Florida banks seek reprieve from new capital rules-WSJ

(Reuters) – Banks in Florida are requesting that U.S. federal regulators exempt them from mandatory higher capital requirements because they are struggling to cope with the BP (BP.L)(BP.N) oil spill, the Wall Street Journal said.

On Monday, Florida Bankers Association President Alex Sanchez wrote to Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) Chairman Sheila Bair and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke requesting a reprieve, the Journal said.

Sanchez has asked that all local banks — already weakened by the real-estate crisis — be granted a twelve-month break from higher capital requirements, loan appraisals and new regulatory sanctions.

“Unless we work together in giving our banks more time to work through this oil crisis” more financial institutions will go under, Sanchez said in the letter, obtained by the Journal.

Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, regulators granted banks in Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and Texas a three-year waiver from loan appraisal regulations but did not offer a full exemption from capital requirements, according to the paper.

“This oil spill crisis will decimate our communities, first in the Panhandle and then around the state as the oil spill spreads. Furthermore, no one knows how long this will last,” Sanchez said.

Florida Bankers Association could not immediately be reached for comment by Reuters outside regular U.S. business hours. (Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Louise Heavens)

Don’t hear case against Adnan until June 10, HC to family court

Mumbai, May 29 — Pakistani singer-composer Adnan Sami has got a reprieve until June 10 in the domestic violence application filed by his estranged wife Saba Galadari before a family court. A vacation bench of the Bombay High Court on Friday restrained the family court from proceeding with the hearing in Galadari’s applications. The vacation bench of Justice S J Kathawala and Justice R G Ketkar gave Sami time so that he could either approach the Supreme Court or appear before the family court on June 7. While refusing to give him six weeks’ time, the high court observed: “No case is made out to place any sickness of appellate [Sami] prior to May 3.” However, the judges felt that Sami should be given time considering he had undergone a gall bladder surgery on May 23. Asking Sami to appear before family court on June 7, the HC has asked the family court not to proceed with the hearing before June 10 in his absence. The family court had last year held that Galadari’s divorce petition could not be entertained because her second marriage with Sami was invalid. The HC reversed this ruling in March, but gave Sami six weeks to file an appeal. However, Sami, who has been admitted to a hospital in Munich after suffering from severe abdominal pain, filed an application in the high court seeking extension of the deadline. His advocate Vibhav Krishna said they could not approach the Supreme Court as Sami fell ill. “He has been admitted in a hospital in Munich and a surgery was performed to remove five stones from his gall bladder,” said Krishna. He informed the court that his client will return to Mumbai by June 3.

Sami claimed his second marriage to Galadari was not valid because she had failed to comply with halala, in which she was required to have married another man before remarrying Sami.

Australia’s Day wins Byron Nelson by two shots

Australian Jason Day survived a final hole bogey to win the Byron Nelson Championship on Sunday.

Day carded a 72 to finish on 10-under-par 270 at the Four Seasons TPC, two strokes ahead of Americans Blake Adams, Brian Gay and Jeff Overton.

The 22-year-old Day was helped by Adams, who double-bogeyed the last after his second shot clipped a tree branch and ended in a water hazard.

“I wear my heart on my collar and I worked so hard to get to where I am today and this means a lot to me,” Day told reporters after becoming the youngest Australian to win on the PGA Tour.

Day seemed headed for a play-off when he pulled his four-iron approach shot into the water at the par-four 18th but got a huge reprieve when Adams also found the water when his second shot clipped a branch.

“I was disappointed that I hit it in the water and made it so hard on myself, but in the end I’m happy,” said Day, the 2006 Australian amateur champion.

Day’s first win took him longer than he expected but he said he had learned a lot.

“It was my own fault it didn’t come sooner,” he said. “I didn’t practice hard enough the first year. You give someone a really good contract deal, everyone is telling you you’re the best and it’s easy to slack off.

“I’ve been working very hard this year and last year and it’s finally starting to pay off, which is nice.”

Day began the final round two strokes clear of Adams but slipped out of the lead after carding three bogeys in four holes just before the turn.

However, he birdied the 11th and 12th to regain a two-shot advantage and came to the last with a one-shot cushion.

Adams blamed a poor tee shot for his costly double-bogey.

“I was fortunate I had a wide-open (second) shot but I had some overhanging limbs and the ball was sitting on hard pan,” he said.

“The ball shot up, hit a limb and threw it left, so I can’t beat myself up over it. It leads back to that three-wood (tee shot). If I hit a good three-wood, it’s a different story.”

(Editing Peter Rutherford; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Zardari grants Malik presidential pardon to save him from 3-yr jail term

Islamabad, May 18 (ANI): Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has come to the rescue of one of his most trusted aides, Interior Minister Rehman Malik, as barely hours after the Lahore High Court (LHC) rejected Malik’s plea in a corruption case, he pardoned the minister using his special power under the Article 45 of the Constitution.

The LHC had dismissed an appeal filed by Malik against punishments announced by the Accountability Court on Monday.

Hour’s after the court’s verdict, Presidential spokesperson Farhatullah Babar hastly announced that the ‘President using his constitutional power on the advice of the Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani’ has granted remission to Malik.

Babar, however, refused to give any more details on the issue, The Dawn reports.

The spokesman said that the pardon has been granted under Article 45 of the Constitution which says: “The president shall have power to grant pardon, reprieve and respite, and to remit, suspend or commute any sentence passed by any court, tribunal or authority.”

Observers believe that Zardari’s move is likely to heighten tension between the Presidency and the higher judiciary at a time when the relationship between the two is already at its lowest ebb. (ANI)

Fighting Rastogi goes down to De Voest in ITF final

New Delhi, May 15 (IANS) India’s Karan Rastogi had to contend with the runners-up trophy for the second successive week though not before making top seed South African Rik De Voest sweat for his 7-5, 6-2 victory in the $15,000 men’s International Tennis Federation (ITF) trophy here Saturday.

Under a scorching sun, both players showed urgency in the first set before De Voest made the second an one-sided affair, eventually winning the match in nearly one and a half hours.

The 23-year-old Rastogi, a finalist in last week’s ITF tournament in Kolkata, showed the stomach for fight and matched De Voest stroke by stroke but ran out of steam in the second set.

The former Indian Davis Cupper was not intimidated by De Voest’s big game and kept up the pressure by moving to the nets besides playing solid from the baseline. He chased down every ball and came up with some stunning returns of serve to leave the South African stranded in disbelief.

But De Voest, who was here to rack up the ATP point to make the cut for the Wimbledon qualifying rounds, showed he is a notch higher in class. The South African Davis Cupper, who was on his second trip to India, relied on his big serve, raining down 13 aces, and powerful forehand to wriggle out of tight spots. His passing shots from the baseline were stinging.

Rastogi was broken in the very first game but the Indian fought back with purpose immediately. The second game, the longest of the match, went to seven deuces and De Voest had to stave off three break points before holding on.

By then Rastogi gained confidence and identified the chink in South African’s armour, his backhand, which he attacked frequently. The Indian broke back at 2-3 with a superb forehand pass and then held his serve without conceding a point.

However, the reprieve was short lived and a few errors from the Indian in the 11th game cost him a break and De Voest soon served out the set.

The pattern changed in the second set where De Voest dicated terms. Rastogi tried to snatch early initiative but by then the South African was firing thunderbolts and with breaks in the fifth and the seventh game, he sprinted to victory.

Rastogi, who is returning to the circuit after two years due to a back injury, said he lost to a better player.

‘I made errors here and there and that proved costly. I had my chances and I needed to cash in on them. But I lost to a better player today and I have no regrets. He came with some great returns and passes. The last two weeks have been good for me and it should improve my rankings,’ Rastogi said.

‘I have been playing four weeks on trot, so I will go home for a break and will reflect on my game. After some days of training, I will play in Indonesia.’

De Voest, who had a near-flawless week, was happy that the match didn’t go to the decider.

‘He (Rastogi) played really well. He didn’t give me much chance. He pounced on anything short from me and kept the pressure. I served well today and I am glad the set didn’t go to the decider as I was getting a little tired in the second set,’ De Voest said.

Nalini fears threat to life, probe ordered

Chennai, May 13 (ANI): Tamil Nadu Government has appointed a committee to look into the allegations by Nalini Sriharan, who is serving life term in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case, that her life was under threat in jail.

The committee headed by DIG of Prisons (Coimbatore) Govindarajan would also go into her other charges, including harassment by jail officials at the high-security Vellore Women”s Prison, where she is lodged.

In two letters addressed to the Additional Director General of Police (prisons), copies of which were released to the media by her lawyers on Wednesday, Nalini accused jail officials of torturing her.”

She also alleged her cell had not been cleaned for days and expressed fears that officials may be ‘planting’ something and ‘recover’.

On May 10, the government had informed the State Assembly that she had made calls to foreign countries, including Sri Lanka and Britain, from a mobile phone seized from her cell.

Tamil Nadu Government had rejected the plea of Nalini and three other convicts in the case for premature release, based on a report by the prison advisory board.

Nalini has been convicted on 16 counts of murder, and found guilty under Section 302 of Indian Penal Code on all counts.

She was also convicted under Section 3 of TADA and Section 120-B of the IPC, dealing with conspiracy.

Nalini”s original death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment after Congress President Sonia Gandhi sought a reprieve for her after she had had a baby daughter. (ANI)

BCCI grants Lalit Modi five days reprieve to file answers

New Delhi, May 10 (ANI): The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on Monday granted suspended IPL Chairman Lalit Modi five more days to respond to a showcause notice served to him on April 26.

Modi was given a showcause notice by the BCCI on charges of financial irregularity.
There are five main charges against Modi, ranging from receiving kickbacks for allotting TV broadcast rights to indiscipline and leveling baseless charges against the BCCI.

He is also facing charges of rigging the bidding of two new IPL teams, which were eventually won by Sahara and the Kochi IPL consortium and also for being a ghost owner in three IPL teams. .

Modi has claimed that he has submitted most of the relevant IPL documents.

They include all franchisee agreements, global media rights agreements, the global media rights packages, bid documents, media rights licensee agreements, eligibility letters of all bidders with details and all sponsorship agreements entered into by IPL.

The board, however, has denied receiving all documents. The BCCI”s chief administration officer Ratnakar Shetty said there are still a few documents that have not been handed over by Modi. (ANI)

Nepal hails reprieve as Maoists call off strike

Kathmandu, May 8 (IANS) Nepal bustled with frantic early morning activities Saturday, making best use of a reprieve

after the opposition Maoist party called off a general strike that had kept the country paralysed for six days.

Vehicles were back on streets and highways that had been deserted since May 2 while shops began opening early as the major political parties, human rights organisations and business groups hailed the decision to end the strike.

However, the Maoists warned that they were simply suspending the protest and would enforce it again later this month if the government failed to address its demands.

‘We have decided to suspend the strike considering the hardship suffered by people and the appeals from different segments of society,’ Maoist chief and former prime minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda said after an emergency meeting of his top leaders Friday night to review the situation.

‘We are also doing this to foil the conspiracy by the coalition government to derive mileage from our protests.’

The move came after growing pressure both at home and the international community.

On Friday, 48 leading organisations, including commerce umbrella organisations and professional bodies, gave the former rebels 48 hours to end the strike, warning they would take steps else.

The peace rally called by the group saw thousands of people irrespective of political affiliation gather in Kathmandu and other major cities, expressing collective anger against the blockade and asking the Maoists to return to dialogues for peace and a new constitution.

The European Union had also delivered a veiled warning to the Maoists and the government, saying the imbroglio should be resolved within the weekend.

Prachanda however said his party’s protests would continue. On Sunday, it would encircle Singha Durbar, the complex where the ministries, including the prime minister’s office, are located.

‘This government is a curse for the country and should be dissolved so that there is a new constitution,’ Prachanda said.

He also warned that if the government continued to ignore the demand for a new, all-party government headed by his party, yet another strike would be called before May 28.

May 28, less than three weeks away, is another critical date for the turbulent republic.

Unless the government can enforce a new constitution by then or amend the deadline for promulgating the constitution, parliament and the government will be dissolved and chaos unleashed.

Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal, who despite his party’s weak position in parliament has managed to stave off the Maoist demand for his resignation for almost a year, and his allies are now seeking to extend the deadline for the new constitution by six months.

But for that, they have to amend the constitution and need the approval of the Maoists, the largest party in parliament after the elections in 2008.

The ruling coalition says the PM can step down if the Maoists agree to empty their guerrilla cantonments before the new constitution comes into force.

There are over 19,600 Maoist People’s Liberation Army soldiers in 28 barracks and the Maoists are pressing for their en masse induction in the national army.

The government however says it will induct around 4,000 guerrillas only after a video tape showed Prachanda boasting that he had inflated the strength of his guerrilla army to control the national army.

Chinese farmer imprisoned for fake tiger photos

BEIJING, May 5 (Reuters) – A Chinese farmer who was found guilty of doctoring photos of an endangered tiger and collecting a cash reward from wildlife authorities has been put in jail after failing to report to parole officers, a news report said.

The photos by Zhou Zhenglong, a 54-year-old farmer from mountainous Zhenping county in northern Shaanxi province, raised hopes that the South China tiger might still exist in the region.

Local officials used that to promote tourism and a wildlife reserve, and rewarded him with 20,000 yuan ($2,930) before the fraud was exposed by local media and Internet experts.

Zhou was sentenced in 2008 to jail with a three-year reprieve, which normally means the convicted person remains at liberty.

But he was imprisoned for two years starting last weekend after a court found he “had not cooperated with monitoring officials and had not reported his thinking and activity,” the Beijing Morning Post said on Wednesday.

Authorities have admitted the pictures were fake after months of stalling, and sacked a number of officials for their part in the scandal.

An investigation by China’s State Forestry Administration has also excluded the possibility of tigers in Zhenping. (Reporting by Yu Le and Lucy Hornby; Editing by Krittivas Mukherjee)

New York mayor drops plans to remove 892 cops after Times Square plot

New York, May 6 (ANI): New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has dropped plans to remove nearly 900 cops days after the failed Times Square car bombing.

Bloomberg”s executive budget for 2011, which he is announcing tomorrow, “won’t include a reduction in the number of police officers out on our streets keeping New York City safe,” the New York Post quoted his spokesman Stu Loeser, as saying.

The change-of-heart comes less than a week after NYPD cops discovered terrorist Faisal Shahzad”s smoldering, explosives-laden Nissan Pathfinder in Times Square on Saturday.

It was city detectives who helped the FBI wrap up the case and arrest Shahzad within 54 hours.
The reprieve came as several developments emerged in the terror investigation.

Bloomberg was preparing to cut 892 NYPD jobs through attrition to save 55 million dollars in related costs.

Officials yesterday said higher-than-anticipated tax revenues were allowing Bloomberg to reverse that decision and keep the police force intact at about 35,000.

As of March, revenues were running about 225 million dollars ahead of expectations. The grim early budget was released in January.

The initial plan was to have the cops retire and not be replaced. With the increased funding, the plan is for the NYPD to have a new class at the Police Academy and hire close to 1,000 rookies.

The police have welcomed Bloomberg’s decision. (ANI)

Shashi Tharoor explanation questioned, compromise formula being explored

New Delhi, Apr 17 (ANI): The Congress Party, according to sources, seems not convinced over the explanation given by Minister of State for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor on his alleged misuse of office to help his friend Sunanda Pushkar to get ‘free equity’ in Kochi Franchise.

Reportedly, a section of the Congress Party moved a compromise formula according to which if Sunanda Pushkar surrenders her stake in IPL Kochi, Tharoor may get a reprieve.

Pushkar has over 70-crore stake in Kochi IPL team, which she is free to sell it at any point.

Congress Party said it would have looked better if Shashi Tharoor had at least offered to resign.

Earlier, Tharoor said during an interview to a private news channel that he would not resign. (ANI)

NZ says to delay full CO2 trading if no int’l progress

* NZ says could soften CO2 scheme if schemes elsewhere stall

* Government cautious about “getting too far ahead of pack”

* But July 1 start for energy, transport sectors unchanged

(Adds quotes, background)

By Adrian Bathgate

WELLINGTON, April 8 (Reuters) – New Zealand is likely to delay full implementation of its carbon trading scheme if there is no progress towards agreement on similar schemes in other developed countries, the government said on Thursday.

However, it said there would be no immediate changes nor any delay to the scheme, which steps up a gear on July 1 with the entry of the transport sector, along with power stations and steel and cement makers. Forestry began in 2008.

Business groups have been putting pressure on the government to delay or soften the impact of the scheme, even though the current government won parliamentary support for a weaker version late last year.

Greens and some analysts say the scheme, the only national scheme outside Europe, is already too soft and won’t drive deep emissions reductions. Emissions trading during the initial years was also likely to be small and relatively illiquid. (For an analysis on the scheme, click on [ID:nSGE62O0IX])

Climate Change Minister Nick Smith said support measures, such as a fixed carbon price, that are due to expire in 2013, might be extended to protect the competitiveness of New Zealand businesses bound by the scheme.

“New Zealand is cautious about getting too far ahead of the global pack,” Smith told Reuters.

“We have programmed these sectors bearing the full price of their carbon emissions from January 1, 2013, but would reconsider that if no progress is made globally, and particularly amongst our key trading partners like Australia and the U.S.,” he said.

A number of business groups this week lobbied the government for a reprieve of the transport, energy and industrial sectors which account for about half of the country’s emissions.

Agriculture, which makes up the other half of New Zealand’s emissions, will be included in the scheme in 2015.

(For more on climate change in New Zealand and Australia, click on [ID:nCARBONAU]. For a factbox on the scheme, click on [ID:nSGE62O0J0])

FAIR SHARE

However, Smith said the scheme would not be altered for the time being, and the July 1 start date would remain.

Under the scheme, emitters have the option of paying a fixed price of NZ$25 ($17.73) a tonne of carbon, and will only have to surrender one pollution permit for every two tonnes of emissions. These support measures are due to be phased out in 2013.

Under current rules, the scheme will face a mandatory review in 2011. Smith said a key criteria would be how much international progress was being made towards putting a price on emissions in major trading partners.

“We cannot have a small trading country like New Zealand imposing costs on its own industry if similar countries are not also bearing their share of the responsibility,” Smith said.

The Greenhouse Policy Coalition, comprising some of the country’s top emitters, welcomed the prospect of support measures being extended.

“Our view is that New Zealand companies are going to be facing a price of carbon and their competitors won’t. It’s as simple as that,” executive director David Venables told Reuters.

Critics point to the large numbers of free emissions permits to be given out to some of the biggest polluting firms and that there is no cap on the number of those free permits.

The government also hasn’t finalised the nation’s emissions reduction target for 2020 and won’t do so until there is agreement on a tougher global climate pact.

“If Australia doesn’t come in, if other nations don’t come in, almost certainly you want to keep the scheme going at a low level pending decisions as to whether you think international decisions are on the horizon,” said Stuart Frazer from carbon consultants Frazer Lindstrom.

But Simon Terry of lobby group the Sustainability Council told Reuters that big emitters were already being subsidised and the majority of the cost was being passed on to taxpayers.

“Extending the transition provisions means the taxpayer continues to pick up what the polluters would otherwise be responsible for.” ($1 = NZ$1.41) (Editing by David Fogarty)

Hospital tenants get temporary reprieve

The Mackay Division of General Practice says the receivers of the Pioneer Valley Hospital have decided to allow specialist services to continue at the facility.

The hospital went into administration last month and tenants were due to vacate the premises last Thursday after a Workplace Health and Safety report commissioned by the receivers found it was unsafe.

The chief executive of the division, Christian Grieves, says the specialist services will continue until the end of the week and tenants are in negotiations to arrange month-by-month leases.

He says the tenants face uncertainty until a buyer for the hospital is found.

“The problem really is that most of the tenants that are there are trying to work out what to do long-term, because the owners of the building obviously want to sell the building,” Mr Grieves said.

“If they sell the building to someone who’s not going to run the facility as a hospital then most of the tenants would need to leave at some point anyway.

“While the receivers have indicated to the owners that they’re staying there for one more week, it’s our understanding that they’re just organising the equipment in the building that that they own so they can sell it at some point.

“But the owners have actually indicated that they’re happy to give existing tenants a month-to-month lease.”

Tamil Nadu Government rejects calls for Nalini Sriharan”s premature release

Chennai, Mar 29 (ANI): The Tamil Nadu Government on Monday accepted the recommendations of the Prison Advisory Board to refuse premature release to former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi”s assassin, Nalini Sriharan.

The Tamil Nadu Government was to deliver a verdict on Nalini”s premature release on Monday.

The Karunanidhi- led Dravida Munettra Kazhagam (DMK) Government had on March 11 said it would take a final call on Sriharan”s plea in two weeks time.

The counsel for the State Government is said to have given this assurance to the Madras High Court.

The state government also submitted the Prison Advisory Board report to the High Court.

“Hopefully, we should be able to report the decision before March 29, but the truth of the matter is the government has asked for certain additional details from the board and collector,” said P S Raman, Advocate General of the Tamil Nadu Government.

“For some factors, beyond the government”s control, if the decision making process takes a little longer we may have to ask the court for some more time,” added Raman.

Earlier on March 10, a two-judge bench of the high court, comprising Justice Elipe Dharma Rao and Justice K.K. Sasidharan, had asked the State Government to submit their report on March 11.

Tamil Nadu Government advocate G.Desingu claimed the Government had just received the report and sought time to study it.
Nalini, who is undergoing life imprisonment, is lodged in the Vellore Central Jail.

In her petition, she said she was entitled for release as far as 2005, as she had completed 14 years in jail.

Nalini was convicted on 16 counts of murder, and found guilty under Section 302 of Indian Penal Code on all counts. She was also convicted under Section 3 of TADA and Section 120-B of the IPC, dealing with conspiracy.

Sriharan”s original death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment after Sonia Gandhi sought a reprieve for Nalini after she had a baby daughter.

In September 2009, Nalini went on a hunger strike demanding that she be set free. (ANI)

Temporary reprieve for Drivetrain workers

Albury gearbox factory workers who were stood down two weeks ago have been offered their jobs back, for the moment.

Drivetrain Systems International (DSI) cut 170 casual positions at its Lavington plant because it was owed money from Korean car maker Ssangyong.

Sean Morgan from the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union says Sangyong has paid its debt and has also paid for more gearboxes up front.

He says it is only five weeks work at this stage, but it is good news.

“According to my senior delegate down at DSI, the company has started to ring those employees that were stood down and asking them to start there ASAP,” Mr Morgan said.

“I always take good news where I can find it and it’s some comfort at least to know there’s at least a further five weeks there anyway.”

Inmate wins reprieve an hour before execution

The United States Supreme Court has stayed the execution of a convicted murderer in Texas less than an hour before he was due to die after a plea to allow further DNA tests.

Henry ‘Hank’ Skinner, 47, was convicted in 1995 for the 1993 New Year’s Eve killings of his girlfriend and her two sons in his home.

Skinner, who is now married to a French anti-death penalty campaigner, says new DNA tests will prove he did not commit the triple murder.

Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Jason Clark says Skinner “felt weak in the knees” upon hearing news of his reprieve.

“He felt like he really won,” he said. “He said he didn’t expect to get a stay. He expected to be executed.”

Skinner had been scheduled to be executed by lethal injection at 6:00pm local time at the prison in Huntsville, Texas.

In a brief decision, Supreme Court justices said the court must now decide if it will take up the case on the merits, otherwise a new execution date will be decided.

Skinner’s defence attorney Rob Owen says the stay “suggests that the court believes there are important issues that require closer examination”.

“We are relieved that the US Supreme Court has intervened to prevent Mr Skinner’s execution,” he said.

“We remain hopeful that the court will agree to hear Mr Skinner’s case and ultimately allow him the chance to prove his innocence through DNA testing.”

Skinner, who has proclaimed his innocence since his arrest, claims DNA testing on items that were not examined during his trial will clear him.

Some DNA evidence was presented during his trial to ascertain that he had been present in his home in the Texas town of Pampa when the murders were committed – a point the defence never contested.

But he says a third person must have committed the murders because he had passed out under the influence of anti-anxiety medication, painkillers and alcohol at the time.

Blood tests confirmed the presence of the drugs in his bloodstream.

Skinner’s defence insists he was physically incapable of killing his girlfriend Twila Jean Busby, 40 – who was beaten with an axe handle – and her two sons, aged 20 and 22, who were stabbed to death.

French support

Skinner is married to French anti-death penalty campaigner Sandrine Ageorges-Skinner, who enlisted some high-profile support.

Earlier this week the French ambassador in Washington contacted Texas governor Rick Perry urging a stay of execution.

French president Nicolas Sarkozy and foreign minister Bernard Kouchner have also expressed their support to Skinner’s wife.

France abolished capital punishment in 1981.

In recent years, 17 US death row prisoners have been released after DNA tests proved their innocence.

-AFP

Bondi Pavilion squatters win eviction reprieve

A group of homeless men has won a temporary reprieve in their fight to sleep at the Bondi Pavilion, in Sydney’s east.

The group has won the right to take their case to the High Court, which will then decide if there is merit in the case being heard.

Earlier this month the homeless men lost an appeal in the Supreme Court over their right to live at the Bondi Pavilion.

Spokesman Kevin St Alder says there is relief that Waverley Council has agreed to let the group stay until the matter is finalised.

“They were just so happy that the court didn’t just dismiss it outright,” he said.

“We would have been forced into a situation of total fear and marginalisation by having to move by midnight tonight or the police and/or council [would] come down with their jack boots on tomorrow to evict us out of the area.

“So it gives them some of their dignity back they can sleep soundly tonight.”

Sweet reprieve for cogen plants

The New South Wales Sugar Milling Co-operative says its two cogeneration plants on the north coast will continue to operate, at least in the short term.

The viability of the facilities at Condong and Broadwater has been questioned in recent weeks and executives from the co-operative held urgent meetings with bankers yesterday.

The co-op’s chief executive, Chris Connors says the market for renewable energy certificates is being flooded by home-based systems, leaving larger generators at risk.

But he says the organisation now has three to four months to turn the situation around.

“The time will also give us an opportunity to see whether the government’s mooted new legislation is going to have the right impact in the marketplace as far as our receipt prices, so that’s important and it’ll also give us time to establish alternative fuel sources to make sure that we’ve got stable security from that point of view,” Mr Connors said.

Veraval riots: Nanavati Commission not to issue notice against Modi

Ahmedabad, Sep.19 (ANI): In a major reprieve for Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, the Justice Girish Thakorlal Nanavati Commission on Saturday confirmed that it would not be issuing any notice to him in connection with the communal riots in Veraval.

However, the commission has asked the State Government to give it transcripts of the conversations that took place prior to the riots, during the riots and in its aftermath.

The commission has so far given a clean chit to Modi in the post-Godhra events. The Nanavati Commission said there was no evidence to show there was lapse in Modi’s or his ministers’ role in providing protection, relief and rehabilitation to the victims of communal riots or in the matter of not complying with the recommendations and direction given by the National Human Rights Commission.

Communal attacks on Muslims took place in Gujarat between February and May 2002.

The riots occurred after the burning of the Sabarmati Express. According to official figures tabled in the parliament, more than a thousand people were killed (790 Muslims and 254 Hindus) in the violence after the train incident. More than two hundred and fifty thousand people were displaced (about 200,000 Muslims and 40,000 Hindus).

Organizations such as Human Rights Watch criticized the Indian government for failure to address the resulting humanitarian condition of people, “overwhelming majority of them Muslim,” who fled their homes for relief camps in the aftermath of the events.

Many of the investigations and prosecution of those accused of violence during the riots have been opened for reinvestigation and prosecution. According to an official estimate, 1044 people were killed in the violence, including those killed in the Godhra train fire. Another 223 people were reported missing, 2,548 injured, 919 women widowed and 606 children orphaned. About 100,000 Muslims and 40,000 Hindus were in relief camps. (ANI)

Officials in Chinese city banned from having extramarital affairs

Beijing, July 8 (ANI): Officials in Sichuan province’s Meishan city have been banned from taking lovers outside marriage, as well as sleeping during meetings.

According to the China Daily, a guideline titled “Behavior Standards for Officials of Meishan After Eight Hours of Work” was released with four other directions designed to strengthen discipline among county-level or higher officials in Meishan.

“Officials should persist in being upright and honest after work hours, should not have too close relations with people that are interest related, and should not have abnormal relations with people of the opposite sex,” it reads.

Some officials in China have been notorious for having numerous lovers.

According to statistics by the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, 90 percent of provincial or ministry level officials found guilty of corruption have had lovers.

Among the notorious adulterers is Xu Qiyao, former director of the construction bureau of Jiangsu province, who was reported to have had 146 lovers during his official term.

He is still referred as “the one who had the most lovers” on the Internet. He was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve in 2001 for taking bribes.

Jin Weizhi, who had 13 lovers when he was general manager of the State-owned Nanjing Dairy Products Company in Jiangsu province, once said that he thought it was common among officials to have lovers as “how many women you might have depends on how powerful you are” and “they are a symbol of your status, or others will look down upon you.”

Yang Hongshan, professor of public administration school of Renmin University of China in Beijing, said the practice of extramarital affairs reveals problems with the country’s supervisory system.

Other rules in Meishan’s new regulations bans officials from sleeping or talking during meetings. They are also banned from being late or absent from meetings without permission and taking phone calls in meetings.

If an official is found to have broken the rules more than once, the government will tell local media and the person will be fined 1,000 Yuan (146 dollars). For those who break the rules more than twice, the official’s department will be disqualified from yearly evaluation, an activity to reward departments with evaluations. (ANI)