Friday, July 31, 2009

BREAKING NEWS: Philippines ex-leader Aquino dies


Former Philippines President Corazon Aquino has died at the age of 76, her family has said.

She had been suffering from colon cancer for more than a year and recently announced she was refusing further treatment.

Her family had said she was leaving her fate to God, prompting church services offering prayers for her health.

Mrs Aquino became president when the 1986 "people power" uprising deposed former dictator Ferdinand Marcos.

"Our mother peacefully passed away at 0318 [1918 GMT Friday] of cardio-respiratory arrest," Mrs Aquino's son, Senator Benigno Aquino Jr, told the media.

"She would have wanted us to thank each and every one of you for all the prayers and the continuous love and support."

Mrs Aquino had recently been admitted to hospital suffering from a loss of appetite related to her condition.

The widow of former Senator Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino, Mrs Aquino was catapulted from domesticity to run a country deeply divided after years of martial law and communist insurgency.

She battled several coup attempts against her rule, protected the country's fledgling democracy and freed political prisoners.

In recent years, she campaigned against former President Joseph "Erap" Estrada, but then reconciled with him to join protests against incumbent President Gloria Arroyo over allegations of vote-rigging and corruption.

She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1986 and later received several awards and citations for her work to promote democracy and human rights.

Shuttle Endeavour, 7 astronauts return to Earth


CAPE CANAVERAL: Space shuttle Endeavour and its seven astronauts are back on Earth.

Endeavour landed at Florida's Kennedy Space Center late Friday morning after a 16-day mission that saw them complete all their major construction goals at the international space station.

Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata is back after four-and-a-half months in space. He says he can't wait to eat some sushi and see his wife and son.

Japan's space station lab got a porch for experiments during Endeavour's visit. The crew also installed fresh batteries and stockpiled big spare parts.

It was eventful in other ways. The astronauts celebrated the 40th anniversary of the first moon landing with their own spacewalk. They also coped with a flooded toilet and an overheated air-purifier.

Pakistan nears solution to World Cup 2011 dispute


LAHORE: Pakistan moved closer to solving its World Cup 2011 dispute and a court Friday extended a stay order on relocating the event's headquarters out of the country, an official said.

Pakistan initiated a legal case against the International Cricket Council (ICC) after being stripped of its World Cup 2011 matches in April this year.

The ICC relocated abroad Pakistan's share of 14 matches because of security fears following attacks in its eastern city of Lahore on the Sri Lankan team on March 3.

The attacks, which left seven players and their assistant coach injured besides killing eight people, appeared to end any chance of hosting international cricket in Pakistan, where teams had already refused to tour over security fears.

But the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) launched a legal fight against the re-location and won a stay order against moving the World Cup secretariat from Lahore to arch rival India's Mumbai.

Recent talks between the ICC President David Morgan and PCB chairman Ijaz Butt, however, raised hopes of an out-of-court truce.

PCB legal adviser Taffazul Rizvi said Friday's extension of the stay order until September 3, awarded in the Lahore civil court, was a step in the right direction.

‘The ICC requested that the stay be extended so that negotiations continue, and it's a step in the right direction because is in the interest of all that the matter is solved out of court in accordance to law,’ Rizvi told AFP.

Butt last week said Pakistan was on the right track to solve the matter out of court.

‘We are looking toward an out of court settlement with the ICC and I am hopeful that we will settle the issue some time next month,’ Butt told reporters in Islamabad.

The ICC ruled out relocating the matches to a neutral venue such as the United Arab Emirates, where Pakistan played their recent international matches.

The Central Organising Committee of the World Cup 2011, in a meeting earlier this month, awarded eight of Pakistan's matches to India, four to Sri Lanka and two to Bangladesh -- a decision which Pakistan did not accept. Butt also ruled out shifting the matches to neutral venues.

‘There is no such clause in the agreement among the four co-hosts, so we are not pressing for playing our matches at neutral venues,’ said Butt, who earlier pressed for the UAE as a neutral venue for Pakistan.

Bookmakers’ issue to be investigated: PCB

KARACHI: A member of the Pakistan Cricket Board’s (PCB) Governing Board has promised to raise the issue of bookmakers allegedly trying to contact the country’s national players in Sri Lanka at a meeting soon, in spite of the fact that some of board’s top officials tried to keep the issue under wraps.

Dr Mohammad Ali Shah, a member of the PCB Governing Board and Sindh Sports Minister, has said it is an important issue and should be discussed thoroughly, adding he will raise it at the next Governing Board meeting.

Abdul Qadir, former Pakistan Test leg-spinner, has also demanded an inquiry into the incident.

Earlier this week Pakistan players, according to some media reports, alleged that they were approached by suspicious characters at their team hotel during Test matches in Sri Lanka.

The reports quoted Pakistan manager Yawar Saeed saying that some of the players had complained to him about the presence of undesirable people in the team hotel. Saeed also said the matter was raised with the hotel management after which the Pakistan team members were shifted to some other floor of the hotel. Saeed, however, later denied making such remarks.

‘No such thing happened,’ Saeed was quoted as saying in an interview. ‘There are usually many other guests at the hotel, who want autographs and photographs with the players, and then maybe invite them for a coffee or something. I just instructed the players not to go out with people they didn’t know from before. And that is the usual protocol.’

However, one of the players currently with the national team in Sri Lanka confirmed that some of them were indeed approached in the team hotel by ‘a few undesirable elements’ who invited them for tea and dinner.

‘The players refused and informed the team management,’ he said.

Pakistan captain Younis Khan gave a different view on the issue saying that no such incident took place. ‘No bookie has approached me. If ever one does, I will catch him and hand him over to the ICC because these people have destroyed the game,’ he said.

But on the same day, PCB chairman Ijaz Butt told the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Sports in Islamabad that the rooms were indeed changed.

It is because of such conflicting comments on the issue that Qadir has called for an immediate probe into the incident.

‘Different comments on the same issue from the manager and captain of the Pakistan team makes me suspicious. I believe that it is a serious issue which needs to be probed,’ said Qadir.

England swing into action against Aussies


BIRMINGHAM: England swing duo James Anderson and Graham Onions took nine wickets between them Friday as Australia were bowled out for 263 on the second day of the third Ashes Test at Edgbaston.

Overcast conditions offered just enough late movement for the pair, who exploited the Australian batsmen's vulnerability against the swinging ball.

Australia, who had been 126 for one overnight, collapsed in spectacular style with both Anderson (five wickets for 80 runs in 24 overs) and Onions (four for 58 in 16.4) taking their Ashes Test-best figures.

England captain Andrew Strauss, whose 161 helped propel the hosts to a 115-run second Test win at Lord's, consolidated the seamers' work with another fine innings of 64 not out before bad light forced an early close.

At stumps, England, 1-0 ahead in the series, were 116 for two, a deficit of 147, with Ian Bell, returning to Test cricket on his Warwickshire home ground after Kevin Pietersen was ruled out with an Achilles injury, unbeaten on 26.

But Bell was fortunate not to fall lbw to Mitchell Johnson on 18. It looked as if the struggling left-arm quick, whose eight series wickets before this match had cost an expensive 41 runs apiece, had bowled the perfect inswinger.

But South Africa umpire Rudi Koertzen, who gave some key decisions against Australia at Lord's, ruled in favour of the batsman with replays suggesting the sound of Bell's bat clipping the pad may have misled the veteran official, standing in his 101st Test.

England were 60 for two when Bell came in after Essex duo Alastair Cook and Ravi Bopara had gone cheaply.

Strauss took some of the pressure off by continuing to drive and square cut strongly before Bell delighted his fans by clipping Peter Siddle off his legs for four.

Bell, who can cut a nervous figure at the crease, then went down the pitch to loft off-spinner Nathan Hauritz straight for the first six of the match.

Strauss, looking in prime form, meanwhile completed a 92-ball fifty including eight fours.

England enjoyed a spectacular start Friday with Onions taking two wickets with the day's first two balls.

Australia resumed with makeshift opener Shane Watson 62 not out while Australia captain Ricky Ponting was unbeaten on 17, needing just eight more to surpass Allan Border as his country's leading Test run-scorer.

Watson could not add to his overnight score when he was lbw to Durham quick Onions.

Next ball Michael Hussey was bowled off-stump after the left-hander deliberately offered no stroke to a ball that swung in a touch.

Australia were now 126 for three and Onions, who looked decidedly unthreatening while bowling three overs for an expensive 21 runs on Thursday, was on a hat-trick but new batsman Michael Clarke evaded a short ball.

Meanwhile, Ponting's three off his legs against Andrew Flintoff saw him surpass Border's record of 11,174 runs and moved him up into third place in the all-time list of Test run-scorers behind Sachin Tendulkar (12,773) and Brian Lara (11,953).

But, on 38, Ponting feathered an attempted hook off a well-directed short ball from Onions through to wicket-keeper Matthew Prior.

Anderson then, as Onions had done, struck twice in two balls to spark a spell of five wickets for 13 runs in 38 balls.

Left-hander Marcus North edged and was caught one-handed by a diving Prior, who took the left-handed chance from in front of Strauss at first slip.

Anderson, whose overnight figures were an unimpressive 10 overs for 45 runs, then had Johnson, caught on the crease, lbw, on his way to a Friday return of five for 35 in 14 overs.

Australia's last two wickets though added 60 runs before Onions, who had two catches dropped off his bowling, ended the innings by having Hilfenhaus caught in the gully.—AFP

Kashmir CM Abdullah cleared in scandal, resumes work


SRINAGAR: Indian-administered Kashmir's chief minister resumed his duties Friday, a day after the state governor rejected his resignation and cleared him of any links to a sex scandal.

Omar Abdullah announced his resignation after opposition lawmakers alleged he was a suspect in a probe into a prostitution ring involving 40 women and under-age girls, who allegedly had sex with politicians and businessmen.

The 39-year-old Abdullah, regarded as one of India's most promising young politicians, resumed his duties, saying he was ‘looking forward to serving the people of the state.’

An emotional Abdullah stormed out of the state assembly Tuesday, branding the charges that he was linked to the prostitution ring ‘baseless.’

The allegations raised in the state legislature plunged the mainly Muslim state, which has been racked by a two-decade-old separatist insurgency, into political turmoil.

‘I had to take a difficult decision in order to clear not only my name but also to establish some respectability for politics and politicians in the state,’ Abdullah told reporters Friday, referring to his move to quit.

He had vowed to return to his office only after the governor exonerated him of the ‘serious allegations’ levelled against him.

Governor N.N. Vohra wrote a letter Thursday to Abdullah calling on him to resume his duties, saying according to information given to him by the home ministry there was ‘no basis’ for Abdullah to resign.

India's Central Bureau of Investigation, which is probing the case, has already absolved Abdullah of any link to the prostitution charges.

The CBI has charged several former state ministers and top security officials over the prostitution scandal that first erupted in 2006, but opposition lawmakers said the agency was protecting some of the accused.

Both Pakistani players fail in Malaysian Open Squash Q-finals


KARACHI: Top Pakistani players Aamir Atlas Khan and his cousin Farhan Mehboob were beaten in the quarter-finals of CIMB Malaysian Open, the premier annual international squash championships in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur.

Seeded seventh in the event and ranked 19th in the world, Aamir Atlas was defeated by Nick Matthew 5-11, 8-11, 9-11 while seeded eighth Farhan Mehboob was beaten by the three-time world champion from Egypt, Amr Shabana. Score was 6-11, 8-11, 6-11.

Presidency welcomes SC verdict


ISLAMABAD: “The Supreme Court short order today declaring the November 3, 2007 actions of General Pervez Musharraf as unconstitutional is a triumph of the democratic principles, a stinging negation of dictatorship and is most welcome”.

The short verdict as has become known thus far declaring actions of November 3, 2007 as unconstitutional is what the PPP and President Asif Zardari has all along maintained against the dictatorship of General Musharraf, spokesperson to the President former Senator Farhatullah Babar said in a statement on Friday.

Farhatullah Babar recalled that soon after the November 3 declaration of emergency the former Prime Minister and Chairperson of the party Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto cut short her visit to Dubai and rushed to Pakistan to challenge the emergency and dictatorship even at the risk of her life.

The negation and rejection of dictatorship and its actions of November 3, 2007 today by the Supreme Court is a triumph of the principles for which the party fought and its Chairperson Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto and countless workers laid down their lives, he said.

He further said that as details of the judgment are still awaited it is premature to comment on it in detail at this stage

SC declares Nov 3 steps unconstitutional


ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court of Pakistan Friday declared the steps taken on November 3, 2007 by former president Pervez Musharraf as unconstitutional.

The judgment came after the 14-judge larger bench headed by Chief Justice of Pakistan Justice Iftikhar Muhammed Chaudhry completed the hearing of constitutional petitions regarding PCO judges, appointments of judges of higher judiciary and November 3, 2007 steps.

The Supreme Court in its short verdict declared the steps of November 3, 2007 taken by former president Pervez Musharraf as unconstitutional. Article 279 of the Constitution was violated on November 3, 2007, it said.

It termed as illegal and unconstitutional the sacking of Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry and the other higher judiciary as well as the appointment of Justice Abdul Hamid Dogar as chief justice.

The oath taken by President Asif Ali Zardari will not be affected by the SC verdict, is said.

All the appointments made in the higher judiciary of Justice Abdul Hamid Dogar have been termed illegal.

It termed as unconstitutional all the appointments of judges during November 3, 2007 to March 24, 2008.

It said the strength of Supreme Court judges will remain 17.

It declared unconstitutional all the steps taken by Pervez Musharraf during November 3, 2007 to December 15, 2007 including the increasing of number of superior judges through finance bill.

Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry announced the verdict.

The verdict said all the appointments of judges on and after November 3, 2007 under PCO were unconstitutional. The case of PCO judges will be referred to the Supreme Judicial Council, it said.

The announcement of today’s verdict sent a wave of jubilation outside the Supreme Court and at all the bar associations. Sweets are being distributed as people and lawyers are chanting slogans in support of the judiciary.

The 14-judge larger bench headed by Chief Justice of Pakistan Justice Iftikhar Muhammed Chaudhry reserved the judgment after completing the hearing of the case and announced it after a delay of over four and a half hour.

Sharapova, Dementieva through to quarter-finals


STANFORD (California): Maria Sharapova and Elena Dementieva breezed into the quarter-finals of the Stanford Classic on Wednesday, crushing their second-round opponents with equal efficiency.

A red-hot Sharapova destroyed fifth seed and compatriot Nadia Petrova 6-1, 6-2, before world No 4 Dementieva despatched another Russian in Maria Kirilenko with the same scoreline.

Sharapova, who came back from shoulder surgery in May after nearly 10 months off the tour, overwhelmed Petrova with precise serving, huge returns and razor-sharp groundstrokes in a stunning return to form.

After shaking off the rust with a three-set defeat of Japanese veteran Ai Sugiyama in the first round on Monday, Sharapova was rarely troubled by Petrova, who stretched her to three sets at the French Open second round in May.

Sharapova will play the winner of the match between Venus Williams and Alla Kudryavtseva of Russia.

Dementieva had few problems with 52nd-ranked Kirilenko, who appeared tired after her marathon three and half hour win over Anna Chakvetadze on Tuesday.

The Wimbledon semi-finalist was solid and quick off the baseline, consistently running down blasts from Kirilenko and firing them back as winners.

Australia’s Samantha Stosur defeated Monica Niculescu of Romania 6-1, 7-5 in other second round action on Wednesday.

Unesco, archaeology dept urged to save Buddhist stupa


TAXILA: Officials of the regional department of archeology and museums have urged the Unesco and federal department of archaeology to save the Buddhist stupa and monastery from the illegal digging and excavations.

The request was made after the two officials of the federal department of archaeology and museums sub-regional office, Taxila, found illegal excavation and theft of the ancient artifacts from the Buddhist monastery.

In a report submitted to highups of Ministry of Culture, the officials said the stupa and the monastery had been badly damaged by the excavator s digging the sites with heavy equipment.

‘And, most probably they have also taken away two or three small statues of Buddha,’ the officials reported.

The officials said if the proper excavations under official patronage were carried out, it would not only help to preserve the cultural heritage but also promote tourism in this area where researchers, students of archeology, tourists and scholars from across the world come to visit the ancient civilisation.

It has been learnt that the police were informed by the local people about illegal digging and excavations and a police party reached the spot but did not stop the illegal activity. Also, the sub-divisional police officer and SHO Hazro also reached the site and arrested 15 diggers but freed all of them after two hours without taking any legal action against them.

The report said SHO Hazro police station had misguided officials of the archeology department and did not tell the exact location where illegal digging was being done by the land grabbers.

They said the police were protecting the illegal diggers and asked the police highups to take action against those officials responsible for this situation.

When contacted, Muhammad Bhadur Khan, deputy director federal department of archaeology and museums, confirmed the massive destruction of the Buddhist site. He said a report of the illegal digging by influential mafia in league with the police had been submitted to the department headquarters and police authorities.

He strongly advocated for the preservation of the site from the illegal diggers who, he said, were bent on destroying the national heritage.

Supreme Court Verdict Delays


ISLAMABAD: The entire nation is waiting for the Supreme Court verdict regarding PCO judges case, appointments of judges of higher judiciary and November 3 steps, as the apex court's decision is delayed by more than two hours.

Earlier, the court completed the hearing and withheld the decion which was scheduled to be announced at 3:30 after an interval for Friday prayers.

The 14-member larger bench arrived in courtroom and the decision is still being mulled over after the lapse of two hours.

The courtroom is overcrowded and all the Bar Associations in the country are brimming with the lawyers with advance arrangement for sweets.

Chairman PCB admits out of court WC settlement


ISLAMABAD: Chairman Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Ijaz Butt said that the matters of World Cup 2011 hosting would be settled next month.

Ijaz Butt told at the meeting of the Standing Committee for Sports in Islamabad that the matters with the International Cricket Council (ICC) are being settled out of the court but the case has not been withdrawn.

He said that the PCB has suggested the ICC to hold the Pakistan’s share of matches at neutral venue.

Replying to a question, he said that it was not the responsibility of the PCB to provide security to Sri Lankan team.

Thousands evacuated from Texas town due to chemical fire


CHICAGO: A fire at a chemical plant has forced the evacuation of a Texas town of 72,000 people after it released a massive plume of toxic orange smoke that could be seen for miles Thursday, officials said.

No serious injuries were reported as a result of the fire, but officials called for the mass evacuation after the smoke blanketed much of Bryan, Texas, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) northwest of Houston.

Ten people were hospitalized with respiratory problems, local media reported. "The fire department has not been able to put it out for the safety of the firefighters," city spokesman Kendall Kessel told foreign news agency. "They're just letting it burn so it could take hours to completely burn out."

Nov 3 steps: hearing ends; verdict minutes away


ISLAMABAD: Supreme Court has Friday completed the hearing of the constitutional petitions regarding November 3 measures and the appointments of judges of higher judiciary; the verdict will be announced at 3:30pm after Friday prayers.

Chief Justice of Pakistan Justice Iftikhar Muhammed Chaudhry said he will not pass such a verdict as will trigger chaos in the country.

While giving arguments at the court, the Attorney General said the verdict should be such that it does not harm the system; thereupon, the CJ queried him about the ‘system’ and that the president, premier, parliament and provincial assemblies are the only constituents of the system.

On this, Justice Sardar Raza asked Hamid Khan Advocate whether an Army Chief of grade 22 could authorize the president to lift the emergency and that an Army Chief is empowered to impose emergency.

Giving his remarks, the CJ said if the November 3 step was wrong, then even a six-storey building is erected on this, that would be equally wrong.

Attorney General Lateef Khosa said in his arguments said today’s verdict will be extremely vital and a landmark decision in judicial history and dictatorship will die out, adding the verdict will be instrumental in changing people’s thought.

The Attorney General said the decision regarding the future of 37 ordinances should be left on the parliament. Commenting on this, the Chief Justice said the government should clarify its stance on this by providing the judiciary with a list of ordinances to be kept and jettisoned.

He continued that the supremacy of the constitution should be kept intact and this cannot be compromised.

Private transplants to be banned


The government says it will ban all private transplants of organs from dead donors in the UK.

The move comes after media reports of overseas patients paying to receive organs donated by British people.

An independent report said the public needed to be confident that scarce donor organs were allocated fairly within the NHS.

Transplant surgeons said the ban would reassure the public that organs will go to those in greatest need.

Elisabeth Buggins, former chairwoman of the Organ Donation Taskforce, carried out an inquiry after allegations in a number of newspapers that organs from NHS donors were being given to patients from countries such as Greece and Italy.

It emerged that more than 700 transplants, mostly liver transplants, had been carried out on non-UK patients over the past decade.

In total, 631 of those transplants used organs from dead donors and, of those, 314 were from outside the EU.

It is not clear how many of those paid privately.

Japanese jobless for June highest in six years


TOKYO, Japan (CNN) -- Japan's unemployment rate hit a six-year high in June, climbing to 5.4 percent, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications said Friday.

The jobless figures were up two-tenths of a percent from May after holding at that rate for three months.

Nearly 3.5 million Japanese were unemployed in June, an increase of 830,000 or more than 30 percent from the previous year, according to the ministry.

Some U.S. bank pay "unmoored" from performance: Cuomo


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bonuses paid to executives at nine banks that received U.S. government bailout money in 2008 were greater than net income at some of the banks, the office of New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said on Thursday.

Cuomo, in a report on months of investigation into compensation paid by the banks, said employee pay "has become unmoored from the banks' financial performance."

Representatives of the banks either declined comment on the report or could not comment immediately.

"There is no clear rhyme or reason to the way banks compensate and reward their employees," said the report by Cuomo, New York's top legal officer, who began his probe last October amid taxpayer complaints about Wall Street pay.

Even in one of Wall Street's worst years on record, at least 4,793 bankers and traders received more than $1 million in bonus payments, according to the report.

Cuomo argued that, if firms followed "a more principled" bonus system, they would be less susceptible to poaching of their employees by other firms offering more pay.

"This rationalization of the compensation and bonus system must be accomplished now," said the report, which was sent to Edolphus Towns, chairman of the U.S. House of Representatives Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman.

Since nine banks received a total of $125 billion last October in taxpayer money under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) to help them survive the financial crisis, Cuomo has pressed them for details on billions of dollars paid to executives amid huge losses.

SUBSTANTIALLY GREATER

The report said bonuses for Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase & Co were "substantially greater" than the banks' net income.

Goldman earned $2.3 billion, paid out $4.8 billion in bonuses and received $10 billion in TARP funding, the report said.

Morgan Stanley earned $1.7 billion, paid $4.475 billion in bonuses and received $10 billion in TARP funding, while JP Morgan Chase earned $5.6 billion, paid $8.69 billion in bonuses and received $25 billion in TARP funding.