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Controversial Japan mayor to seek new mandate

TOKYO, Feb 3: The controversial mayor of Japan’s second city, Osaka, is to step down and seek re-election in a bid to prove he has public support for plans to reform local Government.
Toru Hashimoto, who caused an international stir last year when he said women forced into sexual slavery by Japan’s imperial army served a “necessary” purpose, is expected to submit his resignation later today.
Hashimoto, who doubles as co-head of the Japan Restoration Party, has long championed a plan to merge the prefectural and municipal Governments of Osaka, claiming it would cut out unnecessary layers of bureaucracy.
But a panel made up of representatives of the Osaka prefectural Government and Osaka municipal Government on Friday rejected plans to speed up the integration, prompting his decision to go over their heads to the electorate.
“If it is the will of voters, I will leave the world of politics without hesitation,” Hashimoto told a party convention at weekend, adding that a renewal of his mandate would prove the public was behind the plan.
But rivals have dismissed the move as self-indulgent and said they have no intention of fielding candidates.
“It is a ridiculous scheme to call an election just because the discussion is not going the way he wants it to,” the Yomiuri Shimbun daily quoted a senior member of the New Komeito party as saying. “He is like a child screaming.” (AGENCIES)

Facebook celebrates its 10th birthday

WASHINGTON, Feb 3: Facebook – with more than 1.2 billion users worldwide – is celebrating its 10th birthday amidst challenges of keeping its original base of young users with new innovative social networks coming to the fore.
The company was launched by Mark Zuckerberg on February 4, 2004, from Harvard University.
The site was conceived as a way to connect students, and let them build an online identity for themselves, ‘Computer World’ reported.
According to the company’s own recent figures, the social networking site has since expanded to cover a large swath of the world, with more than 1.2 billion people using its site on a monthly basis.
Zuckerberg, who turns 30 in May, reflected on the 10-year milestone at an industry conference in Silicon Valley last week.
He said he never envisioned Facebook, which made him one of the wealthiest people in the world, becoming so large or influential at the start.
“It didn’t even occur to me that it could be us,” Zuckerberg said.
Since then, Facebook’s site and its business, now a public company, have changed dramatically, the report said.
The company was slow to react to the important mobile market, however, last week it reported that more than half its ad revenue now comes from mobile devices, the report said.
Among the growing challenges is the soaring popularity of smartphone apps that let people share images, videos, thoughts or observations at any moment.
Social networking sites such as Pinterest, Twitter and SnapChat have sparked concerns that Facebook which set a social networking trend in motion may be losing its original teen base.
A recent Princeton University study suggested that Facebook may lose around 80 per cent of its users over the next three years, a claim which was challenged by the social networking site.
According to a recent report in iStrategyLabs, Facebook lost more than 3 million users in the age group of 13 and 17 between January 2011 and January 2014. (AGENCIES)

Turkish police murder trial opens amid tight security

KAYSERI (TURKEY), Feb 3: Four policemen went on trial amid tight security in Turkey today, accused of beating to death a 19-year-old student in the huge anti-Government protests that rocked the country last June.
The high-profile court case comes as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan battles his biggest crisis in 11 years in power, which has hit the economy and is threatening the strongman’s presidential ambitions.
Some 2,000 riot police were deployed in the central city of Kayseri for the start of the trial, roads around the courthouse were blocked and demonstrations banned for “security” reasons.
Activists trying to get to Kayseri for the trial said that several buses carrying demonstrators were prevented from entering the city overnight and this morning.
The case centres on the death of Ali Islmail Kokmaz, who died after being pummelled with baseball bats and truncheons in the western city of Eskisehir on June 2, one of one of six people to perish as three weeks of protests convulsed the country of 76 million.
The attack was recorded by security cameras and the 19-year-old student, wearing a “World Peace” T-shirt, suffered a brain haemorrhage and died after 38 days in a coma.
Eight men, including four plain-clothes policemen, are accused of premeditated murder and face life in jail if convicted.
In an attempt to avoid fresh trouble, authorities moved the trial some 550 kilometres east of Eskisehir to Kayseri.
“My son will never come back but I want his killers punished,” the dead student’s mother Emel Korkmaz told Turkish media, saying she would attend the trial to “look them in the eye”.
More than 8,000 people were injured, the Turkish Medical Association says, during the protests in June that began as a peaceful sit-in against plans to build on a Istanbul park.
Erdogan called the demonstrators “vandals” and branded Twitter, used to organise protests, a “troublemaker”. Heavy-handed police tools included tear gas, plastic bullets and even live ammunition.
Amnesty International said there were “gross human rights violations” and German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the time called the police response “much too harsh”. (AGENCIES)

Awami League will win if elections are held today: poll

DHAKA, Feb 3: The ruling Awami League would still bag more votes than opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) if elections were held today with the participation of all major parties, according to an opinion poll.
The study, conducted by US-based Democracy International a week after the BNP-boycotted the January 5 polls, found that if the elections were fully participatory, 42.7 per cent people would have voted for Awami League, while 35.1 per cent would have preferred the BNP.
The watchdog carried out the study between January 11 and 15 to gauge the post-election environment, quizzing 1,500 people, aged 18 and above in 39 districts in all the seven administrative divisions of the country.
In November 2013, a poll showed that the Awami League remained behind the BNP.
Democracy International described the new results as being a “statistical dead heat” because of the margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 per cent and showed that the political environment was ‘competitive’.
The poll found that the Awami League’s crucial ally Jatiya Party had 4 per cent support and BNP’s key ally in the 19-party alliance fundamentalist Jamaat-e-Islami 1 per cent.
Thirty two per cent of people said BNP must cut its ties with Jamaat while 19 per cent were undecided but around half of people surveyed said it did not matter to them who BNP’s political allies were.
Fifty two per cent of Awami League supporters quizzed in the survey said they were of the view that the BNP should cut ties with Jamaat while 17 per cent BNP supporters also expressed identical opinion.
Sixty-nine per cent of the respondents said Bangladesh was headed in the wrong direction and top three reasons for this were political conflicts, too many political shutdowns and price hikes.
The survey found that seven out of 10 supporters of the BNP and the AL want their parties to compromise and engage in talks to end the political stalemate.
Asked about the Government formed through the January 5 election, 40 per cent termed it “not credible”, 18 per cent credible, 25 per cent highly credible and 17 per cent less credible.
Fifty-nine per cent felt there should be another election within the next five years and 52 per cent said the BNP should immediately enter talks with the Government and stop protests.
Forty per cent believed the Government should complete its five-year tenure. (AGENCIES)

Strong earthquake rattles Greek island

ATHENS, Feb 3: A strong 6.1 magnitude earthquake struck near the Greek island of Cephalonia in the Ionian Sea today, the the US Geological Survey (USGS) reported.
The quake hit at 5:08 am (0308 GMT) with its epicentre just 12 kilometres (7 miles) from the town of Lixourion, 300 kilometres west of Athens, the USGS said.
There were no immediate reports of any damage or casualties.
A 5.8-magnitude earthquake struck the same region late last month.
That quake was felt on several Ionian islands and as far away as the capital Athens.
Greece is one of Europe’s most earthquake-prone countries.
Cephalonia has previously been struck on several occasions and in August 1953 virtually every house on the island was destroyed during a major earthquake.
The island was also the setting for the popular novel Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, about a Second World War romance between an Italian soldier and a local woman. A 2001 movie of the same name, starring Nicolas Cage and Penelope Cruz, was filmed on the island.
The Mediterranean region as a whole is seismically active due to the convergence of the African and Eurasian tectonic plates. (AGENCIES)

North Korea agrees to talks on family reunions

SEOUL, Feb 3: North Korea today agreed to hold talks with South Korea on organising a rare reunion event for families separated by the 1950-53 Korean War, Seoul’s Unification Ministry said.
After days of silence following an initial proposal from Seoul last week, Pyongyang said it would be willing to participate in a meeting on Wednesday or Thursday at the border truce village of Panmunjom.
“We welcome that the North has finally come forward to discuss the reunion,” Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Eui-Do told reporters.
“Given the urgency of the matter, we will make preparations to hold the reunion as soon as possible,” Kim said, adding the ministry would notify Pyongyang which day it preferred for the Panmunjom meeting.
Millions of Korean families were left separated by the conflict that sealed the peninsula’s division.
Most family members have since died without ever meeting or talking to their relatives. Cross-border visits, along with postal and phone communications, are banned for ordinary citizens.
About 71,000 people — more than half aged over 80 — are on the South’s waiting list for a reunion opportunity.
Last week, South Korea proposed holding the event on February 17-21 at the North’s Mount Kumgang resort.
Around 100 people from each side would take part and, if it goes ahead, it would be the first such reunion since 2010.
Seoul had also called for immediate working-level talks to hammer out the logistical details, and some officials expressed frustration over the Lunar New Year weekend that the North was taking so long to respond.
A reunion was planned for last September but Pyongyang cancelled at the last minute. There are concerns it may do the same this time around, due to planned joint South Korea-US military drills likely to begin late this month. (AGENCIES)

Pollutted Ranbir Canal

Sir,
Throwing of kitchen garbage in Ranbir Canal of Jammu city is a regular practice and it is very difficult to go near the canal now a days due to foul smell which emits. The people of the Jammu especially who reside near the sacred Ranbir Canal are requested not to throw kitchen garbage including polythenes into the canal. It will only harm you only. There may be chances of breakout some air borne and water borne diseases in the Jammu city due to it.
It is the prime duty of educated people of the society to educate the  common masses regarding the importance of environment in which we live. Apart from this, we have some other sources through which common masses can easily be educated in the nuke and corners of the state/country e.g religious institutions, schools, colleges, universities, Political gatherings etc.
Yours etc..
Prof Hardial Singh
Deptt of Botany

Discrimination with the disabled

Sir,
The short list for teachers has been notified by Services Selection Recruitment Board through its website jkssb.nic.in. The reservation for persons with disabilities has been ignored by the Selection board. All the categories have been given their due but the persons with disabilities have been totally dropped from the list. Highly qualified candidates with disabilities are disappointed with the move. Most of the persons with disabilities are in great agony because they are going to cross the upper age limits. The surprising fact is that  the  Supreme Court of India has passed the direction that if the reservation percentage exceeds 50 percent in case of the employment of the persons with disabilities it should be ensured in all conditions. The three percent reservation for persons with disabilities has been endorsed by JK Persons with Disabilities Act – 1998.
It is first time when the Service Selection Board J&K used screening test as a medium to select the teachers and other posts in the State thus General Administration Department, Social Welfare Department, SSRB Convener and Chairperson were represented well in advance that the reservation / category for persons with disabilities should be maintained separately. Despite their assurances and promises the persons with disabilities have been discriminated and segregated.
The highly educated disabled persons have to compete in exams at par with physically fit persons in all types of climatic conditions. This is the annual exam season and harsh climatic conditions. Thus wheelchair users, blind persons and all types of severe disabled people carried in laps, go and take examination in these conditions.
It is humbly requested that kindly direct the concerned authorities like GAD and SSRB to provide three percent separate quota to persons with disabilities without any hesitations.
Yours etc…..
Javed Ahmad Tak,
Humanity Welfare Organisation
Helpline NGO,  Bijbehara Kashmir

Lead futures down on subdued spot demand, overseas trend

NEW DELHI, Feb 3: Tracking weakness in base metals overseas and subdued spot demand, lead prices eased by 0.41 per cent to Rs 133.45 per kg in futures trade as speculators reduced their positions.
At the Multi Commodity Exchange, lead for delivery in March fell 55 paise, or 0.41 per cent, to Rs 133.45 per kg in business turnover of nine lots.
Likewise, the metal for delivery in February shed 50 paise, or 0.38 per cent, to Rs 132.55 per kg in 109 lots.
Marketmen said the fall in lead futures prices was attributed to a subdued demand at domestic markets amid a weakening trend at the London Metal Exchange on slowing manufacturing in China, the world’s largest user of base metals. (AGENCIES)

Health Hazards of mobile phones & towers

Er Neeraj Dubey
The mobile phone industry has been one of the fastest growing industries in modern history. At present, India has 875.48 million mobile phone users and nearly 7,36,654 towers which emit electromagnetic radiations. By the end of 2014, this proportion is bound to grow as the access and affordability of mobile phones continues to increase. In the years ahead, an ever-increasing number of people will be exposed for long periods of time to radiation from mobile phones. Mobile phones, by various bio-physical mechanisms, may be responsible for a wide variety of health hazards. This article attempts to present the basic bio-physics of these devices and explain the health hazards of electromagnetic radiation exposure in terms of thermal and non-thermal effects. Wireless telephones are two-way radio transmitters. When a call is made, voice (sound energy) is converted to radiofrequency (RF) waves (electromagnetic energy). Radio waves travel through the atmosphere to the nearest base station and, at the call receiver’s end, waves travel from the base station to the receiver’s wireless phone.  The receiving instrument re-converts radio frequency waves to sound energy and the receiver hears this as voice in the ear piece. In mobile phone technology, there are two main transmission protocols. The Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM) was established in 1987 and is the dominant protocol used in India and most European countries. Another protocol, founded by Qualcomm (a USA-based mobile service provider), is the Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) standard. It is the major protocol used North America and was introduced in India a few years ago. In India, GSM phones use transmission frequencies in the frequency ranges of 890-915 MHz or 1710-1785 MHz for uplink (handset to base station) and 935-960 MHz or 1805-1880 MHz for downlink (base station to handset). The CDMA phones use frequencies of 824-849 MHz for uplink and 869- 889 MHz for downlink. Additional frequency ranges may be opened in the near future, to accommodate technologies such as the 3G (third generation) protocol. Radio waves are a form of electromagnetic radiation. Like gamma rays, X-rays or visible light, they form a part of the electromagnetic spectrum. These waves are generated by the movement of electrical charges in a conductive metal object (such as a transmitting antenna). Similarly, the waves can also be intercepted, i.e. by a receiving antenna. Each type of radiation has a specific frequency and wavelength, which decides the identity of the waveform. The wavelength (? ) is the distance covered by the wave in one second and the frequency is the number of waves formed per second. The electromagnetic energy absorbed by a unit mass of tissue is known as the specific absorption rate (SAR) and is expressed in watts per kilogram (W/kg) or milli-watts per gram (mW/g). In addition to mobile phones, electromagnetic radiation emission occurs from numerous devices that are frequently encountered by people. These include microwave ovens, radars, industrial heaters, cardiac pacemakers, televisions (especially plasma screens), refrigerators and washing machines, to name a few. The identified whole-body threshold level of exposure in terms of Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) is 4 watts per kilogram (4 W/kg). The whole-body human absorption of RF energy varies with the frequency of the RF signal. The most restrictive limits on whole-body exposure are in the frequency range of 30-300 MHz where the human body absorbs RF energy most efficiently. For exposure of the general public to mobile phone radiation, the US FCC (Federal Comm. Commission) limits RF absorption (in terms of SAR) to 1.6 W/kg, averaged over one gram of tissue. The Government  of  India  Department  of Tele-communications (DoT) adopted the guidelines set by the International Commission on Non-Ionising Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) and released a set of draft guidelines. The salient points from these guidelines are: – 1). It will now be mandatory for handset manufacturers to display the radiation levels on mobile phones through the menu options, making it easier for consumers to know the exact RF levels for each mobile device before purchase. These proposals are being framed by the Telecom Engineering Centre (TEC), which is the technical arm of the DoT. 2). The draft guidelines also propose that children under 16 years of age be discouraged from using mobile  phones, while adding that setting up telecom base stations within the premises of schools and hospitals may be avoided because children and patients are more susceptible to electromagnetic fields. 3). Thus, all wireless phones sold in India will have to follow safety guidelines. Each agency has the authority to take action if a wireless phone produces hazardous levels of RF energy. This implies that Base Station operators will have to conduct an audit and provide certification that they are meeting the prescribed standards. At a later stage TEC may also set up a conformity assessment body (CAB) to measure radiations and provide certifications. Unfortunately, the Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI) has opposed the regulation demanding display of SAR values emitted by the handset. Most mobile phone providers give information about the SAR values on the batteries of these phones. Further information can be obtained from their websites, which mention SAR values according to the mobile phone models. People with pacemakers should take some simple precautions to be sure that their cellular phones do not cause a problem. For example, holding the phone to the ear opposite the side of the body where the pacemaker is implanted will add some extra distance between the pacemaker and the phone. And since cellular phones transmit electromagnetic energy whenever they are “on” (even when they are not being used), pacemaker wearers should avoid placing a switched-on phone in close proximity to the pacemaker (i.e. in a shirt pocket). Practicing safe mobile phone usage habits and avoiding excessive use will go a long way in minimizing biological hazards from these devices.
Now a day’s mobile towers of different phone companies are seen in every nook and crannies of our country. Almost all use mobile phones. But how many of us know about the adverse impact of mobile phone and mobile towers on our body and environment. Many scientists after carrying out lot of researches have found that mobile towers emits a lot of electromagnetic radiation which causes different types of diseases like heart disease, leukemia, hypertension, brain tumor, brain cancer. It affects those badly who are living within one kilometer from the tower. Children are the worst victims of this harmful radiation. Even the birds, insects and trees will also be affected. What is more worrying is that almost all the towers have been installed near public places such as schools , colleges, clinics, hospitals and residential apartments by directly violating the rules and norms of the govt. The Govt. should formulate innovative policies for handling this threat and strictly deal with the phone companies for the sake of people’s health & environment.
(The author is Asstt Professor GCET, Jammu)