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  • Yousuf returns for Sri Lanka Tests
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    World Twenty20 champions Pakistan on Monday unveiled the 15-man squad to tour Sri Lanka next week, including in the line-up pardoned rebel Indian league players Mohammad Yousuf and Abdul Razzaq.

    Both Razzaq and Yousuf risked their international careers when they played in the Indian Cricket League (ICL), which is not recognised by the International Cricket Council or the Board of Control for Cricket in India.

    The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) banned all 23 players who joined the ICL, but in February this year the Sindh high court suspended the bans on all but two ICL players, paving their way to return to Pakistan’s squad. Inzamam-ul-Haq and Saqlain Mushtaq, who are now retired, did not appeal against the ban.

    Mohammad Yousuf

    Born: August 27 1974
    Batting style: Right-handed
    Bowling style: Right-arm offbreak
    Role: Middle-order batsman 
    
    Test debut: February 26 1998 v South Africa
    ODI debut: March 28 1998 v Zimbabwe 
    
    Career statistics
    Competition	Test		ODIs
    Matches 	79		 269
    Runs scored 	6,770		 9,242
    Batting average 55.49 		43.18
    100s/50s 	23/28 		15/62
    Top score 	223 		141*

    Razzaq was the first ICL player to return to international cricket after he replaced injured all-rounder Yasir Arafat and appeared in the World Twenty20, which ended Sunday with Pakistan lifting the Twenty20 Cricket World Cup.

    They beat Sri Lanka at Lord’s in London, and will now play three Tests, five one-day internationals and a Twenty20 match on the Sri Lanka tour.

    Yousuf, 34, was declared the best Test batsman in 2007 after scoring a world record 1,788 runs in the previous calendar year.

    Yousuf and Razzaq joined the ICL after being left out of the team which finished runners-up in the inaugural World Twenty20 held in South Africa two years ago.

    All-rounder Shahid Afridi, declared man-of-the-match in Pakistan’s semi-final and final win in the World Twenty20, will skip the Test leg of the Sri Lanka tour but will be available for the limited over matches. Injury-prone paceman Shoaib Akhtar, who missed the World Twenty20 due to groin problems, was also not considered for selection for the Sri Lanka tour.

    Also axed from the squad was paceman Sohail Tanvir, part of Pakistan’s winning team on Sunday.

    Rookie 17-year-old paceman Mohammad Aamir, easily the find for Pakistan in their World Twenty20 win, will supplement the attack along with the more experienced Umar Gul and Razzaq.

    Also returning to the squad is paceman Abdur Rauf, who played four one-day matches last year but was never selected for the Tests. Pakistan starts the current tour on June 29 with a three-day side match in Colombo. The first Test starts at Galle from July 4.

    The other two Tests will be played in Colombo (12-16 July and 20-24 July) followed by one-day series and the Twenty20 match.

    Squad: Younus Khan (captain), Misbah-ul-Haq (vice-captain), Salman Butt, Khurrum Manzoor, Mohammad Yousuf, Shoaib Malik, Kamran Akmal, Umar Gul, Saeed Ajmal, Mohammad Aamir, Danish Kaneria, Abdul Razzaq, Abdur Rauf, Faisal Iqbal, Fawad Alam.


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  • Inland Revenue Dept nets Rs. 105b in five months
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    The Department of Inland Revenue has collected Rs.105 billion from taxpayers’ money on behalf of the Government for the first five months of 2009, Commissioner General Inland Revenue Mahinda Medagoda said.

    “Though we are behind the target we are working hard to catch up with the shortage. We encourage the taxpayers’ by requesting them to pay taxes to be used for development in the North and East. There is a good response for this,” he said.

    The targeted amount of total tax money for the year 2009 is Rs. 420 billion. This includes import VAT and nation building tax.

    The taxpayers are called upon to go through the returns and we ask them to pay the agreed taxes. Our officers are in constant contact with them in collecting the taxes. We are satisfied with the way the tax is being collected as we have taken effective action, he said. One of the problems at present is the shortage of tax officers. We have a few vacancies for them as some had left us in the recent past.

    This has hindered the tax collection process, and we work hard to overcome this, he said.

    “We need to widen the tax paying societies. We have already identified some potential segments to collect taxes including mass scale tuition classes and professionals such as doctors and lawyers. It is essential to carry out research to identify the income generating avenues and the trends.

    With this is place we will be able to achieve our targets, the Commissioner General said.

    Our officers have started to work on VAT refunds and we plan to expedite the work and to complete them as soon as possible.

    There was a delay in this and we are in the process of clearing the backlog, he said. We have no immediate plans to branch out as we are already experiencing staff shortages, we need to think twice before we decide on this, Medagoda said.

    During the recent air attack, the Inland Revenue building’s 12th floor was damaged and the other floors also suffered damage to some extent. Its records were intact and no files were damaged. However, urgent repair work to the building has been completed and it is expected that the building repairs will be completed by December this year, he said.

    Currently, the office work is carried out in two other places apart from the head office building at Fort in Darley Road and Union Place.


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  • Rs 30,000 fine on mosquito ‘breeders’
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    Fines totally Rs. 30,000 were imposed on three persons found guilty of having mosquito breeding places in their domestic compounds by the Tangalle Magistrate Bandula Himburegama.

    The officials of the Tangalle MoH office nabbed the suspects during an inspection tour in Tangalle town and produced the suspects in Court. Meanwhile, 249 dengue patients have been identified in Kalutara district while four persons have died. This was revealed at a conference held at the Kalutara Secretariat by District Secretary S. Hapuarachchi.

    He said he has implemented a special program through Divisional Secretaries to eliminate places where mosquitoes breed. Dengue affected persons were detected in Matugama, Horana, Bandaragama, Panadura and Madurawala Divisional Secretariat divisions in the Kalutara District.

    Epidemiologist Dr. Renuka Hawawasam said dengue mosquitoes breed in clean water. “Unlike other mosquitoes the dengue mosquito bites during day time,” Dr. Hawawasam said.

    A health education program through the media has been launched to enlighten the masses about the hazard of environmental pollution and methods to control dengue, he said.

    It was also revealed that 61 persons affected by dengue fever have been identified in Madurawala Medical Officer’s division.


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  • T-Mobile announces second Google phone
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    Competition in the smartphone market is heating up this summer as one new hot smartphone after another hits the street. The latest is T-Mobile’s next Google Android device, called the myTouch.

    T-Mobile myTouch

    T-Mobile myTouch

    T-Mobile will announce the new smartphone Monday. It is the second smartphone the carrier has introduced that uses Google’s open-source mobile operating system, Android. T-Mobile introduced the world’s first Google Android phone, called the G1, last fall. And so far the company claims it has sold over 1 million devices.

    The myTouch is manufactured by HTC and is essentially the same hardware design as the Google Ion, which is also known as the HTC Magic. The device was introduced at the GSMA Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February and is now being sold by Vodafone in various markets around the world.

    The Google Ion/HTC Magic has been described as thinner than the G1 and slightly smaller than Apple’s iPhone. But it features a large 3.2-inch touch screen with a resolution of 320 x480 pixels and no physical keyboard. The phone offers network support for 3G and Wi-Fi.

    Kent German, an editor for CNET Reviews, characterized the Google Ion/HTC Magic as having a “sleek, attractive design with a gorgeous display, tactile controls, and an easy-to-use interface. ” German said that the phone was the Android device he had been waiting for.

    CNET’s German hasn’t yet reviewed the new myTouch, which will come in new colors and have enhanced software capabilities specially designed for T-Mobile.

    The myTouch comes with 512 Megabytes of internal memory and supports microSD for external storage. The device will ship with a 4GB microSD card, but customers can add more storage if they’d like.

    Even though T-Mobile’s first Android phone hasn’t even been out a year, T-Mobile is calling the myTouch its premier Android smartphone, said Andrew Sherrard, vice president at T-Mobile. The carrier will announce a few more Android devices later this year, but it will be focusing much of its marketing efforts promoting the myTouch. And while Sherrard said the G1 isn’t going away anytime soon, he believes the myTouch will have an even better chance to pick up new customers who are looking for an easy to use smartphone.

    T-Mobile plans to sell the myTouch for $199 with a two-year service contract, and it will be available to current T-Mobile customers starting July 8. Non-T-Mobile customers will be able to get the new phone in early August.

    The myTouch is entering the market just as every major smartphone maker is also introducing its latest and greatest device. Three other smartphones makers have already started selling phones this summer. Palm’s much anticipated Pre was introduced on Sprint Nextel’s network two weeks ago. Nokia followed with its U.S. debut of the N97, touch-screen smartphone. And Apple started selling its faster and memory-enhanced iPhone 3G S on Friday.

    Like the Palm Pre and Apple iPhone 3G S, the myTouch will be sold exclusively through a single wireless operator in the U.S. And as a result the $199 price tag is subsidized and requires consumers sign a two-year service contract with the carriers. By contrast, Nokia’s N97 is not subsidized and is sold at full retail price without a service contract.

    So how does T-Mobile expect the myTouch to stand out among all these other cool new phones? The key, Sherrard said, is personalization. While the basic hardware design of the myTouch is the same as the HTC Magic, T-Mobile has made enhancements to the device both in terms of hardware and software.

    “No two myTouch devices will be alike,” Sherrard said. “They will be as unique as the users that own them.”

    From a software perspective, consumers will have the opportunity to completely customize their myTouch device with various Android applications. In retail stores, T-Mobile sales representatives will help customers set up their own personalized device before they leave the store.

    The location-based application Sherpa was designed specially for the myTouch.

    One example of an application that will make the phone more unique to a particular individual is called Sherpa, created by Geodelic. This application is a location-based service that uses GPS to help users find restaurants, movie theaters, and other businesses or points of interest that are nearby.

    What differentiates this service from other location based services is that Sherpa learns where users have been and what they have searched for in the past, and the application is able to make recommendations. It might show some local businesses that it thinks a user might be interested in, such as the nearest dry cleaner. Or the application might highlight special events going on in that area. It also will tell users how far they are from whichever location they are trying to find.

    The application, which is one of 5,000 applications available on the Android Marketplace, will be exclusive to T-Mobile, Sherrard said. The myTouch will also have special Google features baked in, such as easy picture uploading to Picasa and easy video loading to YouTube, both Web properties owned by Google.

    Some other ways users will be able to customize their phones includes the ability to add widgets, music, a personal calendar, photos, and Web link shortcuts that can all be accessed with a single click.

    “What we have found is that once consumers know how to customize a device and they add everything they want on it, they respond very well to having a phone that is specially designed for them,” Sherrard said.

    Still, the battle for the smartphone customer could get bloody. Even though Apple’s iPhone 3G S offered only a modest hardware upgrade, it still flew off the shelves the first weekend it was on the market. Analysts said earlier they had expected Apple to sell 500,000 iPhone 3G S devices during the weekend, and it’s likely that the company easily exceeded these expectations.

    The Palm Pre also got off to a good start with devices selling out the first weekend it was on sale. And Research In Motion, one of the biggest smartphone makers on the market, expects to introduce the BlackBerry Tour and the next generation of its touch-screen BlackBerry phone, the Storm, later this year.

    In the end, Sherrard believes consumers will seethe myTouch as more than just a phone.

    “This is more than a product launch for us,” Sherrard said. “We want consumers to view this as an experience that we are creating for them.”


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  • Tech giants deny helping Iran eavesdrop
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | 1 Comment1 Comment Comments

    A joint venture of Siemens AG and Nokia Corp., two large European technology firms, is denying reports that Iran uses its Web-monitoring technology to censor and spy on its citizens’ online activities.

    Nokia Siemens Networks said Monday that it has sold telecommunications systems to the Iranian government but that any built-in monitoring technology was for voice communications and not the Internet.

    “The lawful intercept capability is purely for local voice calls,” spokesman Ben Roome said in an interview. “We don’t know who may have provided other Internet technologies to Iran.”

    The company’s denial comes as protests over Iran’s disputed election enter their second week, amplified by Twittering from the Iranian diaspora and cell phone videos showing ongoing street conflicts and the apparent death of young Iranian woman called Neda.

    Images and video clips trickling in from the streets of Tehran–even ones whose authenticity may never be established–have electrified the West and demonstrated the limits of power that the government is able to wield. Because foreign correspondents are being pressured by authorities and forced to leave, according to journalist advocacy groups, the country’s relatively tiny Internet pipe to the outside world is offering a unique glimpse of the situation on the streets.

    Iran’s Internet restrictions are no secret, of course. As CNET News reported last week, Web sites including Facebook, YouTube.com, and the BBC have been deemed off-limits by government censors, and there have been recurring reports that Twitter.com and Yahoo Messenger have been blocked as well. Except for some hiccups, though, Iran’s Internet authorities have chosen not to pull the plug on the nation’s connections to the outside world.

    The source of the surveillance technology used by Iran’s Internet service providers remains an unresolved political question that could prove an embarrassment for any Western company linked to Tehran’s censorial regime. Few technology executives have forgotten the spectacle of Washington politicians calling Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang to a hearing and denouncing him as “spineless” for doing business in China, or Cisco being dubbed as “collaborating with the Chinese government” for supplying Internet switches and routers.

    This recent dispute erupted in the form of a front-page article in Monday’s editions of The Wall Street Journal, which claimed that the Iranian government has developed “one of the world’s most sophisticated mechanisms for controlling and censoring the Internet” with the help of Nokia Siemens Networks. The headline read: “Iran’s Web Spying Aided By Western Technology.” (In April, the Washington Times published a similar report that also named Nokia Siemens Networks.)

    But Roome, the Nokia Siemens Networks spokesman, said that the newspaper’s report was incorrect. He said in a blog post, “Unfortunately, I was unable to clarify for the Wall Street Journal the limited scope of the lawful intercept capability (voice calls only) and rule out…deep packet inspection and Web filtering.”

    Roome argued that, whatever its faults, even Iran’s wiretap-ready mobile phone network has proven vital in spreading word about the political upheaval unfolding amid widespread protests. “Mobile networks in Iran, and the subsequent widespread adoption of mobile phones, have allowed Iranians to communicate what they are seeing and hearing with the outside world,” he said. “The proof of this is in the widespread awareness of the current situation.”

    Complicating the matter is the difficulty of identifying the technology used. It’s relatively easy to figure out which Web sites that are off-limits–groups like Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society have made a practice of compiling such lists–but much harder to know what hardware or software is being used to monitor Internet links.

    “For the filtering work we are able to verify the actual functionality,” said Rob Faris, research director for the Berkman Center. “It’s just about impossible to document surveillance with the same level of confidence.”

    In terms of Web blocking, a Berkman Center report compiled in 2005 said that Iran used Secure Computing’s SmartFilter. It quoted the company’s chief executive, John McNulty, as saying: “We have been made aware of ISPs in Iran making illegal and unauthorized attempts to use of our software. Secure Computing is actively taking steps to stop this illegal use of our products.”

    McAfee now owns Secure Computing and sells the software as McAfee SmartFilter. A product description boasts of “a proven repository of more than 25 million blockable websites across more than 90 categories.”

    “We have never seen any direct evidence or hard proof that Iran has ever used any McAfee or Secure Computing product,” McAfee said in an e-mailed statement on Monday. “McAfee complies with all export laws and regulation applicable to its products. Rigorous due diligence was conducted prior to the acquisition of Secure Computing and there was no indication of any contract in Iran or support being provided in Iran.” (A U.S. economic embargo restricts trade with Iran.)

    More recent reports suggest that Iranian Internet providers have developed or adapted their own Web filtering technology, but shed little light on the question of surveillance.


    Watch CBS Videos Online

    Compared with a few years ago, traffic analysis and inspection have become more common for Internet providers; their legitimate purposes include detecting malicious activity, prioritizing online phone calls over e-mail, and for mobile providers, charging different fees for different types of data.

    Cisco’s Service Control Engine series boasts of conducting “deep packet inspection” and “detection and control of virtually any network application, including: Web browsing, multimedia streaming, and peer-to-peer (P2P).” WireShark, free software for intercepting and decoding traffic, can record and display what’s taking place on a network. And most modern routers can block or log access to Web sites based on a list of Internet addresses or domain names.

    “I don’t know how one could actually determine” what Iran is using for surveillance, said Tony Barbagallo, vice president of marketing at WildPackets of Walnut Creek, Calif., which sells Internet monitoring tools including OmniPeek Network Analyzer. “It’s pretty easy to conceive that they could be using homegrown technology.”

    “Our products are used in the United States and elsewhere specifically for lawful intercept,” Barbagallo said. “We’ve actually developed extensions to our products to make it easier to do lawful intercept. Any of our customers with a maintenance contract can download the same products the governments are using.”

    This echoes the argument that Nokia Siemens Networks has made: that selling voice-only lawful intercept gear to Iran is acceptable because built-in wiretappability is required in the United States and Europe. Ever since the 1994 Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act, U.S. telephone companies have been legally required to make sure their networks can easily be wiretapped by police; in 2006, a federal appeals court upheld the Bush administration’s decision to extend those rules to Internet providers.

    On the other hand, the United States and Europe tend not to imprison people for criticizing their respective governments, something that responses posted on Nokia Siemens Networks’ blog pointed out on Monday. One response asked: “What happens when your ‘lawful intercept’ capability is sold to regimes which are likely to use it a way which would be considered unlawful under European and U.N. Human Rights conventions — say to suppress freedom of speech?”

    Jay Botelho, WildPackets’ director of product management, said the best way for an Iranian Internet provider to monitor its customers would be to use one bank of monitoring equipment for e-mail, another for Web browsing, a third for VoIP calls, and so on. “Using our product, the easiest way to monitor everything is to hook onto an (extra port) port off your main switch,” Botelho said. “The problem is that depending on the traffic, that could overload an appliance. But if you slowed everything down, you’d get everything.”

    That’s not a problem in Iran, which has limited connectivity to the outside world, and where download speeds are far slower than what many other countries enjoy. Some Iran watchers have speculated for years that those sluggish connections represented a form of social control–it dramatically curbs Web video usage, for instance–and point to a 2006 decree saying that Internet connections should be limited to 128 Kbps (kilobits per second).

    The largest Internet provider in Iran is Tehran-based Pars Online, which claims to employ over 400 people. It claims to have three satellite stations that can send data at 155 Mbps (megabits per second), amounting to the size of the virtual pipe connecting much of Iran to the outside world. By contrast, Verizon’s FIOS service offers each home subscriber a connection of 50 Mbps for downloads and 20 Mbps for uploads.


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  • Glover holds off Mickelson to win U.S. Open
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    American journeyman Lucas Glover denied Phil Mickelson a fairytale victory at the U.S. Open as he kept his nerve to close out a two-shot victory at Bethpage Black on Monday.

    Glover celebrates claiming his first major title by two shots from a trio of chasers.

    Glover celebrates claiming his first major title by two shots from a trio of chasers.

    Mickelson, who was playing while his wife Amy battles breast cancer, had to settle for a share of second place with fellow Americans David Duval and Ricky Barnes.

    It was a record fifth runner-up finish at the U.S. Open for Mickelson as Glover, who had not won since 2005, fired a final round three-over-par 73 in tough and windy conditions to finish on four-under 284.

    Mickelson, with the majority of the final day crowd rooting for an emotional victory, eagled the par-five 13th to move into a share of the lead at four-under with Glover, but crucially dropped shots at 15th and short 17th.

    “I put myself in a great position to close it out but I didn’t finish it off,” Mickelson said.

    “Certainly I’m disappointed but now that it’s over I have more important things going on.”

    Duval, who not featured in a major for several years, carded a hat-trick birdies to the 16th to briefly join Mickelson and Glover on three-under, but also bogeyed the 17th as he lipped out. It was his first top 10 finish since 2002.

    Defending champion Tiger Woods was also briefly a factor but saw a string of birdie opportunities go to waste as he closed with a 69 to finish tied with Soren Hansen of Denmark in sixth place on level par 280.

    “I gave myself so many chances and I made nothing,” said Woods as he rued his missed putts.

    Ross Fisher of England was another to challenge on a topsy-turvy final day as he got to three under by eagling the 13th, but like so many others fell away to finish in fifth at one-under.

    Glover, who had started the final day of the rain-hit major in a tie for the lead at seven-under with the surprising Barnes, gave himself vital breathing space with his lone birdie of the day on the par-four 16th.

    He takes home a check for $1.35 million in claiming his first major.

    “It was a test of patience, that’s for sure,” Glover said. “It was just heart today.”

    The second major of the season was struck from the start by torrential rain which flooded the course in New York State and pushed the fourth-round finish to Monday for the first time since 1983 and only the second time ever.


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  • Holder Venus cruises through opening match
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    Defending Wimbledon champion Venus Williams eased through to the second round of the women’s singles with a comfortable straight sets victory over Swiss teenager Stefanie Voegele under beautiful blue skies on Center Court.

    Venus is through to the second round at Wimbledon after a straight sets victory on Tuesday.

    Venus is through to the second round at Wimbledon after a straight sets victory on Tuesday.

    Third seed Venus will next face Ukrainian Kateryna Bondarenko after a 6-3 6-2 victory over the world number 97 who was making her debut at the All England Club.

    The American, who is seeking a sixth singles title at SW19, had a couple of shaky moments on her own serve — and was broken twice before reaching the second round in 78 minutes.

    “This is the best place to be when you are a professional tennis player and I savor every blade of it,” Williams told reporters.

    “I’ve had that crown for several years and I want to make it mine again.”

    In other women’s matches, Sixth seed Jelena Jankovic is also through to the second round after defeating Germany’s Julia Goerges 6-4 7-6 and she will next face Czech Iveta Benesova, who beat young British hope Katie O’Brien in three sets.

    Meanwhile, Australian Jelena Dokic, who made her career breakthrough here in 1999 when she defeated top seed Martina Hingis before experiencing problems in her personal life, took the first set off German qualifier Tatjana Malek before losing 3-6 7-5 6-2.

    Dokic complained of feeling dizzy at the end of the second set and had her blood pressure taken at courtside. Malek now goes on to face Australian 18th seed, and French Open semifinalist, Samantha Stosur.


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  • Liverpool close to bank debt deal
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    Liverpool owners George Gillett (left) and Tom Hicks

    The club’s owners are having to sell assets in the US and Canada

    Liverpool Football Club - which owes two banks £350m - is close to renegotiating its debt with the Royal Bank of Scotland, the BBC has learnt.

    RBS has told club owners Tom Hicks and George Gillett the debt, due to be repaid in July, will be refinanced.

    BBC business editor Robert Peston says RBS will insist on significant payments in the subsequent six months.

    It comes as Portsmouth’s defender Glen Johnson has agreed to join Liverpool in a £17.5m move.

    Lending agreement

    Our business editor says the good news for Liverpool FC supporters is that the club is not about to go bust.

    “I understand that Royal Bank of Scotland has told its two billionaire owners, George Gillett and Tom Hicks, that their £350m debt - which falls due for repayment on 24 July and is owed to Royal Bank and Wachovia of the US - will be refinanced.

    “A new lending agreement will be put on place.”

    A spokesman for the US pair would not comment on the development.

    The other bank owed money, Wachovia, has yet to make any announcement.

    US sales

    Latest accounts show Kop Holdings, the parent company of the Anfield club, lost £42.6m in the year to August 2008.

    The RBS revelation comes days after Liverpool co-owner George Gillett agreed to sell one of his major assets in a deal which would ease financial pressures at the Premier League club.

    He is selling his 80% stake in the NHL’s Montreal Canadiens ice hockey team, in a deal reported to be worth at least $550m (£332.9m).

    His fellow Liverpool owner, Mr Hicks, has also been looking to sell off elements of his own sporting empire - which includes Major League Baseball’s Texas Rangers and the NHL’s Dallas Stars.

    The sales will help provide financial guarantees to RBS and Wachovia that Mr Gillett and Mr Hicks have funds available for the operation of the football business.

    ‘Commercial acumen’

    Meanwhile, the club has appointed a new managing director, Christian Purslow, as overall manager of the club until a new chief executive is in place.

    Mr Purslow will represent owners George Gillett and Tom Hicks and liaise with manager Rafael Benitez on his summer transfer dealings.

    He is an executive board member and co-founder of private equity firm Mid Ocean Partners.

    “His strategic and commercial acumen will be a real asset and we’re delighted that he has made a long term commitment to the club,” Mr Gillett said.


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  • German troops die in Afghanistan
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    A German soldier in Afghanistan

    Germany has about 3,700 German troops in Afghanistan

    Three German soldiers have been killed during a clash with insurgents in Afghanistan, the German defence ministry has said.

    The soldiers were on a joint operation with Afghan forces when the attack took place near the northern city of Kunduz, a ministry spokesman said.

    The German military base in Kunduz is a frequent target of attacks.

    Some 3,700 German troops are serving in Afghanistan with Nato’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).

    In 2008, the deteriorating security situation in northern Afghanistan prompted Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government to increase the number of German troops in the country to up to 4,400 by the end of this year.

    But the military operation in Afghanistan is unpopular with some people in Germany and is likely to be a campaign issue ahead of general elections in September.

    Some 35 German troops have died in the country since 2002.


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  • “I weighed 33 stone at age 15″
    By Asiri on June 23rd, 2009 | No Comments Comments

    At 15 years old and weighing 33 stone (210kg), Georgia Davis was dubbed Britain’s fattest teen.

    After winning a scholarship to an American weight loss camp last year, Georgia has lost 14 stone (89kg), almost half her body weight.

    Georgia, now 16, tells BBC Radio 5 Live’s Victoria Derbyshire show about how she achieved her dramatic weight loss - and why she thinks the NHS should now fund her weight loss programme.

    Georgia, from south Wales, says she began overeating at a very young age:

    “It all started when I was five when my dad died and I was letting my emotions control me.

    “I was always upset, so every time I got upset I would comfort eat.”

    As well as family pressures, Georgia started to experience problems at school - where she says she was bullied - and her comfort eating continued.

    “I would eat pretty much all day.

    “I would eat everything, any kind of food.”

    Bread - up to three-quarters of a loaf a day - milk, cola, crisps, chocolate biscuits and cakes were particular favourites.

    “It made me feel better for a minute or two, but then I’d feel down again, so I’d eat again, and it would just continue on and on.”

    Morbidly obese

    Her mother, Lesley, found Georgia’s eating habits impossible to control: “You know what teenagers are.

    Georgia Davis

    Georgia before she lost the weight

    “They don’t want to be doing what they’re supposed to be doing.

    “They’d rather do the complete opposite.”

    By the time she was 15, Georgia’s weight had reached 33 stone (210kg), and she was a UK size 38.

    At 5′6, she was morbidly obese.

    But after nine months at the Wellspring Academy, an American fitness school which awarded her a scholarship, Georgia weighs under 19 stone (121kg) and is now a size 20.

    She says her calorie consumption has gone down from around 13,000 a day to around 1,200.

    Funding

    She told BBC Radio 5 Live’s Victoria Derbyshire show about her new routine: “It’s a structured day.

    “It helps you control your life accordingly.

    “Basically, you wake up around 6.30 and you go to morning activity for about an hour.

    “Once you’ve done that, you go to breakfast and then you have school and basic classes.”

    “Then you have lunch in between classes, and then more activity and then dinner, free time and then more activity before you go to bed.”

    She credits CBT, cognitive behavioural therapy, with helping her understand the reasons for her overeating and learning how to control it.

    The school says she needs to complete another year to lose weight and keep it off, but that it can only fund her until Christmas.

    Mike Davidson of the Wellspring Academy said: “Georgia is still about 8 stone (51kg) from her healthy weight and has not dealt with all of her emotional needs or unlocked the habits around her eating yet that could cause her to relapse.

    “She needs more time.”

    The NHS, after initially refusing to provide the estimated £23,000 needed for this, is now reviewing its decision.

    Georgia says that she’s pleased to be seen as a kind of test case:

    “I want to help as many people as I can, because during this time I’ve been doing this academy, I’ve realised that there are so many people out there with the same problem that I have.

    “And I think that if I can do this with the NHS, if they fund me, then the NHS will help fund others… so that other people will be happy and normal too.”


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