Bomb in Iraq shrine city kills three, injures 54

The blast occurred despite intense security measures put in place across Iraq in the lead up to Sunday's vote. –Photo by AP

NAJAF: A car bomb killed two Iranian pilgrims and an Iraqi and wounded 54 other people in the central Iraq city of Najaf Saturday, the eve of parliamentary elections, police and a hospital official said.

A local official said the bomb exploded about 500 metres from the shrine to Imam Ali, son-in-law of the Prophet Mohammed and one of Shia Islam's most revered figures, reports AFP.

The blast occurred despite intense security measures put in place across Iraq in the lead up to Sunday's vote, which has already been marked by violent attacks in Baghdad and the central city of Baquba.

Thousands of Shia Muslims visit the shrine to Imam Ali every month, many who make the pilgrimage from neighbouring Iran.


Incoming ICC chief Howard welcomes strong India

Howard, who is facing a challenge to win over Asian nations, according to Sri Lankan great Muttiah Muralitharan, said India’s growing power was positive for the sport. -Photo by AFP


SYDNEY: Former Australian prime minister John Howard has welcomed India’s new-found influence over world cricket as he prepares to become the sport’s governing body chief in 2012.


Howard, who is facing a challenge to win over Asian nations, according to Sri Lankan great Muttiah Muralitharan, said India’s growing power was positive for the sport.

India is the second most populous country in the world, it’s cricket-mad, they are pluses,” Howard told state radio on Wednesday.

“I think it’s entirely wrong to look at the Indian involvement in cricket in a negative light.

“I think of those millions of people in India and the sub-continent... who play cricket. They play it with a passion and love it.”

Howard, a self-confessed “cricket tragic”, has been nominated for the rotating International Cricket Council presidency and will take over from India’s Sharad Pawar in 2012.

Muralitharan said he had forgiven Howard for labelling him a “chucker”, but added that it would not be easy for the conservative former leader to get South Asian nations on-side.

“It won’t be an easy job. He has to convince the subcontinent — that’s going to be a tough challenge for him,” Muralitharan told the Sydney Morning Herald.

India’s huge market has made it cricket’s most important powerbase, with its Indian Premier League Twenty20 tournament handing out lucrative contracts to the world’s best players.

Howard also defended his suitability for the role despite having no experience of sports administration, unlike the New Zealand contender John Anderson.

“I think the fact I haven’t been involved in cricket administration is explained by the fact I had a day job which made that rather difficult,” he said in reference to his 30-year stint in politics.

Afridi threatens to quit Karachi team over captaincy

Dolphins are one of the two sides representing the metropolis in the tournament and Afridi has warned the local officials that he may opt to play for another region if they continue to treat him “badly.” —File Photo
KARACHI: Shahid Afridi has threatened to quit his regional side Karachi, after having been overlooked to captain the team in the domestic Twenty20 tournament.

“I think the KCCA officials need to rethink their attitude towards senior players,” Afridi told the media at National Stadium Karachi.

Fast bowler Mohammad Sami has been captaining the Karachi side this season in Afridi’s absence. While the all-rounder was unavailable during the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy and the Pentangular Cup, he will be representing Karachi Dolphins for the entire duration of the ongoing RBS Twenty20 Cup.

“I have no problems with the captaincy I am playing under Sami but senior players like me deserve better treatment from the association.”

Afridi said he should have been informed by the officials about their decision to replace him before the tournament began.

“I think the KCCA officials should have had the courtesy to at least tell me why they didn’t want me as captain. I am always prepared to play even as an ordinary player but there is a way you treat senior players and the KCCA is not doing that,” the all-rounder said.

Dolphins are one of the two sides representing the metropolis in the tournament and Afridi has warned the local officials that he may opt to play for another region if they continue to treat him “badly.”

“I have always taken a lot of pride in representing Karachi in domestic cricket but if the KCCA continue to treat senior players badly then I might be forced to play for some other region in coming events.”

KCCA secretary Siraj-ul-Islam Bukhari, who has held the post for more than three decades now, was quick to explain that Afridi had misunderstood the situation.

“The fact is that last season when we wanted him to lead the side he was not available and this year we also had to take into consideration the fact that Mohammad Sami had led Karachi to the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy title and deserved to continue as captain,” he said.

According to Afridi, however, he had been told last year by national coach Intikhab Alam that he could play in only two matches during the competition.MOREDETAILS.....



CJ takes suo motu notice of police torture in public

Justice Iftikhar has constituted committees in all the four provinces to submit the comprehensive report by March 11. — File Photo by APP
ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice of Pakistan Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhary has ordered the IGPs, home secretaries, Advocates General of all four provinces, commissioner Islamabad and Attorney General of Pakistan to identify the cases of police torture occurred in the past.

Taking suo motu notice of police torturing in Punjab, the chief justice constituted committees in all the four provinces to submit the comprehensive report by March 11 to the Supreme Court.

The registrar of the high courts have also been directed to confirm from the magistrates hearing the cases of such police officials as to who ordered them to sent these officials to the judicial lock up before the investigating the matter by police.

The Supreme Court in its order directed the committees to let the SC know regarding the action taken not only against the subordinate officials involved in such practices but the high up of police in that area.

These committees would also inform the SC regarding details of trial of police officials carried out in different court as per order of the chief justice.

The Supreme Court order said that the media reports suggested as if there was no rule of law in some parts of the country rather it was law of jungle there.

It said that torturing the citizens was against the fundamental rights of the citizens and was violation of article 4, 9 and 14 of the constitution.

It said that taking actions against those appearing in footages was not sufficient senior officers should also be included in such investigations.MORE DETAILS.....



Hottest temperature ever heads science to Big Bang

Scientists used a giant atom smasher at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York to knock gold ions together to make the ultra-hot explosions - which lasted only for milliseconds.But that is enough to give physicists fodder for years of study that they hope will help them understand why and how the universe formed. –Reuters Photo
WASHINGTON: Scientists have created the hottest temperature ever in the lab - 4 trillion degrees Celsius - hot enough to break matter down into the kind of soup that existed microseconds after the birth of the universe.

They used a giant atom smasher at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York to knock gold ions together to make the ultra-hot explosions - which lasted only for milliseconds.

But that is enough to give physicists fodder for years of study that they hope will help them understand why and how the universe formed, reports Reuters.

“That temperature is hot enough to melt protons and neutrons,” Brookhaven's Steven Vigdor told a news conference at a meeting of the American Physical Society in Washington on Monday.

These particles make up atoms, but they are themselves made up of smaller components called quarks and gluons.

What the physicists are looking for are tiny irregularities that can explain why matter clumped out of the primeval hot soup.

They also hope to use their findings for more practical applications - such as in the field of “spintronics” that aims to make smaller, faster and more powerful computing devices.

They used the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC, pronounced “rick”), a particle accelerator and collider that is 2.4 mile (3.8 km) around and buried 12 feet (4 metres) underground in Upton, New York to collide gold ions billions of times.

“RHIC was designed to create matter at temperatures first encountered in the early universe,” Vigdor said. They calculate the 4 trillion degree temperature gets pretty close.

“How hot is it?” he asked.

In comparison, “The predicted melting temperature of protons and neutrons is 2 trillion degrees. The temperatures at the core of a typical type-2 supernova is 2 billion degrees,” he said.

The center of our sun is 50 million degrees, iron melts at 1,800 degrees and the average temperature of the universe is now 0.7 of a degree above absolute zero.

Birth of Matter

Vigdor's team believe they are looking at a recreation of the moment just before the quark-gluon soup condensed into hadrons - the particles of matter that make up most of our universe.

Something happened in the milliseconds after the Big Bang to create an imbalance in favor of matter over anti-matter. If there had not been this disparity, matter and anti-matter would have simply reacted to create a universe of pure energy.

Later this year, physicists using the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland hope to smash lead ions together to create even hotter temperatures that should replicate moments even earlier in the birth of the universe.

Brookhaven has also patented some potential commercial applications of the research, said theorist Dmitri Kharzeev.

“The goal here is to create a device that can operate not only on the current of an electric charge but also on the current of spin,” Kharzeev told the news conference.

Quarks spin in different directions and understanding how and why they do this can help scientists harness the power.

It may be possible to replicate a symmetrical spin in graphene, for example, said Kharzeev. Graphene is a so-called nanomaterial that scientists believe may replace silicon in super-fast and super-small devices.MORE DETAILS.....



Suicide bomber kills at least 10 in Hangu


Four vehicles were also destroyed in the Hangu attack. – (File Photo)
HANGU: A suicide bomber attacked a convoy of civilians guarded by security forces in Pakistan's northwest on Friday, killing at least 10 people and wounding 30, police said.

Suicide bombings have eased in recent weeks but it is not clear whether that is because security has improved after military gains against the Taliban, or if the insurgents are merely regrouping for more attacks.

“Our convoy was hit by a big explosion. It's all chaos here. I myself have seen four dead, two of them are children. I have seen four wounded women,” said witness Javed Hussain, who was in the convoy of vehicles carrying Shia Muslims to the city of Peshawar.

“We have now a confirmed figure of 10 dead, including four women. Thirty wounded have been admitted to hospitals,” Fazal Naeem, the regional police spokesman, said.

Eye witness accounts reveal that a boy blew himself up near the convoy when it reached a petrol pump in the Thall Tehsil of Hangu. Four vehicles were also destroyed in the attack.MORE DETAILD....

India wants cooperation to go “extra mile” on Pakistan

King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia speaks with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in Riyadh.—AP
RIYADH: India will go the extra mile to improve relations with Pakistan if Islamabad acts decisively on terrorism, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said on Monday during a visit to Saudi Arabia.

Riyadh has close ties with Pakistan and has also been cited as a possible mediator in any eventual political settlement with the Taliban in Afghanistan where India and Pakistan have long battled for influence.

“If Pakistan cooperates with India, there is no problem that we cannot solve and we can walk the extra mile to open a new chapter in relations between our two countries,” said Singh, on the first visit to the kingdom by an Indian leader since 1982.

But Islamabad needed to act against Pakistan-based militant groups, Singh told Saudi Arabia's quasi-parliament, the Shura Council.

He also said that “no sanctuary should be given to those who promote terror, violence or instability” in Afghanistan, according to a text of his speech given to journalists.

India broke off talks with Pakistan after the November 2008 attack on Mumbai blamed on the Lashkar-e-Taiba.MORE DETAILS.....