Saturday, 30 April 2011

US Army says WikiLeaks suspect fit to stand trial

Washington:  The US Army says the intelligence analyst suspected of illegally passing government secrets to the WikiLeaks website has been found competent to stand trial.

Army spokesman Gary Tallman says a panel of experts completed its evaluation of Pfc Bradley Manning's mental fitness on April 22, and informed Army officials today of the conclusion. Tallman says no date has been set yet for the trial.

Manning is suspected of obtaining hundreds of thousands of classified documents while serving in Iraq and providing them to the website. He faces about two dozen charges, including aiding the enemy. That charge can bring the death penalty or life in prison.

Manning was transferred Wednesday to an Army prison in Kansas. He passed a psychiatric evaluation there, allowing him to live alongside other inmates.

The day history was created in Britain - a fairytale wedding


From Buckingham Palace to Britain's Prince William kisses his wife Kate, Duchess of Cambridge on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after the Royal Wedding in London Friday, April, 29, 2011. 



Thursday, 28 April 2011

Death toll from southeastern storms climbs to 76

The death toll from a series of violent storms that swept across the South rose to 76 early Thursday after Mississippi officials confirmed the storm-related deaths of 18 people in that state.
Among the fatalities was a 3-year-old girl in McComb, Mississippi, who died in her bed from a falling tree.
Meanwhile, Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal declared four northwestern counties disaster areas after a series of severe storms and tornadoes swept through the state, killing at least 11 people.
Deal declared a state of emergency in Catoosa, Floyd, Dade and Walker counties.
His declaration followed declarations by the governors of Mississippi and Alabama, where at least 45 people died during a wave of violent weather in that state, according to emergency management officials.
In Alabama, the National Guard dispatched hundreds of personnel to some of the state's hardest hit areas.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with the families who lost loved ones or property in this devastating storm," said Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, who declared a state of emergency in 39 counties. The declaration allows the state to offer aid to the counties during recovery efforts.
The state was also bracing for flooding along the Mississippi River.
The storms killed 11 people in Georgia, seven in Catoosa County, two in Spalding County and two in Dade County, according to the Georgia Emergency Management Agency.
The town of Ringgold, Georgia, was hit particularly hard. One tornado appeared to remain on the ground for at least a mile, said Gary Sisk with the Catoosa County Sheriff's Department, adding that some buildings were demolished.
The Georgia storms left 38,000 customers without power statewide, according to Georgia Power Co.
Arkansas and Tennessee reported that at least one person died in each of those states.
The Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant in Alabama automatically shut down after losing off-site power, said Barbara Martocci of the Tennessee Valley Authority.

Prince William, Kate at final wedding rehearsal


London:  Britain's Prince William and his bride-to-be Kate Middleton arrived at Westminster Abbey in London on Wednesday evening for a private wedding rehearsal ahead of their big day on Friday.

Escorted by police, the convoy swept through the gate giving the crowd already assembled for the wedding no glimpse of the couple behind the blacked out windows.

Joining them at the rehearsal were the bride's parents, Williams brother and best man Prince Harry and senior clergy.

Britain hasn't seen a royal wedding of this size since Williams father Prince Charles married the late Lady Diana Spencer in 1981.

There were actually 200 more police on duty for that wedding, which had a longer procession route and a guest list of some 3,500 people, including foreign royals and heads of state.

Friday's wedding will offer much of the same pomp and circumstance with its 1,900 invited guests and excited crowds were already camping out outside Buckingham Palace and Westminster Abbey to get the best possible view ahead of the royal wedding celebrations.

Following the rehearsal, the royal convoy swept out of the gates of Westminster Abbey and through the London streets, to cheers from the assembled crowds.

Some people have already spent their first night sleeping on the pavement with many more expected to join them on Wednesday evening.

Afghan pilot fires on troops at Kabul airport, several dead

Kabul:  A veteran Afghan military officer opened fire on foreign forces Wednesday after a dispute at the Kabul airport, killing several NATO troops, Afghan and coalition officials said.

It was the latest in a spate of deadly incidents that have occurred inside government or military installations, a favorite target of Taliban insurgents.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, but Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi said the gunman was an Afghan military pilot who "opened fire on foreigners after an argument."

The pilot was killed in the shooting, which occurred inside a facility used by the Afghan Air Force, Azimi said.

NATO did not disclose the number or nationalities of the casualties pending notification of their families. The airport is home to the NATO Air Training Command.

Lt. Col. David Simons, a spokesman for the NATO training mission, said small arms fire was reported at the airport at about 10:25 a.m. local time.

"A quick-reaction force responded to the incident," he said. "At this time there are reports of NATO casualties."

Azimi said the shooter was a military pilot of 20 years. "An argument happened between him and the foreigners and we have to investigate that."

An Afghan pilot who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the gunman was Ahmad Gul, a 50-year-old pilot from Tarakhail district of Kabul province.

In a statement, Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed the gunman was impersonating an army officer and that others at the facility helped him gain access. The gunman killed nine foreigners and five Afghan soldiers, he said. The Taliban often exaggerate the number of casualties caused by their attacks.

Since March 2009, the coalition has recorded 20 incidents where a member of the Afghan security forces or someone wearing a uniform used by them attacked coalition forces, killing a total of 36.

According to information compiled by NATO, half of the 20 incidents involved the impersonation of an Afghan policeman or soldier. The cause of the other 10 incidents were attributed to combat stress or unknown reasons. The officers insisted that so far, there is no solid information that an insurgent was directed to join the army for the purpose of conducting attacks.

NATO officials said that in recent incidents:

--An Afghan man wearing a border police uniform who shot and killed two American military personnel April 4 in northwest Faryab province was upset over the burning of the Quran at a Florida church.

--An Afghan soldier who shot and killed three German soldiers and wounded six others Feb. 18 in northern Baghlan province felt he had been personally offended by his German partners.

--An Afghan border policeman who gunned down six American soldiers Nov. 29, 2010 in eastern Nangarhar province was suffering from personal stress because his father was forcing him into an arranged marriage.

It is not known how many of the 282,000 members of the Afghan security forces have been killed in these type of incidents.

A man in an Afghan army uniform penetrated to the heart of the Afghan Defense Ministry compound on April 18 and gunned down two Afghan soldiers.

Ask the cast of 'Pirates of the Caribbean'Yo ho! It’s Captain Jack Sparrow’s fourth trip to the big screen and land-lubbing iReporters now have the chance to interview the cast of “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides!” Taking your video questions will be Johnny Depp, Penelope Cruz, Geoffrey Rush, Ian McShane, Astrid Berges-Frisbey, Sam Claflin, director Rob Marshall (“Chicago”) and producer Jerry Bruckheimer.Yo ho! It’s Captain Jack Sparrow’s fourth trip to the big screen and land-lubbing iReporters now have the chance to interview the cast of “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides!” Taking your video questions will be Johnny Depp, Penelope Cruz, Geoffrey Rush, Ian McShane, Astrid Berges-Frisbey, Sam Claflin, director Rob Marshall (“Chicago”) and producer Jerry Bruckheimer.

Yo ho! It’s Captain Jack Sparrow’s fourth trip to the big screen and land-lubbing iReporters now have the chance to interview the cast of “Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides!”

Taking your video questions will be Johnny Depp, Penelope Cruz, Geoffrey Rush, Ian McShane, Astrid Berges-Frisbey, Sam Claflin, director Rob Marshall (“Chicago”) and producer Jerry Bruckheimer.

Wednesday, 27 April 2011

We're All Invited to the Wedding!

The bride is dancing down the aisle in her pristine gown while her husband-to-be in his military uniform swings along with his ginger-haired brother as best man. The groom's stepmother winks from under her spiky hat -- and even granny, in her tailored green coat, gives a fillip to her stately walk and regal stance.

As if!

Yet the spoof royal wedding playing on YouTube as an ad for T-Mobile says something profound about the much-heralded marriage this week of Prince William of Wales to the "commoner" Catherine Middleton, known as Kate.

For by Friday morning at 10 a.m., the real royal wedding will have taken over in cyberspace. Live-streamed on YouTube and the official royal Web site, Ms. Middleton will reveal to an estimated 2.5 billion global viewers the secret she is determined to keep: her wedding dress.

As she steps out of the royal Rolls Royce -- the same one that was beaten up this spring by rioting students with her future father-in-law Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla, inside -- she and her elongated train will start their journey past 1,900 guests down the aisle of Westminster Abbey.

Not a wriggle from the four small bridesmaids -- all chosen from William's side of the family -- nor any tear shed by the bride's mother, Carole Middleton, will escape the video camera's eye, as the first royal wedding in British history is brought into the millennial, digital age.

The centuries-long move from the "divine right of kings" to a royalty of pomp without power has now come into the full glare of the world's gaze.

Already, with everything except the famous dress given full disclosure, the world's audience can see almost every aspect of the preparations on two separate Web sites: www.royal.gov.uk and www.officialroyalwedding2011.org.

Once the wedding gets going the digital pomp will be available as mobile apps. Even the soundtrack of the ceremony will be released on iTunes within hours of the ceremony.

Historians will surely look at this multimedia, multichannel  interactive social media event  as the meeting point of private and public.  And, if all goes according to the minute planning, it will be an example as shining as the bride's glossy mane of how to make the ritual and tradition of monarchy relevant to the modern age.

For Ms. Middleton, 29, and her husband, 28, will be symbols of a monarchy refreshed. As ever in the royal dynasty, the marriage of the heir to the throne -- however distant the takeover -- is required to bring new blood and respond to a new generation.

Queen Elizabeth turned 85 last week, and next year she will celebrate her diamond jubilee of 60 years on the throne. Her son and heir, Prince Charles, 62, hit a more baleful date this month: as the longest-ever king in waiting. And the late Diana, his former wife and self-styled "queen of hearts," still casts a long shadow over the royal family.

Faced with the challenge of being a new "People's Princess," Ms. Middleton has scarcely put a low-heeled court-shoed foot wrong -- especially when it comes to the language of clothes.

Last week, as she and her family received a coat of arms, the future bride was out on a shopping spree that was the antithesis of a royal bridal trousseau or of the big-brand splurges of England's fashion-addicted footballers' wives.

Popping into the middle market Warehouse shop on King's Road, Chelsea, the future queen spent just £225, or $370, on four summer outfits -- three of her favorite floral dresses and a lace blouse.

Perhaps this deliberate lack of luxury is part of the reverse snobbery of England's upper crust -- like the aristocratic Prime Minister David Cameron saying that he would wear a business suit rather than a morning-dress tailcoat, until the outcry forced him to change his mind.

Such thrift will certainly endear Princess Catherine to Queen Elizabeth. But will Her Majesty be happy if the bride chooses not to wear a tiara on her wedding day? Ms. Middleton could always cite Queen Victoria, who wore a circlet of orange blossom in her hair on her Big Day.

Internet bloggers and Twitterers will always be passing judgment on Ms. Middleton's appearance. But so far, the sartorial attitude of both the bride and the groom -- think of William's cashmere sweater for the recent Mario Testino pictures -- has been resolutely contemporary.

Libya: UN team to start probe of human rights abuses

A UN team is due to arrive in Tripoli to investigate allegations of human rights violations in Libya since the start of the conflict in February.
The team was appointed by the UN Human Rights Council following the Libyan government's crackdown on protesters.
The government has said it will co-operate with the inquiry.
The three investigators say they will look at all alleged abuses, including those the government says have been committed by rebels or Nato forces.
The original mandate - to examine human rights violations allegedly committed by the forces of Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi - remains the priority, says the BBC's Imogen Foulkes in Geneva, where the UN Human Rights Council is based.
There have been reliable reports of enforced disappearances, torture and even killing of protesters, says our correspondent.
The UN human rights commissioner, Navi Pillay, said in late February that what was happening in Libya "may amount to crimes against humanity".

On Tuesday, three people were reportedly killed as missiles slammed into the city's port, a lifeline for those seeking to escape to the rebel stronghold of Benghazi.
Misrata has been besieged by government forces for two months, leaving parts of the city with neither electricity nor water.
Continued sniper fire, street clashes and shelling have prevented people from venturing outside their homes to get food and medicine.
Human rights groups say more than 1,000 people have been killed in the fighting and many more have been wounded. Ships have been ferrying the injured to hospitals in Benghazi and bringing in humanitarian aid.
Libya's government denies it has been indiscriminately shelling civilian areas.
Misrata is the last major rebel-held city in western Libya and the fighting for it has been fierce.
The UN investigators are to present their findings to the Human Rights Council in June. But their work could be overtaken by other moves, says our Geneva correspondent.
The UN Security Council has asked the International Criminal Court to investigate Libya on possible charges of war crimes.
                                                                        

                                                                     'Back foot'
Nato is enforcing a UN resolution to protect civilians in Libya amid a two-month revolt inspired by other uprisings in the Arab world.
A recent Nato strike on Col Gaddafi's compound in Tripoli sparked angry criticism from Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who said the Western coalition had no mandate to kill the Libyan leader.
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates defended the strike, calling it a legitimate attack on a military command and control centre.
He spoke after a meeting in Washington with British Defence Secretary Liam Fox, who said Libya's rebels had gained "momentum" on the battlefield and that Col Gaddafi's forces were on the "back foot".
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Nato's 1,500 strike sorties over Libya had "seriously degraded Gaddafi's military assets and prevented widespread massacres planned by Gaddafi's forces".
"They remain unable to enter Benghazi and it is highly likely that without these efforts Misrata would have fallen, with terrible consequences for that city's brave inhabitants."
On Tuesday, the US eased oil sanctions against Libya.
The move allows rebels to sell oil within their control and US firms to engage in transactions involving oil and oil products, and natural gas, as long as the exports benefit the opposition Transitional National Council.
As Japan's earthquake and tsunami ripped through the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the wind turbines at nearby Takine Ojiroi Wind Farm did what they were designed to do: They swayed, they stopped, and they electronically checked themselves.
"Except for one wind farm that was very close to the nuclear power plant, all our turbines were up and running after the quake," said Sean Sutton of Vestas, the world's largest manufacturer of electricity generating wind turbines.
"And we are able to remotely monitor the turbines that were down (stopped)," he said.
As a source of power, wind energy is about as clean, safe and earthquake-proof as it gets -- the problem is it generates a fraction of Japan's energy needs.
Compared with the massive 4,696MW output of the six reactors at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, the 23 turbines at Takine Ojiroi can produce just 46MW -- enough for 30,000 households.

How long will radiation remain in Japan?
Major challenges of nuclear power
 
 Babies represent life returning to Japan



With just 1% of the capacity of the nuclear-powered leviathan just a few kilometers away, the wind farm is a microcosm of the contribution of wind power to Japan's energy mix.
Currently, Japan gets 27% of its power from coal, 26% from gas, 24% from nuclear, 13% from oil, and 8% from hydro. The remaining 2% is occupied by renewables such as geothermal power stations, solar and wind.
While renewable energy companies are loathe to admit it, as Japan still counts the human cost of the quake, the nuclear crisis at Fukushima may be the best thing that ever happened to the sector.
Last week, the share prices of renewable energy companies soared as much as 10%. Nuclear companies, meanwhile, tanked as China -- which has the world's largest commitment to nuclear power with 13 plants in operation and more than 27 in the pipeline -- announced it would suspend approval for new nuclear power projects.
Germany, too, has suspended its nuclear program and ordered seven older plants closed during the moratorium. At the same time, Berlin has boosted the size of the government's renewable energy fund from €300 million ($425 million) to €1 billion.
Renewable energy companies admit their fortunes are closely tied to the vagaries of the oil market. Every sustained price spike sees renewed interest and funding in alternative energy. This interest ebbs when oil prices fall to more affordable levels.
However, the nuclear crisis in Fukushima -- coupled with events in Libya that have pushed oil to 30-month highs -- has added a new, and many in the industry will be hoping, permanent dimension to the funding of the heavily subsidy-dependent alternatives sector.
"I guess this is the right time to evaluate the options," said Sutton, whose Danish company has its Asia headquarters in Singapore. "Wind power compared with other sources is safe, fast, predictable and clean - it can also be deployed quickly."
He said the Japanese government was now reviewing long-stalled wind power feed-in tariffs -- a form of government subsidy -- under which alternative power producers, including solar power generating households, are paid a premium for feeding power into the grid.
With the Japanese government considering massive offshore wind farm projects that could generate 1,000MW of power, wind companies are betting on strong growth in Japan.
"Previously the government was quite fractured on this issue, but I think if there's any good to come from this nuclear crisis then it will be to help kick start feed-in tariffs for wind," Sutton said.
The Holy Grail for the alternative sector is what is known in the industry as grid parity, where it becomes as cheap to buy wind and solar power as it is to buy other power on the grid. Without feed-in tariffs the dream of grid parity is a long way off.
Japan already has feed-in tariffs for solar power and is the third largest producer of solar power in the world, behind Germany and Spain. While it has ambitious plans for the fast growing energy sector, even the most optimistic projections only put it at 10 % of the energy mix by 2050.
As exciting as alternatives may seem, the answer to Japan's future energy needs is likely to come from more traditional sources, according to Ivo Bozon, a leading energy analyst at McKinsey & Company.
"It takes a long-term commitment to get the scale necessary in renewables to produce meaningful amounts of the power," said Bozon. "There are physical limits on renewable energy -- with wind power it's reliant on onshore winds and with solar it's space and sunlight."
As you go down the list of clean fuels, he explained, discounting those energy sources that take up too much space, rely on intermittent power sources or are simply too expensive to produce, what you end up with is natural gas.
"The biggest lift from this is likely to be in gas, especially in Japan and China, where they have the scale to get plants up and running," he said.
Biomass, fuels produced from biological sources such as palm oil, is also likely to see renewed interest as the pendulum swings away from nuclear power.
"I think all countries will be rethinking their commitment to nuclear in the light of these events. At the very minimum there could be delays," said Bozon.

Yemen remains al Qaeda's ultimate breeding ground

December 15, 2001, Pakistani border troops came across some 30 al Qaeda fighters in a mountain pass. They had fled the U.S. bombardment of Tora Bora, Osama bin Laden's last stronghold in Afghanistan. The group turned out to be members of the al Qaeda leader's security detail, and U.S. intelligence swiftly dubbed them the "Dirty Thirty."
They were transferred to U.S. custody in Kandahar and then moved to the Guantanamo Bay detention camp in Cuba early in 2002. It soon transpired most of the "Dirty Thirty" were from Yemen, a country where al Qaeda has an even greater presence today than it did before 9/11.
Analysis of many profiles of Guantanamo detainees suggests that becoming a member of al Qaeda in Yemen in the late 1990s was relatively easy, which may explain why (after Afghans and Saudis) Yemenis comprised the third largest group held there.
The documents, compiled by the U.S. Joint Task Force at Guantanamo Bay, show that:
-- A network of al Qaeda recruiters was able to operate in Yemen with virtual impunity.
-- Salafist religious institutes in Yemen influenced many to take up jihad and join bin Laden.

Al Qaeda expands presence in Yemen
One of the recruiters was Sharqawi Abdu Ali al-Hajj, a Yemeni who "had access to the identities of many al Qaeda-related travelers and plausible knowledge of the detainees' travel times and locations," according to the documents. Al-Wadi, who died in 2001, and other radical imams in Yemen also provided money to several of the jihadists who would end up among the "Dirty Thirty."
Many of the young Yemenis who ended up in bin Laden's security detail were capable fighters but poorly educated. Mohammad al-Ansi failed 11th grade three times and worked as a bus driver before turning to jihad. Another detainee never made it past seventh grade, while Mahmud al-Mujahid finally got his high school diploma at 22. Several had odd jobs and felt unable to support their families.
Frequently, recruitment into al Qaeda was a family affair. Among those captured in that freezing mountain pass in Pakistan was a 21-year-old by the name of Uthman al-Rahim. His brother was also an al Qaeda fighter and he allegedly had ties to several al Qaeda members responsible for the attack on the USS Cole in 1998. Mahmud al-Mujahidand and his brother were both bodyguards to bin Laden.
2010: USS Cole crew praised at memorial Video
The Yemeni recruits were given similar basic training before being deployed to the front near Kabul to fight against the Northern Alliance as members of al Qaeda's elite 55th Arab Brigade. They later became bin Laden's bodyguards, according to the profiles. The documents say several of the "Dirty Thirty" also took part in a close combat course that bin Laden used to select militants for special operations.
Some of the Yemenis were fast-tracked for advanced training. Mohammed al Ansi would later train for an aborted al Qaeda operation in southeast Asia to hijack airliners and crash them into U.S. military bases in the region. Bin Laden planned to use Yemenis in the operation because they could easily travel to the region, according to another detainee. Others ran training camps or safe houses. Hamza al-Qaiti was one; he was at large until 2008, when he was killed in Yemen.
The Guantanamo documents might be solely of historical interest were it not for Yemen's chronic instability today, and the growing presence of al Qaeda in the Arabian peninsula in the provinces of Shabwa, Abyan and Hadramut. Even though Yemeni security forces have stepped up operations against al Qaeda in the last year, U.S. officials describe al Qaeda in the Arabian peninsula as the most effective operational arm of the group. John Brennan, assistant to the president for homeland security and counterterrorism, said in December the group was "increasingly active" in reaching out to find terrorist recruits, even in the United States, and was "the most operationally active node of the al Qaeda network."
It was in Yemen that the alleged Detroit "underwear" bomber was recruited and trained in 2009. Al Qaeda in the Arabian peninsula militants have killed dozens of Yemeni soldiers and police; earlier this month Islamist militants briefly occupied a town in southern Yemen and raided an ammunition factory.
The Guantanamo documents suggest that Yemen remains a recruiting ground for al Qaeda, with one written in 2008 saying Yemeni sheikhs "continue to recruit Yemeni youth to participate in hostilities against U.S. and coalition forces."
That's perhaps why today so many Yemenis are left at Guantanamo. The risk of sending them home to a volatile country with a history of jail breaks and a vibrant al Qaeda franchise is too great. Of the 112 Yemenis taken to the detention center over the past nine years, nearly 90 are still there. (The New York Times, which has seen all the Guantanamo documents, reports that 23 have been sent back to Yemen and two died in custody.)
Few of those left are likely to be leaving anytime soon

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

Nicolas Cage's son Weston marries in New Orleans

Nicolas Cage's difficult month turned brighter on Sunday night, as he celebrated his son Weston's marriage in New Orleans.
Cage, 47, donned a black tuxedo for the occasion. His son Weston, 20, wed musician Nikki Williams, 22, after getting ready at the famed Omni Royal Hotel. Says a source at the hotel of Weston: "He looked good in a tux."
The family then headed off in a limo, and celebrated on a yacht on Lake Pontchartrain.
"Nic was smiling and happy as he toasted the happy couple on the back of the boat," a source tells PEOPLE.
Weston and Williams, both musicians, got engaged just last week. On Saturday, Williams tweeted: "Weston presented me with my GORGEOUS ring last night in front of a giant bonfire and the Fire Department showed up

White House considering targeted sanctions on Syria

Washington--The United States is considering targeted sanctions among "a range of possible options" to pressure the Syrian government to stop attacking protesters, White House spokesman Jay Carney said Monday.
"We are very concerned about it, as a number of countries are, and we are looking at a variety of options including targeted sanctions," Carney told reporters.
Carney said that the rights of the Syrian people should be respected, and they should not be attacked and killed for expressing their grievances.
"What we have seen is that sanctions can put pressure on governments and regimes to change their behavior," Carney said.

Nadal powers to sixth Barcelona title

Spain's Rafael Nadal has beaten compatriot David Ferrer 6-2 6-4 in the final of the Barcelona Open to claim his sixth win at the event.
Nadal took one hour and 49 minutes to overcome the world number six in front of a packed crowd at the Real Club de Tenis on Sunday.
"It's unbelievable. I'm very happy to come back and win here after not playing last year (because of a knee injury). It was a difficult decision, it's a always a special dream to play in this tournament," Nadal said, AFP reported.
Earlier, Nadal had wasted no time in sprinting into a one set lead, but Ferrer showed resistance in the second, managing to break the clay court maestro's serve in the fifth game to lead 4-2.
It's unbelievable. I'm very happy to come back and win here after not playing last year
--Rafa Nadal
But the world number one broke back immediately and in the ninth game secured a second service break before going on to serve out the match.
Nadal seals 500th win

The Spaniard praised his opponent after the match saying Ferrer "deserves to win a major title," because "he's doing very well week after week."
Nadal now lies alone in third place on the all-time clay-court trophy winners list with 31 career titles to date, with only Argentina's Guillermo Vilas (45 titles), and Austrian Thomas Muster (40) ahead of him.
The 24-year-old has now won 34 consecutive matches on clay since his last defeat to Robin Soderling in the fourth round of the French Open in 2009

Colombian president calls for unity as country struggles with floods

Colombia's president called for national unity Monday night as the country struggles to dig out of the devastation wrought by the torrential rains and massive floods that have so far claimed 91 lives this year.
It is the longest rainy season the country has had in the past 40 years, according to the Colombian Red Cross, which released new casualty figures Monday.
So far this year, 91 people have been killed in the floods, 79 have been hurt, and 15 people remain missing, according to the Red Cross figures. Most of those are from the month of April.
"This is the worst natural tragedy in memory," Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said about the rains, calling on his countrymen to work together. "Colombia is bigger than the adversity it faces."
He said humanitarian assistance would be the government's first priority, securing people's homes and health.
According to the Red Cross, more than 1,000 municipalities in 28 of Colombia's 32 provinces have been affected, in addition to the district around the capital, Bogota.
The aid agency said the extreme weather is a result of La Nina, the weather phenomenon known to bring heavy rainfall to northern South America. La Nina typically happens every few years, though Colombia also has an annual rainy season.
It is the second straight year that Colombia has been devastated by torrential rain and massive flooding. Last year, 408 people died in the nation and more than 2.8 million people were left homeless or affected in some way by the rain

Monday, 25 April 2011

The Royal Wedding: Waiting for the dress

New York:  When Kate Middleton strides down the aisle at Westminster Abbey on Friday, millions of Americans watching at home will be transfixed by her gown.

Few more so than Don O'Neill.

Mr. O'Neill, the creative director of Theia, a bridal house in Manhattan, expects that Ms. Middleton's dress (or a much more affordable version of it) will be coveted by brides-to-be on this side of the Atlantic. So sure is he, in fact, that he has already designed, and plans to sell, a gown he thinks will emulate her choice. Slender and long-sleeved, its decorously scooped neckline encrusted with crystals and silver bullion thread, it will boast a five-foot train.

"We're calling it The Kate," Mr. O'Neill said. "It's very precious, very regal and suited to a princess, if only in my head."

Not every bridal designer is so farsighted -- or so brashly confident. But many believe that Ms. Middleton's dress, like the bouffant gown Princess Diana wore in 1981, will be a game changer, inspiring replicas or adaptations at every level of the marketplace, some within weeks or even days of its debut.

"We're all holding our breath for it," said Janet Lyons-Brooks, the owner of Leontina Gowns, a bridal house in Imlay City, Mich., and its companion site, Mybigfatbeautifulwedding.com. "My factories are standing by."

The tricky part, of course, is that no one knows what the dress they are poised to copy actually looks like. With the Great Event only days away, Ms. Middleton's gown remains a closely guarded secret, its designer's identity a mystery. (The latest rumor pegs Ms. Middleton herself as the creator.)

But that hasn't stopped  dozens of bridal houses from marshaling reserves of sketch artists,  pattern makers, lace manufacturers, cutters and embroiderers, all standing ready to make last-minute tweaks to existing gowns, or to copy the royal gown outright, funneling imitations into the market at warp speed.

Already retailers are fielding inquiries from customers wondering if, and when, a Kate-inspired gown will be available. "We've had enough curiosity that we have decided we are going to pay close attention to the wedding," said Dan Rentillo, the vice president for design for David's Bridal, the national chain. He plans to have a prototype in the works by the following weekend.

Many are banking on the premise that Ms. Middleton will be influencing bridal trends for years, even decades, as did Princess Diana, whose dress is still inspiring knockoffs in the $2 billion bridal gown market. That gown, it should be noted, with its infanta dimensions and 25-foot train, drew its share of ridicule, better suited, some sniped, for a Disney princess.

Not that it mattered. "Before Diana's wedding, you couldn't find a dress anywhere that was all billowy," said Susan Glick, the vice president for women's apparel for New York International Bridal Week, a trade organization. Afterward, Ms. Glick said, the market was glutted with voluminous look-alikes. 

The gowns that Ms. Middleton's dress will loose on the market will no doubt be more subdued. Learned speculation based on royal etiquette (modest cut, no cleavage or bare arms, if you please) and the bride's taste predicts that this gown will be slender, flared, mermaid style, and low key. (The last a concession to the ailing British economy.)

Tradition dictates that brides order their gowns four to six months ahead, allowing plenty of time for unforeseen production or shipping delays and alterations. But that makes the royal couple's timing inconvenient for high wedding season in the United States.

Jane Wang, the owner of an upscale bridal house in Midtown Manhattan, is prepared to modify dresses already in her line to meet a projected demand,  charging a rush fee of 15 percent of a retail price of roughly $3,000 to cut her delivery time from a customary 12 weeks to 4 to 6.

Mr. O'Neill of Theia is leaving nothing to chance.  Should his house be besieged by last-minute orders for June brides, he will leap into the fray, shrinking his usual lead time to offer a style that is similar, though not identical, in as little as two to four weeks.  His lace manufacturer in Rhode Island is on call, as are his embroiderers in India. "They're going to hate me," he said. "They'll have to do double and triple time to get all those waistlines and necklines stitched."

In the race to be first with a look-alike, no hurdle seems too daunting, certainly not copyright laws, which permit "interpretations," to borrow an industry euphemism, in the cut or details of a garment, so long as subtle modifications are made.

"When that dress hits, we'll be right on it," said Jim Hjelm,  a bridal designer in New York.  "We'll be on the computer that afternoon, sending a sketch."  The company's factory in China will return samples for approval within 24 hours, Mr. Hjelm said. Equipped, like its competitors, with high-tech computer programs, the factory can approximate a design from a sketch or a Web page, with no need to pull apart the seams of an actual garment.

"We'll probably gamble and have a dress or even three styles out before October," said Mr. Hjelm, for shipping to stores in February. "But there are plenty of people who will have the dress within a day."

LightInTheBox.com, an Internet retailer, will submit a design almost instantaneously. "Our online marketing team will start to prepare the visual materials needed for pushing the dress online overnight," said Steven Lin, a company spokesman. Assembling an actual garment will take about a month and shipping an additional three to eight days, he said -- well in time for mid- to late-June nuptials.

Even in the prom market, designers see potential. Seema Anand, whose company, Blue Plate, makes inexpensive runway-inspired clothes for stores like Macy's, Bloomingdales and Forever 21, will offer knee-length prom-worthy variations in as little as three weeks

In the bridal industry, there has long has been precedent for speedy turnarounds. Mr. Hjelm, a veteran of the industry, recalled that when Grace Kelly married Prince Rainier of Monaco in 1956, "by the end of that day they had a Grace Kelly look-alike in Filene's window in Boston."

With its high neckline and ballroom skirt, Ms. Kelly's dress, made by the Hollywood costumer Helen Rose, inspired an avalanche of knockoffs.

As did Carolyn Bessette Kennedy's slip-like bias-cut gown in 1996, which, as Millie Martini Bratten, the editor in chief of Brides magazine, pointed out, became the quintessential wedding dress of the era.

Even Chelsea Clinton, who has never been known as a style setter, inspired a trend last year when she wore a Vera Wang strapless wedding gown, spawning rafts of copies.

The grande dame of bridal trendsetters was none less than Queen Victoria, whose choice of a white dress for her wedding to Prince Albert in 1840 established a precedent that has been honored ever since. "These women were celebrities," said Ms. Glick of International Bridal Week, who went on to predict that, like the young women brandishing magazine tear sheets with photos of their favorite film stars, legions will be storming retailers next month, demanding Kate's dress. "After all," Ms. Glick said, "Kate Middleton is a celebrity, too."

5.0-magnitude quake rocks Jammu and Kashmir


Srinagar: An earthquake measuring 5.0 on the Richter scale struck Jammu and Kashmir on Monday morning. The epicentre of the quake was located in Pakistan, the local disaster management authority said.

"The earthquake was of mild intensity with coordinates measuring 36.23 north and 72.17 east. It struck at 6.25 am Its epicentre lay in Pakistan. No damage has been reported from anywhere so far," said Amir Ali, in-charge of the the disaster management cell at the provincial headquarters here.

It may be mentioned that more than half a dozen earthquakes have rocked the Valley during the last two months. Jammu and Kashmir is located in a highly seismic zone.
More than 40,000 people were killed in a massive quake, measuring 7.9 on the Richter scale, that rocked this state in 2005.

Afghanistan: Hundreds escape from Kandahar prison


More than 470 inmates at a prison in southern Afghanistan have escaped through a tunnel hundreds of metres long and dug from outside the jail. Officials in the city of Kandahar said that many of those who escaped were Taliban insurgents.

The Kandahar provincial governor's office said some had since been recaptured but gave no further details. A spokesman for the Taliban said it had dug the 320m (1,050ft) tunnel and that it had taken five months to construct.

Zabiullah Mujahid said about 100 of those who escaped were Taliban commanders, and most of the others were fighters with the insurgency. Correspondents say the Taliban often make exaggerated claims.
Second jailbreak

"A tunnel hundreds of metres long was dug from the south of the prison into the prison and 476 political prisoners escaped last night," said prison director General Ghulam Dastageer Mayar.

The prison holds about 1,200 inmates

One escapee told the BBC it had taken him about 30 minutes to walk the length of the tunnel. The escape took most of the night and vehicles were waiting at the exit point to take prisoners away. It is thought that the tunnel was dug from a house outside the prison walls.

The jailbreak is the second major escape from the prison in three years.

In June 2008 a suicide bomber blew open the Kandahar prison gates and destroyed a nearby checkpoint, freeing about 900 prisoners, many of them suspected insurgents. After that, millions of pounds were spent upgrading the prison. The 2008 breakout was followed by a major upsurge in violence.

The prison is under Afghan control, but Nato-led International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) said it was ready to provide assistance if requested by Afghan officials. Nato forces are preparing for the long process of withdrawal from Afghanistan. The first stage is the transfer of security powers to local forces from July, but Kandahar is not among the first tranche of provinces and cities to be handed over to the Afghans.

Analysts say that it is only to be expected that those regions will once again be the focus of insurgent activity as the Taliban will be planning to seize them back.