WAGs declare war on Capello following their World Cup ban

London, Sep 12 (ANI): England’s WAGs have blasted coach Fabio Capello after he banned them from the World Cup in South Africa and laid down strict rules for them.

Capello insisted that his stars will not go to the tournament for a holiday, and warned their wives and girlfriends: “If you don’t like it, don’t come.”

He ruled that his current squad can have just one day with their partners and families after each game next summer. And that will be the only socialising allowed.

The WAGs hit back after the team boss insisted the South Africa trip will not be a “holiday” by saying that they were a vital part of the beautiful game, the Daily Star reports.

Speaking on behalf of the international players’ wives, Lizzie Cundy, 38, wife of ex-Chelsea ace Jason, 39, said: “Fabio has made the wrong decision.”

Danielle Lloyd, 25, who is dating Portsmouth loan signing Jamie O’Hara, 22, says WAGs are vital to the game.

“I understand Fabio’s concern. It isn’t a good idea for the wives and girlfriends of the footballers to be taking them away from their careers. But it is important for us to be supporting our partners, as that will also help them with their game. I always make sure Jamie eats well and rests in the run-up to a game so he’s in the right frame of mind,” she said.

Lizzie added: “I admit that at the last World Cup the WAGs did hit the headlines but they’ve learned their lesson and have all grown up a bit.”

Capello’s hardball threat came after England’s last trip to the World Cup finals turned into a circus when the WAGs took over the picturesque town of Baden Baden in Germany. There were parties every night and the players were in almost daily contact with their loved ones. (ANI)

Capello warns WAGs World Cup in South Africa is no holiday

London, Sep 11 (ANI): England coach Fabio Capello has laid down strict laws for WAGs, and is determined that team takes the World Cup in South Africa seriously.

England’s last trip to the World Cup finals turned into a circus when the WAGs took over the picturesque town of Baden Baden in Germany. There were parties every night and the players were in almost daily contact with their loved ones.

Capello insisted that his stars will not go to the tournament for a holiday, and warned their wives and girlfriends: “If you don’t like it, don’t come.”

Capello has ruled that his current squad can have just one day with their partners and families after each game next summer. And that will be the only socialising allowed.

The 63-year-old Italian, whose team qualified for the finals, said: “I hope this period that we are at the World Cup will be very long. The players will have one day with their family, with the girls and friends. It will be one day a week, after each game and that is enough. That’s it.”

Asked if there was any danger it could be like Baden Baden, Capello replied: “No, absolutely not. Please. If they do not want to come for the day, then they should stay home. I like what we’ve had at training where the players stay together. We are going there to play, not for a holiday.”

Stars like Rio Ferdinand and Frank Lampard have admitted the WAGs’ presence affected the team under Sven Goran Eriksson in the 2006 World Cup, where Portugal won their quarterfinal on penalties, The Sun reports.

Some of the WAGs have started planning for South Africa, checking accommodation in Rustenburg, England’s most likely training base. (ANI)

Fabric bags are growing popular in Kashmir

Srinagar, Aug 31 (ANI): People are lapping up environment-friendly fabric bags in Srinagar, which they say is reusable and has many benefits.

With the two-month old ban on plastic bags, jute, fabric or recycled paper carrier bags have now become a common sight in the valley.

People can be seen carrying their shopping in jute or other fabric carrier bags.

With the increased demand, sellers are happy to earn a few extra bucks on these eco-friendly bags.

Residents are happy with the government initiative, which is helping to make their picturesque town cleaner and healthier.

“People like fabric bags. Earlier, people used to throw polythene bags anywhere. It used to clog drains forcing and dirty water would flow over. It used to help in spreading diseases.

The government has done a good job by banning it. The demand for plastic bags has decreased a lot,” said Inayatullah Dar, a resident.

The drive has also helped to generate employment for people who are now making these fabric bags from cloth and recycled paper, including newspapers.

“In the process, the cottage industry has started looking up. Now people are stitching cloth bags, which are getting popular. People are now instead of binning their old newspapers reselling them for a little less than their purchase price. This has also helped in the circulation of newspapers,” said Khawaja Farooq Renzu, Commissioner, Municipal Corporation, Srinagar.

The ban has been imposed in the entire state, but tourist places are seeing its stricter implementation to discourage both residents and tourists from using plastic bags. By Afzal Bhat (ANI)

Orgy takes place during masked ball at 17th century hall

London, July 15 (ANI): A group of partygoers reportedly held an orgy at a masked ball inside an upmarket 17th century hall.

A company hired the picturesque Halswell House, in Goathurst, for 9,000 pounds for the swingers’ romp involving 350 well-off guests.omen wore corsets and suspenders and everyone was in masks and capes for the sexy get-together at the Somerset pile.

Owner Grahame Bond, an ex-estate agent, who has spent 2million pounds doing up the house, said that the well-heeled guests swept up the drive to the house in a succession of Porsches, BMWs and Aston Martins.

But at midnight, Bond said that one of the organisers announced: “The moment has come. The spell has begun”.

“Within minutes, the entire assembly began kissing and shortly afterwards having sex,” the Sun quoted him as saying.

“To say I was shocked was an understatement. It was as if a switch had been flicked on.

“One of my staff came up to me and said, ‘you have to see this’, and I couldn’t believe my eyes.

“I realised it was a swingers party. Everywhere there were couples having sex. Over the banisters alone I counted four couples at it.

“I was very worried for my staff and told them they could go home if they wanted, and two of them, who were only 19-years-old, did so.

“The guests were all public-school types and I jokingly said to one: ‘I suppose you are a High Court judge’. He replied: ‘You’re not far off the mark’.

“Afterwards, I called the police, but they said that as it was a private party, there was nothing illegal about it,” Bond added.

On its website, Halswell House is billed as a “glorious grade 1-listed house”, and says it hosts parties, weddings and corporate events. (ANI)

Shanghai film festival sees Tibetan film scooping Jury Grand Prix

New Delhi, June 23 (ANI): The 12th Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF) saw Tibetan director Pema Tseden’s movie ‘The Search’ bagging the Jury Grand Prix.

The film follows a director’s search for a leading actor for his drama set in picturesque Tibet.

The festival, which ended on Sunday, also saw Christina Yao’s ‘Empire of Silver’, a mainland-Hong Kong-Taiwan co-production about a young heir to a giant banking empire in 1899, scooping the Jury Award.

A comedy titled ‘Original’, jointly produced by Danish and Swedish filmmakers, took the Golden Goblet Award.

Directed by Antonio Tublen and Alexander Brondsted, the film tells the story of a man who gets tired of living up to others’ expectations, and tries to chart his own course.

According to Jury leader Danny Boyle, the film was “a light, touching and subversive study of mental illness that is both compassionate and never sentimental.”

The film’s leading actor Sverrir Gudnason was also named Best Actor, reports the China Daily.

“I feel so good. This is the best thing that anybody has given to me and will keep me going,” he said. (ANI)

Lily Allen ‘plans to ditch party lifestyle to move to sleepy Devon town’

London, May 27 (ANI): Lily Allen is looking to dump her hard partying lifestyle to settle for a sleepy seaside town in Devon, according to reports.

The singer is allegedly on the look out for a house in the town of Ilfracombe, where the average age is 57.

But the 24-year-old would purportedly maintain her main residence in London.

“Lily loves London but would like a bolthole to escape to,” the Mirror quoted a source as saying.

“Kate Moss, Liz Hurley and Pete Doherty all have pads in the Cotswolds, but she hit on Devon. Ilfracombe is surprisingly up and coming, plus it is on the coastline and very picturesque.

“Lily has looked at a gorgeous beachside property for around 300,000 pounds,” the source added. (ANI)

Jet Airways, Kerala Tourism announce the launch of ‘Jet2Kerala’

Kochi, May 13 (ANI): As part of its ongoing effort to boost tourism within India, Jet Airways and Department of Tourism, Government of Kerala, have announced the launch of ‘Jet2Kerala’, a new domestic travel initiative at the Trident, Nariman Point, Mumbai.

Jet Airways and Kerala Tourism, two super brands, will leverage their respective brand equities to boost tourist traffic into ‘God’s Own Country’.

With its stunning natural beauty and rich cultural heritage, be it the sandy beaches of Kovalam, blue Lagoons at Veli, hill stations at Munnar, backwaters of Kollam and Alappuzha, spice plantations in the high ranges of Wayanad, wildlife, high mountain peaks, picturesque valleys, magnificent forts and intricately decorated temples, Kerala has emerged as arguably the leading travel destination in India.”

The package offers travelers unmatched pan-India connectivity from all major parts of the country to three key cities in Kerala – Thiruvananthapuram, Kochi and Kozhikode.

Travelers can enjoy a range of accommodation options to suit every budget- from luxury properties to budget hotels and houseboats.

According to Sudheer Raghavan, Chief Commercial Officer, Jet Airways, said, “Jet Airways has always sought to promote tourism both internationally, as well as within India, by leveraging its unmatched pan-India and growing international network.

We are delighted to partner with Kerala Tourism to launch our new ‘Jet2Kerala’ initiative, as part of our ongoing efforts to boost domestic travel and tourism. We are confident that the compelling value proposition on offer will spur more travelers to visit Kerala this year.”

Dr. V Venu, Secretary (Tourism), Government of Kerala, said, “Kerala has been positioned as an upmarket and high quality international destination. Despite the challenges posed by the global economic downturn, the international tourist arrivals continue to be impressive, with a 16.11 per cent increase in visitors in 2008.

The new Kerala packages will further complement the range of exciting domestic and international JetEscapes holiday packages already on offer by the airline.

International travelers to and from Kerala may connect onto Jet Airways’ daily, direct services to Kuwait, Doha and Muscat in the Gulf, as well as to several destinations in North America, Europe, Asia and the Gulf via the airline’s three international gateway cities in India – Mumbai, Delhi and Chennai.

Kerala Tourism has won several prestigious international and domestic awards for its outstanding work in promoting tourism in Kerala. It is acclaimed as ‘one of the ten paradises in the world’ by the National Geographic Traveler. By Juhan Samuel (ANI)

Amy Winehouse named ‘Pied Piper of St Lucia’

p
London, April 27 (ANI): Amy Winehouse is being called the Pied Piper of St Lucia after she helped a number of local kids, according to reports./pp
The ‘Rehab’ hitmaker took six kids from near her new island home to the picturesque Cotton Bay to play on the beach./pp
And now she is being referred to as the ‘Pied Piper of St Lucia’ by locals, who have been impressed by the songbird’s generosity towards the island’s children, according to sources./pp
Amy is happiest when she’s with children – kids love her. The children she took to the beach on Saturday were following her round and all vying for her attention, the Sun quoted a source as saying./pp
She’s determined to do as much as she can for local kids as they’re a lot less fortunate than she is, she added. (ANI)/p

Swat deal may harm Afghanistan’s security

Kabul, Apr 15 (ANI): Afghanistan has said its own security could be hurt by a deal between the Pakistan Government and the Taliban militants to impose Islamic law in the Sawt Valley.
President Asif Ali Zardari signed a regulation on Monday imposing sharia on Swat, a picturesque valley in northwest Pakistan, as part of a deal to end violence from the Taliban guerrillas.

Afghanistan, fighting its own insurgency against the Taliban, has long been worried that success by the Taliban in Pakistan could embolden the militants on both sides of the border.

“Since any deal with terrorist groups can have effects on the security of our own country and people, we ask the country of Pakistan to take into consideration the issue of security and its side-effects on relations between the two countries,” said Afghan presidential spokesman Humayun Hamidzada.

The strict Taliban, with roots in ethnic Pashtun tribes that straddle the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, have been waging insurgencies in both countries, the Dawn reported.

Afghanistan has in the past accused Pakistani security forces of tacitly supporting militants who infiltrate across the border into Afghanistan, an accusation that has soured ties between the two key allies of Washington. (ANI)

La dolce vita with Swiss precision

Lugano, Switzerland – The southern Swiss city of Lugano, on the shores of Lake Lugano in the Italian-speaking canton of Ticino, blends grandezza and la dolce vita with Swiss precision. In spring, snow-capped Alpine peaks and Mediterranean palms are mirrored side by side in the lake. So, too, do the city’s languages, cultures and mentalities merge in a way that is truly unique.

“Signora” Lugano is, in short, a study in contrasts: modern and narrow-minded, industrious and indolent, effervescent and drowsy, and, despite some architectural eyesores, still beautiful.

The city’s Mediterranean climate, lakeside location between the peaks of Monte Bre and Monte San Salvatore, and Italian flair coupled with Swiss order and tidiness make it a magnet for visitors, especially from the north side of the Alps. Despite Lugano’s business efficiency, life there seems easier, cheerier and more colourful than in northern Switzerland.

On Via Nassa, the main shopping street in Lugano’s “centro storico” or historic centre, fashion designers’ and jewellers’ pricey boutiques are lined up like pearls on a string. Some pieces of jewellery and watches in the displays cost hundreds of thousands of euros.

The items find buyers. Lugano is a wealthy city – the beneficiary of decades of flourishing tourism and Switzerland’s third most important financial centre. Wealthy Italians, mainly, stash their millions in the city’s banks.

A Ferrari or Maserati is nothing special, hardly drawing a glance in front of the five-star Grand Hotel Villa Castagnola. At the foot of Monte Bre facing Monte San Salvatore, the venerable establishment seems to have sprung from a story by German writer Hermann Hesse, who lived in Ticino near Lugano.

The hotel, with many historic salons and a luxuriant palm garden, was once the summer residence of a noble Russian family. Today it is a meeting place for Lugano’s high society.

You can also come across the city’s well-to-do in the gourmet lakeside restaurants and posh piano clubs. After supper, they as well as people of more modest means, stroll through the lakeshore Parco Civico, a municipal park featuring illuminated water fountains and old-fashioned pedal boats, to the plaza that is Lugano’s “salotto,” or parlour.

“The Piazza della Riforma is our living room,” remarked Gianfranco, a waiter.

There, in front of the Renaissance facade of the town hall and its meticulously-tended geranium beds, people get together in a cafe over an espresso or aperetivo in the afternoon, and over a glass of Ticino’s own red Merlot in the evening. The locals discuss games played by their beloved ice-hockey club, seven-time Swiss champion HC Lugano, while tourists make plans for the next day.

Funicular rides up Monte Bre and Monte San Salvatore are popular, as are lake cruises on the old-fashioned boats of the Societa Navigazione del Lago di Lugano or Lake Lugano Navigation Company.

You can sail from the main landing place to the picturesque Ticino village of Morcote, which clings to the slopes of Monte Arbostora. Even on hot days, the rather strenuous climb to the church of Santa Maria del Sasso is worthwhile.

Other rewarding destinations are the former fishing village of Gandria; the casino in the town of Campione d’Italia, on the Italian side of the lake; and the markets in Porlezza and Ponte Tresa.

Internet: www. myswitzerland. com, www. lugano-tourism. ch. (dpa)

Taliban eye Islamabad, threaten to pull out of Swat peace deal

Islamabad, April 9 (IANS) After consolidating their position in a vast swathe of the country’s restive northwest, Taliban militants now seem to be eying this Pakistani capital, even as they threatened to walk out of a peace deal in the Swat valley if the federal government doesn’t play ball.

A large group of Taliban fighters has moved into the Buner area, an otherwise peaceful district just 100 km northwest of Islamabad, despite local elders asking them to stay out, and sparked fears that they could next move on to the federal capital.

‘The day is not far when Islamabad will be in the hands of the Mujahideen,’ The Nation Thursday quoted Taliban commander Mullah Nazeer Ahmed as saying.

‘Tense calm prevailed as armed militants expanded their activities to Bagra and Kalabatt areas of Buner despite repeated calls by the Quami Jirga (elders’ council) to vacate the district,’ Dawn News channel said Thursday.

Meanwhile, uncertainty loomed Thursday as a radical cleric who had brokered a peace deal with the Taliban in Swat shut down his camp in the area after accusing the federal government of insincerity in ratifying the pact.

Speaking to reporters in Swat, Maulana Sufi Mohammad of the Tehrik-e-Nifaz e Shariah-e-Mohammadi (TNSM) said he was not pulling out of the deal but was only shutting his peace camp in the area.

Initial reports said the cleric had withdrawn from the deal inked Feb 16 between the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) government and the TNSM, which is aligned to the Taliban, on imposing Sharia laws in seven districts of the province, including the picturesque Swat Valley that was once a popular tourist destination.

Sufi Mohammad had subsequently held talks with local Taliban leader Maulana Fazlullah, who is also his son-in-law, on the militants laying down their arms.

The cleric also said that while the NWFP government was sincere in implementing the pact, the federal government was dragging its feet on ratifying the accord.

He maintained that peace could not return to the region unless Sharia laws were in place.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, who had given the go-ahead for the deal, has said he would ratify it only if peace returned to the area.

Zardari, however, has been under immense pressure to turn down the deal, particularly after the emergence last week of a video depicting a 17-year-old girl publicly receiving 38 lashes over an alleged illicit relationship. Though the incident was denied, it sparked universal outrage.

The president’s approval is necessary because the provincial government cannot amend its laws without his nod.

The deal with the Taliban had attracted international condemnation as it was seen to be bowing to the militants.

The Taliban-TNSM’s main demand was the replacement of regular courts with Islamic courts. There are reports that over 70 Sharia Courts have already been established in Swat.

Protracted fighting between the Pakistani security forces and the Taliban has forced tens of thousands of civilians to flee Swat. Estimates vary, but human rights monitors believe that up to 800,000 of the valley’s 1.8 million people may have left.

Uncertainty looms as Swat peace deal totters

Islamabad, April 9 (IANS) Uncertainty loomed Thursday as a radical cleric who had brokered a peace deal with the Taliban in Swat shut down his camp in the area after accusing the federal government of insincerity in ratifying the pact.

Speaking to reporters in Swat, Maulana Sufi Mohammad of the Tehrik-e-Nifaz e Shariah-e-Mohammadi (TNSM) said he was not pulling out of the deal but was only shutting his peace camp in the area.

Initial reports said the cleric had withdrawn from the deal inked Feb 16 between the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) government and the TNSM, which is aligned to the Taliban, on imposing Sharia laws in seven districts of the province, including the picturesque Swat Valley that was once a popular tourist destination.

Sufi Mohammad had subsequently held talks with local Taliban leader Maulana Fazlullah, who is also his son-in-law, on the militants laying down their arms.

The cleric also said that while the NWFP government was sincere in implementing the pact, the federal government was dragging its feet on ratifying the accord.

He maintained that peace could not return to the region unless Sharia laws were in place.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, who had given the go-ahead for the deal, has said he would ratify it only if peace returned to the area.

Zardari, however, has been under immense pressure to turn down the deal, particularly after the emergence last week of a video depicting a 17-year-old girl publicly receiving 38 lashes over an alleged illicit relationship. Though the incident was denied, it sparked universal outrage.

The president’s approval is necessary because the provincial government cannot amend its laws without his nod.

The deal with the Taliban had attracted international condemnation as it was seen to be bowing to the militants.

The Taliban-TNSM’s main demand was the replacement of regular courts with Islamic courts. There are reports that over 70 Sharia Courts have already been established in Swat.

Protracted fighting between the Pakistani security forces and the Taliban has forced tens of thousands of civilians to flee Swat. Estimates vary, but human rights monitors believe that up to 800,000 of the valley’s 1.8 million people may have left.

This apart, ‘the horrendous situation in a region, where people have suffered tremendous brutality, where girls have been driven out of schools and where people have been beheaded in public for defying the militants, is one that no elected government can stand by and calmly endure’, an editorial in the English daily The News said a day after the peace deal was signed.

Swat peace deal collapses

slamabad, April 9 (IANS) A deal between the Pakistani government and the Taliban to restore peace in the Swat Valley Thursday collapsed with a radical cleric withdrawing from the pact he helped broker, reports said

‘Maulana Sufi Mohammad announced his withdrawal from Swat peace deal on Thursday,’ Geo TV reported.

The cleric had helped broker the deal between the North West Frontier Province government and the Taliban under which the militants had agreed to lay down their arms in return for the imposition of Sharia laws in the area.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, who had given the go-ahead for the deal, had said he would ratify it only if peace returned to the picturesque valley, once a popular tourist destination.

Zardari, however, has been under immense pressure to turn down the deal, particularly after the emergence last week of a video depicting a 17-year-old girl being publicly flogged over an alleged illicit relationship. Though the incident was denied, it sparked universal outrage.

The deal with the Taliban had attracted international condemnation as it was seen to be bowing to the militants.

Easter Weekend: Travel Chaos Underway

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Major routes have already become congested, particularly on the M25 around Heathrow and on the Birmingham M6 toll road.

Heavy traffic has also hit the picturesque A303 through Wiltshire and the A66 in Cumbria.

With forecasters predicting temperatures could reach 19C (66F) in parts of southern England, travellers are keen to make the most of the bank holiday.

The RAC predicts that 33% more people intended to take short trips by road this year than last, and is expecting congestion on the M25, M1 and M6.

The AA said resorts such as Brighton and Bournemouth could be busy as well as historic cities such as Cambridge and Edinburgh.

More than 30 sets of roadworks are in place across the country whilst 51 have been suspended until the end of Easter Monday.

The Highways Agency, which is responsible for England’s motorways and major roads, said it had completed 37 sets of roadworks in time for Easter.

On the railways, passengers on a number of routes face service suspensions while a £55m programme of engineering work goes ahead.

P and O Ferries will carry 132,000 passengers on its Dover-Calais route from Good Friday to Easter Monday – an increase on the 98,000 figure last Easter.

A total of 200,000 passengers will travel with the Channel Tunnel high-speed Eurostar train company in the period from today until Easter Tuesday.

Those travelling by rail will have to contend with the closure of the West Coast Main Line between Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire and Rugby in the West Midlands from Easter Saturday until 12 noon on Easter Monday.

Services in and out of London’s Liverpool Street and Waterloo stations will also be disrupted by engineering work, although 64,000 train services will run over the holiday period (today to Monday) which is around 5,000 more than last Easter.

The most popular destinations for Brits travelling abroad this Easter include Turkey, Egypt and Tunisia.

British Airways said its top long-haul destinations for the holiday period were New York, Los Angeles and Hong Kong.

Follow our live traffic updates from the Highways Agency and your reports.

Twitter Users: If you see anything on the road, please tweet a message with #eastertravel when you pull over. To follow our live travel updates please follow: skytravelupdate.

Vermont becomes 4th US state to allow gay marriage

Vermont legalized gay marriage on Tuesday after lawmakers overrode a veto from the governor by a wafer-thin margin, making the New England state the fourth in the United States where gays can wed.

The vote, nine years after Vermont was first in the United States to adopt a same-sex civil-union law, also makes the tiny state of 624,000 people the first in the nation to introduce gay marriage through legislative action instead of the courts.

“We’ve shown that truth and fairness and justice and love are more powerful than one man’s veto pen,” same-sex marriage advocate Beth Robinson said to cheers from supporters in the state capital of Montpelier after Vermont’s House of Representatives passed the bill by a 100-49 vote.

Known for picturesque foliage, quaint dairy farms and a counter-culture spirit, Vermont joins New England neighbors Connecticut and Massachusetts in allowing gay marriage. Iowa legalized gay marriage last week.

Lawmakers in next-door New Hampshire and Maine are also considering bills to allow gay marriage, putting New England at the heart of a divisive national debate over the issue.

Washington D.C. extended new rights to gay couples on Tuesday, too, with a unanimous City Council vote to recognize same-sex marriages performed outside the district. Some city lawmakers lauded the move as a prelude to legal same-sex marriage in the U.S. capital.

OVERRIDES GOVERNOR’S VETO

Vermont’s bill, which becomes law on Sept. 1, looked in peril after a 95-52 vote on Thursday in the Democratic-controlled House that was five votes short of the support needed to clear a veto from Republican Governor Jim Douglas.

Douglas vetoed the bill on Monday, urging lawmakers to focus on the economy instead. Supporters needed two-thirds of the votes in each chamber to override his veto. They got that easily in the state Senate, which passed the bill 23-5 earlier on Tuesday.

The vote came just four days after Iowa’s Supreme Court struck down a decade-old law that barred gays from marrying. The surprise ruling, which made Iowa the first in the heartland to allow same-sex marriages, may have influenced some Vermont lawmakers to change their vote, gay marriage advocates said.

California briefly recognized gay marriage until voters banned it in a referendum last year.

The group Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, which helped to legalize gay marriage in Massachusetts and Connecticut, has set a goal of expanding such marriages to all New England states by 2012. Maine and New Hampshire already offer same-sex couples some form of legal recognition.

Forty-three U.S. states have laws explicitly prohibiting gay marriage, including 29 with constitutional amendments restricting marriage to one man and one woman.

Political instability leading to job loss: Goa industry

Panaji, April 5 (IANS) The Goa Chamber of Commerce and Industry has said growing political instability and a 15 percent drop in the tourism sector have led to nearly 100,000 people in the state losing their jobs.

Alongside, according to chamber president Nitin Kunkolienkar, ‘rising civic unrest’ was proving to be a deterrent for setting up new industries in this picturesque Goa.

‘There is a 10-15 percent drop in the tourism sector. We have about one lakh unemployed youth in the state,’ Kunkolienkar said Saturday in his address at the closing ceremony of the year-long centenary celebrations of the chamber.

‘No major industries are coming to Goa, while we are busy protesting and agitating.’

Maintaining that a ‘handful of protestors were holding the state to ransom’, Kunkolienkar said: ‘Protesting is becoming a fashion. Goa is getting a bad name because of drugs. People coming here on vacations are disappearing. And yet these protestors do not raise a voice against this.’

Kunkolienkar also said special economic zones (SEZ) could be an answer to Goa’s economic and employment woes. ‘But these SEZ should have non-polluting industries like IT or pharmaceutical companies.’

Dehra Dun’s Baba Ram Rai Gurudwara draws large number of devotees

Dehradun, April 1 (ANI): Baba Ram Rai Gurudwara, a popular pilgrimage centre for Sikhs and Hindus in Dehradun, is drawing a large number of devotees of all faiths.

Located in a picturesque location, the gurudwara was built by Baba Ram Rai, the eldest son of the 7th Sikh master, Guru Har Rai.

Legend has it that Baba Ram Rai was not made the Sikh Guru by his father and was forced to move away from Punjab and settle down in Dehradun valley. After reaching the city, Baba Ram Rai built a home for himself with the support of Fateh Shah, the ruler of Dehradun.

“Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb had once invited Guru Har Rai, the father of Baba Ram Rai at his court in Delhi. But Guru Har Rai could not go, but instead sent his son. At the court, Baba Ram Rai was asked several questions on various subjects to discredit Guru Har Rai and the Sikh faith. However, the Guru answered all questions wisely and also showed them some miracles,” said R.L. Juyal, caretaker of Gurudwara Ram Rai.

“The overwhelmed Emperor appreciated Ram Rai and described him a ‘Saint’. A message was sent to Fateh Shah of Dehradun to welcome the Guru. Emperor Aurangzeb gifted seven villages to Baba Ram Rai,” Juyal added.

A large number of devotees converge at the Ram Rai Gurudwara during the annual fair, held on the 5th day after Holi. It is celebrated to commemorate the arrival of Baba Ram Rai in the city in 1699.

The fair promotes communal harmony and people from different religions and castes join in to hoist the flag. The devotees come from Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh and various other parts of the country.

“We pray here as we have great faith in this place. All our wishes are fulfilled. I came here when I was the minister in the year 2002. Now, I have come here after seven years and I am feeling blessed that I can raise a flag,” said a devotee.

“Long after we leave this world, our children will continue to come here to raise the flag. Our next turn to raise the flag will come in 2079. For this purpose we have submitted the names of our children. Even if we die by that time our children will come here to raise the flag,” said another devotee. By Ashish Goel(ANI)

Blooming mustard fields in Kashmir

Srinagar, Mar 31 (ANI): Hordes of tourists visiting Kashmir valley are fascinated by the mustard fields as the mustard crop has turned the whole picturesque Kashmir valley into golden.

According to mustard growers, following sufficient snowfall and rains this winter, the crop yields are much better than the previous year.

On the way to Pahalgam, 16 kilometres off Srinagar on the national highway, many tourists feast their eyes and minds with the scenic view of blooming mustard flowers.

Interestingly, the tourists initially get the glimpse of these mustard fields while arriving in the valley by flight since they are located in the region from the planes approach Srinagar prior to landing.

“Luckily we were going to Pahalgam. So we went through this place. Driver told us that the plane has gone through this place only. So this is the same place which we had seen from our … (aircraft) had flown by. So we wanted to have a look here and we are extremely happy,” said Puneet, a tourist.

Some tourists said that the place gives them a feel of being in Switzerland. They draw a parallel between the combination of green and yellow hues in the backdrop of snow capped mountains.

“It somewhere resembles Switzerland. A combination of mountains and mustard fields and not found so easily. The smell and beauty of this place is awesome,” said Rashmi, another tourist.

Reportedly, the tourism authorities haven’t laid their eyes on the development of these spots whereas the experts are of the view that these scenic spots can be a major attraction for the tourists.

“These tourists enjoy the scenic beauty and click pictures. They feel the beauty of the place,” said Mohammad Shafi, a tour operator.

The mustard crop is sown in September-October. As temperatures rise after winter, the rapeseed-mustard crop blossoms and the farm is harvested towards the end of May.

India, China, Canada, Poland, France and Pakistan are major rapeseed-mustard growing countries. India, according to a survey, has nearly 4.5 million hectares under mustard production. By Parvez Butt (ANI)

Kashmir gears up to welcome tourists

Srinagar, Mar 2 (ANI): Kashmir is giving a facelift to the gardens of the valley, ahead of the tourist season.

With the winters bidding a goodbye to the region, the floriculture department has started a massive upgradation of almost all the gardens.

The Mughal gardens like Nishat and Shalimar as well as the famous tulip and the botanical gardens play an important role in promoting the state as a tourist destination.

The floriculture department of state has for the first time launched a programme to give a face-lift to the gardens. New varieties of flowers are also being introduced to make ‘all weather gardens’.

“Tulips bloom only for four to five weeks. We want to attract tourists throughout the year and make these gardens all weather gardens,” said G.S. Naqash, director, floriculture department, Kashmir.

Hundreds have been engaged to work in the gardens.

“The aim is to complete all the work within one month. Many tourists visit the valley during this season. Like every year, we expect that thousands of tourists will throng the valley to witness the flowers in full bloom. So, we are working to make the garden look good. Our entire team is engaged in the tulip and the botanical garden,” said Ghulam Hassan, a gardener.

Kashmir is considered the land of gardens. The most famous are the Mughal gardens with vast picturesque hillsides. The Mughal gardens of Shalimar, Nishat, Chashmashahi and others like Pari Mahal and Harwan are major tourist attractions.

The city also boasts of one of Asia’s largest tulip garden situated at the foothills of the Zabarwan Mountains on the banks of the Dal Lake spread over 12.5 acres of land and has 1.2 million tulips in full bloom.By Bilal Butt (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)