Friday, 20 March 2009

Parents donate organs to daughter

Cathie Locke and daughter Jasmine Mirza
Jasmine said it felt "special" to have received the help from her parents

A five-year-old girl is thought to be the first in the UK to receive organ transplants from both her parents.

Jasmine Mirza is recovering after being given 30% of her father Sohrab's liver and one of her mother Cathie Locke's kidneys.

Jasmine was diagnosed with liver failure at seven months before her kidneys started to fail in 2007.

Ms Locke, from Farnborough, Hampshire, said the transplants have given Jasmine "her life back".

"For me, I wasn't worried about the operation side of things," she added.

"Through all this Jasmine's health has been the main priority.

'Feels special'

"It has given her back her life as she would have still been on dialysis.

"Hopefully she has had her ups and downs early in life and it will be over."

Jasmine said "it feels very special" to have received the help from her mother and father.

Mr Mirza, 38, donated about 30% of his liver at King's College Hospital in London in 2005.

The liver tissue will grow with her, while his liver has regenerated.

When Jasmine's kidneys started failing in 2007 her father stepped in again but he was not considered a suitable donor and Ms Locke, 33, came forward.

Jasmine was given one of her mother's kidneys last October at St Thomas' Hospital in London.

She is recovering so well that she was able to go back to North Farnborough Infant School in January.

Doctors said they are not aware of any other child receiving "living" organ donations from both parents.

The NHS Blood and Transplant agency said it was very rare to receive transplants from a mother and father.

Obama sorry for disability remark

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Barack Obama "It was like Special Olympics or something"

US President Barack Obama has apologised for joking on a TV chat show that a poor bowling performance was "like the Special Olympics".

He made the comment during an appearance on Jay Leno's Tonight Show, and later phoned the chairman of the Special Olympics to apologise.

Responding, Tim Shriver said Mr Obama's remarks could be seen as "humiliating" to people with special needs.

The organisation involved people with intellectual disabilities in sport.

It was established in 1968 and now runs programmes in more than 180 countries.

Reacting to Mr Obama's comments, Mr Shriver said the president had apologised for his remark.

I think it's important to see that words hurt and words do matter
Timothy Shriver
Chairman, Special Olympics

"He expressed that he did not intend to humiliate [the disabled] population," said Mr Shriver.

But he stressed that the president's comments should not be dismissed out of hand.

"I think it's important to see that words hurt and words do matter," he added.

"And these words that in some respect can be seen as humiliating or a put down to people with special needs do cause pain and they do result in stereotypes."

'Wonderful programme'

A spokesman for Mr Obama said the remarks were not meant to disparage the Special Olympics.

"He thinks that the Special Olympics are a wonderful programme that gives an opportunity to shine to people with disabilities from around the world," the spokesman said.

Mr Obama made the remark after telling Mr Leno that he had been practising his bowling in the wake of a much-lampooned performance on the campaign trail in 2008.

On that occasion he managed to score just 37 points, a tally that was filmed and widely highlighted during the campaign.

He had improved his score since then, he said, but was still unhappy with his most recent tally of 129 points: "It was like the Special Olympics or something," the president told Mr Leno.

Mr Obama also talked about his economic policies in the interview, as well as engaging in discussions about his family, and his efforts to find a pet dog for his daughters.

The BBC's Rajini Vaidyanathan said the smooth segue in conversation from economic policy to more personal matters demonstrated Mr Obama's so-called "Barackstar" status, as a man equally happy to play the role of politician and personality.

Wednesday, 18 March 2009

Actress Richardson dies aged 45

Actress Richardson dies aged 45

A look back at Natasha Richardson's life

British actress Natasha Richardson has died from head injuries sustained in a skiing accident in Canada.

Richardson, 45, the daughter of actress Vanessa Redgrave, fell on a beginners' slope at the Mont Tremblant resort in Quebec on Monday.

The family were devastated by the death of their "beloved Natasha", her husband Liam Neeson's publicist said.

Richardson died in a New York hospital, close to the home she shared with Irish actor Neeson and their two sons.

The accident happened while the actress was taking a supervised skiing lesson at the Quebec resort.

She had a sort of luminous presence on the stage, but off- stage she was a very shy, easy-going, almost self-deprecating character
Theatre critic Tim Walker

Richardson initially showed no sign of injury but about an hour later she was taken to a nearby hospital after feeling unwell. It was later confirmed her injuries were critical.

Irish actor Neeson, 56, flew from the set of his new film in Toronto to be with his wife as soon as he heard news of the accident.

He accompanied her as she was flown from Canada to Lenox Hill Hospital, in New York, on Tuesday.

Neeson, her mother Oscar-winning actress Vanessa Redgrave, 72, and two sons, Michael, 13, and Daniel, 12, had gathered at her bedside.

Natasha Richardson and Liam Neeson
Richardson and Neeson got married in 1994

Her sister, the Nip/Tuck actress Joely Richardson, was also pictured visiting the hospital.

Richardson's death was announced shortly before midnight GMT. Neeson left the Manhattan hospital in the back seat of a people carrier at about 2030 local time (0030 GMT).

Alan Nierob, Neeson's publicist, said: "Liam Neeson, his sons, and the entire family are shocked and devastated by the tragic death of their beloved Natasha.

"They are profoundly grateful for the support, love and prayers of everyone, and ask for privacy during this very difficult time."

'Great actress'

Richardson starred in films and TV but won most acclaim for her stage work.

Part of the Redgrave acting dynasty, she was the daughter of Redgrave and director Tony Richardson.

Our hearts go out to her family. This is a catastrophic loss for them, and it is a terrible loss for amfAR and the fight against Aids
Foundation for Aids Research

The Sunday Telegraph's theatre critic, Tim Walker, said she never needed to ride on the coat-tails of her famous relations.

He said Richardson took the decision early in her career to "stand or fall on her own" and left London to begin her career in Leeds at the West Yorkshire Playhouse.

"The world of acting has been deprived of a great actress, really in her prime," he said.

"She had a sort of luminous presence on the stage, but off-stage she was a very shy, easy-going, almost self-deprecating character who didn't like being made a fuss of."

Richardson, whose father director Tony died of Aids-related causes in 1991, was on the board of the US-based charity amfAR, The Foundation for Aids Research.

A spokeswoman for the charity said she was a "dedicated Aids advocate" and an "eloquent spokesperson for amfAR".

"Our hearts go out to her family. This is a catastrophic loss for them, and it is a terrible loss for amfAR and the fight against Aids," she said.

"She generously contributed her time and resources to amfAR for over 15 years."

Head injuries

It is not known exactly what happened to Richardson.

However, leading neurosurgeon Chris Chandler said a seemingly minor blow on the head can cause life-threatening injuries.

Mr Chandler, from King's College Hospital in south London, said the effects of a blow to the head may not become apparent until several hours afterwards and, if untreated, a patient can fall into a coma.

"A blow to the head can cause a bruise or rupture a blood vessel that slowly swells, causing pressure to build up inside the skull," he said.

"In the skull there is nowhere for the brain to move to so pressure continues to grow and that swelling can cause the brain to malfunction because it can limit circulation.

"If that pressure is not relieved it can kill."

Monday, 16 March 2009

Obama 'outraged' at AIG bonuses

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President Obama said he was 'choked up with anger'

US President Barack Obama has expressed anger at $165m (£116m) bonuses pledged to executives of bailed-out insurer AIG, calling the payments "an outrage".

"It's hard to understand how derivative traders at AIG warranted any bonuses, much less $165m in extra pay," he said.

He has told Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to "pursue every single legal avenue" to block the bonuses.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs later said AIG's next bailout payment could be altered to protect taxpayers.

He did not say how this could be achieved, but analysts say the government could reduce the payment - which is $30bn - by $165m, in order to force AIG to account for the bonuses in another way.

'Play by rules'

AIG announced the bonus payouts on Sunday.

In a speech which was intended to launch initiatives to help small businesses deal with the economic crisis, President Obama strongly criticised the company.

"All across the country, there are people who work hard and meet their responsibilities every day, without the benefit of government bailouts or multimillion-dollar bonuses," he said.

"And all they ask is that everyone, from Main Street to Wall Street to Washington, play by the same rules."

AIG sign
AIG insures financial institutions around the world

The $165m was payable to executives by Sunday and part of a larger total payout reportedly put at $450m.

New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo now says he has issued legal papers demanding that AIG reveal the names of those receiving the bonuses - something which he says the firm has refused to do.

"When a company pays funds that the company effectively doesn't have, it's akin to a looting of a company," he said.

AIG has not yet commented on the legal move, but a spokeswoman said the firm was "in ongoing contact" with the attorney general.

'Outrageous'

AIG has received bailout payments from the US government totalling $180bn (£127bn) since coming close to collapse in 2008.

AIG: QUICK FACTS
30 million US policy holders
Operates in 130 countries
Provides insurance to 100,000 companies and other entities

AIG boss Ed Liddy - who was installed by the government after the company got into trouble - earlier said the bonuses had to be paid to honour contracts signed before the financial crisis hit.

But Mr Liddy said bonuses for this year had been revamped and cut by as much as 30%.

However, such concessions have done little to appease angry senators.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said: "Did they enter into these contracts knowing full well that, as a practical matter, the taxpayers of the United States were going to be reimbursing their employees?

"Particularly employees who got them into this mess in the first place? I think it's an outrage."

Democrat Elijah Cummings was equally incensed: "It's like, OK, you got to help me screw you. And by the way I'm going to take your money and I'm going to slap you with it."

Sunday, 15 March 2009

Doctors save speared Indian boy

Mehul Kumar before the iron rod was successfully removed
Doctors praised Mehul Kumar as they successfully removed the iron rod

A six-year-old Indian boy is recovering after doctors removed a two metre (6ft) iron rod that speared his body when he fell from a terrace.

Mehul Kumar was rushed to hospital in the city of Ranchi in Jharkhand after the incident on Wednesday.

Doctors at the Rajendra Institute of Medical Sciences removed the rod in a four-hour operation.

The doctors said he had lost a lot of blood and suffered liver and stomach injuries but "nothing major".

Mehul was playing on the Indian festival of Holi when he fell on the rod in a terrace under construction at his grandparents' home

He was given first aid at a local hospital than transferred to the Rajendra.

A surgeon there, Sandeep Aggarwal, said: "Opening the abdomen, we discovered his liver was injured, the stomach was injured, but thankfully, the spleen and pancreas were safe.

"The child was lucky that he did not suffer any major injury but yes he had substantial injuries."

Dr Aggarwal praised Mehul for his strong willpower.

RIMS director NN Agarwal said: "Mehul will recover fast and properly because he is a child and most of his vital organs are in the process of development.''

Amazingly this is not an isolated incident in India.

Last year, doctors in Delhi removed a 5ft iron rod from the chest of a 22-year-old man after a road accident.

And a 21-year-old construction worker in the western city of Pune had a 6ft rod removed that pierced him from shoulder to thigh via his abdomen.

Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry restored as Chief Justice of Pakistan

Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry restored as Chief Justice of Pakistan ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani early Monday morning announced reinstatement of the deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry and other judges.

“I restore the deposed chief justice and others according to the promise made by me and the President,” Gilani said in a televised address to the nation.

The announcement, in light of the directive of President Asif Ali Zardari, met the main demand of the political parties and the lawyers’ community.

He said, “A notification to this effect is being issued now.” He said Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry would replace Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar, who retires on March 21.

Gilani said and pledged to “continue the politics of reconciliation.” The deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was removed from service by former President Pervez Musharraf on March 9, 2007, sparking a wave of protest that led to his resignation from his office on August 18, 2008.

The prime minister also announced reinstatement of other judges of the Supreme Court and said the number of judges for the apex court has already been increased through legislation to accommodate the reinstated judges.

The prime minister also announced that the federal government would file a review petition in the Supreme Court seeking reversal of the order of disqualification of Nawaz Sharif and Shahbaz Sharif, and addressing all issues in light of the Charter of Democracy.

“I invite them to move forward along with all political forces for the implementation of the Charter of Democracy,” Gilani said.

He asked the provincial governments to lift the Section 144 immediately and release the arrested persons. He said the PPP had made a lot of contribution to the lawyers’ movement and rendered numerous sacrifices. He said shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto had pledged to reinstate the deposed Chief Justice.

Gilani said President Asif Ali Zardari also pledged to do the same.

Gilani recalled that soon after securing a heavy mandate from the parliament he had announced the release of the detained judges and also restoration of their emoluments.

The prime minister said the decision was taken in consultation with the allies.

Gilani also greeted Chairman of Pakistan People’s Party Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, lawyers, political workers, and civil society on this auspicious occasion and asked them to celebrate the occasion in a befitting manner.


Nawaz greets nation over restoration of deposed judgesGUJRANWALA: Pakistan Muslim League-N Quaid Mian Nawaz Sharif announced on Monday to call off the long march. He congratulated the whole nation over the reinstatement of deposed judges.

Addressing a charged long march rally here, Nawaz termed the restoration of Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry a big success and a prelude to positive change.

He said Justice Iftikhar did not bow down to the dictator.

He said that the decision to call off the long march has been made after consultations with Jamaat-e-Islami Ameer Qazi Hussain Ahmed, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Chief Imran Khan and Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) President Ali Ahmed Kurd.


US welcomes restoration of Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry
US welcomes restoration of Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry ISLAMABAD: The United States Monday welcomed Pakistan's decision to reinstate its top judge as a move to "defuse a serious confrontation" and a "substantial step towards national reconciliation."

"This is a statesmanlike decision taken to defuse a serious confrontation, and the apparent removal of this long-standing national issue is a substantial step towards national reconciliation," said the US embassy in Islamabad.

"Now is the time for all Pakistanis and their political representatives to work together, with the support of their friends and allies, to peacefully strengthen their democracy and ensure a positive dialogue," it added.

Saturday, 14 March 2009

Web founder looks to big changes

Tim Berners-Lee - 13/3/2009
Mobile phone Web access will benefit the developing world, says Sir Tim

The founder of the World Wide Web says the pace of innovation on the web is increasing all the time.

Marking the 20th anniversary of his proposal to create the web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee said "new changes are going to rock the world even more".

The future of the web lies in mobile phones, he said at the research centre in Switzerland where he was working when he proposed the web.

He also warned of user profiling on the internet and the risks of "snooping".

Sir Tim was working at the Cern nuclear research centre, near Geneva, in March 1989 when he proposed to his colleagues a hypertext database with text links that would help scientists around the world share information quickly.

His supervisor described the proposal as "vague, but exciting" and the next year Sir Tim wrote the software that allowed users access to information on the already-existing internet.

In developing countries it's going to be exciting because [mobile phones are] the only way that a lot of people will actually get to see the internet at all
Sir Tim Berners-Lee

Speaking to the BBC's technology correspondent Rory Cellan Jones, Sir Tim credited scientists around the world with helping to build the web.

"Creative people all over the planet started to get involved and I'd get these random e-mails from people in different fields and different countries who decided the web would be a good idea if everybody did it, so they would do it."

'Tip of iceberg'

As director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) that guides the web's development, Sir Tim said much more was to come.

"The web is not all done, it's just the tip of the iceberg... I'm convinced that the new changes are going to rock the world even more," he said at the 20th anniversary celebrations at Cern.

Mobile phones would form a key part of the web's future, he said.

"In developing countries it's going to be exciting because that is the only way that a lot of people will actually get to see the internet at all."

But he also sounded a warning about the emergence of systems that can automatically track a web user's habits and create a detailed profile of the person.

"That sort of snooping is really important to avoid," he said.

Google has become the latest firm to launch a system to send advertisements to web users based on their online activities.

First Superman fetches $317,200

The first edition of Superman
There are only 100 copies of the first edition of Superman lef

A rare copy of the first Superman comic, dating from 1938, has sold at auction for $317,200 (£227,000).

The online auction started two weeks ago and attracted 89 bidders. Neither the buyer nor the seller were named.

The copy was described as unrestored. The cover shows the cape-wearing action hero from the planet Krypton lifting a car above his head.

There are only 100 copies left of the first Superman comic, which sold for 10 cents when it appeared in June 1938.

Stephen Fishler, the owner of the online auction site Comic Connect said the Superman comic had been in the same hands since 12 years after it was published, when a young boy on the US west coast bought it for 35 cents.

He then forgot about it until 1966 when it emerged in his mother's basement. He held on to since then, hoping it would gain in value, Mr Fishler told CNN.

He said before the auction the comic might fetch as much as $400,000.

Superman is generally recognised as the first superhero to appear in comics - predating the likes of Spiderman and Batman.

The crime fighter's secret alter ego is Clark Kent, a mild-mannered, bespectacled reporter for the The Daily Planet, who dashes into phone booths to change into Superman.

The now-dilapidated house in Cleveland, Ohio where writer Jerry Siegel and illustrator Joe Shuster created Superman sold in an online auction last October for $100,000 (£71,000).

Iraq's voices of pessimism

Life may appear to be improving in Iraq, reports the BBC's Mike Sergeant, but while most Iraqis are desperate to believe the war is over, many still worry about what the future may hold.


Fighfighters put out fires at the site of a car bomb attack in Baghdad in 2007
More than 25,000 people are thought to have been killed in Iraq in 2007
When I first came to Iraq in the summer of 2007, it was a very dark and dangerous place.

Bombs were exploding every few hours.

In a typical day, dozens of bodies were dumped on the streets of Baghdad. Thousands were killed every month.

The events of recent days have shocked many Iraqis and brought back painful memories.

Every attack is an uncomfortable reminder of the many risks that still lie ahead.

Spirited

A couple of weeks ago, things seemed a little brighter here.

Military commanders were keen to show off what people in the news business like to simplify as "life getting back to normal".

We attended one of many media events carefully designed to give the sense of things looking up.

A dozen or so reporters and cameramen were driven in military convoy to Shula, a suburb previously said to have been one of the most violent in the capital.

On arrival, we were handed a leaflet welcoming us on what was described as "a walking tour - honouring the improvements of the Shula area".

So, as instructed, we were briskly marched off to "honour" those improvements.

The brochure told us exactly what we were about to see: "Terrorists tried to destroy the best chicken restaurant in Shula", it read.

"They did not succeed.

"They also tried to destroy the spirit of Shula. They failed in this regard as well."

Darkness and light

Then we watched a football match.

A map of Iraq showing Baghdad and Basra
The teams wore brightly coloured shirts and played enthusiastically on a nicely prepared grass pitch.

The crowd was almost entirely made up of heavily armed US and Iraqi soldiers.

One American colonel told me that he was "shocked" by how good life was here.

"People are still out there who want to do bad things," said another US soldier "but they are on the run."

US troops on the ground often talk about "good guys" and "bad guys".

They sometimes portray the struggle in Iraq as a battle between the vast majority of "ordinary Iraqis" and a small minority of "terrorists" who want to destroy progress and turn back the clock to the chaos of two years ago.

Six years of war has taught their commanders that things are almost always more confusing.

This patchwork country of intermingled faiths and traditions is not easy to divide into the "forces of light" on one side and "darkness" on the other.

Cultural re-awakening

In most areas and on most days you can see real improvements.

Iraqis eating in a Baghdad cafe (Photo: ALI YUSSEF/AFP/Getty Images)
Iraqis are feeling more confident about being out on the streets at night
We went to a nightclub in what once would have been a charming old house in the centre of Baghdad.

Men sit around drinking alcohol watching women dance. These activities might have got them killed in the past.

In other parts of the city, restaurants, shops and galleries are reopening.

Cultural life is starting to blossom again. The sound of traditional Iraqi songs can be heard once more.

We spent an hour at a music institute in the centre of Baghdad.

In 2006 and 2007, the students had to play in secret and hide their instruments in plastic bags on the way to school. Now they are confident enough to perform their ballads openly.

The people I have met desperately want to believe the war is over
I am told, however, that before 2003, most of the musicians were girls.

When we visited there was only one, Hazzar Bassam. She plays an instrument called the joza, made from the shell of a coconut.

"It's true there are generally fewer explosions now," she told me, "but the violence may be coming back again. We are still afraid."

Waiting for revenge

Recent attacks have led others to question the accepted international narrative of recent months that Iraq is definitely "getting better" while Afghanistan is "getting worse".

An Iraqi man watches a US soldier on patrol in Iraq
About 140,000 US soldiers are currently based in Iraq
US generals have always been very wary of declaring victory. They remember President Bush's horribly premature "mission accomplished" speech after the US invasion.

Hundreds are still dying violently here every month.

The people I have met desperately want to believe the war is over.

Voices of pessimism, though, are not that hard to find.

One Iraqi friend told me that there will be many scores to settle once the US military leaves.

"Most people are sick and tired of violence, but some are just waiting for the right moment to take their revenge," he said.

"People in this country never forget, particularly if their relatives were brutally killed."

Everyone knows the Americans are leaving. The big unknown is what happens when they do.

Has Iraq really turned the corner? Or are most of the gunmen and bombers simply biding their time and waiting for the power struggles to come?

It is very hard to make predictions about a country like this. But, to think that Iraq is a problem that somehow has now been "solved", might be to repeat the historic mistake of simplifying a very complicated place.

Thursday, 12 March 2009

A crisis about more than judges


Pakistani police ring the residence of Nawaz Sharif in Lahore, 15 March
Many see great dangers in the bitter power struggle

Nawaz Sharif has won the latest round in an ongoing battle with the government, driving in triumph through a police cordon surrounding his house in Lahore.

After a jubilant reception from thousands of supporters, Pakistan's main opposition leader headed to Islamabad.

He is determined to lead lawyers and political activists in the final leg of what is called a Long March to push their demand for the restoration of the deposed chief justice.

It is not clear how far he will get: the government has sealed the capital to prevent protestors from fulfilling their plan to hold an indefinite sit-in in front of parliament.

What is clear is that the challenge has Pakistan's military establishment and international allies very worried.

Power struggle

Top diplomats including US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have called Mr Sharif and the President, Asif Zardari, in recent days. The army chief of staff has been holding meetings with the prime minister. All are urging a political resolution to the crisis.

It is obvious by now that this is about more than judges.

Of course it is true that the restoration of the chief justice, sacked two years ago by the then military leader Pervez Musharraf, has been a bone of contention between Mr Sharif and Mr Zardari for months.

Mr Sharif accuses the president of failing to honour three written agreements to reinstate the top judge. Mr Zardari argues it is a constitutionally complex issue, but his critics say he is afraid the restored judiciary would challenge aspects of his rule.

However, the controversy over the Long March mushroomed into a political crisis several weeks ago, when the Supreme Court disqualified Nawaz Sharif and his brother Shahbaz from holding elected office.

The Sharifs saw this as a deliberate attempt, backed by the president, to remove them from power, despite Mr Zardari's denials.

That suspicion was reinforced when Asif Zardari imposed federal rule on the Punjab province - the power base of Nawaz Sharif's Muslim League Party (PMLN). In effect the Sharifs' government was dismissed while the president's representatives began negotiations with other parties to permanently replace the PMLN.

Why is this power struggle so dangerous?

Alarming rhetoric

First of all, because it puts the main opposition party into a violent confrontation with the government. That harkens back to the instability of the 1990s, when Mr Sharif's Muslim League and Mr Zardari's Pakistan Peoples' Party traded terms in power, each undermining the other.

Secondly, it pits the centre against the Punjab. Again history demonstrates that when the two are in conflict, the government struggles to function.

Some observers believe Mr Zardari may have tried to remove the Sharifs' provincial government for that reason.

The president can mobilise the resources of the state, but Mr Sharif can mobilise popular and material resources, such as his efforts to send thousands of people to lay siege to the capital.

Third, it pits the country's two biggest parties against each other.

The Pakistan Peoples' Party has representation across the country, particularly in the province of Sindh, Mr Zardari's base. Nawaz Sharif's Muslim League is the party of the Punjab, the largest and wealthiest province. Both can rally the street if they want to, violence cannot be ruled out.

Some observers have also expressed concern at rhetoric which appears to endanger the fragile threads of Pakistan's federation, implying that a Punjabi leader is trying to destabilise a Sindhi president.

The West is alarmed because it wants the Pakistani political forces to focus on battling the Taleban and al-Qaeda on the Afghan border, not each other.

The military is alarmed because it sees threats to the integrity of the state. Few believe it wants to intervene. Few doubt it will if the situation descends into chaos.

After Mrs Clinton's intervention, President Zardari has offered to appeal against the Supreme Court decision, but that has not ended Nawaz Sharif's support for the Long March.

A reversal of the court ruling may lead to the reinstatement of his government in the Punjab, but the opposition leader has made it clear that any political resolution of the crisis must include the restoration of the chief justice.

Tuesday, 10 March 2009

Older fathers 'hit brain power'


Children of older fathers perform less well in a range of brainpower tests during infancy and early childhood, a study found.

In contrast, children with older mothers did well on the tests, which assessed abilities such as memory, learning and concentration.

Experts believe mutations in a man's sperm, which build over time, may be a factor.

The University of Queensland study appears in the journal PLoS Medicine.

Nature intended us to have our children earlier in our lives than we currently are
Dr Allan Pacey
University of Sheffield
The age at which men and women are having children is increasing in the developed world.

But while the effect of increasing maternal age on reduced fertility is widely known, the impact of increased paternal age is not as well established.

However, older fathers have been linked to a range of health problems, including an increased risk of birth deformities, autism and neuropsychiatric conditions, such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

The Queensland team analysed data on 33,437 children born between 1959 and 1965 in the US.

Each child was given a range of tests of cognitive function at eight months, four years, and seven years.

The researchers adjusted their study to take account of socio-economic factors, such as family income and parental education.

They found that the older the father, the more likely the child was to have lower scores on the various tests.

In contrast, the older the mother the higher the scores of the child in the cognitive tests.

Nurturing environment

Previous researchers have suggested children of older mothers may perform better because they experience a more nurturing home environment.

But the latest study suggests this might not be the case in relation to fathers.

Genetic factors are likely to be key, as there is evidence that genetic mutations become more widespread in a man's sperm as he ages.

But the Queensland team said the impact of social factors could also not be ruled out, although they said a child would usually benefit socioeconomically from having an older father, with better access to health and educational services.

The researchers, led by Dr John McGrath, wrote: "Given the trend towards older maternal and paternal ages in the developing world, policy-makers may want to consider promoting an awareness of the risks to children that this study associates with delayed fatherhood."

Dr Allan Pacey, an expert in fertility at the University of Sheffield, said: "We have known for some time that the children born from older fathers are at increased risk of a number of medical problems and this is almost certainly because as men get older the sperm production gets less efficient and their sperm have a higher number of genetic defects.

"The author's observation that most neurocognitive outcomes is also reduced in the children of older fathers provides a further piece of evidence to remind us that nature intended us to have our children earlier in our lives than we currently are."

Dozens dead' in Baghdad bombing


At least 33 people, including a local army chief, have died and 46 have been injured in a suicide attack on the western edge of Baghdad, officials say.

The attack took place in the Abu Ghraib municipality, and appeared to target a group of dignitaries as they left a national reconciliation conference.

Violence levels have declined in Iraq recently, but this is the third major attack in the last few days.

More than 30 died in an attack on a police recruitment centre on Sunday.

On Thursday, a car bomb exploded at a cattle market in Babel province killing 10.

The BBC's Mike Sergeant in Baghdad says it is too soon to say whether the attacks constitute a pattern but they show that life in Iraq is still dangerous.

But he says that if the violence of recent days continues, a timetable announced by US President Barack Obama to withdraw most combat troops by mid-2010 could be increasingly hard to maintain.

Troop reductions

The bomb exploded as delegates came out of the conference, attended by a large number of VIPs.

The hall which hosted the conference is about 25km (15 miles) from the centre of Baghdad, and close to the Abu Ghraib prison facility, which came under scrutiny because of the abuse of prisoners by US troops.

One witness, the owner of a car repair shop, described how the bomb went off as the delegates began a walking tour of Abu Ghraib's market.

Security forces at the scene of the blast

"I hid for a while, but then I raised my head to see scattered bodies, including women and children, and some surviving women and children were screaming out of fear," Ahmed Ali, 33, told the Associated Press.

Police sources said tribal leaders, police, soldiers and journalists were among the dead in the latest attack.

Two journalists for the Cairo-based independent TV station al-Baghdadiya were among the dead, and four al-Iraqiya journalists were wounded, reports said.

Al-Bagdadiya correspondent Suhaib Adnan and cameraman Haider Hashim were both killed, a station spokesman said.

An Iraqi government spokesman, Ali al-Dabbagh, insisted after the bombing that there would be "no going back" from the path of reconciliation in Iraq.

"Reconciliation is the response to the devilish acts that try to wreck nationalist efforts between Iraqis," he told Reuters.

The latest attack comes days after the US military said it was to reduce troop numbers in the country by 12,000 in the next six months.

RECENT IRAQ ATTACKS
8 Mar Bomb at police academy kills 28 in Baghdad
13 Feb Attack on Shia pilgrims kills 32 south of Baghdad
12 Feb Bomb attacks in Mosul and Karbala
11 Feb Baghdad market bombs kill 16
4 Feb Female suicide bomber kills 35 in Baghdad


Maj Gen David Perkins, a spokesman for US forces in Iraq, told a news conference on Sunday that violence was at its lowest level since the summer of 2003.

He was also reported as saying the recent series of attacks was evidence that terror groups such as al-Qaeda in Iraq were growing desperate as they sought to derail security gains in the country.

Iraq has massively expanded its police and military forces over recent years as Mr Maliki's government seeks to ensure local forces can provide security amid the envisaged draw-down.

About 140,000 US soldiers are currently in the country.

The withdrawal is part of President Barack Obama's plan to end the "combat mission" in Iraq by August 2010, entailing the withdrawal of some two-thirds of the US force there - some of which will be deployed in Afghanistan instead.

Between 35,000 and 50,000 American troops will then stay in Iraq for a further year, to provide support and training to Iraqi forces, the US says.

Saturday, 7 March 2009

Nasa launches Earth hunter probe


Nasa launches Kepler telescope

An unmanned Nasa mission to search the sky for Earth-like planets with the potential to host life has launched from Cape Canaveral in Florida.

The Kepler telescope will orbit the Sun to watch a patch of space thought to contain about 100,000 stars like ours.

It will look for the slight dimming of light from these "suns" as planets pass between them and the spacecraft.

Controllers took their first opportunity to launch the probe, at 0349GMT (2249EST) on 7 March.

Kepler blasted off atop a Delta II rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

Kepler focal plane array (Nasa)
Kepler will use the largest camera system ever launched into space

"This is a historical mission; it's not just a science mission," said Dr Edward Weiler, Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at Nasa.

"I maintain that it really attacks some very basic human questions that have been part of our genetic code since that first man or woman looked up into the sky and asked the question: 'are we alone?'."

Equipped with the largest camera ever launched into space, it is the first mission designed to find rocky worlds orbiting Sun-like stars. Planets located in a warm zone - known as the habitable zone - might host liquid water on their surfaces.

And where there is liquid water, scientists argue, there is at least the potential for life.

'Flea in headlights'

Of the 300-plus extrasolar planets discovered to date, only a handful are thought to be rocky like the Earth, and none are Earth-mass. The vast majority are gas giants like Jupiter or so-called ice giants like Neptune.

This is thought to be due to the technological limitations of current telescope technology, rather than a lack of Earth-mass planets in our galaxy.

Kepler will detect the periodic dimming of stars caused by transiting planets.

THE KEPLER SPACE TELESCOPE
Infographic (BBC)
Will study more than 100,000 suns
Continuously for 4 to 6+ years
Tuned to see Earth-size planets
Will target the habitable zone
Also see Mars to Jupiter sizes
First results within 3 months

Some star systems are oriented in such a way that their planets cross in front of their stars, as seen from Earth's point of view. During these transits, the planets cause their star's light to slightly dim, or wink.

The orbiting observatory can register changes in brightness of only 20 parts per million.

"If Kepler were to look down at a small town on Earth at night from space, it would be able to detect the dimming of a porch light as somebody passed in front," said James Fanson, Kepler project manager at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.

He commented: "Trying to detect Jupiter-size planets crossing in front of their stars is like trying to measure the effect of a mosquito flying by a car's headlight.

"Finding Earth-sized planets is like trying to detect a very tiny flea in that same headlight."

William Borucki, Kepler chief scientist from Nasa's Ames Research Center in California, said: "We will monitor a wide range of stars; from small cool ones, where planets must circle closely to stay warm, to stars bigger and hotter than the Sun, where planets must stay well clear to avoid being roasted."

Venus transit (BBC)
Closer to home: Venus is pictured making a transit of our Sun

If the mission does find Earth-size planets in the habitable zones of stars, it should find them first around suns that are smaller than our own. In the case of small stars, this habitable zone is located closer in, so planets circling in this comfortable region will take less time to complete one lap.

This means it will take less time for Kepler to find them and for other ground telescopes to confirm their existence.

Any Earth-size planets orbiting in the habitable zones of stars the size of our Sun would take at least three years to be confirmed.

The telescope has a very large field of view, which it needs in order to observe the necessary large number of stars.

Kepler will stare at the same star field for the entire mission monitoring the brightnesses of more than 100,000 stars for the mission's three-and-a-half-year lifetime.

The spacecraft will be launched into an orbit where it will drift behind Earth as it circles the Sun. This will ensure our planet does not block the stars which need to be observed continuously by the observatory.

Getting answers

Dr Borucki suggested the mission could make major contributions to understanding other star systems, including the unresolved question of how they form. But he cautioned that the knowledge still to be accumulated was vast.

"If you look at the giant planets, we have found 340 of these. People say: 'Why would you need any more?'

"My guess is that by understanding giant planets and small planets we are going to make dramatic discoveries about other planetary systems. But I don't expect us to have all the answers in three-and-a-half years."

Finding Earth-size planets is one thing, confirming life - even simple microbial life - exists on them is another matter altogether; and will require future telescopes capable of seeing trace gasses in the planets' atmospheres that are a possible signature for biology.

"We certainly won't find ET but we might find ET's home by looking at all of these stars," said Bill Borucki.

Week in pictures: 28 Feb - 7 Mar


Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe celebrated his 85th birthday in Chinhoyi, north-west of Harare, at a lavish party thrown by supporters. Here he eats cake with his son Chatunga.


Guinea-Bissau's President Joao Bernardo Vieira was killed by rebellious soldiers hours after his rival, the army's chief of staff, was killed in an explosion.


A pallbearers breaks down as some of the 140 officers killed in a mutiny in Bangladesh were buried in the capital Dhaka.

A Tibetan woman looks on as Buddhist monks pray for world peace in Kathmandu, Nepal. About 300 monks from India, Nepal and Tibet are staging a four-day prayer session.


US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton shows a diplomatic cheek at the end of a joint press conference following meetings with Israeli leaders in Jerusalem.


Gunmen attacked members of the Sri Lankan cricket team on their way to play in Lahore, Pakistan. Six police officers and a driver were killed, though the Sri Lankans escaped without serious injury.


British Prime Minister Gordon Brown spoke to Congress, where he urged Britain and the US to renew the "special relationship for our generation".


Supporters of Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir surround him after he scorned the warrant for his arrest issued by the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes in Darfur.


South Korean President Lee Myung-bak inspects a war memorial in the Australia capital of Canberra during a state visit.