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Prince Harry ‘struggling to get a girlfriend’

LONDON, Mar 14: More than two years after splitting with old flame Chelsy Davy, Britain’s Prince Harry has claimed that he’s struggling to find a new girlfriend as he belongs to the royal family.

At the end of his 10-day Caribbean tour to celebrate the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee this year, the third-in-line to the British throne was asked if being a royal comes in the way of having a love life.

He replied: “Not at all. As any girl would ever tell you, it’s sort of, ‘Oh my God, he’s a prince’. I mean, look at me, I’m 27, and not so much searching for someone to fulfil the role, but trying to find someone willing to take it on.”

Prince Harry has also claimed how sometimes he and his brother, Prince William, just wish they were “normal”, ‘The Sun’ reported.

He said: “Me and my brother are very privileged in the position that we are, but with great privilege comes great responsibility. There’s a lot of times when both myself and my brother wish we were just completely normal.” (PTI)

3 Pakistani personnel in UN mission guilty of sexual abuse

UNITED NATIONS, Mar 13: Three Pakistani police personnel, serving in one of the United Nations’ peackeeping missions in Haiti, have been found guilty in a sexual exploitation case and will be imprisoned on their return to Pakistan.

According to the UN Stabilisation Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), a military justice procedure was conducted by Pakistani authorities in Port-au-Prince against three members of the Pakistani Formed Police Unit.

“The three individuals were found guilty of sexual exploitation and abuse through a court martial proceeding undertaken in accordance with the national laws of Pakistan,” UN spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters here during his daily briefing.

The police personnel were based in Gonaives and a senior Pakistani official had visited Haiti on March 8 and 9 to meet with Haitian authorities regarding the case.

Nesirky said according to the Pakistani authorities, the three would be punished, including through “dishonourable discharge from service with loss of benefits”.

They will also serve a jail term immediately after they return to Pakistan.

“The guilty parties have been repatriated and the United Nations is further liaising with the Pakistani authorities to examine the formal details of the procedures and to ensure appropriate follow-up,” Nesirky added.

He said he would not comment on how long the prison sentence would be and on other details of the punishment since that is a matter between Pakistan and Haiti.

Nesirky added that the UN considers this to be a “case of the most serious sexual exploitation and abuse”. (PTI)

First C-sec births increases risk in normal delivery

MELBOURNE, Mar 14: Women who had a Caesarean section for their first child births are likely to face more health risks if they go for a vaginal birth of their second baby, a new research by Australian experts have claimed.

According to a report in ‘The Australian’, a study which included over 2,300 women at 14 hospitals in Australia who were preparing for their second child, was published in open access journal PloS One.

The report said that about half signed up for a vaginal birth after C-section, or VBAC, and the other half chose to repeat the surgery.

Women who planned a repeat C-section had a significantly lower rate of complications than women who chose to deliver vaginally the second time — 2.4 per cent risk of death or serious complication compared to 0.9 per cent in the surgery group, it noted.

Similarly, the risk of complications to the mother, such as major bleeding or haemorrhage, was 2.3 per cent for women who delivered vaginally compared to 0.8 per cent for a planned repeat C-section.

“Until now there has been a lack of high-quality evidence comparing the benefits and harms of the two planned modes of birth after previous Caesarean,” lead author Caroline Crowther from the Australian Research Centre for the Health of Women and Babies, part of the University of Adelaide, was quoted as saying by the report.

“The information from this study will help women, clinicians and policy makers to develop health advice and make decisions about care for women who have had a previous Caesarean”. (PTI)

Looking forward to work with new ISI chief: Pentagon

WASHINGTON, Mar 14: The US is looking forward to work with the new head of Inter-Services Intelligence of Pakistan, Pentagon said, noting the US-Pak relationship is critical for the region and Afghanistan.

“We look forward to working with the new chief,” the Pentagon spokesman, Navy Captain John Kirby, said yesterday, when asked about announcement of the new ISI Chief.

On March 18, Lieutenant Gen Zaheer ul-Islam would replace Lieutenant Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha as the new ISI chief.

Under Pasha, Americas relationship with Pak’s top spy agency had hit a new low.

“We look forward to having a good partnership with Pakistan moving forward. That’s what our focus is on. We believe it is critical for the region and for the mission in Afghanistan,” Kirby said.

However, he said that the US has nothing to say on the appointment and the decision.

“This is the decision that the civilian leadership of the nation of Pakistan get to make. It is not for us to make the comment one way or the other their appointments to high office,” said the Pentagon spokesman. (PTI)

Assad’s forces, rebels clash in southern border city

AMMAN, Mar 14: Heavily armed forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad fought today with rebels controlling a main district of the southern city of Deraa on the border with Jordan, opposition activists said.

Around 20 tanks and armoured vehicles surrounded the al-Balad area of city, which is right on the border, and fired anti-aircraft guns into buildings, activist Rami Abdelhaq told Reuters by phone from Deraa, where the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad began a year ago.

(agencies)

Wen attacks Tibetan govt in exile for trying to separate Tibet

BEIJING, Mar 14: Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao today branded the Tibetan government in exile in India as a “theocratic” establishment, and accused it of trying force the secession of Tibetan-inhabited areas from China.

The Premier also decried the recent suicides by monks and nuns in Tibetan-dominated areas, seeking the return of spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, as “radical” moves.

Answering questions for the first time on the situation in Tibet and the four neighbouring provinces, following over 25 self-immolation attempts, Wen said at his annual press conference today that China is opposed to such radical measures.

“The so-called Tibetan government in exile in Dharmashala in India is by nature a theocratic one, both under the direct control of the Dalai Lama or under his indirect influence,” he said in his last annual press conference before his expected retirement later this year.

“The purpose of it is to separate Tibet and the Tibetan inhabited areas, the four provinces from China. We have a firm position and principle on this matter,” he said.

“At the same time I should point out that all should recognise that Tibet and Tibetan inhabited areas of four provinces are inseparable part of China’s territory,” he said.

Referring to the recent spate of suicides and attempted self immolations, he said such behaviour was distressing.

“We are opposed to taking such radical moves which disturb and undermine social harmony. The young Tibetans are innocent. We are deeply distressed by their behaviour,” he said.

Chinese officials have blamed the Dalai Lama for instigating the suicides though Wen did not directly blame the Tibetan spiritual leader.

At the same time, Wen admitted that development in Tibetan areas had lagged behind compared to mainland China. (PTI)

Panetta says no need to alter Afghan war strategy

BASTION AIRFIELD, AFGHANISTAN, Mar 14: US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta arrived in Afghanistan on an unannounced visit today, as the United States tries to contain fallout from a massacre of 16 Afghan civilians by an American soldier.

Panetta’s two-day trip had been scheduled before Sunday’s shootings, but it takes on new meaning as political pressure mounts on Afghan and US officials over the unpopular war, now dragging into its eleventh year.

Panetta was scheduled to hold talks with Afghan leaders including President Hamid Karzai, as well as provincial officials in southern Helmand province during the visit.

He was also due to speak with American troops in Afghanistan, who could become the targets of any backlash over the killings of villagers, including nine children, by a rogue American soldier. The Afghan Taliban threatened to retaliate by beheading American troops.

Panetta’s arrival at Bastion Airfield in southern Helmand province came just a day after the first protests over Sunday’s massacre flared in the eastern city of Jalalabad.

Some 2,000 demonstrators chanted ‘Death to America’ and demanded Karzai reject a planned strategic pact that would allow US advisers and possibly special forces to remain in Afghanistan beyond 2014.

Panetta, the most senior US official to visit Afghanistan since the shootings, told reporters at the start of his trip that he believed the US strategy was working and would withstand fallout from the massacre.

‘I think we’re on the right path now. And what we’ve got to do is convince people that despite these kinds of events we ought not to allow these events to undermine that strategy,’ Panetta said on Monday. (agencies)

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Mamata tells PM to sack Trivedi

KOLKATA, Mar 14: On a day of dramatic developments, TMC tonight sought the removal of its seniormost nominee in the Union Cabinet Railway Minister Dinesh Trivedi hours after he proposed a hike in railway passenger fares, plunging the UPA Government in an unusual political crisis.Angered by Trivedi’s proposal contained in the Railway Budget which he presented to Parliament earlier in the day, mercurial TMC boss and West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee wrote to Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh late in the night seeking removal of Trivedi and his replacement by Mukul Roy, currently Minister of State for Shipping who had earlier served in the Railway Ministry.”Yes, I have written to the Prime Minister seeking his replacement with Mukul Roy, another Union Minister,” Banerjee told reporters

J&K gets bridge factory, Institute for Tunnel & Bridge Engineering Trivedi predicts delay in Kashmir rail link due to less funding Train to reach Katra, Banihal in upcoming financial year Udhampur-Rohila Express converted into tri-weekly

By Sanjeev Pargal

JAMMU, Mar 14: Railways Minister Dinesh Trivedi said today that prestigious rail project to Kashmir valley was likely to be delayed for want of adequate funding as he pointed out that Railways was passing through financial crunch and a very tough period. However, he announced electrification of Udhampur-Srinagar-Baramulla rail line in the 12th five year plan, which was going to start from April 1 this year. Mr Trivedi also sanctioned a bridge factory and an Institute for Tunnel and Bridge Engineering for Jammu and Kashmir. Though no new train was announced for Jammu or Udhampur, the Railways Minister said that frequency of Delhi Sarai Rohilla Express, a weekly train between Udhampur-Jammu-Rohilla has been upgraded to thrice a week. In his budget speech in Lok Sabha today, a copy of which has been accessed by the Excelsior, Dinesh Trivedi announced that an Institute for Tunnel and Bridge Engineering would be set up at Jammu. “A bridge factory would come up in Jammu and Kashmir’’, he said.

How funds of ` 700 Cr NRHM are plundered in J&K-(III) All firms’ tenders filled up by same person Identical rates quoted by four CPSEs Manufacturing-specific price preference benefit applied also to ‘marketing’ activity of firms

Excelsior Special Correspondent

JAMMU, Mar 14: Funds to the tune of ` 4.37 Crore were separately released and transferred electronically to Director of Health Services Jammu (DHJ) and Director of Health Services Kashmir (DHK) for purchase of the drug kits for thousands of health institutions and ASHA workers in Jammu and Kashmir, in 2010-11. While as the process progressed ‘smoothly’ in Jammu, hiccups came up in Srinagar. Head of the Srinagar-based Purchase Committee and then Principal of Government Medical College Srinagar, Dr Shahida Mir, refused to be part of the NRHM loot-and-scoot. Vide his letter No: DHSK/Kits/2010-11/1775-77 dated 12-01-2010, Dr Amin Wani asked the Purchase Committee in Srinagar to assess and approve the rates for the supplies. After a meeting, Srinagar-based Purchase Committee communicated its decision to DHK through its Member-Secretary, vide No: PS/AIJ/MCS/1847-48 dated 25-01-2011. It reads: “It was unanimously decided that in view of the guidelines referred to in the letter from Govt of India, Mission Director National Rural Health Mission can purchase the drugs as per rules”