50,000 American Muslims to attend prayer meeting on Washington Mall on Sep.25

Washington, Sep.13 (ANI): At least 50,000 American Muslims will participate in a national prayer gathering for September 25 in Washington, D.C.

According to a report filed by The Star-Ledger, the gathering is taking place in the city’s National Mall area and is being organised by representatives of a mosque in Elizabeth, New Jersey.

The paper quoted Hassen Abdellah, president of the Dar-ul-Islam mosque and an event organizer, as saying: “Most of the time, when Muslims go to Washington, D.C., they go there to protest some type of event…This is not a protest. Never has the Islamic community prayed on Capitol Hill for the soul of America. We’re Americans. We need to change the face of Islam so people don’t feel every Muslim believes America is ‘the great Satan,’ because we love America.”

The Star-Ledger reports that “A permit from the Capitol Hill police, granted July 28, allows access to the area by the West Front of the Capitol building from 4 a.m. to 7 p.m. on September 25, but the main gathering will occur at 1 p.m., for the Friday prayer service.

Abdellah said he expects 50,000 people to attend, from mosques around the country, though non-Muslims are welcome, too.”

Abdellah stated the idea germinated after President Obama’s inaugural speech, and was reinforced by this summer’s Cairo address: “For the first time in my lifetime,”

Abdellah said, “I heard someone of his stature speaking about Islam and Muslims not in an adversarial sense, but in the sense of being welcome and acknowledging we are integral citizens in the society-that we’re gainfully employed, we’re educated.”(ANI)

The ‘orgy island’ in Malaysia that wants you to bare all under the moonlight!

Kuala Lumpur, May 19 (ANI): A couple, who is believed to have arranged a sex orgy party on Pulau Perhentian, have been fined 25,000RM under the Entertainment Act 2002 for organising a party without permit.

According to reports, the wild party was going on full swing before Besut District Council (MDB) enforcement officers moved in on the revellers.

It was the second time that such a party had been held on the island. The first party, themed ‘Buffalo Bars Pink Lady’, was organised on May 3.

The party that took place on May 10 was themed ‘Come bare under the moonlight’. It left council officer Razman Ahmad, who led the team, startled to find condoms strewn on the secluded beachfront where the party was held.

“I can’t disclose more facts as the council has lodged a police report on the matter, but I can tell you that there were activities associated with sexual intercourse on that night and this was substantiated by the discovery of sex paraphernalia,” Star Online quoted Ahmad as saying.

Though he has declined to give any details on whether he witnessed the revellers having sex when council officials arrived at the scene, investigations have shown that the organiser was a 31-year-old man from Kedah who arranged the party with his girlfriend from Ireland.

The lady in question is under police investigation for organising similar parties, including in Langkawi and Port Dickson, and also for being the one responsible for posting the invitation on her Facebook.

Ahmad added that the scantily-clad teenagers, some of them foreigners, were intoxicated when his team arrived at 1am in two speedboats, and after he decided to call his superior to brief him on the situation, the police were informed and 15 officers arrived at the scene.

The officers seized alcoholic drinks worth about 90,000 RM, loudspeakers, audio equipment, psychotropic pills, drug and sex paraphernalia during the raid on the party attended by 200 teenagers, who were invited via Facebook.

Of the first party, council president Wan Mustafa Wan Hassan said that the officers were unable to reach the site on time as they received the tip-off late. (ANI)

Madonna and Jesus Luz are perfect together, feels designer Marc Jacobs

Washington, May 2 (ANI): Fashion mogul Marc Jacobs feels Madonna and beau Jesus Luz are the perfect couple.

Although Madonna has laughed off reports claiming that she helped Luz’s career by persuading fashion houses to give him modelling contracts, Jacobs admitted that he wrote a letter to officials in which he backed Luz’s bid for a work permit at Madonna’s request.

“M asked me to write a letter (supporting Luz’s work visa), and I’d do anything to help a friend. Whatever. It’s no big deal – I didn’t know that anybody even knew about it. Jesus is the sweetest guy. I hope he and Madonna are happy,” Contactmusic quoted Marc, as telling The New York Daily News.

Madonna has been reportedly dating Luz since her split from movie director husband Guy Ritchie last year. (ANI)

Lankan Tamil protest in Canada enters fourth day

Toronto, Apr 30 (ANI): The protest by Tamil people living in Canada, who want the West to broker a ceasefire between the Sri Lankan Army and the separatist Tigers, entered its fourth day on Wednesday with police refusing to break up the protest as long as it remains peaceful.

Hours later demonstrators tried to push their way north of University Avenue. The police arrested 15 people and drove the crowd back.

“We had identified an area that we thought, in our view, enabled the protesters to make their points in a way that was consistent with public safety,” said Mark Pugash, Director of public information. “For some reason, it appears, some people chose to break out of that area.”

Constable Tony Vella, another police spokesman, said the demonstration has police being very careful about what they do.

“You don’t want this, basically, to turn ugly. It could be a volatile situation,” Globe and Mail quoted him, as saying.

The 15 people face charges for mischief and breaching the peace.. Pugash expects the stretch of University Avenue will remain closed throughout Wednesday night and into Thursday morning.

Police say the protesters have no permit, but that they are not breaking any laws, other than some noise bylaws. Legal experts say that may not be the case.

Pugash refused to speculate on what police could do to get protesters off the street, saying the goal of officers is to maintain the peace, minimize the traffic impact and support the right to protest.

The protest, which began Monday, is the largest along the street in a decade. For nearly three months in 1999, Serbian protesters gathered outside the US consulate to protest a NATO bombing campaign, a demonstration that sent two officers to hospital and cost taxpayers 2.1million dollars in police overtime. (ANI)

Kosovo officials grant Serbian president private visit to Kosovo

Pristina – Kosovo officials on Friday granted Serbian president Boris Tadic permission for a “private visit” to Kosovo, government officials told the German Press Agency dpa.

The Serbian president will visit the Decani monastery in western Kosovo and spend Orthodox Good Friday there with monks and believers, Tadic’s cabinet told Belgrade media. The cabinet said that Tadic had not formally requested a permit to enter Kosovo.

However, “Prime Minister Hashim Thaci decided to grant the entrance to the president of Serbia so that he could undertake a private visit to the Decani monastery for Orthodox Easter,” Memli Krasniqi, spokesperson for the Kosovo government told dpa.

The decision was taken after the consultations with international partners, Krasniqi added.

Earlier, the EU representative in Kosovo Pieter Feith said that he recommended that the Kosovo officials to allow Tadic to visit Kosovo in order to “relax the ties” between Serbia and Kosovo.

Kosovo media reported that Tadic will be flown to Decani by helicopter due to security concerns. International forces in Kosovo could neither confirm nor deny the reports.

Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in February 2008 and was recognized by most of the EU and United States. Serbia bitterly opposes it and Tadic has repeatedly said that Belgrade will never recognize Kosovo and always consider it as its southern province. d pa fa kp.(dpa)

Indian students flocking to New Zealand

Chandigarh, April 9 (IANS) Indian students continue flocking to New Zealand for higher education and the number has increased by 300 percent in the last six years, says a diplomat from that country.

‘India is a big market of talented students for us. Their number has considerably increased. I do not think recession can stop Indian students from coming to New Zealand,’ Cliff Fuller, New Zealand’s trade commissioner in India, told IANS.

According to Fuller, the percentage of Indian students enrolling in New Zealand institutes has increased nearly 300 percent in the last six years.

‘In 1998, only 150 Indian students enrolled. This figure rose to 1,500 in 2002. In 2008, we registered 6,000 new enrolments from India,’ Fuller said.

He said it was difficult to give the exact number of Indian students in New Zealand. ‘We have the number of newly-enrolled students. It is very difficult to tell the exact number of Indian students studying there.’

He said Punjab was the biggest market for New Zealand institutes.

Education contributed substantially in the economy of New Zealand as it figured among the top five contributors to the country’s economy.

Fuller said bilateral trade between India and New Zealand was nearly $500 million per year now. ‘There is a vast potential to increase business in the fields of IT, software, industrial exports and CNG industry.’

Fuller was in the city to participate in the education fair organised by New Zealand Trade and Enterprise (NZTE) and Education New Zealand, a government-funded organisation. Around 25 New Zealand institutes participated in the fair.

‘The best part of our education is that we also grant a one-year search visa, which is generally not available in case of other countries. After getting a job, one can also apply for two-year work permit,’ said Chris Bond, a representative of a management institute in Wellington.

Hindu elder approaches UK High Court over right to open-air cremation

London, Mar.24 (ANI): An elderly Hindu man has said that he will be going to the High Court in a bid to win the right to be cremated on a traditional open-air funeral pyre when he dies.

In a test case on religious burials, Davender Ghai, aged 70, is challenging a refusal by Newcastle City Council to permit him to be cremated according to his Hindu faith, The Telegraph reports.

His human rights application is being supported by a wide range of Hindu organisations.

The local authority contends that the 1902 Cremation Act prohibits a pyre outside a crematorium.

Ghai’s lawyer, Andrew Singh Bogan, said a successful challenge would “create a precedent for all local authorities to grant open air funeral pyres if there was demand in their area”.

Ghai, founder of the Anglo-Asian Friendship Society (AAFS), was refused a permit for an open-air cremation site in a remote part of Northumberland in February 2006.

His legal team will argue at a three-day hearing before Mr Justice Cranston, sitting in London, that the law does not prohibit a religious cremation outside a crematorium.

They will contend that, if it does, it is incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.

They will ask the judge to declare it is discriminatory and breaches Mr Ghai’s right to protection for his private life and religious and cultural beliefs.

Ghai, who moved to Britain from Kenya in 1958, says he is seeking a judicial review to “clarify and enforce the law, not disrespect it”.

He stated: “As a Hindu, I believe my soul should be liberated in consecrated fire, “Agni”, after death – a sacramental rebirth, like the mythical phoenix arising from the flames anew. I will not deny my claim is provocative, least of all in a nation as notoriously squeamish towards death as our own. However, I honestly do not believe natural cremation grounds would offend public decency – as long as they were discreet, designated sites far from urban and residential areas.”

“I have lived my entire life by the Hindu scriptures and they have inspired me to charitably serve this country for over 30 years. In the frailty of my twilight, I now yearn to die by them,” he said. (ANI)

70 percent of foreign worker permits in Malaysia slashed

Putrajaya (Malaysia), Mar.15 (ANI): Work permit approvals for foreign workers in Malaysia have been slashed by almost 70 percent due to an emphasis on hiring locals.

In January and February, an average of 250 permits were approved daily compared to 800 last year.

Home Ministry deputy secretary-general Raja Azahar Raja Abdul Manap told the Sunday Star that there was a time when up to 2,000 approvals were granted daily.

He attributed the decrease to a more thorough vetting process by the ministry.Those requesting for foreign labour have to prove that they have made the effort to employ locals. If they can prove it, then they will get the clearance,” he said in an interview.

Raja Azahar said representatives from the various ministries would visit the employers to make sure that there were jobs available and also check if those requesting for foreign workers provided accommodation.

The ministry approved 301,682 foreign workers last year.

Azahar also said the ministry was not extending the work permits of unskilled workers who have been here for three years.

He said his ministry was confident of achieving its target of reducing the number of foreign workers to 1.5 million by 2015. (ANI)

Indian workers deported from Malaysia

Chennai, Mar 7 (ANI): At least 43 workers from Tamil Nadu who returned from Malaysia complained of ill-treatment on Friday.

The youths from Villupuram, Vellore and Tiruvannamalai districts of the state, were employed in a hotel in Malaysia since February last year.

“I paid 85,000 rupees to seek immigration for Malaysia but were not given worker’s visa permit and were tortured inhumanely,” said Yasin, a youth.

The youths said they were not paid any salary after working for a month in the hotel. Later they were asked to vacate the hotel.

The workers decided to lodge a complaint with the Indian High Commission in Kuala Lumpur. However, the bus they were travelling was intercepted by the police.

They were arrested and handed over to the immigration department that detained them.

“When we were behind bars, nobody came for our rescue, neither Malaysian and Indian government or our employer. It is only after one-and-a-half months, we were released. Has our country no responsibility towards us, are we not Indian citizen?” asked Satish Kumar, another youth.

They were later released after approaching the High Commission through a local social worker.

Malaysia is a magnet for cheap labour from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Indonesia and Bangladesh. The country is home to two million legal foreign workers, as well as another 500,000 to 700,000 working illegally. Many resort to bribery to speed up their visa applications or to avoid deportation. (ANI)

Treasure trove of stolen Afghan artifacts returned to Kabul

Washington, March 7 (ANI): Antiquities that were pillaged from more than 1,500 ancient sites around Afghanistan by scavengers, looters, and thieves, have been returned to Kabul.

Across the war-shattered nation, thieves have been pillaging antiquities from more than 1,500 ancient sites around the country and smuggling them abroad.

“It’s like a sickness that kills us slowly,” said Omara Khan Masoudi, director of the National Museum of Afghanistan. “Every day, we lose a bit more of our cultural heritage,” he told National Geographic magazine.

But now, Afghanistan is finally getting something back.

The British government, with the help of the National Geographic Society and the British Red Cross, has returned 3.4 tons of stolen antiquities that were confiscated over the past six years at London’s Heathrow Airport.

On February 17, a Red Cross freighter plane touched down at the Kabul Airport, carrying the looted treasure back to its homeland.

The artifacts are now at the National Museum.

Returning the enormous shipment took more than a year to organize, and involved the cooperation of participants from around the globe.

The Heathrow collection includes more than 1,500 objects spanning thousands of years of Afghan culture: a 3,000-year-old carved stone head from the Iron Age and hand-cast axe heads, cut rock crystal goblets, and delicate animal carvings from the Bactrian era, another thousand years earlier.

The oldest artifacts in the collection include a marble figure of an animal showing similarities to artifacts dating to the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods, dating as far back as 8,000 years.

The collection also contains gilded bronze pieces, coins, and ornately inscribed slabs dating from Afghanistan’s early Islamic period (8th-9th centuries A.D.) and treasures from the Medieval Islamic period (10th-14th centuries A.D.) that serve to replace the decimated collection at the National Museum, which was hit by a rocket in 1993 during the civil war, then repeatedly looted.

Through a quarter-century of violence, Masoudi and his staff somehow managed to save about 90 percent of the National Museum’s masterpieces, an incredible feat.

But the museum still lost about 70,000 objects, most of them from the reserve inventory kept in storage.

Helped by Carla Grissmann, an American expert on Afghan cultural heritage who has been working with the National Museum since 1973, and a British Museum curatorial team, U.S. archaeologist Fredrik Hiebert compared the objects in the Heathrow hoard to tens of thousands of missing items from the museum’s collection.

“None of the Heathrow objects came from the museum,” Hiebert said. “They are from recently illegally excavated sites exported without permit,” he added. (ANI)

Nano-hydrogels capable of detecting cancer cells developed

Washington, Feb 18 (ANI): Researchers from University of the Basque Country team have developed nano-hydrogel – small particles that are capable of detecting cancer cells and release medication where required.

The hydrogels are polymers in the shape of a net. They can swell up – by absorption – but cannot be dissolved in a liquid.

This type of polymers can be used to make artificial muscle or for capturing heavy metals in waste water.

The team led by Dr. Issa A. Katime have come up with ‘intelligent’ hydrogels that are capable of detecting changes in pH.

While blood generally has a pH of 7.4, in a zone where a cancer is located it drops to 4.7-5.2.

These hydrogels are functionalised with folic acid, which has the ability to detect and to “trick” cancer cells, in such a way that these permit penetration of their membranes: under these conditions the hydrogel acts like a “Trojan horse”.

Once in the cell interior, the change in pH favours the swelling of the nano-hydrogel and, thus, the release of the pharmaceutical drug.

These nano-hydrogels are not only useful for combating cancer. The application of nano-hydrogels with anti-tubercular pharmaceutical drugs is currently being investigated.

Today, the most effective anti-tubercular drugs have to be injected several times daily, a problem in areas with poor access to health centres, as in developing countries.

The research team is designing a system with nano-hydrogels that contains a mixture of anti-tubercular pharmaceutical drugs and which release this medication in a controlled and constant manner over long periods of time. (ANI)

Most wanted Nazi criminal Heim may have died in Cairo in 1992

London, Feb.5 (ANI): The world’s most-wanted Nazi war criminal, concentration camp doctor Aribert Heim, may have died in Cairo in 1992, according to reports.

Germany’s ZDF television and The New York Times said Heim was living under a pseudonym and had converted to Islam by the time of his death from intestinal cancer.

ZDF said that in a joint effort with the New York Times, it located a passport, application for a residence permit, bank slips, personal letters and medical papers – in all more than 100 documents – left behind by Heim in a briefcase in the hotel room where he lived under the name Tarek Hussein Farid.

Although he did not know Heim’s real identity, Egyptian dentist Tarek Abdelmoneim el Rifai said he knew him through his father, Abdelmoneim el Rifai, 88, who was Heim’s dentist in Cairo.

He said he only met Heim a few times, 20 years ago, but confirmed that he knew of his death.

“He died in 1992. I didn’t know that he was a doctor and that he is the most wanted Nazi war criminal. I am surprised,” the Daily Express quoted him as saying by telephone.

“He introduced himself to my father as a German and I know that he converted to Islam and changed his name.”

When he met Heim two decades ago at his father’s clinic, el Rifai said he had the impression he was on the run.

ZDF quoted Heim’s son Ruediger as confirming the pseudonym Tarek Hussein Farid as his father’s assumed name and the documents as belonging to him.

Heim said he visited his father regularly in Cairo and had taken care of him after an operation related to his cancer in 1990.

The Simon Wiesenthal Centre’s head Nazi hunter Efraim Zuroff said he had not seen the documents and that while it seemed that there was “definitely a strong possibility” they pointed to Heim’s death in Cairo 16 years ago, they needed to be examined by experts. (ANI)

Truckers’ strike called off in many places by local associations

New Delhi, Jan 11 (ANI); Brahm Dutt, Secretary, Road Transport and Highways, today reiterated the government stand on transporters’ strike that while the government is open to discussing their problems, it will not allow a section of transporters to take the country to ransom.

Briefing the media on the truckers’ strike, Dutt informed that local transporters’ associations have called off strike in many places including Pune (Maharashtra), Hasan (Karnataka), Jaipur (Rajasthan) and Gurgaon (Haryana).

He also informed that the representatives of All India Confederation of Goods Vehicle Owners’ Associations (AICOGOA), who are not participating in the strike, have assured their full cooperation for smooth movement of goods and commodities.

Dutt also informed that the strike, which entered the seventh day today, has affected inter-State movement of goods, especially industrial goods, to some extent but supply of essential and daily use items has not been affected.

“Arrangements have been made by the FCI and State governments to ensure that adequate quantities of wheat and rice are available in the fair price shops,” Dutt said.

The Secretary said that all the grievances of transporters have been addressed in July last year when detailed deliberations were held with the All India Motor Transport Congress (AIMTC). However, the striking transporters have been coming up with more and more demands, which are unreasonable and untenable.

Dutt also informed that the Government is in close contact with States/UTs to ensure uninterrupted movement of essential commodities across the country.

“States have been advised to keep contingency plans ready and invoke ESMA and NSA where required, so that supply of essential commodities is not affected. Several State governments have informed that they have prepared contingency plans to meet the situation,” he said.

Giving details of alternative arrangements to deal with the strike if it continued further, Dutt said that about 15-20 lakh trucks would be arranged by the States to ensure movement of goods across the country.

A State Transport Ministers’ meeting has been called tomorrow, which will discuss the prevailing situation and steps required to ensure uninterrupted movement of essential commodities across the country.

The Central Government will take up the issue of national permit with the States and would emphasise that it would help in smooth inter-State movement of goods.

As the strike will aggravate the impact of global recession and thus weaken the national economy, Dutt termed the strike anti-national.

At the same time, he appealed to all the transporters to resume work in the interest of the nation especially because their reasonable demands have been met in July 2008 and the government is open to examine the remaining issues. (ANI)

Minister Baalu ready to invoke ESMA to end transporters strike

New Delhi, Jan.10 (ANI): Union Surface Transport and Shipping Mminister T R Baalu on Saturday said that he was ready to invoke the Essential Service Maintenance Act (ESMA) to force striking transporters to get back on the road.

Suggesting an advisory action plan to state governments to deal with the strikers, Baalu said it would include declaring transport services as essential services and to use transport vehicles within the state for carrying the essential commodities without permit.

He also said that while he did want to act tough, he would not hesitate to suspend or cancel the permits of strikers if they did not back down.

“We don’t want to act tough, we don’t want to precipitate the issue further. Transporters are the stakeholders of the ministry. I ‘m only requesting to come forward (for talks),” Baalu told reporters.

His statement came a day after the Centre had asked states to act firm against the transporters

Baalu’s warning came as the Central Government said that it would hold a meeting of state transport ministers on Monday to find a solution to the issue.

The All India Motors Transport Congress (AIMTC), which is spearheading the strike of about six million truckers, has refused to come forward for talks asking for the release of their arrested members, including president Charan Singh Lohara and Secretary S Venugopal, besides pressing for their demands.

The strike entered its sixth day on Saturday, with the strikers demanding a reduction of diesel prices and certain tax concessions.

AIMTC and federal government officials broke down last weekend, threatening to push up prices of food and other essential commodities across the country.

“We are facing lot of problems because of this strike. We have incurred huge losses during this period. We can’t export anything outside, thus our whole business has gone down.” said Pritam Das, a vegetable seller.

The pinch of the strike is being felt by the customers in the Indian capital New Delhi where they say that the supply of the vegetables has come down drastically and the prices have shot up.

“As such I can’t really feel any major difference, but still definitely there has been hike in vegetable prices,” said Shambhunath Jha, a vegetable seller.

“We always maintained this stand from the beginning itself that we won’t be guiding on this strike nor we will be supporting this strike. Around about 70% of truck owners come under our association, that is around about of 40 lakhs of trucks comes under our association. We always ask the government to rectify any problem so that everything functions smoothly,” said Channa Reddy, president of All-India Confederation of Good Vehicles Owners Association.

All-India Confederation of Goods Vehicle Owners Association Vice-president Chitranjan Das and President Channa Reddy came to New Delhi to meet and lend their support to Baalu. (ANI)

2 lakh transporters go on strike

NEW DELHI: With last-minute talks between the motor transporters’ body and the surface transport ministry remaining inconclusive on Sunday, over two lakh transporters went on an indefinite nationwide strike from Monday midnight. Their demands include reduction of diesel and tyre prices.

The initial impact may not be much in reality, but with such strikes serving as a convenient excuse to jack up prices of essential commodities, the average householder is likely to start feeling the pinch much sooner than usual. That could be bad news for an economy already reeling under an economic slowdown.

“We had a meeting with the transport secretary. Despite being fully aware of our demands and our concerns, the government has done nothing. We will go ahead with our call and the impact would be felt from Monday itself,” said Chandrajit Singh Lohara, president of All India Motor Transport Congress (AIMTC), an apex transporters body, which has over 4,000 associations affiliated to it.

A few days ago, transporters had told the government that the Centre had failed to implement the agreement signed between government officials and the association’s representatives in July last year.

“Our long pending demands have not been addressed. In our case, chakka jam means we will not ply, but will not stop others from plying,” Lohara said. He claimed that in the next few days, even farmers and other sections would join the transporters since many of the issues raised concern them too.

Transporters have demanded that the government introduce a bailout package for the sector to address issues like high price of diesel, tyres, and permits, besides other demands. They have demanded reduction of diesel price by Rs 10 per litre since crude oil prices in the international market have declined drastically.

The list also includes levying uniform 4% VAT on diesel, scrapping registration and return filing requirements in the new Carriers Act, reducing tyre prices by 30-35% and rolling back national permit fees from Rs 5,000 to Rs 1,500.

Transporters have also said that as part of the bailout package, the tenure of loans for trucks and carriers should be increased as in the current scenario the owners can’t even pay back the loans.

Despite several attempts by TOI, Brahm Dutt – secretary, surface transport ministry – was not available for comment.