Two men drown off Gorai beach

Mumbai, June 6 — Two men, who were part of a 10-member group from Thane that had gone for a picnic to Gorai beach, drowned on Saturday. While Shailesh Ghadigaonkar’s (25) body has been recovered, Srikrishna Bhoir (22) is still missing. Police suspect Bhoir too has drowned. At 2 pm, Ghadigaonkar decided to go for a swim. Soon, Bhoir too joined him. “After half-an-hour they ventured deep into the sea,” said a witness, who refused to give his name. The other eight friends too were in shallow waters. The witness added that a few members of the group noticed that their friends were drowning and tried to save them. “One of the group members informed the police and fire brigade,” said an officer of the Gorai police station, requesting anonymity.

Efforts to locate Bhoir were on until late evening.

Racial attacks: Shane Warne mingles with Indians to allay fears

MELBOURNE: Australian spin legend Shane Warne on Tuesday stepped in to mend his country’s fractured ties with India, attending a picnic here with the Indian community, which has been targetted in a series of violent attacks in the past few months.

Warne met the community members of Victoria state, talked to them, posed for photographs and tried to allay fears of the students, saying Australia is a “great” place to live in.

“I think the state sells itself, it’s just such a great state, it’s a great city to live in. I’ll keep pushing the message across over there, I love India, I love Rajasthan when I play cricket there, so to me it was a natural thing,” Warne said.

“I want to listen, really, to hear what the students have to say and see what these guys, how they’re feeling about things,” said Warne, who is quite popular among the Indian diaspora here.

Victorian government had asked the iconic cricketer to help them boost the state’s image in India after recent attacks on Indian students in Melbourne tarnished its reputation.

The leg-spinner, also dined with the Indian students on the occasion and told the crowd: “It’s important for me as a Victorian… to keep building the relationship with India and Australia, and in particular Victoria.”

Warne will leave for India on Thursday to lead the Rajasthan Royals in the Indian Premier League commencing March 12.

Meanwhile, Victoria Premier John Brumby, who was also present at the picnic, hoped Warne’s presence in India for the IPL would help improve Australia’s image.

“Shane’s been great in the support that he’s given the State just over the last year, particularly in relation to the bushfires, and where the sort of support that he can provide is so important in lifting spirits and giving people hope for the future,” Brumby said.

“We need to bear in mind all the great things about our state and we are a very warm, open, welcoming state. We love sport, we’re very multicultural, we’ve got nearly half of our population born overseas and with one of their parents born overseas, and we’ve got a good story to tell about all of us, about the great multicultural society that is Victoria, so we just need to get a bit of balance back into this debate,” Brumby added.

Eight killed in US drone strike in South Waziristan

Islamabad, Aug.27 (ANI): At least eight people were killed and several others injured in a US drone strike South Waziristan’s Kani Goram area on Thursday.

According to sources, three missiles were fired from unmanned Predator aircrafts targeting a house in the region killing eight people on the spot besides injuring many others.

Kani Goram is considered to be a picnic spot and is situated near Ladha, where the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud is said to have been killed in a similar strike earlier this month.

More than 35 missile strikes have killed over 350 people since August 2008, fanning hostility against the United States and the government in Pakistan, where more than 1,700 people have died in extremist bombings in two years. (ANI)

Brit shopper asked for age proof to buy teaspoons at Asda!

London, May 6 (ANI): A Brit shopper was left gob smacked when an Asda shop assistant asked her for an age proof to a set of teaspoons.

The lady, who went to the store to stock up on picnic equipment was reportedly informed by the assistant that someone was once murdered with a teaspoon, and thus age identification was a requisite.

The woman had also bought plates and picnic ware at the Halifax branch in West Yorkshire.he receipt for the bizarre sale was published on the website nannyknowsbest.blogspot.com-a website set up by an internet entrepreneur Ken Frost to “expose and resist the all pervasive nanny state that is corroding the way of life and the freedom of the people of Britain.”

On seeing the receipt online, the users subsequently bombarded the site with comments and suggestions for other items that could cause harm.

However, Peter McCarthy, the Asda Halifax store manager, said that he was unaware of the spoon ID rule.

“The customer will have been asked for age identification by the assistant when prompted by the till. I’m not aware of an age restriction for spoons. It’s most likely a mix-up with the bar codes,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying. (ANI)

Life’s a picnic for Obama and Hillary Clinton

Washington, Apr.11 (ANI): It was reportedly Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s idea to hold her afternoon meeting with President Barack Obama outside.

Fierce campaign rivals just a year ago, Obama and Clinton were the picture of political bliss earlier this week when they ditched the Oval Office for a little quality time in the White House garden, reports the New York Daily News.

On a glorious spring day in the nation’s capital, the pair decamped for a picnic table next to a new swing set the Obamas recently purchased for daughters Sasha and Malia.

Witnesses – who were mostly there to watch First Lady Michelle Obama plant a new vegetable garden in another corner of the White House’s sizable grounds – reported lots of smiling and easy banter between the two. (ANI)

Indian student drowns in sea in New Zealand

Mohali (Punjab), April 9 (IANS) Rajdeep Singh, a 25-year-old from Punjab who had gone to New Zealand in pursuit of a bright future and better job prospects, died after drowning in the sea there, his family said here Thursday.

‘Rajdeep, had gone to the University of Technology in Auckland to do a two-year diploma course in February 2009. He was an intelligent student and always wanted to do big in life,’ Sohan Inder Singh, maternal uncle of the deceased, told reporters here late Thursday evening.

Singh added, ‘He went for a picnic at a sea beach there and drowned while playing with friends last Saturday. The family members are still very shocked.’

Rajdeep was the only son of his family that resides here in Sector-71, Mohali, around 10 km from Chandigarh. His father Sukhbir Singh is a retired bank manager while his mother Harpreet Kaur is a teacher.

‘The body of my nephew has reached New Delhi and I would go there on tomorrow (Friday) to bring it back to Mohali. His cremation will be done here Saturday,’ said Singh.

Clarke, Hughes coach now to mould boys at Nagpur academy

Sydney, Feb.21 (ANI): Neil D’Costa is a cricket coach with a difference. He has made a name for himself by pitching two youngsters into the Australian Test squad in the last five years – Michael Clarke and Phil Hughes, and now his own career is also undergoing a change.

He has been invited to coach at a cricket academy in Nagpur, India.

Flown out to meet the boss, the chairman of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), Shashank Manohar, he was astonished not only by the facilities, but also by Manohar’s intelligence and vision.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, the academy at Nagpur is at an old Test ground and includes a 40-room hostel, 16 turf nets, a gym, a medical room and a sports science wing.

He has accepted the opportunity, and from May 1 will oversee 80 students in two squads.

D’Costa will be biting his fingernails as Phillip Hughes takes guard at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg next week. D’Costa also hopped on a plane alongside numerous family members to go to watch Clarke make his memorable debut in Bangalore. But this time he will follow events on TV.

He has too many gifted players to coach at his centre in Picnic Point, youngsters with semi-finals coming up and so on. He cannot let them down.

D’Costa has learnt to let go.

D’Costa believes in the holistic approach to coaching, concentrating on attitude to life as much as cricketing technique. Perhaps it comes from his mixed background. His parents were born in Chennai, India, and came to Australia in their 20s to join relatives and to avoid political strife.

His father was coached by Lala Amarnath, and in his turn played alongside Len Pascoe and Jeff Thomson at Bankstown. (ANI)

Bogmati turns a favourite tourist destination in Assam

Bogamati hill area (Guwahati), Feb.18 (ANI): Despite being rich in wildlife and having several national parks, Assam could not become a major tourist centre due to militant activities for many years. But now it is trying to bring about a change. Efforts are being made to develop new tourist places such as Bogamati hill area.

Endowed with fascinating natural scenery, Bogamati hill area in particular is nature lovers’ paradise.

Located at the Indo-Bhutan border area, Bogamati lies between two hill ranges and the foothills of the Bhutan border. Today, it is a hotspot for picnickers, thronging from remote places of Assam. Just five year ago, it was the general headquarters of the militant outfit United Liberation Front of Assom (ULFA).

After firm action against the militants and development of the region by the state tourism department, Bogamati has today become a popular tourist destination.

The Bogamati hill resort offers some picturesque sights, including ‘Bor Nadi’ river, which originates from Bhutan Hills and flows through two ridges of the hills.

Private companies are also in process of tying up with the state government to develop ‘Bogamati’ as a hub for water sports.

“Earlier, there used to be militants here, but it is not so now. The situation was not good but now everything is fine. There were a few shops but now the numbers of shops has increased,” said Sunmoni Basumatary, one local resident.

“After they have develop the place and its sports it has become very popular. The response of the people who come to this picnic spot is good. Roads are also developed slowly its becoming a good picnic spot and we have no fear to come here,” said Mutesh Sharma, one tourist.

The growing influx of tourists here has developed good business opportunities for local villagers who have set up eating-joints or telephone booths for visiting tourists. By Peter Alex Todd (ANI)