Friday, July 6, 2012

Asian nations want to sink South Korea whale hunt plan

PANAMA CITY: South Korea's proposal to resume whaling for scientific research has angered other Asian countries and conservationists who said the practice would skirt a global ban on whale hunting. 

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard said she would fight the proposal, which was made on Wednesday at a meeting of the International Whaling Commission in Panama City, while the United States said it planned to take the matter up with the South Korean government. 

Critics said the move to pursue whaling in domestic waters was modeled on Japan's introduction of scientific whaling after the IWC imposed a 1986 moratorium on commercial whaling. 

Japan says it has a right to monitor the whales' impact on its fishing industry. South Korea says whaling is a long-standing cultural tradition. 

Anti-whaling activists regularly harass Japanese vessels engaging in their annual whale hunt in the Southern Ocean off Australia and Antarctica, with the two sides sometimes clashing violently. At least one activist boat has sunk in recent years. 

In Seoul, a government official said South Korea abided by international regulations and it would be up to the IWC to assess its proposal. 

Roger Federer beats Novak Djokovic; reaches record 8th Wimbledon final


Roger Federer
Roger Federer advanced to his record eighth Wimbledon final on Friday, beating defending champion Novak Djokovic in four sets.
The six-time champion defeated Djokovic 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 under a closed roof on Centre Court and is now one victory from equaling two other records in an already record-laden career. “This is what you want to be playing for _ the Wimbledon trophy,” Federer said. “I've got a tough task ahead of me.”
If Federer beats either Andy Murray or Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in Sunday's final, he will equal Pete Sampras' record of seven Wimbledon titles, a mark he shares with 1880s player William Renshaw. He would also take over the No. 1 ranking from Djokovic and equal Sampras' record of 286 weeks as the top-ranked player.
Murray and Tsonga were to play in the other semifinal later Friday. Neither has won a Grand Slam title; Federer is aiming for his 17th.
“There's obviously a lot on the line for me in terms of winning here, the all-time Grand Slam record, world No. 1,'' Federer said. “I'm also going into that match with some pressure, but I'm excited about it. That's what I play for.”

India's Sunil Chhetri to play for Sporting Lisbon


Sunil Chhetri
India's football captain Sunil Chhetri has signed up with Portuguese club Sporting Lisbon to play in its second division soccer league.
Sunil Chhetri completed his contract with Indian club Mohun Bagan last season, scoring just five goals.
Sporting Lisbon's second division team has, in the past, produced stars such as Christiano Ronaldo, Nani and Figo.
Baichung Bhutia was the first Indian to play international club football, representing the English club FC Bury.
News of Chhetri's joining was announced by Sporting Lisbon on its website.

US economic recovery is tepid, says IMF


House for sale in the US
The US recovery "remains tepid", according to the annual report from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
It has cut its growth forecast for the US economy to 2% this year from an earlier estimate of 2.1%.
The IMF warned of risks from the eurozone debt crisis and uncertainties surrounding domestic policies, with an election in November and the debt ceiling needing to be raised in 2013.
But it said there was also a chance that the economy could recover faster.
The IMF said non-financial firms could invest more than expected and the housing market recovery may accelerate.
Its report said that "house prices have stabilised recently, but remain at depressed levels".

US jobs data triggers share price slip


Queuing for jobs in California
US shares have fallen after official unemployment figures showed the rate unchanged at 8.2% in June, with just 80,000 new jobs created.
The figures, from the US Labor Department,show employment growth has slackened from earlier this year, when growth averaged more than 200,000.
Shares slipped after the news, with the opening Dow Jones index falling 1%.
Hopes for a high number had risen after Thursday's private sector jobs report came in better than expected.

London's Shard skyscraper celebrated with laser show


Shard firing lasers

A laser show has been staged to celebrate the inauguration of London's Shard skyscraper.
Earlier, the Duke of York and the Qatari prime minister attended a ceremony to mark the unveiling of the 1,016ft (310m) structure, which has been funded by the Qatar National Bank.
At about 22:15 BST a light show began firing beams from the summit to London landmarks including the BT Tower.
The spectacle could be seen across the city.
During Thursday afternoon's inauguration of the building, which is yards from the banks of the River Thames in Southwark, Prince Andrew said the building was a "huge new boost".
He added: "I'm sure that we would all be extremely glad if this could be repeated in a number of other areas across the UK."
The Shard is joint-owned by the state of Qatar, and the country's prime minister Hamad Bin Jassim Bin Jabr Al-Thani also attended the ceremony.

Syria Manaf Tlas desertion 'hard blow' for Assad


 A picture taken on August 22, 1999 shows then Colonel Bashar al-Assad (L), who is the current Syrian President, arriving with Manaf Tlas, son of then Syrian Defence Minister Mustafa Tlass in Kuwait City.
Manaf Tlas (r) trained at military academy with President Bashar al-Assad 

A Syrian general close to President Assad has defected, delivering "a hard blow for the regime", French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius has said.
Brig Gen Manaf Tlas fled Syria via Turkey, his family confirmed.
Mr Fabius said his departure showed Mr Assad's entourage was beginning to realise the regime was unsustainable.
Rumours of the possible defection last March proved false. If now confirmed, it would be the highest-level defection since Syria's unrest began.
Pro-government website Syriasteps said earlier Gen Tlas had made an "escape", adding the move was "insignificant".
Brig Gen Tlas, believed to be in his mid-40s, is a commander of a unit of the elite Republican Guard. As a young man he attended military training with President Assad.

Higgs boson: the human urge to visualise the particle is irresistible


Event display of a Higgs Boson 2e2mu
'It is obvious this is not like looking at a snapshot of the Higgs boson at a party, grinning for the camera between a couple of gurning gluons.' Photograph: Cern
Yellow lines shoot in wavy, wire-like radiations through a field of multitudinous blue dots. A few green and red lines are in there, too. These lines and points shine against darkness. Around the edge of the bright pattern, glowing rectangles define the perimeter of a circle.
"Picture that changes the way we see the universe for ever", said the headline above this image on the front page of Thursday's Guardian. The picture suggests a revolutionary frontier of knowledge. It fizzes with energy and mystery. If it is reasonable to call the Higgs boson a "God particle", this image certainly conveys the Sistine Chapel awe, the electrified sense of wonder, that has greeted its apparent discovery.
And that is probably about as much as a "photograph" of science at this level can communicate or record. Since the Higgs boson has taken prolonged experiments in the world's greatest particle accelerator to glimpse at all, and given that to do so the Large Hadron Collider had to recreate conditions in the universe just after the big bang (remember when it was switched on and people worried it would implode the universe?), it is obvious this is not like looking at a snapshot of the boson at a party, grinning for the camera between a couple of gurning gluons.
It has been released along with similarly mind-boggling images to convey the drama of collisions and energies that has enabled scientists to claim the discovery of the particle that is thought to create much of the mass of the universe. The fabric of reality suddenly looks less threadbare. It is a vindication of decades of theory and research, of modern science itself. So of course we want to see a picture. Show us the Higgs.
Everyone knows the information in this photograph would be as hard to explain in words as quantum mechanics itself, but our urge to see a picture is irresistible. That is not only natural but recognises what has been achieved at Cern. For this is a triumph for the human urge to see the truth.
The history of science is a dialogue between theory and experiment. The great insights of modern science start with Copernicus and Galileo: in fact the discovery of the Higgs boson, which started as pure theory and has now been "seen", re-enacts their discovery of the solar system. Copernicus was like Peter Higgs and the other physicists who hypothesised the existence of a particle that gives other particles mass. He theorised. At the start of the 16th century he argued that the Earth orbits the sun. It was pure hypothesis. Copernicus never picked up a telescope. Galileo did. Galileo was the first truly empirical scientist who put every hypothesis to the test.
Galileo's 1610 book The Starry Messenger contains his own drawings of the moon as it looked through his telescope. He could see mountains, craters, a planet-like surface. This showed the moon cannot be just a light revolving in the sky, as medieval cosmology had it. Therefore the sky is not a canopy over our heads, it is a vast field of moving objects – space – in which the Earth is a moving object, too. Galileo gave an empirical basis to the strange idea proposed by Copernicus – just as, four centuries later, the LHC experiments have given an empirical basis to the strange idea of Higgs and his fellow physicists.
The way science works – with theories that are tested against evidence, through experiment – was not the invention of one great philosopher. It was born out of the practical-minded curiosity of the Renaissance and was arrived at by trial and error. The scientific method was understood by Leonardo da Vinci, who said all true knowledge comes of experience – the evidence of the senses. The scientist who practiced it most beautifully was to be Charles Darwin, who delayed publishing his theory of natural selection until he had amassed enough evidence to make The Origin of Species as much a miracle of observation as of radical thought.
By contrast, Albert Einstein's theories of special and general relativity seemed completely remote from "experience" — yet experiments have repeatedly confirmed them.
In his painting An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump in London's National Gallery, the 18th-century artist Joseph Wright of Derby shows the wonder and terror of experiment. A moonlit gathering is held enthralled – and horrified – by a spectacular demonstration of the reality of the vacuum.
This week's discovery means the vacuum is not so empty after all. But it also means we are the true heirs of Wright of Derby's Enlightenment and Galileo's Renaissance. These may be troubled times, but this week, reason reasserted itself.

Microsoft India to make Windows phones women-friendly





HYDERABAD: For a clutch of women engineers on the sprawling campus of theMicrosoft Research Centre in Hyderabad, writing code has taken on a new meaning in the past two months. 

Tasked to create mobile applications that will appeal to other women, this group of nearly 200 engineers are at the head of a new initiative from the global software major aimed at increasing the popularity of Windows phonesamong women. 

Informally titled 'Code for Her', the project incubated in Hyderabad has helped create about 10 apps that have been uploaded on Microsoft platforms globally. While one app, Asset Tracker, which helps people trace where important documents are stored, has already seen about 600 downloads within a week of its launch. 

"The uber goal of this initiative is to make sure more women use our apps and eventually gravitate towards our Windows phone," said Meher Afroz, General Manager, Microsoft IT India.

The software maker has drawn a few tips from reality shows on television to raise the competitive quotient among its app developers. The female-friendly apps such as Travelogue, Asset Tracker and Yoga for Her that are developed by the contestants are short-listed and vetoed by a jury, much like the jury that certifies dishes in the reality cookery show Master Chef. 

Once voted in, these apps are uploaded for users of the Windows Phone and Xbox Connect, to pick from. Xbox Connect is software that runs on one's personal computer that lets one playMicrosoft Xbox games and Sony PSP games with players from around the world. The software major is developing a monitoring mechanism to track how the apps have helped augment sales of Windows phones. 

"We launched the first season from Hyderabad because Microsoft's research headquarters outside the US is based here and it acts as a think tank for much of the new technology that the company offers," said Afroz. 

The programme also aims to attract, retain and promote talented women in the organisation and prevent them from being poached by competitors. 

Bhagwad Gita holds lessons for managers of all faiths


Bhagwad Gita holds lessons for managers of all faiths: Debashis Chatterjee
Small and medium enterprises in India have never had any qualms about bringing religion into the workplace - most people here start the day with prayers, if not an elaborate puja. Large corporates, on the other hand, have tended to look askance at religion, discouraging, if not outright forbidding overtly religious behavior in the office. But that seems to be changing, with many Indian CEOs now prepared to make room for religious discourse in the office --provided it is in the form of management philosophy. We discuss the trend withIndian Institute of Management Kozhikode directorDebashis Chatterjee, who has recently authored a book titled Timeless Leadership: 18 Leadership Sutras from the Bhagwad Gita: 


Why are Indian corporates so interested in Hindu philosophy these days? 

It's a world-wide phenomenon and it is largely because they find that the management theories don't work as well as they had imagined. The search for alternate models had led to interest in the insights provided by texts like the Ramayana, Mahabharata, Bhagwad Gita. I've lived and worked in the USA and even there, the rule of separating the church from the state is b r e a k i n g down. There is a view that faith should be integrated with work and people are looking to the Bible and Torah for insights. These texts don't provide tips on how to make money, but they do teach us how to align our selfish, personal will to a larger will. 

Olympic experts confident over cyber attacks


Olympic experts confident over cyber attacks

London: Technology experts running the 11,000 computers and servers at the logistical heart of London`s 2012 Olympic Games say they are confident of defending their systems against attempted cyber-attacks.

Atos, which has been the lead technology firm for the Summer and Winter Games since 2002, said Tuesday it had carried out more than 200,000 hours of testing — including mounting simulated attacks.

Its systems handle venue scoreboards, tournament data, accreditation and workforce management.

Michele Hyron, the company`s chief integrator, said the firm had drafted in ethical hackers — specialists capable of mounting attacks, but who use their knowledge to test systems rather than disable them.

Atos expects about 12 million cyber security events each day during the Games, but says less than 20 per day will require investigation.

Mitt Romney rakes in $100 million in June: Report




WASHINGTON: Republican White Househopeful Mitt Romney raised more than $100 million last month, Washington-based publication Politico said Thursday, putting fundraising pressure squarely on PresidentBarack Obama.

The figure is a record for the 2012 campaign. While it is below the $150 million pulled in by Democrat Obama in September 2008, the most by any US politician in a month, Romney's haul is startling given that the funds were raised a full five months out from the November election.

Politico's Mike Allen broke the news on Twitter, after Romney's campaign leaked the June numbers.

The Obama team has yet to announce its fundraising totals for June, but the month may well be the second in a row in which Romney outraised the incumbent.

Romney raised more than $76 million in May, compared with more than $60 million for Obama. May was the first full month in which Romney was seen as the clear winner of the Republican primary race, and it marked the first time in which he outraised Obama.

The president, campaigning on Thursday in the swing state of Ohio, warned of a monumental financial push by Republicans to oust him from the White House.

"They're spending -- the other side's spending more money than any time in history," Obama told supporters.

His campaign suggested the leak of the June figures was aimed at blurring voters' attention from key focal points of the campaign that have emerged in the last week.

"Mitt Romney is trying to distract from a week when he took contradictory positions on the freeloader penalty in the Affordable Care Act and we learned more about his offshored finances in Switzerland, Bermuda, and the Cayman Islands," Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt said, referring to reports that Romney keeps an undisclosed portion of his wealth outside the United States.

Obama lags behind Romney when it comes to super-PACs, the independent political action committees which can raise and spend unlimited funds to support candidates, although they cannot directly fund a campaign.

Wealthy conservatives are said to be funneling huge sums into outside groups that support Romney's agenda.

Despite what may amount to a Republican fundraising advantage in the presidential race, Obama senior campaign adviser David Axelrod brushed aside Romney's haul.

"I mean, I don't think that, ultimately, that this race will be determined on monthly fundraising," news website Buzzfeed quoted Axelrod as saying in Ohio.

He said big money won't help generate a victory "if you don't have the right candidate and the right message."

Fundraising is vital to US presidential elections, when candidates criss-cross the country for months and roll out several advertising campaigns, spending hundreds of millions of dollars in the process.




British Police arrest seven people on suspicion of terrorist offences

British Police arrest seven people on suspicion of terrorist offencesLondon: 
British police say seven men have been arrested on suspicion of terrorist offences after a routine vehicle search turned up firearms and weapons.

Scotland Yard said Friday that the arrests followed a routine vehicle stop on the M1 motorway in South Yorkshire, England on June 30.

It said "firearms, offensive weapons and other material" were later found hidden in the car, which prompted police to trace and arrest the driver, passenger and other suspects.

US President polls: Obama enjoys lead over Romney, albeit thin

WASHINGTON: Just months before America goes to polls, opinion appears to be tilted in favour of incumbent Barack Obama, with a new 'poll of polls' giving him a 3-point lead over Republican rival Mitt Romney

Obama leads 48 per cent to 45 per cent in a CNN Poll of Polls, a sample of three recent national surveys of the presidential race that culminates in November. 

While Romney has outpaced Obama and the Democrats on fundraising, the campaign for the incumbent's re-election has intensified its attack on the challenger, and its efforts to paint Romney as a corporate outsourcing specialist appear to be having an impact on swing voters. 

The CNN Poll of Polls uses three recent surveys -- CNN/ORC International Poll, the Gallup Daily Tracking Poll, and the Newsweek/Daily Beast Poll, to arrive at a consolidated figure of 48 to 45. 

In the most recent CNN/ORC International Poll, conducted between June 28 and July 1, Obama is ahead of Romney, 49 per cent to 46 per cent. 

The Gallup poll includes results of the past seven days and has Obama over Romney, 48 per cent to 44 per cent. 

In the Newsweek/Daily Beast poll, meanwhile, Obama leads Romney 47 per cent to 44 per cent. 

Obama's lead, however, in all three polls was close to the sampling error limit of two to 2.5 percentage points. 

However, the CNN poll also showed Romney with an advantage over Obama in the 15 states listed as 'battlegrounds' on the CNN Electoral Map. 

Romney was ahead of Obama 51 per cent to 43 per cent in those states, including those that are leaning but not solid for Obama or Romney and those which appear to be true tossups, CNN said. 

Political sparks have been flying in the US as the two camps have intensified attacks against each other, taking bitter taste at times. 

Ahead of the November election, the Obama campaign has been portraying Romney as a "pioneer" of outsourcing to low-wage countries like India and China, to counter Romney's claims that he was the right man to fix America's economy. 

On Twitter, a campaign against hot pants at UAE malls

On Twitter, a campaign against hot pants at UAE malls



Abu Dhabi, UAE: With the number of foreigners dwarfing that of locals in her hometown of Abu Dhabi, Asma al-Muhairi has become increasingly anxious at the prospect of her younger nieces abandoning their full-length black robes in favor of Western attire that seems to be everywhere she goes.

But it wasn't until the 23-year-old marketing worker came face to face with two scantily-clad female foreigners at one of the many luxury shopping malls in the United Arab Emirates that she decided to take action.

ISI officer provided cartridges for 26/11, claims Abu Jundal


ISI officer provided cartridges for 26/11, claims Abu Jundal


New Delhi: A day after Pakistan said it rejects any insinuation of state support for the terrorists who ravaged Mumbai in 2008, Abu Jundal has provided crucial details that suggest the opposite. The terrorist has said that an officer from Pakistan's military intelligence agency, ISI, provided two cartons of cartridges that were used during the 26/11 attacks.

Jundal is in the custody of the Delhi Police after he was deported from Saudi Arabia last month. The ISI officer he refers to is Major Sameer. Jundal is originally from Maharashtra; he has said he was in a control room in Karachi which coordinated and instructed the ten terrorists who opened fire at Mumbai landmarks, killing 166 people. Over the last few days, his interrogation has led to references to a series of ISI officers.