N. Korean delegation visit to China may tackle nuke issue

New Delhi, Sep 2 (ANI): A delegation from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) led by Deputy Foreign Minister Kim Yong-il has arrived in Beijing, China’s Foreign Ministry has confirmed.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement that positive signs were seen in August, suggesting tension had eased on the Korean Peninsula, the China Daily reported.

The DPRK has made a series of conciliatory gestures during the past month that analysts interpreted as an attempt to re-engage with the outside world.

But the ministry did not link the visit to the stalled Six-Party Talks, saying it was “part of regular exchanges to mark the 60th anniversary of the two countries formally establishing diplomatic ties.”

“The two sides will exchange views on bilateral ties and issues of common interest,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at a media briefing.

Last Saturday, North Korea released four Republic of Korea (ROK) fishermen who were detained last month after their boat strayed into northern waters.

DPRK and ROK also agreed to hold reunions for families separated by the 1950-53 war, which was widely said to “be a new watershed in improving inter-Korean relations”.

“We hope that all sides concerned will grasp the opportunity so that the situation will develop with better prospects,” the statement said.

Last month, Chinese nuclear envoy, Wu Dawei, visited Pyongyang, a move that analysts thought was aimed at encouraging DPRK to return to the Six-Party Talks.

Fan Jishe, an expert on the DPRK at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said it was “very likely” that both China and the DPRK would exchange ideas about the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue during the delegation’s visit. (ANI)

Provisional Merit List ~ CoEP Pune ~ CoEP Pune Provisional Merit List of FY B.Tech 2009 Admissions

Provisional Merit List ~ CoEP Pune ~ CoEP Pune Provisional Merit List of FY B.Tech 2009 Admissions

2009 – 2010 F.Y. B.Tech Admissions provisional merit list for six autonomous engineering colleges of Pune will be available on College of Engineering Pune (CoEP) Website – www.coep.org.in

The first round of admission will be completed by 14th July 2009 and classes will start on 15th July 2009.

DSC Results ~ DSC Results 2009 ~ DSC 2009 ~ Andhra Pradesh Teachers Result ~ Teachers Recruitment DSC 2009 Result ~ DSC 2009 Results to be declared on Jun 30 2009 ~ DSC Exam Results 2009 ~ DSC 2009 Education

DSC Results ~ DSC Results 2009 ~ DSC 2009 ~ Andhra Pradesh Teachers Result ~ Teachers Recruitment DSC 2009 Result ~ DSC 2009 Results to be declared on Jun 30 2009 ~ DSC Exam Results 2009 ~ DSC 2009 Education

Andhra Pradesh Teachers Recruitment DSC 2008/2009 Exam Results will be declared today, 30th June 2009, at around 4.00 p.m.

The test was held on May 29, 30 and 31 this year, and over six lakh candidates appeared for the examination to compete for 52,625 teacher posts in 19 categories.

Students can access the DSC 2009 Results on some of the following websites:

www.examresults.ap.nic.in
www.indiaresults.com
www.aarvy.com
www.examresults.net
www.nettlinxresults.com
www.manabadi.co.in
www.manabadi.com
www.schools9.com
www.prathibhaplus.com
www.getourresults.com
www.results.sol.net.in
www.exametc.com
www.bharatstudent.com
www.6students.com
www.bharatfamily.com
www.studentshine.com

“The final selection list would be released in the final week of July,’’ the minister said.

Pelosi talks Tibet with China’s leaders

Beijing, May 28 (ANI): US House of Representative Speaker Nancy Pelosi and a bipartisan CODEL met with China’s President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao, and Wu Bangguo, the chairman of the National People’s Congress – and talked about North Korea and human rights abuses in Tibet.

Pelosi, a longtime critic of China’s record in Tibet, was greeted by pro-democracy protesters bearing a banner reading “Welcome Pelosi… SOS.”

For the first few days of her trip, Pelosi had emphasized her push for international environmental reforms, but in recent days she’s talked more about human rights.

“We had productive discussions about how the United States and China can cooperate on improving international security, growing our economies and protecting the environment,” Pelosi said in a statement after the Wednesday meeting.

“We urged the Chinese leaders to use their influence to help bring North Korea to the table for Six-Party Talks. On clean energy and climate change, both sides agreed to work together to confront the urgent challenge we face. Our delegation also emphasized the bipartisan concern in Congress on China’s poor record on human rights in China and Tibet.” (ANI)

Peaches Geldof strips to become lingerie brand Miss Ultimo’s face

London, May 10 (ANI): British socialite Peaches Geldof does not care a hoot what her father Irish singer Sir Bob Geldof thinks of her latest escapade as a top model for lingerie brand Miss Ultimo.

Peaches, 20, revealed that she is not worried whether her father likes it or not and that she is just happy to be able to earn money doing it.

“Dad hasn’t seen the pictures yet. But I’m not worried about his reaction because I’m a 20-year-old woman not a 13-year-old girl,” News of the World quoted her as saying.

“I’m glad I can earn money like this.

“I’d rather young girls were looking at a normal body like mine rather than an anorexic model,” she stated.

Ultimo boss Michelle Mone immediately singed Peaches up for a six- figure deal after she saw topless beach snaps of hers.

“Peaches was the perfect choice for this campaign. She’s young, edgy with lashings of style,” Mone added.

Miss Ultimo designer range from 16 pounds is available at Debenhams or www.missultimo.com (ANI)

North Korea vows to boycott nuclear talks

Seoul – North Korea announced Tuesday it will boycott international negotiations on ending its nuclear weapons programme and restore nuclear facilities that have been disabled as part of an earlier multilateral agreement. The Six-Party Talks “in which we are participating have become no longer necessary,” the state-run Korean Central News Agency said.

The statement came in response to a United Nations Security Council statement from Monday condemning an earlier rocket launch.

North Korea’s Foreign Ministry also said it intended to re-start a reactor at its Yongbyon nuclear facility and reprocess nuclear fuel rods. (dpa)

China urges UN to act prudently to N. Korea’s rocket launch

Beijing, Apr.8 (ANI): China has asked the United Nations to respond prudently to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s (DPRK) rocket launch, even as the UN Security Council have scheduled a second meeting to discuss what sanctions, if any, can be imposed on that country.

“China is always careful about imposing sanctions. We believe the response of the Security Council should be conducive to the peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia as well as the Six-Party Talks,” said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu.

The Security Council failed to agree on a collective response to the launch at an emergency meeting held on Sunday. Council members agreed to continue consultations on the issue.

Jiang said satellite launches are totally different from missile or nuclear tests.

“This issue also involves the country’s rights to use outer space peacefully. We believe the UN Security Council should respond to that prudently,” she said.

Russia also warned against a hasty decision.

“It is clear that the situation does not arouse joy, it arouses concerns,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Tuesday.

By contrast, Japan and the US called for a strong response.

“If the violation is left as is, the credibility and the authority of the Security Council will be undermined. We are working with countries involved so that the Security Council can together send out a strong message soon,” said Japanese Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone.

The US wants to have a strong, effective, coordinated response from the Security Council, the State Department said on Monday.

China hopes parties remain calm, keep long-term interests in mind and jointly safeguard the peace and stability of the region. (ANI)

Be cautious over North Korea, China asks UNSC

New York, April 6 (Xinhua) China has called on the UN Security Council (UNSC) to be ‘cautious and proportionate’ in its reaction to North Korea’s rocket launch.

Ambassador Zhang Yesui, China’s permanent representative to the UN, told a press conference here Sunday that the reaction of Security Council, which held an emergency session on the missile launch by Pyongyang, should be ‘cautious and proportionate’.

‘It served the common interests of the international community to continue to promote the Six-Party Talks, achieve denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and maintain peace and stability on the Peninsula and in Northeast Asia,’ he said.

The 15-nation Council kicked off an emergency session Sunday afternoon at the request of the Japanese mission to the UN over the alleged long-range missile test by North Korea, which says it has launched a communications satellite into orbit.

US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice told reporters shortly before the beginning of the UNSC meeting that Washington calls for ‘a strong collective action’ from the Security Council.

‘We have been in consultation with our allies in the region, and other partners in the Security Council,’ Rice said before she entered the Security Council chamber.

French UN Ambassador Jean- Maurice Ripert also told reporters that the Security Council ‘should act in an unanimous way’ after the rocket launch by Pyongyang.

Oprah Winfrey adopts a new puppy

Washington, Mar 4 (ANI): Talk show queen Oprah Winfrey has got a new member in her family-a puppy-which she and her long-time beau Stedman Graham have adopted recently.

A representative for PAWS Chicago shelter, Lisa Nowak, has confirmed that the couple took home an eight-week-old blonde-coloured cocker spaniel on March 1.

“(The dog) is really cute. Oprah saw her and fell in love with her! She was very excited,” Us magazine quoted Nowak as saying.

Although the shelter staff named the pup-one of a litter of six-Amanda, Nowak has no idea whether Winfrey has renamed her.

The talk show host adopted the pup after her two cocker spaniels, Sophie and Solomon, died last year.

Also, in 2007, Winfrey’s golden retriever, Gracie, choked to death on a plastic ball.

Still an owner of two golden retrievers, Luke and Layla, the philanthropic host had vowed to adopt her next pooch after dedicating a show to puppy mill horrors.

Oprah has even donated money in Sophie’s name for a room at PAWS Chicago.

“She’s very supportiveIt’s great to have her in,” said Nowak. (ANI)

Netanyahu meets Livni for unity government in Israel

Jerusalem, Feb 23 (DPA) Israel’s prime minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu met outgoing Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni Sunday night in an attempt to bring her Kadima party into the government he is attempting to form.

It is the first meeting between the two since the Feb 10 elections, in which the centrist Kadima won 28 of the 120 Knesset seats at stake, one more than that won by Netanyahu’s hardline Likud Party.

Israeli President Shimon Peres tapped Netanyahu Friday to form the next government, after consultations the president had with other Knesset factions revealed that the Likud leader had the best chance to form a government.

Livni rejected a last-minute plea by Peres Friday to join with Netanyahu in a unity coalition, and on Sunday evening she told the Kadima Knesset caucus that Kadima would be betraying its voters if it compromised its principles to sit in a government with Netanyahu.

Israeli media however speculated Sunday that Netanyahu would offer Kadima a ‘full partnership’ in government, including two of the top three cabinet portfolios – defence, foreign affairs or finance.

Netanyahu has up to six weeks to form a government. He can set up a 65-legislator coalition with right-wing and ultra-orthodox parties, but has said he hopes to form a wall-to-wall unity coalition.
DPA

Two people killed in Iraq bomb attacks

Baghdad, Feb 23 (Xinhua) Two civilians were killed and 13 injured in two bomb attacks targeting police patrols in the Iraqi capital Monday, an interior ministry source said.

‘An explosion struck a police patrol near the Andulus square in Baghdad’s central district of Karrada, killing two civilians and wounding six people, including two policemen,’ the source said.

A police vehicle was damaged by the blast.

In a separate incident, a roadside bomb exploded near a police patrol close to the Technology University in eastern Baghdad, damaging a police vehicle and wounding three policemen aboard and four bystanders, the source added.
Indo Asian News Service

Top official abducted in Pakistan’s Swat Valley

Mingora (Pakistan), Feb 22 (IANS) Suspected Taliban militants Sunday abducted a top government administrator and six guards in Pakistan’s Swat Valley, officials said.

District administrator Khushal Khan was going in his car to Mingora, the main town of Swat, when he was abducted by the suspected militants, The News reported.

The abductors have also kidnapped six of Khan’s bodyguards who were accompanying the official.

Khan was transferred to Swat only two days ago.

The kidnappings have dealt a blow to the peace efforts in the region, as the government and Taliban militants have pledged a ceasefire in the region.

Pakistani authorities last Monday entered into a deal with Taliban militia to restore sharia, or Islamic law, for peace in Swat, a idyllic valley where Pakistani military has been engaged in an unending war with Islamist militants.

A journalist working for a local television channel and newspaper was abducted and killed Wednesday as he covered a ‘peace march’, led by radical cleric Maulana Sufi Mohammad who was freed by the government to negotiate peace with Taliban militants.

Last Sunday, Islamist militants announced a 10-day ceasefire in the valley as a ‘goodwill gesture’ towards the peace talks.

Pakistan said Saturday the government and the militants have agreed to a ‘permanent truce’, but a Taliban commander said their ceasefire would be reviewed on its expiry Wednesday.
Indo Asian News Service

U.S., Iraq launch new bid to eradicate al Qaeda

U.S. and Iraqi forces have launched a new military campaign they hope will put an end to a stubborn insurgency in restive Nineveh province, seen as a final holdout for Sunni Islamist militants, officials said on Sunday.

Brigadier General Said Ahmed Abdullah, spokesman for the northern province’s military command, said local forces began searching homes and conducting widespread arrests on Friday as part of the new operation to oust al Qaeda militants.

He said 84 suspects had been detained so far in the province, which as violence drops across the country is now Iraq’s most dangerous area and seen as a haven for al Qaeda and other militants who launch car bombs and other attacks daily.

“‘Operation New Hope’ will allow the local and provincial governments to begin projects focusing on restoring essential services to the citizens of Mosul,” said Major Ramona Bellard, a U.S. military spokeswoman in northern Iraq.

While Bellard described it as a joint operation between U.S. and Iraqi forces, Abdullah said local troops would call on their U.S. counterparts for backup “only when required.”

The operation came less than a month after local elections brought a political sea change to Nineveh, where minority Kurds have dominated the provincial government since its majority Sunni Arabs boycotted elections in 2005.

Sunni Arabs’ lack of political power has been seen as fuelling much of the strife in Nineveh and its capital, Mosul, which six years after the U.S.-led invasion is still gripped by violence and in dire need of reconstruction and basic services.

Al-Hadba, a Sunni Arab bloc, swept last month’s vote in Nineveh and will dominate the provincial council from next month.

The Iraqi forces’ lead of the crackdown reflects the changing nature of military operations across Iraq as Washington prepares to withdraw troops by the end of 2011 under a bilateral security pact agreed last year.

The United States has poured billions of dollars into helping Iraq rebuild its forces, which were disbanded in 2003 by U.S. administrators and initially dominated by corruption, armed gangs and sectarianism when they were reformed.

Under the new security pact that took effect in January, Iraqi approval is required before U.S. troops can conduct combat operations, and U.S. combat troops are due to withdraw from Iraqi cities in the middle of next year.

Gunmen kill at least 6 football fans in Nigeria

Gunmen ambushed a busload of football fans travelling to a match in southern Nigeria on Saturday and killed at least six in an apparent revenge attack, police and local officials said.

The supporters were travelling from Yenegoa in Bayelsa state to neighbouring Delta state. Local officials said the execution-style killing appeared to be in retaliation for a nightclub shooting in Yenegoa on Friday.

“The fans coming to Delta were ambushed and shot. Eight were killed and seven were injured and are in hospital,” Delta state police spokesman Charles Muka said.

A senior Bayelsa state government official who visited the scene said he had seen six bodies being taken to the mortuary in the nearby town of Ughelli. Another local official put the death toll among the “Ocean Boys” football supporters at 13.

Bayelsa and Delta are two of the main states in Nigeria’s restive Niger Delta, where criminal gangs and militant groups regularly ambush vehicles and carry out kidnappings for ransom.

The government official said the killings appeared to be part of a feud between rival “cults”, a word often used in Nigeria to refer to university campus gangs originally sponsored by politicians to commit abuses at election time.

Detailed statistics are not available, but hundreds of people are believed to have been killed in clashes between such gangs since the early 1990s at the more than 100 federal and regional universities and polytechnics in Nigeria.

The lawlessness in a region which is home to Africa’s biggest oil and gas industry has forced many foreign companies to remove expatriate staff and scale back their operations.
Segun Owen

Taliban briefly holds top civil official, 6 guards in Swat

Rezaul H Laskar Islamabad, Feb 22 (PTI) A top civil official and his six guards were today kidnapped and briefly held by the local Taliban in Pakistan’s restive Swat valley, where religious hardliners are holding talks with the militants to usher in peace. District Coordination Officer Kushal Khan, who was recently appointed to the post, and his guards were abducted on the outskirts of Mingora, the main city in Swat district.

Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan, however, claimed the official was “not kidnapped” and had been stopped by the militants so that he could be their “guest” for tea. But the officials contested the Taliban’s claim, saying Khan was held by the militants for almost four hours.

“We allowed him to go after taking care of him as a guest,” the Taliban spokesman said. Today’s incident occurred despite the government and the militants calling for separate truces in the region.

Most parts of Swat are controlled by the Taliban, who are currently holding peace parleys with the Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e- Shariah Mohammadi, an outlawed group of religious hardliners. The TNSM recently reached a controversial agreement with Pakistani authorities on implementing Shariah or Islamic laws in Swat and Malakand to counter the Taliban insurgency.

PTI.

US offers immigrants citizenship to join army

New York, Feb 15 (IANS) The US Army is wooing skilled immigrants to join it, including those who know Hindi and Tamil, by offering them a chance to become citizens in as little as six months, a media report said.

For foreigners who live in the US on temporary visas, it often takes more than a decade to get citizenship.

As part of the army’s one-year pilot programme, to begin in New York City, it will recruit about 550 temporary immigrants who speak one or more of 35 languages, including Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Igbo (a tongue spoken in Nigeria), Kurdish, Nepalese, Pashto, Russian and Tamil, the New York Times reported Saturday.

Spanish speakers are not eligible.

Immigrants, who are permanent residents holding green cards, and have lived in the US for at least two years will be eligible to join, officials said.

‘The American army finds itself in a lot of different countries where cultural awareness is critical,’ said Lt. Gen. Benjamin C. Freakley, the top recruitment officer for the US Army. ‘There will be some very talented folks in this group.’

The programme will begin small – limited to 1,000 enlistees nationwide in its first year.

Immigrants serving in the US Army can apply to become citizens on the first day of active service, and they can take the oath in as little as six months.

If the pilot programme succeeds as Pentagon officials anticipate, it will expand for all branches of the military. For the army, it could eventually provide as many as 14,000 volunteers a year, or about one in six recruits.

Recruiters expect that the immigrants will have more education, foreign language skills and professional expertise than many Americans who enlist, helping the military to fill shortages in medical care, language interpretation and field intelligence analysis.

‘The army will gain in its strength in human capital,’ General Freakley said, ‘And the immigrants will gain their citizenship and get on a ramp to the American dream.’

The army’s programme will also include about 300 medical professionals to be recruited nationwide. Recruiting will start after the Department of Homeland officials updates an immigration rule in coming days.

Language experts will have to serve four years of active duty, and health care professionals will serve three years of active duty or six years in the reserves. If the immigrants do not complete their service honourably, they could lose their citizenship, the report said.

About 8,000 permanent immigrants with green cards join the US armed forces annually, the Pentagon reports, and about 29,000 foreign-born people currently serving are not American citizens.

Indo Asian News Service

Auto Credit May Bring Some Hope To The Wilting Auto Industry

Auto Credit May Brings Some Hope To The Wilting Auto IndustryLast month federal government announced, in its budget, the formation of the Canadian Secured Credit Facility under which Ottawa will purchase up to $12 billion in securities from financial institutions including banks.

The securities would be supported by loans and leases on vehicles and equipment. This would enable the automakers to offer financing to more consumers and dealers.

This news comes as the much needed relief to the automobile industry scorched by recession. But they seem to be getting much too impatient to wait till June.

“We need it today,” Bigland, chief executive officer of Chrysler Canada Inc., said in an interview at the Canadian International Auto Show. “It’s critical oxygen that the patient needs.”

“We can’t wait six months,” he said.

North America has witnessed a major slowdown on automobile sales due to the rising fuel prices, a subsequent global financial crisis that brought the credit markets to a standstill and wilting consumer confidence.

Bigland observed that in a normal economic climate, about 5 per cent of customers can’t get credit to buy vehicles, but Chrysler dealers across the country have given proof showing that level has shot up to 20 to 25 per cent in the past four months.

“It’s the number one issue affecting our business and it’s getting worse,” he said.

CERN pushes back particle accelerator restart date

Geneva – Scientists have again pushed back the restart date of the giant particle accelerator along the French-Swiss border by another six weeks, CERN announced, saying even this schedule was “tight.”

By September, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) should be operational again with particle collisions set to take place about a month later, the announcement made late Monday said.

The LHC, operated by the European Organization for Nuclear Research – known by its French acronym CERN – has been turned off since September last year following a malfunction which caused damage to integral parts just about a week after the first experiment.

The delay in restarting was said to be mostly related to the installation of better safety and protection systems.

Scientists have been working to create the LHC for about 20 years, and are aiming to send two proton beams into direct head-on collision nearly at the speed of light. They hope this will recreate conditions just after the Big Bang, which most scientists accept as the origin of the universe.

Once the machine was operational again, hydrogen atoms would again be inserted into the LHC and sent around a 27-kilometre ring, in a tunnel 90 metres below ground.

The collision of the atoms’ protons would take place within a month and discoveries would be likely over the following year. (dpa)

Nominee for South Korea’s national police chief withdraws over raid

Nominee for South Korea's national police chief withdraws over raid Seoul – South Korean President Lee Myung Bak’s nominee for national police chief withdrew his nomination Tuesday because of criticism over a deadly police raid in January.

Kim Seok Ki also resigned from his present post as Seoul’s police chief, saying he held himself “morally responsible” for the January 20 operation in the capital in which six people died.

Police stormed a building in central Seoul to evict squatters armed with Molotov cocktails who were protesting redevelopment of the area. The demonstrators threw the firebombs at police, and a blaze broke out on the roof of the building, killing five protestors and a police officer.

Pressure on Lee to withdraw Kim’s nomination had intensified recently. The police were accused of being excessive in the operation and disregarding the physical danger it posed to the demonstrators.

Kim’s withdrawal came a day after prosecutors exonerated police in the raid but indicted 20 of the protestors, accusing them of causing the deadly fire by producing incendiary materials.

Seven employees of a private security firm were also indicted, accused of trying to clear the occupied building by force before police stormed it. (dpa)

India’s economic growth to slow to six-year low of 7.1 per cent

India's economic growth to slow to six-year low of 7.1 per cent New Delhi – India’s economy is expected to post its lowest growth in six years and fall to 7.1 per cent for the current fiscal year against 9 per cent the previous year, according to government data released Monday.

The estimate – the first official projection for the financial year ending on March 31 – was on expected lines and similar to the rate forecast by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s Economic Advisory Panel.

The Central Statistical Organization (CSO) data showed that the growth figures for the three main components of national income – agriculture, manufacturing and services
- were expected to fall.

Manufacturing output growth was estimated at 4.1 per cent, half of the 8.2 per cent expansion in 2007-2008, while agriculture growth was pegged at 2.6 per cent against 4.9 per cent the previous year.

Services growth was estimated to fall to 9.6 per cent against 10.9 per cent.

The decline in growth figures of Asia’s third largest economy comes in the backdrop of a global slowdown that has hit the country’s key sectors.

The central Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had also recently lowered its growth forecast for gross domestic product (GDP) to 7 per cent from 7.5-8 per cent. (dpa)