Month: May 2016

  • EINSTEIN’S RELATIVITY THEORY STILL VALID: STUDY

    EINSTEIN’S RELATIVITY THEORY STILL VALID: STUDY

    TOKYO (TIP): After analyzing a 3D map of 3,000 galaxies that are 13 billion light years from Earth, an international team led by Japanese researchers has found that theoretical physicist Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity is still valid.

    Since it was discovered in the late 1990s that the universe is expanding at an accelerated rate, scientists have been trying to explain why.

    The mysterious dark energy could be driving acceleration, or Einstein’s theory of general relativity, which says gravity warps space and time, could be breaking down.

    “We tested the theory of general relativity further than anyone else ever has. It’s a privilege to be able to publish our results 100 years after Einstein proposed his theory,” said project researcher Teppei Okumura from Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics (Kavli IPMU) at University of Tokyo.

    To test Einstein’s theory, the team led by Okumura and colleagues, with researchers from Tohoku University and Kyoto University, used “Fast Sound Survey” data on more than 3,000 distant galaxies to analyze their velocities and clustering.

    The results indicated that even far into the universe, general relativity is valid, giving further support that the expansion of the universe could be explained by a cosmological constant as proposed by Einstein in his theory of general relativity.

    “Having started this project 12 years ago, it gives me great pleasure to finally see this result come out,” added Karl Glazebrook, professor at Swinburne University of Technology who proposed the survey.

    No one has been able to analyse galaxies more than 10 billion light years away but the team managed to break this barrier thanks to the FMOS (Fiber Multi-Object Spectrograph) on the Subaru Telescope which can analyse galaxies 12.4-14.7 billion light years away.

  • Stain on your shirt? Technology launched to make it clean itself

    Stain on your shirt? Technology launched to make it clean itself

    AHMEDABAD (TIP): Getting rid of stubborn stains from clothes will no more be a herculean task. The Facilitation Centre for Industrial Plasma Technologies (FCIPT), a division of Institute for Plasma Research (IPR) in Gandhinagar, has manufactured a technology wherein a cloth can be rendered stain proof.

    The FCIPT has developed nano particle powder wherein titanium metal is vaporised with plasma to form titanium dioxide (TiO2). These nano particles, when mixed with alcohol -like in the case of deodorants – and sprayed on clean clothes prove to be excellent stain cutters. “The TiO2 nano particles get trapped between fibres of the cloth and form a protective coat. The moment a tough stain like say turmeric enriched curry falls on the your nano-treated shirt or top, one just has to leave it in the sun for two to three hours and the stain vanishes instantly,” says C Balasubramanian, senior scientist at FCIPT.

    “The sun’s ultraviolet rays activate the TiO2 which helps oxygen from atmosphere to convert to radical oxygen that reacts with stain molecules and breaks it down – thereby removing stains. This process is called a self-cleaning cloth,” Balasubramanian explained.

    Once sprayed, the TiO2 coat remains for more than 20 washes. Balasubramanian adds, “Normally, preparing TiO2 through a chemical process involves several steps over many days. At FCIPT we have prepared a process to produce nano particles of high purity in large quantities through plasma treatment in 2 to 3 minutes flat,” the scientist said. Dr S K Nema, senior scientist at FCIPT, said, “We have developed a system where textile rolls are passed through plasma which modifies the surface of the textile up to a few nano meters.” Source: TOI

  • RECORD 1,284 PLANETS ADDED TO LIST OF WORLDS BEYOND SOLAR SYSTEM

    RECORD 1,284 PLANETS ADDED TO LIST OF WORLDS BEYOND SOLAR SYSTEM

    CAPE CANAVERAL (TIP): Astronomers have discovered 1,284 more planets beyond our solar system, with nine possibly in orbits suitable for surface water that could bolster the prospects of supporting life, scientists said on Tuesday.

    The announcement brings the total number of confirmed planets outside the solar system to 3,264. Called exoplanets, the bulk were detected by Nasa’s Kepler space telescope, which searched for habitable planets like Earth.

    The new planets were identified during Kepler’s four-year primary mission, which ended in 2013, and previously had been considered planet-candidates.

    Scientists announcing the largest single finding of planets to date used a new analysis technique that applied statistical models to confirm the batch as planets, while ruling out scenarios that could falsely appear to be orbiting planets.

    “We now know there could be more planets than stars,” Paul Hertz, Nasa’s astrophysics division director, said in a news release. “This knowledge informs the future missions that are needed to take us ever closer to finding out whether we are alone in the universe.” Of the new planets, nearly 550 could be rocky like Earth, Nasa said. Nine planets are the right distance from a star to support temperatures at which water could pool. The discovery brings to 21 the total number of known planets with such conditions, which could permit life.

    Kepler looked for slight changes in the amount of light coming from about 150,000 target stars. Some of the changes were caused by orbiting planets passing across, or transiting, the face of their host stars, relative to Kepler’s line of sight.

    The phenomenon is identical to Monday’s transit of Mercury across the sun, as seen from Earth’s perspective. The analysis technique, developed by Princeton University astronomer Tim Morton and colleagues, analyzed which changes in the amount of light are due to planets transiting and which are due to stars or other objects.

    The team verified, with a more than 99 percent accuracy, that 1,284 candidates were indeed orbiting planets, Morton said.

    The results suggest that more than 10 billion potentially habitable planets could exist throughout the galaxy, said Kepler lead scientist Natalie Batalha, with Nasa’s Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California. The nearest potentially habitable planet is about 11 light years from Earth.

    “Astronomically speaking, that’s a very close neighbor,” she said.

  • Translate on tap eliminates your need to open any app

    Translate on tap eliminates your need to open any app

    NEW DELHI (TIP): “Of the 500 million people who use Google Translate, more than 9 in 10 live outside the US,” said Google on the launch of a new translation feature in a blog post.

    Remeber Now on Tap? The feature due to which pressing the home button on an Android smartphone long enough would result in a contextual search of everything on the screen. Tap to Translate is a similar feature but instead of conducting a search, it translates any language you’re not familiar with on the sreen.

    “We know millions of you painstakingly copy-paste text between Google Translate and other apps. Now, you can just copy the text of a chat, comment, song lyric, etc. in whichever app you’re using, and a translation will pop up right there—no need to switch apps,” said Google. Besides making the process of translation quick enough to be comfortable for chatting, the company also announced the addition of Offline Mode to the
    iOS? version of their Google Translate app.

    They also claim to have shrunk the size of their language packages by 90 percent.“Offline Mode is easy to set up: Just tap the arrow next to the language name to download the package for that language, and then you’ll be ready to do text translations whether you’re online or not—and it works with Tap to Translate too,” said Google.The final feature that Google added to translate will be of special interest to anyone visiting China in the future. “Finally, we’re adding Word Lens in Chinese.

    It’s our 29th language for instant visual translation, and it reads both to and from English, for both Simplified and Traditional Chinese.

    Try it on menus, signs, packages, and other printed text. As with all Word Lens languages, it works offline,” said Google, concluding the blog post listing out the most substantial updates to the leading translation service across the globe.

  • IXPAND IS A PHYSICAL ALTERNATIVE TO ICLOUD AND GOOGLE DRIVE

    IXPAND IS A PHYSICAL ALTERNATIVE TO ICLOUD AND GOOGLE DRIVE

    NEW DELHI (TIP): SanDisk is making it easier to create more free space on your iPhone and iPad with the launch of iXpand. It’s basically a pendrive with a lightning port at the other end.

    When plugged in, it can back up photos and videos from your camera roll, watch movies directly from the drive and transfer files to your computer at USB 3.0 speeds.

    While Photos can be backed up because Apple allows access to them, opening files on the iXpand drive –copied form a computer via the USB?port– is only possible by installing the companion app.

    “The iXpand Flash Drive features a two-year warranty5 and will initially be exclusively available at Amazon.in in capacities of 16GB, 32GB, 64GB and 128GB at Rs.3990, Rs.4990, Rs.6990 and Rs.9990, respectively. The drive is compatible with iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 5s, iPhone SE, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5, iPad Pro (12.9-inch), iPad Air 2, iPad Air, iPad mini 4, iPad mini 3, iPad mini 2, iPad mini and iPod touch (5th generation) running iOS 8.2 or later,” said SanDisk.

    However, if backing up photos is the sole reason you’d buy the drive for, try out a cheaper — free –alternative called Google Photos cloud backup first.

  • STUDY IDENTIFIES SAFER ACUTE STROKE TREATMENT: MODIFIED MEDICINE DOSAGE

    STUDY IDENTIFIES SAFER ACUTE STROKE TREATMENT: MODIFIED MEDICINE DOSAGE

    Reducing the dosage of a key medication currently used to treat strokes helps reduce risk of bleeding and improve survival rates of patients, a study said on Wednesday.

    Researchers said that the findings can change the way the most common form of stroke is treated globally, including in India where an estimated 1.2 million people suffer from ischaemic strokes and the high cost of the drug, lack of health infrastructure and public awareness are the reasons for underutilisation of this treatment. Professor Jeyaraj D Pandian, who was involved in the concept and design of the study, said that intravenous rtPA (or alteplase) therapy is the currently approved one within 4.5 hrs after the onset of stroke symptoms and this drug breaks and dissolves the clot in the blocked arteries inside the brain.

    However, very few patients in India receive this drug because of late arrival to the hospital or unable to afford the treatment. The cost of the drug is about Rs 67,000.

    Researchers said that the high cost of the drug, lack of health infrastructure and public awareness about stroke are the reasons for underutilisation of this treatment in India.

    Researchers at the George Institute for Global Health investigated a modified dosage of rtPA which can be considered to be given at a subsidised rate at all government hospitals to eligible patients that can reduce serious bleeding in the brain and improve survival rates.

    “It is hoped that the findings from this trial called ‘Enchanted’ involving more than 3000 patients in 100 hospitals worldwide could change the way the most common form of stroke is treated globally.

    “The study shows that if we reduce the level of dosage, most of the clot busting or dissolving benefits of the higher dose is maintained but there is significantly less bleeding inside the brain, thereby improving the survival rates. On a global scale, this approach could save the lives of tens of thousands of people,” a statement from The George Institute for Global Health said.

    Stroke or brain attack is the leading cause of death and disability in rural India while an estimated 1.2 million people in India suffer ischaemic strokes which is blockage of an artery that supplies blood to the brain, each year.

    Worldwide, the figures are estimated to be 2 million in China, 640,000 in the USA, 120,000 in the UK and 40,000 in Australia.

    The findings of the study showed that compared to standard dose (0.9mg/kg body weight), the lower dose (0.6mg/kg) of rtPA reduced rates of serious bleeding in the brain, known as intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) by two-thirds.

    It also found that after 90 days, 8.5% of patients died after receiving low dose rtPA, compared to 10.3% who received the standard dose.

  • SCIENTISTS SAY FASTING HELPS FIGHT FATTY  LIVER DISEASE

    SCIENTISTS SAY FASTING HELPS FIGHT FATTY LIVER DISEASE

    Scientists have found that upon deprivation of food a certain protein is produced that adjusts the metabolism in the liver, assisting in warding off fatty liver disease.

    According to researchers, a reduced intake of calories, such as in the framework of an intermittent fasting diet, can help to whip the metabolism back into shape.

    The findings showed that during fasting, the stress molecule reduces the absorption of fatty acids in the liver and improves sugar metabolism.

    In the study, published in the open access journal EMBO Molecular Medicine, the researchers found that during fasting GADD45 beta — protein, whose name stands for ‘Growth Arrest and DNA Damage-inducible’ – controls the absorption of fatty acids in the liver.

    Mice who lacked the corresponding gene were more likely to develop fatty liver disease.

    However when the protein was restored, the fat content of the liver normalised and also sugar metabolism improved.

    “The stress on the liver cells caused by fasting consequently appears to stimulate GADD45 beta production, which then adjusts the metabolism to the low food intake,” said Stephan Herzig, professor and Director of the Institute for Diabetes and Cancer (IDC) at the Helmholtz Zentrum München in Germany.

    Also, in humans, a low GADD45 beta level was accompanied by increased fat accumulation in the liver and an elevated blood sugar level.

    “Once we understand how fasting influences our metabolism we can attempt to bring about this effect therapeutically,” Herzig added.

    The researchers now want to use the new findings for therapeutic intervention in the fat and sugar metabolism so that the positive effects of food deprivation might be translated for treatment.

  • DELICIOUS DETOX WATERS TO BURN BODY FAT

    DELICIOUS DETOX WATERS TO BURN BODY FAT

    A numero uno advice for everyone wanting to stay fit is to drink plenty of water. But the goodness of water can be enhanced simply by adding some interesting elements to it. “While infused water has the benefit of being full of flavor, it also has no calories, making it a very powerful tool in your efforts to lose weight and gain better health,” shares nutritionist Shikha Shah.

    We bring you some infused waters that are brilliant for you…

    Fruity detox water Fruits are an extremely important part of your diet but many nutritionists advise against juicing them up. You can enjoy the goodness of these fruits by adding them to water. It even makes for the perfect summer drink. So how do we go about it?Slice a watermelon, strawberry and kiwi and put these in a bottle of water. Let it sit for a few hours and you have a bottle of fruity goodness.

    Lemon, mint and cucumber detox water Want to slim down? You must have heard the ‘evergreen’ drink up advice. Drinking plenty of water is considered to be the perfect detox but if you add a couple of more elements to it, it can work on speeding your metabolism and flushing the toxins out effectively. Here’s the recipe: Add a handful of mint, sliced lemon and cucumber to a bottle of water. Let it sit for a couple of hours and your detox drink is ready. If you want, you can have 2-3 bottles ready for optimum results.

    Apple cinnamon slimming water Want to enjoy a zero calorie drink? If you are thinking about Coke Zero or Diet Coke or Diet Pepsi, they will never solve the purpose. You can make your own zero calorie drink. Here’s how- Thinly slice an apple and take a few cinnamon sticks. Add them both to a bottle of water and let it sit in fridge. You can add apples and  cinnamon sticks as per your taste. If you want a stronger taste, add more quantity of fruit.

    Aloe drink Aloe is detoxifying and supports the immune system. Not only that, it also lowers cholesterol and blood sugar. Consuming aloe water is very good for your digestive system. You can take readymade aloe juice but the fresher it is, the better will be the results. To prepare fresh aloe drink, slice aloe leaf into two and scoop out the pulp. Mix it with equal amounts of lemon and a cup of water in a blender.

    Lemon ginger detox water Ginger is known for its pain relieving properties and also for being a wonderful detox agent. So lemon mixed with ginger makes for the perfect detox recipe. To prepare this water, you have to take a bottle of water and add half a lemon juice and half knob of ginger (grated). Make sure the ginger you use is fresh. This makes for a perfect day-starter, something that can be consumed as the first thing in the morning. Lemon, of course will help flushing out toxins.

    Watermelon water Watermelon is a rich source of vitamins and minerals and is also a brilliant source for flushing out toxins from your system. Add it to your water to enjoy its detoxing benefits. Cut chunks of watermelon and add to water. Keep it in the refrigerator for a few hours and enjoy this infused watermelon water.

  • Islamic State kills 17 Iraqi soldiers with suicide truck bombs

    Islamic State kills 17 Iraqi soldiers with suicide truck bombs

    BAGHDAD (TIP): Islamic State insurgents killed at least 17 Iraqi soldiers with suicide truck bombs on May 12 in a major attack on government forces that recaptured the western city of Ramadi in December, military officials said.

    The jihadist group also killed two policemen and wounded eight others in two suicide bombings in Abu Ghraib outside Baghdad, a day after killing at least 80 people in bombings at an outdoor market and two checkpoints inside the capital.

    The attacks near Ramadi dealt one of the heaviest blows to the army since it drove Islamic State out of the western city five months ago.

    An army colonel told Reuters that militants killed at least 17 soldiers with suicide truck bombs in Jarayshi, 10 km (6 miles) north of Ramadi. They also surrounded an army regiment, seized a bridge and cut a key supply route linking Ramadi to the Thirthar district further north, army sources said.

    Air strikes by a U.S.-led coalition later allowed government forces to regain control of the supply route. But despite army reinforcements, the militants had dug into northern residential areas by nightfall and were lobbing mortars at government positions across the Euphrates river.

    An officer said the Islamic State attack appeared designed to delay an expected army offensive that would have completely severed militant supply routes to Falluja on the western approaches to Baghdad, which Iraqi forces have ringed for more than six months.

    As Islamic State has been pushed out of key towns and cities it seized in 2014, it has resorted increasingly to guerrilla-style attacks in civilian areas under nominal Iraqi government control.

    The toll from Wednesday’s three suicide bombings in Baghdad made it the deadliest day in Baghdad so far this year.

    Police sources said Thursday’s bombers approached a police station in Abu Ghraib from two directions before detonating their explosives. Baghdad Operations Command, one of the security organs charged with protecting the capital, said a third assailant was killed on approach to the police station.

    Amaq news agency, which supports Islamic State, said two militants had clashed with police at al-Zeidan station before setting off their explosives-filled vests.

    Sunni Muslim militant violence against security forces and Shi’ite Muslim civilians has persisted since Baghdad became the target of almost daily bombings a decade ago following the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 that toppled Saddam Hussein.

    A recent surge in bombings has heightened criticism of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi as he grapples with a political crisis over his attempts to overhaul his cabinet to weed out corruption and mismanagement. (AP)

  • Pope Francis might consider ordaining women as deacons

    Pope Francis might consider ordaining women as deacons

    VATICAN CITY (TIP): Pope Francis on May 12 hinted that he is now open to the idea of women serving as deacons in the Catholic Church. In a restricted meeting conducted with some 900 superiors of women’s religious orders, the pope agreed to a proposal to create an official commission to study whether women can be deacons.

    Deacons are ordained ministers but are not priests, though they can perform many of the same functions as priests like preside over weddings, baptisms and funerals, and preach. They however cannot celebrate Mass.

    Currently; married men, who are also mostly barred from the Roman Catholic priesthood, can serve as deacons. While women cannot serve as deacons, many historians claim that women served as deacons in the early Church.

    Despite this new development, the pope in no way signalled during a conversation with the sisters that the church’s long-standing prohibition on ordaining women priests will change. But asked during a question-and-answer session if he would be willing to create a commission to study whether women could serve as deacons, Francis said he was open to the idea, according to the National Catholic Reporter and Catholic News Service, which had reporters in the audience.

    (AP)

  • CHINA SURPASSES US AS BIGGEST OVERSEAS INVESTOR

    CHINA SURPASSES US AS BIGGEST OVERSEAS INVESTOR

    BEIJING (TIP): The world’s second-biggest economy trounced the United States in another aspect as Chinese companies inked the highest number of overseas deals so far this year. The number of deals, mostly purchase of foreign companies, since January amounted to $110.8 billion.

    In fact, Chinese firms surpassed their own full-year record in 2015 when they spent $106.8 billion on foreign acquisitions, according to UK-based data provider, Dealogic. They were engaged in 17 deals, each worth more than $1 billion, while the rest were of lesser value. Taking the cake was a $43 billion cash offer by China National Chemical Corp for purchase of Swiss pesticide and seed company Syngenta.

    The US has dominated the rankings in overseas acquisitions since 2007. Dealogic predicted that China will come ahead of the US at the end of 2016.

    The acquisition spree, which covers the United States, is partly driven by economic slowdown in China. the ongoing economic slowdown in China may be forcing Chinese companies to explore new avenues in overseas markets to sustain their growth, Abdul Erumban, senior economist with the Conference Board, told TOI.

    Chinese companies, many of whom are flush with funds, are finding it difficult to identify suitable investment destinations in their home country. Significantly, the anti-China tirade by US politicians has done little to hamper Chinese investments in that country. Financial compilers said that Chinese companies acquired 25 firms based in the United States and Canada last year, compared to just four in 2014 and nine in 2013.

    Analysts also said that Chinese investments overseas would more than double of the 2015 record because Chinese companies are targeting more than 1,000 foreign firms for acquisition in 2016. Last year, Chinese business groups took control of 598 companies, according to the financial compiler. Drawing the most attention is the wrangling involving Chinese conglomerate Anbang Insurance Group and Marriott International, which are battling to acquire the iconic Starwood Hotels and Resorts for nearly $14 billion. Anbang upped its offer on Monday, leaving the market waiting anxiously for Marriott’s next move.

    (AP)

  • HARISH RAWAT BACK AS UTTARAKHAND CM

    HARISH RAWAT BACK AS UTTARAKHAND CM

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Supreme Court on May 11 (Wednesday) put the Harish Rawat-led Congress government back in the saddle in Uttarakhand, allowing the central government to revoke President’s rule following Rawat’s victory in Tuesday’s floor test.

    A bench of Justice Dipak Misra and Justice Shiva Kirti Singh accepted Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi’s plea that the Centre wanted to withdraw the proclamation for President’s rule in the course of the day to enable Rawat to take charge as chief minister.

    As the AG submitted that Rawat had been successful in proving his majority on the floor of the House, the bench opened the results of the floor test, submitted by court-appointed observers, and declared that Rawat had secured 33 of the 61 votes.

    Late Wednesday night, a Home Ministry official confirmed that President’s rule had been lifted. “The President has signed the papers for lifting of President’s rule in Uttarakhand. The official notification is being issued,” the official said. While assembly polls in the state are scheduled for January-February next year, the Congress is learnt to be weighing the pros and cons of going for early elections to encash what it believes is a “sympathy wave” in favour of Rawat. There’s also nervousness about the state government counting on external support for its survival —it’s backed by the PDF of six MLAs.

    After the court order, Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi said, “Hope Modiji learns his lesson. People of of this country and the institutions built by our founding fathers will not tolerate the murder of democracy. They did their worst. We did our best. Democracy won in Uttarakhand.” But the BJP tried to put up a brave front, saying that the Congress’s victory had been “purchased”. “This is not a victory, it has been purchased. This was a fixed match… They are trying to run a government by dadagiri. This is a crisis of their own making,” BJP spokesman Shrikant Sharma said. In court, modifying its previous order whereby the Centre was restrained from revoking President’s rule in the state, the bench said, “Keeping in view the prayer made by the learned Attorney General, we vary the order by granting liberty to the Union of India to revoke the proclamation of President’s rule in the State of Uttarakhand in the course of the day. Needless to say, after the Presidential rule is revoked, the first respondent (Rawat) can assume the office of the Chief Minister of Uttarakhand.” Minutes after the bench gave its nod, the Union Cabinet met briefly at Parliament House at 12.45 pm and recommended the revocation of President’s rule in Uttarakhand. The order of revocation has to be placed before the apex court on Friday. Rawat’s counsel Abhishek Manu Singhvi and Kapil Sibal appreciated the Centre’s stand on revocation of the proclamation. “It is a very fair stand and we appreciate the learned AG for making a statement on revocation of President’s rule,” said the lawyers.

    Harish Rawat rules out snap polls

    Back to power in Uttarakhand, the Congress is in no hurry to call fresh Assembl y elections in the state. It will focus on development of the state, which stands derailed since the Centre imposed President’s rule on March 26.

    Chief Minister Harish Rawat today ruled out snap polls in the hill state after he met Congress president Sonia Gandhi at her residence here this evening. His Cabinet colleagues accompanied him. They are back to the Cabinet with the revocation of President’s rule in the state last midnight after Harish Rawat won the floor test. “Our sole priority right now is development of the state which has been derailed on account of the two-month gap during President’s rule. We have to put the state back on track,” said Rawat after being asked if he discussed snap polls and Uttarakhand cabinet rejig with Sonia Gandhi.

    Asked if he planned to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, the Chief Minister said he would meet anyone he had to in the interest of the state. He said his win in the floor test was in fact a win of people of the state, adding that he would not practise a politics of confrontation with the Centre.

  • 53 Rajya Sabha members retire on May 13; Cong biggest loser, BJP tally to rise

    53 Rajya Sabha members retire on May 13; Cong biggest loser, BJP tally to rise

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Rajya Sabha will see 53 members retiring on Friday, one of the biggest in recent times. Congress, with 65 seats, will be the biggest loser with 16 members retiring and chances of only a handful of them returning to the House.

    For BJP, majority in the upper House though looks elusive. Five ministers —Venkaiah Naidu, Piyush Goyal, Nirmala Sitharaman, Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi and YS Choudhry — retire and all will be re-elected. BJP will increase its tally but will still fall short of majority.

    It will gain in Rajasthan where the party has a massive majority. But successive losses in states will dent the strength of Congress.Among other parties, Samajwadi Party’s strength is likely to go up while BSP may lose its House power.

    Naidu is likely to be reelected from Karnataka where a vacancy has been created after Vijay Mallya resigned. Naidu can even come from his home state Andhra Pradesh provided BJP seeks help of ruling Telugu Desam Party. In AP, TDP is likely to get three seats while YSR Congress will get one. In case Naidu comes from AP, Sitharaman, whose two-year term from AP is getting over, will have to be elected from some other state. Naqvi is likely to make it from UP and Choudhry, a TDP member, from AP. Goel will come from Maharashtra.

    The Congress is likely to draw a blank from AP or Telangana. Jairam Ramesh, currently representing AP, is likely to make it from Karnataka since the party is in power there. P Chidambaram is also an aspirant from Karnataka. But other veterans like Hanumantha Rao and JD Seelam may not be so lucky. For Congress, Sushil Shinde, Gurudas Kamat and Mukul Wasnik are aspiring for the lone seat from Maharashtra. Former defence minister AK Antony’s return will depend on the outcome of Kerala assembly election. Congress will lose one seat in Punjab, since out of three members who are retiring, only two can come back.

    UP will see SP increasing its strength. Out of six retiring members of BSP, only two will make a comeback.This will include Mayawati’s confidant Satish Chandra Mishra. From Bihar, five JDU) MPs are retiring. The party will retain two seats, while RJD will get two and BJP one. From Rajasthan, BJP is likely to get all four seats.

  • 15-YR DEVELOPMENT AGENDA TO REPLACE FIVE-YEAR PLANS

    15-YR DEVELOPMENT AGENDA TO REPLACE FIVE-YEAR PLANS

    NEW DELHI: Five-year plans, one of the last links to Nehru’s economic policies, will soon be history. The Narendra Modi government has decided to discontinue the plans after the current one, which ends in March next year, and replace it with a longer vision of 15 years that will factor in social goals and sustainable development goals.

    Starting next financial year, the NDA government intends to put in place a seven-year strategy as part of what will be called a ‘National Development Agenda’ (NDA) to convert the long-term vision into a policy statement that can be implemented, sources familiar with the decision taken by the Prime Minister’s Office said. Unlike the five-year plans, which largely focused on social and economic sectors, the ‘NDA’ will also extend to defence and internal security.

    The ‘NDA’ will be reviewed every three years with the first mid-term appraisal due in 2019-20, the year the next Finance Commission award is implemented and a new Lok Sabha is elected. “By aligning it to the Finance Commission, the government is trying to ensure that financial resources are available,” said a source.

    The Finance Commission is tasked with deciding the division of the Centre’s tax revenue with states and local bodies every five years.

    Since taking charge two years ago, the Modi government has abolished the Planning Commission, which was set up by Nehru in 1950, and replaced it with NITI Aayog which is no longer involved with the allocation of plan funds.

  • Despite disruptions, Parliament session ends on a high

    Despite disruptions, Parliament session ends on a high

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The second budget session of Parliament proved to be one of the most effective despite the shadow cast by political bickering over the imposition of President’s rule in Uttarakhand and the AgustaWestland chopper deal. The political temper, however, didn’t come in the way of the passage of key legislation, such as the insolvency and bankruptcy bill and the anti-hijacking bill, pending before Parliament for a long time.

    The Lower House passed six bills apart from the financial business while the Rajya Sabha managed to clear nine. Altogether, five bills were cleared by Parliament during the session which started from April 25.

    The Lok Sabha, which was adjourned sine die on Wednesday, utilised 119% of its time — working overtime to transact business. The Rajya Sabha, a vibrant battleground of the government and the Opposition, witnessed repeated disruptions but managed to work for 80% of its allotted time.

    The Upper House will be adjourned sine die on Friday after customary farewell speeches by members who will retire in the next two months. Over the next two months, 53 members will retire. On Thursday, the House was adjourned for the day as a mark of respect for sitting Congress member from Gujarat Praveen Rashtrapal who passed away earlier in the day.

    The question hour, the 60-minute section where MPs put questions to ministers, saw a revival after being a victim of disruptions for a long time. “Earlier, only two or three questions on average could have been answered in a session. But we now see more then five questions getting answered orally in the House on average,” said Chaksu Roy of PRS Legislative Research.

    During the budget session, the productivity of the question hour, in terms of questions answered orally has been the highest in 15 years, according to PRS Legislative Research.

  • SIT TO PROBE NAVAL WIFE-SWAPPING CASE

    SIT TO PROBE NAVAL WIFE-SWAPPING CASE

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Supreme Court on Thursday directed the Kerala Police to form a special investigation team (SIT) headed by a deputy inspector general rank officer to probe into allegations of wife-swapping among a group of Indian Navy officers.

    A three-judge bench presided by Chief Justice T S Thakur declined a plea made by one accused Naval officer’s estranged wife for a CBI probe into the charges.

    “The facts and circumstances in which the offence is alleged to have been committed can be better investigated into by the state police,” the bench, also comprising Justices R Banumathi and U U Lalit, said, after noticing the plea by Kerala Police that as many as 70 witnesses had already been examined by them.

    The Navy was rocked in 2013 by the shocking charges of wife-swapping when an officer’s wife accused her husband as well as five other naval officers — two captain and three lieutenant rank — posted at Kochi, and wife of one of the naval officers of sexual abuse. Subsequently, an FIR was registered by the Kerala Police against her husband and other officers.

  • Top Hezbollah commander killed in Israeli air strike

    Top Hezbollah commander killed in Israeli air strike

    BEIRUT (TIP): Top Hezbollah commander Mustafa Badreddine was killed in an Israeli air strike at the Lebanese-Israeli border this week, the Lebanese Shi’ite group announced on May 13, the biggest blow to the group since the 2008 killing of its military commander.

    Badreddine, 55, was one of the highest ranking officials in the group, according to security sources.

    “He took part in most of the operations of the Islamic resistance since 1982,” Hezbollah said in a statement announcing his death, describing Badreddine as “the great jihadi leader”. He was killed on Tuesday night, the statement said.

    A US Department of the Treasury statement detailing sanctions against Badreddine last year said he was assessed to be responsible for the group’s military operations in Syria since 2011. Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, is fighting in Syria in support of President Bashar al-Assad.

    Badreddine, a brother-in-law of the late Hezbollah military commander, Imad Moughniyah, was indicted by the U.N.-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon in the 2005 killing of statesman Rafik al-Hariri.

    He was sentenced to death in Kuwait for his role in bomb attacks there in 1983. He escaped from prison in Kuwait after Iraq, under the leadership of Saddam Hussein, invaded the country in 1990. For years, Badreddine masterminded military operations against Israel from Lebanon and overseas and managed to escape capture by Arab and Western governments by operating clandestinely.

    The U.S. Treasury statement said Badreddine had accompanied Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah during strategic coordination meetings with Assad in Damascus.

    It also said he had led Hezbollah ground offensives in the Syrian town of al-Qusayr in February 2013, a critical battle in the war when Hezbollah fighters defeated Syrian rebels in an area near the Syrian-Lebanese border.

    Around 1,200 Hezbollah fighters are estimated to have been killed in the Syrian conflict.

  • Brazil’s interim president Michel Temer calls for unity

    Brazil’s interim president Michel Temer calls for unity

    BRASILIA (TIP): Brazil’s interim President Michel Temer called on his country to rally behind his government of “national salvation,” hours after the Senate voted to suspend and put on trial his leftist predecessor, Dilma Rousseff, for breaking budget laws.

    Temer, a 75-year-old centrist now moving to steer Latin America’s biggest country toward more market-friendly policies, told Brazilians to have “confidence” they would overcome an ongoing crisis sparked by a deep economic recession, political volatility and a sprawling corruption scandal. “It is urgent we calm the nation and unite Brazil,” he said, after a signing ceremony for his incoming cabinet. “Political parties, leaders, organizations and the Brazilian people will cooperate to pull the country from this grave crisis.”

    Brazil’s crisis brought a dramatic end to the 13-year rule of the Workers Party, which rode a wave of populist sentiment that swept South America starting around 2000 and enabled a generation of leftist leaders to leverage a boom in the region’s commodity exports to pursue ambitious and transformative social policies.

    But like other leftist leaders across the region, Rousseff discovered that the party, after four consecutive terms, overstayed its welcome, especially as commodities prices plummeted and her increasingly unpopular government failed to sustain economic growth.

    In addition to the downturn, Rousseff, in office since 2011, was hobbled by the corruption scandal and a political opposition determined to oust her.

    After Rousseff’s suspension, Temer charged his new ministers with enacting business-friendly policies while maintaining the still-popular social programs that were the hallmark of the Workers Party. In a sign of slimmer times, the cabinet has 23 ministers, a third fewer than Rousseff’s. A constitutional scholar who spent decades in Brazil’s Congress, Temer faces the momentous challenge of hauling the world’s No. 9 economy out of its worst recession since the Great Depression and cutting bloated public spending.

    He quickly named respected former central bank governor Henrique Meirelles as his finance minister, with a mandate to overhaul the costly pension system.

    Rousseff defiant

    The Senate deliberated for 20 hours before voting 55-22 early on Thursday to put Rousseff on trial over charges that she disguised the size of the budget deficit to make the economy look healthier in the runup to her 2014 re-election. Rousseff, 68, was automatically suspended for the duration of the trial, which could be up to six months. Before departing the presidential palace in Brasilia, a defiant Rousseff vowed to fight the charges.

    In her speech, she reiterated what she has maintained since impeachment proceedings were launched against her last December by the lower house of Congress. She denied any wrongdoing and called the impeachment “fraudulent” and “a coup.” “I may have made mistakes but I did not commit any crime,” she said.

    Rousseff’s mentor, former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who now faces corruption charges, stood behind her and looked on dejectedly. Even as outgoing ministers wept, Rousseff remained stolid. “I never imagined that it would be necessary to fight once again against a coup in this country,” Rousseff said, in a reference to her youth fighting Brazil’s military dictatorship.

    “This is a tragic hour for our country,” said Rousseff, an economist and former Marxist guerrilla, calling her suspension an effort by conservatives to roll back the social and economic gains made by Brazil’s working class.

    The Workers Party rose from Brazil’s labor movement in the 1970s and helped topple generals who had held power for two decades ending in 1985.

    In the heady days of Lula’s presidency, starting in 2003, it helped lift millions of people out of poverty before running into recession and scandal, with many of its leaders now tainted by corruption investigations and criminal convictions. Despite Rousseff’s vows to fight, she is unlikely to be acquitted in the Senate trial. The size of the vote to try her showed the opposition already has the support it will need to reach the two-thirds majority required to remove her definitively from office.

    “It is a bitter though necessary medicine,” opposition Senator Jose Serra, who became the new foreign minister, said during the marathon Senate debate. “Having the Rousseff government continue would be a bigger tragedy.”

  • No hajj for Iran pilgrims this year

    No hajj for Iran pilgrims this year

    TEHRAN (TIP): Iranian pilgrims will not be traveling to Saudi Arabia this year for the annual hajj pilgrimage because security conditions in the Sunni kingdom are inadequate, says an Iranian government minister.

    Ali Jannati, the country’s minister of culture and Islamic guidance, said on Thursday that Tehran has been trying to “resolve the issue” with Riyadh for four months without progress and “now we’ve lost time.”

    The kingdom severed ties with Tehran after its diplomatic missions were attacked and ransacked in Iran after the Saudis executed a top Shiite cleric, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr on terror charges.

    Iran says at least 464 Iranian pilgrims were killed in the stampede at the hajj last September and blames Saudi “incompetence” for the deaths.

  • British ‘barbarians’ need manners lessons, says Chinese paper on rudeness row

    British ‘barbarians’ need manners lessons, says Chinese paper on rudeness row

    BEIJING (TIP): The British media is riddled with “barbarians” who would benefit from a lesson in manners from China’s ancient civilisation, a state-run newspaper said May 12 after Queen Elizabeth II called some Chinese officials “very rude”.

    In a rare diplomatic gaffe, the British monarch was caught on camera at a Buckingham Palace garden party making unguarded comments about a state visit last year by President Xi Jinping that drummed up billions in Chinese investment.

    The remarks made headlines worldwide on Wednesday but initially they were largely censored in China, blacked out of BBC World transmissions, according to the British broadcaster.

    The Global Times newspaper, which is close to China’s ruling Communist Party, blamed the British media for blowing the incident out of proportion and fawning over the footage as if it was “the most precious treasure”.

    “The West in modern times has risen to the top and created a brilliant civilisation, but their media is full of reckless ‘gossip fiends’ who bare their fangs and brandish their claws and are very narcissistic, retaining the bad manners of ‘barbarians’,” it said in an editorial.

    “As they experience constant exposure to the 5,000 years of continuous Eastern civilisation, we believe they will make progress” when it comes to manners, it added in the Chinese-language piece, which was not published in English. London and Beijing have both proclaimed a new “golden era” of relations between the former imperial power — whose forces repeatedly invaded China in the 19th century — and the rising Asian giant, now the world’s second-largest economy.

    Xi’s trip in October saw a clutch of contracts announced, which Cameron said were worth almost $58 billion.

  • MEGAN FOX: I’M NOT PASSIONATE ABOUT ACTING

    MEGAN FOX: I’M NOT PASSIONATE ABOUT ACTING

    Hollywood star Megan Fox has admitted she is not passionate about and doesn’t see her long-term future in Hollywood. The 29-year-old beauty said her enviable good looks have helped to propel her career, and she doesn’t mind if that’s the only reason why she secures certain roles, reported Female First.

    “I’m not like a silly, stupid little actress but I don’t care if people only want to hire me to look pretty. In Hollywood your time is limited and I’m not passionate about it,” the
    ‘Transformers’ actress said.

    Fox said she doesn’t care about personal accolades for her on-screen performances. “It is what it is. I don’t care. I feel like if I was really hung up on critical acclaim or people’s opinions then I would be more pressured, I would strive harder to disprove such a stereotype.”

    “But sometimes you just get pigeon-holed. I have fun most of the time making movies, and that’s the main objective because it’s just a job,” she said. The actress also said that her career has already reached something of a crossroads. “I’m trying to figure out what I really want to do with the rest of my life because Hollywood is not a land where you can work until you’re elderly, when you’re a woman

  • Captain America: Civil War | MOVIE REVIEW

    Captain America: Civil War | MOVIE REVIEW

    STORY: Tony Stark (Downey Jr.) and Steve Rogers have a difference of opinion over the Sokovia Accords, created by the United Nations, that seeks to create a governing body for the Avengers. Stark is in favour while Rogers prefers them to be free to act on their own instincts and thoughts. A series of events involving a multitude of superheroes from the Marvel Universe, intrigue and different kinds of motivation, leads to a clash between Iron Man and Captain America, among others.

    Captain America: Civil War | MOVIE REVIEW
    Captain America: Civil War | MOVIE REVIEW

    REVIEW: Without giving away anything that might spoil this treat for Marvel and superhero fans, let’s just say that Captain America: Civil War is essentially like a battle royale between superheroes like you’ve never seen before. And in a way that doesn’t bludgeon your senses into numb submission, like some other superhero films we’ve seen of late.

    The Russo duo has managed to handle this ensemble cast of superheroes and their personalities with a certain deftness of touch that has to be seen to be believed. Black Panther, Spiderman, Captain America, Black Widow, Winter Soldier… well, pretty much all of them put in some seriously convincing performances. Downey Jr’s Stark-isms have been dialed down here, allowing us to get a glimpse of his real side, as being more than just a one-liner machine. But truth be told, it is Evans who steals the show. Enough said.

    As for the action and cinematography, one word -amazing. The climax action sequence at Leipzig/Halle airport is something that might just leave you breathless. It is 17 minutes long (that’s right) and is straight up the stuff of legend. And no, entire cities and buildings need not be leveled to make a good group fight scene.

    Rogers’ mistrust regarding new-world values (compared to the time he was from) is nicely explored. His unwillingness to compromise on his code is seen to great effect. There is darkness, there is depth, but the important thing is that the element of fun is also most definitely present. Oh and needless to say, don’t miss Stan Lee’s cameo and do stay for the post-credits scene.

  • KRISTEN BELL’S STRUGGLE WITH ANXIETY, DEPRESSION

    KRISTEN BELL’S STRUGGLE WITH ANXIETY, DEPRESSION

    Actress Kristen Bell has opened up about her struggle with anxiety and depression. The 35-year-old ‘House of Lies’ star said the problem is something that her mother and grandmother also suffered from, reported US magazine.

    “I struggled a lot with anxiety and depression. There is a serotonin imbalance in our family line,” Bell said adding that her grandmother would go ‘nuts’ at times.

    The actress, who is married to funnyman Dax Shepard and is the mom of daughters Lincoln and Delta, said she was diagnosed with the problem at a young age.

    “(My mom’s) a nurse and she had the wherewithal to recognize that in herself when she was feeling it, and when I was 18 said, ‘If you start to feel like you are twisting things around you, and you feel like there is no sunlight around you and you are paralyzed with fear, this is what it is.

    “I got on a prescription when I was really young and I still take it today and I have no shame in that because my mom had said to me, ‘If you start to feel this way, talk to your doctor, talk to a psychologist, see how you want to help

  • PRACHI DESAI: I AM BORED OF PLAYING SIMPLETON ROLES

    PRACHI DESAI: I AM BORED OF PLAYING SIMPLETON ROLES

    In her eight-year-old career, Prachi Desai mostly played simpleton characters on screen and theactress says she wants to have an image makeover so that people can see the real side of her. “I am actually quite bored of playing simpleton roles. I want to do different stuff so that I can be creatively satisfied. I think my audience has also got bored along with me because I am giving them similar thing again and again and not giving anything interesting to watch,” Prachi told PTI.

    The 27-year-old ‘Rock On!!’ star is making a comeback to films after a gap of three years with Emraan Hashmi-starrer upcoming biopic ‘Azhar’. “I would put the blame on lack of opportunities because the kind of roles I was getting were nothing different of what I have done in the past.

    “Secondly, the films which I really wanted to do, things did not work out. So, that’s how I wasted a lot of time. I think I should do more work now. People should offer me more films so that I can make up for the loss time.” In ‘Azhar’, Prachi is playing the first wife of former cricketer Mohammad Azharuddin. For getting into the skin of the character, she even met Naureen . “Naureen has been a mystery to all of us. The audience will also discover her first time ever with this film. She is so private and guarded all her life that nobody knows anything of her. She was married to one of the successful Indian cricketers but she never came into the limelight.”

    It was a challenge for Prachi to portray her because there was less information about the woman, who played an integral role in Azharuddin’s life. “Giving her a face was difficult for me. The characterisation part, which is the first stage of every film, that itself was the toughest job because how would you form an image about someone that you know nothing about?I was relying on our director (Tony D’Souza) for my role. The information, which we had, was very limited.”

    But Azharuddin helped her in knowing his ex-wife well and also arranged a meeting with Naureen. “All the information about Naureen was given by Azharuddin and their son Abbas. Initially, I had no first hand interaction with his family.

    It was only Tony but later on when we got into the whole process then there were lot of people involved in and through them I got to know her.”

  • SUNNY LEONE’S ‘NO KISSING’ CLAUSE STUNS FILMMAKERS

    SUNNY LEONE’S ‘NO KISSING’ CLAUSE STUNS FILMMAKERS

    Bollywood’s sexy siren, Sunny Leone has decided to not indulge in on-screen kissing in her future films. Yes, you read that right! The last film that saw Sunny kissing her co-stars on screen was ‘Ragini MMS 2’ and post that, Sunny hasn’t kissed any of her co-actor. However, the actress doesn’t mind doing intimate scenes and will continue to do so if the script demands but with a ‘no kissing’ clause. In fact, one look at her recently released films like ‘Ek Paheli Leela,’ ‘Kuch Kuch Locha Hai,’ ‘Mastizaade’ and ‘One Night Stand’ and you would realise that the actress has not kissed any of her co-stars in these films although she was seen getting intimate with them. Now, considering romance and intimate scenes are incomplete without kissing, the filmmakers are in a fix and confused as to how they would convince Leone to kiss on screen. Well, that’s none of our business, is it? Let the filmmakers do that. Source: TOI