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CHENNAI, India, July 23, 2010 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Sify Technologies Limited (Nasdaq NM: SIFY), a leader in Enterprise Services and Consumer Internet Services in India with global delivery capabilities, announced that it will report its financial results for the first quarter of fiscal year 2010-11 ended June 30, 2010 on Friday, July 30, 2010 before the market opens.

In conjunction with the earnings release, Sify will host a conference call at 8:30 ET hosted by Mr. Raju Vegesna, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. CVS Suri, Chief Operating Officer and Mr. MP Vijay Kumar, Chief Financial Officer.

Interested parties may participate in the conference call by dialing +1-877-407-8031 (in the U.S. or Canada) or +1-201-689-8031 (international), which will also be simultaneously broadcast live over the Internet at http://www.sifycorp.com or http://www.vcall.com.

Please allow extra time prior to the call to visit the site and download the streaming media software required to listen to the Internet broadcast.

The online archive of the Web cast will be available shortly after the conference call, or investors can listen to the replay by dialing +1-877-660-6853 (in the U.S. or Canada) or +1-201-612-7415 (international) and entering account number 286 and conference ID number 354421. Please allow for some time post conference call to access the archive of the Web cast.

About Sify Technologies

Sify is among the largest Managed Enterprise and Consumer Internet Services companies in India, offering end-to-end solutions with a comprehensive range of products delivered over a common telecom data network infrastructure reaching more than 600 cities and towns in India.

A significant part of the company’s revenue is derived from Corporate Services, which include corporate connectivity, network and communications solutions, security, network management services, enterprise applications and hosting. Sify is a recognized ISO 9001:2008 certified service provider for network operations, data center operations and customer support, and for provisioning of VPNs, Internet bandwidth, VoIP solutions and integrated security solutions, and ISO / IEC 20000 – 1:2005 certified for Internet Data Center operations. Sify has licenses to operate NLD (National Long Distance) and ILD (International Long Distance) services and offers VoIP back haul to long distance subscriber telephony services. The company is India’s first enterprise managed services provider to launch a Security Operations Center (SOC) to deliver managed security services. A host of blue chip customers use Sify’s corporate service offerings.

Sify also caters to global markets in the specialized domains of eLearning Services and Remote Infrastructure Management Services. The eLearning Services designs, develops and delivers state-of-the-art digital learning solutions for non-profit, for-profit organizations and governmental organizations in the fields of Information technology, engineering, environment, healthcare, education and finance. The Remote Infrastructure Management Services provides dependable and economical solutions around managed services, hosting and monitoring.

Consumer services include broadband home access and the ePort cyber cafe chain cross more than 200 cities and towns in India. Sify.com, the popular consumer portal, has channels on news, entertainment, finance, sports, games and shopping. Samachar.com is the popular portal aimed at non-resident Indians around the globe. The site’s content is available in 8 Indian languages, which include Hindi, Malayalam, Telugu, Kannada and Tamil, Punjabi and Gujarati in addition to English.

For more information about Sify, visit http://www.sifycorp.com.

Forward Looking Statements

Sify: This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The forward-looking statements contained herein are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in the forward-looking statements. Sify undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statements.

For a discussion of the risks associated with Sify’s business, please see the discussion under the caption “Risk Factors” in the company’s report on Form 6-K for the quarter ended September 30, 2009, which has been filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission and is available by accessing the database maintained by the SEC at http://www.sec.gov.

For further information, please contact

Sify Technologies Limited

Mr. Pijush Das
Investor Relations
+91-44-2254-0777 (ext. 2703)
pijush.das@sifycorp.com

Mr. Praveen Krishna
Corporate Communications
+91 44 22540777 (extn.2055)
praveen.krishna@sifycorp.com

Grayling Investor Relations
Ms. Truc Nguyen (ext. 418)
Mr. Christopher Chu (ext. 426)
+1-646-284-9400
truc.nguyen@grayling.com
christopher.chu@grayling.com

SOURCE Sify Technologies Limited

PMs” AND THOSE PRESS CONFERENCES

New Delhi, May 20 (ANI): Dr. Manmohan Singh will address the first formal press conference of his second term as Prime Minister on May 24 here. The Prime Minister”s Media Advisor, Harish Khare, will conduct the press conference where over a thousand reporters and photographers are expected to be present.

Though, the Prime Minister has addressed the media on several occasions when traveling abroad, he is reticent when it comes to interacting with the press at home. This is inexplicable, because Dr. Singh”s press conferences are a no-stress affair for the media and have never generated controversies.

He speaks at great length, does not snap at uncomfortable questions and explains his point of view gently and self-effacingly to even the junior-most of reporters.

Manmohan Singh never plays favourites with the media and does not hesitate in answering a question such as, “Sir, who is in the driver”s seat – you or Mrs. Gandhi?” a question once asked by a slightly inebriated reporter. Dr. Singh kept his cool and answered the young lad and, even posed for a picture with him at the end of the press interaction!

Dr Sanjaya Baru, a former media advisor to the Prime Minister and currently on the other side of the fence as Editor of the Business Standard, says, “As media advisor to a Prime Minister like Dr. Singh, I often felt like a BMW salesman would! The brand and the product are so good, that there was not much of sales talk to do.”

Dr Baru served as the PM”s Media Advisor in the UPA”s first term. In the second term, Dr. Singh has Mr. Harish Khare, a former Associate Editor of The Hindu, as his media advisor.

A media advisor”s office before a PM press conference is a beehive of activity. He has to prepare a list of questions that might be asked and must advice the PM on how best to respond. The list of questions are made up after consulting with other senior officers of the Prime Minister”s Office as also with journalists. Mr. Khare is a veteran journalist, having done the ”PMO-beat” himself. So, he would be well aware of the kind of questions likely to be asked on Monday.

Predictably the questions will center round the Naxal issue, inflation, Indo-Pak and Indo-US relations. The googlies could be about Tharoor and Twitter and Jairam Ramesh and China.

None of the press interactions are ever orchestrated. The questions are not filtered through the media department in the PMO, nor is the reporter harassed if he asks a question that may seem a bit harsh.

So long as the language is courteous as befitting the office of a Prime Minister, the PMO offers little resistance to even the most belligerent of reporters.

However, times have changed from the era of Mrs. Indira Gandhi, who had an uncomfortable relationship with the media.

Her media advisor, the legendary journalist and writer H.Y.Sharda Prasada, was well aware of Mrs. G”s cut and dry method of dealing with reporters.

She was disarmingly charming to some, gave the right quotes and posed prettily for their cameras. But she could be bitingly harsh to many others.

Mr. Sharada Prasada had a comparatively easier task when he worked with her son, Rajiv Gandhi. Here, the problem was different. Rajiv would breach protocol and mix very freely with journalists. Mr. Sharada Prasad was of the old school where Prime Ministers maintained their distance, and were supposed to be unapproachable. RG would have none of that.

The PM”s office has changed. Whether V.P.Singh or Chandrashekhar or I.K.Gujral, they were all accessible to the media. While Gujral and Chandrashekar were not in their jobs long enough to hold the customary Vigyan Bhavan press conferences, the others did.
V.P.Singh held his in the Siri Fort auditorium as Vigyan Bhavan was under renovation and predictably, the questions were about the Mandal report and things got too hot to handle.

Mr. Narasimha Rao was dour during a press conference, but polite to journalists when he knew he was not on record! His famous last press interaction at 7, Race Course Road soon after the destruction of the Babri Mosque was legendary.

BBC correspondent Mark Tully asked him “Do you Sir, take no responsibility for the destruction of the mosque?” Mr. Rao, who had for over half-an-hour droned on and on about law and order, bristled at the question, and shockingly answered, “I do not think the responsibility lies on me.”

That was the last formal press interaction Mr. Rao had as Prime Minister. While editing the tape, I was well aware that this was the best ”bite” for many years to come.

Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee”s press conferences were a delight to attend.

From the long pauses, which gave us junior scribes enough time to take down each and every word without abbreviating, to the cryptic statements which had to be deciphered after the presser, one always had brilliant copy at the end of the interaction.

But editing his sound bites for TV were nightmarish experiences! There were times though one was irritated about why he would not be as honest with the media as he was with his colleagues.

The most glaring example being his apparent soft approach to Chief Minister Narendra Modi when he visited Gujarat post riots, and said that the Chief Minister should practice “Rajdharma”.

Most journalists were disappointed with the Prime Minister. They expected a reprimand. But the PM would not oblige. If Modi was reprimanded, it was behind closed doors. Vajpayee practiced his “Rajdharma”.

Dr Manmohan Singh is in his sixth year as Prime Minister and interacts with the press in the same manner as he did during his first year in office. In April 2010, in Washington DC after meeting with US President Barack Obama and completing six other engagements, the Prime Minister answered every question put to him without a single ”no comment” or a brusque ”this is a hypothetical question”.

While the government is working hard to put together its report card on ”One year of UPA-2”, the media in Delhi is readying for the event of the summer. That is, unless President Obama decides to visit Delhi in the summer. (ANI)

New MI5 book to reveal exploits of real-life James Bonds, Russian spies’

London, Mar 22(ANI): A new book by MI5, the UK’s counter-intelligence and security agency, will reveal how they dealt with Russian spies during the cold war, and details exploits of some real-life James Bonds.

The book will be published on the base of a 59-page booklet, “Their Trade Is Treachery”, drafted by MI5 in 1963.

It was drawn a year after the Profumo affair, which had engulfed then Prime Minister Harold Macmillan into a scandal, and warns spies about how they could avoid the Soviet Union spies.

Harry Chapman Pincher, a 95 year-old veteran journalist, who had obtained a copy of a booklet, said: “Around 1963, MI5 decided they had to try to warn all the people who might come into contact with Russians what they were up to in the way of trying to recruit them.” There was money and sexual blackmail. They would set them up in a room with cameras. The booklet was deadly serious and was a decision taken as a result of so many disasters,” The Telegraph quoted Pincher, as having told the Daily Mail.

The chapters in the booklet, included “How to foil a spy”, “How to become a spy (in six easy lessons)” and “How not to become a spy (in six not-so-easy lessons)”. (ANI)

New MI5 book to reveal exploits of real-life James Bonds, Russian spies’

London, Mar 22(ANI): A new book by MI5, the UK’s counter-intelligence and security agency, will reveal how they dealt with Russian spies during the cold war, and details exploits of some real-life James Bonds.

The book will be published on the base of a 59-page booklet, “Their Trade Is Treachery”, drafted by MI5 in 1963.

It was drawn a year after the Profumo affair, which had engulfed then Prime Minister Harold Macmillan into a scandal, and warns spies about how they could avoid the Soviet Union spies.

Harry Chapman Pincher, a 95 year-old veteran journalist, who had obtained a copy of a booklet, said: “Around 1963, MI5 decided they had to try to warn all the people who might come into contact with Russians what they were up to in the way of trying to recruit them.”

“There was money and sexual blackmail. They would set them up in a room with cameras. The booklet was deadly serious and was a decision taken as a result of so many disasters,” The Telegraph quoted Pincher, as having told the Daily Mail.

The chapters in the booklet, included “How to foil a spy”, “How to become a spy (in six easy lessons)” and “How not to become a spy (in six not-so-easy lessons)”. (ANI)

“Terrorism-Patterns of Internationalization”

New Delhi, Aug.20 (ANI): There are very few books that try to understand the process and stages through which terrorism has spread in various parts of the world .We don’t have materials that tell you the distinguishing features that characterize the internationalization of terrorism-from local to global.

“Terrorism-Patterns of Internationalization” by Jaideep Saikia and Ekaterina Stepanova provides a systematic analysis of the concepts of internationalization of terrorism.

The book challenges a number of conventional patterns of analysis and underlines the importance of visualizing terrorism as an act driven by political motivation,nothwithstanding the fact that it is manisfested through ideological or religious sentiments.

It also analyses the various tactics used by different terrorist organizations in different regions and distinguishes terrorists from other non state actors.

It dwells on the dangerous implication of the internationalization of terrorism and emphasizes the need to develop a research methodology which can help understand the current conceptualization of the phenomenon and bring forward analytical solutions.

The book “Terrorism-Patterns of Internationalization” has well researched chapters by leading experts on terrorism from across the five continents.

In the chapter “Jihad or Joi Bangla: Bangladesh in Peril” the veteran journalist Subir Bhaumik underlines the “imperatives that closely link military dictatorships in South Asia to Islam,and the manner in which the “barrac politics” of Dhaka-betraying the secular and nationalist sentiments that liberated Bangladesh from Pakistan-began not only to systematically rehabilitate pro-Pakistan forces and enshrined Islam as the state religion,but also paved the way for the current Islamist upheaval”.

Jennifer Lynn Oetken’s examination of the insurrection in Kashmir provides a “unique progression of a homegrown movement’s transformation to a full blodied international one”.He says that the movement is guided by an “international ideology”; its agenda and activities are confined to a particular area,but the “external links that engender the movement is maximum”.

On Al-Qaeda,Stepanova analyzes the role played by the extremist ideology of the group and the al-Qaeda inspired cells and networks in shaping their unlimited,global goals- centred on establishing Islamic rule world wide.Stepanova argues that “this ideology gives a radical, quasi-religious response to the challenges of the modern,globalizing world”.

The book “Terrorism-Patterns of Internationalization” addresses both the policy making community,international affairs,anti-terrorism and other security professionals,journalists,the students of of the international affairs,security and political science,and the wider public that may have an interest in the highly debated and politically and socially relevant issue of internationalization of terrorism”.

Published by Sage, the book tries to address many issues from a new perspective and approach.

The editors of the book Jaideep Saikia (guwahati) and Ekaterina Stepanova (Stockholm/Moscow) are terrorism and conflict analysts.They had earlier worked ona project on “Spoiler and Devious Objectives in Peace Processes” for the United Nations university.

This book developed as a result of their close academic interaction and a desire to put together an international team of experts to pioneer a research project on the phenomenon of internationalization of terrorism. Sanjay Kumar (ANI)

Myanmar pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi to testify Tuesday

Yangon – Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is scheduled to testify in court Tuesday against charges that she broke her terms of detention by allowing a US national to swim to her lakeside house-cum-prison, her lawyer said Monday.

At least 30 diplomats and 25 journalists will be invited to the trial Tuesday, court sources said.

“We did not have sufficient time to discuss with Daw (Mrs) Aung San Suu Kyi the full defence,” Nyan Win, part of Suu Kyi’s defence team, said.

The defence will present four witnesses Tuesday, including Win Tin, veteran journalist and senior executive member of the National League for Democracy (NLD) opposition party, that Suu Kyi leads.

Suu Kyi, her two house helpers and US citizen John William Yettaw, 53, have been accused of violating Suu Kyi’s terms of household arrest after Yettaw entered her Yangon compound on May 3 and stayed until swimming away on May 6.

Yettaw, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, faces several charges including immigration violations for visiting a prisoner while on a tourist visa, and breaking municipal laws for swimming illegally in Inya Lake, according to state media reports.

Prosecutors claimed last week that Yettaw first visited Suu Kyi’s house on November 30 when he handed over his church’s Book of Mormon to her servants for Suu Kyi to read.

His uninvited May 3 visit to Suu Kyi’s residence has allowed the ruling junta to charge her with violating the terms of her house detention, which has lasted the past six years and was due to expire on May 27.

The new case against Suu Kyi, which began a week ago in Yangon’s Insein Prison, has outraged the international community and even prompted warnings from Myanmar’s close allies in the Association of South-East Asian Nations.

It is widely believed that the judges would find Suu Kyi guilty and sentence her to another three to five years in detention, long enough to keep her out of the political picture while the junta stages a general election next year.

Suu Kyi, 63, is the leader of the NLD opposition party which won the 1990 general election by a landslide, but has been blocked from power by Myanmar’s junta for the past 19 years. She has spent 13 of those years under house arrest.(dpa)

Stability, less inequality top wish list for polls

New Delhi, April 9 (IANS) Some leading public figures and intellectuals in India are hoping the coming elections will produce a government that can provide security and stability and also be more sensitive to social inequality.

Veteran journalist and political commentator Kuldip Nayar says he is ‘exasperated by the way elections are being conducted’.

‘Parties are highlighting trivial issues and campaigns are degenerating into personal abuses. I find no issues, no all-India party and no leaders. It’s all hotch potch – the money, criminalisation and the controversies,’ said Nayar, a former Rajya Sabha member.

‘The country desperately needs stability, but the whole process is about how to get seats and grab power. Real issues are not relevant.’

But he adds: ‘There are too many players this time. I think we are going through a churning process out of which something good will emerge.’

Mark Tully, writer and BBC’s former bureau chief in India, wants the April-May polls to throw up a government that will be stable.

‘I would like to see a stable government that would concentrate on improving the administrative system and follow a policy of inclusive development. The development policy should benefit all – and not just one particular segment of the population,’ said Tully, now a New Delhi resident.

The author of books like ‘No Full Stops in India’ and ‘The Heart of India’ said even if the elections produced a coalition government, ‘there is no reason why it should not last’.

Former army officer Mukul Deva, whose new book ‘Salim Must Die’ hit the bookstores this week, hopes the present United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government will stay. ‘What are the other alternatives available?’

The military thriller writer feels that political parties should focus on ‘economy and security as the key issues. And on education, health and defence service’.

Deva has been voting regularly since he left the army in the mid-1990s. He said the new government needs to strengthen the police and ‘enlist forces of better calibre as the police were a frontline defence against terror’.

‘One of the major tasks the politicians have on hand is to bring back all the money idling in the tax havens abroad. And those who channelled it abroad must be taken to task,’ Deva said.

Said veteran journalist and novelist Tarun Tejpal: ‘The new constellation must be far more sensitised to inequality and injustice. The country has deep inequalities. Millions are poor in our country.

‘Those representing the country should stop talking about Shining India because even 60 years after independence, our children are not being fed, not clothed and not sent to school,’ Tejpal, editor-in-chief of Tehelka weekly, told IANS.

Rama Krishnan, a professor of international relations at the Jawaharlal Nehru University here, hopes the election verdict will reflect the country’s diversity.

‘I want the diversity of the country to be represented in a variety of forms. And the parties must have a secular and democratic vision. The rule of law should not be questioned by any political party, and human rights should be respected even while battling terror. That is also the image India must project abroad after the polls,’ Krishnan said.

Indians beginning to enjoy crime fiction, says author Etteth

New Delhi, April 7 (IANS) Thriller and horror story writer Ravi Shankar Etteth, who has woven his new whodunit around freedom fighter Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, says Indians are just beginning to enjoy and appreciate crime fiction.

‘Why do people in this country say crime stories and thrillers are inferior? It is literature. So long as you can give intelligent people a good read, you should not care. I dislike passionate intellectuals who don’t live their lives,’ Etteth told IANS.

Etteth is an emerging name in the fledging genre of thrillers and supernatural fiction in the country. His third novel ‘The Gold of Their Regrets’, a thriller based on a fictitious tale of Netaji’s last flight from India, was launched by veteran journalist Vir Sanghvi here Monday.

‘I think Indians are just starting to have fun and appreciate crime fiction,’ said the writer, who is also the group editor of the Voice of India television network.

‘The Gold of Their Regrets’ begins on Aug 18, 1945, when the commander of the Indian National Army (INA) boards a Mitsubishi-K1-21 bomber to fly east to Manchuria and crashes into the heart of a jungle in Myanmar with 30 million pounds in gold.

Only three men know the truth behind the crash and what happened to the gold that disappeared mysteriously. Sixty years later, a stranger stalks these men, seeking the lost gold and revenge.

‘I wrote my first ghost story at Leila aunty’s (novelist Vikram Seth’s mother) sprawling hilltop home in Shimla, where I was vacationing in the early 80s. She was the chief justice of Himchal Pradesh then.

‘My friend David Davidar of Penguin Books told me to do something useful instead of lolling in the sun. I wrote a short story and he included it in the ‘Indian Collection of Ghost Stories’, which Ruskin Bond was editing,’ said Etteth.

In 1996, Etteth wrote his first volume of short horror stories, ‘The Scream of the Dragonflies’, which he says was ‘full of vampires’. He followed it up with a full-length thriller, ‘The Village of Widows’, a prequel to his new novel.

The author says World Wars I and II have had a deep influence on him.

‘It’s because of their scale of evil. What Japan did to China and Germany to Europe did during the wars cannot be matched with anything but the atrocities in the days of Timur and Babur. Most of the perpetrators of war world crimes were not skilled executioners. They were either doctors, lawyers, dentists or professionals,’ Etteth said.

It meant that the masterminds could not create a ‘massive evil machinery’, the writer inferred. ‘Which proves given an opportunity, 90 percent people are capable of creating total evil.’

‘My grandpa fought in the World War II in Mesopotamia and I liked reading about the war to while away my time,’ Etteth said.

While browsing through the Internet to learn more about the wars, Etteth stumbled upon a diary of an Indian airman of the Royal Indian Air Force, who fought in the Burma theatre during World War II.

‘I also chanced upon an Indian regiment that fought for Mussolini’s army, the Battaglione Azad Hindoustan, and another that swore allegiance to Hitler, Freies Indian Legionnaires,’ he said.

Mussolini wanted to send the legion to go to Africa, but the Indian soldiers wanted to fight the British.

‘It sparked a revolt and the deserters apparently became mercenaries and a handful joined Bose’s Indian National Army,’ the author said.

The slices of history set the writer thinking.

‘Netaji had made a lot of money. After his plot in India failed, he probably wanted to fly out with all the money and gold he had collected. But his INA mates wanted the gold back and shot down his plane.’

And that is how Etteth hit upon the idea for his latest novel.

-

Fear grips media in Assam due to killing of veteran journalist

Guwahati, March 27 (ANI): The recent killing of a veteran journalist of a Assamese daily by unidentified gunmen here have sent shock waves across the media fraternity here.

Anil Majumdar, a journalist and Executive Editor of Aji, an Assamese daily, was shot on point blank range in front of his house in Guwahati, the main city of Assam state. Doctors declared him dead on arrival at the International Hospital in Christian Basti.

Majumdar had been campaigning for peace talks between United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) and the government.

Majumdar is today survived by his wife and two daughters. He is remembered as a courageous journalist whose death is being viewed as a great loss to the media and Assam.

“This is very wrong and will affect the Journalist fraternity. It is a great loss. With his death, Assam has lost a courageous journalist,” said Dr. Bhumidhar Barman, the Revenue Minister of Assam.

Meanwhile, the Journalists’ Action Committee of Assam has submitted a memorandum to the government demanding punishment for the culprits and ensuring security of mediapersons.

Several social organizations have condemned the killing.

“There should not be any doubt and any argument on this point that the journalists in Assam are really very insecure,” said Ajit Bhuyan, a senior journalist.

” Whatever is happening here; the blasts or killing of journalists, these things should not happen in future. We should follow the ideology of Mahatma Gandhi and move forward,” said Uttam Kalita, a social worker.

Hundreds of journalists gathered to pay tribute to the deceased.

The killing came days after security officials warned journalists that rebel groups could target them ahead of the general elections.

Police department is expected to take its own time to identify and arrest the actual perpetrators of the crime.

“We have to wait and see. Everything has to be based on evidence,” said G.M. Shrivastav, Director General of Police (DGP), Assam, said.

ver 22 journalists have been killed in Assam in the last six years. By Peter Alex Todd (ANI)

Assamese editor Khiren Roy passes away

Guwahati, Mar 13 (ANI): The Journalist’s Action Committee and the Journalists’ Forum, Assam mourned the death of Dr. Khiren Roy, a veteran journalist of Assam.

Dr. Roy, who was working as the Chief Editor of Assamese daily ‘Asomiya Khobor’, passed away on March 11 following a cardiac failure.

Died at the age of 68, Dr. Roy left behind his wife Gayatri Roy and two daughters Arupa and Antara.

Before serving the mainstream Assamese daily, Dr. Roy worked as a Deputy Editor of ‘The Assam Tribune’, where he started his career as a staff reporter. He was also the editor of ‘The Northeast Times’ and ‘Meghalaya Guardian’.

Born at Matia, a remote village of Goalpara district, Dr. Roy completed his M.A. in English and later received his Ph.D. in Mass Communication from Guwahati University.

He also participated in higher journalism courses offered by the Press Institute of India and the Thomson Foundation, U.K. (ANI)