Monday, August 3, 2009

Jackson's mother granted custody


Michael Jackson's mother Katherine will become the permanent guardian of her son's three children, a Los Angeles judge has ruled.

The 79-year-old has been caring for Prince Michael, 12, Paris, 11, and seven-year-old Prince Michael II since the singer's death on 25 June.

The ruling follows an agreement with Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe, mother of the two eldest children.

The singer had nominated his mother to raise his children in a 2002 will.

Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff also granted Mrs Jackson a monthly allowance from her son's estate, which is believed to be worth $500m (£300m).

Custody rights

The amount was not disclosed, but the judge ordered the allowance to be applied retrospectively to June and be reviewed after six months.

Jackson's children were also approved a monthly allowance, which will be reviewed after the same period.

Ms Rowe is the biological mother of Jackson's eldest children, but she gave up custody rights to the pair following her divorce from Jackson in 1999.

The former nurse later applied for her access to the children to be reinstated, reaching an agreement with Jackson in 2006.

Under the new custody agreement, Ms Rowe will have visitation rights with the two oldest children and will continue to receive spousal support payments.

Lawyers for both parties said no money had been involved in reaching the agreement with Ms Rowe.

Her lawyer, Eric George, said the agreement "eliminates uncertainty" over the children's future.

The singer's youngest son - Prince Michael II, known as Blanket - was born to a surrogate mother whose identity has never been revealed.

Jackson's autopsy results are due to be released this week.

Australia detains terror suspects

Australian police have made a series of arrests in the southern city of Melbourne after uncovering a plot to launch a terror attack in the country.

Police said a group was believed to be at an "advanced stage" of preparing to storm an army base, media reports said.

More than 400 officers were involved in carrying out 19 search warrants. The number of people arrested was unknown.

Those arrested are reported to include Australian nationals of Somali and Lebanese descent, reports say.

"Police believe members of a Melbourne-based group have been undertaking planning to carry out a terrorist attack in Australia and allegedly involved in hostilities in Somalia," a police statement said.

Western Mexico hit by earthquakes


Mexico's Gulf of California has been hit by a 6.9-magnitude earthquake and at least three smaller tremors.

There have been no reports of injuries or damage.

The 6.9-magnitude tremor struck at 1259 local time (1759GMT), with its epicentre 76 miles (122km) north-east of Santa Isabel in Baja California.

There was a risk of a small, localised tsunami in the area, officials and experts warned, but no threat to America's Pacific coast.

The tremors were all centred under the bed of the Gulf of California, a narrow strip of sea between Baja California peninsula and the Mexican mainland.

Wilfredo Rivera, a manager at the Posada Santa Gemma hotel in Bahia Kino told Associated Press: "The earth was turning around really ugly. People got really scared."

The mountains and deserts of the peninsula are sparsely populated, minimising the risk of widespread damage or injuries.

Plague kills 2nd man; China seals off entire town


BEIJING: A second man has died of pneumonic plague in northwest China, in an outbreak that prompted authorities to lock down a town where about a dozen people were infected with the highly contagious deadly lung disease, a state news agency said.

The World Health Organization office in China said it was in close contact with Chinese health authorities and that measures taken so far to treat and quarantine sickened people were appropriate.

The man who died Sunday was identified only as 37-year-old Danzin from Ziketan, the stricken town in Qinghai province, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

Danzin was a neighbor of the first person who died, a 32-year-old herdsman whose name was not given. Another 10 people, mostly relatives of the first deceased man, were infected and undergoing isolated treatment in hospital, Xinhua said in a report late Sunday.

The town of 10,000 people has been sealed off and a team of experts was sent to the area, the local health bureau said Sunday, warning that anyone with a cough or fever who visited the town since mid-July should seek treatment at a hospital.

A food seller surnamed Han at the Crystal Alley Market in Ziketan said authorities have said homes and shops should be disinfected and residents should wear masks when they go out. He said 80 per cent of shops in the town were closed and prices of disinfectants and some vegetables have tripled.

‘People are so scared. There are few people on the streets,’ Han said by telephone.

‘There are police guarding the quarantine center at the township hospital but not on the streets.’

The situation in Ziketan was stable, said an official surnamed Wang at the local disease control center, who added the measures taken were ‘scientific, orderly, effective and in accordance with the law.’

A woman who lives in Ziketan, who refused to give her name, said county officials distributed flyers and made TV and radio announcements on how to prevent infection. The woman contacted by phone said police checkpoints were set up in a 17-mile (28-kilometer) radius around Ziketan and residents were not allowed to leave.

Pneumonic plague is spread through the air and can be passed from person to person through coughing, according to the World Health Organization. It is caused by the same bacteria that occurs in bubonic plague — the Black Death that killed an estimated 25 million people in Europe during the Middle Ages.

Bubonic plague is usually transmitted by flea bite and can be treated with antibiotics if diagnosed early. Pneumonic plague is one of the deadliest infectious diseases, capable of killing humans within 24 hours of infection, according to the WHO.

People infected with pneumonic plague must be given antibiotics within 24 hours of first showing symptoms, while people who have had direct contact with those infected can protect themselves by taking antibiotics for seven days, according to the Web site of the US Centers for Disease Control.

The WHO’s spokeswoman in China, Vivian Tan, said China reported the first death and 11 other cases to the organization on Saturday.

‘In cases like this, we encourage the authorities to identify cases, to investigate any suspicious symptoms among close contacts and to treat confirmed cases as soon as possible. So far, they have done exactly that, so at this point we don’t have any additional advice,’ Tan said.

In 2004, eight villagers in Qinghai province died of plague, most of them infected after killing or eating wild marmots. Marmots are related to gophers and prairie dogs. They live in the grasslands of China’s northwest and Mongolia, where villagers often hunt them for meat. — AP

Metal leak at China chemical plant leaves 500 sick


BEIJING: More than 500 villagers in central China have been found to have high concentrations of a dangerous metal in their bodies after a series of leaks from a chemical plant, state media reported Monday.

Of the nearly 3,000 villagers living near the Changsha Xianghe Chemical Plant in Hunanprovince’s Zhentou township, 509 people were found to have high concentrations of cadmium and 33 were hospitalized over the weekend, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. Cadmium is used to make batteries.

The chemicals may have been leaking for months before two villagers, since found to have excessive levels of cadmium, died in May and June.

Two senior environmental officials were suspended and the head of the chemical plant was detained Saturday. That followed protests last week by nearly 1,000 residents complaining that deadly pollutants were being discharged from the factory into water that irrigates rice and vegetable fields, according to Xinhua.

Calls to the Liuyang city government office rang unanswered late Monday.

Factory accidents and chemical leaks are common in China, in part because of lax enforcement of proper worker training and safety rules.

Exposure to large amounts of cadmium can cause failure of the central nervous system and lungs, lead to severe brain damage and in some cases, cause death.

China’s waterways, especially its major rivers, are dangerously polluted after decades of rapid economic growth and poor enforcement of pollution controls. — AP

Pakistan to send list of Afghan terror camps to Kabul


ISLAMABAD: Highly placed Interior Ministry sources told DawnNews that action has been taken byIslamabad following a statement by the Afghan Interior Minister that the Afghan President did not admit that there existed militant training camps inAfghanistan.

The source said lists of suspected camps have been prepared and would be handed over toKabul within twenty four hours.

The lists also contain information about Indian involvement in such activities on Afghan soil against Pakistan.

Talking to DawnNews, Interior Minister Rehman Malik strongly refuted the statement of his Afghan counter-part. Rehman Malik said that during his meeting with Hamid Karzai two weeks ago, he did discuss terrorist camps, and the Afghan President assured him that action would be taken.

Pakistan has prapared lists of terrorist training camp being operated from Afghan soil for carrying out terrorist activities in Pakistan.

Ashraf quiet when asked about end of power crisis by Dec


ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Water and Electricity Raja Pervez Ashraf has turned away from his claims to end power crisis from country by December 31, 2009.

Right after taking charge of his office, he continued to make gigantic claims pledging nation to overpower electricity crisis presently has heightened in country but now he seems to have turned away from his claims.

Raja Pervez Ashraf, when asked about overcoming electricity shortage in country outside Parliament House by Geo news, instead of reiterating his promise, he said why do you ask me same question every time?

Now, he is saying we hope to end electricity crisis by December 31, 2009.

Turbulence injures 26 on flight, diverted to Miami


MIAMI: More than two dozen people were hurt when a Continental Airlines jet hit turbulence on a flight from Brazil to Texas, forcing the plane to make an emergency landing in Miami early Monday, officials said.

Four people were seriously injured and another 22 were in stable condition with bumps and bruises, Miami-Dade Fire Rescue spokesman Elkin Sierra said. A total of 13 people were taken to local hospitals.

Continental Flight 128 was traveling from Rio de Janeiro to Houston with 168 people on board when it was diverted, Miami International Airport spokesman Marc Henderson says.

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen says the plane landed safely at 5:30 a.m. The plane reported hitting severe turbulence at 4:30 a.m.

Houston-based Continental did not immediately respond to messages left for a spokesman.

Those not seriously injured would be flown on to Houston, the airport spokesman said.

Henderson said the plane was scheduled to return to Houston, though he did not know what time. The uninjured passengers remained on the plane nearly three hours after landing. Because it was an international flight, "if they get off, they have to be cleared, and I am not aware that they have been cleared off the plane."

Sri Lanka clinch series after Jayawardene ton


DAMBULLA: Mahela Jayawardene scored a brilliant hundred to guide Sri Lanka to a series-clinching six-wicket victory in the third one-day international against Pakistan on Monday.

The former Sri Lanka captain, who opened the innings after Sanath Jayasuriya fell sick, scored a sublime 123 as the hosts overhauled Pakistan’s 288 for eight with 21 balls to spare.

Jayawardene compiled 202-run partnership for the first wicket with Upul Tharanga, who scored 76.

Victory gave Sri Lanka an unassailable 3-0 lead in the five-match series, their first ODI series win against Pakistan on home soil.

Jayawardene’s century, an innings that was hampered at the end by painful leg cramps, was the 11th of his career and his first since 2007.

Pakistan hopes were briefly buoyed after the fall of three quick wickets, Sri Lanka sliding from 202 without loss to 212 for three.

However, skipper Kumar Sangakkara finished off the game with an unbeaten 37, adding 56 with Thilina Kandamby (32) for the fourth-wicket.

Umar Akmal top-scored with a brisk 66 for Pakistan and his elder brother Kamran Akmal chipped in with 45, sharing a 71-run second-wicket partnership with skipper Younus Khan, who scored 44.

Pakistan’s lower order also rallied, with Shahid Afridi (32), Abdul Razzaq (30) and Naved-ul-Hasan (30 not out) all making contributions. — Reuters

BREAKING NEWS: Afghan priority for new Nato head


Nato's priority must be the war in Afghanistan, including negotiations with moderate members of the Taliban, the organisation's new head says.

Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said there were "groups that you can talk with" with a view to splitting the militant group.

He said his second priority would be improving ties with Russia, though he admitted there would be difficulties.

One of his other ideas is to create a "standing anti-piracy" capability

Massive dollar buying set to depreciate rupee


KARACHI: The foreign exchange market may see another massive dollar buying form Monday after the private sector was given responsibility to pay 50 per cent oil import bill from August 1. Experts and dealers see depreciation of the rupee amid massive dollar demand by the private sector, which has already indicated its presence.

The State Bank of Pakistan under the agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is gradually shifting the load of oil import bill payment to private sector.

Dealers said the import of diesel and furnace oil would bring a demand of about $5 billion from the private sector while the total forex reserves of banks stand at $3.4 billion.

‘There is no doubt that the market will see aggressive dollar buying during the current year and that will escalate the price of the US currency,’ said Atif Ahmed, a currency dealer.

Experts on exchange rate were sure that the rupee would lose against the US currency but were not able to assess the quantum.

‘The depreciation looks imminent but it depends on the inflows of dollars in the local market,’ said a brokerage house researcher.

‘If the oil prices remain constant at the current level and inflows improve then it will have low level effect on exchange rate,’ said the researcher.

However, analysts observed that the exchange rate scenario was not good for the US currency in the global market which means that dollar might lose weight against the international currencies that would have positive impact on the rupee.

Analysts said the recession in the US was still not over while the low oil prices had reduced the dollar demand in the global market which could reduce the dollar valuation in the coming months.

If the remittances remain on the higher side as they were in 2008-09 and inflows from IMF continue, the exchange rate may see stability despite higher dollar buying by the private sector, currency dealers said.

‘The dollar buying will surely involve speculative forces which would create some destabilisation but it could be checked with higher inflows,’ said Atif.

However, it was observed that the country’s reserves had been declining since the first week of July, which is alarming especially when the private sector has gotten a major role in the exchange rate mechanism.

The State Bank had taken charge of paying oil bills in July 2008 to protect the exchange rate from speculative forces which caused serious damage to the value of rupee.

Indian troops kill four in Kashmir


SRINAGAR: A gunbattle between Indian troops and suspected militants in the forests of occupied Kashmir near the Line of Control left one soldier and four militants dead, an army spokesman said on Sunday.

The 10-hour gunbattle ended just before dawn in Bangus, 120km north of Srinagar, said Lt-Col J.S. Brar.

The fighting started when an army patrol noticed a suspicious group of men and challenged them. The men opened fire, triggering the gunbattle, Col Brar said. Soldiers were chasing down the surviving militants, he said.

The fighting follows two attacks by suspected freedom fighters that killed an Indian policeman and wounded two paramilitary troops in Srinagar on Saturday.

More than a dozen groups are fighting for Kashmir’s independence from India or its unification with Pakistan. More than 68,000 people, most of them civilians, have been killed since the movement began in 1989.

SC indefinitely defers petitions’ hearing in Hafiz Saeed case


ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court of Pakistan has indefinitely adjourned hearing of petitions challenging the release of Jamaatud Dawa chief Hafiz Mohammad Saeed.

Hafiz Saeed's counsel A K Dogar said the hearing of two petitions filed by the Federal and Punjab governments had been adjourned indefinitely by the apex court.

Sources say the move was apparently linked to the resignation of Punjab's Advocate General Raza Farooq, who was representing the provincial government in the hearings.

Saeed has been accused by India of being the mastermind behind the Mumbai attacks.

The apex court's direction comes two days after India said there was ‘enough evidence’ to continue the investigation against the Jamaatud Dawa chief in connection with the Mumbai attacks.

Musharraf’s trial possible through parliamentary resolution: Khosa


ISLAMABAD: Attorney General Latif Khosa said former President Musharraf could be tried by simple majority resolution of Parliament.

Talking to media in oath taking ceremony of Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali, attorney general said cases of Supreme Court’s Justice Faqir Khokar and Justice Javed Batter will be send to Supreme Judicial Council (SJC).

SJC only hears matters of citing judge and if any judge tender resignation during proceedings, reference against him could not be hear. A judge retains his position till the verdict of SJC.

Replying to a question about action against former President Musharraf, attorney general said Parliament is supreme in this issue.

Iran leader endorses Ahmadinejad


TEHRAN: Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Monday formally endorsed hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president for a new four-year term amid intense political turmoil in the Islamic republic.

"Iranian people have voted in favour of a fight against arrogance, to confront destitution and spread justice," a local television quoted Khamenei as saying after confirming Ahmadinejad in office.

Among those who did not attend were Ahmadinejad's defeated rivals Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, along with powerful cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and former reformist president Mohammad Khatami, it said. However, Mohsen Rezai, the former head of the elite Revolutionary Guards who was Ahmadinejad's only conservative rival in the June 12 vote, was at the ceremony.

Pakistan amass 288-8 in 3rd ODI against SL


DAMBULLA: Pakistan’s batsmen displayed fine batting performance by piling up 288 runs of eight wickets after they were put into bat by Sri Lanka in the third One-day International here at the Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium on Monday.

Young Umar Akmal, playing only his second one-dayer, notched up 66 from 65 balls with five fours and two sixes to help Pakistan amass a huge total before his older brother Kamran made 45 and captain Younis Khan hit 44.

Later, Shahid Afridi (32 off 20 balls), Abdul Razzaq (30 off 26) and Rana Naved-ul-Hasan (30 not out from 23 balls) made significant contributions. Razzaq and Naved both smashed two sixes each.

Opener Nasir Jamshed (1) and former captain Shoaib Malik (12) failed again to get runs.

For Sri Lanka, Angelo Mathews and Muttiah Muralitharan got two wickets each while Thilan Thushara, Dilhara Fernando and Nuwan Kulasekara took one wicket each.