Videogame adaptation “Kane” eyes new director

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – F. Gary Gray is in talks to direct “Kane and Lynch,” a video game adaptation starring Bruce Willis and Jamie Foxx.

Film

The game follows Kane (Willis), a death row inmate who, along with a schizophrenic killer named Lynch (Foxx), is sprung by Kane’s former team so that he can retrieve a stolen fortune. Kane travels to Los Angeles, Japan and Cuba, with Lynch acting as the team’s watchdog in order to save his wife and daughter.

Stunt coordinator Simon Crane was attached to direct the Nu Image/Millennium project, but he left last month due to creative differences. Wayne Kramer (“The Cooler”), Roger Donaldson (“The Bank Job”) and Gray landed on the shortlist, with Gray rising to the top.

Gray was most recently in theaters with the violent thriller “Law Abiding Citizen,” starring Foxx and Gerard Butler. His other credits include “The Italian Job” “The Negotiator” and “Set It Off.”

MorrisAnderson Promotes Dan Dooley to Chief Executive Officer

CHICAGO, IL, Jun 07 (MARKET WIRE) —
MorrisAnderson announced today that it has named Dan Dooley as chief
executive officer (CEO), effective immediately. In his new role, Dooley
will be responsible for guiding the financial and operational advisory
firm’s strategic growth, as well as overseeing its nine offices
throughout the country.

Dooley joined MorrisAnderson in 1997 and for the past five years has
managed the firm’s operations as chief operating officer (COO). In this
role, he has successfully increased the firm’s focus on industry
specialization, as well as driven its expansion from 25 professionals and
four offices, to 40 professionals and nine office locations. During his
13-year tenure with MorrisAnderson, Dooley has managed more than 50
projects and held interim CEO and CRO positions in numerous client
engagements. In addition, the automotive industry credits him as a top
negotiator as a result of his work with leading U.S. automakers. He also
has negotiated numerous transactions involving the sale, refinancing and
recapitalization of companies, including the closing of four transactions
in 2010.

“Dan’s dynamic leadership skills and ability to develop our consultants,
as well as his expertise in both the operational and financial advisory
sectors, make him the best possible leader to drive MorrisAnderson’s
continued growth,” said Alan Glazer, former CEO of MorrisAnderson and one
the firm’s three founding partners. “Another outstanding quality of Dan’s
is his ability to cultivate meaningful relationships with our clients,
banks, law firms and investors. I am confident these qualities will
ensure he upholds MorrisAnderson’s tradition of excellence our clients
have come to expect.” Glazer served as CEO of Morris Anderson for the
past five years and will remain with the company full time as a senior
principal and project manager.

“Dan has deep knowledge of many industries — from automotive and
aerospace to construction products and restaurants — and understands the
importance of expanding the firm’s footprint to accommodate distressed
middle-market companies in untraditional industries, such as real estate
and oil and gas,” said Ken Yager, chief marketing officer of
MorrisAnderson. “In doing so, we’ll be well positioned to quickly respond
to and better anticipate the needs of our clients, as well as take
advantage of opportunities in new industries.”

Prior to joining MorrisAnderson in 1997, Dooley served as an executive in
both financial and general management roles at several Fortune 500
manufacturers, including Illinois Tool Works and Allied Signal. He also
founded and operated a niche footwear manufacturer. Dooley is a Certified
Turnaround Professional (CTP), past president of the Chicago Chapter of
the Turnaround Management Association (TMA), a past board member and vice
president of the TMA International and a current committee co-chair for
the American Bankruptcy Institute (ABI). He is a frequent panelist and
author in the areas of distressed businesses and insolvency. Dooley
earned his bachelor’s degree in business administration and his M.B.A. in
finance from the University of Minnesota.

About MorrisAnderson
Now celebrating its 30th anniversary, Chicago-based
MorrisAnderson has offices in New York, Atlanta, Milwaukee, Los Angeles,
Cleveland, St. Louis, Charlotte, N.C. and Minneapolis. The firm’s service
offerings include performance improvement, financial advisory, interim
management, turnarounds, workouts, litigation support and insolvency
services and wind-downs. MorrisAnderson emphasizes hands-on involvement
for companies with $50 million to $500 million in annual sales.

Image Available: http://www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=1273593

Contact:
Monica Heckman
Reputation Partners (for MorrisAnderson)
(312) 819-5720
monica@reputationpartners.com

Marjorie Dunn
Manager, Marketing & Communications
MorrisAnderson
(312) 254-0892
mdunn@morrisanderson.com

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

Kiwi PM slammed for cannibalism comment

Wellington, May 13 (ANI): Kiwi Prime Minister John Key has come under fire for joking that Tuhoe would “have him for dinner”.

“The good news is that I was having dinner with Ngati Porou as opposed to their neighbouring iwi which is Tuhoe, in which case I would have been dinner, which wouldn”t have been quite so attractive,” the New Zealand Herald quoted Key, as joking about enjoying a dinner at a Ngati Porou marae on the East Coast of the North Island this week.

Key”s comment, made during a tourism event held in Auckland, came three days after the announcement that Tuhoe would not be given Te Urewera National Park as part of a Treaty of Waitangi settlement.

This was despite iwi understanding a settlement was in the offing after 18 months of negotiations.

Chief Tuhoe negotiator Tamati Kruger said Key”s statement hadn”t offended him, but in light of where the Tuhoe people were with the prime minister “it gives me the sense that whatever we say or do he will never, ever take it seriously.”

Kruger added: “He is affirming a rigidness which is not really in the spirit of good faith negotiations. He is really going to force Tuhoe into a position that makes us look like the bad guys – like we are walking out of negotiations…” (ANI)

Lib-Dems behaving like �every harlot in history� says David Blunkett

London, May 11 (ANI): In yet another twist in the post-election frenzy former British home secretary, sharp-tongued David Blunkett has likened the Lib-Dems to a �harlot�, apropos to the hemming and hawing on the part of the Lib-Dems in forming an alliance that will decide which party comes to power.

“Can we trust the Liberal Democrats?” Mr Blunkett asked in an interview with the BBC, “They�re behaving like every harlot in history.”

The Lib-Dems� vacillation has had senior members of both Labour and Tory fuming.

Both the Labour Party as well as the Tory Party have been wooing the Lib-Dems with Gordon Brown even offering to step down as Prime Minister.

Thus far Clegg�s negotiators have displayed an their inclination toward the Tories, Blunkett pointed this out in an interview with the BBC, he believes that the Conservatives are more likely to come to power and advised his party�s top-brass to gracefully accept their position as the Opposition rather than hastily cobble together an impractical coalition.

“I don�t think it will bring stability, I think it will lead to a lack of legitimacy and I think it will make people think that we haven�t listened to them,” he told the BBC.

The Lib-Dems convened for an exhaustive meeting at the House of Commons yesterday, they were there till the wee hours.

“We are keen to settle things as soon as we can. I am as anxious as anyone else,” The Telegraph quoted Nick Clegg as saying.

Negotiator David Laws described the meeting as “good and extensive” and said MPs and peers would gather again today. The next 24 hours are crucial for all three parties as a new coalition is likely to emerge within this time-frame.

Meanwhile, Conservative Party members launched a broadside against Brown, with Lord Heseltine, another former Tory Cabinet minister, claiming Mr Brown�s attempted deal with the Lib Dems was �party politics at its most sordid�.

A Lib Dem-Lab tie-up is highly unfeasible in terms of sustainability of numbers, the formation of a new coalition at the earliest is now imperative since the British markets have been facing a lean period as a result of the power vacuum.

Investors are hoping for a Lib Dem-Tory pact over a Lib Dem-Lab one because both parties are less ambitious about tackling the deficit than the Tories.

“Markets are quite nervous and look as though they will continue falling unless theres a resolution that leads to someone who is going to address that problem,” Terry Smith, chief executive of broker Tullet Prebon told the paper. (ANI)

Climate talks at dead-end, says India

Beijing, May 10 — India has low expectations of reaching a global agreement to fight climate change when world leaders meet later this year in Mexico to take forward the bitterly divided Copenhagen talks held last December. “We’ve reached virtually a dead-end,” Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh told the media in Beijing.

“The prospect of a breakthrough is very, very remote. There’s no silver lining.

At the most, there’ll be a political statement.” Ramesh said the political authority of the US to influence a binding agreement at Cancun (in Mexico) has eroded after failing to push through its own climate legislation.

Both the US and China, the world’s top two polluters, are reluctant to make a major concession without the other side giving in first. The US remains ‘very uncomfortable’ with the bonhomie between India and China in resisting pressure from the developed nations to make binding emission cuts.

“India was critical to China in Copenhagen,” he said. “The Chinese know it in their hearts that India was absolutely essential.

we saved China from isolation. If a deal had not been signed Obama would have gone back to the US and painted China as the devil.

” After a watered-down Copenhagen statement was signed, recalled Ramesh, China’s top climate negotiator Xie Zhenhua ‘thumped his fist twice on the table and shouted at US President Barack Obama’. Obama reportedly defused the tension by saying that Xie was congratulating them.

“I guess he was trying to say that the Americans were not fulfilling their part of the bargain,” Ramesh said. India emits about 4.5 per cent of the world’s greenhouse gases, compared to China’s 23 per cent.

‘India should build on the Brahmaputra’ India should build hydel power projects on the Brahmaputra to strengthen negotiating power with China, said Ramesh.

INTERVIEW – U.S. to host major economies meeting on climate

The United States will host a meeting of major economies on April 18-19 in Washington to advance talks on a global deal to fight climate change, the top U.S. climate negotiator said on Wednesday.

Todd Stern told Reuters he hoped U.N. climate talks in 2010 would lead to agreements on six outstanding issues, including financing for poor countries’ pollution-control efforts, but he said it was unclear whether a legally binding deal to reduce greenhouse gas emissions would be reached this year.

“Is there going to be a legal treaty? I think we don’t know that,” Stern said.

The Major Economies Forum, which helped nudge big emitters to support a goal of limiting global warming to less than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) above pre-industrial levels, was not intended to be a negotiating forum to replace the United Nations, Stern said, reiterating U.S. policy.

Analysts have speculated the forum or other groups would take on a greater role this year in climate negotiations after chaotic U.N. talks in Copenhagen in December ended without a legally binding pact.

“There is, in general, an increasing pace now of discussions,” Stern said, referring to different meetings worldwide on climate change.

“We will look forward to having a pretty broad discussion about what people’s expectations are this year” during the talks in Washington, he said.

The Major Economies Forum groups 17 countries that account for roughly 80 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. The countries have not met on climate issues since the Copenhagen summit.

Stern said Germany would also host a ministerial level meeting of some 40-45 countries on May 2-4.

With only about eight months left before U.N.-sponsored global negotiations on climate change set for Cancun, Mexico, Stern said countries had not yet worked out basic procedural questions. Those issues, Stern said, will feature during a batch of U.N. talks beginning in Bonn, Germany, on April 9-11.

EYES ON UNITED STATES, CHINA

Stalled progress in the U.S. Senate on a bill to curb domestic emissions has hampered global talks. Stern said he hoped there would be movement in that area.

“It’s obviously highly important that progress be made on the domestic front,” he said, adding the bill was critical for U.S. leverage and credibility in U.N. negotiations.

“It’s important first and foremost for the United States, for our own national security and economic interests and environmental interests,” Stern said.

President Barack Obama and many of his fellow Democrats in the U.S. Congress want to put the United States on a path toward reducing carbon dioxide emissions 17 percent by 2020 compared to 2005 levels.

While that goal is significantly below commitments made by some other countries, notably European economies, it would be seen as major progress by the world’s second-largest carbon polluter after China.

Stern declined to predict whether a bill would pass this year. Analysts view it as an uphill fight to enact legislation before the congressional elections in November.

Stern also declined to predict the outcome of global talks but said he hoped more progress on issues such as mitigating the effects of climate change and making different countries’ goals to curb emissions transparent would be made.

“There are fundamentally six big issues at the center of negotiations: mitigation, transparency … financing, technology, forests and adaptation,” he said.

“It would be a quite desirable outcome to essentially conclude text on all of those issues.”

China will be a key player in international talks. Stern said Beijing had done a lot domestically to fight climate change but needed to do more.

“We appreciate what’s been done and more needs to be done and we have to see how it goes this year,” he said.

He praised China for signing up to the Copenhagen Accord on global warming but said there have been questions about “the degree to which (Beijing was) prepared to internationalize their efforts in the sense of reaching international agreements as distinguished from just taking domestic action.”

More than 110 countries have signed up to the Copenhagen Accord on fighting global warming, but the United Nations says their emissions cutting pledges are insufficient.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Iran says sanctions not to stop nuclear work-agency

TEHRAN, April 2 (Reuters) – International sanctions will not prevent Iran from pursuing its nuclear activities, said the country’s top nuclear negotiator on Friday, the official IRNA news agency reported.

“Iranians are familiar with sanctions … We consider sanctions as opportunities … We will continue our (nuclear) path more decisively,” Saeed Jalili was quoted by IRNA as saying in China.

The West accuses Iran of covertly trying to build nuclear weapons. Iran says its nuclear power is aimed at generating electricity.

The United States and its European allies want to curb the Islamic state’s nuclear activities and are pushing for new U.N.-backed sanctions against Tehran.

China, a veto-wielding member of the United Nations Security Council, has for months fended off the calls to back sanctions.

Jalili flew to Beijing on Thursday to hold talks with Chinese officials. Iran is a major oil supplier to China. (Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Iran says sanctions not to stop nuclear work-agency

TEHRAN, April 2 (Reuters) – International sanctions will not prevent Iran from pursuing its nuclear activities, said the country’s top nuclear negotiator on Friday, the official IRNA news agency reported.

“Iranians are familiar with sanctions … We consider sanctions as opportunities … We will continue our (nuclear) path more decisively,” Saeed Jalili was quoted by IRNA as saying in China. (Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Q+A – Where does China stand on Iran sanctions?

Iran’s top nuclear negotiator is heading to China for talks on Thursday as Western governments become increasingly confident that Beijing will back sanctions against Iran over its disputed nuclear activities.

WHAT IS CHINA’S GENERAL POSITION ON SANCTIONS?

China has long said sanctions are not an effective tool to solve diplomatic disputes, and its diplomats have often repeated that line in answering questions about Iran.

That position partly reflects Beijing’s resentment of Western sanctions it has faced, especially after the 1989 armed crackdown on pro-democracy protests around Tiananmen Square.

It also chimes with China’s stance of “non-interference” in other nations’ domestic affairs, a position that has often amounted to wanting to insulate its economic interests from diplomatic disputes.

But Beijing has backed previous rounds of U.N. sanctions against North Korea and Iran over their disputed nuclear activities. China this year also threatened to put unilateral sanctions on U.S. firms selling weapons to Taiwan, the self-ruled island that Beijing claims as its own.

Since the 1990s, China has cast itself as a responsible supporter of nuclear non-proliferation safeguards.

That desire to be a respected global player and not be isolated from dominant international opinion could weigh in favour of China allowing fresh sanctions against Iran, especially with Russia indicating it may back sanctions.

HOW WILL CHINA HANDLE THE NEW SANCTIONS PUSH AGAINST IRAN?

China is one of five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council with the power to veto any proposed resolution.

While Beijing sometimes abstains from Security Council votes on decisions it dislikes, it is much less willing to use its veto and risk diplomatic isolation, especially if fellow Security Council member Russia backs a resolution.

China is more likely to use its influence to draw out negotiations on sanctions and try to thwart any measures that could threaten its energy and economic ties with Iran, as it has done before.

In July 2006, China backed U.N. Security Council Resolution 1696 that threatened sanctions on Iran, and in December of the same year it supported Resolution 1737, which imposed sanctions on Iranian nuclear imports and exports.

It supported two further resolutions, one in 2007 which broadened the sanctions to cover a ban on Iranian arms exports, and another in 2008 which criticised Iran for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment.

Each time, however, Beijing has worked to rein in Western demands for tougher restrictions on Tehran.

A draft sanctions document circulated by Western powers a few weeks ago proposes restricting more Iranian banks abroad, but does not call for sanctions against Iran’s oil and gas industries.

WHY IS CHINA OPPOSED TO STRICT ECONOMIC SANCTIONS?

Beijing sees Iran as an important oil supplier and trade partner and as a major strategic actor in the Middle East, where China is buying growing volumes of oil. There is scant chance of China risking those ties by backing expansive economic sanctions.

China is the world’s No. 2 crude oil consumer, behind the United States. Iran has the world’s second-largest crude oil reserves, but needs investment to develop them.

In 2009, Iran was China’s third biggest source of imported crude oil. But in the first two months of 2010, China imported 2.53 million metric tonnes of Iranian crude oil, a drop of 37.2 percent compared to the first two months of 2009.

That made Iran the fourth-ranked foreign source of crude for China so far this year, behind Russia, Angola and top supplier, Saudi Arabia.

China is also an investor in Iranian oil and gas, and Chinese state-owned energy conglomerates have been exploring for new fields there, with an eye to expanding their stake.

Industry sources have said China has been selling gasoline to Iran, which lacks refining capacity to meet domestic demand. Chinese customs statistics do not record any shipments, which may go through intermediaries.

(Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

U.S. plays down hopes for Afghan reconciliation

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Wednesday the timing was still not right for reconciliation with senior Afghan Taliban leaders, acknowledging military pressure had yet to weaken the group enough.

“The shift of momentum is not yet strong enough to convince the Taliban leaders that they are in fact going to lose,” Gates told lawmakers during a congressional hearing.

“And it’s when they begin to have doubts whether they can be successful that they may be willing to make a deal. I don’t think we’re there yet,” he added.

Gates’s comments, upholding Washington’s long-standing concerns, came the same day a negotiator for one of Afghanistan’s main insurgent groups, Hezb-i-Islami, said its leadership was ready to make peace and act as a “bridge” to the Taliban, if Washington fulfills plans to start pulling out troops next year.

Hezb-i-Islami negotiator Mohammad Daoud Abedi told Reuters the decision to present a peace plan was taken as a direct response to a speech by U.S. President Barack Obama in December. Obama announced plans to deploy an extra 30,000 U.S. but set a mid-2011 target to begin a withdrawal.

“There is a formula: ‘no enemy is an enemy forever, no friend is a friend forever,’” Abedi said. “If that’s what the international community with the leadership of the United States of America is planning — to leave — we better make the situation honorable enough for them to leave with honor.”

U.S. officials have repeatedly said an American withdrawal will be gradual, at a speed that will depend on conditions on the ground and on Afghanistan’s ability to provide for its own security.

Admiral Mike Mullen, who as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is the top U.S. military officer, cautioned against over-optimism created by reconciliation talk in congressional testimony on Wednesday. He said the U.S. war effort was not “going to end rapidly.”

‘VERY TOUGH’

“I worry about the sort of hope that gets created immediately when you see a little light here that this is going to end rapidly,” Mullen told lawmakers.

“I just don’t see that. This is a tough, very tough part of the process.”

Islamabad has also offered to play a role in negotiations with the Taliban and its recent arrest of a top Afghan Taliban commander has increased speculation that Pakistan wants to have a place at the table when talks occur.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, on a visit to Washington for high-level talks with the United States, said he had discussed with Afghan President Hamid Karzai what role Pakistan could play.

Qureshi said Pakistan saw reconciliation as an “Afghan-led, Afghan-owned” process.

“It is their choice. If they feel we can contribute, if we can help, we will be more than willing to help, but we leave it to them,” Qureshi told reporters at a joint news conference with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

“We want a peaceful, stable, friendly Afghanistan. Period,” he added.

Asked what role she thought Pakistan could have, Clinton said: “I agree with what the foreign minister said.”

Analysts say Pakistan has long seen the Afghan Taliban as a tool to promote its interests in Afghanistan where it wants to see a friendly government in power and to lessen the influence of its old rival India.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart, Adam Entous and Sue Pleming in Washington and Peter Graff in Kabul; Editing by Eric Beech and Will Dunham)

INTERVIEW – Turkish EU negotiator hopeful over Cyprus talks

Turkey’s chief EU negotiator urged Greek Cypriots on Wednesday to do more to seek a peace deal for their divided island and said he did not expect reunification talks to break down after an election next month.

EU affairs minister Egemen Bagis also said in an interview he was confident Turkey would one day join the bloc but made clear it was not about to open its ports to Greek Cypriot ships in a dispute that is holding up progress towards accession.

Bagis said he was hopeful talks would continue after the April 18 presidential election on the Turkish side of Cyprus despite suggestions they would stop if hardliner Dervis Eroglu ousted Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Talat Ali.

“Would Eroglu be as enthusiastic for a comprehensive solution as Talat? We all need to see. But at least I hope so,” Bagis told Reuters during a visit to Brussels.

Opinion polls put Eroglu ahead of the more moderate Talat, who has been holding talks with the Greek Cypriots since September 2008 but has secured no breakthroughs on issues linked to power-sharing on the Mediterranean island.

Eroglu wants a two-state solution that Greek Cypriots oppose and diplomats have said talks could collapse if he wins.

The dispute over Cyprus, which has been divided since Turkey invaded the island in 1974 after a brief coup inspired by Greece, has hampered Turkey’s bid to join the EU.

The EU says Turkey must carry out promises under a 2005 agreement known as the Ankara protocol to open its ports and airports to traffic from the Greek Cypriot part of the island.

Asked whether he expected any movement on the dispute, Bagis said Turkey wanted the EU first to end its international isolation of the northern part of Cyprus, a self-declared state recognised only by Ankara.

“Yes, we can (open up the traffic routes) — if the EU decides to implement its decision (to end isolation),” he said.

“INSULTING” ALTERNATIVES

Bagis said Turkey would conclude reforms needed to meet EU entry requirements by the end of 2013. But many national governments, including in France and Germany, are reluctant to invite Turkey to join the bloc because of public opposition.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is due to visit Turkey next week and Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan will go to France next month.

Bagis said relations with Berlin were strong and made clear Turkey would not welcome Germany reiterating calls for Ankara to be offered only a “privileged partnership” promising closer economic and other ties but not full membership.

“We have appreciated the fact that she has not used this horrible and insulting phrase of ‘privileged partnership’ for the last nine months and I think this is an important development,” he said.

Bagis dismissed the significance of cultural differences between the EU and Turkey, a secular state of about 70 million people, almost all of them Muslims, and said the EU would gain from Turkey’s accession.

“This is a chance for the EU to prove if it is really a club of elites, a Christian club, or a union of values,” he said.

“The EU cannot sustain itself without enlargement, we have to be realistic,” he said.

(Writing by Justyna Pawlak; Editing by Timothy Heritage and Jon Hemming)
Justyna Pawlak and Timothy Heritage

Obama names Indian-American Muslim as Special Envoy to Islamic world

WASHINGTON: An Indian-American Muslim who is a product of the liberal, syncretic cultures of India and the United States has been appointed Washington’s special envoy to the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC), much to the delight of Indian-Muslims who see this as vindication of their plural and moderate ethos by the Obama administration.

The White House on Friday named Rashad Hussain, an Obama acolyte who is son of Indian immigrants from Bihar, as the US envoy to the 57–member OIC, following up appointments of several Indian-Americans, including at least two other Indian-American Muslims, to high level posts.

One of the appointees, Srinagar-born Farah Pandit, who is the State Department’s Special Representative to Muslim communities, arrived in New Delhi on Monday on a visit aimed at furthering Washington’s engagement with Muslims around the world. Obama has also named Dr Islam Siddiqui, an immigrant from Uttar Pradesh, as the Washington’s chief agricultural negotiator, although the nomination is currently held up in the Senate.

White House officials said that as Special Envoy to the OIC, Hussain will ”deepen and expand the partnerships that the US has pursued with Muslims around the world” since Obama’s speech in Cairo last June in which he reached out to the Islamic world.

”As an accomplished lawyer and a close and trusted member of my White House staff, Rashad has played a key role in developing the partnerships I called for in Cairo. And as a hafiz of the Qurân, he is a respected member of the American Muslim community, and I thank him for carrying forward this important work,” Obama, whose middle name is also Hussain (which he gets from his father, although the President is a practicing Christian) said in a statement.

Born in Wyoming, Rashad Hussain grew up outside Dallas, Texas, where his parents still live. His father, Mohammad Hussain, is a retired mining engineer from Bihar, while his mother, Ruqaya, is a gynaecologist. His older sister, Lubna, is also a physician, while his younger brother, Saad, is a medical student. The accomplished Indian-American Muslim family offers a different perspective from the dark vision that fundamentalist, grievance-filled Muslims offer.

Hussain completed a bachelor’s degree in philosophy and political science, from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where his thesis was titled, “Assessing the Theistic Implications of Big Bang Cosmological Theory.” He also holds a Masters degree in Arabic & Islamic Studies from Harvard University, and got his J.D. from Yale Law School, where he served as an editor of the Yale Law Journal.

Between Harvard and Yale, he worked as legislative aide on the House Judiciary Committee, where he reviewed the USA Patriot Act and other bills. In January 2009, President Obama named him deputy associate counsel to the White House after he had served as a trial attorney at the US. Department of Justice.

Incidentally, Obama also has appointed at least three other Indian-American legal luminaries to administrative posts. He chose Preeta Bansal, 42, as Counsel and Senior Policy Advisor in the Office of Management and Budget, and Neal Katyal, 38 as Principal Deputy Solicitor General, the number two position in the Office of the Solicitor General in the Department of Justice. He also named Ferozepur-born Preet Bharara as the US Attorney for Manhattan.

But Rashad Hussain’s appointment was particularly sweet for Indian Muslims who have won high praise in the US (including from former President George Bush) for their liberal, syncretic values that contrast sharply with the dark vision of many of their co-religionists in the region. Bush often expressed admiration for the fact that India’s 160 million-plus Muslims were largely immune to grievance-laden extremists types that proliferate in neighboring Pakistan, something which is constantly being challenged.

Hussain’s appointment delighted Indian-Americans, including one fellow Indian-American who was also in line for the job. ”Rashad is greatly influenced by the Indian ethos of pluralism and inclusiveness. As a Special envoy to the OIC, he will initiate a positive relationship between America and the Muslim nations, I am proud of his heritage; an Indian, Muslim and an American,” said Mike Ghouse, a Dallas-based inter-faith activist from India who has known the Hussain family and who was also under consideration for the post.

Hussain’s appointment is also politically and diplomatically significant in the context of New Delhi’s own uncertain ties with the OIC. The OIC has not accepted India as a full-member it having the world’s second largest Muslim population after Indonesia, mostly on account of Pakistan’s historical insecurities and fears.

Pressed by Islamabad, the OIC some months back appointed Abdullah Bin Abdul Rahman Al Bakr, OIC’s assistant secretary-general for political affairs, who is from Saudi Arabia, as the special envoy on J&K to examine the human rights issues. That few OIC countries, least of all Saudi Arabia, are well known for their protection of human rights was lost on the organization.

Hussain’s appointment now comes as a huge embarrassment for a militarized, army-dominated Pakistan, whose espousal of a militant, intolerant brand of Islam to cement its national security is increasingly being questioned in Washington. In fact, Pakistani officials have been deeply resentful of what they see as the growing ”Indian” influence in Washington and Congressional circles and launched a crude, toxic propaganda against Indian-American serving in the administration.

In a vicious attack last week, a Pakistani newspaper accused Preet Bharara, the Obama-appointed US attorney in New York, of carrying out a witchhunt against Pakistanis in the US because of his ”ideological beliefs” going back to the sub-continent’s partition days. The paper also alleged that Bharara appointed a ”like-minded controversial Indian who is also known for his hatred and venomous propaganda against Pakistan, Anjan Sahni, as Chief of the Terrorism and International Narcotics Unit soon after he assumed the charge of US Federal Attorney of New York.”

Clinton meets Obama, discusses release of two American journalists

Washington, Aug.19 (ANI): Former U.S. President Bill Clinton went to the White House on Tuesday and briefed incumbent Barack Obama and his top aides about his recent trip to North Korea, which resulted in the release of two American women journalists-Laura Ling and Euna Lee.

According to the New York Times, the 40-minute session took place in the White House Situation Room. Before the meeting, Clinton spoke to the president by phone and briefed his national security adviser, Gen. James L. Jones.

The paper said that the meeting was rich in symbolism. The president invited Clinton to the Oval Office to talk further.

The White House said little about what the men discussed, beyond noting that Obama had wanted to thank Clinton for winning the release of Ling and Lee.

The paper also revealed that Clinton’s visit to North Korea would not have materialized had not been for the role played by veteran North Korean hand and intelligence officer, Joseph R. DeTrani.

DeTrani is the government’s senior officer responsible for collecting and analyzing intelligence on North Korea. His efforts to pave the way for Clinton’s visit offer a glimpse into how the administration was forced to use unorthodox methods to overcome the lack of formal communications between Washington and Pyongyang.

The visit was arranged under a veil of secrecy with the help of De Trani, who has spent much of his career trying to unlock the mysteries of North Korea.

His role in the whole episode allowed Clinton to land in Pyongyang on August 4 to win the release of two imprisoned American journalists.

Clinton was determined not to extend a public-relations coup to North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il, who feted him over a long dinner that night, even proposing to stay up afterward.Kim was flanked by two longtime aides – a surprise to Americans who had suspected that both men had been pushed aside – and he gave no hint that North Korea was in the throes of a succession struggle, despite the widespread questions over how long he might live.

Kim expressed a desire for better relations with the United States. De Traini and John Podesta, a trusted adviser to him and Obama, assisted Clinton.

The details about Mr. Clinton’s visit came from interviews with multiple government officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

Before taking the job of North Korea mission manager in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in 2006, DeTrani served in the State Department as the special envoy to the six-party talks with North Korea, holding the rank of ambassador.

In that job, he got to know key North Korean officials, including Kim Kye-gwan, the chief nuclear negotiator, who greeted Clinton. DeTrani also worked with David Straub, a former head of the State Department’s Korea desk, who was a member of Clinton’s delegation.

More than anything else, Clinton’s visit served to clear up some of the shadows surrounding Kim Jong-il’s health.

The former American president did not engage in a substantive discussion about North Korea’s nuclear program. Nor did the North Korean leader give Clinton any indication that his nation would relinquish its nuclear ambitions – a condition the United States has set for resuming negotiations, officials said. (ANI)

Jacko was just a normal guy who loved bargaining, says childhood pal

London, June 30 (ANI): Michael Jackson might have been known for his wild behaviour, but for music producer and King Of Pop’s childhood pal David Gest, he was a loyal friend who made him laugh.

Gest spilled the bean on his 40-year friendship with Jackson, who died last Thursday aged 50.

“There is nobody who knew Michael like I did. He was so gifted, it’s hard for me to picture him gone. There is a whole side to him people never saw,” the Sun quoted him as saying.

“For instance, people always think of him as talking in that high, soft voice, but he didn’t really speak like that – it was a facade.

“Still to this day I am not sure why he did it. The Michael I knew talked like a real man, acted like a real man and shook a hand like a real man,” he added.

Gest revealed that despite enjoying enormous fortune at the peak of his career, the ‘Thriller’ hitmaker loved to bargain.

“He loved haggling over the price in stores. If something was 4,000 dollars, he would cheekily start them at 200 dollars.

“He was an arch negotiator. People thought he was absolutely nuts but he actually got away with it sometimes,” Gest added.

Jackson also loved to read especially classic literature.

“What a lot of people don’t know about Michael is that he was always reading. He was an intelligent man. His favourite poet was Robert Burns and he was obsessed with the novels of Charles Dickens,” Gest said.

Meanwhile, it has been revealed that the body of late superstar could be put on display in a glass coffin so that fans can bid adieu to the star before his burial.

According to reports, the King of Pop’s family has discussed the idea of a see-through casket to allow the public to see him one last time. (ANI)

Mousavi seeks to overturn Iran election result

TEHRAN – Defeated candidate Mirhossein Mousavi demanded on Sunday that Iran’s presidential election be annulled and urged more protests, while tens of thousands of people hailed the victory of the hardline Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Mousavi’s supporters again took to the streets after violence on Saturday, clashing with police in protests that have underscored political rifts exposed by Friday’s disputed vote.

In a statement on his website, Mousavi said he had formally asked the Guardian Council, a legislative body, to cancel the election result.

“I urge you, Iranian nation, to continue your nationwide protests in a peaceful and legal way,” he added.

Mousavi’s supporters handed out leaflets calling for a rally in Tehran on Monday afternoon. After dusk some took to the rooftops across the city calling out “Allah Akbar” (God is greatest), an echo of tactics by protesters in the 1979 Islamic revolution.

The unrest that has rocked Tehran and other cities since results were declared on Saturday is the sharpest expression of discontent against the Islamic Republic’s leadership for years.

The election result has disconcerted Western powers trying to induce the world’s fifth biggest oil exporter to curb its nuclear programme. U.S. President Barack Obama had urged Iran’s leadership “to unclench its fist” for a new start in ties.

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden cast doubt on the election result but said Washington was reserving its position for now.

“It sure looks like the way they’re suppressing speech, the way they’re suppressing crowds, the way in which people are being treated, that there’s some real doubt,” he told NBC’s “Meet the Press” when asked if Ahmadinejad had won the vote.

Germany, one of Iran’s biggest trading partners and a negotiator in the West’s nuclear talks with Tehran, has summoned the Iranian ambassador, the foreign minister said.

“We are looking toward Tehran with great concern at the moment. There are a lot of reports about electoral fraud,” Frank-Walter Steinmeier told Germany’s ZDF television.

An adviser to French President Nicolas Sarkozy, said what was happening in Iran was “clearly not good news for anyone, neither for the Iranians nor for peace and stability in the world.”

SEA OF FLAGS

Ahmadinejad appeared amid a sea of red, white and green Iranian flags waved by partisans thronging Tehran’s Vali-e Asr square, some perched on rooftops or cars, to applaud the victory he achieved with a surprising 63 percent of the vote.

“Some … say the vote is disrupted, there has been a fraud. Where are the irregularities in the election?” he said in a speech that the crowd punctuated with roars of approval.

“Some people want democracy only for their own sake. Some want elections, freedom, a sound election. They recognize it only as long as the result favors them,” he declared.

Tarverdi Chegine, a 35-year-old government employee, told Reuters: “We have a very brave president. I love him.”

He said anti-Ahmadinejad protesters were not true Iranians. “They belong to the West. They belong to Bush. We are anti-Bush.”

After the rally, witnesses said Ahmadinejad and Mousavi supporters clashed on a main Tehran street. A Reuters reporter saw fires and broken glass on the street, people throwing stones, and riot police on motorbikes. One policeman was beating people on the pavement with a rubber truncheon.

About 2,000 students at Tehran University, some with Mousavi posters, others covering their faces with bandanas, chanted anti-government slogans and taunted riot police across the road outside. Some threw stones at police when they chased protesters who had tried to gather outside the university gates.

Abdul Reza, 26, standing behind the gates and watching as police charged the crowd outside, said: “Mousavi is the real president of Iran. Ahmadinejad did not win the election.”

Speaking at a news conference Ahmadinejad described the election as “clean and healthy” and dismissed complaints by defeated candidates as sour grapes.

He consigned Iran’s nuclear dispute to the past, signaling no nuclear policy change in his second term, and warned that any country that attacked his own would regret it. “Who dares to attack Iran? Who even dares to think about it?” he asked.

Iran’s refusal to halt nuclear work the West suspects is aimed at making bombs, a charge Tehran denies, has sparked talk of possible U.S. or Israeli strikes on its nuclear sites.

FRAUD REJECTED

Police have detained over 100 reformers, including a brother of former President Mohammad Khatami, a leading reformer said. A police official denied Khatami’s brother had been arrested.

Interior Ministry officials have rejected accusations of election fraud and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s top authority, has called on Iranians to back their president.

A senior Western diplomat in Tehran said he believed the authorities would soon subdue the street unrest, but said Ahmadinejad’s re-election battle had exposed a polarizing power struggle between radicals and moderate conservatives which could affect the Islamic Republic’s long-term stability.

“There is turbulence in the whole system,” he added.

A spokesman for Mousavi said his newspaper, Kalameh-ye Sabz, and its website had been shut down. Mobile telephone text services have also been interrupted in Tehran for several days, and the British Broadcasting Corporation said Iran was using “heavy electronic jamming” to interrupt its widely watched BBC Persian television service.

Muslim militants free three abducted teachers in the Philippines

Zamboanga City, Philippines – Muslim militants Tuesday freed three schoolteachers after four months in captivity in the southern Philippines, a rebel negotiator said.

The three teachers were abducted by Muslim Abu Sayyaf rebels on January 23 at sea off Zamboanga City and held captive in the jungle of nearby Basilan province, 900 kilometres south of Manila.

Hadji Hassan Lamla, an official of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) who helped negotiate the release, said the teachers were freed before noon in Ajul town in Basilan.

Lamla identified the freed teachers as Freires Quizon, Raphael Mayonado and Jeanette Delos Reyes.

It was not clear if money changed hands for the release.

Abu Sayyaf rebels are still holding captive three schoolteachers, a Sri Lankan peace advocate and a lending firm employee in the jungles of Basilan.

A separate group of Abu Sayyaf guerrillas has been holding captive an Italian Red Cross worker on the nearby island of Jolo since January 15. Two other Red Cross workers were freed in April. (dpa)

Samuel L. Jackson keen to play Andrew Mwanguru

Washington, May 8 (ANI): Hollywood actor Samuel L. Jackson is keen to play the lead in a film about Andrew Mwangura, a negotiator between pirates and the owners of vessels hijacked off the coast of Africa.

Jackson’s Uppity Films has already collaborated with Andras Hamori’s H20 Motion Pictures to secure life rights of Mwangura.

Mwangura is a journalist and ex-marine engineer who runs the Seafarers’ Assistance Programme, a non-profit group that offers humanitarian aid to all seafarers.

Hamori flew to Mombassa and negotiated a rights deal as Mwangura brokered the freedom of crew and cargo of the Ukrainian ship V.S. Faina for 3.4 million dollars. The price was high because the pirates discovered a secret cache of Russian tanks.

“(Andrew) has the trust of the pirates and the ship owners, and his loyalty is to the kidnapped crews that get caught in the middle of these episodes,” Variety magazine quoted Hamori as saying.

Jackson and Hamori earlier teamed up to produce ‘Formula 51′, and are currently in pre-production of an adaptation of the J.G. Ballard novella ‘Running Wild’ that Jackson will topline. (ANI)

China and Taiwan agree to strengthen business relations

Beijing – Negotiators from Taiwan and China signed a series of agreements Sunday to increase cooperation and investment across the Taiwan Strait. Taiwan’s chief negotiator Chiang Pin-kung, chairman of the Straits Exchange Foundation, met Chen Yunlin from the mainland Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits in the southern city of Nanjing.

Taiwan agreed to clear the way for Chinese companies to do business on the island, the state-run news agency Xinhua reported.

“Taiwan sincerely welcomes mainland companies to invest on the island,” according to a foundation statement quoted in the report.

“The goal of economic normalization between the two sides is being realized,” Wang Yi, director of China’s State Council Taiwan Affairs Office, was quoted as saying.

The negotiators, meeting for the third time since China and Taiwan resumed talks last year, also signed three separate agreements.

The first would increase the frequency and routes of cross-strait direct flights, Xinhua reported.

There would now be a total of 270 flights per week, up from 108, and new routes from Guangzhou and Shanghai to Taipei, as well as from Hefei, Harbin, Nanchang, Guiyang, Ningbo and Jinan.

In the second agreement, the two sides reportedly pledged to work together to fight cross border crimes including drugs and human trafficking, and economic crimes involving fraud, money laundering, forging or falsifying currencies and securities.

According to Xinhua, negotiators from both sides will also now consider cases where there are discrepancies between Chinese and Taiwanese laws.

Chen and Chiang also signed an agreement for a cooperative financial regulatory mechanism aimed at overseeing banking, securities, futures and insurance sectors across the Strait.

Under this agreement, financial organizations would be allowed to do business across the straits, and a currency-clearing system will gradually be set up, the report said.

The latest agreements build on six previous joint actions since last June which first saw the establishment of weekend charter flights, and the expansion of cross-strait postal and shipping. (dpa)

Taiwan top negotiator en route to Nanjing dialogue

Taipei – Taiwan’s top negotiator Chiang Pin-kung travelled to Nanjing, China Saturday for talks in Beijing on economic and judicial cooperation across the Taiwan Strait. “During the talks, we will stick to the interests of Taiwan and its public, and sign three agreements on joint efforts to fight crime, financial cooperation and regular flight service,” Chiang said before the trip.

The two sides would also issue a joint statement on Chinese investment in Taiwan, he said.

A small group of pro-independence activists shouted at Chiang in Taipei’s Taoyuan airport, accusing him of selling out Taiwan and kowtowing to China, a political rival since the two sides split at the end of a civil war in 1949.

Taiwan and China began formal talks in Beijing last June.

Chiang heads a 22-member delegation of senior government officials and negotiators.(dpa)

US envoy meets Palestinian leader in peace bid

US special envoy George Mitchell met Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas on Thursday amid warnings that peace talks will remain stagnant unless Israel’s new government commits to a two-state solution.

“Until the (Benjamin) Netanyahu government unequivocally affirms its support for the two-state solution, implements Israel’s roadmap obligations and abides by previous agreements, Palestinians have no partner for peace,” top negotiator Saeb Erakat said after the meeting in the West Bank town of Ramallah.

Mitchell emerged from the talks reiterating “the two-state solution is the only solution” and that “a comprehensive peace in the region is in the US national interest.”

The largely right-wing cabinet of Israel’s hawkish prime minister has distanced itself from past governments’ support for the US-backed concept of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, and has called previous agreements into question.

Mitchell and Abbas both “emphasised the shared commitment of the (President Barack) Obama administration and the Palestinian leadership to the two-state solution,” Erakat said in a statement.

The Abbas-Mitchell talks came after meetings in Jerusalem yesterday that highlighted the rift between the United States and Israel over the Middle East peace process.