Thursday, February 10, 2011

A roadside bomb blast in southern Afghanistan has claimed the life of a retired US Customs officer and left three other customs workers wounded.




A roadside bomb blast in southern Afghanistan has claimed the life of a retired US Customs officer and left three other customs workers wounded.


The attack at the Inland Customs Warehouse in the province of Kandahar killed David Hillman, a retired US Customs and Border Protection officer, on Monday.

According to a statement released by US Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano in Washington, Hillman had worked for the US government for 30 years, AP reported. 

France has decided not to send additional troops to Afghanistan in 2011 as US-led soldiers struggle to rein in the nine-year-old war in the country.





France has decided not to send additional troops to Afghanistan in 2011 as US-led soldiers struggle to rein in the nine-year-old war in the country.


"We have a group of around 4,000 soldiers in the field and we do not intend to increase that," AFP quoted French Defense Minister Alain Juppe as saying during his meeting with US Defense Secretary Robert Gates in Washington on Tuesday.

Juppe, however, noted that France will continue to redeploy some of its troops from around Sarobi -- located between Kabul and Jalalabad in Kabul Province -- in order to pave the way for handing over the security missions to Afghan forces. 

US, China closer to trade war





US lawmakers say they are pushing for a legislation that would punish China for allegedly manipulating its currency.


The draft bill, which is to be submitted on Thursday, is to address what the US senators describe as the unlawful practice of currency manipulation, according to the AP.

Both Republican and Democratic senators had informed US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner about the draft bill a month ago.

Relations between Beijing and Washington have been strained over the issues of currency and trade. 

FARC 'to release more hostages'





The Colombian FARC rebel group has promised to free more hostages in the coming days following the release of former councilor Marcos Baquero.


The former councilor is the first of five abducted politicians the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) have so far released.

According to a statement released by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Baquero was handed over to former Senator Pierdad Cordobahas, ICRC delegates and a member of Colombians for Peace in a rural area of the Meta province on Thursday. 

Egyptian pro-democracy protesters are calling for the formation of a civilian government as the threat of a military coup by the country's army looms.


Egyptian pro-democracy protesters are calling for the formation of a civilian government as the threat of a military coup by the country's army looms.


"We want a civilian government, not a military rule," pro-democracy protesters chanted in Egypt on Thursday.

It comes on the 17th day of protests against Mubarak's 30-year rule.

Earlier Thursday, a senior member of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's biggest opposition group, said he feared that the Egyptian military was staging a coup.

"It looks like a military coup ... I feel worry and anxiety," Essam al-Erian told Reuters.

"The problem is not with the president, it is with the regime."

His remarks come as Muslim Brotherhood cited presidential sources as saying that Mubarak has left Egypt.

Pakistan, India agree to resume talks




The Pakistani foreign minister is set to visit India in July to resume talks which were suspended after a terrorist attack on the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008.


Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said on Thursday that the two countries will hold talks on various issues before he visits India in July.

Last week, the foreign secretaries of the two countries agreed to continue talks on important issues, which were suspended by India after Pakistan's Lashker-e-Toiba attacked the financial capital of Mumbai in 2008, killing some 170 people. 

The lawyer of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says he has seen some 100 text messages by Assange's alleged victims, which can help clear him of his charges.


The lawyer of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says he has seen some 100 text messages by Assange's alleged victims, which can help clear him of his charges.
Bjorn Hurtig said the messages by the women accusing Assange of rape show they sought payment, wanted to get “revenge” and disgrace him by informing media of his affairs.

Hurtig, though, said the Swedish authorities are denying his client the right to a fair trial as they have not let him have copies of the texts.

Israel has held a rapid-response drill to gauge abilities of its armed forces as the Israeli ruling class is afraid the outcome of the Egyptian revolution affects Tel Aviv.



Israel has held a rapid-response drill to gauge abilities of its armed forces as the Israeli ruling class is afraid the outcome of the Egyptian revolution affects Tel Aviv.


Israeli police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld told Xinhua news agency on Thursday that police and border police units held an exercise on Thursday to deal with "any possible scenario” in Israel.

The drill came as outgoing police chief Insp.-Gen. David Cohen said on Wednesday that 27,000 members of Israeli forces are ready to handle any breakout of protests in Israel. 

Senior Iranian lawmaker Mohammad Hassan Aboutorabi-Fard says the 1979 Islamic Revolution helped Iran find its real place in the region and Asia.


Senior Iranian lawmaker Mohammad Hassan Aboutorabi-Fard says the 1979 Islamic Revolution helped Iran find its real place in the region and Asia.


“Before the victory of the revolution, the US and Western states believed that they dominated political and security issues of other countries,” the vice speaker of the Iranian Parliament (Majlis) said on Thursday.

Aboutorabi-Fard added that before the 1979 revolution, the West controlled the destiny of other countries, and “promoted [military] assault on Muslim nations,” Mehr News Agency reported.

India and Pakistan say they have agreed to resume peace talks "on all issues".


Indian Foreign Minister MS Krishna (L) and his Pakistani counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi hold a joint news conference in Islamabad in this July 15, 2010 file photo.

India and Pakistan say they have agreed to resume peace talks "on all issues".
Peace moves were put on hold after Pakistan-based militants attacked Mumbai in 2008, although the sides have met a number of times in the past year.
The nuclear-armed rivals' decision to discuss key issues in the dispute came after top officials met at a summit in Bhutan at the weekend.
Pakistan's foreign minister will visit India by July to review progress in the dialogue, a joint statement said.
Before then, senior officials from both sides will get together to discuss a range of issues which have harmed relations for decades.
"They have agreed to resume dialogue on all issues following the spirit of the Thimpu meeting between the two prime ministers," a joint statement said, referring to weekend talks in the Bhutanese capital.
BBC correspondents say no-one is expecting swift progress on issues at the heart of the dispute.
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A row has flared in Mexico after a radio station fired a journalist, who said on air that President Calderon should respond to drinking allegations.


Carmen Aristegui

A row has flared in Mexico after a radio station fired a journalist, who said on air that President Calderon should respond to drinking allegations.
Carmen Aristegui said the station was pressured by the presidency to make her apologise, which she refused to do.
The president's office denied any involvement in her sacking.
Officials have said rumours about Mr Calderon do not merit a response and his private secretary said that the president enjoyed good health.
The controversy began last week when a left-wing deputy unfurled a banner in Congress, alleging that Mr Calderon had alcohol problems.
Ms Aristegui, who is a well-known radio and TV host, said the accusation was serious and warranted an official response from the presidency.
On Monday she was sacked by MVS Noticias, who said they were terminating her contract because she had violated their code of ethics by "broadcasting rumour as news" and had refused to apologise.
The journalist hit back on Wednesday, telling a news conference that MVS Noticias, which is waiting to renew its broadcast licence, had come under official pressure to fire her.
"An act like this is only imaginable in a dictatorship that nobody wants for Mexico: punishing for opining or questioning rulers," Ms Aristegui said, adding that she had nothing to apologise for.

The number of homes repossessed in the UK last year dropped by 24% to 36,300, the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) has said.


Empty houses
The number of homes repossessed in the UK last year dropped by 24% to 36,300, the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) has said.
The number of people in arrears by 2.5% or more of their outstanding loans also fell last year, by 13% to 169,600.
The continued low level of interest rates has helped many home owners in financial difficulties.
However, the CML repeated its warning that arrears and repossessions may rise this year.
"As we go through 2011, the number of people facing payment pressures may increase if interest rates rise, and as a result of the spending cuts that have resulted in reductions in the level of public support available," said the CML's director general Michael Coogan.
"We will be monitoring developments closely, but at present we continue to expect the number of arrears and repossessions to be in line with our forecasts of 40,000 repossessions and 180,000 arrears cases as at the end of 2011."

A bomb disposal expert was unlawfully killed in Afghanistan trying to defuse a device he could not have detected, a coroner has ruled.

Staff Sgt Olaf Schmid
A bomb disposal expert was unlawfully killed in Afghanistan trying to defuse a device he could not have detected, a coroner has ruled.
Nothing about the Army operation could have prevented Staff Sgt Olaf Schmid's "catastrophic injuries", said West Cornwall coroner Emma Carlyon.
Staff Sgt Schmid, 30, had triggered a new type of pressure plate developed by the Taliban, the inquest heard.
In a statement his widow Christina said the hearing had been "traumatic".
She said the process of recording the precise moment of her husband's death had been "deeply unsettling".
Staff Sgt Schmid died in October 2009 the day before he was due to fly home.

Six people have been killed and six others injured after a small plane travelling from Belfast crashed in fog at Cork Airport.


The Manx2 commuter flight with 10 passengers and two crew on board crashed on the runway on its third attempt to land just before 1000 GMT.
The aircraft overturned and burst into flames.
The six injured are being treated at Cork University Hospital. Four are said to be in a serious condition.
The other two are described as being 'comfortable'.
No details about those on board have been released, but all their families have been informed.
Flight NM7100, a scheduled daily flight from Belfast to Cork, left George Best Belfast City Airport at 0750 GMT.
People living close to where the crash happened said they heard the plane flying overhead near Blarney, outside Cork city and it sounded "like it was in trouble".
A woman who was driving her husband to the airport said they were turned back by Gardai.
"There was a huge sense of urgency and it was obvious that something big had happened," she said.
She said that a police officer told her husband "he wouldn't be flying anywhere today".
map
Another eyewitness who was travelling in a taxi said he could see that the plane must have left the runway. He said people waiting at Cork airport were frantic.

Egypt's Mubarak 'may stand down'

Anti-Mubarak protesters, Cairo, 10 Februaryent Hosni Mubarak is to make an address on national television, amid suggestions that he is preparing to step down.
A senior member of Egypt's governing party, Hossan Badrawi, has told the BBC he "hopes" Mr Mubarak will transfer power to Vice-President Omar Suleiman.

Egypt's Mubarak 'may stand down'

1639: The BBC's Wyre Davies in Israel says the events in Egypt are being watched closely: "Clearly, Israel is very worried about events - but there has been no formal statement yet, they are waiting to see how the dust settles. They see him as a strong man, an ally in the regime. Mr Mubarak stamped down on Islamist political parties in the country, and that is perhaps exactly what the Israelis wanted to see from an Egyptian government, and what they wanted to continue."
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Intel chief sees al Qaeda as top threat




WASHINGTON: Al Qaeda and its offshoots remain the top threat to the United States and, in turn, the focus of the US intelligence agencies, the director of national intelligence plans to tell Congress, according to US officials.
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper also is expected to discuss revolts that have swept through two major Arab allies of the United States, toppling the leader of Tunisia and threatening the regime in Egypt, according to two intelligence officials familiar with testimony planned Thursday before a congressional committee.

gypt’s government warned of a military crackdown as massive rallies against President Hosni Mubarak spread and reports surfaced that the army had detained and tortured pro-democracy activists.




CAIRO: Egypt’s government warned of a military crackdown as massive rallies against President Hosni Mubarak spread and reports surfaced that the army had detained and tortured pro-democracy activists.
Hundreds of demonstrators marched on parliament from the epicentre of the uprising in Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Wednesday, a day after the largest protests since the revolt began, as unrest spread across the nation.
Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit warned the army, until now a mostly neutral force, would intervene if the protests against Mubarak’s 30-year-old US-backed rule escalated.

Snowflakes keep falling on my head

Snowflakes keep falling on my head
They claim to speak English in Canada – the Queen’s English, given that this vast swath of land which comprises the northern half of North America still recognises Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II as its official head of state.
But if you arrive in this cold frosty country in the middle of January – which is considered to be the peak winter month – you will hear the natives speak words that you have probably never encountered before in any other English-speaking land. While these words are all part of a distinctive Canadian lexicon, you will soon start to wish that you had never heard of at least some of them…
Wind chill factor
Once you begin to understand what these three otherwise innocuous words really stand for when they are put together, you will never leave home without wearing at least three layers of warm clothing or checking the weather channel on television.
For example, on any given winter day the thermostat might say it is ‘only’ minus 17 degrees Celsius, but in fact when you ‘factor’ in the outcome of  the howling ‘wind’ on the air temperature, the actual ‘chill’ felt on exposed skin can be as much as (or as low as) minus 30 degrees Celsius – or worse.

Higher Education Commission’s (HEC) scholar Mashkoor Ahmad has won the Best Research Award 2010 in the Department of Material Science and Engineering among more than 400 Ph.D scholars,said a press release on Tuesday.




ISLAMABAD: Higher Education Commission’s (HEC) scholar Mashkoor Ahmad has won the Best Research Award 2010 in the Department of Material Science and Engineering among more than 400 Ph.D scholars,said a press release on Tuesday.
Mashkoor Ahmed is pursuing Ph.D in Nanoscience and Technology at Tsinghua University, Beijing under Overseas Scholarships Scheme for MS/MPhil leading to Ph.D in Selected Fields (Phase-II).

‘Thinking cap’ that could boost creativity




SYDNEY: Scientists in Australia say they are encouraged by initial results of a revolutionary “thinking cap” that aims to promote creativity by passing low levels of electricity through the brain.
The device, which consists of two conductors fastened to the head by a rubber strap, significantly boosted results in a simple arithmetic test, they said.
Three times as many people who wore the “thinking cap” were able to complete the test, compared to those who did not use the equipment. Sixty people took part in total.
Allan Snyder, director of the University of Sydney’s Centre for the Mind, said the device worked by suppressing the left side of the brain, associated with knowledge, and stimulating the right side, linked to creativity.
“You wouldn’t use this to study or to help your memory,” Snyder told AFP.
“You would use this if you wanted to look at a problem anew.
“If you wanted to look at the world, just briefly, with a child’s view, if you wanted to look outside the box.”He said goal was to suppress mental templates gathered through life experiences to help users see problems and situations as they really appear, rather than through the prism of earlier knowledge.
Snyder added that the work was inspired by accident victims who experienced a sudden surge in creativity after damaging the left side of their brains.
“We know that from certain types of brain damage and abnormalities or injuries, people who suddenly have damage to the left temporal lobe will burst out in the arts or other types of creative activities,” he said.
Snyder said the device had been in use by scientists for a decade, but this was the first study into how current passing through the brain could amplify insight.
He said the “thinking cap” had potential applications in the arts and problem-solving, although the science remained in its infancy.
“The dream is that one day we may be able to stimulate the brain in a particular way to give you, just momentarily, an unfiltered view of the world,” Snyder said.
Source



ISLAMABAD, Feb 6: The number of migratory birds visiting the capital`s Rawal Lake every winter is dwindling because of habitat destruction and indiscriminate hunting.
“They start arriving in October and November and stay till March. Habitat destruction, water quality, less food, forest decline and indiscriminate hunting are contributing to the decreasing trend,” said Jamshed Iqbal Chaudhry, a wetlands biologist of Pakistan Wetlands Programme.

Diet soda tied to stroke risk, but reasons unclear




LOS ANGELES: It’s far from definitive proof, but new research raises concern about diet soda, finding higher risks for stroke and heart attack among people who drink it everyday versus those who drink no soda at all.
The beverage findings should be “a wakeup call to pay attention to diet sodas,” said Dr. Steven Greenberg. He is a Harvard Medical School neurologist and vice chairman of the International Stroke Conference in California, where the research was presented on Wednesday.
A simple solution, health experts say, is to drink water instead.

Flood and storm-battered northern Australia is likely to suffer more frequent weather extremes, according to a study of coral cores that reveal a centuries-old climate record for the region.




SINGAPORE: Flood and storm-battered northern Australia is likely to suffer more frequent weather extremes, according to a study of coral cores that reveal a centuries-old climate record for the region.
Like pages in a book, corals can help scientists go back in time by revealing years that were unusually wet or dry. The annual changes or variations in weather are recorded in growth rings that can be studied by drilling and extracting long cores.
“The corals are providing another piece of evidence that maybe suggests that we are seeing some consequences already of global warming,” Janice Lough, a senior scientist at the Australian Institute of Marine Science in Queensland State, told Reuters from Townsville on Thursday.

Strike action paralysed Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) for a third day Thursday, stranding 25,000 passengers as the troubled state carrier said it had cancelled nearly 100 flights.




KARACHI: Strike action paralysed Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) for a third day Thursday, stranding 25,000 passengers as the troubled state carrier said it had cancelled nearly 100 flights.
Staff oppose management plans to farm out lucrative European and US routes to Turkish Airlines, in an effort to rescue the airline from bankruptcy. They want the plan scrapped and the managing director sacked.
PIA says at least 90 flights have been cancelled since the strike began on Tuesday, including to Britain, the Middle East, Europe and Asia.

Pakistan appears to be building a fourth military nuclear reactor, signalling its determination to produce more plutonium for atomic weapons, a US-based think-tank said.




VIENNA: Pakistan appears to be building a fourth military nuclear reactor, signalling its determination to produce more plutonium for atomic weapons, a US-based think-tank said.
The report came as India and Pakistan agreed to resume peace talks that were broken off by New Delhi after the 2008 Mumbai attacks, a move that should help ease tensions in the volatile region.
The nuclear-armed neighbours have been under pressure from the United States to reduce tension because their rivalry spills over into Afghanistan, complicating peace efforts there.
The Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), a think-tank specialising in nuclear proliferation issues, said it had obtained commercial satellite images from mid-January.

The Afghan authorities have arrested two men allegedly involved in the suicide bombing of a Kabul supermarket popular with Westerners which killed eight people, officials said Thursday.




KABUL: The Afghan authorities have arrested two men allegedly involved in the suicide bombing of a Kabul supermarket popular with Westerners which killed eight people, officials said Thursday.
A spokesman for the National Directorate of Security (NDS), Lutfullah Mashal, said one of the men, Talib Jan, had helped organise the attack from inside prison by giving instructions to visitors.
A second man, Mohammed Khan, is accused of bringing the suicide attacker, 21-year-old Mohammed Shoaib, to Kabul from North Waziristan in Pakistan’s lawless tribal district, where many Taliban commanders are based.
He is now in custody, Mashal told a press conference in Kabul. Khan appeared at the press conference, confessing involvement and apologising.
Eight people, all Afghans, were killed in last month’s attack at the supermarket, which is located close to many of Kabul’s foreign embassies and international offices.
“Mohammed Khan facilated the suicide attack at Finest supermarket in Kabul,” Mashal said.
“The second person was Talib Jan (who) has been in Pul-e-Charkhi prison (in Kabul) for the past three years and was organising suicide attacks from inside the prison by using visitors, instructing them what to do, where to carry out suicide attacks.”Mashal also claimed that the intended target of the attack was two “important” French nationals, possibly diplomats or military, without giving further details. – AFP

The law minister in Punjab province said prosecutors would go to court Friday to demand a murder trial for a US official in a case that has inflamed relations with Washington.




LAHORE: The law minister in Punjab province said prosecutors would go to court Friday to demand a murder trial for a US official in a case that has inflamed relations with Washington.
On January 27, Raymond Davis confessed to shooting dead two Pakistani men in self-defence in broad daylight on the streets of Lahore.
A third Pakistani was run over and killed by a US consular vehicle coming to collect Davis, who was instead taken into Pakistani police custody.

President Asif Ali Zardari continued on Wednesday his efforts to persuade leaders of political parties to attend the round-table conference he has proposed “to address important national issues” in the words of the presidential spokesman.




ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari continued on Wednesday his efforts to persuade leaders of political parties to attend the round-table conference he has proposed “to address important national issues” in the words of the presidential spokesman.
Towards this end, the president placed a telephone call to the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) chief Nawaz Sharif, inviting him to the conference for which no date has so far been announced.
He also spoke to Awami National Party (ANP) leader Asfandyar Wali, while he metMaulana Fazlur Rehman, chief of the disgruntled coalition partner, Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-F (JUI-F), at a lunch in the presidency. The president is reported to have invited him to rejoin the coalition government.

Former president Pervez Musharraf knew that Tehrik-i-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud was plotting the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, but withheld the information from agencies concerned, according to the Joint Investigation Team (JIT) probing the murder.


ISLAMABAD: Former president Pervez Musharraf knew that Tehrik-i-Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud was plotting the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, but withheld the information from agencies concerned, according to the Joint Investigation Team (JIT) probing the murder.
Sources told DawnNews television channel on Wednesday that Khalid Qureshi, the JIT head, met officials of the interior ministry and briefed them about the challan submitted by the Federal Investigation Agency in Rawalpindi`s anti-terrorism court (ATC) earlier this week.

Militants on Thursday blew up the largest gas pipeline in southwestern Pakistan for a second time this week, again leaving tens of thousands of consumers without gas




QUETTA: Militants on Thursday blew up the largest gas pipeline in southwestern Pakistan for a second time this week, again leaving tens of thousands of consumers without gas, officials said.
“It was the major pipeline. Militants dynamited it overnight only a few hours after the authorities repaired it,” senior administration official Anwar Durrani told AFP in Balochistan province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan.

Pakistan successfully test fires Hatf-VII missile




ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s military says it has successfully test-fired a cruise missile capable of carrying ”strategic and conventional” war heads.
An army statement says the Hatf-VII or Babur missile, which has a range of 360 miles (600 kilometers), was test-fired from an undisclosed location Thursday. The statement did not specifically say if the missile could carry nuclear warheads.

A teen suicide bomber in a school uniform attacked soldiers during morning exercises at a Pakistani army training camp Thursday, killing 30 troops




PESHAWAR: A teen suicide bomber in a school uniform attacked soldiers during morning exercises at a Pakistani army training camp Thursday, killing 30 troops and wounding 40 others, police and the military said, DawnNews reported.
The attack in the northwest town of Mardan showed that despite years of army operations against their hideouts along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, Taliban and al Qaeda-linked fighters retain the ability to strike back. It was one of the worst attacks on security forces in recent months.
Senior police official Abdullah Khan earlier told AP that 27 soldiers died and around 40 were wounded, some critically. Khan said an examination of the body parts at the scene indicated the bomber was a teenage boy, which is a common finding in suicide bombings in Pakistan.

President Zardari, PM Gilani finalise cabinet details




ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and President Asif Ali Zardari  met on Thursday, DawnNews reported.
The meeting finalised the composition of the cabinet, DawnNews quoted sources as saying.
Moreover, President Zardari told Prime Minister Gilani the details of his recent contacts with the leadership of different political parties.
Source

Arrest warrant issued for Hamid Saeed Kazmi




ISLAMABAD: A civil court issued an arrest warrant for former minister for religious affairs Hamid Saeed Kazmi in the Haj corruption case, DawnNews reported.
The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) raided his residence on Thursday. However, Kazmi had left the house and evaded the arrest.
The warrant was issued by a civil court in Islamabad after Thursday’s hearing of the case, DawnNews reported.

Pakistan And India Are Ready For Table Talk




NEW DELHI: India and Pakistan announced Thursday they would resume wide-ranging peace talks that were frozen after the 2008 attacks in Mumbai, which were blamed on Pakistan-based militants.
The US has been pressing the nuclear-armed rivals to restart their peace efforts in hopes that reducing tensions along their border would free Pakistan to focus on its fight against Taliban militants _ a key element of US strategy in Afghanistan.
The decision followed talks Sunday between the foreign secretaries of the two countries in Bhutan, the latest in a yearlong string of meetings of top officials intended to rebuild the nations’ shattered trust.

OECD: Hi-tech cyber-attacks may have “catastrophic” global implications



Hi-tech cyber-attacksAccording to a report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), co-ordinated hi-tech attacks on critical computer systems have the potential to rake a perfect storm with "catastrophic" global implications.
The report, which largely dealt with the incidents that can create global disruption in the cyber arena, said that a multiple cyber-attacks, one after the other, may end up becoming "a full-scale global shock," similar to a pandemic or financial instability in the world.
Suggesting emergency plans for recovering affected computer systems and cyber-security policies pertaining to the needs of all citizens and not just central government facilities, the report said that the cyber-attacks generally cause problems that are localised and short-lived.
Noting that "What should concern policy-makers are combinations of events - two different cyber-events occurring at the same time, or a cyber-event taking place during some other form of disaster or attack. In that eventuality,

Deutsche Bank “overwhelmingly positive” on iPhone trial



Deutsche Bank, AppleA recently-released Deutsche Bank Equity Research report has revealed that the company's two-month trial of the Apple iPhone - using Good Technology's secure email app - was an "overwhelming positive" experience, despite a few minor hiccups.
Talking about the highly satisfactory trial of the iPhone, Deutsche Bank's research analyst Chris Whitmore said in a telephonic statement: "You're seeing consumers, or employees, bring their iPhones in to IT managers and `say make this work'."
The statement implicitly underscores a scenario in which a slew of small security software developers are helping the iPhone gain traction within businesses - a market that is typically considered the exclusive domain of Research In Motion's BlackBerry.

Zuckerberg’s Facebook page hacked; two new security measures announced



Mark ZuckerbergIn a high-profile breach on the Facebook site, the fan page of Mark Zuckerberg – the founder of the popular social networking site – was hacked on Tuesday. Zuckerberg’s fan page breach came close on the heels of the Sunday hack French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s wall, with a hacker posting a message that the president will not run for re-election.
The message on Zuckerberg’s page said: “Let the hacking begin: If Facebook needs money, instead of going to the banks, why doesn't Facebook let its users invest in Facebook in a social way? Why not transform Facebook into a 'social business' the way Nobel Price winner Muhammad Yunus described it?http://bit.ly/fs6rT3 What do you think? #hackercup2011?”
Facebook, which has often been scrutinized about its handling of the private data information of its over 600 million users, soon removed the message from Zuckerberg’s page; though not it had received over 1,800 “likes.”

Repeated Hacking Attempts Alarm NASDAQ Authorities



Repeated Hacking Attempts Alarm NASDAQ AuthoritiesA number of attempts were made to hack the computer networks of Nasdaq Stock Market during last year. Federal investigators are still trying to identify the persons responsible for this offence and they are still not sure about their purpose behind doing this.
Though it was a relief that the main trading platform was not compromised in any way but the situation is still doubtful about which other parts of Nasdaq's computer network were accessed.
Investigators are anticipating different possible motives and intentions behind it but it cannot be anything other than unlawful financial gain, theft of trade secrets and a national-security threat designed to damage the exchange.
This incident came out alarming the officials as it plays an important role including power companies and air-traffic-control operations. The authorities are not taking it lightly because they can well remember the case in which hackers planted potentially disruptive software programs in the U. S. electrical grid.

UK government computers hit by Zeus information-stealing Trojan



William HagueDuring his Friday speech at the 47th Munich Security Conference, the UK Foreign Secretary William Hague admitted that the UK government computers were infected the Zeus information-stealing Trojan in December 2010.
Acknowledging that a Zeus variant had successfully infected UK government computers in December, Hague further elaborated that the government was targeted with bogus emails that apparently originated from the White House. The emails supposedly featured a link which downloaded the malware.
Hague told the conference attendees: “The UK Government was targeted in this attack and a large number of emails bypassed some of our filters. Our experts were able to clear up the infection, but more sophisticated attacks such as these are becoming more common.”
Hague also disclosed that the UK government had also suffered two attacks lately – while one attempted to steal information about the UK’s nuclear Trident programme; the other came from a unreal Foreign Office employee who happened to be a hostile state intelligence agency.

Health Canada Orders the Removal of Six Over-the-Counter Drugs



Health Canada Orders the Removal of Six Over-the-Counter DrugsHealth Canada has directed pharmacists to remove six types of over-the-counter drugs available at chemists across the country. The latest decision has been implemented because of a possible contamination of drugs between product lines.

The drug maker from Laval in Quebec, Pharmetics Inclusive has recalled six of its over-the-counter medicines following an evaluation carried out by Health Canada. In the report compiled after the inspection, it was reported that Pharmetics assembly line did have a lot of deficiencies.

According to an advisory posted by Health Canada on Tuesday, it has cautioned people that some of the products being sold had the wrong expiry date pasted on them. Apart from that, it has also warned that some of the medicines manufactured at the facility were contaminated because of a mix up with other drugs.

Heart and Stroke Foundation Launched a Massive Drive for Heart Patients

Heart and Stroke Foundation Launched a Massive Drive for Heart Patients


On the eve of Heart and stroke day, galaxy of renowned personalities from every corner of life gathered their support for Canadians. In the wake of rising concern over the heart ailments, Kassandra Clarke, of the Heart and Stroke Foundation reportedly endorsed his open support to promote an awareness campaign at Masonville Mall.


Voicing their support to the campaign, many supports came forward to join the national drive .The organizers of the drive installed kiosks in the mall to counsel people and track down their risk factors. The campaign was reported to have generated lots of support in terms of funds as people lend money to promote healthy life style.


Donations can also be made by purchasing balloons, scarves and T- shirts, sponsored by the foundation. Moreover, appropriate information has been published on the Heart and Stroke website www. heartandstroke. ca.

B.C. NDP Leadership Candidate Dana Larsen: Soft on Marijuana



B.C. NDP Leadership Candidate Dana Larsen: Soft on MarijuanaSoda drinking is more lethal than marijuana. The B. C. NDP leadership candidate, Dana Larsen has appealed to levy more tax on the consumption of soft drinks, energy drinks, sports drinks fruit punches, fruit cocktails, and other sugar-sweetened beverages.

Tagging sugar–sweetened beverages as root cause of obesity, former B. C. Marijuana Party leader has expressed his willingness to market soft drinks in the similar theme of cigarette marketing.

As per recent media reports, Larsen has endorsed the idea of legalizing marijuana, by putting an end to the long time war. Criticizing British Columbians of covering the real cost of sugar-sweetened beverages, Larsen warned consumer of potential harmful effects of beverages.

CBI cuts down on their forecasts on growth after fall in GDP



Confederation of British IndustryToday, The Confederation of British Industry is reducing its forecasts for UK economic growth. They declared that the unexpected fall in gross domestic product in the fourth quarter of 2010 suggests basic economic expansion may have been weaker than previously assumed.
And it further expects that unemployment, on the International Labour Organization (ILO) measure, will rise throughout this year and go up higher than it thought previously at 2.71 million by the end of 2011. It will remain persistently high.
CBI forecasts that ILO unemployment will be at two million and six hundred and forty thousand by the fourth quarter of 2012, considerably higher than the latest available figure of two and a half million for the month of September to November period last year.

Blair Government under Scanner



NHS Blair Government policies are under severe criticism. Recent study has established a fact that labor government is overly inclined towards an expensive mortgage scheme, Private Finance Initiative (PFI) leaving NHS under huge financial burden.

Sending an alarming signal, Public health expert Professor Allyson Pollock criticized the government of choosing over- valued NHS PFI contracts over health care funding.

Further, Pollock reportedly claimed that the biased policy of goverment can cost quality health care services in the country.

The report has also unveiled that 101 out of 135 new NHS hospitals, built from1997-2009, were heavily paid, for being in contracts with PFI. Adding to the woes of financial crises, the government is reported to be under debt of £42.79bn.

The author of the study has raised concern over the upsurge in the interest rate levied by PFI which would further worsen the financial crunch, NHS is facing.

Woman Braved Cancer To Save Her Daughter




Victoria WebsterA cancer-affected young woman, beating all odds, not only saved herself from the brutal clutches of cancer but even her stillborn daughter from abortion.


Victoria Webster, aged 33, felt dizzy and tired at the onset of her second pregnancy, after her four-year-old son Lewis. She contacted her gynecologist, hoping for some complications in her pregnancy.


But her blood tests had different story to tell. She was found to be suffering from acute myelogenous leukemia, a cancer of the myeloid line of blood cells and was recommended for early treatment by chemotherapy.


She was further suggested by doctors for an abortion as the treatment could have harmed her unborn child. But the brave mother-to-be postponed her therapy and stunned everyone by giving birth to a healthy girl child, Jessica.


Expressing her happiness, Victoria said: "I was terrified my treatment would harm Jessica, but she was perfect. Holding my daughter in my arms was an amazing moment. I might have risked my life for her, but she was worth it”.

ENPA’s arguments against Apple’s new in-app subscription system




ENPA’s arguments against Apple’s new in-app subscription systemClose on the heels of its last-week announcement, disallowing Sony from selling content via its Sony Reader Store app on the iPad, Apple is now sparring with publications, by looking to confine consumers as well as publications to one single purchasing site - the iTunes store.


While the move clearly reflects Apple’s attempts to benefit from consumer information and commission for periodical sales, the European Newspaper Publishers' Association (ENPA) has expressed the opinion that subscriptions should largely be left to the publishers, not the platform providers.


Appreciating the iPad for the platform it provides, ENPA – which represents 5,200 newspapers in the European Union – has voiced its concern over what it considers is a restraining condition inherent in Apple’s new in-app subscription system in its iOS 4.3 beta.

Liquid Medications And Inhalers Used Wrongly In Care-homes, Study Reveals



British Medical Journal of Quality and SafetyAs per the findings of the new research, which were published in the British Medical Journal of Quality and Safety, it was found that there are ascended chances of errors in the dosage if the medication is not imparted through a monitored dosage system.

The study, which recruited 233 residents in 55 residential homes, unveiled that the liquid medicines are at the highest risks of given wrongly, with more than 4 times as compared to capsules of tablets.

The trial targeted mainly to representative sample of varying sizes, ownerships and types of care offered.
The research findings indicated that the possibilities of errors were 19 times incremented with the employment of ointments, creams or eye/ear drops, whereas the whopping 33% chances of mistakes were in the case of inhalers.

Genetic Code Discovered Could Save 10000 Prostate Cancer Patients A Year



Genetic Code Discovered Could Save 10000 Prostate Cancer Patients A YearIt is one of the most common life eaters in British men. Prostate cancer is responsible for the claim of so many lives in a year. According to new researches conducted by Scientists, there has been the discovery of the genetic code of the disease.

It is a groundbreaking discovery and it could save the lives of so many. It is a horrible disease and about 35000 men are affected by it in a year. As for the death counts, about 10000 people die of it every year.

According to this discovery, patients would be able to maintain their own charts of mutation. This shall be helpful in keeping a track of the flaws that prevail and also would be able to discover the best of the medicines that could treat the ailment.

Dr Mike Berger, the U. S. study’s lead author, said: ‘This is a transforming moment in understanding the underlying biology of prostate cancer.’

Police are told to put the Drink- Drive samples on hold



Police are told to put the Drink- Drive samples on holdThe Police of BY Jon Clements were told to put on hold, the samples they have from the drink and drive case. This was after the forensic staff stopped its testing.

According to a leaked memo, the analysts of the Forensic Science Service, have halted the processing the auto cases. This is because it is being shut down.

The staff has been ordered to put in refrigeration, all the samples of urine and blood, until and unless, the ownership can be transferred to a private company which can continue the work.
There have been many important cases in which FSS has majorly been a part of. Chorley investigator Lancs has been a part of the of the Ian Huntley and Roy Whiting cases.
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