2013, ഫെബ്രുവരി 27, ബുധനാഴ്‌ച

Death sentence for two in Anitha Murder case



KOZHIKODE: Two persons were Wednesday awarded capital punishment by a local court here for killing a college student after outraging here modesty in Wayanad about two years ago.
District Sessions Judge M J Shaktidharan awarded death sentence to first and second accused Nazer and Eratta Gafoor respectively after finding them guilty of killing Parallel College student Anitha after raping her at Appappara forest on August 9, 2011.
Prosecution had argued that accused Nazer had admitting of abducting Anitha in the guise of love and strangulating her to death after rape.

Death sentence for two in Anitha Murder case



KOZHIKODE: Two persons were Wednesday awarded capital punishment by a local court here for killing a college student after outraging here modesty in Wayanad about two years ago.
District Sessions Judge M J Shaktidharan awarded death sentence to first and second accused Nazer and Eratta Gafoor respectively after finding them guilty of killing Parallel College student Anitha after raping her at Appappara forest on August 9, 2011.
Prosecution had argued that accused Nazer had admitting of abducting Anitha in the guise of love and strangulating her to death after rape.

Veena Malik kissed by 100 men in 60 seconds


MUMBAI: Controversial Pakistani actress Veena Malik has entered the Guinness World Records by receiving 137 kisses on her hand in one minute. She admits it is for the sake of her upcoming film The City That Never Sleeps.

"I am a celebrity anyway and if you say that it is for publicity, ok, yeah, we need publicity for The City That Never Sleeps," Veena said here Tuesday after breaking the earlier record set by Salman Khan of 108 kisses.

"We have to break 20 records for the film and this is one of the records," she added.  In 2011, Salman had got 108 kisses in a minute on a TV reality show Guinness World Record - Ab India Todega.

It was Veena's birthday on February 26 and the men were chosen through contest The City that Never Sleeps-Bollywood Hunt. "Long back we decided that I will break this record on my birthday and now we have to break 19 more records for The City That Never Sleeps," Veena said.

"So if you call it publicity, then yes, it is for publicity. Films are for what? For publicity, right?" When she was asked which Bollywood actor she wants to kiss on the screen, she said: "I would like to kiss the actor who does not like kissing on-screen and he is our Dabangg Khan Salman Khan. I think that would be beautiful if we have a kiss on-screen."

Veena Malik kissed by 100 men in 60 seconds


MUMBAI: Controversial Pakistani actress Veena Malik has entered the Guinness World Records by receiving 137 kisses on her hand in one minute. She admits it is for the sake of her upcoming film The City That Never Sleeps.

"I am a celebrity anyway and if you say that it is for publicity, ok, yeah, we need publicity for The City That Never Sleeps," Veena said here Tuesday after breaking the earlier record set by Salman Khan of 108 kisses.

"We have to break 20 records for the film and this is one of the records," she added.  In 2011, Salman had got 108 kisses in a minute on a TV reality show Guinness World Record - Ab India Todega.

It was Veena's birthday on February 26 and the men were chosen through contest The City that Never Sleeps-Bollywood Hunt. "Long back we decided that I will break this record on my birthday and now we have to break 19 more records for The City That Never Sleeps," Veena said.

"So if you call it publicity, then yes, it is for publicity. Films are for what? For publicity, right?" When she was asked which Bollywood actor she wants to kiss on the screen, she said: "I would like to kiss the actor who does not like kissing on-screen and he is our Dabangg Khan Salman Khan. I think that would be beautiful if we have a kiss on-screen."

2013, ഫെബ്രുവരി 25, തിങ്കളാഴ്‌ച

Karat flags off CPI-M's southern march


Kanyakumari : CPI-M general secretary Prakash Karat Sunday launched the southern leg of his party's 'Sangharsh Sandesh Jatha' - march for struggle - that will highlight problems faced by the common people, including price rise and corruption.

The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) will also send three other jathas - from Kolkata on March 1, Amristar on March 4 and from Mumbai on March 8th. They will all culminate at Delhi's Ramlila grounds with a rally on March 19.

Other smaller jathas will begin from from Assam, Odisha, Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh and will join the main marches.

'The purpose of the jatha is to highlight the problems faced by the people on account of price rise, unemployment, the problems faced by the farmers and the massive corruption. We are the only one to form alternative policies to the present ones being laid out by either the Congress or the BJP,' said Karat while launching the jatha.

The southern leg of the 'jatha', led by politburo member S.Ramachandran Pillai, will enter Kerala Monday. It will pass through eight of the state's 14 districts before entering Tamil Nadu again through Palakkad.

'Through this march, the CPI-M will mobilise people to fight for their rights, especially the right to food, right to employment, education, health. Besides, it will ask the people to fight the massive corruption in the country,' added Karat.

Altogether, more than 10,000 km will be covered by all the four marches of the CPI-M.

Ten lakh copies of a booklet explaining the aim of the march have been published in various languages for the campaign.

Karat flags off CPI-M's southern march


Kanyakumari : CPI-M general secretary Prakash Karat Sunday launched the southern leg of his party's 'Sangharsh Sandesh Jatha' - march for struggle - that will highlight problems faced by the common people, including price rise and corruption.

The Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) will also send three other jathas - from Kolkata on March 1, Amristar on March 4 and from Mumbai on March 8th. They will all culminate at Delhi's Ramlila grounds with a rally on March 19.

Other smaller jathas will begin from from Assam, Odisha, Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh and will join the main marches.

'The purpose of the jatha is to highlight the problems faced by the people on account of price rise, unemployment, the problems faced by the farmers and the massive corruption. We are the only one to form alternative policies to the present ones being laid out by either the Congress or the BJP,' said Karat while launching the jatha.

The southern leg of the 'jatha', led by politburo member S.Ramachandran Pillai, will enter Kerala Monday. It will pass through eight of the state's 14 districts before entering Tamil Nadu again through Palakkad.

'Through this march, the CPI-M will mobilise people to fight for their rights, especially the right to food, right to employment, education, health. Besides, it will ask the people to fight the massive corruption in the country,' added Karat.

Altogether, more than 10,000 km will be covered by all the four marches of the CPI-M.

Ten lakh copies of a booklet explaining the aim of the march have been published in various languages for the campaign.

Earthquake shakes buildings in Tokyo


Tokyo: A 5.7-magnitude earthquake hit Japan on Monday, setting buildings in the capital swaying but causing no risk of a tsunami, seismologists said.

National broadcaster NHK said there had been no abnormalities detected at nuclear power plants near the epicentre, which was north of Tokyo, where buildings rocked for upwards of half a minute.

The US Geological Survey said the quake had hit at 16:23 (0723 GMT), with its epicentre 57 kilometres (36 miles) north-northeast of Maebashi and around 143 kilometres north-northwest of Tokyo.

The agency said it had struck at a depth of nine kilometres.

The Japan Meteorological Agency had earlier put the magnitude at 6.2

Takayuki Fukuda, an official at the Nikko city fire department in Tochigi prefecture, near the epicentre, told AFP by telephone that the quake had rocked the city, a popular spot on the tourist trail.

'It shook vertically for about 10 seconds. Nothing fell from shelves and window glass was not shattered. There was no report of fire and we are preparing to patrol the city,' he said.

He said there had been preliminary reports that a wall in the city had tumbled, injuring an unspecified number of people.

NHK said several bullet trains had been temporarily stopped, but service had resumed moments later.

Japan is regularly hit by powerful earthquakes and has largely adapted its infrastructure to tremors that can cause widespread damage in other, less developed countries.

However, a huge undersea quake with a magnitude of 9.0 in March 2011 sent a towering tsunami into the northeast of the country, devastating coastal communities and killing nearly 19,000 people.

It also sparked the world's worst atomic accident in a generation when waves knocked out the cooling systems at Fukushima nuclear plant.

That disaster, which is officially recorded as having claimed no lives, caused widespread mistrust of nuclear power generation in a country that had previously relied on the technology for around a third of its electricity needs. AFP

Earthquake shakes buildings in Tokyo


Tokyo: A 5.7-magnitude earthquake hit Japan on Monday, setting buildings in the capital swaying but causing no risk of a tsunami, seismologists said.

National broadcaster NHK said there had been no abnormalities detected at nuclear power plants near the epicentre, which was north of Tokyo, where buildings rocked for upwards of half a minute.

The US Geological Survey said the quake had hit at 16:23 (0723 GMT), with its epicentre 57 kilometres (36 miles) north-northeast of Maebashi and around 143 kilometres north-northwest of Tokyo.

The agency said it had struck at a depth of nine kilometres.

The Japan Meteorological Agency had earlier put the magnitude at 6.2

Takayuki Fukuda, an official at the Nikko city fire department in Tochigi prefecture, near the epicentre, told AFP by telephone that the quake had rocked the city, a popular spot on the tourist trail.

'It shook vertically for about 10 seconds. Nothing fell from shelves and window glass was not shattered. There was no report of fire and we are preparing to patrol the city,' he said.

He said there had been preliminary reports that a wall in the city had tumbled, injuring an unspecified number of people.

NHK said several bullet trains had been temporarily stopped, but service had resumed moments later.

Japan is regularly hit by powerful earthquakes and has largely adapted its infrastructure to tremors that can cause widespread damage in other, less developed countries.

However, a huge undersea quake with a magnitude of 9.0 in March 2011 sent a towering tsunami into the northeast of the country, devastating coastal communities and killing nearly 19,000 people.

It also sparked the world's worst atomic accident in a generation when waves knocked out the cooling systems at Fukushima nuclear plant.

That disaster, which is officially recorded as having claimed no lives, caused widespread mistrust of nuclear power generation in a country that had previously relied on the technology for around a third of its electricity needs. AFP

Park Geun-hye becomes South Korea's first female president


SEOUL: Park Geun-Hye was sworn in as South Korea's first female president Monday, vowing zero tolerance with provocation from North Korea and demanding Pyongyang 'abandon its nuclear ambitions' immediately.

As leader of Asia's fourth-largest economy, Park, the 61-year-old daughter of a military strongman, faces challenges including slowing growth and soaring welfare costs in one of the world's most rapidly ageing societies.

Taking the oath of office before 70,000 people in front of the National Assembly building in Seoul, Park called on North Korea to 'abandon its nuclear ambitions without delay' and rejoin the international community.

The North carried out its third nuclear test earlier this month, triggering global condemnation and the threat of toughened sanctions from the UN Security Council.

'North Korea's recent nuclear test is a challenge to the survival and future of the Korean people, and there should be no mistake that the biggest victim will be none other than North Korea itself,' she said.

'I will not tolerate any action that threatens the lives of our people and the security of our nation,' Park said, while promising to pursue the trust-building policy with Pyongyang that she had promised in her campaign.

'I will move forward step by step on the basis of credible deterrence,' she added.

Observers say her options will be limited by the international outcry over the North's February 12 nuclear test, which has emboldened the hawks in her ruling conservative party who oppose closer engagement.

Monday's two-and-a-half hour inauguration ceremony, held on a chilly and cloudy morning, included a 21-gun salute. As part of the warm-up act before Park arrived, Korean rapper Psy performed his global hit 'Gangnam Style'.

Park took office a little more than 50 years after her father, South Korea's late dictator and vehement anti-communist Park Chung-Hee, seized power in a military coup.

He went on to rule the country with an iron fist for the next 18 years until his eventual assassination, and remains a divisive figure -- credited with dragging the country out of poverty but reviled for his regime's human rights abuses.

The bulk of Park's inauguration speech focused on the economy, and included commitments to job creation, expanded welfare and 'economic democratisation' at a time of growing concern with income and wealth disparity.

South Korea's extraordinary economic revival from the rubble of the 1950-53 Korean War -- known as the 'Miracle on the Han' -- has faltered in recent years, with key export markets hit by the global downturn.

Promising 'another miracle', Park said her administration would build a new 'creative economy' that would move beyond the country's traditional manufacturing base.

'At the very heart of a creative economy lie science and technology and the IT industry, areas that I have earmarked as key priorities,' she said.

In a clear warning to the giant, family-run conglomerates, or 'chaebols', that dominate the national economy, Park promised a more level playing field and a 'fair market' where small and medium-sized businesses could flourish.

'By rooting out various unfair practices and rectifying the misguided habits of the past which have frustrated small business owners... we will provide active support to ensure that everyone can live up to their fullest potential,' she said.

Chaebols such as Samsung and Hyundai were the original drivers of the nation's industrialisation and economic growth, but have been criticised as corporate bullies who muscle out smaller firms and smother innovation.

South Korea's journey from war-torn poverty to economic prosperity has done little to break the male stranglehold on political and commercial power in what in many ways remains a very conservative nation.

As South Korea's first female president, Park leads a country that is ranked below the likes of Suriname and the United Arab Emirates in gender equality.AFP

Park Geun-hye becomes South Korea's first female president


SEOUL: Park Geun-Hye was sworn in as South Korea's first female president Monday, vowing zero tolerance with provocation from North Korea and demanding Pyongyang 'abandon its nuclear ambitions' immediately.

As leader of Asia's fourth-largest economy, Park, the 61-year-old daughter of a military strongman, faces challenges including slowing growth and soaring welfare costs in one of the world's most rapidly ageing societies.

Taking the oath of office before 70,000 people in front of the National Assembly building in Seoul, Park called on North Korea to 'abandon its nuclear ambitions without delay' and rejoin the international community.

The North carried out its third nuclear test earlier this month, triggering global condemnation and the threat of toughened sanctions from the UN Security Council.

'North Korea's recent nuclear test is a challenge to the survival and future of the Korean people, and there should be no mistake that the biggest victim will be none other than North Korea itself,' she said.

'I will not tolerate any action that threatens the lives of our people and the security of our nation,' Park said, while promising to pursue the trust-building policy with Pyongyang that she had promised in her campaign.

'I will move forward step by step on the basis of credible deterrence,' she added.

Observers say her options will be limited by the international outcry over the North's February 12 nuclear test, which has emboldened the hawks in her ruling conservative party who oppose closer engagement.

Monday's two-and-a-half hour inauguration ceremony, held on a chilly and cloudy morning, included a 21-gun salute. As part of the warm-up act before Park arrived, Korean rapper Psy performed his global hit 'Gangnam Style'.

Park took office a little more than 50 years after her father, South Korea's late dictator and vehement anti-communist Park Chung-Hee, seized power in a military coup.

He went on to rule the country with an iron fist for the next 18 years until his eventual assassination, and remains a divisive figure -- credited with dragging the country out of poverty but reviled for his regime's human rights abuses.

The bulk of Park's inauguration speech focused on the economy, and included commitments to job creation, expanded welfare and 'economic democratisation' at a time of growing concern with income and wealth disparity.

South Korea's extraordinary economic revival from the rubble of the 1950-53 Korean War -- known as the 'Miracle on the Han' -- has faltered in recent years, with key export markets hit by the global downturn.

Promising 'another miracle', Park said her administration would build a new 'creative economy' that would move beyond the country's traditional manufacturing base.

'At the very heart of a creative economy lie science and technology and the IT industry, areas that I have earmarked as key priorities,' she said.

In a clear warning to the giant, family-run conglomerates, or 'chaebols', that dominate the national economy, Park promised a more level playing field and a 'fair market' where small and medium-sized businesses could flourish.

'By rooting out various unfair practices and rectifying the misguided habits of the past which have frustrated small business owners... we will provide active support to ensure that everyone can live up to their fullest potential,' she said.

Chaebols such as Samsung and Hyundai were the original drivers of the nation's industrialisation and economic growth, but have been criticised as corporate bullies who muscle out smaller firms and smother innovation.

South Korea's journey from war-torn poverty to economic prosperity has done little to break the male stranglehold on political and commercial power in what in many ways remains a very conservative nation.

As South Korea's first female president, Park leads a country that is ranked below the likes of Suriname and the United Arab Emirates in gender equality.AFP

[