Tuesday, 3 May 2016

Bipasha Basu’s wedding and reception: Bachchans, Khans, Deols and a lot more



MUMBAI: Bollywood actors Bipasha Basu and Karan Singh Grover tied the knot amid the presence of glamorous superstars such as Shah Rukh Khan, Salman Khan, the Bachchans and a lot more.
Bipasha Basu and Karan Singh Grover’s wedding had been a much-talked about event, ever since the two had announced they planned on getting hitched at the end of April. While we knew Bipasha Basu had not invited John Abraham to her wedding, plenty of other superstars were in attendance to witness the Bollywood actress’ union with her Alone co-star Karan Singh Grover.
From Shah Rukh Khan, Salman Khan to the Bachchans and Preity Zenta and Ranbir Kapoor, everyone attended the wedding. Check out some of the pictures from the wedding and reception night:-


I’m being offered new Bollywood films: Mawra Hocane



LAHORE: Pakistani actress Mawra Hocane recently revealed in an interview that she was receiving numerous offers from Bollywood directors to star in a movie.
Though Mawra Hocane’s Sanam Teri Kasam did not get to register a strong performance at the box office nor did it receive any sizeable amount of critical acclaims. However, Mawra Hocane’s performance and dance steps did receive praise from critics here and there, so much so that the actress claims to have been receiving offers from Bollywood directors to star in their upcoming projects.
In an interview, the actress said that after her debut Bollywood flick Sanam Teri Kasam, she had received offers from other Indian directors to star in upcoming Bollywood flicks. Mawra also said that for a Pakistani actor or actress to make it big in India was an honour since there were hundreds of actresses in the Indian film industry.
She also said that for an actor or actress to make it in the top ten list was a matter of pride for her. In response to a question, the Pakistani actress also said that there was no pressure on an artist while he/she was working in India. Mawra also said that her experience of working in Bollywood was a great one since she had received nothing but love and admiration.

Priyanka Chopra dines with Obama, finds him ‘charming’



WASHINGTON: Priyanka Chopra dined with US President Barack Hussain Obama at the White House Correspondent’s dinner and found him to be ‘charming’.
Priyanka Chopra has another feather in her cap. The Bollywood actress, who was blessed with international recognition after her role as Alex Parrish in Quantico, dined with United States President Barack Obama and his wife Michele Obama at the White House Correspondent’s dinner this Monday.
33-year old Chopra looked bewitching in a deep-cut, black and sheer-stripe gown while Obama pulled off a dapper look in his black suit and crisp white shirt, over which he also wore a bow. Chopra chatted with the US President and his wife over dinner during which they also discussed their program Let Girls Learn.Here is the picture which Priyanka posted on Instagram.
The dinner event, which is supposed to be Obama’s last one in office, was also attended by other high profile celebrities such as Kerry Washington, Emma Watson, Will Smith and wife Jada Pinkett, Michelle Dockery and Kendall Jenner. The event was hosted by comedian Larry Wilmore.
During the event, Barack Obama also roasted US Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.


Adnan Siddiqui, Sajal Aly to debut in Bollywood with Sridevi-starrer ‘Mom’



Pakistani drama actors Adnan Siddiqui and Sajal Aly are going to debut in Bollywood alongside veteran Indian actress Sridevi in movie ‘Mom’.
Adnan Siddiqui will play the role of Sridevi’s husband and Sajal’s father. Producer of the film, Sridevi, will play lead role in the ‘women-centric’ show.
News of Sajal’s debuting in ‘Mom’ had broken few weeks before, however a source close to the production has confirmed Adnan Siddiqui as the second Pakistani actor in the upcoming flick. This will be Adnan’s second overseas film, after ‘A Mighty Heart’.

Back from the dead: Jon Snow continues to trend on Twitter in Pakistan



Jon Snow continued to trend in Pakistan after the latest Game of Thrones’ episode saw him return back to life.
We all knew Jon Snow was well past dead after he had been stabbed numerous times at the end of season five last year. However, this is Game of Thrones we’re talking about and in a show where you have White Walker, dragons, dwarves and giants, bringing someone back from the dead was never a long shot. The handsome Lord Commander of the Night’s Watch was brought back to life via Lady Melisandre’s magic, as fans across the world (and across Pakistan as well) heaved a sigh of relief.
Jon Snow trended in Pakistan on Twitter in Pakistan yesterday and continued to trend as well today. Here are some of the tweets which were doing the rounds on micro-blogging site Twitter:-

Arjun Kapoor’s secret visit to Malaika’s house gives rise to affair speculations



Arjun Kapoor was caught by paparazzi and media persons coming out of Malaika Arora Khan’s house in the wee hours, setting fire to rumours of the two being involved in an affair.
A couple of months ago, Malaika Arora Khan and Arbaaz Khan split from each other, confirming months of speculation that the two had failed to reconcile their differences. As soon as the two had confirmed their split, rumours started doing the rounds regarding the reasons for their split. There were strong rumours that Malika had an affair with a wealthy businessman which had caused things to go to a point-of-no-return.
Recently, Arjun Kapoor was spotted by paparazzi coming out of Malaika Arora Khan’s house in the wee hours. Following his secret visit to the actress’ house, speculations started doing the rounds that the two were having an affair since a long time and this had been the very reason for the split between Malaika and Arbaaz.
Here’s what a photographer said:-
“We were standing outside her house as we got a tip-off that Arjun Kapoor might come there late in the night. When his car arrived, we didn’t click any pictures because then he would have left immediately. We saw that his driver came out to see if there are any photographers and after doing a thorough check, he went inside. After a few minutes, the driver took the car inside and Arjun got off.”
The photographer also said that a cop emerged outside the house and asked them to leave the vicinity.
“He told us that Arjun had called and asked them to clear the paparazzi. The policeman wasn’t rude to us and simply told us to leave, which we did,” he said.
Do you think the recent rumours regarding Arjun Kapoor and Malaika Arora are exaggerated or is there something the two are hiding?

Beyonce’s ‘Lemonade’ tops Billboard, Prince reigns on album chart



R&B star Beyonce stormed to the top of the weekly U.S. Billboard 200 album chart with her surprise visual concept album “Lemonade,” while late singer Prince’s music dominated the chart as fans continued to remember his legacy through his music.
“Lemonade,” the sixth solo album by Beyonce, sold 485,000 albums, more than 900,000 songs and was streamed 115 million times, totaling 653,000 units according to figures from Nielsen SoundScan.
Beyonce debuted “Lemonade” as an hour-long film made up of music videos on cable network HBO last week, and initially made it available exclusively on premium streaming service Tidal, before releasing it to other online retailers.
The album garnered headlines for lyrics that suggested Beyonce’s husband, rapper Jay Z, may have had an extramarital affair. The songs transition from suspicion and anger to hurt and finally forgiveness and reconciliation.
The album also contains the single “Formation,” a power anthem to race and feminism.
Five of Prince’s albums stayed in the top ten of the Billboard 200 chart this week, led by 2001’s compilation “The Very Best of Prince” at No. 2 with 391,000 units sold.
Sales of Prince’s music, which he kept off numerous streaming platforms such as Spotify and YouTube, have soared after the singer’s sudden death on April 22 at his Minnesota estate.
On Billboard’s Digital Songs chart, which measures online song sales, Prince’s “Purple Rain” led seven of the late singer’s songs in the top ten of the chart with 282,000 copies sold.
Beyonce’s “Formation” came in at No. 3 and “Hold Up” came in at No. 9.

English Premier League: Leicester complete miracle title triumph



LEICESTER: Thousands celebrated and millions around the world looked on in wonder as 5,000-1 underdogs Leicester City completed arguably the greatest fairytale in sporting history by becoming English Premier League champions.
Second-placed Tottenham Hotspur’s 2-2 draw with Chelsea late on Monday was enough for last year’s relegation battlers to seal a scarcely credible title after outshining some of football’s most glamorous teams.
Leicester’s season of 22 wins out of 36 games and just three defeats means they become champions with two games to spare, with Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United and Liverpool all trailing at a distance.
After fighting off relegation last year and being rated 5,000-1 for the title at the start of the season, Claudio Ranieri’s Thai-owned side have now pulled off a shock rated by many as the biggest seen in sport.
The modest Midlands club are England’s first new champions since Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest in 1978, and their surge in the world’s most watched football league has won them admirers across the globe.
Dancing fans waving blue and white flags poured onto the streets of Leicester, while footage on Twitter showed the team celebrating wildly as they watched Monday’s game at the home of talismanic striker Jamie Vardy.
The players can now look forward to another title party when they lift the trophy at their King Power Stadium following Saturday’s home game with Everton.
“It’s an unbelievable feeling. I’ve never known anything like it,” said Vardy. “We were scrapping to stay in the league last season and on Saturday we’ll be lifting the trophy.
“It’s the biggest achievement in the history of a great club and we all feel privileged to be part of it.”

Selby grinds down Ding to win world snooker title



SHEFFIELD: England’s Mark Selby held his nerve in a ruthless display to beat China’s Ding Junhui 18-14 on Monday and win the world snooker championship for the second time.
World number one Selby, champion in 2014, never trailed in the match as he ended Ding’s hopes of becoming the first Asian player to win the biggest prize in the sport.
“It is fantastic,” Selby said.
“It was very special to win it two years ago, but I felt under a lot more pressure now than I did two years ago.
“It was a tough final and with the amount of pressure Ding is under, from China alone but to play like that. I can’t imagine how he could do that.”
Ding, who lost the first six frames, fought back on Sunday to leave Selby 10-7 ahead overnight at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England.
The Chinese player started well on Monday and reduced the deficit to 11-10 but Selby rallied and went into the final session 14-11 ahead.
Selby, 32, extended his advantage to 16-11 but Ding, the first Asian player to reach the final, was not finished, conjuring up breaks of 70, 73 and 103 to fight back to 16-14.
The 31st frame was crucial, Selby producing superbly disciplined snooker to win it after a 51-minute tactical battle and he dominated the next to seal the title.
“In the first to 18, a 6-0 lead is not a huge one, especially against someone like Ding,” said Leicester-born Selby who secured the title minutes after his home-town football club won the Premier League crown.
“He played fantastically earlier today and I had to just hang on to him. I’m just over the moon. I saved my best performance for the final and I only had two good sessions in the tournament.”
Selby became the 13th player to win the world title more than once.
Only three players from outside Britain and Ireland have won the crown, Australian Horace Lindrum in 1952, Canadian Cliff Thorburn in 1980 and Australian Neal Robertson in 2010.

“I had a very bad start 6-0 down, I couldn’t win a frame. I was a bit nervous as I hadn’t been in a final before,” said the 29-year-old Ding, a former world number one who had to qualify for the tournament after slipping to 17th in the world rankings.

Messi’s ‘plastic shirt’ fan arrives in Pakistan



Five-year-old Murtaza Ahmadi, who idolises the Argentine soccer star Lionel Messi and shot to fame for donning a jersey of his favourite player, has arrived in Pakistan.
He came to Quetta a few days ago where he is living with his father. Reports said he is residing in Hazara Town and arrived in Pakistan from Afghanistan for a better livelihood.
His elder brother Homayoun, 15, made him the blue-and-white-striped plastic shirt with Messi’s named scrawled in marker pen and posted the photos of Murtaza wearing it on Facebook in mid-January.

Murtaza’s father, a poor farmer in Ghazni’s Jaghori district, admitted he could not afford to buy him a replica jersey, adding that Murtaza only had a punctured ball to play with.
Photos of the boy wearing the improvised Messi jersey — made from grocery bags discarded by their neighbour — has touched a chord with football fans around the world.
Jorge Messi, Lionel’s father, had told a wire service that the footballer was aware of the photos that made waves on social media and “wants to do something” for his young fan.
The Afghanistan Football Federation (AFF) said Messi was keen to meet Murtaza as soon as possible, though no date or venue has so far been finalised.
“Messi has been in communication with the federation to set up a meeting with the young boy,” AFF spokesman Sayed Ali Kazemi said.
“We are working to see whether Messi will come to Afghanistan or the five-year-old will travel to Spain or they will meet in a third country.”

Four killed in homemade bomb blast in India



KOLKATA: Four people were killed when the crude bombs they were making exploded in India’s West Bengal, where bitterly fought state elections are underway, a senior police official said Monday.
Another six people were injured in the explosion on Sunday night in a village about 360 kilometres (220 miles) north of Kolkata, close to the eastern state’s border with Bangladesh.
“Four people were killed and six others injured when the bombs they were making exploded in a house at Baisnabnagar village,” Anuj Sharma, West Bengal additional director general of police, told AFP.
“The explosion rocked the area and damaged the house.”
Police were investigating the reasons for the bombmaking but no arrests have been made so far, Sharma said.
West Bengal is set to hold the final phase of staggered state elections on Thursday. Homemade bombs are sometimes planted by workers from rival political parties to intimidate voters ahead of polling day.
India has sent extra security forces to West Bengal for the election.
Chief minister Mamata Banerjee is battling left-wing rivals and the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, which rules at national level. Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress party has also been hit by bitter infighting among its rival factions.
Two people were killed in March when their homemade bombs accidently exploded, also in West Bengal, while police in February recovered 80 crude bombs from the house of a local leader of the Trinamool Congress party, according to local media.

Saudi Binladin Group lays off 77,000 workers: report



RIYADH: One of Saudi Arabia’s most powerful firms, the Saudi Binladin Group, has laid off 77,000 foreign workers, a Saudi daily reported on Monday, citing an anonymous company official.
The report is the latest over the past few days alleging tens of thousands of layoffs, unpaid salaries and unrest by employees of the firm which built some of the Gulf country’s landmarks.
Sources in March told AFP that delayed receipts from the government, whose oil revenues collapsed over the past two years, have left employees of the kingdom’s construction giants struggling to survive while they await their salaries.
However, Saudi Binladin Group was also sanctioned by the government after a deadly crane accident at one of its projects last September.
The firm could not immediately comment but asked AFP to submit questions in writing.
The company official cited by Al-Watan daily said that as of Sunday 77,000 Binladin Group workers had received exit visas to leave the country.
He added that they were among 200,000 expatriates employed by the company, one of the largest builders in the world.
In addition, 12,000 out of the 17,000 Saudis working for the firm as engineers, administrators and inspectors were also expected to be let go, the source said.
On Friday, Al-Watan reported that 50,000 of the group’s staff were refusing to leave the country while their salaries remained unpaid after more than four months.
Another newspaper, Arab News, on Sunday cited employees of Saudi Binladin Group as confirming “massive layoffs”.
An Arab News report on Monday blamed “unpaid workers” for torching several Binladin Group buses in the city of Mecca over the weekend.
After decades of thriving on lucrative government contracts, the company faced unprecedented scrutiny after one of its cranes working on a major expansion of the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Islam’s holiest site, toppled in September.

At least 109 people including foreign pilgrims died, leading King Salman to exclude the firm from new public contracts

CIA ‘live-tweets’ bin Laden raid



HINGTON: The CIA has marked the anniversary of the killing of Osama bin Laden by live-tweeting — with a five-year delay — the raid by US special forces on the Al-Qaeda founder’s compound in Pakistan.
Using the hashtag #UBLRaid, the CIA blasted out updates of the May 2011 strike as if it was unfolding in real time — in a highly unusual move for the secretive spy agency.

“To mark the 5th anniversary of the Usama Bin Ladin operation in Abbottabad we will tweet the raid as if it were happening today. #UBLRaid,” @CIA said in announcing its social media blitz.
Tweets included the now famous picture of President Barack Obama and other high-ranking US officials watching matters unfold from the White House’s Situation Room. “1:51 pm EDT – Helicopters depart from Afghanistan for compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan #UBLRaid,” read one tweet. “3:30 pm EDT – 2 helicopters descend on compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. 1 crashes, but assault continues without delay or injury #UBLRaid,” read another.
The CIA’s Twitter move got quite a bit of attention, with not everyone enthused. “@CIA Are we tweeting Hiroshima on August 6th too? Or is THAT in bad taste?” tweeted one user, Kris Knight. Another who identies as Amber V tweeted: “Don’t you have better things to do, like catch living and breathing bad guys, or secretly invade our privacy, or something? @CIA#UBLRaid
“Now, with the new phenomenon of (IS), this is going to challenge us for years to come,” he added.
Asked if removing IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi from action was as important as the Bin Laden get, Brennan, who does not often do interviews, was direct.
“If we got Baghdadi, I think it would have a great impact on the organization. And it will be felt by them,” he said.

Video goes viral: Daughter of dead Indian soldier pleads for peace between India and Pakistan



JALANDHAR: An Indian soldier who was killed in combat at Kargil by Pakistani armed forces sent a powerful message of peace in a video which went viral over the internet.
Social media is a powerful medium which is used properly, can contribute a lot towards positiveness. Gurmehar Kaur, daughter of the slain Captain Mandeep Singh of Jalandhar, uploaded a video over the internet which went viral. In the video, she narrates her own experience of how she harboured hate for Muslims and Pakistan after her father had been killed in combat with Indian armed forces.
The video, which was uploaded last month on April 23 on YouTube, has so far raked in an impressive amount of views. So far, it has notched 7.66 lakh views and over 21,000 shares.

“My mother held me back and made me understand that Pakistan did not kill my dad, war killed him. It took me awhile to know but today I have learnt to let go of my hate. It was not easy but it’s not difficult. If I can do it so can you,” her placards read.
In the video, she also recounts an incident in which she tried to stab a woman clad in a burqa when she was six years old. According to Gurmehar,
Mumbai-based social commentator Ram Subramanian assisted Gurmehar in making the video.
“I wish to live in a world where there are no Gurmehar Kaurs who miss their dad,” reads her placard in the very end of the video.

Malia Obama headed to Harvard



WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama’s eldest daughter Malia will attend Harvard University in the fall of 2017 after taking a year off from studies following her high school graduation this spring, the White House said on Sunday.
“Malia will take a gap year before beginning school,” a White House statement said, breaking a months-long silence about Malia’s college search.
Both her parents attended Harvard Law School.

Malia, 17, will concentrate on finishing her high school final exams before considering how to spend her gap year, an official who had been briefed on Malia’s decision told Reuters.

She has shown interest in film and television, having worked two summer internships in the industry. Last summer, she worked in Brooklyn, New York, on the set of the HBO series “Girls,”
In 2014 she worked on the set of CBS science fiction series “Extant”, starring Halle Berry. The now-canceled series was produced by Steven Spielberg, a prominent donor to Obama’s presidential campaigns.
Harvard College, the university’s undergraduate division, said on its admissions website that it encouraged admitted students to defer enrollment for one year to travel, pursue a project or work. About 80 to 110 students did so each year, it said.

Kerry aims to extend truce to Syria’s Aleppo as ceasefire unravels



AMMAN/GENEVA: Washington and Moscow said on Monday they were working hard to extend a truce in Syria to Aleppo, the divided northern city where a sharp escalation of violence in recent weeks has left a ceasefire in tatters and torpedoed peace talks.
U.S. Secretary of State Joahn Kerry was in Geneva for meetings with other dignitaries to try to revive the two-month-old U.S. and Russia-sponsored cessation of hostilities, which quieted guns for the first time during the five-year Syrian war but which has unraveled in recent days.
Syria announced temporary local truces in two areas last week. But those agreements have not been extended to Aleppo, where government air strikes and rebel shelling have killed hundreds of civilians in the past week, including more than 50 people in a hospital rebels say was deliberately targeted by the army.
The Aleppo fighting threatens to wreck the first peace talks involving the warring parties, which are due to resume at an unspecified date after breaking up in April when the opposition delegation walked out citing government ceasefire violations.
“We’re getting closer to a place of understanding, but we have some work to do, and that’s why we’re here,” Kerry said at the start of a meeting with Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir.
Kerry said he hoped for more clarity in the next day or so on restoring the nationwide ceasefire. The United States and Russia had agreed to keep extra staff in Geneva to work on it.
“Both sides, the opposition and the regime, have contributed to this chaos, and we are working over the next hours intensely in order to try to restore the cessation of hostilities,” Kerry said.
He later spoke by telephone to Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. The Russian Foreign Ministry said they both called on all sides to observe the ceasefire. A Russian military official, General Sergei Kuralenko, said talks were under way on extending the local truces to Aleppo.
ALEPPO KEY TO PEACE
The United States and Russia have taken the leading roles in diplomacy since Moscow joined the war last year with an air campaign that tipped the balance of power in favor of President Bashar al-Assad, its ally.
Washington is among Western and regional powers that say Assad must leave office. The White House said on Monday Assad’s government needed to live up to its ceasefire commitments.
The civil war in Syria has killed hundred of thousands of people, driven millions from their homes, created the world’s worst refugee crisis and provided a base for Islamic State militants who have launched attacks elsewhere.
All diplomatic efforts to resolve it have foundered over the fate of Assad, who refuses to accept opposition demands that he leave power.
The local truces, known as a “regime of calm”, were launched in the Eastern Ghouta suburb of Damascus and the countryside of northern Latakia province from Saturday morning in a bid to revive the overall ceasefire. The Latakia truce was for three days and the Ghouta truce, initially for 24 hours, was also extended by another 48.
Both cover areas where there has been heavy fighting. But without a similar truce in Aleppo, divided for years between government and rebel zones, there appears to be little hope of restoring the overall ceasefire so talks can resume.
De Mistura, due to travel to Moscow for talks with Lavrov, said in a statement there could be no progress in political talks without the ceasefire and other steps to bring “tangible benefits on the ground for the Syrian people”.
Aleppo remains the biggest prize for Assad’s forces hoping to take full control of the city, Syria’s largest before the war. The nearby countryside includes the last strip of the Syria-Turkish border in the hands of Arab Sunni rebels.
CIVILIANS KILLED
The opposition accuses the government of deliberately targeting civilians in rebel held parts of Aleppo to drive them out. For its part, the government says rebels have been heavily shelling government-held areas, proving they are receiving sophisticated weapons from foreign sponsors.
A British-based monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, has reported scores of civilians killed on both sides in recent days, although more in rebel-held territory.
Syrian state television said on Monday that a missile had hit the surroundings of Aleppo University Medical Hospital, and several civilians were injured by rebel mortar attacks on the residential area of Jamiyat Hay al Zahra in western Aleppo.
The rebel-held local council of Aleppo city announced a state of emergency in areas it runs due to the intense bombardment. About 350,000-400,000 people are believed to remain in rebel-held parts of what was once a city of 2 million.
Mohammad Muaz Abu Saleh, a senior councillor in the rebel Aleppo governate council, said residents were nonetheless not abandoning opposition-held areas.
“Those who wanted to leave Aleppo have fled,” he said. Those who have stayed behind “have decided to stay under all circumstances of shelling and siege. Aleppo will remain populated with its people not leaving.”
Amar al-Absi, a resident of a rebel-held area, said: “There was heavy shelling throughout the night. In my neighborhood, Salah al-Deen, a missile hit a building that was empty and it was leveled but there were no casualties.”
In Hama, a western city, government troops surrounded a prison and fired teargas to put down a revolt by inmates, who seized several guards in protest against their planned transfer to a military prison, the Observatory reported.
In countryside north of Aleppo, other rebel groups have battled Islamic State fighters who are not party to any ceasefire. Amaq, a news agency affiliated to Islamic State, said the militants had gained control of three villages near the border with Turkey, cutting supply routes of other rebels, despite Turkish shelling.
The Observatory said the militants had staged a counterattack to regain ground lost from other rebels in to-and-fro fighting that has seen no major gains for any side.
Two rockets hit the Turkish town of Kilis near Islamic State positions in Syria on Monday, killing one person and wounding others, a security source told Reuters. The source said the Turkish military returned fire hitting IS targets. Ankara said it had killed 34 militants on Sunday.
Turkey, a NATO ally and backer of anti-Assad rebels, is part of a U.S.-led coalition launching air strikes against Islamic State but is also strongly opposed to the main Kurdish militia in Syria, Washington’s closest ally on the ground.
Another major supporter of the rebels is Saudi Arabia, whose Foreign Minister Jubeir blamed the latest escalation on the government and called for Assad to step down.
“He can leave through a political process, which we hope he will do, or he will be removed by force,” Jubeir said alongside Kerry.

Pakistan raps Trump over vow to free doctor who helped track bin Laden



ISLAMABAD: Pakistan angrily criticized Donald Trump, frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination, for saying he would force the country to free a jailed Pakistani doctor believed to have helped the CIA hunt down al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
Trump, a 69-year-old billionaire real estate developer, told Fox News on Friday that, if elected, he would get Pakistan to free Shakil Afridi “in two minutes”, saying that Islamabad receives a lot of development aid from the United States.
“Contrary to Mr. Trump’s misconception, Pakistan is not a colony of the United States of America,” Pakistani Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar said in a statement on Monday.
The statement said Afridi’s fate would be decided “by the Pakistani courts and the government of Pakistan and not by Mr. Donald Trump, even if he becomes the president of the United States”.
The statement came on the fifth anniversary of the killing of bin Laden – architect of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on U.S. cities – during a secret raid in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad that damaged relations between the strategic allies.
Washington views Afridi as a hero but Pakistan sentenced him in 2012 to 33 years in jail on charges of belonging to militant group Lashkar-e-Islam, which he denies. That sentence was overturned and Afridi is now awaiting trial on another charge.
Trump has alarmed U.S. allies with his combative rhetoric and his calls for an “America First” agenda that many see as a threat to retreat from the world.
In his comments about Pakistan and Afridi for Fox News, Trump said: “I would tell them let (him) out and I’m sure they would let (him) out. Because we give a lot of aid to Pakistan.”
Afridi has also been accused in Pakistan of running a fake vaccination campaign in which he purportedly collected DNA samples to help the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) track down bin Laden. He has not been charged over those allegations.
After his original conviction was overturned, he was charged in 2013 with murder relating to the death of a patient eight years earlier. He remains in jail.
In the Fox interview Trump also said he supported leaving the roughly 10,000 U.S. troops still based in Afghanistan instead of withdrawing them by the end of 2017.
“I would stay in Afghanistan,” he said. “It’s probably the one place we should have gone in the Middle East because it’s adjacent and right next to Pakistan which has nuclear weapons.”

The United States led the military invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 to oust the Taliban for sheltering bin Laden and other al Qaeda leaders following the Sept. 11 attacks.

Solar Impulse 2 completes first leg of round-the-world flight



SAN FRANCISCO: The Solar Impulse 2, an experimental solar-powered aircraft, landed in Phoenix, Arizona late Monday, completing the latest leg of its around the world journey to draw attention to clean energy technologies.
Pilot Andre Borschberg put the long, light, propeller-driven aircraft down at Phoenix Goodyear Airport at 10:03 pm (0403 GMT) after a 16 hour, 10 minute flight from Moffet Airfield southeast of San Francisco.
“I made it to #Phoenix, what an amazing flight over the Mojave Desert to promote #futureis clean,” Borschberg said on Twitter.
The plane had been in California for a week since crossing the Pacific in an approximately 60-hour flight to land in Mountain View.
Borschberg, who has been alternating the long solo flights with his teammate, Swiss adventurer Bertrand Piccard, will pilot Solar Impulse across the United States and to New York. Piccard piloted the craft from Hawaii to California.
The 63-year-old adventurer took off at 5 am (1200 GMT) to take advantage of a clear weather window on a 750 mile (1,203 kilometer) voyage higher over the Mojave Desert.
“The sun is rising in the horizon. It feels good to be flying round-the-world with #Si2 again,” Borschberg posted on Twitter after taking off.
It was the 10th of 13 legs in a journey that began last year in the United Arab Emirates.
“As the sun gets higher, #Si2’s energy reserves will start filling up, thanks to all its #cleantechs,” Borschberg wrote on Twitter.
The solar-powered plane, which stores energy in batteries for when the sun is not shining, will make several stops across the United States, although the team is still examining potential destinations.
Thanks to an inflatable mobile hangar, which can be packed up quickly and transported, Solar Impulse 2 can be sheltered at a variety of possible locations.
The plane will make a final US stop in New York before a transatlantic flight to Europe. From there, the pilots plan to make their way back to the point of departure in Abu Dhabi.
Technologies usable ‘on ground’
The mission aims to promote the use of renewable energy, with an aircraft powered by 17,000 solar cells.
“If an airplane can fly day and night without fuel, we could all use these same clean technologies on the ground to develop new industrial markets and stimulate economic growth, while also protecting the environment,” Piccard said in a statement.
The plane’s wingspan is broader than that of a jumbo jet but its weight is roughly the same as a family car.
Solar Impulse 2 was grounded in July last year when its batteries suffered problems halfway through its 21,700-mile (35,000-kilometer) circumnavigation.
The crew took several months to repair damage from tropical high temperatures during the first Pacific stage, a 4,000-mile flight between Japan and Hawaii.
The aircraft was flown on that leg by Borschberg, whose 118-hour journey smashed the previous record of 76 hours and 45 minutes set by US adventurer Steve Fossett in 2006.
Born in Zurich, Borschberg is no stranger to adventure — 15 years ago he narrowly escaped an avalanche, and then in 2013 he escaped a helicopter crash with just minor injuries.
He took catnaps of only 20 minutes at a time to maintain control of the pioneering plane during his arduous flight from Japan, in what his team described as “difficult” conditions.
Piccard, a 58-year-old doctor by training, already completed the first non-stop round-the-world balloon flight in 1999.

California Muslims sue over hijab discrimination



LOS ANGELES: Two lawsuits filed in California on Monday claim that Muslim women were discriminated against in separate incidents because of their religion and for wearing the hijab.
One of the suits claims that police in Long Beach forcibly removed a suspect’s headscarf while another suit alleges that a group of women were kicked out of a Laguna Beach coffee house for being Muslim.
According to the complaint against the city of Long Beach and its police department, Kirsty Powell and her husband were pulled over by two officers while driving home in May of last year.
She was subsequently arrested on two outstanding warrants — one linked to her sister allegedly falsely using her identity and one in relation to a 2002 shoplifting incident at a grocery store.
Powell, who is African American, alleges that while being booked at the police station, one of the officers forcibly removed her headscarf in view of other male officers and inmates, telling her she was “not allowed to wear her hijab” and that policemen were “allowed to touch women.”

Must read: Muslim woman in London assaulted for wearing headscarf

The suit states that Powell “suffered and continues to suffer extreme shame, humiliation, mental anguish and emotional distress” as a result of her experience.
“The actions taken by the Long Beach police officers were unwarranted and a serious violation of Mrs Powell’s bodily integrity,” said Yalda Satar, attorney for the Los Angeles chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which filed the suit on behalf of Powell.
“The manner in which Mrs Powell was treated by LBPD officers was simply a show of authority over a woman of color who was unable to protect herself, and is another example of the type of discrimination faced by women who wear a hijab.”
The Long Beach Police Department said in a statement late Monday that Powell’s hijab was taken off in line with the department’s policy to remove certain items from inmates — including belts, shoe laces and head coverings — for their own protection.
“We respect the religious rights and beliefs of all people and understand the sensitivity of this matter,” police chief Robert Luna said. “The policies we have in place are for the safety of the individual, other individuals and police employees.

– ‘Targeted over hijab’ –
In a separate lawsuit also filed on Monday, a group of seven women claim that they were kicked out of Urth Caffe, in Laguna Beach, last month because they were Muslim.
The women, six of whom wear the headscarf, allege that management had asked them to vacate their table on April 22 on grounds that the restaurant was busy and that the policy limited seating to 45 minutes when no free tables are available.

Read more: Muslim student who wears Hijab named ‘Best Dressed’ at US high school

When the women refused to leave, the coffee house called in the police.
Dan Stormer, whose law firm is representing the women, told AFP that it was clear his clients were targeted because of their religion.
“At the time our clients were there, there were several dozen free tables,” he said.
“There were people who were there before our clients arrived and they were not asked to leave. Those people were white and they were not wearing the hijab.”

Related read: Muslim woman in Swedish police praised for wearing hijab

The owner of the restaurant, Shallom Berkman, could not be reached for comment.
But in interviews with local media, he denied discriminating against the women and pointed out that his wife was Muslim.
The two lawsuits come as police in Los Angeles and San Francisco have come under scrutiny over racist and homophobic text messages and emails, several of which target Muslims.
On Sunday, a senior official at the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department stepped down after outrage over emails he sent three to four years ago mocking Muslims and others.In San Francisco, several police officers have resigned or retired over racist text messages they exchanged among each other.