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US has very high expectations from Indian PM's visit: Mulford Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Friday, 26 September 2008

Washington, Sept.25 (ANI): The United States has very high expectations from the visit of Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh not only with regard to the next steps and possible signing of the US-India civil nuclear deal, but also in the context of the overall relationship between the two countries, said the country's envoy to India, David C Mulford.

Talking to ANI here ahead of a significant working dinner meeting between Dr. Singh and US President George W Bush, Ambassador Mulford said: "We have very high expectations from the (Indian) Prime Minister's visit not just because of the US-India civil nuclear deal, but in the context of the overall relationship."

He said that it was in everyone's knowledge that the US-India civil nuclear deal was before the U.S. Congress, and the Indian Prime Minister's visit should be seen as a significant coincidence.

Mulford said that while tonight's talks would focus on the entire gamut of US-India ties, the focus would also be on the progress made so far on the nuclear deal and the steps that are to be taken for it to move forward to its logical realization.

"We will be following the developments in the Congress... We are not yet completed... that is in the hands of the Congress. At this stage it is impossible to predict whether it (the deal) will be passed or not. We are confident that it will be passed, we are reasonably positive, but can't say when. Only the U.S. Congress knows. It is impossible to project with any certainty," said Mulford.

He reiterated that Thursday's meeting at the White House would focus on all the other elements of US-India relations, including defence, security, education and health. When asked by ANI whether it is possible to get the deal through today, Mulford replied: "It (Congress) is the only one which knows, we don't know, Congress is the only one which knows. It is not impossible; it could happen in next couple of days, it's impossible to project. The nuclear deal is racing against time in the Congress, which will be ending tomorrow."

Describing Washington's ties with New Delhi as a "very important relationship", Mulford said that tribute must be paid to the US Congress for taking out crucial time despite its preoccupation with the financial crisis in America, to discuss the Bill related to the US-India civil nuclear deal.

"It is a positive statement about the strength of the US-India relationship, he said.

Mulford's comments provide an indicator as to what Dr. Singh and President Bush are likely to discuss tonight. There seems to be hope as well as resignation in the atmosphere surrounding the talks, the outcome of which will be known early on Friday. By Naveen Kapoor(ANI)

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Last Updated ( Friday, 26 September 2008 )
 
Korea and India to step bilateral trade Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Thursday, 25 September 2008

New Delhi, Sept 25 (ANI): At the conclusion of the 12th round of the Korea-India Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) held in Seoul from September 22-25, India and Korea have announced today that all outstanding issues in the negotiations have been resolved successfully.

The CEPA agreement is expected to further accelerate the growth of the flows of bilateral trade and investment between Korea and India.

Major elements of the agreement will be made public at that time. Both sides aim to sign the agreement by the end of this year after completing all domestic procedures and the agreement will come into effect from the first half of next year on a mutually agreed date.

The Korea-India CEPA negotiations started in March 2006 and a total of 12 rounds of negotiations have been held.

India and Korea are 12th and 13th largest economies in the world respectively. The bilateral trade has been growing by an average rate of around 27 per cent over the last three years and amounted to US 11.2 billion dollars in 2007. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 25 September 2008 )
 
Rescue operations continue in Lahaul Spiti valley following heavy snowfall Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Thursday, 25 September 2008

Lahaul Spiti (Himachal Pradesh), Sept 25 (ANI): Rescue operations continue in Himachal Pradesh as early snowfall disrupted road connectivity and left several people stranded at various places in Lahaul Spiti valley.

According to official sources, more than 500 people, including tourists, are still stranded in Lahaul Spiti valley.

Army and local administration have rescued about 19 foreign tourists who are from Switzerland, Poland, Austria, England and Russia.

"We were stuck here due to snowfall. My wife got ill due to altitude. We spent six days in cold in very difficult conditions," said Britte, a tourist from France.

Authorities said that administration is taking measures to rescue stranded people by helicopter and essential requirements such blankets, medicines are also being provided.

"Our Lahaul area got cut off completely from other parts of the state. Now we are conducting rescue operations through road, helicopter, by all means of transport. We have arranged ration, blankets, water and medicine at all the places. We evacuated 10 people yesterday," said Palrasu, Deputy Commissioner, Lahaul Spiti.

Himachal Pradesh has been witnessing incessant rains in the past few days. The heavy downpour has caused floods and triggered landslides in the lower Himalayas. Landslides have affected many districts of the state including the capital, Shimla. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 25 September 2008 )
 
White House played role in CIA interrogation of Al Qaeda operative Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Thursday, 25 September 2008

Washington, Sept.25 (ANI): Senior White House officials played a central role in deliberations in the spring of 2002 about whether the Central Intelligence Agency could legally use harsh interrogation techniques while questioning an operative of Al Qaeda, Abu Zubaydah, according to newly released documents.

In meetings during that period, the New York Times says that the officials debated specific interrogation methods that the C.I.A. had proposed to use on Qaeda operatives held at secret C.I.A. prisons overseas, the documents show.

The meetings were led by Condoleezza Rice, then the national security adviser, and attended by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, Attorney General John Ashcroft and other top administration officials.

The documents provide new details about the still-murky early months of the C.I.A.'s detention program, when the agency began using a set of harsh interrogation techniques weeks before the Justice Department issued a written legal opinion in August 2002 authorizing their use.

Congressional investigators have long tried to determine exactly who authorized these techniques before the legal opinion was completed.

The documents are a list of answers provided by Rice and John B. Bellinger III, the former top lawyer at the National Security Council, to detailed questions by the Senate Armed Services Committee, which is investigating the abuse of detainees in American custody.

Senator Carl Levin, chairman of the committee, provided the documents to The New York Times.

Some of the techniques proposed by the C.I.A. - including waterboarding, which induces a feeling of drowning - came from a program used by the Pentagon to train American pilots to withstand the rigors of captivity.

"I recall being told that U.S. military personnel were subjected in training to certain physical and psychological interrogation techniques and that these techniques had been deemed not to cause significant physical or psychological harm," Rice, now secretary of state, wrote in response to one question.

Still, Rice said she asked Ashcroft personally to review the program and "advise N.S.C. principals whether the program was lawful."

Gordon D. Johndroe, a White House spokesman, declined to comment on which officials attended the meetings in 2002.

He, however, confirmed that Vice President Dick Cheney often attended meetings of the National Security Council's principals committee, a group of senior officials who advise the president on national security.

The new documents do not specify dates for the White House meetings.

Current and former officials have said that the C.I.A. began using harsh interrogation methods on Zubaydah in Thailand weeks before the Justice Department formally authorized the interrogation program in a secret memo dated Aug. 1, 2002.

The officials said Justice Department lawyers gave oral guidance to the C.I.A. before the secret memo was completed. But at one point during the summer of 2002, current and former intelligence officials have said, C.I.A. lawyers ordered that the use of the harsh techniques by C.I.A. personnel be suspended until they were formally authorized by the Justice Department.

A fierce dispute erupted between the C.I.A. and the F.B.I. during the spring and summer of 2002, as F.B.I. officials objected to the harsh treatment and ultimately withdrew from Zubaydah's interrogation.

Levin, a Michigan Democrat, said the new documents showed that top Bush administration officials were more actively engaged in the debate about the limits of lawful interrogation than the White House had previously acknowledged.

"So far, there has been little accountability at higher levels," Mr. Levin said. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 25 September 2008 )
 
Idaho cheerleaders told to cover up 'too revealing' outfits after complaints Print E-mail
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Written by ANI   
Thursday, 25 September 2008

London, Sept 25 (ANI): Cheerleaders from University of Idaho have ditched their uniforms for a more modest outfit following the complaints from spectators, who claimed that they were 'too revealing'.

The fans of the Vandals, University's American football team, were upset that the cheerleaders' two-piece uniforms - tops little bigger than a bra, and short skirts that looked like more hot pants - were too revealing.

Bruce Pitman, the university dean, said that although there were "a number of fans who liked them", the outfits had now been deemed inappropriate.

Some of the cheerleaders had also complained that the outfits were not comfortable and did not suit their figures.

"Girls are just bigger these days, not everybody's a size zero," Telegraph quoted Shelly Robson, a fundraiser for the university's athletics department, as saying.

"We're not being a bunch of prudes," she added.

The new outfits feature less revealing tops and skirts that are six inches longer.

Earlier this year the Vandals have altered uniforms for taste reasons. The American football team took the university logo - an "I" - off the seat of their trousers after the first game of the season. (ANI)

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 25 September 2008 )
 
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