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Saturday, 26 April 2014

Tito Vilanova Dead: Former Barcelona Coach Dies Of Cancer At 45

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Tito Vilanova, the soccer coach who succeeded Pep Guardiola at Barcelona and won the Spanish league title in his only season in charge, died Friday of throat cancer. He was 45.
Vilanova had a recurring tumor in a saliva gland and was admitted to a hospital in Barcelona last week. The team announced his death on its website.
As Guardiola's assistant, Vilanova provided the tactical know-how that helped the coach build one of the best teams in the history of the sport, winning two Champions League titles.
Barcelona star Lionel Messi called the death a "moment of profound pain for Vilanova's family, and also for Barcelona and its fans."
"All of us who shared Barcelona's locker room with Tito are deeply affected, considering what he gave us as a person and as a professional," Messi said in a statement. "I, personally, will always hold dear the things he shared and went through with me, which I will never forget."
Former Barcelona defender Eric Abidal, who recovered from liver cancer and a liver transplant to help hoist the 2012-13 league trophy with Vilanova, wrote on Twitter: "For everything we went through together, I will always remember you, my friend. Thanks for fighting."
Spain's royal family and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy also sent telegrams to Vilanova's family and Barcelona, according to Europa Press news agency.
Vilanova first became ill in November 2011 while an assistant to Guardiola and took a leave of absence after surgery. Vilanova returned and replaced Guardiola the next season, leading Barcelona to the Spanish league title with a record-tying 100 points.
Vilanova had a second tumor removed in December 2012 and traveled to New York several times during the season for further treatment before returning to the sidelines. In April 2013, Vilanova said he felt fine and "never thought about quitting." He finished the season before suddenly being forced to resign following a relapse in July.
As an assistant, Vilanova helped Guardiola propel Barcelona into its most successful period and transform a team led by Messi into perhaps the world's best.
With a team that also included several of the players that led Spain to the World Cup title in 2010, Barcelona won 14 of a possible 19 major trophies from 2008-12 under Guardiola before adding the league title with Vilanova in 2013.
Despite the league display, Vilanova was unable to win another Champions League title last season. Barcelona lost to eventual champion Bayern Munich 7-0 on total goals in the semifinals.
Vilanova also will be remembered for his role in a brawl in the 2010 Spanish Super Cup won by Barcelona, when Real Madrid coach Jose Mourinho poked him in the eye.
As a young player, Vilanova was at Barcelona's training academy from 1984-89 but never made it to the first team. Instead, he went on to play for clubs such as Celta Vigo and Mallorca before his career was cut short by a knee injury.
Vilanova then went into coaching and got a job with Barcelona's youth players, tutoring current players Gerard Pique, Cesc Fabregas and Messi. Vilanova left to work as sport director at third-division club Terrassa before returning to Barcelona to take over the club's "Barca B" feeder team.
Vilanova is survived by his wife, Montse Chaure, and two children. His son Adrian is currently in Barcelona's youth academy.
His funeral is Monday at Barcelona's cathedral.

Friday, 25 April 2014

Gautam Gambhir says Chris Lynn's catch was unbelievable against Royal Challengers Bangalore in IPL 7


Chasing 151, Royal Challengers Bangalore fell short against Kolkata Knight Riders in the Indian Premier League after an airborne Chris Lynn, who had earlier smashed a 31-ball 45, stretched his body backwards at the deep mid-wicket fence to pull off a blinder and send back dangerman AB de Villiers.


Sharjah:  Skipper Gautam Gambhir called it "incredible" after his side Kolkata Knight Riders pulled off a remarkable come-from-behind victory over Royal Challengers Bangalore in the Indian Premier League here on Thursday.


Riding on one of the greatest catches of all time and superb bowling at the death, the Knight Riders pulled off a two-run win in a thrilling last-ball finish.

"It was an incredible win. We deserved some luck too as we have had a number of these last-ball finishes," Gambhir said at the post-match presentation ceremony after his side's second win in the tournament.

Chasing 151, RCB fell short after an airborne Chris Lynn, who had earlier smashed a 31-ball 45, stretched his body backwards at the deep midwicket fence to pull off a blinder and send back dangerman AB de Villiers.

"Once the ball got a little old, it was difficult to hit. Chris scored useful runs, so did Surya. So we had it in mind that once the ball got that old, we had a chance.

"We were scratchy with the bat, and with the ball, so we need to improve on the areas. The catch was unbelievable and Chris deserved the Man of the Match for that catch," Gambhir added.

Asked about the blinder that he had pulled off, Lynn said, "I slipped and I though if I stood up and dropped the catch, it would look very silly, so just stayed down."

Chasing on a good batting surface, Bangalore were off to a blazing start with Yogesh Takawale (40) and Parthiv Patel (21) dealing in boundaries. They were very much the favourites to log full points till Lynn came in their way.

RCB captain Virat Kohli said his team messed up the chase in the last few overs.

"We lost that game rather than KKR winning that one. We played some really good cricket to restrict them to a total, built partnerships, but messed up the game in the last few overs," a dejected Kohli said.

'Revolver Rani' movie review: Kangana Ranaut’s 'Rani' not completely credible

'Revolver Rani': movie review
Star Cast: Kangana Ranaut, Vir Das, Piyush Mishra, Zakir Hussain, Zeeshan Qadri, Kumud Mishra, Pankaj Saraswat
Director: Sai Kabir
Rating: *1/2
In the life of a Bollywood leading lady, a month can be a long time. In ‘Queen’, Kangana Ranaut’s Rani was a West Delhi ingĂ©nue plunged into a quest to find herself. In ‘Revolver Rani’, Kangana Ranaut does a 360 degree in terms of look: she is a rebel, wearing outlandish Turkish pants and jackets and dark glasses and a dark tan. She is also a woman, and she is also, in her own twisted way, in search of herself.
But the difference between the two films is crucial: the Rani in ‘Queen’ won our hearts because she was believable every inch of the way. This Rani, who hefts revolvers and shoots to kill, is neither wholly a cartoon figure, nor completely credible. This confusion makes us stop suspending disbelief, and ‘Revolver Rani’ becomes a tiresome Bollywoodesque trudge through the Chambal, and its men and one woman posturing with guns, and the standard corrupt ‘netas’ and complicit cops.
Alka Singh (Kangana Ranaut) is a hard-headed, flint-eyed woman with a dark past. With the help of her beloved ‘mama’ Balli (Piyush Mishra), she is being positioned to become the leader of the Bhind-Morena-Gwalior area in Madhya Pradesh. Her rival Udaybhan Tomar (Zakir Hussain) has only one aim: to find a weak spot in her arsenal, which appears in the shape of her toyboy (Vir Das), whose only desire is to make it big in Bollywood.
There are a few parts of the film that come together, where you can see the dark satirical edges, and what the debutant director (who has worked with Tigmanshu Dhulia, who, in turn, has produced the film) was aiming for in sending up stereotypes. Especially in the way a newsreader acts as a ‘sutradhar’, her comments becoming increasingly frenzied. That’s nicely done. Some of the shoot-outs are also a hoot, particularly when you really can’t make out the difference between the lawmakers and the lawbreakers.
But the high farcical tone that this film should have been made in keeps dipping. And that’s because the heroine who is meant to be the hero (nice subversive trick, pity it doesn’t work) keeps wanting to become earnest. It is clear that Kangana Ranaut is trying hard for the ‘sur’, but this is not her territory: she gets to that well-judged manic edge

Nokia to Exclude India Phone Plant From Microsoft Deal

Nokia Oyj (NOK1V) will exclude its India phone factory from a 5.44 billion-euro ($7.5 billion) agreement to sell its mobile phone business to Microsoft Corp.(MSFT:US) amid a legal battle over a tax dispute in the country.
“We are leaving out the plant because of the tax issues,” Poonam Kaul, a Nokia India spokeswoman, said by telephone today. The plant, one of the Espoo, Finland-based company’s largest phone factories, will make products for Microsoft as part of a servicing agreement, according to Kaul.
Nokia was ordered by India’s top court last month to guarantee tax liabilities of the Indian unit before transferring the plant to Microsoft, a decision it was “disappointed” with at the time. India, Asia’s third-biggest economy, is the world’s largest market for mobile phones after China.
India’s Supreme Court on March 14 upheld the decision of a lower court asking Nokia to deposit 22.5 billion rupees ($368 million) into an escrow account and said the parent should agree to pay any tax dues after related litigation is over, according to a two-judge bench headed by A.R. Dave in New Delhi.
Nokia strongly believes its offer to the Indian tax department is fair, Brett Young, a spokesman for the company, said at the time. The company is offering a voluntary retirement plan to workers at the plant near the southern Indian city of Chennai, according to Kaul.
Calls to Waggener Edstrom, Microsoft’s Rapid Response Team for communications in the U.S., and an e-mail to Microsoft India weren’t immediately returned.
Nokia expects the sale of almost all of its Devices and Services business to Microsoft to close tomorrow, the Finnish company said April 21. The Redmond, Washington-based company is due to report quarterly earnings (MSFT:US) today.

Nokia to name Rajeev Suri as next CEO: report


A file photo of Rajeev Suri
A file photo of Rajeev Suri

Helsinki :
Nokia, which is set to close the sale of its phone business to Microsoft, will on Tuesday name Rajeev Suri as its next CEO and outline its new strategy with a focus on its networks equipment business, a newspaper said on Friday.
Citing unnamed sources, daily Helsingin Sanomat said Nokia would also on Tuesday, along with its first-quarter results, announce how much cash it would pay out to shareholders.
India-born Rajeev Suri has a Bachelor of Engineering (Electronics and Telecommunications) from Mangalore University, also the alma mater of Microsoft chief Satya Nadella.
Investors have been looking forward to hearing about Nokia's next steps since it announced the 5.4 billion euro ($7.5 billion) Microsoft deal in September.
Nokia said earlier this week it expected the deal to close on Friday after the companies had agreed to modify certain deal conditions.
46-year-old Suri has been widely considered the leading candidate for the CEO post as in recent years he has helped the network division Nokia Solutions and Networks (NSN) turn profitable with a drastic restructuring plan and by ditching unprofitable businesses.
The newspaper also said Nokia would over time abandon the name NSN.

Thursday, 24 April 2014

Meet AISight - The "Pre-Crime"-Detecting Software Being Installed On Global CCTVs

If you thought that CCTV cameras tracking your every move in public was bad enough, you’re going to just love AISight (pronounced “eyesight” of course). The invention of a Houston, Texas based company called BRS Labs (which stands for Behavioral Recognition Systems) is headed by former secret service special agent John Frazzini, and this Orwellian surveillance platform brings artificial intelligence to all of those creepy cameras that have been installed everywhere around you.
Apparently, this system is currently being installed in Boston, and has already been implemented in Chicago and Washington. In the event you live in these cities, I bet you’ve never heard of AISight, and more importantly, I bet there’s been little to no public debate.
The most disturbing part about this platform is that this artificial intelligence defines what is “normal” behavior and anything that falls outside of that narrow band can be flagged for “pre crime” potential. Ultimately, if these things are allowed to proliferate, it will condition humans to behave like zombie automatons fearful that anything interesting or creative might be viewed as criminal.
The NYPD recently engaged in such behavior when it arrested a street artist unlawfully. Now imagine if a computer could do the work the work without human involvement.
The entire sad incident was caught on video. See below:

The “War on Street Artists” – Puppeteer Unlawfully Arrested and Harassed in NYC Subway

For more details on AISight, we turn to ITProPortal:
Imagine a major city completely covered by a video surveillance system designed to monitor the every move of its citizens. Now imagine that the system is run by a fast-learning machine intelligence, that’s designed to spot crimes before they even happen. No, this isn’t the dystopian dream of a cyber-punk science fiction author, or the writers of TV show “Person of Interest”. This is Boston, on the US East Coast, and it could soon be many more cities around the world.

Behavioral Recognition Systems, Inc. (BRS Labs) is a software development company based out of a nondescript office block in Houston Texas, with the motto: “New World. New security.”

BRS Labs’ AISight is different because it doesn’t rely on a human programmer to tell it what behaviour is suspicious. It learns that all by itself.
The system enables a machine to monitor is environment, and build up a detailed profile of what can be considered “normal” behaviour. The AI can then determine what kind of behavior is abnormal, without human pre-programing.
Just what the world needs.
Oh, but wait, it gets even better…
What’s more, AISight permanently learns and registers when changes in normal behavior occur, so no ongoing programing is required from human operators. In order to do this, it employs a technology known as “artificial neural networks”, which mimics the function of the human brain.

What’s more, BRS Labs’ system is extremely easy to implement even across huge, disparate networks of outdated camera equipment. The company claims that it needs maximum of only a few days for the complete hardware and software installation.
So fast the public won’t have a chance for public debate!
After that, the system sets about “autonomously building an ever-changing knowledge base of activity seen through every camera on your video network.”

The software is already in place in other cities around the United States, such as Chicago and Washington.

“Our system will figure out things you never thought of looking for,” said Wesley Cobb, BRS’ chief science officer. “You never thought to look for a car driving backwards up the entrance of a parking garage, for example. Our system will find that and alert on it, because it’s different from what it usually sees. It’s taught itself what to look for.”
How about laugher, is that banned yet? How about thinking?
The inevitable security concerns have already been raised. While BRS claims to be “concerned about the privacy rights of individuals everywhere,” it’s not hard to imagine a future where our every move is assessed, quantified and judged by ever-smarter generations of artificial intelligence.

There’s one security camera for every 11 people in the UK, and it has been reported that the average British citizen is recorded on camera over 300 times every day.

Samsung Galaxy S5 review: Worth the price you will pay for it

Every time there is a new Galaxy flagship from Samsung, there is a lot of hype as well as a lot of expectation. Not all of that is unfounded, as over the past few years top-end Samsung phones have been able to capture popular imagination like very few other devices have been able to. But not everyone was happy with what came in the Samsung Galaxy S4 and it seems the Korean tech leviathan was under pressure to innovate with the Samsung Galaxy S5. We look at the innovations, the disappointments and the surprises.


The PHONE
DESIGN: The Samsung Galaxy S5 looks just the way is should — like a Galaxy device. There is no doubt that this is from a design family that we are all so familiar with. There is one good thing though: this phone does not feel like an overdose of plastic like some of the earlier versions. This has a perforated rear panel, which does not feel all that plasticky. The chrome bezel is definitely tacky and I thought the plain line on the S4 was better than this three line design. The rest is all the same, except for the micro-USB port, which is now under a chrome flap as this phone is supposed to be water resistant.
Galaxy S5
However, the flap does not inspire a lot of confidence. We will need to take a relook at how many of them are still hanging from the bodies six months down the line.
DISPLAY: It is pointless to talk about the displays on Samsung phones, after all they make the best mobile displays, whatever the screen size. So it has to be the best on a flagship phone and the 5.1-inch FullHD AMOLED display on the S5 is really up there. This is among the best features of the phone.
Galaxy S5
PERFORMANCE: This was a no-brainer from the start, except for the fact that this phone is not powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 like the rest of the world. Thanks to the absence of 4G networks will be get a combo of Samsung’s own 1.9GHz and 1.3GHz quad-core processors. That does not mean the phone is by any means slow or laggy. Multi-tasking is smooth and there were no occasions when I felt the phone was lacking oomph. If you need benchmarks, then let me tell you this phone clocked a score better than the Samsung Galaxy Note 3. That should prove it.
The INNOVATIONS
FINGERPRINT SCANNER: The one innovation that you will get to use a lot, if you opt for it, is the fingerprint scanner. The scanner has been embedded in the home button, like in the Apple iPhone 5S. If you activate it, the phone will unlock only if you swipe your finger on the button from top to button. It is a great security feature to have, especially on a top-end phone. And, I have to say it works like a dream on the S5. But is it a practical feature? That I am not very sure of. For instance, while reviewing the phone I could not ask my wife to take a call while I was driving. Even if you unlock the phone and hand it over to someone trusted, it won’t be long before they request the services of your finger.
HEART RATE SENSOR: The other innovative feature, is the heart rate sensor in the rear, next to the LED flash. This feature works in tandem with the S-Health app and is an important part of the entire fitness eco-system that Samsung is trying to drive with it new phones and Gear wearable devices.
WATER RESISTANT: This phone is also dust and water resistant, with resistant being the operative part. It is not waterproof. So don’t think you can take it to the pool for an underwater photo shoot. However, if you are in Mumbai or Kerala and prone to getting the phone wet, then this phone will be a winner. The flap for the USB port and the extra rubber lining inside are all meant to protect the innards of the phone. This is indeed a good feature to have, but one I would like to see becoming a standard on all mid and high range phones soon.
The SURPRISES
CAMERA: The phone has quite a few surprises. But none more than the auto-focus on the 16MP camera which is undoubtedly the fastest I have seen.
Galaxy S5
This comes in very handy when you are taking pictures of moving objects, always an effort with a smartphone. Usually, the subject is gone by the time the phone gets itself to click the picture. For instance, try clicking the picture of a flower on a windy day. See the results I achieved with the S5.
The selective focus is also good, letting you blur the background, or the foreground, as you deem fit. This is usually the preserve of the DSLR, but now available on the Samsung Galaxy S5. The camera also has the ability to add apps like in Lumia phones, though there are not many free apps available to add. If only the final results of the camera we as stunning as the rest of its features. The S5 results are good, but I would have loved more clarity in some of frames.
Galaxy S5
APPS: The S5 does not have a lot of gimmicky software tweaks like some of its earlier versions. The UI and the operating system are as simple as Samsung could keep it. But there are some welcome features, like the settings that gives all features on a platter, AirView that lets you see menus without clicking and multi-window. There is also the Toolbox that lets you access the most commonly used features from any screen, provided you can live with the button being on every single screen you open. But this feature is not innovative and has been spotted on tweaked Androids like the Color OS.
ULTRA POWER SAVING: Like with many of the new flagship phones, the S5 too has an ultrapower saving mode which can come to your rescue when the battery is about to drain out. I turned to the feature when I had just 28% left on the phone. With the limited features in the mode, the phone said it could use this juice to last over 3.5 days. Now, who wouldn’t want that feature on a phone. But remember this gives you a stripped down version of the OS and only a handful of essential apps. But you could make the phone last a whole fortnight on a full charge if you are planning a trek in the hills. But we have seen the same feature in the new HTC One M8.
BATTERY LIFE: The 2800 mAh battery on the S5 can give you more than 12 hours on regular use. But we suggest you shift to ultra power saving mode at the end of the day.
The DISAPPOINTMENTS
The Samsung Galaxy S5 resulted in some, though minor, disappointments.
AUDIO QUALITY: The call quality on the phone is not all that great. In fact, the entire phone seems to emanate sounds when you are on a call, as if you had the speaker phone switched on. The rear flap vibrates when you are talking to someone. The audio quality is not sharp because of all this. But this could well be a problem with the review unit as I doubt Samsung would err on something so basic.
HEATING: The phone heats up when you are using the browser, even when you are having a long drawn conversation. Not expected of a top draw phone.
SHOULD YOU BUY IT
There is nothing that prevents me from not suggesting this phone as a buy for those looking for a top-end Android phone. Yes, you should be able to afford it to begin with. The phone is worth the Rs 51,500 you will pay for it. But if you want more innovative phone then maybe you should take a look at the HTC One M8 too before making up your mind.

Sachin Tendulkar begins birthday by casting vote, wishes pour in

MUMBAI: The cricket fraternity today took to Twitter to convey their wishes to the legendary Sachin Tendulkar, who started his 41st birthday by casting his vote in the general elections. 

"I have voted, have you? A wonderful start to my birthday, as a responsible citizen of our great nation," Tendulkar wrote on his Twitter page. 

Tendulkar had returned from the UAE, where IPL 7 is going on, according to sources close to him, and is celebrating his birthday with family and friends in the city. 

Wishing the maestro, Indian batting's mainstay Virat Kohli said it was Tendulkar who inspired him to take up the game of cricket. 

"Happy birthday to the man who inspired me to play this game. Happy birthday @sachin_rt paji! Legend forever," wrote Kohli on his Twitter handle. 

India opener Rohit Sharma, who still shares the dressing room with Tendulkar as a part of the Mumbai Indians team in the Indian Premier League, Tweeted: "Happy birthday @sachin_rt wish you all the happiness. Really happy to still share the dressing room with you." 

This is Tendulkar's first birthday after he quit all forms of cricket in November 2013 following his 200th and final Test at his home ground, Wankhede Stadium, against the West Indies. 

The cricket icon is, however, still associated with the Mumbai Indians outfit as its team's mentor. 

"Happy birthday to Sachin Paaji. May u have a peaceful and fun-filled life. God bless u," India discard Gautam Gambhir wrote. 

Wishing his "God" happy birthday, Sreesanth said, "@sachin_rt Wishing my cricket God ..a very happy birthday..!!" 

Former England skipper Michael Vaughan also wished Test and ODI cricket's highest scorer. 

"Happy Birthday @sachin_rt .. Celebrate in style.....," he wrote. 

In his message, Sri Lankan cricketer Russel Arnold prayed for Tendulkar's long life. 

"Sachin Tendulkar turns 41 today... Happy Birthday... !!!! Have a good one and many more!!!," tweeted Arnold. 

BCCI vice president Rajeev Shukla also extended his wished to Tendulkar. 

"May everyday bring something new and exciting for you. May this Birthday turn out to be as amazing as you .....," said Shukla. 

Tendulkar hung up his boots after a glittering international career that saw him amass 15,921 runs in Tests, at an average of 53.78, and 18426 runs in 463 ODIs at an average of 44.83. 

He had scored 100 centuries during his international with Test matches accounting for 51 of those, the most by any batsman in the world.

Varanasi welcomes Modi with open arms, makes him cult figure

BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi today literally created the Modi wave in the temple town of Varanasi as his supporters to the tune of thousands braved the hot sun since 8 am to 2.30 pm to walk along with him as he filed his nomination from the holy city this afternoon. In a massive gathering of supporters that was unprecedented and unmatched to that of his rivals, Modi succeeded in painting the city saffron as people from all walks of life flocked to cheer him.

The rejoicing for Modi it seemed, was natural, as the city offered a rousing welcome to the BJP prime ministerial candidate almost akin to a victory parade.

From the look of it, people in large numbers in Varanasi believed that Modi was someone who could change face of the city and consequently their living conditions. The atmosphere was electric and the energy infectious enough to beat even the wildest celebrations of India's World Cup triumphs in the cricketing world. Some even resorted to fanciful apparels invoking the divine -- Shiva, Hanuman, Bharat Mata and Maa Ganga.

When a lady journalist argued with some in the crowd that Modi was no magician who could turn dreams into reality, she got a quick rebuttal from one of them, "Indeed he is not a magician who would weave dreams but a magician who unleashes development."

Buoyed by the unprecedented response, BJP leaders called this mass surge as manifestation of an electoral tsunami as the chants of—Har Har Modi—reigned the air again whether his political opponents like it or not. The response that Modi got was no less than the Kumbh. As people take a dip in the Ganges hoping for some divine intervention, the BJP prime ministerial candidate triggered similar sentiments albeit politically.

Added to the euphoria present in the chock-a-block streets of Varanasi was the large electronic media presence that beamed live images across the country. During his road show, Modi stopped at four places to garland the statues of Madan Mohan Malaviya, Sardar Patel, Bhimrao Ambedkar and Swami Vivekanand.

Though the BJP’s organisational machinery under stewardship of Modi’s trusted aide Amit Shah had worked hard, it was in all likelihood, people with no affiliation to any political party that made the event big. This trend might worry AAP convener Arvind Kejriwal and Ajay Rai of the Congress as they are pitted against Modi from the seat. On Wednesday, Kejriwal had put up a good show but he was nowhere close to Modi.

Minutes before he filed his nomination, Modi spoke to the media and tried to establish an emotional connect with the city by invoking mother Ganga. It is true that Ganga is an emotive issue here but with years of neglect there is a great deal of cynicism among the people of tall talks made by leaders on its purification. Modi used to a different pitch to connect.

"When I was made a candidate I thought I was being sent there by the party. But today I realise that I have neither come, nor sent but have been drawn by mother Ganga. I feel like a child who feels elated in a mother’s lap. May the almighty give me strength to do for Ganga what I did for river Sabarmati and proudly put Ganga and Varanasi on world heritage map," he said. Modi also drew a Shaivite connection between his native place Vadnagar in Gujarat and Varanasi. The BJP prime ministerial aspirant also made a politically significant connection between Baroda and Dalit icon Bhimrao Ambedkar. He also said that like the Muslim kite makers in Gujarat, the condition of the silk weavers of Varanasi can be improved through branding and globalised marketing. A connect between Buddhist Sarnath and Vadnagar was also drawn.

Modi’s strategists chosen four individuals to propose his nomination so that they could display broader social spectrum of Kashi’s cultural tradition – first by the grandson of Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya, founder of famed Banaras Hindu University Justice (Retd) Giridhar Malaviya; second by musician Dhanulal Mishra, third by a boatman community member Veerbhadra Nidhad and fourth by a weaver Ashok.

The choice of 24 April was guided more by strategic reasons than by astrological formations. It was last date of filing nominations for 12 May, the last phase of polling. By doing it today he will be accountable to Election Commission for his expenditure for less number of days and thus he would keep it to the minimum. Moreover, the date coincided with the sixth phase of polling for 117 candidates in 12 states including those in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Chhatisgarh, Mumbai, Rajasthan and other places.

Ukraine forces kill up to five rebels, Putin warns of consequences

Ukraine forces kill up to five rebels, Putin warns of consequences
Ukrainian forces killed up to five pro-Moscow separatists in the east of the country, the interior ministry said on Thursday.

SLAVIANSK (Ukraine)/ST PETERSBURG (Russia): Ukrainian forces killed up to five pro-Moscow separatists in the east of the country, the interior ministry said on Thursday, as Russian President Vladimir Putin warned of "consequences" if Kiev used the army against its own people. 

Interior ministry forces backed by the army removed three checkpoints manned by armed groups in the separatist-controlled town of Slaviansk, the ministry said in a statement. 

"During the armed clash up to five terrorists were eliminated," it said, adding that one person had been wounded on the side of government forces. 

Under an international accord signed in Geneva last week, illegal armed groups, including the rebels occupying about a dozen public buildings in the largely Russian-speaking east, are supposed to disarm and go home. 

However, the Kremlin, which has deployed tens of thousands of troops on Ukraine's border, maintains it has the right to protect Russian-speakers if they come under threat, a reason it gave for annexing the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine last month. 

In St Petersburg, Putin said that if the authorities in Kiev had used the army in eastern Ukraine, this would be a very serious crime against its own people. 

"It is just a punitive operation and it will of course incur consequences for the people making these decisions, including (an effect) on our interstate relations," Putin said in a televised meeting with regional media. 

The Geneva agreement, signed by Russia, the United States, Ukraine and the European Union, is already in trouble as Kiev launches its offensive to regain control of the east. 

East and West have put the onus on each other to ensure the accord is implemented on the ground. U.S. President Barack Obama said earlier he was poised to impose new sanctions on Moscow if it did not act fast to end the armed stand-off. 

Moscow also flexed its economic muscles in its worst stand-off with the West since the Cold War, with the government suggesting foreign firms which pull out of the country may not be able to get back in, and a source at Gazprom saying the gas exporter had slapped an additional $11.4 billion bill on Kiev. 

Washington accuses Moscow of fomenting unrest in the east. Russia denies this and counters that Europe and the United States are supporting an illegitimate government in Kiev. 

Obama said the Russian leadership was not abiding by the spirit or the letter of the Geneva agreement so far. 

"We have prepared for the possibility of applying additional sanctions," he told a news conference on a visit to Japan. "There's always the possibility that Russia, tomorrow, or the next day, reverses its course and takes a different approach." 

US troops arrive in Poland 

So far, the United States and EU have imposed visa bans and asset freezes on a few Russians in protest at Moscow's annexation last month of Crimea from Ukraine. 

In NATO member Poland, the first group of a contingent of around 600 U.S. soldiers arrived on Wednesday. They are part of an effort by Washington to reassure eastern European allies who are worried by the build-up of Russian forces near Ukraine's borders. 

Earlier on Thursday, Kiev forces with five light armoured vehicles took control of a checkpoint north of Slaviansk after separatists appeared to abandon the position, Reuters journalists said from the scene. 

The government said the city hall in another eastern town, Mariupol, which had been seized by separatists, was now back under central control. Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said the mayor was back in his office. 

"In this instance there were no casualties ... The process of getting the situation back to normal in the city will continue," he said in a post on his Facebook page. 

Kiev also reported a shootout overnight in another part of the east when a Ukrainian soldier was wounded, while pro-Russian separatists in Slaviansk were holding three journalists, including U.S. citizen Simon Ostrovsky. 

Ukraine, a former Soviet republic, slid into unrest late last year when Moscow-backed President Viktor Yanukovich rejected a pact to build closer ties with Europe. Protesters took over central Kiev and he fled in February. 

Days later, Russian troops seized control of Crimea. Moscow then annexed the region, saying it was protecting Russian residents, while the West called the action a land grab. 

The focus has now shifted to eastern Ukraine, the industrial heartland and home to a large Russian-speaking community. 

No way back? 

With rhetoric building from the United States about the imposition of a new, tougher round of sanctions, Russia suggested on Thursday that Western firms which pulled out of the country may not be able to get back in. 

"It is obvious that they won't return in the near future if they sever investment agreements with us, I mean there are consequences as well," Natural Resources Minister Sergei Donskoy told reporters. 

"Russia is one of the most promising countries in terms of hydrocarbons production. If some contracts are severed here, then, colleagues, you lose a serious lump of your future pie," the minister added. 

However, Western oil majors BP and Royal Dutch Shell were sticking with their projects in Russia, he noted. 

Supplies of Russian gas to Europe are also, potentially, at risk from the crisis over Ukraine. Moscow has threatened to cut Kiev off unless it pays off its debts, and drastically raised this bill this week. 

State-controlled Gazprom sent Ukrainian energy firm Naftogaz an additional bill on Wednesday of $11.4 billion, more than five times its previous claim, a source at the company said. This was in addition to the $2.2 billion that Naftogaz already owes for supplies in 2013 and 2014 so far. 

Moscow nearly doubled the gas price for Ukraine from April but Kiev, which is in financial trouble, is refusing to pay. 

If Moscow cuts off the flow to Kiev, this would have a knock-on effect on European customers further West, because many of the pipelines that deliver their gas run through Ukraine. 

European and Ukrainian officials were to meet in Slovakia, which borders Ukraine, on Thursday to try to work out ways to mitigate the impact if Ukraine is cut off. 

The options include reversing the usual east-west flow of the pipelines to Europe to pump gas back into Ukraine, but the volumes that could be supplied this way would be only a small fraction of the amount that Ukraine needs. 

Unarmed mediators from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe are in eastern Ukraine trying to persuade pro-Russian gunmen to go home, in line with the Geneva accord. 

Reuters reporters have not been able to establish that any Russian troops or special forces members are in the region, though Kiev and Western powers say they have growing evidence that Moscow has a covert presence. 

Putin has described as "nonsense" allegations that Moscow has its forces in eastern Ukraine. It says the unrest is a spontaneous protest by local people who fear persecution from the government in Kiev which it says is illegitimate and has far-right links.

India’s June-Sept monsoon likely to be weak: Govt

India’s June-September monsoon will likely be weak, the India Meteorological Department said in its official forecast Thursday. It put the odds of an El Nino, a weather pattern that puts India and Australia at higher risks of a drought, at 60%, in line with some global projections.
 
A below-normal monsoon doesn’t necessarily put India at the risk of drought. Less than half of all El Ninos in a 126-year period have impacted India’s monsoon, the Met’s data show. Yet, much depends on how the weather pattern, marked by a warming of the equatorial Pacific, builds up.
 
The monsoon is critical for Asia’s third-largest economy as half of all Indians depend on agriculture for a living. Good summer rains drive up output of summer crops, which account for half of India’s total annual food production. These include the key staple rice, along with a range of commodities, including lentils, oilseeds, vegetables and sugar, of which India’s is the second-biggest producer and largest consumer.
 
According to the official forecast, rainfall is likely to be 95% of the long-term average of 89 cm. According to the Met’s classification, for a normal monsoon, falls have to be between 96-104%. The Met is likely to issue an updated forecast in June.
 
India’s economy is set to grow at 4.9% in 2013-14, marginally higher than previous year’s 4.5%. This is the first time in 25 years that the country’s growth rate will end up below 5% in two successive years. A deficient monsoon could be among the first challenges a new government, set to take office in May, will have to address to help revive an embattled economy.
 
Plentiful rains help keep a check on food prices. If rains end up poorer than estimated, the country could face a drought for the first time in four years. Weak rains could potentially dent farm output and make the fight against inflation tougher, which are already ruling high at over 7% at the retail level.

Sri Lankan officials apologise to British nurse arrested over Buddha tattoo

Naomi Coleman flies back the Britain on a ticket paid for by the government as it emerges a row with a taxi driver sparked arrest

The unidentified woman was arrested at the country's main international airport on Monday and appeared before a magistrate who ordered her deportation, police said in a statement
Naomi Coleman was arrested in Colombo minutes into her holiday Photo: Lakruwan Wanniarachi/ Getty

Sri Lankan authorities have apologised to a British nurse jailed over her Buddha tattoo and paid for her flight back to the UK.
As she flew home it emerged that Naomi Coleman, 37, was arrested minutes into her holiday as she rowed with taxi driver over an extortionate fare and he took her to police and pointed out her tattoo.
She spent a night in prison, where she feared she would be raped, before being transferred to a detention centre in the suburbs of the capital Colombo.
It is understood that the British High Commission is to lodge a complaint with Sri Lanka's External Affairs Ministry over her treatment.
Miss Coleman, who is expected to land in Heathrow on Thursday night, had been planning to travel on to the Maldives but was forced to cut her dream holiday short because no airline would carry her without security clearance.
"I have been treated very badly. I am exhausted," she said. "I just want to go home.”
Sri Lanka's government-run Tourism Promotion Bureau paid for her ticket and an official apologised to her personally for the “unfortunate incident”.
Miss Coleman, a mental health nurse from Coventry, has revealed that when she landed in Colombo on Monday she tried to get a taxi from the airport to her hotel in the nearby town of Negombo.
The driver demanded an “extortionate” Rs 15,000, around £68, when the fare should not have exceeded a couple of thousand rupees and the pair got into an argument.
As a result, the driver took her to nearby police and pointed to the Buddha tattoo on her upper right arm.
She was dragged before a magistrate and imprisoned on the grounds that she tried to outrage public feelings.
Since then she has been through “hell”, Miss Coleman said, fearing she would be raped by a male prison guard who made a lewd gestures and was forced to bribe a female guard to avoid a “thorough” body search.
"I did not feel safe,” she said.
Authorities insist they will investigate her claim if a formal complaint was made.
Sri Lanka is highly sensitive to perceived insults to Buddhism, but Miss Coleman says that she is a devout Buddhist and the tattoo was out of respect and conviction.
Another British tourist from entering the island in March last year for showing "disrespect" to Buddhism by having a Buddha tattooed on his arm.
In August 2012 three French tourists were sentenced to six months in jail, which was suspended for five years, for kissing a Buddha statue in what the authorities considered a sign of disrespect.
Sri Lanka prevented US rap star Akon from visiting in 2010 over one of his music videos which featured scantily clad women dancing in front of a Buddha statue.
The incident has prompted the foreign office to update their advice for those wishing to visit the area.
They warn: "The mistreatment of Buddhist images and artefacts is a serious offence and tourists have been convicted for this. British nationals have been refused entry to Sri Lanka or faced deportation for having visible tattoos of Buddha. Don’t pose for photographs by standing in front of a statue of Buddha.”