Month: January 2014

  • Britain’s World War I diaries go online

    Britain’s World War I diaries go online

    LONDON (TIP): Britain is recruiting an army of amateur historians to sift through more than 1.5 million pages of diaries written by World War I army officers, published online for the first time 100 years after the conflict began. Spanning the whole of the 1914-18 conflict, the diaries are the official record of the war by British army units — but deeply poignant testimony can be found among the battalions’ dayto- day accounts of their movements.

    “I have never spent and imagine that I can never spend a more ghastly and heart-tearing forty-eight hours than the last,” writes Captain James Patterson in an entry from the French trenches dated September 16, 1914. “Swarms of Germans on the ridge rather massed. Our guns open on them at 1,800 yards, and one can see a nasty sight through one’s glasses. Bunches of Germans blown to pieces.” The yellowing pages of Patterson’s diary are among some 2,000 files published online on Tuesday by Britain’s National Archives, as part of a project that will eventually see some 1.5 million similar documents made available on the Internet. “A lot of people think that a unit war diary will only mention places and dates and activities, but there are lots and lots of different stories amongst these records,” said William Spencer, the archives’ principal military specialist.

    “By digitizing them, we not only preserve them for future generations — we also make them available in a new way.” The archives are urging volunteers to help them catalogue the contents of the diaries as part of “Operation War Diary” (operationwardiary.org), a joint project with London’s Imperial War Museum and Zooniverse, a citizen science project. Members of the public will be able to tag key details mentioned on the online pages — such as names, places and dates — with the aim of making the diaries searchable for everyone from academics to family tree researchers. Organisers say the work of these “citizen historians” is crucial because the service records of many of the troops mentioned in the diaries were destroyed by bombing during World War II.

    Patterson’s own neatly typewritten diary, recording the movements of the 1st Battalion South Wales Borderers, comes to an abrupt end on October 25, 1914, when he was killed just three months into the war. His diary had recorded scenes “beyond description”. “Poor fellows shot dead are lying in all directions,” he wrote. “Everywhere the same hard, grim, pitiless sign of battle and war.” He describes his terror of firing into the night, writing: “One is very likely to kill one’s own men, and from wounds I have seen since, I am sure some of them were hit like this.” The diaries also describe lighter moments among the troops, such as rugby matches and tugs-of-war. “A somewhat scrappy game, ending in a draw,” reads the official account of one rugby match.

    Another diary entry — part of a batch yet to be published — describes the exploits of one Reverend Tron, chaplain to some of the battalions. “The padre … repeatedly struck the German in the face until they broke apart,” reads the entry. “Unslinging his glasses, the German thrust them into the hands of the astonished clergyman, and tended his surrender.” Luke Smith of the Imperial War Museum said the work of volunteers in sorting through the diaries would help piece together the stories of the priest and thousands of others who served in the war. “By working with citizen historians, we’re going to find all the references to Reverend Tron, and the half-a-million or so other named people in those diaries,” he said. “We’re going to uncover the story of the Western Front at an unprecedented level of detail.”

  • US suspends 34 nuclear missile officers over exam cheating

    US suspends 34 nuclear missile officers over exam cheating

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The US military has suspended 34 officers in charge of launching nuclear missiles for cheating on a proficiency test, Air Force leaders said on January 15. The scandal at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana marked the latest in a series of damaging revelations dogging the country’s nuclear force, including a separate probe into illegal drugs that came to light last week.

    “There was cheating that took place with respect to this particular test,” air force secretary Deborah Lee James told a news conference. “Some officers did it. Others apparently knew about it, and it appears that they did nothing, or at least not enough, to stop it or to report it.” She called the cheating “absolutely unacceptable behavior” but insisted the scandal did not call into question the safety or competence of the nuclear force.

    “And very importantly, I want you to know that this was a failure of some of our airmen. It was not a failure of the nuclear mission,” said James. The launch officers tied to the cheating allegations have also lost their security clearances. The cheating came to light as investigators were looking into suspicions of illicit drug possession by some officers at Malmstrom and other bases. Two of the officers implicated in the cheating also are linked to the separate drug case, which involves officers at other bases, officials said.

    The Air Force has come under growing scrutiny over a spate of embarrassing setbacks linked to the nuclear force, amid persistent reports of low morale among the troops assigned to the mission. All launch officers in the missile force have been ordered to take the proficiency exam again and the testing will be completed by Thursday, said James, who was accompanied by the Air Force chief of staff, General Mark Welsh. The Malmstrom base has a total of about 190 launch officers, including the 34 who have been suspended.

  • Xi Jinping warns of grim fight against corruption

    Xi Jinping warns of grim fight against corruption

    BEIJING (TIP): Chinese President Xi Jinping said that the drive to curb corruption in public life will become harsher and “all dirty hands will be caught”. The President called corruption a disease that has to be cured with “drastic medicine” and reminded Communist Party officials of an old proverb, which says that it is sometimes necessary to cut off the wrist that is bitten by a snake. Xi has made fighting pervasive corruption a central theme since assuming office and has warned, like others before him, that corruption threatens the party’s survival. “Xi Jinping stressed that while we affirm our achievements, we must also see that the fertile ground for corruption still exists,” state broadcaster CCTV said.

    “The anti-corruption situation remains grim and complicated, the unhealthy influence of the corruption problem is malignant and needs to be solved quickly,” CCTV cited Xi as saying. He said the party must “continue to beat the tigers and flies together”—meaning both high-flying politicians and lowly bureaucrats— to tackle corruption. Xi’s comments, made in a speech to the Communist Party’s anti-graft watchdog, on Monday reflect that the president and the party general secretary are not entirely happy with the progress of the anti-graft drive. Hotbeds of corruption still exist, and it is a complex problem, he said.

    Xi, who became China’s president in March last year, urged efforts to ensure “relatively independent and authoritative supervisory power” of disciplinary agencies at all levels. China saw a rise of 13.3% in anticorruption cases in 2013 as compared to the previous year. Antigraft officials also investigated 31 high profile officials and handed over their cases to prosecutors.

  • Intern’s plea: SC notice to Justice Swatanter Kumar

    Intern’s plea: SC notice to Justice Swatanter Kumar

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Supreme Court today issued a notice to National Green Tribunal (NGT) Chairman Justice Swatanter Kumar on a PIL petition by a woman lawyer claiming that she was sexually harassed by Justice Kumar in May 2011 while she was an intern and he was a sitting SC judge. A Bench headed by Chief Justice P Sathasivam, however, made it clear that it was not expressing any opinion on the allegations against Justice Kumar and would go only into the prayer for setting up a permanent mechanism in the SC to deal with such complaints against sitting or retired judges.

    The Bench, which included Justices Ranjan Gogoi and Shiva Kirti Singh, clarified that the complaint in question would be referred to the proposed committee, subject to SC deciding to constitute it and finding merit in the allegation against the NGT Chairman despite the 30-month delay in filing it. The Bench also sought views of the Centre on the issue and asked senior counsel Fali S Nariman and PP Rao to assist the court as amicus curiae in adjudicating the matter. Attorney General GE Vahanvati would also help the Bench. At the outset, the Bench asked senior counsel Harish Salve, who appeared for the victim, as to why his client had chosen to remain silent for such a long time before coming out in the open despite the fact that as a lawyer she must have been aware of the need to file a complaint immediately on such issues.

    If such complaints were entertained, retired judges would run the risk of facing sexual harassment allegations even at the age of 80-85, decades after demitting office, the Bench noted. Salve said the SC did not have a mechanism to receive such complaints in 2011 and even the present committee set up under its own guidelines in the Vishakha case to deal with sexual harassment at workplaces did not have the mandate to entertain complaints against sitting or retired judges. His client approached the SC with her grievance after the court’s prompt action on a similar complaint by another intern against its former judge AK Ganguly in November- December 2012, he said. During the brief arguments, both Salve and the Bench refrained from taking the name of Justice Kumar, preferring him to mention him as “Respondent No. 2”.

    Asking Justice Kumar and the Centre to respond to the PIL within four weeks, the Bench posted the matter for next hearing on February 14. Justice Kumar has denied the allegations and moved the Delhi High Court claiming damages against the media organisations for denting his image and reputation by naming him, besides pleading for a ban on reporting the issue merely on the basis of unsubstantiated allegations. After hearing his plea, the HC today reserved its order to be delivered tomorrow. The victim, who did her graduation in law from the West Bengal National University for Juridical Sciences (WBNUJS) from 2007-12, had sent a sworn affidavit narrating the harassment to the CJI on November 30, 2011, but the court’s Secretary General intimated her on December 13 that her complaint would not be entertained in the light of the December 5, 2013, full court resolution against admitting such pleas against retired judges. At the time of her internship she was working at the residence of Justice Kumar, assisting him in organising a conference on environment as the SC was closed for the summer vacation.

  • Oxford apologizes for email blunder

    Oxford apologizes for email blunder

    MELBOURNE (TIP): Oxford University has apologized after an administrator accidentally emailed a list of all the poorly performing students’ marks to their peers on Wednesday. The email disclosed the names of students who were awarded marks graded 2.2 and below in their first-term exams at University College. The Oxford Student newspaper reported that a mistake on an Excel document meant that the names and marks of almost 50 students were sent out on an email originally written to inform students of timetables for upcoming exams. Abigail Reeves, president of the University College’s JCR, said that the staff member responsible was “mortified” by the mistake.

    Dr Anne Knowland, a senior tutor at the university said, “We would like to apologize to all the students affected by this disclosure for any distress this has caused and reassure them that we are investigating how this happened and are determined to make sure this does not happen again.” The email is believed to have been sent to hundreds of students. The college has 372 undergraduate and 221 graduate students.

  • Slow and steady tortoise beats rabbit, wins pet ski-off

    Slow and steady tortoise beats rabbit, wins pet ski-off

    BEIJING (TIP): A tortoise beat a rabbit in a skiing competition held for pets and their owners in China, a report said on January 13. Cats and dogs faced off against a menagerie including a rooster and a yellow duck in a race to the finish line on snowy slopes in Henan province, the state-run China News Service said. The 40 human competitors were allowed to place their animals on skis or sledges, or could guide the pet with a lead while skiing, the report said. In an unexpected outcome akin to an ancient Greek fable, a tortoise beat a rabbit, with the shelled reptile eventually claiming third place overall, the report said. “Because the rabbit loved jumping and didn’t follow its owner’s commands, it was overtaken by the tortoise,” it said.

    The tortoise — which would normally be expected to hibernate during the winter — apparently hitched a ride on its owner’s ski equipment, the report added. Pictures showed a yellow duck taking to the slopes in a fetching red neck tie, attracting curious stares from two dogs, before being held aloft by its owner who clutched a red certificate of honour after it waddled over the finish line — even though it finished last overall. The bird’s “spirit of persistence rendered onlookers speechless with admiration,” the report said. Skiing has become more popular in China in recent years, with a range of slopes opening across the country’s cold north, and it is bidding for the 2022 Winter Olympics.

    The bid, though, faces a number of challenges, not least that Asia will host both the 2018 winter Games in South Korea’s Pyeongchang and the 2020 summer Olympics in Tokyo. The US state of California plays host to an annual dog-surfing competition, and a Chinese farmer made headlines in 2012 for training pigs to dive from a threemetre platform.

  • Polls in Egypt close after final day of voting on new constitution: State media

    Polls in Egypt close after final day of voting on new constitution: State media

    CAIRO (TIP): Polls across Egypt closed on Wednesday evening, state media reported, after a second and final day of voting on a draft constitution that could pave the way for a presidential bid by army chief General Abdel Fattah al- Sisi. Though voting passed off more peacefully than on Tuesday, when nine people were killed, officials said police arrested at least 79 people during protests by supporters of deposed President Mohamed Morsi, who was removed from power by Sisi in July.

  • Sheikh Hasina sworn in for 3rd time as Bangladesh PM

    Sheikh Hasina sworn in for 3rd time as Bangladesh PM

    DHAKA (TIP): Sheikh Hasina was sworn in on Sunday for her second straight term as Bangladesh’s prime minister and third overall, following one of the most violent elections in the country’s history. Hasina took the oath of office a week after her Awami League party won an election marred by street fighting, low turnout and an opposition boycott that made the results a foregone conclusion. President Abdul Hamid also swore in 29 cabinet ministers and 19 deputies. The election was one of the deadliest since Bangladesh’s 1971 independence, as an opposition alliance led by Khaleda Zia, former prime minister and Hasina’s archrival, attempted to derail the vote by calling weeks of strikes and blockades. At least 18 people died in election day violence, and more than 100 polling centers were set on fire. Since last February, at least 300 people have died in political violence.

    Zia, leader of the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, or BNP, was absent from the swearing-in ceremony at the presidential house in the capital, Dhaka. Many western diplomats attended the ceremony despite a call from the United Nations, the United States and the European Union for an inclusive election. The election boycott by Zia’s party means Hasina’s new government will have no strong opposition in parliament. The BNP has vowed to continue trying to force Hasina to step down and allow a caretaker government to oversee a new election in which the opposition party would take part.

    After she was sworn in, Hasina, who also served as prime minister from 1996-2001, said she would work to uphold democracy and would not hesitate to take any measures if a consensus was reached. The political gridlock plunges Bangladesh deeper into turmoil and economic stagnation. The country also is struggling to reinvigorate its $20 billion garment industry, which has been hit by a series of horrifying disasters including a factory collapse last April that killed more than 1,100 workers.

  • Revoking AFSPA will not help Kashmir: Army Chief

    Revoking AFSPA will not help Kashmir: Army Chief

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Army Chief General Bikram Singh warned against revoking or diluting the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) in Jammu and Kashmir and said he was positive that recent talks with Pakistan and China would ensure peace along the border. “There are inputs of a possible terrorist spillover into the Valley after the US drawdown in Afghanistan.We need to look at developments in Afghanistan in 2014 before we can look at perhaps tampering with or diluting the Disturbed Areas Act,” the General said while addressing the media ahead of the Army Day (Jan 15).

    It would be prudent to wait and watch for a while before taking a call on AFSPA, he said. On recent talks between the Director Generals of Military Operations (DGMOs) of India and Pakistan, the Army Chief said: “The meeting was very positive. The Indian side has taken up with Pakistan all issues pertaining to the peace and tranquility at the Line of Control (LoC).” “The talks are a step in right direction and will help in maintaining the ceasefire agreement. Peace is conducive for development and helps in addressing aspirations of people along the LoC. He, however, warned any infiltration attempt from across the border would elicit a strong response.

    “We will give a befitting reply if an infiltration attempt is made,” the General said. The Army Chief said the idea is not to escalate tension along the LoC but to give a professional response. “If rules are broken (by Pakistan), we cannot follow rules… then rules will be broken”, he said. To a query whether the Army gave an adequate response to Pakistan following last year’s gruesome beheadings or not, the General said: “This assertion that the Army has not taken action is not correct”. “Let me assure you that action has been taken.

    I invite the attention to a Geo TV (Pakistan news channel) report on December 23 which talked about their officer and nine jawans being killed and over 12 wounded. This has happened due to firing of your soldiers on the ground. They have done their bit,” the Army Chief told reporters. He pinned hopes on the Border Defence Cooperation Agreement (BDCA) signed in October 2013 for maintaining peace along the Line of Actual Control (LAC). Asked about India’s response to frequent incursions by Chinese troops in Ladakh, the General said: “We have increased patrolling in disputed areas. There has been an improvement in the situation along the LAC. Attempts are on to ensure that the agreements are adhered to.”

  • United States seeks probe into Sri Lankan war crimes

    United States seeks probe into Sri Lankan war crimes

    COLOMBO (TIP): The US on Sunday pressed Sri Lanka to probe alleged rights abuses by its army through independent and credible investigations after a top American diplomat recorded eyewitness accounts of serious “abuses” during the final stages of the civil war with the LTTE. The US ambassador at large at the office of global criminal justice, Stephen J Rapp, concluded his week-long visit to Sri Lanka during which tweets from the US mission here carried photos of alleged sites in the north where people were killed due to Lankan military shelling in the 2009 war. Rapp had listened to eyewitness accounts of rights abuses “including those that occurred at the end of the war”, a statement from the US embassy said here.

    Sri Lankan military had defeated the Tamil Tiger rebels in May 2009. Colombo has resisted calls to probe claims that over 40,000 ethnic minority Tamils were killed by the military during the final phase of the civil war. ” … the government of the US encourages the government of Sri Lanka to seek the truth through independent and credible investigations, and where relevant, have prosecutions,” it said. Rapp called on foreign minister GL Peiris on Friday. Sri Lanka has denied charges that around 40,000 ethnic Tamil civilians were killed by the army during the final push that crushed the LTTE.

    The Lankan military has denied US accusations levelled through photographs during Rapp’s visit which came ahead of the March sessions of the UN human rights council in Geneva. The US has told Lanka that it could introduce a third successive resolution over rights accountability and reconciliation with the Tamil minority at the Council. Two previous resolutions, both US-moved, were supported by India. Rapp’s visit met with a protest opposite the US embassy. A nationalist group slammed the US for interfering in the country’s internal affairs. A protest was sparked when Rapp told the main Tamil party TNA that the March resolution would push for an international war crimes investigation.

  • DELHI HC PUTS CURBS ON MEDIA

    DELHI HC PUTS CURBS ON MEDIA

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Delhi High Court restrained the media from publishing and telecasting the sexual harassment allegations levelled against National Green Tribunal (NGT) Chairman Swatanter Kumar by a woman lawyer. The alleged harassment took place in May 2011 while she was an intern with Justice Kumar, who was a judge of the Supreme Court at that time.

    Justice Manmohan Singh also directed the media to delete the defamatory parts of the news items and the photographs of Justice Kumar within 24 hours and stay away from carrying his photographs till further orders. The court passed the order on a petition filed by Justice Kumar seeking a gag order against the media and claiming damages from two news channels and an English daily for defaming him on the basis of unsubstantiated allegations by the ex-intern.

    The court issued notice to the complainant and the media organisations on Justice Kumar’s petition asking them to file their response. Posting the next hearing for February 24, the HC said its order would remain in force till then. The ex-judge of the SC has sought at least Rs 5 crore each as damages from the woman lawyer and the three media groups for attempting to sully his image and reputation built over an illustrious career spanning 43 years as a lawyer and a judge of high courts and the Supreme Court. The media had no business to undermine his fundamental right to good name and reputation, his counsel Mukul Rohatgi had contended yesterday.

  • Fire breaks out at Pak military hospital where Musharraf is undergoing treatment

    Fire breaks out at Pak military hospital where Musharraf is undergoing treatment

    ISLAMABAD (TIP): A small fire on Wednesday broke out at a military hospital in Rawalpindi, where former Pakistani military ruler General Pervez Musharraf is under treatment. The cause of the blaze, which broke out at the 4th floor of the Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology (AFIC), is suspected to be an electric short circuit, sources said. The fire was extinguished immediately, officials said. Local media reports said Musharraf was not affected. The former military ruler is under trial for treason over his imposition of emergency rule in 2007, charges he has dismissed as politically motivated. He was admitted to AFIC on January 2 after suffering “heart problems” while being driven to court.

  • Indian Army chief’s statement provocative: Pakistan

    Indian Army chief’s statement provocative: Pakistan

    ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has said Indian Army chief General Bikram Singh’s statement on ceasefire violations was provocative and regrettable. In a clear warning to Pakistan, General Bikram Singh said on Monday any militant who crosses the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu & Kashmir would be fired at. Pakistan’s Inter-Service Public Relations ( ISPR) said in a press release later that it is contrary to the facts on ground. The Pakistan Army respects the ceasefire agreement in letter and spirit, it quoted a Pakistan military’s spokesperson as saying. After the meeting between the Directors General of Military Operations (DGMOs) Dec 24, 2013, the situation along the LoC has improved considerably.

    Such accusation and provocative statements are regrettable and counterproductive, the spokesperson added. The Indian Army chief in his statement Monday also said the army needed to continue guarding the troubled northern state “under the present circumstances”. “We will fire at any militant trying to enter through the LoC,” Gen. Bikram Singh said at the annual press conference ahead of Army Day Jan 15. His comments came as reports in the Pakistani media blamed India for violating the ceasefire and firing at a civilian near the LoC.

  • Himachal, Uttarakhand sops to continue till 2017

    Himachal, Uttarakhand sops to continue till 2017

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) extended the special industrial package for Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand till 2017, a move that will boost industrialisation and create more employment in the two hilly states. Both the states have seen phenomenal growth in investment and industrial growth in the last 10 years due to the package.

    However, the neighbouring states like Punjab have been opposing the extension of the package on the plea that it is driving industry out of the state towards the hilly states because of special incentives. Welcoming the decision to extend the package, Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma said this would generate gainful employment, especially for the rural youth. “It will also give a fillip to manufacturing and the small and medium enterprises in these two states”, he said.

    A special package for industrial development in both the states was extended by the government in 2003 as these states were lagging in industrial growth. In 2007, it was curtailed, before being restored till 2010. The capital investment subsidy was one of the major components of a special industrial package offered to the states by the union government. The objective of the policy announced in 2003 was to provide the required incentives as well as enabling environment for industrial development, improve availability of capital and increase market access to provide fillip to private investment.

  • Seven militants killed in Afghanistan

    Seven militants killed in Afghanistan

    KABUL (TIP): At least seven militants were killed in separate military operations in Afghanistan, the interior ministry said in a statement on January 14. The Afghan police, army and the National Directorate for Security (NDS) have carried out several operations in Baghlan, Zabul, Uruzgan and Farah provinces and killed at least seven Taliban militants, injured three and arrested six others, Xinhua quoted the ministry as saying. They also found weapons and defused several improvised explosive devices and roadside bombs, it said.

  • Suicide attacker strikes police bus in Afghanistan, 6 injured

    Suicide attacker strikes police bus in Afghanistan, 6 injured

    KABUL, AFGHANISTAN (TIP) : Police say a suicide attacker has struck a bus carrying police recruits in eastern Kabul, wounding at least six police. Kabul Police Chief General Mohammad Zahir Zahir says three civilians were also very slightly wounded in the attack, which occurred around 3:30 p.m. local time (1100 GMT). Police spokesman Hashmat Stanekzai said Sunday that the attacker, who died in the attempt, rode a bicycle packed with explosives and targeted a bus from the Kabul police training center.

  • Dedh Ishqiya

    Dedh Ishqiya

    Story: A team of con men fall for a Begum and her female confidante. Does their love fructify? Review: Dedh Ishqiya is a sequel to the zany 2010 black comedy Ishqiya. Like its prequel, the idiom and the setting are rural. The spoken language is Hindi with a peppering of heavy-duty Urdu. Thank God for the English subtitles in circuits except the Hindi belt! What’s also nice is the contemporary thought woven in (with references to Iphone-5 and hamburgers in New York). So, the desi-yuppies can connect. The plot, with many interesting twists, is about the irrepressible team of crooks, Khallu and Babban (Naseeruddin Shah and Arshad Warsi respectively). When these two arrive in Mehmudabad, Naseer finds himself magnetically drawn to the local heiress, Begum Para (Madhuri Dixit Nene).

    And Arshad falls head over heels in love with the Begum’s aide, Muniya (Huma Qureshi). The uncle-nephew team chase their love interests and build castles in the air about sex, life and wealth. The women, Begum Para and Muniya, also have a back-story. Para is the widow of a debauched Nawab who gambled away his wealth on men and wine. Her crazy suitor, Jaan Mohammad ( Vijay Raaz) wants to bail her out. In their attempt to live happily ever after, Begum and Muniya devise their own Thelma and Louise (the 1991 Hollywood flick) kind of plan. Not willing to give up, Khallu and Baban try hard to fit in. Vishal Bharadwaj’s dialogue keeps you in splits.

    The free usage of words like sex and chu**yapaa tickle the funny bone. Naseer is back in super-form after straying in outings like Jackpot. Ditto Arshad. Madhuri looks gorgeous but the dhak-dhak girl (now woman) falls short on the oomph meter, as compared to Vidya Balan in Ishqiya. Huma Qureshi is interesting.

  • ELLI TO SIZZLE IN ATUL’S FILM

    ELLI TO SIZZLE IN ATUL’S FILM

    Elli Avram won quite a few hearts, including that of the host’s during a recently concluded reality show. While on ‘Bigg Boss’ Salman Khan had promised her a film once she was out of the house and buzz was that she would be seen in a special appearance in ‘Jai Ho’.

    But when asked director Sohail Khan laughed off the rumour saying, “The film is complete, there’s no place for anyone else to make an appearance.” But all is not lost. According to a source, the ‘ Mickey Virus’ actress will be shaking a leg in Salman’s brother-in-law Atul Agnihotri’s upcoming film ‘ Oh Teri’.

  • 8 PUNJAB COPS GET LIFE TERM FOR MURDER

    8 PUNJAB COPS GET LIFE TERM FOR MURDER

    BATHINDA (TIP): The court of Additional Sessions Judge today sentenced eight policemen, who were found guilty of killing a city resident 22 years ago, to life imprisonment. The body has not been recovered till date. The victim’s relatives had accused the eight policemen of arresting Paramjit Singh, killing him and disposing of the body. The court of MPS Pahwa also imposed a fine of Rs 10,000 on each policeman and ordered that 15 per cent of the total fine be paid as compensation to the victim’s family.

    The policemen’s counsel, advocate Gurjeet Khadial, said that they would appeal in the high court that the “deceased” Paramjit was alive and spotted in Patna and Maharashtra by some Bathinda residents.The accused include dismissed Punjab Police DSP Gurjit Singh (now a proclaimed offender), dismissed Inspector Baljinder Kumar, ASI Lakhvir Singh (now dead), ASI Gurbachan Singh, constable Pal Singh (now dead), retired head constable Mal Singh, head constable Harinder Singh, head constable Kanwaljit Singh now deployed at Civil Lines Police Station, retired constable Tarlok Singh, dismissed home guard jawan Jagsir Singh and Home Guard jawan Jarnail Singh.

  • Texas judge recuses herself from lawsuit over brain-dead pregnant woman

    Texas judge recuses herself from lawsuit over brain-dead pregnant woman

    TEXAS (TIP): The judge overseeing a lawsuit seeking to force a Texas hospital to remove a braindead pregnant woman from life support abruptly recused herself from the case January 16. In a oneparagraph order issued without explanation late in the afternoon, Tarrant County District Judge Melody Wilkinson removed herself from the nationally watched case of Marlise Munoz, the 33-year-old Fort Worth paramedic whose husband has sued to have her taken off of life support.

    Marlise Munoz was 14 weeks pregnant when she collapsed in November from what doctors believe was a pulmonary embolism. Her husband, Erick Munoz, has said that doctors have described her as brain-dead and that his wife was clear that she wouldn’t want to be kept alive. Erick Munoz on Tuesday sued John Peter Smith Hospital of Fort Worth, which responded that it was barred by state law from removing a pregnant patient from life support. Neither judge Wilkinson nor the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office would elaborate on the move, but Bud Kennedy, a reporter for the Fort Worth Star- Telegram, tweeted on Jan 16 that Wilkinson’s campaign treasurer is also general counsel for JPS Health Network, the hospital’s parent company.

  • Texas Family Of Four Arrested On Drug Charges After Neighbors Report Suspicious Activity To Police

    Texas Family Of Four Arrested On Drug Charges After Neighbors Report Suspicious Activity To Police

    TEXAS TIP): Four members of a Texas family face drug charges after neighbors reported suspicious activity at their home to police using a crimeprevention smartphone app. Parents Raymond and Stephanie Wood were arrested last January 17, along with their 18-year-old son and 22- year-old daughter. They were all charged with drug possession, and the parents face additional charges of possession of an illegal weapon, according to police.

    The son’s girlfriend was also arrested, according to the mediapersons. Harris County deputies allegedly found marijuana, cocaine, morphine, and Xanax at the home, and several illegal weapons including a sawedoff shotgun. Neighbors told that for months they’d seen a constant flow of traffic to the house — even into the wee hours of the morning — and had observed other strange activity as well. “There would be a skateboarder that would come down our street,” neighbor Carlie Padgett told the station. “He had a bag in his hand and he would throw it in their yard and pick up a bag and skateboard back out.”

    Police said they acted after receiving a narcotics tip though a smartphone app called iWatchHarrisCounty. “[The narcotics unit] did an excellent job developing probable cause. We got a search warrant went inside the house,” Sgt. Larry Franks told . The family’s lawyer, Sam Adamo, called the raid a “home invasion. He also said one of the weapons belonged to a deceased son who was a U.S. Marine and explained that the traffic at the house was due to an ecigarette business that Stephanie Wood and her daughter ran out of their home.

  • TO PARIS, WITH LOVE FROM JACQUELINE FERNANDEZ

    TO PARIS, WITH LOVE FROM JACQUELINE FERNANDEZ

    Jacqueline Fernandez, who is currently shooting for the ambitious action entertainer ‘Kick’, recently gifted her parents a holiday to France , a country they wanted to visit for a long time. “Jacqueline knew that her parents wanted to visit the country for a long time now. So, she planned the entire trip for them. She not only booked the tickets, but also made all the arrangements for their trip, including their stay and sightseeing, etc,” says a source close to the actor.

    And while Jackie wanted to accompany her parents on the trip, she has been extremely tied up with her shooting schedule for Kick and other assignments. Says Jacqueline, “My parents always wanted to visit France, so I decided to gift them a vacation to the beautiful country that they both love.”

  • Sushmita Sen is gearing up for a comeback

    Sushmita Sen is gearing up for a comeback

    Sushmita Sen has lost weight and is gearing up for a comeback and says 2014 is going to be her year. “I have been preparing actually since 2013. I know every time an actor loses weight or starts looking fitter or thinner, it is always for a reason. But this is me getting ready for the most fantastic time of my life in all aspects. Professionally and personally 2014 is going to be my year,” the 38-year-old said at an art exhibition. Sushmita is eagerly awaiting the announcement of two projects, one of which goes on floors in July.

    “Professionally you are going to see me back this year for sure. We have two very nice announcements, hopefully they should happen soon,” Sushmita said. “The filming for one of them begins in July and the rest of them is more of combining the entrepreneur side of me and the actor and the mum side of me, all of it together,” she added.

  • Man gives change to a homeless person, gets handcuffed

    Man gives change to a homeless person, gets handcuffed

    HOUSTON (TIP): Greg Snider was in a Houston, Texas parking lot, on the phone making a business call. While in the lot, a homeless man approached his car and asked for change. Snider gave him 75 cents and then drove off. KPRC Local 2 News reported on the shocking thing that happened next. When Snider pulled onto a nearby freeway, a police car pulled him to the side.

    Greg was surprised by how aggressive the officer was, telling KPRC, “He’s screaming. He’s yelling. He’s telling me to get out of the car. He’s telling me to put my hands on the hood…They’re like, ‘We saw you downtown. We saw what you did.’ And I was like, ‘Are you kidding me? I gave a homeless man 75 cents.’” He was dragged out of his car and handcuffed. So what was it that police insisted Mr. Snider had done? Give that homeless man drugs. Again, he didn’t.

    Snider only gave the man some money. Snider agreed to let police search his car for drugs, and they did so for an hour while Greg remained handcuffed. In that time, ten more police cars showed up and pulled over. The search was not fruitful – no drugs were found in the car. That is, because, as previously mentioned, Snider didn’t have any drugs to give. Aside from the damage police did to his car, Snider isn’t happy that the police were actually laughing about the mistake. Mr. Snider has filed a complaint. Police declined to comment to KPRC about the incident.

  • Thieves Have Stolen in Dallas 60 Cars Left Idling to Warm Up

    Thieves Have Stolen in Dallas 60 Cars Left Idling to Warm Up

    DALLAS (TIP): Think before you leave your car idling to warm up. You may soon develop cold feet. Leaving an unwatched car idling on a Dallas street is like wrapping a steak in bacon, throwing it to a pack of stray dogs, and hoping it doesn’t get eaten. The numbers are a bit stupefying. In the month of January, which is all of 15.75 days old, thieves have made off with 60 cars that had been left to warm up. That’s four people every day.