Gujarat cricket will be professionalised, says Modi

Gandhinagar (Gujarat), Sep.15 (ANI): Ending the Congress party’s domination of the Gujarat Cricket Association (GCA) by taking over the presidency of the outfit, state Chief Minister Narendra Modi said on Tuesday that it would be his endeavour to professionalise the activities of the GCA.

Speaking to reporters after being elected unanimously to the post, Modi said that there was so much taking place outside and beyond the world of cricket, that he would use every opportunity and technical know-how to make cricket in Gujarat more market savvy and a better sporting entity.

Thanking all those who had elected him unopposed, he said that in the coming months and years he would do his best to improve the state of cricket in the state.

Modi replaced Narhari Amin as GCA president.

The GCA, affiliated to the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), governs the game of cricket in Gujarat.

It is involved in the conduct of the game from the grass root level to the International level. (ANI)

“We’ll try to persuade Rahul Gandhi to join the cabinet” says Manmohan

New Delhi, May 16 (ANI): Thanking the people of the country for the Congress led UPA’s stupendous performance in the 2009 general elections, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday said that he would try to make party general secretary Rahul Gandhi a part of the new cabinet.

Addressing media persons jointly with UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi at 10 Janpath here, Singh thanked the people of the country for the faith they had shown in the Congress party.

“It’s always my wish to have Rahul Gandhi in my cabinet, but now we’ll have to persuade him to join us,” Singh said.

He said the thumping win of the Congress party was due to the untiring work that Sonia Gandhi and Rahul had done during all the five years of the UPA’s regime.

“Under the visionary leadership of Sonia Gandhi and the sustained hardwork by our youth leader Rahul Gandhi, we achieved the success,” Singh added.

Congratulating the people of the country on giving the UPA the mandate to form the next government, Sonia Gandhi said people had revealed that they knew what was right for them.

“People of India know what’s good for them,” Gandhi said. (ANI)

Lets let bygones be bygones, Zuma appeals after ANC election win

Johannesburg – South Africa’s ruling African National Congress leader Jacob Zuma on Saturday appealed to his opponents to let bygones be bygones after his party was handed a decisive mandate to govern for the next five years, but with a reduced majority. Zuma was speaking after the Independent Electoral Commission in Pretoria announced the ANC had won 65.9 per cent of Wednesday’s vote to the National Assembly in Cape Town, which is expected to elect Zuma president within days.

“We have gone through a difficult period over a few years,” Zuma, 67, said, referring to the protracted infighting in the ANC between factions loyal to Zuma and ousted ex-president Thabo Mbeki that led to a split in the party.

“It is now time to put it all behind us,” Zuma appealed, calling for an end to “mistrust, uncertainty, pain and tension” and saying it was vital to restore South Africa’s image as a place where country came before partisan interests.

Thanking the millions who voted ANC, Zuma said the ANC’s “decisive” victory was an endorsement of the party’s 15-year track record in government as well as “a victory for the country’s constitution.”

“We reiterate that the constitution is not under threat from the ANC. It has never been,” he said in answer to fears in opposition quarters that the ANC, if it had obtained a two-thirds majority, might have used it to rein in dissent by changing the much-vaunted charter. Zuma has recently questioned the powers of the judiciary, saying judges who ruled against him in his defunct corruption case, were “not God.”

In the end, the ANC fell short of the “overwhelming majority” Zuma had asked for, dropping around 4 percentage points on its 2004 score of 69.7 per cent.

Unemployment of around 40 per cent, and the slow pace of service delivery in poor communities, were listed by voters, including ANC voters, as the most critical election issue.

While the ANC has built around 3 million free or low-cost houses since 1994, close to 1 million people out of a total 48 million still live in tin shacks.

Zuma acknowledged that improving service delivery was critical, while voicing concern about the potential impact on the economy of the global economic crisis.

After averaging 5 per cent between 2003 and 2007, GDP growth in South Africa is forecast to dip under 1 per cent this year, constraining Zuma’s ability to deliver on his election promises of more jobs.

Preparations for the football World Cup being held in South Africa next year has helped buffer the country from the worst of the global economic fallout.

Zuma said he had spoken to Joseph Blatter, head of the World Cup organizing body FIFA, earlier Saturday and assured him of his “unwavering commitment” to the tournament. (dpa)

Sir Elton John returns to Watford FC for a visit

London, Jan 7 (ANI): Brit singer Sir Elton John has returned to Watford FC for a visit after stepping down as its honorary president.

John, who is a football fanatic and lifelong supporter of the Hertfordshire club, stepped down two months ago, after an ongoing feud with chairman Graham Simpson.

But now with Simpson having resigned, there is the possibility that the singer might return and take back his seat.

The Hornets” manager Brendan Rodgers was delighted when John accepted his invitation to visit the club”s training ground recently.

“He is one of the most iconic figures associated with Watford Football Club. People like Elton John have been involved here for many years,” the Daily Express quoted Rodgers as saying.

“For me it”s important to have people like that have a part in the future as well.

“I was delighted when he accepted my invitation…and he was great with the players and staff. He rang me later when he got home, thanking me for the day,” he added. (ANI)