Tuesday, August 31, 2010

فکسنگ الزامات، سب سے گرم موضوع

انگریزی اخبار ڈان نے اسے پاکستانی کرکٹ کے لیے ایک اور شدید دھچکا قرار دیا ہے

پاکستان میں آج لوگوں کے درمیان سب سے گرم موضوع میچ فکسنگ کے وہ الزامات ہیں جو پاکستانی کرکٹرز پر لگائے گئے ہیں اور پاکستانی میڈیا چاہے وہ الیکٹرانک ہو یا پرنٹ ہو اس کی ترجیح بھی یہی خبر ہے۔

پاکستان کے زیادہ تر اردو اور انگریزی روز ناموں نے اس خبر کو شہ سرخی کے طور پر شائع کیا ہے۔

انگریزی اخبار دی نیوز نے پاکستانی ٹیم کے مینجر یاور سعید کو نیوز آف دی ورلڈ میں میچ فکسنگ کی خبر پڑھتے ہوئے تصویر کے اوپر لکھا ہے، ’داؤ پر لگی ٹیم۔‘

انگریزی اخبار ڈان کی سرخی ہے پاکستانی کرکٹ کو ایک اور شدید دھچکا۔

ڈیلی ٹائمز نے اس خبر کو سب سے اوپر بہت زیادہ نمایاں طور پر شائع کیا ہے۔

اخبارات نے اس قضیے کو لے کر ان کا پس منظر بھی شائع کیا ہے جیسے روزنامہ خبریں نے اپنی پیشانی پر لکھا ہے کہ میچ فکشنگ کا اعتراف سب سے پہلے عمران خان نے کیا ’اپنی جیت پر رقم لگائی تھی۔‘

نوائے وقت کی شہ سرخی ہے کہ ’میچ فکسنگ قوم کے سر شرم سے جھک گئے:گیلانی۔‘

روز نامہ ایکسپریس نے اپنے کھیل کے صفحے پر لکھا ’میچ فکسنگ سکینڈل سے پاکستانی کرکٹ کے درودیوار لرز اٹھے۔‘

”جنگ اخبار لکھتا ہے ’کرکٹ کے میدانوں سے طاقتوروں کی جاگیروں تک ہر جگہ کرپشن۔‘

بعض اخبارات نے عوامی سروے بھی شائع کیے۔ ان میں کرکٹ شائقین کے حوالے سے لکھا کہ ’سٹے بازی میں ملوث کرکٹرز کو سر عام کوڑے مارے جائیں۔‘

یعنی اخبارات میں اس قضیے کو لے کر ہر طرح سے بھڑاس نکالی گئی۔

اخبارات کے ادارتی صفحات نے میچ فکسنگ کے اس سکینڈل پر اداریے اور کالم شائع ہوئے۔ایک کالم نویس لکھتے ہیں، ’تین نو بالز جس نے کرکٹ کو ہلا کر رکھ دیا۔‘

کچھ پاکستانی اخبارات بے اس خبر کے حوالے سے دوسرا رخ دکھانے کی بھی کوشش کی ہے ۔

ایک روزنامے نے بک میکرز کے حوالے سے لکھا ہے کہ میچ فکسنگ سکینڈل پاکستانی ٹیم کے خلاف بھارتی سازش ہے۔ کرکٹ میں نو بالز پر جواء نہیں ہوتا۔

پاکستان کے نجی ٹیلی ویژنوں پر تو سنیچر اور اتوار کی رات سے ہی اس خبر کو لے کر ہنگامہ برپا ہے۔

تمام پاکستانی ٹی وی چینلز مختلف کرکٹ مبصرین سابق چئرمین اور سابق کرکٹرز سے ان کی آراء لینے میں ایک دوسرے کو مات دینے میں کے لیےایڑی چوٹی کا زور لگانے میں مصروف ہیں۔

چند گھنٹوں میں پاکستان میں کرکٹ کی تاریخ میں ہونے والی بے ضابطیگیوں اور اس سے پہلے ہونے والے میچ فکسنگ اسکینڈلز کا کچا چٹھا ایک بار پھر مختلف قسم کے ٹی وی فیچرز کی شکل میں ناظرین تک پہنچ رہا ہے۔

اس حوالے سے آنے والی تمام خبروں کو بار بار دکھایا جا رہا ہے۔خبریں پڑھنے والے ہر خبر چاہے وہ میچ کے نتیجے کی ہو یا پاکستان ٹیم مینجمنٹ کی پریس کانفرنس ہو دکھانے کے ساتھ ساتھ اس پر طنزیہ اور تضحیک آمیز تبصرے کر رہے ہیں

چند ٹی وی چینلز پر پاکستانی کرکٹرز کی کرائی گئی نو بالز کے پیچھے طنزیہ گانے بجائے جاتے رہے۔

Private toll roads not the answer - M6 motorway report

Private toll roads not the answer - M6 motorway report

M6 Toll The M6 Toll was opened in 2003 and was intended to relieve congestion

Private toll roads are not a cost-effective answer to traffic problems, the government has been warned.

A report by the Campaign for Better Transport said the UK's only private motorway toll, the M6 Toll, had not significantly cut congestion.

Its owners lose tens of millions of pounds a year on the road, near Birmingham, campaigners added.

Midland Expressway, which runs the M6 Toll, was approached by the BBC but would not comment on the report.

Related stories

The Campaign for Better Transport concluded that the government should not see privately financed schemes as a way out of economic problems.

Road charge

The group argued that journey times on the M6 were only slightly better than before the toll opened nearly seven years ago, and drivers were put off using the road by the charge of £5 per car.

It estimated the toll road's operator was losing more than £25m a year, discouraging potential investors.

M6 Toll report key findings

  • The toll road has failed to significantly cut congestion on the M6
  • Journey times on the M6 are only slightly better than before the toll opened
  • The cost of the toll for users has risen well above inflation each year
  • The toll operator has lost around £26 million a year since the toll opened

Source: Campaign for Better Transport

Campaigners used documents from the Highways Agency, the Transport Select Committee and Midland Expressway to compile the report.

Not only had the toll road failed to improve transport in the West Midlands, it concluded, but drivers who paid the toll were not receiving value for money.

In addition it said the Highways Agency was planning to spend £500m on congestion relief that the M6 Toll was supposed to have provided.

The M6 Toll is a 27-mile privately-financed motorway that runs around the north west of Birmingham, between junctions 3a and 12 of the M6.

It opened in December 2003 and was intended to relieve congestion on the busiest section of the M6 by providing an alternative route.

BBC transport correspondent Richard Scott says that with the public finances under pressure and road building under threat, the government is looking at how to improve the transport network in the most cost-effective way.

Mexico arrests 'drug lord' Edgar Valdez

Mexico arrests 'drug lord' Edgar Valdez

Edgar Valdez under arrest, 30 August 2010 The US had offered a $2m reward for information on Edgar Valdez

Mexican police have arrested alleged drug trafficker Edgar Valdez, a US citizen also known as Barbie, Mexico's attorney general says.

Officials said he put up little resistance when he was captured in a residential area near Mexico City.

Edgar Valdez is linked to the influential Beltran Leyva drug cartel.

Mr Valdez has been fighting Hector Beltran Leyva for control of the gang, previously led by his brother Arturo until he was shot dead last December.

Analysis

Born in Laredo, Texas, Edgar Valdez Villareal had a meteoric rise to the upper echelons of the Beltran Leyva cartel, one of Mexico's most powerful criminal organisations.

As the alleged head of the hitmen for the gang, his high profile - and catchy nickname, Barbie, thanks to his fair complexion - made him one of the most famous cartel members and thus he joined the list of Mexico's most wanted men.

Since December last year, when one of the founders of the cartel, Arturo Beltran Leyva, was killed by security forces, he was vying for control of the organisation.

His career as a criminal comes to a screeching halt with Monday's arrest, which was celebrated by Mexican authorities.

Earlier this month, police found four decapitated bodies hanging from a bridge in the city of Cuernavaca and their heads were discovered nearby with a message warning that anyone supporting Edgar Valdez would risk a similar fate.

National security spokesman Alejandro Poire told a news conference Mr Valdez had links with criminals across South and Central America.

"This capture constitutes a blow of great impact against organised crime," he said.

Analysts believe his capture will be a boost for President Felipe Calderon, who launched a high-profile fight against the drugs gangs after taking office in 2006.

Mr Calderon hailed the arrest on the Twitter website, calling Mr Valdez "one of the most-wanted criminals in Mexico and abroad".

The US authorities had offered $2m (£1.3m) for information leading to the arrest of the 37-year-old, who was also known as "El Comandante" and "El Guero", as well as "Barbie", because of his fair complexion and blue eyes.

Mr Valdez has been charged with distributing thousands of kilos of cocaine in the eastern US between 2004 and 2006.

His arrest comes weeks after security forces killed Ignacio "Nacho" Coronel, a top member of the Sinaloa drug cartel and believed to be the right-hand man of Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, the country's most-wanted drug lord.

The war against the drug cartels has left some 28,000 people dead since Mr Calderon came to power.

He has deployed the army against the traffickers in many parts of the country, despite the opposition of many of his critics.

The federal police force in Mexico said on Monday it had sacked almost 10% - some 3,200 - of its officers this year for corruption, incompetence or links to criminals.

Afghan roadside bombs kill four US soldiers

Afghan roadside bombs kill four US soldiers

A US soldier runs to the scene of a bomb explosion in Kandahar on 30 August 2010 US soldiers have come increasingly under Taliban attack

Four US soldiers have been killed in two separate bomb attacks in eastern Afghanistan, Nato said.

In a press release, Nato said home-made bombs, one of the main weapons of the Taliban, were used in both the attacks. No other details were given.

The attacks come a day after seven US soldiers were killed in two bomb attacks in southern Afghanistan.

The deaths add to the rising trend of casualties for Nato's International Security Assistance Force (Isaf).

June and July were the worst months for foreign troop deaths since the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001.

Nearly 50 Americans have died in August alone. More than 350 Nato soldiers have been killed this year.

The Nato commander in Afghanistan, Gen David Petraeus, said international forces had reversed some of the gains the Taliban had made in recent years in the southern provinces of Kandahar and Helmand.

But, he added, the militants still retained the initiative in some parts of the country.

Housing group gives four-year negative equity warning

Housing group gives four-year negative equity warning

Rooftops in Newport, Wales Low-income families could be locked out of the market, the NHF said

Homeowners who bought at the peak of the market face four more years of negative equity, a housing group said.

The National Housing Federation (NHF) said the average buyer in England paid £216,800 for a home in 2007.

They may now have to wait until 2014 before prices recover enough to make their homes worth more than their loan.

Meanwhile, figures from the Bank of England show that the number of mortgages approved for UK home buyers was barely changed in July at 48,722.

Related stories

The figures reinforce data from lenders and surveys which suggest that prices have reached a plateau after the revival that started in the spring of 2009.

The Bank's figures show that in July, the number of mortgage approvals was just 160 higher than in June and only slightly higher than the average recorded in the previous six months.

With lenders continuing to ration severely their loans to house buyers, net mortgage lending rose by only £86m in July, one of the lowest monthly increases on record.

"The Bank's July mortgage figures offer further evidence of a stabilisation in the level of home loans," said Brian Murphy of mortgage brokers the Mortgage Advice Bureau.

"The October Spending Review — D-Day for consumer confidence — is approaching fast and many prospective borrowers are understandably being cautious."

Forecasts

According to the NHF, house prices in England will dip again next year by 3%, before steadily climbing thereafter.

Start Quote

Proposed caps on housing benefit payments could also put nearly a million people on low incomes at risk of losing their home”

David Orr National Housing Federation chief executive

The federation expects prices to be 22% higher by 2015 than they were in 2009, bringing the average price of a house to £226,900.

The NHF, which represents housing associations in England, said in its report that prices are still too high for many buyers.

Unless homeowners wish to sell their property, being in negative equity - when your home has become worth less than the mortgage secured against it - does not necessarily pose a problem.

But it is when people are looking to move that they can face a struggle, as lenders are entitled to insist that borrowers redeem their loans.

In theory, if the mortgage is worth more than the house and the borrowers cannot find the money elsewhere, they will be prevented from moving.

'Perfect storm'

Other groups have issued similar forecasts.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors has said that house prices are starting to fall, while figures from the Land Registry suggest that prices are levelling off.

The accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers expects prices to be flat for the second half of 2010, and warned that they might not reach the levels seen at the peak of the market for another decade.

"A combination of circumstances in the market have made it very, very difficult for house prices to recover," NHF chief executive David Orr told the BBC.

"But actually the big problem that we have is that we've created a kind of perfect storm where there is negative equity for some people and they're trapped and can't move, but prices haven't come down enough to make buying a home a realistic option for people in their 20s and 30s in ordinary jobs.

"We really are in danger of pricing people out of owner-occupation."

He also criticised government decisions to scrap regional house-building targets and withdraw funding for affordable housing.

"Proposed caps on housing benefit payments could also put nearly a million people on low incomes at risk of losing their home," he added.

Ed Balls slams 'daily soap opera' of Miliband brothers

Ed Balls slams 'daily soap opera' of Miliband brothers

Ed Balls Ed Balls is calling for money to be made available for more affordable housing

Labour leadership candidate Ed Balls has criticised the "daily episodes" of the "soap opera" surrounding fellow contenders Ed and David Miliband.

Calling for £6bn to be invested in affordable homes, he said their rivalry "did not do justice to the issues".

Labour heavyweights Lord Kinnock and Lord Mandelson have also clashed following Ed Miliband's criticisms of the New Labour project.

Voting in the leadership contest gets under way on Wednesday.

Labour Leadership Contest

  • Labour leader: Runners and riders
  • Labour leadership rules
  • Newsnight leadership hustings
  • Kuenssberg meets: Andy Burnham Watch

The final weeks of the battle have been dominated by the "increasingly fractious battle" between the Miliband brothers, BBC political correspondent Carole Walker said.

Ahead of a campaign event in London, Mr Balls said the debates about Old and New Labour were detracting from the issues at stake.

'Hark back'

He told the BBC: "We've had a daily soap opera of one Miliband brother or the other, with their supporters or non-supporters, commenting here and there.

"It is a bit like in the election campaign where it was all about personalities. I think what the public want to know, what Labour members and voters want to know, is do we have plans to deal with the big issues of our time?"

He called for Labour to focus more on the issue of housebuilding.

Mr Balls, the shadow education secretary, said the government should use a £12bn "windfall" - available because public borrowing for 2009-10 came in at £155bn, lower than the earlier forecast of £167bn - to create more homes.

Analysis

Suddenly it seems the Labour leadership contest is getting personal.

First Lord Mandelson warns that Ed Miliband would lead the party up an "electoral cul de sac"; then Lord Kinnock accuses Lord Mandelson of "personalised factionalism;" and Ed Balls bemoans the "Miliband soap opera."

But this is about a lot more than personalities. The angry exchanges are because such experienced Labour figures recognise this contest is about fundamental choices over the future direction of the Labour Party.

In short, whether Labour turns its back on the New Labour inheritance or seeks to build upon it.

Ed Miliband - while hardly the born-again Bennite he is sometimes characterised as - has defined his whole campaign by criticising much of the Blairite approach - and would seem intent on taking the party to the left.

His brother David - is much more comfortable with the Blairite years - and critical of what he clearly regards as his rival's core vote approach.

And the stakes for Labour are immense. Get it wrong and the party risks years in opposition. No wonder, then, that its getting personal.

He admitted Labour's pre-election plans to build 176,000 social homes over four years were "too cautious", saying: "The truth is that whilst we made progress, Labour leaders over several decades never paid enough sustained attention to housing to make it the priority it deserved. That must change.

"We now need a strong housing policy to support our economy, to provide the homes Britain badly needs and to reconnect with the voters we lost, both young families who want a home of their own and those queuing patiently for social housing."

Former Labour leader Lord Kinnock, who is backing Ed Miliband in the contest, said in his letter to the Times newspaper that Lord Mandelson was "indulging in the sort of personalised factionalism that has inflicted such damage on our party in ancient and modern history".

Lord Mandelson, the former business secretary, has said Labour could be left in an "electoral cul-de-sac" if its next leader tried to create a "pre-New Labour party" - seen as a criticism of Ed Miliband.

He was reacting after the leadership hopeful suggested New Labour had feared increasing taxes for high earners, had displayed an aversion to Old Labour's anti-Americanism and had suffered from an unnecessary desire to protect the public from the views of Labour members.

Speaking to the Times, Lord Mandelson addressed Mr Miliband's criticisms of New Labour.

He said: "I think that if he or anyone else wants to create a pre-New Labour future for the party then he and the rest of them will quickly find that that is an electoral cul-de-sac."

The peer also accused Lord Hattersley and Lord Kinnock of wanting to "hark back to a previous age".

Voting in the contest will continue until 22 September, with the winner being announced on the first day of the party's conference in Manchester on 25 September.

The other candidates are Diane Abbott and Andy Burnham.

Chile begins drilling mine rescue shaft

Chile begins drilling mine rescue shaft

Drill on the surface of the Chile mine (30 August 2010) The drilling is the start of up to four months of work to free the men

Engineers in Chile have begun drilling the rescue shaft through which they hope to eventually free the 33 men trapped in a collapsed gold mine.

The miners have been stuck 700m (2,300ft) underground for the past three weeks.

Officials say it could take up to four months for the tunnel to be completed and the men to be winched out.

Some of the miners have developed fungal infections and body sores in the hot conditions underground.

Chile's Trapped Miners

  • Conversation of hope
  • Rescuers' challenge
  • In pictures: 'Ground Zero'
  • Realism amid elation

A huge Australian-made "Strata 950" excavator began work late on Monday.

The machine dug a narrow test hole, and will now drill down to the men, before widening the shaft to about 60cm.

The miners will have to clear thousands of tonnes of falling debris in round-the-clock shifts, although officials say the men are in no danger of being hit.

The rescue shaft is likely to take 90 to 120 days to complete. Then a capsule can be lowered down to retrieve the miners one by one.

Mining Minister Laurence Golborne had said up to 10 options were being considered in the efforts to rescue the men.

But he dismissed suggestions that the men could be out within a month, saying: "Up to now there is no alternative... that would allow us to get them out in 30 days."

At present, rescue workers are using three narrow shafts to send essential supplies to the trapped men, and ensure they have adequate ventilation.

Vaccinations

On Sunday, the miners were each able to speak to family members for one minute by telephone.

Click to play

Click to play

The supply line which is proving vital to the Chilean miners

Alicia Campos said she broke down as she said goodbye to her son, Daniel Herrero, promising him she would see him again.

"His voice is the same. He's not good, but not so bad either," she said.

Jessica Chille said speaking to her husband, Dario Segovia, had been "a balm to my heart".

The men are trapped in a refuge chamber of the mine, where they managed to take shelter after a rock collapse on 5 August.

One of the men has some medical training and has been able to give his colleagues vaccinations against tetanus. They will be sent flu vaccinations later this week.

Quick-dry clothing has also been sent down, after some of the miners said they were suffering from skin conditions in the hot, wet conditions. Others have been sent mats to sleep on to protect them from the damp ground.

They have also been sent mp3 players to listen to music and a small screen, so they can watch football matches.

'Well organised'
Strata 950 drill The drill will first make a pilot shaft and then widen it out sufficiently for a rescue capsule to be lowered

Four experts from Nasa are due to arrive at the mine this week at the request of the Chilean authorities, to advise the miners and rescuers on how to cope with their situation.

The team includes a doctor, nutritionist, and engineer and a psychologist.

Nasa deputy chief medical officer Michael Duncan said that while the environment was different to that experienced by astronauts, "the human response in "physiology, behaviour, responses to emergencies is quite similar".

"We think that some of the things we learned in research and operation can be adaptable to the miners who are trapped under the ground," he said.

Mr Duncan praised the responses of the miners and officials, saying they appeared to be well organised.

"They have done a lot for the miners, and in fact the miners have done a lot for themselves underground," he said.

Families of the men have set up a temporary encampment at the head of the mine, which they have called Camp Hope.

The BBC's James Reynolds at the mine, about 800km (500 miles) north of Santiago, says a shrine has been built for each of the miners, covered in photographs, messages and football shirts.

How rescuers will drill to save miners

graphic

1. First, a 33cm pilot hole is drilled down to the miners' location 2. Next, the hole is "reamed" with a wider drill to a diameter of between 60 and 70cm. Debris falls down the hole to the bottom 3. Thirdly, a rescue capsule is lowered down to the men and each is slowly brought to the surface

Four Pakistan cricketers 'unlikely' to finish tour

Four Pakistan cricketers 'unlikely' to finish tour

Pakistan's Test captain Salman Butt
Test captain Salman Butt is one of four players in the spotlight

Four Pakistan cricketers under scrutiny for claims of spot-fixing are unlikely to play again on the current England tour, the BBC understands.

The BBC's Pat Murphy said the four may lack the mental focus required to play.

The International Cricket Council's anti-corruption unit is preparing an urgent report, while police carry out a separate criminal investigation.

The four players being questioned are Salman Butt, Mohammad Amir, Mohammad Asif and Kamran Akmal.

Murphy added that the ICC was concerned about banning the four players based on a newspaper expose and an incomplete investigation from Scotland Yard, and therefore wanted to receive the findings from the anti-corruption unit urgently. It is expected within days.

The anti-corruption unit's representatives are now in the UK, while the Pakistani government is sending its equivalent members to work with Scotland Yard. An ICC press conference has now been pencilled in for Thursday.

Click to play

Click to play

Pakistan's team manager Yawar Saeed: "No allegations are true til they are proved"

Murphy told BBC Radio 5 live: "A conference call between Pakistan high commissioner [Wajid Shamsul Hasan] and chairman of the cricket board [Ijaz Butt], who are in London and sports minister [Ijaz Hussain Jakhrani] in Islamabad will take place on Tuesday.

"And given the importance of cricket in Pakistan, Prime Minister [Yusuf Raza Gilani] may also be directly involved in the discussions.

"Although the players will still be deemed to be innocent until proven guilty, it's almost certain they will taken out of the firing line and the formula of words citing mental pressure and a lack of necessary focus, will necessitate their withdrawal from the Twenty20 matches and the one-day series."

ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat told BBC Radio 5 live that the intention is to conclude the investigation before the start of the first of two Twenty20 internationals against England, in Cardiff on Sunday.

The ICC has also stated that Pakistan's tour of England will carry on - they are due to play Somerset in a tour match from Thursday - president Sharad Pawar said it was the "desire of the ICC and the cricket boards of England and Pakistan that the game should continue".

Lorgat added: "The reputation of the game has been tarnished and it is something we must make right. There is no question that people's confidence will have been swayed.

"We're busy with the Metropolitan Police and hope, before the weekend arrives, we can get to some sort of a conclusion.

"We are working hard, but it's important to remember that an individual is innocent until proven guilty.

If any players are found to be guilty, the ICC will ensure that the appropriate punishment is handed out
Chief executive Haroon Lorgat

"I'm in touch with the investigators. It's likely I might have to come across to London. But this is a live issue which moves with the hour, every hour.

"At the moment, it is appropriate that the game continues. We shouldn't let everyone suffer because of a couple of individuals that might have got caught up in corrupt practices.

"The vast majority of players are not guilty of any such behaviour. They play the sport in the right spirit, and there are many fans who want to watch the game.

"We shouldn't let a couple of individuals, a few players, bring the entire game to a standstill."

Test captain Butt, fast bowlers Amir and Asif and wicketkeeper Akmal were questioned by police at the team's hotel in London on Sunday following a report that some Pakistan players had been bribed to fix incidents during the fourth Test against England at Lord's.

The allegations centred on three no-balls from Amir and Asif which the News of the World newspaper said had been bowled on purpose at pre-determined times to facilitate betting coups after a "middle man" accepted £150,000 in cash from an undercover reporter.

The man identified as the alleged go-between, cricket agent Mazhar Majeed, 35, has been released on police bail after being arrested on Saturday on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud bookmakers.

Investigators from the ICC's anti-corruption and security unit are already in the UK conducting enquiries of their own as well as "assisting London's Metropolitan Police with their criminal investigation".

"If any players are found to be guilty, the ICC will ensure that the appropriate punishment is handed out. We will not tolerate corruption in this great game," said Lorgat in a statement earlier.

On Monday, the Pakistan team coach left London for Taunton ahead of the match against Somerset. Pakistan are then due to continue their tour with the two Twenty20 internationals and five one-day internationals against England in September.

Test captain Butt - the one-day side is led by Shahid Afridi - boarded the coach with Amir, Asif and Akmal, plus the rest of his team-mates, despite calls from a number of quarters for the quartet to be suspended from the final part of the tour pending investigations.

There were audible, but isolated, shouts of abuse from at least one member of the public after a crowd gathered to watch the players leave London.

Somerset chief executive Richard Gould said he expected the team to receive a "warm welcome" on Thursday.

He added: "They have a net session booked in for Wednesday and if they want anything else we will be happy to provide it. This game has been looked forward to by many of our supporters and members and we think they will give the Pakistan team a warm welcome."

Pakistan's team manager Yawar Saeed revealed there were "sober feelings" in the dressing room, but added: "No allegations are true until they are proved."

Cricket agent Mazhar also owns Croydon Athletic Football Club who have released a statement saying they are "devastated and appalled to hear of the alleged match-fixing of international cricket matches by its owner Mazhar Majeed".

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Pakistan cricket 'match-fixing' in urdu

Pakistan embroiled in cricket 'match-fixing' probe

Pakistan embroiled in cricket LONDON: Pakistan's embattled cricket team were embroiled in allegations of match-fixing on Sunday after British police arrested a man on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud bookmakers.

The controversy erupted after the News of the World alleged some members of the Pakistan team were involved in a betting scam in the ongoing fourth and final Test against England at Lord's.

Britain's biggest-selling newspaper claimed several blatant no-balls had been delivered by Pakistan bowlers.

The weekly tabloid said it gave 150,000 pounds (230,000 dollars, 185,000 euros) to a middle man who correctly told them in advance precisely when those deliveries would be bowled.

"Following information received from the News of the World we have arrested a 35-year-old man on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud bookmakers," a spokesman for London's Metropolitan Police said.

Despite the latest controversy swirling around the game, the International Cricket Council (ICC) insisted the fourth Test would continue as scheduled on Sunday, adding that no "players nor team officials have been arrested in relation to this incident".

Pakistan tour manager Yawar Saeed added: "I can confirm we are aware of the allegations. Scotland Yard (Metropolitan) police are with us now at our hotel and we are helping them with their enquiries.

"This is as much as I can say at the moment."

The News of the World published images and dialogue from the encounter and a picture of what it said was one of the promised no-balls delivered on Friday.

It also ran a photograph of Pakistan captain Salman Butt standing with the man they claimed was the middleman, and one of their reporters.

The News of the World claimed their reporters had posed as front men for an Asian gambling cartel, paying 10,000 pounds to the alleged fixer as an upfront deposit.

They met again on Wednesday in a west London hotel room to hand over the rest of the money as their "entry ticket" into what they claimed was a "huge betting syndicate".

They claimed the middle man then correctly predicted when the no-balls would be bowled.

The newspaper showed the alleged fixer with piles of cash on a table.

Meanwhile, the ICC said the match would continue as planned on Sunday at Lord's, the spiritual home of the game.

"The International Cricket Council, the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) and the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) have been informed by the Metropolitan Police that a 35-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud bookmakers," said an ICC statement.

"The Metropolitan Police have informed the ICC, ECB and PCB that their investigations continue and ICC, ECB and PCB, with the involvement of the ICC Anti Corruption and Security Unit, are fully assisting those enquiries.

"No players nor team officials have been arrested in relation to this incident and the fourth Test match will continue as scheduled on Sunday.

"As this is now subject to a police investigation neither ICC, ECB, PCB nor the ground authority, MCC (Marylebone Cricket Club), will make any further comment," it added.

Pakistan, who have been dogged by 'fixing' allegations since the 1990s, collapsed spectacularly yet again Saturday to leave England closing in on an innings victory.

At stumps, Pakistan, following on, were 41 for four in their second innings, having been dismissed for just 74 first time around.

That left them still 331 runs adrift of England's first innings 446 as the home team eyed a victory that would give them a 3-1 win in their final series before they begin the defence of the Ashes in Australia in November.

There was also a controversial finish to Pakistan's 2006 Test series in England.

They forfeited the final match at The Oval in south London, having refused to take the field after tea on the fourth day because they'd been penalised for ball-tampering.

Pakistan have been unable to play matches at home since an armed attack on the Sri Lanka team bus in Lahore in March last year effectively turned the country into a 'no-go area' for international cricket.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Rani is Out, Katrina is Aditya’s n muse

Updated at: 1448 PST, Thursday, August 19, 2010
Rani is Out, Katrina is Aditya’s n muse MUMBAI: Rani Mukherjee, who used to be the muse for filmmaker Aditya Chopra, is no longer the director’s lucky charm.

Adi, as the filmmaker is fondly called in the industry, held Rani of Black fame in high esteem as his lucky mascot until recently, when it seems the spell of another Bollywood belle has been cast on him. The new arrival in the filmy world of Adi is none other than the charming Katrina Kaif.

A source close to the filmmaker reveals that Adi has developed a liking for Katrina after New York, starring Kat along with Neil Nitin Mukesh and John Abraham, became a blockbuster last year. The words emanating from the grapevine are that being bitten by the bug that is Katrina’s beguiling beauty, Aditya has been spending quality time with her. In addition, the Bollywood beauty has been taking career tips from him as per the reports.

The buzz in the air also reveals that Katrina has walked out of Abbas Mustan’s The Italian Job because Adi thought that this is the high noon of her career and she should not do insignificant roles.

The source also informs that Kat is going to do three films under the banner of the Chopras. Katrina herself confirms that she is doing a Yash Raj film with Imran Khan and she is supposed to be cast in the female lead in Dhoom 3 under the same banner.

Boy killed as fresh clashes erupt in IHK: police

Updated at: 0112 PST, Friday, August 20, 2010
Boy killed as fresh clashes erupt in IHK: police SRINAGAR: Twenty people were hurt Thursday in fresh clashes with police after the death of a nine-year old boy injured during a weekend protest in Indian Occupied Kashmir, police said.

The death brought to 59 the number of protesters and bystanders killed in two months of violent protests in the mainly Muslim-majority Kashmir Valley, most of them young men or teenagers shot dead by security forces.

The boy, who was not part of any protest, had been shot in southern Kulgam district Saturday and died in hospital Thursday, police said.

"He was injured when a stray bullet hit him after security forces opened fire to quell a demonstration," a police spokesman said.

Thousands of Kulgam residents, shouting, "We want freedom" and "blood for blood" attended his funeral, which dispersed peacefully.

In Srinagar, the Kashmiri summer capital, hundreds defied strict curfew restrictions in several places and staged protests against Indian rule, witnesses said.

Riot police fired live ammunition, tear-gas and wielded batons, injuring 17 protesters and bystanders, a police officer said, asking not to be named.

He said three of the injured suffered bullet wounds and were from the same family -- a man, his daughter and daughter-in-law.

Protesters retaliated by hurling rocks and bricks, injuring three policemen.

Srinagar has been under a rolling curfew after separatists called on residents to hold protests against Indian rule.

Anti-Indian sentiments run deep in the valley, and recent protests that started on June 11 after a teenage student was killed by a police tear-gas shell, are the biggest in recent years.

Kashmir is in the grip of a 20-year-old insurgency against Indian rule that has left more than 47,000 people dead by an official count.

Boy killed as fresh clashes erupt in IHK: police

Updated at: 0112 PST, Friday, August 20, 2010
Boy killed as fresh clashes erupt in IHK: police SRINAGAR: Twenty people were hurt Thursday in fresh clashes with police after the death of a nine-year old boy injured during a weekend protest in Indian Occupied Kashmir, police said.

The death brought to 59 the number of protesters and bystanders killed in two months of violent protests in the mainly Muslim-majority Kashmir Valley, most of them young men or teenagers shot dead by security forces.

The boy, who was not part of any protest, had been shot in southern Kulgam district Saturday and died in hospital Thursday, police said.

"He was injured when a stray bullet hit him after security forces opened fire to quell a demonstration," a police spokesman said.

Thousands of Kulgam residents, shouting, "We want freedom" and "blood for blood" attended his funeral, which dispersed peacefully.

In Srinagar, the Kashmiri summer capital, hundreds defied strict curfew restrictions in several places and staged protests against Indian rule, witnesses said.

Riot police fired live ammunition, tear-gas and wielded batons, injuring 17 protesters and bystanders, a police officer said, asking not to be named.

He said three of the injured suffered bullet wounds and were from the same family -- a man, his daughter and daughter-in-law.

Protesters retaliated by hurling rocks and bricks, injuring three policemen.

Srinagar has been under a rolling curfew after separatists called on residents to hold protests against Indian rule.

Anti-Indian sentiments run deep in the valley, and recent protests that started on June 11 after a teenage student was killed by a police tear-gas shell, are the biggest in recent years.

Kashmir is in the grip of a 20-year-old insurgency against Indian rule that has left more than 47,000 people dead by an official count.

UN urges faster Pakistan flood aid

Updated at: 0238 PST, Friday, August 20, 2010
UN urges faster Pakistan flood aid UNITED NATIONS: United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has said the Pakistan flooding is the worst natural disaster he has ever seen - as more heavy rain heads towards the worst-hit areas.

With the first case of cholera reported, Ban has also urged foreign donors to speed up aid to the country.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has said as many as 300,000 people may contract cholera and up to seven million will suffer from diarrhoea.

Up to 1,600 people have died in the disaster and around 20 million have been left homeless.

After pledging a further $10m from the UN's central emergency response fund, Ban said: "This has been a heart-wrenching day - I will never forget the destruction and suffering I have witnessed.

In the past I have witnessed many natural disasters around the world, but nothing like this.

"I am here... to share my sympathy and solidarity of the United Nations together with the people and government of Pakistan at this time of trial.

"I am here also to urge the world community to speed up their assistance to Pakistan.

"Waves of flood must be met with waves of support from the world."

So far, only one case of cholera has been confirmed by the UN, but other cases are suspected among those with diarrhoea.

Mark Ward, acting director of the US department for foreign disaster assistance, said cholera was "unavoidable" - but could be controlled.

He praised a system set up by the WHO to quickly detect any cases of the disease or other waterborne illnesses common after flooding.

"The good news is that we know where it is and we can get resources in there to help because of the disease early warning system," he said.

"When you are dealing with this much water and that many people, it (cholera) is almost unavoidable. I think we can control this."

Cholera, a bacterial intestinal infection typically spread through contaminated water, causes severe diarrhoea and dehydration and can be fatal.

Fresh flood waves have swelled the River Indus, threatening nearby cities, towns and villages in southern Sindh province, said senior meteorologist Mohammed Ajmal Shad.

Authorities are trying to evacuate or warn people in Jacobabad, Hyderabad, Thatta, Ghotki, Larkana and other areas in Sindh province that so far have been spared floods.

Meanwhile, more American helicopters have joined food aid work, with the US assigning aircraft from the USS Peleliu in the Arabian Sea.

And France has announced it will send a plane loaded with 60 tons of aid to the region.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the world and Pakistan faced a "defining moment," while Britain and the United States raised their combined aid contributions to 250 million dollars.

"I stand before you as the voice of 20 million Pakistanis devastated by the floods," Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told the UN General Assembly's emergency fund-raising session in New York.

"The massive upheaval caused by the floods and the economic losses suffered by the millions of Pakistanis must be addressed urgently. We cannot allow this catastrophe to become an opportunity for the terrorists."

Although weather forecasters say the monsoon systems are easing off and water levels receding, the fallout from three weeks of devastating floods that have left nearly 1,500 people dead is likely to last for years.

The nuclear-armed nation of 167 million is a top US foreign policy priority due to the threat posed by Islamist extremists, as Washington tries to bring an end to the nine-year war against the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.

In a poignant video message, Clinton urged Americans and the world to reach deep into their pockets for the crucial war on terror ally, saying: "This is a defining moment -- not only for Pakistan, but for all of us.

"The enormity of this crisis is hard to fathom, the rain continues to fall, and the extent of the devastation is still difficult to gauge.

"In surveying the lives and landscape affected by this disaster, we see brothers and sisters; mothers and fathers; daughters and sons. We see 20 million members of the human family in desperate need of help."

Clinton doubled US aid from 90 million dollars to 150 million dollars, while Britain said it planned to double its contribution to more than 64 million pounds (99 million dollars).

"I have come to New York directly from Pakistan, where I saw the dire need for more help," British Development Secretary Andrew Mitchells told the General Assembly. "It is deeply depressing that the international community is only now waking up to the true scale of this disaster."

Clinton announced that the State Department had set up a Pakistan Relief Fund and urged Americans to donate, either online or by texting F-L-O-O-D to a special cell phone number.

"Every dollar makes a difference," she said. "Five dollars can buy 50 high energy bars providing much needed nutrition; 10 dollars can provide a child or mother with a blanket; and about 40 dollars can buy material to shelter a family of four."


The US pointman on Pakistan called on China to join the global effort, saying billions of dollars would be needed for the country's reconstruction.

"I think the Chinese should step up to the plate," Richard Holbrooke told reporters at an Asia Society event before the UN meeting.

More than 40 speakers were scheduled to take the floor of the General Assembly to pledge increased assistance.

Opening the special session, UN chief Ban Ki-moon described the disaster as "one of the greatest tests of global solidarity" and said Pakistan was facing a "slow-motion tsunami."

Qureshi said the economic damage was at least 43 billion dollars and warned that failure to assist, "could undermine the hard won gains made by the government in our difficult and painful war against terrorism."

The General Assembly adopted a resolution urging the international community to help Pakistan recover, as foreign donors belatedly rallied in support of the embattled Muslim nation.

The Asian Development Bank said it would provide two billion dollars to repair roads, bridges, power lines, homes, schools, medical facilities and farm structures, and the World Bank has promised to lend 900 million dollars.

At least six million flood survivors in desperate need of food, shelter and clean drinking water require humanitarian assistance to survive, as concerns grow over potential cholera, typhoid and hepatitis outbreaks.

The floods wiped out villages, farmland and infrastructure, and UN aid coordination body OCHA said more than 650,000 homeless families were still without basic shelter.

In Islamabad, US Senator John Kerry and Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari urged the world to act swiftly to stop extremists exploiting the country's devastating floods and to prevent social unrest.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

B.A./B.Sc. result annual examination 2010

The result of B.A./B.Sc. Annual 2010 has been scheduled to be declared on 17th August 2010.http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f9/June21-2004-ThePunjabUniversity-OldCampusBuilding-1.jpeg

Friday, August 13, 2010

Eric Pickles announces plans to scrap Audit Commission

England's public spending watchdog the Audit Commission, which employs 2,000 people, is to be scrapped.

Communities Secretary Eric Pickles said the move would save £50m a year.

Commission Chairman Michael O'Higgins said the watchdog had improved the quality of local services since its inception in 1983.

He said the commission regretted the government's decision but the body had already been looking at moving some of its work into the private sector.

Staff received an email from management on Friday. A source told the BBC it came "completely out of the blue".

Surprising move

In a press statement, Mr Pickles said the commission's research functions would stop and councils would be able to ask private companies to carry out audits. There would also be a "new audit framework" for local health services.

In May, Mr Pickles vetoed the £240,000 salary for the new head of the Audit Commission. Earlier this month he criticised its decision to pay a lobbying firm £55,617.

A source at the commission told the BBC that moving some of the auditing into the private sector could end up costing more.

But Mr Pickles said: "The corporate centre of the Audit Commission has lost its way. Rather than being a watchdog that champions taxpayers' interests, it has become the creature of the Whitehall state.

Analysis

"The Audit Commission is a body that has been responsible for checking how councils, and some health organisations, spend taxpayers' money.

There have over the last few weeks been some quite bad tempered tussles between the Audit Commission and the new coalition government.

But the fact that it is to be scrapped has come completely out of the blue.

The Communities Secretary Eric Pickles' belief is that bringing in the private sector will increase the amount of competition and drive down costs.

Sources I've spoken to believe the Audit Commission can do the job more cheaply than big private accounting firms.

Tonight, the victim of the latest cuts announcement is clear - 2,000 staff at the Audit Commission will lose their jobs - at any rate in their present form."

"We need to redress this balance. Audit should remain to ensure taxpayers' money is properly spent, but this can be done in a competitive environment, drawing on professional audit expertise across the country."

He said he wanted to see the commission's auditing function become independent of government and compete for business from the public and private sector.

He later told BBC Radio 4's PM programme it could mean being bought by another company, or the auditing arm becoming a co-operative, like John Lewis.

Job losses

Asked about job losses, he said: "In terms of people working for the Audit Commission, almost certainly we are looking for them to be able to continue in another form."

He also said the Audit Commission had already been thinking about putting the auditing function out to the private sector.

In a statement, Mr O'Higgins said: "The Audit Commission was set up by a Conservative Secretary of State in 1983, and I believe we have more than fulfilled Michael Heseltine's ambitions when he set it up.

He said the commission had exposed poor practice and had played a significant role in improving services across the country.

'Uncertainty'

"The gerrymandering 'homes for votes' scandal at Westminster Council was uncovered by the Audit Commission," he said.

He said the commission's successes had enabled ministers to give local authorities more autonomy.

Earlier, Mr O'Higgins told the BBC Radio 4's PM programme the decision was only confirmed at 1000 BST on Friday.

He said Mr Pickles' comments about the body were "characteristically robust and quotable" but argued the body had criticised Whitehall and saved £600m in one fraud initiative alone and the quality of local government had vastly improved.

Audit Commission

  • The Audit Commission for Local Authorities in England and Wales was established in 1983
  • It is an independent watchdog "driving economy, efficiency and effectiveness" in local public services
  • The commission assumed auditing responsibility for the National Health Service in 1980
  • Functions were extended to fire and rescue services in 2004
  • Its remit in Wales was transferred to the auditor general for Wales, also in 2004
  • The commission now covers local government, health, housing, community safety and fire brigades
  • It audits £200bn spent by 11,000 local public bodies

He also said some major audit firms were interested in acquiring parts of the commission's audit function - and they would look at mutualisation or a management buyout.

He said there would inevitably be "uncertainty for staff" but until a decision about the next step was made, the commission would continue to carry out its work.

In a statement, Labour's shadow communities secretary John Denham said the move meant taxpayers would have "no coherent information" about how much value for money their local services provided.

He said: "The Audit Commission doesn't just look at the cost but at the quality.

"Without the function of the Audit Commission there will be no one to step in when a council is failing, as Doncaster was recently.

"This move by the government shows they are only interested in the cost of everything and the value of nothing."

He added: "I had warned The Audit Commission against excessive wage increases and their fate seemed to be sealed when they ignored this but the commission needed reform - not abolition."

Clive Betts, the Labour chairman of the communities and local government select committee, suggested to BBC Radio 4's PM programme there might be a "political motive" behind the move - saying there were "quite a few Labour people" including former councillors on the body.

The watchdog has offices in London, Bristol, Leicester, Solihull, Stevenage, Bolton, Gateshead, Leeds and Exeter.

Liam Fox unveils plans for 'leaner' Ministry of Defence

Liam Fox has said the Ministry of Defence must become "leaner" to help tackle the "dangerous deficit".

The defence secretary indicated there would be fewer civil servants and senior officers, to ensure enough money was devoted to the front line.

He did not say what jobs or equipment would go, but said cutting the deficit would be "difficult and painful".

For Labour, Bob Ainsworth said Dr Fox was just "softening us up" for the cuts he had previously opposed.

The MoD is looking at cuts to its budget of between 10% and 20%. A strategic defence and security review, expected to bring about cuts in equipment and personnel, is due to report in October.

'Dangerous deficit'

In a speech at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, Dr Fox said it had to be the "defence review that puts the Cold War to bed", and that it would "shape Britain for the 21st Century".

And he blamed Labour for what he called an "unfunded liability" of £37bn defence spending plans over 10 years - £20bn for equipment and support programmes Dr Fox said were ordered "without ever having an idea whether the budget would be able to afford it".

ANALYSIS

Liam Fox looks like a man under pressure - over money, time, and aspirations.

And his latest remarks underline just how radical a shake-up the Ministry of Defence is facing.

The existing strategic defence and security review is already expected to make big changes to the armed forces.

Now there is to be a review of just how the MoD is run as well.

In a sense, it is no surprise. In opposition, the Conservatives made much of the number of MoD civil servants relative to the size of the Army.

Speculation about cuts in the armed forces has come thick and fast.

Just where the savings will be made, though, is still far from clear, or how they will all fit in an overall strategy.

And Dr Fox insisted that one major imponderable still has to be resolved - he said discussions are ongoing with the Treasury on exactly how to fund the replacement for the Trident nuclear system.

He outlined plans to reorganise the MoD into three areas - policy and strategy, the armed forces and procurement and estates - and for a cultural shift "which will see a leaner and less centralised organisation".

In opposition, Dr Fox had said he wanted to cut the department's running costs by 25% and criticised the fact it had 85,000 civil servants while the Army had just 100,000 soldiers.

But asked how many civil service jobs he expected to go, he would not put a figure on it, saying there would be "root and branch reform", and that it was "much more complex than that".

"I don't pretend that it will be painless, but I want, at the end of this period of office, for us to look back and say we took the necessary changes for the long-term view."

He said a visit to Afghanistan this week had reminded him that "the prime purpose of what we are doing is to make sure that our armed forces on the front line have everything they need... to carry out their mission successfully and safely".

"That means that the backroom sometimes has to do without to make sure that the front line gets what it wants."

He also said "fundamental assumptions" about tour lengths and intervals for armed personnel had to be challenged, "taking into account the varying pressures on our personnel resulting from widely varying missions".

Trident questions

While he said he was not intending to merge the armed forces, he would "consider whether the current senior rank structure across the services is appropriate".

"We cannot demand efficiency from the lower ranks while exempting those at the top."

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Bob Ainsworth: "He (Liam Fox) is softening us up for cuts he opposed in opposition"

The defence secretary announced that a defence reform unit was being set up under Lord Levene to guide the strategic defence and security review.

The new unit will work with the permanent secretary, chief of the defence staff and the service chiefs to find ways of devolving more responsibility for the running of the armed services themselves.

Shadow defence secretary Bob Ainsworth said Dr Fox had said nothing of substance: "What he's effectively doing is softening us up for cuts that he opposed in opposition."

He told the BBC he was concerned that not enough time had been put aside for a proper defence review - and it appeared to be "Treasury-led".

"He can't even tell us whether the MoD budget is going to have to pay for the full costs... of the Trident nuclear deterrent."

'Devastating impact'

Previously the Trident renewal costs - estimated at £20bn - were funded directly by the Treasury - but Chancellor George Osborne said last month the full costs must be met from the MoD's budget. Dr Fox said how that would happen was "a conversation that is constantly ongoing with the Treasury".

Mr Ainsworth agreed that tour lengths should be looked at but he warned against cutting civilian staff too quickly as it could mean their jobs have to be "backfilled" by uniformed personnel.

Asked about the £37bn funding gap, Mr Ainsworth said: "There are some pressures on the [MoD] budget but there always have been. It's just not true to say this is a new creation, that this wasn't there in the past or these difficulties don't exist in other countries, because they do."

The SNP said the coalition government should abandon plans to renew the Trident nuclear missile system and not undermine the "conventional capabilities of our forces" in Afghanistan.

"Absorbing Trident into the core defence budget is unsustainable and would have a devastating impact for spending on conventional forces, which are already overstretched," said the SNP's Westminster spokesman Angus Robertson.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Three children found dead in Edinburgh blast flat

The deaths of two young boys and a girl in an incident at an Edinburgh flat are being treated as suspicious, police have confirmed.

Fire, police and ambulance crews were called to reports of a fire at 166 Slateford Road in the west of the city after 1500 BST.

A woman who is thought to be the children's mother was also taken to the city's Royal Infirmary by ambulance.

It is understood the children did not die as a result of a blast or the fire.

A Lothian and Borders Police spokesman said: "A criminal investigation is currently underway and nothing more can be said at this time into the circumstances which led to their deaths."

The identity of the children will not be released until after post mortems have been carried out.

The woman, who was found injured on the ground outside the property, remains in hospital.

Start Quote

We saw a woman lying on the ground. She was covered by a sheet, then she was taken in an ambulance and we were asked to move to a safer area”

End Quote Omar Barisah Neighbour

The police spokesman said a fire on the first floor of the three-storey modern apartment block was extinguished by Lothian and Borders Fire and Rescue Service and the property made safe.

Gas supply at the scene was isolated as a precaution, and Scotland Gas Networks engineers were sent to the scene.

However, it was confirmed there was not a fault with the gas supply to the flat.

Several foreign students living in the terraced block said they believed the injured woman lived in the property with her three children, and that they were newcomers to the building.

Some said they believed the woman had jumped from a balcony.

Chemical engineering student Moe Harbi, 22, from Saudi Arabia, said he smelt gas at about 0100 BST on Wednesday.

He added: "I thought it was from my flat though I checked the kitchen and the oven and then I slept. I didn't think it was from my neighbours."

Scene of the blast Emergency services were called to the scene at 1500 BST

Omar Barisah, 20, also a student, told BBC Scotland he had heard a noise "like a shooting gun".

He added: "It felt like a big bang - it was absolutely frightening and I had to take my little brother, and his friend who was sleeping and woke up because of the noise, and we ran out of the house.

"We saw a woman lying on the ground. She was covered by a sheet, then she was taken in an ambulance and we were asked to move to a safer area."

A spokesman for Lothian and Borders Fire and Rescue said: "Two fire appliances and a turntable ladder attended at the address, a three-storey modern townhouse. Two firefighters wearing breathing apparatus extinguished a small fire on the first floor of the building.

"Gas at the property was isolated as a precaution and fire crews remain at the scene with the fire investigation unit - they are currently liaising with the police."

'Terrible incident'

The spokesman said there was "no significant structural damage to the building" and confirmed that the fire was extinguished very quickly.

Ann Fairbairn, of Tallulah Hairdressing on Lanark Road, which joins on to Slateford Road, said: "The road has been cordoned off and it's swarming with police, nobody is allowed in or out.

"There are ambulances, police and it looks like CID as well as the fire service."

Edinburgh City Council leader Jenny Dawe said: "Although there is little information at the moment this is obviously a terrible incident and our thoughts go to those who are affected.

"The council will provide whatever support the emergency services require as they deal with the incident and its aftermath."

Police said westbound traffic was being diverted at Longstone Garage and eastbound drivers are being diverted at Chesser Avenue.

There are also warnings of heavy traffic on the A71 Gorgie Road.

Meat of second cloned cow offspring 'in UK food chain'

Meat of second cloned cow offspring 'in UK food chain'

British beef meat on the bone  The FSA said meat from the offspring of a cloned cow entered the UK food chain

A second case of meat from the offspring of a cloned cow entering the UK's food chain has emerged.

The Food Standards Agency said it came to light as it investigated an earlier case of meat from a Highlands farm bull grown from the embryo of a cloned cow being sold to consumers.

The FSA has admitted it does not know how many embryos from cloned animals have been imported into Britain.

FSA chief Tim Smith said he had no safety concerns about the meat.

However, he said any suppliers would require approval under European law.

The FSA had already traced two bulls born from embryos of a cow cloned in the US that were bought by a farm near Nairn, in the Highlands.

The first of the two animals was slaughtered in July 2009 and its meat entered the food chain.

The second was slaughtered on 27 July 2010, but its meat was stopped from entering the food chain.

But now it has revealed that meat from another offspring of a cloned cow entered the food chain.

The animal, called Parable, was born in May 2007 and slaughtered on May 5 2010.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said: "The FSA is investigating how meat from the offspring of a cloned animal was allowed to get into the food chain. We will need to consider their findings, and Defra is liaising closely with them.

"If we need to change our procedures to ensure full traceability of cloned cattle and their offspring in the UK, then we will work with our European partners to ensure that this happens."

It also said it had carried out an "extensive campaign" with the FSA three years ago which "publicised widely the rules around cloned animals and progeny of cloned animals entering the food chain", adding that the information still appeared in the national and farming press.

In 2008, the Food and Drug Administration in the US said meat and milk from cloned animals were safe for human consumption, and Professor Hugh Pennington, an expert on food safety from Aberdeen University, told the BBC he agreed with that assessment.

"People are concerned about playing God and that kind of thing... rather than producing products which are dangerous to eat," he said.

"There's absolutely no evidence for that, and I've got no expectation that any such evidence will ever emerge."

At present, foodstuffs, including milk, produced from cloned animals must pass a safety evaluation and gain authorisation under so-called novel foods regulations before they are marketed in Europe.

The FSA said it had not been asked to consider any such cases, but Mr Smith said that despite having a "first-class cattle tracing scheme" in place, the system was not perfect.

"It's a bit like the police being there and being an efficient service and us expecting no crime. It's inevitable that however good the system is, it ultimately relies on the honesty of the people who are participating in the chain.

"So it means that every farmer, every breeder, every processor has to come clean and tell us what it is they're actually doing. It's impossible for us to stand by each animal and watch what happens to it throughout its life cycle."

Meanwhile, Scottish Environment Secretary Richard Lochhead said consumers "deserve to know the origin of all foods they purchase" and he was "concerned to learn that the offspring of these animals have been reared in the UK for food production purposes without any authorisation from the Food Standards Agency".

Earlier this week, a British dairy farmer said he used milk from a cow produced from a cloned parent, but UK dairy industry body DairyCo said it was "confident" no milk from such animals had entered the human food chain.

Consumer confidence

Peter Stevenson, from campaign group Compassion in World Farming, said cloning was "at the sharp end of the inhumane selective breeding processes that are often involved in the intensive production of meat and dairy products".

"Many animals suffer in the pursuit of higher yields because they are being stretched to the limits of their physical capacity," he added.

David Bowles, from the RSPCA, which wants cloning banned, said: "The Food Standards Agency and the regulators and the government had no idea that any animal meat or animal milk had gone into the food chain.

"So it's really about showing there's transparency and that customers can trust what they go into shops to buy and at the moment that is in doubt."

In 2008, the European Food Safety Authority said "no clear evidence" had emerged to suggest any food safety differences between food products from clones or their offspring compared to products from conventionally bred animals.

"But we must acknowledge that the evidence base, while growing and showing consistent findings, is still small," it added.

Last month MEPs voted in favour of a law that would ban cloned meat and other animal products in the European food supply.

The legislation faces a next stage of consideration in September before it could become EU law.

Majority of BP spill 'dealt with'

Almost three-quarters of the oil spilled in the Gulf of Mexico has been cleaned up or broken down by natural forces, the US government says.

White House energy adviser Carol Browner said only a quarter of the leaked oil posed any further danger to the environment.

The majority had been captured, burned off or evaporated, she said.

She was speaking after BP announced its "static kill" procedure was working. Barack Obama welcomed the news.

"So, the long battle to stop the leak and contain the oil is finally close to coming to an end. And we are very pleased with that.

"Our recovery efforts, though, will continue. We have to reverse the damage that's been done," he said.

A 'big step'

Speaking on the ABC television network, Ms Browner said: "The scientists are telling us about 25% was not captured or evaporated or taken care of by mother nature."

She said the inter-agency report was "encouraging", but added that more cleanup was necessary.

"This is an initial assessment by our scientists in the government and outside the government. We think it's important to make this available to the public. That's what we'll be doing today," she said.

Graphic: What happened to the oil?

The New York Times said the report from the National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration indicated it was unlikely beaches along the Gulf of Mexico would be covered by surfacing oil in the future.

And although the report may claim residents along the Gulf will not see their beaches coated with oil, Ms Browner warns we may continue to see effects from the disaster.

"Mother nature will continue to break it down. But some of it may come onshore, as weathered tar balls. And those will be cleaned up. They can be cleaned up. And we will make sure they are cleaned up," she said.

Meanwhile, BP says the "static kill" of its ruptured Gulf of Mexico oil well has worked, a big step towards sealing it.

On Tuesday, the oil giant began pumping a drilling fluid known as mud into the well from vessels on the surface.

Experts believe the mud will force the oil back down.

Workers stopped their static kill procedure after eight hours to monitor the well and make sure it remained stable.

BP said well pressure was being controlled by the pressure of the mud, which was "the desired outcome".

A 18,000ft (5486m) relief well is also currently being drilled, which BP will use later this month to perform a "bottom kill" procedure.

Retired Coast Guard Adm Thad Allen said mud and cement would be injected into the bottom of the damaged well as the last step in the process to permanently stop the leaking oil.

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"There should be no ambiguity about that. I'm the national incident commander, and this is how this will be handled," Adm Allen said

Efforts to kill the well are becoming increasingly important as hurricane season approaches in the Gulf.

Oil began flowing into the Gulf after an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig in April. Eleven workers were killed in the blast.

The leaking oil was stopped on 15 July when BP closed a new cap it placed on the leaking well.

An estimated 4.9 million barrels of oil leaked into the waters of the Gulf during 87 days, with only 800,000 barrels being captured.

BBC infographic

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Monday, August 2, 2010

UN rushing food to victims of deadly Pakistan floods

UNITED NATIONS, Aug 2 (APP): The UN World Food Programme (WFP) said Monday it has begun distributing food to more than 35,000 families affected by the worst floods northwest Pakistan has seen in decades. According to media reports, more than 1,000 people have died in the flooding, unleashed by torrential monsoons which are said to be the worst in living memory. More than a million people have been affected. “We are deeply saddened to hear that so many people who have already suffered terribly in recent years are now seeing their lives washed away. We stand with them as they deal with this enormous shock,”the agency’s Executive Director Josette Sheeran said in a statement. “WFP is mobilizing every possible resource to make sure their needs are met as quickly as is humanly possible,” she added.

The first emergency rations for flood victims reached some 3,000 families yesterday in Peshawar, Nowshera and Charsadda, three of the hardest-hit areas. The parts of Pakistan affected most by the flooding are also among the poorest in the country, where WFP is already helping nearly 3 million people uprooted by violence along the border with Afghanistan. The agency plans to scale up its assistance to feed up to 150,000 more families who lost what little they had to the raging floodwaters over the next two to three months. The floods have caused major damage to infrastructure, including roads and dozens of bridges, isolating some heavily affected areas, in addition to thousands of homes. A WFP warehouse for food supplies for both Pakistan and Afghanistan has also sustained damage, which could further complicate efforts to distribute urgently-needed supplies.
The UN World Health Organization (WHO) reported some 27,000 people are still waiting to be evacuated from flooded areas in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK), formerly known as the North-West Frontier Province. WFP is assisting with the Government’s damage assessment in the worst affected districts, as well as working to determine the extent of the damage across the border in Afghanistan, where heavy flooding has also been reported. On Sunday, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a statement that he is “deeply saddened by the significant loss of lives, livelihoods and infrastructure in Pakistan,”pledging the UN’s full commitment”to supporting authorities to meet humanitarian needs. He also announced that on top of the aid that the world body is already providing, up to $10 million will be disbursed from the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), set up in 2006 to allow the UN to dispatch funds to tackle disasters and crises as soon as they emerge, to help address needs in Pakistan following the floods.