Monday, November 30, 2015

Narendra Modi's Handshake With Nawaz Sharif In Paris

Modi Meets French President Francois Hollande | Modi In Paris

Harry, not Humpty

Harry, not Humpty

Diesel chase reopens needy Nepal's wound

Diesel chase reopens needy Nepal's wound


Student leader linked to ISI

Student leader linked to ISI

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Australian Christmas tree sets Guinness world record


As reported in 'The Japan News' : The Associated Press In this Friday photo, people gather to observe a Guinness World Records attempt for the most lights on an artificial Christmas tree, in Canberra.
The Associated Press CANBERRA (AP) — An Australian set his third Christmas-themed world record in as many years Friday by illuminating a tree in downtown Canberra with 518,838 twinkling lights. Guinness World Records confirmed that David Richards had broken the record for the most lights on an artificial Christmas tree that had been held for five years by Universal Studios Japan in Osaka. That 36-meter Japanese tree had set a new benchmark of 374,280 lights this month. Richards, a Canberra lawyer and businessman, brought together a team of volunteers including an electrical engineer, structural engineer, welders, carpenters, masons and steel fixers to erect the dazzling display on a 22-meter steel tree. Richards creates such Christmas extravaganzas to raise money for Canberra’s Sudden Infant Death Syndrome charity, SIDS and Kids, by drawing large crowds and inviting them to donate. “Some people say I’ve got quite a knack for getting people to do things for nothing,” Richards said.Speech

Putin signs Turkey sanctions decree


As reported in 'The Japan News' :
Reuters MOSCOW (Reuters) — President Vladimir Putin signed a decree imposing a raft of punitive economic sanctions against Turkey on Saturday, underlining the depth of the Kremlin’s anger toward Ankara four days after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane. The decree, which entered into force immediately, said charter flights from Russia to Turkey would be banned, that tour firms would be told not to sell any holidays there, and that unspecified Turkish imports would be outlawed, and Turkish firms and nationals have their economic activities halted or curbed. “The circumstances are unprecedented. The gauntlet thrown down to Russia is unprecedented. So naturally the reaction is in line with this threat,” Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s spokesman, said hours before the decree was published. A senior Turkish official told Reuters the sanctions would only worsen the standoff between Moscow and Ankara. But aides to Putin say he is incandescent that Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has yet to apologize for Tuesday’s incident near the Syrian-Turkish border in which one Russian pilot was killed along with a Russian marine who tried to rescue the crew of the downed SU-24 jet. Senior Russian officials have called the episode, one of the most serious publicly acknowledged clashes between a NATO member country and Russia for half a century, a preplanned provocation. Erdogan has been equally robust. He has said Turkey will not apologize for downing the jet, saying Ankara was fully within its rights to defend its air space. On Saturday, he appeared to soften his rhetoric a little, saying the episode had saddened him. Putin’s spokesman suggested the Russian leader was ready for a long standoff, however, saying he was “fully mobilized” to tackle what he regarded as an unprecedented threat from Turkey. National security The decree, posted on the Kremlin’s website, spoke of the need to protect Russia’s national security and Russian citizens “from criminal and other illegal activities.” In it, Putin ordered the government to prepare a list of goods, firms and jobs that would be affected. Some of the measures announced have already been informally introduced. The government is expected to publish the list of banned imports on Monday, Interfax news agency reported, citing a government source. The list is likely to include food and some other products, a second government source said.

Russia stops visa-free travel with Turkey


As reported in 'The Japan News' : The Associated Press Turkish protesters shout anti-Russia slogans as they hold a poster of Russian President Vladimir Putin that reads in Turkish and Russian “Assassin Putin!” during a protest in Istanbul on Friday.
The Associated Press MOSCOW (AP) — Russia announced Friday that it will suspend visa-free travel with Turkey amid the escalating spat over the downing of a Russian warplane by a Turkish fighter jet at the Syrian border. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov announced that Moscow will halt the existing visa-free regime starting Jan. 1, saying that Turkey has become a conduit for terrorists and has been reluctant to share information with Moscow about Russian citizens accused of involvement in terrorist activities. Turkey’s downing of the Russian military jet Tuesday, the first time in half a century that a NATO member shot down a Russian plane, has drawn a harsh response from Moscow. Russia has since restricted tourist travel, left Turkish trucks stranded at the border, confiscated large quantities of Turkish food imports and started preparing a raft of broader economic sanctions. President Vladimir Putin has also ordered the deployment of the long-range S-400 air defense missile systems to a Russian air base in Syria just 50 kilometers south of the border with Turkey to help protect Russian warplanes, and the Russian military warned it would shoot down any aerial target that would pose a potential threat to its planes. The military also moved the missile cruiser Moskva closer to the shore to help cover Russian bombers on combat missions. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan refused to apologize for the plane’s downing, which Ankara said came after it flew for 17 seconds into Turkish airspace. At the same time, Erdogan said he has tried in vain to speak by phone to Putin to discuss the situation and expressed hope they could meet at the sidelines of a climate summit in Paris next Monday. Putin’s foreign affairs adviser Yuri Ushakov said Friday that the Kremlin had received Erdogan’s request for a meeting, but wouldn’t say whether such a meeting is possible. Asked why Putin hasn’t picked up the phone to respond to Erdogan’s two phone calls, he said that “we have seen that the Turkish side hasn’t been ready to offer an elementary apology over the plane incident.” Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus voiced hope that Moscow would keep military and diplomatic channels open and added that Ankara was mulling possible measures in response to Russian economic sanctions. He said that Turkey doesn’t think Russia would risk losing it as a partner. Speaking to reporters after Friday’s Cabinet meeting, Kurtulmus said that Turkey would not have shot down the plane if it had known it was Russian and said this is what Turkish officials have told senior Russian officials. He added that if the pilots had responded to the Turkish warnings and informed them that they were Russians, the shooting wouldn’t have occurred either. In Moscow, Russian air force chief, Col.-Gen. Viktor Bondarev, reaffirmed Friday that Turkey hadn’t issued any warnings on a previously agreed radio frequency before downing the plane. He insisted that the Russian Su-24 bomber hadn’t veered into Turkey’s airspace, and also claimed that the Turkish F-16 fighter jet flew into Syria’s airspace for 40 seconds to down the Russian plane. The tug-of-war between the two countries has been driven by a clash of their leaders’ personal ambitions. Putin and Erdogan have been frequently compared to each other. Both are populist leaders who frequently crack down on critics and often revert to anti-Western rhetoric. They had enjoyed close relations until recently, despite differences over Syria, and regularly exchanged visits. In September, Erdogan traveled to Moscow where he and Putin attended the opening of a new mosque, and they also met separately on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit hosted by Turkey. The summit in Antalya marked their deepening rift over Syria, when Putin showed fellow G-20 leaders aerial pictures of what he said were convoys of oil trucks carrying crude from fields controlled by the Islamic State group into Turkey. Putin’s move came as Russia, the United State and France all have focused their air strikes on the ISIL oil infrastructure, seeking to undermine the group’s financial base following the terror attacks in Paris and the downing of a Russian passenger plane in Egypt.Speech

Russia, France agree on fight against ISIL


As reported in 'The Japan News' : Reuters Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, right, shakes hands with his French counterpart, Francois Hollande during a meeting in Moscow on Thursday.
The Associated Press MOSCOW (AP) — The presidents of France and Russia agreed Thursday to tighten cooperation in the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group, although they remained at odds over their approach toward Syrian President Bashar Assad. ISIL has claimed responsibility for deadly attacks against both of the countries’ citizens in recent weeks: Nov. 13 shootings and suicide bombings in Paris, which killed 130 people, and the Oct. 31 bombing of a Russian passenger jet over Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula that claimed 224 lives. French President Francois Hollande has been on a diplomatic drive since the Paris attacks to increase cooperation in tackling ISIL, which holds swathes of territory in both Syria and Iraq. He has met this week with President Barak Obama, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi before flying to Moscow on Thursday for talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Hollande and Putin agreed on increasing intelligence sharing, intensifying their airstrikes against ISIL in Syria and cooperating on selecting targets — two days after Turkey downed a Russian warplane near the Syrian border. “We agreed on a very important issue: To strike the terrorists only, Daesh and the jihadi groups only, and not to strike the forces and the groups that are fighting against the terrorists,” Hollande said after the meeting, referring to ISIL by its Arabic acronym. “And we are going to exchange some information about that: what can be struck, and what must not be struck.” But the two countries remain at odds in their approach toward Assad, with Hollande saying the Syrian head of state “does not have his place in Syria’s future,” and Putin stressing that “the Syrian president’s fate should be entirely in the hands of the Syrian people.” Putin described Assad’s army as a “natural ally” in the fight against ISIL — an essential force capable of battling the extremist group on the ground. He added that Russia was ready to cooperate with other groups ready to fight ISIL. Russia has been Assad’s staunchest ally, and has come under criticism for targeting some rebel groups who are fighting against both ISIL and Assad in Syria’s multifaceted and complex civil war.

Narendra Modi Praises Opposition Leader Ghulam Nabi Aazad

Arunachal students rap rights centre

Arunachal students rap rights centre

Tibetan fights to salvage fading culture

Tibetan fights to salvage fading culture

‘Black day for press’: Protesters gather outside Cumhuriyet office in Tu...

‘Turkmen’ who boasted of killing Russian pilot is allegedly Turk nationa...

Nepal detains, releases SSB men who crossed border after diesel smugglers

Nepal detains, releases SSB men who crossed border after diesel smugglers

Friday, November 27, 2015

Meet Bhogdoi, river of Jorhat's ancestors

Meet Bhogdoi, river of Jorhat's ancestors

Erdogan to Russia: Don't play with fire

Erdogan to Russia: Don't play with fire

Modi reaches out to rivals

Modi reaches out to rivals

Italian police seize 800 shotguns en route from Turkey to Belgium

‘Everything the West has done was to create ISIS’ – John Pilger

‘Short air space violation is no excuse to shoot an ally’ – fmr MI5 agent

EU politicians blast Turkey’s links to ISIS, call Erdogan’s policies dan...

Media Crackdown: Turkish journos jailed for 'treason' over gun, oil smug...

In the Trenches With Al Nusra (Excerpt from 'Inside the Battle: Al Nusra...

2 held in Berlin raids

2 held in Berlin raids

Islamic State claims responsibility for attack on Shia mosque in Bangladesh

Islamic State claims responsibility for attack on Shia mosque in Bangladesh

India-first is the only religion, Constitution the only holy book: Modi

India-first is the only religion, Constitution the only holy book: Modi


12 Killed in Terrorist Attack in Tunisia

12 Killed in Terrorist Attack in Tunisia


Wednesday, November 25, 2015

NRC to trace family tree

NRC to trace family tree

BJP MP lashes out at writer

BJP MP lashes out at writer


Living Without Water: Contamination Nation

Syrian army saved 1 pilot of downed Russian Su24 who escaped killer rebels

Syrian army saved 1 pilot of downed Russian Su24 who escaped killer rebels

Set the record straight before letting loose the lynch mob

Set the record straight before letting loose the lynch mob

Sena to Aamir: what calamity has befallen you?


As reported in 'The Telegraph' culcutta, India Mumbai, Nov 25 (PTI): Shiv Sena on Wednesday hit out at actor Aamir Khan for his remarks on intolerance, saying he was speaking the “language of treachery” and asked the 'Khan clan' in the film industry to explain what calamity has befallen them. Dubbing Aamir 'Ranchhoddas', a character he played in the film “3 Idiots”, Sena said, “This Ranchhoddas should explain in which country is he going to live.” “Speaking of leaving the country is a language of treachery. Leave whatever glory this country has given you, here only,” the BJP ally said in an editorial in party mouthpiece 'Saamana'. “Only Aamir knows why he wanted to leave the country and why did he take his filmy wife's remarks so seriously,” the Sena said. “Those who don't feel that India is their own, should not speak of patriotism and of 'Satyamev Jayate' (referring to Aamir's popular TV show),” it said. Attacking the powerful 'Khan clan' in the Bollywood, Sena said, “The Khan community in the film industry speak of fleeing the country. Let it be known what calamity has befallen them. The film 'PK' which ridiculed Hindu deities garnered hundreds of crores. Was this because the country is intolerant.” The Sena said if the actor feels suffocated over 'intolerance', then he should release his films outside India. “Aamir and his wife should go to Kashmir and see the war which our jawans fight. Should families of martyred jawans flee the country,” it said. The 50-year-old actor had said, “Kiran (his wife) and I have lived all our life in India. For the first time, she said, should we move out of India...She fears for her child, she fears about what the atmosphere around us will be.”

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

‘Turkey wants to drag NATO in a kind of collision course with Russia’ – ...

FSA video claims Russian helicopter hit with US-made TOW missile near Su...

Su-24M crash: Militia shooting at Russian pilots parachuting after plane...

PM Modi's speech at the Indian Community reception at Singapore

PM Modi departs from Singapore after 2-nation visit to Malaysia & Singapore

MAP: Russian Su-24 crash scheme by defense ministry

Tribals ask Centre to clarify ST status

Tribals ask Centre to clarify ST status


IS appoints 'regional leader' in Bangladesh

IS appoints 'regional leader' in Bangladesh


Many held as Brussels shuts down

Many held as Brussels shuts down


IS finds Indians 'inferior'

IS finds Indians 'inferior'


Turkey downs Russian Su24 fighter jet near Syria border for 'airspace violation'

Turkey downs Russian Su24 fighter jet near Syria border for 'airspace violation'


Aamir Khan Speaks On Intolerance

Tarun Gogoi Demands Assam Governor P.B Acharya's Suspension

How Should We Respond to the Paris Terror Attacks?

Trade24 Makes Bold New Steps Towards a Better Environment

Trade24 Makes Bold New Steps Towards a Better Environment


Is ISIS Losing Territories in Iraq and Syria?

Is ISIS Losing Territories in Iraq and Syria?


Monday, November 23, 2015

UK, France, Canada hunt 'Russian sub' off Scotland, no trace yet

Life in ruins: Syrians survive in Aleppo amid city destruction

Anti-Muslim sentiment spreading across US, EU after Paris attacks

Combat cam: Massive bombardment of ISIS oil refineries, tankers by Russi...

On The Line: Jason Leopold and Kaj Larsen on Intelligence Agencies and T...

What's Next For Paris?: France At War (Dispatch 4)

Dhaka reacts sharply to Pak statement | The Daily Star

Dhaka reacts sharply to Pak statement | The Daily Star


Another step towards justice | The Daily Star

Another step towards justice | The Daily Star


Loktak visit treat for foreigners at festival

Loktak visit treat for foreigners at festival


Hasina 'corrects' perception with hangings

Hasina 'corrects' perception with hangings


Married to The Organisation

Married to The Organisation


EU capital still in security lockdown

EU capital still in security lockdown


Eastern coyotes are hybrids, but 'coywolf' is not a thing

Eastern coyotes are hybrids, but 'coywolf' is not a thing 


Scientists Say CO2 Not Responsible for Global Warming

Scientists Say CO2 Not Responsible for Global Warming


As a New Yorker, I Say Please Torture The Isis Terrorists

As a New Yorker, I Say Please Torture The Isis Terrorists 


Sunday, November 22, 2015

Green light rider for 2 projects

Green light rider for 2 projects


Blast damages rail tracks

Blast damages rail tracks


Report reveals influx 'system'

Report reveals influx 'system'


Homage to Netaji on Malaysia trip

Homage to Netaji on Malaysia trip


US aid worker of Indian origin killed in Mali

US aid worker of Indian origin killed in Mali


At least 10 times they made me hold my ears and squat while barking out an oath

At least 10 times they made me hold my ears and squat while barking out an oath


Terrorism's shadow stretches across world: PM

Terrorism's shadow stretches across world: PM


Barrel Bombs Continue to Pound Syria

Barrel Bombs Continue to Pound Syria