last race for him was not that great but I think he’ll be quick here. He’s quick and he’s dedicated and that’s the thing about Mark. He’s focused and he won’t stop until he wins.

“Hopefully for him he’ll have a good weekend, hopefully for me he doesn’t.

“You’d have to say the Red Bulls are very strong. The Red Bulls and the Ferraris were so quick in Bahrain.”

With Button seventh and McLaren team-mate Lewis Hamilton third at the weekend, the Briton forecast a better performance this week.

“I think we’ll be a lot closer here. This circuit should suit as well,” Button said.

“Lewis has had a good time here before and also I have, so hopefully we can get a good result.

“This circuit is a low downforce circuit so that should suit us reasonably well.”

Button also warned against a knee-jerk reaction to the outcry after the “follow-the-leader” Bahrain GP, which had viewers switching channels in frustration.

A ban on refuelling during races and teams restricted to a single pit stop made for a humdrum spectacle in the Gulf state, with drivers anxious to avoid tyre wear.

“The last race was not the most exciting from a fan’s point of view,” Button said.

“I think we can improve it and it takes all of us to look at what happened and not get too worried about it and hope that this race is better – this one and the next race, in Malaysia.

“After that we can’t just point fingers.”

- AAP

Schumacher vows to be back with a vengeance in Australian GP

London, Mar 19(ANI): Seven time Formula One champion Michael Schumacher has vowed to be more competitive in the next race of the season at the Albert Park circuit in Australia.

Schumacher, who finished sixth in the season opener of F1 in Bahrain last Sunday, reckons that he will be stronger in Australia, where he has won four times.

“I am very happy with the outcome of the season opener in Bahrain. Sixth position was good for me, especially considering how few times I have driven an F1 car since my retirement,” The Mirror quoted Schumacher, as saying.

“I am sure that Melbourne will help me to get into the rhythm even more and I am looking forward to it. Australia has always been one of the highlights on the F1 calendar and this has never changed for me in all my years of competing,” he added.

Schumacher, who had retired in 2006, has signed a three-year contract to drive for the new Mercedes GP team. (ANI)

China”s elections won”t be Western-style, says lawmaker

Beijing, Mar.20 (ANI): China has said that it will adhere to its own mode of development instead of adopting Western-style elections.

“Different countries have different election rules and a socialist China won”t follow Western election campaigns,” the China Daily quoted Li Fei, the deputy director of the legislative affairs commission under the Standing Committee of the National People”s Congress (NPC), the country”s top legislature, as saying.

He was speaking after the adoption of the latest amendment to the Electoral Law last Sunday.

Li, who has been leading the revision, said some people want to expand direct elections, but the current priority is to perfect existing direct elections at county and township levels.

Whether in terms of justice or fairness, a society must pay more attention to “substantial democracy”, which in China means that there should be representatives from all areas, ethnic groups and walks of life, Li said.

“Western-style elections, however, are a game for the rich. They are affected by the resources and funding that a candidate can utilize. Those who manage to win elections are easily in the shoes of their parties or sponsors and become spokespersons for the minority,” Li said, referring to Western elections at the national level. (ANI)

Doctor prayed to God to heal Beckham”s Achilles tendon

London, Mar. 20 (ANI): The surgeon who operated on David Beckham”s Achilles tendon has revealed that he prayed to God to help him heal the former England skipper’s wounds.

Dr Sakari Orava said he begged for the Lord”s help in healing Becks” Achilles tendon, which he ripped playing for AC Milan.

“It wasn”t so easy to get back to sleep. But I”m a devout Christian, so my wife and I prayed. We said it is not up to us, it”s in bigger hands to see if things go fine,” The Sun quoted Orava, as saying.

Milan bosses made a frantic phone call to the world renowned Achilles expert on Monday.

Becks, 34, tore his tendon last Sunday.

He was operated at the orthopaedic surgeon”s clinic in the Finnish city of Turku the next day.

Beckham has been ruled out playing in the World Cup.

“There is mental stress and pressure, but you can”t show it. The job needs to be done. My hands were not trembling,” he said. (ANI)

Beckham writes open letter to AC Milan mates

London, Mar. 20 (ANI): A torn Achilles may have forced David Beckham out of the game but the England star has expressed full support to his mates at AC Milan by posting an open letter on the club’s website.

“I want to wish everyone the best of luck and to say I hope they win the title. I would also like to thank you all for your support after the Chievo match,” The Sun quoted Becks, as saying..

“I hope to play with you again and be part of this marvellous club,” he added.

Beckham, 34, is out for the season after he tore his Achilles during Milan”s 1-0 win against Chievo last Sunday.

Beckham was on loan at the Serie A club from LA Galaxy.

He underwent surgery earlier in the week but is also ruled out of this summer”s World Cup. (ANI)