Mom biggest fan, dad biggest critic: Ranbir Kapoor

New Delhi, Nov 4 – Bollywood heartthrob Ranbir Kapoor, who belongs to a family of great actors and filmmakers, says while his mother Neetu Kapoor is his biggest fan, his father Rishi Kapoor is his biggest critic.

‘My mom is my biggest fan, but my father is my biggest critic,’ Ranbir told IANS.

‘He is someone who will call a spade a spade and is not afraid of hurting anyone because he is very correct when opinions are concerned and I am really happy that I have someone like him in my life who will tell me when I’m bad and when I’m good,’ he said.

Ranbir, who has acted in films like ‘Saawariya’, ‘Bachna Ae Haseeno’ and ‘Wake UP Sid’ will be next seen opposite Katrina Kaif in the romantic comedy ‘Ajab Prem Ki Ghazab Kahani’, slated to release Nov 6.

India needs better fire protection services (Comment)

The massive oil depot fire that raged for days in Jaipur has dramatically but tragically illuminated the woefully inadequate fire service infrastructure in India. While conceding that the Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) depot fire in Jaipur was colossal by any standard, the routine fire accidents that occur on a daily basis reveal the institutional flaws in the entire fire protection capacity at a national level.

For example, Diwali this year, like previous years, brought with it numerous reports of casualties in the burns wards across Delhi. Nearly 250 small fires occurred but hardly raised any public outcry.

Being an issue evoking a non-committal response from society and the state in particular, fire protection has bred over the years a state of apathy among most Indians. The increasingly deplorable conditions under which the Fire Services (FS) of the country struggle to render a sustained modicum of minimum service today are stark but invisible.

Thus the Oct 23 cabinet clearance of ‘a scheme of the Ministry of Home Affairs for strengthening of fire and emergency services to be implemented at an estimated cost of Rs.200 crore during the remaining period of the Eleventh Five Year Plan’ is a much-delayed but welcome initiative.

Within this scheme, fundamental issues like protection of life and property clearly need to be addressed. Recognising fire protection as a fundamental right would benefit every citizen.

The fire services continue to be governed by the rather obsolete system set in place by the British Raj. The FS must be elevated to the Concurrent List from the State List and recognised at par with centrally administered service like the other allied services.

At the state level, ground level instruction for firemen should adhere to an all-India standard, imparted partly in vernacular languages. Another category of training, with adequate monetary incentives, could be implemented for the locals in smaller habitats. Specialised institutes offering higher content structure for officers could fall within the purview of the individual states.

All-India institutes for higher training in accordance with national and international fire standards, perhaps affiliated to a university, would necessarily have to be a concern of the centre. Promotions to the ranks of chief fire officer, director and adviser both at the centre and in the states may be subject to qualifying in the advanced courses, for which adequate vacancies would also have to be added.

With India aiming to be among the ranks of developed nations by 2020, heavy investment in R&D and the establishment of test laboratories conforming to national and international fire standards are a pre-requisite. Simultaneously, the insurance rules for fire protection for life, property, crops, manufacturing facilities and other assets clearly need to be instituted, as insurance remains a key multiplier for all related activities — thereby enabling them to become self-sustaining and reducing dependence on the government.

Critical equipment for manufacture of firefighting implements and tools forms one of the key imports. Some are manufactured indigenously but, with FS being technology-intensive like the navy, it would be ideal if the route adopted is as per the experience of the navy.

Massive funds are spent in imports without the benefit of reductions arising from bulk purchase, or without the benefit of the standard offset clause when awarding contracts. With central and state requirements clubbed together, it would become viable for big Indian corporations to venture into manufacturing sophisticated fire equipment in India with the additional advantage of in-house research as well as generating additional employment.

Setting up of world class test laboratories and centres of excellence in R&D is a rather formidable task for which sustainable collaboration with technical institutes and universities is a must. The education level of fire officers would have to be sufficiently raised so that given considerable experience, they can be posted to the centres. Initial funding would have to be borne by the central government with major manufacturing companies being enticed to participate as equity holders in due course of time in which the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) could emerge as a potential Leader.

A fraction of the budgeted plan could be diverted towards the constitution of an exclusive Fire Services Commission on the lines of the Police Commission, headed by a powerful public figure and vested with the authority to lay down the road map to finance it whilst concurrently strengthening fire and emergency services. The commission would be inclusive of representatives of FS, IAS, IPS, defence forces, armed police forces, the Home Guards and stakeholders like the Planning Commission, CSIR, Ministry of Finance, insurance regulator, the business chambers and the media. A core team may initially have to evolve terms of reference, quantify the scattered expenditures incurred by various states, the public and private sector players and suggest appropriate funding measures.

India’s home secretary recently stated at a business seminar that $6 billion has been earmarked for strengthening homeland security. With homeland security thus engaging national attention in such a major way, fire protection can and must be developed as a key integral component of this much-needed but largely ignored national effort. The next big fire as in Jaipur and the Diwali of 2010 must see India better prepared.

(04.11.2009 – The author is a former naval officer and merchant navy captain. He has been working in the area of fire service in India.)

US, Europe must accept climate change obligations: German chancellor

Washington, Nov 4 – German Chancellor Angela Merkel has made an impassioned plea to the US and European nations to accept binding obligation on climate change to influence countries like China and India without whom no agreement was possible.

‘There can be no agreement without India and China,’ she said in an historic address before both houses of the US Congress on Tuesday. ‘No doubt about it, in December, the world will look to us, to the Europeans and to the Americans. And it is true, there can be no agreement without China and India.’

‘But I’m convinced, once we in Europe and America show ourselves ready to adopt binding agreements; we will also be able to persuade China and India to join in,’ she said.

‘We need an agreement on one objective: Global warming must not exceed 2 degrees Celsius,’ Merkel said stressing the importance of work together on efforts to curb global warming and to help forge a binding climate-change deal at an international meeting in Copenhagen next month.

Merkel said that people must tear down mental walls that blocked them from seeing the plight of future generations if warming continued unchecked with the same resolve that Germans had when they brought down the Berlin Wall on Nov 9, 1989.

The first German chancellor to address a joint session of the US Congress in 50 years, Merkel also called for building a stable partnership with India, China and Russia, noting that the world today is both freer and more integrated than ever before

‘The fall of the Berlin Wall, the technological revolution in information and communication technology, the rise of China, India and other countries to become dynamic economies-all of this has changed the world of the 21st century into something completely different from what we knew in the 20th century,’ she said.

‘There is no doubt NATO remains the crucial cornerstone of our common security,’ the German Chancellor said. But ‘Europeans, I am convinced, may contribute even more in the future, for we Europeans are currently working on giving a new contractual basis to our European Union,’ she said.

‘This will make the European Union stronger and more capable of action, and thereby turn it into a strong and reliable partner for the United States. We can build stable partnerships on this sound basis, first and foremost with Russia, China and India,’ Merkel said.

As leader of Europe’s largest economy, Merkel also pledged to keep working with the Group of 20 major economies, including India, to take coordinated steps to prevent a another global financial meltdown.

‘The cooperation between the Americans and the Europeans is a crucial cornerstone. It is not an exclusive, but an inclusive cooperation. The G-20 have shown they are capable of action. And we need to resist the pressure of those who almost led the nations of this planet to the abyss.’ she said.

(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)

Largest, costliest cruiser nearly ready for launch

Helsinki, Nov 4 (DPA) A thin layer of ice covers the teak wood deck of the cruise ship the Oasis of the Seas at the moment. But the cold weather is just one of the challenges a visitor will need to overcome if they want to visit the vessel: tins of paint are everywhere and sheets of tarpaulin make walking around the ship difficult.

By the start of November the flagship of the cruise company Royal Caribbean International (RCI) should be ready to set sail. When that day arrives the world will have a few more superlatives: never before has there been a cruise ship as large and as expensive to build as the Oasis. Right now construction and fitting out of the $1.4 billion vessel is underway at the Aker shipyard in Turku, Finland.

Over 2,000 people are working on the 360-metre-long and 71-metre-wide ship. All of them are wearing blue overalls and helmets – a few are even jogging around. ‘It’s as busy here as a freeway in Miami,’ says RCI spokeswoman Elisabetta Raffo. ‘But we are well on schedule.’

The Oasis is due to be christened in Fort Lauderdale Nov 30. On Dec 1 it will begin its maiden voyage to the Caribbean. Some of the islands in the Caribbean are quite small – too small almost when you know the ship can take up to 6,296 passengers and 2,160 crew.

That explains why the Oasis will only make three visits during its seven day cruise to St. Thomas, St. Maarten and Nassau in the Bahamas. The four day voyage will go to the Royal Caribbean port resort of Labadee on Haiti.

‘They are building new passenger terminals in the harbours so we won’t have to go through customs on board the ships in future,’ says hotel director Raimund Gschaider.

Luckily there is no pressing need to go on land as the Oasis of the Seas has plenty on offer and a week on board may end up passing by too quickly. Although not every guest will want to try out one of the ship’s two climbing walls, hang from a zip-line over the boardwalk or go ice skating, many will certainly be taking advantage of the pool and bar areas.

The biggest freshwater swimming pool at sea – called the Aqua Theatre – will also tempt a few to go diving for the first time. Passengers can even go for a walk in the ship’s Central Park; a park area the size of two football pitches with trees up to eight metres tall.

The Oasis looks smaller than it actually is and the architects managed to make the vessel look elegant despite its 18 decks. The ship’s interior is also almost transparent thanks to the wide-scale use of glass. The main restaurant can seat up to 2,000 guests but due to the clever design with corners, dividing walls and alcoves you only get to see a portion of it at any one time.

The ship is divided into seven ‘neighbourhoods’ and there are 24 restaurants to choose from. Among them the Rising Tide Bar will likely be popular as it will feature a lift that can carry up to 50 people from the fifth floor to Central Park.

The colour scheme is unobtrusive with cream, beige, sea green, blue, terracotta and rust red the main hues. The children’s areas are more colourful. Most of the 2,706 cabins have a balcony either facing inwards to the arcades or outwards to the sea.

The Oasis of the Seas will leave Finland at the beginning of November and travel to its home port of Fort Lauderdale via the Azores. During the 12-day voyage the crew will be introduced to the ship. In Florida there will be five days of finishing touches when plants will be brought on board.

India’s National Defence College was terror target

Washington, Nov 4 – Two Pakistan-born Chicago men charged with plotting to launch terrorist attacks in India and Denmark in association with Pakistan based terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) were targeting India’s National Defence College (NDC), a US court was told.

In court papers filed in Chicago Tuesday to have a federal judge detain Chicago businessman Tahawwura Hussain Rana without bond, federal prosecutors said he discussed the attack on NDC with David Coleman Headley, a Pakistan-born American national.

Prosecutors told magistrate Judge Nan Nolan that the alleged discussion of an attack on the New Delhi-based premier military college for senior service and civil officers shows that Rana was serious about taking part in terrorism and wasn’t merely Headley’s dupe as Rana’s lawyers contend.

Rana, a Pakistan-born Canadian national, and Headley, whose former name was Daood Gilani, are also charged with plotting to attack Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. The newspaper sparked outrage throughout the Muslim world in 2005 by publishing 12 cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.

After a brief hearing Tuesday, the detention question was continued to Nov 10 before magistrate Judge Nolan.

The government’s memorandum in support of Rana’s detention pending trial said the planners of this attack included at least one member of LeT and Ilyas Kashmiri, who is affiliated with Al Qaeda, another terrorist organization that has been so designated since 1999.

Recorded conversations involving Rana, emails and other documentary evidence demonstrate that the Rana conspired to provide, and did provide, material support to the conspiracy, it said.

Rana was aware of the object of the conspiracy and the ongoing efforts to further the plot, the memo said. For example, on Sep 7, 2009, Rana and Headley, actively discussed the efforts to communicate with Kashmiri.

Rana and Headley also discussed the need to get Headley’s ‘reports’ and ‘notes’ to Kashmiri. ‘In doing so, Rana was neither laughing nor ridiculing Headley, as suggested by Rana during oral argument,’ prosecutors said.

In the same conversation, Headley and Rana discussed Denmark and other targets, including the National Defence College in India, the memo said noting Rana, in fact, used the English word ‘target’ in this discussion.

Rana also misled a government official, the Pakistani Consulate in Chicago, to obtain a visa for Headley to facilitate his prospective overseas travel.

Rana, the owner of a Grundy County goat farm and a Chicago immigration business, also allegedly communicated with a person affiliated with Let about smuggling in workers to the US.

He allegedly e-mailed an LeT associate last December concerning a ‘loophole’ in American immigration policy. ‘Whenever you find easy way to come to US immediately think there is a catch to it,’ Rana wrote, prosecutors said.

‘Only one loophole is business, which they believe is OK and intelligence can play a role,’ he was quoted as saying

Meanwhile, a team of Indian officials have arrived in the US to join the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in probing the foiled terror plot.

The officials were expected to interview at least Headley in a bid to determine the intended target in India and when the alleged attack was to be carried out. However, both Indian and American officials declined to ‘confirm or deny’ whether they had questioned Headley.

(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)

Pirated Windows 7 generates $100,000 in India

Lucknow, Nov 4 – About 50,000 pirated DVDs of Microsoft Windows 7 are estimated to have been sold here since the official launch on Oct 22, generating unaccounted business of around Rs.50 lakh (nearly $100,000).

The reason for the allure of the pirated versions: These cost Rs.40-Rs.250 in Naza Market in Hazratganj here, drawing buyers from not only the rest of Uttar Pradesh and neighbouring states like Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Uttarakhand but also Nepal and Bangladesh.

‘This is the biggest market in the region,’ said a shopkeeper in Hazratganj, claiming at least 50,000 DVDs of the pirated Windows 7 have been sold since hitting the local markets within 24 hours of the official launch, fetching sellers about Rs.50 lakh so far.

The legal version of the new operating system launched by Microsoft Corp costs between $150-$300 (Rs.7,500-Rs.15,000) in the international markets. The company, however, tagged its prices 20 percent below international rates in India, where it is available in the Rs.6,000-Rs.11,000 range through official channels.

Despite the discounted company rates, buyers are opting for the pirated version.

‘Why invest Rs.10,000 when it is available for Rs.250?’ asked Pramod Yadav, a student pursuing a Master of Computer Applications (MCA) course.

Added Mohit Singh, who runs a computer hardware and software maintenance company: ‘We pay for only the DVD as we are regular customers. A DVD hardly costs Rs.20-40.’

Most computer service providers or ‘regular customers’ in Lucknow and elsewhere in India use pirated software, contended Nishant Kumar, a software engineer with HCL Technologies in Greater Noida.

According to him, what makes the pirated operating systems more attractive is that cheap pirated anti-virus software is also freely available.

‘A lot of anti-virus software, for example Awast, is available on the Internet,’ Kumar said, adding that it was equally effective and has the same service life.

Those selling pirated Windows 7 deny doing anything illegal.

‘There are over 200 shops in Naza Market. All have everything you want. We are not doing anything illegal as everything is available on the Internet,’ said a shopkeeper not willing to be named.

‘We are only transferring and supplying to buyers who include students, professionals and even big business houses.’

Those selling authentic software are unhappy.

‘Be it software or encyclopaedia, everything is available in pirated form within 24 hours. We do not get the expected business,’ Amit Mishra of Newgen Technologies, the authorised distributor of Compaq, HP, Microsoft and Lenovo in Hazratganj, told IANS.

The police express helplessness in combating piracy. ‘We know what is going on for the past couple of decades. But we cannot act on our own. We need a formal complaint to act or else you (the media) will come down on us,’ police spokesperson A.K. Pathak told IANS.

Besides software, the Naza Market and the Naka Market in the Naka area are also famous for producing CDs and DVDs of newly released Bollywood movies within 24 hours.

‘You name the movie and you will have the CD, DVD the next day,’ boasted Harnam Singh, a Naka shopowner.

(Rajat Rai can be contacted at rajat.r@ians.in)

12 injured as train derails near Mumbai

Thane, Nov 4 – At least 12 passengers sustained minor injuries when 11 coaches of the Gandhidham-Bengaluru Express derailed near Dombivili here early Wednesday, a railway official said.

‘The incident occurred around 2 a.m. near Dombivli on the single-line Vasai-Diva section which links the Western Raiwlay and Central Railway,’ said an official of the railway control room.

Of the 11 coaches that derailed, at least two overturned and got badly damaged in the incident.

All the passengers, most of whom were sleeping at the time of the accident, had a miraculous escape.

Relief and rescue teams were rushed to the scene of the accident and work on restoration of the railway traffic has started.

The Central Railway was making arrangements to put the stranded passengers on a special train to their destinations.

The railways have also set up helpline numbers at Mumbai, Thane, Kalyan, Vasai, Gandhidham, Ahmedabad, Surat, Vadodra and Bengaluru to provide information to people about their near and dear ones.

Kareena and I were depressed during ‘Kurbaan’ shoot: Saif Khan

Mumbai, Nov 4 – Bollywood actors often describe their shooting schedule as a picnic. But ‘cold and depressing’ is what Saif Ali Khan has to say about the US shoot of ‘Kurbaan’, speaking for not just himself but also girlfriend and co-star Kareena Kapoor.

‘ ‘Kurbaan’ was hard work. Period. In fact, the Philadelphia schedule was plain hell. It wasn’t anything like a picnic shooting for the film,’ shudders Saif, who is glad that the film is complete and ready for release.

Saif says, ‘It gets dark there at 4 p.m. itself. Moreover, it’s so cold and at minus 10 degrees it can actually get really depressing. Since we were shooting in sync sound, it was extremely difficult to get the pitch and tone right while delivering our dialogues.’

The film by Rensil D’Souza also stars Vivek Oberoi, Dia Mirza, Om Puri and Kirron Kher and will be released Nov 20.

It was during the shoot of the film that Saif and Kareena got news of the terror attack in Mumbai last year. ‘Because of that, it was so difficult to concentrate on the film’s shoot. Thankfully, Bebo (Kareena Kapoor) was there with me at that time but still both of us were very depressed,’ says Saif.

As it was quite cold in Philadelphia, Saif and Kareena were required to wear layers of clothing. Later, for continuity purpose, they had to wear the same clothes in the summer of Mumbai.

Saif and others also had a hard time adjusting to the locations chosen for the film’s shoot.

‘We were shooting in a tube and that’s anything but fun,’ he remembers. ‘We had to shoot a subway sequence but being in a tube for hours at a stretch is like being in an underground prison. Really, it is very disorienting. Who says shooting for a film is like being in a picnic? ‘Kurbaan’ certainly wasn’t one.’

When asked to name one film which was fun to shoot, Saif talks of Abbas-Mustan-directed ‘Race’.

‘Now that’s what I call as a real picnic’, he says. ‘Doing the film was quite easy since the working hours were quite comfortable while locations were nice, easy and comfortable. It was really simple work and I enjoyed a lot. It was really entertaining to drive fast cars, saying cool lines, be a hero and stuff alike.

‘On the other hand, ‘Kurbaan’ has me playing this complicated character which only makes it further difficult for an actor.’

GM confirms to keep Opel, scraps Magna deal

Washington, Nov 4 (DPA) General Motors’ board voted Tuesday to hold on to its Opel division rather than sell a majority stake to Canada-based Magna, ending months of uncertainty and dashing the hopes of German officials.

‘Given an improving business environment for GM over the past few months, and the importance of Opel-Vauxhall to GM’s global strategy, the GM board of directors has decided to retain Opel and will initiate a restructuring of its European operations in earnest,’ GM said in a statement.

US, EU resume talks on climate change

Washington, Nov 4 (DPA) The US and European Union resumed talks on climate change Tuesday as they intensify efforts to reach an accord ahead of next month’s UN summit in Copenhagen, expressing confidence a pact could be reached.

US President Barack Obama said the discussions focused ‘extensively’ on reaching a deal to reduce greenhouse gases by 2020. Obama has accepted the goals for reducing global warming but has come under increasing pressure from the European Union to do more.

While the two sides remain far apart they are still optimistic a deal can be reached at the Copenhagen conference Dec 7-18.

‘I am more confident now than I was some days before,’ Jose Manuel Barroso, the president of the European Commission, told reporters.

Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency and EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana also participated in the meeting.

Other issues on the agenda were the war in Afghanistan, curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the economic recovery, trade and the Middle East peace process.

The United States has been criticized by the EU and other countries for failing to commit to curbs on its greenhouse-gas emissions blamed for global warming. Obama has been reluctant to agree to a strong global climate treaty without the backing of

Congress, where Obama’s fellow Democrats are struggling to pass a pollution-curbing bill.

‘We are confident that if all countries involved recognize this is a unique opportunity, that we can get an important deal done,’ Obama said during a separate meeting with Reinfeldt on Monday.

The United Nations hopes governments will agree to a new treaty that can replace the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. The US-EU talks will continue on Wednesday.

The US Senate last week began considering a bill that would force US companies to cut their climate-damaging emissions, but even administration officials have acknowledged that a bill is unlikely to reach Obama’s desk in time for the Copenhagen talks.

By contrast, the EU’s 27 member countries on Friday reached a compromise on how much money to offer developing countries to fight climate change, a key stumbling block for a global treaty. Obama has not said how much the US is willing to contribute.

The EU’s 27 national leaders endorsed estimates by the European Commission, the EU’s executive, that rich nations will have to offer developing countries around 100 billion euros ($147 billion) per year by 2020.