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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

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Saturday, June 27, 2009

Exact details of Jackson's death

Exact details of Jackson's death remain unclear

FILE - In this April 19, 1997 file photo, pop star Michael Jackson, right, poses by his wax figure at the Grevin Wax Museum in Paris. Photo: AP

The final act of Michael Jackson's life came into clearer focus Friday, a picture of a fallen superstar working out with TV's "Incredible Hulk" and under the care of his own private cardiologist as he tried to get his 50-year-old body in shape for a gruelling bid to reclaim his glory.

While the exact circumstances of his death remained unclear, early clues suggested he may simply have pushed his heart too far.

Police said they had towed the doctor's BMW from Jackson's home because it may include medication or other evidence, and a source familiar with the situation told The Associated Press that a heart attack appeared to have caused the cardiac arrest that led to the pop icon's sudden death.

As grief for the King of Pop poured out from the icons of music to heartbroken fans, and the world came to grips with losing one of the most luminous celebrities of all time, an autopsy showed no sign of trauma or foul play to Jackson, who died Thursday at UCLA Medical Center after paramedics not could not revive him.

The AP source who said Jackson apparently suffered a heart attack was not authorized to speak publicly and requested anonymity. Jackson's brother Jermaine had said the pop singer apparently went into cardiac arrest — which often, but not always, happens because of a heart attack.

Authorities said they spoke with the doctor briefly Thursday and Friday and expected to meet with him again soon. Police stressed that the doctor, identified by the Los Angeles Times as cardiologist Conrad Murray, was not a criminal suspect.

"We do not consider him to be uncooperative at this time," Beck said. "We think that he will assist us in coming to the truth of the facts in this case."

Craig Harvey, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County coroner, said there were no signs of foul play in the autopsy and further tests would be needed to determine cause of death. He said Jackson was taking some unspecified prescription medication but gave few other details.

Meanwhile, a 911 call released by fire officials shed light on the desperate effort at the mansion to save Jackson's life before paramedics arrived Thursday afternoon. Jackson died later at UCLA Medical Center.

In the recording, an unidentified caller pleads with authorities to send help, offering no clues about why Jackson was stricken. He tells a dispatcher that Jackson's doctor is performing CPR.

"He's pumping his chest," the caller says, "but he's not responding to anything."

Asked by the dispatcher whether anyone saw what happened, the caller answers: "No, just the doctor, sir. The doctor has been the only one there."

The president of the company promoting Jackson's shows said Murray was Jackson's personal physician for three years.. Jackson insisted Murray accompany him to London, said Randy Phillips, president of AEG Live.

Phillips quoted Jackson as saying: "Look, this whole business revolves around me. I'm a machine, and we have to keep the machine well-oiled." Phillips said Jackson submitted to at least five hours of physicals that insurers had insisted on.

On Friday, the autopsy was completed in a matter of hours, but an official cause of death could take up to six weeks while medical examiners await toxicology tests.. No funeral plans had been made public.

Jackson had remained out of the public spotlight during intense rehearsals for the London concerts, but those with access said he was upbeat and seemingly energized by his planned comeback. Ken Ehrlich, executive producer of the Grammys, said he watched Jackson dance energetically as recently as Wednesday.

"There was this one moment, he was moving across the stage and he was doing these trademark Michael moves, and I know I got this big grin on my face, and I started thinking to myself, 'You know, it's been years since I've seen that,'" he said.

Lou Ferrigno, the star of "The Incredible Hulk," said he had been working out with Jackson for the past several months.

Still, Jackson's health had been known to be precarious in recent years, and one family friend said Friday that he had warned the entertainer's family about his use of painkillers.

"I said one day we're going to have this experience. And when Anna Nicole Smith passed away, I said we cannot have this kind of thing with Michael Jackson," Brian Oxman, a former Jackson attorney and family friend, told NBC's "Today" show. "The result was I warned everyone, and lo and behold, here we are. I don't know what caused his death. But I feared this day, and here we are."

Oxman claimed Jackson had prescription drugs at his disposal to help with pain suffered when he broke his leg after he fell off a stage and for broken vertebrae in his back.

The worldwide wave of mourning for Jackson continued unabated for the man who revolutionized pop music and moonwalked his way into entertainment legend.

"My heart, my mind are broken," said Elizabeth Taylor, who was one of Jackson's closest friends and married one of her husbands at a lavish wedding at the pop star's Neverland Ranch in 1991. She said she had heard the news as she was preparing to travel to London for Jackson's comeback show, and added, "I can't imagine life without him."

Hundreds made a pilgrimage to the Jackson family's compound in Los Angeles, leaving flowers and messages of love. They did the same at his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and at the home in Los Angeles' Holmby Hills where Jackson was stricken. Some camped out overnight.

In New York, people stopped at Harlem's Apollo Theater, where Jackson had performed as a child with his brothers in one of rock's first bubblegum supergroups, the Jackson 5.

Scores of celebrities who knew or worked with Jackson — or were simply awed by him — issued statements of mourning. Some came through publicists and others through emotional postings on social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook, where countless everyday fans were sharing memories as well.

"I truly hope he is memorialized as the '83 moonwalking, MTV owning, mesmerizing, unstoppable, invincible Michael Jackson," said John Mayer.. Miley Cyrus called him "my inspiration."

And Diana Ross, the former lead singer of the Supremes who introduced the Jackson 5 at their debut on "The Ed Sullivan Show" in 1969, said she could not stop crying. "I am unable to imagine this," she said. "My heart is hurting."

His two ex-wives both said they were devastated. One of them, Lisa Marie Presley, posted a long, emotional statement on her MySpace page in which she said her ex-husband had confided to her 14 years ago that he feared dying young and under tragic circumstances, just as her father, Elvis Presley, had.

"I promptly tried to deter him from the idea, at which point he just shrugged his shoulders and nodded almost matter of fact as if to let me know, he knew what he knew and that was kind of that," Presley said.

Presley's father, the King of Rock 'n' Roll to Jackson's King of Pop, died in 1977 at age 42 of a drug-related death.

At rehearsals for Sunday's Black Entertainment Awards show, stars like Beyonce, Wyclef Jean and Ne-Yo were frantically revamping their performances in an effort to turn the evening into a Michael Jackson tribute.

"There's a direct line from Ne-Yo to Michael Jackson," said executive producer Stephen Hill. "There's a direct line from Beyonce to Michael Jackson. There's a direct line from Jay-Z to Michael Jackson. I think they'll want to pay tribute in their own way."

When he was on trial on child molestation charges in 2005, Jackson appeared gaunt and had recurring back problems that he attributed to stress. His trial was interrupted several times by hospital visits, and Jackson once even appeared late to court dressed in his pajamas after an emergency room visit.

After his acquittal, Jackson's prosecutor argued against returning some items that had been seized from Neverland, the Santa Barbara County estate Jackson had converted into a children's playland. Among the items were syringes, the powerful painkiller Demerol and other prescription drugs.

Demerol carries a long list of warnings to users. The government warns that mixing it with certain other drugs can lead to reactions including slowed or stopped breathing, shock and cardiac arrest.

Within hours of Jackson's death on Thursday, fans were inundating Web sites that sell his music, and physical stores reported they had been cleaned out of Michael Jackson and Jackson 5 CDs. All 10 of the albums on Amazon.com's bestseller list Friday were Jackson's; the 25th anniversary edition of "Thriller," the bestselling album of all time, was at the top.

Meanwhile, fans were snapping up every Jackson recording they could get their hands on.

Bill Carr, Amazon.com Inc.'s vice president for music and video, said the Web site sold out within minutes all CDs by Michael Jackson and by the Jackson 5. Jackson's albums accounted for all 10 of Amazon's "Bestsellers in Music" list Friday, with the 25th anniversary edition of the celebrated "Thriller" album taking the top spot.

Barnes and Noble Inc.'s Web site and retail stores also sold out most Jackson CDs, DVDs and books, and its 10 best-selling CDs were Jackson titles as well.

"They love him," said Bill Carr, Amazon's vice president for music and video. "He's a legend, and they're anxious to make sure they have his music in their collections."

 
I've To Be Cruel Only To Be Kind....



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Monday, April 27, 2009

No relief from water crisis for now in Bangladesh


‘Let’s pray for rains,’



No immediate relief from water crisis is in sight for the residents of the capital as Dhaka Water Supply and Sewerage Authority itself is plagued by a number of problems, including lack of sufficient number of generators, inefficient operations of the existing ones and negligence of duties by the employees at the pump stations.
Frequent power outages, dropping down of the groundwater level and mismanagement of the lifted water have aggravated the crisis in the city.
The prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, on Sunday asked the power authorities to provide adequate electricity to the city’s water pumps so that the DWASA could supply sufficient water to its consumers, officials said.
She also directed WASA officials to inform the city residents in advance at what time of the day they would get water supply.
The top and the field-level employees of the DWASA, however, said there was no remedy for the crisis unless there were rains.
‘There are seven to eight hours of power outages a day at my pump station, which results in a drastic fall in lifting of water as the pump usually extracts 2,300 litres per minute,’ Sadek Mia, one of the operators of Gulshan Shooting Club pump station, told New Age on Monday.
Against the backdrop of the power outage, a mobile generator was brought and set up at the pump station on Sunday, he said.
‘All of a sudden, lifting of water by the pump fell to 1,700 litres per minute on Sunday. I have communicated the matter to the head office. The engineers have visited the station but failed to find out the cause,’ Sadek said.
Though Dhaka WASA has the capacity of drawing water up to 205 crore litres per day against a demand for 215 crore litres, the water lifting has dropped to 170 to 175 crore litres because of power outages and fall in the groundwater level.
‘Just two months ago, the water lifting was 2,200 litres per minute, which now stands at only 1,700 litres per minute,’ said Suman Haider, an operator of a pump station at Banani, on Monday.
‘Water lifting at the Dhaka WASA’s pumps has decreased alarmingly during the dry session because of the fall in the groundwater level and frequent power outages. DWASA does not have sufficient number of generators,’ Dhaka WASA managing director, Shahjahan Ali Mollha told New Age on Sunday.
DWASA at present has only 233 fixed generators and 41 mobile generators for its 514 deep tube-wells. As a result at least 270 tube-wells remain unutilised during power outages.
When his attention was drawn to the state of the generators, he said, ‘WASA has decided to procure 200 more generators to solve the power crisis. But it will take another year to procure and set them up.’
‘Let’s pray for rains. Once there is a heavy shower, the problem will disappear to a large extent,’ the managing director said.
‘As we cannot manage generators for each of the pump stations overnight, the authorities concerned have decided to give an alternative connection to each of the pump stations,’ Mollah said.
‘Besides we have taken up a crash programme aiming at improving our internal management so that operators at the pump stations can work efficiently and regularly. We are also making preparations for increasing the number of mobile units so that people can get water from the lorries whenever they want,’ Mollah said.
Groundwater level in Dhaka city is getting depleted by 1.0 to 1.5 meter each year as water supply is heavily dependent on it.
The city will have to wait until there is a lot of heavy rain for the groundwater level to be recharged.
Of the total demand for water, 85 per cent is being met by groundwater. The rest 15 per cent is supplied by three surface water treatment plants in and around Dhaka, using waters from the adjacent rivers.
‘It is not a new problem. We have suffered water crisis in every dry session over the last eight to ten years,’ said Shamsul Haque, an inhabitant of Senpara at Mirupur, where people have long been facing the crisis.
He also accused the WASA officials of favouring influential people in supplying water.

Shibir threatens to shut RMC again

Shibir threatens to shut RMC again


Bangladesh Islami Chhatra Shibir (ICS) Rajshahi Medical College (RMC) unit has threatened to paralyse the college if the authorities take any move to rearrange seats at Shibir-controlled hostels.

Campus sources said a group of Shibir men, led by college unit President Abu Talha and General Secretary Anwarul Haque, met RMC Principal Prof ABM Abdul Hannan at his office yesterday and asked him not to rearrange seats at Shaheed Pinku and Shaheed Kazi Nurunnabi hostels.

They Shibir men said they will shut the college if the authorities do not pay heed to their demand, sources added.

Earlier on the day, the RMC authorities rearranged seats at the two hostels and hung lists of fresh allottees at the entrance of the Shibir-controlled hostels.

The resident students have started returning to their respective hostels as the medical college is scheduled to reopen today.

As per decision of the academic council taken at a meeting on April 24, the college authorities reopened the male and female hostels yesterday.

The meeting also imposed restrictions on rallies, processions and activities of the student organisations on the campus for an indefinite period.

The authorities asked all the students to carry identity cards with them while their stay on the campus and at dormitories. Hostel authorities are checking identity cards of the resident students at the entrance.

A large number of police have been deployed on the campus to avert any further incident.

When contacted, Principal Prof Abdul Hannan said the authorities have rearranged seats at the two hostel as per decision of the academic council.

“We informed the divisional commissioner and police commissioner about Shibir's threat', he said.

RMC was closed sine die on March 13 following a clash between BCL and Shibir on Rajshahi University (RU) campus that left Shibir leader Nomani killed and 100 others from both sides injured.

From: The Daily Star

SE Asia will be worst-hit by climate change

SE Asia will be worst-hit by climate change

Southeast Asia will be hit particularly hard by climate change, causing the region's agriculture-dependent economies to contract by as much as 6.7 percent annually by the end of the century, according to a study released yesterday.

The Asian Development Bank study focused on Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam. Those countries are especially vulnerable because they have large coastal populations facing rising sea levels and rely heavily on rice and other agriculture products which could suffer from water shortages as well as floods. Vietnam was found to be the most vulnerable.

"Climate change seriously threatens Southeast Asia's families, food supplies and financial prosperity," said Ursula Schaefer-Preuss, the ADB's vice president for knowledge management and sustainable development. "If Southeast Asian nations delay action on climate change, their economies and people will ultimately suffer.'

If nothing is done to combat global warming, the report said that by 2100 the four Asian countries would see temperatures rise an average of 8.6 Fahrenheit (4.8 Celsius) from the 1990 level.

All Dhaka Rivers Left Dead

Soft attitude of the government towards polluters and lack of awareness among city dwellers have literally left dead all the rivers and other surface waters in and around the capital.

Over the years the government agencies conducted small-scale drives against the polluters without yielding any major success. The polluters have meanwhile continued polluting the rivers side by side with city dwellers linking excreta discharge to the storm sewerage that ultimately falls into the rivers.

The immediate past caretaker government had earlier directed industrialists to install Effluent Treatment Plants (ETP) at their respective industries by October 31, 2007. But most of the industrialists defied the directive and the government also did not go for action against the violators.

Even the Department of Environment (DoE) does not know exactly how many of the industries have ETPs installed.

"Some industries set up ETPs but don't use those as they need to spend additional money to treat their water," says a DoE inspector.

According to a study jointly conducted by the World Bank and the Institute of Water Modelling (IWM), there are over 300 various effluent discharge outlets from nine major industrial clusters including Tongi, Hazaribagh, Tejgaon, Tarabo, Narayanganj, Savar, Ashulia, Gazipur and Ghorashal.

Of these, 19 outlets carry the major discharge of domestic and industrial waste.

Of the discharged untreated liquid waste, 61 percent are industrial and 39 percent domestic waste, the study shows. The lone Sewerage Treatment Plant (SWP) in Pagla in Narayanganj can treat only 10 percent of the industrial waste.

The primary estimates made in this study show that nearly 330,000 kilograms of BOD is discharged from various polluting sources every day in Dhaka watershed.

"This gives an indication of the extensive pollution loads from various domestic and industrial sources. The situation is extremely precarious particularly during the six months of the year from November to April," the report states.

Over the last 10 years major industrialisation in the Dhaka watershed has been observed, especially in dyeing, washing and textiles sectors. It is estimated that there are over 7,000 industries in Dhaka metropolis located mostly in three clusters -- Hazaribagh, Tejgaon and DND area.

According to statistics from DoE, the number of polluting dyeing mills is 365, tanneries 198, pharmaceutical units 149, engineering workshops 129, chemicals and pesticide factories 118, jute mills 92, rubber and plastic units 63, food and sugar 38, paper and pulp 10, cement and fertilisers five each and distilleries four.

However, the real number is much higher than the statistics, and among all these the dyeing factories and tanneries are the main polluters of the rivers.

Asked why the industries don't use ETPs even if they have it, a DoE chemist explains the reason. He says, "If a dyeing factory produces one tonne of cloth, it discharges 100 cubic metres of liquid waste equivalent to 100,000 litres of water.

"A factory needs to spend Tk 300 to Tk 400 to purify one cubic metre of water excluding electricity and manpower costs.

"They just don't want to spend that money," the DoE chemist says.

Waste from these industries is connected to the sewerage system that directly leads to the rivers around the city. In fact, the rivers have become a dumping ground of all kinds of solid, liquid and chemical waste of bank-side population.

According to the Environment Conservation Rule, 1997, every industry should have an in-house ETP. Otherwise, they would not get from DoE the environmental clearance, which is mandatory to obtain power and gas connections.

Mahmud Hossain, owner of a washing plant in Gazipur, said their industry generated 150 cubic metres of waste water every day.

"We need to spend Tk 8-10 lakh per month for lime, poly electro lime, polly aluminium chloride and polly electro chloride to treat the waste," Mahmud added.

"If we are honest we can treat the wastewater before discharging and even make profit from the business," he commented.




The Daily Star
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