Monday, 23 May 2011

Dairy products don’t raise heart attack risk

 
LONDON: Cheese and butter eaters worry no more as researchers found that eating dairy products do not raise the risk of heart attack.

The nutritionists examined thousands of old-aged people and came to know that even those who ate more than half a kilo of cheese did not put them under increased risk.

Things like milk and cheese are very complex substance, explained researcher Stella Aslibekyan from Brown University, Rhode Island, where the study was carried out.

The study suggested that nutrients like calcium, vitamin D and potassium present in the dairy products may protect against heart disease for all but those who ate the most of them.
 

Kate's dress to go on public display

 
MADRID: The bridal dress of Catherine Middleton, Duchess of Cambridge, is to go on public display, allowing visitors to examine its every intricate detail.

Possible venues include the State Rooms at Buckingham Palace or Hampton Court Palace, where a team from the Royal School of Needlework helped in the dress's creation.

The dress was made amid such secrecy that the lacemakers from the Royal School of Needlework were not told the identity of the designer in case it leaked out.

US company plans to offer trips around moon

 
WASHINGTON: A US private space exploration company has recently announced its plan to offer trips around the moon to space tourists.

The tourists willing to pay the $150 million ticket price would launch into space aboard a three-seat Russian Soyuz spacecraft.

The Space Adventures expects to begin launching their trips around the moon within the next five years.

'Pirates' is box office gold

 
LOS ANGELES: The fourth installment in the "Pirates of the Caribbean" series captured $90 million in box office treasures as Jack Sparrow's latest adventure debuted at number one, Sunday estimates said.

In "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides," Johnny Depp's character looks to get "savvy" with the Fountain of Youth. Penelope Cruz, Geoffrey Rush and Ian McShane co-star in the Disney romp, which has earned mixed reviews from critics.

The $90.1 million North American take was enough to knock "Thor" off its throne, according to estimates from industry tracker Exhibitor Relations.

The surprise hit "Bridesmaids" held onto the second spot, grossing $21 million in its second week. The comedy about an oddball group of women preparing for their wedding day supporting roles has earned $57.5 million total.

After two weeks on top, "Thor," starring Chris Hemsworth as the epic hero banished to Earth from the mystical world of Asgard, slipped to third, earning $15.5 million and raising its three-week total to $145 million.

"Fast Five" kept its engine revving by picking up $10.6 million. The fifth volume in the high-speed car chase series, which added action star Dwyane "The Rock" Johnson this time around, has grossed $186 million in a month.

In the fifth spot was "Rio," a family-friendly tropical bird comedy which took $4.65 million for a total of just over $131 million over its six-week run.

Horror flick "Priest" starring Paul Bettany on the hunt for vampires who kidnapped his niece fell two spots to number six. It grossed $4.6 million in its second week.

"Jumping the Broom," about two African-American families meeting for a wedding, earned $3.7 million, slipping one spot to seventh.

Next was romantic comedy "Something Borrowed" with $3.4 million, followed by Depression-era romance "Water for Elephants" with $2.1 million. Rounding out the top 10 was "Madea's Big Happy Family," which took in just under $1 million. (AFP)

US tornado toll climbs to 116

 
JOPLIN: US states braced for more storms Monday after a tornado in Missouri killed 116 people, putting it on course to be the deadliest single twister to strike the United States in modern history.

Forecasters warned more potent storms were on the way in the area around Joplin, Missouri where the massive twister struck Sunday leading to 116 deaths, matching the deadliest tornado in modern US records.

"We are currently forecasting a major severe weather outbreak for Tuesday over the central United States with strong tornadoes likely over Oklahoma, Kansas, extreme northern Texas, southwest Missouri," said Russell Schneider, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Storm Prediction Center.

Officials warned the death toll in Missouri was sure to rise after Sunday's massive twister cut a swath of destruction four miles (6.4 kilometers) long and three quarters of a mile (more than a kilometer) wide.

"There are going to be some things out there that are going to be hard to see and stomach," Missouri Governor Jay Nixon said as he asked people to pray for those affected and those searching the wreckage.

"We remain positive and optimistic that there are lives out there to be saved.
"We're going to go through every foot of this town and make sure that every person is accounted for," Nixon told reporters.

Officials said the last single twister to wreak such loss of life occurred on June 8, 1953 when 116 people were killed in Flint, Michigan.

Some 1,150 wounded people were treated in area hospitals after Sunday's twister, The Joplin Globe reported.

Flames and smoke from broken gas lines shot up through the wreckage as block after block of homes and businesses were reduced to rubble and cars were tossed so violently into the air that they turned into crumpled heaps of metal.

Heavy rain, lightening and strong winds hampered relief efforts while hundreds of exhausted rescue workers carefully picked their way through the rubble with the help of sniffer dogs.

Disaster struck on Sunday evening when, with just 24 minutes warning, the monster twister packing winds of up to 200 miles (320 kilometers) an hour tore through the center of town. (AFP)

Mysterious helicopters seen roaming in Muzaffarabad

 
MUZAFFARABAD: Eight mysterious helicopters were seen roaming about in the skies of Muzaffarabad at around 1:15am, Geo News reported.

The copters including seven small and a large remained in the skies for several minutes and returned after inspecting the mountains in Dolai area of AJK capital.

The roaming of these helicopters has created panic among the people of the area.

Military officials have claimed that these helicopters were of Pakistan and that these were on night mission.

Pakistan scent victory over W. Indies

 
BASSETERRE: Hundreds from Taufeeq Umar and Misbah-ul-Haq followed by purposeful bowling led by Abdur Rehman had Pakistan on the verge of victory over West Indies in the second Test on Monday.

Rehman captured three for 26 from 14 overs, as West Indies, in pursuit of 427 for victory, slumped to 130 for six in their second innings at stumps on the fourth day at Warner Park.

Left-hander Darren Bravo has been the only West Indies batsman that has come to terms with the Pakistani bowlers, hitting the top score so far of 50.

Taufeeq had equalled his career-best of 135 and Misbah, the Pakistan captain, was undefeated on 102, as the visitors reached 377 for six in their second innings before they declared about 45 minutes after lunch.

Taufeeq struck 13 fours from 315 balls in close to seven hours batting, and Misbah stroked 10 fours and two sixes from 141 deliveries in close to four hours.

Devendra Bishoo was the most successful West Indies bowler with two for 149 from 38 overs.

"It is really, really good to score a Test hundred as a captain because the team is always looking towards you for something special," said Misbah. "For your own confidence, and the sake of the team, it is really important that you chip in and perform at all stages of the game.

"But we have not won the Test match yet. Until we have taken the final wicket, we have not won it yet. "It's still a game of cricket, and we have to finish the game, unless it's half the job done."

Tanvir Ahmed made an early breakthrough for the Pakistanis, leaving West Indies 54 for one at tea, when he bowled West Indies opener Kraigg Brathwaite for a duck in the third over of the innings.

After tea, the visitors made a huge charge for victory, with Rehman playing a leading role, with the wickets of Lendl Simmons and Ramnaresh Sarwan in the space of five deliveries.

The Pakistan left-arm spinner had Simmons caught at second slip for 24, and Sarwan, the most experienced batsman in the West Indies line-up, was lbw playing back and across for a duck, a decision from New Zealand umpire Billy Bowden, which was changed after it was reviewed.

Rehman added the scalp of Marlon Samuels caught behind for six to leave West Indies 77 for four, but the Pakistanis met defiance from the left-handed pair of Bravo and West Indies vice captain Brendan Nash.

The visitors spent over an hour working away on the West Indies pair before Bravo cracked under the pressure, and was lbw to left-arm fast bowler Wahab Riaz. He struck two fours and two sixes from 144 balls in close to three hours of batting.

Earlier, Pakistan jammed their foot down on the accelerator, anticipating the declaration after they reached 202 for three at lunch. Misbah reached his hundred from 141 balls, with a thick edge to third man off Ravi Rampaul for his last boundary to prompt the declaration.

Umar Akmal shared 62 with him for the sixth wicket before Bishoo bowled him for 30, and Mohammad Salman was caught at deep fine leg off Rampaul for eight before the declaration came.

Pakistan trail 0-1 in the two-Test series, following a 40-run defeat inside four days in the first Test, which ended last Sunday at the Guyana National Stadium, crushing their dreams of a maiden Test series victory in the Caribbean. (AFP)

Screen capture of a terrorist wounded/killed in the attack, shown by Interior Minister Rehman Malik



 
KARACHI: Four of the six militants who were involved in the armed raid on Pakistan’s Naval air base have been eliminated in the retaliatory operation by the security forces while two managed to escape, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said here Monday.

He put the number of martyred armed forces personnel at 10 and the injured at 15.

Talking to media men here at Chief Minister House after his visit to the PNS Mehran at Sharea Faisal, the Interior Minister said the martyred troops would be awarded Sitara-e-Shujaat posthumously.

"The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) have claimed responsibility for the attack," Rehman Malik said.

He said two terrorists were killed by the security forces in clashes, another blew himself up in one of the buildings while body of the fourth is said to be in the debris. "They were wearing black shirts and trousers."

He said two naval surveillance planes P3C Orion were destroyed by the terrorists who were equipped with rocket propelled grenades (RPGs), LMGs and hand grenades.

Malik said other planes were towed away by Navy personnel assisted by Rangers out of the terrorists' firing range.

He said 17 foreigners including 11 Chinese and 6 Americans were rescued by the Naval commandoes. The foreigners were there to give training to naval personnel about Orion planes.

Interior Minister said two other suspected terrorists were stated to be seen running away by the eye-witnesses at the base and added that the terrorists sneaked into the base from the back side by scaling the walls with the help of ladders.

"Two ladders and cutters were also found from the spot," he said.

The Minister said that the terrorists were between 22 to 25 years of age with fair and sharp complexion.

He said the security personnel who achieved martyrdom included one officer Lt. Yasser Abbas, 3 firemen, 3 SSG personnel, 1 sailor and 2 personnel of Pakistan Rangers.

The attack started at 10. 30 pm Sunday night and clashes continued till the operation was completed by personnel of Navy and Rangers by 3.30 pm on Monday.

Rehman Malik said that President and Prime Minister were in constant touch with him during the operation and added that an investigation team led by Pakistan Navy will be established whose report will be made public.

He said all terrorist activities were being planned in Waziristan andAl-Qaeda and TTP were destroying the assets of the country at the behest of other forces that wanted to destabilise Pakistan.

"I appeal to all political parties to get united against common enemy and protect the homeland," he maintained.

To a question, he said Pakistan was fighting the terrorists not only to protect itself but the whole world and this terrorism on naval base was attack on Pakistan.

On the occasion, he paid rich tribute to Navy and Rangers troops who embranced martyrdom especially Lt. Yasser Abbass who, he said, sacrificed his life and saved the assets and personnel of Navy at the base.

Four of 6 militants killed in Naval operation: Rehman

 
KARACHI: Four of the six militants who were involved in the armed raid on Pakistan’s Naval air base have been eliminated in the retaliatory operation by the security forces while two managed to escape, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said here Monday.

He put the number of martyred armed forces personnel at 10 and the injured at 15.

Talking to media men here at Chief Minister House after his visit to the PNS Mehran at Sharea Faisal, the Interior Minister said the martyred troops would be awarded Sitara-e-Shujaat posthumously.

"The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) have claimed responsibility for the attack," Rehman Malik said.

He said two terrorists were killed by the security forces in clashes, another blew himself up in one of the buildings while body of the fourth is said to be in the debris. "They were wearing black shirts and trousers."

He said two naval surveillance planes P3C Orion were destroyed by the terrorists who were equipped with rocket propelled grenades (RPGs), LMGs and hand grenades.

Malik said other planes were towed away by Navy personnel assisted by Rangers out of the terrorists' firing range.

He said 17 foreigners including 11 Chinese and 6 Americans were rescued by the Naval commandoes. The foreigners were there to give training to naval personnel about Orion planes.

Interior Minister said two other suspected terrorists were stated to be seen running away by the eye-witnesses at the base and added that the terrorists sneaked into the base from the back side by scaling the walls with the help of ladders.

"Two ladders and cutters were also found from the spot," he said.

The Minister said that the terrorists were between 22 to 25 years of age with fair and sharp complexion.

He said the security personnel who achieved martyrdom included one officer Lt. Yasser Abbas, 3 firemen, 3 SSG personnel, 1 sailor and 2 personnel of Pakistan Rangers.

The attack started at 10. 30 pm Sunday night and clashes continued till the operation was completed by personnel of Navy and Rangers by 3.30 pm on Monday.

Rehman Malik said that President and Prime Minister were in constant touch with him during the operation and added that an investigation team led by Pakistan Navy will be established whose report will be made public.

He said all terrorist activities were being planned in Waziristan andAl-Qaeda and TTP were destroying the assets of the country at the behest of other forces that wanted to destabilise Pakistan.

"I appeal to all political parties to get united against common enemy and protect the homeland," he maintained.

To a question, he said Pakistan was fighting the terrorists not only to protect itself but the whole world and this terrorism on naval base was attack on Pakistan.

On the occasion, he paid rich tribute to Navy and Rangers troops who embranced martyrdom especially Lt. Yasser Abbass who, he said, sacrificed his life and saved the assets and personnel of Navy at the base.

Man held in Times Square bombing probe deported to Pakistan

Aftab Ali Khan, 28, was accompanied by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers on a flight from Logan International Airport to Islamabad. –AP Photo
BOSTON: A Pakistani man arrested during the investigation of the failed New York Times Square car bombing was deported to Pakistan, federal authorities said.
Aftab Ali Khan, 28, was accompanied Sunday by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers on a flight from Logan International Airport to Islamabad, the agency said in a statement.
Khan, his uncle and a man in Maine were arrested on immigration violations nearly two weeks after the failed bombing attempt on May 1, 2010.
Khan pleaded guilty last month to immigration and illegal money-transfer charges and was sentenced to time served. He did not face terrorism-related charges.
Khan, who lived in Watertown, came to the US in August 2009 on a 90-day visa to get married.
Prosecutors alleged that Khan gave $4,900 to Faisal Shahzad, of Bridgeport, Connecticut, who was later convicted in the bombing attempt. They said it was part of a transaction to get an equivalent amount of money to Khan’s family in Pakistan.
Khan is not accused of knowing what Shahzad would do with the money. But investigators say they uncovered fraudulent immigration documents and that Khan lied to them while they were investigating the Shahzad case.
Shahzad, who admitted leaving an SUV rigged with a homemade bomb in busy Times Squares, was arrested trying to leave the country on a Dubai-bound flight two days later. He was sentenced to life in prison.

Battle with militants reaches climax at PNS Base in Karachi

At least 20 militants stormed the PNS Mehran Base near Shahrah-e-Faisal in Karachi on May 22, triggering explosions and gunbattles three weeks after the US killing of Osama bin Laden. –Photo by AFP

KARACHI: Taliban militants assaulted the headquarters of Pakistan’s naval air force, battling on Monday security forces in the most brazen attack in the country since the killing of Osama bin Laden, killing eight people, injuring 16 others and blowing up at least two military aircraft.
The dead include seven navy officials and one Ranger, DawnNews reported.
Blasts rang out and helicopters hovered above the PNS Mehran base near Shahrah-e-Faisal almost 14 hours after more than 20 Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants stormed the heavily guarded building with guns and grenades, blowing up at least two aircraft and casting doubt on the military’s ability to protect its installations.
The Pakistan Taliban, which is allied with al Qaeda, said the attack was to avenge the al Qaeda leader’s killing on May 2.
Bin Laden was shot dead by US special forces in a secret operation that Pakistan says breached its sovereignty.
“It was the revenge of martyrdom of Osama bin Laden. It was the proof that we are still united and powerful,” Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location.
Trucks carrying military and paramilitary rangers streamed into the base in the southern city of Karachi in the morning, as security forces tried to end the siege.

Eight military men were killed in the assault that started at 10.30 pm on Sunday local time, a navy spokesman said.
A senior security official, who declined to be identified, said the militants had taken over a building in the base.
Another official stationed in the base said the militants had not taken any hostages, but added: “There is a chance that some terrorists have suicide belts or jackets.”
Sixteen military men were wounded in the attack, some reports said that at least three militants had been killed while trying to flee but nothing has been confirmed so far.

The base is 15 miles from the Masroor Air Base, Pakistan’s largest and a possible depot for nuclear weapons.
“They were carrying guns, rocket-propelled grenades (RPG) and hand grenades. They hit the aircraft with an RPG,” Navy spokesman Commander Salman Ali said of the militants.
A spokesman said two P-3C Orion, maritime patrol aircraft, had been destroyed and that intermittent gunfire was continuing.
Interior Minister Rehman Malik said earlier that the militants had attacked from the rear of the base. “We have been able to confine them to one building and an operation is underway either to kill or capture them,” he said.
Media reports said the attackers had made their way in through a sewer pipe but that was not confirmed. The military’s goal was to capture as many of the attackers alive as possible, television reported.
The attack evoked memories of an assault on Pakistan’s army headquarters in the city of Rawalpindi in 2009, and is a further embarrassment for the military, widely seen as the only properly functioning institution in Pakistan, in the wake of bin Laden’s killing.
The military has come under intense pressure from the United States and its own people for failing to know that bin Laden had been living in a garrison town, north of the capital and near a top military academy, for years, and also for allowing five US
helicopters to penetrate Pakistan’s airspace and kill him.
Wave Of Bombings 
Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani condemned the attack.
“Such a cowardly act of terror could not deter the commitment of the government and people of Pakistan to fight terrorism,” Gilani said in statement.

Pakistan has faced a wave of assaults over the last few years, many of them claimed by the Pakistani Taliban.

Others have been blamed on al Qaeda-linked militant groups once nurtured by the Pakistani military and which have since slipped out of control.
The Taliban have stepped up attacks since bin Laden’s death, killing almost 80 people in a suicide bombing on a paramilitary academy and an assault on a US consular vehicle in Peshawar.
The TTP is led by Hakimullah Mehsud, whose fighters regularly clash with the army in the northwest. The group also claimed responsibility for a botched plot to bomb New York’s Times Square last year.
The discovery that bin Laden was living in Abbottabad, has revived suspicions that militants may be receiving help from some people within the security establishment.
Pakistan and the United States say the senior leadership in the country did not know bin Laden was in Abbottabad, but his presence — and his killing — has strained already fragile ties almost to breaking point and deeply embarrassed Pakistan’s military
Washington sees nuclear-armed Pakistan as a key, if difficult, ally essential to its attempts to root out militant forces in neighbouring Afghanistan.

“We condemn the attack and our sympathies are with the families of those injured or killed,” the White House said in a statement.
On April 28, suspected militants detonated a roadside bomb in Karachi, killing four members of the navy, the third attack on the navy in a week.

Afghan TV claims Mullah Omar killed, Taliban deny


Taliban Chief Mullah Omar – File Photo

ISLAMABAD: A senior Pakistani security official said on Monday he could not confirm a media report that Taliban leader Mullah Omar had been killed.
“I am making queries,” the official said, requesting anonymity. “I can’t confirm it.”
On Monday, Afghanistan’s privately owned TOLO television reported Omar had been killed in Pakistan, while on the way from Quetta to North Waziristan. There was no immediate comment from the Taliban.
The Taliban in Afghanistan rejected reports that Omar had been killed in Pakistan, saying he is alive and in Afghanistan.
“He is in Afghanistan safe and sound,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. “We reject these baseless reports that Mullah Mohammad Omar has been killed.”

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