MI6 chief’s beach pics on Facebook ‘no state secret’, says UK Foreign Secretary

London, July 6 (ANI): Reacting on the headlines grabbed by new MI6 head Sir John Sawers’ photographs, which appeared on Facebook, UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband has said that it is “not a state secret” that the spy chief wears Speedos.

John’s wife Shelley Sawers had posted beach photos of her husband on facebook site the day after he was appointment head of MI6.

Information on her profile revealed the couple’s friendships with actors Moir Leslie and Alister Cameron.

According to The Mail, Shelley had disclosed details on Facebook, including the location of the London flat used by the couple and the whereabouts of their three children and of Sir John’s parents.

Senior politicians said that the security lapse raised concerns about John’s ability to take up his post as chief of the Secret Intelligence Service this November, giving him responsibility for Britain’s overseas spying operations.

However, while talking on BBC1′s Andrew Marr Show, Miliband dismissed allegations of recklessness and asked people to “grow up”.

He said that John was an “outstanding professional”, and denied that the details on the social networking website, which have since been removed, would compromise his career.

“What are you leading the news with that… The fact that there’s a picture that the head of the MI6 goes swimming. Wow that really is exciting,” the Telegraph quoted Miliband as saying.

“It is not a state secret that he wears Speedo swimming trunks, for goodness sake let’s grow up.

“This allegation that there’s great secrets and then you find out it’s about his swimming trunks and the fact that his family’s getting dragged into it.

“He was appointed 10 days ago to be the head of MI6; he’s an outstanding professional who will do a really good job in an outstanding organisation that does a huge amount for this country.

“The newspapers have gone on to Facebook and got pictures of him in his swimming trunks – the fact that you’re leading on it when we’ve got Iran, Afghanistan and the other issues,’ he added.

Sir John Major, the former Conservative Prime Minister, said that the issue had been “overblown”. (ANI)

Apple faces lawsuit over ‘explosive’ iPod

London, March 14 (ANI): Apple has landed in legal trouble after a mother alleged her son endured second-degree burns when the company’s iPod touch music players exploded in his pocket.

Lynette Antrobus, from Cincinnati, is claiming 75,000 dollars plus punitive damage after accusing the multinational corporation of “gross negligence and recklessness” and of behaving “maliciously and fraudulently”.

Legal papers, filed with Ohio Southern District Court, said that while at school on December 4 last year, the child heard an “unexpected pop” from the gadget, that was switched off, then a “burning sensation” followed by the realisation that his “pants” were on fire.

“Plaintiff A.V immediately ran to the bathroom and took off his burning pants with the assistance of a friend,” the Telegraph quoted the document as saying.

“[The iPod touch] had burned through Plaintiff A.V’s pants pocket and melted through his nylon/spandex underwear, burning his leg,” it was added.

While Apple is yet to issue a statement regarding the case, the device’s battery is thought to have caused the alleged explosion.

The consumer electronic and software giant had in 2008 paid an undisclosed amount to a man after he suffered burns when his Mac laptop battery caught fire. (ANI)

Archbishop of York says Christians regarded as ‘mad’ by society

London, Feb. 18 (ANI): The Archbishop of York Dr. John Sentamu has said the society considers Christians to be ‘mad’ because they are motivated by charity and compassion rather than the reckless pursuit of money. Many Christians are living out their lives as the church dispersed in the world of business and commerce every day. They are involved daily in building the Kingdom and have the daily challenge of living by a set of values that the world thinks are mad,” Sentamu said on Tuesday at the Trinity Brompton church in West London.

Sentamu, the second most senior cleric in the Church of England and its first black Archbishop, said the recession should lead to a rediscovery of what is truly important in life.

“All of life is religious and there is a desperate need to reconnect the sacred and the secular. There is no more urgent time than now to break down the compartmentalized thinking that separates trust in God from the world of work,” the Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

Sentamu has repeatedly criticised the greed and recklessness in the banking sector, which eventually led to the current financial crisis.

In his latest attack, he said: “In our imagination, addiction to growth, fuelled by over-borrowing (debt), stopped being a bad thing. Instead, it became a means to an end, a route to growth. The unfettered pursuit of profit was never going to deliver. It is this idolatrous love of money, pursuing profit without regard for ethic, risk or consequence, which led us to our current situation.”

The Archbishop, however, expressed confidence that London would get through the current recession.

“Just as after the war they had to live through a time of pre-fabs and rationing, I believe we urgently need to rediscover what it is to rebuild the city in our day, and now, in this time of transition, we need to learn how to build it,” he said.

Sentamu also said faith cannot be separated from the world of work, and the staff should not be expected to give up their religious convictions when they walk into the office, he added.

“There needn’t be a separation between what goes on in church and in our prayers – and what goes on in the office or in the boardroom or on the shop floor.” (ANI)