Thursday, May 5, 2016

Freida Pinto to promote women empowerment at Cannes

IANS, Mumbai

May 5, 2016- US-based Indian actress Freida Pinto will reportedly attend the upcoming 69th Cannes International Film Festival to launch the first project of non-profit production company called We Do It Together, which focuses on women empowerment in the entertainment industry.
Freida is one of the members of the advisory board which also includes stars like Jessica Chastain, Juliette Binoche, singer Queen Latifah, and film director Catherine Hardwicke.
Other members are director Hany Abu-Assad; actress Zhang Ziyi; director Amma Asante; director Marielle Heller; director Katia Lund; director Malgorzata Szumowska; actress Alysia Reiner; National Humanities Medal honoree Henry Louis Gates; and director Haifaa Al-Mansour.
The Cannes International Film Festival is scheduled to be held from May 11-May 21, 2016. 
According to sources, the "Slumdog Millionaire" star will be a part of the prestigious gala on May 15 to announce the first project of the company. 
The all-female production company We Do It Together (WDIT) aims to produce films and TV that boost the empowerment of women. The company also hopes to partner with male and female industry professionals to create a slate of gender-led projects, and to generate opportunities for women.
The organisation also participated at the United Nations' Third Annual Power of Collaboration Global Summit in February. 
Freida's upcoming projects include "Jungle Book: Origins" and "Yamasong: March of the Hollows".
Source: Ekantipur

Monday, January 11, 2016

Food dispatched to starving Syria town

Jan 11, 2016- A long-awaited aid convoy has set off for the besieged Syrian town of Madaya, with enough basic food supplies to last 40,000 people for a month.
Residents have been trapped there for six months by a government blockade and have received no aid since October. Some have reportedly starved to death.
Deliveries of medicines and other non-food items will follow later this week.
Aid will also be sent to two villages besieged by rebel forces in the northern province of Idlib.
The situation in Foah and Kefraya is also reported to be extremely dire, with an estimated 30,000 people trapped.
Madaya, which is about 25km (15 miles) north-west of Damascus and 11km from the border with Lebanon, has been besieged since early July by government forces and their allies in Lebanon's Shia Islamist Hezbollah movement.
Brice de la Vigne from the medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) described the situation in the town as "quite horrific".
Mr de la Vigne, whose organisation has been in contact with doctors inside Madaya, told the BBC that more than 250 people there had "acute malnutrition".
He added that 10 of them needed immediate medical evacuation or would die.


Source : Ekantipur

Spain's Princess Cristina tried for fraud

Jan 11, 2016- Spain's Princess Cristina has become the first member of the country's royal family to be put on trial.
She is charged with being an accomplice in an alleged embezzlement scam involving her husband and 16 other defendants, who all deny the charges.
Princess Cristina, 50, faces eight years in jail if found guilty by a three-member panel of judges.
The trial in Palma, Majorca, is seen as an embarrassment for the royal family.
Princess Cristina arrived at the court in Palma on Monday with her husband, Inaki Urdangarin, who is accused of embezzlement and money laundering.
They made no statement to reporters. A small group of anti-monarchists protested outside.
As the judges read out the charges, the princess sat at the back of a makeshift courtroom at the public administration school in Palma. Her husband sat in the same row but court rules prevented them from sitting together.


It all looks so normal.
Three rows of six defendants sitting in court on blue chairs, facing the panel of judges.
But in the third row, at one end, sits Princess Cristina, sixth in line to the Spanish throne.
It's something many people in Spain thought they would never see - the powerful being held to account.
Princess Cristina's lawyers will try to get charges against her dismissed. But in a country where corruption has become a huge political issue, this is a big moment.
Source: Ekantipur


Zidane's arrival breathes new life into Real Madrid

Jan 10, 2016- There is definitely something different about Real Madrid since Zinedine Zidane took over.
Obviously, it's still too early to know whether he'll succeed in his first head-coaching job, but it's already clear that his arrival has breathed new life into the Spanish giant.
Just like that, there's no more jeering at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium. Players seem to have a new attitude. Critics have stopped talking about a crisis.
Putting a former club idol in charge apparently has produced the right result.
Real Madrid routed Deportivo La Coruna 5-0 on Saturday in its first game under the new coach. Although there was nothing unusual about the victory — anything other than a win wasn't expected — it was obvious that the atmosphere at the Bernabeu had changed.
"When a game is won the manager can only be happy," Zidane said. "I am happy with our first game and with the three or four days that we had of training sessions. What I liked most was the team's attitude."
The doubts that hung over the team when Rafa Benitez was in command were not there anymore. Even before the game started, there was a sense that things had improved. The confidence was back. Fans were smiling again.
"I was absolutely delighted with the fans, it was clear that they were right behind the team from beginning to end," Zidane said. "There was a good atmosphere."
Nearly two months after an embarrassing 4-0 loss to Barcelona at the Bernabeu, spirits were finally high again at the club that calls itself the best in the world. For a change, Florentino Perez had a peaceful night at his presidential suite.
Real Madrid was inconsistent under Benitez, who struggled to get the team back on track following the defeat to Barcelona and the embarrassing elimination from the Copa del Rey for using an illegible player. He was being jeered at nearly every game at home, even in 8-0 and 10-2 wins, and setbacks in important league games eventually led to his firing after only seven months in the job.
"Everybody knows that Zidane was a great player and I'm sure he'll be the same as a manager," said forward Gareth Bale, who scored a hat trick against Deportivo. "We've only trained a few times but we are professionals and we work hard to try to win games and all of the titles available. We have to carry on the same way, like we were doing before."
Although the tested Jose Mourinho was on the market, Perez took the popular route and hired the largely inexperienced Zidane, the former France great who thrived with the club as a player more than a decade ago. He was Carlos Ancelotti's assistant when the club won its 10th Champions League, but his head-coaching experience was limited to Madrid's B team in the third division.
"I am happy because this is another challenge for me," the 43-year-old Zidane said. "It is important to be here as a manager and what I want to do is enjoy it."
He will have a week before Madrid gets back on the field, against Sporting Gijon in the Spanish league, again at home. The team is two points off provisional Spanish league leader Barcelona.
"The first game was really good but it is the start and we have to keep going," Zidane said. "Real Madrid always needs to win and we have to keep winning. We have to improve a lot of things and we are going to do it. We have weeks to work and we are going to improve, I am convinced of that."


Source: Ekantipur

Bombs laid by Islamic State hamper Iraqi troops in Ramadi after victory

Jan 11, 2016- Islamic State militants left Ramadi's streets and buildings boobytrapped with bombs, hampering efforts to rebuild the city two weeks after Iraq's elite counter-terrorism forces claimed victory against the militant group there, officials said.
Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province, was touted as the first major success for Iraq's army since it collapsed in the face of Islamic State's lightning advance across the country's north and west 18 months ago.
The militants have been pushed to Ramadi's eastern suburbs, but almost all of the city, which was battered by U.S.-led air strikes against Islamic State, remains off-limits to its nearly half a million displaced residents, most of whom fled before the army advance.
"Most areas are now under the security forces' control," Anbar governor Sohaib al-Rawi said on Saturday at a temporary government complex southeast of the city.
"Most of the streets in Ramadi are mined with explosives so it requires large efforts and expertise," he said.
Specialized bomb disposal teams from the police and civil defense force would begin work "soon", he said.
The counter-terrorism forces which spearheaded the city's recapture are securing only main streets and tactically important buildings, security sources said.
They have built up earth banks at the entrance of central neighborhoods deemed clear of militants but still laden with explosives, and marked buildings' exteriors as "mined", the sources added.
Snipers have also slowed progress. Iraqi forces clear them by calling in devastating air strikes - more than 55 in the past two weeks, according to the coalition.
On Saturday they routed militants from the Mal'ab neighborhood, adding the last major district in Ramadi's city center to their control, said commander Lieutenant General Abdul Ghani al-Assadi.
Iraqi forces withdrew from Ramadi in May last year, allowing Islamic State to take control, the group's biggest gain since sweeping across the Syrian border a year earlier and declaring it was establishing a caliphate.
Islamic State fighters are still holed up in a roughly 10 kilometer (6 mile) stretch east towards Husaiba al-Sharqiya using agricultural lands to evade detection, security sources said. It could take at least 10 days to clear those areas.
PATH OF DESTRUCTION
Hundreds of air strikes since July, combined with Islamic State sabotage, have reduced much of Ramadi to rubble.
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) is still waiting for the green light from the Iraqi government to enter the city and start work to rebuild it, the deputy head of its Iraq program, Lise Grande said.
UNDP has prepared 100 generators and mobile electrical grids to provide a temporary power grid as soon as that happens. An assessment of the damage to the rest of Ramadi's infrastructure will dictate other areas of focus.
The city will require around $20 million immediately for emergency humanitarian response and billions more for long-term reconstruction, said Grande.
"Restoring infrastructure is hugely important, but the decisive factor in getting people to return is when they think security is in place," she said.
After Ramadi, there remains the bigger challenge of Mosul, 400 km (250 miles) north of Baghdad. As many as 3,200 Islamic State fighters are there, more than three times the number that held Ramadi, according to the coalition.
It is also more densely populated. Most of Mosul's pre-2014 population of about two million have not left.
The destruction in Ramadi has sparked criticism including from powerful Iranian-backed Shi'ite militias, which were kept out of the battle for fear of stirring sectarian tensions in Anbar's Sunni heartland.
Despite accusations of human rights abuses, groups like Asaib Ahl al-Haq claim they have could have retaken Ramadi more "neatly".


Source: Ekantipur

Next Saff Championship to be held in Bangladesh

Jan 3, 2016- The upcoming edition of Saff Championship will be held in Bangladesh, decided a meeting of South Asian Football Federation held at Kerala on Saturday.

India and Afghanistan are contesting in the finale of this year’s Saff Championship at Kerala on Sunday. Afghanistan Football Federation has already decided to pull out of the next Saff Championship.

As per the terms with Suzuki, the sponsor of Saff Championship, India will again host the tournament in 2019.

Nepal choked out from the group stages of the tournament this year after a narrow loss against Sri Lanka and a humiliating trouncing at the hands of hosts India.


Source: Ekantipur

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Chris Gayle fined in Big Bash League reporter 'sexism' row

Jan 5, 2016-
West Indies cricketer Chris Gayle has been fined A$10,000 ($7,200; £4,900) by his club for "inappropriate conduct" after he asked a TV reporter for a date in a live interview. Gayle was speaking to journalist Mel McLaughlin during a Big Bash League T20 match in Hobart on Monday.
"To see your eyes for the first time is nice. Hopefully we can have a drink afterwards. Don't blush baby," he said. Gayle has said he is sorry, but that the reaction was "out of proportion".
Apparently making light of the episode, the cricketer later tweeted a photo of an empty bed, saying he was tired. He then said his teammate Dwayne Bravo was buying him a meal because his "pockets were empty".
He also retweeted a comment from broadcaster and cricket fan Piers Morgan, who said he was "outraged at the outrage" at Gayle being "a bit cheeky to a female TV reporter".

West Indies cricketer Chris Gayle has been fined A$10,000 ($7,200; £4,900) by his club for "inappropriate conduct" after he asked a TV reporter for a date in a live interview. Gayle was speaking to journalist Mel McLaughlin during a Big Bash League T20 match in Hobart on Monday.
"To see your eyes for the first time is nice. Hopefully we can have a drink afterwards. Don't blush baby," he said. Gayle has said he is sorry, but that the reaction was "out of proportion".
Apparently making light of the episode, the cricketer later tweeted a photo of an empty bed, saying he was tired. He then said his teammate Dwayne Bravo was buying him a meal because his "pockets were empty".
He also retweeted a comment from broadcaster and cricket fan Piers Morgan, who said he was "outraged at the outrage" at Gayle being "a bit cheeky to a female TV reporter".


Source: Ekantipur