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Minors could face death penalty if law amended

Written By Unknown on Senin, 31 Desember 2012 | 22.14

NEW DELHI: Jolted by the extreme cruelty unleashed on Nirbhaya by the only juvenile among the six accused in the Delhi gang-rape case, the government may be looking at enhanced punishment for minors — even a waiver of the delinquent's age by six months to a year — keeping in view the severity of the crime.

While this review comes too late for the Delhi gang-rape case as it cannot be applied with retrospective effect, the shift is significant because heinousness of the crime committed rather than the exact age of the accused will determine the punishment.

If the government does carry out amendments to enhance the punishment for minors guilty of heinous crimes, juveniles could even face death penalty.

The women and child development ministry that is reviewing the Juvenile Justice Act, is looking at treating juveniles aged 17 or more who are guilty of heinous or violent crimes as adults. "We can have a provision by which six months or a year of the juvenile's age can be waived if the crime committed is severe in nature, like in this case. If the juvenile has committed a violent or serious crime he can be tried under law as an adult," said WCD minister Krishna Tirath.

At present, under the Act, a juvenile accused has to be kept in a juvenile correction home or any other reformatory centre for minors. S/he faces a separate trial under the JJ Act and the maximum sentence that can be given is only three years.

The use of death penalty for crimes committed by people younger than 18 years is prohibited under the international human rights law, yet some countries still execute child offenders. Such executions are few compared to the total number of executions across the world. Since 1990, Amnesty International has documented 87 executions of child offenders in nine countries. Several of these countries, including the US, have changed their laws to exclude the practice.

The ministry of women and child development that is reviewing the Juvenile Justice Act is considering such a provision to treat guilty minors aged 17 or more like adults.


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Alert cops prevent another horror in bus

NEW DELHI: On the day that Nirbhaya succumbed to her injuries, another horrific incident inside a bus in the heart of the city was averted in the nick of time by alert cops.

A 16-year-old girl who had left home after allegedly being ill-treated by her stepmother and brother on Saturday night was molested and harassed by an off-duty conductor inside a cluster bus plying on the city roads without a home guard, police said.

The incident came to light after the driver forgot his way to Lajpat Nagar and ended up stopping the bus on Tansen Marg near Mandi House to ask for directions.

Two cops patrolling at Tansen Marg spotted the girl crying inside the bus, stopped it after a chase and arrested the accused who was in an inebriated condition. He has been identified as Ranjeet Singh, a resident of Palam Colony.

Singh worked as a conductor in another bus and has been booked for criminal intimidation, molestation and outraging a woman's modesty, a senior police officer said.

The accused has been sent to 14 days judicial custody after being produced in the court.

The driver, Prehlad Singh and conductor, Tejveer, were let off after interrogation by the police. However, they have been terminated from service by the authorities for moving the bus ahead after asking for directions.

Police said the victim lived with her father, two elder brothers and a younger brother and her stepmother in Khayala area of west Delhi.

Allegedly tormented by her stepmother and brother, she had left home around 9.30pm to go to the Child Welfare Committee in Lajpat Nagar, about which she had heard from her neighbors.

As per her statement in the FIR, she boarded the bus plying on route number 410 from Khayala to Jal Vihar (Lajpat Nagar) around 10pm and there were around 12 passengers in the bus.

The accused boarded the bus in Moti Nagar and sat beside her. The bus emptied out after Shankar Road bus stop.

The accused then allegedly sat beside her with a plastic glass and offered to become friends. When she objected, the accused touched her in an inappropriate manner, the girl told police.

The girl began to cry and raised an alarm after which the conductor and the bus driver asked the accused to stop. The girl then asked the driver to stop the bus and let her get down.

By 11pm, the bus had reached Mandi House. The driver apparently forgot the way due to Metro work and diversions. At the police picket, the driver stopped the bus and asked the police for directions.

As the bus moved ahead, two constables, Babu Alim and Bishram, spotted the girl and began to trail the bus. The bus was stopped and the cops asked the girl if she had a problem.

Meanwhile, people gathered and began enquiring into the matter.

The accused was apprehended at her instance around 11.45pm and her statement was recorded with the help of an NGO.

The girl's family also registered a case of kidnapping at Khayala police station when the girl did not return home late night. Further investigation about her allegations of sexual exploitation is in progress, cops said.


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Woman who pushed Indian to death in New York subway laughed during trial in court

NEW YORK: A 31-year-old woman accused of shoving an immigrant from India to his death in front of a subway train because she believed he was Muslim laughed and smiled during a court hearing where she was ordered to undergo a psychiatric evaluation.

Erika Menendez, 31, was charged on Saturday night with murder as a hate crime after she told police she spontaneously pushed Sunando Sen, according to prosecutors.

"There is no reason. I just pushed him in front of the train because I thought it would be cool,'' she said, according to the Queens district attorney's office.

She laughed so hard during her arraignment in Queens criminal court that Judge Gia Morris told her lawyer: ``You're going to have to have your client stop laughing.''

Defense attorney Dietrich Epperson said her behavior in court was no different from how she had been acting, and said his client didn't really think the proceedings were funny, according to Newsday. He represented her for the arraignment only and had no further comment.

Menendez was held without bail and ordered to have a mental health exam.

Queens prosecutors said she pushed the 46-year-old Sen to his death because she blamed "Muslims, Hindus and Egyptians'' for the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

``I pushed a Muslim off the train tracks because I hate Hindus and Muslims ever since 2001 when they put down the twin towers I've been beating them up,'' Menendez told police, according to the district attorney's office.

Friends and co-workers said Sen, a native of Calcutta, was Hindu. He had lived in Queens for decades and was a graphic designer and copy shop owner. Sen was standing on an elevated platform of the No. 7 train that travels between Manhattan and Queens when he was shoved from behind as the train entered the station.

Witnesses told police a woman had been mumbling to herself and was sitting on a bench behind Sen until the train pulled in, then shoved him from behind. She then fled.

Police released a sketch and surveillance footage of a woman running from the subway station. Menendez was arrested after a passer-by saw her on the street and thought she looked like the wanted suspect. Witnesses identified her in a lineup and she was questioned by police, when she implicated herself, according to police and prosecutors.

Angel Luis Santiago, who used to work at the Queens building where Menendez's mother and stepfather live, said he was shocked by her arrest.

"It surprised me what she did,'' he said. "She never acted that way.''

Menendez's next court appearance is scheduled for January 14.

Sen was the second man to die after being pushed in front of a New York City subway train this month. Ki-Suck Han, a Korean immigrant, was killed in a midtown Manhattan subway station on December 3. A homeless man was arrested and charged with murder in that case and is awaiting trial. He claimed he acted in self-defense.

Such subway deaths are rare, but transit officials said last week they would consider installing barriers with sliding doors on some subway platforms. Other cities including Paris and London have installed such barriers.


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Gang-rape victim cremated in Delhi; PM, Sonia Gandhi received body

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 30 Desember 2012 | 22.14

NEW DELHI: It was only late last night that police approached the officials of a crematorium in south-west Delhi for an early morning cremation of the 23-year-old gang-rape victim.

The cremation plans were kept a secret till the last moment as police apprehended a large gathering may cause problems.

Fearing law and order problems, authorities also wanted the last rites to be performed at 6.30am but their plans did not go through as Hindu traditions did not allow cremation before sunrise.

At 7.30am, the emotional father of the victim, who fought a brave battle for life for 13 days, lit the funeral pyre in the presence of her brothers, relatives and others.

Police had approached the officials of New Indian Education and Cultural Society running a crematorium in Dwarka at around 10pm yesterday and told them to arrange for cremation at 6.30am today.

"We were told about the victim. We made arrangements. Our priest Vijender Sharma guided the rituals.

"The cremation was planned at 6.30am but as per Hindu traditions, we cannot conduct such rituals before sunrise. So we had to wait till 7.30am," Sunil Kumar, manager of the society, said.

The body, which was brought to Delhi from Singapore in a special aircraft of Air India, was taken to the victim's residence amid heavy security at around 3.30am.

A large number of Delhi Police, RAF and BSF personnel in riot gear accompanied the ambulance carrying the body to her house. The locality around her house was also fortified.

After performing rituals at home, the body was taken to the crematorium in an ambulance with similar security arrangements.

A senior police official said the security arrangements were made to ensure that the cremation takes place peacefully. There were violent protests last weekend following the gangrape and brutal assault on the 23-year-old girl.

The family and relatives were brought to the crematorium in a bus accompanied by police.

At the crematorium, the entrance was blocked for public and media.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress president Sonia Gandhi went to airport to receive the body and console the family.

Chief minister Sheila Dikshit went to the crematorium and placed a wreath. Minister of state for home affairs RPN Singh, West Delhi MP Mahabal Mishra and Delhi BJP chief Vijender Gupta also attended the cremation.

Police had approached the government yesterday and proposed that the body be taken directly to Ballia in UP via Lucknow or Varanasi but the government decided against it, sources said.


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Doctors question move to shift Delhi gang-rape victim to Singapore

NEW DELHI/KOLKATA: The decision to shift her to Singapore was not a medical decision and was based on "direction from the top (government)", said a senior doctor at Safdarjung Hospital, where Nirbhaya was being treated. Nirbhaya had suffered irreversible brain damage in the early hours of Wednesday, 22 hours before she was airlifted to Singapore, the doctor told TOI.

According to the doctor, damage to the brain was caused by a thromboembolic attack — a clot in the blood vessel — which also triggered two consequent cardiac arrests. "While the heart function could be revived by giving DC shock, the brain function was damaged irreversibly during the process. A neurologist was called to examine the pupils which showed sluggish reaction on shining a torchlight," the doctor said. He also said there was no possibility of the patient undergoing any transplant in that condition.

Sources said inotropic drugs (which alter the strength of heartbeats) were used to keep Nirbhaya's heart beating while she was being airlifted to Singapore. But she still went into near collapse in the air ambulance when her blood pressure dipped alarmingly. The doctors on board created an arterial line to monitor the blood pressure real-time.

"The shifting of the victim who had suffered irreversible brain damage, after two consequent cardiac arrests and septicemia was ethically and morally wrong," said Dr Deepak Agarwal, senior neurosurgeon at the AIIMS trauma centre. He dismissed the government claims that Mount Elizabeth hospital was selected as it has state-of-the-art organ transplant facility. "The fact is a patient with two cardiac arrests and septicemia cannot undergo transplant. She was at best an organ donor not a recipient," said Agarwal. He added, "I would suspect she was brain dead already."

However, Dr Yatin Mehta, chairman of the Medanta Institute of Critical Care and Anesthesiology, who was part of the team that accompanied her to Singapore, said the doctors were fully aware the girl wasn't fit to withstand an intestine transplant. She was flown to Singapore in a last-ditch attempt to try and revive her in a set-up that was far better than Safdarjung Hospital. "Let me be honest. Despite the best efforts and arrangements that we made for her here, they can't be compared to Mount Elizabeth Hospital. It has a far better set-up, with an environment and facilities that are not available in India. The priority was to save her life. We were not even thinking of an intestine transplant," added Mehta.

Mehta said he would have been "pleasantly surprised" if she survived. He, however, refused to comment on whether the decision to fly her to Singapore was logical. "I am not saying she was not in a condition to be flown. But she was in no state to undergo a transplant. When she was taken out of Safdarjung Hospital, Nirbhaya was on a ventilator. She had a serious infection, had already undergone three surgeries and suffered a cardiac arrest. Her blood was not clotting well. Her blood pressure had stabilized but she was not breathing properly," he said.

"On the flight, her blood pressure dropped to 80 from 120, but she responded to the measures that were taken immediately. It was clear that she would struggle to survive even in Singapore," Mehta told TOI in Kolkata on his way back from Singapore.

Dr Samiran Nundy, gastro-intestinal surgeon at Sir Ganga Ram hospital, said, "The patient could have been served better in India. The girl was not in a condition to undergo transplant immediately and infection control was being done successfully by the doctors at Safdarjung hospital." Nundy, who has worked for 21 years at AIIMS, said the government could also shift the patient to the institute which would have helped in avoiding unnecessary travel.

When contacted, the chairman and managing director of Medanta Medicity Dr Naresh Trehan said the decision to shift the patient was taken by the treating doctors, not him. "I was contacted to assess if the patient could be airlifted. We have air ambulance facility and a team of experts who regularly ferry international patients suffering from serious medical problems," Trehan said.

"I did not take the call. I cannot comment on this issue," said Dr Anil Aggarwal, chief of the department of gastro-intestinal surgery at G B Pant hospital, who was a part of the team of doctors treating the victim whose intestines and blood vessels were ruptured when she was brutalized.

Dr Devi Shetty, renowned cardiac surgeon, said he supported the government decision. "They made an effort which, I would believe, was taken in the best interest of the patient. She was a young and brave girl and could have come out of the trauma," he said.

Experts say that a patient has to be hemodynamically stable and there should be no infection to undergo the transplant procedure. "If the brain is damaged, the transplant cannot be carried out," said Dr Sanjeev Bagai, CEO and Dean Radiant Life Care which manages the BLK hospital.


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Ind vs Pak: Dhoni's valiant ton goes in vain as Pakistan clinch first ODI

CHENNAI: Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni's heroic unbeaten century under pressure went in vain as archrivals Pakistan held their nerve to clinch the first one-day international with a comfortable six-wicket victory in a low-scoring contest on Sunday.

Scorecard | Match in Pics

India posted 227 for six after recovering from a precarious 29 for five one stage but that turned out to be insufficient for the Pakistanis who rode on Nasir Jamshed's unbeaten century to overhaul the target with 11 balls to spare and take a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

Dhoni played a captain's knock with an unbeaten 113, his 8th ODI century, to script a brilliant Indian recovery after left-arm pacer Junaid Khan (4/43) exploited the overcast conditions to rip through the top-order and leave the hosts gasping for breath within the first 10 overs.

The Indian captain found an able ally in Suresh Raina (43) first and then Ravichandran Ashwin (31 not out) to take the score beyond the 200-run mark which looked doubtful at one stage following the top-order collapse.

Dhoni and Ashwin put on a record seventh wicket partnership of 121 runs but the Indian captain's superlative knock off 125 balls lost much of its value as the Pakistani batsmen went about the task of chasing down the target without taking too many risks.

Younis Khan (58) and Shoaib Malik (34 not out) were the other notable performers for Pakistan.

The Pakistani innings started on a disastrous note as ODI debutant Bhuvneshwar Kumar produced a beauty to get rid of Mohammed Hafeez with the very first delivery of the Pakistan innings.

The ball came back sharply after pitching as Hafeez didn't offer a stroke only to find his off-stump knocked back.

The youngster got rid of Azhar Ali a few overs later to reduce the visitors to 21 for two. But the experienced Younis Khan and Nasir steadied the Pakistan innings with a solid 112-run third wicket partnership.

Both Jamshed and Younis benefitted due to some horrendous decisions given by the Indian umpire S Ravi. Jamshed was lucky to get a reprieve on 24 when an inside edge was caught by Virender Sehwag in first slip off Ashwin but Ravi turned down the appeal.

Ravi also negated a plumb leg before decision against Younis when the right-hander missed a delivery from Ashwin in his bid to play the sweep shot.

Younis returned to the pavilion when Ashwin latched on to a low catch off Ashok Dinda, a decision which was referred to the TV umpire by on-field umpire Billy Bowden. But by that time, the visitors were already in a good position and just needed to bat sensibly to reach the target.

Jamshed, who grew in confidence as the innings wore on, was dropped by Yuvraj Singh when on 68 off Dinda much to the disappointment of a sizeable holiday crowd at the Chepauk.

Just when Pakistan seemed to be cruising along comfortably, Ishant Sharma enlivened the proceedings to some extent by getting rid of captain Misbah-ul-Haq (16) with a slower ball which knocked down the off stump.

It was Malik, who hit the winning runs with a pull towards deep mid-wicket boundary off the first ball of the penultimate over.

Earlier, put into bat, India plunged into trouble straightaway with Gautam Gambhir (8), Virender Sehwag (4), Virat Kohli (0), Yuvraj Singh (2) and Rohit Sharma (4) returning to the pavilion in quick succession as Junaid got the ball to swing under overcast conditions.

The Pakistani pacers took advantage of the moisture on the track and troubled the top-order batsmen with the new ball. Once the ball got a little older, Dhoni and Raina applied themselves and started rebuilding the Indian innings.

The two teams will now travel to Kolkata for the second ODI to be held on January 3 while the third and final match will be staged at the Ferozeshah stadium in New Delhi on January 6.

Pacer Junaid had justified his captain Misbah-ul-Haq's decision to bowl first in damp conditions with struggling opener Sehwag becoming Junaid's first victim.

The Delhi batsman, considered a game-changer for his ability to take the attack to the opposition, swung it Pakistan's way after slogging for 11 balls to get four runs.

Sehwag was castled by a Junaid delivery that came in a shade after pitching.

The big four of the Indian batting order were all bowled, three of them by Junaid, who seemed unplayable getting the ball to move appreciably both in the air and off the pitch.

The proverbial promising batsman of the side, Rohit added another one to his growing list of failures, becoming Junaid's fourth victim after scratching around for 14 deliveries for his four runs.

Rohit's last six ODI innings now read a disappointing 4, 4, 4, 0, 0 and 5. In fact, the top five managed to pull off just two fours for the team.

At 29/5 in a little less than 10 overs, India were staring firmly down the barrel before Raina and Dhoni came together to repair the innings slowly and steadily.

The duo cautiously added 73 runs for the sixth wicket and defied Pakistani bowlers for a good 23 overs.

Dhoni got a life on 16 when in the 26th over rival skipper Misbah-ul Haq dropped him at midwicket of Mohammed Hafeez's bowling and the Indian, who smashed seven fours and three sixes, made it count.

Dhoni was suffering from dehydration and also battled cramps towards the end of India innings.

Meanwhile, Raina's patient innings came to an end when he lost his leg stump to Hafeez. But Dhoni was unfazed and, in fact, accelerated from that point, reaching his fifty with a whip over midwicket boundary off Umar Gul.

For a man not exactly known for solid technique, Dhoni was the lone Indian batsman to smash spin ace Saeed Ajmal for a six. A new ball had to be sought to replace the one which went out of the ground.

He also brought up his hundred in style, hoicking Irfan over cover in the 49th over, which produced 21 runs with Dhoni doing most of the scoring. For Pakistan, Junaid was the most successful bowler, grabbing 4/43 in his nine overs.

This was the first match played under the new ICC rules. Under these rules, one new ball was used at each end, bowlers were allowed two bouncers an over, there was no batting Power Play, the bowling Power Play was completed before the 40th over, and at no stage in the innings more than four fielders were allowed outside the 30-yard circle.


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Amitabh Bachchan slams media over Delhi rape case

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 29 Desember 2012 | 22.14

The Shahenshah of Bollywood Amitabh Bachchan is reportedly angry with the media for not respecting the privacy of the Delhi gang-rape victim while being shifted to another location.

The 70-year-old actor, who was rushed to hospital a couple of years ago, recalled the difficulty he and his family faced because of the media frenzy, which delayed his treatment by 20 minutes.

"Lot of debate and discussion and comments on the media coverage of patient (Delhi gang-rape) being shifted in ambulance to another location ... patient privacy is an important element in the Constitutional Journals of Medical Ethics," he said.

"Couple of years ago when I was in an emergency and taken to hospital, media had blocked the ambulance door to such an extent that it took my family and the doctors 20 minutes to open the door to get me out, while I suffered pain inside, impatient to get immediate medical attention," he added.


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Delhi gang rape victim dies: Cerebral edema, swelling of the brain, proved fatal

NEW DELHI: A swollen brain finally got better of the fighting spirit of the 23-year-old gang-rape victim Nirbhaya (a name given to her by TOI) as she succumbed to her injuries at Singapore's Mount Elizabeth hospital at 2:15am (IST) on Saturday.

Cerebral edema - serious swelling of the brain, which resulted from the cardiac arrest on Tuesday night when Nirbhaya was still in India, along with severe infections, finally proved fatal.

A CT scan that was conducted after Nirbhaya reached Singapore showed that blood loss to her brain caused during the three-minute period when doctors at Safdarjung hospital in Delhi had failed to find a pulse or blood pressure, led to the brain edema - a dangerous condition where the brain's water content rises, causing the pressure to rise in the skull.

This cuts off oxygen supply as the blood vessels become squeezed. Cerebral edema is a medical emergency that can even lead to death as brain cells become damaged and die.

Prime minister Manohan Sngh said he was "deeply saddened to learn that the unfortunate victim of the brutal assault that took place on December 16 in New Delhi had succumbed to the grievous injuries she suffered following that attack. "I join the nation in conveying to her family and friends my deepest condolences at this terrible loss."

Singh said: "I want to tell them and the nation that while she may have lost her battle for life, it is up to us all to ensure that her death will not have been in vain. We have already seen the emotions and energies this incident has generated. These are perfectly understandable reactions from a young India and an India that genuinely desires change. It would be a true homage to her memory if we are able to channelize these emotions and energies into a constructive course of action."

According to Singh, the need of the hour is a dispassionate debate and inquiry into the critical changes that are required in societal attitudes.

He said that the government is examining, on priority basis, the penal provisions that exist for such crimes and measures to enhance the safety and security of women.

"I hope that the entire political class and civil society will set aside narrow sectional interests and agenda to help us all reach the end that we all desire - making India a demonstrably better and safer place for women to live in," Singh said.

Nirbhaya's health started to slide from Friday evening (6.30 pm IST) when she suffered multiorgan failure.

Doctors informed her family members that Nirbhaya's condition had seriously deteriorated as she was put on maximum artificial ventilation support, optimal antibiotic doses as well as stimulants which would help maximise her body's capability to fight infections.

In the early hours of Saturday, Mount Elizabeth hospital issued a fresh statement announcing the worst.

The hospital said: "In relation to the young female patient from Delhi who was assaulted in a bus, and who was transferred from a hospital in India to receive further treatment at Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore on December 27, we are very sad to report that the patient passed away peacefully at 4.45am (Singapore time) on December 29. Her family and officials from the high commission of India were by her side. The patient had remained in an extremely critical condition since admission to Mount Elizabeth hospital in the morning of Dec 27."

According to the hospital, despite all efforts by a team of eight specialists at Mount Elizabeth hospital to keep her stable, her condition continued to deteriorate and she suffered from severe organ failure following serious injuries to her body and brain.

"She was courageous in fighting for her life for so long against the odds but the trauma to her body was too severe for her to overcome," Dr Kelvin Loh, CEO of the hospital said.

Critical care specialist Dr Yatin Mehta from Medanta hospital, who had accompanied Nirbhaya to Singapore, told TOI on his return to India on Saturday morning that the swelling of the brain finally took her life.

"A fresh episode of cardiac arrest resulted in multiorgan dysfunction syndrome. Her injuries were too severe. While being transported to Singapore, her oxygen requirements increased by 70%. We had carried 8 oxygen cylinders as standby, each capable of running for two hours. Six additional batteries were taken to ensure the machines ran fine during the flight. Her blood pressure fell to around 80 on route which we finally managed to bring back to normal. The injuries were horrendous," said Dr Mehta, who left for India from Singapore on Friday night when Nirbhaya was still alive, told TOI on his return.

Dr Mehta also added that Nirbhaya's organs weren't fit for donation as they were seriously infected.

"We spoke to the family very frankly last night. We told her father and brothers that she is critical and might not pull through. Her family was stoic and handled the eventuality i a very mature way," Dr Mehta said.


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Gautam Gambhir, Virat Kohli in race for Test skipper

NEW DELHI: The debate over India's Test captaincy could be settled after the ongoing Pakistan tour of India, with Delhi stars Gautam Gambhir and Virat Kohli seen as likely replacements in case selectors decide to relieve Mahendra Singh Dhoni of his charge.

With the two T20 matches ending tied 1-1, a victory against Pakistan in the three-match one-day series may yet give Dhoni a breather. But the Indian cricket board (BCCI) slowly seems to be acknowledging that it might be time to split the captaincy and blood a new leader in Tests.

Voices calling for a change of guard have grown after India suffered a humiliating 1-2 defeat -- the first loss to England at home in 28 years. This followed disastrous tours of England and Australia -- both lost 0-4 -- which means India has lost 10 of the last 12 Tests played against quality opposition.

While Dhoni's place in the side is hardly in question, cricket bosses are looking at a future scenario in the context of a new look India squad. Of the two candidates, Gambhir has displayed leadership skills as a stand-in skipper in ODIs and also in the IPL, but Kohli has been in far superior form this year.

In the past, Gambhir has led India in six one-day internationals, winning all of them, and also captained Kolkata Knight Riders to victory in IPL-5. He is seen as an inspirational skipper who leads from the front, but his current patchy form may go against him.

Kohli initially struggled against England in the Tests but a superb century at Nagpur won him many plaudits, including from Sunil Gavaskar, who said making Kohli Test captain could energize the side. He was also in outstanding form in the ODIs and T20s throughout 2011. At 24, he may seem a tad young for the responsibility but BCCI sources point out that Dhoni himself wasn't much older when he was appointed captain of the T20 squad in 2007, four years after his international debut.

The trend of banking on youngsters is also seen to weigh in favour of Kohli. South Africa skipper Graeme Smith took charge at 21, barely a year or so after his debut for the Springboks in 2002. Likewise, England's Alastair Cook became Test captain six years after his debut while taking charge of the ODI team even earlier.

Sources, however, point out that India's troubles are unlikely to be settled by a change of captain alone. Dhoni can hardly be blamed for the lack of incisive quick bowlers, the failure of spinners--England's Monty Panesar comfortably outbowled India's tweakers--and the indifferent form of key batsmen like Virender Sehwag, Sachin Tendulkar and Gambhir.

On the other hand, a process of rebuilding is inevitable and Tendulkar's decision not to grace ODIs again points to the inexorable passage of time taking a toll even on legends. Tendulkar's final call on the Test format cannot be too far away and the BCCI is looking to prepare and even hasten change.

Times View

It is indeed time that the selectors split the captaincy of the Indian team in the three formats. On current form and past track record, there is a very strong case for retaining Mahendra Singh Dhoni as the ODI captain and a reasonably good one for continuing with him in the T20 format.

In Test matches, on the other hand, three successive series defeats against top teams, the last at home, suggests that MSD is not really up to the job.

If the choice is between Gautam Gambhir and Virat Kohli, we would suggest going with Kohli. Not only is he younger and hence likely to be around for much longer, Gambhir is at the moment not looking entirely convincing as a Test batsmen, which could well weigh his captaincy down.


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High drama at 30,000ft as girl's blood pressure dips alarmingly

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 28 Desember 2012 | 22.14

NEW DELHI: There was nerve-wracking drama at 30,000 feet when Nirbhaya, the 23-year-old Delhi gang rape survivor, went into a near collapse in the air ambulance on the night of Wednesday-Thursday as she was being ferried on a six-hour flight to Singapore's Mount Elizabeth hospital.

Nirbhaya's blood pressure suddenly dipped alarmingly, and in what is being considered a medical feat, critical care specialists Dr P K Verma of Safdarjung hospital and Yatin Mehta from Medanta Medicity created an arterial line to stabilize her. An arterial line is a thin catheter inserted into an artery - used mainly in intensive care - to monitor blood pressure real-time, rather than by intermittent measurements.

Explaining the mid-air crisis to TOI, Dr M C Mishra, chief of AIIMS' trauma centre said, "We had explained to the girl's family the potential risks of transporting her to Singapore. She could suffer a cardiac arrest or her blood pressure could fall alarmingly. After discussions, we took a calculated risk by creating an arterial line."

Dr Mishra added: "Monitoring blood pressure from the arms can sometimes give false readings up to 20 mm which could be critical in such a delicate case. Dr Verma is well versed with hemodynamics (study of blood flow) and is very well aware of Nirbhaya's condition while Dr Mehta is highly experienced. They did a great job."

Nirbhaya was wheeled into Mount Elizabeth hospital at 9.10am (Singapore time). She underwent a full CT scan and was taken to the intensive care unit. Dr Mishra informed that the doctors in Singapore have told him that Nirbhaya's blood pressure is now under control and her condition although critical, was stable. Despite all the complications, her fighting spirit remains unbowed and she is bravely battling on.

Dr Kelvin Loh, Mount Elizabeth Hospital CEO, was less reassuring. He said in a medical bulletin at 7pm on Thursday that Nirbhaya's condition "remains extremely critical". "Before she was admitted to our hospital she had undergone three abdominal surgeries and had a experienced cardiac arrest in India. A multidisciplinary team of doctors is taking care of her and taking all possible steps to stabilise her condition," he added.

The team of Indian doctors that reached Singapore on Thursday morning also informed that Nirbhaya's ejection fraction (EF) - an important measurement in determining how well your heart is pumping out blood and in diagnosing and tracking heart failure - has dropped to 25%. Normal EF is around 70%.

"When Nirbhaya left yesterday for Singapore, her EF count was around 50%. On reaching Singapore, her EF dropped to almost 25% which means her heart condition has been deteriorating. A normal heart's ejection fraction is around 70%," a source in Safdarjung hospital told TOI.

Doctors also fear serious neurological damage to Nirbhaya's brain as doctors could not find her pulse and blood pressure for nearly three minutes on Wednesday when she suffered a cardiac arrest.

"Doctors in Singapore conducted a full body CT scan on Thursday. They are also looking at any neurological damage that could have resulted from the cardiac arrest. She is under heavy sedatives," doctors at Safdarjung hospital said.


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Safdarjung doctors who treated Nirbhaya for 11 days sidelined

NEW DELHI: The team of doctors in Safdarjung Hospital who worked 24x7 to keep Nirbhaya alive as she oscillated between life and death is surprised at not being allowed to accompany her to Singapore.

The doctors feel that after tending to her for the past 11 days and being familiar with the gut-churning case, they should have been part of the team accompanying her to Singapore's Mount Elizabeth Hospital. Finally, only one doctor from Safdarjung, ICU in-charge Dr P K Verma, went along.

In fact, Safdarjung officials conveyed this to the government, but their proposal was shot down on Wednesday afternoon, with the government deciding to involve private hospital Medanta Medicity: a call supposedly taken by home minister Sushilkumar Shinde which has raised eyebrows.

Sources told TOI that the medical superintendent (MS) of Safdarjung Hospital Dr B D Athani visited Shinde's residence on Wednesday afternoon carrying passports of six experts from the hospital for a closed-door meeting that was attended by Intelligence Bureau chief Nehchal Sandhu, home secretary R K Singh and joint commissioner of police Vivek Gogia.

The six-member Safdarjung team was to include surgeon Dr Rajkumar Chajera, who conducted the first surgery on Nirbhaya after she was brought to the hospital on December 16, Dr P K Verma and Dr Ranju Singh who were monitoring her round-the-clock in the intensive care unit, gynecologist Dr Rekha Bharti who was the specialist on call and two nurses who have been by her side all through.

The Safdarjung doctors were stunned when the government asked cardiovascular surgeon Dr Naresh Trehan to put together a team from Medanta to accompany Nirbhaya to Singapore.

"We found it strange that the team from Safdarjung Hospital which knew Nirbhaya's condition best was sidelined. In fact, it was after much discussion that even Dr Verma, who knew Nirbhaya's condition best, was taken on board," a health ministry source told TOI.

Asked why Medanta was suddenly brought into the picture, Dr Trehan told TOI, "We have a special team of doctors trained in critical care to conduct emergency evacuations on air ambulances. That's why we were brought in."

The government was mulling over the option of shifting Nirbhaya outside India since Monday night on the "basis of an intelligence report that a fatal conclusion to her life could see the national capital in turmoil". Nirbhaya was finally shifted on Wednesday night.

Dr M C Mishra, chief of AIIMS trauma centre, was also supposed to accompany the medical team to Singapore. "But he backed out at the last moment. This delayed our schedule by two hours. The air ambulance was originally scheduled to depart Delhi at 9.30pm. It took off finally at 11.30pm," a health ministry official said.


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Delhi gang-rape case: Victim 'fighting for her life', hospital says

SINGAPORE: The 23-year-old Delhi gang-rape victim has significant brain injury, infection in lungs and abdomen and she is currently struggling against all odds at Mount Elizabeth Hospital where her condition continues to be "extremely critical", the hospital said on Thursday.

"Our medical team's investigations upon her arrival at the hospital yesterday showed that in addition to her prior cardiac arrest, she also had infection of her lungs and abdomen, as well as significant brain injury," said Dr Kelvin Loh, chief executive officer, Mount Elizabeth Hospital.

In a statement, Dr Loh said, "The patient is currently struggling against the odds, and fighting for her life."

Briefing reporters here on girl's condition, Loh said, "As at 28 December, 11am (8:30 IST) the patient continues to remain in an extremely critical condition."

The girl, who was gang-raped and brutally assaulted in a moving bus on December 16, was brought here in an air ambulance yesterday and admitted to the intensive care unit.

She had undergone three surgeries at the Safdarjung Hospital in Delhi, where she remained on ventilator support during most part of the treatment. Doctors removed major part of her intestines which had become gangrenous.

"A multi-disciplinary team of specialists has been working tirelessly to treat her since her arrival, and is doing everything possible to stabilise her condition over the next few days," Dr Loh said.

"The High Commission of India has been fully supportive in helping the hospital and her family, and ensuring that the best care is made available," he added.

The security was tightened at the hospital, favoured by well-heeled patients, with each visitor screened before being allowed into the ICU.

In Delhi, Congress chief Sonia Gandhi stressed that no time should be lost in bringing the perpetrators of such barbarous act to justice.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh assured that those found guilty of lapses in the aftermath of the incident will not be spared.

"We are committed to bringing the guilty to justice as soon as possible," Singh said, adding that best possible medical care was being provided to the victim.

The victim's father, who flew in with her, said he was reassured that the best is being done for his daughter.

The girl's family members do not speak English and rely on interpreters to communicate with hospital staff, the Strait Times newspaper reported.

The High Commission of India has assigned a liaison officer with the family.


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Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg's sister tripped by privacy settings

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 27 Desember 2012 | 22.14

SAN FRANCISCO: Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg's sister evidently tripped on the social network's privacy settings, landing in the midst of a debate on Wednesday about "online etiquette."

Randi Zuckerberg, who launched a Silicon Valley themed online reality show after quitting her job handling Facebook public relations, kicked off the controversy after a family photo intended for friends went public.

The picture, copies of which were at Buzzfeed.com and elsewhere on the Internet, showed Mark Zuckerberg in a kitchen with family members dramatizing reactions to messages sent with a freshly launched "Poke" feature at Facebook.

Poke lets people send messages that self-destruct in what is seen by many as a spin on popular smartphone application Snapchat.

Some have joked that Poke is a boon for "sexting" risque pictures because senders can have them quickly erased.

Randi Zuckerberg posted a copy of the family photo to Facebook for the eyes of close friends only, but evidently it was also shared with friends of those tagged in the picture due to privacy settings at the social network.

That meant the fun photo popped up in the news feed of someone outside Randi Zuckerberg's circle, who then shared it on popular messaging service Twitter.

From there, the photo went viral -- much to Randi Zuckerberg's chagrin.

"Digital etiquette: always ask permission before posting a friend's photo publicly," Mark Zuckerberg's elder sister said in a Christmas tweet. "It's not just about privacy settings, it's about human decency."

The comment sparked heated debate at Twitter and other online forums, where a vocal contingent saw poetic justice in Zuckerbergs being exposed by the way the social network handles the privacy of users.

"How terrible that someone might take something that belongs to you and use it in ways that you had not anticipated, and for which you had not given explicit permission," Dan Lyons said facetiously in a post at ReadWrite.com.

"What kind of world are we living in when just because you post something on a website, someone else can take just take that stuff and do things with it?" he asked rhetorically before finishing with "Oh, wait..."

In a Twitter message on Wednesday, Randi Zuckerberg said the topic of online etiquette elicits "passion, debate, anger & Twitter crazies" to the extent that it might be the subject of her next show.


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Jayalalithaa walks out of NDC meet after 'big humiliation'

CHENNAI: Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa created a flutter when she walked out of the National Development Council (NDC) meeting held in New Delhi on Thursday morning, protesting the "shabby treatment" meted out to her by the Centre in "stifling the voices of chief ministers".

"At the NDC meeting, the voices of the CMs have been stifled. Chief ministers were not allowed to speak freely. At the very beginning we were told that only ten minutes would be allotted to each CM and that after ten minutes the bell would ring. This is unheard of," she told reporters soon after she walked out of the meeting in a huff.

Stating that this has never been the practice before, she said, "I attended many such conferences in the past. I have attended meetings of the NDC and conferences of CMs convened by the Prime Minister on many occasions. Such practices have never been adopted before," Jayalalithaa said.

She said she had barely begun her speech when she was told that her ten minutes were up and the bell rang. "This is utter humiliation of a chief minister, who has come all the way to Delhi to present the views of the state government in the interest of the welfare of the people," she said.

Jayalalithaa alleged that there have been many occasions before when other chief ministers who support the Central Government have been allowed to speak for 30 minutes, 35 minutes and even more sometimes.

"At the last conference that I attended, the Assam chief minister was allowed to speak for more than 35 minutes", she said.

Claiming that it is impossible to convey the views of the state government in such a short period as ten minutes, she said, "We were all asked to come to Delhi to discuss the 12th plan document, which itself is so lengthy and encompasses so many subjects. It is practically impossible to convey everything that a CM wants to say within a short time frame of ten minute." If this is the way that they are going to treat chief ministers, the centre can stop calling such conferences and stop inviting the chief ministers, she said, adding, "we have got enough work back home."


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President's son Abhijit Mukherjee apologizes after calling anti-rape protesters 'dented and painted'

KOKATA: President Pranab Mukherjee's son Abhijit Mukherjee stoked a major controversy by describing women participating in Delhi protests against gang rape of a student as 'highly dented and painted', triggering angry backlash.

Abhijit had said, "Walking in candlelight processions, going to discotheques, we have also led student life, we have been students. I well know what the character of a student should be."

"Those who are coming in the name of students in the rallies, sundori, sundori mahila (beautiful women), are highly dented and painted," Abhijit Mukherjee, an MP from Jangipur seat which the President had vacated before his election, told a vernacular news channel.

"Giving interviews in TV and showing off their children. I wonder whether they are students at all," he said, adding, "what's basically happening in Delhi is something like pink revolution, which has very little connection with ground realities."

As his "insensitive" remarks sparked outrage with even his sister Sharmistha expressing "utter shock and anguish" and apologising on his behalf, Abhijit "withdrew" his comments and said they were not meant to hurt "any particular section or any particular sentiment".

"I express my utter shock and anguish. I really apologise to every women, man and every sensitive person in this country... I am utterly shocked and only thing I can say is that I really apologise on his behalf ... I am quite surprised with what my brother said," Sharmistha said.

Asked whether Abhijit should apologise for his words, she said, "I completely agree. He should immediately apologise.

"Not only as a President's son, but as any sensitive man, he should not have made this kind of statement. Forget about being a political leader, it shows a certain degree of insensitivity... My family is not like that," she said.

On whether her father would be embarrassed with Abhijit's remarks, Sharmistha said, "I am sure he will be. I can say that he also shares my view.... One thing is for sure that he (Pranab) does not agree with his (Abhijit) views. I am sure. He (Pranab) has made a statement and during our personal interactions, he expressed his anguish."

Soon after Abhijit said, "I apologise to all the people whose sentiments who got hurt because of these sentences and these sentences are withdrawn" but the women activists and political leaders were unimpressed.

CPI(M) leader Brinda Karat said political leaders cannot be allowed to get away with a mere apology after making such "outrageous and highly condemnable" remarks "demeaning women" and there should be a code of conduct for elected representatives.

Jaya Jaitley said the women will not be "cowed down" by such comments and it will only add strength to the movement. She said the comments have revealed the true mindset of the people.

"If it is what he has said, it is truly regrettable. I think that is so far away from reality. As a representative of the people, obviously this is an insensitive statement... That is why the suffering is increasing," former IPS officer and social activist Kiran Bedi said.

Terming the remarks as unfortunate, Smriti Irani, chief of BJP' women wing, said it was especially distressing as they had come from the President's son and that too at a "challenging time" when not only women but men have come out on streets demanding justice and safer environment for women.

"I think this is exactly the kind of mindset that the youths are fighting against," she said.

Her party said the comments reflect the Congress mindset of not addressing the problem and instead attacking peaceful protesters. "To criticise the common people who are taking out candle light march peacefully is not fair. Congress leaders should avoid such comments," BJP spokesperson Shahnawaz Hussain told . "Mukherjee should not have given such a statement. These comments show the Congress mindset of not addressing the crisis and criticising the protesters," he added.

Meanwhile, the 23-year-old Delhi gang-rape victim was admitted on Thursday morning to the Mount Elizabeth Hospital's intensive care unit in Singapore in an extremely critical condition. The country is witnessing widespread protests over the incident with protesters demanding a more effective legal system and better safety in the capital, known as one of the least safe cities in the world for women.

Over the weekend, protests in Delhi turned into violent clashes with the police; a constable trying to control the crowd died of his injuries.


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Eight Indians among world's best performing CEOs

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 26 Desember 2012 | 22.14

WASHINGTON: Eight Indian CEOs have made it to Harvard Business Review's (HBR) list of 100 best performing global chief executives headed for the last 17 years by the late Steve Jobs of Apple.

ITC chairman Y C Deveshwar, ranked seventh overall (Rank 7), was first among the Indian CEOs. Under his leadership, ITC saw its value increase by $45 billion.

He was followed by former ONGC's late chairman and managing director Subir Raha (Rank 13). During Raha's May 2001-2006 tenure, ONGC's market capitalisation increased more than 10 times.

Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani (Rank 28), was ranked third among Indians. Under his leadership, Reliance Industries has grown to become India's second-largest Indian company by turnover.

Larsen & Toubro chairman and managing Director A M Naik (Rank 32), came next. Under Naik's leadership, the company has expanded its horizons beyond domestic frontiers, positioning itself to become a true international player.

Former Bharat Heavy Electricals CMD A K Puri (Rank 38) is ranked fifth among the Indians. He is followed by Bharti Airtel chairman, Sunil Bharti Mittal (Rank 65).

Jindal Steel & Power CEO Naveen Jindal (Rank 87) is ranked seventh among Indians. He is followed by Former SAIL chairman, V S Jain (Rank 89).

On an average, these CEOs have delivered a total shareholder return of 1,385 per cent during their tenures and increased their firms' market value by $40.2 billion (adjusted for inflation, dividends, share repurchases, and share issues).

Jobs of Apple, who has been the best-performing CEO over the past 17 years was number 1 on HBR 2010 list as well. From 1997 to 2011, Apple's market value increased by $359 billion, and its shareholder return experienced average compound annual growth of 35 percent.

Jeff Bezos of Amazon.com has now climbed to the number 2 spot, up from number 7 in HBR 2010 list. Under his leadership, the company delivered industry-adjusted shareholder returns of 12,266 percent and saw its value increase by $111 billion.

The highest-ranked woman on the list is Meg Whitman, currently the CEO of beleaguered HP, whose performance as the CEO of eBay from 1998 to 2008 earned her the number 9 spot.


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5 Reasons why you should masturbate

Given our busy schedules, perhaps the time has come to enjoy solo sex. Remember, 94% men and 89% women still masturbate on a regular basis. Masturbation doesn't cause any harm to your body until and unless you over do it.

Here, we give you five reasons why you should masturbate.

Masturbation is healthy: Masturbation is one of the best ways to stay healthy and has many health benefits. It can cure diseases like insomnia, stress, anxiety, menstrual cramp, depression, and it can even stimulate your immune system. Some researches say it's also a form of exercise; it can burn a few calories even though it can't match up to gym workout.

It feels really good: Fantasies make masturbating so much fun. So, fantasize about having sex with celebrities, porn stars, strangers and what have you. By masturbating, you can have one of the greatest orgasms of your life.

Masturbation is safe: What's the only 100% safe form of sex? It's masturbation. You don't need to worry about getting pregnant or getting an STD. Unlike sex, masturbation is free of cost. It's your own body, do whatever you want.

Masturbation is natural: Masturbation is normal, and it's a natural act. It is a common form of autoeroticism. Forget the myths and misconceptions regarding masturbation. It will never lead to infertility, sexual weakness or loss of libido. Even animals like monkeys, dogs, and cats masturbate.

Masturbation improves sexual relationship: You can learn many things from masturbation. It can improve your sexual relationships with your partner. Women can explore their own body through masturbation; they can determine what is erotically pleasing to them and can share this with their partners.

It's a fun experience.


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Dhoni, Hafeez play down Ishant-Akmal on-field face-off

BANGALORE: Playing down the face-off between Indian pacer Ishant Sharma and Pakistan batsman Kamran Akmal in the first Twenty20 International, captains of both the sides said it was a minor argument which ended with an exchange of smiles between the two.

A heated argument erupted between the two and umpires had to step in to separate them and continue with the thrilling game which Pakistan won by five wickets.

The two got into an argument when Shoaib Malik was declared not out after he was caught off a no ball by Ishant, and then Akmal was beaten on the next ball as the two batsmen had crossed each other when the ball was in the air.

Soon both angry players exchanged a few angry words and wagged fingers at each other. Finally, the ground umpires and Indian players intervened and separated both of them.

"It happened because of some misunderstanding between the two. The bowler said something else and the batsman understood something else. I am pleased that Ishant had not abused him. We will try to keep this in check," Mahendra Singh Dhoni said.

His opposite number Mohammad Hafeez said the players doused the issue on the ground itself.

"We have come here to play competitive cricket and such incidents do happen. It is a part of the game. However, Ishant and Akmal ended the issue on the ground by exchanging smiles at each other," he said.

Apart from the argument between the two, Gautam Gambhir and Mohammad Irfan too glared at each other at the start of the match.


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Don't have powerful families backing me: Shahid

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 25 Desember 2012 | 22.14

VICKEY LALWANI, Mumbai Mirror Dec 24, 2012, 09.26AM IST

(Shahid KapoorMore Pics )

TOI caught up with Shahid Kapoor in Mysore, where he is shooting for Rajkumar Santoshi's Phata Poster Nikla Hero. Excerpts from the interview in which we grilled him on the controversies dogging him:

Did you lose out on the YRF film because you turned up for a puja in a pair of shorts?
Do you really think YRF films get cancelled because of shorts? Have I not attended enough pujas in my life to know what not to wear? I waited eight months for Maneesh's film after committing to it. First it was inclement weather. Then, Maneesh had a slip disc. And finally, I was told he needed time to finalise the script. Imagine an actor wasting eight months of his life for a film. Post Mausam, I was offered 18 films. The fate of Mausam at the BO was a personal injury.

Did you also refuse to attend reading sessions and rehearsals?
Ridiculous. Why will I wait for eight months and not follow my director's vision?

They say 'Shahid is fickle minded'. You refused Punit Malhotra's film because you wanted changes. You were also replaced in Milan Luthria's film.
I am not fickle minded. I had never committed to both the films. I would love to work with Milan, but the film never reached the narration stage. Karan and I have been in talks, but nothing has materialised.

Do you think you made some blunders?
Some of my films didn't do well. Obviously those choices were not correct. But I don't fear failures anymore. I need to work harder and I am doing that. Many successful actors bounced back after a dozen flops in a row. I have to give the audience all that I fell short on in the last couple of years. I've also learnt something...

Which is?
I need to utilise more opportunities to get it right. In retrospect I was also too hard on myself, my films.

How did you change?
Natural progression. I also want to do more mainstream films. In the late 90s, there were no masala films. Now I whistle and clap in theatres. Why shouldn't I attempt what I enjoy so much?

Did you have a fallout with Vishal Bhardwaj and Ahmed Khan?
I respect Vishal sir too much. Ahmed is like family.

And Ken Ghosh?
We were never very close. His second film with me, Fida, was a very good attempt. The climax was a let down. During Chance Pe Dance, I realised we are no more on the same page. There is one more thing which is changing in me. I was a shy guy. Weirdly after two flops, I am more confident, more open. Nothing to lose I guess. (smiles)

So, a misunderstood guy?
A misrepresented guy (laughs). Also, my dad had done only a few films and TV. My parents had separated. Till I was 21, I wasn't too close to my dad. My understanding of the industry came in late. I am surrounded by actors with big production houses and families backing them. I'm not one of them.


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UP rape victim raped by cops probing case

LUCKNOW: A gang-rape victim from Uttar Pradesh's Ambedkar Nagar, who was again violated by the investigating officer (IO) probing her case, has now alleged that she was also raped by the inspector in charge of the police station where she had lodged her complaint. While the IO was arrested on December 14, no action has been taken against the inspector. Now the victim has written to the chief minister for justice.

Maan Singh, a senior sub inspector (SSI) posted at Akbarpur police station in Ambedkar Nagar, was arrested on December 14 from a hotel in Faizabad by SSP D S Yadav. The arrest came after the SSP was informed that the cop had brought the gang-rape victim from Ambedkar Nagar to the hotel and was raping her. The victim was rescued from the room after the cop was caught with his pants down. Now the rape victim has alleged that in-charge of the Akbarpur Kotwali, inspector AK Upadhyay, had also raped her.

As per the woman, she was gang-raped in Ambedkar Nagar last month. Her family had lodged an FIR in this connection at the Akbarpur police station. Maan Singh was the IO of the case. Allegations are that after the police failed to initiate any action against the accused, the victim approached the SSI who promised to help her.

He then suggested that she should accompany him to Faizabad and appear before the deputy inspector general (DIG) Faizabad Range of which Ambedkar Nagar district police is a part. The unsuspecting victim agreed and accompanied Maan Singh to Faizabad. The cop took the victim to the hotel and raped her. During her ordeal, the woman somehow managed to send a message to her neighbour in Ambedkar Nagar, who contacted the Faizabad SSP.

The girl has now alleged that by the time the SSP raided the hotel and arrested Maan Singh, she had already been raped by Upadhyay as well. Upadhyay is the immediate boss of Maan Singh. The victim, in her letter to the senior officers, has alleged that though she had provided this information to the officer investigating the rape case against Maan Singh, no action has been initiated against the accused inspector.

The woman has now alleged that since the matter was related to the police department, she was being threatened not to testify against the arrested SSI before the court and was also under pressure not to raise the issue of the inspector's involvement.

Faizabad city SP Subhash Singh Baghel said he was getting the charges verified. "Whosoever involved will not be spared.''


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'Theek hai?': PM’s speech gaffe overshadows his address to the nation

NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh finally addressed the nation on Monday morning to calm the protestors agitating against the gang-rape incident in Delhi. But a gaffe at the end of the speech, which was broadcast by major news channels, only left the protesters more incensed.

After finishing his speech the PM asked, probably the cameraperson filming him, "theek hai?". The few-second long footage was somehow not edited out before the statement was sent to television channels. It soon made its way to YouTube and was shared by thousands of web users on Twitter and Facebook.

The netizens on Twitter and Facebook took "theek hai" part of the speech as a show of political apathy and indifference. Using the hashtag #theekhai, they ridiculed the PM and his government. Many wrote that 'it is not #theek hai'.

In less than an hour after the speech, #theekhai became the top Twitter trend for India. Since then thousands of tweets have been using the hashtag.

Rahul Kanwal(@rahulkanwal), a journalist, tweeted: "If sab #TheekHai there'd be no reason for you to speak @PMOIndia."

Chetan Bhagat (@chetan_bhagat), a writer, said, "Madam, madam sorry madam, maine aise hi pooch liya #theekhai? Aage se will stick to the script. Theek hai? Oops madam, sorry.. hello? hello?"

Faking News (@fakingnews) noted, "LOL! #TheekHai is already trending in India. Twitter can earn billions if it sells a control panel to gov that could censor trending topics."

However, some people were not in favour of making a big deal of the gaffe. Culdivsac (@culdivsac) tweeted: "Lol, what's the big deal abt #theekhai? The PM was giving a take for the camera & expressed his approval of the take. So? Just lazy editing."


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'Dabangg 2' going strong, spells profit for all

Written By Unknown on Senin, 24 Desember 2012 | 22.14

" Dabangg 2", the last big release of 2012, seems to cap the year on a profitable note. The Salman Khan-starrer opened with a record-breaking collection of Rs.21.10 crore on the first day and trade pundits predict it will enter the Rs.100-crore club.

Rajesh Thadani of Multimedia Combines told IANS that "Dabangg 2" has opened "exceptionally well at the box office on Friday" and on Saturday "collected around Rs.17 crore and is going housefull on Sunday".

According to him, it is a record breaking opening and that "Dabangg 2" has broken the record of "Rowdy Rathore" that opened with Rs.15.10 crore.

A sequel to Abhinav Kashyap-directed 2010 blockbuster "Dabangg", the part two, said to be made at a budget of Rs.50 crore, marks Arbaaz Khan's directorial debut and repeated the lead pair of Salman and Sonakshi Sinha, while Prakash Raj replaced Sonu Sood as the villain.

Brijesh Tandon said: "In Delhi and Uttar Pradesh, 'Dabangg 2' has collected around Rs.3.40 crore on Friday which was quite expected from Salman's film. We hope the film gets bigger and better tonight."

Anand Verma of DT Cinema informed that at their centres it has got a "phenomenal response" despite a slow start on Friday morning and most of the shows have been "housefull".

However, Vinay Choksey of VIP Movies feels that Monday will be crucial to the movie.

He said: "Today (Sunday) the film is going housefull and it should collect around Rs.20 to Rs.23 crore. We are only concerned about the Monday morning collections. We hope there won't be any dip on Monday."

In Mumbai, according to Manoj Desai, executive director of G7 multiplex and Maratha Mandir: "'Dabangg 2' was housefull at G7 and Maratha Mandir on Friday and Saturday. Even on Sunday the film is going housefull. Now let's see how the film does on Monday."

Will "Dabangg 2" break the record of Salman's earlier release, "Ek Tha Tiger", which earned Rs.33 crore on its opening day?

"I don't think 'Dabangg 2' will break the record of 'Ek Tha Tiger', but the film will certainly cross Rs.100 crore without any doubt. Besides, Tuesday is a (X-Mas) holiday, so the film will collect enough on Christmas."

Sunil Bansal of Yash Raj Jai Pictures Pvt Ltd said that in Rajasthan, "Dabangg 2" amassed around "Rs.1.25 crore on day one. On Saturday, the film collected around Rs.90 lakh".

Opening in Orissa has been average, according to Jeetu Khandelwal of Movie Pioneers, who informed that "the film collected around Rs.30 lakh, but it is going housefull on Sunday".

"Nobody will ever face any loss with a Salman Khan film. But 'Ready' and 'Bodyguard' opened with better collection compared to 'Dabangg 2'," he added.

Manoj Desai, executive director of G7 multiplex and Maratha Mandir said: "'Dabangg 2' was housefull at G7 and Maratha Mandir on Friday and Saturday. Even on Sunday the film is going housefull. Now let's see how the film does on Monady."

Made at a budget of Rs.40 crore, "Dabangg" had collected Rs.145 crore.


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Sachin Tendulkar: Great in Tests, greatest in ODIs

MUMBAI: Time stood frozen on Sunday as Sachin Tendulkar, a behemoth of one-day cricket batting, decided to abruptly call it a day. In his ODI avatar, Tendulkar leaves behind not just the memories of his strokeplay but the riveting story of a marketing phenomenon that made him India's biggest brand.

Sachin's ODI record | Profile: Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar | In Pics: Sachin's one-day journey

While he always remained the undisputed king of one-day cricket, the question lingers if he managed to conquer Test cricket in an equally fascinating way.

Statistics alone may never tell the real story. Tendulkar has played 463 ODIs with 234 resulting in India victories and 33 of his 49 hundreds, including the world-record unbeaten 200, coming in a winning cause. His ODI average stands at 44.83 and the winning average at 56.63. What makes Tendulkar's ODI stint more special is also the 154 wickets against his name, with 97 coming in matches India won.

Ricky Ponting, Sanath Jayasuriya, Inzamam-ul Haq, Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid - five of the greatest ODI batsmen of Tendulkar's generation - do not match up to the tally.

In Test cricket, Tendulkar averages a whopping 54.32 in 194 matches with the win/draw average at a daunting 64.92 in 66 games. The 51 Test centuries are only an icing on the cake. Off those 51, 40 have either resulted in India's victory or a draw.

Jacques Kallis, Ricky Ponting, Rahul Dravid, Jacques Kallis and Brian Lara - the five greatest Test batsmen - again do not match up to these figures.

As a one-day cricketer, he's been part of a World Cup winning team while as a Test cricketer, he played a crucial role in India going on to become the world's top-ranked team. While Tendulkar continues to play Test cricket, numbers make it impossible to suggest which format he ruled more. A Test batsman is gauged by his run-making ability in different conditions, against different opposition. On that count, 29 of Tendulkar's 51 Test centuries have come in away matches, with some of the best coming at the WACA, Old Trafford, SCG, the Basin Reserve, Galle and so on.

In one-day cricket, the accolades are normally reserved for big-match entertainers, and once again there is nobody bigger than Tendulkar. He took India to the semifinals of the 1996 World Cup and batted on a wicket that looked like a featherbed till he got out. He scored a century in the 1999 World Cup immediately after his father's untimely funeral. The nerveless 98 against Pakistan at Centurion in the 2003 World Cup too stands out. Finally, winning the coveted trophy in 2011 makes it complete.

For many, favourite Tendulkar moments go beyond the World Cup, be it the 84 in Auckland or the Desert Storm in 1998 or the double century in Gwalior.

To say that he was better in one format than the other can only be an anomaly for those looking to make assumptions.
Perhaps the fact that he still doesn't have a triple hundred in Tests places him a notch lesser than some other legends. Possibly, compared to Dravid, Tendulkar's double hundreds haven't come in the most demanding conditions either. However, for those looking beyond numbers, the sight of Tendulkar batting has always been divine.

One-day cricket, however, has one strong Tendulkar connection. His rise as a ODI batsman, the advent of cable TV and introduction of coloured clothing all happened almost at the same time. The manner in which he went on from there to become India's biggest brand, the darling of scores of parents who wanted their children to be like him, and the humility with which he went about his job perhaps makes him the most complete cricketer ever.


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Ahmedabad woman, daughter kill Mumbai stockbroker, cut him into 17 pieces

AHMEDABAD: A woman and her daughter from the Maninagar area of Ahmedabad ended the life of a Mumbai stockbroker - with whom both were having an affair - cutting him 17 times, to annex his Rs 17 crore property. Mukti Shah, from the western Mumbai suburb of Kandivli, was found dead in the Anand district of Gujarat on December 12. The 52-year-old woman and her 30-year-old daughter, who were arrested by the Anand police on Friday, have confessed to committing the murder.

Shah was killed near Vasad village en route from Ahmedabad to Mumbai. On Sunday, the local crime branch officials recovered the power of attorney for the Rs 17 crore property, which is located in Panvel on the outskirts of Navi Mumbai.

Local crime branch inspector R D Dabhi said that the accused are educated and upwardly mobile. The daughter is a fashion designer who had crafted the plan to make Shah sign the power of attorney in her name six months ago.

Officials said that this was the first instance of a mother and daughter being involved in such a brutally executed murder. Interestingly, the first clue of a woman being involved in the murder was picked up by Anand superintendent of police who found a plastic bag containing vegetables and a dupatta in Shah's car.

Anand police requested the Ahmedabad police to scan call data records which highlighted frequent calls to the two women. They were then picked up for interrogation.

The women told police officials said that Shah first came in touch with the woman during his frequent visits to Ahmedabad. The two started an affair and the woman even gave her husband's retirement money to Shah.

Later, her daughter too began an affair with Shah and he would regularly go on trips with either the mother or the daughter.

When the daughter found that Shah was a rich man and had property in Panvel, a plan began to germinate. On one outing with Shah, she ensured that he became inebriated and had him sign the power of attorney. Later, the two women decided to eliminate him.

Third time unlucky

The mother-daughter duo wanted to use poison - with which dogs are put to sleep - to kill Shah, but could not draw the poison into a syringe. They then mixed this poison in his tea. When Shah started feeling groggy, the daughter made him sit in the car saying that she would drive him to Mumbai. Her mother sat in the back seat.

When the women were sure that Shah had become unconscious, they cut his jugular vein and other veins and dumped him in the car to die.

The two confessed that this was their third attempt to finish off Shah. Earlier, the daughter had gone to Lonavala with Shah and had tried to push him off a cliff. When she failed, she again tried to poison Shah in Panvel by spiking his drink, which Shah did not touch.

The third time around, the mother lent her a hand and the two succeeded.

They wanted to be dead sure

After attacking Shah, the two women fled from the car. They were spotted by a motorcyclist who asked them if they were in trouble. The two cooked up a story that they were involved in an accident and needed help. The motorcyclist dropped them at Borsad. After getting down, the two were worried that Shah may still be alive. They took a rickshaw back to the spot to confirm that he indeed was dead.


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Rs 150 crore bullet-proof office ready for Narendra Modi

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 23 Desember 2012 | 22.14

AHMEDABAD: Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi would shift to his newly-built office in Gandhinagar unofficially dubbed as the 'North Block' after 'kamurtas' or the inauspicious period ends in mid-January. Incidentally, the Prime Minister's office is located inside New Delhi's South Block.

The new Rs 150-crore chief minister's office complex, built in less than a year, has a south block too modeled on New Delhi's secretariat, where his ministers will have their offices. The complex will be officially called 'Panchamrut', meaning that elixir for six crore Gujaratis will flow from here.

The four-floor building — spread across 35,000 sq ft — has been built by the roads & buildings (R&B) department and designed by a leading Ahmedabad architect, who has also designed the Gujarat high court and Amul dairy building apart from some corporate offices.

Given the security concerns, bullet proof glasses have been used for its windows and doors. The centrally air-conditioned building has a special room for cabinet meetings and will be constantly under CCTV surveillance. "The new CM office is directly connected with the first floor of the state assembly from where the CM, ministers and MLAs can enter the assembly hall," said a senior R&B official.

Modi took keen interest in every detail of the design. Currently, Modi's office is located on the fifth floor of block No.1 in Sachivalaya. Over the past few years, the scope of its activity has expanded considerably, under his centralised style of administration, with a number of staffers occupying space on the second, third and fourth floors.


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Delhi gang rape: Victim continues to be critical, doctors say

NEW DELHI: The condition of the 23-year-old girl, who was gang raped in a moving bus last Sunday, continues to be critical and doctors are subjecting her to various tests today.

"We are subjecting her to all examinations and procedures. She continues to be critical," Dr B D Athani, medical superintendent of Safdarjung Hospital, told PTI.

Doctors had said yesterday that the rape victim is psychologically "composed and optimistic" about her future and has started communicating.

Doctors had also said they are keeping the patient on high doses of antibiotics and high standards of hygiene - two important factors for preventing infection.

Prohibitory orders clamped, protesters defy police

Earlier, hours after police evacuated demonstrators from Raisina Hills and Sonia Gandhi's residence, high drama was witnessed at India Gate today when protesters resisted police attempts to detain them for defying prohibitory orders to protest against the gang rape of a young girl.

The protesters assembled near the war memorial from 9am when they were asked to vacate the location by the police which said the area was under Section 144 of CrPC which bans the assembly of four or more persons. As the protesters remained defiant, police forcibly removed them from the spot.

Some of the protesters tried to get out of the police van but were pushed back into the vehicle. Later, the protesters also punctured the tyres of the bus which was carrying them while a group of girls lay down infront of it. Women protesters alleged that they were manhandled by male police personnel though women police were present at the spot.

"We are here to protest a heinous crime. We have the right to protest," said Pushpa, a Nepali national, who is pursuing studies here.

Earlier in the morning, the police evacuated a number of protesters from area of Raisina Hills, where Rashtrapati Bhavan and key government offices are located, and outside Congress chief Sonia Gandhi's 10, Janpath residence where they had stayed put since last night to protest against the gang-rape of the 23-year-old girl on Sunday last.

The protesters, most of them students, who spent a chilly night in the open after they fought pitched battles with the police throughout the day yesterday at Raisina Hills, were taken into a bus in an early morning operation. Outside Gandhi's residence also, protesters were taken into custody.

A large number of police men were deployed and Raisina Hills and Rajpath were barricaded. Eight metro stations near India Gate and Raisina Hills were closed as part of police preparations to contain the agitation.

The police clamped prohibitory orders in New Delhi district and asked protesters to stage demonstrations either at Jantar Mantar or Ramlila Maidan.

A Delhi Police statement said, "Protestors may go to Ramlila Maidan or Jantar Mantar. Traffic has been diverted from Vijay Chowk and Rajpath."

It said prohibitory orders under section 144 of CrPC have been issued in New Delhi area except Jantar Mantar.

Anticipating more protests on the gang rape issue, eight Delhi Metro stations near Raisina Hill and India Gate were also closed for public.

Last night, it was decided to close four stations — Patel Chowk, Central Secretariat, Udyog Bhawan and Race Course — but this morning it was extended to four more — Barakhamba Road, Mandi House, Khan Market and Pragati Maidan.

Though the commuters were less in the morning it being on Sunday, the few who chose to take the metro to reach these destinations were put to hardship as they unaware of the announcement made late last night by DMRC.

Delhi Metro's decision came on the directions of the Delhi Police. The stations will remain closed till further orders.

"The stations will remain closed till DMRC gets further orders from the Delhi Police. All the four stations are close to India Gate. However, interchange will be allowed at Central Secretariat station," DMRC officials said.

The police move came a day after thousands of youths clashed with the police at Raisina Hills protesting against the gang-rape and demanding speedy punishment to the accused.


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Will marry after Jodhpur & Mumbai court verdicts: Salman

Superstar Salman Khan has finally put to rest questions pertaining to his marriage, saying he will think about tying the knot only after the verdicts of Jodhpur and Mumbai courts in the blackbuck and vehicle mishap cases against him.

The 46-year-old actor, who is always hounded with questions about his never ending bachelorhood, has been linked to a number of women in his career but is said to be single post his alleged split with actress Katrina Kaif.

"I will think about marrying only after the courts give their verdicts. If the verdicts go against me, I will marry only after coming out of jail," the actor told Rajat Sharma during India TV's show 'Aap Ki Adalat'.

Salman is fighting a case in Jodhpur court in the killing of a blackbuck during the shooting of 'Hum Saath Saath Hain' in 1999 and another in Mumbai court for the vehicle mishap incident in 2002, which resulted in the death of a person.

"I hope to be acquitted in both cases, but if I marry before the verdicts, will it be fair? Suppose, if there is a turn of events and I am sent to jail, and my wife has to come with our child to meet me in jail. Will it be fair?," joked the actor.

Salman, who has delivered back to back hits, is often called 'critic-proof' thanks to the box office performances of his films, latest being 'Dabangg 2'.

But the actor has been advised by the doctors to avoid doing action sequences because of his trigeminal neuralgia condition, for which he underwent an operation last year.

Speaking at length about the blood clot in his brain, Salman said, "There are two options. If there is a surgery there could be loss of sight and loss of balance. The surgery could then prove negative. I have chosen the other option. I admit there is a problem, but everything will be fine. Doctors have advised me not to do action sequences and avoid anger to keep my BP in check.

"But if I am totally unable to do action sequences, then I will stop doing films. After all, the audience pays money to watch my action," he added.


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Dabangg 2

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 22 Desember 2012 | 22.14

Story: Super-cop Chulbul Pandey moves to Kanpur - where he crosses guns with vicious Bachcha Bhaiyya. Can Chulbul swing it a second time?

Movie Review: Yes, Chulbul (Salman) swings it a second time - and hits home harder. Dabanng 2 is actually a better film than the first, tighter, brighter and sharper. Featuring explosive action and fine detailing - the Pandeys move to Kanpur where cows block the streets, Chulbul asking his hawaldar, "Hum kisi khet mein ghus aaye hain?", and being told, "Nahin sir, main chauraha hai," - Dabanng 2 never takes its eye off its heart - Salman Khan.

This is an unapologetic star vehicle driven by Khan who rolls an SUV over with one hand, takes lakhs for his 'police welfare fund' with another, romances wife Rajjo (Sonakshi) with tangible tenderness, dances wild jigs with controlled abandon. Dabanng 2 is Salman's show all the way, every second line - "Ye Kung Fu Pandey hain!" - homage to his Chulbul.

But Dabangg 2 features other delights too, like its detailing of local flavour down to the 1980s Bhojpuri hit 'Phulauri bina chutney' playing at a function, its kitschy-cutesy touches (Chulbul's belt dances the Dabangg step on its own), its moffusil-like low-voltage lighting, its heroine Sonakshi glowing with pretty appeal. It features a nice show by Vinod Khanna as Chulbul's reconciled stepfather and tolerable acting by Prakash Raj as Kanpur's creepy Bachcha Bhaiyya, Deepak Dobriyal his slimy sibling Genda.

There are crackling good lines (when Genda's abducting a girl, a hawaldar muses, "Personality ke hisab se, kuch zyada nahin bol raha?") and rainbow-like music, ranging from the soft 'Dagabaaz naina' to the electric 'Aadat badi naaspiti, Pandey-ji bajaye duty pe seeti' channeling the classic 'Pinjare wali muniya', mixing it up with a glittering guest visit by Munni (Malaika Khan).

Arbaaz Khan's direction is commendable - he maximises his main star, maintains balance and keeps the movie tight. There are some loose strands - an SP eating 'pisa' becomes annoyingly heavy, Sonakshi's acting stays lean, some jokes are saccharine-like - but at the end, Salman's shirt comes off, so it's all cool. Taking this franchise forward, Dabangg 2 presents a sewaiyyan Western where hot-cop Chulbul is cowboy and stud. If you're up for fun that's purely tongue-in-cheek, this will give you bangs for your buck.

Note: If you don't like Salman Khan, Dabanng 2 won't pack a punch for you.


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Mother of four sedated and raped, two held

NEW DELHI: In yet another ghastly incident in the city targeting its women, a 40-year-old mother of four was allegedly gang raped by three men after she was sedated. The incident was reported on December 19 from the Welcome area in northeast Delhi. Two people have been arrested and a case registered. The accused include the father of a rape victim whom she had helped get justice. "It was the victim's statement that helped the prosecution obtain a 10-year conviction," said a senior police officer.

According to police, the woman, who worked in a factory, is originally a resident of Loni in Ghaziabad. She recently lost her husband and is unemployed at present. "She was staying at Janta Colony. She quit her job a few months ago. During this time, she met Gaffar whose daughter worked with her at the factory.

"Gafar's daughter was raped in the factory by the employers and the victim became a key witness in the case. It was her statement that earned the accused a conviction of 10 years RI. Gafar was initially grateful to the victim and the two became friends,'' said an investigating officer.

On the night of December 19, the accused had met Gafar and two of his friends - Alam and Rezaful - at her residence. "The woman has alleged that they spiked her food and sedated her after which they took turns to rape her. We received the complaint the next morning and sent the complainant to GTB Hospital for medical examination. When rape was confirmed, we registered the case and raided several places. We arrested two of the accused from northeast Delhi and adjoining areas. We are raiding several other places in order to nab the last man," the police officer said.


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Huma Khan sentenced to 3 years jail for torturing minor girl

Huma Khan, a 47-year-old actress who had appeared in a string of C grade films during the late 80s and early 90s, has been charged for kidnapping and criminal intimidation and sentenced to three years of rigorous imprisonment by Additional Sessions Court Judge AR Waghwate.

Her brother Shammiuddin Moinuddin Shaikh, though booked, has been acquitted after he made the court believe that he was impotent. Medical reports , however, prove otherwise.

Khan, a resident of Dahisar, was arrested for the illegal detention of her maid's daughter. The victim, Shanti Mansingh Vishwakarma, 16, had alleged she had been taken to Pune from June 2007 to February 2008 by the small time actress, and where her brother raped her three times.

A complaint registered by the victim's mother Reshma Mansingh Vishwakarma at the Mira Road Police Station on February 25, 2008 declares: "Khan and Shaikh had illegally kept the girl and burnt her with cigarettes. Sixty-six injury marks have been found on her body."

Chief Public Prosecutor RJ Qadri said, "She was arrested after the complaint on charges of rape, attempt to murder, kidnapping and criminal intimidation under Sections 307, 363, 376 read with 114 of the IPC. She was in Kalyan Jail but left on bail later."

Shanti often used to accompany her mother when she used to work for Khan in the Rashmi Tanna Building in Mira Road. After her film career failed to take off, Khan shifted to Pune to stay near her brother. She took her maid Reshma's daughter with her saying she will treat Shanti as her own daughter and manage all her expenses.

Hemlata Deshmukh, Additional Public Prosecutor said: "We are not satisfied with the judgement that has been met out to Shammiuddin Shaikh. We will appeal to higher court."

Shanti, after a year of surviving the torture, managed to reach her mother and told her plight. Her mother then took her to the police and doctors who said that the wounds indicate that she had been beaten up and singed with cigarettes on almost all parts of her body, including her tongue.

- Mustafa Shaikh and Ram Parmar


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Elections 2012 results: Modi scores hat-trick in Gujarat, Congress wins Himachal

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 21 Desember 2012 | 22.14

AHMEDABAD: Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi won a third consecutive victory in the assembly elections and is likely to lead the race for prime ministerial candidate in BJP in 2014 while the Congress wrested power from the saffron party in Himachal Pradesh.

The BJP was leading in 118 of the 182 seats in Gujarat while Congress was ahead in 59. Former chief minister Keshubhai Patel's GPP on which the Congress hoped to defeat Modi fared very badly. The NCP and JDU were leading in one seat each.

Chief minister Narendra Modi won comfortably from the Maninagar constituency by about 86,000 votes against suspended IPS officer Sanjiv Bhatt's wife Shweta Bhatt. In 2007, Modi had won the elections by more than 87,000 votes.

His aide & former minister Amit Shah, who was arrested in the Sohrabuddin fake encounter case won from the Naranpura constituency.

Gujarat Parivartan Party president and former CM Keshubhai Patel won by around 20,000 votes in Visavadar seat.

In the last elections in 2007, the BJP had won 117 seats and Congress 59.

However, the party was set for a debacle in Himachal Pradesh, a state which has stuck to its habit of voting out an incumbent government.

The Congress, which put up a spirited campaign under former chief minister Virbhadra Singh, is all set to return to power in the hill state.

As trends showed reverses for BJP, chief minister Prem Kumar Dhumal appeared prepared for defeat.

"Whatever people decide is good. It would be good if they support us, and good even if they don't. I will welcome the decision of people," he said when asked to react on the trends going against his party.

Dhumal himself won from the Hamirpur defeating his nearest Congress rival Narinder Thakur by a margin of over 9,500 votes. He had won from Bamsan in 2007 by about 30,000 votes but after delimitation his constituency was scrapped and he had to shift to adjoining constituency of Hamirpur.

His rival and Congress veteran Virbhadra Singh said that he had put in his "best efforts" in the polls and it was for Sonia Gandhi to decide the party's chief minister.

"I had been given the brief to bring the party back to power and for that I had put in my best efforts. It is for our national leader Sonia Gandhi to decide who will become the chief minister," Singh said.

The party has already won two seats and was leading in 35 seats in the 68-member Assembly. BJP was leading in 23 seats and has won two seats. 'Others' led in four seats having won in one. Congress had won 23 seats and BJP 41 in the 2007 polls.

The BJP's hat-trick in retaining power in Gujarat added grist to political mill speculating on Modi becoming the party's PM candidate in the next Lok Sabha elections.

BJP MP Smriti Irani openly declared that Modi is her prime ministerial candidate. However, the party was cautious to comment on the issue. Suspended MP Ram Jethmalani said that the victory has "definitely" strengthened Modi's contention for being the PM candidate.

Jethmalani said the third straight victory in Gujarat Assembly Polls has defined Modi as the prime ministerial candidate for the BJP in the next Lok Sabha polls.

"Definitely," Jethmalani said when asked if the victory has strengthened Modi's contention for the Prime Minister's chair.

Chief spokesperson of BJP Ravi Shankar Prasad, however, parried questions on the issue saying Modi has always been an important leader in the party.

"We are not a dynastic party, which is led by a Yuavaraj. We function in a pure democratic fashion," he said without committing on Modi.

In a significant comment, Modi tweeted that it was time to move "forward".

"No need of looking behind...FORWARD...we want infinite energy, infinite courage, infinite patience..." Modi said on the microblogging site Twitter as trends indicated a clear victory for him.

Congress leaders sought to downplay their defeat and also the possible emergence of Modi as a PM candidate. Finance minister P Chidambaram said Congress is the "clear winner" in Gujarat having "contained" Modi and BJP.

They sad that victory in Assembly polls does not guarantee Modi's acceptability in national politics.


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Should never have married: Kamal Hassan

Kamal Haasan talks about his tumultuous personal life and the challenge of releasing Vishwaroopam on satellite TV a day before its theatrical release

Where has your conflict with multiplexes over the proposed DTH (direct -to-home) premiere of Vishwaroopam reached?
We have booked theatres in the South, but a section there is still opposed to it. In Mumbai, PVR was supportive enough initially but suddenly, they backed out. Subsequently, I tried convincing them but they have not relented.

Is DTH just a way to play safe in a low satellite market?
No. Let me tell you that unlike in Mumbai, satellite rights have risen in Tamil Nadu. I had my regular takers with substantial money but profits would have been meagre. DTH ensures greater profit. Some exhibitors claimed I am driven by greed but I prefer to call it 'opportunity'. Asked what I would do with the money, I said I would plough back in theatres. They are needlessly worried. Seeing a film in a theatre is a cultural habit in India, it will never go away.

How did Vishwaroopam shape up?
PVP was supposed to produce Vishwaroopam but the canvas kept widening. They were kind enough to become the financers while I took over production. I got a cameraman who would work on digital cinema, an AD from the US, an art director from Vietnam, and stuntmen from Thailand and the US. It wasn't an easy film to make. We didn't shoot in Afghanistan since we were advised it would be unsafe. We thought of going to Kazakhstan but the people there were not film savvy. Eventually, we recreated Afghanistan in Chennai. Also, we dropped the idea of casting big stars like Sonakshi Sinha among others. We wanted the money to show in the film and not in its posters.

So you dropped her from the film?
Everything was amicable. We explained it to her. Shatrughan is like an elder brother.

You did films like Saagar, Sadma, Sanam Teri Kasam... and then you left Mumbai...
At the time of Saagar, I had done 109 films. Had I hung around here, I wouldn't have completed 215 till date.

Weren't you supposed to do a film with Barry Osborne?
That will happen but after I complete Vishwaroopam 2. I've even completed ten days shooting for it. Osborne is also helping me premiere Vishwaroopam in Los Angeles.

Tell us about your daughters Shruti and Akshara.
Shruti is travelling more than I ever did. She has become very busy. However, her Ek Duuje Ke Liye is yet to come. Akshara is learning how to dance. They stay with their mother (Sarika).

Are you in touch with Sarika and Vani?
No. The parting wasn't smooth in either case. I was too much in love for an amicable settlement. I am sure it wasn't easy for my wives either. Marriage is not a film you can forget if it flops. I felt scarred.

Did you see the break-ups coming?
I saw them coming. Sarika and I were married for 17 years. And I knew the marriage wouldn't last 12 years before we parted ways. Although we kept pulling on. I thought it would affect the children. I waited for them to come of age.

Both your marriages didn't succeed. Do you think you should've married at all?
I never believed in marriage. People marry because of peer pressure but I don't subscribe to the 'herd mentality'. I shouldn't have married. I married for the convenience of my women. Vani wouldn't live-in and I wasn't strong enough to put my foot down. And the society was such that Sarika and I couldn't book a hotel room together even after we had two daughters.

Didn't Gouthami pressure you to marry her?
Never. She is very different. She is a very progressive lady, and not just to please me.


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Gang-raped girl's will to live leaves doctors amazed

NEW DELHI: Her sheer will to live has left doctors amazed. Although the victim of Sunday's brutal gang-rape continues to be critical, doctors said she has responded well to the second surgery on Wednesday in which her entire intestine was removed as it had turned gangrenous.

Despite the serious injuries and two major surgeries within days of each other, the girl was hanging on tenaciously and even attempting to breathe on her own.

"We have never seen such injuries, especially in a sexual assault case. She has immense fighting spirit," said B D Athani, medical superintendent, Safdarjung Hospital.

Doctors said her vital parameters like blood pressure, urine output, respiratory rate and pulse were within limits. The only cause for concern was the dip in the white blood cell and platelet count (41,000). "This indicates an impending danger of infection. Her intestine had turned gangrenous. The next 10 days are going to be critical,'' said M C Misra, chief of AIIMS Trauma Centre, who is assisting doctors at Safdarjung Hospital.

The gang-rape victim is conscious and alert, and has been communicating with her family. Her brother told TOI that she asked him to get her three ATM cards blocked. "I told her we had got the cards blocked. She got a little hassled to see relatives in the hospital. She doesn't want anyone to know what happened to her. We told her no one knows about the incident and that the relatives had been told that she had met with an accident," he said.

The brother said no one was talking to her about the rape. "We don't want her to slip into depression. We want her to survive. She is also not talking about the incident," he said.

On Friday, doctors will try to wean her off ventilator support. She will only be given parenteral nutrition — that is, nutrition passed into the body intravenously — through tubes inserted in her abdomen. "We want to see how she responds to it. There are high chances of infection, so she has been put on prophylactic antibiotics,'' said Dr Athani.

Doctors say she would not be able to eat normally again and would have to be fed intravenously.

When asked about her prognosis, Dr Misra said, "At present, the focus is on weaning her off the ventilator and then to take her out of the ICU. We will think about the next steps later."

Times view: Hive off VIP security

Every time the Delhi Police is asked why it can't be more effective in basic policing functions despite having around 80,000 personnel, the answer is that much of this apparently large force is permanently occupied in providing VIP security. This might be a convenient excuse, but it isn't entirely without merit.

As the national capital, Delhi is not only the seat of Parliament and the Union government but also of the Rashtrapati Bhavan and the Supreme Court. In addition, there are embassies and visiting dignitaries to protect.

Given this reality, and the very real threat that terrorism poses in today's world, there is no getting away from the fact that a lot of Delhi Police's time and resources will be devoted to protecting these VIPs. You could argue that many who don't need protection insist on getting it as a status symbol and are able to pull enough strings to ensure that they do get it. But even if we deal with that problem, as we must, VIP security will remain a considerable drain on Delhi Police's resources unless we look at a new way of organising the force.

Here's what we believe should be done: carve out a separate VIP security force from the Delhi Police. First, this will mean that what remains will be free to focus on basic policing duties. Second, we will then have a much better idea of how many policemen are being used for VIP security and take a call on whether so many are actually needed. The carved-out force can stay under the Union home ministry, to which the Delhi Police now reports.

The main police force, on the other hand, should be handed over to the Delhi government. Today, the government elected by the people of Delhi has no control over the police, which means there is no real accountability to Delhiites for failures of the police.

Once the VIP security personnel are hived off into a separate force, we need to take a hard look at whether what is left is enough for policing a city of Delhi's size. If not, its strength must be increased. Never again should we be in a position where those responsible for ensuring our safety are able to say that they simply do not have enough boots on the ground to do the job.


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