2013, സെപ്റ്റംബർ 21, ശനിയാഴ്‌ച

Yemen blasts death toll touches 65

Aden (Yemen): The death toll in three suicide car bombings that ripped through a key military site and police centre in Yemen's southeastern province of Shabwa Friday has risen to at least 65. 'At least 65 army and security soldiers died and 38 others were wounded in three simultaneous car bombing attacks that targeted the police station headquarters and army-held sites in Azzan area in Shabwa,' a provincial security official told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.

A police officer said that the deadliest of Friday's attacks took place when an Al Qaeda suicide bomber drove his explosive-laden car into the army-held site in Azzan near an oil pipeline. Medical officials in a nearby military hospital confirmed the casualty figures to Xinhua. An earlier report Friday said that three explosives-rigged cars went off at a military site in Azzan, killing at least 40 soldiers and wounding dozens of others.

An army source said that the security forces, backed by heavy armoured vehicles, have been deployed in large numbers around the scene. A witness told Xinhua that he 'saw a number of charred bodies near the police centre and the bodies of five high-ranking army officers brought out of it'.

'The bombs struck an army base and huge clouds of black smoke billowed into the air,' the witness added. The toll in the suicide attacks could rise as ambulances and civilian cars evacuated the victims to different hospitals and medical centres in the city, according to local sources.

A official in the security operations room in Shabwa told Xinhua that the troops killed in the army barracks were responsible for securing and protecting a nearby oil installation in the southern edge of the province.  Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has claimed responsibility for the bombings. 

An AQAP spokesman told Xinhua over the phone that it launched the attacks a few minutes after a US drone attacked a car carrying militants in the Eyen Ma'Bad area in Shabwa and killed all those on board. The Yemen-based AQAP, which emerged in January 2009, is considered the most strategic threat to the Yemeni government and its neighboring oil-rich Saudi Arabia.  The studies have proved that increase in death rates in bike accidents are due to not wearing helmets.

Yemen blasts death toll touches 65

Aden (Yemen): The death toll in three suicide car bombings that ripped through a key military site and police centre in Yemen's southeastern province of Shabwa Friday has risen to at least 65. 'At least 65 army and security soldiers died and 38 others were wounded in three simultaneous car bombing attacks that targeted the police station headquarters and army-held sites in Azzan area in Shabwa,' a provincial security official told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.

A police officer said that the deadliest of Friday's attacks took place when an Al Qaeda suicide bomber drove his explosive-laden car into the army-held site in Azzan near an oil pipeline. Medical officials in a nearby military hospital confirmed the casualty figures to Xinhua. An earlier report Friday said that three explosives-rigged cars went off at a military site in Azzan, killing at least 40 soldiers and wounding dozens of others.

An army source said that the security forces, backed by heavy armoured vehicles, have been deployed in large numbers around the scene. A witness told Xinhua that he 'saw a number of charred bodies near the police centre and the bodies of five high-ranking army officers brought out of it'.

'The bombs struck an army base and huge clouds of black smoke billowed into the air,' the witness added. The toll in the suicide attacks could rise as ambulances and civilian cars evacuated the victims to different hospitals and medical centres in the city, according to local sources.

A official in the security operations room in Shabwa told Xinhua that the troops killed in the army barracks were responsible for securing and protecting a nearby oil installation in the southern edge of the province.  Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has claimed responsibility for the bombings. 

An AQAP spokesman told Xinhua over the phone that it launched the attacks a few minutes after a US drone attacked a car carrying militants in the Eyen Ma'Bad area in Shabwa and killed all those on board. The Yemen-based AQAP, which emerged in January 2009, is considered the most strategic threat to the Yemeni government and its neighboring oil-rich Saudi Arabia.  The studies have proved that increase in death rates in bike accidents are due to not wearing helmets.

Helmet: License to be suspended

Thiruvananthapuram: Motor Vehicles department will suspend the license of the two-wheeler drivers riding without wearing helmet. Transport commissioner Rishi Raj Singh directed the same to officers in MV department. 

Helmet: License to be suspended

Thiruvananthapuram: Motor Vehicles department will suspend the license of the two-wheeler drivers riding without wearing helmet. Transport commissioner Rishi Raj Singh directed the same to officers in MV department. 

Yoga Guru Baba Ramdev detained for six hours at Heathrow

London: Yoga guru Baba Ramdev was today detained and questioned at Heathrow airport for over six hours by British customs officials. Ramdev was questioned by customs officials as he came here on a visitor visa instead of a business visa, sources
said. Some media reports also said that Ramdev was questioned about certain medicines he was carrying with him. Ramdev's spokesman S K Tejarawala described as 'baseless' that he was being questioned on carrying some medicines.
'It was not clear why the Yoga guru was detained for over six hours at Heathrow. He was not carrying anything with him except a small bag of personal effects. It is for the British authorities to explain why he was detained,' Tejarawala told
PTI.

He said Ramdev has been cleared to go into the city. Ramdev went to London to attend a function organised by the Patanjali Yogpeeth on the 120th anniversary of Swami Vivekananda in the next couple of days. PTI

Yoga Guru Baba Ramdev detained for six hours at Heathrow

London: Yoga guru Baba Ramdev was today detained and questioned at Heathrow airport for over six hours by British customs officials. Ramdev was questioned by customs officials as he came here on a visitor visa instead of a business visa, sources
said. Some media reports also said that Ramdev was questioned about certain medicines he was carrying with him. Ramdev's spokesman S K Tejarawala described as 'baseless' that he was being questioned on carrying some medicines.
'It was not clear why the Yoga guru was detained for over six hours at Heathrow. He was not carrying anything with him except a small bag of personal effects. It is for the British authorities to explain why he was detained,' Tejarawala told
PTI.

He said Ramdev has been cleared to go into the city. Ramdev went to London to attend a function organised by the Patanjali Yogpeeth on the 120th anniversary of Swami Vivekananda in the next couple of days. PTI

Simple tips to reduce stomach acid

London: Stomach acid is very important for digestion but it should not become very high, says a food expert. Avoiding spicy food is the best way to keep it under control. According to Geeta Sidhu-Robb, raw food pioneer and creator of the Nosh Detox - a diet that helps in removing toxins from the body, one should avoid spicy food that causes such a problem. 

She also shares other tips to reduce stomach acid, reports femalefirst.co.uk. - Eat smaller and lighter meals regularly. - Avoid eating late in the night, also sleep with your head in a raised position. - Avoid peppermint tea. - Losing weight provides a long term solution to stomach acid. - Medications like aspirin and Ibuprofen make it worse. - Avoid smoking as this makes the occurrence of acid reflux more likely


Simple tips to reduce stomach acid

London: Stomach acid is very important for digestion but it should not become very high, says a food expert. Avoiding spicy food is the best way to keep it under control. According to Geeta Sidhu-Robb, raw food pioneer and creator of the Nosh Detox - a diet that helps in removing toxins from the body, one should avoid spicy food that causes such a problem. 

She also shares other tips to reduce stomach acid, reports femalefirst.co.uk. - Eat smaller and lighter meals regularly. - Avoid eating late in the night, also sleep with your head in a raised position. - Avoid peppermint tea. - Losing weight provides a long term solution to stomach acid. - Medications like aspirin and Ibuprofen make it worse. - Avoid smoking as this makes the occurrence of acid reflux more likely


Deep Impact comet research mission ends: NASA

Washington: The US space agency has announced an end to its eight-year Deep Impact mission that included an unprecedented impact, comet flybys and the return of approximately 500,000 images of celestial objects, Xinhua reported Friday. Deep Impact was most travelled comet research mission in history, going about 4.7 billion miles (7.58 billion km).

The project team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) gave up on the Deep Impact after being unable to communicate with the spacecraft for more than a month. The last communication with the probe was Aug 8. 'Deep Impact has been a fantastic, long-lasting spacecraft that has produced far more data than we had planned,' Mike A'Hearn, Deep Impact principal investigator at the University of Maryland said in a statement. 'It has revolutionised our understanding of comets and their activity.'

Launched in January 2005, the spacecraft first made worldwide headlines July 4, 2005, when it released a refrigerator-sized impactor to collide spectacularly with comet Tempel 1, giving scientists their first-ever view of pristine material from inside a comet.


Deep Impact comet research mission ends: NASA

Washington: The US space agency has announced an end to its eight-year Deep Impact mission that included an unprecedented impact, comet flybys and the return of approximately 500,000 images of celestial objects, Xinhua reported Friday. Deep Impact was most travelled comet research mission in history, going about 4.7 billion miles (7.58 billion km).

The project team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) gave up on the Deep Impact after being unable to communicate with the spacecraft for more than a month. The last communication with the probe was Aug 8. 'Deep Impact has been a fantastic, long-lasting spacecraft that has produced far more data than we had planned,' Mike A'Hearn, Deep Impact principal investigator at the University of Maryland said in a statement. 'It has revolutionised our understanding of comets and their activity.'

Launched in January 2005, the spacecraft first made worldwide headlines July 4, 2005, when it released a refrigerator-sized impactor to collide spectacularly with comet Tempel 1, giving scientists their first-ever view of pristine material from inside a comet.