Wednesday, December 06, 2006

The Hindu News Update Service

Bollywood to launch signature campaign in support of Sanjay

Mumbai, Dec. 6 (PTI): The Bollywood today decided to launch a signature campaign on December 12 to express their support to actor Sanjay Dutt who has been held guilty under the Arms Act for possessing weapons used in 1993 serial bomb blasts case.

"We are grateful to Sanjay for his kind deeds and the help he extended to workers in the film industry and hence we are launching signature campaign to express our feelings that the entire Bollywood is with him in this moment of crisis", said Pahlaj Nihalani, film producer and President of Association of Motion Pictures and TV Programme Producers.

The signature campaign would be just for a day at the Film City in suburban Goregaon where members of film industry in various cadres -- spot boys to actors, producers and directors --"will come together to show their support to Sanjay whom they all love", Nihalani said.

"We do not have any intention to interfere with the court's order or influence the judiciary. The idea is to express our support to Sanjay who has in the past helped the film industry workers in whatever way he could", Nihalani said.

"All that I can say is that Sanjay is a nice person, always helpful to others and has already undergone punishment by spending some time in jail and going to TADA court regularly for the last 13 years", Nihalani said.

The film producer further said the entire Bollywood welcomed the verdict to the extent that Sanjay had been exonerated of terrorism charges.

After pronouncing him guilty on November 28, the court gave Sanjay time to surrender till December 19 and would hear arguments before awarding him the punishment.

Check out some wallpapers of Sanjay Dutt aka Sanju baba

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us             

Source: The Hindu News Update Service

DNA - After Hrs - The race for dressing up Shah Rukh Khan for KBC hots up - Daily News & Analysis

The race for dressing up Shah Rukh Khan for KBC hots up
Wednesday, December 06, 2006  23:59 IST

The country’s leading designers give SRK styling tips for his TV comeback.

The race for dressing up Shah Rukh Khan for ‘Kaun Banega Crorepati’ is hotting up.  We asked some of country’s leading designers to reveal what look they’d like to give King Khan.

Surily Goel
KBC is a very formal show. Unless they are changing the format drastically wherein Shah Rukh could break free and dress in more casual outfit, for the present format I think he is best suited in well cut jackets and suits. Shah Rukh looks great in suits.

Shaina NC
No one can touch Amitabh Bachchan and the way he dressed for the show. For a high profile show like this one, a jacket is a must.  He should ideally be dressed in a trendy or classic suit, but the shirt and necktie look that he had in ‘Don’ definitely won’t work here. I can never imagine him in Indian wear, so it is a definite no-no.

Arjun Khanna
I would like to see him in very chic and suave clothes, but definitely not casual wear. I would have also given him Indian wear, not too ethnic but something of a mix with very subtle embroidery. I would want him to experiment and dress up differently for every episode.

Aki Narula
I loved what Amitabh Bachchan wore but for the fact that he stuck to dark colours. For Shah Rukh Khan, I would give him a washed linen suit and Madras check jackets in lighter colours for summer. For winters I would give him darker colours like Olive green and also perhaps a cravat to go with the suit.

Anna Singh
I feel that SRK’s look should not be inspired by what Mr Bachchan wore. SRK should experiment and try his hand at various clothes - more so on semi-formals. Above all, his look should be identifiable and relate to audiences, as KBC is a people’s show.

Source: DNA - After Hrs - The race for dressing up Shah Rukh Khan for KBC hots up - Daily News & Analysis

Ash, Hrithik to face trial for kissing scene : HTTabloid.com

Ash, Hrithik to face trial for kissing scene
Reuters, Bhopal, December 5, 2006

Ash, Hrithik to face trial for kissing sceneThe kissing scene filmed on Bollywood actors Aishwarya Rai and Hrithik Roshan from the film Dhoom 2 has now come under the scanner of law, as a lawyer has filed a criminal case against the stars, accusing them of obscenity.

Shailendra Dwivedi of Indore, near Bhopal, the capital of central Madhya Pradesh state, said the scene from the movie, titled Dhoom 2, lowered the dignity of Indian women and gave an obscene message to youth.

"Bollywood actors are conveying vulgarity in the society," Dwivedi said. "These films cannot be watched with our families, they are so vulgar at times."

A local court accepted Dwivedi's petition to punish the actors and said it would hear the petitioner on December 11.

The Indian censor board, which certifies all films, released the movie with a "parental discretion" certificate.

A majority of Indians frown upon intimacy in public.

Source: Ash, Hrithik to face trial for kissing scene : HTTabloid.com

Chennai Online News Service - View News

Sidhu sentenced to three-year RI

Navjot Singh SidhuChandigarh, Dec 6: Former BJP MP and popular cricket commentator Navjot Singh Sidhu was today sentenced to three years rigorous imprisonment in a case involving him in death due to road rage 18 years ago.

Giving the quantum of punishment, Justice Mehtab Singh Gill and Justice Baldev Singh of Punjab and Haryana High Court suspended the sentence till January 31 to enable Sidhu file a special leave petition in the Supreme Court, which means he will not go to jail.

Extending similar relief, the court also sentenced the other convict in the case Rupinder Singh Sandhu to three years rigorous imprisonment.

Both of them were fined Rs.one lakh each and were directed to furnish a bail bond on or before December 8.

During the arguments on the quantum of punishment before the Bench, the prosecution demanded the maximum ten-year imprisonment for the 43-year-old former MP while the defence sought leniency saying he should either fined or granted probation.

Sidhu, dressed in a blue suit and turban, was present in the jampacked court during the arguments which lasted two hours. BJP leaders Arun Jaitley, Avinash Khanna, Satyapal Jain and Akali Dal leader Daljit Singh Cheema were present in the court.

Setting aside the order of a lower court acquitting Sidhu and his accomplice Rupinder Singh Sandhu, the Bench had on December 1 held them guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to murder of Gurnam Singh on December 27, 1988 in Patiala after which the first-time MP from Amritsar had resigned from the Lok Sabha.

Sidhu and Sandu were on bail in the case which was granted by the High Court on November 29, 2000 while admitting the appeal against his acquittal.

A flamboyant cricket commentator known for wit and humour dubbed as 'Sidhuism', he had played for India in 51 Tests and 136 one-dayers in a 16-year career. (Agencies)

Source: Chennai Online News Service - View News

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

» Your Own Linux Distribution » Soft32.com News

Your Own Linux Distribution » Soft32.com News

That is the name of a Swiss project which will allow users to build customized Linux distributions

The Linux Community offers numerous Linux distributions for all tastes. From small, 50 MB, distributions to one-DVD installations, Linux comes in many different flavors and covers a wide number of features. With such a variety of flavors, users always find it difficult to choose the Linux distribution that fits their needs best.

There is no such thing as a perfect Linux distribution. No matter which one we choose we always find out that there is something else we need and has to be downloaded or there is something useless that is just taking up hard-disk space.

The team behind the Ark Linux project was confronted with lots of users asking for more features, thus violating the project’s policy of simplicity. As a response, the developers launched a completely new company called YOLD (Your Own Linux Distribution).

YOLD specializes in customizing Linux systems to customers’ needs - whatever those needs may be. “No matter whether you’re looking for a customized solution for your in-house desktops or servers, a Linux version to run on embedded devices, or a specially branded Linux distribution to be sold by your business, or a demo Live CD, YOLD can do it.” says the YOLD website.

The team charges about $81 per hour for development, but offers a 50% rebate if the customer chooses to release the work under the GNU General Public License (GPL). Also, a free offer is available for Open Source projects.

Source: » Your Own Linux Distribution » Soft32.com News

» Microsoft to face challenge over Linux licenses » Soft32.com News

Microsoft to face challenge over Linux licenses » Soft32.com News


Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer

Supporters of PC operating system Linux are preparing to counter a recent deal penned by Microsoft Corp which establishes for the first time the principle of paying the software giant for the operating system, whose license requires it to be free.

Microsoft signed a deal with Novell, one of the providers of Linux, in which Novell paid it a lump sum in return for a guarantee that Microsoft would not sue Novell’s clients for what it calls a violation of its own patents in the Linux program.

The prospect of a drawn-out legal battle with Microsoft, an experienced litigator, could push users of Linux into the hands of Novell and away from dominant Linux provider, Red Hat, which does not have such a deal with Microsoft.

Although Linux is free, providers of the system offer the software with packaging, documentation and — most important — installation and maintenance, so any client shift from Red Hat would cost it money.

“Either customers desert Red Hat to go to Novell, to get safety, or Red Hat will be forced into a similar deal with Microsoft,” said Eban Moglen, a professor at Columbia Law School and founding director of the Software Freedom Law Center in New York.

Moglen, one of the pioneers of free software, said Microsoft’s deal skirts the requirements of the GNU General Public License, used by Linux and other free programs, which requires the software to be given away.

He and others have started work on updating the license to close the loophole by saying a promise not to sue, such as the one given by Microsoft, would be automatically applicable to everyone.

That would effectively flip Microsoft’s agreement on its head and guarantee that no one would face a suit from Microsoft if anyone were protected.

“A clause like that would not be difficult to get community agreement on these days,” Moglen said, adding that a change could be ready in weeks or months.

LIABILITY?

Under the Novell deal, in which both companies agreed not sue each other’s clients for patent violation, Microsoft agreed to pay Novell $348 million, while Novell pays Microsoft $40 million, on the basis that Novell has fewer customers.

Microsoft says it has patent rights to some of the technology in Linux, although it has never said exactly what those rights might be or what patents are involved.

Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said if customers bought Linux from anyone but Novell, they could face trouble.

“If a customer says, ‘Look, do we have liability for the use of your patented work?’ Essentially, if you’re using non-SUSE Linux, then I’d say the answer is yes,” Ballmer told eWeek.com recently, referring to the Linux system sold by Novell.

“I suspect that (customers) will take that issue up with their distributor,” Ballmer said, adding that if customers considered doing a directdownload of a non-SUSE Linux version, “they’ll think twice about that.”

Microsoft makes the Windows operating system, for which it charges billions of dollars a year, but Linux has been a thorn in the software giant’s side because it is freely available.

Linux was created, maintained and improved by volunteers working under a license requiring that it be freely available for copying, modification and improvements.

Source: » Microsoft to face challenge over Linux licenses » Soft32.com News

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Getting w.Bloggar to work with Blogger Beta

I signed up for Blogger Beta. Only to find out that none of my posting softwares work. I earlier used to use w.Bloggar, and had been using Windows Live Writer for the last few days. I downloaded w.Bloggar's latest version and tried setting it up with my new Blogger Beta blog. Behold the Beta Gods. It said my username/password didn't match. I realised it was not connecting to the beta interface, but rather to the old Blogger interface. And the old Blogger interface cannot login a Google Accounts username/password.

Being a lazy person, I searched the net first to see if womeone else had come up with a solution. My search yeilded no results. So I tried to play with the w.Bolggar account settings. Luckily, I got it right in the first attempt. Anyways, I decided to share this info with you all. So here is a step by step with screenshots (click on them to enlarge).

Getting w.Bloggar to work with Blogger Beta :
Requirements :
  1. A Blogger Beta blog
  2. w.Bloggar
  3. Internet connection


Instructions :
Step 1 : Fire up the account selection box in w.Bloggar. You can reach it by Clicking on File, Select Account or by pressing F9
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Step 2 : Click on the Icon next to the account name.
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Step 3 : Selct New
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Step 4 : Select "Yes, I want to add it as a new account"
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Step 5 : Select Custom from the drop down list and fill in a name for you account. Select Ping if you would like to notify Weblogs or Technorati upon updates. Click Next.
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Step 6 : Keep the settings as is. Click Next.
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Step 7 : In the Host field type in "beta.blogger.com". (Without the quotes, of course!)
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Step 8 : In the Path field type in "/api". (Without the quotes, of course!). Click "Next"
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Step 9 : Type in your Google Accounts username/email and your password. Select "Save password" if you would like w.bloggar to remember your password.
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Step 10 : Click Finish. You are done.

Do send your comments and feedbacks.

Friday, October 13, 2006

India ranks 24th in Global Hunger Index

JOSEPH VACKAYIL
Saturday, October 14, 2006

CHENNAI, OCT 13: Hunger and malnutrition continue to haunt India despite green, white and IT revolutions and economic reforms. India is world’s 24th most malnourished country, and in Asia, it has Bangladesh (18th) and Mali (19th) for company among the top 25 malnourished countries in the world. All others are in Africa. What is more alarming is the slowdown and near stagnation of the fall in poverty rates in India since 1992.

According to the Global Hunger Index, prepared by the International Food Policy Research Institute and released in Washington on Friday, India scored 41.23 in the GHI in 1981. There was a substantial fall to 32.73 in 1992. In 1997, it touched 25.73 and continued to remain steadfast at that score even in 2003.

The GHI of IFPRI captures three dimensions of hunger: insufficient availability of food, shortfalls in the nutritional status of children, and child mortality, which, to a large extent, attributes to undernutrition.

The index includes three equally weighted indicators: The proportion of people who are food energy deficient as estimated by Food and Agriculture Organisation, the prevalence of underweight in children under the age of five as compiled by the World Health Organisation, and the under-five mortality rate as reported by Unicef.

The IFPRI report says “in India and Bangladesh, high rates of child malnutrition are main reasons for high GHI values relative to Gross National Income per capita”. Low status of women in the region and their lack of nutritional knowledge are important determinants of high prevalence of underweight in children.

IFPRI researchers have concluded that more educational opportunities for women must be created in South Asia and similar regions to address their inadequate knowledge and low status, which contribute to high child malnutrition rates. The GHI has been calculated for 1981, 1992, 1997 and the latest for 2003. In the latest round, 94 developing countries and 22 countries in transition were ranked.

Unlike in India, there has been significant fall in the hunger index of both Bangladesh and Mali from 35.73 to 28.27 and 31.97 to 28.07, respectively, between 1997-2003.

Read more at : India ranks 24th in Global Hunger Index

Friday, September 08, 2006

Useful tollfree helplines in India

Airways
Indian Airlines - 1800 180 1407
Jet Airways - 1800 22 5522
SpiceJet - 1800 180 3333

Automobiles
Mahindra Scorpio - 1800 22 6006
Maruti - 1800 111 515
Tata Motors - 1800 22 5552
Windshield Experts - 1800 11 3636

Banks
ABN AMRO - 1800 11 2224
Canara Bank - 1800 44 6000
Citibank - 1800 44 2265
Corporatin Bank - 1800 443 555
Development Credit Bank - 1800 22 5769
HDFC Bank - 1800 227 227
ICICI Bank - 1800 333 499
ICICI Bank NRI - 1800 22 4848
IDBI Bank - 1800 11 6999
Indian Bank - 1800 425 1400
ING Vysya - 1800 44 9900
Kotak Mahindra Bank - 1800 22 6022
Lord Krishna Bank - 1800 11 2300
Punjab National Bank - 1800 122 222
State Bank of India - 1800 44 1955
Syndicate Bank - 1800 44 6655

Cell Phones
BenQ - 1600 22 08 08
Bird CellPhones - 1800 11 7700
Motorola MotoAssist - 1800 11 1211
Nokia - 3030 3838
Sony Ericsson - 3901 1111

Computers/IT
Adrenalin - 1800 444 445
AMD - 1800 425 6664
Apple Computers - 1800 444 683
Canon - 1800 333 366
Cisco Systems - 1800 221 777
Compaq - HP - 1800 444 999
Data One Broadband - 1800 424 1600
Dell - 1800 444 026
Epson - 1800 44 0011
eSys - 3970 0011
Genesis Tally Academy - 1800 444 888
HCL - 1800 180 8080
IBM - 1800 443 333
Lexmark - 1800 22 4477
Marshal's Point - 1800 33 4488
Microsoft - 1800 111 100
Microsoft Virus Update - 1901 333 334
Seagate - 1800 180 1104
Symantec - 1800 44 5533
TVS Electronics - 1800 444 566
WeP Peripherals - 1800 44 6446
Wipro - 1800 333 312
xerox - 1800 180 1225
Zenith - 1800 222 004


Couriers/Packers & Movers
ABT Courier - 1800 44 8585
AFL Wizz - 1800 22 9696
Agarwal Packers & Movers - 1800 11 4321
Associated Packers P Ltd - 1800 21 4560
DHL - 1800 111 345
FedEx - 1800 22 6161
Goel Packers & Movers - 1800 11 3456
UPS - 1800 22 7171

Education
Edu Plus - 1800 444 000
Hindustan College - 1800 33 4438
NCERT - 1800 11 1265
Vellore Institute of Technology - 1800 441 555

Healthcare
Prevent Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Best on Health - 1800 11 8899
Dr Batras - 1800 11 6767
GlaxoSmithKline - 1800 22 8797
Johnson & Johnson - 1800 22 8111
Kaya Skin Clinic - 1800 22 5292
LifeCell - 1800 44 5323
Manmar Technologies - 1800 33 4420
Pfizer - 1800 442 442
Roche Accu-Chek - 1800 11 45 46
Rudraksha - 1800 21 4708
Varilux Lenses - 1800 44 8383
VLCC - 1800 33 1262

Home Appliances
Aiwa/Sony - 1800 11 1188
Anchor Switches - 1800 22 7979
Blue Star - 1800 22 2200
Bose Audio - 1800 11 2673
Bru Coffee Vending Machines - 1800 44 7171
Daikin Air Conditioners - 1800 444 222
DishTV - 1800 12 3474
Faber Chimneys - 1800 21 4595
Godrej - 1800 22 5511
Grundfos Pumps - 1800 33 4555
LG - 1901 180 9999
Philips - 1800 22 4422
Samsung - 1800 113 444
Sanyo - 1800 11 0101
Voltas - 1800 33 4546
WorldSpace Satellite Radio - 1800 44 5432

Hotel Reservations
GRT Grand - 1800 44 5500
InterContinental Hotels Group - 1800 111 000
Marriott - 1800 22 0044
Sarovar Park Plaza - 1800 111 222
Taj Holidays - 1800 111 825

Insurance
AMP Sanmar - 1800 44 2200
Aviva - 1800 33 2244
Bajaj Allianz - 1800 22 5858
Chola MS General Insurance - 1800 44 5544
HDFC Standard Life - 1800 227 227
LIC - 1800 33 4433
Max New York Life - 1800 33 5577
Royal Sundaram - 1800 33 8899
SBI Life Insurance - 1800 22 9090

Mattresses
Kurl-on - 1800 44 0404
Sleepwell - 1800 11 2266

Investments/Finance
CAMS - 1800 44 2267
Chola Mutual Fund - 1800 22 2300
Easy IPO's - 3030 5757
Fidelity Investments - 1800 180 8000
Franklin Templeton Fund - 1800 425 4255
J M Morgan Stanley - 1800 22 0004
Kotak Mutual Fund - 1800 222 626
LIC Housing Finance - 1800 44 0005
SBI Mutual Fund - 1800 22 3040
Sharekhan - 1800 22 7500
Tata Mutual Fund - 1800 22 0101

Paints
Asian Paints Home Solutions - 1800 22 5678
Berger Paints Home Decor - 1800 33 8800

Teleshopping
Asian Sky Shop - 1800 22 1600
Jaipan Teleshoppe - 1800 11 5225
Tele Brands - 1800 11 8000
VMI Teleshopping - 1800 447 777
WWS Teleshopping - 1800 220 777

Travel
Club Mahindra Holidays - 1800 33 4539
Cox & Kings - 1800 22 1235
God TV Tours - 1800 442 777
Kerala Tourism - 1800 444 747
Kumarakom Lake Resort - 1800 44 5030
Raj Travels & Tours - 1800 22 9900
Sita Tours - 1800 111 911
SOTC Tours - 1800 22 3344

UPS (Uninterrupted Power Supply)
APC - 1800 44 4272
Numeric - 1800 44 3266

Others
Consumer Helpline - 1800 11 4000
L'Oreal, GARNIeR - 1800 223 000
KONE Elevator - 1800 444 666
Indane - 1800 44 51 15
Aavin - 1800 44 3300
Pedigree - 1800 11 2121
Kodak India - 1800 22 8877
Domino's Pizza - 1800 111 123
World Vision India - 1800 444 550
Telecom Monitoring Cell - 1800 110 420

Five killed, 24 injured in blast in Malegaon

Rediff.com, September 08, 2006 15:36 IST

At least five persons were killed and 24 others injured Friday in a blast outside a mosque in the textile town of Malegaon in Nasik district, 180 kms from Mumbai, police said.

The blast took place Friday afternoon when people were returning after offering the Friday prayers at Nurani Masjid in the heart of the city, police said.

Nashik Superintendent of Police Rajvardhan told reporters that at least five persons were killed in the blast, although the figure could rise further.

They said the blast took place near Bada Kabristan, but added that he would not be able to comment on the nature of the explosion.

Rajvardhan said that people present on the spot have said that there was a possibility of more than one blasts.

Anti-Terrorism Squad sources said that at least two dozen persons were injured, seven of them critically, in the blast at Malegaon.

Read more : Five killed, 24 injured in blast in Malegaon

Income tax laws may soon be easier to understand

Rediff.com, September 08, 2006 14:45 IST

A government-appointed group to study simplification of laws relating to income tax has recommended removal of redundant provisions and use of simple language for understanding the laws.

The group consisting of Central Board of Direct Tax officials has submitted the 'Report on Simplification of Income Tax Act, 1961' to Finance Minister P Chidambaram and the government will now decide on further action, an official statement said in New Delhi on Friday.

The report combines all existing direct taxes like income tax, wealth tax, fringe benefit tax, etc, into one code 'Direct Taxes Code Bill 2006.'

For better understanding of law, the group has taken recourse to simple language -- minus the usual complicated legalese.

It has made efforts to remove existing anomalies and inconsistencies to enable easy implementation and ensure better compliance.

The concepts of 'previous year' and 'assessment year' have been replaced with 'financial year.'

Chidambaram had announced in his budget speech of 2005 that the Income Tax Act would be simplified and a new Bill would be introduced in Parliament, following which the group was constituted to simplify and rationalise the law relating to income tax.

Read more at : Income tax laws may soon be easy to understand

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

It is possible to be invisible!

It is possible to be invisible!
Reuters, London, August 1, 2006


It's unlikely to occur by swallowing a pill or donning a special cloak, but invisibility could be possible in the not too distant future, according to research published on Monday.

Harry Potter accomplished it with his magic cloak. H G Wells' Invisible Man swallowed a substance that made him transparent.

But Dr Ulf Leonhardt, a theoretical physicist at St Andrews University in Scotland, believes the most plausible example is the Invisible Woman, one of the Marvel Comics superheroes in the Fantastic Four.

"She guides light around her using a force field in this cartoon. This is what could be done in practice," Leonhardt said. Invisibility is an optical illusion. Leonhardt uses the example of water circling around a stone.

The water flows in, swirls around the stone and then leaves as if nothing was there.  "If you replace water with light, then you would not see something present because the light is guided around the person or object. You would see the light coming from the scenery behind as if there was nothing in front," he said.

The research was published in the New Journal of Physics, as a follow-up paper to an earlier study published in Science.

Read more at : Juniors

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Intel unveils Core 2 Duo processors

Intel unveils Core 2 Duo processors
CRN Network, July 27, 2006


Intel Corporation has unveiled 10 Intel Core 2 Duo and Intel Core 2 Extreme processors for consumer and business desktop and laptop PCs and workstations.

Charlotte Lamprecht, director, Digital Home Brand Management, Intel Corporation, said, "The Core 2 Duo processors are simply the best processors in the world. Not since Intel introduced the Pentium processor has the industry seen the heart of the computer reinvented like this."

Ramamurthy Sivakumar, managing director, Sales and Marketing (South Asia), Intel further added, "The Core 2 Duo desktop processor is an energy-efficient marvel, packing 291 million transistors yet consuming 40% lower power, while delivering the performance needed for the applications of today and tomorrow."
 
The company says that the highly anticipated processor family already has very broad support with more than 550 customer system designs underway - the most in Intel's history. Ultimately, tens of thousands of businesses will sell computers or components based on these processors.

The Intel Core 2 Duo processors are built in several of the world's most advanced, high-volume output manufacturing facilities using Intel's leading 65-nanometer silicon process technology. The desktop PC version of the processors also provide up to a 40% increase in performance and are more than 40% more energy efficient versus Intel?s previous best processor. According to multiple independent review organizations, the processors win more than nine out of 10 major server, desktop PC and gaming PC performance benchmarks.

The Intel Core 2 Duo processor family consists of five desktop PC processors tailored for business, home, and enthusiast users, such as high-end gamers, and five mobile PC processors designed to fit the needs of a mobile lifestyle. Intel Core 2 Duo processor-based workstations will also deliver industry-leading performance for such areas as design, content creation and technical computing.
 
The processor family is based on Intel Core microarchitecture, designed to provide powerful yet energy-efficient performance. With the power of dual cores, or computing engines, the processors can manage numerous tasks faster. They also can operate more smoothly when multiple applications are running, such as writing e-mails while downloading music or videos and conducting a virus scan.

Consumers and businesses will have the option to purchase Intel Core 2 Duo processors as part of Intel's premier market-focused platforms, which are made up of Intel hardware and software technologies tailored to specific computing needs, including Intel vPro technology for businesses, Intel Centrino Duo mobile technology for laptops, and Intel Viiv technology for the home.

Initial Intel Core 2 Duo processor-based systems are now available from system manufacturers, resellers and integrators, including Intel Channel Partner Program members. Intel Core 2 Duo desktop processor-based systems will be available beginning in early August. Intel Core 2 Duo processor-based notebooks will be available at the end of August. Intel Core 2 Extreme processor X6800 is priced at $999, Core 2 Duo processor E6700 is available at $530, E6600 at  $316, E6400 at $224 and E6300 at $183.

Read more at : Computer Reseller News - For Providers of Information Technology Solutions

Saina Nehwal — female version of Gopi Chand

Saina Nehwal — female version of Gopi Chand
Stan Rayan, Jul 20 2006


KOCHI: As she enters the court, you can see the respect and fear in her opponent's eyes. Saina Nehwal, Indian badminton's wonder girl, scares the living daylights out of her rivals. A good number of her matches in the Indian circuit last just fifteen minutes and twenty at the most.

Given her awesome performances, one begins to wonder whether she is the female version of Gopi Chand.

"She may be better than that," says Thomas John, the India-born British coach at Gopi Chand's new academy in Hyderabad where Saina trains.

"Watch her, she'll win all the three National titles (sub-junior, junior and senior) this season. And if she works hard, she may win the Commonwealth Games crown in Melbourne next year," predicts Thomas.

But Saina has higher ambitions. "I want to win an Olympic gold," she says.

Given her hunger, she is in the right hands. Her idol Gopi Chand, who shocked the badminton world by lifting the All-England title a few years ago, frequently monitors her training sessions at his academy.

The 15-year-old Saina is already the country's junior champion and a runner-up in the Senior Nationals, losing to Aparna Popat who is World No. 27 and a former Junior World silver medallist.

At the international level, she won the Junior Czech Open two years ago and was a leading member of the Indian team which bagged the Commonwealth Youth Games silver in Bendigo, Australia, last year.

Saina fought well against host Korea's top-seeded Ha Jung Eun in the girls' second round of the Junior Asian championship last year before losing in three games. And she was in the Indian team for the Uber Cup qualifiers, the youngest-ever to do so.

The teen wonder has badminton in her blood. Her parents Harvir Singh, a scientist at the Directorate of Oilseeds Research, and Usha Rani were former State champions in Haryana and it did not take long for Saina to start swinging the racquet.

Working on weaknesses

She moved to Hyderabad seven years ago and was trained by Dronacharya Awardee S.M. Arif for two years till his retirement from the SAI last year.

Unlike many Indian girls, Saina relies on ruthless power to subdue her opponents. She used to be a little suspect in her net play and mobility, but a recent look proved that the Andhra Pradesh star has worked on these aspects.

Having ironed out many of her physical flaws she now has to work on her mental make-up, especially when it comes to the international circuit. Often, after gaining huge leads, Saina has been unable to hang on to them and finish the job.

The Gopi Chand Academy has plans to send her to Holland or Denmark for training soon. That's the best thing that can happen to her career at the moment.

Read more at : The Hindu : Sport / Olympic Games : Saina Nehwal — female version of Gopi Chand

Friday, July 28, 2006

Udit admits Ranjana is his first wife, duo patches up

Udit admits Ranjana is his first wife, duo patches up
Bureau Report, Zee News

Patna, July 28: Noted Bollywood singer Udit Narayan today admitted for the first time that Ranjana Jha was his first wife as he appeared before the Bihar Women`s Commission. In a clear indication of reconciliation with her husband, Ranjana too stated that she has no problems with his second wife Deepa. Udit, however, avoided taking to media.

Udit Narayan, who had been evading the appearance before the panel, was given 15-day ultimatum by the commission to solve the matter. Today, he gave a written assurance to the Commission that he recognised Ranjana as his first wife.

Udit Narayan had flown to Patna on June 30 for a reconciliation with Ranjana after the commission had threatened to have an arrest warrant issued against him if `meaningful reconciliation` was not achieved.

As Ranjana had told the commission following the meeting that talks were moving in the right direction, it had asked the singer to appear before it. Ranjana after about two-and-a-half hours of talks with Narayan at the airport lounge here on June 30 had told the media that talks had proceeded in the `right direction` and claimed that the singer had accepted her as his first wife.

A high-voltage drama was enacted on April 21 in a posh hotel here when Ranjana staged a sit-in in front of the door of the hotel suite in which Narayan was staying with Deepa Narayan, with whom he is living at present.

The commission had on the basis of the photographs and statement of people who had attended the marriage in 1984 prima facie accepted Ranjana`s claim of marriage with Narayan and had asked the singer to appear before the panel to record his version and also clarify his relationship with Deepa.

Deepa blames media, says it is family matter

While the high-voltage drama between Udit and Ranjana seemed to be dying down, Udit’s second wife Deepa took a U-turn today and blamed the media for “unnecessarily creating troubles for the family over what she termed as “internal matter”. She insisted that she had full knowledge of Udit’s first wife Ranjana before marrying him in 1982.

Deepa said that she has no problems with Ranjana.

Read more at : Zee News - Udit admits Ranjana is his first wife, duo patches up

Suspects in Mumbai Bombings Confess Ties to Pakistani Militants

Suspects in Mumbai Bombings Confess Ties to Pakistani Militants
By ANAND GIRIDHARADAS and SOMINI SENGUPTA, July 28, 2006


MUMBAI, July 28 — Suspects in the serial bombings on July 11 of the city’s commuter train network have confessed they went to Pakistan for training in arms and explosives, the police in India said today, and at least one has testified that he received instructions from an operative of a banned terrorist organization operating across the border.

The statements by senior police officials represent the first glint of evidence of complicity by the Pakistani-based militant group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, that Indian officials have blamed repeatedly for terror attacks on Indian soil. The chief of the Mumbai police antiterrorist squad, K. P. Raghuvanshi, said today that six of the eight suspects confessed to having gone for military training in Pakistan.

The police have not described precisely how the 8 men are linked to each other or, more importantly, to the blasts, which killed 183 people during the evening rush hour.

The Pakistani Foreign Office spokeswoman, Tasnim Aslam, said by telephone from Islamabad that her government had offered to cooperate with the investigation into the bombings, but had yet to receive evidence from the government in New Delhi. “If they have something, they should share it with us and we will cooperate with them,” she offered, noting that Britain and the United States had turned to Pakistan to help track down terror suspects.

The Indian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Navtej Sarna, countered that no evidence offered to Pakistan in the past had yielded results.

To what extent today’s revelations will affect the bruised peace process between the two countries remains to be seen. Shortly after the July 11 blasts, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh of India accused Pakistan of failing to rein in terrorists operating on its soil. The Pakistani president, General Pervez Musharraf, called the accusation “unsubstantiated.”

The senior inspector of the Mumbai police, J. K. Hargude, who interviewed five of the eight suspects, described them as having possible links to Lashkar-e-Taiba. Among them is an apparently influential leader of Lashkar’s local chapter here, Faisal Shaikh, 30, and his younger brother, Muzamil, 23, a software engineer who, the police said, had recently begun to work with the American software company, Oracle.

Faisal Shaikh, the police said, appears to have organized the passage of the others to Pakistan for military training. Muzamil Shaikh, on the other hand, while keen to follow his brother into the radical Islamist group, seems to have had second thoughts after being offered the job at Oracle. He was employed on a contract basis, said a police officer who was part of the interrogations, pending the completion of company training. “He was very hopeful of a good career,” said the police officer, who was not authorized to speak to the news media. Both Muzamil and Faisal traveled to Pakistan through Iran, the police said.

The arrests of the two brothers on Thursday follows the capture of 6 others, including Zameer Shaikh, 31, a keymaker in central Mumbai; Sohail Shaikh, 30, from the nearby city of Pune; and Tanvir Ansari, 32, a doctor and practitioner of the alternative medicine known as Unani.

The police refused to saytoday how the men were connected to each other, or whether they had any direct links with the July 11 bombings.

Clearly, Faisal Sheikh has emerged as their biggest catch. Mr. Hargude said he joined the radical Students Islamic Movement of India by 2001, and resolved, as Mr. Hargude put it, to “do something for Islam.” He first traveled to Pakistan in 2002. He obtained a visa by saying he wanted to visit relatives in Lahore, but ended up meeting a number of extremists, including a Lashkar operative named Azam Cheema.

It was a fruitful exchange, as Mr. Hargude described it: Lashkar plied Mr. Shaikh with $750 to $900 a month through informal money transfer networks, while Mr. Shaikh sent potential Indian recruits for training. Mr. Hargude said all five men confessed to meeting Mr. Cheema between 2002 and 2005 at a training camp near the town of Bahawalpur.

Anand Giridharadas contributed reporting from the International Herald Tribune for this article.

Read more at : Suspects in Mumbai Bombings Confess Ties to Pakistani Militants - New York Times

Thursday, July 27, 2006

India may decline Negroponte's $100 laptop program

India may decline Negroponte's $100 laptop program
John Ribeiro

India may not go in for the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) program led by Nicholas Negroponte, which aims to deliver laptops priced at US$100 to school students, according to reports this week in Indian media.

India's education secretary Sudeep Banerjee is reported to have written last month to the country's Planning Commission that the case for giving a computer to every single child is pedagogically suspect, and may actually be detrimental to the growth of creative and analytical abilities of the child, according to a report this week in The Times of India, the country's largest newspaper.

Banerjee was not available to comment on these reports as he is currently "on tour".

In the letter to the Planning Commission, cited by the newspaper, Banerjee wrote that if the Planning Commission has the kind of money that would be required for the OLPC scheme, it would be appropriate to utilize it for spreading secondary education in the country, for which a concept paper has been lying with the Planning Commission for approval since November last year.

"We need classrooms and teachers more urgently than fancy tools," Banerjee wrote. This is a view held by a number of government agencies and nongovernmental organizations (NGO) who hold that the focus on taking technology to India's poor overlooks other key requirements like water, food, and basic education of the country's deprived sections.

The OLPC is a nonprofit organization in Cambridge, Massachusetts, set up to research and develop a $100 laptop that is to be distributed to children through government initiatives. The low-cost Linux laptop initiative was first announced by Nicholas Negroponte, chairman of the OLPC, in January last year, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Negroponte is on leave from his position as director of the MIT Media Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

If India backs out of the OLPC project, this will be the second time Negroponte encounters a set back in India. In 2003, MIT Media Laboratory pulled out of Media Laboratory Asia, set up in 2001 in collaboration with the Indian government to take technology to India's rural masses. The Indian government cited differences of opinion over the focus of the lab.

Read more at : India may decline Negroponte's $100 laptop program

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Kurukshetra kid fights for life on B'Day : HindustanTimes.com

5-year-old boy falls into pit in Kurukshetra
Press Trust of India, Kurukshetra, July 23, 2006


As little Prince fights to keep alive more than 40 hours after he fell into a 60-feet-deep pit in this Haryana district, he is unaware that Sunday happens to also be his birthday.

Prince turns five on July 23, his anxious mother Karamjit said as rescuers tried frantically to dig a parallel tunnel to bring out the boy.

"I don't know when this ordeal will end," she said. Prince fell into the one-foot-wide pit on Friday evening while playing with friends

Karamjit said she was anxiously waiting for her son to come back.

It would be like a re-birth for him once he is rescued, said a villager, one of the hundreds who have gathered at the site at Hatheri village near Shahbad town of Kurukshetra to witness the mammoth rescue efforts.

A team of eight doctors is monitoring Prince's health through a closed-circuit TV camera lowered into the pit with a rope.

The doctor in-charge of the medical team said that the boy seemed fine despite being trapped for over 41 hours. He said that the boy was able to eat and drink Sunday morning and that was a positive sign.

With the news of the rescue operation spreading like wild fire, nearly 10,000 people, mostly from adjoining villages, reached the spot.

The police had to resort to mild cane charge to keep people at bay as they tried to get closer to the well where the boy was trapped.

Read more at : Kurukshetra kid fights for life on B'Day : HindustanTimes.com

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

DNA - Mumbai - Monsoon enters Mumbai - Daily News & Analysis

Monsoon enters Mumbai
Agencies, Wednesday, May 31, 2006 20:21 IST


MUMBAI/THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The South-West monsoon entered Mumbai with torrential showers lashing the metropolis on Wednesday, injuring six, even as incessant rain continued to pound Kerala and Goa, claiming 11 lives and leaving a trail of destruction.

Heavy rain pelted Maharasthra's coastal Konkan region, where the monsoon was vigorous, hitting train services as weather office predicted more showers in the state.

One person was feared drowned at the Gateway of India in Mumbai.

Three people were injured when lightning struck them and an equal number in a wall collapse in Mumbai where the rains were preceded by gusty wind that uprooted trees and knocked out power at many places.

The monsoon has set over Mumbai, coastal Konkan and parts of South-Central Maharasthra, Deputy Director (Meteorology) Dr C V V Bhadran said in the metropolis.

Konkan and central Maharashtra had widespread rains since last evening with Ratnagiri recording 64 cms. Several trains were left stranded on the Konkan Railway section owing to waterlogging.

Twenty-two fishermen, who ventured into the sea, were reported missing in Kerala where 11 people had perished in heavy rain slamming the state for the past few days.

The fishermen ventured into the sea in two groups on May 25 and 26 from Beypore coast and had not returned to shores so far.

The rains had wreaked havoc in Kerala extensively damaging houses and standing crops and inundating low-lying areas throwing normal life out of gear.

The Kerala government, which sanctioned Rs 6 crore for emergency relief work, announced two-week free rations to those affected by the calamity.

The schools in the state will reopen on June 5 instead of June 1 as most relief camps are set up there.

Showers, accompanied by high-velocity winds, lashed Goa for the fourth day, prompting authorities to shift 300 families living on the outskirts of Margao town to safer places.

Several low-lying areas in south Goa, especially coastal towns, were inundated, prompting evacuation of the marooned, official said in Panaji.

Fishermen were warned not to venture into the sea that was rough due to gusty winds, they said.

Twenty centimetres of rains were recorded in the state since last evening.

Read more at : DNA - Mumbai - Monsoon enters Mumbai - Daily News & Analysis

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

IBNLive : Move over Sania, Saina is here

Move over Sania, Saina is here
P Revathi, CNN-IBN, Tuesday , May 30, 2006




There is a new teenage sporting sensation in Indian sports. Move over Sania Mirza as now it is the turn of another Hyderabadi girl to make the headlines.

Saina Nehwal has became the first Indian woman to win a 4-star badminton tournament and her parents Usha and Harvir Singh Nehwal are on cloud nine.

After all their 16-year-old daughter has done what no Indian has done till now.

Saina's win in the Philippines Open saw her parents, both of whom are former badminton players, celebrating.

And now they proudly show off the medals and trophies that their daughter has won till date.

"Saina was was a very different kind of child. At the age of seven-eight months we were worried about her because she was very serious and would never smile. One day, I took her to the badminton court and when she saw a game, she started laughing," her father Harivir Singh says.

Saina's talent was noticed when she was just nine and former all England champion P Gopichand took her under his wing when she was 13.

"I think her achievement is phenomenal because no Indian woman has done it so far. Also to do so when she is just 16 is great. She has got many tournaments to play in future. It is remarkable not only for her but also for Indian badminton," Gopichand says.

Saina's game is simple as she relies on power to subdue her opponents.

It was on display at the 2006 Commonwealth Games when she was part of the team which won the team bronze.

And now her parents want her to go for the biggest prize of them all.

"Determination accha hai uska. Mehnati bhi hai. Woh accha Olympian banegi aur jeetegi (She is very determined and works hard. I want her to win a medal in the Olympics)," her mother Usha Nehwal adds.

At 16 Saina's best is yet to come. She celebrated her birthday just 10 days back and her parents could not have asked for a better gift from her.

Read more at : IBNLive : Move over Sania, Saina is here

Tata Power plans two 1000 mw projects

Tata Power plans two 1000 mw projects
Gayatri Ramanathan / Mumbai May 31, 2006


Tata Power Company (TPC) is planning to set up two new 1,000 mw imported coal-based projects near Rewas in Maharashtra.

The state government has given approval for the first of the 1,000 mw plants and land acquisition has begun, Adi Engineer, director, Tata Power told Business Standard.

Environmental clearances for the two Rewas plants are also in place. The government is acquiring close to 1000 acres of land for both the plants.

Engineer said that it will take upto three years for commissioning the plant from the time land acquisition is completed. He said that the government expects to complete the acquisition process in the next five to six months.

These power plants are in lieu of the company’s earlier proposal to set up a 1000 mw Vile project which now stands scrapped. Engineer said that the Vile project has been dropped due to logistical problems in the handling of imported coal.

Engineer said that the company was considering its own jetty at the plant site to handle the imported coal. The coal for the plant is being imported from Australia and Indonesia.

Engineer added that the company also has plans of acquiring coal mines in either of the countries and is in talks with some mine owners.

TPC is also planning to set up a 100 mw Diesel Generator sets which have short commissioning period of 10-12 months, as an interim arrangement to meet the peak load shortfall in the Mumbai area, he said.

Engineer said this is part of the company’s plan to expand its power generation capacity to 4500 mw in two to three years time. It is planning an investment of Rs 18,000 crore in capacity expansion. Engineer also said that the company will bid for all the ultra mega power projects.

So far it has received request for qualification documents for the Sasan and Mundra projects in Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat, respectively. It has also been pre-qualified for a 280-390 mw open cycle gas turbine peaking IPP project in South Africa, he added.

On the nuclear power front, Engineer said, “The company is geared to step in at the right time. This is part of our medium term plans,” he said. Group chairman Ratan Tata had earlier indicated the Tata group’s interest in setting up nuclear power plants.

On the transmission front, Engineer said “We are bidding for 1100- 1200 km of the Maharashtra and Gujarat stretches of the western grid strengthening for which Power Grid Corporation of India Ltd has issued tenders.”

Read more at : Companies & Industry

Monica agrees to play Sonia- The Times of India

Monica agrees to play Sonia
Subhash K Jha, Tuesday, May 30, 2006, TIMES NEWS NETWORK


The film, to be directed by Jagmohan Mundhra, will go on floor in September.

After a great deal of deliberation, Italian actress Monica Belluci has finally consented to play Sonia Gandhi in a bio-pic on the latter’s life that Jagmohan Mundhra will direct.

The deal was finalised after the director met Belluci last week. Work is now expected to start by September.

Confirming this from London, producer Sunanda Murli Manohar said, "We were waiting for Monica to hear the script. Her confirmation finally puts a seal on the deal. She's excited about the prospect of playing Sonia Gandhi. The script by Carl Austen has gone through a number of re-drafts and now we're ready to roll."

After Provoked, Mundhra is excited about doing this film. He was so impressed with Monica's performance as a war widow in Mellina, that he was keen on casting her for this role.

"There were rumours that I was thinking of casting Aishwarya Rai or Preity. Preity was a possibility but after I met her at Cannes, she admitted she was wrong for the role. Preity said, 'Just because Sonia Gandhi and I have dimples it doesn't mean I'm qualified to play her.'

Monica was perfect because she physically resembles Sonia." But how will she cope with the Hindi language? "Sonia Gandhi only speaks Hindi in public. My film will be in English and Monica will speak English most of the time," he says.

Ahmed Patel, political secretary to Sonia Gandhi says, "We are not aware of the film. But as far as cooperating with its production is concerned, we will not do it as it is not an official bio-pic."

The rest of the cast is yet to be finalised, especially that of Rajiv Gandhi. "I've heard of a Parsi-British actor called Zubin Warla who has done a lot of theatre. I believe he resembles Rajiv. But I'm open to casting a Bollywood actor too," says Mundhra.

Read more at : Monica agrees to play Sonia- The Times of India

The Hindu : "Da Vinci Code" opens to Rs 3 cr in the first week

"Da Vinci Code" opens to Rs 3 cr in the first week

Mumbai, May 30 (UNI): " The Da Vinci Code" which opened in India on Friday has grossed Rs 3 crore over four days.

Sony Pictures Releasing India (SPRI) released "The Da Vinci Code" on May 26, across 108 prints and 113 screens in English and Hindi. The Da Vinci Code is the 13th largest opening ever for any Hollywood film in India.

Tamil Nadu and Kerala roll out on June 2 while Andhra Pradesh is slotted for a June 9 release. The film was originally slotted for a May 19 release but was delayed by a week due to issues pertaining to the release of the film in India.

A press release issued here today said "The Da Vinci Code" bowed to a worldwide box office taking of 231.8 million dollers on May 19, 2006 - making it the 2nd biggest worldwide opening for any film. North America opened to 77.1 million dollars while the International markets bowed to 154.7 million dollars. This is also the studio's biggest worldwide opening ever.

Internationally (non North American markets) "The Da Vinci Code" opened on 12,213 screens setting an all-time record for weekend box office in the international marketplace grossing 154.7 million dollars.

Meanwhile, Amod Mehra, trade analyst said the collections of "Fanaa" starring Aamir Khan and Kajol are 90 per cent in the first week.

Read more at : The Hindu News Update Service

IBNLive : 16 school kids drown in Kashmir lake

16 school kids drown in Kashmir lake
CNN-IBN, May 30, 2006


Srinagar: Sixteen school students drowned when a boat capsized in Wullar Lake in Baramulla district of Jammu and Kashmir on Tuesday.

The students belonged to Burn Candle High School in Handwara town of Kupwara district and had gone to the lake in Watlab for a picnic, police said.

There were 25 people on boat. A defence spokesman said naval personnel had rescued a teacher and 12 children.

A group of school children requested a naval sailor to take them for a boat ride in the lake, a defence spokesman said. The sailor sought proper permission but the boat capsized due to excess weight.

As the teacher and rescued children were in a state of shock and removed to a hospital at Sopore, the exact number of students on board the boat could not be ascertained, he said.

Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad expressed grief and sorrow over the death of the school children in the incident.

Read more at : IBNLive : 16 school kids drown in Kashmir lake

Friday, April 14, 2006

DNA - Mumbai - Ahilya Rangnekar regrets taking up dance bar ban issue - Daily News & Analysis

Ahilya Rangnekar regrets taking up dance bar ban issue
Haima Deshpande, Thursday, April 13, 2006 16:47 IST


MUMBAI: One of the most well-known and vocal votaries of the dance bar ban, Ahilya Rangnekar regrets taking up the issue and extending support to the government on it.

Reacting to the Bombay High Court decision striking down the ordinance, Rangnekar revealed that though shocking, it was expected.


“Lawyers were unwilling to take serious note of our stand. All who I had approached kept telling me that being a woman I should have a compassionate view of the issue. According to them, I lacked compassion. The lawyers felt our stand did not hold much strength as we were fighting to take away the right to work of these dancers,” Rangnekar told DNA.

“The government went back on its word and did not work out a rehabilitation package for the dance bar girls. I regret taking up the issue,” she said.

Refusing to comment on the stance taken by Rangnekar, Dance Bar Virodhi Manch convenor Vidya Chavan stated that the umbrella organisation would approach the Supreme Court. The appeal will be made in a few weeks, revealed Chavan.

Twenty-four non-government organisations (have united under the Dance Bar Virodhi Manch and supported the government’s ban on dancing in beer bars.

Well known names in community service, including Mrinal Gore, Rangnekar, Vidya Chavan and Pratiba Naiithani took their pro-government stance to the streets and urged wider support from society.

The Manch had submitted 1.50 lakh signatures to the Legislative Assembly, insisting on the closure of dance bars. The ban came into effect from August 15 last year.

Said Chavan, “We are prepared with our arguments. When the decision was delayed for so long, we expected this outcome.”

However, Rangnekar felt that there was no point in appealing to the Supreme Court without aggressive and knowledgeable lawyers taking up the issue for the Manch. “It is such a wasted battle,” she said.

Naiithani felt an appeal must be made in the Supreme Court. According to her, since dance bars have emerged as a major social problem, the Manch will try all options to ensure the ban stays in force.

Naiithani felt that since dance bars encouraged prostitution, its activities should be brought within the purview of the Indecent Representation of Women Act.

“After the decision the dance bar owners will become more bold. What was once happening in a hidden manner will now take place openly,” Naiithani said.

On July 21, 2005 the Bill to ban dancing in beer bars was passed unanimously after a marathon debate in both Houses of the Maharashtra Legislature.

Shiv Sena deputy leader and member of the Legislative Council Dr Neelam Gorhe said both Houses must debate on the issue before the Budget session ends on April 21.

“There could be loopholes in the Act banning dance bars. Members of both Houses must bring in necessary changes to plug loopholes. The government must appeal to the Supreme Court,” said Dr Gorhe.

An angry former chairperson of the National Commission for Women, Dr Poornima Advani emphasised that the state government must appeal against the high court order. “It was a mistake on the part of the Maharashtra Government to give the bars licences under the garb of promoting cultural activities. Dance bars have been encouraged by the state government. They are pickup joints and men do not throw cash on the dancers for nothing. Dance bars are derogatory to the dignity of women,” Advani said.

Read more at : DNA - Mumbai - Ahilya Rangnekar regrets taking up dance bar ban issue - Daily News & Analysis

DNA - Mumbai - Ahilya Rangnekar regrets taking up dance bar ban issue - Daily News & Analysis

Ahilya Rangnekar regrets taking up dance bar ban issue
Haima Deshpande, Thursday, April 13, 2006 16:47 IST


MUMBAI: One of the most well-known and vocal votaries of the dance bar ban, Ahilya Rangnekar regrets taking up the issue and extending support to the government on it.

Reacting to the Bombay High Court decision striking down the ordinance, Rangnekar revealed that though shocking, it was expected.


“Lawyers were unwilling to take serious note of our stand. All who I had approached kept telling me that being a woman I should have a compassionate view of the issue. According to them, I lacked compassion. The lawyers felt our stand did not hold much strength as we were fighting to take away the right to work of these dancers,” Rangnekar told DNA.

“The government went back on its word and did not work out a rehabilitation package for the dance bar girls. I regret taking up the issue,” she said.

Refusing to comment on the stance taken by Rangnekar, Dance Bar Virodhi Manch convenor Vidya Chavan stated that the umbrella organisation would approach the Supreme Court. The appeal will be made in a few weeks, revealed Chavan.

Twenty-four non-government organisations (have united under the Dance Bar Virodhi Manch and supported the government’s ban on dancing in beer bars.

Well known names in community service, including Mrinal Gore, Rangnekar, Vidya Chavan and Pratiba Naiithani took their pro-government stance to the streets and urged wider support from society.

The Manch had submitted 1.50 lakh signatures to the Legislative Assembly, insisting on the closure of dance bars. The ban came into effect from August 15 last year.

Said Chavan, “We are prepared with our arguments. When the decision was delayed for so long, we expected this outcome.”

However, Rangnekar felt that there was no point in appealing to the Supreme Court without aggressive and knowledgeable lawyers taking up the issue for the Manch. “It is such a wasted battle,” she said.

Naiithani felt an appeal must be made in the Supreme Court. According to her, since dance bars have emerged as a major social problem, the Manch will try all options to ensure the ban stays in force.

Naiithani felt that since dance bars encouraged prostitution, its activities should be brought within the purview of the Indecent Representation of Women Act.

“After the decision the dance bar owners will become more bold. What was once happening in a hidden manner will now take place openly,” Naiithani said.

On July 21, 2005 the Bill to ban dancing in beer bars was passed unanimously after a marathon debate in both Houses of the Maharashtra Legislature.

Shiv Sena deputy leader and member of the Legislative Council Dr Neelam Gorhe said both Houses must debate on the issue before the Budget session ends on April 21.

“There could be loopholes in the Act banning dance bars. Members of both Houses must bring in necessary changes to plug loopholes. The government must appeal to the Supreme Court,” said Dr Gorhe.

An angry former chairperson of the National Commission for Women, Dr Poornima Advani emphasised that the state government must appeal against the high court order. “It was a mistake on the part of the Maharashtra Government to give the bars licences under the garb of promoting cultural activities. Dance bars have been encouraged by the state government. They are pickup joints and men do not throw cash on the dancers for nothing. Dance bars are derogatory to the dignity of women,” Advani said.

Read more at : DNA - Mumbai - Ahilya Rangnekar regrets taking up dance bar ban issue - Daily News & Analysis

DNA - Mumbai - Bar one, bar all, says court - Daily News & Analysis

Bar one, bar all, says court
Anshika Misra, Friday, April 14, 2006 01:40 IST


MUMBAI: In a hard-hitting criticism of the state government’s double standards, the Bombay High Court’s order striking down the ban on dance bars ruled that, “There can be no different standards of morality for the affluent and the rich availing the means of entertainment and any common person who can afford to visit places of entertainment within his reach.”

The HC on Wednesday struck down the ban on dance bars on the grounds that it was discriminatory as it banned all kind of dance performances in dance bars but exempted establishments like three-star and five-star hotels. The objective behind the ban, which came into effect on August 15, 2005, was to prevent dances which are obscene, vulgar or immoral and hence derogatory to the dignity of women and to prevent exploitation of women. In a sharp criticism of the state’s dual morality, the HC noted that, “Activities, which the banned establishments are accused of, are also indulged in the exempted establishments in spite of so-called socially-conscious or responsible strata of society who visit them.”

The state had justified the exemption granted to hotels saying the exemption was not an indirect license to perform dances as in the prohibited establishments, but to conduct performances by people who have acquired skill in Western and Indian classical dance forms.

Other reasons stated were that the exemption was granted with the object to encourage tourism, five-star hotels are a class by themselves and cannot be compared with dance bars, people visiting these hotels stand on different footing and cannot be compared with people who visit dance bars and hotels are conducted by responsible people/managements who are conscious of their social commitments and obligations.

“Using terms like Indian and Western classical dance is of no consequence as the Act and rules recognise no such distinction. All applicants for performance license have to meet the same requirements and are subject to same restrictions,” the HC’s 257-page order stated.

Justices FI Rebello and Roshan Dalvi held that couples dancing together, ice-skating and ballroom dancing are embedded in cultures of our regions. Therefore, banning all kinds of dance performances was not fair.

The state’s argument on exempting hotels that authorities have opportunity to screen and supervise nature of performances in these establishments was also debunked by the HC. “Provisions of controlling obscene and vulgar dances are the same, whether they are in the prohibited or exempted establishments,” it held. The court held that the ban discriminates between artistes—dance girls dancing in dance bars and Tamasha theatre—and discriminates between the viewers visiting dance bars and Tamasha. “The object cannot be achieved so long as Tamashas theatre, three and five-star hotels are allowed to hold dance performances. There can be no different standards of morality,” the HC held.

Read more at : DNA - Mumbai - Bar one, bar all, says court - Daily News & Analysis

DNA - Mumbai - ‘Why must we get 20% less power?’ - Daily News & Analysis

‘Why must we get 20% less power?’
Prashant Hamine
Friday, April 14, 2006 22:43 IST


MUMBAI: The BJP on Friday demanded the withdrawal of the Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission (MERC) order, directing Mumbaikars to consume 20 per cent less electricity compared to last year.

City BJP president Prakash Mehta said an “international city” like Mumbai could ill-afford to have power cuts.

Moreover, the Centre had assured 250 MWs of power to the state to overcome the power crisis, Mehta said. Therefore, there was no need for such a regulation, he added.

Mehta demanded that the Reliance Energy Limited (REL) be directed to withdraw the notification in its electricity bills asking consumers to pay 100 per cent fine if they consumed more than 300 units per month. Mehta said the party would stage a dharna at Azad Maidan on April 17 to protest against load-shedding.

Meanwhile, MERC Chairman Pramod Deo said the commission order was issued keeping in view the long-term needs of the city. He said there had been no addition to the BEST’s power generation capacity.

Read more at : DNA - Mumbai - ‘Why must we get 20% less power?’ - Daily News & Analysis

DNA - Mumbai - Congress stabs Patil, welcomes dance bar order - Daily News & Analysis

Congress stabs Patil, welcomes dance bar order
Shubhangi Khapre
Saturday, April 15, 2006 00:50 IST


MUMBAI: The Congress is not very enthusiastic about Deputy Chief Minister and Home Minister RR Patil’s decision to challenge the dance bar verdict in the Supreme Court.

Welcoming the Bombay High Court decision, the alliance partner in the Democratic Front government on Friday said it would be very difficult for the government to explain how dancing in a bar was morally unethical than performing in a five-star hotel.

Congress spokesperson Sanjay Nirupam said, “On behalf of the Congress party I welcome the verdict on dance bar. We have always maintained that the government took a decision in haste without providing any alternative source of livelihood to thousands of workers.”

Patil has maintained that the government’s decision to ban dance bars was taken through political consensus and the Bill was passed in the state Assembly.

Congress leader Hussain Dalwai said, “When Patil took the decision to ban dance bars, he had a limited agenda. His concern was limited to the rich and spoilt children mainly from the cash-rich western Maharashtra, who splurged money, got into all wrong acts and invited AIDS. The home minister never gave a thought to the rehabilitation of thousands of women who depended on dance bars to earn their bread and run their families.”

Another senior Congress MLA who voted in favour of the ban in the Assembly said,

“In principle, nobody can support dance bars. But how can the state government involve in selective moral policing? If a dance bar is unethical and obscene, then what about belly dancing in five-star hotels? The government should apply law uniformly to all, as indicated by the HC.”

Read more at : DNA - Mumbai - Congress stabs Patil, welcomes dance bar order - Daily News & Analysis

Bombing in New Delhi Mosque Injures 13 - Forbes.com

Bombing in New Delhi Mosque Injures 13
By TIM SULLIVAN , 04.14.2006, 03:24 PM , Associated Press


Two bombs shook New Delhi's main mosque Friday shortly before worshippers gathered for evening prayers, sending terrified people running through the ornate 17th century complex, officials said. At least 13 people were injured.

The explosions came the same day that a series of apparently coordinated grenade attacks by suspected separatist rebels left a bloody trail through the streets of Srinagar, the main city in violence-wracked Indian Kashmir, killing five people and injuring 30 more.

The twin blasts at the Jama Masjid, the imposing red sandstone complex that is the heart of New Delhi's crowded old city, came about an hour before evening prayers.

"People were walking around and suddenly - boom! - there was a bomb," said Mohammed Salaudi, who was inside the mosque when the first explosion took place.

Salaudi said he saw at least three wounded people and other worshippers running in fear.

The blasts occurred within 30 minutes of each other, said Police Chief K.K. Paul, who added they had been caused by "low intensity" improvised explosive devices.

No one claimed responsibility for the bombings, which Sheila Dikshit, New Delhi's top elected official, said had injured 13 people.

Police put New Delhi on high alert, stepping up security at the mosque and across the city, he said.

The first blast went off near a fountain in the mosque's central courtyard where worshippers wash their hands before offering prayers, said Syed Ahmed Bukhari, the chief cleric. It was not immediately clear where the second explosion occurred, although officials said it was in the mosque complex.

Bukhari appealed to people to remain calm.

The Jama Masjid is the main landmark in one of the most crowded parts of Delhi's old city, surrounded by hundreds of shops and houses lining a maze of crowded alleyways.

Less than two hours later, police reopened the mosque complex and hundreds of worshippers streamed through the main gate as night fell and the sound of prayers over loudspeakers echoed across the neighborhood.

Most people stopped near the site of one blast to stare at the red sandstone flooring that covers the mosque courtyard, some of which had turned bluish-black from the blasts.

Half a dozen shoes and flip-flops, some charred from the explosion, lay scattered around, left behind as people scrambled to flee. About 30 feet away, a splotch of red had been circled in white chalk by police, with the notation "BLOOD" in large letters.

"Who would do something like this? What sort of person is this?" wondered Mustafa Iqbal, a trader, who had come for evening prayers, as he looked at the shoes.

In Kashmir, meanwhile, a series of grenade attacks by suspected separatist rebels stunned Srinagar, the region's main city, killing five people and injuring 30 others, police said.

All the dead were civilians - three women and two men who died of their injuries at the city's main hospital, said Mushtaq Ahmad, a police officer.

Security forces fanned out across the city after the first blasts, stopping cars and frisking people as they rushed home.

But the explosions kept coming - there had been at least eight by 8 p.m. - with targets including police patrols, the main bus station and a promenade frequented by tourists and lined with hotels and restaurants.

A local news agency, Current News Service, said four Islamic rebel groups had separately claimed responsibility for the attacks: Jamiat-ul-Mujahedeen, Al-Mansurain, Jaish-e-Mohammad and Islamic Front.

Various Islamic militant groups have been fighting Indian security forces in the insurgency-hit state of Jammu-Kashmir since 1989 to create a separate homeland or merge the Himalayan region into Pakistan.

But even by the standards of Srinagar, a city that long ago grew accustomed to violence, it was a terrifying day.

"Everyone was frightened. By afternoon, we closed down the factory for the day and all the workers went home to their families," said Amjad Khan, who owns a metal factory.

Associated Press Writer Mujtaba Ali Ahmad in Srinagar contributed to this report.



Read more at : Update 6: Bombing in New Delhi Mosque Injures 13 - Forbes.com

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Rice Faces Congress on India Nuclear Plan

Rice Faces Congress on India Nuclear Plan
By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press Writer


Wednesday, April 5, 2006(04-05) 13:38 PDT WASHINGTON, (AP) : Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sought to assure a wary Congress on Wednesday that a landmark plan to share nuclear technology with India for its civilian program won't undercut efforts to stop the spread of nuclear weapons.

"Clearly, this agreement does not constrain India's nuclear weapons program. That was not its purpose," Rice told a House committee. "Neither, however, as some critics have suggested, does it enhance India's capability to build nuclear weapons."

In the House and Senate, Republicans and Democrats alike expressed serious reservations over the plan and criticized what they called the Bush administration's failure to explain its details to lawmakers earlier.

"It is my view that this is in trouble here," said Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y., who supports the plan but criticized how the administration has handled it.

The administration needs Congress to change, or approve an exception to, the law that bans civilian nuclear cooperation with countries that have not submitted to full nuclear inspections. India continues to refuse to sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

Despite concerns, some lawmakers from both political parties indicated they would back the plan because of an overall goal of strengthening the U.S.-India relationship.

"This is a very good bet for our country," said Sen. George Allen, R-Va.

Others weren't swayed.

"I fear that this deal could end up making our world less safe rather than more safe," said Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis.

Rice testified on the plan during back-to-back hearings before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and House International Relations Committee. The administration is pursuing the proposal in part because it sees India as an ally in a region now dominated by China.

Considered a major U.S. policy shift, the plan calls for the United States to share nuclear technology and fuel with India to help power its rapidly growing economy. India, for its part, agreed to allow U.N. inspections of its civilian nuclear reactors. India's nuclear weapons facilities would be off limits.

Critics on and off Capitol Hill contend the plan could dramatically increase India's nuclear arsenal and weaken decades of efforts to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons.

Rice rejected those arguments, saying the plan will help fulfill the energy needs of a country that has been "a responsible actor" with regard to its nuclear technologies.

"Civil nuclear cooperation with India will not lead to an arms race in South Asia," Rice told the Senate panel. "Nothing we or any other potential international suppliers provide to India under this initiative will enhance its military capacity or add to its military stockpile."

Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., the Senate committee chairman and a longtime nonproliferation advocate, praised the plan for allowing more inspections by the U.N. nuclear watchdog. But he also expressed concern that "it would not prevent India from expanding its nuclear arsenal."

In the same vein, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., noted that eight of India's 22 nuclear plants would not be open to U.N. inspectors, "and they will be producing large amounts of nuclear material."

Still, two senior Democrats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Joseph Biden of Delaware and John Kerry of Massachusetts, signaled they were inclined to vote for the agreement, albeit reluctantly.

"It comes down to a simple bet we're making," said Biden, the panel's top Democrat. "It's a bet that India appreciates, as much as we do, that the two nations have the potential to be the anchors for stability and security in the world going into the 21st century."

In both the House and the Senate, lawmakers questioned the relationship between India and Iran. "Iran is the most troubling aspect of this deal," said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla.

The lawmakers pointed to energy cooperation between the two countries and port calls that Iranian vessels have made on India.

"In whose best interest is this?" asked Sen. Lincoln Chafee, R-R.I. He said it appeared that the United States wanted to change U.S. law simply to impede India's oil and gas relationship with Iran.

Not so, Rice said. The goal of the plan is to create a "strategic partnership" with India on technology, energy and economic issues.

Rep. Tom Lantos, the House committee's top Democrat and a supporter of the plan, warned that India-Iran military cooperation could derail it in Congress. "There can be no equivocation on India's part regarding Iran under its current management," said Lantos, D-Calif.

In a tense exchange with Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., on the same issue, Rice acknowledged that India has some "low-level military-to-military contacts with Iran."

But, she said: "The United States has made very clear to India that we have concerns about their relationship with Iran."

"I just think your words are a bit hollow," Boxer responded. "This deal has to have more checks and balances."

Read more at : Rice Faces Congress on India Nuclear Plan

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Oddly Enough News Article | Reuters.com

India to probe fashion show "wardrobe malfunctions"
Tue Apr 4, 2006 10:48 AM ET


MUMBAI (Reuters) - Outraged officials in largely conservative India will examine video clips to see whether a halter slipping off a top model or another's skirt zip splitting at a fashion show were "deliberate" acts, a state minister said.

Last week, model Carol Gracias's skimpy halter slipped down to her waist showing her breasts to snapping photographers and rolling TV cameras during a fashion show in Mumbai.

This was followed by another sensational "wardrobe malfunction" when former Miss India Gauhar Khan's skirt zip split, revealing her bottom to the media and Mumbai's smart set.

This has not gone well with Mumbai's politicians who have been waging a morality campaign which shut down the city's famous dance bars, making thousands of female dancers jobless.

"If we find that these acts were not accidental, then we will take action against the fashion show organizers," deputy chief minister of Maharashtra state R.R. Patil said late on Monday.

The wardrobe malfunctions at the fashion show caused a sensation in conservative India.

But some fashion designers say wardrobe problems do happen on the catwalk and don't understand what the fuss is all about.

"We don't want everyone to be veiled. We are lucky to live in a free country," fashion designer Narendra Kumar was quoted in The Indian Express Tuesday as saying, adding what happened to Gracias and Khan were "clearly a mistake."

Read more at : Oddly Enough News Article | Reuters.com

Oddly Enough News Article | Reuters.com

"Loyal" donkeys better than wives, says textbook
Tue Apr 4, 2006 10:28 AM ET


NEW DELHI (Reuters) - A textbook used at schools in the Indian state of Rajasthan compares housewives to donkeys, and suggests the animals make better companions as they complain less and are more loyal to their "masters," The Times of India reported Tuesday.

"A donkey is like a housewife ... In fact, the donkey is a shade better, for while the housewife may sometimes complain and walk off to her parents' home, you'll never catch the donkey being disloyal to his master," the newspaper reported, quoting a Hindi-language primer meant for 14-year-olds.

The book was approved by the state's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party government but has sparked protests from the party's women's wing.

State education officials in Rajasthan, a western state known for its conservative attitude toward women, said people should not be upset by the comparison, the paper said.

"The comparison was made in good humor," state education official A.R. Khan was quoted as saying. "However, protests have been taken note of and the board is in the process of removing it (the reference)."

Read more at : Oddly Enough News Article | Reuters.com

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone From Yahoo! News

Child Bride
Posted by Kevin Sites on Mon, Mar 20 2006, 4:55 PM ET


Married at the age of four, an Afghan girl was subjected to years of beatings and torture, finally escaping to discover that within all the world's cruelty, there is also some kindness.

KABUL, Afghanistan - Eleven-year old Gulsoma lay in a heap on the ground in front of her father-in-law. He told her that if she didn't find a missing watch by the next morning he would kill her. He almost had already.

Enraged about the missing watch, Gulsoma's father-in-law had beaten her repeatedly with a stick. She was bleeding from wounds all over her body and her right arm and right foot had been broken.

She knew at that moment that if she didn't get away, he would make good on his promise to kill her.

When I meet her at the Ministry of Women's Affairs I'm surprised that the little girl, now 12, is the same one that had endured such horrible suffering. She is wearing a red baseball cap and an orange scarf. She has beautiful brown eyes and a full and animated smile. She takes one of my hands in both of hers and greets me warmly, without any hint of shyness.

"She looks healthy," says Haroon, my friend and translator. I nod. But she looks older than her years, we both agree. In orphanages — first in Kandahar, then in Kabul — she has had a year to recover from a lifetime's worth of unimaginable imprisonment, deprivation and torture.

In one of the ministry's offices she sits in a straight-backed wooden chair and tells us the story of her life so far. She is stoic for the most part, pausing only a few times to wipe her eyes and nose with her scarf.

Her story begins in the village of Mullah Allam Akhound, near Kandahar.

"When I was three years old my father died, and after a year my mother married again, but her second husband didn't want me," says Gulsoma. "So my mother gave me away in a promise of marriage to our neighbor's oldest son, who was thirty."

"They had a ceremony in which I was placed on a horse [which is traditional in Afghanistan] and given to the man."

Because she was still a child, the marriage was not expected to be sexually consummated. But within a year, Gulsoma learned that so much else would be required of her that she would become a virtual slave in the household.

At the age of five, she was forced to take care of not only her "husband" but also his parents and all 12 of their other children as well.

Though nearly the entire family participated in the abuse, her father-in-law, she says, was the cruelest.

"My father-in-law asked me to do everything — laundry, the household chores — and the only time I was able to sleep in the house was when they had guests over," she says. "Other than that I would have to sleep outside on a piece of carpet without even any blankets. In the summer it was okay. But in the winter a neighbor would come over and give me a blanket, and sometimes some food."

When she couldn't keep up with the workload, Gulsoma says, she was beaten constantly.

"They beat me with electric wires," she says, "mostly on the legs. My father-in-law told his other children to do it that way so the injuries would be hidden. He said to them, 'break her bones, but don't hit her on the face.'"

There were even times when the family's abuse of Gulsoma transcended the bounds of the most wanton, sadistic cruelty, as on the occasions when they used her as a human tabletop, forcing her to lie on her stomach then cutting their food on her bare back.

Gulsoma says the family had one boy her age, named Atiqullah, who refused to take part in her torture.

"He would sneak me food sometimes and when my mother-in-law told him to find a stick to beat me, he would come back say he couldn't find one," she says. "He would try to stop the others sometimes. He would say 'she is my sister, and this is sinful.' Sometimes I think about him and wish he could be here and I wish I could have him as my brother."

One evening, Gulsoma says, when her father-in-law saw the neighbor giving her food and a blanket, he took them away and beat her mercilessly. Then, she says, he locked her in a shed for two months.

"I would be kept there all day," she says, "then at night they would let me go the bathroom and I would be fed one time each day. Most of the time it was only bread and sometimes some beans."

She says every day she was locked in the shed, she wished and prayed that her parents would come and take her away. Then she would remember that her father was dead and her mother was gone.

But Gulsoma had an inner strength even her father-in-law couldn't comprehend.

"When he came to the shed he kept asking me, 'Why don't you die? I imprisoned you, I give you less food, but still you don't die.'"

But it wasn't for lack of trying. Gulsoma said when her father-in-law finally let her out of the shed, he bound her hands behind her back and beat her unconscious. She says he revived her by pouring a tea thermos filling with scalding water over her head and her back.

"It was so painful," she says, dabbing her eyes with her scarf and sniffling for a moment. "I was crying and screaming the entire time."

Five days later, she says, her father in law gave her a vicious beating when his daughter's wristwatch went missing.

"He thought I stole it," she says, "and he beat me all over my body with his stick. He broke my arm and my foot. He said if I didn't find it by the next day, he would kill me."

She crawled away that night and hid under a rickshaw. When the rickshaw driver found Gulsoma, broken and bleeding, he listened to her story and took her to the police. She was hospitalized immediately.

"The doctor at the hospital who treated me said, 'I wish I could take you to the village square and show all the people what happened to you, so no one would ever do something like this again,'" Gulsoma says.

It took her a full month to recover from her last beating. But the fear and psychological trauma may never go away.

"I was happy to have a bed and food at the hospital," she says. "But I was thinking that when I get better they will give me back to the family."

However, Gulsoma says when the police questioned the family, the father-in-law lied and tried to tell them she had epilepsy and had fallen down and hurt herself. But the neighbor who had helped Gulsoma confirmed the story of her beatings and torture.

The police arrested her father-in-law and "husband." They told her, she says, they would keep them in jail unless she asked for their release.

"Everyone was crying when they heard my story," Gulsoma says.

Gulsoma says she stayed at an orphanage in Kandahar, but was the only girl in the facility. Eventually, her story was brought to the attention of the Ministry of Women's Affairs.

Gulsoma was then brought to a Kabul orphanage, where she lives today. She takes off her baseball cap and shows us a bald spot, almost like a medieval monk's tonsure, on the crown of her head where she was scalded.

She then turns her back and raises her shirt to reveal a sad map of scar tissue and keloids from cuts, bruises and the boiling water.

Haroon and I look at each other with disbelief. Her life's tragic story is etched upon her back.

Yet she continues to smile. She doesn't ask for pity. She seems more concerned about us as she reads the shock on our faces.

"I feel better now," she says. "I have friends at the orphanage. But every night I'm still afraid the family will come here and pick me up."

Gulsoma also says that when the sun goes down, she sometimes begins to shiver involuntarily — a reaction to the seven years of sleeping outdoors, sometimes in the bitter cold of the desert night.

She says she believes there are other girls like her in Kandahar, maybe elsewhere in Afghanistan, and that she wants to study human rights and one day go back to help them.

As we walk outside to take some pictures, I ask her if, after all she's been through, she thinks it will be harder to trust, to believe that there are actually good people in the world.

"No," she says, quickly.

"I didn't expect anyone would help me but God. I was really surprised that there were also nice people: the neighbor, the rickshaw driver, the police," she says. "I pray for those who helped release me."

Looking directly into the camera, she smiles as if nothing bad had ever happened to her in her entire life.

"I think that all people are good people," she says, "except for those that hurt me."

Read more at : Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone From Yahoo! News

Friday, March 17, 2006

State to pull the plug on instant, net lotteries- The Economic Times

State to pull the plug on instant, net lotteriesAdd to Clippings
TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 2006 01:24:14 AM]


MUMBAI: After closing down dance bars last year, the Democratic Front government in Maharashtra now plans to ban instant and internet lotteries in the state. The decision, according to sources, is being taken for ‘social reasons’.

State finance minister Jayant Patil made the assurance in the Legislative assembly after members from both the ruling and the opposition benches demanded government action against internet and online lotteries, which, they said, were “ruining an entire generation”.

Replying to supplementaries on a calling attention notice by Chandrakant Chhajed (Congress) and others on the menace of instant lotteries, Mr Patil said, “If the House so desires, the government would also consider banning all instant lotteries.”

“As of now, these lotteries carry out about 1,500 draws each day. Most of the lotteries are being run by other state governments and hence there are some legal issues involved,” Mr Patil added. He made it clear that the state government had no powers to close down online terminals of lotteries of other states.

He, however, cautioned members that banning lotteries will affect thousands of people across the state whose livelihood depends on the trade. “The members should not come to us to complain that the bread and butter of those engaged in lottery business have been snatched away,” Mr Patil said.

The minister said it was true that the “addiction” to instant lotteries was widespread and “the state government is committed to control the addiction”.lmost all the members who spoke on the issue lamented the ‘side effects’ of the trade. “Young boys from villages queue up from early morning before these lottery centres. Their lives are being ruined,” a BJP MLA said.

Later, Mr Patil told media persons that the decision to ban internet-based and 15-minute draw online lotteries would cost the state exchequer Rs 25 crore. The minister, however, said that daily and weekly draws of online lotteries will continue.

Read more at : State to pull the plug on instant, net lotteries- The Economic Times