Filipino inmates in `Thriller’ video stage tribute

CEBU, Philippines – The Filipino inmates who shot to global fame with a YouTube video of their “Thriller” dance swayed and stomped again Saturday in a behind-bars tribute to their idol, Michael Jackson.

After being told of Jackson’s death Thursday in Los Angeles, the 1,500 inmates at the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center hit the exercise yard, practicing for nine hours Friday night — and into the wee hours of Saturday morning — for the show. They took breaks only to eat or when it rained, said professional choreographer Gwendolyn Lador, hired by the prison to teach the inmates the dance.

“I felt sad because we lost our idol,” said inmate Wenjiel Resane, who plays the role of Jackson’s girlfriend in the video.

Crisanto Nieri, 38, was feeling a little extra stress. He danced Jackson’s part in “Thriller.”

“Even as a kid, he was already my idol,” said Nieri, who is serving seven years on drug charges. “I am happy that our video became famous, but I feel some pressure to perform well.”

A crowd of 700 Cebuanos and foreign tourists watched the performance from a second-floor corridor, swaying to the music and applauding as the inmates, dressed in orange prison T-shirts and sweat pants, stomped and clapped in unison in the hilltop prison, behind thick stone walls topped by electrified razor wire.

Other numbers included “Ben,” “I’ll Be There” and “We Are the World.” The inmates then held up a 5-by-10 foot (1.5-by-3 meter) tarpaulin showing Michael Jackson holding a sword with his name written below it.

Others waved the flags of the Philippines and other nations.

Before the show, the performers dedicated a prayer to Jackson’s family.

“I was sad because one of the songs of Michael Jackson, `Thriller,’ made us famous around the world,” said Francis Mercader, 36, who has spent a year in detention while on trial for drug charges.

Byron Garcia, the Cebu provincial security consultant who came up with the idea of adding synchronized dancing to poorly attended exercise sessions, said he was surprised by the popularity of the 2007 video — one of more than a dozen inmate dance numbers he has posted on YouTube.

“Thriller” has attracted 24.3 million hits since it was posted two years ago, with nearly a million of them in the 24 hours since news of Jackson’s death spread.

The inmates “consider Michael Jackson as a god here,” Garcia said. “If not for Michael Jackson, they would not have this international recognition.”

“The fame brought them back their self-esteem,” he told reporters. “So that’s why we have these public performances.”

Inmate Alfredo Gaballo, 52, says Jackson “inspired us, so we are all sad about his death.”

“The performance today has been amazing,” said Karen Benrad, 29, from London. She and about two dozen foreign and local tourists later joined the inmates at the prison quadrangle, dancing to the tune of “Macarena” and “I just can’t get enough.”

Kim Hua-sung, a 23-year-old South Korean student in Cebu who watched the inmates’ performance, said he is also a Jackson fan. “I’m sad that I can’t listen to more songs from him.”

In Taiwan, two top Michael Jackson impersonators donned fedora hats and sequined outfits Saturday, moonwalking to “Billie Jean” in their own tribute to the pop star.

Thirty-year-old Wang Chih-wei told The Associated Press he secured a photo op with his idol during Jackson’s whirlwind tour in 1993 after winning an impersonation contest.

“I didn’t know much English so I could only tell him, ‘I love you,’” Wang said. “He was very friendly. I melted when he put his hand on my shoulder for the photo.”

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On the Net:

Performance of “Thriller” Video

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Associated Press writer Debby Wu contributed to this report from Taipei, Taiwan.

Source By – http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090627/ap_en_ot/as_michael_jackson_dancing_inmates

Sri Lankan cricketers shot in Pakistan terror attack

Terror struck at the heart of cricket when masked gunmen attacked the bus carrying the Sri Lankan cricket team to the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. Five cricketers, including Mahela Jayawardene, the Sri Lankan captain, and his deputy Kumar Sangakkara, received minor injuries. The attack also left six security men and two civilians dead.

Ijaz Butt, the PCB chief, said the Test has been called off. Salman Tasheer, the Punjab governor, said a helicopter will soon evacuate the Sri Lankan players from Gaddafi Stadium and take them to a nearby airbase from where the team will fly back to Sri Lanka. Duleep Mendis, the Sri Lanka Cricket chief, said that they were “getting the team back [to Sri Lanka] today”.

There have been terror strikes on the peripheries of cricket, but this is the first time players have been directly targeted. The Sri Lankans were on their way to the Gaddafi Stadium when their bus was attacked by five armed terrorists near Liberty market. Habibur Rehman, chief commissioner of police, said 12 masked terrorists fired at the Sri Lankan team bus. The gunmen shot at the wheels of the bus and also injured the driver. A grenade was also thrown at the bus but it missed.

Jayawardene received a cut to the ankle while Sangakkara was injured in the shoulder. Thilan Samaraweera and Tharanga Paravitarana were the ones most seriously injured; both received shrapnels in the chest. Ajantha Mendis received a minor injury in the back.

“The bus came under attack as we were driving to the stadium, the gunmen targeted the wheels of the bus first and then the bus,” Mahela Jayawardene told Cricinfo. “We all dived to the floor to take cover. About five players have been injured and also Paul Farbrace [a member of the support staff], but most of the injuries appear to be minor at this stage and caused by debris.”
Top Curve
Security concerns in Pakistan

* September 2001- New Zealand decide not to tour Pakistan following USA’s military action in Afghanistan in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. West Indies and Australia then decide to move their games in Pakistan scheduled for later in the year to neutral venues in Colombo and Sharjah.
* May 2002 – New Zealand cancel their tour of Pakistan after a bomb blast outside Karachi’s Sheraton Hotel where they were staying.
* March 2008 – Australia postpone their tour of Pakistan slated for the end of March as a result of security concerns.The decision was taken in the aftermath of Benazir Bhutto’s assasination in December 2007.
* October 2008 – West Indies call off a proposed tour of Pakistan scheduled for November citing security concerns, a week after the West Indies Women had cancelled the Pakistan leg of their Asian tour.
* December 2008 – The BCCI call off India’s scheduled tour of Pakistan in 2009 following a directive from the government.
* December 2008 – The PCB confirm that Sri Lanka will tour Pakistan after India decided not to after the Mumbai terror attack.
* February 2009 – The ICC decide not to stage the 2009 Champions Trophy in Pakistan after some of the members expressed reservations about touring the country.

Bottom Curve

Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive, confirmed that the remainder of the tour had been cancelled. “We note with dismay and regret the events of this morning in Lahore and we condemn this attack without reservation.

“It is a source of great sadness that there have been a number of fatalities in this attack and it is also very upsetting for the wider cricket family that some of the Sri Lanka players and one match official have been injured in this attack. At this time our thoughts and prayers are with the injured people and also the families of those who have died.”

Television footage of several gunmen creeping through the trees, crouching to aim their kalashnikovs then running onto the next target were aired by Pakistan’s private channel Geo.

Chamra Ranavira, third secretary and press secretary at the Sri Lankan High Commission in Islamabad, said Samaraweera and Paranavitana had been admitted to hospital, but were out of danger now. “We are communicating with the Pakistan Cricket Board and the high commission has taken action to send the cricket team back home as soon as possible,” he said.

The reserve umpire Ahsan Raza was also injured in the attack. Nadeem Ghauri, the TV umpire, who was traveling in a bus behind the Sri Lanka team bus said the firing continued for some time. Umpire Steve Davis, who was on the team bus, called the terrorist attack “terrible”. “I’m lost for words,” he said.

Speaking from Sri Lanka, Sanath Jayasuriya said that it was an “extremely unfortunate incident. “We’ve never had this kind of problem,” Jayasuriya told CNN-IBN. “They are all safe, that’s the good news I got when I spoke to Kumar. I don’t think they’ll stay back and play. I think they will come back as soon as possible. Depends on the injuries.”

Speaking on Geo TV, Inzamam-ul-Haq, the former Pakistan captain, said: “This is the first time that a cricket team has been seriously targeted… Pakistan’s image will be hit and only time will tell how much damage has been done to Pakistan cricket. The World Cup too might be affected… no country would want to come now to Pakistan… I am worried where Pakistan will get a chance to play, not only in Pakistan but outside as well. This is all so sad.”

The Indian cricket board, which called off a scheduled tour of Pakistan last December, expressed its sorrow over the attack. “We pray for the speedy recovery of the injured cricketers, and sympathise with their families and compatriots,” BCCI Secretary N Srinivasan said in New Delhi. “The BCCI stands alongside Sri Lanka Cricket in this hour of crisis.”

The Sri Lankan team had stepped in after the Indian government had barred the Indian team from touring Pakistan after the terror attack in Mumbai.

Orissa to swap power to meet shortfall

Bhubaneswar, Feb 25 (IANS) Power trader PTC India will swap power with Orissa to help it overcome the power shortage it is facing currently, an official said Wednesday.

PTC – formerly Power Trading Corp of India – will supply about 150 MW daily to Grid Corp of Orissa (Gridco), the bulk supplier of electricity in the state.

Under a short-term agreement signed Tuesday, PTC will make the supply from Feb 25 to March 31, and get back 5 percent more than what it supplies between Sep 1 and Oct 15, Gridco director (commercial) A.C. Mallik, told IANS.

PTC will source the energy from New Delhi Power Ltd, a distribution company controlled by Tata Power.

Orissa is facing a daily shortfall of 110 MW after one unit of the Talcher thermal power plant developed a technical snag. The state government is at present meeting the shortfall drawing electricity from Orissa Hydro Power Corp.

According to Mallik, Orissa requires about 2,800-3,000 MW during peak periods, particularly in summer, and about 2,300-2,500 MW during off-peak periods.
Indo Asian News Service

Turk state TV pulls plug on Kurdish speech by deputy

Turkish state television cut off live broadcasting on Tuesday when the head of the largest pro-Kurdish party began addressing his parliamentary deputies in the Kurdish language.

The incident highlighted tensions in the European Union candidate over the issue of using the once-banned language in public despite recent government moves to ease restrictions, including launching a Kurdish state channel.

It also took place before March 29 municipal elections in which the ruling AK Party is locked in a close battle with the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) in Diyarbakir, the largest city in the Kurdish southeast region.

“In order to show that there is nothing to fear in using other languages and to emphasise brotherhood of languages during the International Day of Mother Tongues, let me continue my speech in Kurdish,” DTP leader Ahmet Turk told a gathering of DTP members before he went off the air.

Under Turkish law, it is illegal for Turkish politicians to make political speeches in a language other than Turkish, although the new state Kurdish channel translated and aired a speech made by Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan at an election rally in Diyarbakir on Saturday.

“The constitution and the law on political parties bans the use of any language other than Turkish in parliament and in group meetings. Therefore we had to cut the live broadcast and we apologise for this,” TRT said in a statement.

Nihat Ergun, deputy chairman of the AK Party’s parliament group, called Turk’s speech a “provocation”. Parliament Speaker Koksal Toptan said Turk was wrong for addressing parliament in Kurdish but that he not will face penalties for defying the law.

Turkey launched a Kurdish state channel in January following pressure from the EU to expand rights of minority Kurds.

DTP officials have said the channel is a ploy by the AK Party to win votes for municipal vote and have pointed out the many restrictions that still exist on Kurdish.

Erdogan has worked hard to win the support of Turkey’s 12 million minority Kurds ahead of the polls. He told a crowd in Diyarkabir that all Turkish citizens were equal, but TRT’s decision to pull the plug on Turk could damage the AK party’s message of inclusion for long-discriminated Kurds.

Kurdish was banned following a 1980 military coup until 1991, as the Turkish state fought a war against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) guerrilla group.

The DTP, which has 21 members in parliament, faces closure by the Constitutional Court on charges it has links to the PKK.
Ibon Villelabeitia

India to reply Pak’s query on dossier after chargesheet: PC

New Delhi, Feb 25 (PTI) India will respond to Pakistan’s questions on dossier after filing of chargesheet in Mumbai attack case, Home Minister P Chidambaram said. “After the chargesheet is filed, we will reply,” Chidambaram told reporters outside Parliament on being asked when India would reply to the set of 30 questions posed by Pakistan on the Indian dossier.

Chidambaram was speaking when the chargesheet in Mumbai case was about to be filed in a court in the financial capital. Minister of State for Home Shakeel Ahmad said the government will seek to clarify whatever doubts Pakistan may have with regard to the attack.

He said the footage of four terrorists roaming in Taj Hotel in Mumbai on November 26 last year, which was aired by a TV channel, should provide further evidence to Pakistan in connection with the probe. “So far they have acknowledged the nationality of only Ajmal Amir Kasab but there has no acknowledgement by Pakistan of the nationality of his associates, who died during the attack.

The footage should help Pakistan in identifying them,” he said. At the same time, he said Pakistan should also hand over 40 fugitives of Indian law, which New Delhi has demanded.

“This is our target.” PTI.

Ban holds talks with Canadian premier on kidnapped diplomats

Ban holds talks with Canadian premier on kidnapped diplomats New York – UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Monday that he and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper discussed efforts to secure the freedom of a Canadian diplomat kidnapped last December in Niger.

Robert Fowler, a high-ranking Canadian official and former ambassador to the United Nations, disappeared on December 14 with his foreign affairs aide, Louis Guay. They were in a UN-marked vehicle and were believed to be kidnapped with their driver.

Fowler was on an official UN mission, trying to find ways to settle a growing conflict led by Tuareg nomads against governments in Niger and Mali.

Harper visited UN headquarters in New York, but did not speak to the media.

Ban said the two discussed “how we can expedite the process of releasing my special envoy (Fowler).” He did not elaborate.

“Canada is one of the very important member states, sharing major goals and objective of the UN,” Ban told reporters. (dpa)

NEWS FEATURE: Syria, courted from abroad, remains coy

NEWS FEATURE: Syria, courted from abroad, remains coy Damascus – Presidents, important US senators, senior officials from the Arab League – lately it seems everyone is courting Syria.

In recent months Damascus has been the centre of a flurry of international diplomatic activity.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy visited. So did a delegation of European Union officials and foreign ministers. Arab League chief Amr Mussa, who hails from Egypt, a country with increasingly fraught relations with Syria, seeks Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s counsel.

But al-Assad’s separate meetings with US Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry and a second congressional delegation in Damascus on Saturday were what really made headlines.

Some Arab observers are wondering if Syria really can be pried from its uneasy alliance with Iran, as some in Washington hope, or how serious US President Barack Obama is about renewing ties with Arab world.

Al-Assad told Kerry that “dialogue is the only way” to solve problems and that “the policy of dictation has proven useless,” Syria’s SANA news agency reported on Saturday.

Kerry, on the other hand, told reporters that “unlike the Bush administration … we believe you have to engage in a discussion.”

Fine words, some Arab observers say, but will they translate into a real rapprochement?

Emad Gad, a Middle East expert at Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that both sides “are merely testing the waters to see what the other side could offer.”

Many thorny issues remain between the two countries.

The United States accuses Syria of supporting terrorism by providing a safe haven for such organizations as the Islamist Palestinian Hamas movement and Islamic Jihad. The US objects to Syria’s strategic partnership with Iran and the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah movement. US officials remain suspicious of Syria’s nuclear programme, and the US State Department routinely blasts Syria over its human rights record.

“Syria will not change its alliances in the region for the sake of mere promises,” Gad told dpa. “They will wait to hear specific and concrete offers to begin weighing a compromise.”

Among the key offers Syria would want to hear is active US support for the return of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights to Syrian control. It also wants economic and political incentives, including an end to unilateral US economic sanctions imposed in 2004.

The problem is that even if the US were willing to make concessions on these scores, it is not the only player in the region.

“With the Israeli government leaning further to the right as Benjamin Netanyahu takes power, peace talks will become even more difficult than before. Syria is thus skeptical that the US can have a great influence in peace talks,” he said.

And al-Assad has said that Syria will not stop supporting groups the US lists as terrorist organizations.

In an exclusive interview with Hezbollah-run al-Manar television in August, al-Assad said, “We do not see any interest in abandoning the resistance. Our position toward resistance against any occupation in Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine is firm and has not changed.”

Lebanese analyst Hussein Abdel-Hussein, however, believes that the new US administration would be wrong to abandon the previous administration’s policy of pressuring Syria through isolating it.

“US lawmakers should realize that if America’s isolation of Syria failed, a successful policy does not entail a reversal of whatever (former) president (George W) Bush did,” Abdel-Hussein told dpa.

Rather, he said, al-Assad manipulates democracies with his foreign policy by “playing by words.”

According to Abdel-Hussein, al-Assad gave “false impressions that he had opened an embassy in Beirut, to the joy of the amateurish French diplomatic corps.”

“Yet the embassy remains without an ambassador, a step which Assad hopes he can trade for something new, maybe this time with the Americans,” the analyst concluded.

In an interview published recently in Britain’s Guardian newspaper, al-Assad acknowledged that Syria and the US were “still in the period of gestures and signals.”

Yet the “gestures and signals” do suggest the two countries are moving closer together.

Al-Assad told the paper that he expected the US to send a full- fledged ambassador to Damascus soon, and he said that there was “no substitute” for Washington as “the main arbiter” in the Middle East peace process.

Bush withdrew his ambassador to Syria after Damascus was accused of complicity in a massive bomb in Beirut that killed former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri in February 2005.

“An ambassador is important … Sending these delegations is important. This number of congressmen coming to Syria is a good gesture. It shows that this (US) administration wants to see dialogue with Syria,” al-Assad said. (dpa)

German federation calls on Rangnick to explain doping tests remarks

German federation calls on Rangnick to explain doping tests remarks Frankfurt – The German football federation DFB has called on Hoffenheim coach Ralf Rangnick to elaborate on comments in which he sought to explain why two of his players turned up late for a doping test.

The federation has also called for written statements from the players, defenders Andreas Ibertsberger and Christoph Janker, who are being investigated for breach of doping regulations.

The players turned up 10 minutes late for a doping control immediately after the Bundesliga match on February 7 at Borussia Moenchengladbach.

Rangnick told a regional television programme Sunday evening the players had gone into the changing room to put on a fresh shirt, saying this was common practice at other Bundesliga clubs.

“It was often so in the past that even the doping expert said they could go quickly to the dressing room to put on a fresh shirt,” Rangnick said.

The coach said he had spoken to other managers about it and “it’s also the case at other clubs that players have the possibility or are told to change into a fresh shirt.”

Both Ibertsberger, a 26-year-old Austrian international, and fellow defender Jancker, 24, recorded negative doping tests in the controls carried out after the match which ended 1-1.

“That doping does not take place at Hoffenheim and in the Bundesliga is without question,” Rangnick said.

DFB vice-president and legal affairs expert Rainer Koch said the federation adhered strictly to the anti-doping guidelines. It would take legal proceedings should it become aware of any practices which were in breach of the regulations, he said.

The Hoffenheim players could face suspension, while Borussia Monchengladbach have lodged an official appeal over the 1-1 draw.

Borussia sports director Max Eberl said the appeal was lodged as a “legal safeguard” and not with the aim of being awarded the points.

“For me as a former professional player it would be sad if the players were to receive drastic sanctions. They weren’t doped after all,” he said.

However Eberl said doping “is an issue in sport and we have to be credible in football and cannot be negligent on this.” Clear rules were necessary “and rules always mean consequences.” dpa

NEWS FEATURE: A rare silence falls on site of Cairo bomb attack

NEWS FEATURE: A rare silence falls on site of Cairo bomb attack Cairo – An hour after a bomb exploded near the steps of Cairo’s landmark Hussein Mosque in the heart of the city’s Medieval quarter, little remained to testify to the chaos and the panic that had so recently gripped the area.

Footprints led through puddles of blood on the mosque’s marble steps. Plainclothes police rapidly escorted tourists out of the area. Police in riot gear, illuminated by ambulances’ flashing lights and wailing sirens, blocked the main entrances to the normally crowded square in front of the mosque. Crowds of curious neighbours and journalists crowded the blockades.

When the bomb exploded, killing one French woman and injuring 21 other people, including a young Egyptian child, the blast blew out glass from nearby shop windows. Witnesses told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that the ground shook, buildings buckled, and items on display in stores fell off their shelves from the strength of the explosion.

An hour afterwards, the blood remained, but the glass had been swept away. In fact, the clearest sign that something had gone wrong was the quiet. Hussein Square is never empty, and it is never quiet.

Tourists and Egyptians alike throng to its cafes and shops at all hours of the night. Hawkers selling papyrus, taxidermy, key chains, fake watches, and perfumes normally call out to customers in at least half a dozen languages.

On Sunday night, everyone spoke in soundbites. A Swiss-German tourist, who gave his name only as Andreas, assumed the brisk tone of a government spokesman when asked what he’d seen.

“We heard a loud explosion and saw everyone running. The police came very quickly to escort us out of the area. We have no further information,” he told dpa.

A portly café owner who sat smoking a water pipe only 30 metres from the site of the blast, perhaps 90 minutes after the bomb went off, spoke in the nationalist cadences of an Arab politician on satellite television, and yet he would not give his name because he said plainclothes police officers had told residents not to talk to journalists.

“Egypt is bigger and stronger than the cowards who did this,” he said, warming to his role. “Egypt is the mother of the world, the mother of all countries, a great country of farmers and engineers and brave soldiers.”

On Monday, the square was unnaturally quiet again, and security was as tight. And Ahmad Abdallah, a 28-year-old shopkeeper who works steps from the centre of the blast, spoke in the same proud cadences.

“There’s no way an Egyptian could have done this attack. There’s no way an Egyptian could do this to his own country,” he said. “This had to have been a foreigner trying to harm Egypt’s reputation as a safe country.”

The quiet in that descended on the blast site Sunday night and Monday morning was unusual. But the characteristic Egyptian humour and resiliency residents maintained seemed to suggest the neighbourhood would recover from this attack, as it had from previous attacks.

In a back-alley approach to the blast site on Sunday night, a group of Arab and foreign journalists trying to skirt the security cordon by approaching from behind shared a joke with the policemen sent to stop them.

“That one could be from the New York Times,” a passerby joked as a foreign journalist with a long telephoto lens walked by. “Papyrus, papyrus,” another joked, parodying hawkers’ calls, as a foreign journalist interviewed witnesses.

And on Monday, when dpa asked a group of neighbourhood youths who they thought had perpetrated the attack, one responded, “I dunno. Ahmed, who do you think did it?”

“I have no idea,” Ahmed responded. “Colombo?” (dpa)

Mayawati to be next Indian PM: pollster

London, Feb 23 (IANS) The coming Indian general elections are likely to lead to a Left-leaning government led by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati and supported from the outside by either the Congress or the BJP, a leading pollster predicted Monday.

Yashwant Deshmukh, who runs the Team Cvoter polling firm and has covered more than 100 state and national elections in India, will tell leading British politicians this week that neither the Congress nor the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will be able to win a majority in elections to the Lok Sabha.

In fact, he believes that both parties will see their number of seats dramatically reduced.

“I am looking at the possibility of Mayawati leading a government of an assortment of political parties, barring the Samajwadi Party,” he told IANS ahead of Wednesday’s House of Commons briefing for British MPs, members of thinktanks and businessmen and investors.

“This government would be formed with either inside- or outside-support from the Left parties. But it will need the support of either the Congress or the BJP from the outside.

“In the current scenario either of them will do it because no one wants to be seen as trying to stop a Dalit woman from becoming prime minister. Coming in her way would be committing political harakiri.”

Deshmukh said the post-election scenario was less clear than in previous years, but predicted: “This time round the Congress party will be the loser and the BJP will be the even bigger loser. Both will all need to give away a lot of power if they’re going to even come close to a majority.”

Vikas Pota, managing director of the public relations firm Saffron Chase, which is organising the briefing, said the elections were expected to lead to a slowdown in the process of liberalisation in India.

‘It seems that the current world recession is leading to protectionist language from all nations. It will be difficult to grow the insurance, retail and banking sectors as a result,’ he told The Guardian newspaper.

Bride among 15 killed as train rams car in Orissa

A train rammed into a crowded jeep returning from a wedding in Orissa on Sunday, killing 15 people including the bride, officials and eyewitnesses said.

An express train hit the car at a level crossing near Bargarh town, 380 km from Bhubaneswar, officials said.

“In total 15 people including some girls died,” a senior regional official, Jamil Ahmed Khan, told Reuters.

No one on the train was injured, a spokesman for East Coast Railway said.

Pak extending room to Taliban affects whole region: PC

Jalandhar, Feb 23 (PTI) Pakistan’s “extending room” to the Taliban in the form of any “compromise” affects the entire region, Home Minister P Chidambaram said today. Taliban was an issue which largely concerned Pakistan but its “extending room” to them in the form of any “compromise” affects the entire region, he told reporters on the sidelines of a function here.

He was replying to a query on a deal reached between the authorities in the North West Frontier Province in Pakistan and the Taliban. PTI.
PTI

UN envoy concerned for civilians, Rajapaksa assures action

T V Sriram Colombo, (PTI) Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa today assured the UN’s humanitarian chief of all efforts to get the conflict-hit Tamil civilians in the north rehabilitated to safe areas, as the latter expressed concern over the plight of thousands of people trapped in war zone. Rajapaksa told the visiting UN Under-Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs, Sir John Holmes that his government would make all efforts to bring out the civilians trapped in the war zone in the Northern Wanni and rehabilitate them to safe areas.

The meeting followed Holmes’ visit to the camps of Internally Displaced People (IDP) at Vavuniya yesterday. The UN envoy said “tens of deaths and more injuries” of civilians are taking place daily inside the northern Wanni region.

Holmes told reporters that he was concerned over restrictions on freedom of movement of the displaced and the presence of military inside the camps. Wrapping up his three-day visit to the island, he asked the government to expedite registration process of refugees at the earliest to ameliorate the lot of the civilians.

Appealing to the government and LTTE to ensure civilians were spared from the war, Holmes said: “I urge both sides to do everything they can for a peaceful and orderly end to avoid a final bloddy battle”. PTI.
PTI

German woman tells of “horror house” stay with creepy internet friend

German woman tells of Wellington – A German woman who flew to New Zealand to meet a man who wooed her on the internet with eloquent emails and poetry told a newspaper Tuesday of her time in a “horror house” with a stranger who was nothing like her online friend.

“He was quite intellectual and he knew the way to my heart,” the 36-year-old musician and drama teacher from Leipzig, who identified herself only as Maja, told the Otago Daily Times.

She said she realized her mistake as soon as she landed at Dunedin airport to meet the man she had formed an internet relationship with in October through his MySpace page. He was not the 33-year-old PhD student he had pretended to be, but an unkempt, unemployed man of 54 years.

“He had such a creepy aura,” she said. “I was in shock.”

Not knowing what to do, and having spent all her money on the fare to New Zealand, she went with him to his house.

“His home was really a horror house, I would say,” she told the paper. “Little roosters, cats and chickens lived in the house. There were a lot of cartons and dust and rubbish. You could not walk up the stairs and there was an ugly smell, a dead animal smell, and an ugly smell of old clothes.”

Maja said she stayed at the house because the man would not allow her to take her passport when they went out and she became more afraid as he listened in on her telephone calls and shouted at her.

She was rescued by police on Saturday after she had phoned a man she met on the plane and said she was not well. She said she couldn’t speak too much because her online pal was listening, but the man she called contacted police when she failed to meet him in the city on Thursday as arranged.

“I put much energy in keeping him calm to make him not nervous,” she said of her internet romancer. “He was really afraid that someone would come in and that I’d tell someone I was not okay.

“He was really out of reality. He lived in a complete fantasy world. I was totally afraid because he said there was no electricity there so we only had the candles at night.”

She said at night he took off his clothes and lay down in the same bed with her. “I had all my clothes on and these dirty sheets around me – I realised in that moment it was too much.” (dpa)

German teachers skip school and demonstrate for more pay

German teachers skip school and demonstrate for more pay Hanover, Germany- Some 2,000 teachers stayed away from school Tuesday and demonstrated in the city of Hanover for more pay as part of rolling strikes against Germany’s 16 state governments.

Ilse Schaad, the chief negotiator for the teachers’ union GEW, told the protesters, “The states are not as poor as they pretend. The have a hoard of tax revenue which they can use to supplement pay.”

Schaad said in Hanover the strikes at German schools would be stepped up in the course of the week “to show we are willing to fight.” Public servants have staged intermittent strikes for days. The next round of pay bargaining is scheduled for Saturday.

GEW and other unions are demanding a pay hike of 8 per cent for employees of the state governments including teachers.

In Berlin, a doctors’ union said 2,000 doctors employed by national occupational therapy agencies would begin rolling strikes from February 26 to press for better working conditions. The strikes would disrupt Germany’s rehabilitation clinics. (dpa)- Some 2,000 teachers stayed away from school Tuesday and demonstrated in the city of Hanover for more pay as part of rolling strikes against Germany’s 16 state governments.

Ilse Schaad, the chief negotiator for the teachers’ union GEW, told the protesters, “The states are not as poor as they pretend. The have a hoard of tax revenue which they can use to supplement pay.”

Schaad said in Hanover the strikes at German schools would be stepped up in the course of the week “to show we are willing to fight.” Public servants have staged intermittent strikes for days. The next round of pay bargaining is scheduled for Saturday.

GEW and other unions are demanding a pay hike of 8 per cent for employees of the state governments including teachers.

In Berlin, a doctors’ union said 2,000 doctors employed by national occupational therapy agencies would begin rolling strikes from February 26 to press for better working conditions. The strikes would disrupt Germany’s rehabilitation clinics. (dpa)

South Africa’s general election set for April 22

South Africa's general election set for April 22 Johannesburg – The date for South Africa’s general elections has been set at April 22, President Kgalema Motlanthe announced Tuesday.

South Africans will be called to vote in their fourth national and provincial elections since the end of apartheid in the early 1990s.

Motlanthe told the National Assembly in Cape Town he had agreed on the date with the Independent Electoral Commission.

“With this coming election, the maturisation of our democracy receives yet another shot in the arm,” Motlanthe said.

The popular ruling African National Congress, which led the fight to end apartheid, is expected to easily win the election.

But the emergence of a new party of disgruntled former ANC members has led to speculation that the party’s more-than-two-thirds majority in the National Assembly could be diminished.

After the election, the new parliament elects a president. ANC leader Jacob Zuma is the party’s candidate to succeed Motlanthe. (dpa)

Poland calls off Pakistani visit after Taliban killing of Pole

Poland calls off Pakistani visit after Taliban killing of PoleWarsaw – The Polish Senate speaker on Tuesday called off a visit from the head of the Pakistani Senate amid the recent killing of a kidnapped Polish engineer by the Taliban in Pakistan.

Senate speaker Bogdan Borusewicz said the cancellation wasn’t a move directed “against Pakistan,” but that the talks would not be possible “in such an atmosphere.”

“I didn’t see the possibility of cooperation after our countryman was murdered,” Borusewicz told reporters.

Pakistani militants released on Sunday what appeared to be video footage of the Polish engineer’s beheading. They had offered to exchange him for 61 of their colleagues held by Pakistan.

Stanczak was seized by militants who ambushed his vehicle in Pakistan’s Attock district, 85 kilometres from the capital Islamabad, last September 28. The militants first killed the driver and two guards. (dpa)

Third pro-Palestinian blogger detained in Egypt

Third pro-Palestinian blogger detained in Egypt Cairo – Police have detained a third pro-Palestinian blogger in Egypt, a source close to Egypt’s Interior Ministry confirmed on Tuesday.

The security source, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media, on Tuesday told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa that police took Dia al-Din Gad from his home in Egypt’s Gharbiya province, northwest of Cairo, on Friday.

Gad was often sharply critical of the Egyptian government’s policy with regard to Gaza on his blog, An Angry Voice, in the past. He became especially outspoken during Israel’s 22-day offensive in the Gaza Strip.

“Bloggers have become a major target of the police authorities in Egypt, and all these assaults are committed outside the law or under the cloak of the state of emergency,” the Cairo-based Arabic Network for Human Rights Information said in a statement released Monday night.

Egypt’s emergency law, in place without interruption since 1981, allows authorities to detain people without charge.

Late on Friday night, officers from Egypt’s domestic intelligence agency, State Security Investigations, also detained Philip Rizk, a German-Egyptian graduate student, blogger, and film-maker after he completed a symbolic march in Egypt’s Qalubiya province north of Cairo to protest the blockade of Gaza.

Lawyers on the case on Tuesday told dpa that they still had received no reliable word as to his location or any charges against him.

State Security officers surrounded and searched Rizk’s family home before dawn on Monday morning, Rizk’s sister, Jeannette, told dpa.

They took computer and video equipment, books, and papers, Gamal Eid, head of the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, said.

Both said that a representative from the German Embassy was present during the search. However, a spokesman from the embassy on Monday told dpa that he could not comment on the case.

Last Tuesday, a Cairo administrative court postponed hearing a complaint against the Interior Ministry alleging that a third blogger, Mohammed Adil, had been detained illegally in November for traveling to Gaza in January 2008.

Prosecutors issued a formal arrest warrant for Adil on November 24, four days after his arrest.

Adil is charged with belonging to a banned group, a probable reference to the Muslim Brotherhood, and crossing into Gaza illegally.

The Muslim Brotherhood, though banned, is Egypt’s largest opposition bloc in parliament by virtue of the sheer number of independent candidates affiliated with the group.

During Israel’s 22-day offensive in Gaza, which began on December 27, protests erupted at Egyptian embassies around the region calling on Egypt to open its border with Gaza at Rafah. (dpa)

Recession is most serious since 1930s, says British minister

Recession is most serious since 1930s, says British minister London – A close ally of British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said that the current global recession is “the most serious for over 100 years,” according to media reports

The comment by Ed Balls, the childrens’ minister and former close adviser to Brown, that the recession was “more extreme and more serious than that of the 1930s,” was reported by the Yorkshire Post newspaper.

Balls told a regional Labour Party conference in the northern county of Yorkshire that these were “seismic events that are going to change the political landscape.”

The remark, coming as criticism grows of the government’s policy of handling the crisis, was described as “staggering and very worrying” by a spokesman of the Conservative opposition. (dpa)

More than 100 dolphins beached in Philippines

More than 100 dolphins beached in PhilippinesManila – More than 100 dolphins were beached Tuesday in a northern Philippine town and at least three of them were already dead, a local official said.

The dolphins crowded the sea off Pilar town in Bataan province, 75 kilometres north-west of Manila, according to provincial Governor Enrique Garcia.

Garcia said fishermen in the area were at a loss on what to do with the mammals.

He added that his office has already called up public and private agencies that can help save the dolphins.

“This is a phenomenon,” he told a local radio station in Manila. “It is only now that this happened in our province.”

Beached dolphins are common in the Philippine archipelago of more than 7,000 islands, but very rarely occur in such huge numbers.

The coast guard has dispatched teams to the area to help guide the dolphins away from the shore.

“We have directed our units in Manila to help out in this particular undertaking,” coast guard commandant Vice Admiral Wilfredo Tamayo said. (dpa)