Shiv Sena-BJP alliance confident of victory in Maharashtra assembly polls

Mumbai, Sep 19(ANI): Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Shiv Sena on Saturday expressed confidence about emerging victorious in the forthcoming Maharashtra Assembly elections.

“It is 45 years since Shiv Sena came into being. And this first day of Navaratri happens to be a red-letter day in the history of Shiv Sena that has crusaded for the cause of Samyukta (unified) Maharashtra. Considering all these aspects, I feel it is an auspicious timing (of) declaring the seat arrangement and we are confident of our combine emerging victorious,” said Uddhav Thackeray, Executive President of Shiv Sena party.

Leaders of both the parties confirmed that there was no bargaining for seats between the two allies.

“Today, is the first day of Dussera and we have arrived at the figures of seat sharing. Yes, it is 169 and 119. The 169 in favour of Shiv Sena and 119 for BJP and it will be interesting to note that both the figures end in 9, a lucky number; 169 and 119. And now onwards we will work on joint strategy. There is no clash of interests and now onwards we will devote to the selection of suitable candidates,” said Gopinath Munde, senior BJP leader.

In the 2004 elections, Shiv Sena had contested for 171 seats while BJP had contested for 117 and jointly they had bagged 119 seats in the legislative house of 289 members.

The alliance of Congress and regional National Congress Party (NCP) had emerged victorious in the 2004 polls. (ANI)

Nirupama Rao discusses India, Nepal ties in Kathmandu

Kathmandu, Sep 15 (ANI): Visiting Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao met Nepal Foreign Minister Sujata Koirala and discussed various bilateral issues including greater sharing of vital information between the two countries.

According to Nepalnews, both the leaders also discussed electricity import from India, signing of extradition treaty and the agreements reached during Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal’s visit to India last month.

Talking to reporters after the meeting, Koirala said that the discussion basically revolved around building greater cooperation between India and Nepal, Constitution drafting and the peace process.

“India was keen on providing more assistance to help develop Nepal’s poor infrastructures, building transmission lines for the import of electricity from India, signing of the new extradition treaty and address other trade issues,” Koirala added.

Earlier Nirupama Rao met her Nepalis counterpart Gyan Chandra Acharya and discussed joint strategy for implementation of the 34-point agreement signed between the two countries last month.

During the meeting, she assured substantial amount of Indian investment in Nepal if peace is established in the country.

She also called on former Prime Minister and Nepali Congress President Girija Prasad Koirala at his residence and suggested that Koirala has a great role to play in the days ahead to end the political impasse in Nepal.

She also met CPN UML Chairman Jhalanath Khanal and extended an invitation to visit India on behalf of the government of India. During her meeting she advised Khanal to seek a practical solution on rehabilitation and integration of former Maoist combatants.

Nirupama Rao also met Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal, Deputy Prime Minister Bijay Kumar Gachhadar, Chief of Army Staff Chatra Mansingh Gurung and Maoist leader Babu Ram Bhattrai New Delhi is sending a high-level official to Nepal at a time when the constitution-drafting and peace process has been stalled due to differences among major political parties.

This is Nirupama Rao’s first visit to Nepal after being appointed Foreign Secretary on July 31.

She will also visit Pashupatinath temple and offer her prayers later today. (ANI)

Chidambaram says Maoists seeking alliance with north-east insurgent groups

New Delhi, Sep 14 (ANI): Union Home Minister P Chidambaram on Monday said that Maoists are seeking an alliance with northeast insurgent groups.

Addressing the inaugural session of a two-day conference on internal security threats, Chidambaram said the Maoists have been sought alliances with secessionists and insurgentse also said that terrorist groups, including the LeT and the JeM, are persisting with their endeavours to launch terror attacks.

“The Communist Party of India-Maoist besides targeting inimical forces was laying a greater emphasis on targeting infrastructure like roads, bridges,” he added

Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh will address the conference on Tuesday. He will also present police medals for meritorious services.

The conference provides an interactive platform for senior police professionals and security administrators to freely discuss and debate diverse national security related issues, as also the various operational, infrastructural and welfare related problems faced by them.

Its deliberations would also include formulation and sharing of professional practices and processes in tackling challenges relating to crime control and law and order management.

The conference offers opportunities for generation and exchange of new ideas on capacity building for the police in respect of manpower, training, logistics and advanced technology.

The Intelligence Bureau organised the first ever conference of IGPs in India in 1920 and since then, these conferences have been held regularly at New Delhi in the post-independence period. The first conference was organised in 1950.

To begin with, it was a biennial event, but after 1973, it became an annual meeting for the Heads of Police Organisations in the States/Union Territories and of the Central Police Organisations. Director, Intelligence Bureau, is the ex-officio Chairman of the conference. (ANI)

DGPS/IGPs conference to deliberate on major internal security issues

New Delhi, Sep 14 (ANI): Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram will inaugurate the DGPs/IGPs Confernce-2009 here today.

Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh will address the conference on the second day and also present police medals for meritorious services.

The conference is expected to deliberate on major internal security threats, including left wing extremism, terrorism, coastal security, insurgency in the north-east and circulation of fake currency notes in the country.

The agenda also includes presentations on important policing issues such as the National Police Mission, corporate fraud and security arrangements being planned for the forthcoming Commonwealth Games in 2010.

The conference provides an interactive platform for senior police professionals and security administrators to freely discuss and debate diverse national security related issues, as also the various operational, infrastructural and welfare related problems faced by them.

Its deliberations would also include formulation and sharing of professional practices and processes in tackling challenges relating to crime control and law and order management.

The conference offers opportunities for generation and exchange of new ideas on capacity building for the police in respect of manpower, training, logistics and advanced technology.

The intelligence Bureau organised the first ever conference of IGPs in India in 1920 and since then, these conferences have been held regularly at New Delhi in the post-independence period. The first conference was organised in 1950.

To begin with, it was a biennial event, but after 1973, it became an annual meeting for the Heads of Police Organisations in the States/Union Territories and of the Central Police Organisations. Director, Intelligence Bureau, is the ex-officio Chairman of the conference. (ANI)

Congress to decide over alliance with NCP on Sunday

New Delhi, Sep 12 (ANI): Union Heavy Industries Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh said that the decision on alliance with Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) for the upcoming Maharashtra Assembly polls would be taken by Sunday.

Speaking to the media after a meeting with Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Deshmukh said the party will take a decision on the continuation of alliance by Sunday.

On Friday the Congress High Command appointed Deshmukh as the chairman of party’s poll management committee and Union Power Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde as the chairman of campaign committee for the Maharashtra polls.

Both Deshmukh and Shinde held an hour-long meeting with the party’s central leadership.

He said, Sonia Gandhi had asked him to coordinate party’s election work by taking everyone into confidence.

Earlier, the Congress Party asked the Sharad Pawar led NCP to accept new ground realities during seat sharing. (ANI)

DGPS/IGPs conference to deliberate on major internal security issues

New Delhi, Sep 11 (ANI): Union Home Minister P. Chidambaram will inaugurate the DGPs/IGPs Confernce-2009 on September 14.

Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh will address the conference on the second day and also present police medals for meritorious services.

The conference is expected to deliberate on major internal security threats, including left wing extremism , terrorism, coastal security, insurgency in the north-east and circulation of fake currency notes in the country.

The agenda also includes presentations on important policing issues such as the National Police Mission, corporate fraud and security arrangements being planned for the forthcoming Commonwealth Games in 2010.

The conference provides an interactive platform for senior police professionals and security administrators to freely discuss and debate diverse national security related issues, as also the various operational, infrastructural and welfare related problems faced by them.

Its deliberations would also include formulation and sharing of professional practices and processes in tackling challenges relating to crime control and law and order management.

The conference offers opportunities for generation and exchange of new ideas on capacity building for the police in respect of manpower, training, logistics and advanced technology.

The intelligence Bureau organised the first ever conference of IGPs in India in 1920 and since then, these conferences have been held regularly at New Delhi in the post-independence period. The first conference was organised in 1950.

To begin with, it was a biennial event, but after 1973, it became an annual meeting for the Heads of Police Organisations in the States/Union Territories and of the Central Police Organisations. Director, Intelligence Bureau, is the ex-officio Chairman of the conference. (ANI)

Modalities of BrahMos-II project to be finalized soon

Tiruchirapalli, Sep. 1 (ANI): The modalities for developing hypersonic missile BrahMos-II by the Indo-Russian joint venture BrahMos Aerospace are in the final phase of finalization.

BrahMos Aerospace CEO and managing director A Sivathanu Pillai told reporters here on Tuesday that a final shape of the project, aimed at developing the aerial version of BrahMos missile that could traverse at speeds between Mach 5 to Mach 7, would emerge shortly.

The design team had already been lined up and discussions would be held shortly between the joint venture partners on investments, sharing of technical responsibilities, administration and sharing of manufacturing facility infrastructure, he added.

Supersonic cruise missile BrahMos, which has a capability of carrying 300 kilograms conventional warheads at a speed of around 2.8 Mach, has already been inducted by the Army and the Navy.

Work related to the design and development of this version had been fruitful and the advanced missile, which weighs 0.5 tonne less than that of the three-tonne land version BrahMos, was ready and the company awaited the modified SUKOI-30 MKI aircraft that would carry the weapon.

Pillai said he was hopeful that the target for induction of the air version set for 2012 would be achieved.

After being fitted on an aircraft, BrahMos will be the only cruise missile with the capability of being launched from land, sea and air, he said.

To a query on export potential of BrahMos missile, Pillai said a number countries evinced keen interest in it, but the priority was to meet the high domestic requirement.

For meeting the demand, the company was in the process of upgrading the production infrastructure at multiple locations besides enhancing component suppliers by including new large and medium sized industries.

On BrahMos Aeropsace’s Thiruvananthapuram facility, Pillai said seven acres of land in possession of Indian Air force adjacent to the main campus was expected to be handed over to BrahMos Aerospace shortly. (ANI)

Rajasthan Government demands lion’s share in Cairn project

Barmer (Rajasthan), Aug.29 (ANI): The Government of Rajasthan on Saturday demanded a lion’s share of the value added tax (VAT) that would be generated from the extraction of crude oil from the Mangala Processing Terminal ( MPT) here.

According to sources, the issue will be settled later when state government representatives meet the officials of this Cairns Energy India-ONGCjoint venture.

ONGC Chairman R.S. Sharma said that it would take at least four years to meet this demand of the Rajasthan Government, which was made by Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot. Sharma said that the approach of the state government would determine the way forward on the issue of revenue sharing.

Officials attached with the joint venture said they are leaving no stone unturned in doing their bit for the local people.

The media contingent accompanying the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, on the inaugural visit to the project site were shown the entrepreneural centre where various social projects for local people are showcased.

Cairn India CEO Rahul Dhir emphasised the point that the maximum number of labourers are locals, and added that out of the 700 contractors, a majority are local people.

Inaugurating the project, Dr. Singh said the present venture is an indication that foreign investment in the country will grow and that the Indian Government will honestly provide all facilities to attract foreign investment.

He also congratulated the technical personnel for successfully finding oil reserves.

It maybe recalled that the Dutch firm Shell had abandoned the search for oil in this desert area. cairn india then stepped in, and after four years of continuous labour, was able to discover oil. arlier, Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Murli Deora described the activation of the Mangala Processing Terminal ( MPT) as a historic achievement, as the crude oil production from this block will meet about 20 percent of the nation’s current crude oil production.

He said this will enable the country to save seven percent of the crude oil import bill and reduce import dependence.

Deora also emphasised the need for stabilising crude oil prices for ensuring the sustained economic growth of the country, Deora said the MPT find is a significant step towards achieving this goal.

Cairn has invested about Rs.10000 crores in the area.

The total investment in this project will be more than Rs. 20000 crores. The government will get Rs. 46000 crores as profit petroleum revenue over the life of the project and will provide job opportunities for more than 6000 people.

According to company sources, the supply terminal to the Mangala field, the second largest oil discovery in the country in two decades, will be a giant step towards curtailing the country’s oil import bill.

With an initial 30,000 barrels capacity per day (bpd), Cairn India plans to add another 1,00,000 bpd over the next 18 months.

Mangala oil field officials are confident of reaching the target of producing 1,75,000 bpd in the next 20 months.

The project would contribute more than 20 per cent of India’s domestic crude oil production by 2011, the company sources said. By Pankaj Chaudhary (ANI)

Battery operated vehicles for disabled at major railway stations

New Delhi, Aug 28 (ANI): The Ministry of Railways has decided to allow private parties to operate free round the clock service of battery operated cars at the platforms of major railway stations for carrying disabled and old aged passengers for boarding the trains.

The policy guidelines in this connection have been sent to all the Zonal Railways.

The parties would be allowed of first cum first serve basis under certain terms and conditions.

No charge will be levied either from the passenger or from the Railway.

Railway will provide only electricity free of cost for charging the batteries of the vehicle and party will be allowed to advertise on the panel of these small four seater cars.

The vehicle will be used to cater only the disabled and old aged passengers.

An agreement with the party will be entered into for a period of maximum one year.

Repairs, maintenance and replacement, if required, will be done by the party.

The number of vehicles to be piled at a station will be decided by the Zonal Railways based on requirement.

An annual review of the performance will be undertaken to assess the revenue involved and possibility of revenue sharing. (ANI)

Government establishing countrywide network for intelligence sharing: Maken

New Delhi, July 8(ANI): Union Minister of State for Home Affairs Ajay Maken on Wednesday said that Government would establish a secure and dedicated online information network between state police forces and Central intelligence agencies.

These will be established at 30 locations across the country as part of its efforts on modernising communication and information sharing.

“Action has been initiated for establishment of online, dedicated and secure connectivity between all the designated members of Multi-Agency Centre (MAC) and the Subsidiary Multi-Agency Centres (SMACs) in 30 important identified locations and between the SMACs and the State Special Branches,” said Maken. (ANI)

Anti-drug campaign to spread awareness in Punjab

Amritsar, July 6 (ANI): In a bid to raise awareness about the cost the society due to drug addiction, a play was staged here recently.

At Patti, a town located at the India-Pakistan border, the Punjab Police, in association with the State health department, launched a campaign to raise awareness about the menace.

It intended to educate public about drug-addiction’s deadly effect in daily life, as drugs have been noticed being the root cause of many crimes and social evils. And, the play highlighted its ill effects on the society and on the addicts’ families.

The play demonstrated how a family raises a happy child and bad company leads him towards drugs addiction. And the end is very tragic.The Indian government has decided to celebrate an Anti-drug Campaign Day. And it has been taken up by the Punjab police that observe the day to spread mass awareness. This programme makes the locals aware of the consequences and aftermath of drug addiction. I appeal to the officials to take this campaign to smaller towns and villages so that they can also benefit from it,” said Prof. Lakshmi Kanta Chawla, State Health Minister in Punjab.

“We want cooperation from everyone, the society, government authorities, and family members. We should also know that how and what to advocate so that maximum awareness can be spread, and for that there should be advocacy camps. Heads of the village Panchayats should be made aware of the consequences of drugs on both family and society,” said Dr. Rana Ranbir Singh, the Village Head.

A survey conducted by the Department of Social Security Development of Women and Children reveals that 67 per cent of the rural households in the state have at least one drug addict.

Also, the spread of AIDS is linked with the malady due to sharing of syringes. The death rate and the HIV positive cases have increased in Punjab by 60 per cent due to widespread use of intoxicants.

However, light has dawned on many individuals after passing through the dark tunnel of drug addiction.

Over 100 families want to spread this light through ‘Wisdom Club’, formed by DR. JPS Bhatia, a renowned psychotherapist. Apart from medical treatment, Bhatia counsels the patient to reject drugs.

“We have taken addiction as a disease. And we have drafted a plan to counter this disease. We have drawn it up according to the Punjabi culture. We do not follow the western style. So this programme of combating the addiction is planned to take care of Punjabi population, culture, beliefs, and identity. We are also focusing the NRI’s from the outside states. We try to understand their psychology and motivate them. We take the help of religion. We work on the patients with a very humanistic approach,” said J.P.S. Bhatia, a psychotherapist related to de-addiction of drugs.

For many years, Punjab was a transit point for drugs from Afghanistan, which were being routed to other parts of the world or metropolitan cities in the country.

Drug trafficking has increased by at last 30-40 per cent in the last year since cross-border civilian movement increased between India and Pakistan. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

Pak to host “home” series against Kiwis on neutral venue

Lahore, July 3 (ANI): Pakistan would host New Zealand for three Tests and five one-day internationals on a neutral venue, after all efforts by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) to relocate the ‘home’ series against Kiwis to New Zealand failed.

Sources said the PCB proposed hosting the series in New Zealand itself , but issues regarding television rights and sharing of revenues could not be sorted out with the New Zealand cricket officials

The PCB is now considering hosting the series in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), The News reports.

The series is likely to be held in Abu Dhabi and Dubai in October-November this year. (ANI)

World’s first farmers may have sped around in two-wheeled carts pulled by camels

Washington, June 28 (ANI): A new analysis of carts that date back to 6,000 to 5,000 years ago, has indicated that some of the world’s first farmers may have sped around in two-wheeled carts pulled by camels and bulls.

According to a report in Discovery News, the cart models, which may have been ritual objects or children’s toys, were found at Altyndepe, a Chalcolithic and Bronze Age settlement in Western Central Asia near Ashgabat, Turkmenistan.

Together with other finds, the cart models provide a history of how wheeled transportation first emerged in the area and later developed.

“Horsepower” is a common term today, but the ancients had bull-power, followed by camel-power, researcher Lyubov Kircho explained to Discovery News.

“I think that the carts pulled by bulls were mostly used in agriculture in the 4th millennium, when the climate was more humid,” said Kircho, who is at the Institute for the History of Material Culture at the Russian Academy of Sciences.

As time went on, Kircho believes the carts carried heavy goods, such as metals, alabaster and the coveted, semi-precious stone, lapis lazuli, over long distances.

“Later, this kind of long distance transport became impossible (due to the region becoming more arid), and the people began to use the camel in the middle of the third millennium B.C.,” he added.

The earliest of the cart models he studied had two wheels with shafts linked to a yoke. Visual representations of the associated harness suggest oxen were the primary draft animals.

The carts at this stage were not driven chariot-style, but a person instead could have “directed the bulls from the side,” which Kircho says would have been “the easiest way” to control both the cart and its animal pullers.

Carts dating to the second half of the third millennium B.C. gained an additional two wheels.

“The most common type had high walls and two shafts, drawn by a single animal-a camel or, less often, a bull,” said Kircho.

The design of the carts, and the behavior of camels, suggests just a single camel pulled each cart.

The carts may help to explain apparent connections between the early residents of what is now Turkmenistan and the ancient people of south-eastern Iran and southern Afghanistan.

Wheeled transportation would have permitted travel and the sharing of goods and ideas. (ANI)

US hoping for positive shift in Indo-Pak relations

Washington, May 23 (ANI): The United States wants both India and Pakistan to break the ice in their relationship, as it considers that cordial relations between both the countries is the key to establish peace and stability in the sub-continent.

Addressing a regular press briefing here, White House Spokesman Robert Gibbs, while referring to the reports about India and Pakistan sharing intelligence inputs with each other, said the step marks a positive shift in the otherwise hostile relationship between the two neighboring countries.

“Obviously, we have seen reports recently of, without getting into any details, of intelligence sharing, which I think, denotes important cooperation that we think is needed on both sides in order to ensure peace and stability in the region,” The Nation quoted Gibbs, as saying.

The report about ‘intelligence sharing’ between India and Pakistan, to which Gibbs referred, was carried out by the Wall Street Journal recently.

According to the report, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) arranged for Pakistan and India to share information on Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), the outlawed group accused of carrying out the Mumbai 26/11 attacks.

The arrangement would also see Islamabad sharing information about the top Taliban commanders who are leading the insurgency inside Pakistan.

Washington is hoping that when New Delhi sees the intelligence and evidence that Islamabad is seriously fighting against the militants, it will ease the deployment of troops against Pakistan, which would prompt Pakistan to focus more on its internal threat rather than India.

“We have to satisfy the Mumbai question, and show India that the threat is abating,” the newspaper quoted an official involved in developing US’ South Asia strategy, as saying.

“We’re not going to tell them everything we know and they’re not going to tell us everything they know. Nobody expects that to happen, but we’re talking about the attack. We weren’t doing that in December,” he added.

The Obama administration has expressed its concerns over LeT’s plans to carry out a second strike against India to ignite a war between the two neighboring countries.

Earlier, the U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also expressed hope that Islamabad and New Delhi would resume their dialogue soon to reduce tension in the region. (ANI)

Italy and Malta want EU to handle rejected immigrants

Valletta – Responsibilities of the EU’s border patrol agency should be widened to include repatriation of immigrants who fail to qualify for refugee and humanitarian protection, according to proposals made Italy and Malta that were disclosed Friday.

Frontex should be roped in to get such immigrants the necessary documentation for repatriation, the Maltese and Italian governments said following a conciliatory meeting in Brussels.

Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni and his Maltese counterpart Carm Mifsud Bonnici met in the wake of a diplomatic spat after both countries last week turned down a Turkish cargo vessel which had rescued 140 would-be illegal immigrants.

Malta had argued that Lampedusa was the nearest safe port while Italy insisted the immigrants should be taken to Valletta since they were found in Malta’s search and rescue area. The immigrants were eventually accepted by Italy.

But in a bid to restore the traditional friendship, Italy and Malta joined forces to accuse other EU countries of showing little interest in the immigration problem and insisted on the need for mandatory burden sharing, Mifsud Bonnici told journalists on Friday.

Malta and Italy had agreed on a common aim to put the EU under pressure to take action, Mifsud Bonnici said.

The two ministers called on the EU to draw up a programme with Libya, from where the problem of illegal migration is believed to have originated, and to expand the operations of Frontex.

Mifsud Bonnici maintained that Malta was right in refusing to take in the rescued immigrants last week, saying it was merely abiding by the same international obligations it had practiced for over 40 years.

On Tuesday, Maroni accused Malta of failing to rescue about 40,000 immigrants since 2004, and that it was dumping the problem on Rome. Malta has strongly rebutted the claims. (dpa)

Free play in early humans led them to cooperative way of life

Washington, Apr 16 (ANI): Early humans used their capacities of free play to overcome the innate tendencies toward aggression and dominance, which in turn led to the development of a highly cooperative way of life.

Peter Gray, Boston College developmental psychologist, said that play and humour played a major role in human social development.

“Play and humour were not just means of adding fun to their lives. They were means of maintaining the band’s existence – means of promoting actively the egalitarian attitude, intense sharing, and relative peacefulness for which hunter-gatherers are justly famous and upon which they depended for survival,” said Gray.

In his opinion, the theory has implications for human development in the present-day world, claiming that social play counteracts tendencies toward greed and arrogance, and promotes concern for the feelings and well being of others.

“It may not be too much of a stretch to suggest that the selfish actions that led to the recent economic collapse are, in part, symptoms of a society that has forgotten how to play,” said Gray.

Psychologists, educators, and the general public are taking an increased interest in play, according to Gray.

“People are beginning to realize that we have gone too far in the direction of teaching children to compete. We have been depriving children of the normal, non-competitive forms of social play that are essential for developing a sense of equality, connectedness, and concern for others,” he said.

Gray stressed that the kind of “play” that helped hunter-gatherer children develop into cooperative adults is quite similar to the sort of play that was once a highlight of American children’s summers and after-school hours in contemporary culture.

He said that this play is freely chosen, age-mixed, and, because it is not adult-organized, non-competitive. This “free play” is distinct from leisure pursuits such as video games, watching TV, or structured extracurricular activities and sports.

“Even when children are playing nominally competitive games, such as pickup baseball or card games, there is usually relatively little concern for winning,” said Gray.

“Striving to do well, as individuals or teams, and helping others do well, is all part of the fun. It is the presence of adult supervisors and observers that pushes play in a competitive direction–and if it gets pushed too far in that direction it is no longer truly play,” Gray added.

However, in self-organized play, children learn to get along with diverse others, to compromise, and to anticipate and meet others’ needs.

Gray said: “To play well, and to keep others interested in continuing to play with you, you must be able to see the world from the other players’ points of view. Children and teenagers in hunter-gatherer cultures played in this way more or less constantly, and they developed into extraordinarily cooperative, egalitarian adults. My observations indicate that age-mixed free play in our culture, in those places where it can still be found, has all of these qualities.”

Apart from addressing to children’s play, the study also highlights as a fundamental component of adult human nature, which allowed humans to develop as intensely social and cooperative beings.

Gray said that in the course of his research, it became increasingly apparent that play and humour lay at the core of hunter-gatherer social structures and mores.

The study has been published in the current edition of the interdisciplinary American Journal of Play. (ANI)

Microsoft rolls out India-specific gaming console – Xbox 360 Arcade

Rolling out its new entry-level gaming console Xbox 360 Arcade in India, Microsoft intends substituting it with the Xbox 360 Core model. The new console offers five interesting Zbox LIVE Arcade games – Uno, Luxor 2, Boom Boom Rocket, Feeding Frenzy, and Pac-man Championship Edition.

According to a statement released by the company, the new console will change the entire gaming spectrum, with its HDMI output to enable users experience the games in the highest-possible definition – up to 1080p, with the HDMI cable and network cable to be sold separately. The console also comes packed with a wireless controller.

Microsoft’s Xbox 360 Arcade is apparently an endeavor to bring forth a reasonably-priced version of the popular console for India. An upgraded model of the Xbox 360 version, the new console – which is largely designed for first-time users of gaming consoles – comes fitted with IBM PowerPC 3 core 3.2GHz processor and 512MB GDDR3 video memory.

The newly-launched India-specific Xbox console also comes with a number of entertainment features, including viewing photos, movies and music – it augments photos, video, music and TV; facilitating sharing of digital pictures and streaming of digital media. Furthermore, it provides its users with other online console gaming pitch such as downloadable high-definition and standard-definition content!

‘Bullet shadow over ballot’

Delhi Police Commissioner YS Dadwal on Thursday assured that “adequate security measures” for the upcoming elections are being taken, keeping in view the prevailing security scenario. “We have deployed Quick Reaction Teams and commandos.

Mobile patrolling across the city has also been intensified to keep a tight vigil before and during the Lok Sabha elections on May 7,” said Dadwal. The commissioner refused to comment about a letter that was received at the office of the Deputy Commissioner of Police, South Delhi, which threatened terror attacks in the Capital.

“I would not like to comment on individual inputs,” he said. The top brass of the Capital’s police on Thursday also held a meeting with police chiefs of Uttar Pradesh and Haryana for coordination during the elections.

Dadwal said the discussions focused on the smooth conduct of elections in the region bordering the Capital. “The officers deliberated upon the ways to enhance intelligence sharing and border checks between the states.

We share a cordial and constructive relationship with our neighbouring police forces,” Dadwal said. Security at the Indira Gandhi International Airport, however, is already on maximum alert, said Central Industrial Security Force spokesman Rohit Katiyar.

‘Snatching cases down in the Capital’ Dadwal also claimed that verification of motorcycles across the city had helped in reducing snatching cases involving motorcycles. “There has been a 30 per cent decrease in snatchings involving bikers in the city while robberies involving motorcycle-borne criminals have gone down 71 per cent,” said Dadwal.