Tuesday 31 May 2011

The Royal Wedding drives record traffic to Yahoo!

SAN FRANCISCO: Yahoo! on Monday said that online interest in the royal wedding led to record high traffic at its websites.

Preliminary figures released by the California-based Internet pioneer indicated that it handled a record-setting 50,000 requests per second for wedding-related content.

Requests-per-second peaked at 33,000 after the recent earthquake and tsunami in Japan and topped out at approximately 40,000 after word broke of US military forces killing 9/11 mastermind Osama bin Laden in Pakistan on Sunday.

Yahoo! served up 400 million page views on Friday, when Prince William married his bride Catherine.

There were reportedly 27 million video streams and 2.6 million live video streams at Yahoo! web pages on Friday.

Skyrocketing online interest in Prince William's wedding had prompted Yahoo! to launch websites spotlighting the April 29 ceremony at Westminster Abbey.

Versions of Royalwedding.yahoo.com websites were tailored for 10 countries, including Britain, France, and the United States.

Yahoo! released the figures on the same day it announced that it hired Jai Singh away from the Huffington Post to be editor-in-chief of its Media Network.

Singh was considered a top editor at news website Huffington Post.

"Jai's appointment comes on the heels of one of the most event-filled news weeks in Yahoo! history, which underscores the importance of our editorial operations," said Media Network head Mickie Rosen.

Singh was in charge of day-to-day news management at the Huffington Post.
He is to begin at Yahoo! at the end of May.

Sunnyvale, California-based Yahoo! has been reinventing itself as a digital media company after being eclipsed by Google in the online search market. (AFP)

The Butt Of All Problems!




He has been labeled a buffoon by former ICC President Malcolm Speed.
His compatriots consider him the biggest threat to the game. Yet
Pakistan Cricket Board’s ‘retired and retarded’ Chairman Ijaz Butt
continues to grow strong, despite his buffoonery and threatening
attitude. The latest ‘adventure’ he enjoyed was the sacking of perhaps
the only ‘sane’ person in Pakistan cricket – one day skipper Shahid
Afridi.

Yes Shahid Afridi has had his bad days but he single handedly led the
side into the semi final of the World Cup. He would have won the match
had Misbah ul Haq not batted the way he did, had the fielders held
onto their catches and had Tendulkar not been given as many as 5
lives. But since we are talking about Pakistan cricket, Misbah ul Haq
has been rewarded with the captaincy and Shahid Afridi is now an
ordinary player of the squad.

Everyone knows that when it comes to Ijaz Butt, you are either with
him, or against him. But the issue is that there are more people
against him than those with him. The day he was appointed the Chairman
of Pakistan Cricket Board, nearly three years back, Salahuddin Ahmed
resigned as the Chairman of the Selection Committee. Ijaz Butt brought
in Abdul Qadir who resigned within a year, despite selecting the team
that went onto win the World Twenty20. In came Iqbal Qasim who quit
after he became convinced that Ijaz Butt was the butt of all problems.

Sacking of Shahid Afridi as skipper of the one day side shouldn’t come
as a surprise. When he was appointed as Chairman of Pakistan Cricket
Board, Ijaz Butt had no issues except minor problems. Yet he managed
to steer Pakistan cricket into one trouble after another, and today it
has reached a point of no return due to his indecisiveness. He has
destroyed the careers of all those who have defied him, and Shahid
Afridi is now one such individual.

Ijaz Butt also has changed as many as 3 coaches during his tenure –
Geoff Lawson, Intikhab Alam and current coach Waqar Younis – while has
tested Shoaib Malik, Younis Khan, Misbah ul Haq, Mohammad Yousuf,
Abdur Razzaq, Salman Butt and Shahid Afridi as captain of the national
side in either tests or one dayers. He continues to listen to his aged
colleagues Yawar Saeed (who never played Test cricket for Pakistan),
Intikhab Alam (who played before most of the current players were
born), Mohammad Illyas (who doesn’t even remember when he last played
cricket) and many others who had undistinguished career before joining
the current set up. One hopes that someone gets the message and
removed the ‘Butt’ of all issues before Pakistan cricket reaches rock
bottom!

Afridi has been prevented from joining Hampshire

Afridi banned from T20

PCB retaliates for former skipper's 'disparaging' remarks

Image text here
Afridi has been prevented from joining Hampshire

One-day sensation Shahid Afridi has been banned from playing for Hampshire after voicing his opinion of the Pakistan Cricket Board.
The explosive all-rounder had been due to join Hampshire to play in the English county Twenty20 tournament
But the PCB revoked Afridi's no objection certificates on Tuesday for 'passing disparaging remarks about the board and its officials'.
The move has come in retaliation to the former Pakistan skipper's public criticism of his treatment at the hands of its officials.
"Revoking all the NOCs naturally means that we don't want him to be selected in any team," said PCB spokesman Nadeem Sarwa.
Afridi, one of the world's greatest limited-overs players, announced his conditional international retirement on Monday in protest at the PCB leadership.

Enigmatic

Much of his frustration has stemmed from the PCB's refusal to commit to his captaincy of the side, beginning with its delay in naming him captain for the away series against New Zealand.
Although he led the team to victory, Afridi was left in limbo as the board waited until just two weeks before the World Cup to confirm he would again skipper the side.
Despite the confusion however, the enigmatic captain still managed to take his country into the semi-finals, also becoming the tournament's leading wicket-taker in the process.
He followed that up by captaining an ODI series win in West Indies, but was sacked on his return this month after criticising team management.
Announcing his protest in an emotional interview on Monday, Afridi said he had been 'humiliated' by a board of 'dishonourable people' and he would only return in the event of a change of leadership.
Contract
The PCB's reaction also included the suspension of his central contract, with chairman Ijaz Butt saying 'He is welcome if he does not want to play under the present (PCB) set-up.'
Afridi is one of the great natural talents of the game and remains a hugely popular figure in his native country.
He rose to prominence in just his second ODI when he slammed the world's fastest ODI century - off 37 balls - against Sri Lanka at Nairobi.
His aggression suited the shorter versions of the game and he is ranked third in Pakistan history for ODIs played (320) and wickets (313).
He is also ranked sixth in runs (6,658) with 289 sixes - the most hit by any batsman in the world.
Afridi played 27 Tests before retiring from the longer version of the game last year during the series against Australia, after scoring 1,716 runs that included five centuries.

Bollywood sequels: a recipe for success?

Bollywood studios are increasingly desperate for a money-spinner, with box office takings in the Indian film industry as a whole down for the last two years and the lack of original, quality script-writing a common complaint. - AFP (File Photo)


MUMBAI: A glut of Bollywood sequels are due out in the coming months, prompting questions about whether the industry has run out of ideas or is just milking a successful formula in troubled times.
More than a dozen follow-ups are in the pipeline, including “Bheja Fry 2”(Brain Fry), a second “Dabangg” (Fearless), a third in the “Dhoom” franchise and another installment of the “Golmaal” series.
Shah Rukh Khan is also getting in on the act, with a sequel due out by the end of the year of his hit “Don”. The action film, in which the actor reportedly does his own stunts, is currently in post-production.
Bollywood studios are increasingly desperate for a money-spinner, with box office takings in the Indian film industry as a whole down for the last two years and the lack of original, quality script-writing a common complaint.
But “Bheja Fry 2” director Sagar Ballary rejected the notion that follow-ups are an easy option – and said success was not guaranteed.
“I didn’t rush to make the sequel immediately after the first film came out in 2007. We waited for the right script to make this part two,” he said.
“Every film stands on its own. Whether it’s a sequel or not, the film has to be good to work.” “Bheja Fry,”, starring comedian Vinay Pathak, is based on the popular 1998 French comedy “Le Diner de Cons” (The Dinner Game), which was also made into a Hollywood movie, “Dinner for Schmucks”.
Follow-ups are an established part of Hollywood. Some films, like those in the “Godfather” trilogy, are arguably better than the original. Others, like the Star Wars prequels, fail to find favour with fans or critics.
Bollywood, which is increasingly following Hollywood trends in filmmaking and marketing, has not been averse to sequels in the past.
Notable franchises include the crime comedy “Munnabhai” series, starring Sanjay Dutt.
The “Golmaal” series, which came out in 2006, 2008 and 2010, were all popular.
Director Rohit Shetty will be hoping the fourth, starring Kareena Kapoor and Ajay Devgn, will be just as successful and has no qualms about doing another follow-up.
“If I have created a brand, why should I be apologetic about making money on it? You reap what you sow, right?” Shetty was quoted as saying in the Hindustan Times newspaper recently.
The “Dhoom” series has equally been a box office winner throughout the last decade.
Bollywood producer Arbaaz Khan, who will direct “Dabangg 2”, said the film was at the scripting stage and hopes that it will live up to audiences’ expectations.
“Dabangg”, a corrupt cop romp starring Salman Khan, was one of the few hits last year, winning a host of awards including Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment at last week’s National Film Awards.
Arbaaz Khan said a sequel is justified given the film’s following.
“It was the biggest mass entertaining film of the last year that did extremely well at the box office. So, the sequel, too, will hopefully work like the first one,” he said.
For all their insistence on artistic integrity, Khan, Ballary and other filmmakers admit that financial factors are important.
With the “brand” already known, less has to be spent on marketing and success is more likely, the argument goes.
“Producers are demanding because for them it’s good business,” said Ballary. “They know sequels will surely recover the cost of the box office because of the success of part one and there’s not much to lose.”
“There are many scripts and good story ideas in the market but producers don’t want to risk new ideas and they feel it’s safe to work with a sequel because audiences like it.”
Khan added: “The pressure to deliver a hit is bigger because people will surely have greater expectations.”

Iran closes airspace to Merkel plane



In this photograph taken on May 26, 2011, German Chancellor Angela Merkel disembarks from a plane after landing at Deauville-Normandie airport, western France. Iran briefly closed its airspace to German Chancellor Angela Merkel's plane as she flew overnight May 30-31, 2011 to India, her spokesman said. – AFP Photo

BERLIN: Iran briefly closed its airspace to German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s plane as she flew overnight Monday to Tuesday to India, her spokesman said.
“Strange start to Indian trip – Iran temporarily denies over flight to chancellor’s plane. Delayed landing in Delhi,” Steffen Seibert said in a message sent on Twitter.
The reason for the over flight denial was not immediately known.
Media reports said the plane carrying Merkel and a high-level delegation had to circle for two hours over Turkey before receiving permission to cross Iranian airspace.
Meanwhile, Germany on Tuesday summoned the Iranian ambassador after the incident took place, Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said.
“Hindering the German chancellor’s passage over Iran is absolutely unacceptable. It shows a lack of respect towards Germany that we will not accept,” Westerwelle said in a statement.
“That is why I have summoned the Iranian ambassador. We shall make it very plain that such a breach of international conventions will in no way be tolerated by Germany,” he added.
A second plane with four of Merkel’s ministers and other delegation members was not delayed.
Merkel has been highly critical of Iran’s human rights’ record and its alleged plans to develop nuclear weapons.
Merkel, who is seeking improved trade between Europe’s biggest economy and booming South Asia, was to meet Tuesday with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President Pratibha Patil during a one-day stop in the Indian capital as part of an Asian tour that will also take her to Singapore.

Russian diplomats inspect bodies of Kharotabad victims

 
QUETTA: Russian diplomats arrived in Quetta and inspected the bodies of victims of Kharotabad incident, Geo News reported on Tuesday.

They collected photos and data of the victims, killed in allegedly fake encounter, for their identification.

Talking to media, the Russian diplomats said that they were waiting for the identification of the bodies, adding that it is premature to say anything till investigation is completed.

They further said they would decide in two days about their burial.

Body of missing journalist Saleem Shahzad found

 
ISLAMABAD: Body of missing journalist Saleem Shahzad has been found from Hear Rasool area in Mandi-Bahauddin, Geo News reported on Tuesday.

Saleem Shahzad, working for the Asia Times Online, went missing three days back. Shahzad left his house in Islamabad to take part in a television programme but never arrived at the station.

PCB suspends Shahid Afridi's contract, revoke NoCs

 
LAHORE: The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) on Tuesday suspended the central contract of former one-day captain Shahid Afridi, who had announced his retirement from international cricket, a board statement said.

At the same time it revoked all no-objection certificates (NOCs) for the player, meaning he will not be officially permitted to play abroad, the PCB said.

Afridi, a hugely popular big-hitting all-rounder, had been expected to play for Hampshire in the Twenty20 league in England next month, and also in the Sri Lanka Premier League a month later.

"PCB has initiated action against Afridi in response to the multiple breaches he has committed under the central contract signed with PCB," the statement said.

The PCB said Afridi must explain within seven days why he levelled allegations against the Board. (AFP)

Monday 30 May 2011

Afridi quits international cricket

 
KARACHI: Former skipper Pakistan cricket team Shahid Khan Afridi has announced retirement from international cricket here late on Monday, Geo News reported.

According to sources, Afridi’s disagreement with Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) over some issues resulted in his early retirement.

He said it was hard for him to play under a cricket board, which pays no respect to senior players.

Musharraf declared PO in Benazir murder case



Former president Pervez Musharraf. — File photo

RAWALPINDI: The Rawalpindi Anti-Terrorist Court (ATC) on Monday declared former military ruler Pervez Musharraf a Proclaimed Offender (PO) in the Benazir assassination case, DawnNews reported.
Taking notice of Federal Investigation Agency’s special public prosecutor Chaudhry Zulfiqar’ request, Judge Rana Nisar Ahmed declared the former president a PO.
Earlier in April, Mr Zulfiqar had requested the court to start the process of declaring Musharraf proclaimed offender because his arrest warrants could not be served on him and that he was wilfully avoiding them.
According to legal experts, declaring the former army chief a proclaimed offender would enable the court to attach his immovable property in Pakistan and proceed with the trial of other accused in the case, leaving the authorities to seek other means for his arrest.
Mr Musharraf has been accused of failing to provide adequate security to Benazir Bhutto and conspiring to kill her.

Iran vows to unplug Internet

 
TEHRAN: Iran is taking steps toward an aggressive new form of censorship: a so-called national Internet that could, in effect, disconnect Iranian cyberspace from the rest of the world.

The leadership in Iran sees the project as a way to end the fight for control of the Internet, according to observers of Iranian policy inside and outside the country. Iran, already among the most sophisticated nations in online censoring, also promotes its national Internet as a cost-saving measure for consumers and as a way to uphold Islamic moral codes.

In February, as pro-democracy protests spread rapidly across the Middle East and North Africa, Reza Bagheri Asl, director of the telecommunication ministry's research institute, told an Iranian news agency that soon 60% of the nation's homes and businesses would be on the new, internal network. Within two years it would extend to the entire country, he said.

PNS Mehran: Ex-Navy commando held

 
LAHORE: A former Pakistan Navy Commando and two of his associates have been arrested in connection with attack on Pakistan Navy airbase PNS Mehran, Geo News reported Monday.

Kamran Ahmed was court-martialed 10 years ago on charges of torture. A brother and aide were also arrested by the security agencies on Friday.

He had been posted at PNS Mehran and PNS Iqbal.
 

Sunday 29 May 2011

Typhoon approaches Japan, may threaten nuclear plant

 
In this May 27, 2011 photo released by the International Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA, members of the IAEA fact-finding team in Japan visit the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Okuma, Fukushima prefecture, northern Japan. - AP Photo

TOKYO: Japan’s crippled Fukushima nuclear plant is not fully prepared to deal with violent storms, officials admitted Saturday, as the country braced for Typhoon Songda to hit.
The storm system was located about 30 kilometres southwest of Miyako-jima Island, near Taiwan, as of 3:00 pm, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.
The typhoon, packing gusts up to 216 kilometres per hour near its centre, is moving northeast and could hit Tokyo as early as Monday, the agency said.
It is not yet clear whether it will move towards the Fukushima Daiichi plant, more than 200 kilometres northeast of the capital.
But the typhoon has already brought heavy rain to the Fukushima region, prompting worries that runoff water may wash away radioactive materials from land into the Pacific Ocean.
Plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) has been pouring synthetic resins over the complex to prevent radioactive deposits from being swept away by winds or rain.
A TEPCO spokesman said workers were mulling ways to continue their work even in storms.
“We are using a pump truck to pour water to (cool overheating) reactors. It is not yet clear how exactly we would conduct the work if strong typhoons hit the plant directly,” he said.
Goshi Hosono, an aide of Prime Minister Naoto Kan, told a news conference Friday that more work had to be done to ensure that the approaching and future typhoons would not spread radioactive materials into the environment.

Gunmen kill two policemen in Quetta


A police officer said that the attack at a checkpoint also wounded three bystanders in Quetta. – File Photo
QUETTA: At least two policemen were killed while three others injured during firing on Spinny road in the provincial capital on Sunday.
“Unknown armed men riding bikes opened fire at policemen, killing two and injuring three, including one police official and two by-standers,” police official Amir Khan Dasti told reporters.
He said that the deceased constables were identified as Ishaq and Musa. The injured were identified as sub-inspector Raza Muhammad, a passerby Yazdan Ali, while the identity of the female passerby who also sustained bullet injuries could not be ascertained.
The injured have been shifted to Bolan Medical College hospital Quetta for treatment.
Heavy contingent of law enforcement personnel reached the site and cordoned off the area to trace and arrest the suspects.
Further investigation was underway.

Enrichment continues, claims A.Q. Khan

Answering a question about safety of the nuclear assets, Dr Khan said neither the Taliban nor any external force could seize them because of a “highly secured system which has been improved gradually”. - Photo by Reuters
ISLAMABAD: The country’s nuclear programme has been “running without any break” for the past 10 years and the process of uranium enrichment is in progress, too, Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan claimed in an interview with Dawn on Saturday.
“Although I have not been associated with the programme for the past 10 years, I know that it has been running without any break and the process of uranium enrichment is in progress,” the nuclear scientist said.
He said although the departments concerned were not giving “final shape to new nuclear weapons”, the material was being prepared and they could be assembled any time if required.
Answering a question about safety of the nuclear assets, Dr Khan said neither the Taliban nor any external force could seize them because of a “highly secured system which has been improved gradually”.
He said the county’s nuclear assets were safe from day one and no country should be worried about them.
“We know how to protect our strength (nukes),” he said in reply to a question about statements from Washington and New Delhi that terrorists could seize Pakistan’s nuclear arsenals.
He said nuclear weapons were not stored at one place and very few people knew about their location. “You can count these people on fingers who exactly know about the location of nuclear arsenals,” he said.
Most of the nuclear weapons made by the Khan Research Laboratories and other departments concerned had been handed over to the military authorities and the practice still continued.
“These weapons are lying in tunnels and safe houses where no one can access them, except very few relevant people,” Dr Khan said.
In reply to a question, he said Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had made the security system of the country’s nuclear programme and nuclear assets foolproof and with the passage of time Gen Ziaul Haq, Gen Mirza Aslam Beg and Gen Abdul Waheed Kakar further beefed up security around them.
“Finally the Strategic Plans Division upgraded the system, making it inaccessible to any one inside and outside the country,” he said.
Asked if the country’s nuclear programme was running satisfactorily, Dr Khan said it was running well.
In reply to another question, the nuclear scientist said he often moved out of his residence because he had no fear about his security. “I have faith in Allah because no one can harm me if He protects me.”

Ten die from E.coli-infected cucumbers


Spanish cucumbers, file pic It is unclear whether the cucumbers were infected at source or in transit
The death toll in Germany from an outbreak of E.coli caused by infected cucumbers has risen to at least 10.
The cucumbers, believed to have been imported from Spain, were infected with a severe complication of E.coli called hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS).
Hundreds of people are said to have fallen sick.
Officials in the Czech Republic said the cucumbers may have been exported there, as well as to Austria, Hungary and Luxembourg.
Adults at risk The aggressive form of E.coli is known to cause kidney failure and affect the central nervous system.
Most of the cases have been in the area around Hamburg.
The Sweden-based European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control said this outbreak was "one of the largest described of HUS worldwide and the largest ever reported in Germany".
It said: "While HUS cases are usually observed in children under five years of age, in this outbreak 87% are adults, with a clear predominance of women (68%)."
HUS cases have also been reported in Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands and the UK - linked to German travel.
A scientist from Munster university, Helge Karch, warned that the spread of infection was not over.
"It is possible that there will be secondary infections during this outbreak as well. These secondary infections work from man to man and they can be avoided. That's why we have to do everything possible for better personal hygiene."
Czech authorities said the European Union's rapid warning system had told them of an importation of the cucumbers into the Czech Republic.
Czech Agriculture and Food Inspection Authority spokesman Michal Spacil told Agence France-Presse: "The Germans said the cucumbers were also distributed to Hungary, Austria and Luxembourg."
Spain has announced restrictions on two suspected exporters.
It is unclear whether the cucumbers were infected at source or in transit.

London boy breaks Seven Summits record with Everest climb

George Atkinson George Atkinson began the Seven Summits challenge at the age of 11
A boy of 16 has become the youngest person in the world to scale the highest mountains in every continent.
George Atkinson, from Surbiton, south-west London, began the Seven Summits challenge by scaling Kilimanjaro in 2005 and completed it by reaching the top of Mount Everest on Thursday.
He broke the record of US teenager Johnny Collinson, who completed the challenge at the age of 17 last year.
George's mother Penny said she felt "elated and emotional".
The British Mountaineering Council has confirmed George's record, who was aged 16 years and 362 days when he reached the summit of Mount Everest.
George, who turns 17 on Sunday, began the challenge of climbing the highest peaks in seven continents at the age of 11 by scaling Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania.

Start Quote

Just get my boy down safe now!”
End Quote Penny Atkinson
He then climbed Russia's Mount Elbrus in 2007 and reached the summits of Indonesia's Carstensz Pyramid and Argentina's Mount Aconcagua in 2008.
Mount McKinley in North America was next, followed by Mount Vinson in Antarctica which he climbed late last year.
In her son's blog, Penny Atkinson announced the completion of his challenge: "George has done it. He reached the summit at about 8.15am Nepali time.
"It sounds as if the weather is good...
"A big thank you to everyone who has helped George to achieve his dream."
She added: "Just get my boy down safe now!"

Twitter's European boss warns users may face court

Tony Wang Tony Wang has been appointed European Twitter boss
Twitter's new European boss has suggested that users who break privacy injunctions by posting on the site could face the UK courts.
Tony Wang said people who did "bad things" needed to defend themselves.
He warned that the site would hand over user information to the authorities where they were "legally required".
Lawyers are challenging Twitter in court to reveal the identities of Twitter users who violated a super-injunction.
MP John Hemming named Manchester United footballer Ryan Giggs in Parliament on Monday as the footballer who had used a super-injunction to hide an alleged affair, after Mr Giggs' name had been widely aired on Twitter.
Responding to a question from BBC News at the e-G8 forum in Paris, Mr Wang said: "Platforms have a responsibility, not to defend that user but to protect that user's right to defend him or herself".
He declined to comment on the case directly but explained that in general, when dealing with cases of illegal activity, Twitter would comply with local laws to turn over user details.
He stressed that the site would also notify those individuals of any such request.
Little sympathy Mr Wang made it clear that if the matter came to court, those people would be on their own.
He said Twitter would, "let them exercise their own legal rights under their own jurisdiction, whether that is a motion to quash the order or to oppose it or do a number of other things to defend themselves."
The subject of legal jurisdictions and the internet has been hotly debated at the first e-G8 summit.
Technology industry leaders including Google's Eric Schmidt and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg were among the speakers at the event.
While many attendees felt that there was a need for further discussion, among delegates from the United States, there was little sympathy for the British legal position.
"I do view it to being similar to the Chinese situation where they also cover up misdeeds of high ranking people," Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales told the BBC.
He said that, although the internet was a global phenomenon, it was unlikely to pander to those countries with stricter rules.
"The US is going to be absolutely inflexible on this point. It is in the constitution," he said, referring to freedom of speech provisions.
"I think that puts intergovernmental communication and co-operation on this issue into a different light, which is, there's not a whole lot to co-operate on."

US defence firm Lockheed Martin hit by cyber-attack

File picture of a US Lockheed Martin F-16 at an air display at the Farnborough International Air Show Lockheed Martin makes F-16 fighter jets
US defence firm Lockheed Martin says it has come under a significant cyber-attack, which took place last week.
Few details were available, but Lockheed said its security team had detected the threat quickly and ensured that none of its programmes had been compromised.
The Pentagon said it is working to establish the extent of the breach.
Lockheed makes fighter jets, warships and multi-billion dollar weapons systems sold worldwide.
Lt Col April Cunningham, speaking for the US defence department, said the impact on the Pentagon was "minimal and we don't expect any adverse effect".
Lockheed Martin said in a statement that it detected the attack on 21 May "almost immediately" and took counter-measures.
As a result, the company said, "our systems remain secure; no customer, program or employee personal data has been compromised".
But they are still working to restore employee access several days after the attack took place.
Lockheed Martin is the world's biggest aerospace company and makes F-16, F-22 and F-35 fighter jets as well as warships.

Shakira considering album in Arabic

 
RABAT: Colombian pop singer Shakira said Saturday she would one day like to sing pop songs, if not an entire album, in Arabic.

The native Spanish speaker, who also has global hits in English, was speaking at a news conference in Morocco, where she was headlining the Mawazine World Rhythms music festival.

"It would be a challenge to do an album in Arabic. I would first have to learn Arabic," she said. "I am completely open to that experience. ... At some point I would love that to happen in my life."

Born in Colombia of Syrian origin, Shakira said she grew up listening to the Arab world's premier divas of the 20th century, Egyptian Umm Kalthum and Lebanese Fairuz.

Shakira often uses eastern dance, also known as belly dancing, in her acts, and her hit Spanish language single "Ojas Asi" relies heavily on a Middle Eastern melody. Her eastern origins and musical influences have made her popular throughout the Middle East.

She admitted, however, that she only speaks a few words of Arabic, including "ateeni boosa" or give me a kiss, provoking laughter among the mostly Moroccan crowd of journalists.

Morocco's 10th-annual Mawazine festival of world music concluded Saturday after eight days of music that saw bands from 60 countries, including Kanye West, Lionel Ritchie, Egypt's Amr Diab and Senegal's Youssou N'Dour. (AP)

Barcelona swamp United to win Champions League

 
LONDON: Barcelona, inspired by the peerless Lionel Messi, delivered a soccer masterclass to overwhelm Manchester United 3-1 in the Champions League final and lift the European Cup for the fourth time on Saturday.

Messi was at his inspirational best all night at Wembley as the champions of Spain left the champions of England looking like desperate also-rans in the face of their relentless intricate passing and deadly movement.

United somehow reached halftime level at 1-1 after Wayne Rooney cancelled out Pedro's opening goal but Barcelona continued their dominance after the break.

A superb Messi goal and a precise 18-metre curler by David Villa, underlined the Spanish side's dominance over the team they also beat in the 2009 final. After a short-lived United flurry at the start, Barca were soon in control as they probed constantly in and around the United box.

UNITED UNDONE

Although the English side kept them at bay with a series of last-ditch tackles they were eventually undone in the 27th minute when Xavi cleverly delayed a pass to open space for Pedro to calmly tuck the ball beyond Edwin van der Sar.

United looked almost out of their depth but showed why they have reached three finals in the last four seasons by conjuring a well-made equaliser after 34 minutes.

Rooney played a one-two with Michael Carrick then another with Ryan Giggs before sweeping the ball high into the net.

Messi was millimetres away from a second goal after another high-speed give and go with Villa but somehow United reached halftime on level terms.

The parity on the scoreboard was short-lived though as Barca immediately regained control and, after more near misses, duly went ahead in the 54th minute.

United's defenders made the fatal error of standing off Messi on the edge of the box and the Argentine maestro took full advantage driving the ball in low for the 53rd and most important goal of his remarkable season.

It was Messi who set up the third too as he surged into the box and, though the ball was half-cleared, it went straight to Villa who killed it instantly before curling a superb 18-metreshot into the top corner. (Reuters)

NASA satellite helps find 17 Egypt pyramids

Infrared imaging in this satellite picture shows the location of the underground pyramids in Egypt
This NASA satellite image obtained on May 25 courtesy of the University of Alabama shows an infra-red image (center) of a pattern of streets and houses in the buried ancient city of Tanis, Egypt. Images produced by a state-of-the-art infrared technique allowed the researchers to clearly see the ruins underground. - AFP File Photo

WASHINGTON: Archaeologists have uncovered as many as 17 buried pyramids in Egypt with the help of NASA satellite imagery, according to a documentary to be aired by the BBC on Monday.
Led by US researcher Sarah Parcak at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, the team has already confirmed two of the suspected pyramids through excavation work.
The BBC, which funded the research, released the findings this week ahead of a broadcast describing the technique and what was uncovered.
“I couldn’t believe we could locate so many sites all over Egypt,” Parcak was quoted as telling the BBC. “To excavate a pyramid is the dream of every archaeologist.”
The team also found more than 1,000 tombs and 3,000 ancient settlements, according to the report.
Infrared images, which were taken by satellites orbiting 700 kilometers above the Earth, revealed the below-ground structures.
The satellites used powerful cameras that can “pinpoint objects less than one meter (three feet) in diameter on the Earth’s surface,” the report said.
The technology was helped by the density of houses and other buildings, made of mud brick so that they showed up somewhat clearly against the looser soil cover.
The documentary, “Egypt’s Lost Cities,” airs Monday on BBC One and will also be shown on the Discovery channel in the United States.

Saturday 28 May 2011

Karishma ready for a comeback

 
MUMBAI: There is a reason why Karishma Kapoor is looking her best these days. Sources have revealed that the actress is busy meeting with the producers over the last few weeks.

A source has also informed that the actress-turned-homemaker has finally signed and decided on her comeback film.

While details are awaited, it is expected that these projects will have either Akshay or Salman as male lead.

Pakistan to take on Ireland in first ODI today

 
BELFAST: Pakistan will be facing Ireland in first One Day match here today with Misbah-ul-Haq as the captain of the team.

The weather could hardly be more different to that in the Caribbean as they arrived in Belfast here on Thursday amid cool, breezy conditions.

Meanwhile, the Stormont ground, the venue for both matches, on Saturday and Monday, was too wet on Thursday to allow Ireland to train.

If Pakistan can adapt to the drop in temperatures and not think too longingly of home after more than a month away, they should have enough all-round strength to see off the leading Associate nation. But anything less than a fully committed performance could see them struggling.

Since Ireland knocked Pakistan out of the 2007 World Cup, they have gone from strength to strength, defeating England at this year's edition. And even one victory against Pakistan will consolidate their 10th place ranking in the ODI table, just four places behind the tourists.

Ireland coach Phil Simmons, the former West Indies all-rounder, is hoping for a similar surface to the one served up at Stormint for the ODIs against Bangladesh in July last year.

While Pakistan have a 15-man squad at their disposal, including the return of Umar Gul and Younis Khan, both rested for the five one-dayers in the Caribbean, Ireland will be without the injured Niall O'Brien and George Dockrell.

Pakistan stands isolated on the world stage, says Nawaz


PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif. — Photo by APP/File
LAHORE: Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz’s chief Nawaz Sharif on Saturday said Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani should apprise the nation over the status of parliament’s resolution which was passed in the wake of the Abbottabad operation, DawnNews reported.
The resolution called for a review of security and foreign policies and condemned the US raid on the Abbottabad compound in which al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden was killed.
The resolution further stated that in the event of another US operation Pakistan would consider cutting off the supply route for US and allied troops in Afghanistan.
Nawaz Sharif further said that Pakistan stood isolated on the international stage, adding that Pakistan could not allow the world community to ridicule it.  — DawnNews

Bomb blast kills eight in Bajaur


The blast took place in the tribal agency's Salarzai area. — File photo

KHAR: A bomb blast targeting a pro-government tribe on Saturday killed at least eight people and wounded 11 others at a market in northwestern Pakistan’s Bajaur tribal area, officials said.
The remote-controlled bomb blast took place at Pasht bazaar in Salarzai region, some 35 kilometres northeast of Khar, the main town of the Bajaur tribal district, which borders Afghanistan.
“At least four people were killed and 15 others were wounded,” local government official Saad Mohammad told AFP.
“Another four people died on reaching the hospital,” health department official Khan Saeed told AFP.
Three of the wounded were in critical condition, Khan said.
“Two tribal elders, Malik Tehsil Khan and Malik Mayn Jan also died in the bomb blast,” local government official Irshad Khan told AFP.
“We think that they were the main targets because they were the senior members of local peace committee which has formed a lashkar (tribal force) against Taliban,” he added.
Another official said that bomb was triggered by a remote control.
Taliban militants, who have targeted members of the Salarzai tribe in the past because they raised a village force to drive them out of region, claimed responsibility for the attack.
“We carried out the bombing against the peace committee because they had joined the government and were maligning Taliban,” Tehreek-i-Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan told AFP.
“We had warned them before and warn them again that they should disband this anti-Taliban peace committee otherwise we will continue to attack them till they are totally eliminated,” Ehsan said.
In Pakistan’s first known female suicide attack, a woman wearing a bomb under her burqa struck near a UN food distribution point in Khar on December 25 killing 43 people. The pro-government Salarzai tribe was again the target.
Pakistani security forces have carried out a series of military operations against the Taliban and other militants in Bajaur since August 2008.
The military has claimed repeatedly to have eliminated the militant threat.
Bajaur is one of seven districts in Pakistan’s semi-autonomous tribal belt on the Afghan border. The United States considers the area the global headquarters of Al Qaeda and the most dangerous place on earth.
More than 4,400 people have been killed across Pakistan in attacks blamed on Taliban and other extremist networks based in the tribal belt since 2007.

Gold and Silver Rates in Pakistan

Gold and Silver Rates in Pakistan:
City Gold Silver
  24K 10 Grams 24K Per Tola 22K 10 Grams  10 Grams
Karachi Rs. 42,171.00 Rs. 49,200.00 Rs. 38,657.00 Rs. 1,080.00
Hyderabad Rs. Rs. Rs. Rs.
Lahore Rs. 42,171.00 Rs. 49,200.00 Rs. 38,657.00 Rs. 1,080.00
Multan Rs. 42,171.00 Rs. 49,200.00 Rs. 38,657.00 Rs. 1,080.00
Islamabad Rs. 42,171.00 Rs. 49,200.00 Rs. 38,657.00 Rs. 1,080.00
Faisalabad Rs. Rs. Rs. Rs.
Rawalpindi Rs. 42,171.00 Rs. 49,200.00 Rs. 38,657.00 Rs. 1,080.00
Quetta Rs. Rs. Rs. Rs.
Last Updated: May 27,2011 (Source: Karachi Saraf Jewellers Association)
Gold Rates in Pakistan - Find Today's current Gold rates in Pakistan and it major cities like Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad. PakBiz.com Finance offers live online Bullion prices (24K gold bullion rates) of Pakistan in Pakistani Rupees, US Dollars and other major currencies in per once and per tola. Here you can also find gold price chart and current silver rates (silver bullion prices) along with international goldrates.

Friday 27 May 2011

Pak shuts 3 US 'intelligence fusion' cells

 
LOS ANGELES: Pakistan has closed three US military intelligence liaison centers in Quetta and Peshawar, a US newspaper reported.

The liaison centers, also known as intelligence fusion cells, in Quetta and Peshawar are the main conduits for the United States to share satellite imagery, target data and other intelligence with Pakistani ground forces conducting operations against militants, including Taliban fighters who slip into Afghanistan.

US special operations units have relied on the three facilities, two in Peshawar and one in Quetta, to help coordinate operations on both sides of the border, senior US officials said. The U.S. units are now being withdrawn from all three sites, the officials said, and the centers are being shut down.

It wasn't immediately clear whether the steps are permanent. The closures, which have not been publicly announced, remove US advisors from the front lines of the war against militant groups.

The decision has not affected the CIA's ability to launch missiles from drone aircraft in northwest Pakistan.

Thursday 26 May 2011

Threatened rock carvings of Pakistan


A collage of carvings and inscriptions of different periods shows the heritage on the brink of destruction as the proposed site of the Diamer-Basha Dam hosts some 30,000 ancient art carvings and inscriptions which may vanish forever. – 3D artwork by Mufassir A. Khan
Pakistan is going to lose one of the most precious rock art carvings due to construction of the Diamer-Basha Dam. The proposed site of the dam hosts some 30,000 ancient art carvings and inscriptions which may vanish forever due to the construction of this reservoir.
The northern area of Pakistan is a mountainous region which lies between the western Himalayas, the Korakoram in the east and the Hindukush in the west. Here, the junction of the ancient routes made the upper Indus a cradle and crossroads of different civilizations.
The junction of the ancient routes made the upper Indus a cradle and crossroads of different civilizations.
Travelers, invaders, merchants, pilgrims and artisans from different ages and cultures used the legendary silk route and its branches to enter in the region. Many of them left their cultural and religious signs on the rocks, boulders and cliffs.
The sun-tanned smooth rocks attracted more visitors and settlers to carve their own signs, symbols, inscriptions and artworks on the same locations. And hence, gradually a rock art archive accumulated in the area and eventually became a wonderland of some 50,000 rock carvings and 5,000 inscriptions from different civilizations ranging from the eighth millennium BC to the coming of Islam (since the 16th century AD) in the region.
The diversity of the rock carvings in the region turned the area into one of the most important rendezvous of petroglyphs in the world.
The history of discoveries
In 1884, a Hungarian traveler, Karl Eugen discovered a Buddhist carving in present Baltistan. In 1907, a veteran explorer, Ghulam Muhammad unveiled another Buddhist petroglyph from the Diamer district.
When the 750 km long, Karakorum Highway (the modern Silk Road) inaugurated in 1978, thousands of more engravings came to view which inspires a German scholar, Karl Jettmar to further explore the rock art wealth.
In 1980, Karl Jettmar and Pakistan’s father of archaeology, Ahmed Hassan Dani launched a Pak-German study group to systematically investigate the ancient rock art in the region.
This area is also famous for the amazing story of mysterious gold-digging ants.Greek historian, Herodotus (in fifth century BC) wrote (Historia III, 102-105) about the land of Dardai, where gold-digging ants – “bigger than fox, though not so big as a dog were used to collect gold particles.”
Another research project entitled “Rock Carvings and Inscriptions along the Karakorum Highway” was initiated in 1983. The Heidelberg Academy of Humanities and Sciences and the Department of Archaeology of Gilgit were responsible for the study group. Professor Harald Hauptmann has been the head of the project since 1989 as a successor of Jettmar.
Talking Rocks
The Shatial, Thor, Hodur, Thalpan, Naupura, Chaghdo and other sites of northern Pakistan having clusters of carvings but the Basha-Diamer area holds thousands of very important rock carvings.
Hauptmann told Dawn.com that a total of 37,051 carvings on 5,928 boulders or rock faces will be inundated after the construction of the Diamer-Basha Dam.
The site represents hundreds of inscriptions in Brahmi, Sogdian, middle Persian, Chinese, Tibetan and even ancient Hebrew languages. Some 80 per cent of the writings are in Brahmi language.
Always) remember that (one day) you must die.” –. Photo courtesy of Harald Hauptmann / Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Germany.
These writings not only provide insights into the religious and political situation but also show the name of the rulers and a rough date of the time. These details of the inscriptions helped the experts arrange them chronologically.
One of the interesting Brahmi inscriptions can be read as; Martavyam Smartavyam, which means: “(Always) remember that (one day) you must die.”
This prehistoric Caprine depiction was discovered in Chilas . Photo courtesy of Harald Hauptmann / Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Germany.
The earliest rock carvings in northern Pakistan dates back to the ninth millennium BC (roughly late Stone Age). Wild animals and hunting scenes are commonly found in this era but the hunter himself was never found.
The mysterious “Giant Figures” represents the demons, deities or supernatural beings. More than 50 such carvings have been discovered in the area. – Photo courtesy of Harald Hauptmann / Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Germany.
The following Bronze Age petroglyphs represent the most spectacular carvings of giants. These life size male giant figures with stretched arms could be assumed to be images of ghosts, demons, deities or gods. Some 50 such carvings have been discovered in northern areas but all the giants have no facial features.
In the third millennium BC, agriculture started in the region and carvings of horses were observed for first time. Then in the beginning of the first millennium BC, the area witnessed invasions by new ethnic groups such as the Sakan tribes. They carved sketches of Eurasian animals, most of them very interesting, bizarre and mythical in nature.
Later, another bunch of carvings appeared representing more mythical creatures, horses and warriors with Persian attire. These depicted the Iranian influence in the region and the expansion of Achaemenid Empire in sixth century BC.
The Golden era of Buddhism
In the first century AD, Buddhism emerged in the area as new belief system and reached its peak between the fifth and eighth century. Many spectacular carvings of Buddha and stupas – sacred buildings – and related inscriptions were found carved in the same era.
The beautiful carvings of two Buddhas flanking a stupa. –. Photo courtesy of Harald Hauptmann / Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Germany.
According the Hauptmann, the historic period of early Buddhism started from this area because of findings of old Indian style Khorashti language or Sanskrit. The venerations of Buddha and names of different kings show the climax of Buddhism in this area.
Although addressing Pakistan’s energy crisis is an urgent need and the Basha Dam would help bridge the gap between the demand and supply of power, the conservation and mitigation of these carvings is also very important.
When Dawn.com, asked Hauptmann about mitigation of the rock carvings in one hand and the need of the dam on the other, he said, “We (as an archaeologist) have to respect the decision (to build the dam) but it is very sad for us to lose one of the most rich and diverse rock art provinces of the world.”
According to Hauptmann, the Basha Dam will drown 32 villages and displace more than 25,000 people.
He added that some 3,000 very important stupas and similar number of drawings will be submerged after the construction of the dam. He called to establish a cultural center in Gilgit where original and replicas of the carvings could be preserved along with scientific documents about the geography, history, languages, music, wildlife and other aspects of the northern areas.
This center could be a rendezvous for scholars, writers, visitors and for future generation to discover the exciting history of the region.
Gold-digging ants
This area is also famous for the amazing story of mysterious gold-digging ants.
Greek historian, Herodotus (in fifth century BC) wrote (Historia III, 102-105) about the land of Dardai, where gold-digging ants – “bigger than fox, though not so big as a dog were used to collect gold particles.”
Later, other historians and writers such as Arrian, Claudius Aelianus, Ktesias, and Plinius shed some light on this amazing tale that fox-sized fuzzy “ants” were found in far eastern India in a region with yellow sand rich in gold particles.
The creatures piled up the dust and dirt while digging up the burrows where people would collect them to extract gold.
In 1854, Alexander Cunningham mentioned the fact that “the sands of the Indus have long been celebrated for the production of gold.”
In 1984, a French ethnologist Michel Peissel wrote a book named, “The Ants’ Gold: The Discovery of the Greek El Dorado in the Himalayas”. Peissel suggested that Herodotus actually mentioned the Deosai Plateau of Pakistan in the story of gold-digging ants.
He said that not ants but (Himalayan) marmot used to dig deep burrows and pile large amount of sand. He further wrote that Deosai Plateau is rich in gold particles where marmot were found in abundance and thus solved the thousands-of-years-old gold-ant puzzle.
Peissel also claimed to interview Minaro, Maruts or Sonival tribes of Deosai Plateau and they confirmed the gold collection procedure through marmots.
But why did Herodotus write about gold-digging ‘ants’? Peissel presented the theory that Herodotus was probably unaware of the Persian language and depended on local interpreters and never claimed to see any ants by himself. He was confused because the old Persian word for “marmot” was very similar to that for “mountain ant”.
The Management Plane
Dr. Ayesha Pamela Rogers is the director of Rogers Kolachi Khan and Associates (RKK) and contracted by the Water and Power Development Authority (Wapda) for the Heritage Impact Assessment survey and report for the dam.
RKK launched its first report in 2009 as a long term comprehensive management plan to safeguard the heritage and help the people affected by the building of the reservoir.
Rogers agreed that some 30,000 carvings on 5,000 rocks will be affected. Some of them will be totally submerged; others will be seasonally under water and then exposed when water level are low, she assessed.
“Other (rock carvings) will be seasonally under water and then exposed when water levels are low, others which are now at high elevations will be close to the new shoreline. It means mitigation and conservation approaches are needed for this entire situation.
Other threats exist which are not related to the dam – many carvings are being vandalised as we speak – and new risks will arise if and when tourism is developed. Again, all these need to be addressed in a management plan,” she added.
She further said that Wapda is committed to this project and preserving whatever it can.
The pages of history, language and religion have been carved on the upper Indus rocks and they have been talking to humanity for hundred of years. An urgent and comprehensive plan is needed to preserve them for the world and for the generations to come.


Moon may have more water than believed: study

NASA announced in 2009 that two spacecraft sent crashing into the lunar surface had discovered frozen water on the moon for the first time, a dramatic revelation it hailed as a giant leap forward in space exploration. – Reuters Photo
WASHINGTON: The moon may have a lot more water than imagined, perhaps as much in some parts as on Earth, a discovery that has cast doubt on long-held theories about how the moon was formed, said a study out Thursday.
The moon was long thought to be a dusty, dry place until a few years ago when water was discovered there for the first time.
Now scientists at Case Western Reserve University, Carnegie Institution for Science, and Brown University believe there is 100 times more water deep inside the moon than previously believed.
The findings were made using a precision instrument, called the NanoSIMS 50L ion microprobe to examine lunar melt inclusions, or tiny bits of molten rock that were picked up by the Apollo 17, the last US mission to the moon in 1972.
“These samples provide the best window we have to the amount of water in the interior of the moon,” said co-author James Van Orman, professor of geological sciences at Case Western.
“The interior seems to be pretty similar to the interior of the Earth, from what we know about water abundance.” The findings are in the May 26 edition of Science Express.
The same team published a paper in Nature in 2008, describing the first evidence for the presence of water in volcanic glasses returned by the Apollo missions.
“The bottom line is that in 2008, we said the primitive water content in the lunar magmas should be similar to the water content in lavas coming from the Earth’s depleted upper mantle,” said co-author Alberto Saal.
“Now, we have proven that is indeed the case.” While the findings corroborate a long-held theory that the moon and Earth have common origins, they also cast doubt on the notion that the moon may have formed after a chunk of the Earth was dislodged, losing much of its moisture in the high-temperature process.
Under this “giant impact” theory dating back to the 1970s, the Moon was formed after our planet collided with a space rock or planet some 4.5 billion years ago.
“This new research shows that aspects of this theory must be reevaluated,” the study said.
The findings also raise questions about theories that ice found in craters at the lunar poles may have resulted from meteor impacts, suggesting some of it may have come from the eruption of lunar magmas.
NASA announced in 2009 that two spacecraft sent crashing into the lunar surface had discovered frozen water on the moon for the first time, a dramatic revelation it hailed as a giant leap forward in space exploration.

Salman Khan wants a homemaker

 
Mumbai: The 40 something superstar of Bollywood, Salman Khan still tops the list of the most eligible bachelors in the country. He might have had a number of love stories to his credit, but Salman’s search for an ideal spouse is on full swing.

While talking to a daily, Bhai, who otherwise prefers to remain silent about his love life, candidly said, "I want someone who is very efficient with good qualities of a homemaker."

The hunk belongs to a well-knit family that has been a cohesive unit thru thick and thin. And family values are something that holds great importance in the actor’s life.

“In today’s times when family values have become trivial and human bonding is breaking down, everyone must remember that a man is a success only if he has good family values. I would rate family values as something more important than success,” said Sallu.

For someone who believes in shouldering his siblings` responsibility even at this age said, “I will be a finished man tomorrow if I do not respect what my family wants. Family is the biggest support system you have."

The flamboyant star does earn in crores but he believes in a simple lifestyle, for he knows how his father moved to Mumbai from Indore with just Rs60 in his pocket!

In Iraq, shisha smoking on a smuggling boat


Men sit at a floating cafe on a ferry docked on the shores of the Shatt al-Arab waterway in Basra, 420 km (260 miles) southeast of Baghdad, May 24, 2011. - Photo by Reuters

BASRA: For the hip and trendy in Iraq’s southern oil city of Basra, a warm spring evening spent puffing a water pipe or drinking tea on a boat that was once used to smuggle oil is just the ticket.
Ferries used to smuggle crude, weapons and people in the mayhem that followed the 2003 overthrow of dictator Saddam Hussein have been transformed into floating cafes as the shore of the Shatt al-Arab waterway reclaims its role as a nightlife hotspot.
“This place where we are sitting used to be a place for gas and oil smuggling ferries. It was an isolated area,” said Mustafa Sadiq, sitting with two friends on one of the boats.
“But now it has become a very nice amusement place. We spend lovely evenings here.”
A security crackdown by the government on militias in 2008 helped restore a sense of normality in Basra, one of Iraq’s most populous cities and the southern hub of the country’s burgeoning oil industry.
Basra is an important centre for the foreign companies that have set up shop here in a bid to refurbish dilapidated oilfields, the wellspring of the billions of dollars of government revenues needed to rebuild after years of war and international economic sanctions.
The Shatt al-Arab, a waterway formed by the confluence of the Tigris and the Euphrates at Qurna – a town some believe to be the site of the biblical Garden of Eden – runs 184 km (114 miles) to the Gulf.
In the chaotic aftermath of the US-led invasion in 2003, Basra smugglers ran wild. They bought oil from gangs that tapped into Iraq’s pipelines and siphoned off crude into tanker trucks.
The stolen oil was transported to the ferries in the Shatt al-Arab and sailed into the Gulf, where it was sold in neighbouring Kuwait or Iran or to ships at sea.
Smuggler’s den to shisha haven
As the smugglers took over the Basra shore, the smell of oil hung heavy in the air. The area was transformed by drugs, prostitution and the detritus of a thriving illegal trade.
Now the smell of grilled meats and shisha, the aromatic flavoured tobacco smoked in hookah-style water pipes, wafts over the shore.
“The Shatt al-Arab and its shore were considered to be one of the most important tourist places in Basra,” said Zahra al-Bijari, head of tourism and heritage for the Basra provincial council. “Now the change we see in the use of these ferries serves Basra and … raises the economic conditions in Basra.”
The resurrection of the cafes on the Shatt al-Arab is another sign of the halting restoration of normal life in Iraq, still beset by an Islamist insurgency.
Nightclubs and restaurants are reopening in Baghdad, where parkland is being replanted. An entrepreneur is building cinemas in private clubs. Major hotels are being refurbished.
In Arbil, the capital of the semi-autonomous northern Kurdish region, residents can swim at a public pool, bowl, ride a cable car, or even ice-skate.
Local investors have lined the shores of the Shatt al-Arab, which was renowed in the 1970s for its floating cafes, with waterborne amusements. One turned a ferry into a wedding hall, while others have been transformed into meeting rooms.
Some of the multi-deck vessels have been painted in bright colours and decked out with decorative lights and railings. Air conditioners have been fitted to walkways and decks crammed with tables and chairs.
A local firm won a $12.5 million contract to build a floating hotel, restaurant and shops.
Schoolteacher Abbas Ali travels to Basra from a town far to the west to smoke shisha and spend time with friends.
“I feel happy when I see these places,” Ali said. “We come here to spend couple of hours to feel at ease in this beautiful weather, then go back late, feeling so relaxed.”

Inside help suspected in PNS base attack


The siege has forced authorities to consider relocating the navy's main air base in Karachi away from its current populated area, near the international airport. - File Photo
KARACHI: Pakistani security officials said Thursday they doubted a 17-hour Taliban siege on a strategic naval air base could have been possible without some kind of inside help.
On Sunday, heavily armed militants stormed the naval base in the country’s biggest city of Karachi, destroying two US-made surveillance planes and killing 10 personnel before officials announced the siege was over 17 hours later.
It was the worst assault on a military base since October 2009, and piled embarrassment on the armed forces, who have been fending off accusations of incompetence or complicity after Osama bin Laden was found living under their noses.
“The investigation team will question all those who were present at the time of the attack,” a security official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
“The way the militants attacked means they had maps and were aware of all the directions inside the base,” the official added.
“We suspect that someone inside the base helped them. We are collecting data about all the staff and will also examine their phone data.”
The navy on Wednesday removed the commander of the base, insisting it was a pre-planned transfer, but the military is under increasing domestic pressure to be held accountable over security lapses.
“We have recovered some technical gadgets which prove that they were very well trained, they had night vision goggles and were using wireless devices to communicate,” another official told AFP.
The siege has forced authorities to consider relocating the navy’s main air base in Karachi away from its current populated area, near the international airport, and fanned debate about the safety of the country’s nuclear weapons.
Karachi is Pakistan’s financial capital and the assault was the fourth on the navy after three bombings in late April killed nine people.

CIA to search bin Laden Pakistan compound: report


The CIA has also been granted access to materials that Pakistan's security forces have recovered from the compound, officials told the Post. - AFP (File Photo)
WASHINGTON: Pakistan has agreed to permit the CIA to send in a forensic team to search Osama bin Laden’s compound, the Washington Post reported Thursday, citing US officials.
The CIA team will arrive at the compound in Abbottabad within days to thoroughly search the residence where US Navy commandos killed bin Laden on May 2 in a unilateral raid that angered Islamabad, the report said.
“The assault team was there for only 40 minutes,” an unnamed US official told the Post. “The aim is to return to the site — to do another, more thorough, look.”
The CIA plans to use infrared cameras and other devices capable of identifying materials possibly embedded behind walls, inside safes or underground, the Post reported.
The Central Intelligence Agency was not immediately available for comment.
CIA Deputy Director Michael Morell negotiated the arrangement in a visit to Pakistan last week, when he met the chief of the country’s intelligence service, Lieutenant General Ahmed Shuja Pasha, the Post wrote.
The agreement signaled a step towards cooperation amid intense US diplomatic efforts to shore up strained relations with Pakistan in the aftermath of the raid.
The CIA has also been granted access to materials that Pakistan’s security forces have recovered from the compound, officials told the Post.
The agency has asked Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence for help in analyzing some of the material that was seized in the raid, including deciphering references to names of individuals and places, the report said.
US intelligence officials have called the trove of computer files and notebooks found at the bin Laden compound as the largest intelligence find ever recovered from a terrorist network.

Suicide car bomb kills 25 in Hangu

Security personnel gather at the site of a suicide car bomb attack in the town of Hangu. -AFP Photo
PESHAWAR: A suicide car bomb struck Pakistani police on Thursday, killing 25 people in the second attack in as many days in the northwest as the Taliban vow to avenge the US killing of Osama bin Laden.
“It was a car suicide attack targeting a city police station. The bomber blew up the car at a checkpoint close to the police station,” said police deputy inspector general Masood Khan Afridi.
Regional police spokesman Fazal Naeem said, “(The bomber) wanted to blow up the city police station but he blew up the car close to the barrier outside the station.” Police officials said 25 people were killed and 38 others wounded.
“Most of those killed in the attack are policemen and the death toll may rise, because there are offices and residences of senior police officials and the local administration near the attack site,” said Naeem.
The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the suicide car bombing, with a spokesman saying it was carried out to avenge the death of Osama bin Laden.
“We accept responsibility for this attack. This was a small attack to avenge Osama’s martyrdom,” spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan told AFP by telephone from an undisclosed location.
“Soon you will see bigger attacks. Revenge for Osama can’t be satisfied just with small attacks,” he said.

Drunk Ali Saleem Arrested for Breaking his Mother’s Nose

Ali Saleem or Begam Nawazish Ali known for his controversies including Sex and Alcoholic Scandals is in another terrible situation of life after torturing his own mother in drunk situation.
As per news Ali Saleem yesterday night when came back from partying he was drunk he asked money from his mother and she refused at this Ali Saleem tortured his own mother and broke the bone of mother. Ali Saleem is still in Lockup since morning 6:00 O Clock where his mother submitted an application against him to Police. As per Medical report its being confirmed that he was drunk and the nose bone of his mother is broken by his torture but police is still not registering FIR against him. In morning when his brother was trying for his bail both fought again each other and Police separated both to different rooms.
ali saleem begam nawazish ali Scandal

Accident & Emergency A&E, Aneasthetics Job Opportunity in UK

Accident & Emergency A&E, Aneasthetics Job Opportunity

Date Posted: 2011/05/20
Category: Overseas
Province: UK
Location: UK
Subcategory: Health
Industry: Doctor and Other
Gender: Both
Description: Accident & Emergency A&E, Anesthetics, Pediatricians, Acute Medicine and Ophthalmology are Required in UK

Finance Manager, Housekeeping Manger Job Opportunity

Finance Manager, Housekeeping Manger Job Opportunity

Date Posted: 2011/05/22
Category: Overseas
Province: Islamabad
Location: Saudi Arabia
Subcategory: Industries and Production
Industry: Office Staff
Gender: Male
Description: Finance Manager, Housekeeping Manger, Assistant Chief Accountant, Internal Auditors, Accountant, Cash Purchaser, Manager Medical, Senior Accountant and Cook are Required in Saudi Arabia

Salesman, Sales Assistant Job Opportunity

Salesman, Sales Assistant Job Opportunity

Date Posted: 2011/05/23
Category: Overseas
Province: Saudi Arabia
Location: Saudi Arabia
Subcategory: Industries and Production
Industry: Office Staff
Gender: Both
Description: Salesman, Sales Assistant, Accommodation Officer, Logistic Officer, Cook, Panel Beater, Electrician, Plumber and Mechanics are Required in Saudi Arabia