Showing posts with label HindustanTimes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HindustanTimes. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 February 2011

China warns foreign media against jasmine strolls


Reshma Patil, Hindustan Times
Beijing, February 26, 2011

First Published: 23:10 IST(26/2/2011)
Last Updated: 01:56 IST(27/2/2011)

The polite reminder of reporting rules came 24 hours before a West Asia-inspired pro-democracy protest scheduled on Sunday in 18 Chinese cities. Dissident posts spreading through banned websites have asked Chinese citizens to ‘stroll, watch or pretend to pass by’ at sites in 18 cities every Sunday a fternoon. Authorities are taking no chances, though the first such protest failed last Sunday, with more police and onlookers than protesters gathered outside a McDonald’s at Wangfujing, in Beijing.

Barricades have since appeared at the site making it difficult for gatherings. Prominent rights lawyers and dissidents have been detained or put under surveillance. Censorship has extended to block online searches in Chinese for US envoy Jon Huntsman who angered netizens after he was spotted at the Wangfujing protest.

On Saturday, an official reminded HT that foreign correspondents must ‘abide by the regulations’ and seek permission before conducting interviews. The official was referring to a 2008 regulation that ‘to interview organisations or individuals in China, foreign journalists need only to obtain their prior consent.’

Calls to journalists ranged from ‘friendly reminders to specific warnings,’ said the Foreign Correspondents Club of China. Some correspondents were told to register for permission at a Wangfujing office with an unlisted number.

Facebook helps in catching thief


Press Trust Of India
Houston, February 27, 2011
First Published: 09:32 IST(27/2/2011)
Last Updated: 10:00 IST(27/2/2011)

After making a name in catching up friends online, Facebook has now helped in apprehending a thief at a shopping mall near Massachusetts. Swansea Police said that 25-year-old Daniel Boyce has been charged with stealing money from the Regal Cinemas at the Swansea Mall. The surveillance camera caught the youth stealing money from the register when it was left unattended.

The theatre clerk, however, helped police find the suspect. He was able to match the surveillance photos with the alleged ones he found on Facebook account of the thief.

Police were then able to find Boyce and arrest him.

He was arraigned on Friday morning and held on $ 1,000 cash bail. If convicted he could face up to two-and-a-half years in prison.

Monday, 20 December 2010

Lanka allows UN panel visit

Sutirtho Patranobis, Hindustan Times
Email Author
Colombo, December 20, 2010
First Published: 01:10 IST(20/12/2010)
Last Updated: 01:13 IST(20/12/2010)
Sri Lanka has said it would allow UN investigators looking into war crimes to visit the country if they want to make representation to the government-appointed panel looking into the civil war. The government had earlier said it would not allow the three-member UN panel, appointed in June by secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, to enter Sri Lanka.

The Mahinda Rajapaksa regime has always said there was no violation of human rights by government troops and dismissed calls for international investigation. Rajapaksa instead appointed the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission to probe the war between 2002 and its end in 2009. The LLRC’s credibility has been questioned by global rights agencies and rights activists.


WikiLeaks will stay strong: Assange

Agence France Pressse, AFP
Email Author
Ellingham, December 20, 2010
First Published: 01:26 IST(20/12/2010)
Last Updated: 02:32 IST(20/12/2010)
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said the site will stay strong despite another blow to its funding and the publication on Sunday of new details of the sex crime allegations against him. The Australian began his third full day under “mansion arrest” at a friend’s house while he fights extradition to Sweden, vowing that the whistleblowing website would continue to publish more secre US diplomatic cables.

Assange on Saturday denounced Bank of America, the largest US bank, for becoming the latest institution to halt financial transactions for Wikileaks after MasterCard, PayPal, Visa Europe and others. The bank said its decision was “based upon our reasonable belief that WikiLeaks may be engaged in activities that are, among other things, inconsistent with our internal policies for processing payments.”

“It’s a new type of business McCarthyism in the US to deprive this organisation of the funds that it needs to survive, to deprive me personally of the funds that my lawyers need to protect me against extradition to the US or to Sweden,” Assange told AFP.

The term was coined to describe the anti-communist pursuits of former US senator Joseph McCarthy from the late 1940s to the 1950s.

Assange is staying at Ellingham Hall, the mansion in eastern England of journalist friend Vaughan Smith, as part of the conditions of bail, which he was granted by London’s High Court on Thursday.


Migrant cap is unlawful: British court

Dipankar De Sarkar, Hindustan Times
Email Author
London, December 20, 2010
First Published: 01:06 IST(20/12/2010)
Last Updated: 01:09 IST(20/12/2010)
A controversial upper limit imposed on the numbers of non-Europeans allowed to settle down in Britain has been described as “unlawful” by a British court, dealing a fresh blow to the government’s immigration policy. High Court judges ruled that home minister Theresa May “sidestepped” parliamentary scrutiny in her attempt to impose the temporary cap on skilled non-European migrants, whose numbers are dominated by Indians. The judges’ decision relates to an interim cap of 24,100 for the period between June 2010 and April 2011, when the government is set to announce a permanent cap.

The cap affects skilled immigrants arriving on visas classed as Tier 1, where they are free to look around for jobs, and Tier 2, which are tied to specific job offers.

“The secretary of state (Theresa May) made no secret of her intentions,” the judges said. “There can be no doubt that she was attempting to side-step provisions for Parliamentary scrutiny set up under provisions of the 1971 Immigration Act, and her attempt was for that reason unlawful.” The judges ruled on a challenge brought by the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants, a non-government body, and the English Community Care Association, which represents home-based nurses – a profession that relies heavily on migrants from the Philippines and India.

JCWI chief Habib Rahman welcomed its victory in the court and urged May to “prioritise the welfare of people and the country over and above her desire to pander to xenophobia and tabloid headline writers.”

JCWI chief Habib Rahman welcomed its victory in the court and urged May to “prioritise the welfare of people and the country over and above her desire to pander to xenophobia and tabloid headline writers.”

But immigration minister Damian Green, while expressing his government’s “disappointment” at the ruling, declared: “We will do all in our power to continue to prevent a rush of applications before our more permanent measures are in place.”

The ruling will please businesses that have benefited from the previous government’s more flexible immigration rules that allowed in large numbers of skilled workers from outside Europe, the majority of them from India.


Chinese media has different border claim

HT Correspondents, Hindustan Times
Email Author
New Delhi/Beijing, December 20, 2010
First Published: 00:41 IST(20/12/2010)
Last Updated: 01:52 IST(20/12/2010)
Reports in the official Chinese media that the Sino-Indian border is only 2000 km-long — excluding the 1,600-km stretch that separates Jammu & Kashmir from Xinjiang and Tibet — have created a flutter in the Indian media. New Delhi didn't react to these reports, and sources said the Chinese media has been putting the border length at 2000km for a long time now.

"The dispute on the length of the borderline was always there. There is nothing new in the media report," said Rong

Ying, vice-president of the China Institute of International Studies, a foreign ministry think-tank.

New Delhi maintains the boundary is 3,488-km long.

Ahead of Premier Wen Jiabao's visit, Xinuha had reported that the Sino-India border 2000 km based on an official briefing by assistant foreign minister of China, Hu Zhengye. The People's Daily had reported the same on January 7 this year. "The border issue stretches back to colonial British

rule. China and India share a nearly 2,000-km border and disputed areas cover about 125,000 sq km on both sides," it reported while covering the India-China defence dialogue. China Daily too mentioned the same in its report same day. The "2000-km-long" boundary was mentioned in China Daily in August 2009 in a report on the 13th round of boundary talks between the two sides.

There was no comment from the ministry of external affairs on the issue. Sources, however, pointed out that there are well-established systems in place to address the boundary issue and it's an on-going process. Chinese media reports after border talks in 2009 and through this year.

"There is no change in Chinese policy as far as I can see," said Rong.


Fasting Naidu shifted to hospital, party calls state bandh


Agencies
Hyderabad, December 20, 2010
First Published: 09:15 IST(20/12/2010) Last Updated: 09:21 IST(20/12/2010)

Telugu Desam Party president Chandrababu Naidu who has been fasting to demand more compensation for Andhra farmers was shifted to hospital this morning as his health condition deteriorated. His blood sugar level is believed to have dropped on Sunday night, due to which he was forcibly taken to the

Nizam's Institute of Medical Sciences, amidst high drama.

Telugu Desam Party workers have called for a bandh in the state on Monday.

TDP chief Chandrababu Naidu on Friday launched an indefinite hunger strike demanding that the state and the central governments immediately provide succour to hapless farmers and artisans who faced the brunt of nature's fury in the last one year. The former Andhra Pradesh chief minister expressed serious displeasure over the relief announced by Chief Minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy and demanded higher compensation as the loss was enormous.

Naidu, the Leader of the Opposition in the Assembly, launched the indefinite hunger strike at the new MLA quarters at Adarsh Nagar close to the state Secretariat after paying homage to TDP founder-president N T Rama Rao at the NTR Ghat, Mahatma Gandhi's statue at the Assembly and B R Ambedkar at Tank Bund.

Tuesday, 14 December 2010

Sino-India ties fragile: Envoy


HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times
Email Author
New Delhi, December 13, 2010
First Published: 23:38 IST(13/12/2010)
Last Updated: 01:18 IST(14/12/2010)
Two days ahead of Premier Wen Jiabao’s visit, while an envoy termed China’s relations with India "very fragile" and "easy to be damaged", Beijing made a rare direct reference to the sensitive dispute of stapled visas. "China-India relations are very fragile and very easy to be damaged and very difficult to repair. Therefore, they need special care in the information age," Chinese ambassador to India Zhang Yan said at a conference.

At the same function, foreign secretary Nirupama Rao said that India has a "very commonsensical" and "very rational" approach to China.

In Beijing, assistant foreign minister Hu Zhengyue, while calling the visit a "big event" in bilateral ties, said on stapled visas, "We do not exclude the possibility of discussion on any issue."

In response to a media query, Hu said the visa issue would be discussed at the "working-level staff".

Wen’s visit comes at the close of an uneasy year for bilateral ties marked by India’s strong objections to Chinese stapled visas for Indians from Jammu and Kashmir. In the past, the Chinese foreign ministry has evaded direct references to the issue in public and only said that its Kashmir policy stays unchanged.

India’s candidature for a permanent place on the UN Security Council will also be discussed, the official confirmed. "We are happy to see India play a bigger role in the international arena including the UN," Hu said, sticking to the Chinese position of not expressing direct support for the bid.

Beijing’s pitch ahead of the visit was to emphasise India-China "friendship from generation to generation".

Diplomats are keen to enhance public exchanges and improve public opinion of the bilateral relationship. Wen will meet Indian representatives from cinema, literature and arts. Both sides will sign an agreement for exchanges for 2010-12 in sectors including media, youth, sports and opera.

Chinese analysts are commenting more cautiously on the week ahead.

In Shanghai, South Asia strategist Shen Dingli said Wen’s visit was a "regular" visit. "It is such constant exchange that will help improve relations."

(With inputs from Reshma Patil in Beijing)


Nursery admissions to mix points, lottery


HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times
Email Author
New Delhi, December 14, 2010
First Published: 00:29 IST(14/12/2010)
Last Updated: 00:31 IST(14/12/2010)
The Delhi government has indicated that it will take the middle path between the points and the lottery systems for nursery admissions starting next year. The government has decided that along with the ‘lottery’ system, it will retain some weightage to points — like neighbourhood, siblings and alumni. This means that if you have gone to the school close to your home and so has your elder child, the younger one’s chances of getting in are higher.

While final guidelines and the notification in this regard is likely to be announced on Wednesday, Delhi education minister Arvinder Singh Lovely said the government has finally worked out the criteria the schools will have to follow in nursery admission process starting January 1.

“We don’t want to flout the Right To Education (RTE) Act. At the same time, we don’t want to do anything that inconveniences the parents. We are trying to find the middle path,” Singh said.

The RTE Act recommends ‘random’ selection process for nursery admissions in schools.

According to the 100-point system recommended by the Ganguly Committee, schools of the Capital gave points to girl child, first child, children of alumni, children of professionals and children living in the neighbourhood, thus increasing their chances of admission in a particular school.

While random selection process also does away the reservation of seats for school management, sources said the government might agree to give a small percentage of seats to schools as discretionary quota.

The recommendations were made in the year 2007 and ran successfully in the past three years. Random selection process — which broadly means lottery system giving equal chances to all applicants for admission in any school — has come under severe criticism from both the schools and the parents. They argue it is based on luck and makes it virtually impossible to send all their children to the same school.

Singh said his department had sought and obtained an interpretation of the word random" from the law department, adding that the law department's view of the "random selection process" had been verbally agreed to by the ministry of Human Resource Development.

In a meeting with the schools last week, chief minister Sheila Dikshit had also expressed displeasure with the lottery system saying that it was unfair to parents and students. "It is not written anywhere in the Right to Education that we should have lottery, it just mentions random selection," Singh said.


IAF chopper crashes in Jammu; 8 injured

Press Trust Of India
Jammu, December 14, 2010
First Published: 11:11 IST(14/12/2010)
Last Updated: 11:37 IST(14/12/2010)
Eight defence personnel, including three crew members, were injured when an IAF helicopter crashed soon after taking off from the Jammu airport on Tuesday morning. The Mi-26 chopper, carrying defence personnel, took off from the technical airport at Satwari here and crashed within minutes of take off at 0950 hrs, defence spokesperson Lt. Col Viplov Nath said. He said eight defence personnel, including crew members, were injured and have been rushed to the Military Hospital at Satwari. The cause of the mishap is yet to be ascertained. The airport has been closed for two hours for clearing operations.

Waqf board to move SC against Ayodhya verdict

Agencies
New Delhi, December 14, 2010
First Published: 10:41 IST(14/12/2010)
Last Updated: 11:07 IST(14/12/2010)
The Sunni Central Waqf Board is likely to file a Special Leave Petition (SLP) in the Supreme Court on Tuesday challenging the Allahabad High Court in the Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid title suit verdict. Advocate Zafaryab Jilani, who is appearing for the board, said the petition argues that the High Court verdict is based on faith rather than documentary evidence on where Lord Ram was born.

Advocate Jilani appeared for the Board in the Allahabad High Court. He said that the Waqf Board is one of the original litigants in the four suits since 1941.

The petition will argue that the judgment violates the fundamental principles under Articles 25 and 26 — freedom to practice religion of choice.

On December 11, the Lucknow bench of the Allahabad high court extended the stay on implementation of its verdict on the Babri Masjid-Ramjanmabhoomi title suit by 45 days till February 15, 2011. According to the verdict, the 13,450-sq-ft plot in Ayodhya on which the disputed structure stood was to be divided into three equal parts among the three main petitioners - the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Central Waqf Board, Nirmohi Akhara and Ram Lalla Virajman (idol of baby Ram).


Tuesday, 7 December 2010

IITs, IISc ink partnership pacts


HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times
Email Author
New Delhi, December 07, 2010
First Published: 00:06 IST(7/12/2010)
Last Updated: 00:21 IST(7/12/2010)
The Indian Institutes of Technology and the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, on Monday signed pacts with top French universities and research centres. The memoranda of understanding were signed after a meeting between HRD minister Kapil Sibal and French higher education and research minister Valerie Pecresse, who is accompanying President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Sibal and Pecresse discussed increasing cooperation in education and research, particularly in nanotechnology, biotechnology, weather prediction, aerospace engineering and advanced math. India and France are undergoing similar higher education reforms principally aimed at improving access and quality.

The IISc will set up an international laboratory on water sciences jointly with the Institut de Recherche Pour le Developpement (IRPD) in France. The jointly set-up research laboratory can strike partnerships with other research institutions in India, France or any other country, under the MoU signed between the IISc and the IRPD.

The seven older IITs signed an MoU with Paris Institute of Science and Technology (ParisTech) on promoting student and institutional exchanges and joint research. The MoU with ParisTech is also aimed at giving the IITs an opening into European Union education programmes and initiatives.

Officials also discussed progress on France’s proposal — announced during Sarkozy’s 2008 visit — to help set up the new IIT in Rajasthan.

The proposal involves the creation of a consortium of French higher educational institutions that will academically and scientifically aid the IIT coming up in Jodhpur, in areas where France is a leader.


Japan's first Venus probe to enter orbit


Agence France-Presse
Tokyo, December 07, 2010
First Published: 09:50 IST(7/12/2010)
Last Updated: 09:53 IST(7/12/2010)
Japan's first space probe bound for Venus on Tuesday was on course to enter the orbit of the planet that is similar in size and age to the Earth, the space agency said. The Planet-C Venus Climate Orbiter, a box-shaped golden satellite fitted with two paddle-shaped solar panels, blasted off from a space centre in southern Japan in May.

As it closed in on Venus early on Tuesday, the probe, nicknamed "Akatsuki" or "Dawn", reversed its engine to slow and enter the planet's gravitational field.

"It is navigating smoothly," a spokeswoman at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said, adding that it would be announced later Tuesday whether it had entered the orbit as planned.

Akatsuki restored communications with the ground control in Sagamihara, near Tokyo, after contact was lost temporarily when the probe was on the other side of Venus.

The communication gap was longer than earlier expected but the satellite seemed to be cruising with no major problems, the space official said.

Venus is similar in size and age to Earth but has a far more hostile climate, with temperatures around 460 degrees Celsius (860 degrees Fahrenheit) and large amounts of carbon dioxide, the primary greenhouse gas on Earth.

Scientists believe a probe of the climate of Venus will help them deepen their understanding of the formation of the Earth's environment and its future.

Fitted with five cameras, its mission is to peer through the planet's thick layer of sulphuric acid clouds to monitor the meteorology of Venus, search for possible lightning, and scan its crust for active volcanoes.

Akatsuki will work closely with the European Space Agency's Venus Express.


'Pachauri colluded with US to keep Iranian out of IPCC'


Yashwant Raj, Hindustan Times
Washington, December 07, 2010
First Published: 08:55 IST(7/12/2010)
Last Updated: 10:10 IST(7/12/2010)
Rajendra Pachauri, chief of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, agreed to play along with the US in its bid to prevent the election of an Iranian to co-chair a climate group, says a leaked state department cable released on Monday. "USDEL contacted IPC chairman Dr Rajendra Pachauri (please protect-sic), who agreed to work on this issue to avoid the potential for disruption to one of the organization's three working groups," said the cable on September 2, 2008.

The Iranian, a government scientist called Mostafa Jafari, was nominated by his country to co-chair an IPCC working group that assesses the vulnerability of socio-economic and natural systems to climate change.

The other person nominated to co-chair this group was an American - Stanford professor Christopher Field - coming in as a candidate of developed countries. Jafari was to represent developing countries.

The US was clearly uncomfortable sharing a position with an Iranian, though it did agree Jafari was a good candidate. "Jafari is a highly qualified scientist with research ties to the UK and Japana," the cable said.

But there will be problems.

"(Co-chair positions) require close collaboration and often travel to or extended residencies in each others, countries. Having US and Iranian co-chairs would be problematic and potentially at odds with overall US policy towards Iran."

US missions were asked in the cable to oppose Jafari's candidacy and lobby for an alternative; it had suggested a few names, calling them leading candidates.

Pachauri, who was not facing any of the controversies that came to dog him later, agreed with the US and agreed to prevent Jafari's election, according to the cable.

IPCC Working Group Two, which assesses the vulnerability of socio-economic and natural systems to climate change and the options for adaptation.


Monday, 6 December 2010

How do games keep players hooked?


ANI
London, December 06, 2010
First Published: 12:17 IST(6/12/2010)
Last Updated: 12:26 IST(6/12/2010)
A new investigation has revealed that computer games contain influential psychological devices that make some people play compulsively. A simple technique based on a 1950s study of rats feeding themselves by pressing a lever, which encourages repeat behaviour by rewarding it at random, has effectively been adapted for use in gaming and is feared to encourage addiction.

The programme, Panorama: Addicted to Games, quoted award-winning computer games designer Adrian Hon, of SixToStart, who admitted that that the technique once used on rats was now common place in computer games.

"In the 1950s scientists discovered that rats which had been trained to feed themselves by pressing a lever, would press it obsessively if the food was delivered randomly," the Daily Mail quoted him as telling BBC.

"People have discovered that this works on humans as well. If you give people a lever or a button to press and give them random rewards, they will press it all the time," he said.

In computer games, instead of food, players are randomly rewarded with extra lives or extra in-game features. The idea is to create a compulsion loop that keeps them wanting to play on.

The technique, called the variable ratio of reinforcement (or operant conditioning) is simple but powerful and is thought to be one of the reasons people become addicted to slot machines.

Hon added, "I think people don't necessarily understand how powerful some game mechanics can be. It's one thing to think "OK, I''m playing too much," but it's another to just stop playing, because some games are designed in a manner that you just don''t want to leave."

He warned that more and more children and young people in particular could be affected because games are becoming much more widespread and much more powerful.

Currently computer game addiction is not recognised as a medical condition but Mark Griffiths from Nottingham Trent University's International Gaming Research Unit has warned the issue needs further investigation.

He said, "People put money into alcohol and tobacco addiction maybe even gambling addiction but in gaming addiction it''s kind of so new people don''t see it as an important research area to look into."

He added that for many people the psychological ''trick'' employed by games would not be a problem but admitted that if people had a "vulnerability or susceptibility to addiction that will keep you in the game probably far in excess of what the normal person would do."


Assange entitled to consular help'

Associated Press
Sydney, December 06, 2010
First Published: 09:32 IST(6/12/2010)
Last Updated: 09:35 IST(6/12/2010)
Australia would give consular help to WikiLeaks' founder if he is arrested abroad, the government said on Monday. However, the administration again condemned WikiLeaks' publication of secret US diplomatic documents, saying doing so threatens the security of the United States and its allies. Attorney General Robert McClelland said WikiLeaks was grossly irresponsible for publishing the documents because they could identify informants.

"Free speech is one thing, we all respect that, but we also respect the freedoms and the rights of people to live without fear," McClelland told reporters.

He said that as an Australian citizen, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is entitled to return to his home country and receive consular help from Australian officials if he is arrested overseas. But Australia is also obligated to help an international criminal investigation into Assange's activities, McClelland said. Australia has said it is assisting US authorities in an investigation into WikiLeaks, and is also examining whether the site has broken any Australian laws by publishing restricted information. Assange, who is in Britain, is also wanted for questioning in Sweden over allegations including rape and sexual molestation.


Bollywood goes retro to boost sales


Agence France-Presse
Mumbai, December 06, 2010
First Published: 09:14 IST(6/12/2010)
Last Updated: 09:28 IST(6/12/2010)
Bollywood is harking back to the 1970s and the days of stylised movie dialogues, cliched plots and elaborate dance sequences in an attempt to boost box office takings after a disappointing 2010. Despite its prodigious output, the Hindi-language movie industry has had a torrid time this year, with only a dozen out of more than 200 films made finding favour with fans.

"The 1970s and 80s were amongst the golden eras of the Indian film industry," said Bollywood director Sajid Khan, whose successes include Heyy Babyy and the recent comedy Housefull.

"We need to give a taste of old music to the new generation," he said.

Housefull found box-office success with a remix of a popular hit song from a 1981 Amitabh Bachchan movie, Laawaris.

Most of Bollywood's popular hit songs of the 1970s and 80s when Bachchan -- known as the Big B -- ruled the movie scene have been remixed and are played in many of Mumbai's best-known nightclubs.

"Bollywood is in search of its roots. Looking to the past is a way of looking to the future but not when it is used as an easy way out," said film critic Shubhra Gupta in the Indian Express newspaper.

Bollywood director Milan Luthria's thriller Once Upon A Time in Mumbaai, set in the 1970s, about a power struggle between two gangsters -- complete with big hair, bigger moustaches, wing-collar shirts and flares -- was a hit.

It took 580 million rupees (13.2 million dollars) at the box office after its release in July this year.

Golmaal 3, a hit comedy released for the recent Diwali holiday about the capers of a group of young friends, was itself based on the 1970s film Khatta Meetha.

But another 1970s themed-movie, the time-travel romance movie starring Akshay Kumar and Aishwarya Rai Action Replayy -- which was loosely influenced by the 1985 hit Back to the Future -- bombed.

Superstar actor-producer-director Shah Rukh Khan, who featured in the 2006 release Don: The Chase Begins Again, a remake of the 1978 Bachchan hit Don, has plans for a follow-up to that.

Another Bachchan cult classic of the 1980s Satte Pe Satta, the Indian adaptation of Hollywood musical Seven Brides for Seven Brothers is to be remade, starring Bollywood's original bad-boy Sanjay Dutt.

In recent years, Indian filmmakers have started making movies with contemporary themes, for a youthful, more well-travelled and knowledgeable audience, away from traditional, formulaic themes of stylised romantic love.

Issues like Islamist extremism, the life of call centre workers and rock bands, weakening relationships among city-dwellers and central characters with a disability or illness, have all been tackled.

But while some modern, real-life themes have worked, others have not, pushing movie-makers to return to tried and tested formulae.

A successful year-end would raise spirits in Bollywood, which was hit last year by a producers' boycott of multiplex cinemas, swine flu fears and a string of big budget failures. The economic downturn also affected overseas takings.

Overall revenues fell 14 per cent to 89.3 billion rupees in 2009, consultancy KPMG said in a report for the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry released earlier this year.

Sarkozy meets PM, set to sign nuclear deal


Agence France-Presse
New Delhi, December 06, 2010
First Published: 08:46 IST(6/12/2010)
Last Updated: 12:02 IST(6/12/2010)
French President Nicolas Sarkozy meets Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Monday in New Delhi, with nuclear power and defence deals likely to be high on the agenda. Sarkozy held delegation level talks with Singh at Hyderabad House, after which they will address a joint press conference.

Officials said India and France are set to sign agreements in areas of cooperation in civil nuclear energy and space.

The French president is on a four-day trip to India, during which he has joined other recent visiting leaders such as US President Barack Obama in acknowledging his hosts' increased role on the world stage.

Sarkozy heads a delegation of six ministers and around 70 chief executives, including the heads of aircraft and defence groups Dassault Aviation and EADS, and the state-controlled nuclear conglomerate Areva.

France is seeking a slice of the billions of dollars earmarked by India for a military upgrade, but competition is fierce among foreign arms manufacturers, and officials in New Delhi have said no contracts will be signed on Monday.

Talks will also focus on Areva's involvement in building nuclear reactors in India, which is expanding fast in atomic energy and hopes to see nuclear power account for 25% of its electricity supplies by 2050.

Sarkozy's visit to India is his first to a G20 state since France took the presidency of the group of developed and major developing economic powers.

In talks with Singh, he is expected to push his plans for overhauling the global monetary system and combating commodity price volatility.

The president and his wife Carla Bruni, a singer and former model, went sight-seeing at the ancient city of Fatehpur Sikri on Sunday after a romantic sunset visit to the Taj Mahal on Saturday evening.

The French leader last visited India in 2008, just before he married Bruni, and he vowed then to return with her to see the Taj Mahal, located in the city of Agra 200 kilometres (120 miles) from Delhi.

The couple flew to Delhi on Sunday evening and attended a dinner at Prime Minister Singh's residence.

Sarkozy began his trip in the southern city of Bangalore, a major technology centre, where he reiterated France's support for India to gain a permanent seat on the UN Security Council.

He also welcomed cooperation in space that will lead the two countries to jointly launch satellites to monitor the climate and oceans next year, and expressed a desire for more Indians to study in France.

He completes his visit on Tuesday with a trip to Mumbai, India's commercial capital that was hit by Islamist militant attacks two years ago in which 166 people were killed.


Centre embarrassed again, SC issues notice to CVC

Agencies
New Delhi, December 06, 2010
First Published: 12:10 IST(6/12/2010)
Last Updated: 12:24 IST(6/12/2010)
The Supreme Court on Monday issued notices to chief vigilance commissioner P J Thomas, the country's top watchdog against corruption, and the centre on the basis of a petition challenging his appointment. SC will hear the case on January 27, 2011 now. Thomas was Kerala's Food and Civil Supplies secretary during the palmoline oil import scam in the state. He was also the union telecom secretary during the 2G spectrum scam.

The Centre has been facing flak from the Opposition since the appointment of Thomas as CVC. Leader of Opposition, BJP Leader Sushma Swaraj had objected to Thomas' appointment.

The Supreme Court too had expressed reservations over how a tainted officer could head one of the nation's highest offices.

Thomas has rejected calls for him to resign, saying he is not guilty.


Saturday, 4 December 2010

Chinese train breaks speed record


Indo-Asian News Service
Beijing, December 04, 2010
First Published: 01:10 IST(4/12/2010)
Last Updated: 01:11 IST(4/12/2010)
China on Friday claimed that one of its high-speed trains broke the world record for unmodified commercial use during trial service. The train hit a speed of 486.1 km per hour on the tracks between Zaozhuang city of Shandong province and Bengbu city in eastern Anhui province, which form a segment of the world's longest high-speed rail line linking Beijing and Shanghai, China Daily reported.

The train's previous speed record was 416.6 km per hour set Sep 28 during its run between Shanghai and Hangzhou, capital city of east China's Zhejiang province.

"It not only marks a milestone in the construction of the Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railway, but also is a major achievement of China's technology innovation," said Wang Yongping, spokesman of the ministry of railways.