Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Eleven airline plot suspects appear in UK court

Peter Clarke, Metropolitan police
Eleven British Muslims charged with being involved in a plot to blow up U.S.-bound transatlantic airliners have been remanded in custody after appearing in a London court on Today. Eight have been charged with conspiracy to murder and with plotting to detonate homemade explosives on planes after smuggling the components on board while three others were charged with other terrorism-related offences.
Abdullah Ahmed Ali, Waheed Arafat Khan, Umar Islam, Tanvir Hussain, Assad Ali Sarwar, Adam Khatib, Ibrahim Savant and Waheed Zaman, spoke only to confirm their names and addresses.
There was no application for bail and all eight were charged with conspiracy to murder and remanded in custody until September 4 when they will appear at the Old Bailey.
Hussain's lawyer Mohammed Zed told the court that "all allegations are denied," while lawyers for the other seven made no comment about a plea.
A 17-year-old who cannot be named for legal reasons was remanded in custody for possessing items useful to a terrorist including a book on home-made bombs and suicide notes while Cossar Ali was remanded for failing to notify the authorities that her husband was planning an act of terrorism.
The two were remanded in custody until August 29 and their lawyers indicated they would plead not guilty.
The 11th suspect, Mehran Hussain, was remanded until September 19 for having information about an individual who was planning a terrorist attack. Hussain's lawyer also indicated he would plead not guilty.
The 10 men were all wearing white sweatshirts or t-shirts and grey tracksuit trousers while the woman wore a blue headscarf.
They were flanked by uniformed security guards while they stood in the dock during hearings in a cramped courtroom at Westminster Magistrates Court.
Two of the men waved to the public gallery which was packed with friends of the suspects and family members. The 11 were mostly from east London or High Wycombe.
U.S. officials have said the plot to use liquid explosives could have caused a disaster on the scale of the September 11, 2001 attacks on U.S. cities that killed nearly 3,000 people.

Monday, August 21, 2006

Reading your way to richness!




In this internet age, when more and more people are using screens, dials and modems to gather and send information, the printed medium is being steadily abandoned- and with it, the wonderful experience of reading books.
Literature remains the most important vehicle towards true enlightenment, as well as being an instant time machine that transports its readers through centuries to other worlds. No technology exists which can compare with the thrill of entering a novel and letting the author take you on a special and exquisite journey through his imagination.
Enhance your spirit by reading regularly.
Remember, each time you open a book, you are about to leap into a magical, endless and bottomless pool from which you will emerge a wiser and knowledgeable person.

LASER MELTS FAT?



Scientists at the Massachusetts general hospital in America are producing a laser that melts fat, and launched the results of their research at the annual meeting of the American society for laser medicine and surgery earlier this year.
For the first time, a laser is being developed that heats up body fat without harming the skin. Experiments were conducted using pig fat and skin samples about 5cm thick, and the results showed that selective photothermolysis- heating tissues with light-may have a number of medical applications in the future, including treating acne, as well as targeting cellulite and body fat, and even the fatty plaques that clog your arteries and put you at risk of a heart attack.
However it will be sometime before the lasers can be tested on humans. So just keep right on RUNNING!

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

New Miss Universe hails from Puerto Rico


An 18-year-old aspiring actress from Puerto Rico was crowned Sunday night as Miss Universe 2006.
Zuleyka Rivera Mendoza shared a nervous emotional hug with the first runner-up, Kurara Chibana of Japan, moments before the winner was announced, then clasped her hands to her mouth as she heard her name called. She beamed as the crown was placed on her head.
Miss USA Tara Conner was the contest's fourth runner-up. Also finishing in the top five were second runner-up Lauriane Gillieron of Switzerland and third runner-up Lourdes Arevalos of Paraguay.
Conner was vying to become the first U.S. winner since Brook Lee in 1997. The Kentucky native wore a red-white-and-blue jockey outfit and cracked a whip during the opening parade of nations.
Lia Andrea Ramos of Philippines was chosen most photogenic in an online vote by the public.
Angela Asare of Ghana won the congeniality award in a vote by all 86 contestants. Chibana, who carried a samurai sword, won the award for best national costume.
"They were probably afraid not to pick Miss Japan or she would use that sword," joked Carson Kressley of TV's "Queer Eye," who provided commentary along with 2004 Miss USA Shandi Finnessey. Opera singer Vittorio Grigolo and Latin singer Chelo provided musical performances.
The winner travels the world for a year on behalf of charities and pageant sponsors.
Natalie Glebova of Canada crowned her successor at the end of the two-hour telecast with a diamond-and-pearl-studded headpiece valued at $250,000.
"My year as Miss Universe has meant more to me than I can express," said Glebova, who began her reign with a trip to South Africa where she publicly took an HIV test.
"I have traveled the world on behalf of various HIV/AIDS organizations, promoting education, research and legislation, and I walk away from this experience feeling like I truly made an impact."

Rice: US has not forgotten Palestinians


The United States has not forgotten the Palestinian people, despite the current crisis in Lebanon, the US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, insisted today after meeting the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, in the West Bank.
"The Palestinian people have lived too long with violence and the daily humiliations that go along with the circumstances here," Ms Rice said in Ramallah.
"I assured the president that we had great concerns about the sufferings of innocent people throughout the region," she told reporters, saying "even as the Lebanon situation resolves, we must remain focused on what is happening here."
"You have our pledge that in our common work of bringing a two-state solution to the people of Palestine and the people of Israel that we will not tire in our efforts," Ms Rice added.
Ms Rice met Mr Abbas after visiting Lebanon and Israel, a trip primarily focused on seeking an end to two weeks of fighting between Israel and Hizbullah forces in southern Lebanon.
The hostilities have left Israel fighting on two fronts, following an offensive launched last month in the Gaza Strip. More than 100 Palestinians have died in the campaign, launched in response to the kidnapping of an Israeli soldier and the killing of two more by gunmen from Gaza.
Mr Abbas called again for an Israeli-Palestinian truce and said Palestinian officials were "exerting all our efforts" to free the kidnapped soldier. "Israeli aggression in the West Bank and Gaza Strip must stop immediately so we can strengthen the truce and start a political process that aims to end the occupation," he added.
Mr Abbas also expressed the hope that Israel would release some of the thousands of Palestinians it held in jail.
Israel has ruled out any exchange deal. Earlier today it dropped new leaflets over Gaza warning that it would escalate its attacks on arms stores and militant leaders because militants continued to fire rockets towards Israel.
In the meeting with Mr Abbas and around a dozen US and Palestinian officials, Ms Rice also briefed the Palestinian leader on the situation in Lebanon and discussed ways to get further aid to the debt-ridden Palestinian government.
Washington and other donors have cut off assistance since Hamas, which the US and EU consider a terrorist organisation, won the Palestinian legislative election in January.
Mr Abbas, who was elected separately last year, has been pressing Hamas to drop its commitment to the destruction of Israel.
Ms Rice, who talked of it being "time for a new Middle East", arrived for the talks in Ramallah shortly after police cleared hundreds of Palestinians holding an anti-US protest outside the government building where the meeting was being held.

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

Lebanon demands compensation from Israel


Israeli troops clashed with Hezbollah guerrillas on the Lebanese side of the border Wednesday, while Lebanon's prime minister reported a death toll of 300 and demanded compensation from Israel for the "unimaginable losses" to the nation's infrastructure.
As fighting entered its second week, Israeli warplanes flattened houses in south Lebanon and Hezbollah rockets made their first hit near Christian holy sites in Israel: Two rockets hit Nazareth _ the biblical hometown of Jesus _ killing two brothers ages 3 and 9 as they played outside, bringing the Israeli death toll to 29. At least 18 others were wounded in the attack. Washington said it won't push Israel toward a fast cease-fire in the fighting, started July 12 after Hezbollah guerrillas captured two Israeli soldiers. The latest fighting dealt a blow to efforts to send international peacekeepers to bolster the 2,000-member U.N. force in south Lebanon.
For more info click here

Thursday, July 13, 2006

To the French, Zidane still a hero, if no longer a 'god'


PARIS says Welcome home, Zizou. All is forgiven.
After a rollercoaster week that saw France's premier soccer star alternately thrill, shock, and mystify a sports-crazed nation, Zinedine Zidane is back in the good graces of most French fans. Despite France's loss to Italy in the World Cup final Sunday and his ambiguous apology for the head butt that got him ejected from the final match of his career, Mr. Zidane - known affectionately as Zizou - seems to have regained his status as a French hero.
No longer a superhero, to be sure, but a heroic common man.
"He's not a god, but simply a hero who has not always handled very well his basic internal conflict, which is his sensitivity to injustice," sports psychologist Makis Chamalidis told the sports daily L'Equipe this week.
Nevertheless, France has long revered the sphinxlike Zidane, a famously reticent man known for his elegant footwork on the field.
He has been called "a planetary icon," "the greatest footballer of his generation," and "a living example for young people." The fact that he grew up in the tough alleys of Marseilles, the son of Berber immigrants from Algeria, only added to his patina as a man who not only prevailed over opponents on the playing field but also over racism in French daily life.
Now, after scandalizing sports fans with his ignominious head butt, he seems to have successfully recast himself once again, this time as a loyal son ostensibly defending his mother's honor.
In the 110th minute of Sunday's nail-biting final between France and Italy, Italian midfielder Marco Materazzi - who had matched Zidane's early goal to tie the game 1-1 - tugged at Zidane's shirt.
There was an exchange of muttered comments. The two separated, Zidane trotted in front of the Italian and suddenly turned back, lowered his shaved head and rammed it into Mr. Materazzi's chest, knocking him on his back.
Zidane, team captain and minutes from the close of a glorious career, was thrown out. In the end, Italy won on penalty kicks, 5-3. From then on, no one has been able to stop talking about Zizou.
A reggae-like song about the head butt has become an instant Internet hit. Sportswriters and the French sports minister called his action odious, shameful, unsportsmanlike, and petulant. Yet rumors abounded that something unsupportable had been said. Lip-readers were employed by various news organizations and concluded that the Italian had used racial epithets or slurs against Zidane's mother and sister. The right-wing Italian Senate president fueled speculation by saying the French team "sacrificed its identity by selecting blacks, Islamists, and communists."
Finally, on Wednesday night, Zidane appeared on national television.
Yes, the soccer star said, Materazzi had used terrible language, insulting his mother and his sister. No, Zidane said, he would not repeat the exact words. All he would say was that he was profoundly, deeply hurt.
"I would rather have taken a punch in the face" than hear such insults, he said.
Zidane, dressed in a T-shirt with a khaki Army surplus coat draped over his shoulders, said repeatedly that he apologized to the children and teachers of the world who saw his head butt.
He called his act "unforgivable" but called for sanctions as well against "the true culprit" who had insulted his family.
Then, mixing his message even further, he declared that he regretted nothing. To have refrained from reacting would have implied that the Italian was right to utter the insults, he said.
"I take responsibility for the good and the bad," he said. "Now another life begins. I'll be less watched, less observed. I am going to try to devote myself to my children and my family. I intend to return to Algeria to rediscover my roots, the land of my parents."
With those words, he reminded his audience of how far he had come. For Mr. Zidane has long been the prime example of a "beur," as French people of North African descent are commonly called, who crossed over into mainstream celebrity status by way of professional sports. He was a source of pride in immigrant neighborhoods, a case in point for French politicians who insisted on the openness of French society and a bane to those on the xenophobic far-right who complained France was losing its white European identity.
In the final score, Zidane became for some the embodiment of a quality admired in more than a few French circles: the willingness to sacrifice victory for pride.
"I see, thanks to Zidane, the victory of a certain national spirit," wrote François Sureau, a French philosopher, in the newspaper Le Figaro, on Thursday. Zidane, he said, "has given us back our beautiful reputation for insolence."

Via:Google

Former CIA Officer Sues Cheney Over Leak

The CIA officer whose identity was leaked to reporters sued Vice President Dick Cheney, his former top aide and presidential adviser Karl Rove on Thursday, accusing them and other White House officials of conspiring to destroy her career.
In a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court, Valerie Plame and her husband, Joseph Wilson, a former U.S. ambassador, accused Cheney, Rove and I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby of participating in a "whispering campaign" to reveal Plame's CIA identity and punish Wilson for criticizing the Bush administration's motives in Iraq.
Several news organizations wrote about Plame after syndicated columnist Robert Novak named her in a column on July 14, 2003. Novak's column appeared eight days after Wilson alleged in an opinion piece in The New York Times that the administration had twisted prewar intelligence on Iraq to justify going to war. The CIA had sent Wilson to Niger in early 2002 to determine whether there was any truth to reports that Saddam Hussein's government had tried to buy yellowcake uranium from Niger to make a nuclear weapon. Wilson discounted the reports, but the allegation nevertheless wound up in President Bush's 2003 State of the Union address.
Mark Corallo, a spokesman for Rove, said, "Without even having had a chance to review the complaint, it is clear that the allegations are absolutely and utterly without merit."
The lawsuit accuses Cheney, Libby, Rove and 10 unnamed administration officials or political operatives of putting the Wilsons and their children's lives at risk by exposing Plame.
"This lawsuit concerns the intentional and malicious exposure by senior officials of the federal government of … (Plame), whose job it was to gather intelligence to make the nation safer and who risked her life for her country," the Wilsons' lawyers said in the lawsuit.
Specifically, the lawsuit accuses the White House officials of violating the Wilsons' constitutional rights to equal protection and freedom of speech. It also accuses the officials of violating the couple's privacy rights.

Via:Google

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Israel kills 18 in Gaza, targets Hamas commanders


Israel killed 18 Palestinians in Gaza on Wednesday including nine members of one family in an air strike that destroyed a residential building where the army said top Hamas commanders were meeting.
The air raid was among a series of attacks that coincided with an Israeli armored sweep into the central Gaza Strip, as the Jewish state broadened an offensive aimed at freeing a captured soldier and halting cross-border rocket fire.
The army said the strike on the three-storey building near Gaza City wounded Mohammad Deif, overall leader of the governing Hamas movement's armed wing and Israel's most wanted man. A spokesman for Hamas's Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, one of three groups whose kidnapping of Corporal Galid Shalit on June 25 led Israel to launch its first ground operations in Gaza since quitting the territory last year, denied Deif was hurt.
The air strike killed a local Hamas leader, Nabil Abu Selmeya, his wife and seven sons and daughters aged 7 to 19, medics said. His eldest son, who was not at home, survived.
Palestinian medics said Israel's air raids and tank shelling had killed a total of 18 people on Wednesday, including militants and one policeman.
Israel has rejected calls from Hamas for negotiations on a prisoner swap for Shalit, whose abduction has triggered the worst fighting between Israelis and Palestinians since 2004. The Gaza offensive has killed 74 Palestinians and one soldier.

Via: Google

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

STRANGE BUT TRUE!!!

Someone really did exist with 4 eyes??? Yes…. His name was Liu Ch’ing and he was born with 2 pupils in each eye. This however, did not deter him from “eyeing” a position in the public service and he eventually became the Governor of shansi province, china in 955 AD.

A human being has lived for 152 years…..his name was Thomas Parr and he was born in Shropshire, England in 1483. He lived through the reign of 10 sovereigns and died eventually, in 1635.

In the 18th century “tooth nappers” roamed the streets attacking and extracting people’s teeth for dentists who advertised for particular teeth in order to make dentures…..
Unfortunately, it turns out, mainly for those who had had theirs “napped”.

The Great Wall of China dates back to 214BC and is over 3000km long, 10M thick and 12M high. It is the only man-made structure that astronauts can see from outer space through a telescope.

The smallest dwarf to ever live was a Frenchman called Richebourg he was 58cmtall and carried dispatches to and fro Paris during the revolution disguised as a baby in the arms of a nursemaid…..

Billed as “A New specie of Man” Francis Lambert was born covered with scales from his neck to his feet. In 1820, at the age of 30, he was exhibited on New Bond Street in London to the utter amazement of all present.

It was fashionable in the 18th century for women to wear their hair in creations that were sometimes 1m high. these styles were supported with wire frames and made out of false hair. They were so elaborate that they were not touched for months on end… just like some of what we see today.

The winter of 1925 in Canada was so cold that Niagara Falls froze over!!!