Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Bangkok faces protests against PM


Tens of thousands of protesters have gathered in the Thai capital, Bangkok, in a fresh bid to force Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva out of office.

The protesters are mainly supporters of the former premier, Thaksin Shinawatra, who was deposed in a 2006 coup and faces jail if he returns from exile.

Security forces are deployed at major sites around Bangkok.

Thailand's long political crisis has yet to end despite a court's removal of Mr Thaksin's allies from government.

As protesters gathered, Mr Abhisit said he would not dissolve parliament.

Red shirts gather

Police said around 30,000 red-clad supporters of Mr Thaksin had gathered outside the main government offices in the capital, where demonstrators have been staging a sit-in for the last two weeks.

The protest comes a day after Mr Abhisit's motorcade was attacked following a cabinet meeting in the resort town of Pattaya.

The demonstrators, from the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), claim Mr Abhisit came to power illegally, and accuse the current government of being a puppet of the military.

Protest leaders say they expect thousands more to come from around the country for what they have called "D-Day" in their efforts to push Mr Abhisit to dissolve his four-month-old government and hold elections.

Police said they believed protesters were planning to surround the residence of one of the widely respected king's top advisers and a former Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda, who has been accused by Mr Thaksin of orchestrating the coup that toppled him in 2006.

Mr Thaksin, who is living in an undisclosed foreign country, said late on Tuesday that the protests would mark a "historic day for Thailand".

"We will come peacefully but we need as many people as possible to show that the Thai people will not tolerate these politics any more," he said in a speech via video-link to supporters outside Government House.

Quake village crumbles in aftershocks

In the ancient mountain-top village of Fossa, surrounded by the soaring snow-capped peaks of the Appenine mountains, the aftershocks of Monday's earthquake are still being felt.

Fossa was badly hit when the quake first struck but some of the houses that remained standing are far from secure.

Just before I arrived in the village - home to about 500 or so people - a large aftershock rocked the mountain.

Four officials had a narrow escape as the building they were inspecting at the time started to collapse. They ran for their lives as it crashed to the ground around their ears.

The first earthquake seems to have weakened some of the buildings so they now collapse from the inside. The men who escaped were very lucky.

Now the village has been closed once again amid fears that more buildings could fall as the aftershocks continue.

Those shocks are an unhappy reminder of the earthquake to the thousands who now find themselves with no home to go to. As many as two thirds of the buildings in L'Aquila and surrounding villages like Fossa are unsafe.

Last night many chose to sleep in their cars rather than leave the town they call home.

Field kitchen

But that is no long-term solution, so at an army base not far from the centre of town the Italian Red Cross is building a temporary field kitchen that will provide 10,000 meals a day for families who have nowhere else to turn.

Volunteers are busy putting flooring down and unloading pallets of food - borlotti and cannelloni beans are stacked along with huge tins of plum tomatoes.

There are also large supplies of milk as well, of course, as water. The centre seems well resourced and well run.

The head of the Italian Red Cross, Francesco Rocca, says the situation is very grave. Tens of thousands face months of uncertainty.

History lessons stymied in Lebanon


Despite a long and varied history, classes on the subject are blinkered when taught in Lebanon, as the BBC's Natalia Antelava found out when she visited a school in the capital, Beirut.

Kristina and Ali sit side by side in their history class and together they learn about the Phoenicians and the Romans, the Greeks and the Ottomans.

But when it comes to Lebanon's more recent, turbulent past - their school teaches them nothing.

Modern history is not part of the curriculum in Lebanon, and just like thousands of other children Kristina and Ali, who are both 14, turn to their families for answers their history teacher cannot provide.

"When I want to know something, I ask my dad," Ali says.

Kristina, who comes from a different religious background, says she does the same.

Their history teacher does not like the arrangement, but in a country split along sectarian lines, she prefers to stick to it.

"Sometimes students ask about more recent events," she says, "but it's difficult to explain things to them without getting into sectarian divisions."

Thorny issue

In Lebanon children are not taught modern history because adults cannot agree on it.

Even the ancient history is a thorny issue here.

There are dozens of the government-approved history textbooks that offer different takes on the past.

While Christian schools tend to focus more heavily on the Phoenician past, which the Christian community here identifies with, the Muslim schools teach more about Lebanon under the Arabs.

But when it comes to contemporary times, in schools across Lebanon history simply comes to a halt.

"It's a real problem," says Ohaness Goktchian, professor of political science at the American University in Beirut.

"We are raising another generation of children who identify themselves with their communities and not their nation.

"History is what unites people, without history we can't have unity."

Back in the 1970s, that lack of national unity combined with the complex geopolitics of the Middle East to erupt in a lengthy civil war.

For 15 years blood was shed across Lebanon in the name of politics and religion.

The war forced millions out of the country, killed almost 200,000 people and left Beirut in ruins.

'One narrative'

Today, much of Beirut has been rebuilt and memories of the violence have faded.

But the legacy of the war - the bitterness and the deep divisions - continue to live on and opinions are as divided as they were in the 1970s.

Lebanese historian Antoine Messarra believes the war will haunt Lebanon until its people agree on one, unified, version of history.

"We are the people without collective memory," he says.

"But for the sake of the future, we need to create one narrative that all of us will be able to believe in."

While Christian schools tend to focus more heavily on the Phoenician past, which the Christian community here identifies with, the Muslim schools teach more about Lebanon under the Arabs.

But when it comes to contemporary times, in schools across Lebanon history simply comes to a halt.

"It's a real problem," says Ohaness Goktchian, professor of political science at the American University in Beirut.

"We are raising another generation of children who identify themselves with their communities and not their nation.

"History is what unites people, without history we can't have unity."

Back in the 1970s, that lack of national unity combined with the complex geopolitics of the Middle East to erupt in a lengthy civil war.

For 15 years blood was shed across Lebanon in the name of politics and religion.

The war forced millions out of the country, killed almost 200,000 people and left Beirut in ruins.

'One narrative'

Today, much of Beirut has been rebuilt and memories of the violence have faded.

But the legacy of the war - the bitterness and the deep divisions - continue to live on and opinions are as divided as they were in the 1970.

Lebanese historian Antoine Messarra believes the war will haunt Lebanon until its people agree on one, unified, version of history.

"We are the people without collective memory," he says.

"But for the sake of the future, we need to create one narrative that all of us will be able to believe in."


Afghans run risks for work in Iran


In a cavernous UN reception tent on the Afghan-Iranian border, eight men and a young boy sit and drink tea at a white plastic table.

Two of the men had bandages around their heads and another wore a neck brace.

The group of Afghans had been packed into a speeding vehicle on the way to the Iranian capital, Tehran, when they had swerved to avoid an oncoming vehicle.

"Our car then flipped," said Nowrous Haji Yakous, 22. "One of my relatives was killed in the accident."

The men were all then arrested by the Iranian police and an hour later were deported from the country because they had no relevant paperwork.

N Korea threatens 'strong steps'


A North Korean diplomat warns "strong steps" would follow, should the UN take action against the country after its launch of a satellite on Sunday.

The UN Security Council has been debating whether North Korea should be punished for the launch.

The US, Japan and key European powers say the launch was a ballistic test in clear violation of a UN resolution.

China and Russia have been more cautious, saying they are yet to be convinced Pyongyang broke the rules.

Pyongyang says the test of the three-stage Taepodong-2 rocket was a success, putting a satellite into orbit which is now transmitting data and revolutionary songs.

Chances for cancellation of Pak-Aus series bleak after MoU signing


LAHORE: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) after finalising the MOU with Cricket Australia announced the itinerary of ODI series against Australia starting from 22nd April in UAE. Following the MoU signing, it is widely hoped that there might not prop up likelihood for the cancellation of series.

Pakistan as host to play five-match ODI series and a Twenty20 International at Dubai and Abu Dhabi and all matches will be played under floodlights.

The schedule of Pakistan-Australia forthcoming ODI cricket series has been made available as per which, the first and second matches will be played in Dubai on April 22 and 24 respectively while three matches to be held in Abu Dhabi on April 27, May 01 and May 3 correspondingly.

Pakistan has already announced its squad and Australia meanwhile is due to announce their touring squad following its ongoing ODI series in South Africa on April 17.

Bearish trend continues in KSE, Index crosses 7600 points


KARACHI: The Karachi Stock Exchange witnessed a continued bearish trend on Tuesday as index crossed the psychological bearer of 7,600 points.

Today, trading began in positive way and this trend continues throughout the day. On one occasion, the KSE 100-index was seen at a level of 7,689 points and investors were looking active in banks and energy stocks.

At the end of the day’s trading, the KSE 100-index closed at 7,635 points with an increase of 117 points.

Today, trade volume was 470 million shares which is the highest level in 18 months.

The most transactions were made in the shares of NIB Bank price of which with an increase of 55 paisa went up to Rs6.80.

Gaddafi says fears Obama assassination


SIRTE: Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi Tuesday called Barack Obama a "flicker of hope in the middle of the imperialist darkness," but said he feared the president could be assassinated.

Gaddafi, known for his controversial statements, did not say who might want to kill Obama but gave the examples of the assassinations of Presidents John F. Kennedy and Abraham Lincoln, as well as black rights leader Martin Luther King.

"I fear that they could liquidate this young man or force him to submit to their imperialist policies," Gaddafi told a university gathering of his supporters in Sirte, without specifying who might put Obama under pressure.

"Obama is a flicker of hope in the middle of the imperialist darkness," the Libyan leader said, adding: "There is a fear that they would liquidate him as they liquidated Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Abraham Lincoln."

Gaddafi praised Obama for breaking with what he said was the previous American foreign policy that dictated to the rest of the world what to do to serve U.S. interests.

"He (Obama) speaks logically. Arrogance no longer exists in the American approach which was previously based on dictating to the rest of the world in order to meet its own conditions," Gaddafi said in the remarks carried by state media.

Public flogging of Pakistani woman 'unacceptable': UN

UNITED NATIONS: UN chief Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday slammed as "unacceptable" the public flogging of a veiled woman in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province (NWEP).

"This is just unacceptable," he told a press conference in answer to a question about the case. "Respecting and upholding basic human rights is universally accepted."

On Monday Pakistan's top judge ordered government officials to submit a detailed report within 15 days over the flogging case, an incident that incensed the volatile Asian nation.

Pakistani Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry gave the directive as eight judges opened a hearing into the case, apparently that of a 17-year-old girl who was caught on an amateur video being whipped face down on the ground.

The date of the flogging, the location and the details of the woman's alleged crime have been confused but the footage showed two men pinning her down while a bearded man in a turban flogged her 34 times with a whip.

Haqqani asks for $30 billion US aid for Af-Pak


WASHINGTON: Pakistan ambassador to US Hussain Haqqani has urged on Tuesday that United States must bag-out 30 billion dollars as aid for Afghanistan and Pakistan to counter terrorism sparked by Taliban and al-Qaeda.

Talking to US daily Haqqani said extremists wish to destabilize Pakistan so in this connection, ambassador urged, US’s additional economic aid package to slash anti-US sentiments and fight al-Qaeda is utterly necessary.

“The US’s economic packages for Pakistan keep no status in comparison with the bailout package sought for US itself to tackle ongoing global economic meltdown in America”, he compared and underlined, “$5 billion needed for Pakistan and Afghanistan every year from US and its allied countries for training of local people to fight against Taliban and al-Qaeda here in this part of the world.”

Monday, April 6, 2009

Pak names squad for ODI series against Australia


LAHORE: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has announced a team for one-day series against Australia. Shoaib Akhtar is also included in the team.

The chief selector of PCB selection committee Abdul Qadir has announced the team during a press conference here.

A five matches series will be played in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. First and second match of the series will be played in Dubai on April 22 and April 24 respectively.

Three matches will be played in Abu Dhabi on April 27, May1 and May3. The team is as follows:

Younis Khan(captain), Salman Butt, Nasir Jamsheed, Misbahul Haq, Shoaib Malik, Shahid Afridi, Kamran Akmal(wicket keeper), Shoaib Akhter, Umer Gul, Rao Iftikhar Anjum, Sohail Tanveer, Yasir Arfat, Fawwad Alam, Ahmad Shahzad and Saeed Ajmal.

KSE-100 Index surges above 7500 level


KARACHI: Investors buying continued at Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) on Monday, pushing the benchmark KSE-100 Index up by 86 points to close at 7,518.

Selling pressure was witnessed at the beginning of today’s trade but later buying in banking and energy stocks switched the share market in positive mode. At the end the major Index gained 86 points to 7,518.

Trade volume was recorded at 380 million shares which is highest in the last 12 months.

NIB bank was today’s volume leader which gained paisas 40 to close at Rs6.25.

Clinton says U.N. should take strong NKorea position

WASHINGTON: U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Monday said North Korea's weekend missile launch had "grave implications" and the first response should be a forceful position taken at the United Nations.

The U.N. Security Council had held an emergency session on Sunday, but the 15 members agreed only to further discussions after North Korea launched a Taepodong-2 rocket.

"It's a provocative act that has grave implications. North Korea ignored its international obligations, rejected the unequivocal calls for restraint, and further isolated itself from the community of nations," Clinton told reporters.

She said U.S. officials were in active consultations with members of the U.N. Security Council and countries engaged in six-party talks over North Korea's nuclear program.

"We know that working out the language is not easily done overnight but we remain convinced that coming out with a strong position in the United Nations is the first and important step that we intend to take," Clinton said.

Six-party talks among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States have been stalled since December.

"North Korea has to know that any efforts to obtain the objectives it set forth as desiring in the six-party talks are put at jeopardy. But we're going to take this one step at a time," she said.

Govt to draft comprehensive policy to curb terrorism


ISLAMABAD: A comprehensive and integrated policy involving all stakeholders will be devised to completely eradicate the scourge of terrorism and extremism from the soil of the country, Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani said Monday.

He stated this while chairing a high level meeting on national security specially convened here at the Prime Minister Secretariat in the wake of recent increase in the incidents of terrorism in the country.

During the meeting various preventive measures to effectively combat the scourge of terrorism were discussed at length.

The meeting decided that the existing Parliamentary Committee on National Security in its report shall also incorporate the root causes of extremism as well as assess the present threats, prepare a draft national policy to handle this extraordinary state of insurgency, devise a de-radicalization program to bring the religious elements into mainstream, devise ways and means to bring the Madaris to the mainstream and enhance capacity building of law enforcement agencies.

In the preparation of its report, the Parliamentary Committee shall also co-opt Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting Qamar Zaman Kaira, Federal Minister for Religious Affairs Hamid Saeed Kazmi, Secretary Interior, Chief Secretaries and IGPs of the four provinces, Chief Commissioner and IGP of ICT, AJK and NAs, all home secretaries and DG FIA.

The committee will finalize its report within two weeks time.

The Prime Minister stressed that all provincial governments, FATA administration and law enforcement agencies should enhance vigilance and ensure protection and security of citizens as it is the basic responsibility of the government to maintain law and order.

The Prime Minister further said that the time has come when all segments of the society should come forward and join hands to substantiate government’s efforts to curb extremism, militancy, intolerance, sectarian violence and terrorism as the enemies of the state are bent upon eroding the very foundations of our country and challenging the integrity, security and national cohesion.

He said that his government would deal sternly with these threats.

During the meeting, it was decided that the provincial governments should monitor activities of banned organizations, misuse of loudspeakers and spread of hate literature.

Monday’s meeting was attended by the Prime Minister of AJ&K Sardar Mohammad Yaqoob Khan, Federal Minister for Defence Ahmad Mukhtar, Federal Minister for Information & Broadcasting Qamar Zaman Kaira, Interior Advisor Rehman Malik, Chief Minister Punjab Mian Mohammad Shahbaz Sharif, Chief Minister Sindh Syed Qaim Ali Shah, Chief Minister NWFP Mir Amir Haider Khan Hoti, Chief Minister Balochistan Nawab Aslam Raeesani, Secretary Interior, Chief Secretaries and IGPs of all the four provinces, Chief Commissioner and IGP of ICT, DG FIA and DG IB.

Gates presses for more 50 unmanned Predators


WASHINGTON: Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Monday outlined plans to "profoundly reform" US military spending, urging a scaling back of major weapons programs while boosting funds for counter-insurgency warfare.

Gates said he was proposing halting production of F-22 fighter jets, canceling a new presidential helicopter and delaying ship building plans, while bolstering funding for surveillance drones and other resources for campaigns against insurgents like the ones in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In hardware, the plan calls for more unmanned Predator drone aircraft, which have been increasingly used under the Obama administration to strike at terrorist camps in the remote Afghanistan-Pakistan border regions.

"If approved, these recommendations will profoundly reform how this department does business," Gates told a news conference.

The defense secretary said he had tried to balance the need to combat immediate threats posed by insurgents linked to terror networks, with more traditional threats associated with conventional warfare.

"Collectively, they (the recommendations) represent a budget crafted to reshape the priorities of America's defense establishment," he said.

The budget was designed to help "fight the wars we are in today and the scenarios we are most likely to face in the years to come," said Gates, whose proposals will likely face stiff opposition from some members of Congress.

In an unusual step, Gates said he briefed lawmakers about his recommendations before making his proposals public.

"The president agreed to this unorthodox approach ... because of the scope and significance of the changes," he said.

The move suggested Gates and President Barack Obama were bracing for a political battle with lawmakers and influential defense industry contractors, who have often rebuffed past attempts to slash mammoth weapons projects.

The Pentagon chief said he recommended ending production for the F-22 Raptors, saying there was no need to greatly expand the aircraft fleet beyond the already approved production of 187.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

22 die, 200 injured at Chakwal Imambargah suicide bombing


CHAKWAL: The latest information confirmed 22 dead and 200 injured in the Imambagah suicide bombing here.

According to initial information, the suicide bomber blew himself up during an annual Majlis Aza being held at the Sarpak Mohalla Imambargah in the vicinity of City police station here. Some 2000 to 2500 faithful were attending the Majlis, when the blast occurred tearing away the bodies of the faithful into pieces.

Relief operations have started, while the dead and the injured are being shifted to the District Headquarter Hospital. Ambulances have been sent from Jhelum and Rawalpindi. Police high officials and the DCO have arrived at the site of incident and supervising the relief work.

Heavy contingents of police have besieged the area and collecting evidences from the site of incident. Police mobiles including several vehicles were also damaged in the blast.

Meanwhile, some sources told that the blast was carried by detonating a bomb planted on the parked motorcycle near Imambargah.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Man who made Swat flogging video speaks to Dawn News


MINGORA: The man who witnessed as well as filmed the Taliban flogging a teenage girl in Swat has spoken out. The flogging was featured in a two-minute long video shot from a mobile phone and shows a burqah-clad woman lying on the ground while being whipped by the Taliban.

Shaukat is the only eye-witness who has come forward and spoken to Dawn News about the incident.

He claimed that the incident took place two weeks ago.

Giving the incident's background, Shaukat said the allegation against and the treatment meted out to the girl was actually a punishment against her for refusing a marriage proposal.

The man who proposed to marry her joined the ranks of the Taliban after the rejection and this was how he took his revenge from the 17-year-old girl, Dawn News quoted Shaukat as saying.


When asked about the reaction of the people who had witnessed the whole episode, Shaukat said the people in Swat are so scared that no one has the courage to stand up and speak out against the Taliban and their verdicts.

FBI rules out Baitullah's claim on New York killings


WASHINGTON: The FBI on Saturday ruled out Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud's claim that he was responsible for an attack on a US immigration assistance center in New York state in which 14 people were killed.


‘Based on the evidence, we can firmly discount that claim,’ FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said.

Militant leader Mehsud had earlier called Reuters and claimed the attack: ‘I accept responsibility. They were my men. I gave them orders in reaction to US drone attacks,’ he said from an undisclosed location.

A man armed with two handguns killed 14 people at an immigration services centre before apparently turning the gun on himself, authorities in Binghamton, New York, said.


Representative Maurice Hinchey, whose district includes Binghamton, told the New York Times that indications are the gunman was an immigrant from Vietnam.


In New York City, Gov. David Paterson said at a news conference that 12 or 13 people had been killed in the city center. The suspected gunman carried identification with the name of 42-year-old Jiverly Voong of nearby Johnson City, New York, a law enforcement official said.

The suspect's body was found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound in an office of the American Civic Association building, said the official, requesting anonymity.


The gunman barricaded the rear door of the building with his car before entering through the front door, firing his weapon, the official said.


The gunman had recently been let go from IBM in Johnson City, said Rep. Maurice Hinchey, whose district includes Binghamton. The gunman opened fire on a citizenship class, he said.


‘People were there in the process of being tested for their citizenship,’ Hinchey said in a telephone interview. ‘It was in the middle of a test. He just went in and opened fire.’


A woman who answered the phone at a listing for Henry D. Voong said she was Jiverly Voong's sister but would not give her name.


Asked if she was aware that he might have been involved in the shooting, she said: ‘How? He didn't have a gun. I think somebody involved, not him. I think he got shot by somebody else.’


‘I think there's a misunderstanding over here because I want to know, too,’ she said.


The American Civic Association helps immigrants in the Binghamton area with naturalization applications, according to US Citizenship and Immigration Services.


The association describes itself as helping immigrants and refugees with counseling, resettlement, citizenship, family reunification and translators.


The association's president, Angela Leach, ‘is very upset right now,’ said Mike Chanecka, a friend who answered a call at her home as Leach wept in the background.


‘She doesn't know anything; she's as shocked as anyone,’ Chanecka said. ‘For some reason, she had the day off today. And she's very worried about her secretary.’


Two women and a man suffering gunshot wounds were being treated at Wilson Medical Center in Johnson City, said hospital spokeswoman Christina Boyd. One was stable, one was serious and one was critical. Their ages ranged from 20s to 50s, she said.


Linda Miller, a spokeswoman at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Binghamton, said a student from Binghamton University was being treated there.


The shooting occurred in a mixed neighborhood of homes and small businesses in the center of Binghamton, a city of about 47,000 located 140 miles northwest of New York City.


College student Leslie Shrager told the AP that she and her five housemates were sleeping when police pounded on the front door of their house next door to the shooting scene.


Officers escorted the six Binghamton University students outside, she said, and that's when they learned of the shooting. ‘One of our housemates thought they heard banging of some kind. But when you're living in downtown Binghamton, it's always noisy,’ said Shrager, of Slingerlands, an Albany suburb. ‘Literally two minutes later the cops came and got us out.’


At the junction of the Susquehanna and the Chenango rivers, the Binghamton area was the home to Endicott-Johnson shoe company and the birthplace of IBM, which between them employed tens of thousands of workers before the shoe company closed a decade ago and IBM downsized in recent years.

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Button storms to pole position in Malaysia


SEPANG: Jenson Button pushed his Brawn GP to a second successive pole position Saturday, topping the times during qualifying for the Malaysian Grand Prix.

The Briton swept around the 5.5 kilometre Sepang circuit in one minute 35.181 seconds ahead of Toyota's Jarno Trulli (1:35.273) to burn off his rivals in an eventful hour-long qualifying.

It was his second straight pole after Australia last weekend which he went on to win in Brawn's maiden race, and only the fifth in his nine years as a Formula One driver.

But while Button was ecstatic, there was despair for last year's pole sitter Felipe Massa, who only managed 16th in his Ferrari during hot and humid, but dry, conditions.

And McLaren's miserable weekend continued with world champion Lewis Hamilton starting from 12th on the grid and his teammate Heikki Kovalainen 14th.

Third fastest was Sebastien Vettel in his Red Bull but he is carrying a 10-place grid penalty from the Australian Grand Prix after his collision there with Robert Kubica and so lines up Sunday in 13th.

Button's teammate Rubens Barrichello was fourth quickest but he too has a grid penalty — five places for changing his gearbox — so is relegated to ninth

Therefore, Timo Glock in the other Toyota will be third alongside Nico Rosberg in his Williams.

Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen, last year's winner, is behind them alongside another former world champion, Fernando Alonso in his Renault.

‘It is not easy to get one pole position but to have two on the trot, I've never done that before,’ Button said after raising the bar on his final flying lap.

‘It shows that the car works on different circuits in all conditions. On Saturday we struggled a bit with the balance of the car and it was difficult but we made changes overnight and it improved a lot.

‘I feel very comfortable in the car and I'm excited about Sunday.’Italy's Trulli is looming as his chief threat in the Toyota, which, like the Brawn and Williams, is using the controversial rear diffusers to make the car more aerodynamic.

Ferrari, Renault, Red Bull and BMW Sauber claim they are contrary to the rules, giving a lap-time benefit of up to 0.5 seconds, and have appealed a stewards' hearing in Melbourne that ruled then legal.

‘The car is good but I didn't expect to be where I am,’ said Trulli.

‘The team have done a great job and got everything spot on.’The big surprise was the failure of Massa to reach the third and final stage of the knockout qualifying format.

The Brazilian, who was third in the morning's final free practice session, was well off the pace when it mattered, managing only 1:35.642 having completed just four laps.

‘The team thought it was enough to be inside the top 15 and maybe I thought as well, to be honest, because when I got back to the pits I was fourth,’ he said.

‘I stayed in the top seven for a while, but then when I started to drop it was impossible to go out again because there was no time to do another lap.’Hamilton also had a day to forget as he comes to terms with the scandal last weekend in Australia in which he was forced to apologise for lying about Trulli overtaking him during the Australian Grand Prix.

‘Nothing has changed since the last race and it was as tough as ever,’ he said.

Qualifying took place with only McLaren and Toro Rosso using the same engines they had in Melbourne as all the other teams elected for new ones.

Drivers are allowed to use eight engines over the course of the season.

India get 233 runs lead in Wellington Test


WELLINGTON: India were 51 for one in their second innings, a lead of 233 at the close of play on the second day of the third test against New Zealand at the Basin Reserve in Wellington on Saturday.

Earlier, India Pace bowler Zaheer Khan struck four times as New Zealand collapsed to 140 for seven at tea, leaving them 239 runs adrift of India's first innings total in the third and deciding Test here Saturday.

Khan mixed good length swinging deliveries with short lifting balls to unsettle the New Zealand batsmen after India ended their first innings on 379 soon after the start of the second day.

Off-spinner Harbhajan Singh complemented his aggressive innings of 60 on the first day by bowling through the session after lunch and capturing two important wickets.

As well as dismissing top scorer Ross Taylor (42) and James Franklin (15), he kept a stranglehold on the scoring, conceding just 23 runs from his 16 overs.

India needs to win or draw this Test to clinch their first series win in New Zealand since 1968.

India recovered from 204 for six shortly after tea on the first day to reach 375 for nine at stumps but the final pair of Ishant Sharma and Munaf Patel could only add another four runs on Saturday before Sharma became Chris Martin's fourth victim.

Opening bowler Martin was the pick of the New Zealand attack, ending with four for 98 from his 25.1 overs.

New Zealand's reply wobbled early when Martin Guptill (17) was cramped by a shorter ball from Khan, chopping it onto his pads and the stumps, with the total at 21.

Only 10 more runs were added before Daniel Flynn edged a swinging Khan delivery to wicketkeeper Dhoni in the 11th over.

The bowler struck again soon after lunch when McIntosh (32) was surprised by a rising short ball, which ballooned off the top of his bat to Yuvraj Singh at first slip.

At 80 for three, New Zealand's hopes were resting on Jesse Ryder, who scored a double century in the drawn second Test in Napier, and a century in the first Test. But after a quiet start, he took a wild swipe at a short pitched Khan ball, sending a simple edge to Dhoni after scoring just three.

Taylor was the best hope of restoring some stability for New Zealand and replays suggested he may have been unlucky to be given out caught behind by umpire Daryl Harper.

An attempted leg glance off Harbhajan ended in captain Dhoni's gloves although replays suggested Taylor did not get bat on ball.New Zealand were struggling at 120 for five and worse was to come with Franklin sweeping Harbhajan straight to Virender Sehwag at square leg just five runs later.

Captain Daniel Vettori became Ishant Sharma's first victim with an inside edge that provided Dhoni with his fourth catch of the innings.

SBP sees signs of economy improving


KARACHI: Gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate is expected to remain in the range of 2.5-3.5 percent.

State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) in its 2008-09 second quarterly report released here said.

The report said that the country’s economic indicators showing signs of improvement with better financial management. The rate of inflation in the last quarter of the current fiscal year is expected to drop down fast, said the report.

The report said that during the initial six months of the current fiscal year, large-scale industrial production fell by 5.4 percent, while the exports during July-February increased by 4.3 percent and imports dropped down by 1.5 percent.

The quarterly report further said that during July-February, tax revenue increased by 20.4 percent and net foreign investment by 1.9 percent, while money supply also increased by 4.9 percent. Financial deficit to GDP ratio stood at 1.9 percent, balance of trade deficit at 6.9 percent and current account deficit remained at 4.5 percent.

The report said that increasing the tax to GDP ratio was imperative, while for the long and medium terms development projects, Pakistan would have to rely on low-rate loans of international organizations. Agriculture sector growth rate would also improve in 2008-09, the report forecasts.

The Last Pullman Porters Are Sought for a Tribute

For more than a century, Pullman porters were a part of American train travel, until competition from planes and automobiles led to the decline of sleeper cars. Now the last generation of porters — who played a critical role in African-American history — is rapidly dying off. And Amtrak is attempting to locate the last few for National Train Day.

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Jack Delano/Farm Security Administration, Library of Congress

A Pullman porter in the 1940s at Union Station in Chicago. The last generation of Pullman porters — who played a critical role in African-American history — is dying off.

Jack Delano/Farm Security Administration, Library of Congress

A Pullman porter in the 1940s aboard the Capitol Limited between Chicago and Washington. Porters will be honored at an observance on May 9.

In 2001, the A. Philip Randolph Museum compiled a national registry of black railroad employees who worked from the late 1800s to 1969, a record that could be useful for historians and genealogists.

“There are a thousand people on this list — as we mark it up, it’s not looking like the same list anymore,” said Hank Ernest, who is coordinating the publicity for Amtrak. Asked how many they had found, he said, “Double digits.”

For his book “Rising From the Rails,” Larry Tye interviewed about two dozen former Pullman porters, so called because they worked for the Pullman Company, which made sleeper cars. “The youngest were in the 80s at that time, and the oldest were in their early 100s,” he recalled. In between the time he did the interviews and when his book came out in 2004, he estimated, a third of those men died. Another third have died since then, he estimates.

“The fact they are disappearing is taking with them a piece of American history,” Mr. Tye said.

Though it could be demeaning, the job of porter was considered for decades one of two good jobs for black men in the United States. (The other was working in the post office.) At its peak, the Pullman Company was the largest single employer of black men in the United States, employing 20,000.

The Pullman porters laid the groundwork for the civil rights movement by forming the first black labor union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, under the leadership of A. Philip Randolph in the 1920s. The union gave leadership and money to the civil rights movement.

It was a former Pullman porter, E.D. Nixon, who selected Rosa Parks as the sympathetic figure for the Montgomery bus boycott, and recruited a young minister named Martin Luther King Jr. to lead the protest.

“If Martin Luther King was the father of the civil rights movement, then A. Philip Randolph was the grandfather of the civil rights movement,” Mr. Tye said.

The Pullman porters also played an important role in the great black migration, since they were the only blacks who regularly moved between the South and the North. By carrying copies of black newspapers like The Chicago Defender and The Pittsburgh Courier, they offered Southern blacks in small towns a glimpse of what life was like in the big cities.

The porters were also playing a critical role in gaining an economic foothold for their descendants. “They are — to a disproportionate extent — the father, the grandfathers, the uncles of the black professional class today,” Mr. Tye said.

A number of prominent black figures have Pullman porters in their lineage, he said: William E. Kennard, a former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, had a Pullman porter grandfather; Thurgood Marshall, the Supreme Court justice, and Willie Brown, a onetime mayor of San Francisco, were the sons of Pullman porters.

The porters’ wages were supplemented by tips, and at times they threatened to strike if tips did not improve. An 1890 article in The New York Times debated the ethics of tipping porters: “Tipping is objected to by austere and frugal American moralists upon the ground that it undermines the manhood and self-respect of the tippee. But this proposition loses all its force when the tippee is of African descent.”

But with meager wages, Pullman porters made substantial contributions to their home communities. For example, in the late 1800s, a Pullman porter built and supported a school that educated hundreds of black children in Covington, Ga.

The Pullman porters were the inspiration of George Pullman, the company’s founder, which is why they were often called George, regardless of their real names.

He was looking for the perfect servant to signify the luxury train experience. “Who better to hire than ex-slaves?” Mr. Tye said. “They were brilliantly attentive. They were incredibly inexpensive to hire.” Not only were they servants, they provided entertainment, as they were organized into choruses, orchestras or bands.

The porters largely settled in cities that were major rail stops — Chicago, Boston, Washington, New York — but they could be found anywhere the railroads ran. “We found pockets of them in Nebraska, in Omaha,” said Mr. Ernest, who works for Images USA, which is working with Amtrak on the National Train Day project.

The men have retained a certain dignity. “When we find them, they are dapper,” Mr. Ernest said. “They are men, even at this age, who wear suits and ties.”

“They will look at you and have a great conversation, because back then that’s what they had to do,” he said.

Former porters should contact Saunya Connelly of Amtrak at (202) 906-4164 or connels @amtrak.com with the following information: name, telephone number, mailing address, age, years of railroad service, and routes if known. The deadline for response is April 14. A ceremony honoring the porters is scheduled to take place during the celebration of National Train Day, on May 9, at 30th Street Station in Philadelphia.

Financial Industry Paid Millions to Obama Aide

WASHINGTON — Lawrence H. Summers, the top economic adviser to President Obama, earned more than $5 million last year from the hedge fund D. E. Shaw and collected $2.7 million in speaking fees from Wall Street companies that received government bailout money, the White House disclosed Friday in releasing financial information about top officials.

Protests and Political Tensions Mar NATO Meeting


STRASBOURG, France-Nato leaders walked across a sweeping bridge over the Rhine between Germany and France to symbolize Europe’s unity on Saturday morning, but later in the day, masked protesters were battling the police of both countries on another bridge nearby, called the Bridge of Europe.

The protesters, who are a mix of anti-globalization and anti-military activists, set a hotel and border post on fire, while riot police used tear gas to keep them back.

For a NATO event intended to be without drama, marking the 60th anniversary of the alliance, the return to full membership of France and entry of two new members, Albania and Croatia, this summit meeting has been fractious both inside the hall and outside.

While President Obama has been greeted like a rock star, his calls for more European troops for Afghanistan have been politely brushed aside. And NATO leaders struggled to name a new secretary-general to replace Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, whose term ends in July.

They finally agreed on the Danish prime minister, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, but it was not easy, given strong Turkish opposition.

NATO works by consensus, and the European-favored candidacy of Mr. Rasmussen was publicly opposed by Turkey, NATO’s only Muslim country. Turkish officials said that Mr. Rasmussen was too insensitive to Muslim concerns during the scandal over the Danish newspapers publication in 2005 of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, and that while NATO is fighting in Muslim Afghanistan, the symbolism would be all wrong.

Mr. Rasmussen has also said he does not think Turkey will ever become a full member of the European Union.

Efforts to sway the Turks over the leaders’ lavish dinner Friday night at a casino in Baden-Baden failed, as did a telephone call by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Mr. Berlusconi’s effort Saturday morning also held up the other leaders as they waited to cross the bridge from Germany and France. Finally, German Chancellor Angela Merkel set off with the others, leaving Mr. Berlusconi behind.

But behind closed doors, in an extended meeting that ran more than hour over time, the deal was done. Mr. Rasmussen, 56, is a center-right politician who has provided strong support for the American war in Iraq and NATO’s operation in Afghanistan, and whose government has sent fighting troops there, as well as to Bosnia and Kosovo.

Mr. Rasmussen graduated in economics but soon went into politics. He is a runner and bicyclist.

Saturday’s meeting began with niceties, with French President Nicolas Sarkozy confirming his country’s full reentry into NATO and President Obama welcoming Albania and Croatia, saying he expected Macedonia to join soon and that NATO’s door remains open to other countries.

But he made no specific mention of Georgia and Ukraine, whose increasingly distant accession to NATO has been a cause of a rift in Russia’s relations with the West. At last year’s NATO summit in Bucharest, President Bush pushed hard for membership accession for Georgia and Ukraine, but he was rebuffed by European leaders. Instead, NATO promised that both countries would eventually join NATO, without specifying any timetable.

A few months later the Russian army occupied the Georgian territories of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, a move which most foreign analysts interpreted as a death knell for Georgia’s NATO membership, since the European members of the alliance are loathe to get into a fight with Russia.

While the United States has since then given lip service to continued support for NATO membership for Georgia and Ukraine, Obama administration officials have indicated privately that they do not plan to put accession for those two countries at the top of the American agenda.

“The door to membership will remain open for other countries that meet NATO’s standards and can make a meaningful contribution to allied security,” Mr. Obama said.

Mr. Sarkozy and Ms. Merkel, the cohosts, praised Mr. Obama. “We are very pleased to work with him,” Mr. Sarkozy said. “We trust him.” On his first overseas trip, Mr. Obama has been the star of the NATO summit, with leaders jostling for alone time and photo opportunities with him, and the local press praising him for speaking in a language that is both direct and substantive.

Mr. Sarkozy and Mr. Merkel praised the new American strategy on Afghanistan, but Europeans promised few new fighting troops for permanent deployment. A senior White House official said that the allies have pledged an additional 4,400 troops to Afghanistan, with 3,000 or so fighting troops. Most of those troops are linked to providing security for the Afghan elections on Aug. 27. Some 1,400 forces will help train security forces.

Some $100 million have been pledged by the allies for new training of the Afghan forces, $57 million of it from Germany.

NATO Summit in progress


PARIS: NATO leaders’ second day Summit comes as France is rejoining the alliances’ integrated command after a hiatus of more than four decades. It also marks the debut of Albania and Croatia on the NATO stage.

In a ceremony at the start of the meeting, U.S. President Barack Obama joined German Chancellor Angela Merkel and other heads of state on the German side of the Rhine River for a symbolic walk across a bridge leading into France.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy coming from the French side joined the leaders half way.

This symbolic ceremony aims at paying homage to all those who sacrificed their lives in discharging duties during the NATO’s 60 years of history.

CJ seeks lawyers’ support to end corruption


ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry said we will eliminate corruption from the judiciary and asked the lawyers to support him for this.

Addressing a function of signing of roll of register, chief justice said there are also black sheep exists in out fraternity. Lawyers should support me for the end of corruption.

He said if Bar Councils could not take notice of corruption, the matter should bring into my notice with valid evidences. Supreme Court will act accordingly. Iftikhar Chaudhry said one should not be blamed on nameless petition.

45 bodies recovered from container in Quetta


QUETTA: Forty-five people apparently suffocated to death in a closed container found abandoned here in Hazar Ganj area on Saturday.

According to sources, 150 people were inside the container who were being illegally taken across border.

The container was reportedly being transported from Afghanistan to Iran via Pakistan.

Eyewitnesses say, most of the deceased apparently belonged to Afghanistan and tribal areas. They said the driver of the container when opened the container’s door found the people inside it dead and unconscious due to suffocation.

The driver escaped from the scene leaving the truck on the road, witnesses added.

The bodies and unconscious people have been shifted to nearby hospitals.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Facebook discipline may be illegal: expert


Firms who discipline or sack staff for comments made on Facebook and Twitter could be acting illegally, says a veteran lawyer.
Stories about NSW Department of Corrective Services threatening to sack prison officers over Facebook posts and Telstra disciplining employee Leslie Nassar for Twitter comments have provoked a series of other examples.
They include a reader who says he was fired from his job at a "large corporate bank" for using the word "recession" in his Facebook profile.
A teacher also complained she was disciplined over comments she made about being bullied.
But Steven Penning, a partner with Turner Freeman with two decades of experience in workplace law, says employers may be acting unlawfully.
He said employment contracts are unlikely to cover staff use of social networking sites.
--------------------------------------------------------------MashUp Blog: Have you been threatened over social network comments?--------------------------------------------------------------
"What employers are doing is they're scrambling and trying to make out that present policies can be stretched to cover these new areas, and in many respects they can't," Penning said.
"If an employer hasn't told people in advance what the rules are, what the conditions are, then that greatly increases the likelihood that an employee can say well, I can't be terminated for this because I wasn't aware that this is something I was not to do."
He contrasted this with the clear policies surrounding the use of work internet access and email that staff were made aware of as soon as they signed up.
The growth of social networking sites like Twitter, Facebook and MySpace has meant people are having private conversations they would have at the pub in an online setting.
However, Penning said this was no longer considered private comment because the discussions are published and distributed publicly.
A 27-year-old Australian woman, who did not want to be named, said about six months ago her employer - a large online technology company - started disciplinary action against her over a "generic" comment she wrote on the Facebook wall of a friend, who did not work at the company, outside of work hours.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Sweden allows same-sex marriage


Sweden will allow gay couples to be legally married from next month.


Parliament voted overwhelmingly on Wednesday to recognise same-sex marriage, becoming the fifth country in Europe to do so.
Sweden was one of the first countries to give gay couples legal "partnership" rights, in the mid-1990s, and allowed them to adopt children from 2002.
The new law lets homosexuals wed in either a civil or religious ceremony, though individual churches can opt out.
The law was passed by 226 votes to 22 and will come into force on 1 May.
COUNTRIES WITH LEGAL GAY MARRIAGE
Netherlands, 2000
Belgium, 2003
Spain, 2005
Canada, 2005
South Africa, 2006
Norway, 2008
Sweden, 2009
These are the years that legislation was passed by parliament
"The decision means that gender no longer has an impact on the ability to marry and that the law on registered partnership is repealed," the government said on its website.
Six of the seven parties in parliament backed the bill, while the Christian Democrats, one of four parties in the governing coalition, refused.
The Lutheran Church, the largest church in Sweden, has offered to bless gay partnerships since January 2007, but has still not given formal backing to the term "marriage", and will allow individual pastors to refuse to carry out gay weddings.
Sweden has become the fifth European country, after the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain and Norway, to recognise same-sex marriage.
Elsewhere, Canada and South Africa have also passed such legislation, as have some US states and local authorities in other countries.

Franco-German alliance growls


It's stuttered and it's stalled over the last few years, but in London the European engine roared back into life. I am talking about the Franco-German motor, which is said to be the engine of the European Union.
The president of France and chancellor of Germany gave an extraordinarily hard-headed joint news conference, delivering the message that the G20 must enforce a profound change to the world's economic system and do it now. Even the often diffident Mrs Merkel sounded passionate, as well as very firm. Given the pair don't like each other, and have often differed on policy, what is this all about?
Both have headaches at home and want to be seen back at home as central players in this grand meeting. Mr Sarkozy is deeply unpopular: a recent opinion poll indicated 59% of the French think he has mishandled the crisis. Mrs Merkel has an election this year, and must make herself stand out from her Social Democrat partners in government.
So they are delivering a message to London and Washington that will be popular in France and Germany. There is a widespread feeling that this crisis was created by a financial system that gave priority to vast profits and the acceptance of immense borrowing of money as a way of life. And that it was clearly marked "made in the USA". But this intercontinental financial missile has devastated their towns and cities and they want economic arms talks right now.
It is just a fact that the Germans and French do not rely on credit in the way we Anglo-Saxons do. Time and time again in Germany I have met bosses of middle-sized businesses who tell me they invest most of their profit, rather than go to the banks. Many people in both countries are in no doubt that in America and the UK fecklessness was not just for the filthy rich, but had become a way of life for all of us.
Depending on your level of cynicism Sarkozy and Merkel are either playing to the gallery or faithfully reflecting a public mood in their nations. They also believe that to do business with even a spanking new America you have to be tough. As one French politician said to me recently (I paraphrase): "Why perform the same role as you British? You say you want to be close to them to influence their policy, and we know that doesn't work".
But I imagine Mrs Merkel will be reflecting long and hard on one part of President Obama's meaty news conference. He said that the world could no longer rely on voracious consumption from America. So countries that lived by exports alone had to think again. The German chancellor has already made it clear that she couldn't transfigure Germany's export-led economy, even if she wanted to do so. Even if there was a successful attempt to stimulate the cautious German consumer into buying more it couldn't take up even a small part of the slack anyhow. I guess that means Germans will have to get used to being that much poorer in the future, or hope new markets blossom.
Merkel and Sarkozy won the argument in Europe against a grand new plan to pump money into the world economy at the last EU summit, when Gordon Brown didn't stand up to them. It seems, and I could yet be proved wrong, that the Americans accept that victory days ago. Whether the newly dynamic duo will win the battle for new rules and regulations we will know by tonight. It will probably take years to know whether their argument is bang on the nail or hopelessly out of touch with economic reality.

Inmates at Afghan prison can challenge detention

WASHINGTON: A federal judge on Thursday ruled that some inmates held at a US military base in Afghanistan have the legal right to challenge their detention in US courts, just as detainees do at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Although the Supreme Court has ruled that detainees at the US naval base in Cuba have the right to challenge their detention, the government had argued that inmates held at the US air base in Bagram, Afghanistan did not have such a constitutional right.Judge John Bates, however, ruled the Bagram detainees faced essentially the same situation as the Guantanamo detainees, being held indefinitely without due process."Bagram detainees who are not Afghan citizens, who were not captured in Afghanistan, and who have been held for an unreasonable amount of time" may invoke the right to habeas corpus, Bates wrote, referring to the legal right dating back centuries. If it stands, the ruling could have far-reaching implications for how the US government handles terror suspects and for its operations at Bagram, where about 600 detainees are held. Barbara Olshansky, a Stanford University professor who represents about 20 detainees at Bagram, told media she felt certain that the ruling would extend to all the detainees at the US base in Afghanistan.

12 SHOs reshuffled in Karachi


KARACHI: Twelve Station House Officers (SHOs) have been reshuffled in the provincial capital on Thursday.Karachi Police chief Wasim Ahmed told Geo News that it was a routine reshuffle.He said inspector Muhammad Nadeem has been positioned as SHO Liaqatabad, Inspector Ashraf Shah as SHO Federal B. Industrial Area; Inspector Nasir Lodhi has been re-designated as SHO Minghopir, Inspector Agha Asad Allah as SHO Steel Town, Inspector Nasir-ul-Hassan as Sohrab Goth, Inspector Khalid Javed as SHO Shahrah-e-Faisal, Inspector Zafar Iqbal as SHO Kokalri and others.Orders of reshuffle through official notification have been issued to concerned police stations.

Jobless man kills spouse, hangs himself in Hyderabad


HYDERABAD: A 30-year-old man, sick of unemployment, committed suicide by hanging himself after killing his spouse in Latifabad area here on Thursday, police sources said.According to police sources, Imtiaz was a resident of Latifabad unit number 11 who rented a house in Dastagir Colony two months ago and would deal in scrap business.The man was leading hand to mouth life for several months and was unable to meet his wife’s needs, police sources said.Police found a letter from his house whereby he admitted that he had killed his wife and committed suicide due to joblessness, sources added.

One killed, 7 injured in Karachi violence


KARACHI: One man was killed and seven injured as two rival groups clashed in Gulistan-e-Johar, an area of metropolis on Thursday. Meanwhile, heavy troops of rangers and police have been deployed here after the incident, police sources said.According to police sources, two rival groups exchanged fire over a row of claiming extortion money in Phelwan Goth area. As a result, Syed Kamal (24) was killed and his death sparked violence as people gathered and set tires on fire on the streets. Later in a meanwhile, unknown gunmen opened fire at people protecting over the death of Kamal leaving seven more people injured.Injured were rushed to hospital for medical attainment and police, rangers troops were deployed following the incident, however, no arrest was made, sources claimed.

NA produces 48pc results in maiden parliamentary year: report

Updated at: 0727 PST, Friday, April 03, 2009 ISLAMABAD: Inter-Parliamentary Union has said in its report following the international rules and regulations that the Pakistan’s National Assembly has managed to produce 48 percent results in its maiden parliamentary year.Many people including parliamentarians contributed in research as respondents. The report has recommended more authorities for parliament to make it rather result-oriented. The recommendations included the authority of appointment and dismissal of Chief Justice, Chairman NAB, Chairman Public Service Commission and other high ranked positions.It said that independent research service should be setup and experts and analysts should be in committees for proposal in legislative matters.Formation of foreign policy got NA 37 numbers, self-accountability got NA 42 number, and the ability of legislation bagged NA 53 numbers, report concluded.

Zulfiqar’s security squad meets accident, 1 guard killed


DADU: One police guard, deployed in security squad of Sindh Home Minister Dr. Zulfiqar Mirza, was killed and five others critically injured as a police mobile van overturned due to over speed here on Thursday.According to sources, Minister was heading to Garhi Khuda Buksh from Dadu district for attending death anniversary of ZAB to be held on April 4. When his caravan reached near Mehar, his security squad’s police mobile vehicle overturned due to rash driving.As a result, police guard Saleem Pathan died on the spot while five police personnel were injured whom police shifted to hospital

Miandad, Intikhab to be removed from PCB Governing Board


Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Javed Miandad and Coach Intikhab Alam will be removed from governing body of PCB, board sources said.According to PCB sources, a member of PCB’s governing board has written a letter to Chairman PCB Ejaz Butt asserting that Javed Miandad and Intikhab Alam are salaried employees of PCB therefore two separate persons must be appointed in PCB replacing Coach and DG.There is room for appointment of 15 members in PCB’s governing board while currently only 10 members holding positions including Chairman himself, sources added.The Patron PCB President Asif Ali Zardari has not appointed members on for five removed members PCB governing board namely Ali Raza, Aslam Sinjrani, Muneer Hafees, Farooq Rehmatullah and Justice Ejaz Yousuf, sources

Bull run gains momentum; KSE up 259 points


KARACHI: Bull-run gained momentum at Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) on Thursday, contributing 259 points to the benchmark KSE-100 which closed at 7,191.The market began upbeat where investors remained active throughout the session, taking fresh positions across the board. Energy and banking sectors particularly attracted the investors.At the end the major Index closed just below the level of 7200 points for the first time since December 2008 with market turnover recorded at 290 million shares.TRG Pakistan drew maximum activity which was stronger by paisas 25 to close at Rs1.60.KSE-30 Index surged by 342 points to finish at 7803

Manika says enjoy support of 51pc members PML-Q in PA


LAHORE: Ata Muhammad Manika, the chief of forward block of Pakistan Muslim League-Q (PML-Q) in Punjab Assembly, has said on Thursday that we have successfully gained all out support of 51 members of Q-league in Punjab Assembly and revealed, “We are the actual PML-Q”.He was talking to media after he held meeting with Chief Minister Punjab Mian Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif here.He said we have no demands and we have yet to decide our Parliamentary leader.“We will support N-league”, he asserted saying, “45 members provincial assembly have spoken their majority during meeting CM Punjab today”.He predicted we will file plea to get ourselves declared as Parliamentary party of Q-league.

Pranab rules out becoming PM


NEW DELHI: Indian External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee said on Thursday that he could not become the Prime Minister of India since he neither possessed good command over the Hindi language nor hailed from northern states of world’s largest democracy.Pranab said in a TV interview that he hailed from a state where leftists enjoyed majority. He praised Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for his intelligence and grasp of the issues and said Singh had full support of Sonia Gandhi and the party.

No possibility of international cricket’s immediate return to Pakistan: ICC


DUBAI: High officials of the ICC said that the international cricket is not likely to be restored in Pakistan at the moment and Pakistan have to improve their security arrangements.Talking with media in Wellington, ICC President David Morgan ruled out the possibility of international cricket's immediate return to Pakistan but insisted that the trouble-torn country should not be isolated.In the wake of the March 3 attack on the Sri Lankan cricketers in Lahore, Morgan dismissed the possibility of any international assignments in Pakistan."The events in Lahore were absolutely dreadful for the people and cricketers of Pakistan. Quite clearly Pakistan is not a country where we can send cricket teams and officials in the immediate future," Morgan said."There needs to be a significant change there in the level of safety and security before we consider it," he added.At the same time, Morgan urged all other countries to host Pakistan or play in neutral venue to ensure the strife-torn nation is not isolated in international cricket."But Pakistan is an extremely important member of the ICC. It has produced some of the world’s greatest cricketers and still has a very strong cricket team. The ICC policy is that Pakistan must not be isolated.ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat said that he is hopeful that international cricket would be restored but we have to wait for this and focus on security related matters.

Dialogue continues with nationalists to resolve issues: Raisani



QUETTA: The Chief Minister of Balochistan, Nawab Muhammad Aslam Raisani said on Thursday that the provincial government was committed to engaging nationalists so as to address their problems through a dialogue process.Talking to journalists in his chamber after Balochistan Assembly session, the chief minister said the reinstatement of Shahbaz Sharif government in Punjab helped resolve the political imbroglio and remove atmosphere of uncertainty.He directed the concerned officials of all law enforcement agencies to put the security on high alert and ensure protection to life and property of the people across the province. Raisani said that a delegation of the United Nations met him today and discussed steps the provincial government had taken for safe recovery of abducted UNHCR official, John Solecki.Balochistan CM said that Pakistan Steel Mills has not been procuring Balochistan’s raw iron and coal since long and he intends to talk to President Asif Ali Zardari in this regard soon. Raisani said relief package worth Rs. 2.3 billion has so far been distributed among Balochistan earthquake affectees.

G-20 aims to raise $1.1 trillion for WB, IMF



LONDON: World leaders are looking to raise up to 1.1 trillion dollars in new financing for the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, diplomats said Thursday.Group of 20 leaders want the extra cash to boost liquidity and help embattled countries -- particularly in crisis-hit eastern Europe -- through the global recession.The British government's Secretary to the Treasury Stephen Timms said the G20 would ramp up IMF funds to about 750 billion dollars.Questioned by reporters about whether resources would be trebled from the current 250 billion dollars, he replied that he would "certainly expect it to be in that area.""The crucial thing... is to help the emerging economies get the benefit of growth because they have been responsible for such a large share of growth in the world economy over the last decade," Timms added.By late Wednesday, around 260 billion dollars had been pledged by G20 countries for the IMF to help countries stricken by the economic crisis, according to the source.Canada (10 billion dollars), the European Union (100 billion dollars), Japan (100 billion dollars) and Norway have signalled that they would pledge extra cash through bilateral agreements that could boost the IMF's current lending capacity of 250 billion dollars, the official said.The G20 also aims to boost World Bank funding, partly by asking members to fund a total 100 billion dollars a year over three years.Earlier this month, the United States suggested that IMF lending should be trebled to 750 billion dollars.Britain's International Development Secretary Douglas Alexander said the global financial crisis was forcing more cash-strapped countries to ask for emergency IMF funds."Traditionally, IMF resources have often been required in circumstances where national economies have got into classic balance of payments difficulties," Alexander said at a press briefing."What we are now experiencing are countries who are obliged to consider approaching the IMF not because of decisions that have been reached domestically, but because of the impact of the global crisis."Alexander added that G20 leaders would consider reform of the IMF in terms of conditions attached to getting funds, as well as the level of cash available.Romania, Hungary, Iceland, Latvia, Serbia and Ukraine in Europe and Pakistan, Mexico and others elsewhere have sought emergency IMF cash in recent weeks."With the expected calls on IMF resources in eastern Europe, the present level of resourcing for the IMF -- about 250 billion dollars -- is broadly judged not to be adequate," British minister Timms said.That was why G20 finance ministers had last month anticipated that IMF funding would double to some 500 billion dollars, Alexander added.

Special committee will be formed for textile sector: Tareen


ISLAMABAD: A special committee would be established to review problems of textile sector and to enhance its performance.Finance advisor Shaukat Tareen stated this in a high level meeting about textile sector. He said exploring new markets for textile products is necessary and more textile cities are needed across the country.The meeting reviewed problems facing by textile sector, impact of power crisis and profit margin.