Sunday, June 7, 2009

Today's Latest News India

US doesn't intend to meddle in Kashmir: Obama aide

WASHINGTON: The US does not intend to "meddle" in the Kashmir issue, but will support any effort by India and Pakistan to reduce their tensions,a key aide to President Barack Obama says while pressing Islamabad to take the "first step" to bring to justice the Mumbai attack masterminds.

Allaying apprehensions in some quarters in India that US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke's mandate may also include Kashmir, Bruce Riedel, who co-chaired the inter-agency committee which formulated the Af-Pak policy, said: "I do not think, the Obama administration intends to meddle in Kashmir."

Riedel, a former CIA official, said it is in the interest of the US to see tension between India and Pakistan be reduced and diminished and see a resumption of the bilateral composite dialogue and a back channel between India and Pakistan that produced some significant result between 2006 and May 2007.

"But at the end of the day it is fundamentally up to the Indians and Pakistanis to make those decisions, and change those policies that way. United States can be a supporter and it should be, but it is up to Indians and Pakistanis to find a way to reduce tensions between them," Riedel said.

"The critical first step in that regard that is for Pakistan to take steps to bring to justice the masterminds who murdered a 160 people in Mumbai last November. That is the first step, without that it would be very-very difficult to see a reduction in tension between Islamabad and New Delhi," he said.

"I can't see how any Indian government could or should simply forget what happened last November in Mumbai," Riedel said, insisting that those responsible for that massacre have to be brought to justice.

"The Pakistani government has been asking for evidence. I think, India has provided the evidence. Now it is time to take some action against Lashkar-e-Toiba, Jamaat-ud-Dawa and those who perpetrated this terrorist outrage," he said.

Commenting on bilateral ties, Riedel noted that there was a bipartisan consensus in the US that India would be one of the most important partners and friends to the United States in the 21st century.

"On every issue that matters to America, from international terrorism to global warming, to arms control, the future of democracy; India is a critical player and the US and India have fundamentally similar interests and values.

"And I think, across the political spectrum in the United States there is a recognition (about) that. This is an unusual area of consensus in American politics. I expect the Obama administration to continue what the Clinton and Bush administrations began, which is strengthening US-Indian relations," he said.

When asked whether the fizz in Indo-US ties that was witnessed during the previous Bush era was missing after Barack Obama became US President this year, Riedel replied in the negative.

Riedel said: "The Obama administration has rightly given India a chance to conduct its own political process. India has been in a process of a very important election and has come out with a very important result - the return of the Congress Government.

"By definition during that electoral period, US-Indian bilateral relations were on the back-burner, while India put its own political house in order."

With the Congress-led UPA back in power, Riedel said he expected bilateral diplomatic ties to regain the tempo and take a "significant uptick."

He also noted that Washington has rightly focused on the war in Afghanistan, and the deteriorating situation in Pakistan. At the same time, he made it clear that the Obama Administration intends to consult closely with New Delhi at every stage it moves forward on the new Afghanistan-Pakistan strategy.

"I think, that makes perfect sense as the government in New Delhi very much wants those consultations," he said.

Describing India as a "key player" in Afghanistan, Riedel noted that New Delhi has provided over USD 1 billion as aid to the Afghan government.


Nimbalkar case: CBI arrests NCP leader Padamsinh Patil


MUMBAI: Nationalist Congress (NCP) MP Padamsinh Patil, who was nabbed by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) early Sunday, has been charged with the murder of his cousin and Congress leader Pavan Raje Nimbalkar in 2006, a law official said.

Senior public prosecutor Ejaz Pathan said that Patil has been charged under the Indian Penal Code Section 302 and 120-B, dealing with murder and conspiracy to murder, respectively.

Meanwhile, in his home town Osmanabad, Patil's supporters went on a rampage protesting against their leader's arrest. According to police, the angry protesters pelted stones at and damaged several private vehicles and two state transport buses.

Patil, a former state home minister, was rushed to a Mumbai hospital early Sunday following complaints of headache, giddiness and hypertension, according to officials.

"We are awaiting his discharge from the Sir JJ Hospital. As soon as he is discharged, he will be brought to the Panvel court," Pathan said.

Elected last month from Osmanbad Lok Sabha constituency, Patil was questioned, detained and subsequently arrested for the murder and conspiracy to kill his cousin Nimbalkar.

Top officials of the CBI western region went to the hospital and consulted the medicos before planning their further course of action.

Patil is due to be presented before the magistrate court at Panvel, around 100 km from here.

Mumbai Police have beefed up security around the hospital premises in south-Mumbai.

Nimbalkar, Patil's cousin, was shot dead by two gunmen at Kalamboli in Navi Mumbai on July 3, 2006, after he was lured there under the pretext of striking a business deal.

Shooter Dineshram M. Tiwari (37) and his supervisor Parasmal T. Jain (47), were arrested by the CBI last week (May 25) for killing Nimbalkar and his driver Samad Qazi.

In their confessional recorded before a magistrate, the duo also made the sensational disclosure of receiving a Rs.2.50 million contract to eliminate renowned social worker and anti-corruption crusader Anna Hazare, a Magsaysay award winner.

The contract to kill Nimbalkar and Hazare was allegedly given by two businessmen Mohan Shukla and Satish Mandade.

Jain said that he accepted the Rs.3 million contract to kill Nimbalkar since he had suffered business losses. He was facing financial problems and wanted money to cure himself of AIDS, he told police.

In police custody till Monday, Jain and Tiwari said that they refused the paid offer to kill Hazare.


Air France says speed monitors faulty, 2 bodies found


Sunday,Jun 07, 2009 at 1107 hrs IST,Paris:Air France acknowledged on Saturday that speed monitors on some of its Airbus planes have proven faulty, icing up at high altitude, and that recommendations to change them were first made in September 2007. Air France issued a statement with details about the monitors hours after the French agency investigating the disaster of Flight 447 said the instruments were not replaced on that aircraft an A330 - before it crashed last week into the Atlantic Ocean en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris.

Air France said it began replacing the monitors on the Airbus A330 model on April 27 after an improved version became available. Pitot tubes, located on the exterior of the aircraft, are used to help measure aerodynamic speed.

Aviation officials have said the crash investigation is increasingly focused on whether external instruments may have iced over, confusing speed sensors and possibly leading computers to set the plane's speed too fast or slow - a potentially deadly mistake in severe turbulence. An Air France statement said that icing of the monitors at high altitude has led at times to loss of needed flying information.

However, the Air France statement stressed the recommendation to change the monitor "allows the operator full freedom to totally, partially or not at all apply it." When safety is at issue the aircraft maker issues, rather than a recommendation, a mandatory service bulletin followed up by an airworthiness directive. Air France said that only a "small number" of incidents linked to the monitors had been reported.


Indian student's car torched, cops deny racial attack


Melbourne:In yet another incident targeting Indian students in Australia, a car belonging to a youth from the community has been torched here, even as police ruled out any racial motive behind it. 22-year-old Vikrant Rajesh Ratan, who had used all his savings to buy the car, said the vehicle was burnt last night. He said that two other cars, also belonging to Indians, that were parked next to his vehicle, were also damaged during the incident. "We were sleeping when it all happened. We heard the fire alarm of the car. When we went out to see what happened we saw the cars on fire," Ratan said.

He said that it could have been done by a group of drug addicts who used to sit near the premises. "I believe they (addicts) probably first tried to open the car. Then they may have used a petrol can to set it ablaze." Ratan, originally from Ludhiana who came here a month ago to pursue a certificate course in Automotive Engineering, said that there was no chance of a short circuit that could have burnt the car in this cold weather. He said he had bought the vehicle a few days ago for 2500 dollars and now he was left with no money. The car was not even insured.

The incident has been reported to the Victorian police, who said they were in the process of getting more information. Ruling out any racial motive behind the incident, a police spokesperson said "there was only one car that was torched while the other two cars had slight damage." "We are investigating who did this. However, it does not look like a racially motivated attack," she said. This was the latest in the spate of incidents targeting Indians in Australia. Among the victims of racial attacks is 25-year-old Shravan Kumar, a student from Andhra Pradesh, who remained critical after being stabbed with a screwdriver by a group of teenagers who also assaulted his three other Indian friends.

Swine flu goes local; 7 cases reported in India

June 6, 2009, Hyderabad:A high-level team from Delhi is expected to arrive in Hyderabad on Saturday night as five of the seven confirmed H1N1 cases in the country have been reported in Andhra Pradesh. This includes the first case of a person who has got the infection locally.

A 25-year-old engineer in Hyderabad got infected after staying with his 28-year-old software engineer brother who had returned from the US on May 31 with the H1N1 virus on a British Airways flight.

On the same flight was a four and a half year old child who has also tested positive.

"In countries like the US there is no screening at exit point, but only at the entry point. So the infection is getting exported," said Andhra Pradesh Government Chest Hospital doctor B Subhakar.

The big challenge now is not just to make surveillance much more thorough at entry points like airports, but also increase isolation facility manifold because though H1N1 is curable, those affected are highly infectious.

At Hyderabad's chest hospital, for example, there is provision for a maximum of 12 people to be kept in isolation but the number of inpatients is already 10.

Indian Business News| Business News

Bankrupt GM pins high hopes on India for turnaround

NEW DELHI: Even as General Motors struggles to emerge from bankruptcy, the auto giant is rolling out new cars in India whose vast market it sees as key to fuelling future growth.

The once-mighty auto company is pinning high hopes on emerging economic powers like India and China to reverse its decline.

While thousands of GM's US employees are getting pink slips, GM India says it has no plans to trim the more than 4,000 workers at its two plants and engineer research and design centre in India.

"It's business as usual," said GM India president Karl Slym last week in New Delhi, where he unveiled GM's latest offering for India -- a clean-burning liquefied natural gas model of its popular Chevrolet Spark minicar.

"We're here for the long haul," Slym said in an interview.

"While the home US market is certainly the most important, China is equally important... India is also key as opportunities here are similar," he said.

Slym has several numbers he likes to focus on when talking about the huge potential for automakers in India and China, with their billion-plus populations.

"In America there are about 850 cars per 1,000 people, in India there are seven per 1,000 and in China there are 17 per 1,000," he told AFP.

"It's very clear there's a high car saturation level in the US while in India and China, it's not just a replacement market, there are new first-time buyers every day," he said.

"It will all be very important for the new GM," he said, referring to the slimmed-down, focused and hopefully profitable automaker to emerge from the US bankruptcy proceedings.

In China, where Detroit-based GM entered in 1996, it is one of the top automakers, having sold more than one million cars last year. In India, where Japanese-owned Maruti Suzuki is in a solid leadership spot, GM has been slower out of the starting gate.

The US auto company, which started selling its Chevrolet marque in India only in 2003, is the fifth-largest carmaker in the country.

It sold 65,702 cars last year, up nine percent from the previous year, but way behind Maruti which sold close to 800,000 cars.

Still, GM believes it can only grow in the India as it penetrates the minicar segment which accounts for 80 percent of Indian car sales.

"We can really say we didn't come to India until we brought in the Spark (in 2007) because the minicar segment is where most of the action is," said Slym.

But the company is still having to work to ensure its reputation is not tainted in India by its US parent's bankruptcy and is running ads to reassure customers it will still be around to service its cars.

GM India's sales in May fell 11.75 percent to 5,109 units from a year ago, a decline the company attributes to customer concern about the automaker's US troubles.

However, it says its Asian operations won't be hit by the bankruptcy as they were not included in the filing and that it is aiming to open new factories in India, China and Thailand even as it shuts down US plants.

In India it is also planning two more launches in 2009 -- that of its Chevrolet Cruze sedan and a new minicar. It will also be putting a "made in India" tag on its cars.

Its new minicar, to be priced at around 400,000 rupees (8,500 dollars), will be made at its Talegaon plant in western India for the domestic as well as export markets.

Up to now, GM India has built its cars using knocked down units from plants abroad.

The automaker has invested over 50 billion rupees (1.1 billion dollars) to build its two factories in the western states of Gujarat and Maharashtra that have capacity for 225,000 vehicles a year -- giving it plenty of growth headroom.

It is also spending 200 million dollars on constructing its first car engine and transmission plant.

"We're now going to be a truly local manufacturer in India," Slym said.

Satyam may layoff 5,000 support staff

New Delhi:The full board meeting of Satyam Computer is likely to be held on June 11 after its new owner Tech Mahindra assumed charge and the board may draw a consensus on the sensitive issue of laying off as many as 5,000 employees in phases.

Sources said the meeting is scheduled to be held on next Thursday or Friday and for the first time the full board -- six government-nominated members and four member from Tech Mahindra (through its arm Venturebay Consultants)—will discuss the business strategies.

A company spokesperson said as and when the meeting takes place, there will be comprehensive discussions on all related issues. He, however, did not divulge details of the agenda or whether or not the meeting would look at ways on how to rationalise the employee strength.

Sources said given the sensitivities of the situation,

the board is likely to draw a consensus on the 'lay-offs' to be undertaken which may take the shape of keeping 5,000-10,000 people on the bench (reserve).

Tech Mahindra CEO Vineet Nayar had recently said Satyam has 10,000 surplus staff and the company would look at the 'least painful' ways to handle the situation.

"It is a question of revival and viability", they said.

Last week Corporate Affairs Minister Salman Khurseed had said the government will not turn a blind eye to any lay-offs in Satyam.

Sources said the company may be forced to ask about 5,000 employees to leave out of the support staff, who are not on the software projects.

Tata Steel sales volume up 18% in May

New Delhi:Tata Steel said its sales volume surged by 18 per cent to 4.69 lakh tonnes in May on the back of robust demand from auto and construction sectors.

In the corresponding month last year, the company's sales stood at 3.97 lakh tonnes, the steel major said in a statement.

During the month under review, Tata Steel saw its saleable steel production surging by 23 per cent to 5.01 lakh tonnes as against 4.08 lakh tonnes.

The sale of long products, mainly used in construction industry, increased by 34 per cent while that of flat items, used by auto and consumer durable sectors, increased by nine per cent, over the year-ago period.

Tata Steel's crude steel output for the month went up by 17 per cent to 4.86 lakh tonnes from 4.16 lakh tonnes, while hot metal production rose by 19 per cent to 5.28 lakh tonnes from 4.43 lakh tonnes.

The company claimed that one of its steel melting shops in Jamshedpur achieved best-ever May production at 2.18 lakh tonnes. Also, a merchant mill recorded best-ever May production of 30,710 tonnes over 28,505 tonnes the same period last year.

The output of its hot strip mill and new bar mill also registered an impressive growth over May 2008, it said.

Indian Cricket News|Sports News|T20 World cup News |French News

Yuvraj, Ojha dazzle; India thump Bangladesh in T20 opener

Trent Bridge:Yuvraj Singh dazzled with the bat before Pragyan Ojha spun a web around Bangladesh as India thumped the minnows by 25 runs to begin their title defence with a bang in the Twenty20 World Cup here.

Ojha's four-wicket haul in his maiden Twenty20 International broke Bangladesh's back as the minnows finished at 155 for eight, a total they owe to Junaid Siddique (41) and Naeem Islam (28).

Earlier, Gautam Gambhir (50) and Rohit Sharma (36) gave India a rollicking start but it was Yuvraj's violent 18-ball 41 that propelled them to 180 for five in the Group A opener.

Chasing 181, Bangladesh began on a positive note with Tamim Iqbal (15) hitting Zaheer Khan for two successive fours and Junaid (41 off 22 balls) pulling Irfan Pathan for a six.

M S Dhoni introduced Yusuf Pathan and it paid off as the duo collaborated to get Tamim stumped in the third over.

Junaid looked unperturbed as he scored at a brisk rate, hitting sixes off the Pathan brothers -- Yusuf and Irfan -- and Harbhajan Singh.

Unfortunately, wickets kept tumbling at the other end.

Mohammad Ashraful (11) fell to Ishant Sharma and then Pragyan Ojha struck twice in his first over to unhinge Bangladesh.

Shakib Al Hasan (8) top edged Ojha's first delivery to Dhoni and then Junaid holed out in the deep as Bangladesh slumped to 77 for four.

Yuvraj took a stunner to remove Mahmudullah (8) and by then, the writing was clear on the wall for Bangladesh and their defeat was just a matter of time.


Gayle warns team of road ahead post victory over OZ

London:West Indies captain Chris Gayle said there was plenty of work left for his side after he led them to a crushing seven-wicket win over Australia in their first match of this year's ICC World Twenty20. Opening batsman Gayle dominated the Australia attack during a blistering innings of 88, off just 50 balls, which featured six sixes and six fours.

Australia quick Brett Lee was made to look like a club bowler during four overs that cost 56 runs, with Gayle striking him for a six out of the ground and then hitting him onto the roof of the stand above the players' dressing rooms at the pavilion end.

"This is only the first game, we still have a long way to go," Gayle told reporters after a morale-boosting win which followed heavy defeats in both Tests and one-day internationals against England earlier on their tour of the United Kingdom.

"In Twenty20 it's so short we tend to concentrate a bit better but there were too many fumbles in the field," Jamaica left-hander Gayle, 29, said. "After a tough series against England, we wanted to put a smile back on our fans' faces," added Gayle ahead of the West Indies' match against Group C rivals Sri Lanka at Trent Bridge on Tuesday.

Gayle received excellent support from Andre Fletcher (52) in an opening stand of 133 - the third highest for any wicket in all Twenty20 internationals. But the platform for victory had arguably been laid in the very first over of the match when Jerome Taylor removed both Shane Watson and Australia captain Ricky Ponting for ducks. "Andre Fletcher took the pressure off me and allowed me to pace my innings," said Gayle. "Credit too goes to Jerome Taylor for picking up those two wickets. "Restricting them to 169 was acceptable, you can get that in England because the wickets are very good and the outfields very fast."

South Africa eye easy win against Scotland

LONDON: South Africa begin their quest to win the ICC World Twenty20 title against Scotland at the Oval on Sunday determined to shed their reputation as One-day 'chokers'.

The Proteas have recently enjoyed some memorable Test triumphs, winning series in both England and Australia.

But since South Africa's re-admission in 1991 they have not reached the final of a major One-day tournament.

"We have had a wonderful past 12 months, which has included winning away Test series in both England and Australia and winning home-and-away ODI series against Australia to gain top spot in the world rankings," said South Africa captain Graeme Smith.

"One of the boxes we still want to tick is to win a major International Cricket Council Championship."

But that will require the Proteas to end their run of self-inflicted wounds. At the 1999 World Cup fast bowler Allan Donald was run out off the last ball of their semi-final against Australia, the tie taking the Aussies into the final.

And four years later, on home soil, South Africa's failure to correctly interpret the Duckworth-Lewis system saw them go out of the World Cup in the group stage during a rain-affected match against Sri Lanka.

South Africa staged the inaugural World Twenty20 in 2007 but did not reach the semi-finals.

But 12 of their 15-man squad played in the recent Indian Premier League, that was moved to South Africa at short notice because of security concerns.

They beat both Pakistan and Sri Lanka convincingly in their warm-up matches and Smith said: "The confidence is good and we are excited about playing this tournament with the chance to go out and express ourselves.

"I think there is a lot more talent, flair and confidence among this team than ever before."

The Netherlands's shock win over hosts England on Friday ought to give fellow minnows Scotland hope that they too can cause an upset.

But there were few signs that such a shock was on the cards during Scotland's warm-up defeats by England and the Netherlands.

The Scots, captained by ex-England all-rounder Gavin Hamilton, opened their World Twenty20 campaign against New Zealand at the Oval on Saturday where rain reduced the match to a seven overs per side contest.

Another Slam for Paes

Sunday , Jun 07, 2009,Paris:Leander Paes was forced to keep his racquet aside and take a brief injury break at the end of the third game of the French Open men’s doubles final after Dick Norman let fly a volley straight at his face. It was a completely unintentional move by the Belgian, who apologised as the Indian sat with an ice pack pressed to his face, but at that moment, with Paes and his Czech partner Lukas Dlouhy already being down a break, the road to the trophy just seemed to get a little more rocky.

The recovery was quick, though, and despite the fact that Paes and Dlouhy could only mount a brief, unsuccessful fightback as they lost the first set, the next two had their names — along with impeccable serves and soft volleys — written all over them as Norman and South African Wesley Moodie capitulated to a 3-6 6-3 6-2 defeat to give Paes and Dlouhy their first Grand Slam.

This was Paes’s ninth Grand Slam title, but his first men’s doubles Slam in nearly three years — the last one he won was in 2006 at Flushing Meadows with another Czech player, Martin Damm. The 35-year-old has earlier won the trophy at Roland Garros in 1999 and 2001 with Mahesh Bhupathi.

Inspired comeback

On Saturday, the third-seeded Indo-Czech pair, who had taken out top seeds Daniel Nestor and Nenad Zimonjic to reach the final, didn’t let a first-set loss deter them. They roared back with intention in the second set, racking up a 5-0 lead before their opponents attempted to begin a comeback of their own, but it was cut short as Paes and his volleys often left Norman and Moodie with no option but to stare helplessly at each other.


Kuznetsova beats Safina to clinch French title


Paris:Svetlana Kuznetsova won the French Open when she outplayed fellow Russian and world number one Dinara Safina 6-4 6-2 in the final on Saturday.

The seventh-seeded Kuznetsova, the 2004 US Open champion, dictated the points throughout and prevailed after 74 minutes on Centre Court.

Kuznetsova, 23, overcame a nervous start to snatch the opening set on Safina's serve with a backhand winner.

She took a decisive lead by breaking for 4-2 in the second set and did not look back, wrapping up the win on her first match point and denying Safina her maiden grand slam title.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Latest News India

Obama reaches out to Muslims, gives Kashmir a pass

WASHINGTON: In a landmark speech reaching out to the Islamic world, US President Barack Obama on Thursday called for a new beginning between the United States and Muslims, saying both sides should overcome the cycle of suspicion and discord, and religious beliefs across the world were not inimical or exclusive to each other.

Obama’s eloquent address in Cairo, Egypt, home to the historic Al Azhar and Cairo University, contained quotations from the Koran, rich references to Islam’s contribution to civilization, and his own personal connection to the faith. Beyond that, he also outlined the source of the fear and mistrust between the two sides, including 9/11, while warning that violent extremists have exploited these tensions ''in a small but potent minority of Muslims.''

Among the key contentious issues and geography identified by Obama were the festering Israeli-Palestinian dispute, Iraq (which he suggested was needlessly invaded), US differences with Iran and indeed much of the world over possession of nuclear weapons, Af-Pak (home to the perpetrators of 9/11), and differing perceptions between the west and the Islamic world on democracy and women's rights.

But he conspicuously excluded any reference to the Kashmir issue in the Indian sub-continent, home of the largest concentration of Muslims in the world, likely to the dismay of Pakistan and its separatist proxies who have made it a cause, and the delight of Indian nationalists who believe it is a domestic or regional concern.

Outlining the more recent events that led to the growing rift between the US and the Islamic world, Obama reminded the world that the perpetrators of 9/11 were hiding in the Af-Pak region, forcing U.S to come after them. Al Qaeda was not only unrepentant but was even now planning to expand their reach and kill on a mass scale.

''Make no mistake: we do not want to keep our troops in Afghanistan. It is agonizing for America to lose our young men and women. It is costly and politically difficult to continue this conflict. We would gladly bring every single one of our troops home if we could be confident that there were not violent extremists in Afghanistan and Pakistan determined to kill as many Americans as they possibly can. But that is not yet the case,'' Obama said, echoing the general Indian sentiment about lowering its guard against acts of terrorism.

The US President said ''America is not - and never will be - at war with Islam. We will, however, relentlessly confront violent extremists who pose a grave threat to our security.''

The US President also touched on the revived debate about nuclear weapons, saying he understood those who protest that some countries have weapons that others do not. ''No single nation should pick and choose which nations hold nuclear weapons. That is why I strongly reaffirmed America's commitment to seek a world in which no nations hold nuclear weapons,'' he said, indicating that he would push ahead with advancing the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

Earlier, in reaching out to the Islamic world, Obama proffered his own personal experience, relating ''I am a Christian, but my father came from a Kenyan family that includes generations of Muslims. As a boy, I spent several years in Indonesia and heard the call of the azaan at the break of dawn and the fall of dusk. As a young man, I worked in Chicago communities where many found dignity and peace in their Muslim faith.''

''So I have known Islam on three continents before coming to the region where it was first revealed,'' he said. ''That experience guides my conviction that partnership between America and Islam must be based on what Islam is, not what it isn't.''

Obama said he considered it part of his responsibility as President of the United States to fight against negative stereotypes of Islam wherever they appear, but that same principle must apply to Muslim perceptions of America. ''Just as Muslims do not fit a crude stereotype, America is not the crude stereotype of a self-interested empire,'' he said, offering a thesis that is seldom accepted in the Islamic world.


Kasab had confessed to crime, police officer tells court


MUMBAI:
A police officer told a special court on Thursday that Pakistani gunman Ajmal Kasab had confessed to him that he along with nine other LeT members had arrived from Pakistan after hijacking marine vessel 'Kuber' and committed terror acts in Mumbai on November 26 last year.

Sub-inspector Chandrakant Jadhav was being examined by the prosecution in an attempt to nail Kasab in the crime.

Jadhav said Kasab had told him, "Ten of us came from Karachi by Al-husseini and mid-way hijacked Indian boat Kuber. Four Kuber crew members were shifted to Al-husseini while we sailed in Kuber with its navigator Amarsingh Solanki till we reached near Mumbai coast. Then we killed the navigator."

The witness told special public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam that Kasab had described how they killed the navigator by slashing his neck from behind and leaving his body in the engine room.

After Kasab made the confession, Jadhav took him and two other witnesses to 'Kuber' boat anchored at Sasoon Dock where they saw Solanki's body. A satellite phone and notebook was also found. These articles were seized and panchnama was drawn, Jadhav said.

The witness said some articles (allegedly belonging to the terrorists) were found from Kuber. These were 14 blankets, 15 jackets, eight empty diesel cans, toothpaste, tooth brushes, three boat covers, two cloth cleaning brushes, empty sugar bag, paper wheat flour bag and 'Pak' brand detergent powder.

Some of the items had 'Made in Pakistan' labels.


Air France says no hope of survivors in Atlantic



Fernando De Noronha (Brazil):
Air France has told families of passengers on Flight 447 that the jetliner broke apart and they must abandon hope that anyone survived, a grief counsellor said on Thursday as military aircraft tried to narrow their search for the remains of the plane.

Air France CEO Pierre-Henri Gourgeon told the families in a private meeting that the plane broke apart either in the air or when it slammed into the ocean, according to Guillaume Denoix de Saint-Marc, who was asked by Paris prosecutors to help counsel family members and was at the yesterday meeting.

The plane, carrying 228 people, disappeared after leaving Rio de Janeiro for Paris on Sunday night.

Investigators were relying heavily on the plane's automated messages to help reconstruct what happened to the jet as it flew through towering thunderstorms.

They detail a series of failures that end with its systems shutting down, suggesting the plane broke apart in the sky, according to an aviation industry official with knowledge of the investigation.

He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the crash. "What is clear is that there was no landing. There's no chance the escape slides came out," said Denoix de Saint-Marc, who heads a victims' association for UTA flight 772, shot down in 1989 by Libyan terrorists.

Gourgeon told families there were no survivors, according to Denoix de Saint-Marc.

New Air France debris found, explosion unlikely

Earlier, search crews flying over the Atlantic found debris from a crashed Air France jet spread over more than 55 miles (90 km) of ocean on Wednesday, reinforcing the possibility it broke up in the air.


India is safe, insists Chidambaram despite US travel advisory


New Delhi:
The US has claimed that India is faced with a "high threat" from terrorism and asked its citizens to be vigilant, prompting New Delhi to assert that the country is a safe place and such an advisory was unwarranted.

Home Minister P Chidambaram said India is "safer than any other country in the world" and New Delhi will try to persuade Washington to withdraw such an advisory.

He was reacting to an 'Urgent Warden Message' posted on American Embassy website which cautioned American citizens in India.

"The United States Mission in India wishes to urgently remind all US citizens resident in or travelling to India that there is a high threat from terrorism throughout India," the message said.

"As terror attacks are a serious and growing threat, US citizens are urged to always practice good security, including maintaining a heightened situational awareness and a low profile," it said.

The message said, "Americans in India should be vigilant at all times and monitor local news reports and vary their routes and times in carrying out daily activities." The advisory asked Americans to consider the level of security present when visiting public places, including religious sites, or choosing hotels, restaurants, entertainment and recreation venues.

Commenting on the advisory, Chidambaram said the MEA will be asked to speak to the US to persuade them to withdraw the advisory.

"India is a completely safe country... India is a safe place, it is safer than any other country in the world. Thousands of tourists come to India and we look forward to welcoming them," he told reporters.


Indian Business News


Sensex ends above 15,000 mark

Mumbai:Reversing its early weak trends, the Bombay Stock Exchange benchmark Sensex regained the 15,000 point level after nine months by rising nearly 138 points after the government unveiled its reforms plan to tackle the economic slowdown.

The 30-share index, which had lost 1.8 per cent in the opening session, rebounded with a gain of 137.78 points at 15,008.68, a level last seen in September last year. It touched the day's high of 15,026.03 points.

Similarly, the 50-share National Stock Exchange index Nifty rose by 41.95 points to 4,572.65, after touching the day's high of 4,582.20.

Marketmen said trading sentiment turned bullish after President Pratibha Patil presented the agenda of the UPA government in Parliament.

They said government data showing a fall in inflation and a firm start in European stock markets this afternoon also boosted trading sentiment.

The President said the new government will focus on adversely-affected sectors like infrastructure, exports, small and medium enterprises, and housing.

The pension and financial sectors and disinvestment in PSUs would be priority areas for the UPA government, she said.

The rally was backed by shares of the realty, capital goods, healthcare, power and banking sectors.

Among the 30 Sensex stocks, 21 counters ended higher, led by pharmaceutical stocks of Ranbaxy and Sun Pharma, while nine ended with losses.

The upsurge was backed by the realty sector, which gained the most, by 3.29 per cent, to 4,116.99, with stocks of DLF Ltd, Unitech Ltd, Shobha Developers and Akruti City perking up.

The capital goods sector was the second-best performer by rising 3.23 per cent to 12,551.73. Stocks of heavy machinery used for construction such as Lakshmi Machines Works surged 28.60 per cent to Rs 1,201.85 and Areva by 7.27 per cent to Rs 362.95 after Patil told Parliament that the government plans to remove delays in public works projects.

Inflation dips to 0.48 pct, rate cut on cards

New Delhi:Inflation declined to 0.48 per cent for the week ended May 23, giving head room to the government to initiate expansionary measures and prompt banks to cut rates.

While the wholesale price index stood at 0.61 per cent in the previous week, the rate of price rise was 8.90 per cent during the corresponding week a year ago.

Even though inflation declined during the week, the prices of essential food items like fruit, tea, cereals, pulses and spices became more expensive.

In the light of falling inflation, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is holding a meeting with heads of public sector banks on June 10 to stress further moderation in interest rates to spur economic growth.

"My Government is firmly committed to maintaining high growth with low inflation, particularly in relation to prices of essential agricultural and industrial commodities,"

President Pratibha Patil said while presenting the agenda of the second UPA government at the joint session of Parliament.

This is the 12th week in succession when inflation stood below one per cent.

Meanwhile, ICICI Bank today slashed the benchmark lending rate by 50 basis points to 15.75 per cent, a move that would benefit home, consumer corporate loan borrowers.

Indian Sports News| Indian Cricket News


Andrew Symonds sent home from T20 World Cup


Melbourne:Controversial Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds is on his way home from the ICC World Twenty20 Championship for skipping the team practice at the Oval following an "alcohol-related incident", media reports said on Thursday.

Cricket Australia Chief Executive James Sutherland said the 33-year-old Symonds broke a number of rules "in the last 24-48 hours" and the CA was now busy in organising flights to get him back to Australia.

"In isolation the breaches that I am talking about are not serious, but in the scheme of things, in the scheme of history, they are enough for it to be the final straw," Sutherland was quoted as saying by the Australian Associated Press.

Symonds' CA contract, which he retained only last month, is also now under review, he said.

Australia's prospect in the tournament have been dealt with a major blow in the absence of Symonds, who starred for the IPL title winners Deccan Chargers in South Africa.

The Ricky Pointing-led team faces the West Indies on Saturday in their tournament opener. Ponting will shortly front another press conference in London to address the situation.

The Australian team management had a meeting after becoming aware of the situation and expressed their concerns to CA, who would request the International Cricket Council to organise a possible replacement player.

It is likely Symonds' international career could now be over after the latest in a long list of off-field problems. Symonds, who failed to earn selection in Australia's Ashes squad announced last month, has been embroiled in a series of off-field controversies over the past year, the prominent ones being the go-fishing saga and monkeygate, involving Indian off-spinner Harbhajan Singh.



Bowling at death remains a concern: Dhoni



London:
The crushing win against Pakistan did lift the morale but India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni is not ready to gloss over the fact that bowling at death remains the team's lone chink in the armour. Even though Dhoni sounded happy about the overall performance of the team, the Indian captain was particularly perturbed about bowling at the death.

"Even though it was a warm-up match, I think winning it was important for us. After the defeat against New Zealand, the response from the players was amazing today," Dhoni said. "But still there are certain areas which need to be addressed, like bowling the last couple of overs," he said. "You have to be good at the end. Fortunately, we have options and players who can bowl at the end," Dhoni said. Both against New Zealand and Pakistan, R P Singh proved particularly expensive towards the end as India bled some late boundaries in both the matches. Dhoni, however, had no other major complains. "We did not field well initially and the energy level was quite down. But after (Suresh) Raina got that run out, it was high again. Spinners then came to the party and Ishant (Sharma) was at his best again," he said. The Indian captain admitted he was worried with Pakistan's brisk start and thought they might end up getting a 180-score.

"They looked like getting 200 at some stage but we always knew in twenty20, if you lose a few wickets in the middle overs, you are in trouble. If you have good spinners, you can always put pressure on the opposition. I thought if we can restrict them to 165, that would be achievable. But if you have to chase 180, you are always under pressure, whatever be the conditions," Dhoni explained.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Latest News India

US mum on Saeed, rewards Pak with another $200 mn


Islamabad, June 03:
The United States on Wednesday chose to stay mum on the issue of Jamaat-ud-Dawah (JuD) chief Hafiz Mohammad Saeed’s release from house arrest, with its special envoy for Af-Pak describing it as a Pakistani government issue.

Addressing a press conference in Islamabad, along with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and Interior Minister Rehman Malik, Richard Holbrooke refused to respond to a reporter’s query on JuD chief’s release Tuesday. “Pakistan has its own laws… it is a Pakistani government issue,” Holbrooke said.

The Lahore High Court had on Tuesday freed Mumbai terror attacks’ prime accused Hafiz Saeed from house arrest, saying there was no concrete evidence to corroborate his involvement in the 26/11 attacks. Within hours of the Lahore HC decision, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani had linked peace in the region to the resolution of the Kashmir issue.

Reports today claimed that the Pakistani government was unlikely to challenge Hafiz Saeed’s release in the Supreme Court.

Holbrooke had earlier in the day commented on the JuD chief’s release by saying, “It has disturbed us all.”

The US Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan arrived in Islamabad today to review relief work for refugees displaced by ongoing offensive by Pakistani authorities against Taliban forces in the Swat Valley.

He announced that President Barack Obama has asked the US Congress to approve another USD 200 million in humanitarian assistance for refugees Pakistan’s northwest.

“President Obama sent me here to show our concern for the people of Pakistan… to show our concern for the refugees,” the envoy told reporters. “I came here to see the situation on the ground… to see what more assistance can be given,” he added.

If the US Congress approves fresh demand for USD 200 million, the assistance the United States would have given for the humanitarian crisis in Swat so far would total USD 300 million.

“This is more than half the assistance Pakistan has received from the international community to tackle the crisis,” Holbrooke said. He further called on the European Union and Gulf countries to do more.

He also reiterated the US’ commitment of assisting Pakistan in combating the Taliban militants, saying Washington would continue to work closely with Islamabad.

“We are committed to help you fight militants… to support democracy,” he stated, adding “instability in Pakistan was not good for any country in the region”.

Pakistan and the US both have same perception of the threat (from the Taliban and al Qaeda), he said further.

Zardari on his part said that the fight against the Taliban was a war of ideology, adding the extremists were trying to take off the flag of Pakistan from the Swat Valley.

“To say the war has been won or is going well, it’s too soon,” he stated.

Osama bin Laden threatens US in new tape over action in Pakistan


Cairo, June 03, 2009:
Members of a political party bribed army officers in a blatant bid to rig postal ballots during last month's general elections in India, according to Election Commissioner SY Quraishi. He did not identify the party.

The visiting Indian official, who was giving a presentation on the just-concluded elections at the House of Commons on Tuesday, said the malpractice came to light during the polls in Punjab.

He said Punjab Police personnel found that army soldiers were being corralled into voting for particular candidates by their commanding officers.

"We realised that the commanding officers of these forces were being approached by a political party and they were being bribed. And these soldiers had been told to just say 'yes sir.'

"There is no other word in their dictionary. So if a commanding officer says 'just vote for this man', all the soldiers will vote for that man," Quraishi said, answering a question about whether India - like Britain - faced problems with postal ballot fraud.

Six Pakistani-origin men were jailed for a total of more than 13 years last month after a major police investigation into an attempt to rig local council elections by fixing ballot papers in the London suburb of Slough.

The malpractice was described by the British judge as a "serious criminal offence... that attacks, affects and corrodes the roots of our democracy".

Quraishi said he was not aware of the British scandal but added that India was trying to address the problem of postal ballot fraud by strengthening the secret ballot. He said every ballot in India has to be posted separately and by registered post, the cost of which is borne by the Election Commission.

Osama bin Laden threatens US in new tape over action in Pakistan

Americans in a new audio tape on Wednesday, saying President Barack Obama inflamed hatred toward the US by ordering Pakistan to crack down on militants in Swat Valley and block Islamic law there.

Bin Laden claimed US pressure led to a campaign of "killing, fighting, bombing and destruction" that prompted the exodus of a million Muslims from Swat Valley in northwest Pakistan. The message was broadcast for the first time on pan-Arab Al-Jazeera Television around the same time Obama touched down in Saudi Arabia at the start of a Mideast visit. He is trying repair relations with the Muslim world frayed under the previous Bush administration.

"Elderly people, children and women fled their homes and lived in tents as refugees after they have lived in dignity in their homes," bin Laden said. "Let the American people be ready to reap what the White House leaders have sown," he added.

"Obama and his administration have sown new seeds to increase hatred and revenge on America," bin Laden said. "The number of these seeds is equal to the number of displaced people from Swat Valley."

Pakistan's military offensive to expel the Taliban from Swat Valley was launched in late April after the militants abandoned a peace deal with the government that gave them control of the region. The offensive, strongly backed by Washington, is seen as a test of Pakistan's resolve against militants in the northwestern border region near Afghanistan.

Pakistanis tired of militant attacks in the country that have killed hundreds of civilians have also supported the campaign. But the fighting has uprooted some 3 million people. Bin Laden focused entirely on Pakistan, claiming President Asif Ali Zardari was paid by the White House to start the crackdown. Al-Jazeera aired excerpts of the tape and did not say how it was obtained.

Bin Laden, whose last message was released in mid-March, has been sparing in his criticism of Obama in the past. In January, he said only that the US president had received a "heavy inheritance" from prhis habams.

Jaitley to lead BJP in RS, Sushma to be Advani's deputy in LS

New Delhi:The BJP appointed its senior leader Arun Jaitley as the Leader of the Opposition in the Upper House and Sushma Swaraj deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha.

S S Ahluwalia would be deputy leader of the opposition in the Rajya Sabha.

L K Advani, who had reluctantly accepted the post of Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha after the party's dismal performance in Lok Sabha poll, was given the responsibility of choosing the leaders for these posts last Sunday.

Advani had met RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat on Monday and was reportedly authorised to take the decisions.

M Venkaiah Naidu was also in the race for the post of Leader of Opposition in the Upper House. Swaraj will assist Advani as his deputy in the Lok Sabha and is likely to be replace him in a few months, BJP sources said.

Ramesh Bais, the senior party leader from Chhattisgarh, and Maya Singh, who hails from Madhya Pradesh, will be the Chief Whips of the party in the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha respectively.


Indian Business News|Business News


No great impact of GM bankruptcy: Wipro

Mumbai:Wipro Ltd, India's No.3 software services firm, said on Wednesday accounts receivable from General Motors was less than $8 million and does not expect to be hit by the US automaker's bankruptcy filing.

GM accounts for less than 1 per cent of Wipro's IT services segment revenue, and our assessment is that a substantial portion is expected to continue, the outsourcer said in a statement.

Wipro said it was in constant talks with GM to "monitor and assess the situation".


Inflation seen at 0.56 pct on May 23


Mumbai:The annual inflation rate is forecast to have eased marginally in the third week of May and could head towards zero by the middle of this month, analysts said on Wednesday.

The wholesale price index should have climbed 0.56 per cent in the 12 months to May 23, compared with a 0.61 per cent rise in each of the first two weeks of the month, the median forecast of 14 analysts polled by Reuters showed.

The data will be released by midday (0630 GMT) on Thursday.

Annual inflation had been ticking up since early April when it fell to 0.18 per cent, a record low since annual data started in 1977/78.

Despite rising prices in many sectors, the annual inflation rate eased slightly due to sharper increases in the wholesale price index last year, analysts said.

"Going forward, the inflation rate will slip into negative territory, probably in mid-June, and will stay there till end-August," said Saugata Bhattacharya, economist at Axis Bank.


Indian cricket news| Indian Sports News|French Open


UK's Oval on high alert for India-Pakistan cricket match

London:Security around the Oval cricket ground here has been stepped up in view of the India-Pakistan Twenty20 warm-up match to be held on Wednesday with extra night watchmen and sniffer dogs pressed into services around the venue.

It will be the first Indian-Pakistan cricket encounter since the November Mumbai attacks, and officials are taking no chances to ensure that the match passes off peacefully. Tournament director Steve Elworthy said, "The sporting landscape has changed hugely since the tragedies in Mumbai and Lahore. We need to be confident we're on top of the situation, which we are."

Security has also been stepped up in venues where the Sri Lanka team is scheduled to play, given the recent events in the island nation and demonstrations in London against the Sri Lanka government's offensive against the Tamil Tigers. A dedicated Police Intelligence Cell headed by the former chief constable Sir John Evans, has been set with the mandate to supervise security arrangements for the whole Twenty20 World Cup tournament.

Last week, the Sri Lanka team cancelled a speaking engagement at the Oxford Union because of security concerns. As many as 23,000 tickets for the Tuesday match were sold out within 48 hours, and the proceeds will be forwarded to the International Cricket Council's charitable initiative "Catch the Spirit".

The beneficiaries will include the families of those killed in the Lahore terror attacks, as well as various educational schemes across the subcontinent. Haroon Lorgat, ICC chief executive, played down security concerns, "I don't see any tensions here. I see a hugely exciting occasion, and one that will help the victims of the Lahore incident."


Safina survives, Murray bows out


Paris:Dinara Safina woke up from a first-set snooze to keep alive her dreams of a maiden grand slam title but Andy Murray paid for his mid-match doze and slid out of the French Open on Tuesday.

World number one Safina soaked up the full force of Belarussian teenager Victoria Azarenka's armoury to reach the semi-finals for the second year running with a see-saw 1-6 6-4 6-2 win. She will face Slovak Dominika Cibulkova next.

British third seed Murray had seen the draw open up wide for him following the shock defeat of four-times champion Rafael Nadal but he will not be able to capitalise on the Spaniard's downfall after being outwitted 6-3 3-6 6-0 6-4 by swashbuckling Chilean world number 12 Fernando Gonzalez.

Murray's demise meant Roger Federer was the only top-four player left in Paris since Serbia's Novak Djokovic has also been ushered out of Roland Garros.

The Scot's hopes of ending Britain's 73-year wait for a men's grand slam champion ended in a flurry of dashing forehands and delectable lobs that flew off Gonzalez's racket.

"No one's hit the ball that big. He was hitting it huge. If that happens, you've got to say too good," said Murray, who before this event had never strung together four wins on clay.

Gonzalez will next take on Robin Soderling.

The Swedish giant-killer proved his win over Nadal was no fluke as he ruined 10th seed Nikolay Davydenko's birthday celebrations with a 6-1 6-3 6-1 walloping.

The 23rd seed is enjoying his moment in the spotlight and has acquired some famous fans along the way.


Nadal slayer Soderling strikes again


Paris:Robin Soderling’s big forehand didn’t let him down on Tuesday at the French Open, and it didn’t let Nikolay Davydenko into the match. The 24-year-old Swede advanced to the semi-finals by following up his upset over Rafael Nadal with a 6-1 6-3 6-1 win over Nikolay Davydenko.

“I was a little bit lucky in the beginning,” said Soderling, who will be playing in his first major semi-final against 12th-seeded Fernando Gonzalez. Gonzalez has made his maiden Roland Garros semi-finals by beating third-seeded Andy Murray 6-3 3-6 6-0 6-4. The Chilean was broken serving for the match at 5-4 in the final set, but he broke back at love for the victory.

At the start, it looked as if Soderling’s huge win on Sunday could have taken too much out of him. Serving to open the match against the 10th-seeded Davydenko, Soderling faced his only two break points. He saved them both, though, and went on the win five straight games — including taking 11 straight points from the third to fifth games.

Soderling also had a break point in the first game of the second set, and three in the fifth, but Davydenko saved them all. At 3-3, however, the Russian committed four unforced errors to give Soderling the decisive break.

After breaking Davydenko two more times in the third set, Soderling served for the match and used two more big forehands to give him three match points. The Swede wasted the first with a forehand that went long, but then he hit his fourth ace of the match to end it.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Indian Latest News

Debris found along Air France plane trajectory

BRASILIA: Search aircraft on Tuesday found a seat and other debris from a plane in a remote stretch of the Atlantic where an Air France flight carrying 228 people disappeared, Brazil's air force said. ( Watch )

The "small remains" were discovered around 1,100 kilometres (680 miles) off northeastern Brazil, some 650 kilometers northeast of Brazil's Atlantic island of Fernando do Noronha.

The items included a seat from a plane, bits of white material, an orange buoy, a barrel and some oil and kerosene slicks, grouped in two floating patches 60 kilometers apart, according to an air force statement.

It could not immediately be confirmed that the debris was from Air France flight AF 447, the spokesman, Colonel Jorge Amaral, told reporters.

There were no signs of survivors, he said.

"The search is continuing because it's very little material in relation to the size" of the Air France Airbus A330, he said.

He added that officials needed "a piece that might have a serial number, some sort of identification" to be sure that it came from the missing airliner.

However the items were found near where the Air France plane sent its final message: an automatic data signal telling of multiple electric and pressurization failures.

Air France flight AF 447 disappeared mid-Atlantic on Monday, four hours into an 11-hour flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris.

A Brazilian air force statement said the debris was discovered at 0300 GMT Tuesday by an Embraer R-99 AWAC plane fitted with onboard radar that detected metallic and non-metallic items floating in the ocean.

After homing in the search to that locale, other air force planes at 0949 GMT spotted the patches of floating debris.


26/11: Freed Lashkar founder Hafiz Saeed wanted in India


New Delhi, Jun 02: Lashker-e-Taiba founder chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, who has been set free by Lahore High court, finds his name among the wanted accused in the 26/11 Mumbai terror strikes.

In its voluminous chargesheet, the Mumbai Police had said that Saeed was among the 35 people who "aided and abetted" the strikes.

He had provided military precision-like planning and training to terrorists between 2007 and 2008-end at Muridke (LeT headquarters), Manshera, Muzzafarabad, Azizabad, Paanch Teni in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).

This is for the first time that the Lashker founder has been named in a chargesheet for his role in hatching the criminal conspiracy to execute the Mumbai terror strikes.

Mumbai Police, which filed the 11,280-page chargesheet in February this year, named 59-year-old Saeed as the first accused wanted for his suspected role in planning the unprecedented attack on the country's financial hub.

With Saeed being named in the chargesheet, India was looking forward to secure a Red Corner Notice from Interpol against him.

Saeed founded LeT, along with Zafar Iqbal, in Kunar province of Afghanistan in 1989. Lashkar is a banned organisation in India, Pakistan, the US, the UK, Russia and Australia. The European Union has also banned the outfit.

An offshoot of Markaz-ud-Dawatul-Irshad, Lashkar renamed itself as Jamat-ud-Dawa, which was also banned by the United Nations. Saeed's clout in Pakistan started during the regime of the military dictator Zia-ul-Haq.

He started raising cadre and funds for campaign against the erstwhile Soviet Union and the socialist government in Afghanistan.

Within two years of the formation of the LeT, several cells were set up by Lashkar in Jammu and Kashmir and its presence saw flow of foreign mercenaries to the state.

Saeed had always been the first target of Pakistan whenever international pressure increased on that country for supporting terrorism.

He was detained on December 21, 2001 after New Delhi accused him of being involved in the December 13, 2001 attack on Parliament. He was under arrest till March 31, 2002, and again held on May 15 and placed under house arrest on October 31 the same year.

After the July 11, 2006 Mumbai train bombings, the provincial government of Punjab in Pakistan arrested him on August 9, 2006 and kept him under house arrest but he was released on August 28, 2006 after a Lahore High Court order.

Since the November 2008 Mumbai attacks, India has submitted a formal request to the UN Security Council to put Jamaat-ud-Dawa and Saeed on the list of organisations and individuals proscribed by the UN for being associated with terrorism.


Attack on Indians: Oz sets up Task Force

Tuesday June 2, 2009, Melbourne:As India raised serious concern over the safety of its citizens Down Under, Australia on Tuesday announced setting up of a new Task Force headed by the National Security Adviser to deal with violence against Indian students in the country.

Foreign Minister Stephen Smith told Parliament that the government was doing everything it can to ensure the perpetrators of the attacks are "found and prosecuted."

Around seven Indian students were assaulted in the country in May which drew sharp reactions from fellow Indian students and the community and New Delhi. India summoned the Australian envoy in New Delhi last week and protested against the assault on students there.

Smith said a new Task Force has been formed to deal with violence against Indian students which will be chaired by National Security Adviser Duncan Lewis.

"The Task Force will include senior officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs and trade, the Department of Education and Workplace relations, the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship and the Attorney-general's department," Smith said, adding that the Task Force had already held its first meeting.

"Through this Task Force the Australian government is showing its resolve to play its part in collaboration with states to respond to this issue," the Foreign Minister said.

Smith said Australia takes very seriously its reputation as a safe destination for international students. Commenting on the new initiatives launched by Australian government, Federation of Indian Student Association said "it was a welcome move and showed that the government was taking a serious note of the problem."

Indian students in Melbourne also highlighted the issue at a peaceful sit-in which ended in scuffles as it was broken by police on Monday.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on Monday had assured India that perpetrators of the recent assaults on Indian citizens here will be met "with full force of the law".

He condemned the incidents as "senseless" and "deplorable" acts of violence.

Another Indian student attacked in Australia

Tuesday June 2, 2009, Melbourne :A 21-year-old Indian student, Nardeep Singh, was attacked by a group of five men at a car park in suburban Melbourne.

The attackers stopped him and demanded cigarettes and money, following which they attacked him.

The victim, who hails from Ludhiana, is a nursing student at the Chisholm Institute in Dandenong, in Melbourne's east.

At first they asked him for cigarettes, to which he replied that he was a non-smoker. Then the attackers asked him for money and when he refused, they slashed him across his chest with a knife.

Nardeep had come to Melbourne a month ago.


Meira Kumar nominated for post of LS Speaker


NEW DELHI: Five-term Lok Sabha MP Meira Kumar on Tuesday became the consensus candidate of the ruling UPA and the opposition BJP for the post of Lok Sabha Speaker.

Leader of the House Pranab Mukherjee led a UPA delegation to submit Kumar's nomination papers to Lok Sabha Secretary General P D T Achary for the election to the Speaker's post scheduled to be held on Tuesday.

64-year-old Kumar, who will be the first woman to head the Lok Sabha, is expected to be elected unopposed as Mukherjee submitted 13 sets of nomination papers which included a set signed by Leader of the Opposition L K Advani and seconded by BJP leader Sushma Swaraj.

"We have filed 13 sets of nomination papers. The first set was signed by UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi and I have seconded it," Mukherjee told reporters at Parliament House.

He said the Leader of the Opposition L K Advani had also signed a set of nomination papers.

"It is a historic moment for women," Kumar said. Among others who filed nomination papers included Sharad Pawar and Praful Patel of NCP, Mulayam Singh Yadav and Shailendra Singh Yadav of SP, Arjun Charan Sethi and B Mahtab of BJD, Lalu Prasad, Farooq Abdullah and E Ahamed.

Besides Meira Kumar, Pawar, Abdullah, T R Baalu, P K Bansal, V Narayansamy were present when the nomination papers were submitted.

Indian Business News|Business News

GM to see 5,100 salaried job losses in '09

New York:Crisis-ridden General Motors will be handing over pink slips to 5,100 salaried employees this year, in addition to 23,000 job cuts announced earlier.

The once mighty American auto maker filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday and the ensuing restructuring efforts is expected to see thousands of job losses.

General Motors has said that the 5,100 job cuts would be happening in North America this year.

"In line with our structural cost reductions and the reinvention of our company, GM will substantially reduce salaried employment in North America, from its current 32,300 to approximately 27,200. Almost all of these reductions are expected to take place in 2009," the car maker said in a statement on Monday.

The revamping initiatives would affect 4,000 or 15 per cent of the 27,400 salaried employees in the US. Faced with massive losses and tumbling sales, General Motors in April announced that it would trim its hourly workforce by as many as 23,000 people by 2011.

Last year, the entity's hourly workforce strength stood at 61,000 and the figure is anticipated to come down to 40,000 in 2010.

By the start of 2011, the total number is expected to be about 38,000. "... hourly employment levels will be reduced from about 61,000 in 2008 to 40,000 in 2010, and level off at about 38,000 starting in 2011. This planned reduction is primarily the result of the previously discussed operational efficiencies, nameplate reductions, and plant closings," General Motors had said in April.

On Monday, the car maker said that it would reduce its facilities from 47 in 2008 to 34 by the end of next year. "The manufacturing plan reduces GM's total number of assembly, power train and stamping facilities in the US from 47 in 2008 to 34 by the end of 2010 and 33 by 2012," General Motors said in a separate statement on Monday.


Air-India contractual strike work, indefinitely


New Delhi:The 300 contractual security and commercial staff of Air India went on an indefinite strike demanding better pay package and medical benefits even as the airlines management terminated the services of 21 such employees.

"We are going on indefinite strike after the management did not pay heed to our demands and terminated the contracts of 21 employees yesterday," said Jeet Singh, president of the Indian Airlines Limited-Airport Services Limited (IAL-ASL) Employees Union.

Nearly 300 contractual security and commercial workers of Air India boycotted work at Amritsar, Jaipur and other airports and also staged a demonstration at the Indira Gandhi International Airport here in support of their demand of a better pay package and medical benefits.

A Royal Nepal Airlines flight to Kathmandu was delayed by about three hours on Tuesday due to ongoing strike by the security and commercial staff.

About 200 security staff have the responsibility of checking the aircraft, baggage and also keep a vigil on the aircraft and areas surrounding it so that no one makes an unauthorised entry.

They also handle baggage of several international airlines like Malaysian, Sri Lankan, Nepal, and Pakistan International Airlines, Air Arabia and Ariana Afghan.

The workers, many of whom joined in 2004, claimed they felt cheated as they were unaware about who their employer is, as the advertisements of employment were published in 2004 by erstwhile Indian Airlines. Even the tests and interviews were conducted by them but they got their appointment letter from its subsidiary Alliance.

The employees also alleged that they were meted out step-motherly treatment by the airline's permanent staff. The employees whose contracts have been terminated by the management said that "they were given the termination letter on plain paper without the company's logo and seal, and it also does not have the name of the issuing authority. Singh said that labour commissioner has summoned the airlines management on the issue.

Indian Cricket News|T20 world cup News| French Open


After loss to Kiwis, Indians 'warm-up' against Pak


London:India skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni would need pluck and luck in equal measure to score a consolation win against Pakistan in the warm-up match of the ICC World Twenty20 in London on Tuesday.

Dhoni's men lost the first sparring match of the warm-ups to New Zealand yesterday and are up against an opponent who consider themselves unlucky to lose in two previous encounters between the two sides.

Both the previous ties were in the inaugural edition in 2007 and India could cross over the finish line by a matter of chance. Indians prevailed in the first through a 'bowl-out' after the two sides had tied at the same score.

In the 2007 final match in Johannesburg, Pakistan was just a stroke away from victory when Misbah-ul Haq's scoop off Joginder Sharma landed in short fine-leg S Sreesanth's hands.

Pakistan would be determined to settle the score for they might not get another opportunity to get even with the Indians unless both sides make it to the finals this time also. Indians would be resigned to leaving out Zaheer Khan and Virender Sehwag on the bench as both are battling shoulder injuries.

They would be keen though to play Yuvraj Singh who is just about coming to terms with a bout of food poisoning, as disclosed by skipper Dhoni last night.

Fast bowler Rudra Pratap Singh could have another game to get himself sorted out after the pasting of the first match. Irfan Pathan, too, would be hoping for a few more overs under his belt, as would be the ambition of bowlers Praveen Kumar and Yusuf Pathan also.


It would have been easy to get carried away: Tendulkar

New Delhi:Sachin Tendulkar, who had taken up the cudgels against criticism of senior players last year, has said that he hardly pays heed to criticism.

"People will have opinions but that doesn't mean they are correct. They are only opinions and I have bigger things to deal with. Guys that have all the time in the world to discuss these things, discuss them. I don't," Tendulkar told men's fashion magazine 'GQ'.

Last year, Tendulkar had defended his senior teammates who were under attack during India's home series against Australia.

Tendulkar said the senior players had made major contributions, which needed to be acknowledged and appreciated.

Dwelling on his own career, Tendulkar said he had moments when he could have "got carried away" but hard work and resolve helped him reach the pinnacle of success.

"Given the things that have happened in my life it would have been easy to get carried away," Tendulkar said. "There were times when I felt that, yeah, I should bunk practice and spend time with my friends and go out for a movie. But my coach would turn up and make me sit on his bike and take me all the way to practice," he recalled.

Tendulkar, who holds umpteen cricketing records, said success did not come automatically to him. "I have made an effort. It doesn't happen automatically," he said.

Federer avoids following Nadal out of Paris

Paris:Roger Federer roared and 15,000 fans hollered as the Swiss clung on by his fingertips to his French Open dreams on Monday and avoided joining Rafael Nadal on the Roland Garros scrapheap.

With the claycourt major still reeling from the shock exit of four-times champion Rafael Nadal just 24 hours earlier, Federer was on the brink of the same fate before finding the strength to bury German Tommy Haas 6-7 5-7 6-4 6-0 6-2.

Fifth seed Jelena Jankovic completed a miserable three days for the Serbs when she followed compatriots Novak Djokovic and 2008 champion Ana Ivanovic out with a 3-6 6-0 9-7 defeat by little-known Romanian teenager Sorana Cirstea in the last 16.

American sixth seed Andy Roddick slammed his racket, complained about the fading light and stormed off court in anger after his hopes of a first Paris quarter-final were dashed 6-4 6-2 6-3 by Frenchman Gael Monfils as dusk set in.

But Roddick and an out-of-form Jankovic's losses barely caused a stir after Federer's great escape on Centre Court.

When Haas swiped a service return wide after three hours and seven minutes of nerve-shredding action, Federer leapt high and let out an almighty roar to mark the moment he had booked a quarter-final with Monfils.

Only 70 minutes earlier, it had looked like the Swiss would suffer his earliest grand slam loss since 2004 when he came within five points of defeat.

At two sets and 3-4 down facing a break point, Federer conjured up a screaming forehand winner to bring the scores back to deuce. Federer earned his get-out-of-jail-free card two points later when Haas dragged a forehand long.


Jankovic falls to teenager from Romania


Paris:Serbian fifth seed Jelena Jankovic was outfoxed by Romanian teenager Sorana Cirstea’s devastating net play on Monday when she lost 3-6 6-0 9-7 in the French Open fourth round.

Jankovic stormed through the first three games before being broken in the seventh. She immediately broke back and claimed the set when 19-year-old Cirstea hit long. The former world number one never got into the second set as Cirstea made regular charges to the net to send a series of winners past her.

Jankovic served for the match in the 11th game of the third but the tenacious world number 41 broke when the Serb hit long. Cirstea unleashed a sizzling crosscourt backhand to reach her first grand slam quarter-final against either Australian 30th seed Samantha Stosur or France’s Virginie Razzano.

Meanwhile, after struggling in two earlier matches that lasted three sets each, second seed Serena Williams reached the quarter-finals with a 6-1 6-2 victory over No 24 Aleksandra Wozniak of Canada.

“My most focused match so far,” said Williams, who stretched her Grand Slam winning streak to 18 matches. On Monday, she took a 3-0 lead in all of six minutes, thanks in part to a 7-0 edge in winners. She finished with 25 winners and only eight unforced errors. Next up for her is a match against 2004 US Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova, who outlasted 12th seed Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland 6-4 1-6 6-1 on Monday.

In a late match on Sunday, Maria Sharapova came back strongly, defeating China’s Na Li 6-4 0-6 6-4 to reach the last eight.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Latest News India

Air France plane crashes into Atlantic with 228 aboard


PARIS:
An Air France plane with 228 people on board was presumed to have crashed into the Atlantic Ocean on Monday after hitting heavy turbulence
on a flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris.

Air France said the Airbus flew into stormy weather four hours after its scheduled take-off from the Brazilian city and shortly afterwards sent an automatic message reporting electrical faults.

Company spokesman Francois Brousse said several of the plane's mechanisms had malfunctioned, preventing it from making contact with air traffic controllers.

"It is probably a combination of circumstances that could have led to the crash," he said.

The airliner might have been hit by lightning, he said. The Brazilian air force said the plane was far out over the sea when it went missing. Military planes took off from both Brazil and Africa to hunt for it.

Flight AF 447 left Rio de Janeiro on Sunday at 7 p.m. (2200 GMT) and had been expected to land at Paris's Roissy Charles de Gaulle airport on Monday at 11:15 a.m. (0915 GMT).

The carrier said 216 passengers were on board, including seven children and one baby, and 12 crew members. Air France said the pilots were highly experienced.

Tearful relatives and friends were led away by airport staff after they arrived at Roissy expecting to greet the passengers.

About 20 relatives of passengers on board the flight arrived at Rio's Galeao airport on Monday morning seeking information after hearing news of its disappearance.

Bernardo Souza, who said his brother and sister-in-law were on the flight, complained he had received no details from Air France.

"I had to come to the airport but when I arrived I just found an empty balcony." he said. "With a lack of information, it is even more worrying."

Senior French government minister Jean-Louis Borloo ruled out the possibility of a hijacking.

"It's an awful tragedy," he told France Info radio. If no survivors are found it will be the worst loss of life involving an Air France plane in the firm's 75-year history.

SCOURING THE OCEAN

The jet's last known location was unclear and Brazil's air force said it had no contact with the plane after 0133 GMT.

Brazilian air force planes had taken off from the island of Fernando de Noronha off Brazil's northeast coast to look for the Air France jet, a Brazilian spokesman said. The Brazilian navy said it had sent three ships to help in the search operation.

Jean-Christophe Rufin, France's ambassador in the west African country of Senegal, told French iTele that aircraft had also taken off from there to search for the missing Airbus.

Brazil's air force said that when the plane left its radar area at 0148 GMT it had been flying normally at an altitude of 35,000 feet and at 453 km per hour. It failed to make contact at the next attempt half an hour later at 0220.

An air traffic controller at ASECNA in Dakar, which covers Francophone Africa, said they did not take control of AF 447.

The plane was an Airbus 330-200 powered with General Electric engines. If the plane is confirmed to have crashed, it would be the first time an A330 has been lost during an operational airline flight.

Air France said the plane had 18,870 flight hours on the clock and went into service in April 2005. Its last underwent maintenance in a hangar in April this year.

The last major incident involving an Air France plane was in July 2000 when one of its Concorde supersonic airliners crashes just after taking off from Charles de Gaulle Airport, Paris, bound for New York.

All 109 people on board were killed along with at least four on the ground.

In August 2005, an Air France Airbus burst into flames after shooting off the runway at Toronto airport following a storm. No one died in the crash.


Mamata orders probe after angry mob torch trains in Bihar


Patna:Angry villagers on Monday torched six rail bogies and a station near Patna protesting against the cancellation of stoppage of a train following which Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee withdrew the order against the halt and set up a departmental inquiry.

Thousands of villagers, perturbed over withdrawal of stoppage of the Rajgir-New Delhi Shramjivi Express at Khusrupur, ransacked and torched the station and six bogies of two trains, and uprooted tracks under Danapur division, about 32 kms from Patna.

They stormed the station building, situated on Patna-Rajgir section of the East Central Railway, as soon as it was announced over the public address system that the stoppage of the Shramjivi express had been withdrawn, ECR chief public relations officer A K Chandra said.

The mob set fire to the 3226 down Danapur-Jainagar Intercity Express and the 543 Rajgir-Danapur passenger trains at Baikatpur village near the station, he said. Four general chair car coaches and an airconditioned chair car compartment of Danapur-Jainagar Intercity express were burnt, he said.

The mob also set afire a generator bogie of the Rajgir-Danapur passenger train, which arrived there a short while after the intercity reached.

Clarifying that her ministry had issued no such order, Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee said in Kolkata that the halt of the train at the station will continue like in the past and ordered a departmental inquiry on the decision to withdraw the stoppage.


My nephew is not one to commit suicide: Harbhajan


LONDON: Indian spinner Harbhajan Singh, whose nephew Upkar Singh was found dead under mysterious circumstances in Melbourne, appealed to the Indian government to ensure the safety of students in Australia.

"I request the authorities to ensure that the guilty are brought to book and my nephew gets the justice he deserves. He was a young and dynamic individual who had chosen to go to Australia for studies and was diligently pursuing a successful career and was an asset to the community in Australia," Harbhajan, who is here to play in the World Twenty20, said in a statement on Monday.

Upkar's body was found near the railway track near his apartment in the Thornbury area of Melbourne on May 7. His father said the Australian police had not even conducted a post-mortem examination and closed the case, terming the death a suicide.

Harbhajan alleged that the Australian authorities are yet to disclosed the cause of Upkar's death.

"We were informed that Upkar committed suicide, but in the death certificate they didn't mention the cause of his death. Our family can't accept suicide claims made by police as Upkar was quite happy in Australia and was almost settled there," he said.

There have been four attacks on Indian students in quick succession, with the first incident reported May 9.

Hospitality graduate Rajesh Kumar received 30 percent burns a week ago after someone hurled a petrol bomb through the window of his Harris Park home in Sydney. Three attacks on Indian students took place in Melbourne.

UPA nominates Meira for Speaker's post


Monday June 1, 2009, New Delhi:
Meira Kumar, who has resigned as Union Minister for Water Resources, said on Monday that she has been nominated as a candidate for the post of Lok Sabha Speaker by the UPA.

"Yes I have resigned (from the post of the Union Water Resources Minister). UPA has nominated me for the post of (Lok Sabha) Speaker," she told reporters in New Delhi.

She thanked Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and UPA allies for nominating "a woman" for the office of the Speaker.

She, however, declined to take any further questions, saying "I will talk on this only after June 3 when the election of the Speaker is scheduled".

Meira Kumar had resigned as Water Resources Minister last night, just two days after taking charge of the ministry.

Meira's resignation was immediately forwarded by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to President Pratibha Patil for acceptance. Patil has accepted the resignation.


Indian Business News


GM files for bankruptcy

New York:US car maker General Motors filed for bankruptcy protection, marking one of the biggest collapses in the corporate history as the iconic entity grapples with global recession and plunging sales.

The century-old auto maker, which is surviving on American taxpayers money has filed for Chapter 11 protection with the US Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York.

General Motors' move is backed by the Obama administration which is expected to be the major stakeholders, once the restructuring is completed.

While the Government is anticipated to retain as much as 60 per cent in General Motors, the remaining would be held by the union and creditors, among others.

According to the court filing today, General Motors has sought bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11.

The car maker has already received nearly USD 20 billion from the US Government and is expected to get more funds to tide over the bankruptcy process.

Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection allows the company to continue with its operations and would be protected from the creditors.

No BSNL-MTNL merger; BSNL may be listed: Raja

NEW DELHI: Telecom Minister A Raja on Monday virtually ruled out the BSNL-MTNL merger saying it is difficult due to lack of identical factor between them. "Identical factors are not there legally for BSNL-MTNL merger," Raja said.

The Minister, who assumed charge today, however, said the Department was keen on listing of BSNL and advised PSU management to start talks with the Employees Union for taking the company public. The union has been opposing the listing.

Late Communication Minister Pramod Mahajan had proposed the merger and was revived by Raja's predecessor Dayanidhi Maran for synergy purpose. Government holds 56.25% in MTNL and it is listed in NYSE and in India. BSNL is 100% owned by Government.

MTNL provides telecom services in Delhi and Mumbai, while BSNL serves the rest of India. On plans to list BSNL in the bourses, Raja said the management has been advised to initiate talks with the employees union.

"We want to list BSNL... We want to create a consensus for it. We have asked the BSNL management to talk to the union", said the Minister. Estimates suggest that BSNL is worth 100 billion dollars and dilution of 10 per cent stake would help the company raise $10 billion (about Rs 48,000 crore).

Yahoo to finally shut Yahoo 360

NEW DELHI: Another Yahoo service is closing officially. Yahoo 360, which was supposed to close early last year, is finally shutting its doors on July 13, according to a blog post written on the site.

"Over the past two years there has been a lot of discussion about the closure of Yahoo! 360° and the transition to our new profiles experience that we’ve had in the works. Today, we’re able to firmly say that on July 13, 2009 Yahoo! 360° will be closing down and you’ll be asked to move into your new profile on Yahoo!, by July 12, 2009," goes the blog.

Yahoo 360 was launched in March 2005 as a ocial network/blogging service. However, the service could never really gain popularity. In fact, several analysts cite Yahoo 360's failure as an example of a hot Internet property that Yahoo failed to cash on.

According to ComScore, Yahoo 360 had 13.9 million worldwide unique visitors in April.

In October 2007, when the company first announced that it would close Yahoo 360, it aimed move to a 'universal' Yahoo profile. The company reiterated the plan during its Yahoo Open Strategy (YOS) launch in April 2008.

In September last year, Yahoo also shut its other social-networking site, Yahoo Mash. Late last year company launched its "universal" profile service, Yahoo Profiles, which incorporates basic social-networking functions. However, Yahoo Profiles doesn't match the features of Yahoo 360.


Indian Cricket News|World Sports News


Lady luck seems to shine on Dhoni in England sun

London:Lady luck always has had an irresistible attraction for Mahendra Singh Dhoni but this time it has moved heaven and earth to favour the Indian captain. With London set to record the hottest Monday of England at 27 degree Centigrade (80.6F) and the entire country basking in second successive week of 'wall-to-wall' perfect sunshine, Dhoni's liability has turned into unimaginable riches. Dhoni's team was saddled with a number of part-time spinners who were expected to wilt under coolish, seamer-friendly English conditions.

Instead, they all now appear a pack of aces under the brutish English sun. Experts agree that at least seven each specialist batsmen and bowlers make up for an unbeatable combination in Twenty20 cricket which didn't appear the case with Dhoni's men when they left home to defend their Twenty20 crown. The team was certain to sweat on their fifth, if not the fourth bowler, as part-time spinners were given no chance to succeed on fresh English pitches.

However, the heat of last two months with the month of May the hottest in last decade have ensured that the wickets would be dry and scruffy and suitable for slow bowlers.

The Suresh Rainas and Yuvrajs; Sehwags and Rohit Sharmas can all lick their fingers in anticipation while opposition can only chew their nails in frustration as precise planning against this squad of match-winners is almost impossible. India can look forward to have a team where everyone, barring skipper Dhoni, can be a steady influence in both bowling and batting.


Dhoni hopeful of defending World T20 title


Mumbai:Beaming with confidence, Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni said on Friday that he was hopeful of retaining the World Twenty20 title with a balanced team having some outstanding talent.

Dhoni also said his team was not under pressure as the defending champions as they leave for the second edition of the prestigious event, beginning in England on June 5.

"We have a very balanced side, very strong in batting. We bat right down to 8 or 9. This is not to say we lack in bowling. We have a strong bowling attack too," he told reporters in a pre-departure match conference.

"We have some outstanding talents in our team and we need to focus on playing to our potential without worrying about the result. We have to give 100 per cent and hopefully we can defend the title," the flamboyant wicketkeeper-batsman said.

Dhoni, however, admitted that his players were tired after the hectic IPL schedule in South Africa but said the Twenty20 extravaganza had only helped the players hone their skills ahead of the World Cup.

"When you play so many matches you do get tired, after all it's a human body, but it (IPL) helped us a lot in terms of exposure and skills. So it was more beneficial for us. There was no time to rest for the players. But fatigue is a part of Indian cricket. Till now Indian players have done well with it," he said.

Dhoni also said he was pleased with the fact that he had plenty of options with regards to non-regular bowlers, especially in spin department and that all his players have the experience of handling pressure by playing in the IPL.


IPL experience will come handy in T20 WC: Smith

London, June 01, 2009:With not many Twenty20 matches under their belt, South Africa skipper Graeme Smith is looking to cash on their Indian Premier League experience during the World T20 Championship starting in London on June 5.

"Most international cricketers have not played a lot of international T20 cricket to date and the 14 matches in the recent Indian Premier League has given them the chance to formulate new ideas and plans for this format of the game," Smith said.

And after watching Jaques Kallis' successful stint in the IPL for Royal Challengers Bangalore team, Smith hopes the all-rounder will continue with the form to become the mainstay of his side in the World Cup.

"He probably is the player with the most to prove. He has worked out how he wants to play this form of the game and he had an excellent Indian Premier League season which means he comes into this tournament full of confidence," Smith said.

Kallis, who was left out of Proteas side for the inaugural edition in 2007, scored 361 runs from 15 matches to help his team finish runner-up.

Stating the current South Africa team the best side he has led till the time, Smith said fusion of youth and experience has made them "Twenty20 fit" and now he is aiming nothing less than the title.

"We have an exciting squad with pace, swing and spin in the bowling department and plenty of depth to our batting. In terms of talent, flair and confidence this is the strongest Proteas' team that I have captained.

"We are very well balanced both in terms of youth and experience and in terms of having all our bases covered regardless of whether the conditions favour swing or spin," he said.

French Open News|French Tennis News


Paes in men's doubles semis, Bhupathi out of French Open


Paris:Leander Paes kept the Indian challenge alive by advancing to the men's doubles semifinals with Czech Lukas Dlouhy but it was curtains for Mahesh Bhupathi and his partner Mark Knowles of Bahamas at the French Open here on Monday. Third seeds Paes and Dlouhy thwarted a late challenge from fifth seeds Bruno Soares of Brazil and Kevin Ullyett of Zimbabwe to emerge 6-2 7-6 (5) victorious and enter the last-four stage.

The Indo-Czech pair face either top seeds Daniel Nestor of Canada and Nenad Zimonjic of Serbia or Russians Igor Kunitsyn and Dmitry Tursunov in the semifinals. Paes and Dlouhy dominated the opening set and broke their rivals twice before wrapping it up in just 36 minutes. However, they had to stave off a strong challenge from the fifth seeds in the second set that lasted 56 minutes.

However, Bhupathi and Knowles bowed out of the tournament with a tough three-set pre-quarterfinal loss to unseeded Jose Acasuso of Argentina and Fernando Gonzalez of Chile. The fourth seeds toiled hard for an hour and 56 minutes before eventually losing 7-5 4-6 6-4. With this loss, Bhupathi's French Open campaign came to a disappointing end as partnering Sania Mirza, he had already crashed out of the mixed doubles event, losing in the first round against French-Israeli duo of Nathalie Dechy and Andy Ram.


Defeat of clay: Nadal knocked out


Paris:Rafael Nadal has still never played a five-set match at the French Open, but he is no longer undefeated at Roland Garros. In one of the biggest upsets in the long history of tennis, Nadal, the four-time defending champion who had won 31 straight matches here, was beaten in the fourth round, 6-2 6-7 (2) 6-4 7-6 (2) by Robin Soderling of Sweden.

Though Soderling, the 23rd seed, had never reached this stage of a Grand Slam tournament before, he is an established figure on tour whose huge forehand and serve have caused plenty of trouble for the game’s leading men over the years.

“I have to accept with the same calm when I win than when I lose. After four years, I lose here, and the season continues,” Nadal told a news conference. “Sure, he did well. He did very well but I didn’t play my best tennis. I didn’t play my tennis, and for that reason I lose. That’s it.”

Defending his Wimbledon title will be Nadal’s next major goal, but that will come after a little rest and relaxation. “Right now, my preparation is for the swimming pool at my house,” joked Nadal, who was also trying to become the first man to win five straight French Open titles. “Give me three more days.”

Costly errors

The Spaniard failed to generate depth consistently on Sunday, which allowed Soderling the space to keep applying pressure. He made errors off the ground from positions where he would normally generate winners or high-bouncing shots to the corners.