Category: News & Entertainment

The Commonwealth Games A Man-Made Disaster

Posted by – September 24, 2010

XIX Commonwealth Games 2010 Delhi The Commonwealth Games A Man Made Disaster

The Commonwealth Games 2010 have been a stupendous PR disaster for a country that likes to think that it is racing alongside China. What was to have been New Delhi’s response to Beijing’s Olympics, has become a 21st century epitaph of ancient Indian specialities such as corruption, nepotism, inefficiency, unaccounability and worse. More

India’s Maoist Insurgency

Posted by – July 19, 2010

cpi naxabari 3 1024x629 Indias Maoist Insurgency

On May 28, an overnight passenger train en route to Mumbai derailed, roughly 55 miles southwest of Kolkata. It was then hit by a freight train barreling along the parallel track, killing over a 100 people and injuring over 200 passengers.

The incident is believed to be the latest in a rash of violent attacks by left-wing Maoist rebels, also known as the Naxalites. As investigators try to ascertain whether an explosive was used to blow up a section of the tracks or whether tracks were removed by the miscreants manually, the Indian government is devising strategies to contain the growing insurgency. More

The ISKCON Theme Park In Bangalore

Posted by – June 21, 2010

10june20kpn85 1024x657 The ISKCON Theme Park In Bangalore

“Scandal” and “controversy” are the middle names of ISKCON.

Weighed down by the dum maaro dum bestowed inflicted on it by Bollywood, the cult has been accused of being a CIA outfit; its gurukuls have been infamous for sex scandals, child abuse, molestation and homosexual abuse; there have been whispers of its founder being murdered.

It falls to a pattern, therefore, that ISKCON’s proposed Krishna Lila theme park on Kanakapura Road in Bangalore, for which the bhumi pooja took place today (in picture), should have been begun on a litigious note, with charges of land grabbing flying around between ISKCON and the Congress’ D.K.Shiva Kumar.

Money for the 28 acre, Rs 350 crore “family edutainment” theme park inspired by Disneyland, and aimed at weaning Indian kids away from western comic-strip icons Superman and Spiderman, will be raised by developing a “heritage township” on the 42.5 acres near the hillock.

The Matadors: Ordonez Brothers

Posted by – June 13, 2010

 

THE MATADORS ORDÓÑEZ 1 The Matadors: Ordonez Brothers

Cayetano Ordóñez—or El Niño de las Palmas—on whom Ernest Hemingway modeled Pedro Romero in The Sun Also Rises, sired a son named Antonio. After his father, Antonio was perhaps the greatest bullfighter of the 20th Century. Hemingway followed Antonio’s battle with Luis Miguel Dominguín in the summer of 1959, and wrote a fine book about it called The Dangerous Summer. Antonio’s son, Francisco “Paquirri” Rivera, was killed by a bull in Pozoblanco in 1984. Paquirri’s sons, both quite fine looking, now fight bulls in Spain. More

Mangalore Air Crash Tragic Fallout of Criminal Negligence of Planning & Regulatory Authorities

Posted by – May 26, 2010

10may22kpn771 1024x609 Mangalore Air Crash Tragic Fallout of Criminal Negligence of Planning & Regulatory Authorities

An Air India Express Boeing 737-800 aircraft arriving from Dubai with 167 on board 2010 tragically crashed at Mangalore International Airport at 6.30 am today (22 May 2010). It is reported that the plane overshot the runway while landing and fell over a cliff resulting in this disastrous crash. Very few are known to have survived this horrific crash.

This was no accident, but the direct result of deliberate failure of officials at the highest level in the Director General of Civil Aviation, Airports Authority of India, Ministry of Civil Aviation and the Government of Karnataka for allowing this 2nd runway to be built in criminal negligence of applicable norms and standards. Such a strong charge is being made as the likelihood of this kind of a crash (the worst case scenario) was predicted. A series of Public Interest Litigations were fought by the undersigned to stop the construction of this 2nd runway in Mangalore airport on grounds that the design simply did not conform to the most basic national and international standards of airport design. The PILs also highlighted that the airport does not conform with the most minimum safeguards for emergency situations – particularly during landings and takeoffs, and could not have emergency approach roads within a kilometre on all sides of the airport as required. More

The Bloom Box: The Energy Breakthrough

Posted by – May 21, 2010

bloomenergy1 The Bloom Box: The Energy Breakthrough

In the world of energy, the Holy Grail is a power source that’s inexpensive and clean, with no emissions. Well over 100 start-ups in Silicon Valley are working on it, and one of them, Bloom Energy, is about to make public its invention: a little power plant-in-a-box they want to put literally in your backyard.
You’ll generate your own electricity with the box and it’ll be wireless. The idea is to one day replace the big power plants and transmission line grid, the way the laptop moved in on the desktop and cell phones supplanted landlines. It has a lot of smart people believing and buzzing, even though the company has been unusually secretive

K.R. Sridhar, founder of the Silicon Valley clean tech start-up Bloom Energy, says he’d like to see his company’s Bloom Box fuel cell technology lighting up most American households within the next 10 years. More

Armani Hotel Dubai Opens

Posted by – May 2, 2010

3539nwp Armani Hotel Dubai Opens

The world’s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa, got its first first landmark tenant this week — an exclusive hotel by designer Giorgio Armani.

Armani Hotel Dubai, the Italian couturier’s first foray into the world of luxury living, occupies 10 levels of the 800-meter, 160-storey tower and has 160 rooms.

The upscale design includes walls decorated with handmade Florentine leather, Japanese tatami on the floors and bathrooms featuring green Brazilian marble.

Of course, if you want to live the Armani dream you’ll need a fashionably large bank balance: Prices range from $760 a night for a room to more than $2,500 for some suites.

More

International Surrogacy Finds India

Posted by – April 27, 2010

10india large3 International Surrogacy Finds India

Yonatan Gher and his partner, who are Israeli, plan eventually to tell their child about being made in India, in the womb of a stranger, with the egg of a Mumbai housewife they picked from an Internet lineup.  The embryo was formed in January in an Indian fertility clinic about 2,500 miles from the couple’s home in Tel Aviv, produced by doctors who have begun specializing in surrogacy services for couples from around the world. 

 “The child will know early on that he or she is unique, that it came into the world in a very special way,” said Mr. Gher, 29, a communications officer for the environmental group Greenpeace.  An enterprise known as reproductive outsourcing is a new but rapidly expanding business in India. Clinics that provide surrogate mothers for foreigners say they have recently been inundated with requests from the United States and Europe, as word spreads of India’s mix of skilled medical professionals, relatively liberal laws and low prices. More

How Gold Pays For Congo’s Deadly War

Posted by – March 23, 2010

gold1 How Gold Pays For Congos Deadly War

The top-rated U.S. news program “60 Minutes” says gold and other minerals mined in the DRC pay for weapons used in “The deadliest war since World War II,” killing five million people so far.
A report aired nationally on the television news magazine “60 Minutes” Sunday by CBS News called for the monitoring of conflict gold in the Democratic Republic of Congo, based upon the already established Kimberley Process for conflict or blood diamonds.
In a recently released statement, the Jewelers of American organization warned the piece would “‘attempt to call the integrity of the entire gold jewelry supply into question, ‘portraying the jewelry industry as having failed to act responsibly in the face of a well-documented, ongoing crisis.” More

Istanbul: Ali Taptik

Posted by – March 3, 2010

 Istanbul: Ali Taptik

Istanbul is a 100km megalopolis that is home to almost 15 million people, doubling every decade. In 2007 there were 48 regeneration areas listed in Istanbul, which will result in the demolition of 1 million buildings, relocating huge numbers of people in order to make room for expensive residential developments and office and retails complexes.

Self-taught photographer and architecture graduate Ali Taptik has taken to the streets of his hometown to capture a city in flux. Here are images of the neighborhoods of Sulukule, Tarablasi, Gulensu-Gecekondu and the new high rise landscape in Atasehir. More