Musharraf denies misuse of US aid, says Indian media highlighting ‘non-issue’

Lahore, Sep.16 (ANI): Days after former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf’s statement that Islamabad had diverted US aid to strengthen its defence against India was splashed in the media all over, the former general has denied allegations of misuse of army equipment, saying the media has highlighted a ‘non-issue’.

Dr Nasim Ashraf, one of Musharraf’s close friends, told a private television channel that the former President has categorically denied misuse of any US military aid during his regime.

Ashraf said it was wrong to say that the Pakistan Army had violated the agreement regarding the equipments supplied by the US.

“If a unit stationed in Waziristan moved to Kashmir, the equipment would move with it, which was not a violation of the agreement,” The Daily Times quoted Ashraf, as saying.

Responding to a question he said Musharraf would return to Pakistan as soon as his lecture tour is finished.

It is worth mentioning here that in an interview to a Pakistani news channel earlier this week, Musharraf had admitted that he had violated the rules governing the use of the military aid, but justified his action, saying he had “acted in the best interest of Pakistan.” (ANI)

Musharraf may meet Obama in October during US ‘lecture tour’

Islamabad, Sep.9 (ANI): Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf may meet President Barack Obama in October, when he visits the United States for a lecture tour.

According to Musharraf’s lawyer, Chaudhry Fawwad, the former general will be arriving in Washington on September 14 for his 40-day US trip.

Musharraf is being paid a whopping fee of 300,000 dollars per lecture to various American think tanks and other institutions, Fawwad said.

Only former US president Bill Clinton is being paid as much for delivering a lecture and nobody else is being paid more than this amount,” PKonweb quoted Fawwad, as saying.

Musharraf is expected to deliver lectures in 17 American states during his tour. (ANI)

Prince Charles likens himself to ‘tree hugging’ ancestor Henry VIII

London, July 9 (ANI): Prince Charles has likened himself to Henry VIII, saying his ancestor was a tree hugger, just like him.

The Royal made the reference while urging action to stop climate change during the 2009 Richard Dimbleby Lecture in London.

“Henry instigated the very first piece of green legislation in this country. In ordering the building of a great many ships, he effectively founded the Royal Navy,” The Sun quoted him as saying.

“But there came a moment when Henry realised that creating his fleet was putting too much strain on the natural supply of wood, particularly oak,” he added.

Charles further hailed the then king’s introduction of the Preservation of Woods law in 1543, to ensure that the country did not run out of timber.

He said: “It was a simple and rather elegant piece of long-term thinking.”

He added: “What was instinctively understood by many in King Henry’s time was the importance of working with the grain of Nature to maintain a balance.” (ANI)

Microscopic ‘beads’ may revolutionise organ transplantation

Washington, July 7 (ANI): If Medical College of Georgia researchers are to be believed, organ transplantation in future may include microscopic beads that create “designer” immune cells so that patients may tolerate their new organ.

Dr. Anatolij Horuzsko, reproductive immunologist at the MCG Center for Molecular Chaperone/Radiobiology and Cancer Virology, has already used this approach successfully in mice with skin grafts.

“It’s absolutely natural,” says the researcher.

The degradable microparticles deliver the most powerful known form of HLA-G, a natural suppressor of the immune response, straight to dendritic cells, which typically show the immune system what to attack.

The microparticles are given right after a transplant, just as dendritic cells are giving the immune system a heads up to get busy attacking the new organ.

Dr. Horuzsko says that microparticle therapy likely would be needed for just a few weeks, until the dendritic cells have learned instead to ignore it.

“It’s like a calming effect and once tolerance is established, we don’t need it any more,” he says.

His team compared the success of HLA-G microparticles with the dendritic cell marker to those without a marker, those with were much more efficient at getting where needed and acting.

He says that those without direction likely were consumed by garbage eaters called macrophages.

“We want to create in kidney transplant patients, the same tolerance to the new kidney,” says Dr. Horuzsko, who reckons that HLA-G microparticles could be doing just that within five years.

He presented the patented process along with his other latest HLA-G findings during an opening lecture of the 5th International Conference on HLA-G in Paris, July 6-8.

Dr. Horuzsko believes that marked microparticles also have treatment potential in diseases where the immune system attacks normal tissue, such as arthritis, multiple sclerosis and inflammatory bowel disease.

He is currently working in collaboration with Dr. Laura Mulloy, chief of the Section of Nephrology, Hypertension and Transplantation Medicine in the MCG School of Medicine, to find out whether higher natural levels of HLA-G already are giving some transplant patients an edge, by comparing HLA-G expression in those who keep and reject their transplanted kidneys. (ANI)

Meira Kumar to inaugurate MLAs orientation programme in Bhopal

Bhopal, July 4 (ANI): A two day orientation programme of the legislatures of the Madhya Pradesh Assembly will be inaugurated by Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar in Bhopal today.

Besides Meira Kumar, Madhya Pradesh Assembly Speaker Ishwar Das Rohani, the state’s Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kailash Vijaywargiya and the Leader of Opposition, Jamuna Devi will also guide the newly elected MLAs.

The BJP’s Deputy Leader in the Lok Sabha, Sushma Swaraj will deliver a lecture on how to become an effective MLA while former Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Digvijay Singh will speak on the role of young MLAs in the empowerment of the parliamentary culture in the programme.

Besides them, former Union Minister Vikram Verma and former Secretary General of the Lok Sabha Subhash Kashyap, Jharkhand Assembly Speaker Inder Singh Namdhari, MP Satyavrat Chaturvedi, MP Sandeep Dikshit, former MP Thavarchand Gehlot and former Lok Sabha general secretary G C Malhotra, and some other experts in parliamentary and legislative procedures will also guide the new members on legislative issues.

Lok Sabha Deputy Speaker Karia Munda will chair the closing ceremony. (ANI)

Musharraf buys flat in UK, to be new neighbour of Tony Blair

London, May 25 (ANI): Pakistan’s former president General (retired) Pervez Musharraf has bought a flat in the Edgeware Road neighbourhood where former British premier Tony Blair lives and Interior Minister Rehman Malik possesses a house, sources have said.

Malik’s flat was the venue of the signing of the historic Charter of Democracy between the late Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif.

But some of his close friends in London said that Musharraf is looking around to buy a flat in central London, preferably around Edgware Road area where most of the property is owned by Arabs and where a two-bed room flat costs around pounds 500,000 to pounds 700,000.

Others said that he was looking for a villa in Chelsea where the property was worth between two million pounds to five million pounds.

In London, Musharraf stays at the Richmond house of his old friend and long-standing bridge partner Brigadier Niaz, The Dawn reported.

Musharraf’s close friends also insist that he has no intention of settling down in the UK. But his detractors are convinced that he has no plans of going back home, at least until the retirement of Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry.

One of his old friends, a former air force officer, Zafar Iqbal, is said to have approached a number of well-informed persons to get an idea about the various possibilities in store for Musharraf on his return home.

Meanwhile, Musharraf has left for Prague where he is scheduled to deliver a lecture at a defence-related think tank on May 27.

Musharraf arrived in London early last month after having travelled to China and Saudi Arabia on what is being described by his friends as a post-retirement extended holiday. (ANI)

US wants to seize Pakistan’s atomic program: Riaz Khokhar

Lahore, May 12 (ANI): Former Foreign Secretary Riaz Khokhar has said that US can never be Pakistan’s friend as it wants is to seize the atomic program by creating unrest here and proving that Pakistan is a failed state.

Giving a lecture here in Aiwan Karkunan-e-Tehreek-e-Pakistan, he said the US wants the Afghan war to spill over and spread in the tribal areas of Pakistan.

“Our nuclear installations are under no threat internally,” The News quoted Khokhar, as saying.

He said it would be dangerous to include India in the Pak-Afghan trade but it is Pakistan People’s Party that has planned to invite the former on board.

The Ex foreign secretary said: “Pervez Musharraf is responsible for disbanding Hurriyat Conference.”

Only a couple of Kashmiris liked the Pervez Musharraf’s formula for resolving Kashmir issue. (ANI)

Strong social networks benefit baboons

Washington, May 9 (ANI): A monkey communication expert at the University of Pennsylvania has suggested that baboons benefit from strong social networks.

Robert Seyfarth came up with this proposition while delivering a lecture on May 5, the kick-off of the University of Delaware’s Year of Darwin celebration, where he told a true story about a female baboon that herded goats in an African village.

He revealed that the baboon knew all of the relationships between the goats so well that at night she would carry a bleating kid from one barn directly to its mother in another barn.

“For all the centuries we’ve bred dogs, no dog has exhibited this knowledge of kids and mothers. The question is where does this mind come from?” said the Psychology professor at the university.

Seyfarth revealed that he and his research partner Dorothy Cheney, who happens to be his spouse, studied the baboons of Botswana’s Okavanga Delta from 1992 to 2008.

He said that his study suggested that the baboon’s ability to recognize social relationships was due to natural selection.

The researcher revealed that the baboons studied live in groups of 80-90 individuals. Males would leave the group in which they were born, while females stayed in the group for their entire lives, with close bonds to female relatives.

He said that the females were arranged in a matrilineal hierarchy of families, with ranks maintained for years. Although once in a while a coup was attempted, such moves were not often successful.

In their experiments, the researchers observed that baboons with names like Sylvia, Champagne, and Helen, and recorded their language, which consisted of no more than 18 sounds, and the interactions of their families.

They found that baboons used certain calls only in certain contexts. Screams and fear barks were only given from a lower-ranking to a higher-ranking baboon, while threat grunts were given only from a higher-ranking to a lower-ranking baboon.

The researchers recorded the various calls, played them in situations that “break the rules”, and determined from the animals’ behaviour that baboons were able to put together the discrete elements of identity, kinship, and rank.

“The animals somehow see this world in all of its complexity. It’s an innate property of the baboon mind — done instantly and unconsciously,” Seyfarth said.

He and Cheney were also able to measure the animals’ stress levels by analysing faecal samples for gluccocorticoid stress hormones. They found that pregnancy and incidences of predation to be major stressors.

Also, some high-ranking males practice infanticide, targeting infants by rank. Mothers may form relationships with lower-ranking males who will help look after their babies.

“Females respond to stress by associating with their closest grooming relationships. They turn to their support network if they lose someone. They broaden and extend to replace old relationships with new ones. Female baboons with strong social bonds survive better,” Seyfarth said.

Seyfarth and Cheney’s work is highlighted in the award-winning book Baboon Metaphysics: The Evolution of a Social Mind, published by the University of Chicago Press in 2007. (ANI)

US Ku Klux Klan ex-leader ordered to leave Czech Republic

Prague – Czech police said Saturday they had released David Duke, former leader of US extremist group the Ku Klux Klan, and ordered him to leave the Czech Republic by midnight. On Friday, police charged Duke with the hate crime of supporting and promoting movements suppressing human rights.

Duke had planned to give talks this weekend in the capital as well as in the country’s second largest city of Brno. He is visiting the Czech Republic at the invitation of local neo-Nazis to publicize the translation of his 1998 memoir, My Awakening.

Contrary to earlier statements, the state attorney on Saturday decided against asking the court to keep Duke in custody, police spokesman Jan Mikulovsky told the German Press Agency dpa.

While police could have held Duke for 48 hours without court’s consent, they decided to release him as he had been already questioned, the spokesman said. Upon release, the Czech Republic’s immigration police ordered him to depart the country on Saturday.

Police said they charged Duke for allegedly denying the Holocaust in a translated book he had come to promote.

“In his book he is promoting views that show signs of denying the Holocaust,” Mikulovsky told dpa.

Denying that the systematic mass murder of Jews and other minorities by Nazi Germany took place is a hate crime in the Czech Republic punishable by up to three years in prison.

Earlier this week, Prague’s Charles University banned a lecture by Duke for a class on extremism. The university said it cancelled it out of a fear that it could have been attended by neo-Nazis.

Political activities of Czech far-right groups have been on a rise in recent months, including provocative marches through Roma ghettos.

Duke, 58, is a white supremacist and a supporter of racial segregation. Aside from being a former chief of the Ku Klux Klan, he had served as a lawmaker in the Louisiana’s House of Representative and unsuccessfully ran for US president. (dpa)

Convincing Pak internal terror bigger threat to it than India proving “tough sell” for US

Lahore, Apr.23 (ANI): The United States is finding convincing Pakistan that the internal threat posed by extremism is a bigger threat to it than India, a “tough sell”.

Delivering a lecture at the Harvard University, Central Command chief General David Petraeus said Islamabad must change its attitude towards New Delhi.

“The existential threat facing Pakistan is internal extremists and not India,” The Daily Times quoted Petraeus, as saying.

Petraeus said India realizes that reducing tension with Pakistan is very necessary for regional peace, so Pakistan should also focus more on its efforts in fighting extremism inside its territory.

Meanwhile, addressing a US think tank, Senator Joseph Lieberman also highlighted the need for Islamabad to understand and realize who its real enemy was.

“Pakistanis have to understand that their major enemy in the region is no longer India, but its extremism. In fact, they have a common enemy in that with the Indians,” Lieberman told Council on Foreign Relations.

However, Lieberman said that it was very difficult to make Pakistan accept the fact that it’s internal problem is the root cause of all the trouble.

“That’s a tough sell,” he added. (ANI)

Jordan Islamists called for Pope Benedict to postpone Mideast trip

Amman – Jordan’s influential Muslim Brotherhood movement on Sunday urged Pope Benedict XVI to postpone his planned Middle East visit next month and to apologize for statements that the group considers “injurious” to Islam.

“We hope that the Vatican will take a decision to postpone the visit until certain issues are cleared,” Muslim Brotherhood official spokesman Jamil Abu Bakr said in a statement.

“The pope’s visit to the region should reflect collaboration of Muslims and Christians throughout history, but sticking to provocative attitudes will not serve this message.”

The head of the Roman Catholic Church is due to arrive May 8 in Jordan for a four-day visit to be followed by stops in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

Abu Bakr urged the pontiff to “apologize to Muslims for his remarks against Islam and the Prophet Muhammad.”

“Ignoring Muslims’ sentiments by Pope Benedict XVI will only block the healing of wounds his statements caused,” he said without specifying the statements made previously by the Pope against Muslims.

During a 2006 lecture at the University of Regensburg in Germany, where he once taught theology, Benedict quoted a 14th-century Byzantine emperor, one of the last Christian rulers before the fall of Constantinople to the Muslim Ottoman Empire: “Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.”

The quote sparked an uproar in the Muslim world, and Benedict later apologized for giving any offense in a historical lecture that he said was meant to encourage mutually respectful dialogue with Muslims. He emphasized that the offensive words were not his own.

Abu Bakr expressed Islamists’ objection to the pope’s scheduled visit to the Holocaust memorial in Israel, saying the visit “will take place only a short time after the Zionist entity killed hundreds of Palestinian children, women and old men in the Gaza Strip. We ask if the Pope of the Vatican will visit Gaza to explore how humanity is being violated, or this does not deserve his visit?”

An estimated 1,300 Palestinians died during a 22-day conflict in December and January between Israel and the Palestinian militant movement Hamas, which rule Gaza.

During his trip to Jordan, Benedict is scheduled to visit a mosque in Amman and meet with a number of prominent Muslim scholars. (dpa)

Vice President to arrive in Shimla today

Shimla, Apr 15 (ANI): Vice President Hamid Ansari will arrive here on a two-day visit today.

During his visit, Ansari will visit to his alma mater St Edward’s School.

The Vice-President is visiting the school for the first time since 1951 when he left the place after studying here for two years. He is expected to spend a few hours at the school interacting with teachers and students.

Besides, he is also scheduled to give lecture at the Indian Institute of Advanced Studies (IIAS). (ANI)

Foreign Minister: Bangladesh is secular – not Muslim – country

Dhaka – Bangladesh’s Foreign Minister Dipu Moni on Saturday described her country as secular with a majority Muslim population, and not a moderate Muslim state as portrayed by the international community. “Bangladesh is a non-communal country where the majority of the people belongs to the Muslim faith. We achieved our independence through an armed struggle with a dream of establishing a secular nation,” the minister told reporters after delivering a lecture in Dhaka on Bangladesh’s foreign policy.

She said the ruling Awami League party, which led the nation in 1971 liberation war against Pakistan, never believed in the idea of moderate democratic Muslim country, which most Western diplomats consider Bangladesh.

Many countries have been given different labels but it is not necessary to take someone else’s definition when it contradicts one’s own fundamental values, she said.

After independence from Pakistan, Bangladesh drew up a constitution with secularism as a basic principle in 1972, but subsequent military dictators replaced secularism in the constitution with Islam as state religion in mid-1980s.

The provision of Islam as a state religion is theoretically still in force and there has been no move by the ruling Awami League- alliance government to return to the original constitution. (dpa)

Musharraf says Obama’s AFPAK policy incomplete without India

Beijing, Apr.12 (ANI): Former Pakistan President General (retired) Pervez Musharraf has said that the US President Barack Obama’s revamped AFPAK policy is incomplete without India, and a solution to the Kashmir issue.

Replying to queries following his lecture at the Shanghai Institute for International Studies here, Musharrraf said nothing was new in Obama’s policy, and it was a continuation of US’s older strategies for the region.

Some heavy lobbying from the Indian-American community forced Obama to exclude India from the policy, Musharraf said.

Musharraf emphasised on the need for closer global cooperation to defeat extremism. He also urged the Chinese leadership to play a more proactive role in the issue, The Nation reported.

Musharraf is on a visit to China to deliver a series of lectures in major cities of the country focusing on the relationship between Pakistan-China. (ANI)

Porn film shown on US college campus despite funding threats

Washington – A few hundred students gathered at a US university campus to watch a pornographic film, chanting slogans about free speech and protesting threats by a state senator to cut funding if the movie was screened.

Students of the University of Maryland watched excerpts of Pirates II: Stagnetti’s Revenge on Monday night, which was followed by a discussion on free speech by lawyers and professors.

Only half an hour of the two-and-a-half-hour film was shown – but the students had made their point.

Senator Andrew Harris, a Republican in the Maryland state legislature, had last week threatened to block 424 million dollars of funding to the university after the movie was set to be screened at the student union, the Washington Post reported Tuesday.

“I know some students would like to portray this as a free speech issue. It is not,” Harris said in a statement. The screening at the student union theatre was cancelled last week. On Monday, the film was shown at a lecture hall and was not paid for by the university.

Some students thought it was a controversy over nothing, while a few were appalled that the film was shown on campus. “That was crazy. I don’t know what they were thinking, to put that in a public viewing, especially on a college campus,” Idara Inokon, 19, told the Post. “It’s just not appropriate.”

The university said in a statement: “Although not condoning this movie or any excerpts from it that might be shown, the University of Maryland must allow this event, but has insisted that it include an educational component.”

For the Student Power Party coalition, the push to go ahead with the film despite threats was to show that they would not be bullied.

“It’s a great opportunity to have more of a dialogue on free speech and the role of pornography in society,” said Malcolm Harris, one of the organizers, adding that Harris was also invited, but declined. (dpa)

Trial date of Wen shoe-thrower changed over “sensitivities”

London – The trial of a German academic accused of hurling a shoe at Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao at Cambridge University in Britain has been brought forward to avoid it clashing with events marking the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

German researcher Martin Jahnke, 27, was due to go on trial on June 2, 3 and 4 on charges of having “harassed, alarmed or distressed” the Chinese premier during his visit to Cambridge on February 2.

But the city’s magistrates court said Tuesday that the trial dates had been switched to June 1, 2 and 3 because June 4 is the 20th anniversary of the shooting by the Chinese army of pro-democracy protestors in Beijing.

Prosecutor Punam Malhan told the court that staging the trial on the anniversary created “concerns” and “security issues.” The court’s legal advisor also said that June 4 would be a “sensitive date.”

Jahnke, a researcher at the university’s pathology department, is alleged to have thrown a shoe at Wen while he gave a lecture to students during his visit to Britain two months ago.

Jahnke has admitted throwing a shoe – which narrowly missed Wen – but denies having caused harassment, alarm or distress.(dap)

Goa ministers splurge taxpayers’ money

Panaji, April 5 (IANS) The Goa government has spent nearly Rs.1.5 crore on food and almost Rs.13 lakhs refurnishing the official residences of three senior ministers and the speaker, according to written replies given by the government to questions raised in the state assembly.

Chief Minister Digambar Kamat threw one party at Eid and another at Christmas. The combined bill came to nearly Rs.11 lakhs, according to one of the replies to a set of questions posed by two legislators – Dayanand Narvekar of the ruling Congress and Vasudev Gaonkar of the Bharatiya Janata Party – during the recent budget session of the assembly.

Kamat also hosted a dinner for historian Romila Thapar and journalist P. Sainath when they were here for a lecture series. The bill for the dinner at a five-star resort came to Rs.244,000, according to a reply in the assembly.

A group of experts was here in September for a seminar on Strategies for Improving Livelihood Security for Rural Poor. Health Minister Vishwajeet Rane treated the delegates to a dinner. The money spent was Rs.310,000, says another reply, adding that the guests also went on an evening cruise on the Mandovi river at the cost of the exchequer.

All the food bills, along with several others which totalled nearly Rs.15 million, were footed by the Arts and Culture Department, which is under the chief minister.

Curtains in the official residence of Home Minister Ravi Naik here cost Rs.123,000 and those in Public Works Department Minister Churchill Alemao’s home Rs.58,036. Two TV sets given to Alemao cost over Rs.100,000.

Assembly Speaker Pratapsing Rane’s liquor cabinet is richer. He bought a wine opener for Rs.875, wine glasses for Rs.800, beer glasses for Rs.200, a set of crystal glasses for Rs.1,000 and cocktail glasses for Rs.1,200, all paid for by the exchequer, says a reply. Add to that a set of bathroom glasses costing Rs.700 each.

All the bills for home furnishings and cutlery were footed by the PWD, along with a host of others, taking the total to almost Rs.1.3 million.

The Goa treasury has an outstanding debt of Rs.50 billion.

Asked if there was a standard procedure or a cap on such expenses, officials in the protocol department of the state government chose not to answer.

Sixty new CBI courts to be set up

NEW DELHI: Chief Justice of India K G Balakrishnan on Thursday announced the setting up of 60 new CBI courts across the country to expedite disposal
of cases involving the agency.

“Sixty new CBI courts will be set up across the country. A recent survey shows 9,000 cases involving CBI are pending in various courts,” Justice Balakrishnan said while delivering the 10th D P Kohli Memorial lecture on Criminal Justice System — Growing Responsibility in the Face of Challenges in Modern Society.

Justice Balakrishnan said criminal law provisions needed to be examined in a fresh light so as to accommodate the logic of punishment as well as compensation. A majority of punitive remedies enumerated in the statutes, such as fines, penalties and imprisonment, were not proportionate to the degree of harm suffered by the victim.

He also emphasised that if the extent of compensation had to bear a rational correlation to the actual harm suffered, the trial judge would need to make a thorough inquiry into the nature and degree of such harm. “There is obvious question about the source of funds for granting compensation to the victims,” he added.

“I am quite optimistic that the proposed changes will definitely improve the role and status of victims in the criminal justice system. The larger agenda of criminal justice reform touches on many more issues — such as better training for police personnel, a clear separation between the investigation and prosecution functions and continuous education for lawyers and judges,” the CJI said.

He cautioned though that if failures of criminal justice system were allowed to continue, they would only encourage offenders to commit more crimes and correspondingly lead to acts of vigilante justice. He also said an efficient yet fair criminal justice system was an essential requirement for a liberal democracy and these issues should be at the forefront of the agenda of all political parties.

Gilchrist to deliver Cowdrey Lecture

London, Apr.1 (ANI): Former Australian wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist will give the 2009 MCC Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture at Lord’s on June 24.

The 37-year-old, still playing Twenty20 cricket for Indian Premier League side Deccan Chargers, will be the youngest person to give the lecture, established in 2001 in memory of former England captain Colin Cowdrey.

Gilchrist was on the winning side in 73 of his 96 Tests, the last of which he played in 2008, and was a key member of the all-conquering Australia team which has dominated world cricket since the late 1990s.

Gilchrist’s average never dipped below 47. (ANI)