Posts Tagged ‘Birmingham’

England beat Windies in 2nd one-dayer

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

: England beat West Indies by six wickets in the second one-day cricket international in Bristol to take a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

Stuart Broad took four wickets as England bowled out the visitors for 160 at the County Ground, then the home team reached 161-4 with 14 of its 50 overs remaining.

Paul Collingwood top-scored with 44 not out for England and also took three wickets on his 160th appearance. Ravi Bopara scored 43, while Owais Shah made 41.

The first of three one-day games was abandoned on May 21 because of rain, without a ball being bowled. The final match is at Edgbaston, Birmingham in two days.

Hate campaigning folds in on Republicans

Monday, October 13th, 2008

Irish Sun

Sunday 12th October, 2008  

After weeks of negative advertising, US Republicans have denied trying to orchestrate a hate campaign against Barrack Obama.

Just over three weeks until the November 4th elections, Republican presidential nominee Senator McCain has reacted strongly against charges levelled against him by civil rights icon John Lewis.

Mr Lewis, who was one of the key figures in the 1960’s US civil rights movement, has angered Republicans with the suggestion that people close to Senator McCain had run a campaign of hatred and division against Senator Obama.

Mr Lewis likened Republican comments on Senator Obama as being reminiscent of segregationist Alabama governor and one-time presidential candidate George Wallace, whose speeches in 1963 were blamed for a church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama, in which four young girls were killed.

Republican leaders have publically rejected the Lewis allegations.

Senator McCain said Mr Lewis had launched a “character attack against Governor Sarah Palin and me that is shocking and beyond the pale.

He said Mr Lewis’ apparent reference to Mr Wallace was “unacceptable and offensive.

In a statement issued on Sunday, Mr Lewis said he had not meant to draw a direct link between Mr Wallace and Senator McCain, but had wanted to send a reminder to all Americans that toxic, racist language could lead to destructive behavior.

Democratic Campaign spokesman Bill Burton stated that the comparison between Senator McCain and Mr Wallace was unfortunate, but said Mr Lewis was right to condemn some of the hateful rhetoric that John McCain himself personally repudiated.

Chants of “terrorist” and “kill him” have reportedly been heard at recent McCain events.

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Comments on this story

as Americans call Obama an Arab; the world knows what kind of racist the Americans are.whatever they say about lot of advertising human rights, everythingn is to bully others.in fact the Americans are the filthy hyenas making the world’s biggest mess.

loserWhy not share his success stories as a politician than dividing the country with their hate comments and smear campaigns..What a sahme!

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Britney Spears Says She Plans To Tour Again

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Britney Spears comeback appeared to be going from strength to strength as she announced plans for her first international tour since 2004 to support her new album Circus.

However the singer’s ex-boyfriend Adnan Ghalib has overshadowed the news by revealing that he is trying to sell a sex tape of the two of them.

The photographer told Heat magazine that he is willing to sell the alleged footage for ‘the right price.

‘There is such a tape, but I won’t discuss prices for hypothetical enquiries.

‘Unless there is a locked-in deal, I will go no further,’ Ghalib said.

Ghalib said the tape was shot in Mexico and is thought to feature the singer wearing nothing but a pink wig.

Birmingham-born Ghalib dated Spears during her very public meltdown and the couple split at the beginning of the year shortly after she was raced to hospital and sectioned.

Rumours of a tape have been rife since their break-up and last month it was rumoured the singer had taken her former boyfriend back because she feared he would release the alleged footage.

The star has been on the mend since her father took control of her business affairs in February and revealed in a radio interview on Monday that she is now planning a world tour.

‘Oh definitely, next year,’ she said, when asked of her plans adding that the tour would probably take her ‘around the world.

The 26-year-old also discussed her new single ‘Womanizer’ which debuted on US airwaves this week.

‘It’s a really cool song,’ she added. ‘I like the fact that it’s so empowering for girls. It’s about guys cheating on other girls.

The song will be the first single from her sixth album Circus which is due out on December 2, coinciding with her 27th birthday.

‘I cut Circus like two weeks ago,’ she said. ‘I’ve been working on this album for like six months now.

Spears also admitted that she was ‘really shocked’ to win three MTV Video Music Awards for her video Piece of Me.

‘It’s a cool video but I think by far I’ve done videos that are way better,’ she told NYC radio station Z-100.

‘It was really inspiring [to win] because now I can go there and do something crazy.

Spears’ last live public performance was a much-ridiculed rendition of Gimme More at the MTV Video Music Awards a year ago.

Over a third of babies born in England, Wales are non-white

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

(IANS)

The number of babies born to immigrants has for the first time crossed the one-third mark of all births in England and Wales, eliciting mixed reactions to questions related to the government’s immigration policy and race integration.

Fewer than two-thirds of babies born in England and Wales are now registered as White British. Of 649,371 babies born in 2005, 64.4 per cent were recorded as White British, according to the Office of National Statistics.

The next largest group were recorded as Asian accounting for 8.7 percent of the births – of whom Pakistanis formed the biggest section with 3.7 percent. Asian British Pakistanis accounted for 24,290 births, Asian British Indians 16,053 and Asian British Bangladeshis 8,241.

Five percent of babies were recorded as black – three percent African, 1.2 percent black British Caribbean and 0.8 percent other black identities.

Mixed race babies accounted for 3.5 percent of births, while 5.1 percent were Irish or other white identities and 2.4 percent were Chinese or other groups. Just under 11 percent had no ethnic identity recorded.

The data on ethnic identity of births reveal stark differences in the lifestyles and social norms of Britain’s various communities.

Virtually all Asian babies – more than 95 percent – were registered by married parents compared to only around half of White British babies and just a third of the Black Caribbean group.

Monmouth Tory MP David Davies voiced concern not over the numbers of births to ethnic minorities but over the potential problems of social integration.

He told Daily Mail: ‘It is now more important than ever that those large number of people with different coloured skin join in with British society. The problem comes when large numbers of people of all ethnicities are not willing to use the language, are abusing our system and demanding that laws are changed to accommodate them.

Andrew Green, chairman of the MigrationWatch think tank, blamed the government for allowing immigration to get out of control. ‘This is a measure of the extent to which uncontrolled immigration is changing the nature of our society, against the wishes of a very large majority.

‘Immigration is now expected to account for 70 percent of our population increase in the next 25 years. This means we will have to build a city the size of Birmingham every three or four years to sustain the newcomers.

But former Labour MP and minister Tony Benn hailed the figures as ‘a delightful snapshot of life in multicultural Britain’. ‘We are now marrying people from different countries and society is becoming more tolerant of different races,’ he said.

Ratna Dutt, Director of the Race Equality Foundation, said: ‘We’re living in a different population now than we were 20 or 30 years ago. The figures show that older generations of black and ethnic minorities, who have grown up in this country, are now comfortable enough to raise their children here.

Commenting on the immigration issue last week, the Daily Mail said: ‘The nation’s population now stands at almost 61 million, up two million since 2001. And, even if the tide of new arrivals does begin to turn, the population will continue to rise, the figures show. Why? Because established migrants are each, on average, having more children than British-born women. And, last year, they accounted for 23 percent of all births (54 percent of those in London).

The Daily Mail said that ‘the strain placed on schools and hospitals – totally unprepared for the influx of migrants since 1997, which by itself has added 1.2 million to the population – will be enormous for years to come’.

The paper said the government’s ‘folly’ was that instead of focusing on immigration, it was attempting to ‘focus on the fall in the number of arrivals from Poland and its neighbours’.

‘Immigrants from some non-EU countries have higher rates of unemployment, claim more in benefits, and have more children. Thus, by comparison, they will be a drain on public finances. By virtue of being granted citizenship or indefinite leave to remain, they are also here to stay. This is Labour’s true immigration legacy. The sooner they face these facts, the better.

Guinness record curry king launches Indian sauce factory

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Midlands curry king Abdul Salam, who owns a well-known restaurant near Birmingham, is thickly into Indian sauces and now has his own factory to prove it.

Abdul, who won a place in the Guinness Book of Records for the world’s biggest curry in 2005, has branched out into specialist sauce making after 25 years at the helm of his Eastern Eye restaurant in Lichfield.

While his Staffordshire restaurant continues to pull in regulars who have enjoyed Abdul’s exotic dishes for years, his new Masterchef UK factory in Lichfield is pumping out 5,000 jars of paste a week.

Abdul’s Indian restaurant sauces are available at Asian diners throughout the UK and now the Bangladeshi entrepreneur is targeting the mainstream supermarket sector to increase the paste’s profile.

‘I have been working for 37 years in the restaurant trade but running the factory is a totally different world for me,’ he told the Birmingham Mail.

‘Most people in the Indian restaurant market use pastes and curry sauces but I always thought that I could do better than the ones already on the market. At the moment we make eight curry sauces and eight pastes and we are looking to add other products, such as poppadoms, spices and pickles.

‘Since April, we have sold over 180,000 pounds ($333,000) worth of products for use in the UK and we also have orders lined up from Germany, Switzerland, Spain and elsewhere,’ he said.

Abdul’s factory in Eastern Avenue, Lichfield, currently employs around 20 full-time staff and he hopes to increase the workforce to up to 100 depending on demand.

‘I did my homework before launching into the market – I visited India to research the authenticity of spices and also travelled to the Middle East and Africa,’ he added. ‘Our products are now being used by people throughout the UK’s catering sector.

Abdul has now put his son Mamun in charge of running Eastern Eye while he concentrates on the Masterchef UK business.

Gulf meets on turning Indian remittances into investments

Monday, August 18th, 2008

(IANS)

Two investor meets will be held in the Gulf in November this year under an Indian government initiative to help overseas Indians channelise their remittances into actual investments back in the country.

The Overseas Indian Facilitation Centre (OIFC), a single window investment facilitation centre set up under a public-private partnership between the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs (MOIA) and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), will hold these two meets in Dubai and Oman’s capital Muscat.

These will be part of a series of investor meets the OIFC will be holding in places across the world with significant Indian population.

‘A curtain-raiser event of these investor meets was held in Oman Sunday,’ an official in the Indian embassy in Muscat told IANS.

‘Two investor meets will be held in Muscat and Dubai in November,’ he added.

There are over 4.8 million expatriate Indians across the six Gulf nations.

Under the new initiative, remittances by overseas Indians will be channelised into actual investments in sectors like real estate, assisted living, wealth management, education, healthcare and infrastructure, as against the current trend of such investments going into consumer spending.

Speaking at Sunday’s meeting at Muscat, OIFC chief executive Harmit Singh Sethi said the figure of 30 million overseas Indians is projected to cross the 50 million mark in the near future, and added that the need to offer investment channels that meet the needs of these Indians has become all the more important.

The products on offer will have low-risk factor, provide moderate to high returns and have longer shelf life, he said.

Speaking on the occasion, India’s Ambassador to Oman Anil Wadhwa said the two investor meets in the Gulf in November would showcase exclusive customized projects and products for the Indian diaspora in broad segments, targeted not only at big-ticket investments but also at the mid-level investors.

‘Inflation and dipping (Bombay Stock Exchange’s) Sensex of late have caused some consternation among economy watchers, but I am sure that it’s a passing phase and that the strong fundamentals of the economy and sound fiscal policies of the government would ensure that readjustments in the economy take place sooner rather than later,’ he said.

Stating that India’s export figures were soaring and Indian companies were in the forefront of global merges and acquisitions, the ambassador said: ‘However, to sustain the current level of economic growth, India will have to make massive investments in modernisation and development of its core infrastructure sectors, such as roads, bridges, power and telecom.

Investments in healthcare and education were also needed to ensure that the country maintained an edge over others in terms of the quality of human resource, Wadhwa added.

According to the AT Kearney Confidence Index 2007, India has been the second most preferred destination for foreign direct investment (FDI) since 2005.

‘As far as the Gulf region is concerned, we are aware that India receives sizeable remittances from this part of the world which basically goes into consumer spending,’ Wadhwa said.

‘One of the primary objectives of OIFC would be to convert these remittances into actual investments.

Apart from Dubai and Muscat, the OIFC will be holding similar investor meets in Vancouver and Toronto in Canada, New York, San Francisco and Chicago in the US, London, Manchester and Birmingham in Britain, Durban in South Africa, Sydney and Melbourne in Australia and Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia.

India next target market for Jaguar Land Rover

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Thursday 24th July, 2008 Jaguar Land Rover, now a Tata acquisition, is looking to expand to India, according to its chief executive David Smith.The eastern expansion of the company is aimed at insulating the company's brands against the downturn in sales in traditional markets like the US, Britain and mainland Europe.The brands sell decent numbers in Russia and China already and India is to join the group. There is only one distribution outlet there at present.Smith warns that the road ahead is not smooth, given the lack of demand for luxury cars in the western economies and the company is likely to cut production levels at all three of its assembly plants to prevent a pile-up.The company has not sold Jaguars and Land Rovers for some years in India now and this is going to change now, Smith was quoted as saying by the Birmingham Post.The father of Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata, the current owner of the company, reportedly owned one of the first XK120s to roll out some 60 years ago.'I think it will be a while before the Indian market is as large as China or Russia for premium vehicles, but there is opportunity to sell more than we are at the moment,' Smith said.'We are looking at establishing some new dealer points in the key cities and getting the service and after-sales in place to make sure we can properly service customers. Then I think we can start accelerating sales,' he added.

Meet the man who is naturally turning into a woman

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

London: A Brit man is seeking help from medical experts after he started turning into a woman naturally.Pub singer Terry Wright started losing his hair and beard ten years ago and since then he has developed smooth skin, hot flushes and boobs.The father-of-five has revealed that kids living nearby make fun him by calling him ‘She-Man’.According to his blood tests, the 60-year-old has abnormally high levels of the female hormone oestrogen.And doctors who have examined him say that they have never seen such a case – and do not know what to do to reverse the process.Wright, of Birmingham, is now begging medical experts to help him.“I am a man, not a woman. And I do not want to be a woman. I just want to get my life back to normal,” The Sun quoted him, as saying.“Doctors call me an ‘interesting case’ and ‘unique’ but I just want to go back to being a proper man.“I get mocked by kids where I live who call me She-Man and other names. Once a child bumped into me and its mother said, ‘Say sorry to the lady.’ My mates are shocked at my appearance but try to make light of it by saying I’m just a pretty-looking man,” he added.A psychiatrist has judged him mentally sound and an MRI scan ruled out the oestrogen surge being caused by a tumour.

Videogamers vie for place in $1m global competition

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Hundreds of videogame fans turned out in Birmingham at the weekend in the hope of booking a place in the finals of the world’s biggest games competition.

Teams from four big European cities gathered to audition potential members for the Championship Gaming Series (CGS), an international contest for professional computer gamers. Those selected for the tour are being offered the chance to compete for $1m (£511,000) at the world finals in Los Angeles this summer.

The championship, modelled loosely on an American sports league, features teams from around the globe competing against each other in games including football and rally driving simulations.

More than 500 players and spectators were on hand at the £4m Omega Sektor gaming centre, as the venue hosted the selection of teams from Birmingham, London, Berlin and Stockholm.

Some of those in attendance had been part of the league’s inaugural season last year, including Samantha Whale, 21, from Luton, who helped her team to third place in last year’s world finals. "The experience in LA was so incredible I can’t even describe it to you," said Whale, who plays for the Birmingham Salvo team under the moniker Ricochet. "I’d love to do it again, so that’s why I’m here."

Professional computer gaming has a big following in south-east Asia, with several TV channels dedicated to "eSports". The league’s backers are investing heavily in it, including the recent construction of a specialised 1,000-seat arena for computer game competitions in Wuhan, China. But competitive gaming has yet to make an impact in the west.

"We’re trying to treat it like any other sports entertainment," said Andy Reif, the CGS chief executive and commissioner. "In the past, it’s mainly been a sport for the participants. We’re trying to make it fun and exciting for spectators to watch."

Among those putting their money and influence behind the series are the American television network DirecTV and the software giant Microsoft.

Such backers allow the CGS to offer big prizes – there was more than £27,000 up for grabs in Birmingham – but also concentrate on marketing itself correctly.

Reif said the organisation recognised the difficulty of being taken seriously by the establishment, but he was hoping to emulate the success of extreme sports.

Activities such as skateboarding and surfing were widely disparaged in the past but they have become a recognised part of the sporting world, earning millions of pounds in sponsorship and TV coverage.

Owen shines in Newcastle win

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

Michael Owen scored twice in the first half on Sunday to continue his return to form and give Newcastle a 2-0 Premier League win over local rival Sunderland.
Owen scored with a fourth-minute header and penalty kick just before halftime to take his tally to six goals in seven games. Newcastle’s six-match unbeaten run has lifted them to 42 points, behind 11th-place Tottenham only on goal difference, and put them clear of relegation. Sunderland is six points back in 15th.
Also Sunday, Aston Villa routed Birmingham 5-1 to leave their city rival in real danger of demotion. John Carew and Ashley Young each scored twice to help lift Villa to 58 points and leave Birmingham in the three-team relegation zone. Gabriel Agbonlahor completed the scoring for Villa in the 78th. Mikael Forssell got a goal for Birmingham in the 66th. Villa move to within three points of fifth-place Everton.
On Saturday, Carlos Tevez equalised two minutes from the end for Manchester United to draw 1-1 at Blackburn and stay three points ahead of Chelsea in the title race. Roque Santa Cruz had put Blackburn ahead in the 21st minute.
United now have 81 points and Chelsea 78 with the two teams meeting next Saturday. Also on Saturday, fourth place Liverpool won 2-0 at Fulham to push the Cottagers closer to relegation. Jermaine Pennant and Peter Crouch scored for Liverpool. Bolton won 1-0 at Middlesbrough and West Ham Derby 2-1, while Wigan and Tottenham drew 1-1.