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Tuesday, 7 June 2011

Who shot bin Laden? Former SEALs fill in the blanks

Map of Abbottabad Compound
He is the unknown shooter. The nameless, faceless triggerman who put a bullet in the head of the world’s most notorious terrorist.
Yet there are clues, and the beginnings of a portrait can be pieced together from scraps gleaned from U.S. officials. A trio of former Navy SEALs — Eric Greitens, Richard Marcinko and Stew Smith — helped us fill in the blanks, drawing from their experiences to develop a kind of composite sketch of an elusive historic figure in real time.
He’s likely between the ages of 26 and 33, says Marcinko, founder of the elite “SEALs Team 6” — now known as DEVGRU — that many believe led the assault on bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. He’ll be old enough to have had time to hurdle the extra training tests required to join the elite counter-terrorism unit, yet young enough to withstand the body-punishing rigors of the job. The shooter’s a man, it’s safe to say, because there are no women in the SEALs. And there’s a good chance he’s white, though the SEALs have stepped up efforts to increase the number of minorities in their ranks, Marcinko and Smith say. A “positive thinker” who “gets in trouble when he’s not challenged,” Marcinko suspects, a man who “flunked vacation and flunked relaxing.”

Hit to India's rising democracy? Popular guru's anticorruption fast turns violent

India has made democratic advances in the past decade; it has a vibrant press, civil society, and an educated population. But it appears unsympathetic to peaceful protest.
The Indian government cracked down this weekend on peaceful supporters of one of the country's most popular yoga gurus after he announced he would lead a mass fast to protest against corruption rampant in the Indian government. The crackdown highlights what appears to be a disconnect in India's democratic advancements.
On Saturday night, police used tear gas and batons to break up a crowd of 60,000 supporters of Baba Ramdev in central Delhi, leaving at least 30 people injured. Authorities in the capital have also invoked for a week a British Raj-era law prohibiting public meetings of five or more people for the purpose of protest.
India has been rocked by a series of high-profile corruption scandals over the past year, some implicating the ruling Congress party and its allies. A growing anticorruption movement is starting to galvanize wide support, which has many looking to Mr. Ramdev to lead a Gandhi-type counter effort. But some have questioned his motives.
RELATED Worst countries on corruption
"I would hardly describe Ramdev as a Gandhian," says Nikhil Dey, an Indian social activist. He adds that Ramdev has laid out no plan on how to combat corruption other than grandiose pronouncements on the return of "black money" stashed in foreign bank accounts to India. Ramdev might be using Mahatma Gandhi's form of nonviolent protest to take a stand against corruption, but he is unlikely to inhabit the same position in the collective Indian psyche, he says.
The police raid Ramdev claims that during Sunday night's reportedly peaceful events, Delhi police dragged and beat his supporters, including hundreds of women and children, and that his stage had been set on fire.
The government says that because Ramdev had sought permission for a gathering of just 5,000 people for a yoga camp, police stepped in to disperse the crowds that they say posed a security risk.
During the raid, Ramdev fled his tent and attempted to evade police but was detained early on Sunday morning. He's now based at his sprawling ashram in Haridwar, northeast of New Delhi.
Popularity and suspicion

Degrees for the Next Decade

Find out which four degrees hold the most potential in the next decade.

By Chris Kyle


A lot can change in ten years. One career can explode in popularity while another can go cold.
Your degree, however, lasts forever, which is all the more reason to earn the right one.
[Click here to find the right college for you]
Yahoo! Education pored over employment projections through 2020 to determine what graduates with different degrees and educational backgrounds can expect from the job market over the next decade.
Keep reading for the degrees that rank highest in terms of employment opportunities through 2020.

#1 - Health Care Degrees

Love it or hate it, health care reform is creating many new, exciting positions in what is already the fastest growing sector of our economy. Factor in the aging population and demand for health care graduates has never been higher.
Top Degree Picks:
Medical Assistant
Nursing
Medical Technician
[Search for Health Care programs right now]

Six Quick-Start Careers

See how you could get into a hot career with just 1-2 years of education.

By Jennifer Berry
Are you feeling stuck in a job you hate? Floundering in a job search that isn't going anywhere?
Don't despair: a quick education program could provide the jolt you need to find the right career.
There is no time like the present to explore your options for going back to school. With many schools offering rolling admissions and even online instruction, it's never been easier to get started.
[Search for career preparation programs now]
With the right education, you could be prepared for a new career in just one to two years. That's a small investment in time that could reap big rewards over the length of your career.
Check out these six solid careers - and learn how you can prepare for them.

Career #1 - Human Resources Assistant

For a stable, rewarding career that you can prepare for quickly, consider a career in human resources. As a human resources assistant, you'll be responsible for maintaining important information about your organization's employees - like their earnings, health and life insurance plans, and tax withholdings.
Quick education: You can earn your associate's degree in human resources in two years. If you already have a bachelor's degree in another field, you can earn a certificate in human resources in just one year.
Good compensation: The average annual income for human resources assistants is $37,840. The top ten percent average at $53,160 a year.*

Taiwan computer makers plot against Apple

It’s the Disney of computer shows. The possibility of something once thought impossible coming true hangs above the maze of gaudy booths and dazzling displays of electronic gadgetry slated for to go on sale in the second half of the year.
There are tablet PCs with detachable keyboards – easier for typing than the usual touch screen – laptops with built-in speakers as powerful as an external setup and half-phone, half-computer handheld devices with 3D displays.
Tech firms from across the world come with showgirls to vie for the attention of corporate buyers, among the 36,000 people expected at the show. A fantasy fulfilled could be a lucrative deal to install microchips in a PC maker’s latest gadgets or finding a bulk buyer of portable computers designed for business use.
RELATED As Asia builds economic ties, Taiwan sidelined by China
The show, Computex Taipei, also serves another purpose: To demonstrate the growing depth and sophistication of Taiwan's high-tech industry. Taiwanese companies hope to show how far they've moved from the days when "Taiwanese electronics" meant contract manufacturing for overseas brands.
But for many Taiwanese vendors, this years Computex, which ended on June 4, was a disappointment. Their Silicon Valley rival Apple Computer had stolen the show.
Rather than enjoying the glitz and glam, Micro-Star International Vice President Henry Lu sat stoically, his necktie loose, in a private conference room pondering one question: What are we going to do about the iPad?
Just outside, his sales people were showing off the Taiwanese firm’s tiny tablet computers, barely one percent of the company’s overall notebook PC business. But Apple’s hot selling touch-screen tablets, the iPads, were getting most of the attention.

Is An MBA Right For You?


Thinking about going back to school to earn your Master of Business Administration (MBA)?
Looking at new employment numbers, there may be no time like the present.
A recent analysis of job placement data for 2009 and 2010 by U.S. News revealed that 75.7 percent of 2010 MBA graduates were hired within three months of graduation, up from 70.8 percent in 2009.
It's Time to Earn Your MBA. Find the Right Business School Now.
Think an MBA might benefit you? Join us as we explore seven MBA specializations that could help you climb the corporate ladder. In addition to required core courses, most business schools allow you to concentrate on one of these key disciplines:
Keep reading to see if one of these MBA specializations is right for you.

More universities than expected to charge top fees

Photo illustration. The government could face a "substantial funding gap" for higher education after ministers underestimated the number of universities which will charge top fees, a report published on Tuesday saidThe government could face a "substantial funding gap" for higher education after ministers underestimated the number of universities which will charge top fees, a report published on Tuesday said.
A government spending watchdog said more universities than expected were planning to charge the maximum £9,000 tuition fees from 2012.
As a result the government, which fund student loans to cover the fees, will face a shortfall of "several hundred million pounds", the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) said.
It warned the funding gap could lead to further cuts in higher education and more taxpayers' money being spent on encouraging students from poorer backgrounds to apply.
Committee chairman Margaret Hodge, a Labour MP, said: "At present, more universities intend to charge higher fees than the Department for Business, Education and Skills had expected.
"If the universities' plans to widen participation are approved by the Office for Fair Access, this will leave a substantial funding gap which will either require further cuts in higher education or further resources from the Treasury."

Iranian women’s soccer team forfeits 2012 qualifier over head scarves




The Iranian women's soccer team was in tears after being forced to forfeit a 2012 London Olympics qualifying match this past weekend because it showed up to play in hijabs. FIFA banned the Islamic head scarf in 2007, saying that it could cause choking injuries -- the same reason it gave for recently banning snoods (neck warmers). FIFA also has strict rules against any religious statements in team uniforms.
Since Iran refused to comply with these rules and didn't use the specially designed caps that its 2010 Youth Olympics team wore, Friday's match was abandoned by officials and a 3-0 win was awarded to Jordan as a result. The Football Federation of Iran said it will complain to FIFA about the ruling, but FIFA says assurances were made beforehand so that this situation would've been avoided.

Emma Watson: 'I Wanted To Pretend I Wasn't As Famous As I Was'

"But they'll ask me, 'How are the Narnia films going?'" Jordan Strauss/WireImage The recent widespread reports that "Harry Potter" star Emma Watson left Brown University due to bullying were a bit hard to take. The 21-year-old seems pretty well-adjusted and easy-going and it seemed sad to think that mean-spirited taunts would derail her entire life.
So we feel relieved to find out that this was, in fact, not what led to Emma's departure.
"It made me so sad when all this stuff came out that I left Brown because I was being bullied. It made no sense at all. Brown has been the opposite. I've never even been asked for an autograph on campus. I threw a party for nearly 100 students and not a single person put a photo on Facebook," she told the Sunday Times Style Magazine.

The 5 Biggest Exercise Myths

Did you answer 3 and 10? Of course you did. It’s the Pavlovian response. After all, anyone who’s ever picked up a dumbbell knows that doing 3 sets of 10 reps of each exercise is the quickest way to build muscle.
Except it’s not. In fact, it’s the quickest way to get nowhere with your workout routine, says Michael Mejia, C.S.C.S., a long-time Men’s Health fitness advisor.
Truth is, today’s most sacred exercise guidelines originated in the ’40s and ’50s, a time when castration was a cutting-edge treatment for prostate cancer, and endurance exercise was thought to be harmful to women. Worse, so-called fitness experts across the country are still spewing these same old conventional wisdoms, despite plenty of research indicating that they (the experts and the wisdoms) aren’t wise at all.
Chances are, these are the rules you exercise by right now. And that means your workout is long past due for a 21st-century overhaul. We asked Mejia to do just that. Here are the five muscles myths he most commonly hears. Hopefully, we're about to bust them for good.
BONUS TIP: Get back in shape—and stay lean for life! Check out our list of the 100 Best Fitness Tips Ever!

Texas movie theater makes an example (and a PSA) of a texting audience member

Ever been annoyed by a loud-talking patron at a film? Had that nail-biting darkened hallway scene ruined by someone turning on their phone to send a text? Well, one Texas theater has your back.

Alamo Drafthouse, a local chain of dine-and-screen movie theaters in Austin, Texas, has long waged a war against impolite moviegoers. And the latest customer to object to their firm rules against talking and texting during an evening out has become the unwitting star of a PSA released by the company on Monday.
According to Tim League, the Drafthouse's founder, the woman in question was warned twice about texting during a screening, and then, in accordance with company policy, was escorted out without a refund. "I don't think people realize that it is distracting," League told The Lookout. "It seems like nothing, but if you spend as much time as I do at the movies, you realize the entire theater sees it and it pulls you out of the movie experience. It's every bit as intrusvie as talking."
However, the determined texter was not about to let the matter rest. She called up the Alamo Drafthouse and left a profanity-laced (and perhaps slightly inebriated) message decrying the theater's policies. "Yeah, I was wondering if you guys actually enjoy treating your customers like a pieces of sh*t," she opened, "Because that's how I felt when I went to the Alamo Drafthouse!"
"So excuse me for using my phone, in USA magnited States of America" she raged, "where yer-you are free to text in a the-a-ter!"

Juarez top cop offers results by December

Julian Leyzaola, police chief of Juarez, smiles during an interview with foreign media in his office in Juarez, Mexico, Tuesday June 7, 2011. The new
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico – The new police chief in Mexico's deadliest city says bringing crime down and cleaning up the police force should be much easier than it was in Tijuana, where he spent three years as the top cop.
Julian Leyzaola, 51, took the Juarez job in March, and he predicted during an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday that residents will begin seeing results in six months.
He said that what he learned in calming Tijuana will help him do the same faster in this city across the border from El Paso, Texas. With more than 3,100 homicides last year, Juarez is one of the deadliest cities in the Western Hemisphere.
Leyzaola, a retired army lieutenant colonel, has started a purge of the police ranks. So far, 160 officers have either quit, been fired or arrested, and he predicted that a total of 400 officers will be dismissed this year.
His pacification strategy for the city includes taking over one neighborhood at a time with overwhelming police force to drive out criminals.
"We will harass them. They will see us everywhere, even in their soup," Leyzaola said. "When there is a murder, it won't be one unit that responds, there will be 30."

Syrian mutiny, loss of town shows cracks in regime

RECROP OF CAI101 In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA and according to them, Syrian policemen carry the coffins of their com
BEIRUT – A deadly mutiny of Syrian soldiers and loss of control over a tense northern town appeared to show extraordinary cracks in an autocratic regime that has long prided itself on its iron control.
Details about the events in Jisr al-Shughour remained murky on Tuesday. The government said 120 forces were dead, without explaining the enormous loss of life, and acknowledged losing "intermittent" control of the area.
But the reports Tuesday from residents and activists — and the television appearance of a soldier who says he switched sides after his hometown was bombarded — were the clearest sign yet that the weekly protests of thousands of Syrians are eroding President Bashar Assad's grip.
Foreign Minister Alain Juppe of France, Syria's former colonial ruler with whom Assad maintained good relations, said the president had lost his legitimacy to rule. British foreign secretary William Hague said Assad must "reform or step aside."
France, Britain, Germany and Portugal have circulated a draft U.N. Security Council resolution that would condemn Syria for its killing and torture of peaceful protesters and demand an immediate end to the violence. But veto-wielding Russia has voiced opposition.

10 Most Expensive Private Colleges

When many think of the most expensive schools in the nation, top ranked institutions such as Harvard University and Williams College likely first come to mind. While tuition and required fees cost about $40,000 annually at each school, neither is amongst the top 10 most expensive private universities.
Connecticut College, ranked 41st in U.S. News's rankings of national liberal arts colleges--schools that award the majority of their degrees in the liberal arts and emphasize undergraduate education--reported the highest tuition and required fee costs in the nation among private colleges for the 2010-11 school year. In all, tuition and required fees at Connecticut cost $43,990, and the total cost of attending the school is even more, as that figure does not take into account books, housing, and living expenses.
[See the 10 private colleges with the lowest tuition and fees.]
Of the top 10 most expensive private schools, seven were liberal arts colleges, while two--Columbia University and Carnegie Mellon University--are national universities (schools that offer degrees of every level and emphasize research). Bard College at Simon's Rock in Barrington, Mass., which costs $41,990 annually, is ninth on the list and falls under the regional college category because it focuses on undergraduate education but grants fewer than 50 percent of its degrees in the liberal arts.
The average combined total for tuition and required fees in the 2010-11 school year was $42,604 among the 10 most expensive private schools, compared to an average of $26,079 among the 817 private schools that reported the data to U.S. News.

As China rises, Asia eyes better channels for security talks

Despite a proliferation of global summits, the annual Shangri-La Dialog that ended Sunday in Singapore has become an essential stop for military chiefs in Asia and beyond. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates, on his final Asian tour, addressed the forum, as did his Chinese counterpart Liang Guanglie, who defended China’s military buildup.
But the forum’s success is partly a reflection of the creaky foundations for security cooperation in Asia. Organized by the Institute for International Strategic Studies in London, the Shangri-La Dialog has become an unofficial gathering of Asia’s top brass and intelligence officials and those of outside powers like the US, Britain, and Russia. Mr. Gates and Mr. Liang held a bilateral meeting, one of several conducted on the sidelines.
Security analysts point out, however, that Asia still lacks an effective forum for multilateral diplomacy on regional security issues, such as the disputed South China Sea and North Korea’s nuclear proliferation. A lack of a such a forum could make it more difficult to head off conflicts in a region with rapidly expanding militaries and unsettled political conflicts.
Think you know Asia? Take our geography quiz.

Yemen's Saleh's injuries more serious: U.S. official

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh was injured much more seriously than first reported in a weekend rocket attack on his palace, a U.S. official said on Tuesday, raising further questions about his continued rule.
Saleh, who is receiving medical treatment in Saudi Arabia, was initially said to have received a shrapnel wound, and his vice president was quoted on Monday as saying the president would return to Yemen within days.
But the U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Saleh was in more serious condition than that, with burns over roughly 40 percent of his body.
Saleh's injuries raise fresh questions about the future of Yemen, where battles between pro- and anti-Saleh forces have raised the specter of a civil war in a nation that is home to one of al Qaeda's most potent affiliates.
The latest development also could help with a push by the United States and Saudi Arabia to ease the 69-year-old ruler from power in an effort to stabilize Yemen after months of anti-government protests. He has been in power for nearly 33 years.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called on Monday for Yemen's government to begin a political transition during Saleh's absence.
In the capital Sanaa, thousands of protesters gathered in front of the Yemeni vice president's residence on Tuesday, demanding the acting leader for Saleh form a transitional council to create a new government.
(Reporting by Mark Hosenball in London; Writing by Warren Strobel; Editing by Will Dunham)

Titanic II sinks in harbour on maiden voyage

Boats gather for a ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the launch of the Titanic, in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on May 31. A British man launched his 16-foot cabin cruiser Titanic II on its maiden voyage -- but like its namesake, it promptly sank
Boats gather for a ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the launch of the Titanic, …
Most people would think twice before buying a boat named Titanic II. And sure enough, when Briton Mark Wilkinson took the 16-foot (4.8-metre) cabin cruiser out for its maiden voyage, it promptly sank.
"If it wasn't for the harbourmaster I would have gone down with the Titanic," Wilkinson, who had to be fished out of the sea at West Bay harbour in Dorset, told local media.
"It's all a bit embarrassing and I got pretty fed up with people asking me if I had hit an iceberg."
Wilkinson, in his 40s, had only recently bought the boat and brought it by road from his home in Birmingham for its first outing.
After a successful fishing trip, things started to go wrong when he entered the harbour and the boat began taking on water. Wilkinson was forced to abandon ship and pictures showed him clinging to a rail before he was rescued.
One eyewitness said: "It wasn't a very big boat -- I think an ice cube could have sunk it!"

Mutinous Syrian soldiers behind deaths in north

Seen from the Druze village of Majdal Shams in the Golan , armed Syrian police officers stand on a outlook overlooking the Israeli side of the border between Syria and Israel, Tuesday, June 7, 2011. A Syrian government newspaper says marches to the border will continue and warns Israel the day will come when thousands of Syrians will return to their occupied villages. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)BEIRUT (AP) — Mutinous Syrian soldiers joined forces with protesters after days of crackdowns in a tense northern region, apparently killing dozens of officers and security guards, residents and activists said Tuesday.
The details of what happened in Jisr al-Shughour remain murky, but if confirmed the mutiny would be an extraordinary crack in the regime, which sees its 40-year grip on the country eroded weekly by thousands of protesters calling for the ouster of President Bashar Assad.
The government said 120 troops and police died after "armed groups" attacked in Jisr al-Shughour, but has not explained how the heavily armed military could suffer such an enormous loss of life. Communications to the area are spotty, foreign journalists have been expelled, and many people reached by phone are too afraid to talk.

Malaysia 'obedient wives' club: Good sex is a duty

In this picture taken Saturday, June 4, 2011, Malaysian Muslim Ishak Md Nor, second from right, 40, and his two wives, Aishah Abdul Ghafar, left, 40, and Afiratul Abidah Mohd Hanan, 25, who are members of the "Obedient Wife Club," pose with their children after the club's launch in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. A Malaysian Muslim group has launched the "Obedient Wives Club" to teach women to be submissive and keep their spouses happy in the bedroom as a cure to social ills. (AP Photo)RAWANG, Malaysia (AP) — As a new bride, 22-year-old Ummu Atirah believes she knows the secret to a blissful marriage: obey her husband and ensure he is sexually satisfied.
Ummu and some 800 other Muslim women in Malaysia are members of the "Obedient Wives Club" that is generating controversy in one of the most modern and progressive Muslim-majority nations, where many Muslim Malaysian women hold high posts in the government and corporate world.
The new club, launched Saturday, says it can cure social ills such as prostitution and divorce by teaching women to be submissive and keep their men happy in the bedroom.
"Islam compels us to be obedient to our husband. Whatever he says, I must follow. It is a sin if I don't obey and make him happy," said Ummu, who wore a yellow headscarf.
The club, founded by a fringe Islamic group known as Global Ikhwan, has been dismissed by politicians and activists as a throwback to Medieval times and an insult to modern women of Malaysia. But the group's activities, which previously included the setting up of a Polygamy Club, show that pockets of conservative Islamic ideas still thrive in Malaysia.

Saving monarch butterflies stirs the 'poetical soul' of Homero Aridjis

Drug wars make headlines. Butterflies do not. Yet even as the drug-related violence in Mexico continues seemingly unabated, each year millions of monarch butterflies perform a mysterious and incredible feat overhead.
Every fall they propel themselves from the United States and Canada to a patch of high forest in central Mexico – and then back in the spring. It's not clear how they find their way, or how long they have been at it.
But what is clear is that they are under threat.
RELATED: Are you saving the planet or just showing off? Take our quiz.
Homero Aridjis, arguably Mexico's most prominent and articulate defender of the monarch butterflies, says standing up for them has been the "environmental cause of my life."
Mr. Aridjis literally grew up with the beautiful orange-and-black insects, climbing the hills in his native Michoacán State as a boy to see them "explode from the tree branches when the sun hit them," he says.
He also has been a pioneer defender of the environment in general, raising public awareness and speaking out with the authority of an award-winning poet and novelist on everything from sea turtles to gray whales to air pollution in Mexico City.

Official: 'Car-mageddon' possible with 405 closure

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Only in Los Angeles could a weekend freeway closure be compared to the end of the world.
Authorities will close Interstate 405 to do road work in July, and they took the step Monday of issuing a dire warning a full month ahead of time because of the potential traffic nightmare it could cause on one of the nation's busiest freeways.
"This doesn't need to be a car-mageddon," county Supervisor Zev Yaroslovsky said at a news conference. "The best alternative route is to totally avoid the 405 area, completely avoid it, don't come anywhere near it, don't even think about coming to it. Stay the heck out of here."
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa inadvertently made a point about the congestion, showing up a half-hour late because, you guessed it, there was heavy traffic on the freeway.
"If you think it's bad now, let me just make something absolutely clear: On July 16th and 17th, it will be an absolute nightmare," Villaraigosa said in a parking lot overlooking the freeway, where morning traffic sounded like a rushing river.
The mayor and other officials urged drivers to avoid the freeway during the work or do the unthinkable — spend a summer weekend at home.

Jilted ex-boyfriend puts up abortion billboard

ALAMOGORDO, N.M. (AP) — A New Mexico man's decision to lash out with a billboard ad saying his ex-girlfriend had an abortion against his wishes has touched off a legal debate over free speech and privacy rights.
The sign on Alamogordo's main thoroughfare shows 35-year-old Greg Fultz holding the outline of an infant. The text reads, "This Would Have Been A Picture Of My 2-Month Old Baby If The Mother Had Decided To Not KILL Our Child!"
Fultz's ex-girlfriend has taken him to court for harassment and violation of privacy. A domestic court official has recommended the billboard be removed.
But Fultz's attorney argues the order violates his client's free speech rights.
"As distasteful and offensive as the sign may be to some, for over 200 years in this country the First Amendment protects distasteful and offensive speech," Todd Holmes said.
The woman's friends say she had a miscarriage, not an abortion, according to a report in the Albuquerque Journal.

Robert Pattinson sinks teeth into MTV Movie Awards


Robert Pattinson accepts the award for best male performance at the MTV Movie Awards on Sunday, June 5, 2011, in Los Angeles. In background looking on are presenters Justin Timberlake and Mila Kunis. - AP Photo
UNIVERSAL CITY: The MTV Movie Awards was more like ”The Team Edward Show.”
”Twilight” star Robert Pattinson sucked up the spotlight – and some popcorn-shaped trophies _ at Sunday’s shenanigan-packed ceremony. Among the goofy actor’s moments: winning three different awards, unexpectedly kissing co-star Taylor Lautner, and slipping the F-word past censors when presenting Reese Witherspoon with the special MTV Generation Award.

N, JI, Q’s likeminded Senators stage walk out over Haideri


Senators Ishaq Dar, Abul Rahim Mandokhel, Professor Khursheed, Pervez Rasheed and Raja Zafarul Haq staged a walk out from the session.— File Photo
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz, Pakistan Muslim League – Quaid (likeminded) and Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) on Tuesday staged a walk out from the Senate session in protest against the nomination of Abdul Ghafoor Haideri of the Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-F (JUI-F) as Leader of the Opposition.
Senators Ishaq Dar, Abul Rahim Mandokhel, Professor Khursheed, Pervez Rasheed and Raja Zafarul Haq staged a walk out from the session.
JUI-F Secretary General Maulana Abdul Ghafoor Haideri was appointed as the new opposition leader by Senate Chairman Farooq H. Naek on Monday and hours before the start of the general debate on the federal budget for the next financial year.
Immediately after the appointment, opposition members belonging to all other parties lodged a strong protest, disrupting the proceedings.

Latest ‘X-Men’ flick tops weekend box office


Actor James McAvoy attends the "X-Men: First Class" New York Premiere at the Ziegfeld Theatre in New York. - AFP (File Photo)
LOS ANGELES: “X-Men: First Class,” a prequel that drops the franchise’s mutants into the Cuban Missile Crisis, topped the North American box office on its debut with dollar 55 million, tallies showed Monday.
Starring James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender, the fifth installment of the popular series shines light on the beginning of the X-Men saga and a “secret history” of the Cold War.
“The Hangover: Part II” was bumped from the top spot, bringing in dollar 31.3 million, for a two week total of nearly dollar 186 million, according to industry tracker Exhibitor Relations.
Bradley Cooper and company retrace their bachelor party missteps – just like the first time – but in Bangkok instead of Las Vegas.

Napoleon’s English lessons sell for 90,000 euros


A picture taken in Fontainebleau, south of Paris, shows a fragment of an Emperor Napoleon's sketch made on the island of St. Helena at Longwood house when having English lessons from 1816. The original sketches and French and English sentences he wrote will be auctioned on June 4 in Fontainebleau. - AFP PHOTO
PARIS: Napoleon’s first English lessons while he was banished to exile on the South Atlantic island of Saint Helena fetched more than 93,000 euros at an auction in France Sunday, several times more than they had been valued.
Three lots of text in English and French, as well as drawings, by the fallen emperor had been valued 7,000 to 9,500 euros, said the Osenat auction house.
“Qu’es qui itoit arrivi. What was it arrived,” Napoleon wrote in his first stumbling efforts to grasp the language of his adversaries.

Qureshi achieves career-best ATP World Ranking

Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, French Open, Wimbledon
-File photo
Pakistan’s Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, dubbed the ‘Good News Ambassador of Pakistan’, achieved his career-best ranking of No. 8 on ATP World Ranking List of Doubles players issued today.
Qureshi, riding on the back of his good run at the recently concluded French Open where he played alongside India’s Rohan Bopanna, moved two places up from his previous ranking of No. 10.
The ‘Indo-Pak Express’, as Qureshi and Bopanna are also known, will now set their sights on Wimbledon which starts June 20, and Qureshi believes the duo’s French Open experience is the ideal preparation.
“We are taking one step at a time. We will do better at the French Open next year. However, climbing two places in the ATP doubles rankings before Wimbledon is a huge achievement. It has given us more confidence which we badly needed.”
Bopanna-Qureshi will now practice in Germany on grass courts for a week before heading to England for the third Grand Slam of the year.

Afridi challenges PCB show-cause notice in Sindh High Court

shahid afridi, ijaz butt, pakistan cricket board, pcb, sindh high court
-Photo by AFP
KARACHI: Suspended Pakistan cricket star Shahid Afridi filed a petition in court against sanctions imposed on him by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), his lawyer said on Tuesday.
“We have filed a petition in the Sindh High Court against the sanctions on our client Afridi and have appealed for a stay order against the punishments against him,” lawyer Mahmood Mandviwala told AFP.
In his petition Afridi claimed that he was ‘punished’ without a proper hearing and a chance to defend himself.
Earlier, Afridi’s lawyer Syed Zafar Ali said, “If there’s any charge against anyone, he should have his legal representative, fair and proper inquiry should be held and then the decision made.”
“At least hear our client first and give him a chance to defend himself.”

Rs3bn secret funds for one ministry


Details of a secret fund which the ministry of information and broadcasting keeps for its hitherto unknown operations and officially admits having spent are also missing from the budget documents. – File Photo
ISLAMABAD: While calls for disclosing details of budgetary allocations in parliament and its standing committees are getting louder, the ministry of information and broadcasting will spend nearly Rs3 billion under the head of ‘other expenditures’ without explaining the purpose for which such a huge amount has been allocated.
Details of a secret fund which the ministry keeps for its hitherto unknown operations and officially admits having spent are also missing from the budget documents.
According to the demands for grants and appropriations presented before the National Assembly on Friday, the government has earmarked Rs4.197 billion for the ministry’s annual expenditures — a 15 per cent increase from the current year spending of Rs3.641 billion.

Heavy vehicles to cost more


An official in Hinopak Motor Company (HML) said the prices of truck chasis and complete bus hover between Rs1.6 million to Rs8 million and these vehicles will become costlier by Rs300,000 to Rs1.3 million due to imposition of 16 per cent general sales tax. — File Photo
KARACHI: The withdrawal of zero-rated exemption from commercial vehicles (trucks, diesel and CNG buses) is bound to make vehicles costlier.
An official in Hinopak Motor Company (HML) said the prices of truck chasis and complete bus hover between Rs1.6 million to Rs8 million and these vehicles will become costlier by Rs300,000 to Rs1.3 million due to imposition of 16 per cent general sales tax.

US waits for economic reforms by new partner India


In the nearly seven months since Obama pressed for stronger economic ties during a visit to India, US firms have struck out in the bidding for an $11 billion jet fighter contract that the president had lobbied for. — File Photo
WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama calls US relations with India a defining partnership of the 21st century. But despite India’s approval this week of a major defense deal, the US still has a hard time doing business with the world’s second most populous nation.
In the nearly seven months since Obama pressed for stronger economic ties during a visit to India, US firms have struck out in the bidding for an $11 billion jet fighter contract that the president had lobbied for.
India has been slow to ease barriers to trade and investment that Washington seeks. It has barred imports of technology for a multibillion-dollar Indian government-backed program to boost production of solar energy. The only notable move toward market opening was in reducing tariffs on sun-dried raisins, cranberry products and pistachios.

Suicides shed light on darker side of Dubai’s glitz


Workers complain of unpaid wages, excessive working hours, high recruitment fees, isolation and employers holding their passports to restrict their movement. — Photo by AFP
DUBAI: Indian labourer Athiraman Kannan kept to his routine in the hours before he jumped off the world’s tallest building.
Three weeks ago, he arrived at Dubai’s Burj Khalifa at 7 a.m., clocked in and headed to where he was working on the upper reaches of the 163-storey tower. About an hour later, the 38-year-old father of one flung himself off the Burj Khalifa’s 147th floor, dying instantly when he hit the 108th floor.
“I spoke to him the night before and he seemed fine,” said another Indian worker, a friend and former roommate who had known him for seven years. “I still can’t believe he did this.”

15 killed in clashes between army, Qaeda in south Yemen


“Heavy fighting broke out between the army and al Qaeda gunmen when troops advanced towards the city to storm it,” said a military official, giving a toll of nine soldiers dead and at least 10 wounded. - Reuters (File Photo)
ADEN, Yemen: Heavy clashes between troops and suspected al Qaeda gunmen at the entrance to the southern Yemen city of Zinjibar left 15 people dead, nine of them soldiers, the military and medics said Tuesday.

Pakistan, China agree to strengthen intelligence cooperation


In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, members of China's armed police force capture supposed terrorists during a joint anti-terror drill in Kashgar, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, May 6, 2011. — Photo by AP
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has assured China of providing full intelligence cooperation on the activities of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), DawnNews reported.

Clinton reserved about French Mideast peace talks


US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, pictured with French counterpart Alain Juppe, gave a cool welcome to a French plan to host a Middle East peace conference. - AFP Photo
WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton gave a cool welcome Monday to a French plan to host a Middle East peace conference, saying it must be linked to a willingness to resume talks.“The idea of any gathering, conference or meeting has to be linked to willingness by the parties to resume negotiating,” the chief US diplomat said during a press conference with her French counterpart Alain Juppe.
“We strongly support a return to negotiations but we do not think that it would be productive for there to be a conference about returning to negotiations.” Her comments coincided with violent protests that left at least 10 people dead along the Syrian ceasefire line on the 44th anniversary of Israel’s seizure of the Golan Heights, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip in the 1967 Middle East war in an event known in Arabic as the “Naksa” or “setback.”

Rain romantic or rain skeptic?

The Urdu poet Shahryar correctly captured the city of Mumbai (then Bombay) when he wrote:
Seene mein jalan, aankhon mein toofan sa kyun hai, Iss shehr mein har shaks pareshan sa kyun hai.”
Certainly, the aam janta of this sprawling metropolis is weighed down by many burdens, not the least of commuting long distances in packed trains and buses.
The miserable heat and humidity too is getting to people this summer and like ever year, the Mumbaiwallah is waiting expectantly for the monsoons to hit. That will bring coolness and relief, but it will also, inevitably, bring many hassles, which is what explains the schizophrenic attitude of residents to the four month monsoon season. Read on.
Here’s how it goes every year: by the end of May, the city is drooping in the heat. Those who can, have escaped and the roads certainly feel empty, but the vast majority has no option but to plod on. Thousands converge to the sea fronts to “eat the breeze” (hawa khane ko) but that is a temporary refuge.
Now the build up, the rains begins. Will the monsoon hit on time? Will it be normal? Are the local authorities prepared to handle the impact of the rains?

Santorum kicks off 2012 bid in Pennsylvania

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, once the No. 3 Republican in the Senate, said Monday he's seeking the GOP nomination for president to protect American freedoms under threat from President Barack Obama.
A blunt-talking favorite among party social conservatives, Santorum said Obama has worked to undermine Americans' freedoms and pushed through a national health care plan that reduces individual choices. He accused Obama of spending billions of dollars that add to future generations' debts and said the president doubts the nation's potential.
"I'm ready to lead. I'm ready to do what has to be done for the next generation, with the courage to fight for freedom, with the courage to fight for America," Santorum said, speaking the sun-splashed steps of a county courthouse in western Pennsylvania. "That's why I'm announcing today that I'm running for president of the United States of America."
Santorum, who enjoys strong support from the anti-abortion rights bloc in the Republican Party, nodded to the social conservatives who have huge sway in early nominating states of Iowa and South Carolina. He also pitched himself to tea party-style activists who have yet to jell around a single candidate.

2011 Infiniti G Coupe

2011 Infiniti G Coupe pictures
Rating: 9.0

Bottom Line:

For a $5,500 premium over a G37 coupe with the Sport package, the IPL model is a sleek and seductive performance bargain. The IPL equipment adds both performance and luxury, but the car is not a track toy like a BMW M3. Instead, it compares more directly to a BMW 335is or an Audi S4, but offers more equipment and lower prices than both. It doesn’t quite have the cachet of those models, but it’s still a heck of a lot of fun.

Massive solar flare somersaults


The "Behind" member of NASA's STEREO spacecraft studying the sun has captured spectacular imagery of a rare somersaulting coronal mass ejection.

A movie of the event combines images captured with the spacecraft's Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUVI) and Inner Coronograph (COR1) telescopes.
The prominence is first seen erupting in the EUVI images and then in white light with COR1. In the white light images, the prominence pauses. Some of the material then drains back down, but most of it is defected to the north and ends up raining down on a different part of the sun.
According to NASA, this is unusual behavior and will be studied carefully by scientists.
To check our more images from NASA missions, be sure to check out the NASA Goddard stream on Flickr.

'Avatar' director targets spaceflight


Steve Boxall / X Prize Foundation
"Avatar" director James Cameron and friends enjoy a zero-gravity airplane flight last October. From left are Rob McEwen, chairman of US Gold; Cameron; Peter Diamandis, chairman and CEO of the X Prize Foundation; Elon Musk, chairman and CEO of SpaceX; and Jim Gianopulos, chairman and CEO of Fox Filmed Entertainment.
The director of the biggest blockbuster movie in history, James Cameron, still has his heart set on flying in space someday — and some reports suggest he might be up for a trip on the moon.
But Cameron says his trip into Earth orbit or beyond won't be merely a joyride: It's got to have a bigger purpose, and part of that purpose would be to document the real-life wonders of the cosmos on film, much as he did in the fictional, computer-augmented setting of "Avatar."

School's out! Summer shows fit for kids of all ages

Image: "WordGirl"
Courtesy of Scholastic/Soup2Nuts
This summer, PBS will tie many of its series in with books and literacy. Among them is "WordGirl," who will be expanding her vocabulary as she battles bad guys.
Summer’s here and the livin’ may not be easy — especially if you have children out of school for the summer and running around like crazy. But the TV schedule is just bursting with great ideas for the times you can’t just send them outside to soak up the sun.

From 'Battlefield' to 'Sims,' EA steps up social gaming


From a new "Sims" game for Facebook to a new online social experience for the "FIFA Soccer" franchise to the highly anticipated online game "Star Wars: The Old Republic," game giants Electronic Arts and Ubisoft spent Monday showing off games that emphasize social and online play.
During a press conference in advance of this week's video game extravaganza known as E3, Electronic Arts executives and the developers they work with took to the stage at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles to reveal a variety of games they have in the works.

Minorities: Agents of White Supremacy?

Minorities: Agents of White Supremacy?Dr. Nitasha Sharna, a biracial scholar of cross-cultural relations, is doing away with the notion that minorities are solely the victims of white supremacy. They can also be the perpetrators, she said in remarks at the 24th annual meeting of the National Conference on Race & Ethnicity in American Higher Education.
Another twist: Hip-hop could be part of the solution.

T-Pain Is Over Auto-Tune. He Promises

T-Pain Is Over Auto-Tune. He Promises
Producer and rapper T-Pain has vowed never to use the Auto-Tune effect again, possibly signaling the end of a long-running trend in R&B and hip-hop music, AllHipHop.com reports.
Does this mean the return of actual, human-sounding voices? Not quite. He's just on to the next thing. He's vowed to ditch the Auto-Tune technology for his own new vocal processor.

Study: Single Moms Suffer From Poor Health Later in Life

Study: Single Moms Suffer From Poor Health Later in Life
As if being a single mom wasn't tough enough, a recent study suggests that it can actually be bad for your health. Researchers at Ohio State University studied nearly 4,000 mothers over a 30-year span (1979-2008) and found that the women who had children when they were single reported being less healthy when they reached their 40s, compared with women who raised their children with the children's father.

A Tribute To Albertina Sisulu

A Tribute To Albertina Sisulu
I was saddened by the news that Albertina Sisulu, one of the great leaders of the African National Congress had died at the age of 92. She was the widow of Walter Sisulu, the first secretary general of the ANC, a Robben Island prisoner and colleague of Nelson Mandela. She was a retired nurse and midwife.
She had made extraordinary personal sacrifices so that the ordinary African could lead a dignified life, free of the daily discriminations and humiliations that constituted the Apartheid System. She endured a lot so that each person, regardless of race, creed or gender, could enjoy the full range of pleasures and sorrows, challenges and accomplishments that define the daily essence of an ordinary person. Best of all, she and her late husband epitomized the proposition that a decent married couple, seeking the best for their children, could also be committed activists for a just South Africa.

The Black Man Behind Lady Gaga

The Black Man Behind Lady Gaga
While Lady Gaga herself (real name: Stefani Joanne Germanotta) is the artist and creative mind behind Lady Gaga Inc., her lesser-known manager, Troy Carter, is leading the enterprise's digital strategy. He's using a unique strategy involving a broad range of online tools to "keep the Gaga machine in overdrive," the New York Times reports.

Palin's Nonsense About Debt-Ceiling Warnings

The Republican mischief maker is at it again, and this time her target is the Treasury secretary.

Palin's Nonsense About Debt-Ceiling Warnings
Earlier this week, Sarah Palin demonstrated why certain stars should never dabble in politics when she said the Republican Party platform is "best for America" because "[i]t's all about respecting equality." Never mind the document calls for etching discrimination into the Constitution with an amendment banning same-sex marriage. Well, yesterday, Palin was at it again. This time sputtering nonsense about Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's warnings about the danger of not raising the national debt limit.

'Single Ladies'? Must We?

Single-Minded: VH1 is stepping into scripted territory with the "urban Sex and the City." Lord help us all.

'Single Ladies'? Must We?
Last weekend I was coaxed into the club despite my popular post-30 hook, "Grown women don't dance; we ... sit the hell down." Over the years, my hooves have done more than enough Electric Sliding, strolling and two-stepping. So I've been boycotting the club since I stopped buying my going-out clothes at Bebe.
"That chick over there clearly doesn't have any friends," I yelled over the music on Saturday. Because friends don't let friends dance in a spandex diaper. Unless, of course, they're the fictional stars of VH1's first hour-long dramedy, Single Ladies, which premiered earlier this week.

Miami Police Accused of Destroying Evidence of Memorial Day Shooting

Miami Police Accused of Destroying Evidence of Memorial Day Shooting
In a new development in the racially charged controversy surrounding the deadly shootings by police officers at Miami's Annual Memorial Day Urban Beach Week Festival, the Miami Herald reports that a couple who filmed the incident has accused officers of intimidation, destroying evidence and twisting the facts.
Narces Benoit and his girlfriend, Ericka Davis, told the newspaper that they saw the end of the 4 a.m. police chase that preceded the shooting, and then used a cellphone to film from just a few feet away as a dozen officers fired their guns repeatedly into 22-year-old Raymond Herisse's blue Hyundai. Herisse was killed, and four bystanders and three officers were injured in the process.

Critics Call Out Sesame Street's 'Anti-Conservative' Bias, Cadbury Apologizes to Naomi and More

Critics Call Out Sesame Street's 'Anti-Conservative' Bias, Cadbury Apologizes to Naomi and More
Sesame Street's alleged "anti-conservative" discrimination: Bet you didn't know Elmo was a democratic operative. Panelists on Sean Hannity's Fox News talk show argued that the beloved kids' show actually dumbs down black and Latino youths and promotes so-called anti-conservative discrimination because it encourages parents to use gender-neutral pronouns. Ken Blackwell, who is African American and previously served as Ohio's secretary of state, argues that the show is a "direct assault on our country's moral foundation." Definitely a more urgent issue than the economy. Definitely.

The Root's Black Bucket List

You don't need to travel the world to find yourself. There's a treasure trove of black history and culture right here in the U.S. The Root explores the places you've got to see in your lifetime.

 The Root's Black Bucket List
Years ago the late, great James Baldwin, the ultimate black expat, said this of his travels: "I met a lot of people in Europe. I even encountered myself." He wasn't being glib. Travel is the great expander, obliterating borders, changing perceptions, both of the outside world -- and of the self.

Plessy and Ferguson: Progeny of a Divisive Court Decision Unite

Keith Plessy and Phoebe Ferguson decided to start a new civil rights education organization that would bear their famous names.

Plessy and Ferguson: Progeny of a Divisive Court Decision Unite

Written by Robert Barnes
When Keith Plessy and Phoebe Ferguson decided to start a new civil rights education organization that would bear their famous names, they sealed the deal in a fitting local spot: Cafe Reconcile.
They represent the opposing principals in one of the Supreme Court's landmark decisions, Plessy v. Ferguson, which upheld the constitutionality of Jim Crow laws mandating segregation under the "separate but equal" doctrine. It stood from 1896 until the court's historic Brown v. Board of Education ruling in 1954.

Hooray for Twitter's Black Tilt

Just as African Americans have influenced language and style, they've "blackened up" Twitter -- 140 snappy and irreverent characters at a time.

Hooray for Twitter's Black Tilt
Twitter's black tilt is wonderful. The big story is not that it's sketchy to even notice it. Nor is the big story that the general level of "blacktags" is not that of a graduate seminar. The big news is that America is talking black.

Healthy(ish) Choices For The Next BBQ

Is it just me, or are we already in the thick of BBQ season? People must be super eager to fire up their grills, because the BBQ invites are coming fast and furious. I love a good BBQ--especially when I don't max out on chips and dip (a weakness) and take a healthier, still-yummy route...
0606-healthy-bbq_vg.jpg
It's one thing when you're the person in charge of the party--you can make the menu as nutritious (or not nutritious!) as you want it to be. But when you're a guest, you've kind of got to make do with what's there. So check out some of the healthier BBQ bets:

The great American yard sale

Image: Home garage sale © Image Source Pink, Jupiterimages
For years, baby boomers have accumulated vast quantities of stuff, from the usual household furnishings to rare antiques and collectibles. With retirement, it's time to sell it off.

US braces for withdrawal along Iraqi road


Even as the American military winds down its eight-year war in Iraq, commanders are bracing for what they fear could be the most dangerous remaining mission: getting the last troops out safely.
The resurgent threat posed by militants was underscored Monday when rockets slammed into a military base in eastern Baghdad, killing six service members in the most deadly day for American forces here since 2009. In recent weeks, insurgent fighters have stepped up their efforts to kill American forces in what appears to be a strategy to press the United States to withdraw on schedule, undercut any resolve to leave troops in Iraq, and win a public relations victory at home by claiming credit for the American withdrawal.
American commanders say one of the gravest threats to the 46,000 troops here is that they could become easy targets for insurgents when they begin their final withdrawal this summer and head for the border along a 160-mile stretch of road cutting through the desert into Kuwait.
“Our forces were attacked today, and we were just sitting still,” said Col. Douglas Crissman, who is in charge of American forces in four provinces of southern Iraq, and is overseeing highway security in them. “What is going to happen to the threat when we line up our trucks to leave and start moving out of the country?”
Cash payments for tribal leaders
Eight years in Iraq has taught the United States military a hard-learned lesson, that American forces cannot effectively secure large areas without the help of the local people. So commanders have fashioned an exit strategy which borrows a key element from the Awakening Movement, a successful tactical program carried out in 2006, just as the violence was peaking. The American exit strategy calls for the military to give cash payments of $10,000 a month to 10 tribal leaders.
Officially, the money is paid to have Iraqis clean the crucial roadway of debris, an apparent pretense because an Iraqi-American agreement bars outright payments for security. The sheiks keep some of the cash and use the rest to hire 35 workers each who clear the road of trash. The work does make it harder for militants to hide bombs.
But the military says it is aiming for more than a highway beautification project. It is hoping for local people to help police the road and the area, and to provide intelligence on militants.
“I can’t possibly be all places at one time,” said Colonel Crissman. “There are real incentives for them to keep the highway safe. Those sheiks we have the best relationships with and have kept their highways clear and safe will be the most likely ones to get renewed for the remainder of the year.”
So far, the contracts have proved to be a cost-effective method for improving troop safety, even at $100,000 a month. Roadside bomb attacks on American and Iraqi soldiers stationed in the area are down, officials said, as are rocket attacks on the military base from areas controlled by the sheiks.
The contracts, officials said, cost far less than nearly all the other measures the military has used in Iraq to ensure security, and sheiks provide the names of the workers so the military can conduct a security check.
“The cost of a damaged MRAP that gets hit by an explosive device is $400,000, and we are not even talking about the cost of a human life,” said Colonel Crissman, referring to an armored vehicle the American troops use. “Given the amount of money we have spent in this country, $100,000 to secure our highway a month is a small price to pay, especially given the importance of the highway to the withdrawal.”
Competing for loyalties
On many days, workers can be seen raking up trash and throwing tires into pickup trucks. Several times a week, the military flies over the highway to ensure that the sections are clean. The value of the contracts — along with their limitations — is evident in roads neighboring the highway, where attacks are up.
That has prompted commanders to begin to expand the program to include neighboring roads as well.
And local sheiks across southern Iraq are more than eager for the cash, jockeying for a chance to collect what may the last bit of military largess. The money also helps the sheiks solidify the loyalty of their own people by giving them the power to dole out jobs.
But the military says the Shiite militias are also aware of the influence cash payments can have with tribal leaders, and so they, too, try to buy allegiance, intelligence and access. “There are some sheiks who are working for the other team and are being paid well by the militants so they can operate in their land,” Colonel Crissman said, referring to Shiite militants who operate in southern Iraq.
Shiite militias and followers of the anti-American Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr have been some of the United States’ fiercest enemies in Iraq. The groups, which have close ties to Iran, have stepped up their anti-American activities recently as Iraqi lawmakers in Baghdad have debated whether to ask the Americans to stay past their scheduled departure date.
Last week, followers of Mr. Sadr, whose Shiite militia, the Mahdi Army, was largely defeated three years ago, held a mass demonstration in Baghdad in which they marched unarmed in formations, trampling over American flags and calling for the Americans to withdraw. The potential value of the highway cleaning contracts was illustrated last month when a reporter for The New York Times accompanied Lt. Col. Robert Wright to a lunch with tribal leaders.
The meeting, which took place in a tent in the middle of a barren stretch of dessert, lasted for three hours, as the tribe’s leaders and Americans ate from large platters of rice and lamb and talked about their families and Iraqi politics. Then on the ride back toward the American base, one of the tribal leaders offered a bit of intelligence regarding Shiite militants who he said met regularly in an open field.
The colonel said he was interested — and then the local leader raised the topic of a contract, to clean the highway.
Image: Army Stryker armored vehicles leave Iraq in August 2010
Maya Alleruzzo  /  AP
A column of Army Stryker armored vehicles cross the border from Iraq into Kuwait on Aug. 18. The Army's 4th Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment, part of the 4th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, were the last combat brigade to leave Iraq as part of the drawdown of U.S. forces.

Sunday, 5 June 2011

Mumbai taxi: 10 tips to make you a smarter passenger

Mumbai taxi
You may have traveled to the wildest amusement parks the world over -- Dreamworld, Disneyland, Six Flags Great Adventure -- and ridden the craziest roller coasters on earth. You may have bungee jumped off a cliff and gone skydiving without professional assistance.
You may have even watched a pregnant Celine Dion live in concert. But. Nothing trips your heart quite like a ride in a good old Fiat Mumbai taxi cab.

IMF set to lend struggling Egypt $3 billion

The International Monetary Fund has tentatively agreed to lend $3 billion to Egypt to support the country's economy.
Cairo (CNN) -- The International Monetary Fund has tentatively agreed to lend $3 billion to Egypt to support the country's economy for the next year, the IMF announced Sunday.
The five-year, 1.5% interest loan must be approved by the IMF board in July. But the agency praised the draft budget Egyptian officials have drawn up for the country's new fiscal year, which starts July 1.

Nadal equals Borg with record sixth French Open title

Rafael Nadal celebrates securing his sixth French Open title after a four-set victory over old rival Roger Federer.
(CNN) -- Rafael Nadal beat Roger Federer in four titanic sets to secure his sixth French Open title at Roland Garros on Sunday, equalling the record of Bjorn Borg in the process.
Top seed Nadal, who was taken to five sets by John Isner in his opening match, found his form the longer the tournament went on, and played majestically to overcome his old adversary and third seed 7-5 7-6 5-7 6-1.
The Spaniard has still only ever lost once in Paris, to Robin Soderling in 2009, the year that Federer went on to win his only French Open title.

Stuntmen try to crash Academy Awards

As of the 83rd Academy Awards, hosted by Anne Hathaway and James Franco, there is no category for stunt coordinators.
Los Angeles (CNN) -- While Oscars go to those who do makeup, design costumes and mix sound for movies, those who crash cars, fall from tall buildings and blow things up can't get an Academy Award.
Stunt coordinator Jack Gill has broken his back twice and his neck once during his 32-year career. He's hit a brick wall for the past 20 years trying to convince the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to honor his profession.