on Sunday, July 31, 2011

Deal agreed to prevent U.S. default

Republicans and Democrats in Congress reached agreement with President Barack Obama to raise the limit on U.S. borrowing and forestall an unprecedented American default, marking the start in the final chapter of one of the nastiest and divisive episodes in recent American political history.

Shortly after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and his Republican counterpart, minority leader Mitchell McConnell, endorsed the plan on the Senate floor, Mr. Obama went to the White House press room to add his support for the deal. It meets one of his key demands, raising borrowing power sufficiently to keep the partisan poison pill from returning to the national agenda until after the 2012 election. It does not include any tax increases that Mr. Obama had pressed hard for to include.

House Speaker John Boehner, in a conference call with Republican members of the lower chamber, said the deal was a good one that met the demands of all Republicans.

Bowing to the still unknown outcome of congressional action, Mr. Obama said important votes remained to be taken but that leaders of both parties in both houses of Congress were agreed to a plan that would initially cut about $1 trillion from U.S. spending, “the lowest level of domestic spending since Dwight Eisenhower was president” in the 1950s.

“Is this the deal I would have preferred,” Mr. Obama asked, answering his own question with one word. “No.”

But he said- “Most importantly it will allow us to avoid default and end the crisis that Washington imposed on the rest of America. And it will allow us to lift the cloud of doubt and uncertainty” that has hung above the United States for weeks.

And not just America- World markets showed their relief immediately. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei index, opening Monday morning -- at 8 p.m. Sunday on America’s East Coast -- was up 1.7 percent in early trading. On Wall Street, U.S. stock futures surged.

No votes were expected in either house of Congress until Monday at the earliest, to give rank and file lawmakers to review the package. Tuesday is the deadline to avoid a U.S. default on payments to investors in Treasury bonds, recipients of Social Security pension checks, those relying on military veterans benefits and businesses that do work for the government.

Mr. Obama and many economists and financial experts predicted global chaos and plunging stock markets had no deal been reached by midnight Tuesday.

If approved in Monday votes, the compromise would presumably preserve America’s sterling credit rating, reassure investors in financial markets across the globe and possibly reverse the losses that spread across Wall Street in recent days as the threat of a default grew.

The broadest outlines of the emerging plan, a deal that involved deep negotiations between McConnell and Vice President Joe Biden, would raise the federal debt limit in two stages by at least $2.2 trillion, enough to tide the Treasury over until after the 2012 elections.

Big cuts in government spending would be phased in over a decade. Thousands of programs -- the Park Service, Internal Revenue Service and Labor Department accounts among them -- could be trimmed to levels last seen years ago.

No benefit cuts were envisioned for the Social Security pension system or Medicare, the federal program that provides health care payments to the elderly. But other programs would be scoured for savings. Taxes would be unlikely to rise.

The first step would take place immediately, raising the debt limit by nearly $1 trillion and cutting spending by a slightly larger amount over a decade.

That would be followed by creation of a new congressional committee that would have until the end of November to recommend $1.8 trillion or more in deficit cuts, targeting benefit programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, or overhauling the tax code. Those deficit cuts would allow a second increase in the debt limit, which would be needed by early next year.

If the committee failed to reach its $1.8 trillion target, or Congress failed to approve its recommendations by the end of 2011, lawmakers would then have to vote on a proposed constitutional balanced—budget amendment.

If that failed to pass, automatic spending cuts totalling $1.2 trillion would automatically take effect, and the debt limit would rise by an identical amount.

Social Security, Medicaid and food stamps would be exempt from the automatic cuts, but payments to doctors, nursing homes and other Medicare providers could be trimmed, as could subsidies to insurance companies that offer an alternative to government—run Medicare.

Any agreement will have to be passed by the Democratic—controlled Senate, which was seen as assured, and Republican—controlled House, which still could face a major tussle, before going to the White House for Mr. Obama’s signature. With precious little time remaining, both chambers had been on standby throughout the day Sunday.

Some Republicans were said to still be balking over proposed cuts in defence spending. It also was unclear how the 87 new House members, voted in with support from the low—tax, small—government tea party wing of the Republican Party, would vote. But it was believed that both Boehner, the Republican House speaker, and Reid, leader of majority Democrats in the Senate, felt certain they could garner sufficient votes.

The coming days will be clogged with statements from both Republicans, especially the tea party caucus, and Democrats as they try to convince their constituencies that they held firm and won the day in the bitter divide over how the government operates and what it owes to its citizens.

on Wednesday, July 27, 2011

China rail officials blame crash on signal 'flaw'

Chinese railway officials have blamed 'design flaws' in signalling equipment for a high-speed train crash in which at least 39 people were killed, the official Xinhua news agency said on Thursday.

The system 'failed to turn the green light into red' after being struck by lightning, Xinhua quoted An Lusheng, head of the Shanghai Railway Bureau, as saying during a meeting on the investigation into Saturday's accident.

The collision of two express trains on the outskirts of the eastern city of Wenzhou was China's deadliest rail disaster since 2008, and the worst ever to hit the country's high-speed rail network.

Nearly 200 people were also injured in the collision, which crushed some carriages and shunted others from a viaduct into fields below.

Premier Wen Jiabao on Wednesday called for an investigation into why a high-speed train ploughed into a second train that had apparently come to a halt.

Authorities at the weekend ordered an "urgent overhaul" of the national rail network, but Wednesday's announcement indicated the government may be trying to assuage mounting public fury over the crash.

Anger over the disaster has been compounded in recent days by allegations that authorities tried to cover up evidence by burying the wreckage.

Thousands of people have posted on China's increasingly popular micro-blogs, demanding to know why the driver of the second train, who was killed in the accident, was not told to stop in time.

They also question whether the death toll might be higher than authorities have said, and whether the nation's high-speed rail system is being developed too fast.

Some relatives of the victims, who include two Americans and an Italian, have reportedly refused compensation and demanded instead to be given answers.

The Chinese media have reportedly been ordered not to question the official line on the accident, but several newspapers have published editorials criticising the railway ministry.

In an unusually scathing editorial published in both its English and Chinese versions, the state-run Global Times on Wednesday contrasted the "bureaucratic" attitude of officials with a booming "public democracy" on the Internet.

"They (authorities) have become accustomed to only being praised in the past and when facing a crisis, they believe they can deal with the public in a bureaucratic way," said the paper.

"However, public opinion in China cannot stand this any more."


Bomb scares at Guruvayur, Technopark

Bomb scares spread panic at the temple town of Guruvayoor as well as the IT hub Technopark in the state capital on Wednesday. Fear gripped the temple town after authorities of the Guruvayur Sree Krishna Temple received a letter warning that the al-Qaeda will launch bomb attacks on the famous shrine.

Police said the letter typed out on a manual typewriter, states that bombs have been placed on the “rear side of Guruvayur temple and Thiruvananthapuram temple” (apparently referring to the Sree Padmanabha Swamy temple). The letter was posted from Chennai. Bomb detection squads conducted searches in and around the temple, but did not find anything.

“The letter written by one Sawai is full of grammatical and spelling errors and makes strange demands including the shifting of a transport office from Nagercoil to Chennai,” said a police officer.

Likewise, a shoulder-bag, found abandoned on the Technopark premises in the state capital, created big scare. Police later said that the bag contained scrap that was brought by Nikhil Thomas, an employee at a Technopark firm, for disposal. However, he left the bag after realising that the refuse bin was full.

Nun weds Hindu youth in Kerala

They broke many religious and social taboos and braved many threats but their romance finally won the day.

Dr Rybi Varghese, a nun belonging to a convent in Angamaly, and Sanoj, a Hindu youth of Thalikkulam, were chat friends who fell in love after exchanging their innermost feelings online.

After months of rattling out their thoughts on the keyboard, Dr Rybi, who was working in Ukraine, and Sanoj, an accountant with a private firm in Muscat, decided to flout traditions and tie the knot.

Dr Rybi converted to Hinduism at Aryasamajam in Kozhikode on July 19, before marrying Sanoj the following day. The unconventional meeting of hearts came to light when the couple approached the Vadanappally police complaining that Dr Rybi’s brother had threatened her, asking to break off the relation or face the consequences. However, they didn't file any formal complaint.

The Vadanappally police, led by the sub-inspector, V.I. Sageer, then played peacemakers. They interacted with the families and resolved the issue.

“In fact, the couple had already informed their parents and relatives that they had married,” said a police officer.

With the hurdles to their marital life being cleared, the couple bought laddus and distributed it to the cops, who happily ate them and wished them well.

Yeddyurappa on slippery wicket; BJP to take a call on Thursday

Karnataka Chief Minister B.S.Yeddyurappa appeared to be on slippery wicket as party leaders who heard him out at a meeting here late on Wednesday evening, deciding to take a call on his continuance at parliamentary board meeting on Thursday, party sources said.

Yeddyurappa, who reached New Delhi on Wednesday evening went to the residence of party president Nitin Gadkari to attend the meeting, convened in the wake of report by Karnataka Lokayukta N. Santosh Hegde who has levelled charges against him.

The meeting, which lasted over three hours, was attended by senior BJP leaders Arun Jaitley, who is BJP party in-charge of Karnataka and former president Rajnath Singh.

BJP sources said that party leaders told Yeddyurappa that the party could ill-afford to defend him at a time when it has taken up cudgels on the issue of corruption against the Congress-led UPA government. They said the leadership was veering to the view that Yeddyurappa should be replaced to save the party from embarrassment of defending a 'tainted' leader.

Yeddyurappa was accompanied by some of his senior ministers at the meeting.

Several senior party leaders are of the firm belief that Yeddyurappa's continuance despite his indictment will only provide Congress an opportunity to hit back at BJP.

However, the chief minister, who was defiant when he reached Delhi, sought to put up a strong defence about the charges levelled against him in the report, sources said.

They said that chief minister told the party leadership that there was nothing new in the report and much of what has been stated in the report is already pending as cases in various courts.

Yeddyurappa also believed to have told the party leadership that he had referred the whole issue of illegal-mining to Lokayukta. Some of Yeddyurappa's aides have also termed the report as politically motivated.

Earlier, on his arrival in the capital, Yeddyurappa said that there was no need for him to resign. "Why should I. Question of resigning does not arise", he told reporters at the airport.

Yeddyurappa said he would convene a meeting of his cabinet at 3.00 p.m. on Thursday to go into the details of the Lokayukta report and give its reaction.

Yeddyurappa said he will 'explain all the things in the report' to the party leadership.

"MLAs are with us... I am going to discuss all these things."

Party sources said that the leadership will not like to delay a decision on Yeddyurappa's continuance due to Monsoon Session of the parliament beginning on August 1.

A section of the party is also vary of the possible action by Karnataka Governor H.R.Bhardwaj in the wake of the submission of the report.

Hegde's report found that the chief minister's family, including son B.Y. Raghvendra, a Lok Sabha member of BJP from Shimoga, 270 km from Bengaluru, benefiting from the mining scam.

A voluminous report submitted by him found that the exchequer lost a whopping Rs.16,085 crore (Rs.161 billion) due to illegal mining and export of iron ore from 2006 to 2010 in royalty, excise duty, value added tax and other levies.

The names doing the rounds in party circles as possible successors to Yeddyurappa include party general secretary Ananth Kumar and state ministers Jagdish Shettar, Suresh Kumar, V.S. Acharya and state party president K.S. Eshwarappa.

Timely crop management, the mantra for success

In the advertisement industry it is common for film stars to endorse certain products as brand ambassadors. But for farmers to follow a particular technology or grow a specific variety, the best endorsement comes from another farmer already practising it.

Mr. P. Chandra Sekhar Azad (70 years) from Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh, is a brand ambassador for 'Prathibha' turmeric variety in the state.

Mr. Azad has been able to convince hundreds of farmers in the region to take up Prathibha cultivation. The Indian Institute of Spices research (IISR), Kozhikode, Kerala developed the variety.

Conviction

“Nothing substitutes determination and hard work for succeeding in agriculture. Forget all other hurdles; if you possess the will to succeed, you can surely make it,” says the farmer.

Agriculture can never become a loss, if one makes use of new technologies and scientific practices available. Hundred per cent involvement coupled with timely scientific management and usage of modern technologies can definitely increase the productivity many fold, seems to be his strong conviction.

Mr. Azad turned to agriculture around two decades ago. Till the age of 50, he was running a small printing press at Vijayawada. “Later I turned to agriculture, cultivating turmeric, paddy, maize, banana, etc in my nine acres of land which I inherited from my father,” recalls Mr. Azad.

Like other farmers in the area, he cultivated turmeric as the main crop, “But the crop did not prove to be profitable in the beginning. Low yields and high infestations ruined the yield,” he adds.

The farmer’s search for a high yielding and good quality turmeric variety came to an end when he happened to hear about a variety called Prathibha.

“I came across the variety developed by IISR nearly seven years back,” says Azad.

New beginning

He started growing the variety from 2004 on an experimental basis procuring 50 kgs of rhizomes. “I never realized that this could mark a new beginning in my faith on the variety and association with the institute,” he adds.

During 2007-08 the farmer supplied 12 tonnes of seed rhizomes to the Horticulture Department, Nizamabad, Andhra Pradesh. During the subsequent year he supplied nearly 30 tonnes of rhizomes to Adilabad district, and another 12 tonnes to the Ranga Reddy district in addition to several farmers in and around Guntur district.

Secret of success

During the last season, he cultivated the variety in 2.75 acres.

“I am following organic farming methods using minimum chemical fertilizers. “Timely crop management is the mantra for success in agriculture,” he points out.

In his experience, Prathiba is highly resistant to rhizome rot while all local varieties such as Thekurpet and Duggirala are prone to infestation.

Harvesting is done with the help of bullocks. He also employs labourers for cleaning the rhizomes.

Cleaned turmeric is then boiled using huge turmeric boilers. The boiled rhizomes are then dried in sun for 20 days and polished using mechanical polishers. But still a major chunk of the produce is being sold as seed rhizomes.

“What makes Azad different from other farmers of his age is his readiness to adopt innovations.

Even at this age he is computer friendly. He keeps in constant touch with the scientists at each and every stage of cultivation through phone and internet.

Record maintanence

“He maintains a record of all farm activities; clicks photos of the crop at regular intervals, and sends them to the scientists for their advice,” says Dr. V.A. Parthasarathy, Former Director of the institute.

Solar-powered boat visits Philippines, promotes renewable energy

The world’s largest solar-powered boat on Wednesday visited the Philippines, the first stop in Asia in its 50,000-kilometre expedition around the world to promote the use of renewable energy resources.

The German-built MS Turanor PlanetSolar was welcomed in Manila by Vice President Jejomar Binay, who hailed the voyage for raising awareness about the benefits of renewable energy and the need for more investment and research into the sector.

“The MS Turanor PlanetSolar shows us that current technology aimed at improving energy efficiency is reliable and effective,” he told the ceremony to welcome the 31-metre catamaran at the Philippine Navy’s headquarters.

But Mr. Binay urged alternative energy companies to make the technology less expensive and affordable for many to use.

The Turanor began its around-the-globe campaign on September 27, 2010, sailing from Monaco and travelling 37,000 kilometres so far using only energy generated from the sun. The Philippines was its 15th stop.

The 95-ton vessel is covered by 530 square metres of solar panels that provide up to 95 kilowatts. It is exclusively powered by 38,000 solar cells produced in the Philippines at the factories of SunPower Corporation, a U.S.-based solar energy company.

Raphael Domjan, PlanetSolar’s founder and co-skipper of Turanor, said his vision was to show the world that technology could help solve such problems as climate change and rising energy costs.

Mr. Domjan said he was confident that the cost of renewable energy would eventually go down.

“One day, the cost of having solar power plants at your home will be cheaper than buying electricity from nuclear or oil-powered plants,” he said.

The Turanor’s future stops would include Hong Kong, Singapore, the Maldives, Mumbai and Abu Dhabi before returning to Monaco. It is scheduled to complete the expedition by late April or early May 2012.


Sensex 86 points down, extends losses for second day

Extending losses for the second day, the Bombay Stock Exchange benchmark Sensex closed 86 points down on Wednesday, a day after the Reserve Bank raised key policy rates to tame inflation.

After recording the biggest loss of 353 points in five weeks on Tuesday, the 30-share index opened on a positive note but soon plunged by 160 points to touch the day’s low of 18,358.76 points

It finally recovered some of the losses to end the day at 18,432.25, lower by 85.97 points from its previous close.

The 50-share National Stock Exchange index Nifty lost 28.05 points to 5,546.80 at close.

Marketmen said the investor sentiment remained dampened after the RBI’s shocking 50-basis point hike in key repo and reverse repo rates.

They added that approaching current month expiry in derivatives segment further fuelled selling as investors squared up their positions on fears of further fall in the stock prices.

A mixed trend in the Asian region and lower opening in Europe following deepening debt crisis in the US too weighed heavily on investors, they said.

The capital goods sector index suffered the most by losing 1.86 per cent, followed by the power index that fell 1.51 per cent. Banking index was down 1.04 per cent, realty index 0.98 per cent and auto 0.12 per cent.

Country’s biggest lender State Bank of India ended a sharp 1.58 per cent down. Tata Motors was another big loser at 1.68 per cent.


Inflation a key concern for Government: Pranab

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee on Wednesday cautioned that year-end inflation may not be less than 6-7 per cent even as the government and the RBI are making sustained efforts to fight price rise.

“We are fighting against inflation...increase in repo and reverse repo by the RBI on Tuesday conveys a strong signal... (but) we shall have to keep in mind that year-end inflation may not be less than 6-7 per cent,” Mr. Mukherjee told reporters here.

The RBI on Tuesday gave a rude shock to the industry, market and borrowers by increasing sharply, the key interest rate by 50 basis points.

Expressing concern over 9.44 per cent headline inflation in June, he said, “Though food inflation has softened as compared to 22 per cent in February 2010, “still 8 per cent food inflation is not acceptable”.

While accepting that there are challenges before the Indian economy arising out of domestic and global factors, the Finance Minister said, he did not believe in despondency.

“...when going gets tough, tough gets going. I do not believe in despondency. Difficulties have to be overcome by ourselves, not by anybody else,” a confident Mr. Mukherjee said.

While there was some deceleration in industrial production and slower growth in interest sensitive sectors, he expressed confidence “that Indian economy would be in a position to come back”.

Referring to the burning issue of black money, the Finance Minister said the government was committed to tackle the menace.

“Effort against black money is relentless...both administrative and legal steps have been taken to fight against this menace,” he said.


Somdev rises to career-best ranking

Indian tennis star Somdev Devvarman climbed six places in the latest ATP rankings to touch a career-best 62nd position in the singles list.

The 26-year-old, who took a break from the circuit after Wimbledon and was since then losing points, made it to the quarter-finals of last week's Tour event in Atlanta, which helped him gain places.

In the ATP doubles ranking, there was no change in the positions of Mahesh Bhupathi (5), Leander Paes (8) and Rohan Bopanna (10).

The pair of Paes and Bhupathi is at No. 4 in the team rankings, while Bopanna and Aisam-ul-haq Qureshi remained at No. 6.

In the WTA rankings, Sania Mirza jumped two places to be 62 in singles, while she maintained her 11th position in the doubles.

Sania's team ranking with Russian Elena Vesnina is also intact at No. 2 in race to year-end championship.

Sania-Elena pair has 4506 points in the list headed by Kveta Peschke and Katarina Srebotnik, who have 6865 points.

The top four pairs compete in the prestigious year-end championship.


Lalrina bags junior boys' snooker title

Mizoram's Lalrina Renthlei claimed the boys' junior snooker title, after finishing on top of the semifinal league at the Hash10-World Sim Nationals, here on Wednesday. There was a three-way tie at the top of the league standings between Lalrina, M.L. Lakshman and Himanshu Jain, which was resolved in the former's favour by frame difference.

Going into the last round of matches, Lalrina was already in pole position with two wins under his belt and barring a poor loss against Lakshman, the title would be his. Lalrina lost the encounter, but not before stretching Lakshman to five frames, ensuring that his frame difference did not take a hit.

With Himanshu struggling (though he went on to win the match 3-2) against Mundir on the adjacent table, Lalrina was assured of the title even before either of the matches reached their conclusion.

Lalrina, Lakshman and Mundir all finished the semifinal league stage on two wins each, but the Mizoram lad's frame difference of +3 (as opposed to Himanshu's +2 and Lakshman's -1) handed him the title.

Shri Krishna advances

In the boys' junior billiards division, Shri Krishna (TN), Ishpreet Singh (Mah), Rohan Jambusaria (Mah) and Anmoldeep Singh (Pun) made it to the main draw after four rounds of qualification.

Alok Kumar suffered a surprise 3-1 loss to Shanker Rao in the men's senior billiards division. Geet Sethi, who was pushed all the way by Siddharth Pariekh on Tuesday, reeled out two breaks of hundred on his way to a convincing 3-0 win over Bhuvaneshwaran of Tamil Nadu.

The results:

Senior billiards (best-of-five frames, 100 up): Group A: I.V. Rajiv (AP) bt M.S. Reddy (Rly) 53-101, 101-73, 102-19, 102-37; Prem Prakash (TN) bt Jai Shankar (Jha) 100-32, 101-38, 101-28; Pankaj Advani (PSPB) bt Vishal Madan (Mah) 46-100, 101-68, 102-0, 100-0.

Group B: Simhachallam (Rlys) bt Anshul Mittal (Har) 101-34, 103-43, 101-28; Shanker Rao (AP) bt Alok Kumar (PSPB) 101-83, 39-102, 101-18, 100-81; Nitin Kohli (UP) bt Utsav Ramani (Guj) 84-100, 102-32, 101-21, 100-53.

Group C: Ketan Chawla (MP) bt Rajkumar (Kar) 103-97, 56-100, 103-93, 100-67; Siddarth Pariekh (Rly) bt Sankeet Saurabh (Bih) 102-28, 101-86, 101-90; Geet Sethi (Guj) bt D. Bhuvaneshwaran (TN) 101-27, 103-0, 102-2.

Group D: Dhruv Sitwala (PSPB) bt Akram Khan (WB) 100-2, 102-67, 67-101, 100-52; Arif Akthar (Chn) bt Abineet Sharma (MP) 102-35, 102-83, 101-11; Arun Agarwal (Mah) bt Subrat Das (WB) 102-4, 101-88, 100-62.

Group E: Shivam Arora (Bih) bt Kankan Shamsi (UP) 13-101, 101-78, 55-100, 101-40, 101-81; Saurav Kothari (PSPB) bt Abhishek Saini (Har) 100-15, 102-16, 101-0; Rupesh Shah (PSPB) bt Aditya Agarwal (Rly) 100-58, 102-87, 100-0.

Group F: Shakeel Ahmed (WB) bt S.A. Saleem (TN) 100-56, 100-25, 101-89; Mahesh Jagdule (Mah) bt Kunal Manchanda (Raj) 100-21, 101-11, 100-44; S.A. Saleem (TN) bt Amit Sharma (UP) 100-30, 101-73, 100-96.

Group G: Bhaskar (Kar) w/o Jayanth Menghani (Raj); Manu Dev (Kar) bt M.C. Manoj (TN) 100-19, 101-44, 96-100, 74-104, 101-84.

Group H: Shyam Jagtiani (WB) bt Amit Lath (Ori) 100-47, 101-14, 102-28; Durga Prasad (Rly) bt Manish Jain (WB) 100-54, 101-78, 101-90; Devendra Joshi (PSPB) bt Dhvaj Haria (Guj) 100-44, 101-8, 64-101, 102-19.

Boys junior snooker (Semifinal league, best-of-five frames): Himanshu Jain (Kar) bt Mundir Sherazi (Kar) 3-2 (51-42, 41-67, 53-67, 71-44, 76-16); M.L. Lakshman (Kar) bt Lalrina Renthlei (Miz) 3-2 (18-85, 74-47, 28-84, 66-4, 68-41); Lalrina bt Himanshu 3-1 (75-17, 18-65, 75-36, 73-19); Himanshu bt Lakshman 3-0 (69-15, 49-45, 87-6); Lalrina bt Mundir 3-1 (39-59, 65-57, 58-17, 65-46); Lakshman bt Mundir 3-2 (40-66, 77-15, 59-10, 58-61, 65-59).

Final standings: 1. Lalrina Renthlei, 2. Himanshu Jain, 3. M.L. Lakshman, 4. Mundir Sherazi.


India needs to start afresh against UAE

India will look to wipe out the painful memories of the Sheikh Khalifa International Stadium before starting afresh against United Arab Emirates (UAE) in the second leg of its World Cup qualifiers engagement here on Thursday.

The task, certainly, will not be easy. But it would not be insurmountable either, since India will have the advantage of playing in the home comforts of the Ambedkar Stadium, where the side had its month-long training session in preparation for the important assignment. Also, the venue evokes some fond memories for Indian football, especially during the stint of former chief coach Bob Houghton.

Chhetri's delight

Star striker Sunil Chhetri's delight at playing in front of home supporters is symbolic of the unit's collective desire. Chhetri had been part of the Indian team which tasted a fair amount of success at its ‘lucky' venue.

“It will be emotionally charged,” said Chhetri, remembering India's agonising and eventful 0-3 loss to UAE last week. India was reduced to nine men for almost 75 minutes of the contest and the Qatari referee's rulings came in for criticism from various quarters.

India coach Armando Colaco blamed the referee (Banjar al Dosari) for the defeat. Colaco had, in fact, requested that no referee from the Gulf be posted for the match.

For many, it might well be a ‘revenge' match. However, the real aim of the home side will be getting the better of its opponent in terms of goal difference and stay on course in its quest for a World Cup berth.

With a deficit of three goals and two of its key players — goalkeeper Subrata Pal and defender Debabrata Roy, who were red-carded in the last match — the job, as of now, looks as good as impossible. But, as Chhetri wants us to believe, one never knows. The team is determined.

Colaco remained positive that the best way forward was by restoring pride.

“It's a new match, a new beginning. We have nothing to lose,” he said.

However, the coach has to reorganise a few things before finalising his starting line-up. One is to find a solution for Roy's absence in the defence. Colaco may consider fielding young Robert Lalthlamuana and hope for the best.

Besides that, he has the option of asking the dependable all-rounder Syed Rahim Nabi to move back from his mid-field position in order to bolster the defence.

Worrying

A worrying factor is Chhetri's ankle niggle, which he picked up during the last match against UAE. The striker has been careful not to aggravate it further, and hopes to be fit for the crucial fixture.

Subrata Pal is the man who will be missed sorely under the bar.

For the past few years, he has been there for almost all the important assignments and is rated highly for his skills, to protect the goal and also orchestrate the defence.

Impressive outing

Karanjit Singh, who replaced Pal in the first outing against UAE, impressed one and all with his heroic efforts and should fill in the shoes of his more famous teammate.

It would be a test of temperament, skills and nerve for the 25-year-old Salgaocar goalkeeper.

The visiting team, having secured a comfortable win, can be expected to approach the match with a relaxed mind and guard against not making too many mistakes in its mission to see off India. UAE, clearly, has the advantage.

Protesters demand action against Vedanta


Shareholders of Vedanta Resources, a FTSE 100 company that has been embroiled in a row over its activities in India, were on Tuesday booed by protesters gathered outside the venue of its Annual General Meeting in Westminster.

They called for its expulsion from India and an investigation into its trade practices and human rights record.

Carrying banners with slogans such as “Vedanta, Give it Up” and “Indian Government-No U-turn on Niyamgiri,” the protesters said the company must abandon its “notorious” mine in the Niyamgiri Hills, in Orissa, home of the Dongria Kondh tribe, which has been campaigning against it.

Permission denied

Vedanta was denied permission to mine in the Niyamgiri Hills following widespread protests, but it has challenged the decision in court.

“Vedanta's bauxite mining has killed thousands, mainly Adivasi people, in India in accidents, police firings, forced displacement, injury and illness. It has displaced thousands of families and destroyed the environment, contaminating drinking water and devastating vast tracts of fertile land in an area of Orissa which has experienced famine regularly since 2007,” said Amrit Wilson of campaign group “Foil Vedanta.”

A spokesman for Survival International said several investors had already disinvested a total of over $40m from Vedanta in protest over the Niyamgiri mine project and other concerns over the company's human rights and environmental record.

Its director Stephen Corry said: “When shareholders are disinvesting, and expressing serious concerns about company conduct, it's time to reconsider policy. Vedanta should respect the resounding ‘no' from the Indian government and abandon the Niyamgiri mine: it might go some way to righting its appalling human rights record.”

Actor Michael Palin, who visited the Niyamgiri Hills, said: “I am very disappointed that the decision to stop Vedanta's mine by India's Environment Minister is now being challenged in the Courts. Vedanta needs, once and for all, to abandon this ill-conceived project and respect the rights of the Dongria Kondh people.”

Protests were also planned inside the AGM.


Look, I can swim

A conversation with Madhavi Latha is revealing. You don't just get to know about her initiative ‘Yes we too can', but also about this mellow 41-year-old whose answer to all her challenges is a generous smile.

A conversation with Madhavi Latha is revealing. You don't just get to know about her initiative ‘Yes we too can', but also about this mellow 41-year-old whose answer to all her challenges is a generous smile.

Madhavi was only seven months old when she suffered an attack of poliomyelitis, which left her with 80 per cent disability.But that didn't stop her from acquiring a long list of professional qualifications, driving to work everyday and fighting to beat the odds. She is a Senior Manager at Standard Chartered Scope International.

Surgery suggested

However, four years ago, she developed complications and the doctors weren't too hopeful. “I had severe back pain and other complications. The doctor told me that if I did not undergo surgery, within a year, my life would be at risk. The chances of the surgery being successful were minimal and I didn't want to risk it. Desperate, I visited a physiotherapist, Ananda Jothi, who changed my life,” she reveals.

Ananda Jothi recommended that she tryhydrotherapy, and for the first time in Madhavi's life, she was engaged in sports. “The benefits I've derived from swimming are astounding. My back pain has disappeared, and I am able to move better. The physiotherapist told me that this therapy has been in the textbooks for ages but isn't extensively used. If I can derive the benefits at my age, you can only imagine how well it would work on younger people,” she says.

That's how ‘Yes we too can' began. “People with disabilities lead a sedentary life. This eventually leads to a lot of health complications. Physical exercise is very important to any person but often parents don't realise it. They're apprehensive about their children involving themselves in sports, unlike the West,” says Madhavi, adding, “when I began swimming, my parents would accompany me everyday, with their hearts in their mouth. Eventually, they realised that I could swim and understood how it helped. I want parents of differently-abled children to know that it's important to engage them in physical activity.”

Her initiative aims at creating awareness about the benefits of disability sports, counselling the physically-challenged and supporting those from the economically weaker sections. As part of the initiative, she has obtained permission from the Shenoy Nagar swimming pool to hold coaching classes. “I've been going around giving talks in schools and colleges. And the response to my initiative has been overwhelming. My company is willing to arrange transportation to the pool and back. We're just waiting for students to enrol.”

A colleague, who is also physically challenged, took a leaf out of Madhavi's book and went along with her for swimming. “He wondered whether he would ever be able to swim. I told him that if I could, so could he. Now he's very happy and confident he can handle himself better. In the West, there's badminton, basketball and every other sport for people like me,” she says.

Dream come true

Madhavi recently participated in the Corporate Olympiad and won the bronze in the 100m swimming category and hopes to be part of the Paralympics soon. “I always thought Madhavi and sports were two different worlds. I wondered if they would ever meet but swimming has helped me realise that dream. I recently participated and won the Corporate Olympiad and people began to refer to me as a sportsperson. It feels wonderful,” she smiles.

But Madhavi's dream is to start a sports school for persons with disabilities. “While I'd like to start a school, my immediate goal is to spread my message across the country. I would like to do everything possible to make sure that other people with disabilities don't go through what I did. Sometimes, we tend to feel excluded from society. With a little bit of support from people, I'm sure we can get over anything.”


The battle of the 'keeper-batsmen

One isn't sure if poltergeists from the past haunt Matt Prior — wicketkeepers, because of the nature of their job, develop the facility to swiftly banish them — but there's a particularly scary one in the woodwork here at Trent Bridge.

It was here that Prior was allegedly overheard boasting to a senior Indian batsman that he drove a swank car. Not much later jelly beans appeared on the pitch, incensing Zaheer Khan enough to bowl India to a famous victory.

Prior was inextricably linked to the episode because he was England's representative at the press-conference in which the Indian fast-bowler spelt out, missing no detail however slight, the order of the infantile proceedings.

By the time Prior's wicket-keeping broke down, in the next Test at The Oval, he was so reviled in England that he later confessed he felt he was “Public Enemy Number One”.

But so marvellously and completely has Prior recovered in the four years since that the experts who pilloried him are falling over themselves to say he is England's finest ever and the best in the world today. That's not accurate. But there's no denying that Prior has won the right to enter the discussion; redemption against India after the misery of 2007 will further his case.

“For me it's a huge series, for those reasons as much as anything,” Prior admitted. “I've been through some challenging times. But it's not whether you go through those challenging times, it's how you come out of them.”

The turnaround was due to hard, informed work. The batting came easier: Prior has always been a beautiful ball-striker, particularly on the off-side, and he worked to tighten his defensive technique. The results showed in vital cameos in the 2009 Ashes at home and his first century against Australia in Sydney this year.

Sturdy innings

Prior's unbeaten 103 at Lord's against India — his sixth Test century — was much like his hundred against Pakistan here last July. Both were sturdy innings that put off the opposition because it struck just the right note of aggression. While it isn't certain if the weakness against pace and bounce has been corrected, he's the most complete batsman at number seven in world cricket.

But the most dramatic improvement has been in Prior's glove-work.

Wicket-keeping is about repetition, about being consistently able to stay low for long, about being balanced in this half-crouch so one can push off either foot, and about ‘giving' with the ball when catching it with as large an area as possible. The difference-maker in keeping, much like in batting, is sighting the ball.

Prior worked tirelessly with former English keeper Bruce French to groove his technique. In his early days, he rose late from an awkward wide-based crouch that anchored his bodyweight in his heels and prevented him from skipping sideways; the method was refined so he could move on the balls of his feet more often. His natural athleticism, with which he flung himself when standing back, was thus easier expressed.

Inevitably, Prior has been compared with M.S. Dhoni. “It inspires you to play against the best in the world, and Dhoni is one of those,” he said. “You go into Test series and look at your opposite number and think let's have a better series than that man.”

Prior had the better of Dhoni in the first Test: two game-changing innings compared to none and a steadier display of keeping. While Dhoni is still marginally better than Prior standing up to the spinners, he struggled with the ‘wobble', the strange phenomenon of the ball swinging and dipping after passing the stumps here in England.

Kiran More, who was at Lord's, had suggested he step closer to counter-act this. But India's keeper and slip cordon (who base themselves on his position) were guilty of standing too deep in the first Test even accounting for the variable bounce, which made judging where to stand trickier.

An old flaw showed itself on occasion when keeping to the quicker bowlers in the first Test. A preliminary shift of the inside foot robbed him off the power step needed to spring across. Incidentally, Prior had the same weakness in 2007, but where the Sussex man tried to compensate by diving anyway and falling short, Dhoni, as is common with his conservative style, chose not to go.

The misses (Jonathan Trott, Stuart Broad) hurt India as much as Dhoni's lack of runs. To be fair to him, the Indian captain batted with more patience than he normally displays, but 638 runs in his last 23 innings is under-par. The battle of the wicketkeeper-batsmen mightn't define the rest of the series, but it'll be both fascinating and significant.


Yeddyurappa government hangs by a thread

The survival of the first Bharatiya Janata Party government in Karnataka hangs by a thread with Lokayukta N. Santosh Hegde indicting Chief Minister B.S. Yeddyurappa and proposing to Governor H.R. Bhardwaj that criminal action be initiated against Mr. Yeddyurappa.

A decision on the removal or continuance of Mr. Yeddyurappa as Chief Minister, however, rests with the BJP high command. It is the first time in the history of the State Lokayukta that a case has been made out against a Chief Minister.

Government authorities told The Hindu that soon after Chief Secretary to the State Government S.V. Ranganath received the report, legal experts including Advocate-General Ashok Haranahalli were closeted with the Chief Minister and senior Cabinet ministers to analyse the report and the possible fallout.

Raj Bhavan sources said the Governor had obtained a copy of the report and “will come out with the steps that he proposes to take” after perusing it. Legal experts have said that as per the provisions of the Constitution, the Governor can grant sanction on a prima facie complaint made out against the head of the government but cannot initiate criminal action.

Incidentally, the Lokayukta has called upon the Governor to initiate criminal proceedings rather than the Lokayukta investigation wing initiating action and seeking the sanction of the Governor for the same since the matter pertains to the head of the government.

Of the two cases made out against the Chief Minister — receipt of funds from a mining company for an education trust floated by his family members and another relating to sale of land at an exorbitant rate (far in excess of the guidance value) — one is already pending before the Lokayukta court following the sanction granted by the Governor on a private complaint.

The investigation by the Lokayukta into illegal mining was first ordered by the H.D. Kumaraswamy government subsequent to the Justice U.L. Bhat Commission of Inquiry, which was constituted in 2006 to go into mining irregularities in Bellary since 2000, with specific focus on the Rs. 150-crore bribery allegation against Mr. Kumaraswamy. The following year, the Kumaraswamy Cabinet wound up the inquiry commission after Justice Bhat resigned, and the matter was then referred to the Lokayukta with the same terms of reference.


Giant snails threaten to conquer more areas in Kerala

Likely to infest at least 41 locations in four districts

Giant African Snails (Achatina fulica Bowtich) are likely to infest at least 41 locations in four districts in the State, according to a scientific prediction. Their presence has already been reported from 10 districts.

The Kerala Forest Research Institute (KFRI), Peechi, Thrissur, has come up with a prediction after assessing 20 parameters in the areas from where severe attack of the invasive snail species was reported. The parameters to make a prediction model included, elevation from the mean sea level, precipitation during the wettest and coldest months, mean monthly temperature and maximum temperature during the warmest month, said T.V. Sajeev, the invasive species expert who led the KFRI team.

Experts have predicted 70 to 100 per cent possibility of the snails establishing themselves in these districts.

Palakkad has been identified as the most vulnerable district with the study predicting attack in 22 locations. Puthunagaram, Kodumbu, Peruvembu, Mundur, Puthuppariyaram, Marutha Road, Kannadi, Koduvayur, Chittur-Thathamangalam, Mathur, Pirayiri, Vadavannur and Thenkurissi are some of the vulnerable areas in the district.

Parali, Kuzhalmannam, Pallassana and Polppully are also susceptible to the attack.

In Kollam, Neendakara, Thrikkadavoor, Thekkumbhagam and Chavara are at risk, followed by Kochi Corporation area, Chellanam, Thripunithura, Njarakkal, Udayamperoor, Mulavukad and Elamkunnapuzha of Ernakulam district. The other areas in Kochi include, Cheranallur, Thiruvankulam, Nayarambalam, Maradu, Kumbalam and Kadamakkudy. Perumbalam and Panavally are the two vulnerable areas in Alappuzha district.

The researchers surveyed the State from Valiyathura in Thiruvananthapuram to Manjeswaram in Kasaragod in 2010 and located 29 distinct populations of the mollusc. Large populations were found in Konni in Pathanamthitta, Kolenchery in Ernakulam and Muzhupilangad and Parassinikkadavu in Kannur district. The presence of the pest has already been reported from Alapuzha, Ernakulam, Kozhikode, Kannur, Kasaragod, Mahe, Malappuram, Palakkad, Pathanamthitta and Thiruvananthapuram districts. Konni in Pathanamthitta was one of the worst hit areas.

The species has been listed as one of the “100 World's Worst Invaders.” The snails, which live up to six years in favourable conditions, feed on over 500 different plant species. This include some of the economically important plants like cocoa, papaya, peanut, rubber and most types of beans, peas, cucumbers, melons, lichens, algae and fungi. The infestation was found to be intense in areas with high population density. Areas with untreated garbage and places of water logging are their favourite spots, Dr. Sajeev said.

Experts have recommended the use of calcium arsenate and Metaldehyde under expert supervision in areas of high infestation. However, they advise to desist from the use of salt to kill the pest as it alters the soil pH. The meat of the snails thus killed will rot with foul smell. Moreover, the application of salt will become untenable during rainy days, researchers said.

on Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Maruti profit rises to Rs.549 crore

Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. (MSIL) on Tuesday reported 18 per cent increase in its net profit at Rs.549.23 crore for the first quarter ended June 30, 2011, while its income from operations stood at Rs.8,529.30 crore, an increase of 2.65 per cent. The company also said it would invest about Rs.3,000 crore in 2012-13 to expand capacity and introduce new models.

Total sales declined marginally to 2.81-lakh units in the period under review from 2.83-lakh units in the same period in 2009-10. It sold 2.50-lakh units in the domestic market, while its exports were down by 24 per cent at 30,843 units.

“External environment was challenging from both volume and margin perspective...petrol prices were unprecedented and interest rate hikes hurt customer confidence,” said MSIL Chief Financial Officer Ajay Seth. Higher commodity prices and foreign exchange volatility also put greater pressure on margins compared to the corresponding period of the previous fiscal, he added.

Pointing out that the car market was sluggish, mainly due to a sharp increase in fuel prices and higher interest rates, while export volumes declined on account of lower demand from Europe. The 13-day-long strike by workers at the Manesar (Haryana) plant had also impacted the overall performance.

In the current financial year, MSIL will put in about Rs.4,000 crore in various activities. It is setting up two new plants inside Manesar with 2.5-lakh unit annual capacity each at an investment of Rs.3,625 crore. While one plant will become operational later this year, the second one will start producing cars in the next fiscal.


Mallya hails Force India's performance

Force India owner Vijay Mallya on Tuesday hailed the performance of his team at the Nurburgring circuit in Germany and said the team has shown they are “truly competitive”.

Mallya said that it was certainly one of the better performances put up by the team, keeping in mind the ever growing competitive nature of the sport.

“It was certainly one of our better performances,” Mallya said.

“Over the last few years F1 has become even more competitive. The gap between the cars has reduced quite a lot from what it was a few years ago. So in this new scenario we have shown that we are truly competitive,” he added.

Force India enjoyed a strong week-end at the German Grand Prix with Adrian Sutil finishing sixth in the race after starting eighth at the grid with a lap time of 1:26.208.

It was the team's best result since last year's Korean Grand Prix, however, there was disappointment for Paul di Resta, who fought back to 13th after being involved in a first lap crash with Renault's Nick Heidfeld.

The result moves the team back up to seventh position in the constructors standings with 20 points.

Sutil, meanwhile, collected eight points from Sunday's race to occupy 12th place in the overall drivers' standings with 18 points after 10 races in the season.

His earlier best performance this season was a seventh-place finish in Monaco in May.


Broad — a clear and present danger

Stuart Broad didn't win the Man of the Match award and he didn't make it to the Lord's honour board, but there was no denying his pivotal role in the first Test.

With his spot under pressure before the game and a duck marring his first appearance in the contest, Broad wouldn't have been feeling too good about himself. But he turned things around spectacularly, doing everything asked of him with ball and bat.

Highly rated

Although experts in England and the cricketers in his own dressing room rate him highly, an average of more than 36 in 37 Tests preceding the one at Lord's hardly suggested a special bowling talent.

There was also confusion over his role in the team: was he the “enforcer”, his brief to rough batsmen up as English bowling coach David Saker said, or was he the third seamer with the same instructions as the other two, as head coach Andy Flower stated?

In both innings of the first Test, Broad primarily bowled a full length to swing the ball at good speed. When the occasion demanded a short-pitched attack — as it did against Suresh Raina on the fifth afternoon, which the batsman, to his credit, handled well — the 25-year-old was charged with the responsibility.

With the performance (seven wickets in the match), Broad showed just why his stock is so high in England. When he operates in this manner, he's a danger to any batsman: with bounce from his 6ft 6in frame, pace, and movement, he has all the tools.

Mentally composed

He also showed he could hold it together mentally, although he wasn't far on occasion from the petulant meltdown that has characterised him.

“I think it was quite obvious I bowled a fuller length” said Broad about his bowling. “I thought about getting a cover in, still keeping three slips and getting rid of the gully which allowed me to bowl that fuller length without the thought of getting hit for four.

“I think that worked, getting the batsmen driving, and that length can still hit the stumps on a pretty slow Lord's wicket. I'll obviously look to do that in the future as well.”

Defined role

Broad's performance clarified his role in the side, and he confirmed it. “Within the changing room, everyone has always known I'm best when I pitch the ball up and get a little bit of movement,” he said. “But when that moment comes when a bowler is needed to rough a batsman up or get two men out on the hook and try to unsettle someone, then the ball gets thrown to me because my bouncer is pretty good and it's got a decent yard [of pace] in it.”

The fast-bowler said being pushed by Tim Bresnan for his place helped, but he traced the turnaround to a recent county performance. “As an international cricketer you are always under pressure, there are always guys who want your spot and that's a healthy thing,” he said.

“What helped me was going back to play for Notts (Nottingham), gaining the confidence of a five-wicket haul (five for 95 v Somerset), bowling at Trent Bridge which always encourages you to pitch the ball up and swing it. I felt in really good rhythm and brought that to the Test.”


Somdev rises to career-best ranking

Indian tennis star Somdev Devvarman climbed six places in the latest ATP rankings to touch a career-best 62nd position in the singles list.

The 26-year-old, who took a break from the circuit after Wimbledon and was since then losing points, made it to the quarter-finals of last week's Tour event in Atlanta, which helped him gain places.

In the ATP doubles ranking, there was no change in the positions of Mahesh Bhupathi (5), Leander Paes (8) and Rohan Bopanna (10).

The pair of Paes and Bhupathi is at No. 4 in the team rankings, while Bopanna and Aisam-ul-haq Qureshi remained at No. 6.

In the WTA rankings, Sania Mirza jumped two places to be 62 in singles, while she maintained her 11th position in the doubles.

Sania's team ranking with Russian Elena Vesnina is also intact at No. 2 in race to year-end championship.

Sania-Elena pair has 4506 points in the list headed by Kveta Peschke and Katarina Srebotnik, who have 6865 points.

The top four pairs compete in the prestigious year-end championship.


'Go for Gold' campaign launched

Rower Bajrang Lal Takhar, boxer Vikas Krishan, paddlers Sharath Kamal and Madhurika Patkar launched the ‘Go for Gold' campaign across the nation by Percept.

The initiative is in tune with the countdown for the London Games 2012 exactly a year away and is aimed at creating an awareness across India about the multi-sport event. Other plans include a torch run from Kanyakumari to Kashmir featuring Indian sports achievers, fashion shows involving athletes, music and cultural events and farewell dinner for Indian contingent.

Takhar, a gold medalist in single sculls at the Guangzhou Asian Games, spoke about his ambitions in the run-up to London 2012. “Beijing Olympics was my first time ever on an Olympics stage and I reached the quarterfinals. Now I am focused on qualifying for London Olympics and competing in the final.”

The Army rower has two events to make the grade (Slovenia and South Korea) where top three get Olympics berths.

His win in the Asian Games has changed the public outlook towards the sport, Takhar said. “People I meet, whether from army or civilian, want to learn rowing and ask me about the way to start. Rowing is for loners and people with a peculiar state of mind. Not everyone can do it.”He trains at Hyderabad with new boats, supplied to rowers following the Asian Games exploits. “Now the federation is supportive and inquires about our needs during preparations. We will go four days ahead of the Slovenia event to get used to conditions there,” he said.

Asked if four days at the venue was adequate, Takhar clarified that competitors are denied access to the venue before that.

Sharath hopeful

Sharath Kamal hopes to clinch an Olympic berth in the Asian qualification tournament, scheduled in April 2012. “I missed out on qualification at the World Championships and am confident of doing so at the Asian event,” said the two-time Olympian (2004 and 2008).

Bhiwani Boxing Club fighter Vikas Krishan wants to emulate club-mates Vijender Singh and is aiming for an Olympic quota. He is an emerging talent, a winner in lightweight class at the AIBA World Youth Championship and Asian Games in 2010.

Julian Barnes on Man Booker Prize longlist

British novelist Julian Barnes, best-known for ‘Flaubert's Parrot and England, England,' his hilariously satirical take on modern Britain's decline, is among the 13 writers longlisted for this year's £50,000 Man Booker Prize.

Barnes, a familiar figure on the Booker circuit having been shortlisted three times before, has been nominated for his new novel ‘The Sense of an Ending,' which is narrated by a man as he looks back on his life punctuated by hope and remorse.

The only former Booker winner on the list, announced on Tuesday, is Alan Hollinghurst who is nominated for his much-discussed novel ‘The Stranger's Child.'

Four debut novelists

There are four debut novelists: Stephen Kelman (Pigeon English), A.D. Miller (Snowdrops), Yvvette Edwards (A Cupboard full of Coats) and Patrick McGuinness (The Last Hundred Days).

Three Canadian writers on the list include Alison Pick, Patrick deWitt, and Esi Edugyan.

Others are Sebastian Barry, Carol Birch, D.J. Taylor and Alison Pick.

Winner will be announced on October 18

A shortlist of six authors will be announced in September and the winner on October 18.

Jury

This year's jury is chaired by Dame Stella Rimington, a former head of intelligence agency MI5.

She said: “We are delighted by the quality and breadth of our longlist, which emerged from an impassioned discussion. The list ranges from the Wild West to multi-ethnic London via post-Cold War Moscow and Bucharest, and includes four first novels.”

CAG rejects RIL claim on inadequate time for response

Asserting that the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) office was in the process of finalising the report on irregularities in KG-D6 blocks and Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs), the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG), Vinod Rai on Tuesday rejected Reliance Industries Limited’s (RIL) claim that it was not given enough time to respond to observations relating to its KG-D6 gas field.

“We have given RIL enough time to respond. The CAG report is in the process of being finalised,’’ Mr. Vinod Rai said on the sidelines of a function here. RIL had earlier issued a statement that the time allocated to the company by CAG was far too inadequate to answer issues raised in the audit report.

The CAG had on June 27 refuted the charge by RIL that the company had not been consulted before preparing the draft report on the KG-D6 gas fields. This came after RIL raised fingers at the manner in which CAG was conducting the whole audit. “As per the standard practice for all performance audits conducted by the CAG, an entry conference and exit conference is conducted with the audited entity, in this case, the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas,’’ the CAG statement had stated.

“In the case of performance audit on hydrocarbon PSCs, interactive meetings were held with two operators, including RIL, prior to the finalisation of the draft performance audit report. At no stage did this office refuse any operator an opportunity to respond to observations made by us,’’ it said.

The CAG draft report had raised questions about the working of the Petroleum Ministry and the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons (DGH) accusing them of giving undue benefits to RIL at the cost of the public exchequer. It had charged both RIL and Cairn India by allowing them to retain the entire exploration acreage in their oil and gas blocks, turning a blind eye to increases in capital expenditure and giving additional area in violation of the PSC.

The CAG had stated that rules were bent, enabling RIL to retain the entire 7,645-sq. km. KG-D6 block in the Krishna-Godavari Basin, off the East Coast. On July 12, the CAG held an Exit Conference with private firms and the Petroleum Ministry prior to finalising its audit report on RIL’s KG-D6 gas field, Cairn India’s Rajasthan oil block and BG's Panna-Mukta and Tapti oil and gas fields. The conference was held as a prelude to finalising its report on KG-D6 fields and taking comments from the companies on its June 7 draft report.

FBI affidavit omitted Headley's testimony on Rana: documents

Mumbai attack accused David Headley had repeatedly told his FBI interrogators that his friend and co-accused Tahawwur Rana was unaware of his terror activities and had not provided any support to him knowingly, details that were omitted from an affidavit filed before a court, recently unsealed documents reveal.

According to the documents, the FBI had presented plenty of evidence in support of its applications to search properties of Rana but there was discrepancy in the evidence presented and Headley's testimony.

In the search warrant affidavit, Special Agent Lorenzo Benedict of the FBI asserted there was probable cause to believe that Rana conspired to provide material support to “a conspiracy to commit terrorist acts involving murder, kidnapping, and maiming outside the U.S., including attacks in Mumbai, Copenhagen, and elsewhere...”

The document cited Headley using Rana's immigration service business as a cover to perform surveillance in Mumbai, besides a conversation between Headley and Rana, reflecting that Abdur Rehman Hashim Syed (aka ‘Pasha') told Rana during a 2008 meeting in Dubai, about the impending attack in India.

While the search warrant affidavit did disclose that Headley had made multiple incriminating statements about his own conduct and of others, it omits the fact that during his two-week-long videotaped interrogation from October 3, 2009 to October 17, 2009, Headley repeatedly told investigators that Rana was unaware of his terrorist activities and had not knowingly provided any support to his activities.

The documents further added that with respect to the Mumbai attacks, the affidavit specifically omits Headley's statements that he used his position as a childhood friend to convince Rana to open businesses in Mumbai and Pakistan, to let Headley run them, and that Rana did this because he trusted Headley.

The documents further added that Rana was unaware of Pasha's role in terrorist activity and that the connection between Rana and Pasha was solely business-related.

Mumbai attacks

Rana was surprised but not upset about the Mumbai attacks and he did not think Headley had done it, according to the Pakistani-American's recorded testimony.

With regard to the planned attacks against Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten too, the affidavit omitted some of Headley's statements during interrogation. These included the stated fact that Rana intended to set up a legitimate immigration business in Copenhagen and while Headley discussed it with him, he did not tell the Pakistani-Canadian the terror plans.

Rana also responded to an e-mail to Headley from the Jyllands-Posten because Headley asked him to do so, supporting a subterfuge by posing as Headley.

During the entire course of the interview, Headley did not once implicate Rana in any criminal behaviour, despite ample questioning to that effect.

While providing all the crucial evidence in its search warrant affidavit, seeking to obtain permission to search Rana's home and businesses, none of Headley's accounts on Rana were provided to the magistrate who issued the warrants, the documents state.

Rana was convicted on June 9 on two counts of supporting terrorism in Denmark and supporting the Lashkar-e-Taiba and faces up to 30 years in prison though his sentencing date has not yet been set.


Israeli orchestra breaks a taboo

An Israeli orchestra made history on Tuesday with a concert in Bayreuth, the spiritual home of Hitler's favourite composer Richard Wagner, and received a standing ovation.

“It was a joy for us to play Wagner here,” said Roberto Paternostro, conductor of the Israel Chamber Orchestra, after the first-ever performance by an ensemble from the Jewish state in the German town.

The concert was not on the official programme the 100th Bayreuth Festival dedicated to Wagner's works that opened with great pomp Monday in the concert hall built by the composer in the 1870s on the famed Green Hill.

However the taboo-breaking concert of around two hours, dominated by music by Jewish composers like Gustav Mahler and Felix Mendelssohn but finishing with Wagner's “Siegfried Idyll”, has been a major talking point.

Wagner died in 1883 and Hitler was greatly impressed by his music with its use of epic Germanic and Norse mythology, becoming a frequent guest of the family and the festival.

As a child Wolfgang Wagner, the composer's grandson who died in March 2010 after running the Bayreuth festival for 57 years, used to call the visiting Nazi dictator “Uncle Wolf”.

Wagner's work has been off-limits in Israel as a result and his music is subject to an unwritten ban.

When Israeli-Argentine conductor Daniel Barenboim led the Berlin Staatskapelle in a performance of an excerpt from Wagner's “Tristan und Isolde” in Jerusalem in 2001, dozens of audience members stormed out.

Wagner's great-granddaughter Katharina Wagner, who since 2009 has run the festival with her half-sister Eva Wagner-Pasquier, sat in the front row for Tuesday's concert.

The concert has still set some tempers flaring, however. The American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors and their Descendants called it “an act of moral failure and a disgraceful abandonment of solidarity with those who suffered unspeakable horrors by the purveyors of Wagner's banner”. — AFP

on Monday, July 25, 2011

Sensex gains in opening trade ahead of RBI policy meet

The Bombay Stock Exchange benchmark Sensex rose by over 73 points in opening trade on Tuesday, extending its gains for the third straight session despite concerns over an expected hike in key short-term rates by the RBI at its monetary policy review meeting later in the day.

A firming trend on other Asian bourses and encouraging Q1 earnings by Reliance Industries mainly buoyed the trading sentiment.

The 30-share index of the Bombay Stock Exchange, which has gained 435.10 points in the past two sessions, moved up further by 73.31 points, or 0.38 per cent, to 18,944.60 points in opening trade today with metal, oil and gas, capital goods and IT stocks attracting interest.

In a similar fashion, the wide-based National Stock Exchange Nifty index gained 21.95 points, or 0.38 per cent, to trade above the psychological 5,700 points level at 5,702.25.

Brokers said the market sentiment at home was firm, largely on the back of a firming trend on other Asian bourses and encouraging earnings from the most-weighted firm in the 30-share Sensex index, Reliance Industries Ltd, which posted a growth of 16.7 per cent in Q1 net profit.

They said, however, concerns that the RBI may announce another hike in key rates in its monetary review to contain inflation capped the gains.

In the Asian region, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was up 1.01 per cent, while Japan’s Nikkei gained 0.60 per cent in morning trade today.


Greek Finance Minister downplays bond downgrade

Greece’s Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos is offering a positive spin on the move by a major ratings agency to downgrade Greek bond ratings.

On Monday, Moody’s said that it is almost inevitable the country will be considered to be in default following last week’s new EU bailout package.

Asked about the development following a speech in Washington, Mr. Evangelos pointed to the agency’s conclusion that the new package will help Greece stabilize its debt.

“For the first time in the last two years, we have positive signals from the international financial community,” he said at The Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund last week agreed to give Greece a second bailout worth euro109 billion ($155 billion), on top of the euro110 billion granted in rescue loans a year ago.

If all goes to plan, banks and other private investors will contribute some euro50 billion ($71 billion) to the rescue package until 2014 by swapping Greek bonds that they hold for new ones with lower interest rates or slightly lower face value, or selling the bonds back to Greece at a low price.

But despite a package that was more comprehensive than many in the markets had predicted, Moody’s said it is going to take many years of hard adjustment for Greece to get complete control of its debts.

Venizelos said he had discussed the new plan in meetings Monday with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde.

In a statement Treasury Department spokeswoman Nathalie Wyeth said that Mr. Geithner urged Greece to press on with economic reforms.

“Secretary Geithner welcomed the progress Greece has already made toward strengthening its public finances and underscored the need for continued and full implementation of the program,” she said.

In his speech, Venizelos called U.S. support, especially through its weight within the IMF essential. The IMF has not yet said how much it will commit to the new bailout package. Mr. Venizelos, said that Greece and European partners welcome IMF involvement.

“The Eurozone is open to the participation and assistance of the IMF which has a vast experience and know-how,” he said.

Mr. Venizelos said that Greece is committed to its austerity measures and stressed that a privatization plan would be key to stabilizing its finances.

“Now the key point is to implement the program,” he said in his speech. “Our goal is to return to positive growth and create primary surpluses by 2012.”

He said he was also seeking support from the U.S. private sector during his visit.


Obama appeals for debt-limit compromise

President Barack Obama on Monday night criticised a newly minted Republican plan to avert an unprecedented government default and said congressional leaders must produce a compromise that can reach his desk before the Aug. 2 deadline.

“The American people may have voted for divided government, but they didn’t vote for a dysfunctional government,” the president said in a hastily arranged prime-time televised speech. He appealed to the public to contact lawmakers and demand “a balanced approach” to reducing federal deficits.

Mr. Obama stepped to the microphones a few hours after first Republicans, and then Democrats drafted rival fallback legislation Monday to avert a potentially devastating government default in little more than a week.

Mr. Obama said the approach unveiled earlier in the day by House Speaker John Boehner would raise the nation’s debt limit only long enough to push off the threat of default for six months. “In other words, it doesn’t solve the problem,” he said.

The president had scarcely completed his remarks when Mr. Boehner made an extraordinary rebuttal carried live on the nation’s networks.

“The president has often said we need a ‘balanced’ approach, which in Washington means we spend more, you pay more,” the Ohio Republican said, speaking from a room just off the House floor.

“The sad truth is that the president wanted a blank check six months ago, and he wants a blank check today. That is just not going to happen.”

Directly challenging the president, Boehner said there “is no stalemate in Congress.”

He said the Republicans’ newest legislation would clear the House, could clear the Senate and then would be sent to Mr. Obama for his signature.