Saturday, 19 October 2013

Did you know?: Waar scores biggest Eid collection in Pakistan

Waar breaks local box-office records by earning Rs42.6 million in just three days of Eid. PHOTO: FILE
Actor Shaan has once again proven that he remains the unbeatable, true star of Pakistani cinema as his much-hyped action thriller Waar broke all records against estimates.
Waar opened Wednesday on 42 screens across Pakistan and set a new record of box-office collections pertaining to Eid openings. After a first day opening of Rs11.4 million (exact figures: Rs11,397,930.00), Bilal Lashari’s big budget flick earned a total of Rs42.6 million (42,606,655.00) till Friday night, breaking all previous records of Eid collections. Waar has also broken first day record set by King Khan’s Chennai Express that had earned around nine million rupees on Eidul Fitr. If this remains to be the trend then Waar is expected to earn a total of Rs60 million or more in its first week, which will also beat Chennai Express‘s all-time high first week collections by a few millions.
Waar‘s first week on the box office will be considered of nine days since the collections from this Wednesday (first day of Eid) to next Friday will be collectively calculated. If Waarcontinues doing great at the box office then it is expected to earn an overall total of Rs120 million. However, an important trend has come to the fore. While Main Hoon Shahid Afridicovered the total business of Chambaili just in its first week similarly, Waar will supersedeMHSA’s total business in its first week of running. But, Waar’s business is expected to face a major decline Monday onwards due to the end of a long weekend. Nonetheless, if it maintains its first-weekend run in the following weekends as well, then it will be considered the second blockbuster of modern-day Pakistani cinema, after Bol.

Klopp: It’s cool our players are linked with Barca

Klopp: It’s cool our players are linked with Barca
The 46-year-old finds it flattering that his players are linked with a move to the Camp Nou, but insists they are nothing more than rumours
Jurgen Klopp thinks it is "cool" that Barcelona are rumoured to have interest in Borussia Dortmund defenderMats Hummels.

Despite their success over the past three seasons, BVB have lost many of their star players, including the likes of Mario Gotze, Shinji Kagawa, Lucas Barrios and Nuri Sahin - now back at the club.

The most recent rumour links Hummels with a €35 million switch to Camp Nou, although his coach maintains there is no truth in the story as they have not agreed a price with the Catalans.

“I’m not annoyed by this news,” he told reporters. “It’s totally normal. I think it’s cool that players in our team can see themselves playing for other top clubs.”

Hummels arrived at Dortmund from Bayern Munich in 2009, and has been with the club since, with his contract expiring at the end of the 2016-2017 season.

Klopp will hope to avoid losing another integral part of his team, with Robert Lewandowski already having decided to leave the club when his contract expires next summer.

“Mats Hummels is probably popular with lots of clubs. I can imagine that being true," he added.

“But the rumour that we agreed on a certain price with Barcelona is too much.

“That’s the point where the rumour becomes annoying.”

During the summer, Hummels admitted to being "fascinated’" by Barcelona, but had made no plans surrounding his future.

Looking for a Larsson - Klose, Lewandowski & the strikers who could move to Barcelona in January

Looking for a Larsson - Klose, Lewandowski & the strikers who could move to Barcelona in January
Coach Gerardo Martino is keen to recruit a frontman prepared to play a support role at Camp Nou, much like the Swede did in his time at the Catalan club between 2004 and 2006
ANALYSIS
By Ben Hayward | Spanish Football Writer

For the first season in memory, Barcelona do not have a recognised centre-forward in their first-team squad. Even though Lionel Messi has largely been used in the 'false nine' role in recent seasons, the Catalans could count on David Villa as an alternative, as well as Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Samuel Eto'o in previous seasons.

Barca boast excellent options among their fantastic forwards, of course, with Cesc Fabregas, Neymar and even Alexis Sanchez suited to a central role in addition to Messi. None of them, however, are out-and-out strikers - and coach Gerardo Martino is keen to boost his front line by bringing in a recognised centre-forward.

There is one condition, though: the player who comes in must be prepared to bide his time on the bench and wait for opportunities, much like Henrik Larsson did during his time at Camp Nou between 2004 and 2006. Barca hope to identify a 'new Larsson' - a player who can come on and make an impact, and probably one who is in the twilight of his career.

Here, Goal looks at the players under consideration by Barca to fulfil such a role as the Catalan club look to recruit a striker either in January or - as seems more likely at this stage - next summer.

OSCAR CARDOZO (BENFICA)


Martino has already coached Cardozo for Paraguay between 2007 and 2011 and considered a move for the Benfica forward in the summer. Cardozo, 30, has just nine goals in 46 games for his country but boasts an excellent scoring record at club level.

However, the former Newell's striker would not come cheap. Cardozo's contract runs until 2016 and Benfica have no need to sell one of their prized players, who is valued at around €12 million.

His agent, Pedro Aldave, last week hinted at a possible summer switch to Camp Nou for his client. "Barca do not have a number nine and therefore it is a possibility when the current championship ends," he said.

NELSON HAEDO VALDEZ (AL JAZIRA)


Another Paraguayan who could make the move to Barcelona is Nelson Heado Valdez, who is currently playing for Al Jazira in UAE but who would arrive with Liga experience following his time at Hercules and Valencia.

Haedo Valdez, who is 30 next month, shocked Camp Nou by scoring both goals as then-promoted team Hercules beat Barcelona on the Catalan national day, La Diada, on September 11, 2010. However, the forward was unable to build on his dream debut, scoring just eight in 26 games as Hercules were relegated. Last term, he hit just nine in 40 for Valencia.

"To be on their list, I must have done something right," Haedo Valdez tweeted earlier this month after he was linked with a move by Catalan daily El Mundo Deportivo.

MIROSLAV KLOSE (LAZIO)


Miroslav Klose has long been considered by Barcelona as a player who can come in and fill the 'Larsson role', but the Germany striker chose Lazio after leaving Bayern Munich in 2011 as he wanted first-team football and he has continued his impressive scoring form in Italy.

However, the all-time top scorer for Germany is out of contract in the summer and could be tempted to see out his career as an impact player for the Catalan club.

Klose is the preferred option of many Barca fans to fill the position. His height and all-round ability make him an attractive alternative for Martino and the only concern for the Catalans will be his age - Miroslav will be 36 when his current contract expires next summer.

ROBERT LEWANDOWSKI (BORUSSIA DORTMUND)


Barca are also monitoring Robert Lewandowski, who is also out of contract in the summer and could be tempted to move to Camp Nou.

However, the Poland striker is just 25 and is considered to be one of the world's finest forwards, and is therefore unlikely to accept a bit-part role behind Messi et al and seems certain to choose a club where he will be the first-choice centre-forward.

Lewandowski still seems set to join Borussia Dortmund's big rivals Bayern Munich in the summer, but denied last week that a deal was already done for the switch to Pep Guardiola's side.

GEORGIOS SAMARAS (CELTIC)


Georgios Samaras and Barcelona may seem an unlikely match, but the Catalan club have been impressed with the Greek striker's work-rate and commitment in recent clashes between the two teams and he is on their list of possible targets.

Samaras, 28, would bring pace and aerial ability to a Catalan attack lacking in height and is a popular choice among the supporters - even if he has scored just 69 goals in 228 games for the Scottish side.

Larsson, by comparison, netted an astonishing 242 times in 313 games for Celtic before moving to Barca in 2004.

ROQUE SANTA CRUZ (MALAGA)


Another Paraguayan, Roque Santa Cruz, is among the names on Barca's list. Currently at Malaga, the 32-year-old scored 12 times in 45 games for the Andalusians last term and managed to stay relatively free from injury following several troublesome campaigns.

Santa Cruz, like Cardozo and Haedo Valdez, has played under Martino at international level with Paraguay. The striker has scored 28 in 95 games for his country.

His height and goalscoring ability make him an intriguing option for the Catalan club and, at this stage of his career, he is likely to be content with a role on the bench.

DAVID TREZEGUET (NEWELL'S)


David Trezeguet is also on Barcelona's radar. The former France striker is currently at Martino's ex-team Newell's in Argentina (on loan from River Plate) and could complete a cut-price move to Spain either in January or in the summer.

Trezeguet played previously in La Liga with Hercules in 2010-11, scoring 12 times in 31 games in a season which started well but which ended in poor form, off-the-field issues with the club and finally, relegation. He is now separated and currently divorcing his Spanish wife of 13 years, Beatriz Villalba.

The 1998 World Cup winner turned 36 last week, however, and his age may be a deterrent. However, Martino is likely to ask his contacts at Newell's about the Frenchman's form and, if positive, may make a move for the former Juventus striker.

China urges ‘de-Americanized’ new world order

China urges ‘de-Americanized’ new world order
In an editorial published by China's state news agency Xinhua, Beijing has lambasted US global leadership, calling for emerging economies to forge a new world order that is less dependent on the volatilities of American domestic politics.
China, the largest single-holder of American Treasury securities, has a particularly strong national interest in how the US reacts in the wake of the resolution of the shutdown and the decision to raise the debt ceiling, albeit temporarily. A US default could have devalued the billions of Treasuries that Beijing holds.
The Chinese government has used the opportunity to question the legitimacy of US global leadership, saying that 'it is perhaps a good time for the befuddled world to start considering building a de-Americanized world.'
'Such alarming days when the destinies of others are in the hands of a hypocritical nation have to be terminated, and a new world order should be put in place, according to which all nations, big or small, poor or rich, can have their key interests respected and protected on an equal footing,' Xinhua author Liu Chang wrote.
But according to foreign policy expert Charles Kupchan, China's response to the political crisis in Washington is largely a rhetorical one.
'China is taking advantage of the troubles in Washington to advance its desire to create an international order that diminishes the influence of the United States,' Kupchan, with the Council on Foreign Relations, told DW.
Global rebalancing
While China's response to events in Washington may be rhetorical, the shift away from the US and Europe and toward emerging powers is real, according to the UN. In its annual human development report, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) laid out the global rebalancing of economic power in stark relief.
For the first time in 150 years, the combined economic output of Brazil, China and India has reached near parity with the traditional industrial powers: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom and the United States.
'In 1950, Brazil, China and India together represented only 10% of the world economy, while the six traditional economic leaders of the North accounted for more than half,' the UNDP wrote in its report.
'According to projections in the report, by 2050, Brazil, China and India will together account for 40% of global output, far surpassing the projected combined production of today's Group of Seven bloc,' the organization wrote.
Kupchan believes that this global shift in economic power has sparked the very early stage of a debate about what the future international order should look like.
'It's safe to say that we are beginning to see the fraying of the Western dominated order that opened with the end of the Napoleonic wars in 1815,' he said.
Discord among emerging powers
According to China expert Francois Godement, Beijing sees an opportunity to increase its global influence as the Western system frays. But Chinese leaders have no comprehensive vision for what a 'de-Americanized' world should actually look like.
'What the Chinese leaders and the propaganda machine are perceiving, is that the West is continually getting weaker in their view,' Godement, with the European Council on Foreign Relations, told DW.
'That's what gives them this boldness in asserting themselves,' he continued. 'They are asserting themselves, but I don't think they know for what.'
Although Brazil and India are often lumped together with China as emerging powers, they are separated from Beijing by conflicting national interests in important policy areas. Both Brasilia and New Delhi, for example, have campaigned for permanent seats on the UN Security Council. The US openly supports India's candidacy and has signaled it may do the same for Brazil.
'The country that blocked the negotiations to reform the Security Council - to expand its membership - was China. It was not the United States,' Paulo Sotero, director of the Brazil Institute at the Wilson Center, told DW.
The West turns inward
Many in Europe and the United States are skeptical of this global shift, particularly as it regards China. According to the 2013 Transatlantic Trends Survey, published by the German Marshall Fund, 47 percent of Americans and 65 percent of Europeans found the idea of Chinese leadership in the world undesirable.
'It matters if you're a democracy or not,' Stephen Szabo, executive director of the Transatlantic Academy, told DW. 'The fact that China is not a democracy does cause concerns in Europe and the United States.'
Meanwhile, Western commitment to the transatlantic alliance remains strong. Some 55 percent of Europeans and 77 percent of Americans still view US leadership as important. Similarly, 71 percent of Europeans and 57 percent of Americans believe that strong leadership by the EU is desirable.
But with the US and EU focusing largely on domestic issues, it's unclear whether or not they have the capability to shape the increasingly multipolar world.
'As a consequence, little attention has been devoted about how to go about crafting a new rules-based order,' Kupchan said.

At least 400 civilians killed by drone strikes in Pakistan, UN told

At least 400 civilians killed by drone strikes in Pakistan, UN told
UNITED NATIONS: The government of Pakistan has confirmed that of some 2,200 people killed by drone strikes in the past decade, at least 400 were civilians and an additional 200 victims were deemed "probable non-combatants," a U.N. human rights investigator said on Friday.
Ben Emmerson, U.N. special rapporteur on human rights and counterterrorism, also urged the United States to release its own data on the number of civilian casualties caused by its drone strikes.
Emmerson says that preliminary information gathered for a report released Friday indicated that more than 450 civilians may have been killed in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen. It says more work needs to be done to confirm these figures.
Emmerson said Pakistan's Foreign Ministry told him it had recorded at least 330 drone strikes in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, Pakistan's largely lawless region bordering Afghanistan, since 2004.
Clearing out militant border sanctuaries is seen by Washington as crucial to bringing stability to Afghanistan, particularly as the U.S.-led combat mission ends in 2014. Most, but not all, attacks with unmanned aerial vehicles have been by the United States. Britain and Israel have also used them.
In an interim report to U.N. General Assembly released on Friday, Emmerson said Pakistani government records showed that drone strikes had killed at least 2,200 people and seriously wounded at least 600 since 2004.
He said Pakistan had confirmed that "at least 400 civilians had been killed as a result of remotely piloted aircraft strikes and a further 200 individuals were regarded as probable non-combatants."
"Officials indicated that, owing to underreporting and obstacles to effective investigation, those figures were likely to be an underestimate" of civilian deaths, Emmerson said.
Emmerson, who visited Pakistan in March, noted that principal media monitoring organizations had recorded a "marked drop" in reported civilians casualties from drone strikes in the tribal areas during 2012 and the first half of 2013.
The tribal areas have never been fully integrated into Pakistan's administrative, economic or judicial system. They are dominated by ethnic Pashtun tribes, some of which have sheltered and supported militants over decades of conflict in Afghanistan.
"The involvement of CIA in lethal counter-terrorism operations in Pakistan and Yemen has created an almost insurmountable obstacle to transparency," Emmerson said.
"One consequence is that the United States has to date failed to reveal its own data on the level of civilian casualties inflicted through the use of remotely piloted aircraft in classified operations conducted in Pakistan and elsewhere." (Agencies)

EU to boost Europe’s sluggish Internet

EU to boost Europe’s sluggish Internet
Neelie Kroes gets annoyed every time she uses her smartphone to access the Internet in Brussels. Both professionally and privately, the 72-year-old politician is an inveterate Internet surfer. But in Belgium - unlike in Nigeria - she has no access to the ultra-fast 4G cellphone network. 'Brussels has no 4G. But Lagos, by the way, has 4G,' she said at an event in the Belgian capital. 'If you live and work here, you know what that means.'
The determined Dutch former government minister - now EU Commissioner for Digital Agenda - has decided that all this must change. Europe is a digital desert, she says, not only for fast mobile phone networks, but also for cable Internet access. Only a quarter of Europeans have access to 4G, she said, while there are twice as many people in the US with access to it. In fact, the number of people in Europe who actually use it is much lower, because of the relatively high costs. Meanwhile, Japan is already establishing the even quicker 5G.
'Europe cannot compete'
'We're limping behind the US, Asia, and parts of Africa, and we can't compete,' groans Kroes. She wants all that to change by 2020 - the target, determined by the EU governments, when every user is to have ultra-fast broadband. Kroes is working on the implementation. 'That's my vision, my car sticker slogan, so to speak: every household, every company, every public institution, and every classroom will be on the Internet,' she says. 'Europe needs connectivity to be competitive in the digital age, and we know that.'
The fact that economic development increasingly happens online means that a good network connection is an opportunity for businesspeople. 'We can't deprive our citizens of this opportunity,' she added. 'We must not allow any digital division of our continent. We must not create a society where we can distinguish between the digitally rich and the digitally deprived.'
The Commission has at least met one target. According to the European Satellite Operators Association (ESOA), by the end of 2013, every European will have the opportunity to receive broadband Internet via satellite. 'That will guarantee that nearly 100 percent of people will have potential access to the Internet,' said Kroes on Thursday (17.10.2013). Satellite Internet, she said, was particularly important for countries like Poland and Slovenia, where cable networks have not yet reached certain rural areas.
No more Internet borders
Countries like Luxembourg and Malta can already boast 100-percent Internet access, while Germany reaches around 97 percent. But that is only true of standard Internet access - only half of Europeans have access to really fast broadband, via cable or cellphone networks. In order to give telecom companies incentives to invest and create new tariffs, Kroes intends to liberalize the market and pull down national borders for the Internet.
'Telecom companies that are allowed to operate in one EU country, should be allowed to operate in all 28 member states,' she said. 'We have to ensure that we have healthy, competitive telecom companies. That's why I want to create a domestic European market for telecommunications. It is strange, to put it nicely, that all kinds of industries have been brought together in a domestic market, and telecommunications hasn't.'
Net neutrality and new business models
Social Democrat MEP Petra Kammerevert sees just one catch. Kroes' proposals could threaten net neutrality. Up until now, every user in Europe can use every possible Internet service and website, regardless of how much data has to be transported. But soon, the telecom companies could stagger their offers and make fast access to certain services more expensive.
That could lead to some pages, such as Skype, being blocked altogether because they disrupt the firm's business model. 'I think that is the first step to a two-tier Internet,' warned Kammerevert. 'That is not what I would define as freedom of communication.'
No roaming
Kroes emphasizes that while she is very much in favor of net neutrality, she says that companies must be able to profit for providing a better service. At the same time, she wants to completely abolish roaming charges for telephone calls and Internet use, making possible a continent-wide flat-rate service.
Industry lobbyists in Brussels have already warned that this could raise flat-rate prices, but Kroes believes that the telecom companies won't make good on this threat because they will be able to make more money by staggering Internet service prices.
Kammerevert thinks the commissioner will end up striking a deal with the industry. 'For me it sounds like this: we'll take away your roaming charge privileges. In return, you get a qualitative staggering of Internet access - a high performance network that is correspondingly expensive. It leaves the impression of a package deal.'
The EU Commission has long been offering the companies financial incentives to invest in network infrastructure, fiberoptic cables, and 4G networks. Around one billion euros ($1.37 billion) of EU structural funds is expected to be made available for this every year until 2020. Not only that, the Internet is expected to be on the agenda again at next week's summit of EU leader

Russia’s rich dominate Cyprus’ largest bank

Russia’s rich dominate Cyprus’ largest bank
When Cyprus in June 2012 came to the EU to ask for a bailout, Brussels decided that this time round things should be different. No simple bailout like in Greece, Ireland or Portugal, but something that would put more of a burden on those who had been responsible for the financial mess: the banks.
With European taxpayers increasingly worried about paying for southern Europe, Brussels made a stand. Cyprus got its helping hand - but with severe conditions. The troika of EU, European Central Bank (ECB) and International Monetary Fund (IMF) decided for a bail-in, i.e. investors had to shoulder part of the bill.
In return for 10 billion euros ($13.6 billion) to be paid out unil 2016, the troika demanded the winding up of the country's second-largest bank Laiki and a haircut on deposits over 100,000 euros in its largest lender, Bank of Cyprus. To compensate for their losses, the investors got shares.
What few people seemed to have realized though was that this meant that the majority of shares would almost over night be in the hands of foreigners, most of them: Russians. In September, six Russians were in fact appointed to the 16-member board of directors of the bank.
Even more dependant on Russia
'It shows the mistakes in the comments by many northern European leaders that the bailout and the haircut was a way of getting Cyprus out of Russian hands,' Alexandros Apostolides, economist at the European University Cyprus, told DW.
'It means that now we are completely dependant on Russia. Before, they were only depositors, now they are shareholders. They own a bank that is even more systemic than it was before the bailout.'
Germany in particular was one of the countries that had been warning that the EU should not help Cypriot banks as this allegedly would have meant bailing out Russian oligarchs who had used the little island state in the Mediterranean as a convenient money laundering location.
The German foreign intelligence service even compiled a special report on how Cyprus was in effect a laundromat for dirty Russian money. But if the goal had been to push back Russian influence, it failed. And experts say that it's something the EU should have seen coming.
'When it was decided that the Bank of Cyprus would be saved by a bail-in, it was clear that those who would lose their savings and investments would in return get shares. That's what happens in the case of a bail-in,' explained Sofronis Clerides of the University of Cyprus.
'The decision for a bail-in was strange, because the main reason was to use the large Russian investments as part of saving the banks - rather than the tax payer. But the result was that the very same Russian oligarchs now are shareholders. It's quite ironic.'
Take the money and run?
While some European leaders may have wanted to curb alleged Russian money laundering in Cyprus, the fact that the country's largest bank is now under Russian influence is not necessarily a bad thing, say many Cypriots. The country's president, Nicos Anastasiades, in fact thanked the Russian community for sticking it out: 'Our friends have remained our friends,' he said.
Economist Apostolides argues that having Russians involved will most likely help the bank. Their main goal after all is most likely to eventually get back the money they lost. And that means they have to have a very strong interest in the bank becoming more profitable.
'Among economists the reaction was mostly positive,' he explained. 'The bank is active in eastern Europe and should have some representation of its main markets on the board. So that makes sense. But some are worried that when the bank finally becomes healthy again you might see a lot of the shareholders take liquidity out of Cyprus and even out of the eurozone and take it back to Russia. So that's why there are mixed reactions.'
Yet it seems that so far things have gone relatively well. It's in fact very difficult to say how many shares are in foreign hands. Many of the former investors are represented by lawyers where it's not clear who the actual shareholder is. The country's media estimates as much as 60 percent of shares are held by Russians. But even if ownership is overwhelmingly in foreign hands, it doesn't seem, at least so far, that they are organized enough to actually control the bank.
A question of trust
The bank has issued new competitive mortgage products and is doing business - although there are still restrictions, limiting the amount that people can withdraw from their accounts. There still is the fear that small depositors might gradually be moving their money abroad. The lack of trust is still the main problem.
For Apostolides, it's a question of finally getting the ECB to stand behind the Bank of Cyprus so that investors know the future of the bank is safe.
'Investors are not idiots. They see a bank that owes a lot of money to the ECB while the ECB at least publicly is being completely unwilling to help out in resolving the situation,' he explained.
'Unless the ECB decides to help out and convert the emergency liquidity into something much more long term, then we can not the resolve this crisis. The ECB has to provide a guarantee that now that the bank has done the bail-in, it is willing to support its existence.'