14 October 2010

Saina Makes Indian History


CWG badminton: Saina makes history, first Indian woman to win gold

Saina-Nehwal CWG New Delhi, Oct 14 : Saina Nehwal created history by becoming the first Indian woman to win the singles gold in badminton at the Commonwealth Games as she saved a match point to beat Malaysian Mew Choo Wong 19-21, 23-21, 21-13 in an edge-of-the-seat thriller Thursday before a capacity crowd.

Legendary Prakash Padukone (1978) and the late Syed Modi (1982) were the two men players to win the singles gold in the Games.

Saina's gold came just hours after Jwala Gutta and Ashiwni Ponnappa also scripted history by becoming the first Indian pair to win the gold at Commonwealth Games. They defeated Singapore's Shari Shinta Mulia and Yao Lei 21-16, 21-19 in the final of the women's doubles.

India thus won two gold medals and one bronze (Parupalli Kashyap in men's singles) from the badminton courts of Siri Fort Sports Complex on the concluding day of the Delhi Games.

After Jwala and Ashwini sizzled with their brilliant show, the packed hall eagerly awaited for World No. 3 Saina to take the courts.

Saina looked nervous in the beginning, making a lot of errors, but regained her composure as the match wore on, playing like a champion. Wong broke free from 4-4 to open up a 9-4 lead. Wong led 18-14 and despite a late comeback by Saina, the Malaysian managed to win the first game.

The gripping second game, that went for 25 minutes, saw both players fighting tooth and nail. Saina trailed 1-4 but caught up with the Malaysian pocketing three points. From then on, the two played long rallies, waiting for the opponent's mistakes.

The game ebbed and flowed both ways but Saina made some errors and allowed the Malaysian to get an upper hand. The Indian faced a matchpoint at 20-19. The tension in the stands was palpable. There was huge sigh of relief when Saina saved the match point. She showed her mental toughness as she drew level and the crowd erupted in deafening roar.

Saina then looked in command in the decider. She played like the World No.3 even as Wong looked tired.

Saina cut down on her errors and made Wong run around the court. Showing good reflexes and net play, Saina finished off the points with clinical precision. She took five points in a row to lead 7-3, never looked back and finished the 70-minute thriller in style and ran towards her coach Pullela Gopichand, a former All England champion, to embrace him.

By then, the crowd was ecstatic and Saina acknowledged their support tossing her racket and towel into the stands.

Tiger Woods Sex Tape To Go Public on Oct 15

Disgraced golfer Tiger Woods’ sex tape will hit the market on Friday, Oct 15 at tigertapexxx.com

The sex tape of tiger woods and porn star Devon James will be released on Friday without any hindrances.

James husband, Nick James, informed that the sex tape will be available as the golfer’s lawyer will not move to stop it.

He said that there was a bid to buy the tape from Woods lawyer but no deal has been finalized. “We are looking forward now and will release the sex tape.

However, there is no proof of authenticity of proof but a website has been launched to release the 62-minute sex tape.

The website tigertapexxx.com reads: Coming soon Tiger Woods sex tape on October 15.

Tiger Woods sex tape

Porn Star Devon James in a pose at website of tigertapexxx.com

Singapore’s Youtube Star is an Indian

By Suma Nagaraj

Guess who’s making news in Singapore?

A young man who needs only to board the MRT and find a few feet of space near the doors and a pole (optional) for some extra theatrics and posing, has been entertaining daily commuters with his almost pitch-perfect renditions of Tamil songs, much to the amusement of his co-travellers.Singapore youtube star

Watch him sing with absolute gusto, with “full feeling”, as we say in India

Further research reveals that he’s not just musically talented, but also is a force to reckon with when he’s doing nothing. Yes, that’s right – when he’s not inside the train carriage singing everyone’s blues away, he’s seen standing still in a variety of poses in the terminals.

Ha ha! I want to meet this guy and shake his hand.

My colleague in Singapore, Ewen, writes about this happening wannabe on Singapore’s Fit to Post:

The MRT train carriage is this man’s stage as he puts on an entertaining Bollywood-worthy performance for his fellow commuters.

Spotted several times by netizens who’ve seen his video, the man’s popularity is soaring on social media websites such as YouTube and Facebook.

Read more here.

What do you think? Is this guy a superstar in the making?

90 Corrupt Govt Officials Suspended in Tripura

corruption bribery tripura Agartala, Oct 14 : A total of 90 Tripura government officials have been suspended since last year for corruption, a minister told reporters here Wednesday.

"Around 90 government officials, including four block development officers (BDOs) and 13 middle ranking bureaucrats, were placed under suspension for financial misdeeds," said Tripura Rural Development Minister Jitendra Choudhury.

The suspended officials included 70 panchayat secretaries posted in the rural areas across Tripura.

"For achieving the desired goal in implementation of central and state government schemes, the government has engaged all principal secretaries and commissioners in monitoring works at grass root levels," the minister said.

"Departmental vigilance and audits are also being further strengthen to deal with corruption," Choudhury added.

Indian Democracy at Work

From Shirt Tearing to Saree Pulling

By R Shankar

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pullingEvery time there are unruly scenes in Parliament or Legislative Assemblies in States, experts and media are quick to point out that democracy and etiquette have touched a new low. When a DMK MLA pulled at the saree of J Jayalalithaa in the Tamil Nadu Assembly in 1999, democracy was called a 'disrobing drama.' More on that later in this piece.

The 'new low' keeps going lower, but the point is that this is how democracy in India `works' - not by discussing issues or raising points, but by hurling tables, abuses and chairs (not necessarily in this order), yanking out mikes, tearing papers and bills, punching opposition members and using the Assembly as a `living' in centre.

The MLAs and the media were quick to point out that it was for the first time that armed policemen, including the police commissioner, entered the Assembly to restore order. This happened in the Karnataka Legislative Assembly on October 11 when the B S Yeddyurappa government was to prove its majority. But this is not right. In 1999, the police in Tamil Nadu went berserk in and outside the Assembly.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

But the one scene that stunned everyone on October 11 was the way former Sports and Youth Affairs Minister Goolihatti Shekhar Goolihatti D Shekhar displayed his `youthfulness' and sporting nature by jumping from one desk to another and then tearing his shirt yelling expletives at Chief Minister B S Yeddyurappa and his government. Shekhar was sacked by Yeddyurappa for non-performance, but on October 11, he was the `best performer' in the Assembly.

A Janata Dal man, Shekhar sought a ticket from Hosadurga in Chitradurga district in Karnataka. When asked to contest from Holalkere, he contested as rebel candidate from Hosadurga and won. He is a science graduate and is into granite business when he does not make money in politics. Remember, the rebel MLAs were offered a whopping Rs 30-30 crore `loyalty fee' apart from free trips to the backwaters of Kerala and seashoreS of Goa.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

Shankar Bidari, Police Commissioner(circled)

October 11 also saw the police storming the Assembly led by Police Commissioner Shankar Bidari. He was instructed to come to the House by Speaker K G Bopaiah as the marshals were not be able to control the unruly MLAs.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

Opposition leader Siddaramaiah (circled) pinning the commissioner to the wall

Though he was discharging his duties, former prime minister H D Deve Gowda's son - the burly H D Revanna - and Opposition leader Siddaramaiah (Congress) pinned the commissioner to the wall and called him names. Siddaramaiah went to the extent of asking the commissioner to get out and issued a threat: "You know who I am. Do you know what I may become tomorrow? And what do you expect your fate to be then?" Bidari was left speechless.

As the arguments got nastier, one MLA knocked off the cap of Bidari, rendering him helpless. He was also pushed and shoved around by the MLAs.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

While many are familiar with floor dance, the Congress MLAs introduce a new number called 'desk dance' on the floor of the Assembly on Oct 11. They stood on tables and chairs, hopped from one desk to another and used foul language at the marshals and the government.

One marshal fainted and others said privately that they had never heard such foul language in their lives. All this from the Congress whose leader Rahul Gandhi wants change and from the JD(S), whose leader was a former prime minister and a `humble farmer' H D Deve Gowda.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

This is not the first time that Karnataka Assembly is in the news. On July 12, MLAs belonging to the Congress and the JD(S) made a tamasha of the Assembly by spending three nights in the House having biriyani, singing songs and sleeping on the floor. Their demand? Handing over the illegal mining scandal involving the Reddy brothers to the CBI.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

Congress and JD(S) MLAs, who do not share the same political ideology, were found sleeping together. Politics, after all, is a story of strange bedfellow.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

On the first day, the MLAs had a tough time at night as rats gave them company. The rats too were perplexed as they found that the MLAs had ousted them in a bloodless coup. Later, the MLAs found that mosquitoes were creating an `uproar' on the floor of the House.

From the next day, the MLAs brought their own mattresses, blankets and mosquito coils. The rats, of course, had staged a walkout.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

This was the first time that the MLAs spent such long hours in the Assembly, of course not transacting business, but fun.

At dawn on the third day, Congress MLAs tore a string of bills that were passed in the Assembly and ended their `night-out'.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

Days later, on July 21, an MLA in Bihar threw a footwear at Speaker Uday Narain Choudhary when the latter suspended the 67 unruly members, mostly from the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) and Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) and the Left parties.

The suspended legislators were forcibly removed by the marshals from the house. But like Goolihatti Shekhar of Karnataka, the most telling image was that of Jyoti Devi of the Congress who broke a string of pots on the Assembly premises after she was expelled from the Bihar Legislative Council.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

Jyoti Devi, a doctor by qualification, picked up pots outside the House and broke them one after another. At one point of time she held the plant and hurled it like an athlete would do in a hammer throw event. Spinning the pot, she threw it at the watch and ward staff yelling furiously.

She then took another pot and used it as a shot-put to throw it at a staffer of the House. Hurling abuses in choicest of words, she soon spent her hysteric steam when the staff picked her up and took her away to a hospital.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

Later, she told newsmen that she threw the pots in self-defence. Nobody had a clue on who was trying to attack her -- the pots, plants or thin air.

The day before, MLAs overturned tables and threw chairs at the Speaker. Many said that the unruly scenes were orchestrated by political parties for byte-hungry TV channels as Bihar is heading for an election early next year.

The Congress, that usually takes a high moral ground, did not condemn Jyoti Devi. Rahul Gandhi, who had told students of Patna colleges that time had come for value-based politics, did not have a word to say.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

The Opposition was demanding the resignation of Chief Minister Nitish Kumar who was among 47 people named in a complaint alleging misuse of Rs.11,412 crore. Petitioner Arvind Kumar pointed to the irregularities in the use of development funds during 2002-08 in Bihar.

Later, around 80 Bihar Opposition members, taking a cue from Karnataka, spent the night in the well of the two houses of the state legislature demanding the resignation of Nitish Kumar.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

In Odisha, on November 2, 2004, Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik was injured in a scuffle between ruling and opposition members in the state assembly in Bhubaneswar over the government's agreement with a private company on bauxite mining.

Dissatisfied with Steel and Mines Minister Padmanav Behera's reply on the issue during question hour, Congress members rushed to the well of the house and scuffles ensued below the podium of Speaker Maheswar Mohanty.

Some opposition and ruling coalition members, who were pushing each other, moved towards the chief minister's chair. In the melee, the desk in front of Naveen Patnaik toppled.

Patnaik's left foot got trapped under the desk and he was seen in great pain. Some legislators rushed to his aid and extricated his foot from under the desk. He was helped out of the house and rushed to a hospital as his feet was swollen by then.

Democracy at work - from shirt tearing to saree pulling

The infamous Jayalalitha saree episode took place in the Tamil Nadu Assembly on March 25, 1989. She was then the leader of the Opposition. Jayalalithaa got furious when a minister allegedly pulled her saree on the floor of the House. All hell broke loose after that.

Earlier Karunanidhi, who was Finance Minister as well as Chief Minister, was punched and Veerapandi Arumugam, who was then Local Administration Minister, bled profusely from the forehead after he was hit with a mike.

In another incident, DMK member Thamaraikani waved his hand at Minister Veerapandi Arumugam's face. When Arumugam reciprocated, Thamaraikani whacked him on the nose and the minister was left bleeding profusely.

Speaker P T R Palanivel Rajan issued a warrant to arrest Thamaraikani and the latter was arrested and lodged in the Central Prison for a week.

In another incident, Thamaraikan had hit Panrutti S. Ramachandran of Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) inside the Assembly and later claimed that he had only given him "an affectionate pat". He had also roughed up Dr. A. Chellakumar of Tamil Maanila Congress (TMC) and A. Rahman Khan.

But the saree episode was not a one-off incident. On January 28, 1988, there was utter chaos when Janaki Ramachandran succeeded M.G. Ramachandran as Chief Minister following the latter's death. When she was to prove her majority on the floor of the house, members came to blows and goondas stormed the House. Mikes were wrenched and pedestal fans and chairs were hurled all around. The then City Police Commissioner W.I. Davaram led a police contingent into the House and the police bet up anyone coming in front of them.

source: India Syndicate

Poster Girl of Taliban Oppression Unveils Her New Face

London: A young Afghan girl, who went on to become a poster girl of Taliban oppression in Afghanistan after her nose was sliced off by her militant husband, has unveiled her new face to the world.

19-year-old Alisha triggered a worldwide outpouring of sympathy after her plight was highlighted by the 'Time' magazine which put her on the front cover to draw attention to sufferings of women in Afghanistan. Poster girl of Taliban oppression unveils her new face

The girl, thanks to pioneering surgery by American surgeons, got a new nose and appeared before the cameras to receive an Enduring Heart Award by a foundation which paid for her operation in Los Angeles, 'The Telegraph' reported.

Poster girl of Taliban oppression unveils her new face

Alisha was 12 when her father married her to a Taliban fighter to repay a debt. She was handed over to the militant's family, abused and made to sleep in a stable with animals. Depressed due to the ill treatment by her husband and in-laws, she tried to escape and her nose and ears were sliced off by her husband as punishment.

Poster girl of Taliban oppression unveils her new face

After being left for dead in the mountains, Alisha crawled to her grandfather's house from where she was rushed to an American medical facility. The Grossman Burn Foundation flew her to America in August where she had a prosthetic nose fitted at the West Hills hospital and the doctors say she would be given a "more permanent" solution soon.

Poster girl of Taliban oppression unveils her new face

This might involve rebuilding her nose and ears, using bone, tissue and cartilage from other parts of the body. Till then, Alisha is back to her old joyful ways.

Poster girl of Taliban oppression unveils her new face

"This is an award given to a woman whose heart endures," said the Californian First Lady Maria Shriver, wife of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who presented the award to a girl who never thought she would see life again.

Source: Agencies

World's 'Sexiest Computer Hacker' Appears in Court

Charged With $3m computer Scam


By Tom Leonard

Staring alluringly into the camera with dazzling blue eyes and a rather daring outfit is the Russian student accused of a plot to defraud British and U.S. banks of millions.

Kristina Svechinskaya, 21, has been dubbed the ‘world’s sexiest computer hacker’ after being charged with being part of a gang aiming to steal $220million (£139million).

In leather boots and skin-tight jeans, she wept during her court appearance. Today, she is due in court again, charged with conspiracy to commit bank fraud and false use of passports.

Kristina Svechinskaya

World's sexiest computer hacker: Kristina Svechinskaya is accused of using the Zeus Trojan software to attack thousands of people's accounts

If convicted, she could be jailed for up to 40 years.

In total, 37 people have been accused in New York over an East European-based plan to use an Internet virus to siphon money from the online accounts of small businesses and individuals.

Anna Chapman

Femme fatale: The hacker has been compared to Anna Chapman, a Russian spy

Svechinskaya was one of four students at New York University said to have acted as ‘money mules’ by opening hundreds of accounts.

Prosecutors claim she opened at least five bank accounts, which received $35,000 (£22,000) of the stolen money.

British police are also investigating the fraud and arrested 11 Eastern Europeans in Essex last month.

They have been charged with fraud and money-laundering offences over bank thefts amounting to £6million.

The FBI said some of the hundreds of bank accounts drained by the alleged fraudsters were held with London-based HSBC.

More suspects have been arrested in the Ukraine, leading federal

officers to describe the case as ‘one of the largest cyber criminal cases’ they have dealt with.

The Eastern European gang made £2million a month from online accounts by stealing victims’ log-in details using ‘Trojan horse’ software which can be bought for just £300 over the internet. According to the FBI, the ring managed to rake in around $70million (£40million) of the huge amount it targeted.

Now, Chinese Train Link Right Up to Arunachal

By Sachin Parashar

Chinese train New Delhi, Oct 14 : China recently started work on extending its rail link in Lhasa to its border with Nepal, but for India it might just be a red herring.

In a development, which has alarmed officials and strategic community here, Beijing is simultaneously working on bringing its rail link right upto Nyangtri -- located on the border with Arunachal Pradesh and an area that China claims as its own.

Nyangtri is also the site where the Brahmaputra is proposed to be diverted northwards by the Chinese. The Chinese claim that the Nyangtri or Nyingchi prefecture includes some parts of Arunachal Pradesh. China proposes to build the largest dam in the world at this spot.

While the line to Xigaze near Tibet's border with Nepal will extend south-west from Lhasa, the line to Nyangtri will extend towards Arunachal in the south-east. China proposes to build as many as six big dams in the region on the Brahmaputra in addition to a dozen or so it has already constructed.

"There is no real evidence till now that Brahmaputra waters have been diverted northwards by China, but the massive infrastructure build up at Nyangtri, including this rail link which they are working on, near the Great Bend doesn't inspire confidence," said an Indian government official.

The Great Bend is the place, where the Brahmaputra takes a decisive turn and flows towards India.

Strategic affairs expert Brahma Chellaney describes the rail link to Nyangtri as a significant new development.

"The building of the railway to this area is significant because of two reasons: China has unveiled plans to construct there the world's largest dam which will be more than twice bigger than Three Gorges Dam, now the world's largest dam, and also because it will strengthen China's rapid military deployment capability in the eastern (Arunachal) sector," said Chellaney, adding that China is in a position to rapidly move forces and strike at India whenever it wants to.

China's focus on expanding its railway south of Lhasa is alarming also because of reports that for the first time earlier this year "combat readiness material" meant for the PLA air force was transported to the region through the Tibet rail link. The PLA Daily recently reported that China conducted its first major parachute exercise in Tibet to demonstrate its capability to rapidly send troops on the world's highest plateau.