Monday, 13 January 2014

FLORENTINO AND ZIDANE TO BE WITH RONALDO IN ZÚRICH

Big night out for Real Madrid

Big night out for Real Madrid
01/13/2014
The presence of Florentino Pérez and Zinedine Zidane in Switzerland just goes to show how important the Ballon d'Or is for Real Madrid, where they have done everything possible for everything to be perfect on one of the happiest days in Cristiano Ronaldo's life.
Madrid's Portuguese star will receive what is one of the most controversial Ballons d'Or in its history. Ronaldo will deservedly carry off the award for the best player in the world, but what Blatter said last year, and the fact that the voting period was extended, have to some extent tarnished an award which Ronaldo has fought for and won on the field of play.
The Madrid delegation will land in a private plane at Zurich about two o'clock in the afternoon, one hour before Cristiano Ronaldo is due to appear before the media along with the other two finalists, Leo Messi and Franck Ribéry. There will be a press conference of incalculable value when you consider the 137 goals scored between the three of them in 2013.
Following the press conference, it will be time to don evening clothes and walk along the red carpet FIFA has laid down outside the Kongresshaus, just as if it were the Oscars ceremony.
The event will start at 6.30 p.m., but the actual award of the Ballon d'Or will take place at the end, with a view to keeping the uncertainty going right up to the last minute.

Has Virat Kohli moved in with Anushka Sharma?

Has Virat Kohli moved in with Anushka Sharma?
Anushka Sharma and Virat Kohli hit it off during the shoot of a shampoo commercial and have since been spotted together several times, a times in a parked car and at other times , making a quick escape.
  
A little birdie revealed that the Indian cricket team’s most popular (and one of the most eligible bachelors) member, Virat Kohli is not only smitten with the vivacious Anushka Sharma but has also moved in to her apartment.

The photographers and gossipmongers have been watching every move of Bollywood’s latest IT couple. A source close to the couple disclosed that Virat has been staying at Anushka's apartment since he came back from South Africa, and while he would generally leave the building after 2 pm, he would always return to her place by 8.30 pm.

A security guard on duty at Anushka’s building also confirmed that Virat Kohli has been staying with Anushka for the past week. 

Virat Kohli brought in the New Year at Anushka Sharma's house. Reports suggest the cricketer spent the entire night partying with Anushka and her friends at her duplex apartment. He was spotted leaving her house only the next day. 

Sunday, 12 January 2014

SIMEONE TALKS UP POINT GAINED AGAINST 'AZULGRANAS'

There's a small €400 million 

difference between us and Barça"

There's a small €400 million difference between us and Barça
01/12/2014
Atlético de Madrid coach Diego Pablo Simeone called Saturday's match against Barcelona a "very tight game between two teams that are flying high at the top of the table". He also praised his players for having racked up an impressive 50 points at the halfway mark of the season.
"We have a lot of respect for Barcelona, but there's the small matter of a €400 million difference between us and them and there's no getting past that. We were at home and we set out to win, but there is a big difference between the two teams' budgets," the Argentine noted.
"Sometimes matches end goalless because they are tactically perfect. We tried to play a smart game while playing to our strengths and I think we succeeded. Barcelona had been banging in the goals in recent matches and if you give them a chance, they make you pay. I'm happy with the team's efforts," the manager stressed.
"50 points is no mean feat. The lads have earned it with their hard work; they have never stopped working or running. I want to congratulate the players," Simeone reiterated.

Cyber security conference: Film challenges ‘official’ narrative on drones

Panellists urge journalists to use independent sources, use of technology to support ‘invisible’ victims. PHOTO: AFP/FILE
ISLAMABAD: 
Rights activists urged journalists to highlight casualties of drone strikes and to challenge the official narrative on drones in Pakistan after the screening of a film Unseen War on Saturday.
One way to do this would be to generate a debate on the impact of drone strikes on innocent civilians living in the targeted areas and overcoming the “invisibility” surrounding this technology through information gathering.
Mainstreaming a counter-narrative and collecting information about drones and their victims is not an easy task. It might even seem impossible, given the secrecy surrounding the US drone campaign and the high level of inaccessibility of areas where these strikes are conducted. Yet, there are some attempts to piece together information about drone strikes from disparate sources and make a case against the negative impact of these strikes.
The film, produced by Tactical Technology Collective, an international non-profit linking activism with technology,  showed interviews with journalists, an academic and a technologist to give a basic understanding of the tribal areas and the drone technology being used by the US to target militants there.
 photo 39_zps6de51f7e.jpg
Through the interviews, the film tries to establish that the covert use of drones for killing militants allows its users “political, military and moral invisibility”. This invisibility coupled with the historical unequal treatment of, and control of information in, the tribal areas leads to self-censorship and indifference in journalistic reporting of the strikes.
But the film puts through the important question of whether drone strikes are legitimising targeted killings. It also sheds light on the way information and communications technology could be used to collect and understand information about the strikes and their impact.
In the subsequent discussion, Shahzad Akbar, a legal fellow for UK-based organisation, Reprieve, said the strikes are killing people “without due process by state, by any state.”
The United Nations has condemned drone strikes. These are against the international law and the Constitution of Pakistan, said Akbar, whose organisation is fighting a case in the Peshawar High Court on behalf of civilians killed in the drone attacks.
The Bureau of Investigative Journalism estimates at least 416 civilians have been killed in US drone strikes in Pakistan between 2004 and 2013, but the bureau also states that only 1.5 per cent of drone casualties can be confirmed as “high-value targets.” The vast majority of drone’s victims — around 76 per cent of the total — fall in the grey area of “alleged combatants.”
During the discussion, Taha Siddiqui, a journalist who also appears in the film, said the narrative is controlled and people are not asking crucial questions about the presence of militants in a given location in the first place.
Another panellist Sadaf Baig, who also appeared in the film, said the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) were an “information black hole” even before 9/11. The panellists agreed that there was a lack of information in the press regarding drone strikes. Akbar said the Pakistani media’s role is especially problematic.
The film’s producer, Marek Tuszynski, who joined the discussion via Skype, said the film is part of a series called “Exposing the Invisible,” which looks at two things: a new way of investigating hidden information through collaboration and use of technology, and shedding light on the concept of invisibility in situations such as drone strikes where the aggressor usually has access to all information but people outside see nothing.
The event was organised by the Digital Rights Foundation, a Pakistani research and advocacy initiative at the ongoing third annual “Cyber Secure Pakistan Conference”

Nida Kirmani on the Muslim identity crisis in a New Delhi locality

Despite these harsh realities, Kirmani believes a silent revolution is taking place. PHOTOS: AYESHA MIR/EXPRESS
KARACHI: 
Muslims residing in a non-Muslim state like India have always talked of social identity crisis and politico-religious insecurity issues since the days of the War of Independence in 1857. Do these issues still apply? Yes they do.
Nida Kirmani, at her talk at T2F, spoke of Muslim marginalisation in the Indian urban locality of Zakir Nagar, New Delhi. She captured the essence of this locality by interpreting what Muslim women of this area shared with her.
Kirmani’s research, which she conducted about eight years ago, is now in the form of a book titled Questioning the Muslim Woman  — Identity and Insecurity in an Urban Indian Locality. The book throws light on what she believes is, “extremely relevant today, keeping in mind the intrinsic issues,” but she does not in any way feel the need “to bash India, rather we should draw parallels to a country called Pakistan, where the situation is a lot worse for minorities.”
As she conducted 70 interviews within this locality, she examined the fact that Delhi is a partitioned city, where, like in other places across India, “Muslim mohallas [communities] grew and places like Zakir Nagar were termed as ‘Mini Pakistan,’ for the increasing number of Muslims residing in these areas.”
Kirmani believed that, “Mohallas were shaped by the events of the partition of 1947, and whether people chose to live together, or were forced to do, is a debate that continues unabated.”
Another statement which is yet to be determined, is whether or not Zakir Nagar can be defined ‘as an enclave or a ghetto’.
Narrating it from a Muslim woman’s perspective residing in a locality like Zakir Nagar, where the average middle-class lives, the biggest problem for Muslims is religious insecurity and a social identity crisis.
She highlighted the fact, that “the Muslim woman is known for her personal law of pardah[veil], or being burqa clad, which highlights the social issues of a Muslim woman even in today’s India, forcing the others to think that they are an oppressed class or section of society.”
“The biggest problem that remains for Muslims is insecurity. No matter how posh a locality is, the feeling that they are insecure thrives in their mind-set,” she added.
Citing examples from major episodes of religious disharmony that India succumbed to in the past, she reported on the Partition of India in 1947, The Sikh Massacre of 1984, The Babri Masjid riot of 1992-1993 and The Gujarat massacres of 2002, all of which have propelled Muslims to feel insecure in India. These hosts of past incidents have made Muslims face other things at a larger level, mostly reclining towards, “gender insecurities, the insecurity of the poor and even housing discrimination”, Kirmani added.
Despite all these issues faced by Muslims residing in India, Kirmani was hopeful, for what she witnessed was a “silent revolution taking place from within” and women asserting for their rights and even going ahead and saying out-rightly, “We are better off than our mothers were in their time!”

I’d never work with any other actor: Rakesh Roshan

Through the father-son driven Krrish franchise, both Roshans are now considered the superheroes of Bollywood. PHOTO: FILE
MUMBAI: As Hrithik Roshan turns 40 on Friday, his father and filmmaker Rakesh Roshan says he would never work with any other actor, unless he is making a women-centric drama like Khoon Bhari Maang.
Rakesh launched his son’s career with the blockbuster Kaho Naa…Pyaar Hai. They later worked together on the superhero-based Krrish series.
Getting emotional, he said, “He can work with outside directors. But I’d never work with any other actor, unless I am making an out-and-out heroine-oriented film like Khoon Bhari Maang. I might be tempted to make a film with a female protagonist, but only if Hrithik is too busy to work with me.”
“When I was an actor, I could feel a film-maker lurking within me. I was never satisfied as an actor. I had a big hit like Kaamchor, but that helped Jaya Prada’s career, not mine. I knew God wanted me to be a director,” said Rakesh.
Rakesh predicts that Hrithik, too, will direct a film someday. “Now I feel Hrithik, who is such a successful actor far more than I ever could be, has a film-maker within him. He will 100 per cent direct a film someday. Mark my words; he’ll be a very fine director. I am sure of that. He may not be a good producer, but he’ll be a terrific director,” he said.
Rakesh has enjoyed Hrithik’s films outside the family banner. “I liked his performance immensely in Jodhaa AkbarAgneepathGuzaarish and especially Zindagi Na Milegi Dobarain which he had to play a normal regular guy. That’s really difficult to do. He never made us feel that a superstar was playing the role,” he said.
Recently, Hrithik announced that he and his wife Sussanne have parted ways, after the latter decided to annul their marriage. “My wife and I want Hrithik to be happy and at peace with himself, no matter what,” said Rakesh, who looks forward to launching Hrithik’s sons  — Hrehaan and Hridhaan  — as future leading men.
“Provided they want to be in films, I’d love to launch them. My blessings are with Hrithik. Whatever he does in life, my wife and I want him to never change. He’s kind, helpful and generous. He deserves happiness,” he said.

Former Miss Venezuela shot dead in robbery

Mónica Spear along with ex-husband were laid to rest in an emotional service.
Friends and family bid adieu to former beauty queen Mónica Spear Mootz and her ex-husband Thomas Henry Berry on January 10, after the two were shot and killed near Puerto Cabello, Venezuela. In what is considered to be a tragic symbol of Venezuela’s crime woes, the former couple’s bodies, along with their injured five-year-old daughter Maya, were found following an attempted robbery, reported The Guardian and dailymail.co.uk.
In an emotional funeral service that took place in Caracas, Venezuela, the two were laid to rest together.
Maya, who was shot in her right leg, had been expected to attend her parents’ funeral, but didn’t as family members decided it may be too traumatic for her.
“She knows she has been injured and that her mom and dad have gone, but we have not gone into too much detail,” said her maternal grandfather Rafael Spear.
Mónica, who won the title of Miss Venezuela in 2004, became a leading television presenter and telenovela (soap) actor after she gave up her crown. According to Thomas’ Facebook page, he was a travel company boss from London. The couple divorced in 2013, but remained on cordial terms and maintained close ties with Venezuela. Although they were not living together, family members said they were on the verge of reigniting their romance.
The Venezuelan beauty had returned to the country from her new home in Miami for a working holiday. She shared in an earlier interview that she moved to the United States due to fears of crime in her hometown.
Five adults have been arrested over the murders of Mónica and Thomas, and their mug shots have been released by police in Venezuela.
Thousands of fans took to Twitter to express their condolences over the demise of the beauty queen, who endorses ‘peace and love’ in her Twitter profile bio. Rafael hopes that his daughter’s death lends impetus to change in a country that has one of the highest murder rates in the world. “Things have to change. We have to stop killing each other. I hope her death serves to eliminate this senseless violence,” he said.
Descanse en paz, Mónica and Thomas