Keira Knightley competes with Scarlett Johansson to be My Fair Lady

London, Aug 30 (ANI): Keira Knightley has been forced to compete with Scarlett Johansson for the role of Eliza Doolittle in a remake of ‘My Fair Lady’.

Knightley was lined up for the part of the Cockney flower seller, played by Audrey Hepburn in the 1964 film, by Sir Cameron Mackintosh, the co-producer.

The ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ star confirmed last year that she had auditioned and begun singing lessons, reports the Telegraph.

However, she has since been told that she has an American rival for the part.

Sir Cameron said: “I have two actresses as potential Elizas, one British, the other American. You’d know their names, but I’m not letting on.”

Emma Thompson is writing the script for the film, which Stephen Daldry is expected to direct. Daniel Craig may be Professor Henry Higgins. (ANI)

Kolkatans worried over rise in prices of vegetables, fish

Kolkata, Aug 28 (ANI): People of Kolkata are a worried lot as prices of vegetables and fish have increased in the city.

The vegetable vendors are selling potatoes at the rate of Rs.18 per kg which were earlier being sold at Rs.6. Earlier, prices of tomatoes were Rs.20 per kg but now they are being sold at Rs.30 per kg. The prices of other vegetables have also increased.

Vegetable sellers say that less production of vegetables have increased the price this year.

“The prices of vegetables were low earlier. But now the prices are increasing because of less production. There is a gap between supply and demand,” said Sahadeb Poira, a vegetable seller.

Residents say that prices of vegetables are becoming unaffordable for them.

“Here if I go to market for potatoes I have to pay 18 rupees more than that. And say now when you—-purchase 5 rupees or 6 rupees per kg now its three times therefore we can’t afford it,” said RN Chakraborty, a resident of Kolkata.

The prices of food grain, sugar and other items of daily needs have created an explosive situation in India because of weak monsoon and drought like situation.

Food prices surged an annual 13.3 percent in mid-August even as the overall wholesale price index fell, and the impact of a poor monsoon on inflation and the economy could prompt further government relief steps.

The prices of ‘Hilsa’ fish have also increased in the region. Sayeed Anwar Maqsood, secretary, Fish Importers Association says that prices have increased because of less procurement from neighbouring Bangladesh.

“The prices of Hilsa fish have gone up because of the fact there is a scarcity in the market. We fish importer association used to bring every year more than 5,000 metric ton of Hilsa fish. But then we are not able to bring fish this year from Bangladesh. The major reason is because fish availability in Bangladesh itself is very little,” said Maqsood.

Hilsa prices in Kolkata, as a result, have shot up substantially from 100-120 rupees (2.3- 2.7 US Dollars) a kilogram to 350-400 rupees (8.15- 9.31 US Dollars), putting the fish out of reach of middle class Bengalis. (ANI)

ISAF troops in Afghanistan need to get rid of their seige mentality

Kabul, Aug.13 (ANI): For the vast majority of troops at the International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) headquarters, Afghanistan remains an enigma, a threatening land lying beyond the concertina wire of the base.

When ISAF troops venture out from their base into the “red zone” (i.e. the comparatively safe streets of Kabul) they are prepared for combat.

Barreling through the crowded streets of a city that has been called a comparative “safety zone” by those fighting in the south, they jam the phone signals of average Afghans with their ECMs (electronic counter measures) and jam the roads with their convoys.

Defeat takes the form of thousands of casualty-phobic troops ensconced behind the walls, sand bags, and blast barriers of a well-protected safety bubble.

One would think that the coalition vehicles driving around Kabul in combat posture and menacingly waving 50 caliber machine guns at Afghans were storming a Taliban sangar (trench) in Helmand, not competing with rush hour traffic.

The only Afghan most ever meet is the Hazara carpet seller on base who serves authentic Afghan food once a month. And the only coalition soldiers most Afghans meet are encased in armor-plated vehicles or flak jackets.

Only a small percentage of “fobbits” (those who live in forward operating bases or FOBs) actually interact with average Afghans due to hyper-protective S.O.P. (standard operating procedures) meant to lessen their risks from interaction with Afghans.

ISAF troops suffer from a siege mentality that led the United States dangerously close to losing the war in Iraq in 2005 and 2006. U.S. forces in Iraq were more concerned with force protection than protecting the center of gravity in Iraq, the Iraqi people.

It was only when Generals Petraeus and Odierno pushed their troops out of the bases and into the streets of Iraq that they began to make headway in the counterinsurgency.

This meant more meetings with Iraqi people, who began to feel that the Americans were protecting them.

For the most part, the coalition has ceded the countryside of the south and parts of the east to the enemy, who took advantage of the vacuum left by enemy troops in 2003 when the U.S. was focused elsewhere.

The White House’s fear of engaging in grassroots nation building allowed the Taliban to fill the void. Pro-government khans and mullahs were executed, villagers cowed into submission, and “vanguard” groups sent onto the next province to lay mines and kill “infidel collaborators.” With no visible coalition presence outside of the provincial capitals, the Taliban swarmed the countryside.

Much the same thing happened in Afghanistan in the 1980s under the Soviets, who controlled the major roads and cities and remained safe in their bases for fear of sustaining casualties.

The U.S. Marines’ recent efforts to clear and hold territory in Helmand Province represent a welcome break from this barracked mentality.

It is only by establishing a reliable coalition presence in contested places like Helmand that the coalition can show the Afghans that they are there to stay and protect them. (ANI)

Farmers oppose fuel price hike

Rohtak (Haryana)/Mumbai, July 2 (ANI): Farmers have reacted strongly to the hike in the prices of petrol and diesel.

The delayed monsoon is forcing them to irrigate their fields through tubewells, which consume around 15-20 litres of diesel. They said the price hike would make the running of tubewells very difficult.

“This is the time to sow paddy in the fields. The monsoon has not arrived as yet. We have to use tubewell water to irrigate the fields. The tubewell consumes around 15 to 20 litres of diesel. But now, after the hike in prices of fuel, how will we arrange for so much money to run the tubewell? It will be very difficult for us. We will face heavy losses,” said Rajendra, a farmer.

The farmers said the prices of vegetables and other commodities would also go up, as transportation costs would rise because of the fuel hike.

“With the increase in fuel prices, the prices of vegetable will also go up,” said Bheema Chavan, a vegetable seller in Mumbai.

Petrol and diesel prices rose by as much as 10 percent in India, on Wednesday, the first increase this year and one of the steepest ever.

Petrol prices rose by four rupees a litre, while diesel rates were hiked by two rupees a litre.

Prices were last raised in June last year, when the average price of India’s crude imports were 113 dollar a barrel, but they were cut in December and again in January as oil prices tumbled.

The government has not increased the price of cooking gas and kerosene to protect the poor and middle-class.

Despite price increase, oil firms say they were likely to suffer a revenue loss of 560 billion rupees on sale of petrol, diesel, cooking gas and kerosene this fiscal. (ANI)

Feminist icon Marilyn French passes away at 79

London, May 6 (ANI): Marilyn French, one of the most renowned feminist writers, has passed away in New York after suffering a heart failure. She was 79.

The author breathed her last on May 2 in a Manhattan hospital, said Carol Jenkins, her friend and president of the city’s Women’s Media Center.

French’s1977 novel The Women’s Room won her much acclaim for her treatment of female subjugation in a male dominated world, reports the BBC.

The novel, considered to be one of the most influential novels of the modern feminist movement, has sold 20 million copies and become an international best seller.

It tells the story of Mira Ward, a conventional and submissive young woman in a traditional marriage and her gradual feminist awakening.

The novel was voted one of the five books that have most changed the way women see themselves in a 2004 poll of listeners to BBC Radio 4′s Woman’s Hour.

French was tagged as anti-male when a character in the book at one point says: “All men are rapists, and that’s all they are. They rape us with their eyes, their laws, and their codes.”

But Jenkins trashed the claims, insisting it to be a misinterpretation.

She said: “Those words came from a character, and she was not a man-hater, and never said that in her personal life. But she wanted men to accept their part in the domination of women.” (ANI)

Ikea names veteran as new chief executive

Stockholm – Swedish furniture retail giant Ikea Friday named Mikael Ohlsson as its new chief executive officer.

Ohlsson, who began as a carpet seller at Ikea’s store in the central city of Linkping some 30 years ago, was to replace Anders Dahlvig as of September 1.

Dahlvig has been head of the furniture giant that employs some 127,000 people for 10 years.

Ikea was founded by Ingvar Kamprad in 1943. It is not a listed company and does not disclose its profitability.

Ikea posted global sales of some 21 billion euros (27 billion dollars) for the financial year that ended August 31.

The group had over 250 stores in two dozen countries at the end of the financial year. (dpa)

Going abroad expands your mind

Washington, Apr 24 (ANI): Living in another country can help expand minds, says a new study.

“Gaining experience in foreign cultures has long been a classic prescription for artists interested in stimulating their imaginations or honing their crafts. But does living abroad actually make people more creative?” asks the study’s lead author, William Maddux, PhD, an assistant professor of organizational behavior at INSEAD, a business school with campuses in France and Singapore.

“It’s a longstanding question that we feel we’ve been able to begin answering through this research,” the expert added.

Maddux and Adam Galinsky, PhD, from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, conducted five studies to test the idea that living abroad and creativity are linked.

The findings appear in the May issue of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, published by the American Psychological Association.

In one study, master of business administration students at the Kellogg School were asked to solve the Duncker candle problem, a classic test of creative insight. In this problem, individuals are presented with three objects on a table placed next to a cardboard wall: a candle, a pack of matches and a box of tacks. The task is to attach the candle to the wall so that the candle burns properly and does not drip wax on the table or the floor.

The correct solution involves using the box of tacks as a candleholder – one should empty the box of tacks and then tack it to the wall placing the candle inside.

The solution is considered a measure of creative insight because it involves the ability to see objects as performing different functions from what is typical (i.e., the box is not just for the tacks but can also be used as a stand). The results showed that the longer students had spent living abroad, the more likely they were to come up with the creative solution.

In another study, also involving Kellogg School MBA students, the researchers used a mock negotiation test involving the sale of a gas station. In this negotiation, a deal based solely on sale price was impossible because the minimum price the seller was willing to accept was higher than the buyer’s maximum. However, because the two parties’ underlying interests were compatible, a deal could be reached only through a creative agreement that satisfied both parties’ interests.

Here again, negotiators with experience living abroad were more likely to reach a deal that demanded creative insight. In both studies, time spent traveling abroad did not matter; only living abroad was related to creativity.

Maddux and Galinsky then ran a follow-up study to see why living abroad was related to creativity. With a group of MBA students at INSEAD in France, they found that the more students had adapted themselves to the foreign cultures when they lived abroad, the more likely they were to solve the Duncker candle task.

“This shows us that there is some sort of psychological transformation that needs to occur when people are living in a foreign country in order to enhance creativity. This may happen when people work to adapt themselves to a new culture,” said Galinsky. (ANI)

Hate literature, militant videos up for sale again outside Lal Masjid in Lahore

Lahore, Apr.16 (ANI): Days after the release of Maulana Aziz, the sale of hate literature and militant videos have once again started near Lal Masjid.

The publication and distribution of hate literature and militant videos has been banned by the government, but such materials propagating ‘jihad’ have once again surfaced, and are being openly sold out side the Lal Masjid, the Dawn reports.

Videos available in the market contain shots of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and show rebels attacking the US led allied forces to provoke others to join in the fight.

Local people said that following Aziz’s return, all the activities which were banned would be restored in the area.

“Now that Maulana Aziz has been restored, all activities will return,” a local video seller said.

Lal Masjid was run by Islamic militants led by brothers, Maulana Abdul Aziz and Abdul Rashid Ghazi, who continued to challenge the government for more than six months. They carried out violent demonstrations, hateful speeches, destruction of private and public property, kidnapping, arson and armed clashes with the authorities.

The masjid complex was besieged from July 3, 2007 to July 11, 2007, after negotiations between the government and the militants failed.

The complex was stormed by the Pakistani Army and members of the Special Service Group and re-taken. The overall conflict resulted in death of 154 people, and 50 militants including Aziz were captured alive.(ANI)

Tanzanian Royalty: No gold, where’s the value? -Barron’s

NEW YORK, April 12 (Reuters) – Tanzanian Royalty Exploration Corp (TNX.TO), a gold explorer has no revenue, no earnings and no proven gold and could be substantially overvalued, Barron’s said.

Its shares trade at premium to peers, and its chief executive has been selling shares, Barron’s said in its April 13 edition.

Chairman and CEO James Sinclair is famous for correctly forecasting gold prices and is very bullish on the metal, but he has been a steady seller of shares of his own gold-related company, Barron’s said.

While Sinclair has had success predicting gold prices, the company does not have a good track record of finding gold, Barron’s said.

The small-cap Canadian outfit has been looking for gold for a decade but none of its properties, all in Tanzania, have shown economically viable miner reserves, Barron’s said.

If it were valued more like its rivals with similar cash and gold reserves, its shares should be priced substantially lower than the current $4.05 per share, Barron’s said. (Reporting by Ilaina Jonas; Editing Bernard Orr)

IPCC chief in pledge over G20 probe

The head of the police watchdog has pledged that the investigation into the death of Ian Tomlinson during the G20 protests will be “independent, fast and effective”. Skip related content
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The Independent Police Complaints Commission is investigating after video emerged of Mr Tomlinson being shoved to the ground by a police officer as thousands of protesters converged in the City of London last Wednesday.

The 47-year-old newspaper seller died shortly afterwards of an apparent heart attack.

On Thursday night the policeman pictured in the video was suspended after coming forward to officials.

IPCC chairman Nick Hardwick defended the decision to use City of London police officers – who it later emerged could have been involved in the incident – to help gather evidence.

He told Channel 4 News their help was “urgently” needed to collect material from “a huge scene” and added that some officers would continue the work.

He said the focus was now on piecing together Mr Tomlinson’s movements using CCTV and other footage.

“This is now a criminal investigation for which someone may face very serious charges. The decision we took meant that we are now in the best possible position to bring that prosecution successfully if we need to do that. We will be independent, we will be fast and we will be effective.”

New photographs of Mr Tomlinson confronting police more than an hour before his death also emerged on Thursday. The pictures, taken by a New York fund manager, appear to show him blocking a police van as officers in riot gear try to move him on.

Protesters calling for a public inquiry are expected to return to the spot where he died on Saturday to lay flowers, having marched from Bethnal Green police station at noon.

Watchdog will quiz G20 policeman

The police watchdog is to interview the officer seen in a video striking Ian Tomlinson, the man who died during the G20 riots in the City of London last week. Skip related content
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The officer has identified himself to investigators, a spokesman for the Independent Police Complaints Commission said.

The officer, from the Metropolitan Police, will be interviewed “as soon as possible”, the spokesman added.

He was seen apparently hitting the 47-year-old newspaper seller with his baton and pushing him to the ground. Mr Tomlinson later collapsed and died. Scotland Yard said no officers had been suspended over the incident.

IPCC Commissioner and deputy chairman Deborah Glass said: “We are pleased that we now have what appears to be valuable information relating to this incident.

“Several police officers, including the officer himself, have come forward. It is our intention to interview this officer as soon as possible.”

A Scotland Yard spokesman said: “A Metropolitan Police Service officer identified himself to his team leader as being potentially involved in the incident shown on the video footage.

“A total of four MPS officers, inclusive of this officer, have now come forward with potentially relevant information in relation to the investigation into the death of Mr Tomlinson.”

Footage shown by Channel 4 News showed a riot officer seemingly striking out at Mr Tomlinson with a baton before pushing him to the ground.

Previous footage, obtained by the Guardian, showed Mr Tomlinson being hit and pushed over by a partially-masked officer as he walks away from a police line with his hands in his pockets.

New Yorkers may get a chance to greet Chia Obama at local drugstores

New York, Apr.8 (ANI): New Yorkers are likely to get a chance to greet the grassy-headed figurine of President Obama, thought it has been pulled off from Walgreens shelves in Chicago and Tampa over claims that it is racist and wrong for the company’s image.

According to the New York Daily News, Chia Obama’s maker is in negotiations with drugstore chains in the New York market to bring Chia Obama here in the coming weeks.

“As quickly as they can take them, we will send them,” said Joseph Pedott, 76, founder of the as-seen-on-TV Chia Pets empire.

In the meantime, Pedott added, Chia Obama is for sale online – in “Happy” or “Determined” poses – for the amazingly low price of just 19.99 dollars (three seed packs included!).

It’s already a top seller and “could be the biggest I have ever had,” Pedott said.

Pedott said he was stung by suggestions that there was something racist about Chia Obama, which, if left untrimmed, appears to give the 44th President a healthy, if very green, Afro.

The presidential bust is also emblazoned “Yes We Can,” Obama’s campaign slogan, as well as with the words “liberty,” “opportunity,” “prosperity” and “hope.” (ANI)

Schindler’s list resurfaces in Australia

Sydney – The list of 801 Jews threatened by Nazi persecution that was drawn up by German industrialist Oskar Schindler in 1945 has resurfaced in Australia and will go on show at a Sydney library, news reports said Monday.

It’s actually a carbon-copy, typed at the same time as the carbon copy that is among the prized exhibits at the Holocaust museum in Jerusalem, but it’s priceless all the same because few carbon copies survived and the original has never been found.

The 13 yellowing sheets, typed in German, were rediscovered by historian Olwen Pryke when she was going through six boxes of papers brought from a manuscript dealer by the Library of New South Wales in 1996.

Australian author Thomas Keneally, author of the Booker Prize-winning Schindler’s Ark, sold the papers. It was his 1982 novel that Hollywood director Steven Spielberg turned into the Oscar-winning 1993 film Schindler’s List.

Keneally told The Sydney Morning Herald that he first saw the list in 1980 when, through a chance meeting in Los Angeles, he was persuaded to turn the life of Schindler, a card-carrying Nazi, into a novel.

He was handed the list by Leopold Pffeferberg, whose name was on the list along with that of his wife, Ludmila.

“It’s the only case in my lifetime that someone has said ‘I’ve got a great story for you’ where I’ve ended up doing anything about it,” Keneally told the paper.

Pryke described the 13 pages as “an incredibly moving piece of history.”

She said neither the library nor the manuscript seller realized the list was in the collection at the time of the 1996 transaction.

Schindler, who died in obscurity in 1974, used his money and his charm to persuade members of Hitler’s elite troops to staff his factory with Jews rather than send them off to concentration camps.

Winston Churchill loved hearty breakfast with whisky and cigar

London, Mar 31 (ANI): Former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill loved a “hearty breakfast” with some whisky and a cigar, it has emerged.

While aboard the BOAC flight in June 1954, Churchill did not find the plane’s menu to be good enough, and thus wrote one out himself.

His hearty meal included poached egg, toast, jam, butter, coffee and milk, a jug of cold milk, cold chicken, and meat.

He also had grapefruit, sugar bowl, a glass orange squash (ice), with some whisky soda to wash down, along with a cigar.

The menu was kept by the air steward, and has been put for sale along with press cuttings from the trip.

It is expected to fetch 1,500 pounds.

“This is one of the most remarkable pieces of Churchill memorabilia we have seen,” the Telegraph quoted Richard Westwood-Brookes, the seller, as saying.

“It shows what a hearty breakfast he ate and it was all washed down with a whisky, after which he smoked a cigar.

“It is the type of indulgence we’ve come to associate with Churchill and it reassuring to know he ate so well in his 80th year.”

“There are some smudges and ink stains but it is a wonderful piece of history,” he added. (ANI)

Joe Biden’s daughter’s ‘cocaine snorting video’ up for sale (Lead:)

New York, March 29 (ANI): U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden may have to face shame after a video of his daughter allegedly snorting cocaine has been put for sale.

The 43-minute tape was said to have been recorded by his daughter Ashley’s ‘friend’ who is now trying to sell it for 4 million dollars, said Thomas Dunlap, a lawyer representing the seller.

The New York Post was shown about 90 seconds of 43-minute tape.

In the video, a 20-something woman with light skin and long brown hair can be seen taking a red straw from her mouth, bending over a desk, inserting the pipe into her nostril and snorting lines of white powder.

Few minutes later she stands up and begins talking with other people in the room.

The camera focuses on her as she moves around the room. At one point she shouts, “Shut the f— up!”

Although the conversation is difficult to discern, the woman makes repeated references to the drugs.

No one else in the video is seen using the drugs. (ANI)

UK websites flooded with 800 million pounds of fake goods

London, Mar.20 (ANI): Online shopping sites in Britain are flooded with fake goods such as counterfeit designer clothing and computer softwares.

According to a research was carried out by the online marketplace Price Minister, these fake goods are worth a whopping 800 million pounds.

One can find counterfeit designer range of handbags, accessories, perfume, cosmetics, watches, jewellery, clothing, and all other commodities on different websites.

With the technology emerging as the biggest sector in this grey market, these websites also offers spurious computer softwares with fake Apple, Microsoft and Nokia goods among the most common.

According t0 Scotsman, the number of fake items being sold online is rising by 50 per cent a year.

The research also revealed that there has been a 45 per cent rise in sites offering fake goods since 2007.

The online marketplace Price Minister said it had blocked about 3000 seller accounts from its website. (ANI)

Yob gobs on Ronaldo’s £150,000 Bentley

London, March 17 (ANI): Ace footballer Cristiano Ronaldo was apparently left angered after a vagrant gobbed on his 150,000-pound Bentley car.

According to reports, the Big Issue seller was pleading Ronaldo to buy a copy of the 1.50-pound magazine.

However, when the 100,000-pound-a-week ace ignored his pleas, he lost his cool.

The vendor brushed past Ronaldo, and hopped in the motor.

He even swore at the Man United star, and challenged the latter to get out and fight.

“He gobbed all over the windscreen. Ronaldo was obviously seething,” the Sun quoted a witness in Manchester city centre as saying .

“He had a face like thunder as he drove off,” the witness added. (ANI)

Heather Mills leaves ‘gutted’ fish cafe seller poorer by 115K pounds

London, March 16 (ANI): Heather Mills left a former fish cafe owner disappointed after she dipped her original offer of 255,000 pounds to 140,000 pounds, blaming the “current economic climate” that had slashed property prices.

The former better half of Sir Paul McCartney had offered to buy the Big Fish Cafe in Hove, East Sussex from Nick Short, but later revised her offer.

“Heather said she’d like to buy the place if it came on the market. Last July I decided to sell so I got in touch. I went to see her at her home and we made a verbal agreement for 255,000 pounds,” the Mirror quoted Nick as saying.

“That was later agreed in writing. The arrangement changed in November. I got a letter from her lawyer saying the price had dropped to 140,000 pounds.

“It blamed the credit crunch and the ‘current economic climate’. Her lawyer said there were other issues such as the cost of the ground rent going up and the need to renovate the windows. I was shocked, absolutely gutted.

“I’d put off other buyers who were offering the full price thinking I had a deal with Heather. There was nowhere else I could go,” he added.

The ex model recently took over the proprietorship, and decided to drop fish and all other animal products from the menu.

Staff at the cafe have also been given the pink slip, and told not to return after the renovation is over.

Heather’s spokesman said: “Heather is very excited to have taken over the cafe. She has been a local resident for nearly ten years and is looking forward to giving the cafe a much-needed renovation. Heather has wanted to buy the cafe for many years to create a fun place serving greattasting healthy plant-based foods for kids, their families and the locals.” (ANI)

Ex-Tesco employee becomes Britain’s first eBay millionaire

London, Mar 16 (ANI): A former Tesco employee has become Britain’s first eBay millionaire.

Mark Radcliffe has made the fortune by selling electrical gadgets like iPod holders and remote control toys for less than 15 pounds.

Radcliffe was 21 when he started his business, First2Save, from his back bedroom in his spare time.

Ten years later, he owns a Ferrari sports car, and has an annual turnover of more than three million pounds, which makes him the first ever eBay millionaire.

Radcliffe began by selling items like mobile phone accessories and computer cables, and now vends a range of 3,700 items.

He has also employed a staff of 19 people, and operates from a 10,000 sq ft warehouse.

“We keep focussed on popular consumables. Our biggest sellers are all items with a value of less than 15 pounds – accessories for iPod’s and mobile phones, gadgets, and electronic toys – low value goods with a high volume and decent profit margin,” the Telegraph quoted Radcliffe as saying.

“When I started I was very young with no commitments, and no real financial backing, so I had to buy small products that I could buy in cheaply and sell quickly.

“I started selling mobile phone accessories in 1999 from my own website. Then eBay came along and that gave me the opportunity to reach a much wider customer-base.

“I’m constantly re-investing the money back into the business, so we can continue to grow.

“Without wanting to sound over-confident there is every chance that we can become the number one eBay seller in the world in the next 2 years,” he added.

He now plans to move into premises three times bigger, and increase his staff to 34.

He also wants to become the world’s biggest eBay trader by selling 50,000 items per month. (ANI)

Early onset of summer shoots up watermelon sale

Coimbatore, Mar 10 (ANI): Sale of watermelons shoots up in Coimbatore due to early onset of summer.

The rising temperature this year has increased the demand for watermelon and there is a shortfall in production as it yields 20 per cent less as compared to the last year.

“Due to the early arrival of summers, the demand for the watermelon is very impressive and during the month of April and May the demand will increase. But because of the early summer this year, the watermelon yield is 20 per cent less as compared to the last year.” said Mubarak, a wholesale watermelon fruit seller.

In order to beat heat, people are having watermelons from the roadside stalls.

“Generally summer falls during the month of April and May but this time it has arrived a bit early and now as the temperature had started shooting up we have started eating fruits like watermelons to balance our body temperature.” said Chellakutti, a resident.

According to Prof. Geetha Lakshmi, a researcher in the Agro Climate Research Centre of Tamil Nadu Agricultural University, the main reason behind the rise in temperature is due to over usage of fossil fuel, which is causing pollution resulting in global warming.

The Department is engaged in a research study on the climate change and change in crop pattern due to the rise in temperatures.

“We have done some initial analysis and have found that Tamil Nadu is not going to be an exception and se by around 0.5 degree Celsius in the mid of this century.

Towards the end of this century around three degree Celsius of increase is going to happen in all over Tamil Nadu. So this is what we are expecting as far as the initial reports are concerned,” sae initial reports are concerned,” said Lakshmi. by Jehovah (ANI)