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Friday, December 27, 2013

Neanderthal Gene Variants Increase Risk for Type 2 Diabetes

Five variants of a lipid transporter gene associated with an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes among Mexicans and other Latin Americans are also seen in a Neanderthal genome sequence, according to a study from the Slim Initiative in Genomic Medicine for the Americas (SIGMA) Type 2 Diabetes Consortium, published online December 25 in Nature.

The same disease may derive predominantly from different gene variants in different populations. The goal of SIGMA is to discover the genomic underpinnings of the doubled prevalence of type 2 diabetes in Mexican and other Latin American populations compared with the US non-Hispanic white population.

The SIGMA researchers, who are from the United States and Mexico, evaluated 9.2 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the genomes of 3848 Mexicans and other Latin Americans who have type 2 diabetes and 4366 individuals from the same populations who do not.

The genome-wide association study confirmed earlier findings of 2 risk loci (TCF7L2 and KCNQ1) and identified a new risk locus in a region of 2 solute carrier genes, SLC16A11 andSLC16A13 (P = 3.9 × 10−13; odds ratio, 1.29). The association was stronger in younger, leaner people with diabetes and was replicated in independent samples (P = 1.1 × 10−4; odds ratio, 1.20).

The genome region that influences diabetes risk has 4 amino acid substitutions and 1 silent mutation, all in SLC16A11. The researchers call the 5 linked gene variants the " '5 SNP' haplotype." Each copy elevates risk by about 20%, so a homozygote would have a 40% elevation in risk. The haplotype "would be expected to contribute to the higher burden of type 2 diabetes in Mexican and Latin American populations," the researchers write.

The 5 SNP haplotype is common among people with recent Native American ancestry (50% frequency), but less so in East Asians (~10%) and rare in modern European and most African genomes. However, when the degree to which the haplotype differs from wild-type suggested an ancient origin, the researchers analyzed a Neanderthal genome and found the same 5 SNP haplotype. Most modern human populations have 1% to 4% of DNA from Neanderthals; sub-Saharan Africans have none.

To analyze the protein's normal function, the researchers expressed the gene in HeLa cells and observed an altered lipid metabolism: increases in levels of triacylglycerol and diacylglycerols and decreases in cholesterol ester, lysophosphatidylcholine, and sphingomyelin. The gene is normally expressed in liver cells.

Previous studies have associated accumulation of intracellular lipids and serum increases in triacylglycerol with increased risk for future insulin resistance and development of type 2 diabetes.

In addition to contributing to understanding the etiology of diabetes in Mexican and other Latin American populations, the identification of the 5 SNP haplotype may improve risk assessment and provide new drug targets. The study underscores the importance of identifying risk genes in understudied populations to expand knowledge of the pathophysiology of a disease.

Astronaut Chris Hadfield Brings Lessons From Space Down To Earth


Mahendra Singh Dhoni picks Ravindra Jadeja over offie Ravichandran Ashwin

On the eve of the second Test here, there was talk about Ravinder Jadeja making it to the playing XI. Many had speculated that he might take Ajinkya Rahane's place. Though, on the morning of the match it was Ravichandran Ashwin who was marked for drinks duty. It was a decision that took many by surprise, starting probably with Ashwin.

For starters, the off-spinner did have a quiet match in Johannesburg. Not only did he go wicket-less across both innings, Ashwin also struggled to make much of an impact on the South African batsmen, even when they were under the pump in the second innings.

This is not the first time that Dhoni has opted for Jadeja over a regular spinner. Against Australia earlier in the year, Jadeja had come in place of Pragyan Ojha when India played three spinners on pitches that had plenty on offer for the tweakers. This time around, the conditions too probably had a lot to do with Jadeja's inclusion.

The wicket at Kingsmead has not only slowed over the years—it's definitely not the grass-bank that greeted India back in 1996—it's also gotten a lot drier. And in Jadeja, India have a more incisive spinner. He doesn't possess the variety and guile of Ashwin but the Saurashtra all-rounder is certainly one you expect to be at the batsmen in all his spells. Jadeja also is a far more accurate spinner, preferring to bowl within his limitations.

Similar tactics

The last time South Africa played a Test in Durban, they had been spun to defeat by Sri Lankan veteran Rangana Herath, a left-arm spinner who like Jadeja prides on his consistency, change of pace and subtle variations of pace and deviation. Interetsingly, South Africa too opted to go with a left-arm spinner with Robin Peterson replacing leg-spinner Imran Tahir. On the basis of what he dished up on Day One, Peterson did manage to concede fewer runs that what Tahir did in his first outing at the Wanderers. He also did create a couple of narrow shaves, especially with a couple of balls stopping on the batsmen.

With the pitch at Kingsmead expected to get drier and slower as the match progresses, India's new lead spinner does have a great shot at coming into his own, as early as when South Africa bat sometime on Friday or Saturday. That is if he doesn't suddenly decide to give his medium-pace a go.

2013, the year of leading ladies in Bollywood

Bollywood is a man's world, they say. But female screen scorchers like Deepika Padukone surprised the audiences and critics with their performances this year, while others like Nimrat Kaur and Huma Qureshi impressed with their finesse in non-commercial outings.

IANS takes a look (in alphabetical order of name) at the women who impressed with their choice of roles in tinsel town in 2013:

Deepika Padukone - In 2013, Deepika scored what's a rarity for an actress in the Hindi film industry - four back-to-back hits. The success of Race 2, Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, Chennai Express andGoliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela - each different from the other - not just proved the actress' versatility but also cemented her position in the Hindi film world, where male talent seems to have ruled the roost so far. All of her films this year made it to the Rs 100 crores club!

Divya Dutta - She is one actress, whose talent shines through brightly even in the gleam of 'stars' in any Bollywood film and even when it may be just another supporting role. Whether it was Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, Zila Ghaziabad, or Lootera, Divya, in her supporting roles, turned out to be a big screen stealer.

Huma Qureshi - After an impressive debut in 2012, Huma Qureshi kept up her standards of delivering a quality performance, film after film. This year she kept the audiences entertained in a supernatural avatar in Ek Thi Daayan and as a daring explosives expert in D-Day. She even played a troubled youngster in Shorts. This one is a promising talent in tinsel town. And, yes, her unconventional looks add to her charm.

Kangana Ranaut - Sometimes it's her clothes and sometimes it's her accent, which is in the line of fire - but all said and done, Kangana Ranaut can act. Her choice of roles is often daring and different. For proof, sample her role as a mutant named Kaya in sci-fi adventure Krrish 3 or as a nautch girl in Rajjo. She also made a mark as John Abraham's love interest in Shootout at Wadala.

Nimrat Kaur - What a revelation she was in The Lunchbox! The film had a unique script and she featured in a role that not most actresses would have risked their career for, but Nimrat did and wowed. With her as-real-as-it-gets portrayal of a Mumbai-based housewife, who is lovelorn, she managed to deliver an indelible and impeccable performance alongside a giant like Irrfan Khan. She went places, literally!

Richa Chaddha - This Bholi Punjaban regaled the audiences and critics with films like Fukrey, Shortsand Goliyon Ki Rasleela Ram-Leela this year. Richa's raw and riveting work has made her stand out of the crowd, earn a good press and appreciation by critics.

Shilpa Shukla - That she can have a strong presence on the big screen is a fact that she proved withChak De! India itself. With this year's B A Pass, an independent project, Shilpa played a bored fornicating housewife or more a sex guru to a young boy, essayed by Shadab Kamal. Definitely, a bold role that most wouldn't go for.

Sonam Kapoor - With films like Raanjhanaa and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, Sonam proved her ease and finesse in portraying a demure desi girl as convincingly as she carries off her glamorous image at red carpet events. In Raanjhanaa, her acting prowess was lauded, while she even managed to impress in her bit role in Bhaag Milkha Bhaag.

Dhoom: 3 breaks Nepal's box office records

Action thriller Dhoom: 3 starring Bollywood star Aamir Khan is going so strong at the box office in Nepal that the local filmmakers have had to delay the release of their own films for the next three weeks fearing tough competition.

"We do not have Nepali movies to release now and for another two weeks, though five to six Nepali movies were ready to come out." Rajkumar Rai, chairman of Nepal Film Producers Association said.

Many producers are not keen to release their films due to the overwhelming response to Dhoom: 3.

Roshan Adiga, CEO of QFX Cinemas, said, "No Nepali film is in the pipeline for release."

Made on a budget of approximately Rs 100 Crores and produced under the Yash Raj Films' banner, the movie hit as many as 4,000 screens across the globe.

In comparison to the over $2 billion Indian film industry, the filmdom in Nepal is very small and the maximum budget of a film doesn't exceed NRs 3 million (approximately $30,000) to NRs 4 million ($40,000).

Dhoom: 3, which had a global release on December 20, hit the screens in Nepal, simultaneously. The sleek thrilling saga, directed by Vijay Krishan Acharya, is successfully running in approximately 120 multiplexes and theatres, and it is expected to pull crowds for another three weeks.

"I must admit that the big budget Indian movies have a severe impact on our industry and Dhoom: 3has repeated the history." Rai said.

Gopi Krishna Movies brought Dhoom: 3 in Nepal after paying a whopping NRs 32 million.

Nepali audiences are directly influenced by Indian TV and Aamir's stardom helped the film get a grand opening.

It is not only Dhoom: 3, which is impacting the Nepal film industry, popularly known as Kollywood. Other Bollywood big-ticket films too have cast a shadow over local productions.

Earlier this year, when Chennai Express hit the screens in multiplexes, several filmmakers decided to delay the release of their movies.

Moreover, multiplex owners give priority to Hindi movies over domestic ones because business matters to them.

Certainly, there is fear-psyche among the producers and distributors when big budget Hindi movies starring superstars hit the multiplexes, said distributor Sunil Manandhar.

Though Nepali cinema is struggling, several big budget Indian films do excellent business and collect record breaking revenues at the box office.

Industry insiders rue that the country lacks policy to protect the local film industry.

This is my scariest New Year: Arshad Warsi

Actor Arshad Warsi is scared about the New Year! Two of his awaited films “Dedh Ishqiya” and “Mr Joe B. Carvalho” will hit the screens in January, and he is nervous about how they will be received.

“'Mr Joe.B Carvalho' and 'Dedh Ishqiya' both are releasing January 2014. This is the most scariest New Year till now,” Arshad posted on Twitter Friday.

Directed by Samir Tiwari, "Mr Joe B. Carvalho", a comedy, will see Arshad Warsi in the role of a detective. It will release Jan 3.

In Abishek Chaubey's "Dedh Ishqiya", which will release Jan 10, he will be seen in a rustic look and he stars alongside actress Huma Qureshi.



More: http://www.apunkachoice.com/content/article/sid100017860-this_is_my_scariest_new_year_arshad_warsi/

Payal Rohatgi roots for beau Sangram Singh's 'Bigg Boss' victory

Actress Payal Rohatgi, whose wrestler-boyfriend Sangram Singh is one of the finalists of "Bigg Boss - Saath 7", says she wants him to get the maximum votes and win the reality show. Also, she has a New Year resolution to avoid any fights with him.

"I want everyone to vote for him and I would obviously root for my boyfriend. Please vote for him," Payal said here on the sidelines of a rehearsal for a New Year's Eve performance.

The show's finale will go on air on Colors Saturday. Sagram Singh is competing with Gauhar Khan, Tanisha Mukherjee and Ajaz Khan for the winner's trophy.

Whether he wins or not, Sangram will be happy when he comes out of the show as Payal has a special resolution for 2014 and it is totally in his favour.

"My New Year resolution is I will never fight with Sangram. I always fight with him and he patches up. But this time after living away from him for three-and-half months, I've realised that I can't live without him. So, it's better that I don't fight with him," Payal said.

Payal and Sangram met on the reality show "Survivor India" in 2011.

Since the last three months, Payal has been concentrating on Sangram's "Bigg Boss" show, now she wants to concentrate on her own career.

"Lots of things (career wise) should happen now because for the last three months I have been concentrating on Sangramji in 'Bigg Boss'. It is a very big and popular reality show, and I was more scared than he was when he was going for it."

"I have been concentrating completely on his show and now I think I should start concentrating on my career also," added the actress, who has been a part of an earlier season of "Bigg Boss".

Shahid Afridi didn't seek explanation: Ali Zafar on 'Total Siyapaa'

Actor Ali Zafar has reacted to reports that Shahid Afridi has not taken a dialogue from the forthcoming film 'Total Siyapaa' well. He says the Pakistani cricketer has not demanded any explanation.

The film's teaser shows Ali's character, a Pakistani boy trying to woo a Hindu girl with a dialogue that implies that Pakistanis are fed up with Afridi.

As an aftermath, it was reported that the allrounder had demanded an explanation for this.


The actor also requested his fans to first watch the film before forming any judgement on its dialogues.

But Ali took to Twitter Friday to clear the air about how the dialogue is harmless.

"Afridi did not demand any explanation regarding the dialogue. He is a great sportsman and great sportsmen have sportsman spirit," Ali posted on the microblogging site.

The actor also requested his fans to first watch the film before forming any judgement on its dialogues.

"Request you all to see the full film with the complete dialogues and banter between the boy girl in the film, before making any judgement," he added.

Directed by E. Niwas and written by Neeraj Pandey, 'Total Siyapaa' is a love story, and it also features Yami Gautam. The film will hit screens Jan 31, 2014.

Google expands Chromebook school programme in India

Google is expanding to India an initiative to popularise the use of its Chromebook laptops in schools, starting with a pilot in four schools in Andhra Pradesh.

The internet search company that makes the world's most popular software for smartphones and tablets will initially make available 25 Chromebooks to each school and train the teachers and instructors in the use of the required software applications.

"The school instructors will t ..


Read more at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/27988456.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

Microsoft launches safety app for Windows Phone users in India

Microsoft has launched a safety application called Guardian for Windows Phone users in India, offering features such as distress messages. The app also allows users to track their devices remotely, similar to iOS's
Track my iPhone and Android Device Manager. Microsoft launches safety app Guardian for Windows Phone users in India.

Users can allow their families and friends to track them in real time during emergency situations by turning on the feature, which runs on Microsoft Windows Azure cloud services and Bing Map APIs. An SOS alert button also lets them connect with security agencies, police and hospitals, or send distress messages to a customized list of contacts via SMS, e-mail or Facebook.

The app was developed over six months by a group of enthusiastic Microsoft employees in India, under the Microsoft Garage intiative which lets staff explore their ideas. It follows a slew of similar apps in India recently catering to heightened concerns over public safety of women, on the back of a high profile gang rape in Delhi earlier this year.

"Our employees wanted to do something to enable people to feel safer in our cities. So they used their spare time to develop Guardian. Guardian is a robust personal security app with more safety features and capabilities than any other comparable app available to Indian smartphone users today," said Raj Biyani, Managing Director of Microsoft IT India.

The Guardian app is officially available for free only for Windows Phone users in India. While Microsoft plans to eventually roll out the service to other countries, it is already downloadable and functional, according to reports.

Earlier this month, the Indian government announced plans to introduce a panic button on public transport which will be GPS-supported, and a mobile app with a similar feature. Local phonemaker iBall has also jumped on the bandwagon with a handset featuring a physical SOS button.

More: http://www.zdnet.com/in/microsoft-launches-safety-app-for-windows-phone-users-in-india-7000024652/

Indian civil aviation finds comfort in overseas investment deals

India's civil aviation industry, which faced turbulence due to high operating costs in 2012, found some comfort this past year due to a slew of overseas investment deals that helped restore confidence in the sector.

"This has been a flat year with minimum growth. However, with the intent of the Tatas and AirAsia on entering the Indian market has definitely paved the way for future growth in the sector," Ankur Bhatia, executive director, Bird Group, told IANS.

"In 2014, we are looking forward for establishment of a civil aviation policy, rationalisation of taxes on jet fuel and growth in the regional aviation space," said Bhatia, who is also a member of the Confederation of Indian Industry's panel on civil aviation.

Abu Dhabi-based Etihad Airways became the first foreign carrier to invest in the Indian sector. It bought a 24% stake in Jet Airways for Rs.2,069 crore ($380 million).

Etihad doubled its services to Mumbai and New Delhi with plans for making Abu Dhabi a global hub connecting Indian passengers and freight to different parts of the world.

Another major announcement came from AirAsia's Tony Fernandes, who partnered with Tata Sons and industrialist Arun Bhatia to set up a budget airline - AirAsia India - proposed to be based out of Chennai.

The venture, which will focus on the tier-II and III cities, is awaiting its air operator's permit from the aviation regulator.

The third big ticket joint venture in the sector came from Tata Sons and Singapore Airlines. They plan to launch a new full-service private carrier based in New Delhi. The proposal of the $100 million joint venture was approved by the FIPB in October. Officials of the proposed airline hope to launch services by May-June 2014.

"The biggest event in 2014 will be the commencement or expansion of commercial operations by four global airlines - Etihad, AirAsia, Singapore Airlines and Tiger Airways - along with their Indian partners," Amber Dubey, partner and head - aerospace and defense at global consultancy KPMG, told IANS.

"We also expect one more FDI deal in an existing airline. All this will bring in global best practices, greater competition, better choices for passengers and lower fares."

Another major milestone in the sector was the government's decision to privatise six airports, apart from developing and managing 20 airports under the public private partnership (PPP) model.

"Government envisages an investment of $12.1 billion for airports during the 12th Five Year Plan (2012-17). This will help in connecting tier II, III cities and increase passenger traffic, thus giving airlines a chance to fully exploit the domestic opportunities," Rajiv Chib, associate director, aerospace and defence at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), told IANS

Passengers carried by domestic airlines during January-November was up 4.52% at 55.83 million from 53.42 million in the corresponding period of last year.

Air India too had some good news towards the end of 2013, as it was finally allowed to join the global Star Alliance inter-line pact. The flag carrier's earnings before interest depreciation taxes and amortization (EBIDTA) seem positive this fiscal end and profit making-plans in the near future seem to be on track.

For the ensuing year, the government is planning to focus on providing greater connectivity to smaller cities setting up of a Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and trying to rationalise state taxes on jet fuel.

Currently, there are seven domestic passenger carriers in the country.

The largest amongst them is IndiGo, which had a market share of 28.6% in November, followed by Air India's domestic operations (19.3), SpiceJet (19%), Jet Airways (18.5), GoAir (8.8), JetLite (5.6%) and newly-started Air Costa (0.2%).

As of August 2013, 81 scheduled foreign airlines were operating to India with over 1,700 flights per week to and from 25 Indian airports. Of these, 72 were passenger carriers, while nine are cargo operators.

Highlights of 2013:

* High fuel prices, interest costs, taxes hurt profitability

* Etihad buys 24% stake in Jet Airways

* AirAsia, Tata Sons and industrialist Arun Bhatia join hands to start a budget carrier

* Tata Group also ties up with Singapore Airlines

* Government plans to give a major boost to regional airlines, increase connectivity.

* Air India allowed to join Star Alliance

Food prices: a bricks and mortar problem for Indian economy

Three months since journeying more than 700 miles (1,130km) from his village in central India to take a job in this bustling city near the capital, New Delhi, Charan is already looking forward to a 10 per cent pay rise. He isn't an engineer or programmer. He hauls bricks and sand at a local construction site for less than $100 a month.

India's biggest cities face a worsening shortage of migrant manual labourers like 26-year-old Charan, who goes by only one name. While India has long suffered from a dearth of workers with vocational skills like plumbers and electricians, efforts to alleviate poverty in poor, rural areas have helped stifle what was once a flood of cheap, unskilled labour from India's poorest states.

Struggling to cope with soaring food prices, this dwindling supply of migrant workers are demanding - and increasingly getting - rapid increases in pay and benefits.

"After paying for food we are left with almost nothing. We need a wage hike," said Charan, who sends a part of whatever he and his wife, who works at the same site, manage to save to their parents back home in Chhattisgarh state.

If their employer refuses to give them an adequate raise, they are confident they'll find better-paying jobs at one of the hundreds of other sites dotted around Gurgaon.

Thailand bus crash: 29 dead after bus falls off bridg

A bus in Thailand crashed off a high bridge in the country's north, killing 29 people on board, police said.

The bus plunged off Khun Pha Muang bridge, which is around 50m (165 ft) high, late on Thursday, police said.

Reports say there were between 33 and 40 people on board. Several survivors are said to be seriously injured.

Traffic accidents are common in Thailand. In July, 19 people were killed in a collision between a bus and a lorry in central Thailand.

The World Health Organisation says that Thailand has a "much higher" rate of deaths from traffic accidents than most other countries in South East Asia.

Poor safety standards and busy roads are thought to be a factor.

The bus was travelling through the northern province of Phetchabun when it plunged off the bridge, police said.

Khun Pha Muang is described as a bridge with some of the highest pillars in Thailand.

"We believe the bus driver fell asleep," local police commander Sukit Samana told the Agence France-Presse news agency.

No foreigners were believed to have been on board, AFP reported.

Huge explosion rocks Lebanese capital

The Lebanese capital was rocked by a huge explosion on Friday, sending black smoke billowing from the centre of Beirut.

The blast went off a few hundred metres from the Government headquarters and Parliament building. The cause was not immediately known.

Troops were seen deploying nearby and ambulances were rushing to the area.

Lebanon has seen a wave of bombings over the past months as tensions rise over Syria’s civil war.

Okinawa approves relocation of US airbase in Japan

Japan's Okinawa on Friday approved the long-stalled relocation of a controversial US military base, a breakthrough that could remove a decades-long source of friction between Tokyo and Washington.

More than 17 years after the two allies agreed to move the US Marines' Futenma Air Station from a densely populated urban area, the local government has finally consented to a landfill that will enable new facilities to be built on the coast.

The agreement will burnish the credentials of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in the US, possibly taking some of the sting out of American criticism of his provocative visit Thursday to a war shrine seen by China and Korea as a symbol of Japanese militarism.

The issue has been deadlocked for years, with huge opposition to the new base site among Okinawans who are fed up playing host to an outsized share of the US military presence in Japan, and who want it moved off the island altogether.

Okinawa's scrappy governor Hirokazu Nakaima, long a thorn in the central government's side, this week met Abe, who pledged a big cash injection into the island's economy every year until 2021.

When he came out of the meeting and declared himself impressed with the package on offer, which includes the shuttering of Futenma within five years, he swung behind the move and gave it his blessing.

The governor announced his decision on Friday afternoon on Okinawa where it was met by an angry popular reaction.

Thousands of protesters surrounded the Okinawa local government office, media reports said, with footage showing demonstrators holding banners reading: "Never bend".

Several hundred had stormed the lobby of the building and were staging a sit-in protest, a government spokeswoman said.

Local bureaucrats signed a document early Friday, which gives the governor's green light to landfill in the Henoko area, near another US base, Camp Schwab.

Environmentalists say any development risks seriously damaging the coral reefs in the area as well as the delicate habitat of the dugong, a rare sea mammal.

Nakaima had been a bitter critic of the central government, which he says is unsympathetic to the southern tropical island and still treats it as an "unsinkable aircraft carrier" of the US military, more than 40 years after it was handed back to Japan.

But at Wednesday's meeting, the carrot of Abe's stimulus pledge -- at least 300 billion yen ($2.9 billion) every year until fiscal 2021 -- proved persuasive for the governor of Japan's poorest prefecture.

The US agreed to shut Futenma in 1996 partly in response to soaring anti-base feeling after the gang-rape the year earlier of a 12-year-old girl by three servicemen.

Its position in the middle of a built-up area also makes it less than ideal for the frequent flights by military aircraft.

However, resistance on the islands to a new site left the base in limbo, with Washington's hopes for a resolution regularly frustrated by weak government in Tokyo.

Relations between the two capitals dropped precipitously after the 2009 election of Yukio Hatoyama as prime minister, partly on a platform that he would turf the base out of Okinawa, much to the irritation of Washington policymakers.

His subsequent flip-flop left Okinawans furious and feeling betrayed, and cast a further cloud over the issue.

The deal Abe appears to have struck marks a significant achievement, and one that is expected to smooth relations after years of frustration.

Observers have pointed to the timing and Abe's controversial visit Thursday to the Yasukuni war shrine, seen as a symbol in northeast Asia of 20th century Japan's brutal imperialism, and said his negotiating methods owed more to his fondness for splurging money.

"Abe flashed big cash around to get the nod from the governor, which saved him some face in Washington," said Tetsuro Kato, professor emeritus at Tokyo's Hitotsubashi University.


Rahul Gandhi holds strategy session with top Congress leaders, CMs

In the first major poll exercise after the party's drubbing in recent Assembly elections, Rahul Gandhi today held a strategy session with top leaders and Chief Ministers of 12 Congress-ruled states to make the party fighting fit for the Lok Sabha polls.

The day-long exercise that commenced in the morning saw full attendance of Congress Chief Ministers along with senior leaders A K Antony, Sushilkumar Shinde, P Chidambaram, Ahmed Patel, Jairam Ramesh, Digvijay Singh, Janardan Dwivedi, Kapil Sibal and K B Thomas.

Having lost the polls in Delhi and Rajasthan, Congress is currently in power in 12 states--- Manipur, Mizoram, Assam, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Maharashtra, Arunachal Pradesh, Kerala and Meghalaya.

With the election defeats rankling in memory, the party is keen to work out the strategy to retain the states where it is in power at present as there seems little possibility of it doing very well in the states already ruled by BJP as the Assembly elections showed.

While BJP bettered its performance in Shivraj Singh Chouhan-led Madhya Pradesh, it managed to retain Chhattisgarh despite Congress doing well in Bastar riding over a sympathy wave after the Maoist massacre of its leadership.

The margin with which BJP wrested power from Congress in Rajasthan has also come a surprise for Congress. In Delhi while BJP managed to somewhat weather the AAP storm, Congress was virtually wiped out.

So "home is where we gather grace" seems to be mantra of the meeting as the party is keen to retain Congress-ruled states. The role of Chief Ministers like Virbhadra Singh in Himachal Pradesh and Bhupinder Singh Hooda in Haryana could be important as such.

The meeting being held at 15, Rakabganj Road, also known as Congress War Room, to work out poll strategies will discuss the future course for the party in the wake of the passage of Lokpal and Lokayukta Bill.

The issue of price rise and steps to arrest it will be taken up in detail at the conclave which will also discuss the food security issue.

Party-ruled Haryana and Uttarakhand were among the first to launch the scheme, which UPA believes is a gamechanger for 2014 Lok Sabha polls.

Immediately after the results of the Assembly elections in Delhi, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh were out, Congress President Sonia Gandhi had listed price rise as an issue that could have led to the rout of the party in these states.

Rahul Gandhi has been raising the issue of corruption frequently in his meetings at the party fora as well his interactions and public fora.

At the FICCI meeting on December 21, Gandhi had said that corruption is the "biggest issue bleeding people dry".

Flagging the concerns over price rise, he had said beating inflation was the top priority.

The conclave of the Chief Ministers comes before the January 17 AICC meeting in which the party will discuss its future strategy amid heightened speculation that Gandhi could be named party's prime ministerial candidate for the next Lok Sabha polls during that session.

Besides the Chief Ministers and central leaders, today's meeting is also being attended by all AICC General Secretary incharges of the states like Ambika Soni (Uttarakhand), Shakeel Ahmed (Haryana), Luizinho Faleiro, who is the in- charge of north eastern states and others.

Rahul Gandhi's role in party affairs has substantially increased after he was made the party Vice President during the Congress Chintan Shivir in January this year.

Before he was made party Vice President, Gandhi was in November last year named as the Chairman of Congress' election committee for 2014 Lok Sabha polls in a clear move that he will be the face of Congress in the general elections.

The chorus to project him as the PM candidate has grown louder within the party notwithstanding the successive defeats Congress courted in state elections where he played a key role.

Rahul Gandhi chairing this meeting of Chief Ministers to work out a strategy for the Lok Sabha polls is a further indication of the centrality of his role in Congress politics ahead of the general elections.

'Aam Aadmi CM' Arvind Kejriwal says no passes needed to attend swearing-in ceremony

Delhi Chief Minister designate Arvind Kejriwal on Friday said that all the elected party leaders will travel by Metro for the swearing-in ceremony to be held at Ramlila Maidan on Saturday.

Kejriwal said he will address the problems of the people by himself going to the places and ask the concerned authorised officer to solve it at that moment itself.

Asked about the Janta Darbar, Kejriwal said that, "it shows that the system, from top to bottom, has collapsed and needs to be amended. That is why the people are coming to the Chief Minister with their problems."

"It is a sad situation, peoples' expectations are very high and their problems have to be solved. We will need to work hard," he said.

While addressing media persons here, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) convenor questioned government's motive to hike the CNG prices just two days ahead of his government formation. Kejriwal said that the government could have waited for two days and consulted us before increasing the prices.

The AAP chief requested the auto drivers not to go on strike and wait for two days so that he could see what led to the increase in CNP prices. "Give me two days, we will see if the CNG price hike can be rolled back. We will talk to the central government. If it is necessary to raise the prices and it cannot be rolled back, auto fares will have to be revised," Kejriwal told reporters.

The auto drivers had also helped AAP in March to ferry about 10 lakh letters against inflated power and water bills to the residence of Sheila Dikshit.

"I had told them earlier, we will have to work from both sides. They have valid problems, we will address them, but auto drivers will have to mend their ways as well. People of delhi are upset with auto drivers," he said.

With Arvind Kejriwal-led Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) all set to form government in Delhi, preparations are underway at the historic Ramlila Maidan in central Delhi for the oath-taking ceremony of the 28 party members. Kejriwal said everyone was welcome to the Ramlila Maidan here Saturday when he takes oath as Delhi's chief minister.

"Many people (are) asking me for passes for tomorrow's oath ceremony. No passes needed. All are welcome. It's (your) programme," he tweeted.

Arrangements were afoot at the venue where anti-graft crusader Anna Hazare's massive protest rallies in 2011 for passage of the Jan Lokpal Bill brought Kejriwal into national prominence.

All eyes are set on Kejriwal, who is to be sworn-in as the new, and the youngest, chief minister of the state. AAP has promised to provide 700 litres of free water, cheap electricity bills, order probe against some Congress leaders allegedly involved in corruption among other things he mentioned in the party manifesto.

Both Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) are keeping a close watch on every move of Kejriwal and would certainly not spare any moment to criticise his party if any of the promises made during election campaign remain unfulfilled.

Not only the main opposition parties, even Delhiites have high hopes from the new political outfit, which had a dream run in the recently held Assembly polls here.

Activist-turned-unlikely politician Kejriwal, 45, will be sworn in by Lt. Governor Najeeb Jung at the sprawling Ramlila Maidan here along with six cabinet ministers at a function expected to draw thousands of supporters.

It will be a minority government -- the AAP won only 28 seats in the 70-member assembly -- and will depend on the legislative backing of the eight legislators of the Congress, which was voted out after 15 years.

Kejriwal yesterday appealed to the people to attned the swearing-in ceremony at Ramlila Maidan.

The AAP chief said, "Everyone is invited for the oath taking ceremony." He further said that people of Delhi would be the chief minister and not him.

While calling upon people to come in large numbers at Ramlila ground for the swearing-in ceremony, Kejriwal said he will speak to his guru Anna Hazare and ask him to grace the occasion.

"Anna Hazare is my guru and I would personally talk to him on phone to invite him for the ceremony," he said.

"The invitation would be sent from the government's side and I had asked them to send an invitation to Hazare, Kiran Bedi and Justice Santosh Hegde," Kejriwal said.

In Ralegan Siddhi, Hazare said he would not be able to attend the ceremony on health grounds.

Woman allegedly gang-raped on Christmas Eve in Puducherry

A 20-year-old woman was allegedly gang-raped on Christmas Eve in Puducherry.

The woman has reportedly told the police that she was abducted by three men while sightseeing with friends in Karaikal, a port city in Puducherry.

One of the men raped her at a secluded spot before freeing her, according to local media reports.

She called for help but then another group of seven men attacked her as she was being escorted to a safe place, the Times of India said.

Six of the men raped her, it added.

"One case has been reported. There are 15 accused (persons) and one victim," senior police officer Monika Bhardwaj told reporters.

Bhardwaj said three of the accused have yet to be found.

The woman has allegedly been admitted to hospital where police will record her statement.

Snoopgate inquiry a genuine need: Congress

Rejecting BJP's charge of political vendetta in the Centre's move to set up an inquiry commission to probe Gujarat snoopgate case, Congress today said it was a "genuine need" and alleged that snooping on the girl was done at the behest of Narendra Modi not only inside but outside Gujarat too.

"Snooping on the girl was done on behest of "Saheb" not only inside but outside Gujrat also. An all-India inquiry was a genuine need," party General Secretary Shakeel Ahmed Tweeted.

Sometime back, Congress had held a press conference in AICC playing out an audio clip that carried a purported conversation between Modi's close aide Amit Shah and "Saheb" about the snooping details, claiming that "Saheb" in this case was Modi.

BJP had yesterday strongly reacted to the Union Cabinet's decision approving setting up of a judicial Commission of Inquiry to probe charges of spying on a young woman in 2009 allegedly at the behest of Modi.

As BJP alleged that the Centre's move was an attack on the federal structure, Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi had yesterday accused the opposition party of "creating an obfuscation", saying that Modi was involved in "cheap abuse" of power in the case and that the Centre was well within its rights to set up the inquiry commission.

Some Congress leaders also said that that the inquiry should have been ordered earlier with Union Minister Beni Prasad Verma going to the extent of maintaining, "Modi would have been in jail" had the probe started earlier.

Kejriwal questions CNG price hike, says auto fares may be reviewed

Chief minister-designate Arvind Kejriwal on Friday questioned the move by the Centre to hike CNG prices when a new government was to assume power in Delhi in two days' time even as he suggested that autorickshaw fares in the national capital may be revised as a result of the steep increase.

He said he would examine the files and also ask the Centre about the reason for its haste in increasing the prices.

"What was the need to increase CNG prices when a new government is to take over in Delhi. It raises suspicions about their intention. I will look at the files once I take over tomorrow and see if the hike can be rolled back," Kejriwal said.

The compressed natural gas, or CNG, rate in the national capital was on Thursday raised by a steep Rs 4.50 per kg in a second increase in rates in three months.

CNG will now cost Rs 50.10/kg in Delhi and Rs 56.70/kg in Noida, Greater Noida and Ghaziabad, Indraprastha Gas Ltd ( IGL) has said. The hike came into effect from midnight last night.

When told that autorickshaw drivers were unhappy with the hike and planning to go on a strike, Kejriwal said, "They have been associated with us for a long time... When I take charge tomorrow, I will hold consultations with them and try to find out a solution. If necessary, we cannot rule out the possibility of a hike in auto fares in Delhi."

Meanwhile, commenting on a sting operation carried out by a news channel purportedly showing that files were being torn, the Aam Aadmi Party leader said it was the chief secretary's responsibility to take care of files.

"This also shows there is large scale corruption in these departments and officials who are seeking transfer are understood to have been involved in it," he said.

Analysis: Japan's Abe bets U.S. alliance, ratings can weather shrine visit

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's visit to a shrine for war dead outragedChina and South Korea, and also upset Washington and his government coalition partner - but he appears confident the alliances and his popularity will not be affected.

On Thursday, Abe became the first Japanese premier in seven years to pay his respects at Yasukuni Shrine, where Japanese leaders convicted as war criminals by an Allied tribunal after World War Two are honored along with those who died in battle.

The shrine is seen by critics as a symbol of Japan's past military aggression. Abe, however, is a staunch conservative and the pilgrimage is part of his mission to recast Japan's wartime past in a less apologetic light and revive national pride.

The visit predictably sparked outrage in China and South Korea, countries with which Japan's ties were already strained by rows over disputed isles and bitter wartime memories.

It also prompted a rare public expression of "disappointment" from the United States and a statement of regret from the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) partner, the more dovish New Komeito party.

Those familiar with Abe's thinking said the prime minister, who took office a year ago for a second term promising to revive a "strong Japan", was well aware of the risks.

"The Americans are dissatisfied? Too bad. Will they still be our ally? Yes," said one Japanese diplomatic source familiar with Abe's thinking. "The economy, income, social welfare - these are the concerns of the Japanese people. Foreign policy probably won't have a decisive impact on the opinion polls."

Abe, although hailing from the most conservative wing of the LDP, avoided going to Yasukuni during his first 2006-2007 term in order to improve ties with China. Relations with Beijing had been badly hurt, in part, by annual visits to the shrine by his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi.

At first Abe stuck to a similar course in hopes of holding a summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. As far back as the summer, however, aides said Abe might visit the shrine if there was no breakthrough in ties.

"For the prime minister, improving ties with China is a matter of national interest, so if he can succeed in that, he can hold back," an aide to Abe said in August. "If it looks as if things are not improving, he will go."

But the chill in ties with China, frayed by a row over East China Sea isles claimed by both nations, deepened after Beijing announced an air defense zone last month, including air space over the disputed land.

"This time, China was not willing to make a deal on the Senkaku," the diplomatic source said, using the Japanese name for the isles known as the Diaoyu in China.

Critics said Abe had now ensured the chill would persist.

"I think it was a seriously counter-productive and irresponsible move and put regional relations in the deep freeze for the foreseeable future," said Jeffrey Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple University's Japan campus.

TURNING THE TABLE

Whether Abe had fully anticipated the rare rebuke from the United States, Japan's closest ally, is far from clear.

Kyodo news agency said the U.S. government was given just one hour's notice of Abe's visit to Yasukuni by its embassy in Tokyo. Experts said the visit would strain the alliance.

Until recently, U.S. officials had seen Abe as restraining his nationalist instincts and been inclined to blame China and South Korea for the strained relations, said Yoshihide Soeya,Japan Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington.

"Abe has now turned the table," he said.

Washington has welcomed Abe's efforts to boost Japan's military posture and assume more of the alliance's defense burden, but been less happy with Abe's revisionist stance on history.

"What the Yasukuni visit does is raise for the U.S. government the need to determine Abe's reliability as an ally and partner in Asia," said one former U.S. official.

On the domestic front, Abe is also betting his support ratings can withstand any impact from the controversial visit.

Abe's ratings slid to under 50 percent in some polls this month after his ruling bloc steamrolled a strict state secrets act through parliament that critics said had echoes of the wartime regime, but they remain high for a Japanese leader.

Trouble could emerge if the economy dips or Abe puts his conservative agenda ahead of economic policies.

"The top priority for Japan now is to revive the economy," said an editorial in the Nikkeibusiness daily.

"What can be achieved by causing political confusion that polarizes national opinion?"

Japanese voters have long been divided on whether leaders should pay their respects at Yasukuni - but protests from China against Koizumi's visits created a backlash against what some people saw as foreign interference in a domestic matter.

Since then, Japanese concern about China's military assertiveness has steadily grown and a fresh barrage of criticism from Beijing could move opinion in favor of Abe.

"The crisis he instigated will lead to a 'rally around the leader' dynamic that will blunt domestic criticism of his security agenda," Kingston said.

Others disagreed. "The net effect is the division of Japanese society getting deeper, which is not good for Abe in carrying out some other (parts of his) conservative agenda," Woodrow Wilson Center's Soeya said.

Officials should keep a check on what they say: CM Akhilesh Yadav

Taking exception to a controversial remark by senior UP bureaucrat A K Gupta that no child in Muzaffarnagar riot relief camps died of cold, Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav on Friday asked officials to keep a check on their use of words and ensure nobody's feelings get hurt.

"Use of words by officials or partymen, whether it is about the government's drawbacks or the party's achievements, should be such that nobody's feelings get hurt," he told reporters here.

He was replying to a question on the remark of Principal Secretary (Home) Gupta that no one dies due to cold otherwise people would not have survived in Siberia, one of the world's coldest regions.

Yadav said, "Sometimes, during question-answer sessions, there could be a change in language used....I think officials should keep a control over what they speak."

The Chief Minister said that this was especially so when it came to bureaucrats or party people talking to TV channels which record their byte and show controversial portions repeatedly.

Asked what action would be taken against the Principal Secretary for his irresponsible statement, Yadav said, "Ab ho gaya (It has happened)," while moving on to another question.

Yadav said the government, along with its associates, has tried to put an end to the Muzaffarnagar issue and people should return from the relief camps to their homes. "Many people have already returned to their homes," he said.

Condemning Gupta's comments, BJP spokesperson Prakash Javadekar hit out at the UP government, saying, "When the administration becomes insensitive, this is what then comes out."

He said that instead of accepting the fault and making a correction, the authorities in Uttar Pradesh were blaming others and making most insensitive comments.

Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah criticised Gupta for his remark, saying that the bureaucrat should be sent out in the cold with lesser clothes.

"Can't die of the cold!!!! Send him out in a few less clothes and let's see if he isn't singing a different tune pretty damn quick," Omar wrote on micro-blogging site

Twitter.com.