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You are here: Home / 2015 / Archives for January 2015

Archives for January 2015

Sania-Bruno enter Australian Open semis

January 28, 2015 by Nasheman

sania_bruno

Melbourne: Top-seeded mixed doubles duo Sania Mirza and Bruno Soares marched in to the semi-finals of the Australian Open, beating local pair Casey Dellacqua and John Peers 6-2, 6-2 in a last-eight match here Wednesday.

The Indo-Brazilian pair started the match on a bright note, breaking their opponents twice to claim the first set 6-2 in just 23 minutes at Melbourne Park.

They continued their ascendancy in the second set leading 4-2, going on to win the second set by an identical first set score, taking a mere 30 minutes to claim the second set on Court 2.

The victors hit 18 winners and committed 10 unforced errors on their way to victory. They are scheduled to play the winner of the quarter-final between third seeds Kristina Mladenovic of France and Canada’s Daniel Nestor and fifth seeds Cara Black of Zimbabwe and Juan Sebastian Cabal of Colombia.

Meanwhile in boys’ singles, India’s Sumit Nagal went down to Australia’s Marc Polmans 1-6, 1-6 in the third round in just 45 minutes.

(IANS)

Filed Under: India, Sports Tagged With: Australian Open, Bruno Soares, Casey Dellacqua, John Peers, Sania Mirza, Tennis

Kejriwal continues to be the most preferred CM; AAP gets an edge over BJP: Survey

January 28, 2015 by Nasheman

Arvind-Kejriwal-Kiran-Bedi

New Delhi: The Aam Aadmi Party has managed to win back supporters in New Delhi and has now taken a lead over the BJP in the Delhi Assembly polls, a pre-poll survey conducted by ABP News – Nielsen shows.

According to the survey, 50 percent of those polled were likely to vote for the Kejriwal-led party, up 4 percent from the last survey conducted by the agency in the second week of January.

In bad news for the BJP, the survey, which was conducted on 24 and 25 January to ascertain what impact Kiran Bedi’s announcement had on the electorate, showed the party’s fortunes decline by 4 percent (now down to 41 percent) in what ABP-Nielsen states is an indication that Bedi is not helping the party bring in new voters.

The BJP, according to the survey, has a higher proportion of committed voters – 84 percent – who say ‘they shall definitely vote for BJP now’ that Bedi has been announced as CM candidate.

However, in terms of its Chief Ministerial choice, Delhiites seem to still prefer Arvind Kejriwal over everyone else. The AAP leader, according to the survey, is the most suitable candidate for the position of CM with a 51 percent vote share while Kiran Bedi managed to secure 40 percent. The Congress’s Ajay Maken finished third with just 8 percent.

The survey states that the AAP’s support base is largely made up of Muslims, SC/ST/OBC and lower income groups. In terms of income groups, a majority of respondents belonging to the lower income group favoured AAP, while those with income on the higher side (Rs. 25,000 per month and above) favoured BJP. For the BJP, the Modi factor still seemed to hold some ground with several respondents saying that they will vote for the BJP because they wanted to support Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The snap poll was conducted in 70 assembly constituencies of Delhi with 2262 respondents. You can read the entire findings here. Delhi goes to polls on 7 February and the results will be declared on 1o February.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: AAP, Arvind Kejriwal, BJP, Delhi, Elections, Kiran Bedi

New art exhibition explores what happens when everyone can be a journalist

January 28, 2015 by Nasheman

The power and potential of social media dominates Jesse Hlebo’s show.

Jesse Hlebo, In Pieces (for Sebastian), 2015. 15 minute video loop on 55" LCD TV, embedded in burnt plasterboard. panels, gasoline, found palettes. Edel Assanti

Jesse Hlebo, In Pieces (for Sebastian), 2015. 15 minute video loop on 55″ LCD TV, embedded in burnt plasterboard. panels, gasoline, found palettes. Edel Assanti

by Mel Bunce, The Conversation

Jesse Hlebo is troubled. The New York-based artist’s latest exhibition, In Pieces explores information overload and authenticity in the internet era – and it’s a challenging place to spend some time.

Walking into the gallery space in Fitzrovia is like opening a laptop to find three YouTube clips blaring at full volume and 16 tabs open on the browser.

In the middle of the room, a large screen projects an endless loop of amateur videos from crises around the world: conflict in the Ukraine, fighting in Gaza, the aftermath of the Boston bombing and the devastation left by Hurricane Sandy. The events flow seamlessly together, and the crises become increasingly difficult to distinguish. There’s no context or information; the audience is taken on a GoPro tour through a post-apocalyptic world, with no guide.

The loop captures some of Hlebo’s concerns about the internet’s vast media ecosystem: “In the amalgamation, there’s just so much,” he says. “There’s constant documenting, constant streaming … People don’t question its validity or where it comes from.”

Jesse Hlebo, In Pieces. Edel Assanti

Everyone’s a journalist

Hlebo is far from alone in his sense of unease. Over the past two decades, technology has radically altered media content, and raised a host of questions around authenticity, representation and power.

In the early 2000s, digital cameras and mobile internet access transformed everyday citizens into amateur journalists and the line between media producer and consumer started to blur.

As researcher and journalist Glenda Cooper notes, the Boxing Day tsunami of 2004 was a touchstone event in the rise of citizen-generated news content. There were almost no foreign correspondents in South-East Asia when the disaster hit – and the raw and powerful images captured by citizens and tourists came to dominate international news coverage.

For a few very short years, citizen-generated content was mediated by traditional news gatekeepers. Citizens would send their pictures and footage to a mainstream outlet: a wire service, the BBC, a newspaper. At these outlets, journalists could (potentially, but not always) contextualise and explain the content to their audiences.

And then came Twitter

The development and mass uptake of social media disrupted these processes once again. With Twitter, YouTube and Facebook, citizens become the distribution channels for media content.

When an aircraft miraculously landed on the Hudson River in January 2009, Jānis Krūms was on a nearby ferry. Instead of sending his now famous image to a news outlet, he uploaded it to Twitter where the picture went viral – 15 minutes before the “old media” had the story.

http://twitpic.com/135xa – There’s a plane in the Hudson. I’m on the ferry going to pick up the people. Crazy.

— Jānis Krūms (@jkrums) January 15, 2009

The event became known as Twitter’s “defining moment“, and media outlets realised they had, to a large extent, lost control of the message. Images and information could be uploaded, disseminated, replicated, decontextualised and re-purposed ad infinitum.

In 2012, Hurricane Sandy became the archetypal example of our new media ecology. Millions of photos were uploaded and endlessly circulated online. Some were authentic. Others were of historical weather events, cut-and-paste from fictional movies or dramatically edited on photoshop. And inevitably (this is the internet) there were cats.

New Gang moves into New York and takes over the subway… #Sandy #NewYork #NewJersey #shark #sharks pic.twitter.com/EYGqg2rv

— Zulf (@Zulf_RadioDude) October 30, 2012

The high circulation of de-contextualised and unverified images remains problematic. On January 12, photos purporting to depict a Boko Haram attack in Northern Nigeria last summer were revealed to be re-circulated images showing the aftermath of a fuel tanker explosion in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The organisation stopfake.org has identified a number of false images in high circulation about Ukraine. One particularly dark image, claiming to show a morgue in Ukraine, was taken five years ago in Mexico. In their redistribution, these photos are infused with new meaning, and can become significant political tools. And such issues have been widely noted in content about Syria, calling into question the credibility of both traditional and social media depictions of the crisis. The promise of new voices Of course, it’s not all bad. The liberation of images from traditional storytellers has also opened up huge opportunity. Social media played a pivotal role in the Arab Spring, which academics are still working to understand. And it allows audiences to challenge dominant representations in the mainstream media. In Kenya, for example, the hashtag #SomeonetellCNN was used to effectively critique and parody a problematic CNN report, leading to an apology and eventual retraction.

We are having offending video pulled. Again, apologies for the mistake. It was changed on air, but not online. Now it is.

— David McKenzie (@McKenzieCNN) March 11, 2012

The power and potential of social media is explored in the second screen that dominates Hlebo’s exhibition. The amateur film – also very difficult to watch – shows Michael Brown’s mother receiving the news that the police officer who killed her son would not be indicted.

The mother’s raw anger tells a different side of the Ferguson story. For Hlebo, it reflects the potential of narrative unleashed from the traditional channels:

To see a mother receive that information in front of the world, without mediation, the power of that. We’re seeing it. It may have taken 270 years. But we’re seeing it.

Around the walls of the gallery hang pieces of Hlebo’s art that were damaged by a demolition team knocking down his Brooklyn flat. The pieces are black and burned, with only a passing resemblance to their original form. Their significance? Entirely up to the viewer.

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Citizen Journalism, Jesse Hlebo, Journalism, Social Media, Twitter, Visual Arts

Karnataka: Excise Minister Jarkiholi resigns

January 28, 2015 by Nasheman

Satish L Jarkiholi

Bengaluru: In a surprise move, Excise Minister and CM Siddaramaiah’s close confidante Satish L Jarkiholi resigned from the cabinet on Tuesday, January 27 citing that he required time to devote to social service.

However, according to sources, Jarkiholi was never happy with the Excise portfolio and instead he wanted to be in charge of the ministry of either Sports and Youth Affairs or Social Welfare.

Jarkiholi faxed his resignation letter to Siddaramaiah as the latter was in Tirupathi. He hails from the Valmiki community and sources close to Jarkiholi said he was upset with the CM for not recognizing his work for the community and uniting the SC/STs in the state, which have moved away from the Congress.

It may be recalled that Jarkiholi had resigned from the ministry and walked away with Siddaramaiah when the latter quit JD(S) in 2006. For his loyalty, Siddaramaiah after becoming CM in 2013, gave him the Excise portfolio along with making him the District In-Charge Minister of Belagavi.

Presently, Sports and Youth Services portfolio is held by Minister Abhay Chandra Jain and Jarkiholi’s alleged desire to secure Social Welfare portfolio may not be fulfilled as incumbent Minister H Anjaneya, is credited with doing justice to his position.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Karnataka, Satish L Jarkiholi, Siddaramaiah

Greenpeace activist Priya Pillai approaches HC against her 'offloading'

January 28, 2015 by Nasheman

Priya Pillai, Campaigner Greenpeace India.

Priya Pillai, Campaigner Greenpeace India.

New Delhi: Greenpeace activist Priya Pillai, who was “offloaded” from a flight at the Delhi airport on instructions of Intelligence Bureau, approached the Delhi high court on Tuesday.

Terming the January 11 move by immigration officials as violation of her basic rights, Pillai has also challenged the home ministry guidelines that allow agencies to deboard citizens without court summons.

She was on her way to London to make a presentation before British MPs regarding alleged human rights violation at Mahan in Madhya Pradesh where a proposed coal mining project was threatening to uproot the lives of the local communities.

Greenpeace in a statement said that the activist has claimed that her being denied permission to travel abroad by government agencies was illegal and a violation of her basic right to personal liberty and freedom of speech. It is also “deliberate attempt to malign her reputation”, the organization has claimed.

Pillai’s petition argues that debarring her from going abroad is an illegal act by overzealous government agencies on the basis of a flawed circular issued by MHA. “The circular has no legal basis as Pillai neither has any conviction against her, nor has she ever evaded arrest or trial in any case,” it says.

In 2014, the MHA had decided to block foreign funds received by Greenpeace India which the NGO had received from Greenpeace International and Climate Works Foundation. The NGO had then challenged the government’s action in the Delhi high court, which last week ruled that the funds must be released. HC directed the MHA to transfer the blocked the funds to Greenpeace India’s account calling the ministry’s action, arbitrary, illegal and unconstitutional.

(TNN)

Filed Under: Human Rights, India Tagged With: Greenpeace, Priya Pillai, Rights

Barack Obama wraps up three-day India visit, departs for Saudi Arabia

January 27, 2015 by Nasheman

US President Barack Obama (L) and First Lady Michelle Obama gesture as they board Air Force One prior to departing from Air Force Station Palam in New Delhi on January 27, 2015. President Barack Obama said the United States could be India's "best partner" January 27 as he wrapped up a three-day visit to New Delhi by highlighting the shared values of the world's biggest democracies. AFP PHOTO / PRAKASH SINGH

US President Barack Obama (L) and First Lady Michelle Obama gesture as they board Air Force One prior to departing from Air Force Station Palam in New Delhi on January 27, 2015. AFP PHOTO / PRAKASH SINGH

New Delhi: US President Barack Obama today left for Saudi Arabia, wrapping up his three-day visit here during which both the countries broke a seven-year logjam to operationalise a landmark civil nuclear deal, besides enhancing defence and trade ties.

Obama, accompanied by his wife Michelle, folded his hands in a traditional “namaste” and waved before boarding Air Force One at the Palam airport where Union Minister Piyush Goyal and, Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh, were among those present.

Obama and the US First Lady had planned a visit to the Taj Mahal but cancelled their trip to the world heritage site and instead decided to visit Saudi Arabia to pay condolences to the Royal family following death of King Abdullah.

In his talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday, both the leaders managed to remove the hurdles to operationalise the civil nuclear deal besides deciding to jointly produce military hardware and stepping up economic engagement.

In what Obama called a “breakthrough”, the two sides resolved key hurdles pertaining to the liability of suppliers of nuclear reactors in the event of an accident and the tracking of fuel supplied by the US.

Obama yesterday became the first US President to grace the Republic Day celebrations. He is also the first American President to visit India twice.

The American President today addressed a Town hall event at Siri Fort Auditorium here during which he spoke on a range of issues and made a strong pitch for religious tolerance.

(PTI)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Barack Obama, Narendra Modi, Saudi Arabia, United States, USA

1,000 Years of Scientific Texts From The Islamic World Are Now Online

January 27, 2015 by Nasheman

Picture of Mount Arafat. Photographer H. A. Mirza & Sons

Picture of Mount Arafat. Photographer H. A. Mirza & Sons

Muslim civilization stretched from Spain to China. From the 7th century onwards, the region contributed breakthrough scientific and cultural achievements on topics such as medicine, mathematics, astronomy and more, fostering a vibrant scientific temper within the Islamic world, and left an indelible mark on the rest of the world. Some of the most influential texts from the period are now available at the Qatar Digital Library.

The library, a joint project of the British Library and the Qatar Foundation, offers free access to 25,000 pages of medieval Islamic manuscripts. Among some of the most significant texts:

The Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices (1206 A.D.), which was inspired by an earlier, 9th-century translation of Archimedes’ writings on water clocks. Devices such as the “Elephant Clock” (pictured below) were the most accurate time-keeping pieces before the first pendulum clocks were built in the 17th century by the Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens.

Filed Under: Cabinet of Curiosities Tagged With: Islamic World, Qatar Digital Library, Science

Leftist Tsipras sworn in as new Greek prime minister

January 27, 2015 by Nasheman

Syriza party to form coalition with small right-wing party and renegotiate massive bailout agreements.

Alexis Tsipras

by Al Jazeera

Greece’s new prime minister has been sworn in after forming a surprise anti-bailout alliance with a small right-wing nationalist party.

Alexis Tsipras broke with tradition and took a secular oath rather than the Greek Orthodox religious ceremony with which prime ministers are usually sworn in.

The 40-year-old, who drew remarks from some observers for not wearing a tie to the ceremony, becomes the youngest man to hold the post in150 years.

His Syriza party gained the key backing of Independent Greeks after Sunday’s elections, paving the way for a coalition government.

Tsipras won the vote but fell short of the majority needed to govern alone.

“From this moment, the country has a government. Independent Greeks give a vote of confidence to Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras,” Panos Kammenos, leader of the Independent Greeks, said.

Kemmenos did not clarify whether he would join a coalition with Tsipras or give support to a minority government.

The two parties have different ideologies and their coalition comes a surprise, which nonetheless boosted stock markets across Europe that had fallen on news of the uncertain election results. Stocks had fallen as much as 4 percent in Athens on Monday morning.

Tsipras has promised to renegotiate Greece’s massive bailout agreements, but has vowed not to take any unilateral action against lenders from other eurozone countries.

Concerns

With 99.8 percent of the vote counted, Syriza had 149 seats in the 300-member parliament with 36.3 percent of the vote. The ruling conservative coalition was on 27.8 percent, and the extreme right Golden Dawn party in third place with 6.28 percent.

Tsipras’ choice to negotiate with the Independent Greeks – a party aligned in Europe with the UK Independence Party – rather than the centrist Potami caused concern that he could take a tough line in negotiations with rescue lenders, reported the Associated Press news agency.

Syriza’s financial planning official, Giorgos Stathakis, confirmed on Monday that the new government had no plans to meet with negotiators from the “troika”, a reference to the European Central Bank, the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund.

The government would instead seek talks directly with governments, Stathakis said.

Greek voters swung to the once-marginal left-wing party after five years of punishing austerity measures demanded under $268bn bailout deals drove hundreds of thousands of people out of work and left nearly a third of the country without state health insurance.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Alexis Tsipras, Europe, Greece, Syriza Party

Iran vows retaliatory response to fresh sanctions by U.S

January 27, 2015 by Nasheman

Ali Larijani

Tehran: Iran’s Majlis (parliament) has devised retaliatory plans in case that the United States imposes fresh sanctions on the country over its nuclear program, the Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani said here on Saturday.

The lawmakers have “seriously considered scenarios” to make the United States regretful if the U.S. Congress decides to slap new sanctions on Iran, Larijani was quoted as saying by Tasnim news agency.

“A jump in (expanding) Iran’s nuclear technology” will occur in case of fresh sanctions, he said, adding that Tehran is absolutely capable of doing that.

Iran has already shown necessary flexibility in the course of nuclear talks with six world powers, and the U.S. President Barack Obama’s struggle with the Congress is his own problem and Iran does not have to pay the price for the political infighting in the western state, the Iranian speaker said.

Washington will be held accountable for possible failure of nuclear talks, Larijani made the remarks following the recent push by some U.S. hardline lawmakers to pass new sanctions against Iran.

Meanwhile, the senior Iranian lawmaker, Hossein Naghavi-Hosseini, said Saturday that any new sanctions against Iran will seriously hurt the ongoing nuclear talks between Iran and the world powers, and the U.S. will be responsible for the probable failure.

Any new sanctions on Iran is against the Geneva accord, and “if this happens it will definitely put an end to the talks,” Naghavi-Hosseini, the spokesman for the Majlis (parliament) National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, was quoted as saying by semi-official ISNA news agency.

The six countries — Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States — and Iran clinched an interim agreement in Geneva in November 2013, whereby Iran agreed to cap its nuclear program in exchange for limited sanction relief.

However, the deadline for following negotiations was extended twice last year, yet with no major breakthroughs.

If the ongoing nuclear negotiations fail, “the United States will be responsible for the failure of the talks,” Naghavi-Hosseini said also referring to the recent moves by some U.S. Congressmen to impose fresh sanctions against the Islamic republic.

A new draft is being prepared by the Majlis which means “to oblige the government to resume nuclear enrichment using new generation of centrifuges,” he said.

“Majlis’ nuclear committee is working on the technical aspects of the draft in detail,” he was quoted as saying.

If the western countries hinder the progress of the talks, the Iranian government will have to upgrade uranium enrichment to 60 percent purity, Naghavi-Hosseini added.

Iran has been a target of UN sanctions due to its alleged attempts to build nuclear weapons. The West accuses Iran of developing nuclear weapons under the cover of civilian nuclear programs, which Iran has denied, insisting that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.

The sides agreed in November 2014 to extend the deadline for another seven months aimed to reach a political agreement within the next five months.

How much nuclear capability Iran can keep, and the steps to lift West-imposed sanctions against Tehran are the main sticking points for the ongoing negotiations.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammed-Javad Zarif and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry held talks about Tehran’s nuclear program on Friday on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in the Swiss city of Davos.

Deputy foreign ministers from Iran are going to sit down with diplomats from the UK, France and Germany in the Turkish city of Istanbul later this month to further discuss Iran’s nuclear issue, according to Press TV report on Saturday.

(Xinhua)

Filed Under: Muslim World Tagged With: Ali Larijani, Iran, Nuclear, Nuclear Energy, United States, USA

U.S a dangerous ally: former Australia PM

January 27, 2015 by Nasheman

Malcolm Fraser, former primer minister of Australia.

Malcolm Fraser, former primer minister of Australia.

by China Times

In his new book titled “Dangerous Allies,” Malcolm Fraser, the former prime minister of Australia worries that the Canberra’s dependence on the United States will eventually bring the nation into a direct conflict with China. His words echo those of Georgetown University professor Amitai Etzioni in and article he wrote for the Diplomat on Jan. 20.

Australia has always been strategically dependent on other great powers since gaining independence in 1901. It relied on the United Kingdom until World War II and then transfered that dependence to the United States afterwards. The relationship grew stronger with the signing of the Australia, New Zealand, United States Security Treaty in 1951. Fraser said that the treaty does not require the US to defend Australia, only nneding to “consult” it in case of an attack.

In Fraser’s book, he describes how Australia’s blind faith in the UK before World War II left the country unprepared for war. He then goes on to say that currently many feel more vulnerable because of the country’s dependence on the United States. What Fraser and many Australian leaders fears most is that the United States will get Australia involved in a coflict not of its own making. “Australia effectively ceded to America the ability to decide when Australia goes to war,” said Fraser.

Fraser labelled the United States a “dangerous ally” as Australia has become progressively more enmeshed in American strategic and military affairs since the end of Cold War.

Just as with the armed conflicts in the Middle East, Fraser said that the conflict in Ukraine took place partially due to Washington’s attempt to include Ukraine in NATO. He went on to blame the United States lack of historical understanding towards Russia on the matter.

Washington’s policy to “contain” China can eventually lead to trouble for Australia. Believing that the United States will eventually use Australia as a base to attack China, Fraser suggested the removal of all American military facilities from Darwin in the north and Pine Gap in the center of the country as soon as possible. The former Australian leader added that the country should be more independent of the United States in both defense and foreign affairs. While recommending that Australia shore up its diplomatic activities throughout Asia and at the UN, he also suggested an increase in defense spending to 3% of the country’s GDP.

Jared McKinney, an American defense expert said that Fraser’s book is often redundant and sometimes appears simplistic and one-sided in its historical interpretations. Still, he praised Fraser’s great service to Australia and it said would be a shame if his arguments were unable to incite the sort of grand strategy debate.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Australia, Dangerous Allies, Malcolm Fraser, United States, USA

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