PML-N may change role in opposition after 18th Amendment Bill is approved

Islamabad, Apr 5(ANI): Pakistan’s political scenario is likely to undergo a change in the years to come, if the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) shifts from being a ‘friendly’ opposition to a ‘responsible’ one after the 18th Amendment Bill is approved.

According to reports, the PML-N’s major concern in the bill is the removal of the restriction on a third term as a premier.

Differences also cropped up between the coalition government over many issues, such as the reinstatement of judges and the federal cabinet formula, and the PML-N withdrew from the coalition and joined the judiciary’s campaign, The Daily Times reports.

PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif had ruled out joining the federal cabinet, saying his party has no intentions of joining the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) led government.

Denying reports of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani asking him to join the cabinet and become a federal minister after the 17th amendment were abolished, Sharif had said the PML-N would continue to play the role of a ‘responsible’ opposition.

“After the 18th amendment bill is passed, the government should start concentrating on providing relief to the common man,” Sharif had said.(ANI)

EU welcomes Obama’s suspension of Guantanamo prosecutions

EU welcomes Obama's suspension of Guantanamo prosecutions Brussels – The European Union’s top justice official Wednesday welcomed US President Barack Obama’s decision to temporarily suspend prosecutions at the US’s controversial Guantanamo Bay prison camp in Cuba.

“I am extremely pleased that one of the first actions of President Obama has been to turn the page on this sad episode of the Guantanamo prison,” said EU Justice, Freedom and Security Commissioner Jacques Barrot.

The commissioner, who also acts as one of the vice-presidents of the EU’s executive arm in Brussels, said that in a country which seeks to uphold the rule of law, every defendant should be entitled to the right to defend themselves.

“Of course, the fight against terrorism must remain a priority for both the United States and Europe. We must be united in this fight, but always in full respect of human rights,” Barrot said.

EU member states are currently split as to whether to host any released prisoners.

German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble argues that since the United States is solely responsible for the fate of any released detainees, he does not see why any EU country should provide them with sanctuary.

But Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos has already said his country would be willing to “assume its responsibility” within the international judicial framework and help Obama close the prison.

Spain would, however, first want to be informed in detail about the legal situation of each of the Guantanamo inmates, Moratinos told Spain’s Punto Radio.

Commissioner Barrot said he planned to raise the issue of Guantanamo with Obama during a forthcoming visit to Washington. No date for the visit has yet been set, his spokesman said. (dpa)

United Arab Emirates signs nuclear power deal with Japan

Dubai – The United Arab Emirates and Japan have signed a memorandum of cooperation that will pave the way toward developing nuclear power plants in the oil-rich Persian Gulf nation, local media reported Tuesday.

“As we evaluate a peaceful civil nuclear power program in the United Arab Emirates, one of our fundamental principles is that we will work with responsible nations that are experts in the field,” UAE Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs Saif Sultan al-Aryani said

after signing the agreement on Monday.

Takamori Yoshikawa, Japanese deputy minister of economy, trade, and industry, said Japan had been “promoting nuclear energy” for 40 years and noted that it operates
55 commercial nuclear reactors.

UAE and Japanese officials stressed the agreement, which follows similar agreements with Britain, France, and the United States, was for peaceful purposes within the parameters of international agreements on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons.

The United Arab Emirates, which, according to government figures, has 9.5 percent of the world’s proven oil reserves, has recently also begun a push to develop renewable sources of energy.

On Sunday the Emirate of Abu Dhabi hosted a summit on renewable energy and signed a memorandum of understanding with Switzerland to cooperate on the development of new energy technologies.

The summit allowed the emirate to showcase its Masdar project, which is being touted as the world’s first zero-carbon-emission city. (dpa)

Triad gangsters resort to recruiting in Hong Kong playgrounds

Hong Kong – Police in Hong Kong were Tuesday questioning 27 suspects after smashing a triad gang operation that recruited young members in school playgrounds.

The arrests came after dozens of cases in which youngsters were approached in playgrounds in Hong Kong schools and threatened with violence if they did not join triad gangs.

Youngsters acted as recruiters and teenagers signed up for gangs in school playgrounds and games arcades were made to pay 3.60 Hong Kong dollars (46 US cents) as a joining fee.

Around 70 per cent of the 27 people arrested were youngsters and one was just 14, police said. They were arrested for suspected triad gang membership, a criminal offence in the city of 6.9 million.

More than 100 police officers raided dozens of flats across Hong Kong to make the arrests from early Monday onwards. They also seized beef knives, water pipes and illegal drugs.

Triad gangs are secret societies notorious for running extortion, drugs and prostitution rackets in Hong Kong, China, Taiwan and overseas Chinese communities.

They are reckoned to be responsible for 3 per cent of all crime in Hong Kong but have increasingly resorted to recruiting in schools and amusement arcades as membership has dipped. (dpa)

Bangladesh to investigate past terrorist attacks

Dhaka – Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wazed has ordered new investigations into past terrorist attacks to expose the national and international links, media reports said Tuesday.

The new premier called for an anti-terrorism task force in South Asia and asked her deputies to seek regional and international cooperation.

“It’s not possible to curb terrorism alone. United efforts are needed to tackle the problem,” Hasina was quoted to have said by her Press Secretary Abul Kalam Azad.

Bangladesh witnessed a wave of terrorist attacks during the 2001-06 regime of former premier Khaleda Zia’s right-wing coalition government. But most of the cases remained unresolved.

A Hasina rally was bombed in August 2004 in the capital Dhaka killing at least 24 people, including her Awami League party’s central leaders. She herself narrowly escaped the attack.

Bomb and grenade attacks also killed former finance minister Shah AMS Kibria, and severely wounded former British High Commissioner to Bangladesh Anwar Chowdhury, while a string of suicide attacks in several districts killed judges, lawyers and cops.

Terrorists demonstrated their reach with synchronized bomb blasts at the headquarters of 63 out of 64 administrative districts in August 2005.

The outlawed Islamist terrorist organization Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh was held responsible for almost all the attacks.

Critics alleged that the BNP-led government manipulated the investigation to save some of the masterminds, attackers, and their patrons. (dpa)

Satyam saga shows holes in India’s corporate governance, say analysts

New Delhi, Jan 13 (ANI): Expressing concern over the Satyam Computer Services scandal, analysts have said that it has exposed serious shortfalls in corporate governance in India, and added that this must be addressed to ensure credibility in an increasingly globalised and competitive world.

Just three months ago, Satyam Computer Services received the Golden Peacock Award from a group of Indian directors for excellence in corporate governance.

Now, its board is in turmoil and its shares have plunged after a botched attempt to buy two infrastructure firms, in which the management held high stakes, sparking off concerns about conflicts of interest and a lack of transparency.

According to the analysts, this sordid saga exposes serious shortfalls in corporate transparency in India.

“How you bring about transparency in the accounting process of a company. How to restore the faith of the investors in all the IT companies especially in this case, if not the entire corporate sector. So far as accounting is concerned, it is not unknown to anybody that some manipulation of accounts is always there in any corporate sector. So it is a question of whether you call it manipulation or you call planning, it is a matter of interpretation,” said Ajay Thakur, a lawyer.
“But those things are there, but it is for the investigators and independent authorities to ensure that nothing of that sort happens which sends a negative signal to the world at large,” added Thakur.

The incidents highlight loose market regulations, especially in developing countries. It could prompt investors to be more cautious on stock picks even as they battle with the fallout from the worst financial crisis in a generation.

The scope and seriousness of the fraud in the Satyam has prompted the government to intervene to keep the company with 53,000 employees afloat and has taken measures for setting up a new board of directors after sacking the existing one.

Allaying fears that the incident could cast a shadow over India’s IT industry as whole, Amit Mitra, Secretary General of the Federation Of Indian Chambers Of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), said, “I don’t see any reason why India’s IT trajectory and the kind of confidence India has given to it in any way will be retracted.”

Satyam says it adhered to corporate governance rules, appointing the requisite number of independent directors with excellent credentials, including the dean of a top business school in its hometown of Hyderabad and a professor at Harvard business school.

But there are concerns that some directors may have been too close to Satyam’s founder chairman Ramalinga Raju to be considered truly independent.

Regulators in India are investigating into how and why Raju was able to fool auditors and investors for several years. India’s market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), and the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) of the state police have began investigations.

“If you are a director you are responsible for the affairs of the company. Independent directors are there to ensure that what is going on inside the company, who are the persons who are controller of the affairs of the company. So it is their responsibility as well to ensure that whatever is going on should be as per law,” Thakur said.

“But in this case, and it’s unfortunate that auditors are also a party to this. So in order to detect such crime at the initial stage may be difficult for an independent person who doesn’t have an accounting background, because accounts can only be understood by a person who has an accounting background,” added Thakur.

Some analysts say the SEBI lacks the teeth for ensuring compliance on governance, while others say the rules don’t go far enough.

In the case of independent directors, the SEBI mandates. they must make up one-third of a board where the chairman is a non-executive director, and half the board where the chairman is an executive director. (ANI)

Al Qaeda’s chief of operations in Pakistan killed in US missile strike

Washington, Jan 9 (ANI): Two top al Qaeda terrorists have been killed in a US missile strike on a building in northern Pakistan on New Year’s Day.

The men were high on the FBI’s “most wanted” list, identified by agency officials as Usama al-Kini — also known as Fahid Mohammed Ally Msalam, al Qaeda’s chief of operations in Pakistan — and his lieutenant, Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan.

Senior US officials said that the two men, both Kenyans, were believed to have been responsible for the September suicide bombing at the Marriott hotel in Islamabad, Pakistan.

The pair was also under indictment for the 1998 bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed more than 220 people and injured scores of others, according to the officials.

“These are two of the most dangerous operational figures in today’s al Qaeda,” the CNN quoted one senior official, as saying.

The officials could not confirm the particulars of the attack that killed them, but The Washington Post reported that the men were slain in a missile strike by a CIA pilotless drone aircraft.

The men were believed to have been behind numerous suicide attacks in Pakistan, including ones targeting police facilities and a Pakistani air force bus.

The officials said that the men were “involved in working with explosives” when the strike occurred.

One of the officials said al-Kini was al Qaeda’s operations director for Pakistan and believed to be behind the September 20 Marriott car bombing that killed 53 people.

The official also said al-Kini also was behind a failed attempt to kill Benazir Bhutto shortly after she returned to Pakistan from exile in October 2007. (ANI)

Soon, a love pill that helps people fall head over heels for anyone!

London, Jan 8 (ANI): For people who thought love was miles away from their lives, take heart, for scientists are on the way to develop a potion which could be slipped into a sweetheart”s drink to trigger everlasting love.

Yes, you heard it right, scientists believe that one day the feelings of love can be induced by popping a pill or smelling perfume, reports the Telegraph.

Researchers are developing drugs that can boost that most human of emotions.

The research team is studying the brain chemistry held responsible for the complex feelings that draw people to a particular member of the opposite sex.

Animal testing is beginning to shed light on the complex neural and genetic components of love in the same way they have led to pharmaceutical therapies for anxiety, phobias and post-traumatic stress disorders.

The behavioural scientist Professor Larry Young, of Emory University, Georgia, writing in the journal Nature, said: “For one thing, drugs that manipulate brain systems at whim to enhance or diminish our love for another may not be far away.” (ANI)

Cry My Country-Oh for a Leader and some Governance

By Prem Prakash

New Delhi, Jan 8 (ANI): The recent volcanic eruption of protests and voices against the political class of India has highlighted one aspect, if nothing else-this was the cry of the people of India looking for a leader? As Bombay, nay India got brutalised by a 60-hour commando terror attack, the people of India felt orphaned? There was not a towering leader around whom they could rally and take solace.

It brings to mind the 1962 debacle that the army of India faced at the hands of the Chinese. This author was one of the only two Indian journalists (the other being B.G. Verghese) who decided to stay back in Tezpur even as the army vacated the North Bank of Brahmaputra in Assam. Earlier, we had both been atop Se La and seen the pathetic conditions in which the army was pitched against an advancing enemy.

There was shock and dismay all over India. People of Tezpur wept and cried as they locked their homes and shops to leave the city. The jail had been thrown open; the treasury burnt the currency notes and a telegram from me to my editor was the last piece of communication to leave the Tezpur post office as they shut shop.

The flight of people from Tezpur, evacuation of the administration, officials, journalists and others was such that even VIP aircraft from New Delhi had been put into service. It was a time when all of India was numbed. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru was on the radio reassuring the nation. Here was a leader, even as his policy towards China lay in tatters, the people rallied around him to seek reassurance. He canalised India”s resolve and in just 20 months that he lived after the October 1962 debacle he had transformed India”s defence forces.

India”s people– a solid one billion –are looking to rally around a leader, not just to be reassured but to thwart the enemies of this country. Where is such a person? Each day bringing in more disclosures that 26/11 could well have been pre-empted has only highlighted the mess in which India”s governance is today?

The simple and glaring fact that the private security business which is worth about 22,000 crores a year at the moment is slated to grow into a Rs. 50,000.00 crore a year industry in another three to four years speaks volumes for the state of law and order and people”s confidence in the state. Why should there be need for private security if policing of India was efficient and her security agencies worked? It only reflects very poor governance.

The steel frame of India, its bureaucracy, has rusted over the years by the high handedness of the politicians. The ruthless manner in which some of the corrupt politicos have used the pliable bureaucracy has resulted in the people having little faith in the fairness of the administration.

Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh is honest and God”s good man. Are we to believe that he does not know what some of his ministers have been up to? The politics of coalition does not mean that you allow your partners to rob the country!

With several of the Ministers at the Centre running their Ministries as their personal fiefdoms has only led to further deterioration of quality of governance. Many of them seem to believe in the TINA factor – there is no alternative. It can only lead to greater crisis in the confidence of the people in its political class,

The opposition, led by the BJP, seems to be under the impression that it has just got to wait in the wings, before it is offered the broom to clear the mess once voted to power and firmly take over the driver”s seat. Can it? The BJP, which would lead the NDA, also suffers from the same malaise of politics of coalition. There were enough scandals during the NDA rule as well; people can watch with their eyes wide open the great change in the quality and style of living of most of the opposition leaders. Millions were stolen the other day from the BJP office. Was that clean money, duly audited?

The country today desperately needs towering leaders with a vision and commitment to respond to the agony of the one billion people. The tragedy is that the country”s political parties have virtually subverted the Parliamentary democracy to which the founding fathers committed this nation. Each political party, whether national or regional, has become either the exclusive preserve of a family or a group. This is one singular factor that thwarts the emergence of strong leaders.

One wonders as to why the Election Commission can not get into action to restore inner party democracy and accountability among the recognised national parties of India. By strictly enforcing audit of their accounts, the Elections Commission can ensure that these parties show the lists of their members,

The criteria for recognising national parties perhaps needs revision to ensure that they have nationwide membership maintaining proper membership records and issuing membership cards to the members in the manner it is done in the U.K. Thereafter the Commission can work out the manner in which the parties show how their party elections are held at each level, including national. This is something that the Election Commission can do, to help in restore faith in Parliamentary Democracy.

It is not just the absence of towering leaders that is hurting the nation. It is the rampant corruption practically in all walks of life that has virtually made governance of India such a difficult task. There is absolutely no discipline left in our cities. People queue up in daily “durbars” before puny politicians seeking to get odd things done. Isn”t it strange that in the India of today, having paid your taxes, you must still bribe some one if there is refund due to you?

Corruption has eaten into the vitals of the country. During the licence- permit raj it flourished due to an economy plagued by shortages. Officers of the Customs Department, coast guards and the police all made money and allowed smuggling It has now come to stay and impacted upon all other parts of the society. India has been placed among the most corrupt countries of the world!

Thus when those ten commandos sailed into Bombay (I refuse to call them mere terrorists), they were confident that our corruption-ridden city would hardly deter them. Let us not forget that the sea route from Gulf towards the West coast had been used with impunity by the likes of Dawood Ibrahim to indulge in smuggling. He used the same route to bring in the RDX that caused havoc in Mumbai 1993. The practise has been continuing.

Yes, we can hold Pakistan accountable for training these terrorists and commandos who attack India. But who do we hold responsible for the failure to protect the coast and being able to govern the country and the State of Maharashtra. Pakistan managed to move a whole lot of its Northern Light Infantry troops into Kargil and our system failed to detect them at the time? Years later we now have a Mumbai attack and we do not even know who is to be prosecuted or to hold responsible for this to have happened?

The nation has to deal with this cancer of corruption and indiscipline in all walks of life. In its absence no amount of new preventive systems may work. Salaries of most of the Government staff have been raised to pretty high levels, but there can be no end to their greed. There is absolutely no reason for any of them to indulge in acts of corruption to garner some more money by virtue of the power of their offices.

The time has perhaps come to learn from China and impose deterrent punishment-death for corruption in public service. Not that this has totally erased corruption in China, but is sufficient to deter many from indulging in it. For every now and then China does put the corrupt to death with their organs sold to those who need them,

Post Mumbai 26/11, I have no doubt that in due course of time the coast of India would be secured and that we may have in place a Central organisation to deal with terror cases. But we need to streamline the whole system. It is the police that needs to be sensitised and made corruption free. It is the police that sit amidst society and the people. They alone can nip any evil in the bud itself, only if it is sufficiently alert and corruption free.

It is important that the huge tragedy that took place in Mumbai is not allowed to be repeated. Let the sacrifice of so many innocent people create a resolve that the country is made among the best governed states in the world. Yes, that is the cry of he country at the moment-for a leader who can force that pace and give the nation kind of governance it deserves. (ANI)

Mumbai attackers linked to Pakistan: Boucher

Islamabad/ New Delhi, Jan.7 (ANI): United States Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs, Richard Boucher, on Wednesday said those involved in the Mumbai terror attacks have links in Pakistan.

The latest statement from the US has supported India”s view, which describes the involvement of Pakistan-based terror outfits in Mumbai terror attacks.

Boucher, who engaged the Pakistani leadership on this issue at length, reiterated that whoever was involved in this, needs to be held responsible.

Boucher, however, refrained from saying anything about the evidence given by India to Pakistan on Mumbai attacks, at this stage while the investigations were still on.

Boucher was responding to a question related to Pakistan”s role in the investigation related to Mumbai attacks in which several US nationals were killed.

“I think there”s a determination here to follow up, find those who are responsible, make sure that we know all we can about how they did it, and even better than that, making sure that they can”t ever do it again,” he said.

Boucher referred to his meetings with the Pakistani leadership.

“We talked about how to ensure that, particularly how to ensure the flow of information back and forth so that the pieces of the puzzle that are on the Indian side can be known to the rest of us that are interested, and the pieces of the puzzle that are on the Pakistani side can be known to the Indians who want to get to the bottom of this,” he said.

Boucher informed that the US has tried to encourage sharing of information so that everybody who is determined to stop this kind of attack can conduct their investigations and pursue all possible leads. (ANI)

Faulty brain circuits may underlie bulimia

Washington, Jan 6 (ANI): A new study from Columbia University and New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York has revealed that women with bulimia may binge eat due to abnormalities in the brain circuit responsible for regulating behaviour.

Bulimia nervosa often begins in the adolescent or young adult years, “primarily affecting girls and women, it is characterized by recurrent episodes of binge eating followed by self-induced vomiting or another compensatory behaviour to avoid weight gain.”

The research team led by Rachel Marsh showed that disruptions in certain pathways between nerve cells known as frontostriatal circuits, responsible for controlling their behaviours, lead to severe sense of loss of control, leading to binge eating.

During the study the researchers compared the performance on the task of 20 women with bulimia nervosa with that of 20 healthy women who served as controls.

In the Simon Spatial Incompatibility task, the participants were asked to indicate the direction an arrow is pointing regardless of where it appears on a screen.

The task is easier when the arrow direction matches the side of the screen, but more difficult when, for instance, an arrow that points leftward appears on the right side of the screen. Ignoring the side of the screen to focus on the arrow direction requires regulating behaviour by fighting the tendency to respond automatically and resolving conflicting messages.

“Patients with bulimia nervosa exhibited greater impulsivity than did control participants, responding faster and making more errors on conflict trials [where the arrow direction and location did not match] that required self-regulatory control to respond correctly,” wrote the authors.

“They responded faster on congruent trials following incorrect conflict trials, suggesting impulsive responding even immediately after having committed an error,” they added.

When patients with bulimia did respond correctly on trials in which the arrow side and direction did not match, their frontostriatal circuits did not activate to the same degree as did those of women in the control group.

“We speculate that this inability to engage frontostriatal systems also contributes to their inability to regulate binge-type eating and other impulsive behaviours,” the authors added.

The study appears in Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals. (ANI)

Obama picks former Clinton aide to head CIA

Washington – President-elect Barack Obama has chosen former congressman and White House chief of staff Leon Panetta to head the Central Intelligence Agency, the New York Times reported online Monday.

If confirmed by the Senate, Panetta would take over an agency responsible for tracking down al-Qaeda leadership, and also one that has experienced turmoil during the administration of President George W Bush.

Panetta, 70, is widely respected in Washington as a bipartisan operative, but he does not have a deep background in the field of intelligence. He served as a member of the Iraq Study Group, which made recommendations in 2006 for revising policy in Iraq.

Panetta was former president Bill Clinton’s chief of staff in 1994 and was credited with turning around a rocky start during the first two years of the Clinton White House. He served as a congressman from California from 1977 to 1993.

Obama has said he wants to bring changes to the CIA and other US intelligence agencies to make them more efficient. The CIA rank-and- file has been skeptical to embrace CIA directors perceived as outsiders.

The CIA has been criticized for its failure to predict the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, providing faulty intelligence on Saddam Hussein’s weapons’ programmes, and for using questionable methods or possibly torture during interrogations of suspects in the war on terrorism.

The Obama transition team has not announced plans to publicly nominate Panetta as CIA director. The Obama team has also not confirmed media reports that retired Navy admiral Dennis Blair has been chosen to oversee all US intelligences agencies, including the CIA.

Blair, 61, served as chief of US Pacific Command from 1999 to 2002 before retiring and holding positions on company boards and heading a Pentagon-funded think tank. Pacific Command manages all US military operations in the Asia-Pacific region.

If confirmed by the Senate, Blair will become the director of national intelligence, coordinating the espionage and information gathering activities of the nation’s 16 intelligence organizations.

In addition to the CIA, those include the Defence Intelligence Agency and the super secret National Security Agency, as well as outfits in the Army, Navy, Air Force, State Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Blair would also be responsible for providing the president with daily intelligence briefings, usually the first order of business for a president every morning.

Naming the chiefs of the intelligences agencies would bring Obama another step closer to filling his senior national security postings. He nominated Senator Hillary Clinton as secretary of state on December 1 and announced that Defence Secretary Robert Gates had agreed to stay in the post. Retired Marine general James Jones will become his national security adviser.

The director of national intelligence, or DNI, was created in 2004 after a commission investigating the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks found the espionage community failed to communicate effectively throughout the various bureaucracies. (dpa)

Organisation and self-control are crucial to longevity

London, Jan 5 (ANI): It may seem boring, but organisation and self-control are crucial to longevity, says a new study.

Led by University of California researchers, the study has found that ambitious, organised and conscientious people are likely to live longer than those who are impulsive.

Howard Friedman, professor of psychology at the university, insists that psychological traits can help predict health risks.

“Not only do conscientious individuals have better health habits and less risk-taking, but they also [have] more stable jobs and marriages and may even have a biological predisposition toward good health,” the Telegraph quoted Friedman as saying.

The researches observed that highly conscientious people could live up to four years longer, as they were less likely to smoke or drink to excess.

They also found that highly conscientious people led a more stable and less stressful life.

The study involved more than 8,900 participants from the US, Canada, Japan, Germany, Norway and Sweden.

The researchers looked at three facades of conscientiousness – self-control, organisation and industriousness.

Other healthy traits included thoroughness, reliability, deliberation, competence and dutifulness.

“There is some evidence that people can become more conscientious, especially as they enter stable jobs or good marriages,” said co-researcher Margaret Kern.

“We think our findings can challenge people to think about their lives and what may result from the actions they do.

“Even though conscientiousness cannot be changed in the short term, improvements can emerge over the long run as individuals enter responsible relationships, careers and associations,” she added. (ANI)

Israeli air strike kills to top Hamas militants

Tel Aviv  – An Israeli airstrike on the southern Gaza Strip city of Khan Younis Sunday killed two top Hamas militants, an Israeli military spokeswoman said.

Hussam Hamdan was held responsible for the firing of long-range Grad missiles toward the southern Israeli cities of Beersheba and Ofakim, while Mohammed Hilo was in charge of Hamas “special forces” in Khan Younis. (dpa)

Cause of glacial earthquakes in Greenland attributed to major ice calving events

Washington, Jan 4 (ANI): Scientists have clarified that glacial earthquakes in Greenland are caused by major ice calving events, not glacier lurching.

Satellite observations during the past decade have shown dramatic changes in flow speed on year-to-year timescales at Greenland”s outlet glaciers.

Seismic events traced back to glaciers during the same time period have been interpreted to have resulted from calving events at the glacier terminus or surging events lubricated by subglacial meltwater.

To learn more, M. Nettles and G. Ekstrom from Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Palisades, New York, US, conducted geodetic studies at Helheim Glacier, one of Greenland”s largest outlet glaciers, during summer 2007.

They observed several large and sudden increases in flow speed along the length of the glacier. These accelerations coincided with glacial earthquakes and major iceberg calving events.

No offset in the position of the glacier surface was observed during these events.

Instead, modest tsunamis associated with the glacial earthquakes implicate glacier calving as the generator of seismic events, putting to rest the idea that lurching glaciers are responsible for glacial earthquakes at outlet glaciers like Helheim, and demonstrating a link between ice loss and glacier acceleration. (ANI)

PM asks Pak to hand over Mumbai terror ‘criminals’

Shillong (Meghalaya), Jan. 3 (ANI): Following Pakistan’s rejection to extradite any Pakistani national to India, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has asked Pakistan to hand over “criminals” responsible for the Mumbai attacks so that they can face trial in India.

Singh hoped that “some sense” would prevail in the Pakistani leadership and that it would recognise that those behind the “horrible acts” in Mumbai should to be brought to justice.

“It (Pakistan) has to take action on the demand from all civilised countries that the perpetrators (of Mumbai attacks) will be brought to book. We hope that these criminals will be handed over to us to face trial,” he told a press conference after inaugurating the annual Indian Science Congress here.

Dr. Singh also hoped that the new government in Bangladesh would not allow its land to be used for terror activities.

Singh said the government would go to any extent to root out terrorism from the nation, but those laying down arms were welcomed to have a dialogue with the government.

Referring to the terror attacks on Mumbai, Delhi and Assam, PM said, “There were some initial setbacks, but we will overcome them. The government will go to any extent to root out terrorism from the country.”

He further said insurgents and terrorists must recognise that the gun is no solution to fulfil their demands. “Once they lay down arms as Indian citizens, we are willing to talk to anybody,” he said. (ANI)

Senior Hamas leader’s son converts to Christianity, speaks against the outfit

Washington, Jan 3 (ANI): Mosab Hassan Yousef, the son of influential Hamas Leader Sheikh Hassan Yousef, has converted to Christianity, and said that there will never be peace between Israel and Palestine.

Mosab Hassan Yousef stated, among other things, “Is there any chance for fire to co-exist with the water? It’s not about Israel, it’s not about Hamas: It’s about both ideologies,” FOX News reported.

Yousef (30) went on to state that Hamas betrays the Palestinian cause and tortures its own members.

Yousef indicated that he was indoctrinated at an early age to use violence to challenge Israeli control in the region. As a teenager he moved up within the organization and became the leader of the radical Islamic Youth Movement that fought Israeli tanks and troops in the streets, celebrated suicide bombings and recruited young men to the cause.

Yousef said he realized the true nature of Hamas and radical Islam during a stint in an Israeli prison. He renounced his Muslim faith, left his family behind in Ramallah and converted to Christianity.

“Islam is not the word of God. If you want to be offended it’s your problem. But you know something? Go study. Think for a second that I might be right. So wake up, look at your path, see where you’re going. Are you really going to heaven with 72 virgins after you kill yourself and kill another 20 people? FOX News quoted him, as saying.

Yousef has sought asylum in the United States and now attends an evangelical Christian church in San Diego, Calif.

“The Hamas leadership, including my father, they’re responsible; they’re responsible for all the violence that happened from the organization. I know they describe it as reaction to Israeli aggression, but still, they are part of it and they had to make decisions in those operations against Israel (for) which there was the killing of many civilians,” he added.

The US Government considers Hamas, formed in the late 1980’s as an outgrowth of the Palestinian branch of the radical Muslim Brotherhood, a terrorist organization.

Hamas seized power in the Gaza strip in 2007 in a violent coup against the more moderate Palestinian Authority led by Mahmoud Abbas. (ANI)

Having a big bottom can cut diabetes risk

London, Jan 3 (ANI): Here’s some good news for women who find it hard to squeeze into their skinny jeans, courtesy their big bottoms: a generously proportioned derriere could be good for health, say scientists.

Accord to research, the fat in buttocks and hips may protect against type 2 diabetes.

Scientists at Harvard Medical School in America reckon that the type of fat that accumulates around the hips and bottom may offer some protection against developing the condition.

Fat found commonly around the lower areas, known as subcutaneous fat, or fat that collects under the skin, helps to improve the sensitivity of the hormone insulin. Insulin is responsible for regulating blood sugar and therefore a big bottom might offer some protection against diabetes.

The boffins said that fat which collects around the stomach can raise a person’s risk of diabetes and heart disease. But, people with pear-shaped bodies, with fat deposits in the buttocks and hips, are less prone to these disorders.

Lead researcher Dr Ronald Kahn said that the research on mice had shown that not all fat was bad and could help to prevent the onset of Type 2 diabetes.

The team is trying to find the substances produced in subcutaneous fat that provide the benefit because they could lead to the development of drugs, reports the Daily Express.

The study is published in the journal Cell Metabolism.

Dr Iain Frame, director of research at health charity Diabetes UK, said: “It has long been known that the distribution of fat may be a determining factor in increasing risk to developing Type 2 diabetes. The paper describes the manipulation of fat cells in mice. Therefore it would be misleading, or even wrong, at this stage to link the results of this work to whether or not a person is at more or less risk of developing Type 2 diabetes because of the size of their buttocks.

“It would certainly take away from our key message based on hard scientific evidence rather than the extrapolation of preliminary findings from experiments in mice, that maintaining a healthy weight through a balanced diet low in fat, salt and sugar and with plenty of fruit and vegetables is by far the best way for most people in Britain to reduce the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.” (ANI)

PDP will be a responsible opposition, says Mufti Mohammad Sayeed

Srinagar, Jan.2 (ANI): Accepting people’s mandate in the recently concluded elections, Mufti Mohammad Sayeed, chief of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has said that his party would play the role of a responsible opposition in the state.

“I assure the people that the PDP will fortify the mandate and safeguard their aspiration as a responsible opposition party,” said Sayeed said.

He also said that the UPA government should not misconstrue large voter
turnout as a solution of the Kashmir issue and demanded renewal of the resolve of the Kashmir resolution process.

“We are cautioning them against misconstruing the largest voter turnout as the Kashmir problem having disappeared and government of India
should cease the movement and revive the Kashmir resolution process with renewed resolve both at the bilateral and international fronts,” he added.

In the recent state legislative polls PDP managed to bag 21 seats. National Conference (NC) emerged as the single largest party with 28 seats. NC is all set to form government in the state with the support of Congress which has 17 seats. (ANI)

Brits offered their cheapest beer for 19yrs at 99p a pint!

London, January 2 (ANI): A pub chain has bucked the credit crunch by reducing the price of a pint of beer to just 99p, a move that will give thirsty Brits their cheapest beer for 19 years.

Bosses at JD Wetherspoon say that the offer will run “indefinitely” at their 713 UK pubs.

They have revealed that some bottled ales and lagers, wines, and spirits will also be sold at cheaper rates.

According to them, a number of meals will be offered for just 2.99 pounds.

The pub chain’s move comes as the Government is making efforts to stop binge-drinking fuelled by “happy hours” and cheap booze deals.

According to reports, pub trade groups are against the Government drive because they feel that the clampdown would hit responsible clients.

Wetherspoon chief executive John Hutson insists that their price-cut decision would be beneficial to customers.

“We appreciate the economic downturn means they have to be more careful with their cash,” the Daily Star quoted him as saying.

“We believe our new prices will allow people to enjoy visiting a Wetherspoon pub without it costing them too much.

“Unlike most sales that start in January, our offers will not end within days but will run indefinitely,” he added.

Wetherspoon has already bucked the financial crisis by opening 20 new pubs at the end of 2008, and thereby creating hundreds of jobs. (ANI)