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Hollywood deal for film of bin Laden killing


US director Kathryn Bigelow - AFP Photo
LOS ANGELES: US film giant Columbia Pictures said Tuesday it has won the US distribution rights for a film about the killing of Osama bin Laden, to be directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow.
Bigelow and journalist-turned screenwriter Mark Boal, who won Oscars for Iraq bomb squad movie “The Hurt Locker” in 2010, had already been working on a project about the Al-Qaeda chief’s capture or killing, before his death on May 2.
Immediately afterwards there were reports they were scrambling to decide what to do with the project, but Tuesday’s announcement by Amy Pascal of Columbia’s parent company Sony Pictures Entertainment confirmed the plans.
“Bigelow and Boal have been developing the project since 2008 and plan to incorporate recent events into the film,” said a statement, adding that the film will focus on “the black ops mission to capture or kill” bin Laden.
Pascal added: “With the death of Osama bin Laden, this film could not be more relevant. Kathryn and Mark have an outstanding perspective on the team that was hunting the most wanted man in the world.
“Mark is second to none as an investigative journalist, and Kathryn will bring the same kind of compelling authenticity and urgency that distinguished The Hurt Locker and made that film so memorable and special.” Boal and Bigelow will produce the as-yet unnamed movie with Annapurna Picture’s Megan Ellison, and executive producer Greg Shapiro. Filming will start in late summer, with the film to be released in the last quarter of 2012.
There is a long history of movies based on real events, from “JFK” to “Titanic,” or more recently “United 93” about the heroism of passengers who prevented a fourth plane from hitting its mark on 9/11.
Bigelow has built her career via movies notable for their macho characters, whether it’s bank-robbing surfers in “Point Break” to adrenaline-addicted bomb squads in “The Hurt Locker.” She became the first woman to win the best director Oscar last year for “The Hurt Locker,” a nerve-jangling movie about a US Army bomb disposal squad in Baghdad.
The low-budget drama, based on a screenplay by Boal after he was embedded with a bomb squad in 2004, beat dollar 500 million sci-fi epic “Avatar,” directed by her ex-husband James Cameron, at the 2010 Academy Awards.

Afridi pulls out of Ireland one-dayers

Shahid Afridi, Ijaz Butt
It was seen as apparent punishment by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) for Afridi's public criticism of coach Waqar Younis for interfering in team selection on the West Indies tour. - File photo
ISLAMABAD: Shahid Afridi, dumped as Pakistan’s one-day captain, has withdrawn altogether from two one-day internationals against Ireland for personal reasons, an official said Tuesday.
The popular 31-year-old all-rounder was last week replaced by Misbah-ul-Haq despite leading Pakistan to the semi-final of the World Cup and a 3-2 one-day series win over the West Indies.
It was seen as apparent punishment by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) for Afridi’s public criticism of coach Waqar Younis for interfering in team selection on the West Indies tour.
“Afridi has informed us that his father has been admitted to hospital for liver treatment and he wants to be with him and would not be available for the two matches in Ireland,” PCB spokesman Nadeem Sarwar told reporters.
No replacement will be sent for Afridi, said Sarwar.
Pakistan, who levelled a two-match Test series in the West Indies on Monday, reach Ireland on Wednesday where they play on May 28 and 30.
Afridi took over as national captain last year but after a heavy defeat against Australia in neutral venue England, he resigned from the Test captaincy.
He continued as one-day captain but developed differences with Waqar during the World Cup, where Pakistan lost in the semi-final to India who eventually won the title in April.
“Everyone should do his job and should be accountable for his duties,”Afridi said, criticising the coach, on his return from the West Indies after the one-day series.
But when asked about his differences with Waqar, Shahid replied: “They are not at a stage where they cannot be resolved.” The PCB took strong note of the public criticism and admonished Afridi for violating the players’ code of conduct for airing team affairs in the media.

Pakistan safe for cricket, says Butt

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-File photo

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s cricket chief insisted Wednesday that his country is safe enough to host international matches, saying the current tour by lowly-ranked Afghanistan sends a positive message to the world.
“We want to send a message to the world that Pakistan is a safe place to play cricket and the people of Pakistan would welcome any team coming here,”said Ijaz Butt in a message at the start of Afghan series.
Sri Lanka Tuesday refused to tour Pakistan later this year, saying security was still a problem.
The Sri Lankan team were attacked in Lahore two years ago. The assault left eight people dead and wounded seven visiting players and their assistant coach.
Since then international cricket has been suspended in Pakistan and the March 2009 attacks forced to the International Cricket Council to relocate World Cup 2011 matches out of the troubled country.
Militant unrest, much of it in the form of suicide attacks, has killed nearly 4,400 people in the past four years as the Taliban and militants linked to al Qaeda wage a bloody onslaught on Pakistan’s US-allied leadership.
Afghanistan, playing the first of three matches against Pakistan’s second-tier ‘A’ team on Wednesday, are the first international team to play in the violence-torn, nuclear-armed country for two years.
They also play in Rawalpindi on May 27 and Faisalabad on May 29. “I take this opportunity to thank the Afghanistan government and Afghanistan Cricket Board for sending their team. I hope this tour will pave the way for more such visits by foreign teams to Pakistan,” said Butt.
Even before the Sri Lankans were attacked, Pakistan had been a virtual no go zone for international teams after the September 11, 2001 attacks put the country on the frontline of the US-led war on the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.
In the last three years, Pakistan have been forced to play their home series in England, New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates.
“The visit of Afghanistan cricket team is also a good sign for the game of cricket in Pakistan. Unfortunately, our cricket frenzy nation is being deprived of international cricket at home,” said Butt.
Butt welcomed the Afghan team and praised their international rise.
“The progress they have shown in recent years is commendable. They have turned out to be a fine team and we expect some good cricket in their matches.”

Pakistan removes base commander after Taliban attack


A member of the Pakistani navy stands guard outside the Pakistan’s Mehran naval air base in Karachi on May 24, 2011. - AFP Photo

KARACHI: Pakistan on Wednesday removed the commander of a naval air base that took 17 hours to quell a Taliban attack that killed 10 security personnel and destroyed two US-made aircraft.
Although a navy spokesman insisted the transfer was pre-planned and unconnected to the gun, grenade and rocket assault, Pakistan’s military is under increasing domestic pressure to be held accountable over security lapses.
“Commodore Khalid Pervez is taking over as the base commander and his predecessor Raja Tahir will be assigned new responsibilities,” Commander Salman Ali, a navy spokesman, told AFP. He did not say what new job the outgoing commander will hold.
“It is a routine and scheduled transfer. The base commander was scheduled to be replaced, even if there was no attack on the facility,” he said.
The assault was the worst on a military base since the army headquarters was besieged in October 2009, and the fourth on the navy after three bombings in late April killed nine people.
The siege has forced authorities to consider relocating the navy’s main air base in Karachi away from its current populated area, near the international airport, and fanned debate about the safety of the country’s nuclear weapons.
After the attack took an entire night and most of the day to repel, Admiral Noman Bashir, the chief of naval staff, conceded that relocation was possible.
Before the attack, Pakistan’s Defence Minister Ahmad Mukhtar, who went to China last week, said Islamabad has asked Beijing for help in building a naval base at its deep-sea port of Gwadar, on the Arabian Sea west of Karachi.
“When the Mehran base was established 36 years ago it was far from the population. But now it is surrounded by civilian populations on all sides, thus the security risks have multiplied,” said Commander Ali.
He said it would be impossible to relocate each of the more than a dozen navy bases in Karachi, but that serious thought was going into Mehran, the only navy air base in the sprawling city of 16 million.
“Relocation is a highly technical and cumbersome task. It is not a matter of days. The authorities are thinking about all possibilities and requirements before shifting Mehran elsewhere,” said Ali.
He insisted that other installations in the port city were “safe and satisfactorily secure.” The New York Times said that a mere 24 kilometres from Mehran, Pakistan was believed to keep a large depot for nuclear weapons that can be delivered from the air.
On Tuesday, Nato secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen said he was confident Pakistan’s nuclear weapons were safe, but admitted it was a matter of concern, when pressed by a journalist the day after the Karachi attack.

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