Friday, September 18, 2009

Thousands march in Iran opposition protests

TEHRAN, Iran – Hard-liners attacked senior pro-reform leaders in the streets as tens of thousands marched in competing mass demonstrations by the opposition and government supporters. Opposition protesters, chanting "death to the dictator," hurled stones and bricks in clashes with security forces firing tear gas.

The opposition held its first major street protests since mid-July, with marchers decked out in green — the reform movement's color — waving V-for-victory signs on major boulevards in the capital.

In some cases on several blocks away, larger crowds marched in government-sponsored rallies marking an annual anti-Israel commemoration, waving pictures of Iran's supreme leader and president and placards denouncing the Jewish state.

The commemoration, known as Quds Day, is a major political occasion for the government — a day for it to show its anti-Israeli credentials and its support for the Palestinians. Quds is the Arabic word for Jerusalem. During a speech for the rallies, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad railed against Israel and the West, questioning whether the Holocaust occurred and calling it a pretext for occupying Arab land.

But the opposition was determined to turn the day into a show of its survival and continued strength despite a fierce three-month-old crackdown against it since the disputed June 12 presidential election.

Top opposition leaders joined the protests, in direct defiance of commands by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who barred anti-government demonstrations on Quds Day. That could provoke an escalation in the crackdown: hard-line clerics have been demanding the past week that any leader backing the protests should be arrested.

Several tens of thousands joined the opposition marches, witnesses said — far smaller than the masses that turned out in the Quds Day rallies, which were helped by government organizing. Police and security forces, along with pro-government Basij militiamen, fanned out along main squares and avenues and in many cases tried to keep nearby opposition protesters away from the Quds Day rallies to prevent clashes, witnesses said.

Opposition supporters poured onto main boulevards and squares, wearing green T-shirts and wristbands and waving green banners and balloons. They waved pictures of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi and denounced Ahmadinejad, chanting "death to the dictator."

Others chanted, "Not Gaza, not Lebanon — our life is for Iran" — a slogan directly challenging the government's support for anti-Israeli Palestinian militants in Gaza and Lebanon's Hezbollah guerrilla. Some shouted for Ahmadinejad's government to resign. Some women marched with their children in tow.

But at one of the several opposition rallies around the city, a group of hard-liners pushed through the crowd and attacked former President Mohamad Khatami, a cleric who is one of the most prominent pro-reform figures, according to a reformist Web site. The report cited witnesses as saying the opposition activists rescued Khatami and quickly repelled the assailants.

Opposition Web sites reported that Khatami fell to the ground, but witnesses said he was only jostled and remained standing.

Hard-liners also tried to attack the main opposition leader, Mousavi, when he joined another march elsewhere in the city, a witness said. Supporters rushed Mousavi into his car when the hard-liners approached, and the vehicle sped away as his supporters pushed the hard-liners back, the witness said. He and other witnesses spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of government retaliation.

Another pro-reform leader, Mahdi Karroubi, who also ran in the presidential election, also joined protests elsewhere in the city.

In one of the main Tehran squares, Haft-e Tir, security forces weilding batons and firing tear gas tried to break up one of the opposition marched, and were met with protesters throwing stones and bricks, witnesses said. Several policemen were seen being taken away with light injuries. At least 10 protesters were seized by plainclothes security agents in marches around the city, witnesses said.

The pro-government Quds Day rallies were held in cities around the country, and the opposition staged competing rallies in the southern and central cities of Shiraz and Isfahan, witnesses said. In Shiraz, police rushed the protesters with batons, scuffling with them, witnesses said.

The opposition claims that Ahmadinejad won the June election by fraud and that Mousavi is the rightful victor. Hundreds of thousands marched in support of Mousavi in the weeks after the vote, until police, Basij and the elite Revolutionary Guard crushed the protests, arresting hundreds. The opposition says 72 people were killed in the crackdown, thought the government puts the number at 36. The last significant protest was on July 17.

In sheer numbers, the opposition turnout was far smaller than the mass pro-government Quds Day marches — not surprising given the state's freedom to organize the gathering.

Customarily on Quds Day, Iranians gather for pro-Palestinian rallies in various parts of the city, marching through the streets and later converging for the prayer ceremony. The ceremony was established in 1979 by the leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

Just hundreds of yards (meters) away from opposition protesters on the main Keshavarz Boulevard, thousands of Ahmadinejad supporters marched carrying huge photographs of the president and Supreme Leader Khamenei. Some in the government-sponsored rally chanted: "Death to those who oppose the supreme leader!"

At the climax of the occasion, Ahmadinejad addressed worshippers before Friday prayers at the Tehran University campus, reiterating his anti-Holocaust rhetoric that has drawn international condemnation since 2005. He questioned whether the "Holocaust was a real event" and saying Israel was created on "a lie and mythical claims."

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Afridi to skip local tourneys before ICC Champions Trophy


Source: icc-cricket.yahoo.net

Ahead of the upcoming ICC Champions Trophy in South Africa, Pakistan Twenty20 skipper Shahid Afridi has decided to skip some local tournaments after sustaining an ankle sprain during the conditioning camp in Lahore. Turning out for the hosts, Afridi, who is also the vice-captain of the national team, has decided to give the quarter-finals of the Dr Muhammad Ali Shah night Twenty20 tournament a miss due of the ankle problem.

"I got a hit on the ankle on the last day of the camp and I don't want to take any risks because we have an important tournament like the Champions Trophy coming up," Afridi said. He said he decided against playing the local event as he wanted to give his ankle some rest before the second phase of the national camp which begins in Karachi from September 12.

While Afridi will be missing from the tournament, other Pakistani players including captain, Younis Khan have got special permission to play in the knockout stages. Pakistan team manager Yawar Saeed has, however, made it clear that no player will be allowed to play in any Ramazan tournament once the camp begins in Karachi.

"The Champions Trophy is a very important event for us and we don't want to risk any fitness issues with any of our players that is why we have stopped them from playing in local matches during the camp," Yawar said.

Hospitality a key part of success at ICC World Twenty20 West Indies 2010

Source: icc-cricket.yahoo.net

Hospitality packages are already available for next year's ICC World Twenty20 West Indies 2010, and the official hospitality programme is already proving to be a crucial part of the tournament's planning and delivery.

The packages are available both locally and internationally with the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) designing, managing and implementing an official hospitality programme itself for the first time.

Two types of hospitality are available, the Century Dining package and the Beyond the Boundary Suite (box) package.

Both will be competitively priced and will be significantly cheaper than comparative packages for the ICC Cricket World Cup in 2007. Prices have been confirmed and are available by visiting www.windiescrickethospitality.com or by following the ‘hospitality link' at www.icc-cricket.yahoo.net.

ICC WT20 2010 Tournament Director Ernest Hilaire said: "The ICC World Twenty20 West Indies 2010 will offer great value to all spectators through competitive ticket prices and the corporate hospitality sector will be no exception."

The hospitality programme will be centrally managed from the tournament headquarters in St Lucia, making use of an extensive network of international official hospitality sales agents around the globe to market, promote and sell official hospitality packages to prospective customers.

However, it is not just in the provision of a world-class hospitality programme that the region will benefit commercially from through next year's tournament. As part of the management and delivery of the programme, local resources will be secured and some large contracts will see many local companies benefiting hugely from the presence of the tournament. Event companies, caterers, hostesses, advertisers, printers, florists, signage manufacturers and a host of local administrators and suppliers will all be a part of the delivery and provisioning of the programme that will see at least US$1.2million pumped in to the economies of the Caribbean.

Furthermore, a legion of local workers will be kept busy as cooks, servers and bar staff, hostesses, musicians and former cricketing greats all combine to form the programmes event-day staff roster. It is predicted that staffing numbers across the three venues will amount to more than 180 match-day personnel, with many more helping out behind the scenes in the lead-up to the event.

And the investment into the region goes even further. As part of the team of global sales agents who have been appointed to sell the official hospitality packages, Kensington Oval Management Inc., the Guyana Cricket Board and the St Lucia National Cricket Association will all benefit from sales commissions, with their appointments further guaranteeing that revenue will go back to the game in each host nation.

"The fact the West Indies Cricket Board is running its own official hospitality programme is an exciting development for the region, and with so many suppliers and local workers set to benefit from just this one element of the tournament, the rewards for playing host to next year's ICC World Twenty20 event are plain to see. With Kensington Oval Management Inc., the Guyana Cricket Board and the St Lucia National Cricket Association among the official sales agents it will also ensure that a good part of revenue generated will stay within the host nations and the game of cricket in those nations," added Mr Hilaire.

Any parties interested in becoming an official sales agent are asked to email hospitality@windiescricket.com for an information pack.

Pricing information:

- On average, pricing for this tournament is almost half the cost of similar packages sold to ICC Cricket World Cup West Indies 2007:

- A dining package to the final in 2007 cost US$1,299. This time it will cost just US$649 for what is essentially the same package in the same facility at the same venue

- A dining package to a semi-final in 2010 will cost just US$449 compared to US$749 in 2007

- A suite package in Guyana cost US$2,200 for six matches over six days for CWC07. In 2010 it will cost just US$800 for six matches over four days for ICC WT20 2010

- A suite package in Saint Lucia cost US$2,600 for six matches and one semi-final in 2007. It now costs just US$1,500 for eight matches and both semi-final matches at ICC WT20 2010

- A suite package in Barbados cost US$5,000 for six matches and the final in 2007. In 2010 it will cost a customer just US$1,800 (Standard) or US$2,400 (premium) for 10 matches and the final

- Being a WICB Twenty20 event there will be all of the customary West Indian sounds and sights at every match, including conch shells, flags and drums

- The public ticket prices have been set low to focus on filling every ground with all of the enthusiastic West Indian cricket fans and travelling fans alike – every match is guaranteed to be a genuine spectacle

- At the Super Eight stage, every team that qualifies will play in both St Lucia and Barbados. A suite customer will be able to watch every Super Eight team play, as well as both semi-finals (St Lucia) or the final (Barbados)

- With the exception of two match days in Guyana, every game day will feature double-headers, offering twice as much cricket for half of the price.

Hosts Greece, Estonia and the Czech Republic record opening day victories


Source:icc-cricket.yahoo.net

Hosts Greece opened the inaugural European Championship World Cricket League Division 5 tournament with a victory over Sweden by two wickets at the Ropa Valley ground in Corfu on Monday, but it was made to fight all the way by a spirited Swedish performance.

The encounter between Bulgaria and the Czech Republic was also a close-run affair, with the Czechs just holding on to secure a two-wicket win.

Meanwhile at the Marina Ground in Gouvria, Estonia registered a solid six-wicket victory over Turkey, largely thanks to a fine all-round performance from Murali Obili (3-10 and 32 in 38 balls) and a hard-hitting innings from skipper Tim Heath (68 not out).

Wednesday's matches will see Sweden take on Bulgaria at Marina while Turkey plays Czech Republic and Greece clashes with Estonia at Rupa Valley.

New Zealand beaten fair and square by Sri Lanka


Source: icc-cricket.yahoo.net

When restricted to 216, it seemed a tight contest on the cards for Sri Lanka, but instead it proved too much for the Black Caps. New Zealand were all out for 119, thus by giving the home side a huge victory in the inaugural match of the Compaq Cup in the R Premadasa Stadium.

Thilan Samaraweera was the batting mainstay of the Sri Lankan innings, surpassing his highest ever score in ODIs, in the way posting his first ever hundred which enabled a big way in ensuring the victory of his country. Lasith Malinga later followed it up with a superlative bowling performance which saw 3 wickets fall in a single over that too of important batsmen.

In-form Brendon McCullum, Jacob Oram then Nathan McCullum all fell in the 19th over bowled by the slinging action bowler and from there onwards, it was downhill for the visiting side.

Such was the magnitude of Sri Lanka's victory, that in a tri-series like this, they have incurred the all too important bonus point also. But the early stages of the match, did not give any indication of all the happenings in the evening.

When Sri Lanka were restricted to 216, it seemed a tight contest was on the cards, sending the smattering of spectators home early. Sri Lanka's innings had been resurrected from 69 for 5 by Samaraweera and Angelo Mathews, but New Zealand never recovered after Sri Lanka's fast bowlers sliced through the order.

Within 29 balls, Jesse Ryder (0), Martin Guptill (3) and Ross Taylor (2) were left brooding in the dressing room. New Zealand's shot at victory had been squashed and any self-belief that lingered after the Tests now vanished.

Malinga was a revelation with the ball when your top order has been blown away, and what followed was stunning. With his first three overs, comprising deliveries on all sorts of lengths, Malinga kept the batsmen tied down. The fourth was something out of a shooting gallery. Brendon McCullum had run the risk of being arrested for loitering as he squeezed 14 from 51 balls before Malinga rattled his stumps. Two deliveries later Malinga held back his length and drew an edge off Jacob Oram's bat to Kumar Sangakkara. With his next ball, Malinga hurled down a corker that went right through debutant Nathan McCullum.

At 41 for 6 in the 19th over, this game was as good as done. The only batsmen to cross 14 were Grant Elliott, with a brave 41, and Ian Butler, whose efforts lessened the margin of defeat. Completing the rout with another yorker was Malinga, whose aggressive bowling had undoubtedly been fuelled by Samaraweera's inspirational batting.

Samaraweera, whose highest ODI score coming into this match was 38 not out, teamed up with Mathews and averted a meek surrender with a 127-run association from 134 balls. The pair combined exceptional running between the wickets with some fireworks to help Sri Lanka reach a total that looked remote when they began.

Conventional wisdom and statistics at the Premadasa suggest strongly you bat first in day-night matches, and when Sangakkara won the toss it was greeted with loud cheers as the crowd anticipated a quick start. But this was an unusual two-paced track that didn't encourage for blazing shots and Sri Lanka slipped to 22 for 3.

There were only two boundaries by the half-way mark - both inside the first three overs - and a run rate of 2.72 indicated how much Sri Lanka had struggled. Almost immediately, Samaraweera and Mathews began to build some momentum, unfazed by the nature of the track and energetically hunting for scoring possibilities. A boundaryless streak, lasting 143 deliveries, was soon snapped.

Vettori has a tough match ahead of him against India, who are keen to wrist the No. 1 spot in One-Dayers. The only hope seems to be look forward to a new pitch.

Watson emerging as one of Australia's most important cricketers

Source: icc-cricket.yahoo.net

Shane Watson has gone from fringe Test candidate to one of the most important cricketers in the country within a month.

Having scored three half-centuries in the recent Ashes series, which Australia lost 2-1, Watson has taken on the mantle of a genuine Test opener, replacing batting tyro Phillip Hughes in the process.

He has already mapped out a future plan that culminates in him leading the Australian batting card in the return series four years from now.

"Absolutely," Watson fires with unwavering eye contact.

"There's no doubt there will be a big series in Australia again, to win back the Ashes. But the true test is playing the English in their conditions, in their country, that would be amazing to be able to win an Ashes series here after the heartbreak of losing this series. It would be great to get the revenge in 2013," he tells the Sydney Morning Herald.

Watson has only played 11 Tests in the last six years. He has had 12 major injury problems in the past six years.

The man himself thought his Ashes chances were finished.

"My goals were, before I came here, to hopefully get a spot in the team maybe batting at No.6 ... Marcus North was the guy that I was comparing myself to, but he started his Test career with an absolute bang so there was no way I was going to come in instead of him when he'd scored so many runs," Watson says.

"At the start of the tour I had a bit of a niggle as well [thigh muscle tear] so at that stage I thought it was just going to be me being part of the group and helping out as much as I could, and preparing for the one-day series."

Watson can be forever grateful that England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff troubled Hughes with the short ball.

Down 1-0 after the Lord's hiding, under enormous pressure, Australian selectors rolled the dice. Ponting pulled Watson aside in the hotel bar one evening for a coffee, just before the third Test at Edgbaston, and said he was in line to replace 20-year-old Hughes.

This was the same Watson whose only first-class opening experience had been six innings for Queensland, where he averaged 4.67 before quietly slinking back down the order.

"Deep down I knew I was in a really good place, I also had the memories of a couple of years ago when I did open the batting which was very unsuccessful and I hardly scored a run, so I had that in the back of my mind," Watson says.

"Before I went out to bat that afternoon at Edgbaston I was the most nervous I had ever been going out to bat. One because of the occasion, I've always dreamt of playing in an Ashes Test, but also being in a pretty foreign place and the last time I was there it wasn't very successful.

"I was very, very nervous going out and it took a couple of overs of feeling comfortable ... but once I got through that I felt really good out there. I felt confident."

From that match Watson has scored 335 first-class runs at 55.83, including 95 against the Lions in Canterbury.

He is now one of the most valuable players in the Australian system, opening the batting and providing bowling cover in all three forms of the game.

"Someone who can bat like that and can bowl and [has] great hands in the field, has always been important to the Australian squad," says stand-in captain Michael Clarke.

ICC WT20: Pakistan Win Twenty20 Cricket World Cup

by John Pennington

Shahid Afridi blasted an unbeaten 54 to power Pakistan to a fairytale eight-wicket victory over Sri Lanka to win the ICC World Twenty20 at Lord's.

Afridi took control of the match batting at number three, thumping two fours and two sixes go guide Pakistan to their victory target of 139 with eight balls to spare. Sri Lankan captain Kumar Sangakkara held the Sri Lankan innings together with a classy unbeaten 64 but even that wasn't enough to put a defendable total on the board.

Sangakkara, adept at finding the gaps and punishing the bad ball, was the only top order Sri Lankan batsmen to effectively combat the fired-up and aggressive Pakistan bowling attack.

Led by Abdul Razzaq, who picked up three for 20, they reduced Sri Lanka to 70 for six to seize early control of the match. Mohammad Amir had man of the tournament Tillakaratne Dilshan caught by Shahzaib Hasan for a duck, Jehan Mubarak also failed to score before he spooned another catch to Hasan as Razzaq struck for the first time.

Sanath Jayasuriya (17) hammered two fours and the first six of the day but he was soon out when he went for a booming drive, only to inside edge onto his pads, shortly before Mahela Jayawardene (1) guided Razzaq into the hands of Misbah-ul-Haq.

Chamara Silva's disappointing tournament ended when he pulled Umar Gul straight to Saeed Ajmal at midwicket for 14 and when Isuru Udana was bowled by Afridi for just one, Sri Lanka were in all sorts of trouble at 70 for six.

However, Sangakkara finally found a willing ally in Angelo Mathews, who finished unbeaten on 35 in 24 balls, sharing in an unbroken, vital stand of 68 with his captain, who scored seven fours in his 52-ball innings.

If any team could defend 138, it would be Sri Lanka, with their variety of unorthodox bowlers but they were put under early pressure by Kamran Akmal (37 in 28 balls) and Hasan (19 in 23), who raced to 48 in the eighth over before Akmal was stumped, charging down the track to Jayasuriya's first ball.

Hasan fell soon after when he lobbed a catch to Jayasuriya and with Muttiah Muralitharan in the wickets, Sri Lanka were back in the game.

Afridi and Shoaib Malik then combined to forge a match-winning partnership but as the runs came in more of a trickle than a flurry, thanks to some excellent bowling, the game was still in the balance.

The turning points came in the 14th over, when Afridi launched Muralitharan into the stands at long-on, then swept for four and when Sangakkara turned to Udana to bowl the 18th, Afridi took full advantage with another six, and 19 runs coming from that over in all meant that barring something extraordinary, Pakistan would be home.

Lasith Malinga tried to pull off some magic, but it wasn't to be, Afridi squirting a ball into the off side for the victory, which finally gave Pakistan cricket something to smile about and put the ghosts of Johannesburg 2007 to rest, when they missed out on victory by five runs to arch-rivals India.

The thoughts of Mohammad Aamer before Afridi took Muralitharan and Udana apart might have been interesting given that the 17-year-old's final over of the Sri Lanka innings disappeared for 17 and some felt that gave Sri Lanka the chance to win the game.

It did, but Pakistan had an in form Afridi to counter with while the ever-cool Malik was unbeaten on 24 from 22 balls, with just one four, when the winning run was hit.



Cricket World Players Of The Week - Afridi Taylor

Source: www.cricketworld.com

Pakistan all-rounder Shahid Afridi and England Women batter Claire Taylor have been named as the Cricket World® Players Of The Week after they played key roles in leading their sides to ICC World Twenty20 glory on Sunday.

Afridi's explosive batting first helped Pakistan reach the final when his innings of 51 and a brace of wickets against South Africa helped set up a seven-run victory at Trent Bridge. Semmingly a different player at number three in the order, he came into bat against Sri Lanka in the final at Lord's and played a sublime innings of 54 not out, including two sixes and the winning run as Pakistan sealed a remarkable win.

He had earlier chipped in with a wicket to finish the tournament with 176 runs and 11 wickets.

Taylor, meanwhile, finished the women's tournament as the player of the tournament and was only one run behind leading run-scorer Aimee Watkins (200) as she helped England continue their run of success.

Also leading with the bat from number three in the order, she scored a brilliant unbeaten 76 against Australia in the semi-final as England coolly chased down 164 to win with three balls to spare.

After England had bowled New Zealand out for 85 in the final, Taylor was again there at the end, scoring an unbeaten 39 which also included the winning hit, a straight four, to seal England's second world title of the year on the back of their World Cup success in Sydney, for which Taylor also earnt the player of the tournament award.

Other contenders for the award included Katherine Brunt, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Shoaib Malik and Watkins.

ICC, Pakistan reach agreement on 2011

Source: news.smh.com.au

The International Cricket Council and Pakistan Cricket Board on Thursday settled a dispute over the staging of the 2011 World Cup after the country lost its matches due to security concerns.

According to the agreement, reached on Thursday in Dubai by the ICC President David Morgan and Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ijaz Butt, Pakistan will retain its host fees and will receive compensation for the loss of hosting rights.

Pakistan lost the right to host international cricket matches after Islamic militants attacked Sri Lankan cricketers on their way to play a Test match against Pakistan on March 3 in the city of Lahore.

"I am glad we were able to come to an amicable agreement and I believe this is a fair resolution for the PCB and the ICC," Morgan told reporters at a news conference on Thursday in Dubai.

"This resolution is good for world cricket and provides an improved platform for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 as we now have a degree of certainty surrounding the event that was not there while the dispute was ongoing," Morgan said.

The PCB's Butt also expressed satisfaction with the agreement.

"The PCB is content with the settlement that has been reached," Butt told reporters on Thursday.

He said his top priority was to ensure that cricket in Pakistan "not be allowed to suffer unduly and I believe this agreement is the best possible outcome for the game".

India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are the co-hosts of the 2011 World Cup.

The 14 World Cup matches that Pakistan would have hosted will be divided among the three nations at an ICC meeting in Johannesburg next month.

Harbhajan Singh, Steve Bucknor, the BCCI and ICC - cricket's conspiracy of corruption


by Soma Sundara Rajan

Steve Bucknor has officially been removed from umpiring the Perth Test match. This is big victory for Indian cricket fans and the BCCI. But will the ICC board members do the same for all the countries and all future series'? That's the big question here.

Bucknor's withdrawal has temporarily stopped the problem arising from unsavoury incidents in the Sydney Test. But did the ICC do the right thing? In my view they succumbed to pressure from the BCCI following the three-match ban on Harbhajan Singh after his alleged racist comments directed at Andrew Symonds.

Sol do we now call the BCCI "dirty winners"? I agree, Bucknor made wrong decision. But the BCCI knew long before the start of the series in Australia that Bucknor was going to be one of the umpires. Indian teams have a long list of problems with this particular Jamaican official. They accepted his appointment at the time but after losing a match they find a scapegoat in Bucknor. But in manouvering his removal they diverted the media's attention from a very poor batting performance in the second innings.

'In manouvering Bucknor's removal they diverted the media's attention from a very poor batting performance in the second innings'


The BCCI are the main money providers for the ICC, but that doesn't mean they should rule the ICC, whose decision to remove Bucknor was surely made to cool the situation and make sure that the tour is continued. But would they have made the same decision if New Zealand or Sri Lankan players had been involved? The recent series between Sri Lanka and England had some real bad decisions, especially from Daryl Harper. Would the ICC have made the same decision had there been an appeal?

Don't be surprised if Harbhajan Singh escapes completely without any ban for his racist remark. The ICC have taken the first step in supporting BCCI by accepting the appeal and clearing him to play in the Perth Test. If he uttered the word "monkey" to Symonds he deserves the ban. Even Anil Kumble revealed afterwards that he pleaded with Ricky Ponting to deal with the issue privately. This undoubtedly proves that words were exchanged. Now another appeal is to be heard and, judging by the way in which the ICC responded to the BCCI response, I am sure Harbhajan will be cleared.

This is the same ICC that tookno action over bad umpiring decision during the series and who imposed a ban on Darren Lehmann for a previous racist remark. The ICC also has to deal with the so called list of "elite" umpires on which Srinivas Venkatraghavan is the BCCI's sole representative.

Aussies absent in ICC awards list

Source: news.brisbanetimes.com.au

Australia's slide from No.1 to No.4 in the ICC Test ratings after their Ashes series loss has been reflected in the nominees for the International Cricket Council's (ICC) annual awards.

Mitchell Johnson is the only member of Ricky Ponting's side in the running for the main award, cricketer of the year, alongside the likes of England captain Andrew Strauss and India's Harbhajan Singh.

Johnson, Michael Clarke and Peter Siddle are among 19 nominees for Test player of the year, while Mike Hussey is the only Australian in the one-day player of the year category.

Siddle, Phil Hughes and Ben Hilfenhaus have been listed in the emerging player of the year section, while fellow Australians Shelley Nitschke, Karen Rolton and Lisa Sthalekar can win the overall women's award.

India's Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Sri Lanka's Tillakaratne Dilshan head the list, with both nominated in three categories.

The long list of nominees in the eight award categories was named on Wednesday, well ahead of the official ceremony in South Africa on October 1.

Dhoni, who was named one-day player of the year last year, was nominated in that category again, along with cricketer of the year and Test player of the year.

Dilshan, yet to win an ICC award, was also nominated for cricketer and Test player of the year, plus Twenty20 performance of the year.

In the cricketer of the year category, India and Sri Lanka topped the number of nominations in the long list with three each.

England and South Africa each had two nominees while the remaining Test-playing nations only had one each.

The West Indies' Shivnarine Chanderpaul won the award last year and was again nominated.

The awards take into account performances between August 13, 2008 and August 24, 2009.

The lists were decided by an ICC panel comprising former players Clive Lloyd, Anil Kumble, Mudassar Nazar, Bob Taylor and Stephen Fleming.

Can anyone stop the Williams sisters winning?

Source:

Most tennis fans would agree the men’s game is the bigger draw in its current state. Yes, the return of Kim Clijsters has helped the women’s game, but real competition is lacking. How much better would it be if Justine Henin was back with racket in hand ready to do battle on court? Or if Maria Sharapova and Ana Ivanovic could recapture their major-winning form to truly challenge the Williams sisters?

It’s worth pointing out too that according to the WTA’s rankings, Venus and Serena aside, the next best-placed American women’s tennis player with a chance of lifting the Flushing Meadows’ title is Melanie Oudin, rank 67 in the world. Strength and depth of talent is needed and nowhere more so than in the United States.

As for the 2009 champion, well, it’s hard to look past the Williams sisters, despite their relatively poor form heading in to the final major of the year. But as we’ve seen many times in the past, both can turn it on come grand-slam time.

I’d personally like to see Elena Dementieva win it. She’s overdue for a major, but whether she has the nerve to go all the way, still remains to be seen. I thought after she won gold in Beijing that she’d turned a corner, but still have to be convinced.

Dinara Safina’s another who has the ability to grab a first grand slam triumph. She’s the most consistent player on tour, but as we’ve seen this year in major finals, the temperamental Russian doesn’t seem to believe in herself on the big stage.

The men’s game currently sees the top four some way ahead of the chasing pack. Can you really see someone other than Roger Federer, Andy Murray, Rafael Nadal or Novak Djokovic winning the U.S. Open? I can’t.

They are sure to be tested somewhere down the line at Flushing Meadows by the likes of Andy Roddick, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Juan Martin Del Potro, but it would not be the biggest upset to see a top four semi-final showdown, just like at the Cincinnati Masters.

Now he’s won number 15, and claimed his first French Open title, Federer can relax as he goes for a sixth straight triumph in New York. He’s the overwhelming favorite and the winner, if, he plays somewhere near his best.

A lapse could see new world number two Andy Murray clinch his first grand-slam title. You’ll remember that he was Federer’s opponent in last year’s final and Murray has admitted that his best chance of major success is likely to come in New York.

Nadal seems to prefer the slower courts of Melbourne to those in the Big Apple, and having just returned from a two-month injury layoff, could be the one to be upset early. Djokovic, meanwhile, is fighting fit, judging by his performance in Cincinnati and is arguably Federer’s greatest threat.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

World’s smallest Mom Cristianne Ray: World’s smallest mother Cristianne Ray





By Therese Lisieux

Cristianne Ray is the world’s smallest living mother. Ray stands at 2 feet 7 inches tall. Ray is 20 in 2008. In 2007, Cristianne Ray gave birth to a healthy baby, Kyrsten Bowden. Ray’s doctors had advised her against having her pregnancy. They were afraid her baby would kill her while developing inside her tiny body. Ray proved them wrong.

Baby Kyrsten weighed 4 pounds 8 ounces at birth. Kyrsten Bowden was 14 inches long and almost half the height of her mother, Ray, who is 31 inches tall.

Kyrsten Bowden’s dad is Jeremy Bowden. Bowden is 6 feet 4 inches tall.


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Gunmen kill 17 people at a drug rehab in Mexico

Source: news.yahoo.com

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico – Gunmen broke into a drug rehabilitation center, lined people against a wall and shot 17 dead in a particularly bloody day in Mexico's relentless drug war. The brazen attack followed the killing of the No. 2 security official in President Felipe Calderon's home state.

The attackers on Wednesday broke down the door of El Aliviane center in Ciudad Juarez, lined up their victims against a wall and opened fire, said Arturo Sandoval, a spokesman for the regional prosecutors' office. At least five people were injured.

Authorities had no immediate suspects or information on the victims. Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, Texas, is Mexico's most violent city, with at least 1,400 people killed this year alone.

Most of the homicides are tied to drug gang violence, which has taken a heavy toll across Mexico. Earlier the same day, gunmen ambushed and killed a senior security official in the home state of President Felipe Calderon.

Dozens of sobbing relatives rushed to the rehabilitation center to find out if their loved ones were among the dead. Soldiers and federal agents patrolled the streets surrounding the center in the Bellavista neighborhood.

Calderon sent thousands more troops and federal police to Ciudad Juarez earlier this year, but the surge has done little to stem the raging violence. The city is home to the Juarez drug cartel, which is battling other gangs for trafficking and dealing turf.

The government is struggling to revamp Ciudad Juarez's police force, which is plagued by corruption and the assassination of many of its officers. Other police have quit the force out of fear of being targeted.

The massacre capped a particularly bloody day in Mexico's relentless drug war.

Gunmen killed the No. 2 security official and three other people in Calderon's home state of Michoacan, where the government is locked in an intensifying battle with the ruthless La Familia cartel, blamed for a string of assassinations of police and soldiers.

Jose Manuel Revuelta, who was promoted less than two weeks ago to state deputy public safety director, is the highest-ranking government official killed in the wave of assassinations sweeping Michoacan, the cradle of La Familia drug cartel.

Attackers drove up alongside Revuelta as he headed home and opened fire, state Attorney General Jesus Montejano said.

Revuelta tried to speed away, but only made it a few blocks before he was intercepted by two vehicles. Six gunmen got out and sprayed Revuelta's car with bullets, killing him, two bodyguards and a truck driver caught in the crossfire, Montejano said.

An AP reporter at the scene saw the bodies of Revuelta and his bodyguards in the car, which had at least 15 bullet holes in the front windshield. Soldiers and federal police rushed to the site — just three blocks from the headquarters of the Michoacan Public Safety Department — and a helicopter circled overhead.

Soldiers and federal police have intensified their fight against La Familia since accusing the cartel of killing 18 federal agents and two soldiers last month. In the worst attack, 12 federal agents were slain and their tortured bodies piled along a roadside as a warning.

It was the boldest cartel attack yet on Mexico's government. Authorities said say La Familia was retaliating for the arrest of one of its top members.

The government has since rounded up more La Familia suspects, including Luis Ricardo Magana, who is alleged to have controlled methamphetamine shipments to the United States for the gang. Days before his capture, prosecutors detained the mother of reputed La Familia leader Servando "La Tuta" Gomez despite his threat to retaliate if police bothered his family. The woman was released after two days "for lack of evidence" of involvement in the cartel.

Calderon first launched his crackdown against drug cartels in Michoacan, sending thousands of federal police and soldiers to his home state after taking office in late 2006. Tens of thousands more have since been deployed to drug hotspots across Mexico.

Drug gang violence has since surged, claiming more than 13,500 lives, including more than 1,000 police officers.

Calderon defended his battle against drug trafficking in a speech to Congress on Wednesday. He said the government has taken on the cartels as no previous Mexican administration has dared to do.

"As never before, we have weakened the logistical and financial structure of crime," the president told legislators.

The federal Attorney General's Office, meanwhile, announced the arrest of its two top officials in Quintana Roo, a state on the Yucatan Peninsula, for allegedly protecting the Gulf and the Beltran Levya drug cartels.

Officials provided no further details on the allegations against the prosecutors, who were ordered jailed by a court Wednesday pending the investigation.

___

Associated Press Writers Gustavo Ruiz in Morelia, Michoacan, Manuel de la Cruz in Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas, and Alexandra Olson in Mexico City contributed to this report.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Recession sparks interest in Islamic finance

By Mark Tutton
Source: edition.cnn.com

LONDON, England (CNN) -- With irresponsible banking practices taking the blame for bringing about the global economic crisis, there has been a surge of interest in Islamic finance.


Now, a slew of academic courses are springing up to meet the demand of those wanting to break into an expanding market.

According to ratings agency Moody's, the global Islamic finance sector is worth $700 billion and has the potential to be worth $4 trillion.

What's more, the ethical principles underpinning Islamic finance are seen by some as offering a more sustainable alternative to profit-oriented conventional banking. The result is that academic institutions are lining up to offer formal training in the area.

"There is a huge demand for Islamic finance courses now, so large that it's difficult to cope with," Professor Habib Ahmed, Sharjah chair in the school of government and international affairs at Durham University, England, told CNN.

Durham will launch a Masters degree in Islamic finance from October, becoming one of a number of European institutions to offer Islamic finance programs.

"Islamic finance has been growing by 15 to 20 percent per year for some time and there is a lot of interest at the moment. People are looking for alternatives after the economic crisis."

"Islamic economists believe that if the principles of Islamic finance were followed the crisis wouldn't have happened. We are seeing a lot of non-Muslim countries, including the UK, France, Japan, Hong Kong and Singapore encouraging Islamic finance," he said.

There are many differences between Islamic and conventional banking practices. One fundamental difference is that Islamic banks do not charge interest. Rather than borrowers and lenders, the system is based on buyers and sellers.

"Conventional banking is biased to the seller. Islamic finance is trying to level the ethics between the two parties," Aly Khorshid, an Islamic finance scholar who writes for Islamic Banking and Finance magazine, told CNN.

"People think the Islamic system is based on faith, but it's based on justice. The system is based on justice for the two parties and how you get to the justice is extracted from Islamic faith," he said.

Khorshid said that there are similarities between "ethical investment" schemes and Islamic finance, in that the Islamic system does not allow investment that harms people or the environment. He credits the rapid growth of the Islamic finance sector on the success of "sukuk" -- Islamic bonds.

In the West, banks including Lloyds TSB, HSBC, Deutsche Bank and Citibank all offer Islamic finance products, catering to a niche market of Muslim borrowers.

But while Islamic banks allow Muslims to take advantage of financial services that are consistent with their religious beliefs, it is the ethics underpinning Islamic finance that are attracting the interest of conventional finance institutions keen to learn lessons from the banking crisis.

Although Islamic banks have suffered from the global repercussions of the economic downturn, they emerged largely unscathed from the initial banking meltdown that brought about that financial turmoil.

Ahmed told CNN that is because Islamic banks are not allowed to deal in mortgage-backed securities or credit-default swaps, two of the practices accused of helping bring about the banking crisis.

Khorshid said that although it's too early to say if Islamic finance has dealt with economic downturn better than conventional finance, the Islamic system has many more layers of risk assessment and management, which could help protect it from the problems afflicting conventional banks.

But the growth of Islamic finance has brought its own problems. Critics say some banks use Islamic finance to package what are essentially conventional products. "Islamic banks are also driven by the profit motive and sometimes that can dominate the ethics," Ahmed told CNN.

While Europe is catching up with the demand for these banking products, the U.S. is lagging behind. Ahmed says that regulatory and legal changes are needed for Islamic finance to grow in the U.S., but he adds there are signs that Canada may become a North American center for Islamic finance.

The lack of Islamic finance services in the U.S. is reflected in a relative lack of demand for Islamic finance courses, but in the UK there is the opposite problem.

With students coming from Asia and the Middle East to get the qualifications that will help them take advantage of the Islamic finance boom, Ahmed says it is difficult for universities to find qualified teaching staff. "Most people with PhDs in Islamic finance are working in the industry, making a lot of money," he told CNN.

He added that Islamic finance products have the potential to appeal to the non-Muslims market, pointing out that in Malaysia the majority of customers for Islamic banks aren't Muslims.

"If people look at the principles they'll see something beneficial in terms of economics, rather than just religious reasons. It's a type of ethical finance that may be attractive to a lot of people."

Vile propaganda against Armed Forces

Written by Sajjad Shaukat


Pakistan’s armed forces have achieved a landmark victory by dismantling the command and control system of the Taliban in Swat, Dir and Buner and other adjoining areas. This fact was witnessed in the recent weeks, when renowned militant commanders were captured, and most of them surrendered. But our misfortune is that some external and internal elements have always acted upon a deliberate propaganda campaign against the security forces under one or the other pretext. As regards external elements, the US and some western countries who had been criticizing Pakistan’s armed forces in the past, underestimating its capabilities by remarking that the Taliban insurgents would occupy Islamabad took a u-turn. In this respect, quite contrary to their previous misperceived approach, American and western high officials have been highly appreciating Pakistan’s forces, donating million of dollars for the IDPs. Besides high officials of UK and other European countries, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Special Envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke and US Central Command (CENTCOM) Chief Gen David Petraeus admired the determination of Pakistan’s armed forces in achieving quick success against the insurgents.

Notably, what the US-led NATO forces, equipped with the latest sophisticated weaponry could not do in the last eight years in Afghanistan, Pakistan’s armed forces did within eight weeks as now Taliban are on escape. And operations are going to reach their logical ends. But it is our misfortune that like India, some Pakistan-based human rights organizations, civil societies and NGOs including a particular newspaper and its TV Channel along with its journalists which have been serving the interest of their external paymasters leave no stone unturned in distorting the image of Pak Army through their vile propaganda. In this regard, while blaming our armed forces for extrajudicial killings, on August 18 this year, a renowned political expert on the affairs of Frontier Province and Afghanistan wrote in that daily of Pakistan, “By now it has become routine for many returning Swati residents to see unclaimed bodies dumped in different parts of Swat, Buner and Dir districts”, which also include “hanging bodies from lampposts.”While citing the fact-finding mission of Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), he also quoted its Chairperson Asma Jehangir, expressing the HRCP’s grave concern on such a worrying development…over numerous extrajudicial killings carried out by the security forces.”

In this respect, on May 27, 2009, the same expert had indicated in the same newspaper, “One doesn’t know how long the army action will continue…the massive displacement of people caused by the military action was not properly foreseen by those who planned it.” Since the end of April this year when the Malakand military operations were launched, this vile propaganda has included a number of other false dimensions such as exploiting the emotional state of the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPS), showing interviews of the innocent persons in which their tales of suffering were exaggerated—projecting self-created images of scattered dead bodies, collective graves and stories of burying without Islamic rituals.

Now, all the self-concocted stories of Pakistan-based internal propagandists have proved untrue in wake of real facts. Pak Army has broken the backbone of the Taliban militants, and there is only pocket resistance in some regions, while our troops are rapidly advancing in South Wziristan. But these hostile elements are still misguiding the general masses by saying that security forces were killing innocent civilians instead of real militants. They have alleged the security forces for all the troubles of the war-zones. Nonetheless, this vile propaganda needs to be countered by showing the other side of the coin in accordance with the ground realities.

The people of every province are aware of the fact that Swat peace agreement was signed on February 15 between the government and the militants led by Sufi Muhammad. But after enforcement of Nizam-e-Adl, the insurgents continued to advance other areas beyond Swat, continuing their previous criminal activities like beheadings, destroying public property, hostage-takings etc. When the Taliban commanders felt that they could not cope with the Pakistan’s armed forces, they started executing their own militants, while most of them succeeded in running. Later on, majority of them surrendered. Even during their control in Swat and other Malakand regions, these insurgents beheaded their rivals. So “unclaimed bodies dumped in different parts” and “hanging bodies from lampposts” were tactics used by the Taliban to spread fear and terror among the populations including the militants in order to avoid desertions.

It was owing to the brutal acts of the Taliban insurgents that majority of the Pakistani people, civil societies and religious parties entailing PPP, PML-N and ANP have supported the military operations which were launched to restore the writ of the government. The general masses of the affected areas and the IDPs, themselves, wanted that our security forces must eliminate Talibanisation once for all. They know as to who is responsible for their plight. Besides other international organizations, in the recent past, even Pakistan Army had sent many trucks of rations and bedding to the IDPs at Mingora and other concerned regions. Our defence forces also donated a part of its daily ration to these suffering people, while deploying its medical resources in all the concerned camps. Pak Army also managed the evacuation of civilians from the war-zones, using all available resources. For this purpose, Special Support Group with more than 100 buses and many trucks facilitated moving out of the IDPs, trapped in the operation areas. For that aim, helicopters were used to lift civilians.

At present, no doubt, military operations have almost reached their logical end and a majority of the IDPs have returned to their native homelands. Their return continues on daily basis. In this context, some political parties and leaders of our own country namely, Jamat-i-Islami and Imran Khan who have been manipulating these operations in order to increase their vote bank have become silent as they have nothing new to say against the security forces, but still they can create some hostile justification for the sake of hostility.

It is of particular attention that some of our writers, commentators and NGOs are definitely financed by external enemies which are trying to destabilise Pakistan. Ignoring the sacrifices of Pak Army, their propaganda campaign against our armed forces is part of a conspiracy against Pakistan. As regards Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, in 2006, I had myself visited its head office, located in Lahore. I met some writers of that particular newspaper, who have been working there. I came to know that its members were being sent to the villages of Pakistan so as to note various crimes which were also published in magazines and afterwards these were sent to western countries, particularly America with the sole aim to show the progress of this Commission which is financially supported by the US. No doubt, we must condemn these crimes in our society, but if we point out these anti-social activities to please our foreign masters, and in order to tarnish the image of our own country including its forces, such a practice itself becomes a greater crime. In this connection, I ask HRCP’s Chairperson Ms. Asma Jehangir as to why multiple crimes, committed inside the United States are not being indicated by this Commission with detail.

From time to time, a number of students have been shot in various American universities, but I did not read any statement of Asma Jehangir in that regard. And why there is no detailed statement against American forces, CIA and FBI which have so far killed a number of innocent Muslims entailing Pakistanis at various detention centres under the pretext of war against terrorism. Recently, even Obama Administration has started investigation in this connection.

The fact of the matter is that any writer, author, commentator and member of a NGO can get good coverage in the western media along with financial help, provided he distorts the image of Pakistan and its army. As a matter of fact, one cannot note difference between these hypocrites and the US-Hindu-Jewish lobbies which are determined to disintegrate Pakistan which is the lonely nuclear state in the Islamic world. It is mentionable that the ongoing military action is not a conventional, but a guerilla war, so no timeframe can be set for its end as pocket resistance and suicide attacks cannot be eliminated suddenly. But it is owing to rapid progress of military operations that the networks of the Taliban militants have been shattered, and level of suicide attacks have reduced to the minimum. Now right hour has come that by setting aside the vile propaganda campaign of the anti-Pakistan elements, all the patriot Pakistanis must unite in backing our armed forces in coping with the insurgents.