Thursday, 13 March 2014

Cabaye: I don't regret PSG move

Cabaye: I don't regret PSG move
The midfielder insists he is happy with the French champions and says he is determined to become a more important player with the club
Yohan Cabaye says he has no regrets over his decision to join Ligue 1 leaders Paris Saint-Germain fromNewcastle United in January.

The midfielder has started just one league game for Laurent Blanc's men since making the switch from St James' Park, whereas he started 17 of Newcastle's 22 Premier League matches this season prior to his departure.
With the World Cup in Brazil on the horizon, Cabaye will no doubt be looking to feature more prominently for PSG in the coming months to cement his place in Didier Deschamps' France team.
But the 28-year-old insists he is relaxed about his situation, and is eager to establish himself at Parc des Princes.
Speaking to RTL, Cabaye said: "I want to focus on the positive aspects - they are a great club and I'm training with great players.
"I have gone from a situation at Newcastle where I was an automatic starter, to one where I don't know when I will next play.
"However, I absolutely don't regret my decision, I have come here to win and climb the hierarchy."

Dzeko told he can leave Manchester City

Dzeko told he can leave Manchester City
The Premier League club rebuffed interest in the Bosnian in January but they will be willing to sell a player with just over a year left on his contract at the end of the season
By Wayne Veysey | Chief Correspondent

Edin Dzeko has been told he will be allowed to leave Manchester City this summer.

The Premier League dismissed all interest in the Bosnian during the January transfer window but are now willing to sell the striker at the end of the season if they receive what they deem an acceptable offer.

Dzeko will have only one year left on his contract in the summer and will be in a strong position to negotiate a cut-price move.

The 27-year-old, who joined City from Wolfsburg in January 2011, is likely to be available for around €18 million, although he will want to join a club who can at least match his €130,000-a-week wages.

Dzeko was the subject of an inquiry from Tottenham last December, while Arsenal are also long-term admirers, but the player made an agreement with City chiefs that he would not consider a move until the end of the season.

The forward is also being closely monitored by a collection of continental clubs led by Inter, Borussia Dortmund and Napoli.

Dzeko has slipped behind Sergio Aguero and Alvaro Negredo in the forward pecking order at City but has still scored 17 goals in 36 matches in all competitions this season.

He has spoken of his frustration at not being a regular starter at Etihad Stadium and the intense competition for places within Manuel Pellegrini's squad means he is likely to move on in the summer.

Dzeko will be part of the City squad that will attempt to overturn a 2-0 first-leg deficit in their last-16 Champions League second-leg clash against Barcelona on Wednesday night

Pirlo hints at imminent new Juventus contract

Pirlo hints at imminent new Juventus contract
The veteran midfielder has moved to assure supporters there is "no possibility" he will leave the club in the summer and will sign fresh terms at the earliest opportunity
Juventus star Andrea Pirlo has insisted that he will put pen to paper on a new contract with the club in the very near future.

The veteran midfielder's current deal expires at the end of the season and he is yet to commit his future to the Bianconeri.

However, he has now revealed that there is been a delay over minor details and assured fans he will still be representing the club next term.

"I still haven't signed. There are little things we are talking about but there is no possibility that I'll go. The announcment will be there shortly," he told La Gazzetta dello Sport.

"Things have been busy and we've not had the time to sort it out. We'll fix things once we have a minute, the fans can rest assured."

Pirlo also revealed that he and coach Antonio Conte have an excellent relationship, although he conceded tempers can flare when he is left out of the starting XI.

"The coach and I have always got along well. Sure, sometimes we argue - you'll never see a player leave the filed or sit on the bench with a smile on his face," he said.

"But they are small things. He's one of the best I've had. He's a great coach and I was amazed by his tactical preparation, concentration and ability to stay focused.

"His desire to chase perfection is amazing. He transfers all that stuff into the team well."

Juventus face Fiorentina in the first leg of their Europa League last-16 tie on Thursday.

Wednesday, 12 March 2014

Malaysia Airlines Jetliner Disappearance Likely Is Temporary

Aviation experts say it’s unsurprising that no trace of Flight MH370 has been found thus far
image of an airplane that says malaysia taking off


A Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777
planegeezer, Flickr Creative Commons
The disappearance this past weekend of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, carrying 239 people, remains a mystery for now. Despite a search effort involving ships and aircraft from multiple countries, all potential leads as to the fate of the craft—including a long oil slick and a floating object thought to be a door of the plane—have failed to pan out.
How does a jetliner simply disappear?
Conventional tracking systems performed well; civilian and military radar tracked the plane until it vanished. As Patrick Smith, a pilot and creator of a blog called “Ask the Pilot,” points out, “They knew where the aircraft was up until the point where something catastrophic happened.” The plane followed the path that the same flight had taken a few days earlier, according to the private flight-tracking Web siteflightradar24. So the next question is why evidence of the plane has yet to turn up. Smith says this is mostly due to the size of the oceanic search area. He’s confident that the wreckage eventually will be found.
There are a variety of methods for tracking planes in the air, says Sid McGuirk, associate professor and air traffic control specialist at Embry–Riddle Aeronautical University’s Daytona Beach College of Aviation. At the airport until about a minute after takeoff, he says, “the tower” is in charge, with flight controllers visually tracking planes. As soon as the plane is out of sight, radar systems take over. Radar works well on land, where coverage is extensive, but about 300 kilometers from shore the signal becomes too weak, McGuirk says. In 2009, when Air France Flight 447 crashed in the Atlantic while en route to Paris from Rio de Janeiro, it was no longer being tracked by radar, which is what made finding its wreckage so difficult: more than five days for the first debris and two years before the black-box flight recorders were located at a great depth on the ocean floor.
Unlike the Air France flight, however, Flight MH370 was still within the range of radar tracking systems. Flightradar24, which does not use radar but instead a network of antennas that receive location information broadcast by planes via a technology called automatic dependent surveillance–broadcast, or ADS–B, tracked the plane to around the same spot. But radar and ADS–B also have limits. Flightradar24 loses ADS–B coverage below about 9,000 meters. And radar also can only track aircraft above a certain elevation, McGuirk says, although that can vary based on the proximity of the plane to the closest radar antenna.
A number of factors can contribute to where plane wreckage ends up. “Dynamics of aircraft can vary,” he says, including how they hit the ocean or whether they disintegrate in flight. In addition, “the aircraft’s flying pretty fast,” says Larry Cornman, a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. “It gives kind of a large window…for where the aircraft could be,” he says, “especially if it broke apart in flight.”
McGuirk thinks that the possibility of the plane being hijacked but still intact is unlikely; it would have required not only turning off the ADS–B system and the plane’s radar transponder, but also flying the plane below where radar could detect it. Then hijackers would have to land the plane unnoticed—a difficult task, given the size of a Boeing 777. “That’s sort of a far-fetched solution,” McGuirk says. “It’s not far-fetched to jump to the conclusion that some catastrophic event occurred onboard,” he says, especially considering the lack of emergency communications from the crew before the disappearance.
After the Air France disaster, which killed all 228 people onboard, some people called for systems that automatically beam an airplane’s location to satellites. It’s unclear, however, if such a system would have helped in the case of Flight MH370; the plane’s location was known before it disappeared. Cornman also points out that because commercial airplane crashes are so rare (with only 0.34 fatal accident per million departures 2002 through 2011, according to Boeing) the cost-benefit argument doesn’t favor adding these systems.
Ultimately, McGuirk says, we likely won’t know for awhile what happened to Flight MH370. “Anything that’s said right now is pure speculation,” he says. Right now, it’s “way, way too early in the investigation to come to any conclusions.”

Investment opportunities: ‘Govt’s economic policies bringing in foreign investors’

Canadian high commissioner says Canada wants to promote cooperation with Pakistan in energy and several other sectors. PHOTO: FILE
LAHORE: 
The dream of progress and prosperity cannot be realised without economic security, Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif said while talking to Canadian High Commissioner Greg Giokas on Tuesday.
Sharif said Pakistan’s economy was becoming stronger by the day as a result of the government’s economic policies and there were vast opportunities of investment in energy, livestock and agriculture.
The chief minister and the Canadian high commissioner also discussed bilateral relations. Sharif said the government’s priority was to end the energy crisis.
Sharif said several countries friendly to Pakistan were helping it set up power generation projects using traditional and alternative resources.  He said the Nandipur Power Project near Gujranwala had been revived after a long hiatus under the previous federal government…its first turbine will start operating in two month. The project would be completed within the year, he said.
Giokas said Canada wanted to promote cooperation with Pakistan in energy and several other sectors. He also invited Sharif to visit Canada.
A delegation of China’s Shandong Ruyi Group also met the chief minister on Tuesday. They expressed an interest in investing in energy, mining and textile sectors in the province. The delegation included Ruyi Group Senior Vice President Jerry Liu, Executive President Arie Qiu, Vice President Li Aiying, Executive Director Zhang Liuzhang and Masood Textile Chief Executive Officer Shahid Nazir.
Sharif said that foreign investors had shown willingness to invest in Pakistan due to the government’s economic policies. He said the Punjab Minerals Department and the Shandong Ruyi Group had reached an agreement to set up two coal power plants in Salt Range…to produce up to 135MW. He said local coal would be used for the plants. He said the government was going to set up an “apparel park” and garment zones to promote the textile sector.
The chief minister said that the government was working on drafting comprehensive reforms to increase the tax to Gross Domestic Product ratio. Sharif met with the country head of McKinsey Pakistan, Salman Ahmad, on Tuesday. They discussed possibilities of cooperation in agriculture and livestock sectors.
Sharif acknowledged McKinsey’s experience and expertise as a consultancy in industrial, agriculture and mining sectors. The chief minister constituted a committee headed by Metro Bus Authority Managing Director Sibtain Fazl Haleem to oversee areas of cooperation between the Punjab government and McKinsey in agriculture, livestock and other revenue generating sectors. The committee and senior officials of McKinsey will develop a roadmap for this purpose.
Ahmad said that McKinsey wanted to promote cooperation with the Punjab government. He said that McKinsey wanted to open an office in Lahore

Economic governance: ‘Technology can improve farm yields’

UAF VC says it is important to understand the seasonal nature of the trade. PHOTO: APP/FILE
FAISALABAD: 
Bilateral trade between India and Pakistan can be enhanced while protecting the interests of stakeholders especially farmers, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad (UAF) Vice Chancellor Iqrar Ahmad Khan said on Monday.
He was speaking at a conference on Improving Economic Governance in Agriculture Sector through Trade Liberalisation between Pakistan and India organised by the UAF.
Khan said it was important to understand the seasonal nature of the trade. “For example, the peak season of potatoes is August and September in India. In Pakistan, it is October and November,” he said.
He said the trust deficit between the two countries should be bridged through dialogue.
Praising India for its agricultural policies, the UAF VC said farmers in the Indian Punjab were being given a subsidy on tube-wells.
Lahore University of Management Sciences (Lums) Pro-Chancellor Syed Baber Ali said technology should be used to improve farm production.
He said 70 per cent of Pakistan’s population was directly or indirectly involved in agriculture. Ali said an entrepreneurship cell should be set up at the UAF to help the youth translate knowledge into better goods and services.
MNA Rana Afzal said the government was doing its best to strengthen the agriculture sector. He said the recommendations made at the seminar would be sent to the government. “Agriculture is the backbone of our economy accounting for 21 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP),” he added.
Pakistan Farmers’ Association President Tariq Bucha asked the government to address farmers’ issues.  “At least 10 per cent of the budget must be reserved for agriculture,” he said.
He said the farmers must be taken on board when trade policies were formulised.
Office of Research, Innovation and Commercialisation (ORIC) Director Asif Ali, Abdul Ghafoor, Waseem Ahmad, Mubashar Mehdi, Ayub Agriculture Research Institute Director Abid Mehmood and Aiwan-i-Zaraat president Siddique Naseem were also present on the occasion.

Governance priorities: What use are youth festival records, asks Imran Khan

The protesting nurses rallied from Cooper Road and tried to march to the Punjab Assembly. PHOTO: ZAHOOR UL HAQ/EXPRESS
LAHORE: 
Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf chairman Imran Khan joined the Young Nurses Association (YNA) at a protest rally on Tuesday to slam the Punjab government for their indifference.
Following an eight-hour long sit-in in front of the Lahore Press Club on Monday, the protesting nurses had announced plans to stage a sit-in in front the Chief Minister’s House on Tuesday.
However, after being turned away by a heavy police contingent at the GOR entrance, the protesting nurses chose Egerton Road for their ‘sit-in’.
Addressing the protesters, Khan said it was unfortunate that while the Punjab government was spending billions of taxpayers’ money on useless record breaking at the Punjab Youth Festival, many of the people serving the humanity were on the streets protesting.
“What’s the use of making a record of eating 100 naans? The government should spend this money on education and health,” he said. He said the government should meet the legitimate demands of the nurses, because hospitals could only work smoothly, if nurses were all looked after.
Earlier in the morning, the protesting nurses rallied from Cooper Road and tried to march to the Punjab Assembly. A heavy police contingent, however, did not let them enter the area. The nurses then decided to stage a sit-in on Egerton Road, resulting in long queues on the adjoining roads.
Nurses at several government hospitals also observed a partial strike to show solidarity with them.
Dr Rana Sohail Ahmad, a surgeon at Mayo Hospital, told The Express Tribune that he had had only one nurse working for four operation theatres. He said in most cases, doctors had to perform their (nurses’) duties during surgeries. He said several surgeries had been postponed. He urged the government to resolve the issue at the earliest, saying doctors would not be able to work without nurses for long.
Health Director General Zahid Pervaiz, who tried to negotiate with the protesting nurses, said that the Health Department had forwarded a summary to the Finance Department to extend the arrangements with the ad hoc nurses. He said that nurses having contract jobs should report back on duty. “We are trying our best to solve the problems at the earliest,” he said.
Later, Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif formed a committee headed by Chief Secretary Naveed Akram to resolve the issue. Other members of the committee are Advisor to Chief Minister on Health Khwaja Salman Rafique, Parliamentary Secretary on Health Khwaja Imran Nazir, Health Secretary Babar Hayat Tarrar and Law Secretary Abul Hasan.
The YNA had not called off the protest till the filing of this report.
Sanaullah’s reaction
Reacting to Imran Khan’s remarks, Law Minister Rana Sanaullah said that Khan should refrain from seeing political capital from the nurses’ protest. He said that Khan’s politics was limited to protest rallies and demonstrations. He said the PML-N government had taken unprecedented steps for the improvement of service structure of doctors and nurses.