Monday, 3 February 2014

Bayern not signing Dortmund players to weaken them, insists Beckenbauer

Bayern not signing Dortmund players to weaken them, insists Beckenbauer
The 68-year-old has responded to recent accusations that the Bundesliga champions are trying to derail their direct rivals
Bayern Munich honorary president Franz Beckenbauer has insisted that the Bavarians are not deliberately trying to weaken Borussia Dortmund

BVB CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke recently hit out at the reigning Bundesliga champions, claiming that they aim to destroy their domestic rivals by signing their top players such as Mario Gotze and Robert Lewandowski.

Nevertheless, Beckenbauer has maintained that Bayern are solely focusing on strengthening their own team and not on possible side-effects.

"Bayern buy the players they feel they need to strengthen the team. It's merely a coincidence if that includes two players who are at Dortmund," Beckenbauer told Sky 90.

"Signing a player strengthens your own team, while weakening this player's former team in the process. That's not the main goal, though, but just a side-effect."

Former Bayern star Paul Breitner slammed Watzke for his comments about Bayern's philosophy at the weekend, but Beckenbauer feels the Dortmund director has every right to voice his opinion.

"Saying that Watzke is just trying to create an anti-Bayern atmosphere is wrong. He has the right to say how he feels."

Bayern currently hold a 17-point lead over Dortmund in the Bundesliga table.

Sunday, 2 February 2014

Scarlett Johansson leaves Oxfam after Israeli settlement uproar

Scarlett Johansson has quit as global ambassador for Oxfam after the aid group deemed the role "incompatible" with her promotion of an Israeli firm that has a factory in the occupied West Bank. PHOTO: AFP
JERUSALEM: Actress Scarlett Johansson has quit her role as an ambassador for Oxfam, the charity said on Thursday, after she fell out with group for endorsing an Israeli firm operating in the occupied West Bank.
The Hollywood star has become the public face for soda-maker SodaStream and is due to appear in an advert for the company that is set to air during the Super Bowl on Sunday.
However, the multi-million dollar deal has caused a backlash amongst activists and humanitarian groups because SodaStream’s largest factory is based in a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank.
The company employs both Palestinian and Israeli workers and says its plant offers a model of peaceful cooperation, but settlements are deemed illegal under international law and are condemned by Oxfam, which has a large operation in the region.
After consultations with Johansson earlier in the week, the actress informed the charity that she would end her relationship with them.
“Oxfam has accepted Scarlett Johansson’s decision to step down,” the group said in astatement. “Johansson’s role promoting the company SodaStream is incompatible with her role as an Oxfam Global Ambassador.”
“Oxfam believes that businesses, such as SodaStream, that operate in settlements further the ongoing poverty and denial of rights of the Palestinian communities that we work to support.”
The controversy has come at a delicate time for US-backed peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians. Israeli officials fear that if the talks fail, a nascent call for an economic boycott of Israel and its settlements might grow.
In a statement reported in the American media, Johansson’s spokesperson wrote that “she and Oxfam have a fundamental difference of opinion in regards to the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement”.
That movement, sponsored mostly by pro-Palestinian intellectuals and bloggers, advocates for a blanket boycott of all Israeli goods and questions the state’s legitimacy.
There is a different consensus among international rights groups like Oxfam, however, which discourages trade only with Israeli firms located on land in the occupied West Bank.
“The very existence of (Israeli settlements) amounts to a serious violation of international law,” the New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a statement on Wednesday.
“It is impossible to ignore the Israeli system of unlawful discrimination, land confiscation, natural resource theft, and forced displacement of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, where SodaStream is located,” the rights group added.
Johansson was named as an Oxfam ambassador in 2007 and has taken part in a number of its global campaigns.

Did you know?: Prince George makes first international trip!

Baby Prince George has begun his life as a little jet-setter. The future King of England travelled outside the UK for the first time this week with his mother Kate Middleton, according to E! News. The duo has spent the week vacationing in Mustique with the rest of the Middleton clan, who are on their annual family trip in celebration of Carole Middleton’s birthday.
It looks like it was strictly a Middleton family gathering, as Prince William stayed home in England to focus on his studies. The Duke is currently completing a 10-week course in agricultural management at the University of Cambridge.
His royal highness’s schedule is so jam-packed that Kate will be flying solo for most of Valentine’s Day. The Palace announced that the Duchess of Cambridge will spend the romantic holiday at the opening of the ICAP Art Room at Northolt High School in Ealing, London.
Oh the ups and downs of being blue-blooded royalty.

Ash voted 4th most beautiful woman in the world

The Bachan bahu clinched the fourth position while Deepika stood at number 29 on the list. PHOTO: FILE
She may have been criticised in India for not losing her baby weight fast enough, but former Miss World and  powerhouse performer Aishwarya Rai Bachchan has been voted the world’s fourth most beautiful woman in a recent poll conducted by the online magazine, Hollywood Buzz.
Rai made it to an impressive fourth position on the list of Top 30 Most Beautiful Women, after Italian actor Monica Belluci, American model-actor Kate Upton and Hollywood star Angelina Jolie. The poll conducted in December 2013 saw more than four million people send in their votes, selecting the most intelligent, desirable and successful women in 2013-14, reportedIMDb.
The Indian model-actor, who recently turned 40, commented on the results of the poll: ‘The result of this poll was brought to my notice by my well-wishers who messaged me… and I must admit, it’s overwhelming to hear that over four million people across the globe have voted, and listed me amongst their top choices with such beautiful and talented women… a loving thank you to all my well wishers for making me smile and always being there for me.”
Deepika Padukone is another Bollywood actor who has made it to the list, at number 29. Aishwarya and Deepika are the only Indian women to feature in the list, which consists largely of Hollywood names, including actors Charlize Theron, Amber Heard, and Jennifer Lawrence. The list also includes musicians Beyoncé, Katy Perry and Rihanna, and models the likes of Adriana Lima, Irina Shayk and Miranda Kerr.
Here is the list of the Top Ten stunners that rule the list of the World’s Most Beautiful Women:
1. Monica Bellucci
2. Kate Upton
3. Angelina Jolie
4. Aishwarya Rai Bachchan
5. Irina Shayk
6. Meryem Uzerli
7. Charlize Theron
8. Amber Heard
9. Rihanna
10. Scarlet Johansson

Shazi speaks on Jal and future plans

Jal the band during its heydays. Shazi considered the band family, but says change makes things difficult. PHOTO: PUBLICITY
It was an emotional decision. He had come home after meeting Goher Mumtaz one last time. Then, he updated his Facebook status, which read, “Shazi left what was left behind…No more with Jal…Been through good and bad with you. But bad is rather memorable…Over and out.”
Shazi had always been the underrated bassist of Jal. He was seen as an outsider. He had been working on the perennial underground rocker Shahzad Hameed’s album with the Meekal Hassan Band, when he met Atif and Goher, who were recording Aadat, in 2003.
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Shazi sat down with The Express Tribune to look back at his career, from the beginning till its end, and all the trials and tribulations of Jal in between. After making his announcement, he switched his phones off for several weeks, and tried to think about what he wanted from the world of music. The emotional decision had to be made due to his approach to the band. Shazi says that he never put himself first and was just looking to make good music.
“Whenever you make music you have to have fun, it’s that simple,” he says.
“These days, music is more like a business, there is pressure, you have do things a certain way.”
He said that the tension within the band occurred several months after Farhan left Jal. It was an interesting period for the band, since Jal was being forced to re-invent itself for its upcoming album. The band had started to promote Shazi in the form of a vocalist on one of the tracks.
It was also difficult due to the changing dynamics of the industry. The music business is very different now than it was during the time of Aadat, and Jal’s initial success. Farhan had managed to forge a solo-career on the basis of the viral hit Pi Jaun, a song that had been composed by Saad Sultan.
Meanwhile, Shazi and Goher were being faced with the possibility of being overlooked by a vastly changing market. The first single after Farhan left, Mahi Ya, was used predominantly in order to show the band’s new line-up, but left Jal fans wanting more.
“Something changed. The band is family to me, and it’s very personal, but change makes it very hard to stick together,” says Shazi. This upheaval within the band occurred on the 10th anniversary of Aadat, a song which changed the industry for good in the mid-2000s.
“It’s true we probably could have produced something better, if we trusted each other. It’s all about working together, if I am thinking something different then let’s sit down and work it out,” Shazi explains.
“You can’t think along the lines of ‘if this person likes this. We as a band could have experimented, which was not allowed,” says Shazi. More importantly, Shazi says that the situation of Pakistani music is very bad at this point.
“It’s fine that music is a business, but don’t take it literally, if it’s not me or you, there are other artists waiting in line — that standard we are searching for has finished,” says Shazi
“People are focusing on solo careers, and what I have noticed is that that people are now competing with themselves, instead of with bands. This is because, slowly, everyone is going solo.”
Since announcing his retirement from Jal, Shazi has already started work on his solo compositions, which he wants to release in the upcoming months. Shazi is working on developing a team of people with whom he could work long-term, and will be working on side-projects with various musicians.
“When you’re making music you can’t always look at for its audience. Its more about what you can bring from inside yourself. I also am looking to make an album because for me, there is a charm in that and it’s very natural,” says Shazi.
The Express Tribune also contacted Goher, who refused to comment on the band’s future following Shazi’s departure.

Directionless and a motionless economy

Airline executives and union leaders have been working hard to cut costs and prove that the airline is on the recovery road. PHOTO: FILE
KARACHI: 
Among the first few things Shujaat Azeem did after taking office of Prime Minister’s special assistant on aviation last month was to issue a statement on the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), the national carrier that is haemorrhaging billions of rupees each year.
He talked about regaining PIA’s lost glory by tackling corruption, adding aircraft into its fleet and assuring the employees that there won’t be any layoffs. His statement, which was issued by PIA’s PR department, did not mention the national carrier’s proposed privatisation.
Time and again, the government has expressed its commitment to privatising loss-making state enterprises in the past few months. A high-level meeting chaired by the prime minister even decided to hand over PIA’s management to private investors by the end of 2014. The sale is also part of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan package.
This is the time when the government should have already started negotiating with union leaders, try to take them into confidence and discuss severance schemes. If the airline is sold, no investor would want to pay around 18,000 employees when the organisation is losing money every day.
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On the other hand, airline executives and union leaders have been working hard to cut costs and prove that the airline is on the recovery road. And now, we have a senior government official suggesting he supports the unions.
So what does the government really want?
Aviation industry officials have warned time and again that privatisation alone cannot help PIA. Changes have to be made to liberal policies, which allow Middle East carriers to dump seats in Pakistan. Who will take on the UAE?
The saga in the power sector
Then there is the power sector, which remains the government’s top priority – at least in statements. No one seems to know what policymakers intend to do to solve the crisis on a long-term basis.
The ground-breaking ceremony of Thar coal mining and power project, which was attended by both the premier Nawaz Sharif and former president Asif Ali Zardari is being rightly viewed as a historical step.
However, at the same time, there are numerous power projects, which will be based on imported coal. Just a few days back, Punjab chief minister invited investors to add thousands of megawatts to the national grid using imported coal. At the same time, there are IPPs working to reengineer their oil-run plants to use coal.
Again, what is the priority? 
When PML-N was voted into power, businessmen were hoping that it would get down to fixing the economic ills immediately. But that is not happening. Debates in parliament, statements, and news all revolve around political and security issues.
“Yes, economy is not featuring prominently in their statements,” said Sayem Ali, Standard Chartered Bank chief economist. “There is no doubt that security is a major concern but some important steps must to be taken at the economic front as well.”
It is not just the MPs who seem absent-minded about immediate problems faced by the country. Opposition legislators are lacking interest in economic matters as well.
“There is absolutely no clarity on how the privatisation process will go ahead,” Ali said. “No one is asking why do you want to privatise? There is no evidence to suggest that organisational losses will come down and these enterprises will become efficient.”
Even more disturbing is the fact that the government is not paying any attention to key regulatory bodies.
The State Bank of Pakistan, National Electric Power Regulatory Authority and Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority all seem to be operating under ad-hoc arrangements.
Dwindling foreign exchange reserves, which have battered the currency rate, has become a serious headache for the economy. The events of the past few months should have pushed policymakers to go out of their way in boosting exports. Yet, nothing has happened.
The much talked about GSP Plus status, which allows Pakistani exports to enter the EU freely, will not bear fruit unless some things are done urgently, industrialists say.

Capitalising on: GSP Plus – for three or ten years

Exporters believe that under the scheme they can increase sales to Europe from the current $500 million to $1 billion annually over the next three years. PHOTO: AFP/FILE
KARACHI: After winning the Generalised Scheme of Preferences (GSP) Plus status from the European Union (EU), the debate about how long Pakistan will be enjoying the facility has gained significant importance.
The government and private sector have their own sets of responsibilities, yet they are trying to ask each other to do their job first.
While the private sector has praised the government’s role in qualifying for the GSP Plus status, it is pressing the PML-N administration to do more to get the deadline for trade concessions extended for seven more years beyond 2017.
On the other hand, the government is asking private businesses to work hard and meet the European standards.
The EU – a 28-nation bloc – has granted the GSP Plus status to 10 developing countries, including Pakistan. It came into effect from January this year. Europe will review the scheme in January 2017 before extension for another seven years for countries that effectively implement 27 international conventions on labour laws, good governance and environment.
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Exporters believe that under the scheme they can increase sales to Europe from the current $500 million to $1 billion annually over the next three years.
However, they see shortage of electricity and gas and poor law and order as a major stumbling block and expect special incentive packages from the government.
In a recent conference on corporate governance, top executives from different sectors got engaged in a debate about the role of public sector and building the private sector’s capacity in light of the GSP Plus.
“Our government needs to implement international conventions effectively, otherwise we could lose the GSP Plus status after 2017,” warned Orient Textile Mills CEO Iqbal Ebrahim.
The panellists at the end of the conference even mocked the government. “Our leading ministries might not have even read the requirements of the GSP Plus,” Habib Metropolitan Bank President and CEO Sirajuddin Aziz said.
Experts, however, call on private companies, whether listed or unlisted, to improve corporate governance. According to the revised Code of Corporate Governance 2012 of the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP), there are four pillars — accountability, fairness, transparency and independence.
State a facilitator
On its part, the government insists that it is monitoring the situation closely and will try to help all sectors, especially textile, pharmaceutical and automobile, to increase exports to the EU. Nevertheless, it is reminding the private sector that it must take the initiative and then expect state support.
“The government is just a facilitator. The onus is on the private sector to implement all international conventions to continue to enjoy easier and greater access to the EU market,” said Ayaz Wazir, spokesperson for Commerce Minister Khurram Dastgir, while talking to The Express Tribune.
When asked what the government has already done to meet the conditions, Wazir said labour efficiency in Pakistan was low, which was a big challenge, but the rest of the challenges like environment and corporate governance were not that difficult to tackle.
Some people in private businesses also echo the government’s views. All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (Aptma) Chairman Yasin Siddik told The Express Tribune that the private sector had the prime responsibility to follow international laws in order to step up country’s exports.
“The government can only pass laws if it is necessary. Rest is the responsibility of the private sector to improve product quality even after the end of the GSP Plus scheme in 2017 or 2024,” said Siddik, who heads the largest lobbying group of textile mills.
Many textile companies were exporting their products to Europe keeping in view all international conventions, but at the same time there were few that could not simply export to the bloc, he said.
“This is a matter of choice for a company whether it wants to work hard or lose the opportunity,” he remarked.