ISLAMABAD, Apr 18: India and Afghanistan failed to agree on transit fee for gas passing through Afghan territory under the USD 7.6-billion Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan- India (TAPI) pipeline project, officials said today.
Consequently, Islamabad and New Delhi too could not agree on the transit fee for the segment of the pipeline passing through Pakistan, which has linked its fee structure to any India-Afghanistan agreement.
Technical teams of Afghanistan, India and Pakistan held talks for two days in Islamabad.
Pakistan’s Petroleum Secretary Ejaz Chaudhry was quoted by The News daily as saying that the parleys had ended inconclusively yesterday.
However, Indian officials told that the talks were held in a positive atmosphere and there was considerable progress on all major issues.
The three countries were trying to settle their differences on the issue of transit fees, the officials said.
Afghanistan will charge Pakistan and India a transit fee for gas passing through the pipeline from Turkmenistan and Pakistan will charge India the same amount as the Afghan side.
Chaudhry said Afghanistan had demanded 54 cents per MMBTU (million British Thermal Unit) as the transit fee but this was rejected by India. Subsequently, the Afghan side made a demand of 50 cents per MMBTU and India responded with an offer of 47 cents, he said.
The difference between the two sides was just three cents per MMBTU and could be settled if there was political support from the Indian and Afghan leadership and “a push from the US”, which is supporting the project, the Dawn quoted its sources as saying. (PTI)
TAPI project: India, Afghanistan fail to agree on transit fee
NAV YUG HR. SEC. SCHOOL
1) LECTURERS/TEACHERS IN CHEMISTRY/MATH/BIO/COMPUTER SCIENCE
2) B.SC. B.ED.
CONTACT WITH RESUME/
EXPERIENCE/PHOTOGRAPH
2581417/9419195110
URGENTLY REQUIRED
4 Receptionist (10000-12000) (Exp in Jewellery)
Marketing Exectives
2 Receptionist (7000-8000)
10 Telecallers (6000-7000)
Drivers ( 6000-7000)
Security Guards (5000-6000)
Cook (4000-5000)
Electrical Engineers ( 10000-20000)
Mechanical Engineers (10000-20000) ITI Fitters, Electricians, Store Keepers, Waitors
9018043208
90862-75880
Urgently Required
A Leading Manpower consultancy requires professionals
1) Mechanical Engg’s (M) for Pharma Degree/Diploma, 5-7yrs Exp ( Maintance) of injection Machinery-Sal-3 lacs to 5 lacs.
2) Store Manager(M) for MNC, Graduate/MBA with Material Management, 8-15 yrs Exp. Sal- 5 lacs etc
3) HR Executive (M/F) for Pharma- MBA (HR)
2yrs Exp. Knowledge of PF, ESIC, Sal- 2 lacs to 3 lacs
4) Excise Incharge (M) For MNC , Graduate with good knowledge of Central Excise, 6-8 yrs exp. Sal- 3 lacs to 4.5 lacs.
Synergy Consultants
12B/C, Gandhi Nagar Jmu. (o) 0191-2434323,
(M) 9419310971
RADIO KASHMIR JAMMU PRASAR BHARATI BROADCASTING CORPORATION OF INDIA RADIO KASHMIR JAMMU
Sealed quotation waxed or cello taped are invited for providing services of Skilled, Semi-Skilled and Ordinary categories of Manpower for a period of one year. Interested parties, firms, contractors, Dealers fulfilling the criteria may collect the tender form on the payment of Rs 100/- (non-refundable) in cash or Bank draft or Postal order from Assistant Engineer (Stores), Radio Kashmir, Jammu between 10.00 am to 3.00 pm on any working day latest by 23rd April 2012. The crossed Bank draft has to be prepared in favour of Drawing & Disbursing Officer, Radio Kashmir Jammu. Duly completed tender form should be submitted upto 1 pm of 24th April 2012 and tenders will be opened on the same day at 3.30 pm in the presence of tenderers (if they choose to be). Tenderers will be opened by Asstt. Engineer (Stores) in presence of Director (Engg.), Radio Kashmir Jammu. The Competent Authority i.e Director (Engg) reserves the right to reject any of the tenders without assigning any reason thereof.
Sd/-
Sanjay Koul
Assistant Engineer (Stores)
For Director (Engg.)
No : JMU-1 (2)/2012-13/CL-E
Dated : 12/04/2012
South Korea welcomes UN action on North Korea rocket
SEOUL, Apr 17: South Korea has expressed support for the UN Security Council decision to tighten sanctions on North Korea for its botched rocket launch, and called for Pyongyang to refrain from further provocations.
The UN Security Council yesterday ordered tightened sanctions on the communist North over its rocket launch last week and warned of new action if the isolated state stages a nuclear test.
Seoul’s foreign ministry, in a statement released late yesterday, said it supported the move and urged the North to “stop provocations that could threaten peace and security of the Korean peninsula and Northeast Asia.”
“The North should clearly realise that the international community” had adopted “a resolute and unified stance on its (rocket) launch,” it said, and also called for Pyongyang to honour existing UN resolutions.
The impoverished but nuclear-armed North, led by its new young ruler Kim Jong-Un, Friday launched what it claimed was a satellite-carrying rocket to mark the centenary of the birth of its late founding president, Kim Il-Sung.
Countries including the US and the South view it as a disguised long-range ballistic missile test banned under UN resolutions.
The launch—staged amid widespread international condemnation—failed when the rocket exploded two minutes after blast-off.
The 15-member UN Security Council—including the North’s closest ally China and nuclear-armed Pakistan—“strongly condemned” the launch in a statement which highlighted “grave security concerns” in Asia.
The council ordered new “entities and items” to be added within two weeks to the sanctions committee list created after North Korea staged nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009. Both were staged one to three months after missile tests.
It also ordered the sanctions committee to revise the individuals and North Korean firms subject to asset freezes under the international measures.
North Korea has not issued yet an official response to the new UN actions. (AGENCIES)
China endorses strong UN statement against North Korea
BEIJING, Apr 17: China has endorsed the strongly worded UN Security Council statement condemning the botched rocket launch by its close ally North Korea and called for more dialogue and consultations.
The UN Security Council statement was a result of consultations by all members of the body and reflects the basic consensus of the international community, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesman, Liu Weimin said.
“It has been proven that dialogue and consultations are the only correct way to solve problems,” Liu said in a statement.
His remarks came after the 15-nation UN body issued a presidential statement stating that North Korea’s failed April 13 rocket launch has raised “grave security concerns” and demanded that Pyongyang fully comply with relevant Security Council resolutions.
Liu said China participated in the Security Council consultations in a responsible and constructive way and it believes that the Council should make “more efforts to promote dialogue and maintain peace and stability on the Korean peninsula”.
The Chinese government believes it is in the common interest of all relevant parties to resume the six-party talks and continue to make efforts to denuclearise the peninsula, he said.
“China is willing to keep in close touch with all parties concerned to push the six-party talks forward and make unswerving efforts to realise long-lasting peace on the peninsula,” state-run Xinhua quoted him as saying.
Analysts said Beijing’s endorsement of the resolution indicates China was not pleased with the North Korean government’s decision to go ahead with the satellite launch, jeopardising its recent agreement with US to get 21000 tonnes food aid.
Washington has cancelled that agreement following the missile launch to put a satellite into orbit, which failed midway.
Chinese officials also indicated that Beijing was trying to prevail on the North Korean government to not go for the much speculated nuclear test to compensate for the failed launch of the satellite. (PTI)
Fire prompts evacuation at nuclear research lab in Idaho
SALMON, IDAHO, Apr 17: A welder’s torch ignited a small fire on the roof of a building at nuclear research laboratory in Idaho on Monday, prompting an evacuation, but no one was hurt and no radioactive material was involved, lab officials said.
Nearly 100 employees were cleared from the building, part of a complex that includes facilities housing spent nuclear fuel and radioactive waste at the Idaho National Laboratory, the US Energy Department’s leading facility for nuclear reactor technology.
The fire damaged 0.4 square meter of the roof and was extinguished about 2-1/2 hours after smoke was first detected, the lab said in a statement yesterday.
No radioactive material was affected or involved in the fire, and there was no release of radiation, the lab said.
The complex of buildings where the fire erupted sits near the edge of the sprawling 890-square-mile lab site in the high desert of eastern Idaho, about 61 km fr om the city of Idaho Falls.
In November 2011, 16 Idaho lab workers in an adjacent building were exposed to radiation during an accident that occurred while they were preparing to remove an old plutonium fuel cell from a decommissioned reactor.
The building whose roof caught fire yesterday houses research laboratories but no spent fuel or radioactive waste, lab spokeswoman Misty Benjamin told Reuters.
Several thousand employees and contractors work at the Idaho National Laboratory, the US Energy Department’s leading facility for nuclear reactor technology. (Agencies)
Faith motivates tongue piercing in Nepal village
BODE, NEPAL, Apr 17: Pressing his palms together, Jujubhai Basan Shrestha raises his hands, acknowledging greetings from the cheering crowd of devotees and onlookers.
Sporting a white turban, the 31-year-old sits on a chair as a man inserts a 33 cm metal skewer through his tongue in a centuries-old ritual in this poor settlement, 12 km east of Kathmandu.
The scene at the weekend, on the second day of Nepal’s New Year, was unique to Bode, a sleepy village of 8,000 people from the devout Newar community, who are thought to have been the early settlers of the saucer-like Kathmandu valley.
A crowd of thousands jostled for a glimpse as young dancers twirled in the dust of vermillion powder, beating cymbals and banging drums in a frenzied performance.
‘This is to keep our culture alive,’ said Shrestha, who teaches fine arts in a local school and spoke to Reuters before the ritual started. Behind him, his wife sat on a bed and painted the eyes of their three-month-old son with kohl paste.
‘Performance of this ritual saves the inhabitants of Bode from disasters like earthquake, severe drought and famine.’
Some medical experts say tongue piercing may result in big gaps between front teeth or complications like infections.
But Shrestha, who had his tongue pierced for the fourth time on Saturday, said his motivation came from his faith and he had not experienced any problems so far.
‘I always wanted to marry before I started piercing my tongue,’ Shrestha said. ‘Now I have a wife as well as a son. The god fulfils your wishes.’
MYTH AND FAITH
The origin of the ritual lies with tales of a devil that harassed the residents of Bode more than 1,600 years ago.
Legend has it that a religious scholar captured the evil spirit through his tantra, or the knowledge of ancient Hindu and Buddhist texts, keeping him in custody for several days.
The spirit was freed after he had his tongue pierced in punishment and swore to protect the villagers from disasters. The ritual is believed to have been repeated every year since.
In preparation, Shrestha abstained from sex for two days and fasted for 48 hours. On Saturday, he shaved his head.
The ritual was performed in front of a small temple of the elephant god, Ganesh, worshipped for good luck.
‘There is no pain, no scar and no bleeding, although it looks chilling,’ said Krishna Chandra Baga, the man who inserted the metal rod through Shrestha’s tongue.
‘This is due to the divine power. Otherwise how can this be possible,’ said Baga, who had his own tongue pierced 12 times.
In Bode, women in red saris with thin streaks of crimson red powder in their hairlines threw auspicious offerings of rice and flowers at Shrestha, who went round the village for over two hours before the metal rod was pulled out.
The scene wowed tourists.
‘It is scary but very impressive,’ said Sophie, a 31-year-old French tourist from Paris. ‘You have to be very strong in your mind to do this. I would be really scared.’
(agencies)
Romney leads Obama in first national tracking poll
WASHINGTON, Apr 17: Presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney leads President Barack Obama by two points in the first national daily tracking poll in run up to November presidential elections.
While Romney is supported by 47 per cent of national registered voters, Obama has backing 45 per cent in the inaugural Gallup Daily tracking results from April 11-15. However, this comes within the three per cent margin of error.
Notably, 65-year-old Romney is yet to be formally declared the Republican presidential nominee.
Gallup said this initial report is based on interviews with 2,265 registered voters, and highlights the potential closeness of this year’s race, with Romney and Obama essentially in a statistical tie.
Gallup’s previous general election trial heat, from a national poll conducted March 25-26, showed Obama with a slight 49 per cent to 45 per cent lead over Romney.
However, according to the Real Clear Politics average of polls, Obama leads Romney by three per cent nationally, although the average doesn’t take into account the latest Gallup numbers. (PTI)