Back | Year 2006 | Year 2005 | Year 2004 | Year 2003
WebLog
US legislators legalizes spamming
Against the advice of all anti-spam organizations, the U.S. House of Representatives has passed the CAN-SPAM Act, a bill backed overwhelmingly by spammers and dubbed the 'YOU-CAN-SPAM' Act because it legalizes spamming instead of banning it.
Deaths in Police Custody
A record 104 people died in the United kingdom while in police custody or in accidents involving police cars last year, according to British Home Office figures.
Ministers said the increase from 70 fatalities in 2001-02 to 104 last year was partly due to a new system of recording which meant every fatality that followed even limited contact with the police was now included.
Three people died in police shootings. Forty were the result of traffic accidents during police chases. A further 40 died in custody or soon after being released, including eight in police stations. These included people who became unwell or took their own lives. The remaining 21 fatalities took place during other types of contact.
Its getting trendy in Britain for women to marry younger men
More and more British women are marrying younger men than ever before as per the Office for National Statistics.
In 1963, when most couples married in their 20s and cohabitation rates were low, 15% of brides were older than their grooms. But by 1998, when more women followed a career first and wed later, 26% chose a husband younger than themselves.
More than a quarter of these older women married a partner at least six years younger. There were about 18,700 such marriages in 1998, compared with 10,500 in 1963.
There were also more "sugar daddy" marriages - women marrying men at least six years older - which had increased from 21% of weddings in 1963, to 25% in 1998.
Improved technology may make long distance telephony free
Care to call home from across the world FREE? VOIP might do the trick!
The basic idea is simple: turn voice into a stream of bits, just like email, and send it on the Internet rather than the telephone company’s lines.
Very soon, Voice Over Internet Protocol will end up being so small a part
of the data stream that it alone will not be worth metering.
Internet Community in India demands justice in the murder of IIT engineer Satyendra Dubey
Please sign this petition demanding full inquiry and justice in the murder of IIT engineer Satyendra Dubey.
The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), which is guilty of leaking Dubey’s name to the very crooked contractors that he had complained against seems unaware about the groundswell of public anger.
The next time a promising young engineer sees corruption and mismanagement in a Government project he’s working on, chances are he will think twice, thrice, several times, before complaining to the political and bureaucratic establishment.
For, the 31-year-old Satyendra Kumar Dubey did that,
he sent his letter to the Prime Minister’s Office—and now
he’s dead, killed by ‘‘unidentified assailants’’
in Gaya, Bihar last week.
Internet Connectivity in India: Are you getting what you paid for?
Despite strict parameters on quality of service (QoS) laid down by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), a vast majority of the Internet subscribers continue to remain dissatisfied.
With approximately 45 million people using the internet through the dial-up or fixed lines across the country, the average speed for a user is around 10 kbps on 33.6 kbps modem at a cost of Rs 35 per hour, while through a dedicated always on connection, a user can have an access speed up to 100 kbps at Rs 500 per month.
Many subscribers did not know what speeds they were getting. Click Here to find out your internet connection speed.
Even as the TRAI's quality of service report finds that the ISPs have managed to reach these standards, many of the subscribers continue to be dissatisfied. More than 62 per cent of the overall respondents believe that cyber cafes are better and easier means of Internet access.
Loss of jobs due to outsourcing, half to India, sparks anger in the US
The dramatic loss of jobs in the United States, an estimated 1.3 million that would be moved offshore by the end of the decade, half to India has sparked anger in the US.
A two-day conference instructing companies on moving technology work and other jobs overseas drew picketers, in one of the first demonstrations protesting the practice to hit the San Francisco Bay Area.
Faced with an electoral backlash, some U.S. states have legislated to ban government agencies from moving tech services overseas and unions are fighting what they see as an alarming trend.
The outsourcing of jobs to China and India is not new, but lately it has earned a chilling new adjective: professional. Advances in communications technology have enabled white-collar jobs to be shipped from the United States and Europe as never before, and the outcry from workers who once considered themselves invulnerable is creating a potent political force.
But the NASSCOM study by New York-based business research consultancy Evalueserve said a combination of skilled immigration and "offshoring" of jobs was vital to head off a looming labour shortfall of 5.6 million by 2010 that would undermine the U.S. economy.
Arrested for circulating anti government email messages
Fourteen people have been arrested in Zimbabwe for circulating an e-mail calling for protests to oust President Robert Mugabe, state media reports.
In the neighbouring Rwanda, the editor and senior journalists from the independent newspaper, Umuseso, have been taken into custody following the publication of articles critical of the government.
It may be recalled that a few weeks back there was a similar attack on the freedom of press in India which prides in being the biggest democracy in the world.
Spam menace drives man to issue death threats
A Silicon Valley computer programmer got so fed up with the daily dose of spam that landed in his inbox and almost rendered his computer unusable for about two months that he threatened to send a "package full of Anthrax spores" to the company he blames for bombarding his computer.
Charles Booker was arrested on Thursday and released on $75000 bond for making threats to the staff of a Canadian company.
He threatened to torture and kill the employees, disable an employee with a bullet and torture him with a power drill and an ice pick, to hunt down and castrate the employees unless they removed him from their email list.
Mr. Booker acknowledged that he had behaved badly but said he had been receiving a barrage of advertising and email for the past two months promising to enlarge his sexual organ.
Whether it offers the chance to enlarge or reduce parts of the body in improbable ways or amazing opportunities to make money without doing any work, spam is now part of a computer user's daily life. It is thought to account for about half of all emails sent over the internet.
Three Indian Air Force Officials have been booked for spying
The CBI has filed two separate complaints under Official Secrets Act against three Indian Air Force officials for indulging in anti-national activities.
Retired Air Vice-Marshal J S Kumar, Sergeant K C Saini and retired Wing Commander Y S Tomar are the three officers.
The CBI conducted a thorough investigation, which revealed that the accused people were allegedly giving out secret and sensitive information from the Air Force headquarters connected with various air force contracts and other vital information.
The complaint alleged that Kumar, with the active support and help of Saini working in the purchase section (foreign purchase) of the air head-quarters, obtained classified information pertaining to IAF from a serving Squadron leader (decoy of Indian Air Force) whom he had paid Rs 50,000 for collecting the information.
The accused persons were caught red-handed while accepting the classified documents.
Tomar collected classified information pertaining to air headquarters and MoD in respect of crash fire tenders and secret contracts between India and Russia.
National Human Rights Commission Chief urges the need to legalize prostitution
Former CBI director and NHRC director-general D R Karthikeyan has stressed the need to legalise prostitution to improve the quality of life of sex workers whom he described as ‘the most exploited section of society.’
It was social and economic pressures that forced women into prostitution. Prostitution would continue to exist and the best that the State could do was to regulate it. Prostitutes live in inhuman conditions without access to basic services, particularly medical facilities.
Supreme Court transfers Jayalalithaa cases to Karnataka fearing failure of justice
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa today suffered a major setback with the Supreme Court directing transfer of the disproportionate assets case against her from a special court in Chennai to a Special Court in Bangalore. Supreme court said that the manner in which the trial was conducted in Chennai would have amounted to failure of justice undermining the public confidence in fair trial.
Besides Ms. Jayalalithaa, others accused in the Rs.66.65-crore wealth case are N. Sasikala, her erstwhile foster son, V. N. Sudhakaran, and Ilavarasi.
Allowing a petition filed by DMK leader K Anbazaghan, seeking transfer of the case outside Tamil Nadu, a Bench comprising Justice S N Variava and Justice H K Sema took strong exception to the fact that Jayalalithaa though an accused in the case had never appeared before the trial Court at Chennai and that a questionnaire was sent to her Poes Garden residence for the purpose of questioning her.
Referring to recalling of over 70 witnesses of whom more than 60 resiled from their earlier statements without any cross-examination from the Public Prosecutor after Jayalalithaa became the Chief Minister, the Bench said the petitioner has made out a case that the public confidence in the fairness of the trial was being seriously undermined.
"As revealed from the facts, great prejudice appear to have been caused to the prosecution which could culminate in grave miscarriage of justice. The witnesses who had been examined and cross-examined earlier should on such a flimsy ground never have been recalled for cross-examination," Justice Sema, writing for the Bench, said.
He said the fact that it was done after Jayalalithaa assumed the power as the Chief Minister of the State and the Public Prosecutor appointed by her Government did not oppose and/or give consent to application for recall of witnesses were indicative of how judicial process was being subverted.
The Apex Court said "if the criminal trial is not free and fair and not free from bias, judicial fairness and criminal justice system would be at stake shaking the confidence of the public in the system and woe would be the rule of law.
"In the present case, the circumstances as recited above are such as to create reasonable apprehension in the minds of the public at large in general and the petitioner in particular that there is every likelihood of failure of justice," it said.
Furniture Package for divorced men
A Belgian furniture shop is offering special packages for divorced men who hate shopping in a country where half of all marriages end in a divorce after five years.
The packages include a living room, a complete bedroom, a dining room and a television set, including a DVD player.
Jayalalithaa forced to comply with the Supreme Court directive
The Hindu today withdrew its request for Central security, in the light of the Chief Minister Jayalalithaa's assurance that the State Police was fully complying with and implementing the orders of the Supreme Court.
This acceptance of the power of judicial review over matters of legislative privilege is institutionally important. This is perhaps the first time that a Chief Minister of a State where the Legislative Assembly has punished anyone for breach of privilege has publicly acknowledged the supremacy of the Constitution and the Supreme Court as the final interpreter and adjudicator of legislative privileges when they come into conflict with Constitutional provisions, especially fundamental rights.
Wary of an erring Chief Minister, Centre offers to guard The Hindu
The Central Industrial Security Force will provide security to The Hindu office and guard residences of five of its journalists, who were awarded 15 days simple imprisonment by the Tamil Nadu Assembly last for breach of privilege.
Freedom of Indian Press under attack from a mis- adventurous Legislature
The Indian Press is reputed to be one that enjoys the highest freedom in the world. This is especially significant when viewed in the backdrop of the blatant media misuse by the US government during the Iraq conflict.
Article 19 of the Indian Constitution guarantees this freedom and judicial interpretation has strengthened this. This freedom was shamefully violated on November 7 by a decision by the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, Jayalalithaa, in the name of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly.
The police sought to enforce the decision in a blatantly illegal and offensive manner by raiding the offices of the newspaper as well as the homes of four of its five senior management and editorial representatives whom the Assembly had sentenced to 15 days simple imprisonment.
The persons targeted were S. Rangarajan, Publisher; N. Ravi, Editor; Malini Parthasarathy, Executive Editor; V. Jayanth, Associate Editor and Chief of the Tamil Nadu Bureau; and Radha Venkatesan, Special Correspondent.
About 30 minutes after the Assembly passed its order this evening, police jeeps carrying about two dozen policemen, some of them in riot gear, arrived at the head office of The Hindu here to arrest the journalists.
When Editor-in-Chief of The Hindu, N Ram asked the police on what authority they entered the premises, and if they had any papers, they turned tail. The half a dozen jeeps also rolled out as silently as they had come in, while the uniformed personnel melted away. Television crews had started arriving at the scene, hearing of the police entry into the offices of The Hindu and Mr. Ram made a statement condemning the police action as an assault on the freedom of the press.
Well after the Supreme Court's dusk deadline on arresting women, two male police officers landed at The Hindu office here to arrest the Executive Editor, Malini Parthasarathy. After 8-30 p.m., they searched the room of Ms. Parthasarathy.
This ran contrary to the statement of the Chief Minister, Jayalalithaa, that the then Chief Minister, M. Karunanidhi had no alternative but to arrest her in the morning in December 1996. "The laws of this land are very clear that no woman should be arrested and kept in police custody between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m."
Late in the evening, Mr. Ram spoke to the Prime Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, and apprised him of the day's happenings. Mr. Vajpayee expressed his concern over the developments.
All this was done in the name of protecting the privileges of the Legislative Assembly.
The Hindu, determined to expose the Jayalalithaa dispensation's grave misadventure factually and truthfully and to face the latest challenge to its freedom and independence and to the fundamental rights and personal liberties of five of its senior and valued representatives with every resource at its command, has decided immediately to take the matter to court.
The Tamil Nadu Assembly based its action on a total misreading of the Constitution. The power of legislative privilege was aimed at strengthening the independent functioning of the legislature; it was certainly not meant to intimidate and stifle criticism and to create a `chilling effect' on the freedom of the press.
The articles that earned the wrath of the Tamil Nadu Assembly's Privileges Committee, dominated by the AIADMK, were three news reports and an editorial titled " " published in April this year. Quite extraordinarily, the allegedly offensive portions in the reports were descriptive words such as "fumed", "incensed", "stinging", "diatribe", and "high-pitched tone" employed to give a feel of Ms. Jayalalithaa's speeches on a few occasions.
The editorial was a well-reasoned and upstanding response to the decision to refer these reports to the Assembly's Privileges Committee. It made the important point that privilege must be invoked only when there is a material obstruction of the functioning of a legislature and that the power must not be used to insulate legislators against comments or criticism.
The Privileges Committee's decision comes against the disturbing backdrop of a systematic attempt by the Jayalalithaa Government to harass and browbeat the independent press. Since the AIADMK came to power in May 2001, the Tamil Nadu Government has filed a large number of defamation cases, criminal and civil, against an array of publications. The Hindu faces 16 criminal defamation cases and one civil defamation suit, all of them completely baseless.
As Mr. Ram escorted the police to their car after the search, about 200 employees mobbed them, shouting slogans, "Down with police high-handedness," "Down with Jayalalithaa" and "Long live the press".
Pacifying the crowd, Mr. Ram said: "The authors of this outrageous
misadventure will pay heavily for this."
Microsoft declares a price of 5 million dollars for hackers' heads
In a most unusual step, Microsoft Corporation has created a $5-million (U.S.) fund to track down malicious hackers that target the software giant's popular Windows operating systems.
Microsoft offered two $250,000 rewards for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible for the Blaster worm and the SoBig.F e-mail virus, which infected more than half a million computers, crashed thousands of systems, and snarled Internet traffic across the globe in August and September.
The world's largest software company - which last month admitted that security concerns have begun to affect its bottom line - also said it had earmarked an additional $4.5 million for future rewards.
The announcement was made in Washington by Microsoft representatives, flanked by agents of the cybercrime divisions of the federal bureau of investigations, secret service and interpol.
The U.S. develops a lethal new virus through genetic engineering
A scientist funded by the US government has deliberately created an extremely deadly form of mousepox, a relative of the smallpox virus, through genetic engineering.
The new virus kills all mice even if they have been given antiviral drugs as well as a vaccine that would normally protect them.
The work has not stopped there. The cowpox virus, which infects a range of animals including humans, has been genetically altered in a similar way.
Gender discrimination in Air India and Indian Airlines
An epitome of beauty, she is full of grace, radiates warmth and keeps you comfortable in every way. She is indeed Air India's hostess - which distinguishes her from her counterparts in other jobs.
A typical Air-India hostess is warm with a pleasing personality. A keen interest in people and places along with being dedicated and conscientious is what makes her unique. She is intelligent, committed, enthusiastic and creative. Her traditional welcome is like no other's and for her it is a pleasure more than a duty to serve you as a special guest aboard Air-India
The above is from www.airindia.com.
The below is from the Civil Aviation Minister Rajiv Pratap Rudy.
Presentability and physical appearance of candidates aspiring to become
air hostesses at Air-India (AI) and Indian Airlines (IA) is more important
than written tests.
A memorandum sent out by the Ministry of Civil Aviation directs future recruitment
of air hostesses is primarily on the basis of looks and personality, rather
than academics or intelligence.
The Supreme Court has ordered that air hostesses, once they cross 50, should only be assigned ground duties.
"This is blatant gender discrimination," said Maldeep Sidhu, a former Air-India air hostess and now a practising lawyer.
Air-India has 753 air hostesses and as many as 600 have put their signatures on a petition protesting the Supreme Court order. The signatories are from all age groups — between 29 and 50.
The apex court judgment has a string of negative implications for the 50-plus air hostesses. Their earnings will be reduced by 75 per cent as they will not be paid flight allowances.
In principle, everyone agrees there should be gender equality. But, in practice, they continue to face the bias and are humiliated on every single flight.
• Air-India’s air-hostesses are considered junior to all male cabin crew, irrespective of the number of years they have served in the airline.
• Air-hostesses are not eligible for the top crew position of Flight Supervisors though they are trained in training schools.
• All air-hostesses, from age 35 on, are required to undergo a biennial medical examination while there is no such requirement for men. Recently, an internal gynaecological check-up has been included which women staff say has no bearing on ‘‘in-flight fitness.’’
• While men and women are required to have regular weight checks, only the women are grounded on account of excessive weight. There have been instances when men have been allowed to fly despite being as much as 40 kg overweight.
• Only men are eligible for the monthly bar loss allowance of 30 pounds a month. This allowance is a compensation for what the AI management assumes are losses arising out of non-payment by passengers buying liquor on flight. Assistant flight pursers and Supervisors who don’t handle the cash also get the allowance.
The normal duties of an air hostess in any airline include:
They serve refreshments
Look after passengers
Take special care of those unwell
Keep an eye on possible breaches of security
Administer first aid in an emergency
Ensure the safety of passengers in the event of a hijack or terrorist threat
These are tasks air hostesses of IA and AI have performed with courage
and distinction. Exactly which part of their job description places a premium
on physical appearance?
Protecting passengers should be the primary concern of any airline in the
event of increasing risks such as terrorist attacks or hijacks.
Equally important are concerns such as air rage. These could affect other
passengers and such situations need to be handled with tact and patience.
It would be wrong and unsafe if the Civil Aviation Ministry ignored such vital issues and confined itself to superficial and chauvinistic jargon — about market feedback showing air hostesses having to be young and pretty for IA and AI to compete effectively.
No doubt, in a service industry like air travel, presentability of the crew has to be ensured. But by no logic can this justify different criteria for men and women, allowing men to continue to fly till the age of 58 but grounding women at 50.
The truth is IA and AI are unable to compete effectively because they have an ageing fleet; their aircraft need to replaced.
They are unable to compete effectively because the Civil Aviation Ministry bears the burden of cross-subsidy of petrol and diesel, leading to a very high cost of aviation turbine fuel.
They are unable to compete effectively because rather than being managed professionally, they are run by a constantly changing stream of IAS officers. These officers learn about the aviation industry after being appointed and are transferred before they get a feel for its intricacies.
It was Rajiv Gandhi who first attempted to remove the degrading and discriminatory service conditions of air hostesses by issuing a directive restoring male-female parity. This directive was subsequently watered down by the ministry.
The Air-India Air Hostesses’ Union is going to seek a review of the Supreme Court judgment grounding air hostesses when they reach 50 years of age.
Former Union law minister Ram Jethmalani, who had argued the case on behalf of the air hostesses in the apex court last week, met civil aviation minister Rajiv Pratap Rudi to urge the government to intervene in the matter.
Sainthood to the Saint of the Gutter for "Miracle Healing" after death!
Nobody would disagree that Mother Teresa, who spent her life caring for the destitute, was a noble soul. For the "Saint of the Gutter", who never in her life assumed holiness by herself, sainthood was conferred upon her not by any religious institution, but the gratitude, appreciation and affection of the millions whom she served. Unfortunately, religious institutions make use of such social acceptance to propagate superstitions and in the process damages the integrity of the person involved on a whole.
At least one proven after-death-miracle is a must for any saint. Teresa’s managers have offered the "Healing of Monica Besra" for this purpose and the Vatican has officially accepted it as a suitable ticket to sainthood.
But unexpectedly the miracle has met with a tough challenge.
The medical records prove that it was sheer conventional medical treatment that rescued her life. "In the 21st century how can you talk about miracle healing?" says West Bengal health minister Suyrya Kanta Nishra. The miracle documentation claims that several doctors have certified that the healing was "scientifically inexplicable", but not a single of these anonymous witnesses could so far be traced. The former health minister of West Bengal, Partho De, revealed that he had been approached by the Vatican agents and asked to name a doctor, who would certify that Monica Besra’s healing was a miracle. He declined support. After ordering the medical records of the case in February 2000 for scrutiny to the Kolkata (Calcutta) health department, he was convinced that there was nothing unusual about the disappearance of the tumor after prolonged medical treatment.
Dr. Manju Murshed, superintendent of the government hospital in Balurghat, informed that Monica Besra was admitted in the hospital with severe pain. She suffered from tubercular meningitis and from an ovarian tumor, which was discovered during an ultra-sound investigation. She was subsequently treated by Dr.Tarun Kumar Biwas and the gynecologist Dr. Ranjan Mustafi. After she left the hospital, the treatment was continued in the North Bengal Medical College and Hospital and ended successfully in March 1999. A final ultra-sound investigation showed that the tumor had disappeared.
Vatican’s "proof" is a statement of crown witness Monica Besra. It leaked, despite utmost secrecy, to the press. In this statement, Besra describes that she was suffering from terrible pain from a giant tumor in her stomach and nearly lost all hope. She left her family to seek help with the Missionaries of Charity in Kolkata. On 5 October, 1998, Mother Teresa’s first death anniversary, she prayed to her ardently. Two nuns, sister Bartholomea and sister Ann Sevika, took a silver medallion with Mother’s picture from the wall and tied it on Monica’s body with a black thread, right on the tumor. The pain vanished the same night and never came back. Her stomach became smaller and smaller and in the morning she felt that the tumor had vanished. She was miraculously healed!
Monica Besra is a 30-year-old tribal woman from Dulidnapur village. She is illiterate and speaks her tribal mother tongue only, laced with a few words of broken Bengali. Until recently she has not been a Christian. The statement is written in fluent English and shows familiarity with details of Catholic belief. It is obvious that the text has not been written or dictated by her. But Monica Besra was not available to bring light into the murky story: she had vanished. She must have been “under the protection of the church”, suspected those close to her. She was not seen, since her name, despite all efforts of secrecy, became public.
And the nuns involved in the miracle kept their lips sealed. "An objective miracle has happened", explains archbishop D’Souza of Kolkata. "The sisters don’t want to give different versions as that would spoil things."
Some of the doctors who treated Monica Besra, for example, say that there is no evidence of a miracle. They say that her tumour was not fully grown and that her condition responded to medical treatment.
"This miracle claim is absolute nonsense and should be condemned by everyone," Dr Ranjan Kumar Mustafi, of Balurghat Hospital in West Bengal, said. "She had a medium-sized tumour in her lower abdomen caused by tuberculosis. The drugs she was given eventually reduced the cystic mass and it disappeared after a year's treatment."
Her husband initially shared this scepticism. "This miracle is a hoax," he told an interviewer last year. "It is much ado about nothing. My wife was cured by the doctors."
Their children are being educated with the help of the nuns and he has been able to buy a small piece of land. "Everything has changed for the better", says Selku Murmu.
Now, he is full of praise for Mother Teresa and her order. "It was her miracle healing that cured my wife," says Selku Murmu, whose family has converted to Christianity. "Our situation was terrible and we didn't know what to do."
Mother Teresa's elevation has also been criticised for its speed. After a Vatican commission recognised Monica Besra's healing as a miracle, the Pope personally intervened to "fast track" the nun's beatification, making it the swiftest in the Church's history.
Under normal Church rules, at least five years must pass after a person dies before the procedure for sainthood can begin, first with beatification and later with canonisation. The process started in 1999, less than two years after Mother Teresa's death, aged 87.
Her canonisation could follow within a year or two, bestowing upon her the Catholic Church's highest honour, though a second miracle would be needed for her sainthood.
If the idea of miraculous healings gets credence, it will have dangerous consequences for the uneducated and the poor. Confidence in modern medicine and science has to be developed and strengthened and people have to be encouraged to use available medical facilities for treatment instead of taking to superstition and miracle belief. The efforts should be to expand the outreach of the modern medicine to all strata of the society.
Month long peoples revolt ends as the President of Bolivia steps down
Bolivia's President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada resigned in a letter to Congress following a month long deadly popular revolt in South America's poorest nation in which more than 70 people were killed.
The decision came after tens of thousands of people had marched and blockaded the capital for weeks to reject Sanchez de Lozada's pro-U.S., free-market economic policies.
Hordes of miners, farmers and Indian women had marched to the center of the capital, shouting ''quit, quit'' and exploded dynamite sticks two blocks from a government palace guarded by troops and assault vehicles. Food is scarce in the capital.
The protestors were seen dancing and clapping in the streets and singing the national anthem. Lozada had to step down for having massacred the people, for lying and trying to hang on to power by all means necessary. Now, vigilant and festive in the streets, the Bolivian people are the live expression of a democracy constructed from below.
Six months after US and British forces ousted former President Saddam Hussein in the name of freedom and human rights the future of Iraqi women is bleak.
The U.S. occupation of Iraq has caused over 20,000 pointless civilian injuries. In addition, more than 1,500 people have died in Baghdad alone. The Pentagon's own numbers admit massive death rates. Women are threatened with rape when they leave their homes. Suicide and car bombs, civil unrest, and riots rock the nation daily. The U.S. has admitted to holding upwards of 10,000 Iraqi prisoners.
Censorship resistance in India: Indian govt blocks Yahoo! groups on security grounds
Along with the notion of free speech, the right to online freedom of association and peaceful assembly needs much greater emphasis. You shouldn't eliminate the right of all to assemble online via YahooGroups because one group is thought to be using the service for non-peaceful assembly. (YahooGroups and Hotmail are probably the world's two most significant contributions to low cost democratic involvement around the world - why? they are free and people actually use them on a consistent basis to communicate and organize.)
Express your protest. Beat the ban. Write your views to
Mr Arun Shourie
Minister of Communications & Information Technology & Disinvestment
Ist Floor, Electronics Niketan,
Lodhi Road, New Delhi
Email : ashourie@nic.in
Mr. Ravi Shankar Prasad
Minister of Information and Broadcasting
E-Mail: ravis@sansad.nic.in
Phone: +91-11-23384340, 23384782 Fax : +91-11-23782118
National Human Rights Commission (NHRC)
You can also read messages posted to the discussion forum at the Ministry of Information Technology’s Website and post your views there.
In the meantime, users in India wanting to urgently access the groups.yahoo.com domain-based sites despite this unofficial ban should attempt to beat the ban by browsing via: www.anonymizer.com or may want to visit www.proxy4free.com. The second option may involve changing some of your PC settings.
Bolivian police clashed with protesters demanding the removal of President
More than 45 people have been killed in a month-long wave of protests by thousands of workers and peasant farmers against Sanchez de Lozada, a U.S. ally, for his free market economic policies and his failure to tackle endemic poverty.
Vatican says AIDS has grown so fast because of the availability of condoms
Contrary to scientific advise, the Vatican is urging people world over not to use condoms, claiming that they do not help protect against the deadly virus.
Scientists prove that the pain of rejection is for real
The pain of rejection is more than mere metaphor. A team of scientists have found that to the brain, a social snub is just like stubbing a toe. More>>
HIV hitting young at the rate of one every 14 seconds
A United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) report says that about 6,000 youngsters become infected with the HIV virus every day, the equivalent of one every 14 seconds. The majority of them are female.
A young female lawyer chose to become the next human bomb; kills 19 in Haifa
A Palestinian woman wrapped in explosives blew herself up yesterday inside a seaside restaurant popular with both Arabs and Jews, killing 19 bystanders, including four children.
The lunchtime attack ended nearly a month of relative calm. One of the deadliest in three years of renewed violence, the bombing came on the Jewish Sabbath and a day before the start of Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar. The blast inside the Maxim restaurant went off shortly after 2 p.m., shattering windows and leaving the white walls cracked and charred. Most of the ceiling collapsed, with lights and wires dangling. Broken plates, glass, chairs and human remains covered the floor of the one-story building. Outside, the body of the restaurant's security guard lay broken and bloody on the steps.
Police said the bomber and 19 bystanders were killed, including four Arabs. The four dead children included a 1-year-old and two others ages 5 and 6, emergency officials said.
The group Islamic Jihad said it organized the bombing. It identified the bomber as Hanadi Jaradat, 27, a law school graduate from the West Bank town of Jenin. Her brother and a cousin, an Islamic Jihad member, were killed in an Israeli military raid in June, the group said.
The explosion brought to 103 the number of Palestinian
suicide bombings in the past three years of fighting. At least 432 persons
have been killed in the attacks.
The suicide bomber whose attack in Haifa left 19 people dead did not fit
the usual profile of an unemployed young man throwing in his lot with the
terror groups. Hanadi Jaradat, was a professional woman who was due to qualify
as a lawyer in a few weeks, with every chance of a successful career. She
left her home in the West Bank city of lenin at 7.30 a.m. local time on
Saturday without breathing a word about her intentions.
Instead of going to the law firm where she was a trainee, she went to Haifa, where she set off her bomb in a crowded restaurant. Among the dead were four Israeli children and three Arabs. Jaradat carried out the attack for Islamic Jihad, the Palestinian terrorist group. Her family said her prime motive was revenge.
In June Israeli forces killed her cousin, Salih, and her brother, Fadi (23), in Jenin. Both were accused of being Islamic Jihad operatives. "Do not expect her not to be influenced by those killings," said her sister, Bisan (21). "She saw her brother slaughtered like a sheep." Jaradat had done well enough at school to win a place at Yarmuk University in neighbouring Jordan. She had always been a devout Muslim, but after her brother’s death she completed the task of memorising every verse of the Koran.
Madhumita case: CBI grills Anuj
A day after Madhumita Shukla's mother and sister were
brought face-to-face with murder suspect Amarmani Tripathi, the Central
Bureau of Investigation has interrogated a student in the case.
According to the CBI, Amaramani Tripathi tried to frame Anuj Mishra, an
IIT student, in the murder case. Madhumita's ex-servant planted the story
of her marriage with Anuj and a priest claimed he had performed the rituals.
Since she was pregnant, it was alleged that Anuj had killed her.
The police had a lead that the suspect had initials 'A.M.' and Anuj Mishra
came under the needle of suspicion. His friends in IIT were questioned and
his house was raided. His family too went through a traumatic period. Anuj
has denied any relation with Madhumita and said he had only met her at her
house on October 27 last year in connection with a poetry competition in
IIT Kanpur.
Now with Amarmani in CBI custody and most of the puzzle falling into place,
Anuj confronted the former minister and tried to debunk the marriage theory.
However, Mishra's testimony does not have a direct bearing on the murder
investigation. Though Madhumita's family is helping the agency in collecting
more information and important evidence, the CBI is still to get its hands
on the man who actually committed the murder.
Chronology:
Oct 4, 2003 : Madhumita case: CBI grills IIT student
Oct 1, 2003 : Amarmani Tripathi fails lie-detector test
Oct 1, 2003 : Madhumani's plea comes up for hearing
Sep 30, 2003: Madhumita case: Tripathi's wife suspected
Sep 30, 2003: Tripathi's bail to be heard on Oct 6
Sep 27, 2003: Madhumita case: Tripathi files bail plea
Sep 26, 2003: Amarmani to undergo polygraph test
Sep 25, 2003: New twist in Madhumita murder case
Sep 24, 2003: Amarmani Tripathi arrives in Delhi
Sep 23, 2003: Madhumita case: Killer confirms Tripathi's role
Sep 22, 2003: Tripathi remanded to judicial custody till Oct 6
Sep 21, 2003: Madhumita case: CBI arrests Amarmani Tripathi
Sep 14, 2003: Amarmani retracts allegation against Mulayam
Sep 7, 2003 : CBI awaits Amarmani's DNA report
Sep 5, 2003 : Madhumita case: CBI awaits formal DNA report
Aug 30, 2003: CBI puts reward on Madhumita's killers
Aug 6, 2003 : Sister Act – New twist to Madhumita case
Aug 4, 2003 : Madhumita case: CBI questions Tripathi again
Aug 3, 2003 : CBI to question Amarmani Tripathi
Jul 21, 2003 : CBI to question Tripathi's servant
Jul 2, 2003 : Showcause notices issued to CBCID officials
Jun 20, 2003: Tripathi to return after probe: Mayawati
Jun 17, 2003: Twist in tale: Tripathi admits 'knowing' Madhumita
Jun 17, 2003: CB-CID confirms Tripathi questioning
Jun 16, 2003: Amar Mani evades CB-CID hearing
Jun 16, 2003: CB-CID to question Amarmani Tripathi
Jun 15, 2003: Madhumita's mother demands CBI probe
Jun 14, 2003: CBI can probe Madhumita case: Mayawati
Jun 4, 2003 : CB-CID interrogates Madhumita's family
Jun 4, 2003 : Madhumita murder: Witness recalls fateful events
May 28, 2003: DNA tests an eyewash: Madhumita's friend
May 26, 2003: Madhumita's foetus sent for DNA test
May 23, 2003: Court notice to UP govt in Madhumita case
May 21, 2003: UP murder: Madhumita may have been married
May 20, 2003: New angle: Madhumita may have been married
May 18, 2003: Madhumita scandal: A politician-poetess saga
May 18, 2003: Mayawati sacks minister linked in Madhumita murder
May 16, 2003: Madhumita murder: Mayawati assures fair probe
May 14, 2003: No headway in Madhumita murder probe
May 13, 2003: Fresh charges surface in poetess murder
May 12, 2003: SP seeks CBI probe in Madhumita murder
May 9, 2003 : Broad daylight murder of poetess Madhumita
Family swaps toddler for colour TV
A poverty stricken Albanian couple has admitted handing over one of their five children to a gang of human traffickers in return for a colour television, Italian media reports said on Tuesday.
The gang subsequently sold the three-year-old boy to an elderly Italian couple for 5000 euro ($8520), according to the Italian news agency ANSA citing judicial sources.
According to the report, the boy's father, knowing that the traffickers were dangerous, agreed to the deal.
The gang was broken up by Italian police several months ago and when the arrest of leader Besim Metani was announced, the boy's mother came forward, the report said.
Italian and Albanian investigators finally traced the boy to the town of Sersale in the south of the country, where he had been living since 1999 with Angelo Borelli, 69, and his wife Iole Rodio, 57, under the name of Michele.
The child, now aged 7, was put into the care of Italian social services until the legal authorities make a decision on whether to send him back to Albania.
The trafficking gang is alleged to have brought about 60 children into Italy by similar means.
Police spokesman Pierpaolo Maraffa said his officers were still trying to trace around 30 children in and around the town of Pescara on the Adriatic coast facing Albania.
French schools are cracking down on a craze among teenage girls to flash their midriffs and wear skimpy G-strings that peek brazenly out from above their low-cut trousers.
A number of head teachers in France -- where school uniforms are practically unheard of -- have slapped a ban on showing off thongs and tummies, the French daily Le Parisien said on Friday.
"In the eyes of boys, thongs reduce girls to bottoms," former junior education minister Segolene Royal said.
"These adolescents are, sadly, a reflection of the society they are sold -- a society where women's bodies are shown off like vulgar merchandise," she told the newspaper.
Teenage girls the world over are sporting ever-lower hipster jeans, pierced navels and tattoos, and have been yanking up their barely-there thongs to show above their trousers.
Underwear makers in France report soaring sales of such garments to girls as young as 10.
"The thong has become a fashion accessory like a handbag or a belt. You let it show above your hipster jeans just like you let your bra-strap show," Le Parisien quoted a spokeswoman for the Dim underwear company as saying.
Teachers are having none of it, however, despite
squeals of protest from students.
"I am quite happy to accept girls showing their navels -- but
not in a high school," said Claudine Wendling-Brickert, headmistress
at the Ribeauville High School in Haut-Rhin.