Month: December 2012

  • Talaash enters Rs100 crore club

    Talaash enters Rs100 crore club

    Aamir Khan-starrer suspense thriller “Taalash” has made it to the Rs. 100 crore club. The film has raked in Rs.131.78 crore worldwide. The film, directed by Reema Kagti, and co-produced by Farhan Akhtar-Ritesh Sidhwani’s Excel Entertaiment and Aamir Khan Productions, earned Rs.85.38 crore at the domestic box office within 13 days of its release, Nov 30.

    The film has grossed Rs.46.40 crore overseas. ” Talaash” also features Rani Mukerji and Kareena Kapoor. It was made on a budget of Rs.40 crore, and released across 2,500 screens. Its satellite rights were sold for Rs. 40 crore.

  • Iran Denies UN Experts Access To N-Site

    Iran Denies UN Experts Access To N-Site

    TEHERAN (TIP): Iran has again denied a request by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to allow its experts to visit a suspected nuclear site in the country. Iranian nuclear officials and a team of IAEA experts met in Tehran Thursday, December 13 for talks on Iran’s controversial nuclear program for the first time since August. Press TV cited Iran’s envoy to the IAEA Ali Soltaniyeh as saying that the sides failed to reach an agreement Thursday over a visit by the experts from the UN nuclear watchdog to the Parchin military base, 30 km from the capital Tehran.

    The IAEA suspects Iran of having conducted nuclear tests at the Parchin site. Tehran has dismissed the allegations as “baseless propaganda”. Tehran insists that Parchin is a sensitive military, but non-nuclear, facility and cannot be subject of inspections by the UN nuclear watchdog. The sides agreed to hold a next round of talks in Tehran Jan 16, 2013. Western nations and Israel are seeking to persuade Iran to give up its uranium enrichment program, which they suspect is aimed at producing nuclear weapons. Iran says its nuclear program is merely designed to generate energy.

  • Indian Nurse Blames Australian RJs For Suicide

    Indian Nurse Blames Australian RJs For Suicide

    LONDON (TIP): The Indian-origin nurse, who committed suicide after a prank phone call to the hospital treating the pregnant Duchess of Cambridge, left a suicide note telling the two Russ behind the prank that they were responsible for her death. In one of the three notes, the 46- year-old Jacinta Saldanha expressed her deep anger at the Australian radio presenters and blamed them for her death, the Daily Mail reported Sunday, December 16. Saldanha was found hanging at her accommodation at the King Edward VII’s Hospital in London. The daily said one of the RJs telephoned the hospital again within an hour of the first call and spoke to Saldanha again, telling her they had played a prank which they were about to broadcast.

    The revelation is believed to have left Saldanha feeling confused and agitated. DJs Mel Greig and Michael Christian have apologized for the tragic repercussions of their prank. They pretended to be Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles seeking information about the duchess’s condition. In another, onepage letter, Saldanha criticized the hospital staff, and particularly blamed two individuals. Although the hospital said no senior member of staff blamed Saldanha for falling victim to the prank, the daily said she may have been reprimanded by colleagues by email. A friend of the nurse’s family told the daily that Saldanha may have tried to commit suicide more than once in the 72 hours between the prank and the moment her body was discovered. The nurse may have attempted to slash her wrists before she died by hanging herself. “She may have tried to kill herself more than once – that’s why there are three notes,” the friend said. In her final letter, Saldanha is believed to have asked to be buried in her home village of Shirwa, near Mangalore, India.

  • Poonam Pandey To Don Bikini For Film Song

    Poonam Pandey To Don Bikini For Film Song

    Bold beauty Poonam Pandey, who has been busy shooting for her debut Bollywood film “Nasha”, hints she might feature in a bikini for a dance number in the movie. “There will be a song in bikini, but not an item number as such. I am not allowed to talk about anything right now,” Poonam said.

    Maintaining suspense around it, she added: “There may be or may not be a bikini song, but you never know it’s me and you can expect anything from me.” Poonam is the model, whose offer to go nude before Team India if they won the Cricket World Cup in 2011, shot the mercury up for the India-Sri Lanka final.

    She is quite a regular on microblogging site Twitter and often shares titillating pictures of herself. However, she is happy concentrating on her film shoot these days.

  • US Counsel Who Advised Immunity For ISI Backed Drone Strikes

    US Counsel Who Advised Immunity For ISI Backed Drone Strikes

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The US government legal counsel who advised the Department of Justice to seek immunity for the Pakistani spy agency ISI and two of its former chiefs in the 26/11 Mumbai terrorist attack turns out to be a strong supporter of the legality of Obama administration’s drone attacks in Pakistan and other countries. Documents reviewed by the Times of India reveal that the immunity guidance to the Justice Department came from Harold Hongju Koh, who is the State Department’s legal advisor, and also a former Dean of the Yale Law School. Koh, who is Korean-American, went on leave from Yale (which is Hillary Clinton’s law school alma mater) after he was appointed to the position in June 2009 by President Obama, who is an alumnus of the Harvard Law School.

    Koh is scheduled to return in January 2003 to Yale, which was started in 1718 with an endowment from Elihu Yale, an American governor of the British East India Company in what was then Madras. In remarks predating his advice on immunity to ISI, Koh asserted that US Drone warfare is lawful self-defense under international law for targeted killings of non-state actors. In a 2010 keynote at the American Society of International Law meeting in Washington DC, Koh stated that “US. targeting practices, including lethal operations conducted with the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), comply with all applicable law, including the laws of war.”

    He further explained that the US is in “an armed conflict with al Qaeda, the Taliban, and the associated forces” and thus has the lawful right to use force “consistent with its inherent right to self-defense” under international law in response to the 9/11 attacks. An international law blog which reviewed Koh address said he identified three elements related to situational considerations that the US uses when determining whether a specific targeted drone killing at a particular location will occur: Imminence of the threat; Sovereignty of other States involved; and Willingness and ability of those States to suppress the threat the target poses. Going by the Obama administration’s relentless drone strikes inside Pakistan, Washington seems to make light of the sovereignty issues, believing Islamabad does not have control over its territories ceded to terrorists and is unwilling or unable to take action.

    But in the 26/11 Mumbai case, sovereignty leaps to the forefront, with the US administration challenging the argument that the ISI and its heads are beyond the control or outside the purview of the Pakistani government. “Plaintiffs’ theory is particularly unusual in the context of an intelligence agency, which, like a foreign ministry or defense ministry, serves a quintessentially sovereign purpose,” reads the statement of interest filed by the US Justice Department before the Eastern District Court of New York, where American families of the 26/11 victims have filed their case. Referring specifically to the plaintiff’s implicating the ISI chiefs, the statement concludes that the “Department of State has determined that former Directors General Pasha and Taj are immune because plaintiffs’ allegations relate to acts that these defendants allegedly took in their official capacities as directors of an entity that is undeniably a fundamental part of the Government of Pakistan.”

    Meanwhile, even as New Delhi expressed its disappointment at the Obama administration letting ISI off the hook, US officials maintained that Washington’s submission was based on a technicality in this specific case where it was asked to determine sovereignty issue, and that it “should not be viewed as a US Government determination on the merits of the Plaintiffs’ claims.” In other words, the US is not talking about the involvement or otherwise of ISI and its chiefs in the Mumbai attacks; just on the issue of sovereign immunity as afforded under law and diplomatic conventions.

    In remarks that offered no relief to Pakistan, which was exulting in what it saw as an exculpatory US statement of interest, a state department spokesperson echoed the court submission which urged the Government of Pakistan to dismantle Lashkar-e-Taiba and specifically asked Pakistan “to support India’s efforts to counter this terrorist threat.” Indian officials see the developments as part of a backroom deal between US and Pakistan to facilitate the American drawdown from Afghanistan which will be difficult to accomplish without Pakistan’s help. Pakistan’s own media and civil society, not to speak of highranking US officials, have implicated the country’s military and ISI in sponsorship of terrorism, one official pointed out, suggesting that geo-politics more than technicalities determined the US court submissions.

  • Sunny Leone to shake her booty for Rs 1 cr at a New Year bash

    Sunny Leone to shake her booty for Rs 1 cr at a New Year bash

    Shortly after news of her being approached for an item song, adult star Sunny Leone is apparently a hot favourite this year for New Year bashes being held in the city. After her debut film, she has been approached by a lot of suburban hotels to perform at the New Year’s Eve and looks like Sunny has given her nod to one of them.

    A source close to her reveals, “Sunny has chosen to perform at a famous property in Delhi. She is being paid close to a crore to dance to a medley of popular Bollywood numbers. She loves to dance and has already started rehearsing for her act on the December 31.”

  • Human Rights Group Wants Tamil Students Charged Or Freed

    Human Rights Group Wants Tamil Students Charged Or Freed

    COLOMBO (TIP): A human rights group on Thursday urged Sri Lanka to formally charge or release four university students detained on allegations of terrorism for honoring Tamil Tiger rebels who died during the country’s bloody civil war. The students in the northern city of Jaffna were arrested by anti-terrorism police for lighting lamps in honor of Tamil rebels to mark their annual heroes’ day on Nov. 27. This month they were transferred to a rehabilitation center housing former Tamil Tigers.

    “Arresting four students without charge and sending them off for ‘rehabilitation’ sends a dangerous message that any Tamil can be detained arbitrarily and indefinitely,” said Brad Adams, Asia director for New York-based Human Rights Watch. “The Sri Lankan government needs to recognize that engaging in peaceful activities that conflict with the government’s views is an exercise of basic rights, not a criminal offense,” Adams said in a statement. Government soldiers defeated the rebels in 2009, ending a quartercentury bid to create an independent state for the country’s ethnic minority Tamils. Since then the government has razed rebels’ war burial grounds and prevented memorials including for civilians killed in the civil war.

    Tens of thousands of civilians were estimated to have died in just the final five months of the conflict. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam was considered one of the most ruthless and effective terrorist groups in the world, highlighted by the use of suicide bombers and child soldiers. Memorials for their fallen cadres were held every year on Nov. 27, with highlight an annual speech by the rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, who was killed by government troops in the final days of the war.

    Government spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella said the students are being detained because they organized an event in honor of a banned organization. A government-appointed war commission recommended last year that war-affected civilians be allowed to organize peaceful memorials to promote post-war reconciliation. Ethnic Tamil politicians have criticized the government crackdown on memorials as a practice of double standards because memorials for those who took part in two Marxist insurrections in 1971 and 1988-89 are freely held every year. The Marxist rebels are mostly ethnic majority Sinhalese.

  • Bomb Kills Seven In Southwest Afghanistan: Officials

    Bomb Kills Seven In Southwest Afghanistan: Officials

    HERAT (TIP): A roadside bomb targeting a police pickup truck killed two policemen and five civilians in southwestern Afghanistan Thursday, provincial authorities said. The vehicle was blown up in the city of Zaranj, the capital of Nimroz province, said acting provincial police chief Mohammad Rahim Chakhansori.

    Provincial governor Sarwar Sobat confirmed the death toll to AFP, saying a policewoman was wounded in the attack. Afghan forces are often the victims of attacks by Taliban insurgents as they increasingly take control of security before the withdrawal of NATO troops from the country by 2014. Roadside bombs are the weapon of choice for the hardline Islamists.

  • Strike Called In Bangladesh To Ban Islamic Parties

    Strike Called In Bangladesh To Ban Islamic Parties

    DHAKA, BANGLADESH (TIP): A general strike to demand that Muslim-majority Bangladesh ban Islamic political parties has shut down schools and stores and disrupted traffic in Dhaka, the capital. A coalition of five leftist parties was enforcing Tuesday’s dawn-to-dusk nationwide strike, a common tactic in Bangladesh to highlight demands.

    Authorities deployed about 10,000 police and security forces in Dhaka as hundreds of protesters took to the streets, blocking roads and halting traffic. But there were no immediate reports of violence. More than two dozen Islamic parties in Bangladesh want the country to be governed by Sharia, or Islamic law. The leftists say the Islamic parties should be banned because they oppose the constitutional provision that Bangladesh be governed by secular law.

  • Landmine Blast Kills 10 Girls In Afghanistan

    Landmine Blast Kills 10 Girls In Afghanistan

    KABUL (TIP): A car bomb exploded outside of a compound housing a US military contractor in Kabul the Afghan capital on Monday, blowing apart an exterior wall, killing at least two Afghan workers and wounding 15 other people, company representatives and police said. In another part of the country, a suspected landmine killed 10 young girls in the east of the country, police said. The girls who died ranged in age from 9 to 13. Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack in Kabul.

  • Myanmar Government Apologizes For Crackdown Violence

    Myanmar Government Apologizes For Crackdown Violence

    YANGON (MYANMAR) (TIP): Myanmar’s government has formally apologized to the country’s Buddhist monks for its recent crackdown on protesters at a copper mine that injured more than 100 of their monastic colleagues. President’s Office Minister Hla Tun led other officials Saturday in apologizing to senior and injured monks in the central city of Mandalay. Police used water cannons, tear gas and smoke bombs on Nov. 29 to break up an occupation of the Letpadaung mine project in northwestern Myanmar, a joint venture between the military and a Chinese company. Protesters want the project halted, saying it is causing environmental, social and health problems. Shin Wirathu, one of those leading the protests, said Saturday’s action satisfied their demands for a formal apology

  • Sri Chinmoy And Ravi Shankar

    Sri Chinmoy And Ravi Shankar

    They are two great musicians who gave India’s divine gift of soulful music to the whole world. Ravi Shankar was the greatest Sitar player in the world who passed away recently. Spiritual master Sri Chinmoy composed 21000 soulful songs and performed in 700 Peace Concerts around the world based on his own meditative compositions and using a number of musical instruments. Sri Chinmoy left his body in October, 2007. Both will be eternally alive through their music and inspire humanity through generations. Sri Chinmoy met Ravi Shankar in 1973. They met again in 2002 in San Diego, California.

    Sri Chinmoy honored Ravi Shankar in his unique way by lifting him up on a specially prepared platform and giving him ‘U Thant Award’. Afterwards they visited Yogananda Centre. Sri Chinmoy composed a beautiful song for Paramhansa Yogananda at the same spot where Yoganada wrote the famous book, ‘Autobiagraphy of a Yogi’. Sri Chinmoy’s disciples sang the song. Olympian Sudhahota Carl Lewis also joined. ( Sudhahota is his spiritual name given by his Guru Sri Chinmoy) In October, 2002 Ravi Shankar traveled to New York to perform a private concert for Sri Chinmoy and his disciples. Sri Chinmoy composed a song for Ravi Shankar in his native Bengali. They were always in contact by phone till Sri Chinmoy left his body in 2007.

  • Santa Claus

    Santa Claus

    Every December 24th millions of people are visited by a short, fat guy in a red suit. Where did he come from, why does he do it, and how does he accomplish this seemingly impossible task? Santa Claus… Kris Kringle…Old Saint Nick…We see him on advertising posters, in parades, at departments stores…who is this guy and why does he have so many aliases? Well, the original St. Nicholas lived in southwestern Turkey in the 4th century.

    As the bishop of Myra he was credited with doing a number of miracles involving sailors and children. After his death this led him to become the patron saint of both groups as well as for unmarried girls. As a saint he was given his own “feast day” that was celebrated on December 6th. At about the same time Nicholas lived, Pope Julius I decided to establish a date for the celebration of the birth of Jesus.

    As the actual time of year for this event was unknown, the Pope decided to assign the holiday to December 25th. There had long been a pagan midwinter festival at this time of year and the Pope hoped to use the holiday to christianize the celebrations. Eventually, Saint Nicholas’s feast day also became associated with December 25th and his connection with Christmas was established. A tradition developed that he would supposedly visit homes on Christmas Eve and children would place nuts, apples, sweets and other items around the house to welcome him. As the reformation took a hold of much of Europe, however, the popularity of St. Nicholas dropped in most Protestant countries, with the exception of Holland where he was referred to as “Sinter Klaas.” After this tradition came to the United States, “Sinter Klass” would eventually be corrupted to “Sancte Claus.”

    America’s Santa
    It’s been said that Dutch settlers brought the tradition of Saint Nicholas to the North American city of New Amsterdam (which the British would later rename “New York”). However, research shows there’s little evidence that Nicholas played much of a part in these early settlers’ celebrations. It seems more likely that Saint Nicholas became an American tradition during a wave of interest in Dutch customs following the Revolutionary War.Washington Irving (of Sleepy Hollow fame) included him a comic History of New York City written in 1809. John Pintard, founder of the New York Historical Society, took an especially keen interest in the legend and the Society hosted its first St. Nicholas anniversary dinner in 1810.

    Artist Alexander Anderson was commissioned to draw an image of the Saint for the dinner. He was still shown as a religious figure, but now he was also clearly depositing gifts in children’s stockings which were hung by the fireplace to dry. Perhaps nothing has fixed the image of Santa Claus so firmly in the American mind as a poem entitled A Visit from St. Nicholas written by Clement Moore in 1822. Moore, a professor of biblical languages at New York’s Episcopal Theological Seminary, drew upon Pintard’s thinking about the early New Amsterdam traditions and added some elements from German and Norse legends. These stories held that a happy little elflike man presided over midwinter pagan festivals.

    In the poem, Moore depicts the Saint as a tiny man with a sleigh drawn by eight miniature reindeer. They fly him from house to house and at each residence he comes down the chimney to fill stockings hung by the fireplace with gifts. Moore had written the poem for the enjoyment of his own family, but in 1823 it was published anonymously in the Troy Sentinel. It became very popular and has been reprinted countless times under the more familiar title, The Night Before Christmas. Where did Moore get the reindeer? The Saami people of northern Scandinavia and Finland often used reindeer to pull their sledges around and this found its way into the poem. Reindeer, which are much sturdier animals than North American deer,are well adapted to cold climates with their heavy fur coats and broad, flat hooves for walking on snow. As time went by, more and more was added to the Santa Claus legend. Thomas Nast, a 19th century cartoonist, did a series of drawings for Harper’s Weekly. Nash’s vision of Santa had him living at the North Pole.

    Nash also gave him a workshop for building toys and a large book filled with the names of children who had been naughty or nice. The 19th century Santa was often shown wearing outfits of different colors: purple, green and blue in addition to red. This slowly faded out so that by the beginning of the 20th century the standard image of Santa Claus was a man in a red suit trimmed with white. The Coca-Cola company has often been cited for cementing the image of Santa with the colors red and white through a series of popular advertisements in the 1940’s depicting Saint Nick enjoying their product (Coca-Cola’s company colors are red and white). However, Santa was already well associated with these colors by that time.

    American artist Norman Rockwell had done a number of paintings with Saint Nick wearing red and white including A Drum for Tommy which appeared on the cover of The Country Gentleman in 1921. The truth is that by the time the Coke ads came out, Santa, in the public’s mind, was already wearing only the modern version of his colors.

    The Christmas tree The fir tree has a long association with Christianity, it began in Germany almost 1,000 years ago when St Boniface, who converted the German people to Christianity, was said to have come across a group of pagans worshipping an oak tree. In anger, St Boniface is said to have cut down the oak tree and to his amazement a young fir tree sprung up from the roots of the oak tree. St Boniface took this as a sign of the Christian faith. But it was not until the 16th century that fir trees were brought indoors at Christmas time.

    King Tut never saw a Christmas tree, but he would have understood the tradition which traces back long before the first Christmas, says David Robson, Extension Educator, Horticulture with the Springfield Extension Center. The Egyptians were part of a long line of cultures that treasured and worshipped evergreens.When the winter solstice arrive, they brought green date palm leaves into their homes to symbolize life’s triumph over death. The Romans celebrated the winter solstice with a fest called Saturnalia in honor of Saturnus, the god of agriculture. They decorated their houses with greens and lights and exchanged gifts.

    They gave coins for prosperity, pastries for happiness, and lamps to light one’s journey through life. Centuries ago in Great Britain, woods priests called Druids used evergreens during mysterious winter solstice rituals. The Druids used holly and mistletoe as symbols of eternal life, and place evergreen branches over doors to keep away evil spirits. Late in the Middle Ages, Germans and Scandinavians placed evergreen trees inside their homes or just outside their doors to show their hope in the forthcoming spring. Our modern Christmas tree evolved from these early traditions. Legend has it that Martin Luther began the tradition of decorating trees to celebrate Christmas. One crisp Christmas Eve, about the year 1500, he was walking through snow-covered woods and was struck by the beauty of a group of small evergreens.

    Their branches, dusted with snow, shimmered in the moonlight. When he got home, he set up a little fir tree indoors so he could share this story with his children. He decorated it with candles, which he lighted in honor of Christ’s birth. The Christmas tree tradition most likely came to the United States with Hessian troops during the American Revolution, or with German immigrants to Pennsylvania and Ohio, adds Robson. But the custom spread slowly. The Puritans banned Christmas in New England. Even as late as 1851, a Cleveland minister nearly lost his job because he allowed a tree in his church. Schools in Boston stayed open on Christmas Day through 1870, and sometimes expelled students who stayed home. The Christmas tree market was born in 1851 when Catskill farmer Mark Carr hauled two ox sleds of evergreens into New York City and sold them all. By 1900, one in five American families had a Christmas tree, and 20 years later, the custom was nearly universal.

    Christmas tree farms sprang up during the depression. Nurserymen couldn’t sell their evergreens for landscaping, so they cut them for Christmas trees. Cultivated trees were preferred because they have a more symmetrical shape then wild ones. Six species account for about 90 percent of the nation’s Christmas tree trade. Scotch pine ranks first, comprising about 40 percent of the market, followed by Douglas fir which accounts for about 35 percent. The other big sellers are noble fir, white pine, balsam fir and white spruce. Premission was granted for Internet use by — Written by: David Robson, Extension Educator, Horticulture; Springfield Extension Center

  • Time Magazine names Obama 2012 Person of the Year

    Time Magazine names Obama 2012 Person of the Year

    NEW YORK (TIP): “We are in the midst of historic cultural and demographic changes,” Time managing editor Richard Stengel said in announcing its choice. “And Obama is both the symbol and in some ways the architect of this new America.” Runners-up were Malala Yousafzai, the 15-year-old Pakistani women’s rights activist who survived after being shot in the head and neck by Taliban; Apple CEO Tim Cook; Egypt’s Islamist President Mohamed Morsi; and scientist Fabiola Gianotti. In 2011, Time had picked “The Protester.”

    The magazine unveiled its Person of the Year selection on the “Today” show on Wednesday, December 19. The president’s reelection in November showed “the Obama effect was not ephemeral anymore, no longer reducible to what had once been mocked as that ‘hopey-changey stuff,’” Time’s Michael Scherer wrote in the cover story. “It could be measured in wars stopped and started; industries saved, restructured or reregulated; tax cuts extended; debt levels inflated; terrorists killed; the healthinsurance system reimagined; and gay service members who could walk in uniform with their partners. It could be seen in the new faces who waited hours to vote and in the new ways campaigns are run. America debated and decided this year: history would not record Obama’s presidency as a fluke.”

    The cover features a silver border- -just the fourth time in Time’s 89- year-history the magazine was published without its trademark red. Time.com also published a slideshow featuring “never-beforeseen images of the Obama presidency” from Election Night to Newtown. “It was easy to think that maybe 2008 was the anomaly,” President Obama told Time in an interview. “And I think 2012 was an indication that, no, this is not an anomaly. We’ve gone through a very difficult time. The American people have rightly been frustrated at the pace of change, and the economy is still struggling, and this president we elected is imperfect. And yet despite all that, this is who we want to be. That’s a good thing.” Read the Time magazine article on Obama at http://poy.time.com/2012/12/19/pers on-of-the-year-barackobama/# ixzz2FVgzguZ5

  • BJP Retains Gujarat, Loses Himachal

    BJP Retains Gujarat, Loses Himachal

    NEW YORK (TIP): The recent polls for Legislative Assemblies in Gujarat and Himachal have mauled BJP and shown the party’s declining power. While the party managed to retain power in Gujarat, it has been routed in Himachal where it gained only 26 against the Congress that captured 36 seats in a house of 68. In 2007 elections BJP had won 41 out of 68 seats and formed the government, with Prem Kumar Dhumal as the Chief Minister. The much touted Modi magic failed to work in Gujarat where the party returned to power with 2 seats short of 2007 tally of 117. Modi enthusiasts had been speaking about a landslide for BJP (Modi) in Gujarat. They referred to ABP News-Nielsen Exit Poll that predicted landslide victory for Modi.

    Narendra Modi-led BJP in Gujarat is yet again set to trample the Congress party in the upcoming Assembly polls. ABP News-Nielsen Exit Poll has found that BJP will bag a landslide majority of 126 seats in the 182- member Assembly, a gain of nine seats since 2007. That did not happen. Instead Modi folded with just 115 seats. The ABP News-Nielsen Exit Poll predicted loss of seats for Congress. “The Congress which won 59 seats in the 2007 polls, is seen to win only 50 seats this time around, a loss of only nine seats compared to the last state elections However, the poll proved wrong here too. Congress won from 61 constituencies, adding 2 seats to its 2007 tally of 59 seats. Although BJP registered a victory, five of its ministers fell by the wayside.

    Those who lost included Agriculture Minister Dileep Sanghani (Amreli), Health Minister Jaynarayan Vyas (Siddhpur), Social Justice and Empowerment Minister Fakirbhai Vaghela (Vadgam), Minister of State for Forest and Environment Kiritsinh Rana (Limbdi) and Minister of State for Agriculture Kanubhai Bhalala (Visavadar). In Himachal, Prem… Kumar Dhumal barely retained his seat, with a margin of just 9500 votes.

  • Claire Danes Giives Biirth To Fiirst Chiild

    Claire Danes Giives Biirth To Fiirst Chiild

    Emmy-winning actress Claire Danes has given birth to her first child, a boy, the publicist for the “Homeland” star said on Wednesday. Cyrus Michael Christopher Dancy was born on Monday to Danes, 33, and her husband, British actor Hugh Dancy. Danes’ performance as CIA operative Carrie Matheson on Showtime’s “Homeland” series scored her an Emmy win in September, while the psychological thriller won the TV industry’s highest honor of best drama series.

    Danes is nominated for her second Golden Globe award in the role at the Hollywood awards show in January. She also has won multiple awards for her past work on 2010 TV film ” Temple Grandin,” and as a 15-year-old on the 1990s coming-of-age television drama “My So-Called Life.”

  • DELHI GANG RAPE: Protests outside Rashtrapati Bhavan

    DELHI GANG RAPE: Protests outside Rashtrapati Bhavan

    NEW DELHI (TIP): A large number of women activists and students today marched towards Rashtrapati Bhavan to protest against the gang rape of a young girl in a moving bus and demand stringent action against rapists. The protesters under the aegis of AIDWA, YWCA and JNUSU among others started their march from Rajpath and as they reached Vijay Chowk, they went past the barricades erected at the entrance of Raisina Hills and moved towards Rashtrapati Bhavan and South and North Blocks. Police stopped the protesters near Rashtrapati Bhavan. Carrying placards and shouting slogans, the protesters demanded stringent punishment for rapists.

    Two days ago in a similar protest, around 200 people had gathered near North Block. They dispersed only after home minister Sushilkumar Shinde agreed to meet a delegation of JNUSU students. A girl identified as Swati managed to go near the Rashtrapati Bhavan but was escorted back later. “They say we need permission to enter there. Why do we need permission? When we are attacked and harassed, nobody needs any permission. We are here to raise our voices and for that we need permission,” she said. The protesters at Raisina Hills later marched towards India Gate. A group of people also staged protest outside Safdarjung Hospital and blocked traffic for sometime. The protesters demanded speedy justice for the victim.

    Meanwhile, Delhi Police detained the fifth accused in connection with the heinous incident in a late night raid on Thursday. The police detained the fifth accused, named Raju, in Badaun, Uttar Pradesh. “The fifth accused has been arrested in the rape case. His age is being verified before giving details. If minor, we have to hold back his particulars as per law,” Delhi Police commissioner Neeraj Kumar said on Twitter. With this, five persons have been arrested in the Sunday night incident which sparked widespread outrage across the country.

    Sources said the fifth accused was arrested from Badaun in Uttar Pradesh even as there were reports that the sixth accused has been picked from Bareilly. However, police is yet to confirm it. One of the four accused in the case was “identified” by the victim’s friend during a Test Identification Parade (TIP) at Tihar Jail here. The 23-year-old victim’s male friend, an engineer in a software company, identified Mukesh during TIP, a senior police official said. Out of the four accused, only Mukesh had agreed to TIP when he was produced before a court here. Other accused – Ram Singh, Pawan and Vinay – had refused to undergo TIP.

    According to the official, the positive identification of Mukesh by the friend, who was also beaten up by thegang before the men allegedly raped the girl, is a shot in the arm of the prosecution as it would help them nail the other culprits. Police have invoked the stringent charges of attempt to murder and destruction of evidence against the accused. Investigators had earlier pressed charges against them under sections 365 (kidnapping or abducting), 376 (2)(g) (gang rape), 377 (unnatural offences), 394 (hurting in committing robbery) and 34 (common intention) of IPC.

    Indian laws against rape are amongst some of the toughest in the world. Owing to regular interpretation of Section 376 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), the victim’s word is now considered substantive proof to convict the accused and send him to jail for a minimum of seven years. In fact, in one case even the lack of conclusive medical evidence to show that a woman was raped did not prevent the Supreme Court from ordering a jail sentence for the accused. In a deeply conservative society, rape is an emotional subject which perhaps explains why the judiciary has been so recipient to making it easy to secure convictions.

    However, this approach as a crime prevention strategy has little value as it is reactive. It comes into play after a crime has already been committed. Research has shown that though we may like to believe that harsh sentences act as deterrents to future criminals, there is little evidence in favor of this belief. Most criminals either truly believe that they will get away with the crime, or are unable to think through the consequences of crime they are about to commit. The crime prevention premise on which First World criminal justice systems (which includes police, prosecutors, judges) now work is that criminals are deterred by their proximal conditions, and not the prospect of a distant punishment.

    Thus incidents of sexual harassment, and drug dealing in public toilets in London dropped drastically with the introduction of better lighting, and signs warning that plainclothes policemen often used those facilities. Similarly, to prevent cases of rape there is a need to view it as a crime in isolation from the emotional rhetoric that surrounds it. The most influential crime prevention philosophy of the last decade stated that a crime takes place when there is presence of a likely target (i.e. victim), and the absence of a capable guardian (examples : policeman, guard, a responsible elder, or even a good lock). Building on this notion police forces in cities like London, and New York write what are called ‘crime scripts’ of common crimes.

    Simply put, the policemen put themselves in shoes of a criminal and write down a detailed step by step procedure in the commissioning of a crime. Thereafter, they concentrate on ‘script disruption’, where interventions at certain stages of the criminal’s actions prevent him for carrying out his criminal act. For instance: jails in Australia reported several cases of inmates scalding other prisoners with hot liquids. The solution came in the form of thermos flasks with narrow opening that did not allow liquids to be thrown at each other. In case of Delhi too it would not be impossible for police to build a script of rapes that are committed. The ease with which criminals can use means of public transportation to pick up unsuspecting victims comes immediately to mind.

    Moreover, little application of mind would show that crimes against women are concentrated in time and space, or go in conjunction with other crimes. That could serve as a starting point for police in Delhi to frame a strategy on how to best use its limited resources for maximum deterrent effect. It is by using such scientific means that police forces in developed countries have been able to reduce crime rates to lowest than they have ever been. As is the case every time, after this rape case in Delhi too, we hear platitudes about falling moral standards of society, with the blame for the crime being laid on factors as wide ranging as erosion of family values to deindividualization of people in a metro.

    This kind of approach in reality is a disservice to women as it offers no solutions. At this stage it would be pertinent to remember that the instances of perverts making lewd calls to women – which was a common phenomena in 1990s – dropped to virtually nil within a few years not because the Indian male underwent some sort of moral renaissance, but because phones started coming with caller IDs, and in a way disrupted the script.

  • US House Of Representatives Puts Off ‘Fiscal Cliff’ Vote

    US House Of Representatives Puts Off ‘Fiscal Cliff’ Vote

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Republicans in the House of Representatives, confronted with a revolt among the party’s rank and file, abandoned a vote on politically-charged but symbolic legislation aimed at averting a fast-approaching “fiscal cliff,” after failing to gather enough support for a measure meant to strengthen the party’s position ahead of final negotiations with US President Barack Obama. December 20th drama, a major defeat for the House Speaker John Boehner, left precious little time for a divided government to prevent across-the-board tax increases and deep spending cuts from taking effect with the new year.

    Economists say the combination threatened a return to recession for an economy that has been recovering slowly from the last one. Boehner’s so-called Plan B legislation was drafted unilaterally by Republicans who control the House and faced sure defeat in the Democrat-held Senate. It was crafted to protect almost all Americans from the expiration of Bush-era tax cuts on Jan. 1, 2013, but would have let rates increase for people earning more than $1 million annually – much higher than Obama’s proposed $400,000 threshold.

  • 33 Dead In Sudan Bus Collision

    33 Dead In Sudan Bus Collision

    KHARTOUM (TIP): Thirty-three people were killed and twenty four injured when two inter-city buses collided in Sudan in one of the country’s worst road accidents in years, police said. The crash between a full-sized passenger bus and a minibus occurred near the small community of El Kamlien, about halfway between Khartoum and Wad Medani late yesterday. “The minibus tried to overtake another vehicle and then collided with the bus,” which was travelling in the opposite direction, a police statement said.

    Deadly road accidents, often involving buses, are relatively common in Sudan, where driving skills are poor. There have been complaints by city bus drivers in Khartoum that Sudan’s surging inflation and sinking currency have driven maintenance costs out of control. In October, 13 people died and 26 were injured when a passenger bus blew a tyre and collided with a minibus on the road to Wad Medani southeast of the capital, country’s media reported at the time. Twenty-one people died in April 2009 when a bus and a truck collided south of Khartoum.

  • Pamela Anderson Set To Sizzle On Ice Dancing Show

    Pamela Anderson Set To Sizzle On Ice Dancing Show

    Come January – ‘Dancing On Ice’ will be bringing all sorts of glittery fun to the screen, as Pamela Anderson will officially star on the show, it has been announced. Olympic skating superstars Torville and Dean will once again drag 12 celebrity contestants up onto the ice in an attempt to teach them to shuffle their feet to a tune, with those shuffles turning into steps, and those steps turning into leaps.

    Following in the footsteps of previous winners Matthew Wolfenden, Sam Attwater, Hayley Tamaddon, Ray Quinn, Suzanne Shaw, Kyran Bracken and Gaynor Faye, this year’s celebrity line up is actually pretty impressive, with the former ‘Baywatch’ star, Lauren Goodger and Shayne Ward among those on the official line up, the Mirror reported. With Jason Gardiner back on the judging panel, the 2013 bunch will have to be extra careful as they kick off in the first live show – because the former bald man has promised to be meaner than ever.

  • India Visit A Memorable Experience For Naomi Watts

    India Visit A Memorable Experience For Naomi Watts

    Actress Naomi Watts, who has got her first Golden Globe nomination for “The Impossible”, not only enjoyed sightseeing and shopping during her India visit, but was also impressed by the “strength and determination” of HIV mothers whom she met in the capital. She visited the country with her husband Liev Schreiber last year. “In Rajasthan, I visited Jal Mahal. It was so beautiful. I was awestruck. The beauty of the terrace garden, Chameli Bagh, was enthralling. I also shopped for Jaipuri quilts from Chaura Rasta in Jaipur.

    My mother and both my children, Kai and Sasha, had a great time,” Watts said in a statement. Schreiber was shooting in the capital for Mira Nair’s “The Reluctant Fundamentalist” and the 44-year-old actress also visited a hospital here, where she met a few HIV mothers. “The hospital staff welcomed me warmly,” she said.

    Talking about her interaction with the mothers there, Watts said: “My heart went out to them. I could see their struggles and challenges that they faced. But what moved me was their strength and determination to raise a healthy child. I have great respect for them.” In “The Impossible”, the actress will be seen as a mother who is separated from her family during tsunami. It is based on real life tsunami survivor Maria Belon.

  • KATIE HOLMES Voted Best Revenge Body Of 2012

    KATIE HOLMES Voted Best Revenge Body Of 2012

    Katie Holmes, who filed for divorce from husband of five years Tom Cruise this June, has been voted the best revenge body of this year in the annual fit list of a magazine. Fitness magazine ranked the 33-year-old actress’s figure slightly ahead of Katy Perry’s post break-up body, whose divorce from Russell Brand was also finalised last summer after just 14 months of marriage.

    Holmes is frequently spotted attending spinning classes in New York at the popular celebrity exercise centre Soul Cycle, and also maintains her petite curves by sticking to a diet rich in vegetables and fruit, Contactmusic reported. The ‘batman Begins’ star had recently revealed that she comes from a health conscious family and said that her family even goes running together before tucking into their Thanksgiving dinner.

    On the other hand, Blake Lively was awarded best legs in the poll, while Jennifer Lawrence was voted best curves.

  • Puducherry A Cultural, Spiritual Treat

    Puducherry A Cultural, Spiritual Treat

    Pristine beaches, spiritual retreat, multi-cultural and well-planned township reminiscent of French colonial rule… Pondy is your perfect weekend getaway Some places have the power to lure you back again and again. Pondicherry is one such place which is thankfully also closer to namma city. Natural beauty with blue waters on one side and greenery on the other, multi-cuisine restaurants, virgin beaches and cheap beer… for all this and more, Puducherry is definitely one helluva place, perfect for a weekend getaway. And the best thing is that being a small town, you don’t need a guide and can explore it on your own.

    French influence Be it the architecture of the buildings or even the patterns of the streets, one can’t help but marvel at the colonial style. You can spend half a day admiring the many heritage buildings and monuments in Puducherry.

    Hit the shores
    Nothing like lazing around by the sea. The place has quite a few stunningly picturesque beaches. Take a sun bath while admiring the coconut palms on the bay.

    Adventure sports
    Pondy is also the place for those who love to try exciting stuff — yes, scuba diving, snorkeling, surfing et al!

    Getting around
    Do away with taxis and autos. For a change, hire a bicycle to go round the small town. It’s not just cost effective, but eco-friendly too. And, it’s also the best way to take in the sights and sounds of the place.

    Spiritual retreat
    The union territory with its tranquil surroundings, quiet lanes and places like Maatrimandir and Aurobindo Ashram is a perfect escape for those seeking spiritual gratification.Another place for the spiritual soul is definitely the Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

    A foodie’s paradise
    The town has an interesting amalgamation of food — sea food, organic food, Italian food — you name it and it’s there! On an average you should be able to survive with Rs 500 for a day.

    Auroville
    The City of Dawn is an experimental township in the making. Maatrimandir, a golden globe roofing a meditation hall, is one of the architectural wonders. You can opt to stay at the Auroville guest house or even homestays. Be at peace while trying out some organic delicacies.

    Where to stay
    Pondy offers innumerable accomodation options — hotels, homestays with kitchenette, cottages. You could either opt to stay by the sea or in the city limits where food is more accesible. Lodging is available for every budget, and in some cases, you can book online as well.

    Don’t miss
    1. Bharti and Bharthidasan
    2. Memorial museum
    3. Auroville
    4. Island beach
    5. Churches
    6. Raj Niwas – the governor’s official residence, again a french structure
    7. Alliance Francaise
    8. Aurobindo Ashram
    9. Manakula Vinayagar Koil
    10. Shopping lanes
    11. Mahatma Gandhi Street (MG street)
    12. Romain Rolland Street
    13. Nehru Street (JN street)

  • India-Asean Trade to Reach $100 Billion Mark by 2015, Says Anand Sharma

    India-Asean Trade to Reach $100 Billion Mark by 2015, Says Anand Sharma

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Inaugurating the 2nd India- ASEAN Business Fair- 2012 in New Delhi today, the Union Minister for Commerce, Industry & Textiles Shri Anand Sharma expressed confidence that the two-way trade between India and the ASEAN countries “will be able to reach USD 100 billion mark by 2015”. He also added that the early operationalisation of the Services and Investment Agreement would provide greater impetus to the trade and investment flows. Welcoming the Trade Minister from the ASEAN countries, Shri Sharma urged the Trade Ministers that they should diversify the trade basket and that the economic gains on both sides would be substantial only if we develop supply chains with a focus on intra-industry trade.

    He also said that in order to realise the true potential of the economies, we should give a concerted push to strengthen the regional connectivity with ASEAN. Shri Sharma said that India views its partnership with ASEAN as a crucial block in sustaining the growth momentum. “We would like to benefit from ASEAN experience in key sectors of economy such as infrastructure, agro-processing, retail and value added manufacturing. Equally, Indian companies can be invaluable partners for ASEAN economies in augmenting their productivity,” said Shri Sharma.

    Speaking on Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, Shri Sharma said that the negotiations would be a momentous step. “The fruition of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership which will have in its embrace ASEAN and the six countries including India, China, Republic of Korea, New Zealand, Japan and Australia, will truly have a defining influence on the global economic architecture,” Shri Sharma further added. Later addressing media persons, Shri Sharma said that the FTA negotiations on Services and Investment would be concluded by tomorrow when ASEAN Ministerial will take place after the formal negotiations. “The senior officers have been meeting and we the Ministers have given them a very clear message and mandate at the recent ASEAN-India summit at Phnom Penh in Cambodia and senior officials and negotiators thereafter met in Jakarta… So the final round of negotiations is taking place between the senior officers of India, the Chief negotiator and his team and the ASEAN officials, and they will be formally reporting to the Ministerial meeting tomorrow. And the Ministers are committed. I can say for all of us to bring this negotiations to closure and carry on with our journey of partnership, added Shri Sharma.

  • Banking Bill paves way for new banks, foreign investment

    Banking Bill paves way for new banks, foreign investment

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The government on Tuesday cleared the decks for the Reserve Bank of India ( RBI) to initiate the process to issue new banking licences and widened the window for infusion of capital into the banking sector. The Lok Sabha cleared the Banking Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2011, after Finance Minister P Chidambaram agreed to drop the contentious proposal on allowing banks to do futures trading. He also clarified status quo would be maintained on the jurisdictions of RBI and the Competition Commission of India ( CCI) in the banking sector. “Since it is important that the Bill is passed, I am dropping the controversial clauses.” While the central bank would regulate the banking sector, the competition watchdog would look at anticompetitive practices, Chidambaram said.

    Most provisions in the Bill are to strengthen RBI. In Parliamentary democracy, give and take was required and rest of the Bill was important as RBI was awaiting more powers, the finance minister added. Changes to the Bill would pave the way for RBI to issue new bank licences. The central bank had been insisting the enabling legislation be put in place before applications were invited for new bank licences. As the Bill has provisions to increase investors’ voting rights in private banks to 26 per cent from the current 10 per cent, it is expected to bring in more foreign investment in the banking sector. In case of public sector banks, voting rights have been enhanced from one per cent to 10 per cent.

    The Bill was passed by voice vote after the amendments proposed by the Left parties were rejected by the House. The Bill would now be taken up in the Rajya Sabha. The insurance Bill,which seeks to raise the cap on foreign direct investment in insurance firms to 49 per cent from the present 26 per cent,would not be taken up for consideration in the ongoing session of Parliament, Chidambaram told reporters after the passage of the Banking Bill. Earlier, during the discussion on the Banking Bill, he highlighted the need for consolidation in the banking sector so that India could have two- three large public sector banks