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In Bollywood industry Katrina Kaif is one of Bollywood’s leading actresses – the most searched-for Indian female film star on the Internet and a former top model with an A-list boyfriend.

She is 25-year-old, whose latest film ‘Ajab Prem Ki Ghazab Kahani’ is released on November 6, said her rise to fame has not been easy and she is determined success will not go to her head.

‘It didn’t happen overnight. I was here struggling to make it as a model and tried my luck in acting,’ she said.

‘I didn’t know in the first place whether I wanted to be in acting but then good roles started coming and my films started becoming a hit. And here I am.’

Kaif, born in Hong Kong to a British mother and a father of Indian Kashmiri origin, made a faltering start in the 2003 film ‘Boom’ after being spotted in a commercial.

She has since notched up roles in high-profile films like the recent blockbuster ‘Blue’, the 2008 action comedy ‘Singh Is Kinng’ and the romantic comedy ‘Namastey London’ in 2007.

The actress in part attributes her rise to actor Salman Khan, with whom she starred in the 2005 hit comedy ‘Maine Pyaar Kyon Kiya’ and now dates, although she refuses to talk about her private life.

‘He was there to guide me in the industry when I was new over here and will always be special to me,’ she said.

Kaif said she was always confident of success, despite setbacks.

‘I have faced a lot of rejections and people always came up with one or the other excuse to reject me on flimsy grounds, but I kept going because I always knew someone would approve me,’ she added.

This year’s ‘New York’, about a group of friends in the city on the day of the September 11, 2001 attacks, was a critical and box office success – and the moment Kaif said she felt she had made it in India.

Kaif, brought up in France, Hawaii and London and one of seven sisters, said family values had helped her keep a perspective in a country that reveres Bollywood stars like gods.

‘I had a very frugal upbringing. My mother was into charity institutions and to date, she is involved in charity work, so I know what hardship means,’ she explained.

‘I never had pocket money and didn’t have access to material things.’

Her mother now lives in the southern Indian city of Chennai and works with orphans.

‘Lots of people feel that whatever I have earned is because of the goodness of her work,’ she said.

Kaif, who took Hindi and dancing lessons to help her acting career, said she never wanted to be a star.

As a skinny teenager, she said boys would not give her a second glance – though now her innocent beauty has brought worldwide fame among Bollywood fans.

‘As a girl I was fascinated about collecting marbles and my two elder sisters used to make me wash dishes in exchange for giving me marbles, which used to be the most precious possessions to me,’ she said.

‘I never knew that the marbles were very cheap and my sisters were fooling with me to do their work.’

Despite now being one of Bollywood’s biggest earners – at a reported 30 million rupees per film – Kaif said she is unchanged by fame.

‘I am still the same person. I am not a glamorous person in real life. I don’t buy handbags like lots of other women do,’ she said.

‘I don’t spend on shoes, too, and you will always find me in casual dress if I am not in a film costume.

‘I don’t want to look glamorous when I am off screen and I want to be as real as I can.’

As for criticism in the cut-throat world of Bollywood, where style often takes precedence over substance, she says she is ‘like every other girl’.

‘I am sensitive and I have my weakness. If people say, ‘You have not lived up to expectations’, I get upset,’ she added.

She further said that ‘I want to do good films. Eventually I want to be married and do things that will make me happy. I got this opportunity in the country by starting with nothing.’

Posted by worldissues Tuesday, November 3, 2009 0 comments





In WASHINGTON it is stated that the tiny infants are most likely to be hospitalized with swine flu, but people over the age of 50 are most at risk of dying in hospital from the disease, US researchers said Tuesday.

Further said that ‘despite having lower hospitalization rates, persons aged 50 years or older who were hospitalized with pandemic 2009 influenza (A)H1N1 infection were among those most likely to die,’ a study conducted by researchers at the California department of health showed.

Around 11 per cent of the 1,088 cases of swine flu reported in California between April 17 and August 22 died, the study showed.

The death rate for people 50 and older was around 19 per cent, compared to seven per cent for children under 18, who made up around a third of swine flu cases reported in California.

Nearly 12 infants out of 100,000 had to be hospitalized for swine flu in the first four months of the outbreak in California, giving the tiny tots the highest hospitalization rate of any age group.

‘The youngest age group, infants aged two months or younger, had the highest hospitalization rates but are too young to receive currently licensed influenza vaccines,’ the study said.

The findings support recommendations for caregivers of the very young to be given priority for swine flu vaccination, it added.

US health officials have repeatedly characterized swine flu as ‘a younger person’s disease,’ and put children and young adults under the age of 25 on a list of five priority groups for vaccination against the disease.

The others are health care workers, infant caregivers, pregnant women and adults up to age 65 with certain underlying health conditions.

The California researchers said the median age for hospitalized and fatal swine flu cases was 27 years — younger than is commonly seen with seasonal flu.

‘For seasonal influenza, persons older than 64 years, younger than five years, or who have specific medical conditions have higher rates of hospitalization and death,’ the study said.

Even though swine flu is perceived as causing ‘only mild disease,’ the researchers also found that about a third of hospitalized cases were severely ill and required intensive care.

Twenty per cent of pregnant women in the study spent time in the intensive care unit, and most hospitalized adults, and more than one-third of children, required mechanical ventilation.

The most common causes of death were viral pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome, the study said.

The United States is battling swine flu amid shortages of vaccine, which has seen states and counties cancel inoculation clinics, and of children’s anti-viral medicine, which last week saw federal authorities raiding the strategic stockpile for kids’ liquid Tamiflu.

Pandemic H1N1 flu has already claimed the lives of more children than seasonal flu typically does during an entire flu season, which runs from August until May.

More than 5,700 people have died worldwide since the virus was first discovered in April, with most of the deaths — 4,175 — in the Americas region, according to the World Health Organization estimation.

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The UN chief Ban Ki-moon yesterday urged Israel to end its ‘provocative actions’ in east Jerusalem and to abide by its commitments to freeze all settlement activity in the occupied West Bank.

‘The Secretary General is dismayed at continued Israeli actions in occupied east Jerusalem, including the demolition of Palestinian homes, the eviction of Palestinian families and the insertion of settlers into Palestinian neighbourhoods,’ a UN statement said.

‘The eviction today of a Palestinian family in East Jerusalem is just the most recent incident,’ it added.

Warning that such actions ‘stoke tensions, cause suffering and further undermine trust,’ Ban urged Israel ‘to cease such provocative actions.’

He also reiterated his call on Israel ‘to implement its commitments’ under the blueprint for Middle East peace put forward by the United States, the European Union, Russia and the United Nations ‘by freezing all settlement activity, including natural growth; dismantling outposts; and reopening Palestinian institutions in East Jerusalem.’

Earlier Tuesday, dozens of Israeli settlers took over a house in mostly Arab east Jerusalem, armed with a court order secured after a protracted legal battle with a Palestinian family, witnesses and police said.

Members of the Al-Kurd family demonstrated in front of the house along with other Arab residents and pro-Palestinian activists as the settlers hurled the family's belongings out into the street, a neighbour told AFP.

Jerusalem police spokesman Shmulik Ben Rubi said police who were sent in to break up the demonstration arrested one activist.

Israel's support for Jewish settlements in east Jerusalem and its demolition of Palestinian homes built there without permits have drawn international criticism in recent months.

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband called settlements in east Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank an ‘obstacle to peace’ during a visit to Jordan on Tuesday and expressed ‘concern’ over the events at the Al-Kurd house.

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The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has conceded that the United States was also responsible for allowing Al Qaeda to enter Pakistan.

She said that Al Qaeda left Afghanistan. And we let them out, she told Greta Van Susteren of FOX News. You know, we should have taken them out when we had the chance back in 2001 and 2002 and they escaped. And they escaped into Pakistan.

Asked if the US was also responsible for Al Qaeda’s presence in Fata, Secretary Clinton acknowledged that if the US had done a better job in Afghanistan, Al Qaeda would not have slipped into Pakistan.

If we had done a better job going into Afghanistan and capture the people who had attacked us or killed them you know, we would be in a different position,’ she said.

Asked about the extent to which the developing US military strategy in Afghanistan bleeds into Pakistan, Mrs Clinton said: Absolutely. I mean when we first did our review upon taking office, we concluded that you had to look at Afghanistan and Pakistan together and in light of the war on terror that we had to wage.

To win the war against terrorists, she said, the US needed to build strong partnerships with both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The stronger partnership we have with Pakistan, the stronger their efforts to root out terrorists in their own country, the better the situation is across the border in Afghanistan.

The top US diplomat said she was impressed with the way the Pakistani military was confronting militants in South Waziristan.

We’re very impressed by the campaign against the Pakistan Taliban in (the Swat valley) and South Waziristan. But our point to our friends in Pakistan is that — that is an important and necessary step for you to take, but remember that there is a terrorist syndicate with Al Qaeda at the head.

She warned: You can’t just say your job is done because you’ve cleared out (Swat), you’ve cleared out South Waziristan, until we truly root out what is in my view the source of the syndicate and a lot of the problems that Pakistan, Afghanistan and the rest of us face.

Asked to comment on her statement in Lahore in which she blamed Pakistan for not doing enough to fight Al Qaeda, Mrs Clinton said it was part of her effort to build a better relationship with the country.

They said to me very clearly: Look, we have a trust deficit for you. And I said, well, look, that’s a two-way street. And I’m happy to take any of your questions. I’m happy to admit where we may not have always done as well as we could have in our relationship.

But a lot of people back home want to know, you know, how come Al Qaeda has a safe haven in Pakistan? How come we arrest somebody like Zazi and find out that he was trained in a training camp run by Al Qaeda in Pakistan?

She added: I think that’s the kind of relationship we need to have.

The United States, she said, was trying to rebuild a better relationship, removing this deep level of mistrust and suspicion about America’s intentions and actions that has built up over the last eight years.

Mrs Clinton said she came to Pakistan with the determination not to meet government officials alone but get to out into different settings, universities and business groups, and really listen to people.

Mrs Clinton said that while she acknowledges that the US should have done a better job in preventing Al Qaeda from entering Pakistan, Islamabad should also accept its responsibility.

There are home-grown terrorists here in Pakistan. They’ve made common cause with Al Qaeda. So we can look backwards through the rearview mirror and say we shoulda, coulda, woulda, and you shoulda, coulda, woulda, too, she said.

The other way of approaching this problem, she said, was to admit that both countries had a common enemy.

And we’re proud that you’re going to after the Pakistan Taliban, who are causing so much damage and destruction, that terrible bombing in Peshawar the other day. But that’s not enough. You have to help us get Al Qaeda. You will be more secure if you help us get the people who are helping to fund and train and equip the very people you’re going after in South Waziristan right now.

Mrs Clinton said she had lot of discussions with the Pakistanis over the Kerry-Lugar bill during his visit.

This really became a very big issue here in Pakistan, and I don’t think most of us in America really understood what the beef is.

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18 people, including women and children, died on 3rd November after a passenger train collided head on with a goods train in the suburbs of the city.

The accident took place just a few minutes past 10am near Juma Goth railway junction, a couple of kilometres from Bhains Colony along the National Highway, when the driver of Allama Iqbal Express ignored a signal and rammed into another train coming from Karachi on the same track.

About 45 people were injured and at least two coaches of the passenger train were destroyed, officials and witnesses said.

‘The cargo train was dead slow and Allama Iqbal Express had also slowed down maybe after its driver saw the other train coming on the same track,’ said Haider Bukhsh, a primary schoolteacher who was among the first people to reach the scene.

‘The number of casualties is much lower than feared because both trains were moving slowly. Otherwise a head-on collision could have caused disaster,’ he said.

An official of the Pakistan Railways said the goods train was asked to move and change track from a loop line and at the same time Allama Iqbal Express was signalled to stop but its driver kept moving and collided with the goods train.

He said the delinquent driver managed to escape, but an inquiry had been ordered to fix responsibility.

People living in the vicinity tried to rescue the injured, but failed because they didn’t have the required equipment. They said rescue teams of the city government, Railways and other agencies reached the place after more than an hour.

It took over six hours to retrieve bodies because the city government’s Urban Search and Rescue Team, Pakistan Railways and charity organisations lacked resources, expertise and coordination.

‘We first approached the nearby police station and then sent some bikers to the highway to seek help,’ said Nadir Khan, a resident of Juma Goth.

The Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre received 18 bodies and 45 injured. ‘Most of the dead received head injuries,’ a JPMC spokesperson said.

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Posted by worldissues Monday, November 2, 2009 0 comments

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