25 April 2010

Fencing of India-Myanmar Border in Progress

indo burma border Imphal, Apr 25 : Fencing along the India-Myanmar international border at Manipur’s Moreh town is in progress to check illegal drug trafficking and movement of militants.

“The project is likely to benefit both Myanmar and India. Drug trafficking, human trafficking and illegal trafficking will be controlled,” said Ginsei Lhungdim, General Secretary, Hill Tribal Council.

The states of Manipur, Nagaland and Mizoram have been identified as a transit point for illegal trafficking by the United Nations Drug Control Programme (UNDCP) and International Narcotic Control Board (INCB).

“Government of India had promised to have Myanmar’s government in setting up Border liaison office near the border area. The objectives are building up bilateral friendship. Then Myanmar’s officials desire to be taught the Queen’s language, English,” said Ginsei Lhungdim.

“They also want to settle petty border criminal issues at the local level itself without forwarding the matter to national capital,” he added.

The first phase of surveying the border fencing work was taken along the porous Indo-Myanmar border in 2009.

The fencing work kicked off this year on February 2 after the completion of the boundary survey by the Survey of India.

According to a trade treaty between India and Myanmar, a stretch of 40 kilometers on each side of the border is totally open. No visa and other documents are required to cross the Indo-Myanmar border in this area.

ANI

24 April 2010

10 Cellphones With Highest Radiation

10 Cellphones with highest radiation

Do cellphones cause brain cancer, dementia or have other side effects?

Though there have been numerous studies on this, the verdict remains unclear. For, some studies reveal long-term side effects of cellphone usage, others term them as mere hype.

However, it is largely certain that cellphones do emit radiation. In fact, some analysts are now of the view that all cellphones should compulsorily display their radiation levels.

US-based environmental group EWG recently published a list of phones with high levels of RF radiation. The list, which appeared on CNET, includes some of the most popular smartphone models from companies like LG, Motorola, Blackberry and Samsung.

The study is based on SAR or Specific Absorption Rate. SAR according to the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association is "a way of measuring the quantity of radio frequency (RF) energy that is absorbed by the body."

Here's over to the 10 mobile phones with highest radiation.

Motorola V195

Motorola V195

Sporting a clamshell design, low-end handset Motorola V195 packs most basic features including Bluetooth, Instant Messaging and speakerphone
SAR: 1.6 W/kg








Motorola Zine ZN5

Motorola Zine ZN5

Motorola Zine ZN5 packs a 5 megapixel camera with auto-focus, Xenon flash, optimised settings for low-light environment and red-eye reduction. It also includes stereo Bluetooth and Wi-Fi.
SAR: 1.59 W/kg














Motorola Rival

Motorola Rival

Featuring a full QWERTY keyboard, Motorola Rival has a 2 megapixel camera, microSD memory slot, VCAST support and GPS support.
SAR: 1.59 W/kg















Kyocera Jax S1300

Kyocera Jax S1300

Bar-style Kyocera Jax S1300's key features include SMS, voice memos, speakerphone, a 250-contact directory, 200 minutes of talktime and 8.3 days standby.
SAR: 1.55 W/kg
















Motorola VU204

Motorola VU204

Clamshell Motorola VU204 features a 1.8-inch screen. The phone offers stereo Bluetooth, GPS, Mobile email and speakerphone.

















BlackBerry Curve 8330

BlackBerry Curve 8330

Featuring a 2 megapixel camera, BlackBerry Curve 8330 packs QWERTY keyboard, built-in MP3, GPS receiver, Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP and a microSD card slot.
SAR: 1.54 W/kg















Motorola Crush

Motorola Crush

Sporting a 2.8-inch touchscreen display with 240400-pixels resolution, Motorola Crush has a virtual QWERTY keyboard, 2 megapixel camera, tap-to-silence feature, Bluetooth connectivity, music player, 3.5mm headset jack and microSD card support upto 16GB.
SAR: 1.53 W/kg
















Pantech Matrix

Pantech Matrix

Dual-slider Pantech Matrix has a 1.3 megapixel camera, Bluetooth and video share support.
SAR: 1.52 W/kg
















Nokia E71x

Nokia E71x

Nokia E71x features a full QWERTY keyboard, Microsoft Exchange Email synchronization, Wi-Fi, Music Player, GPS, Full HTML Web browser with Flash support and PDF reader.
SAR: 1.53 W/kg
















LG Rumor 2

LG Rumor 2

LG Rumor 2 packs a slide-out QWERTY keypad, QVGA display, 1.3 megapixel camera, a removable backplate and choice of Black Titanium and Blue shells.

SAR: 1.51 W/kg


















BlackBerry Bold

BlackBerry Bold

With a 2.44-inch TFT LCD display, BlackBerry Bold features a full-QWERTY keyboard. Bold supports 3G HSDPA networks and is equipped with 624 MHz processor and 256 MB on-board Flash memory. The phone has a built-in GPS, Wi-Fi, 3.2 megapixel camera with auto focus, 2X digital zoom, flash and video recording.

SAR: 1.51 W/kg

Study Uses YouTube To Examine Effect Of 'Salvia' Drug

SALVIA It's tough to secure funding to study the effects of salvia divinorum, the intense, quick-acting and legal hallucinogenic plant growing in popularity among U.S. teenagers. But, as some scientists realized, there are plenty of test subjects publicly recording their experiences for free.

Via DoseNation, a new study published in the scientific journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence analyzed the reactions of salvia users who posted their trips on YouTube.

The use of free, loosely verified research data may well be a growing trend. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the salvia study's authors conclude that their work "demonstrates the feasibility and shortcomings of using YouTube videos to assess emerging drugs and drug effects."

The study's authors used fairly rigorous criteria to select the videos included in their research. By contrast, here is a small, random, and frankly unscreened sampling:

Kelly Brook Not Unhappy Stranded Due to Volcano

Kelly tops up her tan in a pink bikini

Soaking up the sun on a deserted beach, Kelly Brook looks like she couldn't be happier to be stranded in exotic climes.

Spending a few days longer at a faraway beach resort than planned due to the flight delays caused by the Icelandic volcanic, the 30-year-old beauty made the most of the sunshine.

Wearing a pink string bikini, the model showed off her hourglass figure as she enjoyed a cooling dip in the sea.

Kelly Brook pink bikini

Fabulous in fuchsia: Kelly Brook shows off her amazing figure in a hot pink bikini as she is stranded in exotic climes due to the current flight disruption

With a freelance job as a model and actress and access to plenty of disposable income to cover the spiralling cost of extended holidays, Brook is obviously not in the same desperate need to get home as many of other Brits.

As she spent the day on the beach alone, Brook enjoyed a swim in the sea before getting engrossed in M Scott Peck's The Road Less Travelled.

Missing out on all the fun was her rugby star boyfriend Danny Cipriani, who is preparing for his big move Down Under to play for the Melbourne Rebels.

Brook is planning to follow Cipriani to Australia, splitting her time between London and Melbourne.

 Kelly Brook pink bikini on beach Kelly Brook pink bikini on beach

Shapely: The pink bikini made the most of Brook' hourglass figure

Cipriani told the Mail On Sunday's Live magazine earlier this month: 'I’m really excited that Kelly’s coming with me. Leaving her wasn’t an option.

'Our pug Rocky is coming too. We’ve put him in quarantine and got him his own passport.'

Brook and Cipriani started dating in September 2008, just weeks after she ended her four year relationship with American actor Billy Zane.

While the couple are evidently serious about each other, toyboy Cipriani, 22, isn't quite ready to settle down.

Kelly Brook pink bikini on beach

It's a hard life being stranded in the sun: Brook sits down at her lounger as she prepares of an afternoon of sunbathing

He said: 'We're happy as we are at the moment.

'All she cares about is whether I'm happy. She's been amazing about me moving (to Australia). And she's going to help me settle in and spend as much time there as she can.'

Brook has been a frequent visit to Los Angeles in recent months as she plans to the release of her next film role in Piranha 3D.

Explaining the film, she said: 'It's just a big, fun B-movie - lots of boobs, blood, gore and drama. I don't think I'll be getting any Oscars for it.

'In Piranha, there's lots of cool people. It's about a lot of fish that eat a lot of buff boys and big-boobied girls. It's all set during spring break.

'I'd love to do more films. I really enjoy it. I love working in Los Angeles, and I like working on films.'

[via dailymail ]

Evo Morales: Homosexuality is Caused By Eating Chicken

evo_morales Bolivian President Evo Morales attends the World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth session in Tiquipaya, on the outskirts of Cochabamba.

By David Mercado

When Bolivian President Evo Morales took the stage to inaugurate the World People's Summit on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth on Tuesday, April 20, in Cochabamba, he gave his thousands of politically correct attendees a surprise. Somewhere between appealing for an international climate-change court and questioning why the U.N. still uses plastic cups, Morales went after genetically modified foods — by making a comment that some think meant that hormones cause homosexuality.

"When we talk about chicken, it's pumped full of female hormones," Morales said, "and so when men eat this chicken, they stray from being men" (literally tienen desviaciones en su ser como hombres in Spanish). The comment went over non–Spanish speakers' heads, so it wasn't until sundown that it rippled its way through the 35,000-participant gathering. By the next morning, the international press had gotten wind of it, Bolivian newspapers had plastered it on their front pages and Spain's national LGBT federation had issued a statement calling the comment "homophobic."

The Morales government swears he meant no harm. "He made no mention of sexuality," the Foreign Relations Ministry said on Thursday, April 22, in response. "Rather, he said that eating chicken that has hormones changes our own bodies. This point of view has been confirmed by scientists, and even the European Union has prohibited the use of some hormones in food," the government asserts, citing studies that have shown that sexual hormones in food can cause genital abnormalities in boys. The document has not assuaged all critics — especially since the Latin left, which Morales represents, has historically been considered less than sympathetic to homosexuals — but it has taken some of the heat off Morales.

Bolivia's President also called Coca-Cola the poor man's Drano. "If the plumber comes to your house and can't get the job done with all his tools," Morales quipped, "have him pour Coca-Cola down the clogged toilet, and problem solved." This jab was better received, since Bolivians think the beverage company unfairly benefits from the country's traditional coca leaf. The leaf, an integral part of Bolivian indigenous culture as well as the base ingredient for cocaine, is banned outside the Andes. Bolivia therefore can't export its popular tea, for example. However, the U.N. Convention on Narcotics offers an exception when the leaf is used as a "flavoring agent." The Coca-Cola company refuses to disclose any part of its secret formula, but reporting suggests the coca leaf is in the recipe. Morales may have timed this remark on purpose: just last week, a small company in Bolivia introduced "Coca-Colla" into the local market (Colla refering to the native Andean highland people), a new energy soda that proudly uses coca as a main ingredient.

Though the off-color remarks took center stage in the press, summit participants chalked them up to quirky humor and kept focus on what few consider a laughing matter — the growing climate crisis. Morales called for this "people's" summit back in January after what he and many in the global south saw as unwillingness on the part of developed-world leaders to set out a sustainable path in Copenhagen. Workshops and panels in Cochabamba echoed with harsh criticism of the Copenhagen Accord's back-door birth and complaints that it falls short of what's needed to curb climate problems.

"There is a cruel irony to climate change," Naomi Klein, author of the international bestsellers No Logo and The Shock Doctrine and a participant in the People's Summit, tells TIME. "The poorest nations that did not create the problem are the ones who are feeling its effects most," she says, explaining that experts are predicting that the developing world is going to suffer 75% of the effects of climate change.

Bolivia is an example of this irony. The Andean nation's millenniums-old glaciers are melting down to bare rock because of global warming that the country's 9 million residents did little to create. Scientists in Bolivia say its ice masses have lost 50% of their volume in the past 40 years alone. But this goes beyond mourning the slow death of great natural beauty. These glaciers provide 20% of the drinking water for two of Bolivia's largest cities, La Paz and El Alto, as well the surrounding countryside, which combined make up almost a quarter of the country's population.

Moreover, this may be a warning for everyone, says Dirk Hoffman, head of the climate-change program at Bolivia's largest university, Universidad Mayor de San Andrés. He considers the glaciers a kind of environmental miner's canary: "They are extremely sensitive, and so when they show their distress by melting, they are telling us that the rest of the planet is in great danger."

Since Bolivia is suffering the consequences of a sequence of conditions it did not cause, there's a debt to be paid, say some activists. For this nation, that could mean funding projects like the construction of reservoirs. But, the idea goes, climate reparations are about more than just aid. They're about industrialized countries accepting responsibility by taking actions within their borders to curb the problems — for example, pursuing 40% emissions reductions from 1990 levels to 2020 rather than the 13% to 19% promised in Copenhagen. This debt idea has been met with harsh resistance. Todd Stern, the top U.S. climate negotiator in Copenhagen, says reparations on the scale that activists advocate — a cool $400 billion — is "wildly unrealistic."

Back on Tuesday's inaugural stage, speakers understood their uphill battle. As the smoke from the ceremonial coca-leaf offering floated into the late-morning air, representatives from Brazil, Nigeria and India said it was time the world chose between survival and destruction. Attendees at the vast gathering showed tenacity despite the challenges. As Alaska Inter-Tribal Council member Faith Gemmil noted in her welcoming address, "Our people have faced destructive policies for centuries. And we are still here."

[ via time ]

Bret Michaels Has Massive Brain Hemorrhage, Rushed To Hospital

BRET-MICHAELS Los Angeles, Apr 24 : Bret Michaels is in critical condition suffering from a brain hemorrhage, his publicist said Friday. Joann Mignano, Michaels' New York-based publicist, confirmed a report on People magazine's website that said the former Poison frontman was rushed to intensive care late Thursday after a severe headache. The report said doctors discovered bleeding at the base of his brain stem. Mignano said tests are being conducted but did not know where he was being treated.

The 47-year-old glam-rock reality TV star had an emergency appendectomy at a private care facility for diabetics last week after complaining of stomach pains before he was scheduled to perform at Sea World in San Antonio, Texas. Michaels later wrote on his website that though the surgery "has taken its toll," doctors expected him to make a full recovery.

Michaels is currently a contestant on the third season of Donald Trump's NBC competitive reality show, "The Celebrity Apprentice." For the first six episodes, Michaels served as a lighting rod for the show's male team, avoiding being fired in the boardroom.

Trump said in a statement Friday that he was "deeply saddened" to hear of Michaels' condition.

"He's a great competitor and champion, and I hope he will be fine," Trump said.

Before joining "The Celebrity Apprentice," Michaels starred as the lothario on VH1's lusty reality dating series "Rock of Love" from 2007 to 2009. For three seasons, Michaels searched for the women of his dreams amid a sea of implants, tattoos and thongs.

He also served as a judge on the fifth season of the USA singing competition "Nashville Star" in 2007.

Manipur Divided Over Moral Policing

Restaurants come under the scanner

By Khelen Thokchom

An eatery in Imphal West.

Imphal, Apr 24 : In one cozy corner of a dimly lit restaurant in Imphal East, a love-struck young couple were lost in each other, whispering sweet nothings and warming up to the intimacy when a group of men barged in to cut short their moment of bliss.

The men were members of the Amateur Athletics Association, who said they decided to act in view of reports of alarming rise in “immoral activities” in restaurants, mostly by young lovers.

It is anybody’s guess that the term “immoral activities” is a euphemism to describe physical intimacy. But the love-struck — aghast at this moral policing by all and sundry — think otherwise.

As the young Manipuris look for some privacy, the restaurants and eateries have come up with an answer: dimly-lit cabins and even double-seater sofas.

The members of the association who caught the young couple in a “compromising position” at a restaurant in Porompat of Imphal East recently, said the lovers were “minors”. The association, which had carried out “raids” on 16 restaurants in the area, handed over the two to their parents.

“The two we caught on that day were only 17 years of age. We have reports that such activities are very frequent inside several restaurants and eating joints,” Irom Sundar, secretary of the association, said.

The association has warned the restaurant owners not to encourage such activities to make some extra money and even threatened to close down the errant eateries.

A women’s organisation, Ningol Khongchat Lup, Manipur, has issued a statement suggesting that all restaurants should put up at least one photograph of a role model of the state at the entrance to curb such unwanted activities.

Some restaurant owners admitted that some of these eateries “encouraged intimacy”, for which they charge extra.

“We are aware that some of the restaurants are encouraging such activities by giving the young customers private cabins. Such restaurants will have to be corrected,” the president of All Manipur Restaurants’ Association, Ch. Shamu Singh, said.

According to official records, 75 restaurants and fast food joints are registered with the Registrar of Societies under the Manipur Societies Registration Act, 1989.

But there are also several unregistered restaurants while newer ones are coming up in every nook and cranny.

The restaurant owners say lack of a controlling mechanism has led to the unwanted activities.

Till August 2007, the All Manipur Restaurants’ Association acted as the controlling authority. Problems began when the association was dissolved thereafter, as it could no longer bear extortion demands from various militant groups.

The association, which is now reviving itself, had convened a meeting of all restaurant owners on April 8 and asked them to get their eateries registered.

The association is also planning to conduct a survey on the existing restaurants and find out how they were conducting business.

Shamu Singh said the association would submit the findings to the Registrar of Societies and other authorities for necessary action.

A police official, who did not want to be identified, said the police force hardly had any time to pay attention to the functioning of restaurants as they were busy looking after the day-to-day law and order.

However, youngsters have argued that the hue and cry was unnecessary.

“I go to restaurants with my girlfriend just to be together for some time. We only want some privacy, not physical intimacy,” a teenager from Imphal West said.

Another youngster, a sophomore in a city college, who preferred anonymity, said since her parents did not want her to be seen with her boyfriend, she had no other option but to seek the privacy of a restaurant.

Social scientist M.C. Arun too strongly reacted against the so-called cleansing drive by the self-styled moral police.

“These people have no authority to conduct such raids, round up customers or even close down restaurants. Morality is a relative matter,” Arun added.

[ via Telegraph India ]

Lyngkhoi Maps Success Route

By Imtiaz Ahmed

Beningstar Lyngkhoi: Road to victory

Shillong, Apr 24 : It is sheer determination and hard work that helped Meghalaya runner Beningstar Lyngkhoi become the top ranked marathoner of the nation in barely four years’ time.

Taking up long distance running at the age of 23, a time when athletes usually give up competitive sports, Lyngkhoi, an Armyman by profession, dedicated himself fully to marathon and became the national champion.

The 27-year-old ace prospect for the Commonwealth Games spoke to The Telegraph on the sidelines of the ongoing 24th North East Games where he emerged the 5,000 and 10,000metre champion.

The following are excerpts:

On his career as a marathoner

I took up athletics at the age of 15. However, I discovered my ability in marathon at the age of 23. I started practicing on my own in the hilly terrain of Meghalaya. It helped me a lot to win various marathons across the country. I got exposure to professional and scientific coaching in the Army Sports Institute, Pune where I am still training.

On his prospects for the Delhi Commonwealth Games squad

We have two more rounds of qualifying competitions in Malaysia and Kenya in the next few months. The performance in those two events will be considered for the final selection. I hope to be able to live up to the expectations.

On the prospects of the Northeast in athletics

India as a whole has evolved as a force to reckon with in the last few years. We have started qualifying for the Olympics which shows the scenario has undoubtedly improved. The Northeast has some of the best talent in athletics in the entire nation. Our people are naturally gifted and the terrain grooms people in athletes. The need of the hour is tapping and grooming.

On the North East Games

It is one of the best platforms for any region to tap talent. It is the platform for most of the sportspersons of the region. It is true, however, that the meet is never organized the way it should be. The participating states should also start to take it more seriously and send better contingents. The organizers should now think of starting it at the junior level too.

On sports infrastructure in the Northeast

It is quite unfortunate that the region is rich in talent but very poor as far as infrastructure is concerned. When other states in the country have up to six synthetic tracks and infrastructure like modern stadia, equipment, we still have to make do with grass tracks and turf in our stadiums. The region as a whole should try to develop as much infrastructure as possible and I hope it will become a sporting powerhouse very soon.

[ via Telegraph India ]