CM’s chopper has landed, search on for its location: Andhra Finance Minister(1st Lead:AP CM)

Hyderabad, Sep.2 (ANI): Andhra Pradesh Finance Minister K.Rosiah on Wednesday confirmed that the state government helicopter carrying Chief Minister Y.S. Rajshekhar Reddy has landed in a forest area in Chitoor District, and efforts are on to locate it.

Addressing a news conference in the state capital, Rosiah said: “All state and central forces are on alert. At the moment, we are still tracing the location of the missing chopper, which has landed in the forests in the Chitoor-Nellore area. We are finding a way to reach the place.”

Rosiah said the state government has alerted the Union Home Ministry about the missing chopper. He said search choppers, including two Indian Air Force Chetak helicopters have been roped in for the search operations. He said that after 9.35 a.m., contact had been lost with the chopper carrying the chief minister.

Rosiah said that the Prime Minister’s office as well as the offices of Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Home Minister P. Chidambaram and Defence Minister A.K. Antony are being kept posted about the latest developments.

He also issued an appeal to the public to contribute to the search effort.

Rosiah’s briefing came as Andhra Pradesh Police continues their search for the missing chopper of the chief minister.

According to police sources, a civilian copter, air force helicopters and the army has been pushed in to the search operation.

Panic was created around Wednesday noon as Reddy was reported untraceable for nearly four hours.

Reddy was on his way to Chitoor, by chopper which initial reports said had made an emergency landing near Kurnool due to inclement weather.

The chopper took off at 8.45 a.m. for Chitoor and was scheduled to arrive here at 10.45 a.m, sources said.

The chopper was said to have landed in the middle a of thick forest, said to be affected by Maoist activities.

The Chief Minister’s Office (CMO) confirmed receiving a message of the emergency landing of the chopper, but nothing thereafter.

Till now, no one has confirmed the movements of Reddy.

The Union Home Ministry is monitoring the search operations, as Kurnool is a Naxal affected area.

Air Traffic Control (ATC) sources said the chopper went off the radar due to heavy rains.

The CMO maintains there is no need to worry as the area has no mobile connectivity. (ANI)

Missing CM’s chopper: Andhra Pradesh Finance Minister to address media(Lead:AP CM)

Hyderabad, Sep.2 (ANI): Andhra Pradesh Finance Minister K. Rosaiah will address a press conference at 4 p.m. here, during which he will provide an update on the whereabouts of Chief Minister Y.S. Rajshekhar Reddy.

Rosiah’s briefing comes in the wake of Andhra Pradesh Police continuing their search for the missing chopper of the chief minister.

According to police sources, a civilian copter, air force helicopters and the army has been pushed in to the search operation.

Panic was created around Wednesday noon as Reddy was reported untraceable for nearly four hours.

Reddy was on his way to Chitoor, by chopper which initial reports said had made an emergency landing near Kurnool due to inclement weather.

The chopper took off at 8.45 a.m. for Chitoor and was scheduled to arrive here at 10.45 a.m, sources said.

The chopper was said to have landed in the middle a of thick forest, said to be affected by Maoist activities.

The Chief Minister’s Office (CMO) confirmed receiving a message of the emergency landing of the chopper, but nothing thereafter.

Till now, no one has confirmed the movements of Reddy.

The Union Home Ministry is monitoring the search operations, as Kurnool is a Naxal affected area.

Air Traffic Control (ATC) sources said the chopper went off the radar due to heavy rains.

The CMO maintains there is no need to worry as the area has no mobile connectivity. (ANI)

Search for Andhra CM’s missing chopper continues

Hyderabad, Sep 2 (ANI): Andhra Pradesh Police is continuing a search for the missing chopper of Chief Minister Y.S. Rajshekhar Reddy.

According to police sources, a civilian copter has been pushed in to the search operation. nconfirmed reports said the Army has also joined the search operation.

Panic was created around Wednesday noon as Reddy was reported untraceable for nearly four hours.

Reddy was on his way to Chittor, by the chopper which initial reports said had made an emergency landing near Kurnool due to inclement weather.

The chopper took off at 8.45 a.m. for Chittor and was scheduled to arrive here at 10.45 a.m, sources said.

The chopper was said to have landed in the middle of thick forest, said to be affected by the Maoist activities.

The Chief Minister’s Office (CMO) confirmed the receiving a message of the emergency landing of the chopper, but nothing thereafter.

Till now, no one has confirmed the movements of Reddy.

The Union Home Ministry is monitoring the search operations, as Kurnool is a Naxal affected area.

Air Traffic Control (ATC) sources said the chopper went off the radar due to heavy rains.

The CMO maintains there is no need to worry, as the area has no mobile connectivity. (ANI)

India’s first moon mission may be over, says project director

Bangalore, Aug 29 (ANI):India’s ambitious moon mission — Chandrayaan-I — has probably ended after losing radio contact since Saturday noon, said its project director M. Annadurai, but Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) chairman G. Madhavan Nair said scientists will evaluate the performance of the mission over the next two days before deciding whether or not to call it off.

Earlier, in the day the flamboyant spacecraft had lost the radio control at around 1.30 a.m. IST, increasing fears of a premature end of the spacecraft.

According to a press release by the ISRO, the deep Space Network at Byalalu near Bangalore has not received any signal form the spacecraft since midnight.

“Radio contact with Chandrayaan-I spacecraft was abruptly lost at 0130 Hrs (IST) on August 29, 2009. Deep Space Network at Byalalu near Bangalore received the data from Chandrayaan-I during the previous orbit upto 0025 Hrs (IST),”the press release states.he ISRO has ordered for a detailed review of the data received by the spacecraft, “Detailed review of the Telemetry data received from the spacecraft is in progress and health of the spacecraft subsystems is being analysed,” press release states.

Earlier, on July 17, the flamboyant moon mission Chandrayaan-I, had lost a major sensor. The scientific community then feared the premature end of the spacecraft.

The Chandrayaan-I, which was launched from Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh in October 2008, has completed over 350 days in orbit making more than 3400 orbits around the Moon and providing large volume of data from sophisticated sensors.

The spacecraft was equipped with Terrain Mapping Camera, Hyper-spectral Imager, Moon Mineralogy Mapper etc.,

The ISRO scientists expressed confidence of attaining most of the scientific objectives of the mission.

Addressing the Ninth convocation of the International Institute of Information and Technology at Bangalore last month, Nair said the tracking and detection of several factors by Chandrayaan are important steps in mapping the mineralogical composition of moon’s surface, which in turn would enable further study in its origin and evolution.

“I think I am happy to say that Chandrayaan has been completely successful in collecting all the data what we wanted. First was the three dimensional of the lunar surface, also getting the mineral content of the surface and then trying to use the extra instruments,” said Nair.

“All this went on very well and we are more or less very happy that the mission is complete,” he added.

Nair also added that the second moon mission would be launched by 2012. (ANI)

‘Teen-proof’ room cuts out the clutter

London, Aug 24 (ANI): The days of teenagers’ messy bedrooms may finally be over, courtesy an Edinburgh-based company, which has designed a room they can’t ruin.

Design firm IDP claims to have created the ‘teen-proof’ bedroom, which provides solution for the cluttered spaces that have enraged parents for decades, reports the Scotsman.

It features drawing pin friendly fabric wallpaper; a wipe-clean desk; a swivel chair with secret pockets for stashing chocolate and electronic gizmos; stain-resistant carpets; and enough space under the bed to hide a mountain of clothes and computer games and still leave room for a set of iPod speakers.

Gilly Corkery of IDP said: “It was an incredibly challenging project. How do you counteract the natural messiness of teenagers?”

The room includes shelves tailored to the size of CDs, along with compartments in the bed space so that electronic equipment such as stereos or PlayStations can be plugged in – great for easy access when the teens are still lounging in bed at noon.

The room will be exhibited at the Homes and Interiors Scotland Exhibition at the SECC in Glasgow next weekend.

The design firm is keeping some details a closely guarded secret – just releasing a rough sketch of a suspiciously tidy-looking room and a sample of some dog-themed furniture decor.

Corkery, who modelled the design on the taste and habits of her son Jamie, 12, said: “We’ve tried to do little quirky things that teenagers will think are quite cool,” says

“No self-respecting teenager wants to move for too long so we’ve designed a desk chair which has a pocket where they can keep a remote control, their iPod, pens, chocolate or whatever, without having to move.

“Then there’s the upholstery fabric on the walls, which means they can put posters up with drawing pins without leaving a mark,” Corkery added. (ANI)

Bodies of three recovered from Hudson River

New York, Aug.9 (ANI): The bodies of three of the nine presumed victims of a helicopter-plane collision over the Hudson River have been recovered, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said on Saturday.

NTSB chair Deborah Hersman says the recovery operations have been called off and will resume Sunday morning, due to compromising tides and low visibility.

The accident happened just after noon between Manhattan and Hoboken, N.J. when a small private plane collided with a sightseeing helicopter over the Hudson River, leaving debris scattered in the water and on the New Jersey shoreline, sending witnesses ducking for cover, reports the NYT.

The sight-seeing helicopter was carrying five Italian tourists and a pilot, and the plane was carrying a pilot and two passengers, one of whom is believed to have been a child, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said at an afternoon press conference.

“This is not going to have a happy ending. This has changed from a rescue to a recovery mission. If anybody had survived, we would have been there,” said Bloomberg.

Both craft are under water and may have sunk to a depth of 30 feet, he told reporters.

Though it was a crystal-clear summer day in New York, visibility is only about two feet in the water, making the recovery process extremely difficult.

The plane, a Piper PA-32, took off from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey, and the helicopter was a Eurocopter AS 350 owned by Liberty Tours, a sightseeing and charter company, the Federal Aviation Administration said. (ANI)

South Waziristan peace deal ineffective, says militant spokesman

Tank (Pakistan), July 14 (ANI): A militant leader in South Waziristan, who is said to be in the good books of the government, has said that the peace agreement in the agency had been “ineffective”.

Abdul Haq, a spokesman for Maulvi Nazir said that security forces were attacking the Taliban despite the fact that they had “maintained peace in the agency during the past two years.”

“We think the peace deal has lost its validity and we hold the government responsible for this,” The Dawn quoted Nazir, as saying.

Nazir was included in the government’s list of “good Taliban” after he expelled Uzbek militants from the Ahmadzai Wazir area in 2007.

Security forces and militants clashed near Wana after a security post was attacked on Sunday night. Local people said that the clash continued till Monday noon.

According to official reports, three militants were killed and two others wounded in the clash.

However, militants said that one of their colleagues was missing. A daily-wage worker was killed and another injured, they said. (ANI)

Instant shutdown hits tourism in Darjeeling

Sukuna (Darjeeling), July 12 (ANI): Tourists visiting Darjeeling are being forced to return to the plains following strike call given by the Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM).

The shutdown is in operation till Monday noon in protest against the violence at Panighata near Kurseong.

Activists and supporters of the GJM clashed with their Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF) rivals.

The GJM has sought immediate remedial action by the police and issued an ultimatum that their grievances be redressed, failing which an indefinite strike will be called in the hill district of Darjeeling.

With all shops and other establishments downing their shutters, tourists have packed up and rushed to other resorts.

For example, Sukna in the foothills, is attracting a rush of tourists.

“We were planning to stay for more than a week ( in Darjeeling) and had booked a hotel for almost ten days. But because of the strike, I thought there would be no arrangements of vehicle or food. So, we left the place,” said Laxman Adhikary, a tourist from Kolkata.

Earlier, GJM supporters had staged a sit-in-strike before a police station at Panighata and demanded the arrest of Rajen Mukhia, a GNLF leader.

Meanwhile, some GNLF supporters also appeared on the scene, forcing the police to step in to bring the situation under control. A mild baton charge was resorted to.

Police arrested nine GJMM supporters, but Mukhia was not nabbed.

This prompted the GJM leadership to summon a meeting of the central committee where it was decided to go for an indefinite strike if Mukhia was not arrested by July 13.

“We demand from the government the immediate arrest of Mukhia,” said Raju Subba, the information and cultural secretary, GJM.

It may be recalled that the Central Government, the West Bengal Government and the GNLF under the leadership of Subhas Gheising, signed an agreement in 1988, paving the way for the setting up of the Autonomous Darjeeling Gorkha Hill Council (ADGHC). (ANI)

US Embassy in China relying on own air monitoring system

New Delhi, July 1 (ANI): The US embassy in Beijing has set up its own air monitoring station out of concern for the health of its staff.

The embassy has been releasing its own private air quality reports since last year, which differ significantly from the ones issued by the Beijing Government, spokesperson Susan Stevenson said in an interview last week with Canwest News Service.

People can check the air quality near the embassy on a Twitter feed called BeijingAir, with the latest information updated every hour, the China Daily reports.

From 1 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Tuesday, the air quality was unhealthy, according to the embassy monitoring station, while the capital’s environment protection bureau said that the average air quality yesterday in Chaoyang district, where the embassy is located, was “moderate”.

The air quality for June 18, when the sky was murky at noon, was slightly polluted, according to the official data, but the result was different on the BeijingAir Twitter, with the hourly measure creeping into the “hazardous” range for seven hours.

The China Daily calculated that only five days were above “moderate” level in May on BeijingAir, but the local environment bureau said on its website on May 31 that the capital’s air quality was the clearest during the same period since 2000, with 25 blue-sky days.

“This is a single site. It cannot be used to measure the air quality across the city. They can’t be compared,” Stevenson said.

Li Xin, chief engineer of the municipal environment protection bureau, said yesterday that the bureau has 27 monitoring stations across the city and publishes average air quality data every day.

“The embassy is located in the central business district, which has heavy traffic, and its monitoring station cannot represent the overall picture,” Zhu Tong, an environment professor with Peking University, said. (ANI)

Bhutan Prime Minister to arrive in India today

New Delhi, June 30 (ANI): Bhutan Prime Minister Jigmi Y Thinley will arrive here today on a four-day visit to strengthen ties between the two countries.

During his visit, Thinley will meet President Pratibha Patil and his Indian counterpart Dr. Manmohan Singh.

Bhutan Prime Minister is also scheduled to meet Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, External Affairs Minister S M Krishna, Congress President Sonia Gandhi and BJP leader L K Advani.

On Wednesday, Mukherjee will call on the visiting dignitary at 11.15 a.m. Thereafter, the Bhutanese Prime Minister will call on President Patil at noon.

External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna will call on Prime Minister Thinley at 4.15 p.m., while Advani will meet him at 5 p.m. At 6 p.m., he will meet Sonia Gandhi.

Delegation-level talks between the two countries will take place at Hyderabad House on the same day at 7.15 p.m.

Thinley visited India last year after taking over as Bhutan’s first democratically elected Prime Minister. He, thereafter, visited India in November 2008 to participate in the 2nd BIMSTEC Summit in New Delhi. (ANI)

Bhutan PM to visit India for four days

New Delhi, June 29 (ANI): Bhutan’s Prime Minister, Lyonchen Jigmi Y. Thinley, will pay a four-day working visit to New Delhi from June 30 to July 3, 2009.

He would be the first Head of Government to visit India during the second term of the Prime Minister, Dr. manmohan Singh.

Prime Minister Thinley had paid a state visit to India in July 2008 as the first democratically elected Prime Minister after Bhutan’s historic transition to a Democratic Constitutional Monarchy. He, thereafter, visited India in November 2008 to participate in the 2nd BIMSTEC Summit in New Delhi.

During his visit, Thinley will call on President Pratibha Devisingh Patil and meet with Dr. Singh, Sonia Gandhi,the Chairperson of the United Progressive Alliance, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee and External Affairs Minister S.M.Krishna.

e will arrive in the Indian capital on Tuesday morning. Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon will call on him at the Hotel Taj Mahal at 6 p.m.

On Wednesday, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee will call on the visiting dignitary at 11.15 a.m. Thereafter, the Bhutanese Prime Minister will call on President Patil at noon.

External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna will call on Prime Minister Thinley at 4.15 p.m., while Leader of Opposition L.K. Advani will meet him at 5 p.m.

At 6 p.m., he will meet Sonia Gandhi.

Delegation-level talks between the two countries will take place at Hyderabad House on the same day at 7.15 p.m.

He will return to Thimpu on Friday afternoon. (ANI)

Hizbul Mujahideen commander killed near Jammu

Jammu, May 26 (ANI): A Hizbul Mujahideen group commander was killed in an intense encounter in Dachan, about 340 km from Jammu.

The encounter took place after the security forces got a tip-off about the presence of militants at Kripaknoo area in Dachan.

Security forces launched a search operation in the wee hours, and were able to kill the commander and trap two other militants, including a divisional commander of the organisation.

“During the operation, the militants fired at the search team. In the retaliatory fire which was continuing till noon, a group commander of the outfit Karri Qazi was killed and two of its member, including a divisional commander, were trapped,” an official source said. (ANI)

Union Cabinet meeting ends

New Delhi, May 18 (ANI): The Union Cabinet meeting ended here today with the passing of a resolution to dissolve the 14th Lok Sabha.

The Council of Ministers submitted their resignations to the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, before the passing of the resolution to dissolve Parliament.

The Ministers also congratulated Dr. Singh on the UPA’s victory in the 2009 general elections.

Dr. Singh is to meet President Pratibha Patil shortly after noon to submit the resignation of the cabinet. President Patil is expected to call on Dr. Singh to form the next government.

President Patil will host a dinner for the outgoing Cabinet.

On Sunday, a crucial meet of the Congress Working Committee (CWC) was called to deliberate on government formation and the possible support to the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) from like-minded parties. (ANI)

Indian Army ascents seventh highest peak

New Delhi, May 8 (ANI): Six members of the Indian Army team on Friday successfully summitted the seventh highest peak in the world, Mount Dhaulagiri.

At 8167 meter, Mount Dhaulagiri is considered to be one of the most technical, demanding and challenging peaks.

Led by Lieutenant Colonel M S Chauhan, the 17-member expedition team was flagged off by Army Chief General Deepak Kapoor from New Delhi on March 19.

The team reached the Base Camp at 4700 meter on April 7 and established three camps on the mountain by May 1.

On May 7, the summit team left from Camp III, located at a height of 7400 meter. After 14 hours of grueling climb the team finally summitted the peak on Friday after noon.

The summit was a great challenge, as continuous inclement weather during the ascent increased the degree of difficulty.

It was the first ever Indian expedition to Mount Dhaulagiri.

Since 2001, Indian Army has already summitted six out of these fourteen peaks viz Mount Everest, Kanchenjunga, Lhotse, Cho Oyu, Annapurna and now Dhaulagiri. (ANI)

Canadian Tamils plan massive protest against Sri Lanka

Toronto, May. 4 (ANI): Demanding that Canada, US and the UN to intervene to end the Sri Lankan crisis, tens of thousands of Tamil Canadians will form a human chain on Tuesday in downtown Toronto to protest against the Lankan Army’s offensive against the LTTE.

“The chain will form at noon at Union Station and, depending on how many people there are, occupy sidewalks north along Yonge St., west along Bloor St. to Avenue Rd., then south along Queen’s Park and University Ave. and Front St. back to Union,” said Aranee Muru, spokesperson of Coalition to Stop the War in Sri Lanka.

Muru said no streets would be blocked, as happened last week when a protest outside the American consulate forced police to block off University Ave. and neighboring streets for several days.

“We will stay on the sidewalk. We are out there to create more awareness. We don’t want to be disruptive,” The Star quoted her, as saying.

The organizers are not sure about when the protest, will end.

“It’s really up to the people…how long they want to stay,” she said.

They said they are expecting large numbers to attend the event. According to some estimates, over 200,000 people of Tamil origin live in the Greater Toronto Area.

Toronto police say they’re still planning their response. Senior officers will speak with protest organizers and then formulate a plan.

Organizers planning Tuesday’s demonstration have asked participants to come downtown by subway and get out at any stop.

Tamil organizers say they are protesting to draw attention to a “massive buildup of Sri Lankan armed forces” in the northern battle zone.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam have been fighting a 25-year war with the Sri Lankan Government for a separate ethnic Tamil homeland. (ANI)

Provincial poll in Sri Lanka’s Western Province opens

Colombo – A provincial poll in Sri Lanka’s Western Province which consists of the capital Colombo and two adjoining districts opened Saturday, election officials said, despite a deteriorating humanitarian situation in the north of the country as government forces keep up their campaign to crush Tamil rebels. Some 3.8 million voters in the Colombo, Kalutara and Gampaha districts started are registered to vote in the elections which commenced at 7 am (0130 GMT) and is scheduled to end at 4 pm.

Voters are choosing 102 members to the provincial council which overseas provincial administration often serves as a stepping stone to parliament.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s ruling United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) , which campaigned on a platform solely based on the military’s achievements in liberating rebel-held areas in the north-east, are expected to win, despite a strong campaign showing but the opposition UnitedNational Party.

Rajapaksa has so far convincingly won five previous provincial council elections. Polls in two more provinces are due to be held shortly.

Recapturing areas held by the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) has been the main theme for the UPFA as Rajapaksa prepares to hold early presidential polls nearly two years ahead of schedule in a bid to capitalize on the military victories.

Opposition parties have accused the ruling party for misusing government resources and the state media as well as intimidating opposition supporters.

Results are expected to start come in after midnight and the vote count is due to be completed by Sunday noon.

Meanwhile, the humanitarian situation of thousands of people trapped in the last remaining rebel-held areas worsens as the Sri Lankan Army vowed to continue its offensive operations again the LTTE, which has been fighting for more than 25 years for a separate state for the Tamil ethnic minority in majority-Sinhalese Sri Lanka. (dpa)

Taliban abduct 10 Pak soldiers in Malakand

Peshawar, May. 1 (ANI): Taliban militants have kidnapped 10 Pakistani soldiers from their local headquarters in Dir town, which borders the troubled Swat valley.

The abduction took place in the Upper Dir district of Malakand, where an ongoing military offensive is taking place against the Taliban.

The Dawn quoted Dir police chief Ijaz Ahmed as saying, that 60 Taliban militants stormed the local paramilitary headquarters and snatched 10 personnel around noon.

There were only a few personnel at the headquarters, because most were deployed in the field, Ahmed added.

Atiq-ur-Rehman, head of the district administration in Upper Dir, confirmed that more than 50 armed militants attacked the local Dir Levies paramilitary headquarters and abducted 10 personnel.

On Thursday, militants blew up a camp of the Frontier Constabulary and looted a huge cache of weapons as Pakistani Military continued bombing Taliban hideouts in Buner District.

Taliban militants also made two FC platoons surrender before allowing them to leave. This was the same platoon which had been besieged at the Jawar Camp on Wednesday night.

According to the sources, the militants took away an APC, besides a large haul of weapons before destroying the camp and a checkpoint. In a related incident, a police station was set on fire in Pir Baba town.

So far, the Taliban has taken control of Ambela Chowk, Pacha, Nawagai, Jungai, Swarai, Gagera, Dewana Baba, Pir Baba and Sultanwas, local residents said.

Security forces stepped up air strikes, and ground forces, backed by tanks and heavy artillery positioned in Rustam area of the Mardan district, attacked targets in Buner.

Planes bombed Karaker, Dermai pass, Darazai pass and Ambela. Militants have blown up two bridges near Ambela in a bid to block the movement of ground forces.

Hundreds of families, which include Afghan refugees, have been affected due to the latest offensive, and have left their homes.

In Daggar, people were facing shortage of food and other essentials items because of curfew. Troops had arrived in the town by helicopters on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, two children were injured in shelling by helicopters in Gul Abad as security forces continued their operation in parts of Lower Dir district. (ANI)

Lankan Army says it is closing in on LTTE chief Prabhakaran

Colombo, Apr.23 (ANI): The Sri Lankan Army on Thursday said that it is closing in on LTTE Chief V. Prabhakaran’s hide out, adding that the guerrillas now controlled a mere 10-12 square kilometres of territory on the northeast coast, where thousands of civilians are still trapped by the fighting.

The army claim as Seevaratnam Puleedevan, secretary-general of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) peace secretariat, urged the international community to intervene by forcing a permanent ceasefire, which Sri Lanka has ruled out.

The military says around 50,000 people have fled the Tiger-held area so far since Monday, and had given the LTTE until noon Tuesday, a deadline already passed, to surrender or be destroyed.

A senior United Nations official urged Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tiger rebels to lay down their arms and let the UN help trapped civilians to leave the conflict zone. laude Heller, Mexico’s ambassador at the UN in New York, spoke to media after chairing an informal meeting of the UN Security Council on the issue.

Though the 15-strong Council passed no resolution on the conflict, Heller said he was voicing members’ concerns.

The United States expressed disappointment with the Sri Lankan Government over the current humanitarian crisis.

On Wednesday, India voiced its unhappiness over the continued killing of innocent Tamils in Sri Lanka and asked the LTTE to stop its “barbaric” attempt to hold civilians hostage, as Prime Minister reviewed the situation in the island nation.

The Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, convened a special meeting to review the situation arising outof the crisis in Sri Lanka. It was attended by External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee, Defense Minister A.K.Antony, Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon and National Security Advisor M.K. Narayanan.

Mukherjee later stated that authorities in Colombo had a responsibility to protect Sri Lankan citizens and asked the LTTE to stop the barbarism of holding civilians as human shields. He also added that he had “no sympathy for terrorists but every sympathy for civilians.
Sri Lanka President Mahinda Rajapaksa, however,ruled out any chances of pardoning Prabhakaran if he was captured alive by advancing government soldiers.

On Wednesday, the LTTE’s media co-ordinator, Daya Master, and another key rebel leader George surrendered before the army. (ANI)

LTTE asked to surrender by Tuesday noon

Colombo, April 20 (IANS) Closing in on the last Tamil Tiger base, Sri Lanka Monday ordered rebel chief Velupillai Prabhakaran and his fighters to surrender by Tuesday noon or face death.

‘We have issued the last and final 24-hour ultimatum to Prabhakaran and his group to surrender,’ defence ministry spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella told reporters Monday.

‘The ultimatum began this noon (Monday and) will expire tomorrow noon. Otherwise they will have to face the military course of action,’ he said.

The ultimatum to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) came after about 30,000 civilians fled Sri Lanka’s northern war zone as troops moved deep into the last Tamil Tiger stronghold in Mullaitivu district.
Indo Asian News Service

It’s scorcher in Delhi, Met office says mercury to rise

New Delhi, April 20 (IANS) It is official. The sudden rise in day temperature coupled with dusty winds that has hit the national capital over the past few days is a heat wave condition, the meteorological department declared Monday.

The maximum temperature touched a high of 41.7 degrees Celsius, six notches above what is normal for this time of the year, while the minimum temperature settled at 26.1 degrees Celsius, five degrees above normal.

‘The day temperature has increased five to six degrees above normal following hot westerly winds blowing over Delhi. We have declared heat wave condition here,’ a duty officer at the meteorological office told IANS.

People could be seen standing under the shade of trees or buildings to escape the scorching sun as most of the roads in the national capital wore a deserted look. People were seen buying water and cold drinks around offices and in markets to quaffe thirst and beat the heat.

‘In 2006 and 2007 we had the maximum temperature of 42 degrees Celsius. It was only in April 1942 when the mercury had climbed to 45.6 degrees Celsius in the national capital.’

‘In May and June, we expect the mercury to cross 45 degrees Celsius,’ the official added, ruling out the possibility of rains in the near future.

Residents of Delhi have been reeling under the summer heat from the last three days with day temperature rising several degrees above normal.

‘The heat wave is likely to prevail for two to three days and the temperature is likely to rise further,’ the official said.

The Met Office has forecast that the maximum temperature will cross 42 degrees Celsius Tuesday.

‘My skin was burning as I drove to my office around noon,’ said Aakash Aggarwal, a marketing executive.

Asha Sharma, a housewife said: ‘There was no respite from the heat despite putting on the water cooler and fan. I was sweating so much that I bathed five times but it wasn’t of much use.’