Kim Kardashian defends Twitter cat pic

London, April 21 (ANI): Kim Kardashian has defended herself over her cat photograph, saying she didn’t harm the kitty by any means.

Peta had criticised Kardashian for holding a cat by the scruff of its neck for her Twitter photo.

A spokesperson said: “Kim Kardashian isn”t the only person who mistakenly thinks that because a mother cat picks up her kittens by the scruff of the neck that a supportive hand under the rump isn”t needed.”

However, the stunner insists she did nothing wrong, reports The Sun.

“I have been getting negative comments regarding the way I was holding the kitty, but rest assured, the owner and vet were on set and showed me how to pick him up.

“The cat was not harmed in any way and is perfectly fine! I love animals and would never do anything to harm any animals,” she said. (ANI)

Shopping centre gets green light for completion

The Mackay Regional Council has approved the final stages of development for a major retail centre in the Northern Beaches.

The Northern Beaches central development will include supermarkets, a hardware shop, childcare centre, a hotel and a vet.

The development, on the corner of Mackay-Bucasia and Eimeo roads, will have 45,000 square metres of floorspace – the same size as Canelands Central.

Councillor Di Hatfield says developments are usually limited to 10,000 square metres, but the centre is an exceptional case.

“The fact is that it is a huge, growing area and when those areas were set for gross floor area we didn’t have true figures in relation to our population growth,” she said.

“So we’re looking back at 2001 [and] we’re more than happy to recommend that we go beyond our planning scheme and … accept this increased gross floor area.”

Cr Hatfield says the development should ease some employment and traffic issues.

“We are expecting that the entire project in the end will create upwards of of around 900 jobs,” she said.

“That has to be good for the community, it has to be great for the Northern Beaches community in that many of those people may in fact be able to gain employment in that centre too.

“So that will also address many traffic issues that we already have with people travelling from the Northern Beaches through into the city centre.”

Saddam links haunt Iraq election candidates

Iraq’s election result has been thrown into confusion with several winning candidates facing disqualification because of links to Saddam Hussein’s Baathist party.

A special committee has been set up to vet and disqualify election candidates found to have links to Hussein’s regime.

One official is recommending at least four winning candidates be barred.

Some reports say all four were elected on the winning ticket of the former prime minister Iyad Allawi.

Mr Allawi’s Iriqiya bloc won a two-seat victory over the alliance of incumbent prime minister Nouri Al Maliki, but it is not certain whether the potential disqualifications could shift the balance of power.

It is now up to the courts to decide whether the candidates are removed.

There are also fears their disqualification could fuel further sectarian tensions in Iraq.

Kangaroo knocks runner unconscious

A Canberra vet says a kangaroo that attacked and knocked unconscious a man out jogging was probably acting to protect his territory.

A 25-year-old man from Macgregor was running during his lunch break on Thursday at Mt Ainslie when he was attacked by a kangaroo.

Canberra vet Michael Archinald says the case does not surprise him.

“They get very territorial at certain times of the year as well, they’re protecting their flock,” he said.

“They get very antsy and of course this guy would have been running and that’s quite a threatening thing to a roo and the roo is like, fight or flight, so in it goes.”

Miracle cat survives 3800km trek!

Melbourne, Sept 14 (ANI): Clyde, the cat, has miraculously survived a trek over 3800km in three years.

The cat was found in the Cloncurry Hospital, in outback Queensland, four months ago, where a nurse took him to local vet.

The vet scanned the animal for a microchip that led them all the way back to his owners in Tasmania.

Katrina Phillips told The Mercury she burst into tears after she came to know that Clyde was alive and well.

“We just can’t believe he’s alive, it’s just unbelievable and it’s so emotional,” The Herald Sun quoted Phillips as saying.

“I bought him as a birthday present for my daughter Ashleigh and one day, about three years ago, he just disappeared.

“We did everything to try to find him. We door-knocked, did letterbox drops and advertised in the paper, but there was no trace of him,” she added. (ANI)

Malay vet extends service to pet owner by groping, sucking her breasts

Kuala Lumpur, Sep 9 (ANI): A Malay kindergarten teacher, who took her feverish pet squirrel to a veterinary clinic for treatment, had her breasts groped instead by the attending veterinarian.

According to the Harian Metro, the veterinarian had asked the 27-year old woman to place the squirrel inside her blouse to keep it warm, given its “erratic body temperature”.

But the squirrel got stuck on her bra strap, when the 52-year-old veterinarian asked her to take the animal out.

While helping the woman remove the squirrel, the veterinarian saw her breasts, started praising her figure, and allegedly told her to take care of her body and “beautiful breasts”.

Ampang OCPD Asst Comm Abd Jalil Hasan said that the veterinarian later began to demonstrate to her how to massage her breasts.

“He then took advantage by groping and sucking the victim’s breasts. The victim struggled to release herself before the doctor finally let her go,” the Star Online quoted him as saying.

“He told her she need not pay for the squirrel’s treatment and asked her to come again. But she decided to lodge a police report,” he added.

ACP Abd Jalil Hasan added that the veterinarian was arrested on September 7.

However, the squirrel died shortly after returning home. (ANI)

Tennis ace Andy Murray in pet scare

London, July 16 (ANI): Scottish professional tennis player Andy Murray was in a tizzy when his pet dog had to be rushed to the vet, after it ate many rocks from the garden.

Murray, 22, became worried when his border terrier pet dog Maggie started suffering from a mystery illness.

He had a pet ambulance collect Maggie from his 5million-pound home in Oxshott, Surrey, and an X-ray revealed the rocks.

Vets removed them, and Maggie was back to her playful self in a couple of days.

“Stones are usually left to pass through a dog’s body but these were too big,” the Sun quoted a source as saying. (ANI)

Chihuahua survives 900kg stomp on head by horse!

Melbourne, July 2 (ANI): A chihuahua survived an accidental 900kg stomp on its head, made by its buddy horse weighing about 900kg.

Little Berry was suspected to have been almost squashed flat when Leroy, a Clydesdale, stepped backwards on to her head.

Owner Abbey Newton, 24, feared the dog was dead and took her to a vet, who gave it 24 hours to live and suggested she be put down.

But Abbey took her back home, and to the caretaker’s much surprise, Berry was her usual self by the morning.

“She just got up and ate my other dog’s breakfast,” the Daily Tetelgraph quoted Abbey as having told the Metro newspaper. (ANI)

Meet the dog that spent 25 days stuck in a rabbit hole

London, May 27 (ANI): A dog got stuck in a rabbit hole in Haverfordwest, West Wales, and could manage to crawl out only after it lost a third of his body weight due to starvation for 25 days.

Well-fed Jack Russell Jake lost 2kg when it came out of the hole, and vets feared that he would not survive.

Jake’s owner Jill Thomas, 52, revealed that the dog disappeared near some rabbit holes during a walk.

“We looked everywhere. But once three weeks had gone by we gave up hope,” the Sun quoted her as recalling.

Once Jack became free, it staggered to a farm 500 yards away, where the children had seen missing dog posters.

Afterwards, Jill and her husband Rick tok their pet to a vet, who put the dog on a drip.

Fencing contractor Rick said: “Jake was skin and bone. It was touch-and-go for a while. But he’s a fit little dog and he slowly recovered.”

Jill added: “We’re so glad he’s home. It’s incredible he survived.” (ANI)

Kiwi town bans ‘unlucky’ number 13!

Melbourne, May 26 (ANI): Fear of bad luck has forced a Kiwi town to ban number 13.

Palmerston North, in the central North Island, New Zealand has a policy to jump street numbers from number 11 to 15 to avoid the unlucky figure in-between.

The bizarre regulation is in place so people with triskaidekaphobia, or fear of the number 13, are not deterred from buying homes carrying the number on the letterbox.

According to The Dominion Post newspaper, Palmerston North City Council has admitted the age-old policy is a little odd, reports News.com.au.

And residents at number 15 can apply to have their numbers adapted if they really want.

A 92-year-old World War II vet anti-tank gunner Basil Buckley, who lives in the nearby capital of Wellington also criticised the policy.

Buckley said he’d lived at number 13 without incident for 40 years and the policy was a whole lot of “nonsense”. (ANI)

Kangaroo survives arrow shot through head

London, May 12 (ANI): In what can be called a “miracle”, an Australian kangaroo survived an arrow shot through its head.

The wildlife officials said that the kangaroo was expected to make a full recovery.

Veterinary surgeons from Melbourne Zoo operated on the animal over the weekend, and were optimistic about its chances.
“This was a big injury, but because the arrow didn’t seem to have been in there for a long time, and the injury was fresh, hopefully he’ll be okay,” the Telegraph quoted Michael Lynch, a vet at Melbourne Zoo, as saying.

“I’m cautiously optimistic about the kangaroo’s prospects for a full recovery,” he added.

The marsupial was rescued just days after another kangaroo was found with an arrow in its rump in the same location.

“It’s just unbelievable, I just can’t believe that anybody would do something so cruel. It must be a very cold-hearted person to do that,” said Fiona Corke, a Wildlife Victoria spokesman.

Wildlife Australia has posted a 10,000 dollars reward to find the person responsible for shooting the kangaroo. (ANI)

Czechs to ask Air France-KLM, Unimex to bid for Czech Airlines

Prague – The outgoing Czech government on Monday decided to invite the Dutch-French airline Air France-KLM and a Czech consortium of investment Unimex Group and Travel Service low-cost carrier to bid for Czech Airlines, acting Finance Minister Miroslav Kalousek said.

The cabinet thus shut out Russia’s Aeroflot and a private equity group, Odien, from privatizing the state’s 91.5-per-cent stake in the national carrier.

Kalousek as well as outgoing Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek refused to explain the decision. The cabinet said earlier that it would vet applicants in the tender’s first phase on strategic and security basis.

The two chosen bidders will be soon invited to proceed to the binding second round, in which the price will be decisive.

Topolanek’s cabinet, which is expected to be replaced by a new caretaker government on May 9, wanted to pick the owner by September 30.

Kalousek said he hopes that the interim cabinet, which should govern until early elections in mid October, would be able to select the winner.

Czech Airlines have been troubled by dropping demand amid the economic crisis and plane leasing costs.

Most analysts thus estimate the carrier’s price between 3 to 5 billion koruny (144 to 240 million dollars).

Topolanek’s three-party centre-right cabinet has ruled in a caretaker facility since March 26 following a lost vote of no-confidence in parliament two days earlier. (dpa)

Australian tots to get career advice

Sydney – A ballerina, Spiderman, a vet, a train driver and sometimes even a sea lion: these are the jobs that toddlers see themselves in when they grow up.

Kate Castine, an adviser to Australia ‘s department of education, isn’t happy about this and wants 4-year-olds to be more serious about their career options.

As well as the danger of the nappy-bound hankering after non-existent jobs such as that of a mermaid even, there is a risk that they will just want to copy mum and dad and be farmers or housewives, doctors or welfare dependents.

Castine wants proper career counseling to be in the national childcare curriculum the department is busy drawing up.

“The argument that children should be exposed to career development concepts at an early age has been endorsed by current worldwide research,” she said. “Reference to career development competencies needs to be explicit so (kindergarten) teachers understand its importance.”

Castine’s recommendations have been criticized by some who see them as an attempt to hijack childhood and burden little ones with worries about what to do when their schooling is over.

Barrie Elvish, head of a big Queensland childcare provider, argues that careers advice should come much later. “It’s bad enough that kids in years 11 and 12 have to choose a career,” he said. “How on earth can you get a 4-year-old to think about what they’ll be doing in 20 years’ time?” (dpa)

UK arrests have Asian students worried

HAS THE shutter come down for Asian students, particularly Indians, who are interested in studying in Britain? Following the detention of 10 Pakistanis on student visas for allegedly plotting to blow up crowded shopping centres in Manchester, the concern is gripping Indian students. Almost 20,000 Indians got admissions in 2008.

Many are expected to seek admission for 2009. So far Indians found it much easier and quicker to get the entry permission.

Of and #163;2.5 billion contribution made by international students to the UK economy as tuition fees, Indian students comprise 10 per cent of the foreign student market – second only to the Chinese. “But this latest development could mean strict vetting, both time-consuming and irksome, for even Indian applicants,” said Lord Megnad Desai, a professor emeritus at London School of Economics.

“The infiltration into India from Bangladesh is widely known. There is also now suspicion (after Mumbai carnage) that there is a radicalised element in the country.

” Desai said it will be more complex for Pakistanis. “I have had academically excellent, well-behaved Pakistani students in my classes.

They were not interested in anything but their studies. Yet any Pakistani student applicant would now be micro-scrutinised,” he said.

Referring to three Indian-origin men involved in the failed attempts to blow up a night club in London and bomb airport in Glasgow, a diplomat said: “It is unfortunate but stricter rules were being made for some time to vet student visa applications. “Now they will be adhered to the letter and spirit even for non-Pakistani students.

” It would be more difficult for Pakistani applicants, he added. Anatol Lieven, professor in the War Studies Department of King’s College went further.

“We might have to restrict students from Pakistan and #8230; I say with regret as a professor with valued Pakistani students-(but) 42,000 students from Pakistan in four years may be too many for anyone to check properly.” It may take more time and more checks, but Indian students will be welcome here, like the Chinese.

UK varsities are a ‘real and serious’ terrorism threat

London, Apr.9 (ANI): British universities have long been identified as a potential breeding ground for extremists. inisters have already warned that the threat from campuses was “real and serious” as students are at risk of being groomed by fanatics.

The Telegraph quotes experts as saying that as many as 48 universities have been infiltrated in the past.

The Government has urged academics and students to report suspicions over extremism. They were told to identify student societies – particularly Islamic groups – at risk of falling into the hands of radical preachers and vet speakers invited onto campuses to address students.

Bill Rammell, the former Higher Education Minister said he did not want to “overstate the menace” of violent extremism, but it was a “real and serious threat”.

Professor Anthony Glees, the director of Brunel University’s Centre for Intelligence and Security Studies, warned that at least 48 campuses including Oxford, Cambridge, the London School of Economics and Imperial College London had been infiltrated.

Student Islamic societies have faced growing scrutiny after it emerged that one of 12 men charged in connection with the alleged plot to blow up transatlantic airliners was president of the Islamic Society at London Metropolitan University.

Anjem Choudary, the former head of the radical al-Muhajiroun group in Britain, joined the organisation as a student at the University of Surrey.

In 2006, Dhiren Barot, said to be al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden’s “UK general”, was jailed for 40 years for planning terrorist attacks. He faked his identity in order to study at Brunel University.

One student, who joined the radical group Hizb ut-Tahrir while studying at Leeds University, claimed in an interview that universities were “bread-and-butter” recruiting grounds for extremist groups. (ANI)

The kicking buffalo and other rustic tales

IT HAS been a challenging afternoon at the vet’s. The patient is obstinate.

Dr Ranvir Prasad (26) is prodding the genitals of a buffalo with a rusted 10-year-old castrator, and the animal has already kicked him once from under the rickety, box-like enclosure where farm animals are tied during examinations. “The Punjab government expects its White Revolution to be managed by doctors with rusted instruments,” says Prasad, with a grimace, using the phrase often used to describe the dairy boom.

“Punjab produces 51.33 million tonnes of milk every year and #8230; 10 per cent of the country’s total production,” says Prasad, who works in Deon village in Bhatinda district, 300 kilometres west of the state capital of Chandigarh. “And yet this is all we get – outdated tools and medicines past their expiry date.

” The two-room veterinary hospital is a snapshot of a larger rot setting in across the state’s countryside, perceived in the rest of the country as the kingdom of the farmer and milk. In some ways, it is.

Agriculture and livestock are the heart of Punjab’s economy – 60 per cent of the state’s population of 2.44 crore are either farmers, dairy farmers or livestock breeders. “But the government’s policies are anti-people and anti-animal,” says the vet, dusting off his hands.

Irrigation and farmer subsidies are still a priority area in India’s granary, 40 years after the Green Revolution and White Revolution made agriculture and dairy farming profitable again. But medical care for the animals behind the turnaround remains rudimentary at best – although millions of lives are connected to livestock.

There are 90 million heads of livestock in Punjab, serviced by just 1,500 veterinary hospitals and 2,500 dispensaries – that’s one facility per 22,500 animals. Over 50 per cent of the 680 veterinary positions in the state are vacant.

And most of the animal hospitals in the state are ill-equipped. “Look around you,” says Prasad, gesturing at the 800-square-foot facility.

“Is this a hospital?” There is no X-ray machine. In three years, Prasad says he has received supplies twice – both were small batches of antibiotics.

He is the only government vet for Deon’s 1,500 cows, 1,000 buffaloes and myriad herds of goats and sheep. The result: Infertility, low milk yield and death.

There is an average of two cattle deaths daily in Deon – many of them caused by quacks who have rushed in to fill the gap left by the government. The only college of veterinary science sees about 120 graduate every year.

Over 50 per cent flee the state, most seeking employment abroad. In Bhatinda city, Prasad’s batchmates are on one of their periodic protests.

“My clinic is in the heart of Bhatinda city, but I last got supplies eight months ago,” says Dr Charanjit Sarangal (31). “Every election season sees more promises, but never any action.

” In 2006, says Sarangal, Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Badal, then in the Opposition, met state vets during a fast unto death and promised all would be well when they returned to power. “The Akali Dal returned to power in 2007, but that promise has not been kept,” says Sarangal.

“Utility bills for the hospitals are not paid. So many doctors have given up and now have side-businesses to supplement their income.

” Back at Deon, Prasad lists his monthly expenses: “Out of Rs 26,000 per month, I give Rs 5,000 to the pharmacist, Rs 2,260 to the Class IV staff and spend about Rs 1,000 on water and electricity bills. The government has not paid these dues in years.

” What he’s left with is barely two-thirds of his salary. So he’s become a part-time insurance agent.

Ugly moggy attracts tourist attention in US

London, Mar 5 (ANI): A cat, which was born with almost no fur, has attracted the attention of tourists, who became fascinated with his ugly looks.

The feline, named as Ugly Bat Boy, is bald all over and only has a clump of fur around his neck, and he has managed to attract a huge number of tourists, who visit him at the vet’s where he lives.

Staffs, who affectionately call him Uggs, have had to put up signs reassuring visitors that he is not ill, just ugly.

“People come and take pictures of him on their phones,” the Sun quoted Christie Hartnett, of the Exeter Veterinary Hospital in New Hampshire, US, as saying.

“Clients think that he is not real because he just sits so still.

“When he does move, he scares them, but they think he’s mesmerising,” she said.

Vet Dr Stephen Bassett has revealed that Uggs, who had a sister that was also born without fur but survived just a few weeks, loves the attention he gets from visitors.

“He likes it here. He’s comfortable. He likes the people petting him,” he added. (ANI)

Meet the cat that survived 27 bullet shots!

Melbourne, Mar 2 (ANI): A pet cat named Possum miraculously survived 27 bullet shots at point-blank range in the head and neck.

The relentless torture on Possum has enraged animal welfare authorities, who have raised their voices against the inhuman cruelty.

The two-year-old male domestic cat was trapped in a cage about 9pm on February 27, and an air rifle was shoved in its face and mouth with two direct shots penetrating his tongue and lodging in his nasal cavity.

Police are investigating the violent attack on the cat, which has to get the 15 remaining pellets removed in a surgery.

Owner Jodi Mulley pulled out five of the pellets herself, while seven other pellets that punctured the skin were not found.

According to reports, the animal was caught in a cat trap somewhere at Portsmith, and repeatedly shot with the slug gun.

One of the lead pellets narrowly missed the cat’s jugular vein.

After being turned down by four veterinarians, Greencross Veterinarians principal surgeon Max Fargher agreed to treat Possum.

He said that in his 18 years of experience as a vet, he had never seen such a disturbing attack on an animal.

“In general, this is the worst episode of animal cruelty I’ve ever seen,” Cairns.com.au quoted him as saying. (ANI)

Dog owners’ aggression rubs off on their pets: Study

Washington, Feb 18 (ANI): Dogs owned by people who use confrontational or aversive methods to train their violent pets will continue to remain aggressive, unless training techniques are modified, according to a new survey.

Researchers at University of Pennsylvania conducted a year-long survey of dog owners, which also showed that using non-aversive or neutral training methods-such as additional exercise or rewards-elicited very few aggressive responses.

“Nationwide, the No. 1 reason why dog owners take their pet to a veterinary behaviorist is to manage aggressive behaviour. Our study demonstrated that many confrontational training methods, whether staring down dogs, striking them or intimidating them with physical manipulation does little to correct improper behavior and can elicit aggressive responses,” said Meghan E. Herron, lead author of the study.

Researchers from the School of Veterinary Medicine at Penn said that primary-care veterinarians needed to advise owners of the risks associated with such training methods, and provide guidance and resources for safe management of behaviour problems.

The team produced a 30-item survey for dog owners who made behavioural service appointments at Penn Vet.

The questionnaire asked dog owners about how they had previously treated aggressive behaviour, whether there was a positive, negative or neutral effect on the dogs’ behaviour and whether aggressive responses resulted from the method they used.

Owners were also asked from where did they learn the training technique they employed.

Out of the 140 surveys completed, the most frequently listed recommendation sources were “self” and “trainers”.

Many confrontational methods like “hit or kick dog for undesirable behaviour” (43 percent), “growl at dog” (41 percent), “physically force the release of an item from a dog’s mouth” (39 percent), “alpha roll” physically-rolling the dog onto its back and holding it (31 percent), “stare at or stare down” (30 percent), “dominance down”-physically forcing the dog down onto its side (29 percent) and “grab dog by jowls and shake” (26 percent) elicited an aggressive response from at least 25 percent of the dogs on which they were attempted.

Also, dogs brought to the hospital for aggressive behaviour towards familiar people were more likely to respond aggressively to some confrontational techniques than dogs brought in for other behavioural reasons.

“This study highlights the risk of dominance-based training, which has been made popular by TV, books and punishment-based training advocates. These techniques are fear-eliciting and may lead to owner-directed aggression,” said Herron.

The study was aimed at assessing the behavioural effects and safety risks of techniques used historically by owners of dogs with behaviour problems.

The study has been published in the journal Applied Animal Behaviour Science. (ANI)