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Sahara group moves SC against appellate tribunal's order

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 30 November 2012 | 17.34

PTI | Nov 30, 2012, 11.44AM IST
NEW DELHI: Sahara Group moved the Supreme Court on Friday against the order of the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) dismissing its appeal against market regulator SEBI in a case involving refund of about Rs 24,000 crore with interest to about three crore investors.

A bench headed by Chief Justice Altamas Kabir listed the matter for hearing on Monday.

The counsel for Sahara told the bench that the company was ready with a draft of Rs 5,100 crore for deposit in the apex court's registry.

In their appeal before the SAT, two Sahara Group firms had sought the Tribunal's intervention in refund of investors' money and had accused the market regulator SEBI of wrongly charging them of non-compliance with a Supreme Court order in that regard.

The Tribunal, however, had said that any further direction in the case could be sought and granted by the Supreme Court alone and dismissed the appeal.

The apex court had asked Sahara India Real Estate Corporation Ltd (SIRECL) and Sahara Housing Investment Corporation Ltd (SHICL) to refund an estimated Rs 24,000 crore with an annual interest of 15 per cent, while SEBI was directed to facilitate the refund of this money to about three crore investors of the two firms.

The court had asked the companies to furnish the documents related to these investors to SEBI within 10 days and refund the money within three months, failing which the regulator was asked to freeze the accounts and attach properties of the two firms.


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Kingfisher pilots threaten to approach DGCA over salary issue

MUMBAI: Having failed to receive their May salary as assured by the Kingfisher management, the airline pilots have now threatened to approach DGCA if they did not meet the commitment by Friday even as the regulator maintained that the issue is out of its purview.

"We have written to the airline's chief executive that if our salaries are not paid by today we will approach the Director General Civil Aviation to intervene in the issue," airline sources said here.

The airline has not paid salary to most of its 4,000 employees since May.

The pilots' threat comes after the management, which had assured the employees that their three months' salaries, out of the seven months, will be paid in tranches by Diwali.

The airline, which is grounded since October 1 after its pilots and engineers went on strike demanding payment of dues, has temporarily lost its flying license.

However, the airline managed to convince the employees to end their agitation by assuring them that their three-month dues (March to May) will be remitted in three instalments by Diwali.

Subsequently, the agitation was called off on October 24.

Meanwhile, a highly-placed DGCA official told PTI, "Payment of salary is an internal issue which the management and employees will have to sort out among themselves. Our concern is safety and we have already temporarily suspended the airline's flying license on this count."

The official, however, said that these issues will definitely be taken into consideration when the airline submits its revival plan.

"The employees should approach the appropriate authorities such as labour court or any other such institution to get the issue resolved," he added.

The airline has been told by the aviation regulator that its license will be revoked only when it submits a comprehensive revival plan and after taking views of all the stakeholders.


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Anna Hazare alleges arrested Maharashtra MLA getting 'five-star' treatment

AHMEDNAGAR: Anna Hazare has alleged that MLA Suresh Jain, who was arrested in connection with the Jalgaon Housing scam, was getting "five-star" treatment and demanded an inquiry against jail authorities.

Hazare wrote a letter to this effect to additional commissioner of police Meera Borwankar, before leaving for Odisha tour on Wednesday, Anna's close aide advocate Shyam Asawa said here on Friday.

Hazare said in the letter that Jain was denied bail by the high court. After being arrested on March 12, 2012, Jain has been trying to spend maximum time in hospitals and not in prison.

Jain was brought to Arthur Road jail in Mumbai on November 3, but was immediately admitted to Saint George Hospital where he is getting five-star treatment. Some jail authorities are managing these comforts for Jain, Hazare alleged in the letter and demanded an inquiry against them.

Asawa said the Bhrashtachar Virodhi Jan Andolan, of which he is a trustee, will seek legal action against the special treatment being provided to the accused.

Jain, who was a minister for housing during the Shiv Sena-BJP rule in the 1990s, had been arrested for allegedly favouring a builder and indulging in irregularities to the tune of Rs 29 crore.


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Fire in two air-conditioned coaches of Chennai-Delhi GT Express, one passenger dead

BHOPAL: Over 120 passengers on board two air-conditioned coaches of Chennai-Delhi GT Express had a close shave after the train caught fire near Sithauli station in Gwalior district in the wee hours on Friday. However, a 55-year-old passenger S K Verma, suffered cardiac arrest in panic and died, said sources.

Verma was a resident of Chennai and en route to Delhi. He was in the sleeper coach adjacent to the AC coaches that caught fire.

According to railway officials, fire broke out at 2am in the AC Coach B1 soon after it crossed Sithauli station. Passengers pulled the chain and got the train stopped. The bogie was evacuated even as the fire spread to adjacent AC coach B2 that was partially gutted.

Affected coaches were removed and the train left for Delhi at 7am.

DRM of Jhansi Rail Board Naveen Chopra told media that said a short circuit led to the incident as per initial investigation. He said an inquiry has been ordered into the incident.


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Now, check your provident fund balance online with e-passbook service

NEW DELHI: Over 50 million PF subscribers can now access their accounts online as retirement fund body EPFO launched its e-passbook service on Friday.

Active subscribers whose electronic challan-cum-return is already uploaded, can download their e-passbook every month under the service launched by the EPFO's Central Provident Fund Commissioner R C Mishra.

The facility shall be available on www.epfindia.gov.in. In the case of members who are not active (left service) and have not settled their account or have not become inoperative, the facility to download the passbook on request basis shall be available, EPFO said.

Any member of Employees' Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) can register on the member portal by using his or her photo identification number, such as PAN, Aadhaar, National Population Registry, driving licence, passport, voter ID, ration card and use the mobile number as password.

Members can add multiple ID (identification) numbers after registration and can use any one for logging into their account. Once registered, a member can download the passbook by entering his or her account number. If available, the passbook will appear for download.

The e-Passbook shall contain the transaction-wise details of the member's account (all credits and debits) since the month for which the details for the establishment have been processed in new application software at the field offices.

The facility, however, will not be available for members under exempted establishments under the EPF Scheme 1952 (as the fund details are maintained by the Trust) and inoperative members (i.e. in accounts where no contribution has been received in the preceding 36 months).

Under the e-Passbook service, only one registration will be allowed against one mobile number, and a member can download the passbook for only one account number under one establishment.

A senior EPFO official told that the exempted PF trust regulated by the body, would also be asked to provide this service to their members.


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Indian Air Force fighter jet crashes in Sikkim, pilot missing

NEW DELHI: An Indian Air Force fighter jet has reportedly crashed in Sikkim. The pilot of the Jaguar is reportedly missing.

The Indian Air Force has sent rescue teams to the crash site, which is in a forested area according to TV reports.

More details are awaited.


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Police let off boy detained over 'abusive' Facebook comment on Raj Thackeray

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 29 November 2012 | 17.34

MUMBAI: A 19-year-old boy from neighbouring Thane district, detained on suspicion of posting an "objectionable" Facebook comment against MNS chief Raj Thackeray, was let off after police found that a "fake account" was used by some persons in the teenager's name.

"Sunil Vishwakarma is cooperating with us in the case and was allowed to go last night after initial questioning. He is nowhere involved in the case," a senior police officer said.

Police in neighbouring Thane district had picked up the boy after receiving a complaint alleging that he had posted some "objectionable" comment on Raj Thackeray on the social networking site.

According to police, a "fake account" was used by unidentified person or persons in the teenager's name and a case was being registered in this regard.

Police are treading cautiously in the matter against the backdrop of suspension of two senior officers from Palghar for arresting two girls in connection with a Facebook post lamenting the shutdown of Mumbai in the wake of Shiv Sena patriarch Bal Thackeray's funeral on November 18.

The boy has not been charged and police have sought legal opinion, an officer from Palghar police station had said last night on condition of anonymity.

Thane (Rural) unit MNS president Kundan Sankhe had claimed that the boy had made "abusive" comments about Raj Thackeray and the people of Maharashtra, including women.

Late in the night, Additional Superintendent of Police, Thane, S Nishandar told that as per the probe, some unidentified person created a fake account in the name of Vishwakarma, and posted objectionable comment about Thackeray and Maharashtrians in his name.

Vishwakarma had accessed his own Facebook account last on Monday, while the comment on fake account was posted the next day.


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Light intensity tremor experienced in parts of Tamil Nadu

CHENNAI: A tremor of light intensity was experienced in parts of Tamil Nadu, but there were no reports of any casualty or damage, Met officials said on Thursday.

The tremor, measuring 3.3 on Richter scale, was experienced for a few seconds in some parts of Salem and Dharmapuri districts around 11.20 last night, they said.


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Normal life disrupted in Srinagar due to curfew

SRINAGAR: Normal life was on Thursday disrupted in the city as curfew continued in nine police station areas following sectarian clashes.

In view of the situation, the Kashmir University has postponed all examinations scheduled to be held on Thursday.

"All the Kashmir University examinations scheduled to be held today have been postponed. Fresh dates will be notified separately," a university spokesman said.

The district magistrate, Srinagar, had on Wednesday imposed curfew in the nine police station areas of the city after sectarian clashes broke out near Hawal area in the old city.

Curfew has been imposed in Nowhatta, M R Gunj, Safakadal, Khanyar, Rainwari, Nigeen, Lal Bazaar, Zadibal and Parimpora police station areas.

A police spokesman said that police had taken cognizance of the skirmishes between two communities in Zadibal area of the city.

Civil and police administration were monitoring the situation.

"There are no reports of anybody getting injured. However, sporadic incidents of stone pelting were reported yesterday," he said.

Hawal, Gojwara and adjoining areas have become flash points for sectarian violence over the past couple of years during Muharram processions.


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Srinagar-Leh highway closed after season's first snowfall

SRINAGAR: The 434-km Srinagar-Leh National highway was closed for traffic as high altitude areas of Kashmir Valley, including the famous ski resort of Gulmarg, experienced the first heavy snowfall of the season, officials said today.

Heavy snowfall along the Line of Control ( LoC) since last evening also prompted authorities to suspend traffic on the roads connecting the border towns of Gurez, Machil, Karnah, Tangdhar and Keran, the officials said.

They said the Srinagar-Leh national highway-- the only road linking frontier region of Ladakh with Kashmir Valley-- was closed for traffic yesterday following heavy snowfall.

So far two feet of snow had accumulated on the highway between Sonamarg and Zojilla pass which usually attracts heaviest snowfall during the winter resulting in closure of the road for traffic to about six months in a year, the officials said.

Drass and Kargil towns also experienced snowfall last night. While Drass recorded two inches of snow till this afternoon, Kargil which was the coldest place in the state with a low of minus 5.8 degrees celsius witnessed mild snowfall, they said.

Gulmarg, 50 kms from here, also recorded 1.5 feet of snow since last evening, bringing cheers on the faces of tourists, who had thronged the resort to experience the snowfall.

It was still snowing in the hill resort and other high altitude areas, the officials said, adding, Gulmarg was the coldest place in the Valley with a minimum of minus 4.5 degrees celsius.


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Afghan girl's throat slit over refusal to wed, two men arrested

KUNDUZ, AFHANISTAN: Two men have been arrested for slitting the throat of a 15-year-old Afghan girl after her family refused a marriage proposal, police said on Thursday.

The girl was carrying water from a river to her village home in northern Kunduz province on Wednesday when she was murdered, police spokesman Sayed Sarwar Hussaini told AFP.

"The two men attacked her and slit her throat with a knife," he said. "They were arrested and are in police custody."

Hussaini said one of the suspects had proposed marriage to the girl but her family had rejected the offer.

Extreme violence against women and girls remains a major problem in the conservative Muslim nation more than a decade after US-led troops brought down the notoriously brutal Taliban Islamist regime.

According to figures by British charity organisation Oxfam, 87 percent of Afghan women report having experienced physical, sexual or psychological violence or forced marriage.

Last month a 20-year-old woman was beheaded by her husband's family in the western province of Herat after she refused to become a prostitute, police said. Four people were arrested over the brutal killing.

And in September, five people were arrested over the public flogging of a 16-year-old girl for allegedly having an affair.

The girl was whipped 100 times in front of village elders and family members in central Ghazni province. Her alleged boyfriend was fined.

Unmarried girls are often confined to the home and forbidden from maintaining any contact with men outside the immediate family.


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Pakistan major source of fake currency in India: Govt

NEW DELHI: Maximum consignments of high quality fake Indian currency notes are being supplied in the country from Pakistan, the Parliament was informed on Thursday.

"As per available inputs from central intelligence and investigation agencies, consignments of high quality fake Indian currency notes (FICN) have been directly or indirectly sourced from Pakistan," minister of state for finance Namo Narain Meena said in a written reply to Rajya Sabha.

In response to another question about whether India has sought the help of the United States of America to tackle the menace of fake currency notes, he replied in the affirmative.

"Under the Indo-US homeland security dialogue, counterfeit currency is one of the aspects for cooperation, covering exchange of knowledge, skill and intelligence," he said.


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India ranks 78th in guaranteeing access to civil justice

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 28 November 2012 | 17.34

WASHINGTON: India ranks 78th among 97 countries in guaranteeing access to all civil justice, a latest report released on Wednesday said, while its neighbouring country Sri Lanka leads the South Asian nations in most dimensions of the rule of law.

The 'Rule of Law Index 2012' report by World Justice Project's provides country-by-country scores and rankings for eight areas of the rule of law.

India, the report said, has a robust system of checks and balances (ranked thirty-seventh worldwide and second among lower middle income countries), an independent judiciary, strong protections for freedom of speech, and a relatively open government (ranking fiftieth globally and fourth among lower-middle income countries).

"Administrative agencies do not perform well (ranking 79th) and the civil court system ranks poorly (ranking 78) mainly because of deficiencies in the areas of court congestion, enforcement, and delays in processing cases," the report said.

"Corruption is a significant problem (ranking 83rd), and police discrimination and abuses are not unusual. Order and security -- including crime, civil conflict, and political violence-- is a serious concern (ranked second lowest in the world)," the report observed.

According to the report, Sri Lanka outperforms its regional peers in all but two dimensions of the rule of law.

"The country also outpaces most lower-middle income countries in several areas, ranking second in criminal justice, and third in the dimensions of open government, effective regulatory enforcement, and absence of corruption," it said.

"On the other hand, violence and human rights violations related to the legacy of a protracted civil conflict are serious problems," the report said.

Pakistan shows weaknesses in most dimensions when compared to its regional and income group peers, the report said.

"Low levels of government accountability are compounded by the prevalence of corruption, a weak justice system, and a poor security situation, particularly related to terrorism and crime," it said, adding that Pakistan scores more strongly on judicial independence and fairness in administrative proceedings.


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Four killed, 40 injured as van overturns in West Bengal

MALDA (WEST BENGAL): Four persons were killed and 40 others injured, 12 of them critically, when their van overturned at Mongalbari on NH 34 in Malda district on Wednesday.

The mishap took place when some residents of Pakuahat's Mallipara village were returning after a cremation, police said.

While one person died on the spot, three others succumbed to injuries in the hospital, they said.

The injured have been admitted to Malda Medical College Hospital, they said, adding the condition of 12 of the injured was critical.


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Marc Grossman resigns as special AfPak representative

WASHINGTON: The US special envoy to AfPak, Marc Grossman, is stepping down after leading the American diplomatic campaign in the volatile region for two years as President Barack Obama's pointsman to the crucial zone.

Grossman would be replaced by his deputy special US representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, David D Pearce in an acting capacity.

His resignation would come into effect from December 14. Secretary of state Hillary Clinton had roped in Grossman, a former State Department diplomat, after the sudden death of Richard Holbrooke, in 2010.

"The secretary (of state) thanks ambassador Grossman for his efforts to help create the diplomatic surge that secretary Clinton laid out in her 2011 speech at the Asia Society," the spokesperson for the special US representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Eileen O'Conner, said.

"What you've seen over the last year is his effort to lead a diplomatic campaign which put in place a network of regional and international support for Afghanistan post 2014 and into the next decade," she said.

Grossman plans to return to private life.


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Santosh Hegde raises doubts about success of Kejriwal's party

NEW DELHI: Former Karnataka Lokayukta and Team Anna member Justice N Santosh Hegde has raised doubts about the success of the party launched by Arvind Kejriwal.

"My only apprehension is how far will a political party survive because of the very many demands of the political system, these days. It requires a huge amount of money to elect nearly 546 Members of Parliament from Kashmir to Kanyakumari. It is not going to be an easy job," he said.

"It is a good thing in principle, but in reality, can it succeed?" Hegde, a member of Team Anna of which Kejriwal was also a part two months ago, asked.

He was asked how he expects Arvind Kejriwal's newly-launched 'Aam Aadmi Party' to perform.

The former Supreme Court judge also said that there is nothing wrong in bringing the Prime Minister under the jurisdiction of Lokpal as like others he is also a public servant.

"What is wrong in the Lokpal having jurisdiction over the Prime Minister? Is the Prime Minister not a public servant? Aren't there cases of corruption against PMs in other countries? In Japan, you find every other year a Prime Minister is prosecuted. (Former US President Richard) Nixon was prosecuted... What is so great about the PM?," he asked

Noting that the position of the Lokpal was akin to "giving a dog a bad name and kicking it", he told that there have been allegations of corruption against Indian PMs in the past and added that only the President and governors are excluded from being prosecuted and not the PM.

"We have had allegations of corruption against two former PMs - Bofors and the JMM bribery case. In a democracy, how can a person merely because he is holding an office be excluded from prosecution? The Constitution excludes the prosecution of the President and the Governors in some cases...One can't apply the same principle on a man who passes executive orders on a daily basis," he said.


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Millions of dollars spirited out of Afghanistan by Kabul Bank

AP | Nov 28, 2012, 02.40PM IST
KABUL: Hundreds of millions of dollars from Kabul Bank were spirited out of Afghanistan, some smuggled in airline food trays, to bank accounts in more than two dozen countries, according to an independent review released on Wednesday about massive fraud that led to the collapse of the nation's largest financial institution.

The report, which was financed by international donors, offers new details about how the men at Kabul Bank and their friends and relatives got rich by USD 861 million in fraudulent loans in what the International Monetary Fund has called a Ponzi scheme that used customer deposits and operated under nascent banking oversight in the war-torn country.

The report describes Kabul Bank as a sophisticated operation with one set of books for the eyes of regulators and another in the back room that logged how those running the bank and others were fattening their wallets.

Loans were made, but rarely repaid. Borrowers took out loans to pay back loans. Company documents and financial statements were fabricated. The bank's credit department used more than 100 corporate stamps for fake companies to make documents look authentic. The bank operated some of its more than 100 branches without a permit from the government.

The 87-page report, which was conducted to satisfy one of several benchmarks the IMF asked the Afghan government to meet in cleaning up the scandal, points to poor oversight by Afghan banking regulators, political interference in the criminal investigation and activities by a special judicial tribunal hearing the case that it said were "well outside the legal norms of criminal procedure."

The bank's failure and subsequent bailout represents more than 5 per cent of Afghanistan's gross domestic product, making it "one of the largest banking failures in the world," according to the report by the Independent Joint Anti- Corruption Monitoring and Evaluation Committee.

The report said "hundreds of millions" were sent out of the impoverished nation where Afghan, US and NATO forces are fighting an 11-year-old war with Taliban and other militants.

"Every citizen in Afghanistan will bear the cost of the hundreds of millions of dollars required to secure deposits and the tens of millions of dollars required to deal with the aftermath," the report said.

"This is real money from the annual budget of the government that could be much better spent on other priorities, such as education, health care, infrastructure or security."

The Kabul Bank scandal is a saga about money-grabbing, weak banking oversight, lax prosecution, nepotism, political contributions and fraud.


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Farooq meets Karunanidhi, thanks him for backing UPA on FDI

CHENNAI: A day after government secured the backing of key ally DMK on FDI, Union minister Farooq Abdullah on Wednesday met DMK chief M Karunanidhi and thanked him for his support to the UPA coalition in Parliament.

"I thank him for the support that he has given to UPA and in most of the things that are coming up in Parliament. We are very grateful to him," Abdullah told reporters after the meeting.

Asked whether the UPA government is in a strong position on the issue of FDI in multi-brand retail sector, he said, "We are on a very strong wicket and on most of the other things coming up in Parliament, we are on a strong wicket."

Abdullah, who is here to attend a function, said Karunanidhi was very close to his father and he came to pay his respects to him.

In a huge relief to UPA, DMK yesterday decided to support the UPA government in Parliament on the FDI in multi-brand retail sector when the discussion takes place.

The party has decided on this course with "bitterness" so that communal forces do not take advantage of the situation and come to power, Karunanidhi had said.


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Pak Taliban rule out peace, vow to fight 'secular rulers'

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 27 November 2012 | 17.35

ISLAMABAD: The banned Pakistani Taliban have ruled out the possibility of peace negotiations with the government and pledged to continue their fight against the country's "secular rulers".

Reacting to interior minister Rehman Malik's call to the militants to give up violence and join peace talks, Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman Ihsanullah Ihsan said the group would continue its fight.

The Taliban rejected the offer of amnesty for militants who laid down their arms and joined negotiations, Ihsan said.

Talking to reporters in northwest Pakistan, Ihsan accused Malik of being "a foreign agent not worthy of granting forgiveness to the Taliban".

Ihsan said his group would continue fighting till "the ouster of secular rulers imposed by foreign forces to rule an Islamic country".

The Taliban want the creation of "an independent state governed by Shariah law, upon which the foundations of Pakistan were laid", he claimed.

The Taliban have been blamed for hundreds of bombings and suicide attacks over the past four years that have killed or injured thousands.


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Savita's father appeals to Ireland for public inquiry into daughter's death

LONDON: The father of Savita Halappanavar has appealed to the Irish government to hold a public inquiry into his daughter's death, saying that the family was not happy with the probe so far.

"We would like to appeal to Irish Government to please consider funding public inquiry. We are not happy with the progress made so far. We all don't understand the Health Service Executive (HSE) investigation. So once again I ask the Irish Government to consider funding a public inquiry," Andappa Yalagi, Savita's father, said.

He expressed dissatisfaction with the progress so far in finding out why his daughter died in Galway University Hospital on October 28th.

31-year-old Savita died from blood poisoning at the Galway University Hospital after doctors allegedly refused to perform an abortion stating "this is a Catholic country".

Savita's husband Praveen Halappanavar's attorney Gerard O'Donnell has also said his client was prepared to go to the European Court of Human Rights if an independent public inquiry was not set up.

Meanwhile, Praveen is also considering lodging a complaint to the Ombudsman to assert the ownership of his wife's medical notes, his solicitor has said.

O'Donnell said he had taken instructions from Praveen to seek direction from the Ombudsman on whether he or Galway University Hospital owns her medical records.

Praveen has objected to the use of his wife's notes in a HSE inquiry into her death. He has said he has no faith in a HSE-run inquiry and does not want her notes used in it.

O'Donnell had asked that the hospital, where Savita died last month, hand over the original medical notes.

However, the HSE has said it owns them. The Ombudsman has said it is unlikely her office would have a role in this dispute.

Praveen had met Minister for Health James Reilly for 25 minutes in Galway last Friday.

The Health Information and Quality Authority (Hiqa) will publish the terms of reference of its inquiry into her death this week.

The investigation, for which no time span is indicated, will make use of outside expertise, a spokesman indicated.

The authority said it would investigate the safety, quality and standards of services provided by the HSE at Galway University Hospital to "critically ill patients, including critically ill pregnant women, as reflected in the care and treatment provided to Savita Halappanavar".

Galway University Hospital last night confirmed it would co-operate fully with the Hiqa inquiry.


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Families of sailors held hostage by Somali pirates protest

NEW DELHI: Family members of the 17 sailors, who have been held hostage by Somali pirates for the past nine months, on Tuesday protested outside the shipping ministry.

The families demanded immediate release of the sailors, who have been held captive by Somali pirates off the Gulf of Aden, between Yemen and Somalia, on UAE-owned MT Royal Grace.

"Yes, we met the shipping minister, and he assured us that he would do something. Pirates have threatened to kill our children if nothing is done till November 3O. So, we have decided that till they (government) decide to get them released, we will not go from here," mother of Mehtab, one of the hostages, said .

"My son who has been held hostage, has two children. Nothing has happened in the past nine months, let us see what they do now," she said.

Similar is the plight of Saurav's kin, another sailor who is in captivity.

"They (government) have said that they would meet us. We cannot trust them unless they give us something, they have been repeatedly saying that they are doing their best. Pirates have given them (sailors) a deadline till November 30. We want government to assure us that nothing would happen to our people," he said.

"We want them to get our family members released. If something happens to them, who would be held responsible," Sushil, whose younger brother Saurav is held hostage by the Somali pirates, said.


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Four more Tibetans set themselves on fire in China

BEIJING: Four more Tibetans have set themselves alight in protest at China's rule, overseas media said on Tuesday, taking the total to more than 20 this month.

The spate of immolations in recent weeks began in the run-up to the Chinese Communist Party's set-piece congress, where Xi Jinping was named as the organisation's general secretary in a 10-yearly power handover.

According to the US-based Radio Free Asia, the latest incidents on Sunday and Monday -- two in Gansu province, one in Qinghai and one in Sichuan -- brought the number to 21 this month and 85 since 2009.

Three of the latest victims, all in their teens or early 20s, died and one person was taken away by police with his condition currently unknown, it said.

In a statement London-based campaign group Free Tibet gave details of three incidents. "We are now receiving reports of self-immolation protests on an almost daily basis," said Free Tibet director Stephanie Brigden.

"Allied to the many other forms of protests which Tibetans are undertaking -- marching, leafleting, displaying banned images and exerting Tibetan culture -- it forms an unimpeachable argument for an end to Chinese occupation."

The immolations came as authorities in a Tibetan area of Qinghai province in northwestern China apparently fuelled anger by issuing school booklets ridiculing the acts, Free Tibet added.

As many as 1,000 students from a school in Chabcha county took part Monday in a protest believed to have been triggered by the booklets, with up to 20 hospitalised after police and security forces arrived, it said.

"Although we cannot confirm whether security forces beat students or not, it would appear that the change in Chinese leadership has not led to a change in the brutality which passes for government in Tibet," Brigden said.

One Tibetan in Chabcha county confirmed to AFP by phone that there was a protest on Monday but she was unaware of any clashes with police. Phones at government and police offices in Chabcha were not answered on Tuesday.

Most of the 85 who have set themselves alight since 2009 have died, rights groups said.

Beijing has accused exiled Tibetan Buddhist leader the Dalai Lama of inciting the self-immolations.

He has preferred to remain neutral on the acts in public statements, but has urged the Chinese government to investigate, saying: "China does not look into it seriously and tries to end (the incidents) only by criticising me."

Many Tibetans in China accuse the government of religious repression and eroding their culture, as the country's majority Han ethnic group increasingly moves into historically Tibetan areas.

China rejects the allegation, saying Tibetans enjoy religious freedom. Beijing points to huge ongoing investment it says has brought modernisation and better living standards to Tibet.


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Caste violence rocks Tamil Nadu again; dalit colony attacked, 8 injured

CUDDALORE: An angry mob attacked a dalit colony and torched their houses and belongings at Pacharapakkam village near Vadalur in Cuddalore district in north Tamil Nadu on Tuesday morning. The provocation apparently was that a group of dalit men teased a non-dalit girl. Eight dalits were injured in the attack while eight houses and two two-wheelers were set on fire. The mob also damaged a van belong to a dalit.

Police said a group of dalit men teased a girl belonging to a dominant caste in the village. The girl complained to her parents and relatives. Angered by the incident, the non-dalits went on the rampage, attacking the dalits living in a nearby colony. They set dalit houses and 2-wheelers on fire and damaged the windscreens of a van. A police team from Vadalur and nearby stations rushed to the spot and brought the situation under control. More than 100 policemen were posted at the village to prevent any untoward incident.

The incident comes just days after a few villages in Dharmapuri witnessed caste violence after a dalit youth married a girl from the Vanniyar caste, higher up in the caste echelon. Violence erupted on November 7 after the girl's father committed suicide, upset with the inter-caste marriage.


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UK picks Canadian Mark Carney to lead Bank of England

LONDON: The British government has chosen Mark Carney, a Canadian, to become governor of the Bank of England, the first time a foreigner has been tapped for the position since the central bank was founded in 1694.

Treasury chief George Osborne announced the surprise choice to the House of Commons on Monday, saying Carney — who is currently the head of Canada's central bank — would apply for British citizenship.

"Mark Carney is the outstanding candidate to be governor of the Bank of England and help steer Britain through these difficult economic times," Osborne said. "He is quite simply the best, most experienced and most qualified person in the world to do the job."

Besides his job as a central banker, Carney is also head of the G-20's Financial Stability Board, a global supervisor, and spent 13 years at Goldman Sachs. He had been speculated as a possible choice but was not considered a front-runner.

"I'm honored to accept this important and demanding role," said Carney, who will start July 1, at a news conference in Ottawa.

"It's a decisive period for reform of the global financial system including its leading financial center, the City of London. And it's a crucial point in the Bank of England's history as it accepts vital new responsibilities."

Carney will succeed the current governor, Mervyn King, when his term ends next year. As well as chairing the committee which sets the U.K.'s main interest rate, the governor will be given the new responsibility of supervising the country's banking industry. Carney told Osborne that he will only serve five years of the usual eight-year term.

King said Carney was "an outstanding choice" and represents "a new generation of leadership."

Ed Balls, economic spokesman for the opposition Labour Party in the House of Commons, said Carney "has a track record of handling tough and complex challenges" and is "a good choice".

Osborne had boasted that this was the first time that the Treasury had advertised the governor's job, but Carney said he hadn't applied.

"I didn't apply as part of the formal process to the position," he said. "These discussions really only intensified in the last two weeks."

Carney, 47, was appointed to a seven-year term as governor of the Bank of Canada in February 2008. He will step down on June 1.

He gained a bachelor's degree in economics from Harvard University in 1988, and master's and doctoral degrees in economics from Oxford University.

Carney was employed by Goldman Sachs for 13 years, working in London, Tokyo, New York and Toronto, before being appointed deputy governor of the Bank of Canada in 2003.

The Canadian Carney is not the first ex-Goldman Sachs employee to lead a central bank, President of the European Central Bank Mario Draghi is also a former employee of the U.S. investment bank.

"I'm not without ties to the United Kingdom. My wife is a British and Canadian national. My children are both. I lived there for a decade. I know a lot of people in the City, in industry, in the U.K.," Carney said.

"Obviously I think I can play a constructive role as the next governor in relaunching this institution with its new responsibilities, contributing to price stability, to financial stability and to insuring that the rebalancing of the U.K. economy, which is under way, but is seen through over the course of the next five years."

Paul Tucker, one of the two deputy governors of the Bank of England, had been the betting favorite to become governor. Osborne said he hoped Tucker would remain at the Bank, adding that he had extended the term of the other deputy, Charles Bean, for another year until mid-2014.

With Bean's time running short and a disappointed Tucker possibly ready to leave, "today's appointment could well usher in a period of significant upheaval at the Bank of England," said Philip Shaw, chief economist at Investec Securities.

Canada's commodity-rich economy has experienced a better market rebound than the other G-7 nations. The country did not suffer from a mortgage meltdown or subprime lending crisis during the Great Recession of 2008, and its banks are rated among the soundest in the world.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Monday praised Carney for his work in helping the government steer his country away from the worst impacts of the global economic woes.


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SC request Tamil Nadu and Karnataka to resolve Cauvery dispute

Written By Unknown on Senin, 26 November 2012 | 17.34

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday requested chief ministers of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka to meet and find an amicable solution to vexed Cauvery water sharing dispute.

The apex court said it is better that the two CMs meet along with their experts, hold meaningful dialogue and attempt a solution in the larger interest of farmers of both states.

The SC bench also said orders by apex court or Cauvery River Authority may not be able to find a lasting solution to the problem. So, it is better that both states sit together and solve the issue, observed the SC bench.


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SC requests Tamil Nadu and Karnataka to resolve Cauvery dispute

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday requested chief ministers of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka to meet and find an amicable solution to vexed Cauvery water sharing dispute.

The apex court said it is better that the two CMs meet along with their experts, hold meaningful dialogue and attempt a solution in the larger interest of farmers of both states.

The SC bench also said orders by apex court or Cauvery River Authority may not be able to find a lasting solution to the problem. So, it is better that both states sit together and solve the issue, observed the SC bench.


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Pakistan violates ceasefire, targets 10 Indian posts in J&K

JAMMU: Violating the ceasefire yet again, Pakistan troops targeted 10 Indian forward posts by firing over 6000 rounds from heavy weaponry along the Indo-Pak border in Poonch district.

The firing on Sunday night, which was the heaviest this year, came ahead of the ninth anniversary of the Indo-Pak ceasefire agreement on Monday. The Indo-Pak border truce came into force on November 26, 2003.

"Pakistan troops opened heavy fire with medium machine guns and heavy machine guns on 10 Indian forward posts along LoC in Krishnagati sub-sector of Poonch district last night," PRO, defence, S N Acharya said on Monday.

They fired over 6000 rounds of MMGs and HMGs from 1940 hours to 2345 hours on Sunday night, he said, adding "it was heaviest firing by Pakistani troops on Indian posts this year".

"They have also violated the ceasefire", he said. Army troops guarding the border line retaliated resulting in exchanges.

There was no loss of life or damage to property in the firing, he said.

However, due to the Pakistani firing, forest fire along LoC was triggered which the army controlled with the support of locals on Monday morning, he said.

On November 20, Pakistani troops had violated the ceasefire by firing in Gulpur forward area along LoC in Poonch sector.

On October 30, Pakistan Rangers had fired with small arms on Indian post of Pindi along international border in Arnia sub-sector of Jammu district.

On 19 October, Pakistan troops had fired on several Indian posts along Indo-Pak border in Krishnagati sub-sector. Pakistani troops had also fired on forward border belts of Goutrian and Mankote in Poonch sector on October 17.

On October 1, Pakistani troops had fired at Indian posts and Chachwal forward village along international border (IB) in Samba sector of Jammu and Kashmir in which a couple was injured.


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Sonia should retract her statement against BJP on 2G issue: Ravi Shankar Prasad

NEW DELHI: In wake of former CAG official R P Singh claiming his comments on PAC chairman Murli Manohar Joshi on the 2G issue were misquoted, BJP on Monday asked Congress president Sonia Gandhi to retract her statement in which she had attacked the main Opposition party.

"In light of what R P Singh has stated, the BJP would like to know from Sonia Gandhiji would she retract her comment almost condemning the BJP in the most abusive terms," BJP chief spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad told reporters outside Parliament here.

He said the core issue was rampant corruption in allocation of 2G licences, which were subsequently cancelled by the Supreme Court.

Prasad said it was "deeply regrettable and condemnable" for the Congress president to question the bona fide of BJP which is the principal Opposition party based on a "motivated comments" of a retired CAG official.

"Yes, certainly I think so," Gandhi had earlier told reporters here when asked whether BJP had been "exposed" by Singh's comments.

Singh had recently said that the Public Accounts Committee had suggested one of the methodologies to CAG to calculate the losses due to 2G spectrum allocation, which were pegged at Rs 1.76 lakh crore in its final report.


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India deploying more troops in Ladakh due to threat: Farooq Abdullah

NEW DELHI: India is befriending China on one hand and remaining "cautious" on the other by deploying more troops in Ladakh region due to "threat" perception, having learnt lessons from the past, Union minister Farooq Abdullah said on Monday.

Addressing young students, scholars and scientists at the Northern Regional Science Congress here, Abdullah broached the topic when he was referring to the abundant wind energy resources available in Ladakh region.

"We people have Army there (in Ladakh). (We have) one full division there and now we are putting another division there because we have threat from China and I don't say that outside but I am telling you because you are Indians.

"I want to tell you that in one place we are befriending China but we have also learnt a lesson from China and that is why we remain cautious as well because we had one division we will be keeping another one there," he said.

The minister also noted that China was indulging in huge infrastructure building on the Arunachal Pradesh border while "we are still thinking."

On energy, he said India will be a power surplus country by 2030 and the government is looking forward to produce energy through clean coal and nuclear energy as well.

Abdullah said the government has set the target of producing 22,000 MW of energy through renewable sources by 2022.

He said the government is offering subsidies for using solar power water heaters at homes and would also provide loans to buy appliances run on solar power and urged people to adopt solar and other alternative energies.

The minister blamed the US for global warming and said that India is one of the lowest producers of global gases even lower than China.

He also motivated young students and scholars to take up sciences and research as it is the only way to progress forward.

The Northern Regional Science Congress was organised by Indian Science Congress Association (ISCA) and Department of Science of Technology , government of India.


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Fire breaks out at state department headquarters in Washington, 3 seriously hurt

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 25 November 2012 | 17.34

WASHINGTON: Authorities say three maintenance workers were seriously injured after a fire broke out at the state department's headquarters in Washington.

District of Columbia Fire and EMS spokesman Lon Walls said the fire broke out at around 11am on Saturday in the ductwork on the 7th floor. Workers were able to put out the fire before firefighters arrived, but three people suffered burns.

Walls said one person suffered life-threatening injuries and two others had serious but non-life-threatening injuries. All three were taken to Washington Hospital Center.

State department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the fire broke out during routine maintenance to a mechanical area of the building. She said the building was briefly evacuated and then reopened.


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Fire breaks out at state department headquarters in Washington, 3 seriously hurt

WASHINGTON: Authorities say three maintenance workers were seriously injured after a fire broke out at the state department's headquarters in Washington.

District of Columbia Fire and EMS spokesman Lon Walls said the fire broke out at around 11am on Saturday in the ductwork on the 7th floor. Workers were able to put out the fire before firefighters arrived, but three people suffered burns.

Walls said one person suffered life-threatening injuries and two others had serious but non-life-threatening injuries. All three were taken to Washington Hospital Center.

State department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the fire broke out during routine maintenance to a mechanical area of the building. She said the building was briefly evacuated and then reopened.


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Iraqi Kurds send more troops into areas disputed with Iraqi army

ARBIL, IRAQ: Iraq's Kurdish region has sent reinforcements to a disputed area where its troops are involved in a standoff with the Iraqi army, a senior Kurdish military official said, despite calls on both sides for dialogue to calm the situation.

The second military buildup this year illustrates how far relations between Baghdad's central government, led by Shi'ite Muslim Arabs, and ethnic Kurds have deteriorated, testing Iraq's federal cohesion nearly a year after US troops left.

Baghdad and Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region earlier this week began sending troops to an area over which they both claim jurisdiction, raising tensions in a long-running feud over land and oil rights.

More Kurdish troops and tanks were mobilised on Saturday and headed towards the disputed areas, the deputy minister for Kurdish military affairs said late on Saturday, adding that they would hold their positions unless Iraqi forces made a move.

"If they overstep the line, we will strike them," Anwar Haji Osman said.

The Iraqi army and Kurdish troops have previously come close to confrontation only to pull back at the last moment, flexing their muscles but lacking any real appetite for a fight.

Iraq's speaker of parliament, who visited Kurdish President Massoud Barzani on Friday, said "significant progress" had been made towards defusing the standoff and that a meeting between military leaders from both sides would be held on Monday in the Defence Ministry in Baghdad.

Washington intervened to end a similar standoff in August and is again in contact with Iraqi and Kurdish officials to ease tension mounting over the formation of a new command centre for Iraqi forces to operate in the disputed areas.

Kurds say the Dijla Operations Command is a threat to them and an attempt by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki to seize control over the oil rich territories along the internal border that demarcates the Kurdish region from the rest of Iraq.

Maliki says the Dijla Operations Command is necessary to keep order in one of the most volatile parts of the country.

Barzani on Saturday turned down an invitation from Shi'ite cleric and lawmaker Moqtada al-Sadr to meet with Maliki to discuss the situation.

In a statement posted on the Kurdistan regional government's website, Barzani's spokesman said he had refused because the matter was not personal, but rather a result of Maliki's "constant non-commitment to the constitution".

The latest flare-up began one week ago when Iraqi troops went after a fuel smuggler who had taken refuge in the office of a Kurdish political party in Tuz Khurmato, 170 km (106 miles) north of the capital, sparking a clash with Kurdish Peshmerga fighters in which one passerby was killed.

Maliki has sparred more aggressively with Barzani since the withdrawal last year of US troops who had served as a buffer between the federal Baghdad government and Kurdistan.


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Iraqi Kurds send more troops into areas disputed with Iraqi army

ARBIL, IRAQ: Iraq's Kurdish region has sent reinforcements to a disputed area where its troops are involved in a standoff with the Iraqi army, a senior Kurdish military official said, despite calls on both sides for dialogue to calm the situation.

The second military buildup this year illustrates how far relations between Baghdad's central government, led by Shi'ite Muslim Arabs, and ethnic Kurds have deteriorated, testing Iraq's federal cohesion nearly a year after US troops left.

Baghdad and Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region earlier this week began sending troops to an area over which they both claim jurisdiction, raising tensions in a long-running feud over land and oil rights.

More Kurdish troops and tanks were mobilised on Saturday and headed towards the disputed areas, the deputy minister for Kurdish military affairs said late on Saturday, adding that they would hold their positions unless Iraqi forces made a move.

"If they overstep the line, we will strike them," Anwar Haji Osman said.

The Iraqi army and Kurdish troops have previously come close to confrontation only to pull back at the last moment, flexing their muscles but lacking any real appetite for a fight.

Iraq's speaker of parliament, who visited Kurdish President Massoud Barzani on Friday, said "significant progress" had been made towards defusing the standoff and that a meeting between military leaders from both sides would be held on Monday in the Defence Ministry in Baghdad.

Washington intervened to end a similar standoff in August and is again in contact with Iraqi and Kurdish officials to ease tension mounting over the formation of a new command centre for Iraqi forces to operate in the disputed areas.

Kurds say the Dijla Operations Command is a threat to them and an attempt by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki to seize control over the oil rich territories along the internal border that demarcates the Kurdish region from the rest of Iraq.

Maliki says the Dijla Operations Command is necessary to keep order in one of the most volatile parts of the country.

Barzani on Saturday turned down an invitation from Shi'ite cleric and lawmaker Moqtada al-Sadr to meet with Maliki to discuss the situation.

In a statement posted on the Kurdistan regional government's website, Barzani's spokesman said he had refused because the matter was not personal, but rather a result of Maliki's "constant non-commitment to the constitution".

The latest flare-up began one week ago when Iraqi troops went after a fuel smuggler who had taken refuge in the office of a Kurdish political party in Tuz Khurmato, 170 km (106 miles) north of the capital, sparking a clash with Kurdish Peshmerga fighters in which one passerby was killed.

Maliki has sparred more aggressively with Barzani since the withdrawal last year of US troops who had served as a buffer between the federal Baghdad government and Kurdistan.


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Fire in garment factory kills over 100 in Bangladesh

DHAKA: Over 100 people were killed overnight after a fire engulfed a multi-story garment factory on the outskirts of Bangladesh's capital, Dhaka, officials said today.

The fire broke out in the ground-floor warehouse of the multi-storey Tazreen Fashion factory, 30 km north of Dhaka, last evening, trapping hundreds of workers on the upper floors.

"The toll exceeded 100, I fear toll could rise as bodies are still being retrieved," an army official told reporters.

Witnesses said the fire at the six-story factory in started on the ground floor and quickly spread to others parts causing the worst fire tragedy in recent years.

Fire service officials earlier said several workers of the factory were trapped inside and took shelter on the rooftop of the structure awaiting rescuers while efforts were underway to extinguish the blaze.

Television footages showed army troops and fire service rescuers bringing out bodies one after another from the debris as hundreds of people including relatives of the victims waiting outside.

Witnesses said the fire spread quickly, prompting army troops from nearby Savar Cantonment to join the rescue campaign.


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South Sudan plans to double capacity of first refinery to 20,000 barrels per day

Reuters | Nov 25, 2012, 01.51PM IST

JUBA: South Sudan's first mini-refinery will start with an initial capacity of 10,000 barrels a day and double this in a few years, the oil ministry said.

The new African republic signed in October a deal with U.S. firm Ventech Engineers International to build a first refinery in Upper Nile state, home to the country's biggest oilfields.

South Sudan, one of the world's least developed countries, wants to end dependency on refineries and export pipelines in neighbour Sudan from which it seceded in July 2011.

"It (the refinery) will have an initial capacity of 10,000 barrels per day throughput, and the ministry also plans to expand it to 20,000 barrels per day throughput capacity in a few years," Oil Minister Stephen Dhieu Dau said in a statement received on Saturday.

The refinery would be finished within 10 months, he said.

In September, landlocked South Sudan agreed with Sudan to resume oil production after shutting down its entire output of 350,000 bpd in January in a conflict over oil fees.

Oil exports through Sudan's pipelines were meant to resume by the end of the year but new tensions broke out last week between the neighbours, threatening the schedule.


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Tibetan man sets self on fire in protest in northwest China

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 24 November 2012 | 17.34

BEIJING: A Tibetan herdsman has died after setting himself on fire in northwest China's Qinghai province, state media reported on Saturday, in the latest in a series of protests against Chinese rule.

The official Xinhua News Agency says Dazheng, 27, self-immolated in Zekog county on Friday night but provides no further details about why the man set himself ablaze.

The death came one day after Libong Tsering, 19, self-immolated in Tongren county in the same province on Thursday, according to an earlier Xinhua report. Both Tongren and Zekog are located within the Huangnan prefecture. A government worker from Huangnan prefecture, which oversees the counties, said on Saturday he had no information on the deaths and refused to identify himself, which is common among officials in Tibetan regions when the topic involves self-immolations.

The self-proclaimed Tibetan government-in-exile based in India has confirmed Libong Tsering's death and reported another self-immolation in Gansu province on Thursday night by Tadin Kyab, a 23-year-old former monk.

On Tuesday, Xinhua reported two Tibetan herdsmen killed themselves by setting themselves on fire in two separate incidents.

The latest deaths bring to about 80 the number of Tibetans who have self-immolated since 2009 in protest against what overseas supporters say is China's strict control over Tibet's Buddhist culture and a suffocating security presence in Tibetan regions.

Most of the protesters have doused themselves with gasoline and set themselves alight after shouting slogans calling for Tibetan independence and blessings for the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled Buddhist leader. China blames him for encouraging the wave of self-immolations that Beijing has apparently been powerless to stop despite stepped-up security and an extensive spying network.

The self-proclaimed Tibetan government-in-exile on Friday repeated a call for China to reassess its policies toward Tibetans.

"The Central Tibetan Administration urges the Chinese government to address the underlying grievances of the Tibetan people, instead of imposing counter-productive measures targeting the families and relatives of the self-immolators," it said in a statement, using the formal name of the body headquartered in Dharamsala.


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3 die due to gas leakage at sugar mill in Bijnor

BIJNOR: Three persons were killed and two others fell ill due to methane gas leakage at Seohara Sugar Mill in the district, police said today.

Turbine operator Jagdish Singh, Lokesh and security guard Pradeep fell unconscious and later died when they tried to stop the leakage from a turbine of the distillery plant of Upper Ganges Sugar Mill yesterday, they said.

Two guards Kashinath and Vijay also became unconscious and were rushed to a hospital from where they were referred to Moradabad.

Executive president of the mill Sukhveer Singh announced that the widows of the deceased employees, Jagdish and Lokesh, would continue to receive salaries of their husbands.

An interim relief of Rs 1.25 lakh and due compensation would also be paid to them, he added.


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BJP not allowing Parliament to work, ready for debate on FDI: Jaiswal

SAMBHAL: Union coal minister Sriprakash Jaiswal has alleged that BJP and other opposition parties were not allowing Parliament to proceed on the issue of FDI even though the government was ready for a debate.

Talking to the reporters here Jaiswal, who came to attend the concluding ceremony of Kalki mahotsava last night, said, the government was ready for a debate under section 184 but the BJP and other opposition parties were stalling Parliament.

He alleged that BJP was unnecessarily protesting in the name of FDI and coal block allotment, even when the states have been given a free hand whether they implement FDI or not.

Jaiswal said, he wanted to question those opposing FDI whether any debate was conducted on such issue under the rule during NDA regime.

"If it's not bullying then what it is," he said. The minister alleged that BJP's statement on 2G issue was laughable and smells of conspiracy.

He said that whether its 2G or coal block allotment, CAG report was not completely correct and he alleged, a conspiracy to defame the government.


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Several hurt in clash during Muharram procession in Meerut district

MEERUT: At least two dozen people were injured when a clash broke out between two groups of Muslims during a Muharram procession in the district, police said.

The clash broke out between two groups of minority community at Abdulahpur village yesterday, after one side asked the other group to stop beating of drums during the Muharram procession as a 'majlis' (religious gathering) was going on, SSP K Satyanarayan said.

The argument soon turned violent as the two sides exchanged fire and pelted stones at each other, prompting authorities to deploy police force in the district.

Police is interrogating the persons arrested in connection with the violence, SP (rural) R P Pandey said.

A hunt is on to nab others, police said, adding, the situation is under control now.


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Ram Jethmalani criticizes BJP position on CBI director

NEW DELHI: In a fresh salvo, BJP MP Ram Jetrhmalani on Saturday criticized party position on appointment of new CBI director Ranjit Sinha.

In a letter to BJP president Nitin Gadkari, Jethmalani said: "BJP is wrong in questioning the appointment of CBI director."

Earlier, leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha Sushma Swaraj and leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley had on Friday written letters to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh saying that appointment of the new CBI director should not have been done when the Rajya Sabha Select Committee had recommended that such appointments should be done through a collegium.

However, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh rejected BJP's demand to hold the appointment of Sinha as CBI chief.


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Jethmalani flays BJP's attack on govt over CBI director

NEW DELHI: BJP MP Ram Jethmalani today criticised his party's attack on the government over the appointment of the CBI director alleging that the move was "instigated" by the "most undesirable rival".

Jethmalani also had a word of praise for the government action in the appointment of Ranjit Sinha as CBI director and contended that the decision "for a change, has averted national calamity".

"...I was astonished to read that the BJP has attacked the Prime Minister and the Congress party for what the party calls the fast tracked appointment of Ranjit Sinha as the director of the CBI," the veteran parliamentarian said in a letter addressed to BJP president Nitin Gadkari, copies of which were marked to the Prime Minister and the media.

"I regret that this criticism is a result of complete ignorance of relevant facts and has been instigated by a most undesirable rival who had to withdraw his petition before the CAT yesterday as a result of the appointment," Jethmalani said.

Arun Jaitley and Sushma Swaraj, leaders of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha and the Lok Sabha respectively had written letters to the Prime Minister, saying that appointment of the new CBI Director should not have been done when the Rajya Sabha Select Committee had recommended that such appointments should be done through a collegium.

The Prime Minister had rejected BJP's demand to hold in abeyance appointment of Sinha as CBI director and termed as "unwarranted" insinuation the charge that the decision was to preempt the procedure recommended by the Select Committee on Lokpal.

"The rival has powerful friends everywhere who do not know what a disaster it would have been if he could manage to become Director of CBI in place of Mr. Sinha," Jethmalani said.

Jethmalani said he would send to Gadkari documents to show how the government action "for a change, has averted a national calamity."

"I have to request you to ensure that these critics from our Party refrain from further comments till they know all the facts. I claim to know the facts from my own knowledge," he said.

Delhi Police Commissioner Neeraj Kumar had approached the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) against the government's decision to not consider his name for the post of CBI Director but withdrew his application after the appointment of Sinha.

Kumar had moved the tribunal aggrieved over non-inclusion of his name among the three officers shortlisted by the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) for being considered for the post of the next CBI director.


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Greece loses 400,000 civil service jobs to crisis

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 23 November 2012 | 17.34

MOSCOW: The number of Greek civil servants has fallen by 400,000 in three years of crisis, administrative reform minister Antonis Maniatakis said.

There were nearly one million civil servants in 2009 but now there are just 640,000, he told a parliamentary hearing.

Considering that more than 40,000 will be pensioned off before the end of the year, no more than 600,000 will be left, he added.

More civil servants should be moved into sectors such as the police, education, local administrations and healthcare, he said.

Wage and personnel cuts in a number of public sectors are part of new austerity measures approved by parliament last week and were vigorously opposed by civil servants.

"We continue our battle to demand from the government that there isn't a single layoff in the public sector," said Kostas Tsikrikas of civil servants' trade union ADEDY, according to Euronews.

Civil service employees have also seen their salaries cut 40 per cent since 2010 and their holiday bonuses scrapped.


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FDI in retail: PM's dinner fails to achieve breakthrough, BJP to continue to seek vote

NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's dinner invite to senior leaders of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Thursday to attempt to end the political logjam in Parliament, appears to have not cut much ice with the main opposition, as it has resolved to continue to corner his government on the decision to allow foreign direct investment in the country's retail sector.

Manmohan Singh had hosted a dinner for L K Advani, Sushma Swaraj and Arun Jaitley, the three top BJP leaders, on Thursday night at his 7 Race Course Road residence in an effort to ensure that the winter session of Parliament is not lost to the standoff between the government and the opposition over the issue of FDI in multi-brand retail.

Television reports said there was no breakthrough.

At the dinner, the BJP was reportedly adamant that the only way it will allow Parliament to function without disruption is if the government agrees to discuss its major policy decision to allow 51 percent FDI in multi-brand retail under Rule 184, which entails a vote.

The government was equally adamant that it was an executive decision that does not need Parliament's approval. It is ready to discuss the issue, but it does not want a vote.

To that, the BJP reminded the government that it had promised last December, in both Houses, that all stakeholders, including political parties, would be consulted before a decision was taken on the FDI issue.

Interacting with media here late last evening, BJP spokesperson Syed Shahnawaz Hussain, said the opposition would firmly demand a debate on the matter of reforms in economy like foreign direct investment (FDI) in domestic retail sector, insurance and public provident fund.

"This government has no right to continue to be in power, the BJP has been maintaining that. But we can't allow any privilege to the government through our actions; we will try to corner it by the issues, which are most effective. So we thought that the best way to achieve this was to get voting done on (rule no.) 184, and would stand firm on this demand," said Hussain.

Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh avoided a no confidence vote, which could have led to an announcement of mid-term general elections before 2014.

Opposition leaders pushed for the vote in parliament, but the proposal was rejected.

Although for the moment, there is no threat of the government falling, an obstructive opposition and unreliable allies could mean there is little progress on reforms like FDI being opened up for multi-brand retail sector, insurance and pension businesses in the parliament's month-long winter session.

On this score, Hussain questioned as to why the federal government was hesitating debate on FDI.

"The country should be aware of the fact that the stubborn and arrogant attitude of the Congress party is stopping the parliament from functioning. Why is the government hesitating in obliging for a debate on FDI under (rule no.) 184 when political parties want the same? Last time as well, the government consumed an entire session by acting rigid and then later agreed upon it later on. So if the BJP wants a debate under (rule no.) 184 why is this problematic for the government to accept if they have the numbers for support? This is the question before the government," added Hussain.

The reform does not require parliamentary approval.

But left and right wing opposition parties, with an eye to upcoming state and national elections, want to use the session to hold the government to account on the policy, which they say does not have popular support.

The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPM), which is the strong arm of the Left Front, is pushing hard for a symbolic vote against the measure.

If the government loses the vote, it would be an embarrassing setback for a policy on which it has staked so much political capital, said federal lawmaker and politburo member of CPM, Sitaram Yechury.

It could also sap its political will to pursue more difficult reforms to cut high spending and reduce a ballooning budget deficit.

As for the FDI, the CPM slammed the Congress party-led federal government of going back on its word for a debate on the floor of the house.

"That assurance (from government) has been clearly violated and therefore in our opinion another round of discussion without voting is meaningless, because the government is not honouring its own assurances, apart from being a matter of breach of privilege," said Yechury.

Most of the initiatives Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has announced to date have required only an executive order, so this session of parliament poses the biggest test yet of his reform drive. If he fails to get key allies and the BJP on board, his reformist legislative agenda could stall.

Among the reform bills due to be introduced are measures to allow up to 49 percent foreign investment in local insurance companies and domestic pension funds.

Currently, the cap for insurers is at 26 percent and foreign investors are barred from buying into pensions.

In this context, Yechury also lashed out at former coalition partner of the federal coalition government, the regional Trinamool Congress (TMC) for demanding a no confidence motion when aware that it is a game of numbers.

"As far as the Trinamool Congress is concerned, I don't know they are now today acting as the 'B' team of the Congress. The confidence motion that they sought to bring would have given the Congress a reprieve, because on the confidence motion the SP (Samajwadi Party), BSP (Bahujan Samaj Party), DMK (Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam) all of them said that they are not going to go for the destabilisation of government so clearly the confidence motion was not going to win," remarked Yechury.

The TMC party that was the major partner in the ruling United Progressive Alliance, withdrew its support over the issue of reforms, leaving Manmohan Singh in charge of a minority administration at a time when he is trying to revive growth in Asia's third-largest economy.

And any setback on FDI in retail could also sap the government's political will to pursue more difficult reforms to cut high spending and reduce a ballooning budget deficit.

Uncertainty surrounding the passage of these bills has contributed to a 3.8 percent fall in the benchmark BSE stock market index since the start of October.


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Parliament disruption continues, both houses adjourned till noon

NEW DELHI: Both houses of Parliament were adjourned till 12 noon soon after they met on the second day of the winter session over differences on FDI in retail and quota for SC/ST in promotions.

The Rajya Sabha and the Lok Sabha, which witnessed disruptions on the first day of the winter session on Thursday before being adjourned for the day, saw ruckus on Friday too as the BJP along with the CPM and the Trinamool Congress continued their protest for the second consecutive day.

The Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had yesterday hosted a dinner for L K Advani, Sushma Swaraj and Arun Jaitley, the three top BJP leaders, on Thursday night at his 7 Race Course Road residence in an effort to ensure that the winter session of Parliament is not lost to the standoff between the government and the opposition over the issue of FDI in retail.

At the dinner, the BJP was reportedly adamant that the only way it will allow Parliament to function without disruption is if the government agrees to discuss its major policy decision to allow 51 percent FDI in multi-brand retail under Rule 184, which entails a vote.

The government was equally adamant that it was an executive decision that does not need Parliament's approval. It is ready to discuss the issue, but it does not want a vote.


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Steps to protect investors against stock crash soon: Sebi

PTI | Nov 23, 2012, 12.49PM IST
MUMBAI: Market regulator Sebi today said it will soon announce measures to protect investors against stock crashes on the bourses.

Last month, the National Stock Exchange (NSE) witnessed 'flash crash', when the Mumbai-based brokerage Emkay Global Financial Services sent the exchange index tumbling as much as 15.5 per cent in just a few seconds, creating a panic among traders. The crash was the result of erroneous trades worth $126 million, placed by Emkay Global.

"We are going to take some measures so that there is some pre-check in orders, in pricing and there are some other checks also introduced. We are looking at avoiding similar incidents," Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) chairman U K Sinha told reporters on the sidelines of a securities market conference here.

"We are going to announce some measures based on experts views. Lapses on part of any intermediaries will be looked at separately and actions will be taken," Sinha said.

He assured the regulator is acting on both the fronts - systematic improvement and action for lapses.


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North Korea preparing for missile launch: Japanese media

TOKYO: US satellites have picked up signs that North Korea is preparing to launch a long-range missile, a Japanese newspaper reported.

North Korea moved missile parts from its military factory in Pyongyang to a launch pad in Tongchang-ri in the country's far northwest early November, the Asahi Shimbun said.

The US government has already informed its counterparts in Japan and South Korea about the move, the daily said, adding that the three countries had increased vigilance.

The developments came after North Korea carried out a failed rocket launch in April in what the communist state said was an attempt to put a satellite into orbit from the same launch pad.

According to the daily, images of the shipment recently taken by US satellites were similar to one used in the April launch.

Pyongyang is technically ready to launch a missile late November, but an immediate launch is unlikely ahead of South Korea's presidential election next month, the Asahi said. North Korea has not announced any plans to launch a rocket.

Immediate confirmation by the Japanese government was not available.

In Seoul, a South Korean defence ministry spokesman said it could comment on any matter of intelligence, while a presidential Blue House spokeswoman said she had no information.


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Bal Thackeray's ashes immersed in Arabian Sea

MUMBAI: The ashes of late Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray were today immersed in the Arabian Sea by his son and party executive president Uddhav Thackeray.

Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) president and Bal Thackeray's nephew Raj Thackeray was also present at the Gateway of India, where the family had gathered to immerse the ashes.

The 86-year-old Sena patriarch died on November 18 at his residence Matoshree after a prolonged illness.


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Kasab's execution revives memory of mass murder on 26/11: Pak daily Dawn

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 22 November 2012 | 17.34

ISLAMABAD: The execution of Ajmal Amir Kasab has revived the memory of a senseless but well-planned act of mass murder that brought Pakistan and India to the brink of war, leading Pakistani daily Dawn said Thursday.

Four years after the Mumbai terror attack, many questions still remain unanswered, the Dawn said in an editorial.

Pakistani national Kasab, the sole surviving member of a 10-member terrorist group that attacked Mumbai on Nov 26, 2008, was hanged in an Indian jail on Wednesday.

"Who were the brains behind the slaughter of the civilians? What did they propose to achieve? And Where and how were the gunmen trained and armed," the daily asked.

Although Islamabad has acted to reveal the work of a few fanatic killers, "that doesn't serve to hide the shortcomings in the working of Pakistan's anti-terrorism apparatus".

Why did these activities go unnoticed in Pakistan, it asked.

It exposed Pakistan's inability to keep tabs on organisations that manage to amass enough resources to run clandestine cells that undertake operations of such magnitude.

"Who brainwashed them into undertaking that ignoble mission? Who provided the operational facilities, including the boat journey to the Indian port?"

The Pakistani part of the trial is still dragging, prompting allegations from New Delhi that Islamabad is not serious.

Pakistanis deserve to know what the government intends to do to ensure that such a tragedy is not repeated, the daily asked. "The issue is linked to the hydra-headed monster that terrorism has become for us."

Militants are now operating throughout Pakistan and feel free to choose their targets, strike at will and plan operations abroad, the daily rued.

The lesson to be drawn from the Mumbai events and its aftermath is that the government must make efforts to ensure that the state and citizens unite to root out terrorism.

Kasab's end came five days before the fourth anniversary of the brutal terror attacks that claimed 166 lives and left injured 300 people. Nine of his associates, who had sneaked into Mumbai for the three-day carnage, had been gunned down.


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US Navy to briefly reduce carriers in Persian Gulf

WASHINGTON: The Navy said on Wednesday it will temporarily shrink its aircraft carrier presence in the Persian Gulf area from two to one because of a mechanical problem with the USS Nimitz, a carrier based in Everett, Washington.

The Nimitz was scheduled to deploy in January to relieve the USS Dwight D Eisenhower, but that will be put off until summer in order to complete repairs to its propulsion system. The problem was discovered while the ship was doing pre-deployment maneuvers.

As a result, the Navy made the unusual decision to bring the Eisenhower home to Norfolk, Virginia, in December and resurface its flight deck so it can go back to the Gulf area in February and remain for four months. That means that in December and January the USS John C. Stennis will be the only carrier in that area, although there are other naval forces there, including Marines aboard a three-ship contingent led by the USS Peleliu.

In announcing the moves, the Navy said none are related to the conflict between Israel and the Hamas militants in Gaza — or any other security threats or contingency planning. The US fleet of Navy ships has endured much wear and tear during more than 11 years of war; the Stennis, for example, was called on to accelerate its deployment schedule last summer.

The decision to leave a two-month gap in the normal two-carrier Navy presence was approved Tuesday by defense secretary Leon Panetta, officials said. The carriers are a key feature of the US military strategy for the Mideast; they are considered important in deterring Iran, for example.

This will be the first such gap in the Gulf region since at least December 2010, the Navy said.

The Stennis, which deployed from its home port of Bremerton in late August, is due to head home in March. The current plan calls for it to be replaced then by the USS Harry S Truman.


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Israel, US to jointly fight Iran arms smuggling: Netanyahu

JERUSALEM: Israel and the United States have agreed to work together to prevent the smuggling of weapons from Iran to militant groups in the Gaza Strip, PM Benjamin Netanyahu has said.

"Israel cannot sit idly by as its enemies strengthen themselves with weapons of terror so I agreed with President (Barack) Obama that we will work together — Israel and the United States — against the smuggling of weapons to terror organisations, most of which comes from Iran," he said yesterday in a televised address.

His remarks were made as an Egyptian-brokered truce agreement went into effect, ending more than a week of bloodshed ending eight straight days of bloodshed in and around Gaza.

Netanyahu said that Israel's Operation Pillar of defence began after increasing attacks by Gaza militants.

"I said we'd extract high price from terror organisations. The terror organisations thought we'd refrain from strong action. They were wrong," he said.

Israel, he said, had hit militant commanders, had destroyed thousands of rockets and had wrecked Hamas command centres in its relentless aerial bombing campaign which began on November 14 with the targeted killing of top Hamas military chief, Ahmed Jaabari.

The Israeli army also claimed success in the operation, which killed 155 Palestinians and seen more than 1,300 rockets fired over the border, killing five Israelis, one of whom was a soldier.

"Following eight days of operations, the IDF (Israeli Defence Forces) has accomplished its pre-determined objective for Operation Pillar of Defense, and has inflicted severe damage to Hamas and its military capabilities," the army said in a statement.


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Come together and discuss all issues facing the nation, Manmohan Singh tells MPs

NEW DELHI: As the winter session of Parliament gets underway, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today sought cooperation of all his colleagues in both the Houses to come together and address issues and challenges facing the nation.

Against the backdrop of vociferous opposition to FDI in retail and a threat of a no-confidence motion, Singh also reminded the Opposition of the obligation to work together to enable parliamentary democracy to grapple with the formidable challenges before the country.

Noting that Parliament had a very heavy legislative agenda during the winter session, Singh said, "I seek cooperation from my colleagues in the House to come together and address the issues and challenges that we face as a nation".

The Prime Minister said the government was ready to discuss all the issues on the floor of both the Houses.

"We all have an obligation, in Opposition as well as in government, to work together to enable our parliamentary democracy, of which we are genuinely proud of, to grapple with the formidable challenges facing our country," Singh told reporters outside Parliament House.

He said the country was faced with many problems on the economic front arising out of the consequences of global economic slowdown.

"We need to create new jobs on a large-enough scale to provide gainful employment to our youth. We need to increase investments in infrastructure sectors and social services like health and education to accelerate the tempo of economic growth," he said.

The Prime Minister said the government was committed to these tasks but its success required cohesive collective action on the part of all segments of polity.

"I invite all political parties to join hands in this vital national endeavour," Singh said.


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Manmohan seeks cooperation of opposition in smooth running of Parliament

NEW DELHI: As the winter session of Parliament gets underway, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today sought cooperation of all his colleagues in both the Houses to come together and address issues and challenges facing the nation.

Against the backdrop of vociferous opposition to FDI in retail and a threat of a no-confidence motion, Singh also reminded the Opposition of the obligation to work together to enable parliamentary democracy to grapple with the formidable challenges before the country.

Noting that Parliament had a very heavy legislative agenda during the winter session, Singh said, "I seek cooperation from my colleagues in the House to come together and address the issues and challenges that we face as a nation".

The Prime Minister said the government was ready to discuss all the issues on the floor of both the Houses.

"We all have an obligation, in Opposition as well as in government, to work together to enable our parliamentary democracy, of which we are genuinely proud of, to grapple with the formidable challenges facing our country," Singh told reporters outside Parliament House.

He said the country was faced with many problems on the economic front arising out of the consequences of global economic slowdown.

"We need to create new jobs on a large-enough scale to provide gainful employment to our youth. We need to increase investments in infrastructure sectors and social services like health and education to accelerate the tempo of economic growth," he said.

The Prime Minister said the government was committed to these tasks but its success required cohesive collective action on the part of all segments of polity.

"I invite all political parties to join hands in this vital national endeavour," Singh said.


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Local trains on Harbour line delayed due to technical problem in Mumbai

MUMBAI: Suburban train services between Wadala and Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) section of the Harbour line were delayed this morning due to a technical problem on the track, a Central Railway official said.

The problem has been rectified but trains are running late as a precautionary measure, the official said.

"A fracture was found on the track at Wadala station because of which there was some delay in the services. The problem has been fixed but a caution has been issued due to which there is a delay of 15-20 minutes on the Up line towards CST," he said.


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Ireland drops three doctors from Savita's death probe team

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 21 November 2012 | 17.34

LONDON: Ireland has dropped three doctors of the Galway University Hospital from the team that will probe death of Indian dentist Savita Halappanavar, who died due to pregnancy-related complications after being denied abortion.

An announcement in this regard was made by Prime Minister Enda Kenny in the Parliament barely within hours of unveiling of a seven-member team to probe the tragic death.

Savita's husband Praveen Halappanavar had earlier refused to talk to the investigators, saying he would not consent to their viewing his wife's medical records as three of the Galway hospital's senior doctors were part of the team.

"The three doctors will not be part of the investigation and therefore different personnel who are competent, who are experienced and who have no connection to Galway University Hospital will be appointed," Kenny said.

Kenny said that the doctors will be replaced by officials who have "no connection at all" with the Galway hospital to ensure that the probe remains "utterly independent".

The decision was taken "to have regard for the traumatic effect on Savita's husband and family and in the greater public interest at large", Kenny said, adding that the move, by no way, "impugns the integrity" of the doctors.

He expressed hope that the investigation will be able to ascertain the truth, facts and circumstances surrounding the "very tragic" death of Savita.


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Kasab's hanging the right step, says slain commando Sandeep Unnikrishnan's father

NEW DELHI: The father of Sandeep Unnikrishnan, a NSG commando slain in the 2008 Mumbai terror attack, Wednesday said Ajmal Amir Kasab's execution was a step in the right direction.

"It is not a late decision, and it is a step in the right direction. But a lot has to be done before perpetrators of the Mumbai attack are brought to justice (in Pakistan)," K Unnikrishnan told IANS over phone.

"I am extremely satisfied with the government decision. It has brought a sense of relief to those who lost their near and dear ones in that attack," he said.

Choking with emotion, Unnikrishnan refused to say anything more. "I don't know what (more) to say."

Sandeep Unnikrishnan, a major in the Indian Army, was attached to the Special Action Group of National Security Guard at the time of the Nov 26-29, 2008 attack in Mumbai.

He was killed by terrorists at the Taj Hotel in Mumbai.


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Govt defends Kasab hanging; says wrong to question timing

PANJIM: Government on Wednesday denied that defended that 26/11 terrorist Ajmal Kasab's hanging was timed before the winter session of Parliament.

Responding to questions information and broadcasting (I&B) minister Manish Tewari said that the message being sent to people is that perpetrators of the terrorist attack in Mumbai have been brought to justice.

When asked about the timing of Kasab's execution Tewari said, "To look at timing of the hanging is not right. The message being sent is that if India and its citizens are attacked, appropriate action will be taken."

He added that the decision underlined that a dastardly attack had taken place killing innocent people. "Law has taken its course. This shows if India is attacked, the perpetrators will be brought to justice," the minister said on the sidelines of IFFI function.


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Govt defends Kasab hanging; says wrong to question timing

PANJIM: Government on Wednesday denied that defended that 26/11 terrorist Ajmal Kasab's hanging was timed before the winter session of Parliament.

Responding to questions information and broadcasting (I&B) minister Manish Tewari said that the message being sent to people is that perpetrators of the terrorist attack in Mumbai have been brought to justice.

When asked about the timing of Kasab's execution Tewari said, "To look at timing of the hanging is not right. The message being sent is that if India and its citizens are attacked, appropriate action will be taken."

He added that the decision underlined that a dastardly attack had taken place killing innocent people. "Law has taken its course. This shows if India is attacked, the perpetrators will be brought to justice," the minister said on the sidelines of IFFI function.


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Pakistan claims it 'received', 'acknowledged' India's note on Kasab's hanging

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Wednesday rejected India's assertion that it refused to accept a letter on the decision to hang Ajmal Kasab, the lone surviving Pakistani terrorist involved in the 2008 Mumbai attacks, saying it had "received that note and acknowledged its receipt."

Reacting to the execution of Kasab in a jail in Maharashtra early this morning, Foreign Office spokesman Moazzam Khan said Islamabad had adopted the clear and consistent position of condemning terrorism in all its forms.

"We condemned terrorism in all its forms and manifestation," Khan said in a statement.

"We are willing to cooperate and work closely with all countries of the region to eliminate the scourge of terrorism."

On India's assertion that it had informed in advance Pakistan about the decision to hang Kasab but Islamabad refused to acknowledge the letter, Khan said, "these reports are incorrect and baseless."

The Indian Deputy High Commissioner visited the Foreign Office last evening with the note regarding Kasab's execution and the Director General for South Asia in the Foreign Ministry "received that note and acknowledged its receipt," he said.

Kasab was the only survivor of a group of 10 terrorists trained and backed by the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba that targeted Mumbai four years ago.

A total of 166 people, including several foreigners, were killed over a period of three days by the attackers, who were controlled by handlers based in Karachi.

Pakistani authorities have arrested seven persons, including LeT operational commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, and charged them with planning, financing and executing the attacks.

However, their trial by a Rawalpindi-based anti-terrorism court has been virtually stalled for over a year due to various technical reasons.

Islamabad has rejected Delhi's calls for action against LeT founder Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, the mastermind of the attacks, claiming India has not provided any evidence to facilitate his prosecution.


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Pakistan claims it 'received', 'acknowledged' India's note on Kasab's hanging

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Wednesday rejected India's assertion that it refused to accept a letter on the decision to hang Ajmal Kasab, the lone surviving Pakistani terrorist involved in the 2008 Mumbai attacks, saying it had "received that note and acknowledged its receipt."

Reacting to the execution of Kasab in a jail in Maharashtra early this morning, Foreign Office spokesman Moazzam Khan said Islamabad had adopted the clear and consistent position of condemning terrorism in all its forms.

"We condemned terrorism in all its forms and manifestation," Khan said in a statement.

"We are willing to cooperate and work closely with all countries of the region to eliminate the scourge of terrorism."

On India's assertion that it had informed in advance Pakistan about the decision to hang Kasab but Islamabad refused to acknowledge the letter, Khan said, "these reports are incorrect and baseless."

The Indian Deputy High Commissioner visited the Foreign Office last evening with the note regarding Kasab's execution and the Director General for South Asia in the Foreign Ministry "received that note and acknowledged its receipt," he said.

Kasab was the only survivor of a group of 10 terrorists trained and backed by the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba that targeted Mumbai four years ago.

A total of 166 people, including several foreigners, were killed over a period of three days by the attackers, who were controlled by handlers based in Karachi.

Pakistani authorities have arrested seven persons, including LeT operational commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, and charged them with planning, financing and executing the attacks.

However, their trial by a Rawalpindi-based anti-terrorism court has been virtually stalled for over a year due to various technical reasons.

Islamabad has rejected Delhi's calls for action against LeT founder Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, the mastermind of the attacks, claiming India has not provided any evidence to facilitate his prosecution.


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Islamists reject Syria opposition bloc as clashes rage

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 20 November 2012 | 17.34

BEIRUT: The main Islamist rebel groups in Aleppo, a key front line in Syria's civil war, on Monday rejected the newly formed opposition bloc, saying they want an Islamic state, as clashes raged countrywide.

"We, the fighting squads of Aleppo city and province, unanimously reject the conspiratorial project called the National Coalition and announce our consensus to establish an Islamic state" in Syria, a spokesman announced in an Internet video.

"We reject any external coalitions or councils imposed on us at home from any party whatsoever," he said.

The unidentified speaker sat at the head of a long table with at least 30 other men and a black Islamist flag on the wall.

He listed 14 armed groups as signatories to the statement, including the Al-Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham and Liwa al-Tawhid.

The Ahrar al-Sham group rejected the proclamation on its official web page, however, saying that its leadership did not endorse the statement.

The Al-Nusra Front, a formidable fighting force, has claimed the majority of suicide bombings in Syria's deadly 20-month-old conflict.

Abdel Jabbar al-Okaidi, the head of the mainstream rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) in the embattled northern city of Aleppo, told AFP that the statement did not represent the opinion of all rebel groups in the province.

"These groups represent a number of military factions on the ground and reflect their position, but not all military forces in Aleppo agree with this," the defected former army colonel said.

"The military council has announced its support for the National Coalition and is collaborating with them," Okaidi added.

The new National Coalition aims to present a united front to the international community and is lobbying for weapons supplies to help topple President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

On the ground, fighting flared along the Turkish border after rebels took control of the large army Base 46 in the northern province of Aleppo that had been besieged for weeks.

Six rebels were killed in clashes with Kurdish fighters and the head of the local Kurdish People's Assembly was shot dead in the town of Ras al-Ain, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported.

The clashes erupted after a Kurdish demonstration demanding that all rebels not from Ras al-Ain leave after they took the town last week.

The Kurdish fighters belonged to the People's Defence Units, the armed wing of the Democratic Union Party (PYD) which is linked to Turkey's rebel Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

"The rebels burned a flag of the (Kurdish) Democratic Union Party and the Kurds reacted by burning the FSA flag," an activist said.

Rebels accuse Kurdish groups of negotiating directly with Assad's regime, while Kurds question why the rebels entered a safe area.

"The Kurdish regions provide safe havens to thousands of refugees from Damascus, Hama and Homs," PYD leader Saleh Muslim said.

"We are not looking for a confrontation with the FSA, but its members who provoked the incident today in Ras al-Ain receive their orders from Turkey," he said.

Elsewhere, the Observatory said a general it named as Abdullah Darawi was killed in a rebel attack on the town of Nabak, north of Damascus, along with four policemen accompanying him.

The official SANA news agency blamed "terrorists" for the killings.

Fighting also erupted at a border post near the town of Kasab in Latakia province, the Observatory said.

In the mountainous region of Jabal al-Turkman, eight rebels and four soldiers were killed after insurgents attacked an army convoy en route to Kasab.

The Observatory, which relies on a network of activists and medics, said at least 96 people were killed nationwide on Monday -- 45 rebels, 26 civilians and 25 soldiers.

It puts the death toll in more than 20 months of conflict at more than 39,000.


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Warm reception awaits as Sunita Williams heads for Houston

HOUSTON: A warm reception is in the offing for record-setting astronaut Sunita Williams as the Indian-American, along with fellow cosmonaut Aki Hoshide, heads for Houston after completing her space voyage.

While Williams will arrive in Houston with Hoshide today, her another fellow cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko is returning to a Russian space facility outside Moscow.

Her family, which arrived here on November 18 from Boston, has expressed gratitude for encouragement and prayers by people in India for Sunita's safe return.

"We are happy and thankful to Lord for her successful Mission. We are so very thankful to everyone in India for their encouragement and prayers for their daughter Suni," Williams's father Deepak Pandya told PTI.

"We will meet her at the airport with her husband and family. We went to Nasa space center and saw return of three astronauts coming down to earth by Soyuz. We were all joyful to witness Suni's safe return," he said.

Williams, who was commander of Expedition 33 on the International Space Station, returned to earth after 127 days in space with a new record under her belt - the most spacewalking time by a female at 50 hours and 40 minutes over seven career excursions.

She returned home with two space-going colleagues Aki Hoshide of Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency and Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko aboard a Russian Soyuz capsule that landed in Kazakhstan yesterday.

Williams logged 322 days during two space flights making her second on the list of most experienced US female astronauts. She also holds the record of longest spaceflight (195 days) for female space travellers.

She spent 125 of their 127 days in space circling Earth onboard the ISS.

The trio blasted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on July 15.

While on the outpost, they welcomed SpaceX's Dragon capsule making its first official cargo delivery, which included fresh apples and chocolate-vanilla swirl ice cream.

Nasa says the returning expedition conducted a range of scientific experiments, including testing radiation levels on the orbiting outpost, assessing effects of micro-gravity on the spinal cord and investigating melting glaciers, seasonal changes and human impacts on the ecosystem.


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