Thursday, June 30, 2011

US seeks to destroy Al Qaeda core in Pakistan - India

30 june 2011

US seeks to destroy Al Qaeda core in Pakistan



Washington:  Seeking "utter destruction" of Al Qaeda, the US has chalked out a strategy to disrupt, dismantle and ultimately defeat the terror network and its core leadership in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, where they have found a safe haven.

"We need to dismantle the core of Al Qaeda, its leadership in the tribal regions of Pakistan, and prevent its ability to reestablish a safe haven in the Pakistan-Afghanistan region," John Brennan, Assistant to the US President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism, said in his speech at the Paul Nitze School of Advanced International Studies.

"We seek nothing less than the utter destruction of this evil that calls itself Al Qaeda," Brennan said yesterday, laying out the Obama administration's plan to battle Al Qaeda in the era after Osama bin Laden.

The Obama administration aims to render the heart of Al Qaeda incapable of launching attacks against the US, America's allies, as well as preventing them from inspiring its affiliates and adherents to do so, he said.

"At the same time, ultimately defeating Al Qaeda also means addressing the serious threat posed by its affiliates and adherents operating outside South Asia. This does not require a global war, but it does require a focus on specific regions, including what we might call the periphery: places like Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, and the Maghreb," he said.

As the Al Qaeda core has weakened under our unyielding pressure, it has looked increasingly to these other groups and individuals to take up its cause, including its goal of striking the United States, he said. 
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
 


Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Unicef helps Pakistan's underdeveloped schools - India

29 june 2011

Unicef helps Pakistan's underdeveloped schools

Islamabad: Unicef has launched a new mission - to help educate 28,000 children in a remote underdeveloped district in Pakistan's northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
Unicef helps Pakistan's underdeveloped schools
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
A delegation of Unicef and Children's Global Network has offered to train teachers of 140 schools and donate computers to 44 government high schools in Buner district, the Online news agency reports.
The schools would be provided a "safe, healthy and holistic learning environment" in four councils of Buner district - Norezi, Rega, Karapa and Gagara, a statement said.
About 900 teachers would be trained on interactive teaching methodologies. Books and resource material would be translated in Pashto language and distributed among the teachers as well as government officials and care givers.
Nor Shirin of Unicef said the organisation would provide computers to 44 high schools. Each school would have five desktop and 10 laptop computers.
The provincial education minister said the government would extend all support to the global organisations for carrying out the proposed plan.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Australia woos Indian students with scholarships - India

28 june 2011

Australia woos Indian students with scholarships

New Delhi: Ten scholars from India will be awarded 90,000 Australian dollars (about $94,400) each to pursue their Ph.Ds from varsities in Australia's Victoria state starting 2012, the Australian High Commission said Tuesday.
Australia woos Indian students with scholarships
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
The new Victoria-India Doctoral Scholarships Programme, launched by the state government of Victoria and the Australia India Institute, is among the several strategic engagement opportunities initiated by the Victorian government to woo Indian students.
The nine universities in the state have agreed to provide a full tuition waiver to Indian students, and the scholarships will support living costs and education-related travel.
The scheme was launched here by the Australian High Commissioner Peter Varghese and Amitabh Mattoo, director of the Australia India Institute, Melbourne, along with Victoria's Commissioner to India Geoffrey Conaghan.
"This generous scholarship is a great opportunity for some of India's smartest researchers to pursue their doctoral studies at Victoria's universities," Varghese said.
"The academic communities of India and Australia are working more closely together than ever before," he added.

Monday, June 27, 2011

India's solar mission visionary - India

27 june 2011

India's solar mission visionary: Australian report

Bangalore: The Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission launched by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh last year has positioned India "to become a global leader in the growth of concentrating solar power (CSP) technologies," according to a new report.
India's solar mission visionary: Australian report
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
This is, however, subject to the mission being "implemented in a pragmatic manner" and initiation of new measures "aimed at assisting Indian companies through tax incentives, soft loans or a revolving equity fund".
The report, commissioned by the Australian government, analyses the context, barriers and policy options for the growth of the CSP industry in India.
As opposed to photovoltaic (PV) technologies, the CSP technologies use systems of mirrored concentrators to focus direct beam solar radiation to receivers that convert the heat energy to mechanical energy through a steam turbine and then into electricity.
India's solar mission launched in January 2010 has an ambitious target of 20 GWe of installed solar power by 2022. In the first phase, 1 GW of grid-connected solar energy is targeted for 2013 with an approximate 50:50 split between CSP and PV technologies.
"CSP has advantages compared to photovoltaics as it can readily incorporate thermal energy storage and/or fossil fuel boosting to provide dispatchable power," says the report.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Obama's signature: Is it real or is it autopenned? - India

26 june 2011

Obama's signature: Is it real or is it autopenned?


Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Washington:  It's the open secret that nobody in government wants to talk about: That cherished presidential signature that's tucked away in a scrapbook or framed for all to see might never have passed under the president's hand.

For decades, presidents of both parties have let an autopen do some of the heavy lifting when it comes to scrawling their signatures. The machine was recently put to use signing a bill into law, apparently a first.

Overseas and out of reach when lawmakers passed an extension of certain provisions of the Patriot Act, President Barack Obama employed the autopen to sign it, a step the White House has been mum about ever since.

"I always heard the autopen was the second most guarded thing in the White House after the president," says Jack Shock, who had permission to wield former President Bill Clinton's autopen as his director of presidential letters and messages.

Jim Cicconi, who oversaw the use of autopens for President George H.W. Bush, recalls that the plastic signature templates for the machines - yes, there was more than one autopen - would wear out from repeated use.

Ronald Reagan had 22 different signature templates, including "Ron," "Dutch" and other iterations, to boost the aura of authenticity surrounding his fake signatures, says Stephen Koschal, an autograph authenticator who two years ago published a guide to presidential autopen signatures.

It's not just ordinary Americans who get the autopen treatment.

Koschal says he once visited Vice President Dan Quayle's office in the Capitol and spotted a signed photograph from the first President Bush that he said had clearly been autopenned.

Obama took the presidential autopen out of the closet and into a new realm.

While traveling in Europe last month, Obama directed his staff in Washington to use an autopen to sign into law an extension of certain Patriot Act powers to fight terrorism. The legislation had been approved by Congress at the last minute, and there was no time to fly it to France for Obama's signature before the anti-terrorism powers expired.

It was believed to be the first time a president has used an autopen to sign legislation, and that didn't sit well with a number of Republicans. Twenty-one GOP House members sent Obama a letter on June 17 asking him to re-sign the legislation with his actual signature because use of the autopen "appears contrary to the Constitution."

Obama's team relied on a 29-page legal analysis crafted during the administration of President George W. Bush to argue that the faux signature passed constitutional muster.

Ari Fleischer, White House press secretary under the younger Bush, says the Bush White House had considered using the autopen to sign a minor piece of legislation as a test case, "but in the end Bush just kept signing the parchment himself." Bush used the autopen for routine correspondence and photos but not on matters of importance, Fleischer said.

While a number of White House aides from administrations past were willing to discuss the presidential autopen, that kind of talk is frowned upon while a president is in office.

"You want to preserve the president's semblance of reaching out and being connected," says Shock. "But the cold hard facts are that when you get 10,000 letters a day he can't possibly handle all that kind of correspondence himself."

It turns out there are varying levels of fakeness in presidential signatures.

There are preapproved form letters with digital signatures. There are preprinted cards for birthdays and other special events. Autopen signatures generally are reserved for more personalized correspondence that doesn't score a real signature, say officials from administrations past.

Obama's staff is loath to talk about his use of the autopen.

The president prefers to keep the focus on the sampling of 10 letters a day that he reads from among the tens of thousands that ordinary people send to the White House. In many cases, he writes back to these people, with his own signature.

But the president couldn't get around explaining how the Patriot Act got signed into law without briefly shining a spotlight on the autopen. Once that news was out, though, the White House clammed up. It declined to provide any further details about how many autopens the administration uses, what they look like, where they're kept, or who makes the machine.

And don't ask Bob Olding, whose company is the leading manufacturer of autopens, to discuss his clientele.

"I'm not going to help you," he said. "Our customers do not want anyone else knowing they have these machines."

Olding did reveal, though, that "when there's a major change in government, we get an uptick in business."

Olding is president of Rockville, Md.-based Damilic Corp., whose signature machines run from $2,000 up to $10,000. Hulking older versions look like a drafting table and are too big to fit through a doorway. Newer models, with microprocessors and digital controls, sit on a tabletop. But they still feature two mechanical arms that move a pen back and forth, up and down.

The machines sign letters at about the same pace as does the human hand. An autopen machine that automatically signs a stack of documents can spit out roughly 500 signatures an hour; those with manual document feeders, about 200 an hour.

As recently as the second Bush administration, the autopen in use was a large piece of furniture that looked like a drafting table, says Heidi Smith, who served as Bush's correspondence director for two years. She says those with clearance to use the autopen would head over to the executive clerk's office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, next to the White House, where the autopen wielded Bush's pen of choice - a Sharpie.

Autopens have been used by presidents since Dwight Eisenhower, says Koschal, and President John F. Kennedy put them to heavy use. Many presidents have had secretaries sign their names to correspondence and documents, he says.

More than 200 years ago, Thomas Jefferson acquired a mechanical copying device called a polygraph that attached to his pen and made a second copy of what he was writing. Jefferson liked it so much he wrote that "I could not, now therefore, live without the Polygraph."

It's not just busy presidents who rely on autopens. They're used by thousands of organizations, companies and government officials.

Donald H. Rumsfeld got in hot water for using one as defense secretary to sign letters of condolence to the families of U.S. troops killed in action. When word leaked out in 2004, Rumsfeld said he'd done it to "ensure expeditious contact with grieving family members."

"I have directed that in the future I sign each letter," he said.

Other officials and candidates have fingered the autopen as an excuse to avoid taking responsibility for documents that appeared to bear their names. One was Enron executive Kenneth Lay, who was convicted of fraud, conspiracy and lying to banks despite his lawyers' arguments that he shouldn't be held accountable for documents signed by autopen. His conviction was later vacated on other grounds.

So how to tell the difference between a real signature and an autopen version?

Koschal says the best way to detect a fake is to lay the signature in question over a known autopen version and hold the two documents up to a light. If they're exactly the same, chances are that the top one was created with an autopen. But presidents often create multiple autopen signatures to make it less obvious when they're letting a machine do the work.

As for Obama's autopen signature on the extension of Patriot Act powers, it may pass the constitutional test, but not Koschal's.

"I'd pay peanuts for it," the autograph authenticator said. "It's not a real signature."



Saturday, June 25, 2011

IIFA 2011: Performances - India

25 june 2011



IIFA 2011: Performances

A soulful tribute to Michael Jackson performed by his brother Jermaine Jackson and Sonu Nigam.


  • Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Friday, June 24, 2011

Planning to be a loan guarantor? Be informed! - India

24 june 2011

Planning to be a loan guarantor? Be informed!

by BankBazaar.com Desk on    3 Comments |

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
A key deciding factor will be to gauge the borrower’s financial capability to pay off the loan. You also need to evaluate objectively whether the borrower can honour such a commitment and not leave you to face the lone battle of paying up their dues in case of a default.
If you are confident on both these counts, then you can opt to become a guarantor but not before you completely read and agree to the terms and conditions put forth by the bank in their agreement.

What if you are approached by a close friend to become their loan guarantor? Would you say yes without question or would you analyse the situation objectively before making your decision. In money matters objectivity is critical, so we would advise you to opt for the latter. Read on to know more about being a loan guarantor and why you should think twice!
Is being a loan guarantor such a big deal?
When you are a loan guarantor for an individual’s loan it means that you agree to be responsible for the repayment of another individual’s debt in case of a default. It implies you are equally responsible for paying off the loan!
So, should I never be a loan guarantor?
When you provide guarantee for another individual’s debt, it definitely comes with its risks!
A key deciding factor will be to gauge the borrower’s financial capability to pay off the loan. You also need to evaluate objectively whether the borrower can honour such a commitment and not leave you to face the lone battle of paying up their dues in case of a default.
If you are confident on both these counts, then you can opt to become a guarantor but not before you completely read and agree to the terms and conditions put forth by the bank in their agreement.
Am I being approached because the applicant has a bad credit history?
While the lack of a good credit record ( past repayment track record of previous loans, credit card payments etc.) could be a possible reason for a bank to ask for a loan guarantor, this may not always be the case. It could be based on other reasons such as:
  • The borrower has a transferable job,
  • He has a job that involves frequent overseas travel
  • or the loan is applied at a place other than the applicant’s permanent address etc.
If I choose to become a loan guarantor and the borrower is unable to repay, then what happens?
When you sign on the dotted line and agree to become a guarantor, you are legally bound to pay off the debts if the borrower defaults. If the borrower does default, then:
  • The bank will approach you for clearing the debts
  • Personal assets such as bank accounts, cash as well as property could be claimed (except for provident fund and agricultural land which cannot be attached under any court decree) and you could turn bankrupt
  • Your credit standing will get affected and the chances of you getting a loan in the future would be slim.
Why should my chances of getting a loan in future be affected, when I did not take the loan?
It does not matter! Most banks and financial institutions look at the loan that you are a guarantor for, as a loan that you hold. They will therefore deduct that much amount from your loan eligibility.
If I agree to become a guarantor, what are the aspects I should look out for?
- The bank or lending institution is asking for a guarantor as a means to protect itself from a possible default and have the means to recover the money it is lending. Be aware that the bank can file a case against you and lay a claim to your assets for loan recovery.
- It all boils down to what the contract binding you to be the loan guarantor dictates. Hence, check whether the contract indicates the amount you are guaranteeing, make sure it does not exceed a specified limit that is agreed upon between you and the bank, else there might arise a situation where you will have to repay the entire loan in instances where the credit limit is increased on the initial loan borrowed.
- The terms and conditions should be clear and precise. Also, you need to make sure there are enough safety clauses in place that ensures you are protected to some extent against certain eventualities. For instance, the notice period that is available before the bank approaches you in case of a default should be clearly specified. Also, make sure you are not held liable if the original loan agreement is changed at a future point in time without you being aware of it.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Tata group leaders praise Ratan Tata's leadership - India

23 june 2011

Tata group leaders praise Ratan Tata's leadership

Original
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
In the midst of an ongoing search process to find Ratan Tata's successor to head the country's biggest corporate house, top leaders from the group have heaped lavish praise on his leadership style.
Ratan Tata has been heading the group since 1991 as Chairman of the group's promoter company Tata Sons and is  scheduled to retire in December next year. A search committee has been tasked to find Ratan Tata's  successor to head the salt-to-software business conglomerate  and the process is on for many months now.
In the meantime, as many as five senior executives from  the group have written about "the many hues of leadership" in the latest edition of the Tata group's internal publication  Tata Review, wherein they have praised the leadership styles  of the group as also that of Ratan Tata.
These include Tata Sons Director R Gopalakrishnan, Tata  Sons Finance Director Ishaat Hussain, Tata Industries Managing Director Kishor Chaukar, Tata Sons' Group Human Resources Chief Satish Pradhan and Tata Quality Management Services head Sunil Sinha.
Another senior group executive and a search panel member  R K Krishna Kumar recently admitted that finding a successor for Ratan Tata was a difficult task and the panel was  considering people from both within and outside the group.   
Krishna Kumar, in an internal interview published on the  group's website in March, had also praised Ratan Tata for his  contributions to not only the group, but the business and industry as a whole and called him a "born leader."   
Now, Ishaat Hussain has named Ratan Tata among the  business leaders who are inventors. "That's why I admire Ratan   Tata -- he is such a game changer," he said.  
Hussain further said that the Tata group leaders, both past and present, subscribe to a form of leadership where shareholder value was relevant and inclusive.   
Chaukar, on the other hand, said that Ratan Tata was a  "terrific combination" of the four necessary leadership  characteristics -- character, commitment, competence and courage.   
Terming 'courage' as one of the most important ingredients to become a leader, Chaukar said: "The courage  bit is partly yours and substantially that of the organisation you are with. If it had not been for Ratan Tata, I don't know  whether I, as an individual, would have had that courage."  
About Ratan Tata, he further said: "Additionally, he is   an amazing indefatigable individual. I have never seen him say, "I am tired, we'll do this tomorrow."
"Be it with technical stuff, finance, business matters or anything else, he is able to bring tremendous energy levels to the job. He has this immense persistence in always moving  closer to his goal, even if this goal keeps shifting," Chaukar noted.
Satish Pradhan said: "The Tata leadership story is part  of the distinctive narrative that has Ratan Tata and the  leadership infrastructure he created at the centre of the  group."
Noting that Tata was the Chairman of several companies as well as Tata Sons, Pradhan said, "a  whisper from him can reach 5,000 decibels. So he plays his role in a measured, gentle  way."
At the same time, Sunil Sinha said that the Tata model of leadership creation was in contrast to business houses that have "a structure where the centre is more powerful than the  states."
"In such organisations, the parent companies are listed and the children are unlisted. In case of the Tatas, the parent is unlisted and the children are listed," he said.  
Sinha said that the Tata structure has transferred a huge amount of responsibility from centre to state, which results in leaders coming out from different business milieus.
Terming humility as yet another dimension to the Tata leadership matrix, Sinha said, "no one demonstrates this characteristic more than Ratan Tata."

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Salman Khan to skip IIFA - India

22 june 2011

Salman to skip IIFA

All those who were expecting a face-off between the two Khans of Bollywood - Salman and Shah Rukh - at the forthcoming International Indian Film Academy (IIFA) Weekend will be disappointed as Salman has decided to skip the award ceremony.
Salman to skip IIFA
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
Here to promote his debut movie production 'Chillar Party', Salman confirmed that he won't be present at the three-day event which will kick off Thursday in Toronto.
"I am shooting for my next 'Bodyguard' and it is an action movie, so yes, you people won't see me there. IIFA will miss me this time," Salman told reporters.
This year, Shah Rukh is performing on the IIFA stage after seven years. The actor has attended two editions of the IIFA Weekend in the past - in Singapore in 2004, and Amsterdam in 2005.
As 'Chillar Party' will open the 12th IIFA awards ceremony and this being Salman's first production, his presence was more than expected. But it seems the rift between the two Khans has pushed Salman to stay away from the ceremony.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Mandira Bedi's baby son Vir - India

21 june 2011


First pic of Mandira Bedi's son Vir


  • Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India


This Father's Day was an extra special one for actor and anchor Mandira Bedi. She and husband of 11 years Raj Kaushal are new parents to baby boy Vir, born on June 19 in Mumbai. Proud father Raj Kaushal tweeted: Had a superb Fathers day (my 1st) thanks to my little Vir. Thank you @mandybedi for the best gift in my life. I think I am in ? again ? Ladies and gentlemen. At 11.01am IST weighing 6 pounds the czar of our lives Mr Vir Kaushal has arrived. :-)

Monday, June 20, 2011

Ford may park plant next to Nano in Gujarat - India

20 june 2011

Ford may park plant next to Nano in Gujarat

Ahmedabad: If all goes well, Ford India will park its second manufacturing unit right next to Tata Motors’ Nano factory at Sanand. Ford India had sought 550 acres from the state government to set up a mother plant together with an ancillary park.
Ford may park plant next to Nano in Gujarat
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
"The company (Ford) has asked for 400 acres for its mother plant, and needs 100-150 acres for its ancillary units," said a state government source, adding that the government had identified land at Gujarat Industrial Development Corporation's (GIDC) estate at Sanand. According to sources close to the development, an announcement is likely within a fortnight.
This would be Ford's second plant in India. It already has a manufacturing unit in Maraimalai Nagar, Chennai, which has an annual capacity of 200,000 units.
Ford had expressed interest in scouting land in Gujarat in November last year. Talks have been on between the US-based car major and the government. "A Ford India team met senior state government officials earlier this week, and the negotiations were very positive," said a source. The company is expected to have taken a decision in its board meeting a few days back.
Ford is believed to have exchanged notes with the existing auto majors who have operations in Gujarat.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Night owls at greater risk of piling on pounds - India

19 june 2011

Night owls at greater risk of piling on pounds

Staying up late can make you pile on the pounds and is fraught with other negative health consequences.
Night owls at greater risk of piling on pounds
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
Late sleepers consumed 248 more calories a day, twice as much fast food and half as many fruits and vegetables as those with earlier sleep times, according to a study by the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
They also drank more full-calorie sodas. Late sleepers consumed the extra calories during dinner and later in the evening when everyone else was asleep. They also had a higher body mass index, a measure of body weight, than normal sleepers.
The study is among the first in the US to explore the relationship between the circadian timing of sleeping and waking, dietary behaviour and body mass index, the journal Obesity reports.
"The extra daily calories can mean a significant amount of weight gain - two pounds per month - if they are not balanced by more physical activity," said study co-author Kelly Glazer Baron, health psychologist and neurology instructor at the Feinberg School, according to a Feinberg statement.
The study shows that the number of calories you eat are important, but so is when you eat them -- and that's linked to when you sleep and when you wake up, added Phyllis Zee, professor of neurology at Feinberg.
"Human circadian rhythms in sleep and metabolism are synchronised to the daily rotation of the earth, so that when the sun goes down you are supposed to be sleeping, not eating," Zee said.
"When sleep and eating are not aligned with the body's internal clock, it can lead to changes in appetite and metabolism, which could lead to weight gain," said Zee.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Iran to send more satellites to orbit - India

18 june 2011

Iran to send more satellites to orbit


Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Tehran:  Iran announced it plans to send three more home-made satellites to orbit in coming months.

The announcement came after Tehran successfully sent its second domestically-made satellite named 'Rasad' (Observation) into orbit, re-displaying the country's independence in its space program.
       
Speaking to the Islamic republic news agency, Head of the Iranian Space Agency (ISA) Hamid Fazeli said that following successful launch of Rasad, the satellites of Kavoshgar 5 (Explorer 5) that will carry animals, Fajr and Navid will be launched into space.

The official added that Kavoshgar 5, with a weight of 285-kg, will be launched in Mordad (fifth month of the Iranian calendar, July 22 - August 22).

Rasad, designed and built by ISA, was launched by the Safir-e-Rasad satellite carrier on Wednesday.

Iran has recently taken wide strides in aerospace. The country sent the first bio-capsule of living creatures into space in February, using its home-made Kavoshgar-3 (Explorer-3) carrier.

Iran announced in February that it plans to unveil and send two recently-built satellites into space in the near future.
      
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had also earlier announced that the country plans to send a home-made measurement satellite into orbit in the near future.

Omid (hope) was Iran's first research satellite that was designed for gathering information and testing equipment.

After orbiting for three months, Omid successfully completed its mission without any problem.

It completed more than 700 orbits over seven weeks and re-entered the Earth's atmosphere on April 25, 2009.

After launching Omid, Tehran unveiled three new satellites called Tolou, Mesbah II and Navid, respectively.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Indian-American candidate wins city council seat in Texas - India

17 june 2011

Indian-American candidate wins city council seat in Texas


Houston:  An Indian-American has edged past a candidate of Pakistani-origin to win a city council seat in Sugar Land, Texas.
   
In unofficial results, Harish Jajoo edged Pakistani-American attorney and investment manager Farha Ahmed on June 11 in the run-off election for the city council seat in District 4 in Sugar Land.

Jajoo secured 1,473 or 52.38 per cent of the total votes, while 1,340 or 47.62 per cent polled for Ahmed. Jajoo had a 915-724 advantage in pre-election Day balloting, while Ahmed polled better on voting day, getting 616 votes to 559 for her opponent.
 
The tight contest was marred by a flier, circulated before the election and quoting a Pakistani newspaper, erroneously insinuated that Ahmed would represent Afia Sidique, a woman dubbed as "Lady Al Qaeda," in a criminal case.

Siddiqui is a US-educated Pakistani Neuroscientist who was sentenced to 86 years in prison in a New York District Court in 2010 for trying to shoot US soldiers at a police station in Afghanistan in 2008. She was shown on the flier in two grainy mug shots along with Ahmed's photo.
     Ahmed issued a statement saying she is a civil litigation attorney and could not represent Siddiqui in a criminal case.

Ahmed did say, however, that she was approached a few years ago "by attorneys and human rights groups to help gather information to find two missing American children who were believed to have been kidnapped overseas."

"It is inappropriate for me to discuss the details of the case any further other than to state that the children were found. I would also like to humbly request that the identities of the children be safeguarded for their protection," she said.
  
Ahmed did not issue any further clarification to indicate if this work involved Siddiqui or her children.
  
Jajoo, through a statement said that, "I want to assure you that my campaign had nothing to do with this mailer, and I do not condone this type of tactic. I also believe that the voters deserve to hear from my opponent on this issue as well."

On results, Jajoo said, "This culminates a tough race and validates that my campaign was based on right message, right priorities and right approach. I am humbled by the support and enthusiasm of my district voters."

Jajoo also said he received a call from Ahmed the night of June 11 after the results were declared "to congratulate me and I invited her to work with me on the issues important to her."

He said in a press statement that his priorities as a member of the council would be "public safety, infrastructure and quality of life" in Sugar Land.
   
The swearing-in ceremony is scheduled for June 21. Jajoo and his wife, Shashi, have two children.
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Thursday, June 16, 2011

7 saving tips to plan early for your dream home - India

16 june 2011

7 saving tips to plan early for your dream home!



Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
Owning a home gives you a sense of pride and liberty, but also many responsibilities. For a first timer, it would be a rather complicated process, especially ‘saving’ for down payments. The savings for a home purchase can be started at any time, much before you seriously start shopping for a home.  With the RBI increasing the down payment limit to 20% of the actual price of the property for loans above Rs.20L, an early start in saving for your downpayment is the best option.


Planning is the most important step for buying your first home as in with any other purchase. And here, the key for planning is an honest financial self-appraisal with a budget planner. The idea of budgeting may be distasteful to those who have not tried it. However, budgeting is a fabulous diagnostic instrument to analyse your income-expenditure patterns and thereby your true financial position. It helps you to identify and eliminate discretionary expenses.

House ownership typically involves multiple costs like down payments, loan repayments, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, interior designing, stamp duty, etc.  So, if you don’t fix your overspending before you buy a home, you will not be able to protect yourself from the cash flow problems which may affect you.
Also, tracking your income and expense patterns will give a realistic picture of what you can afford to repay each month, considering your other living expenses. Once you understand exactly what you can borrow, start looking out for a home like a shrewd shopper.
Aim for a home you can really afford to pay. Loans can be good friends in the hour of need but an inconvienient burden, if not properly managed. It is wise to restrict your monthly loan repayments to 40-45% of your monthly income. Real estate values are always on increasing trend, except for a few mid term hiccups. So, even if you buy a small house now, in a year or two the prices will double, especially if you live in the city giving you the option of liquidating it and opting for a better residence.
Banks will finance upto 80% of the property value. So, the remaining 20% are expected to be shelled out of your pockets. If your savings allows, it is always better to make the maximum down payment possible, to reduce your monthly financial burden in the form of an EMI.
Familiarize yourself with available options

It is crucial to find the right lender and the right loan in the process of buying a home. It is always good to know the basics of loan terms and clauses from your friends or through online sources, before you speak to the lender.
Compare the EMI payable for different tenures with your monthly income. Higher the loan tenure, lesser the EMI, but at the same time you will be shelling out more interest. There are also schemes like step up loans, where EMIs accelerate every year in proportion to the increase in your income, however it comes with a certain amount of risk. Banks even allow the customers to switch the current EMI options to longer loan tenures, if they are unable to take it forward.
Banks sanction in-principle loan based on the customer’s eligibility for those who have not yet decided on the property. This helps home buyers guage the loan amount that a bank would be able to give them and the the money they will have to manage. This will help set a budget limit before looking out.
Few saving tips
  • Those who started planning early can slowly save and invest in good investment schemes. But you need to make sure that your savings are working for you. Money that is put in a savings account earns less and will not help you much to reach your goal faster. Look forward for a high-yield savings or low risk investment in debt funds. Investing in share markets is a good option, but not a guaranteed one. However if you stay invested for a long term and make your exit at the right moment, it will immensely help you in meeting your money requirements.
  • Those who save late also have many options like gathering additional sources like tax refunds, bonuses, dividends etc. Immediate money requirements can be arranged from sources like- gold loan, personal loan, borrowing from relatives, collateral security etc.
  • If you are selling your current home for a new one, do it right when the real estate market is up. Or if you have already done it, invest the money in low risk investments which have a flexible liquidity option.
  • If you are servicing multiple loans, if possible clear the costlier loans or try to pay off most of them. Personal loans, credit card debts and business loans are costlier, while home loan is the cheapest among them and the tax advantages on home loans is an additional benefit. You can also make part prepayments for all loans whenever you have excess money which will directly bring down your outstanding prinicipal amount.
  • Individuals often take personal loans to bridge the immediate finance requirements. The average interest rate of a personal loan is 16-30%. Ideally you should go for other loans such as loans against property, collateral security loans, top up loans, loans against fixed deposits, gold loan, with lower interest rates for immediate requirement of funds.
  • Always say a strong ‘no’ to borrowing on credit cards. Always pay off all your credit card dues on or before the due dates, as it is the most difficult one to break off if debts mount.
  • While planning, consider not only your current position but also the future changes that could impact your situation like changes to your income, expected costs etc.
Once you begin to understand all the parts of the home buying journey, you’ll feel confident. No matter how a home buyer accumulates funds to purchase a home, careful planning will always make the road to home ownership smooth.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Secrets to a long-distance relationship - India

15 june 2011

Secrets to a long-distance relationship

Relationships can be difficult and adding the considerable strain of long distance can make it considerably harder. But if two people love each other enough, then distance shouldn’t matter, right? Yet despite all the ways technology can help us stay in touch, long distance relationships frequently fail to work out. We sat down with leading relationship experts to find out the secrets to maintaining long distance love and why it so often fails.
Secrets to a long-distance relationship
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
Solving communication
According to clinical psychologist, Dr. Rob Dobrenski, the largest barrier of long-distance relationships is lack of face-to-face communication. Couples invariably need not just emotional and physical intimacy, but also the ability to resolve conflicts. This is significantly easier when you can see your partner's facial expressions and non-verbal communication. Phone, text, email, Skype, Morse code, Instant Messaging, Facebook updates and carrier pigeons all still require a lot of guesswork to really gauge what's going on with your partner. This is especially true if couples aren't already the greatest at directly and confidently stating their feelings. Video chatting is a better option than a traditional phone call, as it allows you to read some of your partner's non-verbal communication. Aside from just talking to each other regularly; use technology to do other things together, like play games online - this is a creative and fun exercise that can promote bonding. "Loneliness will happen but it is important that you acknowledge and attempt to alleviate those feelings. Phone sex works wonders!"
Encounters
Dr. Barton Goldsmith PhD, says "one of the things that keep a relationship together is real chemistry. Touching keeps the brain chemicals, like Oxytocin (also known as the cuddle hormone) and Serotonin (as well as several others that make us happy and feel connected) flowing through our brains and bodies. When you don't get to connect, it's harder to feel the love because you're not able to produce enough these happiness chemicals to make you feel good and most people start to look for ways to get their 'brain-chemical fix' from those who are physically available." This is why it is essential to keep the physical chemistry just as alive as the emotional chemistry. Plan to see one another as often as possible. That may mean costly travelling every now and again so you can tend to your long-distance relationship. It's not easy and both partners need to commit equally but in the end you might be grateful that you did.
Increasing trust
Unfortunately, over time, many long-distance relationships experience a degradation of trust and confidence. As you and your partner develop increasingly independent tendencies, your roles in each other's lives will change. New friends and colleagues will be entering both your lives and this can lead to partners quickly becoming jealous. Jealousy can lead to fights, resentment and eventually the demise of your relationship. It is important to prepare for these changes early on and commit yourself to becoming as trusting and as trustworthy as possible. The increased independence can be a good thing, if you let it, enabling you to continue growing as individuals while still remaining a couple. Eventually, the goal is for one or both of you to relocate to be together and, if you have trust in each other, you can get there.
Keeping a plan
Maintaining a healthy long-distance relationship is all about establishing and sticking to regular achievable goals that you have mutually agreed upon so you both feel like you are working towards something. Never make promises or agree to goals you can't keep. Your word is your bond. A healthy plan and set of goals should include: a daily schedule for communication, a mandatory minimum on Snail mail and small gifts per month, frequency of virtual dates, a schedule for somewhat regular visits and, most importantly, deciding on your monogamy. Remember, things won't always go according to the plan you've set so it is important to anticipate changes and deal with them together as they come up. While, absence may make the heart grow fonder, don't let your relationship linger in this state for years - have an end date in mind in case neither of you can relocate back to the other within a reasonable timeframe.


Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Four students to represent India at 22nd Intl Bio Olympiad - India

14 june 2011

Four students to represent India at 22nd Intl Bio Olympiad

Mumbai: Four students will represent India at the 22nd International Biology Olympiad (IBO) to be held at Chinese Taipei from July 10-17.
The four--Pritish Patil from Nashik, Maharashtra; Saloni Kapoor from Jaipur, Rajasthan; Sanchit Kumar,Chandigarh, Haryana and Twinkle Parekh, Rajkot, Gujarat-- were selected after their performance in the orientation-cum-selection camp for the IBO, Dr Vijay Singh, the National Coordinator for Science Olympiads said on Monday.
The delegation leaders will be Prof MM Chaturvedi from Institute of Lifelong Learning, University of Delhi and Dr Ujwala C Bapat from St Xavier's College, Mumbai while Vikrant Ghanekar of Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education will go as an observer.
All the four students were given special merit award of Rs 5,000 each. Twinkle Parekh was adjudged as Best Performer in Theoretical as well as in Experimental programme and was given a cash award of Rs 6000 (in books and cash) for the same, Singh said.
Around 10,000 students registered from across the country for the first level of examination conducted by Association of Teachers in Biological Sciences (ATBS) out of which 328 were selected for the second round of examination which is also called National Biology Olympiad, he said.
But 35 students were selected for orientation-cum-selection camp and finally four were selected, he added.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Indian Hacker group fighting corruption not on facebook now - India

13 june 2011

Indian hacker group kicked-out by Facebook

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
The Indian arm of a hacker group 'Anonymous' - called Anonymous Operation India - has been removed from Facebook and Twitter. Both the 'Operation India' Facebook page and '@operationindia' Twitter handle are no more accessible.

'Anonymous'  is a 'hacktivist' group that has been linked to the recent attack on Sony as well as against the governments of Iran, Spain, New Zealand and Colombia. Their operations started in India recently and came into the limelight when they claimed to have hacked the National Informatics Centre website and the Indian Army website last week .

The NIC site on the URL  http://informatics.nic.in/oldnewsonline/abc.html was defaced with graffiti  that said: "We exist without nationality. We exist with humanity. NIC took 3 mins."

In a similar hack, the Indian Army's website was reportedly taken down for about an hour.  According to www.hackernews.com, the hackers also released password/ login information and forensic logs of indianarmy.nic.in. The Denial of Service (DoS) attack reportedly did not harm the site and there was no data loss. The site also quotes a message from them that states, "We took Down Indian Army Official Site and NIC knows more what we did."

In a message posted on their IRC (Internet Relay Chat) group, Anonymous claimed responsibility for both hacks saying, "The NIC hack, was merely a taste of what may come...The time has come now, when we'll wage a war of independence - from corruption and we promise to fight till the end."

After the attacks the group has placed its demands that include taking strong and decisive measures to root-out corruption and stem the rot plaguing Indian politics, the expeditious passing of the Lokpal Bill and prescription of severe punishment for corrupt officials. Find below the complete message from the hacking group.
anonymousoperindia2.jpg
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India



Sunday, June 12, 2011

When in Goa temples, keep off beachwear - India

12 june 2011

When in Goa temples, keep off beachwear

Beachwear and temples don't get along in Goa. Never mind if it's a top sun and sand holiday destination.
When in Goa temples, keep off beachwear
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Tourists walk back after swimming at the Anjuna beach in Goa.

The 450-year-old Mahalsa Narayani Temple has banned the entry of foreigners within the temple precincts while the popular Lord Manguesh temple has asked domestic as well as foreign tourists to wear proper attire when they visit the premises.
"We do not mind these foreigners. But sometimes their clothes are vulgar and they do not care about the sanctity of the temples. They need to be disciplined," says Vinod Kamat, who heads the temple committee of the Mahalsa Narayani Devastan, located in the Ponda sub-district, 25 km from here.
Speaking to IANS Monday, Gaurish Kuttikar, a government official who serves as the administrator of the Mahalsa Narayani Temple Committee, said the decision to ban foreigners was completely the prerogative of the temple committee and the government had nothing to do with it.
"They (temple committee) have not approached me nor have they taken the government's permission," Kuttikar said.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Multiple blasts in Peshawar Pakistan - India

11 june 2011

Peshawar:  Two explosions went off minutes apart in the northwest Pakistani city of Peshawar Sunday, killing 34 people and injuring nearly 100 in one of the deadliest attacks since the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden last month, officials said.

The blasts, one of which was caused by a suicide bomber, occurred just after midnight in an area of the city that is home to political offices and army housing.

The attack took place as CIA Director Leon Panetta and Afghan President Hamid Karzai visited Islamabad, 95 miles (150 kilometers) to the east, to speak separately with senior Pakistani officials about intelligence sharing and efforts to reconcile with the Taliban.

The first explosion was relatively small and drew police and rescue workers to the site, said Dost Mohammed, a senior local police official. A large explosion rocked the area a few minutes later, causing the fatalities and injuring 98 people, 18 critically, said Rahim Jan, a senior doctor at a local hospital.

The second blast was caused by a suicide bomber riding a motorcycle packed with 22 pounds (10 kilograms) of explosives, said Ejaz Khan, a senior police official. The source of the first explosion was unknown.

No group claimed responsibility, but the Pakistani Taliban have pledged to carry out attacks in retaliation for the covert U.S. Navy SEAL raid that killed bin Laden in an army town outside Islamabad on May 2.

Saturday's attack took place across the street from the offices of the top political agent to Khyber, part of Pakistan's volatile tribal region, and only about 100 yards from army housing units. Peshawar borders the tribal region and has been repeatedly hit by bombings over the past few years.

The dead included at least one journalist, said Mohammed Farooq, a hospital doctor. Another four journalists and at least 10 police were injured, he said. Many of the people killed were so badly burned they were difficult to identify.

Jamal Khan, a 22-year-old student, was in his apartment when the first blast went off. He rushed to the scene as the second explosion occurred, peppering his face and arms with flying debris.

"The explosion was so huge I will never forget it all my life," said Khan as he recovered in a hospital. "It was deafening, and then there was a cloud of dust and smoke. When the dust settled, I saw people crying for help and body parts scattered everywhere."

The attack followed a second day of meetings between Panetta, the CIA chief, and senior Pakistani officials. The talks were slated to focus on the size and scope of U.S. intelligence activities in the wake of the raid that killed bin Laden, said a Pakistani official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

The bin Laden operation plunged an already strained relationship between the CIA and Pakistan's main intelligence agency, the ISI, to new lows and threatened cooperation that is key to the U.S. fight against al-Qaida and Taliban militants battling foreign troops in Afghanistan.

The U.S. also needs Pakistan's help to promote and guide negotiations with the Taliban that can help end the decade-long Afghan war. Pakistan and Afghanistan inaugurated a joint peace commission Saturday during a visit by Karzai, the Afghan president.

In an attempt to rebuild their relationship, Washington and Islamabad have agreed to form a joint intelligence team to track down militant targets inside Pakistan, drawing in part from the trove of records taken from bin Laden's personal office during the raid.

Panetta and Pakistani officials planned to discuss what U.S. intelligence officers will be permitted to do, and how many will be allowed into the country as part of the team, said the Pakistani official.

But new suspicions have marred this attempt at renewed cooperation.

As an act of faith to restore relations with the Pakistanis, U.S. intelligence shared the suspected location of explosive material held by the al-Qaida-linked Haqqani network at two compounds in the Pakistani tribal areas, according to a Pakistani and a U.S. official.

The U.S. official said that after the intelligence was shared, the explosive material was moved. The Pakistani official told The Associated Press that they checked out the locations, but nothing was there, and that they intend to investigate to dispel U.S. suspicions that the Pakistani intelligence service had tipped off the militants.

Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligence operations.

Panetta's visit is his first to Pakistan since the bin Laden raid. His ties with Pakistan will be key in his new role as U.S. defense secretary, presuming he is speedily confirmed by Congress.

The U.S. wants the proposed joint intelligence team under discussion Saturday to pursue a list of five high-value targets it handed to the Pakistani leadership recently. The target list included al-Qaida's military operations chief in Pakistan, Ilyas Kashmiri, who was reportedly killed by a drone strike in the Pakistani tribal areas June 3.

Karzai pressed Pakistan for support in facilitating negotiations with Taliban militants with whom the Pakistani government has historical ties.

There is a significant level of distrust between the two countries, but Pakistan promised to help as Afghanistan sees fit.

"We both want stability in Afghanistan and in Pakistan," said Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani in a news conference held with Karzai after the first meeting of the joint peace commission. "Our only aim is to support the peace process, which is Afghan-led."

Friday, June 10, 2011

Ramdev hospitalised , fast continues (also in Hindi)- India

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

काले धन के मुद्दे पर अनशनरत बाबा रामदेव की हालत शुक्रवार रात और बिगड़ गई। बाबा के बिगड़ते स्वास्थ्य को देखते हुए डॉक्टरों ने उन्हें तुरंत आईसीयू से विशेष आईसीयू में स्थानांतरित कर दिया। इस बीच रामदेव के सहयोगी बालकृष्ण को भी हिमालयन अस्पताल में भर्ती कराया गया है

रामदेव का स्वास्थ्य बिगड़ने के बाद उत्तराखंड प्रशासन उन्हें हरिद्वार से देहरादून ले आया था। वह जालीग्रांट स्थित हिमालयन अस्पताल में भर्ती हैं।

योग गुरु रामदेव के प्रवक्ता एसके तिजारावाला ने शनिवार सुबह बयान जारी में कहा कि चिकित्सकीय देखरेख और निगरानी के बावजूद रामदेव के रक्तचाप में गिरावट आई है। कल रात दस बजे से आज सुबह छह बजे के बीच उनका रक्तचाप 80-40 रहा।

उन्होंने कहा कि हम इससे बेहद चिंतित हैं और योग गुरु को अब आईसीयू से विशेष आईसीयू में स्थानांतरित कर दिया गया है। गौरतलब है कि हिमालयन अस्पताल में भर्ती किए जाने के बाद रामदेव की कल विभिन्न तरह की स्वास्थ्य जांच की गई थी।

कल शाम जारी मेडिकल बुलेटिन में कहा गया था कि रामदेव के स्वास्थ्य में सुधार हो रहा है और जिगर को छोड़कर उनके बाकी अंग ठीक तरह से काम कर रहे हैं। उनका रक्तचाप 110-78 पाया गया था। हालांकि रात में उनका स्वास्थ्य बिगड़ गया। (भाषा) 
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Thursday, June 9, 2011

Corporate leaders making philanthropic investments in education - India

09 june 2011

Right to education: Class apart

Corporate leaders are making large philanthropic investments in the area of primary education.
Right to education: Class apart
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
Satya Bharti School, Nangal Mundi, has just three classrooms for the students of classes I to V who study here in two shifts. But the rooms are large, airy and clean, and decorated with colourful cut-outs of alphabets and fruits.
The school has six teachers who use aids such as flash cards and instructional CDs played on laptops to teach the around 130 children on the rolls. There's a well-tended lawn, a sand pit and a computer that students are allowed operate on their own. The toilets -- separate for boys and girls -- are squeaky clean. How many primary schools in even the big metros can boast of all these facilities?
Nangal Mundi, however, is no city or even a town; it's a village of 2,000 on the cusp of rural and urban in Haryana's Rewari district. Satya Bharti School, too, is no private schools charging hefty fees, but a charitable one run by the Bharti Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the Mittals, for poor students.
It is vastly superior to the Government Primary School just 50 metres away, where all but one of the dark and stuffy classrooms are locked, and students from classes I to V are taught in one group by a single teacher.
Students don't have textbooks because the government issues are yet to reach, and all that they get as midday meal is a thin broth of porridge with some milk and sugar. The meal served at Satya Bharti School looks hearty in comparison -- roti, chana and aloo-subzi.
"If India has to be the backyard for providing workforce within the country and the world, then education needs to be taken deep into rural India," says Rakesh Bharti Mittal, co-chairman of the Bharti Foundation. And how effective has the effort been?
"In Neemrana, when we first took in students they had bleached hair. But one year in the school and it started turning black, because the mid-day meal the children were getting was probably their only nutritious meal in the day," says he. Mittal also points to the high 96-98 per cent that Satya Bharti students have scored in board examinations in Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan.
Little Mahima and Ravina at Satya Bharti School in Kohrar, in a remote corner of Rewari, are examples of the transformation education can bring.
Daughters of a small trader and a farmer, respectively, whose fathers had studied till class X and mothers never went to school, the class V students are at the computer, rearranging jumbled-up sentences in English -- shuffling "wall the boy on sat the" to "the boy sat on the wall" -- clicking on each word and dragging it to its right place in the sentence. Their summer vacations are kept short -- they may otherwise forget all they have learnt in school.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Anna Hazare's possessions: A plate, a bed - India

08 june 2011

Hazare's possessions: A plate, a bed

Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

New Delhi:  Gandhian activist Anna Hazare said on Wednesday he lived in a temple in Maharashtra, and his only possessions were a plate to eat food and a bed to sleep on.

Speaking briefly about himself after launching a day's fast at Rajghat, Hazare said: "I have nothing except a plate to have food and a bed to sleep. I have no bank balance."

He said he had not visited his home in his village in Ahmednagar district for 35 years.

"I have three brothers. I don't know the names of their children."


Despite his austere lifestyle, he said he was "a very happy and contented man".

Hazare also told the cheering crowds that he had "claimed the wickets of six cabinet ministers" in Maharashtra over corruption. His efforts had led to the sacking of more than 400 corrupt officers.

"I am fighting big goondas... One of the ministers (who lost his job) gave out a 'supari' (underworld contract) to kill me."

He said his life changed when, at age 26, he came across a book by Swami Vivekananda. "I decided then and there to live only for the welfare of the country and the society."

The values important in life, he said, were noble thought and honesty.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Sikh in US attacked, called 'Osama's brother' - India

07 june 2011

Sikh in US attacked, called 'Osama's brother'



New York:  In a "bias" attack, a Sikh man lost three of his teeth after being sucker-punched in a moving train in the US by a man, who accused him of being related to slain Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden.

Jiwan Singh, who came to America 30 years ago and is an employee of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), was attacked on the US Memorial Day on May 30, The New York Daily News reported.

"He was saying, 'You are the brother of Osama,", the 59-year-old Singh was quoted as saying by the news website.

"I said, 'I am not Osama. I have nothing to do with him!"


The daily said the Sikh MTA employee was riding a train to work in Brooklyn from his home in Richmond Hill on Memorial Day when a hate-spewing straphanger accused him of being related to bin Laden and then sucker-punched him.

The father of five said his son, Jasmir, 23, had also lost an eye after being stabbed by attackers in 2009 who targeted him because of his turban and traditional beard.

"We are Indians," he said, recalling other "Osama" slurs he's endured because of his long, white beard.

"Due to that...I have suffered so much, my family has suffered so much, my community has suffered so much."

Singh, an electrical engineer, said the recent attack happened about 11:30 pm and described the attacker as a black man in his late 20s.

Talking about the incident, he said the car was half-empty, but the man walked right up to him and demanded he give up his seat.

Singh said he was nervous, but pointed out that there were other open seats nearby.

He said the man grabbed him by the shirt collar, picked him up and threw him into one of those seats.

"He said, 'Taliban, you sit there!'" Singh recalled.

The attacker then stared down Singh - sometimes cursing him out loud, other times muttering under his breath.

As the train pulled into the next station, Kingston Avenue, the man suddenly threw two quick roundhouse punches, Singh said. Both hit him square in the mouth.

"He said, 'This is for you, Osama!'" Singh recalled, the daily said.

The New York Police Department hate-crimes task force is investigating it as a bias incident, an unnamed police official was quoted as saying.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Royal couple to get new London digs - India

06 june 2011

Royal couple to get new London digs


Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiothoracic Cardiac Heart Surgeon Surgery India

A view of the Kensington Palace in London. (AP)
London:  Most everyone wants a pied a terre in London, a fine city that showcases the arts and music and at times fine food. But only a select few can get a small renovated apartment in Kensington Palace to call home when they are in town.

It's one of the perks of power for Prince William, second in line for the British throne, and his bride, the former Kate Middleton. The finishing touches are being put on their new apartment, which will be their official London residence for the next year while they seek out larger quarters.

Not bad for a couple still on the south side of 30.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, as the couple is officially known, plan to move into the refurbished apartments before embarking on their first official overseas trip to Canada and the United States later this month.

Their primary residence will still be a small house on the remote island of Anglesey off the coast of northwest Wales where William serves as a Royal Air Force helicopter rescue pilot.

But Kensington Palace will be their base on their visits to London, which in the past has included late-night clubbing visits but in the last year has focused more on family-oriented events.

William has strong ties to Kensington Palace - he lived there as a child, first with his parents, before their divorce, and then with his mother, the late Princess Diana, who used it as her primary residence until her death in 1997.

The palace is being extensively renovated. Much of it has been gutted in part so it can be brought up to current health and safety standards.

Other royals also live in the palace, which is broken up into a number of apartments. They share a spectacular flower garden built around an ornamental pool.

The late Princess Margaret, the queen's younger sister, lived there for many years in spacious apartment 1A, which enjoyed a private walled garden.

Joe Little, managing editor of Majesty magazine, said there had been reports that the remaining royals would be relocated and the palace turned into a museum.

"For many years there were a lot of royal aunts and uncles there," he said. "There aren't too many options for Kate and William in London without buying something new, and with the cost of security that's not going to happen."

With the height of the summer season approaching, royal officials said Monday that Middleton's famous wedding gown will be put on public display when Buckingham Palace is opened for tourists from July 23 until October 3.

Buckingham Palace is the official London residence of Queen Elizabeth II, who allows tourists to visit some of the palace's state rooms during the summer months.

The tour also includes a display of some paintings from the queen's extensive art collection. Works by Rembrandt, Rubens and others are on display.

The much-praised dress was designed by Sarah Burton of the Alexander McQueen fashion house.
Royal collection officials said the special exhibit will also display the veil, tiara, shoes and diamond earrings worn during the April 29 wedding.

The diamond-and-sapphire engagement ring she has been wearing since November will not be part of the display - it is still on her finger, recently displayed at the Epsom Derby horserace she and William attended Saturday.

The state room tour, which will include the wedding gown and accessories, typically costs 17.50 pounds ($29).