Thursday, 31 October 2013

Murray might withdraw from Australian Open

Johannesburg, Nov 1 (ANI): Wimbledon champion Andy Murray has said that he will only compete in next year's Australian Open if he feels he has a major chance of winning it.

According to Sport24, Murray is now working his way back to full fitness, but said that he will not cut any corners in his preparations for the Australian Open, which begins on January 13.

The Scot said that he would be disappointed to miss the Australian Open, if he does, because it is a Grand Slam, which is a tournament all the players want to play at.

However, he added that when a player starts setting targets, especially when he is coming back from having surgery on the back, it is important that he does not come back just to play a match or to the Australian Open.

He further said that whether he can make it or not depends on how things go once he gets back on the tennis court. (ANI)


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Pakistan ranked in bottom tier of 'least prosperous' free countries

Islamabad, Nov. 1 (ANI): Pakistan has been ranked 132 in a total of 142 countries in the global prosperity index by Legatum Institute.

The Legatum Prosperity Index that assesses global wealth and wellbeing, in its 2013 report has ranked Pakistan near the bottom of the least prosperous countries based on parameters like economy, education, entrepreneurship and opportunity, governance, health, personal freedom , safety and security and social capital.

According to the Express Tribune, Pakistan is facing stagnation in terms of prosperity even as the global propensity has risen over the past five years.

The LPI's Pakistan profile suggests that Pakistan slipped from 107 in 2009 to 132 in 2013, and secures 107 ranking for its economy as its GDP per-capita growth rate of 1.6 percent is lower than in the rest of the world.

The Index ranked Pakistan 100 for its entrepreneurship and opportunity, despite only 49 percent people considering the nation to be a 'good place' to start up a business.

Pakistan has fared 123, 124, 110, 140, 135, 130 under sub indexes of governance, education, health, safety and security, personal freedom and social charity respectively.

The top 10 most prosperous and free nations have seen Norway as the most prosperous nation followed by Switzerland, Canada, Sweden and New Zealand at the best five positions, with Denmark, Australia, Finland, Netherlands and Luxembourg at the remaining top ten positions.

The least prosperous and free countries on the list of 142 countries include Angola at 133rd position followed by Haiti, Guinea, Yemen, Togo, Burundi, Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic and Chad at the last position. (ANI)


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Cricket: 'MoustAshes' battle gets hairy for Aussies

Australia's cricketers will be having their own battle of the 'moustAshes' when they take on England during the Ashes series starting this month.

Matthew Wade, David Warner, Mitchell Starc, Mitchell Johnson and head coach Darren Lehmann will vie with each other for the hairiest upper lip as they raise funds for the Movember charity.

The cricketers are beginning their moustache-growing from November 1 to raise funds and awareness for prostate cancer, testicular cancer and mental health.

Lehmann said he had no hesitation in offering his support for Movember, one of Cricket Australia's two official charity partners.

"Movember has helped change the way we see men's health and with my grandfather battling prostate cancer, it's a cause I'll always be a huge supporter of," Lehmann said in a CA statement on Friday.

"It's great to have Wade, Warner, Starc and Johnson on board as well and I think things will get pretty competitive but hopefully I'll have the boys covered when it comes to the end of the month."

Last year the Australian cricket community raised more than Aus$112,000 ($106,000) for the cause, taking cricket's contribution to more than Aus$300,000 since 2008.


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Biden admits Obama and him not 'tech geeks'

By Kevin Gray MIAMI (Reuters) - Retired England soccer star David Beckham has chosen Miami for a new U.S. Major League Soccer expansion team, a source familiar with the negotiations said on Tuesday. The former England captain who retired earlier this year after stints with Manchester United, Real Madrid and the MLS club L.A. Galaxy, had been considering several locations and toured Miami this summer, meeting with city and county leaders. His MLS player contract included an option to create a …


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Diabetic women under 60 at higher risk of heart disease

Washington, Nov. 1 (ANI): Researchers including an Indian origin scientist has found that young and middle-aged women suffering from type 2 diabetes are at increased greater risk of developing coronary artery disease than previously believed.

Lead study author Rita Rastogi Kalyani, M.D., M.H.S., endocrinologist at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said that their findings suggest that we need to work harder to prevent heart disease in women under 60 who have diabetes.

She said that this study tells us that women of any age who have diabetes are at a high risk for coronary artery disease.

For the research, she and her colleagues analyzed data from more than 10,000 participants in three widely regarded studies: the GeneSTAR Research Program, the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) III.

None of the participants had a history of heart disease. All three studies yielded similar gender differences in rates of diabetes and the risk of developing heart disease.

Interestingly, in both women and men, these findings were unrelated to differences in obesity and other traditional cardiovascular risk factors such as high blood pressure, cholesterol and smoking.

The study has been published in the journal Diabetes Care. (ANI)


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Japan lawmaker breaks taboo with nuclear fears letter for emperor

TOKYO (Reuters) - A Japanese lawmaker handed Emperor Akihito a letter on Thursday expressing fear about the health impact of the Fukushima nuclear disaster, breaking a taboo by trying to involve the emperor in politics.

Taro Yamamoto, who is also an anti-nuclear activist, gave Akihito the letter during a garden party, setting off a storm of protest on the Internet from critics shocked at his action.

"I wanted to directly tell the emperor of the current situation," Yamamoto told reporters, referring to the crisis at the Fukushima nuclear plant north of Tokyo, which has been leaking radioactivity since it was battered by an earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011.

"I wanted him to know about the children who have been contaminated by radiation. If this goes on, there will be serious health impacts."

Akihito inclined his head as he took the letter in his hand but then handed it to a nearby chamberlain. Yamamoto said he made no comment.

About 150,000 people were evacuated from around the plant which suffered a series of explosions and meltdowns. A large area of surrounding land is off-limits due to high radiation.

U.N. scientists said this year the evacuation helped prevent rising cancer rates and other health problems. Traces of radioactive contamination have been found in rice and far out in the Pacific Ocean.

Akihito, who turns 80 in December, fills a purely ceremonial role and remains above the political fray.

He has striven to draw the imperial family closer to the people. Conservative Japanese revere him, while many others feel a fond affection towards him. Some Japanese see the family as irrelevant.

Some Internet critics called on Yamamoto to resign from parliament. "This was really low," one critic wrote in a Web forum.

Chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga also expressed disapproval, telling a news conference: "There is a line for appropriate behaviour at such an occasion". (Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Robert Birsel)


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Five greatest managers who never played professional football

There are those who say that you can’t cut it as a football manager, if you have never played professional football. Whilst it is true that you learn an awful lot from playing, there is nothing stopping you from learning all of that by just observing and being a spectator. So, this article includes the top five managers who have never played professional football.

The moment anybody says managers who have never played football, Jose Mourinho and Arsene Wenger are usually one of the first couple of names anyone comes up with. But, on a closer inspection, I found out that both of them had actually played professional football. And although they weren’t successful, the fact that they have, rules them out of this list.

Another person who misses out is Andre Villas-Boas, who although hasn’t played professional football, can’t really be classified amongst the other five managers on the list, as he has only been managing professional for a few years. Without a doubt, before long, he will join this list, but for now, he misses out.

So, here is the list of the five greatest managers, to have never played professional football.

5. Gerard Houllier (Teacher)

Gerard Houllier

Not many can claim to have won the Ligue 1 with two different clubs. Gerard Houllier did just that when won three Ligue 1 titles, his first with PSG in 85/86 and his second with Lyon two decades later in 05/06, the third followed the very next year. In England, few Liverpool fans could forget the 2000/01 season in which he won the cup treble by winning the FA Cup, League Cup and the UEFA Cup.

But, not many know that he started his life pursuing a degree in English, but had to drop out and work as a school teacher due to his father’s illness. He eventually completed his degree part-time and it was as a part of his degree, that he spent a year at the Alsop Comprehensive School, Liverpool in 1969–1970 as an Assistant, during which time he watched his first Liverpool match. He then went onto serve as a deputy headmaster of the École Normale d’Arras until he turned 26. And it was only in 1973 that he began his full-time managerial career as player-manager of Le Touquet. Although he played for the local amateur side, he never had what it took to be a pro, but he took to management instead, and turned out just fine.

4. Carlos Alberto Parreira (Fitness Coach)

Carlos Alberto Parreira coached Brazil to World Cup glory

Next on the list is Brazil’s 1994 World Cup-winning coach Carlos Alberto Parreira. The Brazilian’s road to glory with his home nation began not as a player, but as a trainer. He was a physical trainer for several clubs in Brazil, when his first shot at management came with Kuwait in the late 70’s.

Parreira admits that he “started out as a fitness coach,” and that the only reason he took up a coaching job was because he was qualified. He adds “I reached a point in my life where I was so well qualified that I was almost pushed into taking on a head coach’s role. In Kuwait they asked me to take charge of their youth sides and that was the start of a long career.” And what a successful career it has been. It’s one that has included featuring in six World Cups with five different national teams, including Brazil, with whom he won the 1994 World Cup. Apart from that he has also won 2 Asian Cups, the Confederations Cup and a Copa America. Not bad for a fitness coach, eh?

3. Bill Struth (Stonemason)

Bill Struth was exceptional as Rangers manager

Back in the early 20th century, football managers went onto managing for years on end. But, few were as good as Bill Struth at Rangers. A stonemason by trade, Bill Struth sporting career started in the field of athletics, where he made a name for himself as a middle-distance runner. It was this that helped him get a job as a trainer for Clyde and then Hearts, before he joined Rangers as an assistant in 1914. He eventually took over manager in 1920 and transformed the club into Scotland’s dominant force, winning a mind boggling 18 League titles, 10 Scottish Cups and two League Cups during his 34-year spell in charge at the Ibrox.

During his reign, Bill Struth became the first Scottish manager to win the treble and was only the second-ever manager of Rangers. He even managed to rack up a staggering 14 Scottish titles in a 19-year period, in the process lifting the premier domestic knockout trophy for the first time in Rangers history in 1928. For all of his accomplishments, there is a bronze statue of him at Ibrox Stadium. He etched his name in stone, so as to speak.

2. Arrigo Sacchi (Shoe Salesman)

Arrigo Sacchi revolutionized football tactics

Nobody has successfully defended the European Cup since Arrigo Sacchi’s Milan in the early 90’s. He was a revolutionary in the history of football tactics as he almost single-handedly abolishing man-marking in Italian football and introducing Zonal pressing, something that is very prevalent today. Although he was a successful club manager and also lead Italy to the World Cup Final in 1994, there were initially doubts about him, having never played professional football in his life. Before the World Cup, on being questioned about his credentials, Sacchi had this gem to say, “I never realized that in order to become a jockey you have to have been a horse first.”

And although he never made it as a player with lowly amateur side Baracca Lugo, he took charge of the same side whilst juggling a promising coaching career with a job as a shoe salesman. After working with various professional clubs’ youth teams, Sacchi got his big break at third tier Parma, where he impressed Milan’s new owner Silvio Berlusconi to bring him to AC Milan, where he built a dynasty and quite possibly one of the greatest club teams of all time.

1. Guy Roux

Guy Roux

Arguably the greatest manager to have never played football is the one who just resigned in 2005 after 44 amazing years at Auxerre, in which he transformed an amateur team into one that is now known nationally and internationally. A 23-year-old Guy Roux was given the job as coach of Auxerre, although he had no experience and had only played for the club, which was still an amateur back then for nearly a decade. His experience amounted to a month of watching Crystal Palace as an “observer” and he only got the job as he promised to “balance the books and never to waste a penny”.

As a manager, he helped Auxerre reach the Coupe de France final in 1979 and in the same year won Ligue 2, which meant that they would be in Ligue 1, the following year. For 34 successive years they stayed in Ligue 1 and in the process won the title once in 95/96. After winning the Coupe de France the year before that, Auxerre were slowly developing into a major force. To add to all this, players like Eric Cantona, Laurent Blanc, Djibril Cisse and Philippe Mexes, all started their careers at this very club.

When Roux called it quits in June 2005, he called time on an illustrious career that saw him the league title once, the Coupe de France four times and also win the Intertoto Cup, whilst also reaching the semifinal of the UEFA Cup in 1993. All of which, cemented his status as a living legend and the greatest manager to have never played professional football.

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Snoring during pregnancy increases risk of delivering smaller babies

Washington, Nov. 1 (ANI): A new research has found that expecting women, who snore at least three nights a week, are at higher risk of having C-sections and delivering smaller babies than those who don't.

According to the study, conducted in the University of Michigan Health System, chronic snorers or moms who snored before and during pregnancy are two thirds more likely to have a baby that's born below the tenth percentile for babies of the same gestational age compared to non-snorers.

Chronic snorers are also more than twice as likely to need an elective C-section, researchers found.

Lead author Louise O'Brien, Ph.D., M.S., associate professor at U-M's Sleep Disorders Center, said that chronic snoring is associated with both smaller babies and C-sections, even after accounting other risk factors.

The study suggests that doctors have a window of opportunity to screen pregnant women for breathing problems during sleep that may put them at risk of poor delivery outcomes, O'Brien explained.

Timing of snoring patterns also made a difference in outcomes, researchers found.

Meanwhile, those who started snoring only during pregnancy had higher risk of both elective and emergency C-sections than women who did not snore.

The study included 1,673 pregnant women, who were recruited from prenatal clinics at U-M between 2007 and 2010, with 35 percent of the women reporting habitual snoring.

The study is published in the scientific journal Sleep. (ANI)


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Asia factory sector upbeat, led by China

BEIJING (Reuters) - Asian manufacturing activity picked up in October led by China, where factory sector growth hit its fastest pace in 18 months off the back of new orders, purchasing managers' reports showed on Friday.

The surveys provide a more upbeat view of world demand following a month in which a political standoff in Washington over the U.S. debt ceiling and the sixth straight cut in IMF global economic forecasts had raised fresh concerns about the health of the global economy.

China's official purchasing managers index (PMI) rose to 51.4 in October, up from 51.1 in September and above expectations for a reading of 51.2. A PMI reading above 50 suggests expansion from the previous month, while a figure below 50 points to contraction.

"With global demand momentum likely to pick up gradually and domestic demand growth remaining solid, we expect GDP growth to comfortably exceed the government's bottom line in the coming quarters," Louis Kuijs, an economist at RBS, said of the China PMI in a client note.

The China PMI offered some support to weak Asian markets on Friday and data elsewhere in Asia also pointed to brighter economic prospects.

The HSBC/Markit PMI for South Korea showed factory activity expanded for the first time in five months and separate data showed the country's exports in October handily beat expectations to hit a record high of $50.5 billion.

Factory activity in major exporter Taiwan, key to many global tech supply chains, was running at its fastest pace since March 2012, an HSBC/Markit PMI showed.

Japan reported on Thursday that its factory activity grew at the fastest pace in more than three years as the Markit/JMMA PMI rose to a seasonally adjusted 54.2, adding to hopes that the world's third-largest economy and home to big brand names like Sony and Toyota is pulling out of two decades of stagnation.

PMI reports from India and the United States are expected later in the day. A euro zone PMI is due on Monday.

The rise in China's official PMI offered some relief to the growth outlook for the economy after a disappointing run of data last month, which included an unexpected slide in exports.

A breakdown of the sub-indexes showed that new orders in large industries reached 53.8, while for small industries the number was just 48.8, suggesting larger firms are benefiting more from the stabilising economy.

"The PMI data for October shows a continued increase, indicating a preliminary stabilisation in the economy," Zhang Liqun, an economist at the cabinet think-tank Development Research Center, said in a statement released with the PMI.

"The foundation for a recovery is not yet solid."

The HSBC/Markit PMI for China rose to 50.9 in October from 50.2 in September, suggesting factories were humming at their strongest pace in seven months.

The figures showed a surprise jump in new export orders, with many factories reporting stronger demand from the United States. (Additional reporting by Stanley White in TOKYO, Natalie Thomas in BEIJING, Faith Hung in TAIPEI and Se Young Lee in SEOUL; Writing by Neil Fullick; Editing by Kim Coghill)


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Enrollment in Obamacare very small in first days - documents

By Susan Cornwell and David Morgan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Enrollment in health insurance plans on the troubled Obamacare website was very small in the first couple of days of operation, with just 248 Americans signing up, according to documents released on Thursday by a U.S. House of Representatives committee.

The Obama administration has said it cannot provide enrollment figures from HealthCare.gov because it doesn't have the numbers. The federal website, where residents of 36 states can buy new healthcare plans under President Barack Obama's law, was launched on October 1.

"We do not have any reliable data around enrollment, which is why we haven't given it to date," Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told lawmakers on Wednesday.

But the documents, which are labeled "war room" notes and appear to be summaries of issues with the problematic website beginning on October 2, indicate a mere six enrollments had occurred by that morning - the day after the website was launched and almost immediately crashed.

"High capacity on the website, direct enrollment not working," the October 2 notes said. By later that day, "approximately 100" enrollments had taken place.

"As of yesterday, there were 248 enrollments," said the notes from the morning of October 3.

The documents were released by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which has been demanding information from the administration about the website's problems. The committee is chaired by Representative Darrell Issa, a Republican opponent of Obamacare.

The notes were from meetings at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the arm of the Health and Human Services Department that has been overseeing the website, an Issa spokeswoman said. The documents were first reported by CBS News.

Health and Human Services spokeswoman Joanne Peters said the department will release Obamacare enrollment statistics on a monthly basis after coordinating information from different sources. This will including call centers, paper applications for insurance, and data from insurers and states. The first release of enrollment data will likely be mid-November, she said.

"These appear to be notes, they do not include official enrollment statistics," Peters said of the documents Issa's panel released.

"As the secretary (Sebelius) said before Congress, we are focused on providing reliable and accurate information and we do not have that at this time ... We have always anticipated that the pace of enrollment will increase throughout the enrollment period."

HealthCare.gov has been plagued with technology problems since its rollout. It was back up on Thursday after not being fully functional for much of Wednesday.

Both the federal exchange and the exchanges built by 14 other states and Washington D.C. were set up to let residents enroll in new plans created under the Affordable Care Act, Obama's 2010 healthcare reform law commonly known as Obamacare.

The government has said it expects about 7 million people to enroll for individual insurance in 2014, many of whom are expected to receive government subsidies.

EXPERTS BROUGHT IN

The Obama administration said it has brought in experts from top technology companies including Google Inc and Oracle Corp to fix the HealthCare.gov website, as Republicans press for details about the botched October 1 launch.

Health and Human Services said it had added dozens of technology experts and engineers to its round-the-clock effort to fix the technical glitches on the site that is key to the implementation of Obama's healthcare restructuring law.

Giving some of the first details of who might be leading the tech fix, HHS officials identified two experts by name: Michael Dickerson, a website reliability engineer on leave from Google, and Greg Gershman, a Baltimore-based innovation director with the firm Mobomo and who previously worked for the White House and the General Services Administration.

"We are doing everything we can to assist those contractors to make HealthCare.gov a highly performant, highly reliable, highly secure system," Oracle CEO Larry Ellison told shareholders at the company's annual meeting on Thursday in Redwood City, California. There was no comment from Google.

The Obama administration says it is confident it will have the website running smoothly by November 30, giving people enough time to enroll in health plans to receive coverage beginning on January 1. Failure to do so would jeopardize its goal of signing up enough consumers, particularly young and healthy ones, to the new online insurance exchanges, and would provide more ammunition to Republican efforts to delay or kill the 2010 law.

Issa said he had subpoenaed Sebelius for more information on the website's technical problems, including how it was tested, and enrollment data. The subpoena requires the documents to be produced by November 13.

"The evidence is mounting that the website did not go through proper testing, including critical security testing, and that the administration ignored repeated warnings from contractors about ongoing problems," Issa said in a statement.

The administration has launched what it calls a "tech surge" to fix the website's problems, largely centered on two existing contractors who were paid to build its underlying technology - CGI Federal and Quality Software Services Inc, a unit of UnitedHealth Group .

The contractors already were using technology from Oracle in building the site. Experts from Red Hat Inc are also among the repair effort, a U.S. official said on Thursday.

Individuals from Oracle and Red Hat have expertise in site reliability, stability and scalability, according to a blog post by Julie Bataille, spokeswoman for CMS.

She said Dickerson, the expert on leave from Google, would be working for Quality Software Services Inc (QSSI), while Gershman would be working for CGI Federal, "so they are employees of those particular companies" during the work involved. Administration and company officials gave no further details on how much help was being provided. (Additional reporting by Noel Randewich and Jim Finkle; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Paul Simao and Christopher Wilson)


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Wednesday, 30 October 2013

South Africa's Fordoun: Holiday within a holiday

Relaxing in this dairy farm turned into a state-of-the-art luxury hotel, enjoying the peace and tranquillity at the 350-hectare property and indulging in activities like horse riding - Fordoun Hotel and Spa is a bonanza for those travelling to Durban.

Situated in the green pastures of Nottingham Road, which has a history dating to the 1800s, the destination is a two-hour drive from Durban.

Built into and around the original 1860s settler homestead and barns as well as the 1950s dairy and cattle sheds, the eight-year-old sprawling property works like a healer for those who want a break from the city's hustle and bustle.

"The main thing about Fordoun is to relax. We would like people to feel they are in a heaven for relaxation," Jon Bates, the owner and the brain behind the destination, told IANS.

"We are a business inside a farm. When you drive down the avenues of trees leading to Fordoun, you almost feel you are driving into another world. Particularly for people who want to get away from people.

"We have designed it in such a way that even when we are full, it must not feel full," he added.

One of the highlights of the property is Spa treatment, and Bates advises guests to book in advance through www.fordoun.com to enjoy all the activities at and around it.

Once relaxed and rejuvenated, one can indulge in various other activities.

"It's important for a hotel like us to consider all the activities in the area including ours as part of our product. For instance, there are good restaurants in the area - if people want, we make arrangements for them," Bates said.

Walking on trails, mountain biking, swimming and gyming, and horse riding - one can do a lot when there.

"We don't do horse riding at Fordoun, we send guests to three different places - one is close to the mountain to ride a special breed of horses called Appaloosa. We recommend Appaloosa to those who don't have too much experience because it's very easy to ride," said Bates, adding that guests have to pay extra for the activity.

Also on offer are British and Indian style horse riding, which again is a paid activity.

The hotel arranges for special guides to take people to the mountains to view ancient Bushman paintings, but to enjoy such outdoor activities, fitness is important.

Other places that could be visited are a giant castle, battlefields and local schools.

Guests have to pay extra for activities that entail guides.

If you still have the time, try quad biking, shop at Midlands Meander and look at ceramics, including the world famous Ardmore ceramic art.

Bates informed that Ardmore is the best example of high value Zulu creative art that is exported all over the world.

Also enriching is visiting dairy farms.

"Many people have not seen a cow being milked by a machine and this would be the ideal opportunity for such people," Bates added.

Footfalls at the property are satisfactory with 70 percent occupancy throughout the year. Of the visitors, 10-15 percent guests are international travellers.

"We have priced it for the South African market. We do not have a separate price for overseas tourists. So, being priced for South Africa makes us affordable to overseas tourists and that's one of our biggest appeals," said Bates.

"Our business module is being up-market, but affordable," he added.

Bates comes from an advertising background and when asked how he got into the hospitality business, he said that a developer wanted to develop the area but was turned down as he decided to do it himself.

"I decided to do it personally. I have a close friend and architect and it took us about two years to develop the hotel. We were nervous as my background was different, but it was a good learning experience," he said.

"We created something which I believe is something unique. I love this property," he said, adding that he invested 15 million rands (Rs.93 million/$1.5 million) to develop it.

"Which is not a lot. We worked cleverly and used a lot of materials existing on the farm. We tried to bring old bricks, not to save money, but to have an old feel about the place," he said.

As far as his other activitie go, Bates indulges in cattle farming and also grows indigenous African plants like Artemisia Afra and hypoxis, commonly known as African potato used for making oil, soaps and scrubs.

"Virtually everything that one come across in their rooms or in the spa is made here," he said.

Fordoun started yielding profits within the first six months.

"We sell packages and some of them include spa treatment," he said.

One part of the farm is nature reserve too.

How to get there:

Several airlines operate direct flights from New Delhi and Mumbai to Durban. An economy class round ticket costs in the region of Rs.60,000.

From Durban, Fordoun is a two-hour drive.

Tariff: A Superior room costs 2000 rands and a luxury room 950 rands. This is inclusive of VAT, breakfast and free use of the pools, sauna, steam room, jacuzzi, gym and floatation pool at the spa.

(Arpana can be contacted at arpana.s@ians.in)


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Abhishek Bachchan launches Dino Morea's fitness studio in Mumbai

New Delhi, Oct. 30 (ANI): Abhishek Bachchan recently inaugurated fellow actor Dino Morea's DM Fitness Studio in Mumbai.

While launching the open-air work station, Bachchan said that people living in the west have all these wonderful parks where they can do various exercises.

He added that Morea's fitness center is similar to what people have in abroad. (ANI)


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Ex-Brazilian footballer's decapitated head left on `horrified` wife's doorstep

London, Oct 31 (ANI): A former Brazilian professional footballer has reportedly been beheaded and his head left on the doorstep of his home in Rio de Janeiro in a rucksack, which was discovered by his horrified wife as she left the house for work on Tuesday morning.

Police said that the eyes and tongue of 35-year-old Joao Rodrigo Silva Santos had been cut and his head placed inside one of his own rucksacks.

According to the Mirror, Santos, who had retired from football two years ago after a successful career playing for several teams in Rio de Janeiro, Sweden and Honduras, had recently set up his own business selling health foods and dietary supplements.

Police further said that Santos is believed to have been kidnapped as he closed up his shop late on Monday night, adding that witnesses saw several men bundling Santos into his car and speeding off just before midnight.

Although Santos' wife was a social worker in a military police base in a local slum, the police said that she did not patrol the streets or made arrests like other police officers, with Santos' relatives claiming that neither the footballer nor his wife had any enemies.

Investigators are probing whether Santos was murdered by a drugs gang because of the work of his wife, with the report adding that police have begun searching for the rest of Santos' body. (ANI)


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Oman reports first case of MERS coronavirus

Muscat, Oct 30 (IANS/WAM) Oman's health ministry has reported the first case of the deadly Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus.

Giving details of the case Tuesday, Mohamed bin Saif al Hosni, under secretary for health affairs, said that the situation is under control and there is no need for panic.

The affected patient is undergoing treatment at a hospital and his condition is stable, he was quoted by the daily Oman Observer as saying in a statement.

The official said the patient got the disease after coming in contact with someone from outside the country. More details of the case will be known in a few days.

--IANS/WAM

ab/bg


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Too much exposure to noise can pose serious public health threat

London, Oct 30 (ANI): A research team examined the latest research on noise's impact on an array of health indicators- hearing loss, cardiovascular disease, cognitive performance and mental health, and sleep disturbance, reporting that noise exposure is a serious public health threat.

The combined toll of occupational, recreational and environmental noise exposure poses a serious public health threat going far beyond hearing damage, according to an international team of researchers.

With both noise-related hearing issues (auditory) and broader deleterious effects of noise on physical and mental wellbeing (non-auditory) in mind, the research team- consisting of members from the International Commission on Biological Effects of Noise (ICBEN), a global panel of experts in various areas of noise and public health - convened to summarize current findings related to noise exposure and overall health.

The team concentrated on studies published during the past five years in the fields of otolaryngology, cardiovascular medicine, sleep medicine, psychology, and hospital medicine to best determine the state of current evidence of noise's impact on health.

The authors found evidence that long-term exposure to environmental noise affects the cardiovascular system, with connections to hypertension, ischemic heart diseases, and stroke.

The authors note that for auditory effects, there is still debate about what noise levels are considered safe, and that prospective studies with adequate control groups could help shed additional light on the discussion.

For the non-auditory effects, the lead author Mathias Basner said large-scale prospective epidemiological studies, dedicated primarily to the health effects of noise, are needed to strengthen the link between acute and long-term environmental and social noise exposure and the various health outcomes, especially cardiovascular disease.

The study is published in The Lancet. (ANI)


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India gears up its waste-to-energy initiatives

Mumbai, Oct 30 (IANS) India is all set to convert its trash to treasure as it gears up, albeit a bit slowly, to strengthen its waste-to-energy sector and boost recycling and reuse - with one expert estimating the annual earnings from biofuel alone at Rs.50,000 crore ($11 billion).

Aiding India's transition to green technology are a host of European and American consultants with economically viable and eco-friendly solutions.

"There will be three-fold benefits in terms of environment protection, economy and optimising use of space," Amiya Kumar Sahu, president of the National Solid Waste Association of India, told IANS at the recently concluded IFAT here - India's leading trade fair for water, sewage, refuse and recycling.

IFAT India hosted more than 100 exhibitors with 56 percent participation from abroad, including European nations like Germany, Italy, Switzerland and the Netherlands and representatives from the US.

Cappozzo Filippo, owner of the Italian recycling solution provider EcoStar Recycling Technologies - that is in use in seven Indian states - pointed out India's advantageous position in terms of procuring state-of-the art environmental engineering technology.

"You need not invest so much in research and development...you can benefit by directly getting the best available systems. You are starting at the highest level in terms of technology...no going through trial and error. Besides most of India's waste treatment is not designed for municipal solid waste (MSW)," Filippo pointed out.

Atul Narayan Vaidya, senior principal scientist with the solid and hazardous waste management unit of Nagpur's National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) agreed.

"It's not that indigenous technologies are not there, but most of them are of the old-school variety and cannot be applied to MSW which is the primary waste in our country. The foreign companies have been doing this for years and are superior," Vaidya told IANS over the phone.

As per a World Bank report, India generates 110,000 tonnes of MSW per day and the numbers are only increasing.

This translates into a potent revenue source, said Ranabir Das, chief executive, Cogen Systems, which represents the US-based Green Power Inc (GPI) in India.

The company has developed a technique for converting MSW into clean fossil-free fuel (a type of synthetic diesel) and operates not by selling technology but builds plants for investors or municipal waste processors.

"This amount of MSW is equivalent to 30 million litres of diesel fuel per day. Therefore, per year it will be 10,000 million litres approximately. In rupee terms, at around Rs.50 per litre, gross earnings in sale of fuel to the central government would be approximately Rs.50,000 crores per year."

Although the Indian government has recognised the waste-to-energy sector as a renewable technology and has allocated nearly Rs.200 crore ($44.5 million), it's still in the nascent stage but things are slowly picking up, Sahu pointed out.

"What countries like Germany did 10 to 20 years ago we are doing now. There is enormous potential in waste being converted to power to fulfil the energy deficit. Advanced technology from abroad has a big role to play in taking it forward in India. The Indian government also needs to push it more," he added.

According to Jens-Jakob Vahl, project director of Nuremberg's Envi Con and Plant Engineering consultancy, it's a "win-win situation" for India, taking environmental concerns and paucity of space into consideration.

Dumping of garbage in landfills pollutes the air and results in the run-off of toxic materials into the groundwater. Instead of letting it sit, occupy precious space and wreak health havoc, the waste can be converted to biogas for fuel and energy in special plants like those built by Vahl's company.

But can India really afford to support such ambitious projects with its shaky economy?

"Yes, it can, because you need not buy all the parts of the plant from us. Certain components are manufactured indigenously in India...for example the boilers are of good quality. You can use your own components in the waste treatment plants. The ones that are not produced here can be sourced from us," Vahl explained.

Vaidya said it will take "substantial amount of time" before India can augment its solid waste disposal technology and till then, to drive its alternative energy initiatives, sourcing tried and tested products from abroad is the way to go.

(Sahana Ghosh can be contacted at sahana.g@ians.in)


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Bhubaneswar, Imphal airports get international status

New Delhi, Oct 30 (IANS) The government Wednesday accorded international operation status to Bhubaneswar and Imphal airports.

According to a statement of the Union Cabinet, which met here, declaration of these airports as international airports "will offer improved connectivity, wider choice of services at competitive cost".

An airport needs to fulfil criteria such as an extra layer of security and scrutiny such as custom and immigration counters. The airport also needs to have sufficient space for health services, animal and plant quarantine.

The airport also should have a separate domestic terminal building or an integrated one to handle passenger traffic.

Besides, communications, navigation, surveillance (CNS) and air traffic management (ATM) services also need to upgraded to handle higher traffic volumes at the airport.

Oil companies too are required to have special financial arrangements to provide international passenger carriers with air turbine fuel (ATF). ATF sold to these airlines does not carry state sales taxes and is considered as exports.

Currently, Bhubaneswar's Biju Patnaik Airport which belongs to the Airport Authority of India (AAI) is suitable for operation of large-bodied aircraft and is also equipped with facilities for night operations.

The airport's apron area can park up to six aircrafts and navigational aids.

"The modification of the existing domestic terminal building into international terminal building suitable for handling international operations has been completed," the statement said.

The international terminal of the airport will house six check-in-counters, customs and immigration counters.

On the other hand, Imphal airport, which too belongs to the AAI, is suitable for handling medium-size aircraft like Airbus A-320 in all weather conditions.

The cabinet statement added that major facilities at the airport, include night operations, parking for three A-320s, one turboprop ATR-72 at a time, and 19 check-in-counters, custom counters, immigration counters.


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Secret to malaria control identified

Washington, Oct. 30 (ANI): A new study has revealed the secret to controlling malaria menace by restricting the delivery of a male hormone inside the female body of malaria causing species, Anopheles gambiae.

The study led by Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and University of Perugia (UNIPG) researchers has shown that blocking egg development in the mosquito species could help reduce transmission of the disease.

The researchers studied the interaction between a steroid hormone called 20-hydroxy-ecdysone (20E), which is transferred from the male to the female mosquito during mating, and a female Mating-Induced Stimulator of Oogenesis (MISO).

They found out that MISO protein and 20E interacted in the female mosquito's reproductive tract, which boosts the accumulation of lipids in the ovaries, leading to a more rapid and higher production of eggs.

The researchers used chemical techniques to suppress MISO's functioning in female mosquitoes and found that doing so reduced egg development.

Malaria has been the leading cause of death in tropical and subtropical regions.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, malaria claims nearly 660,000 lives per year.

This new finding holds promise for the development of new tools for controlling malaria-transmitting mosquito populations, the researchers said. (ANI)


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Ranbaxy slumps after posting loss for July-Sept quarter

MUMBAI (Reuters) - Shares in Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd fell over 5 percent in early trade after the drugmaker posted losses for a second straight quarter on Tuesday, hurt by foreign exchange charges and a one-time write-off related to one of its plants under an import ban by the U.S. health regulator. The stock recovered later.

Net loss in July-September was 4.5 billion rupees compared with a profit of 7.5 billion rupees a year earlier, it said on Tuesday.

At 10:19 a.m., Ranbaxy was trading 1.26 percent lower at 380.60 rupees.

(Reporting by Abhishek Vishnoi; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)


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WHO confirms polio outbreak in Syria

Geneva, Oct 30 (IANS) The World Health Organisation (WHO) said Tuesday that 10 cases of infection with wild poliovirus type 1 had been confirmed in Syria.

Twenty-two children with acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) in the country's Deir al-Zour province were reported Oct 17 and wild poliovirus has been isolated in samples taken from 10 cases. Results on the other 12 were expected within days, Xinhua reported.

According to the WHO, most of the cases are of kids below two years of age and were un-immunised or under-immunised. Estimated immunisation rates in Syria declined from 91 percent in 2010 to 68 percent in 2012.

It said that Oct 24, a large-scale supplementary immunisation activity (SIA) was launched in Syria to vaccinate 1.6 million children against polio, measles, mumps and rubella, in both government-controlled and contested areas.

Larger-scale outbreak response across Syria and neighbouring countries is anticipated to begin in early November, to last for at least six to eight months depending on the area and based on evolving epidemiology, it said.

The WHO warned that the risk of further international spread of wild poliovirus type 1 across the region is considered to be high due to frequent population movements across the region and subnational immunity gaps in key areas.

A surveillance alert has been issued for the region to actively search for additional potential cases. All travellers to and from polio-infected areas are recommended to be fully vaccinated against polio.

Polio is a highly infectious disease that invades the nervous system and can cause irreversible paralysis in a matter of hours. It causes permanent paralysis in one of every 200 infected individuals. The virus is most often spread through fecal-oral transmission and usually affects children under age five.


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Type of illnesses due to excessive gadget-use revealed!

Washington, Oct. 30 (ANI): As people are getting more and more tech savvy, a host of health issues also come as part of the digital package, which include not only spine issues, but go 'neck-deep' than that.

New York Magazine has revealed a list of gadget-related illnesses that can make a person sick and suffer for a long time.

According to Fox News, one of the most common illnesses arising out of excessive gadget exposure is sleep deprivation as a result of bright lights from the gadget that inhibit the body from entering sleep correctly.

The report said that Nomophobia, affects apparently 66 percent of people, which refers to feeling of anxiety for even a thought of prosaic bathroom trip, without the gadget in hand, with symptoms like trembling, sweating, and nausea.

However, quite ironically, gadgets have also been developed to tackle health issues like the Airo wristband that claims to monitor one's heart rate, workout intensity, sleep patterns and nutritional intake. (ANI)


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Sedentary behaviour linked to precancerous colorectal tumours' recurrence

Washington, Oct. 30 (ANI): Men spending most of their time engaged in sedentary behaviours are at highest risk for recurrence of colorectal adenomas, benign tumours that are known precursors of colorectal cancers, according to a study.

Christine L. Sardo Molmenti, PhD, MPH, postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of Epidemiology at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health in New York, said that sedentary behaviour is emerging as a risk factor for poor health.

Sardo Molmenti and colleagues performed a pooled analysis of participants of two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase III clinical trials conducted at the University of Arizona Cancer Center in Tucson and the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health: The Wheat Bran Fiber Study and the Ursodeoxycholic Acid Trial.

All participants in the trials had one or more colorectal adenomas removed during a colonoscopy conducted in the six months prior to their trial enrollment.

Among the participants were 1,730 who had completed a self-administered questionnaire that included questions about leisure, recreational, household, and other categories of activity at enrollment, and had undergone a follow-up colonoscopy.

When researchers examined the data for men and women separately, they found that men who reported spending more than 11.38 hours a day engaged in sedentary behaviours, such as writing, typing or working on a computer, and reading, were 45 percent more likely to experience colorectal adenoma recurrence compared with men who spent fewer than 6.90 sedentary hours a day

Further analysis showed that men who reported high levels of sedentary behaviors and low levels of participation in recreational activities such as walking, jogging, and playing golf, were 41 percent more likely to experience colorectal adenoma recurrence compared with men who reported low levels of both sedentary behaviors and recreational activity. (ANI)


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Obama under fire as Americans lose prior health plans

By Roberta Rampton

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama is facing fresh attacks for his pledge that Americans who like their current healthcare plans can keep them under Obamacare after reports that thousands of Americans facing cancellation notices.

Accusations that the pledge was misleading are potentially a deeper threat to Obama than the website glitches that have plagued Healthcare.gov since its October 1 launch and allowed only a trickle of people to sign up on new federal insurance exchanges.

Another technical problem struck on Tuesday evening as Connecticut's health exchange said the federal data hub that serves it as well as Healthcare.gov was "experiencing an outage" - for the second time in three days. A similar outage on Sunday also halted enrollment on Healthcare.gov.

Obama has downplayed the problems with the website, saying it's like a cash register not working, and has stressed that the underlying product of the 2010 Affordable Care Act is "actually really good."

But critics of Obamacare have seized on the hundreds of thousands of Americans due to lose their current plans because they fail to include essential benefits required by the law and are asking whether Obama misrepresented the law.

"Can you understand the level of frustration and concern about what many Americans perceive to be a false claim from the administration?" asked Representative Peter Roskam, an Illinois Republican, during a House oversight hearing on Tuesday featuring Marilyn Tavenner, a top U.S. official overseeing the law's rollout.

Tavenner, the administrator of the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), apologized for problems with Healthcare.gov but quickly came under fire about the Americans losing their current coverage plans.

Hours after Tavenner testified, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee released a September 6 status report from Obamacare contractor CGI Federal that warned of potentially severe performance risks less than a month before the rollout. The report was dated four days before CGI and other contractors told Congress the project was on schedule to open.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, who has faced Republican calls for her resignation, is scheduled to testify before another House panel on Wednesday and will likely confront similar questions about whether the administration misled the public about the benefits of Obamacare.

Obama is heading to Boston, Massachusetts, on Wednesday to promote Obamacare at the same spot where Mitt Romney signed Massachusetts' own healthcare law in 2006 as governor. Obama is expected to highlight how Massachusetts' health overhaul, which relied on similar insurance exchanges, also got off to a slow start.

The people at risk for policy cancellations are a portion of those in the pool of 15 million consumers, often self-employed, who do not get coverage through their employers or the government and have individual policies.

The dropped policies are also reviving debate on a core premise of the healthcare law - that all Americans should have adequate coverage so that the costs of healthcare are spread across the population.

Democrats are also saying Obama could have phrased his plan retention pledge more accurately. "I think preciseness would have been better," House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, the second-ranking Democrat in the House, told reporters.

Obama in 2009, while building support for the bill that would become the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, repeatedly said that Americans who liked their doctors or current healthcare plans could keep them. He reiterated the promise as recently as March.

'ESSENTIAL' BENEFITS

Now that the law is fully coming into effect, Americans are receiving notifications from their insurers that their current plans cannot continue because they do not cover certain "essential" benefits such as preventive care and mental health services as required by the law.

The idea was to phase out bare-bones plans that do not cover catastrophic events, sometimes to the surprise of the consumer, and also have the effect of increasing costs across the healthcare system.

When asked by a reporter on Tuesday whether Obama misled the public, White House spokesman Jay Carney redirected the conversation to state that it was not fair for taxpayers to absorb costs of the uninsured or under-insured.

"There was a debate about this and I'm sure there will continue to be a debate that a fundamental premise of the Affordable Care Act is that there ought to be minimum standards for insurance coverage for everybody," Carney said.

But some Americans are reporting sticker shock about the new plans their insurers are offering.

Kevin DeLashmutt, 53, who is self-employed in real estate in Seattle, Washington, said that over the summer he received a letter from his insurance company saying the plan he now has is no longer available.

The cheapest plan he could buy would cost $411, about twice his current premium, while the plan most like the one he has would cost about 150 percent more - $542.59.

"You used to be able to choose what to get based on what you need and what you can afford, including a high deductible," DeLashmutt said. "Let me manage my own risk. Those people in Washington, D.C., shouldn't get to make that decision for me."

MULTIPLE HEADACHES

Besides the rocky Obamacare rollout, Obama is facing protests from allies, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, after it was revealed that the United States for years has spied on foreign heads of state.

The issues are distracting him from other policy goals, including comprehensive immigration reform.

It is unclear exactly how many Americans may lose their current coverage and whether they truly will be forced into more expensive plans.

The law does protect plans that were created before the March 2010 law and have not changed since then, but it is common industry practice for insurers to tweak plans year to year, leading to a flood of cancellations.

These people can either seek new "off exchange" policies from insurers, or try to find cheaper plans through the exchanges that come with a federal tax subsidy if their income is low enough.

If the glitches in the online marketplaces fail to be resolved, the government might have to reinforce low-tech alternatives such as call centers and paper applications, one expert said.

"If they can't enroll before the end of this year ... it's a serious burden on those people," said Joel Cantor, a public policy professor at Rutgers University who advises New Jersey on issues with the healthcare law.

Republicans have been able to harness the frustration to energize their latest attack on Obamacare.

"The problems don't stop at the technical failures of a website," said Representative Sam Johnson, a Republican from Texas, at the oversight hearing on Tuesday. "The real problem stems from the colossal failure to deliver what this law promised the American people." (Reporting By Roberta Rampton; Additional reporting by Lewis Krauskopf, Sharon Begley, David Morgan and David Lawder; Writing by Karey Van Hall; Editing by Tim Dobbyn and Cynthia Osterman)


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China's anti-pollution drive risks running out of gas

By Adam Rose and David Stanway

BEIJING (Reuters) - A chronic shortage of natural gas is hurting China's plan to move away from burning coal to heat homes and offices, raising the prospect of more choking air pollution this winter and beyond.

The problem is worst in northern China, where air pollution mainly caused by decades of reliance on coal has lowered life expectancy by an estimated 5.5 years compared to the south, Chinese and international researchers said in July.

The frigid northeastern city of Harbin, home to 11 million people, virtually ground to a halt last week when airborne contaminants were around 50 times the level recommended by the World Health Organisation. Beijing had its own emergency in January when air pollution was 45 times the level.

"I suspect we will have severe incidents of air pollution in Beijing again this winter," said Alvin Lin, China Climate and Energy Policy Director for the U.S.-based Natural Resources Defense Council.

China sees natural gas as the way to cleaner air. Authorities have said Beijing's urban core should use only gas for heating. But domestic output cannot keep up with demand.

"With the current natural gas situation, maybe you can guarantee (supply to) big cities like Beijing, but if you want to expand to the cities of northern China that need it ... I think that's still quite difficult," said Tao Guangyuan, a renewable energy expert and columnist based in Beijing.

The shortage has forced the government to ration gas supplies, even banning construction of new natural gas-fired power stations. The government also said last week it would control the increase in new gas users, prioritising supplies to residential users and public transport during the winter.

Nevertheless, the gas shortage may still be 10 percent higher this winter than last year because more users have switched over, official media said last week, citing an unidentified executive from PetroChina , China's largest gas producer and importer.

The government has said it would raise natural gas use to 230 billion cubic metres by 2015, more than double the 2010 rate, but disappointing domestic production growth coupled with insufficient pipeline and storage capacity has left it increasingly reliant on imports and prone to shortages.

Importers also risk losses because the government keeps the price of gas low to curb inflation and ease the impact on consumers, although recent incremental price hikes have helped.

"If there's not enough gas, many people will just go back to burning coal, secretly," said Ming Sung, East Asia chief representative of the Clean Air Task Force, a U.S.-based environmental advocacy group.

SMOG ALERT SYSTEM FOR "GREYJING"

China wants to tackle air pollution to stem potential unrest as its increasingly affluent urban populace turns against a growth-at-all-costs economic model that has spoiled much of the country's air, water and soil.

Its cities are among the world's most polluted. Air pollution in Beijing, derided as "Greyjing" or "Beige-jing" by English-speaking residents, exceeded national standards 62 percent of the time during the third quarter, the Ministry of Environmental Protection said.

Beijing authorities have unveiled a new smog alert system that will impose curbs on driving and halt manufacturing and construction if three consecutive days of hazardous pollution are forecast for the capital, located in northern China.

"I think there's now more attention being paid to what are the immediate, short-term things that could be done when the air pollution gets that bad," said Lin.

Images of the acrid smog over Harbin on October 21 were beamed around the world after authorities literally turned on the heat by switching on a network of mostly coal-fired heating plants that warm large swaths of the city. Officials blamed thick fog on the same day for contributing to the pollution.

The same sort of plants are used across northern China, providing so-called centralised heating. Some also supply electricity while others burn coal just to generate steam which is piped into city grids for heat.

Centralised heating dates back to the 1950s in Beijing. It had spread across the north by the mid-1980s. At the time, China was still impoverished, which meant the government could only afford to give its colder north centralised heating. Residents in cities south of the Yangtze River such as Shanghai tend to rely on electric space heaters.

Most of the north's heating plants are turned on around mid-November. Many institutions and residential complexes have private heating, but also use coal-fired boilers.

The coal-fired heating plants use coal-scrubbing filters which reduce soot emissions, said Tao, the renewable energy expert. The real pollution culprits are small coal boilers, as well as traditional "kang" - stove-heated beds that people sleep on - and other forms of "rustic heating" that residents depend on to survive chilly winters. Such stoves produce tar and hazardous smoke, experts say.

Air pollution in Harbin, which gets 65 percent of its warmth from public and private centralised heating, was within WHO recommended levels on Tuesday after being 7.5 times acceptable levels on Monday.

COAL IS STILL KING

Despite China's rush to gas, coal still supplies the bulk of the country's total electricity needs.

Under a new plan announced last month to tackle air pollution, China would cut consumption of the fossil fuel to below 65 percent of primary energy use by 2017, down from 66.8 percent last year.

The plan also aims to raise the share of non-fossil fuel energy to 13 percent by 2017, up from 11.4 percent in 2012.

PetroChina Chairman Zhou Jiping said earlier this year it would take at least four to five years to build up new natural gas supply capacity, which would still not be enough to meet demand.

"For the whole country to move to natural gas in the way that you kind of see in the U.S., ... it's going to be a few decades," said Lin of the NRDC.

Natural gas demand rose 13.5 percent in the first nine months of 2013 for example, 4.3 percentage points faster than production, the government said last week.

With demand set to jump further, the government has put Beijing at the top of the list for supplies.

Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou in southern China are also expected to increasingly get energy from neighboring regions under last month's anti-pollution plan.

The capital, for example, is supposed to get 70 percent of its power by 2017 from neighboring regions, such as Shanxi and Inner Mongolia, where coal is still in widespread use.

"You can think of it as a redistribution of pollution," added Lin.

(Additional reporting by Beijing Newsroom.; Editing by Ben Blanchard and Dean Yates)


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PIP breast implants don't increase risk of cancer in women

London, Oct 30 (ANI): Researchers have found no evidence to higher risk of cancer in women who have PIP breast implants.

According to a review of PIP safety, women also do not need to have the faulty implants removed as a precaution although they may wish to have them taken out if they feel anxious, the Daily Star reported.

Around 47,000 British women are thought to have been given the implants manufactured by the closed French company Poly Implant Prothese (PIP).

The implants were filled with non-medical grade silicone intended for use in mattresses and have been linked to reports of rupture and swelling in the body.

In January last year, the Government announced that women given PIP breast implants on the NHS would be able to have them removed for free, with private firms told they should offer the same deal.

Any woman not helped by private firms would also qualify for NHS help. A review last year by NHS medical director, Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, concluded the implants were not toxic or carcinogenic.

But it acknowledged the distress caused to many women by having them in their bodies.

The study is published by the European Commission's Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks (SCENIHR). (ANI)


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Analysis - On healthcare, spying, questions on what Obama knew and when

By Steve Holland

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - To his critics, President Barack Obama often has seemed to be conveniently distant when trouble has hit his administration.

But on Tuesday, Obama was hit with a public-relations crisis that struck at the core of his domestic and foreign policy - one that raised questions about whether he had misled Americans on his signature healthcare overhaul, and whether he really was unaware of the U.S. government's alleged spying on its allies.

It was a dramatic twist for the Democratic president, who was widely seen as outflanking Republicans during the budget battles that led to a partial government shutdown and a near-default by the U.S. government this month.

Until this week, most of the discussion in Washington on the "Obamacare" health insurance program focused on its clumsy rollout, as symbolized by a balky website that is frustrating uninsured Americans' efforts to enroll in the program.

But several media reports on Tuesday raised questions about whether the administration was completely truthful in selling the program to Americans four years ago, after Obama was first elected president.

The latest flap dates to a pledge that Obama made in 2009 about the healthcare initiative that remains the biggest achievement of his nearly five years in office.

"If you like your healthcare plan, you'll be able to keep your healthcare plan, period," he told the American Medical Association in Chicago on June 15, 2009, a mantra he has repeated regularly - including during his 2012 re-election, when Republicans were saying that the law would force millions of Americans to lose their insurance.

"No one will take it away, no matter what," Obama has said.

But as potentially millions of Americans are learning now, the pledge came with some caveats.

Those who buy their own insurance on the open market and who have policies that don't meet minimum standards of the Affordable Care Act are likely to have their policies canceled and replaced with higher-cost alternatives, industry analysts said on Tuesday.

The scenario could affect a relatively small percentage of Americans, but nevertheless could involve hundreds of thousands of people who have had inexpensive policies with few benefits, analysts said.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said that the administration has always said that some healthcare plans would not meet the new requirements, which require that coverage include emergency services, maternity care, prescription drugs and other popular features.

Carney argued that these Americans would end up with better insurance coverage because they have been in a "Wild West" part of the insurance market that was under-regulated.

Republican critics pounced on the White House's defense, saying that Obama had misrepresented the healthcare law for years. They also chided the administration for saying Obama had been surprised by the depth of the glitches on HealthCare.gov, the federal government's online insurance exchange.

"In the old days people used to call (Republican President) Ronald Reagan the 'Teflon president' if something bad happened in his administration and it did not stick to him," Republican strategist Charlie Black said.

"But that title much more fits President Obama, who goes out of his way to not take responsibility for anything bad that happens."

'THAT'S A BIG PROBLEM'

Black's shot at Obama was part of a chorus of "I-told-you-so" criticism launched by Republicans who have made reversing Obamacare their top priority, claiming that it will kill jobs and raise medical costs.

It also reflected another accusation made by Republicans in recent months: that Obama doesn't seem to be in the loop on key issues involving his own administration.

On Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and National Security Agency Keith Alexander faced questions from lawmakers about reports that the NSA had spied on leaders of U.S. allies, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, a key friend of the United States.

The hearing came a day after California Senator Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in a statement that Obama apparently had not known that Merkel's communications had been collected since 2002.

"That's a big problem," Feinstein said.

White House spokesman Carney has declined to comment on specific reports of NSA spying.

But analysts said that Obama's apparent distance from the NSA controversy follows a pattern with his administration that they have seen in other sensitive matters, including the fatal attacks on a U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, last year and the flap over whether the Internal Revenue Service targeted conservative groups for additional scrutiny.

"The president has some issues here that are really a sad pattern for his second term," said David Yepsen, director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Center at the University of Southern Illinois. "The economy is very fragile. The American people are in an anxious mood. And this sort of drum beat of troubles that the administration seems to have is just really unsettling."

Even TV comedian Jon Stewart of Comedy Central's "The Daily Show," who typically saves his sharpest jabs for Republicans, is making light of what he suggests is the president's curious disengagement from anything controversial.

"If the president is unaware that we were spying on our allies, who gave the go-ahead to spy on our allies?" Stewart said this week during a segment called, "Wait, wait ... Don't tell him."

DEFENDING OBAMACARE

Obama's difficulties likely have contributed to a decline in his public approval rating, now down to 40 percent in the latest Reuters/Ipsos tracking polls. Only 19 percent of those surveyed this week said the country is on the right track.

Ipsos pollster Julia Clark said the approval rating is about the lowest Obama has had, and is likely the result of political fallout from the 16-day government shutdown and the problems with the healthcare program's launch.

"While all politicians were affected by the former, Obama personally suffers more from the latter due to the fact that it is, quite literally, branded with his name, 'Obamacare,'" she said.

Obama's defenders believe the controversies will blow over and that the president should focus on the next round of budget negotiations with Congress as key deadlines for action approach in December and January.

The fight over spending is likely to set the stage for the November 2014 midterm congressional elections, the outcome of which will determine whether Obama will have enough fellow Democrats in Congress to get much done in his final two years in office.

"I think the big things for the president right now are how he handles what happens in January and February and how the Republicans handle it," said Democratic consultant Bob Shrum.

(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton and Mark Felsenthal; Editing by David Lindsey and Paul Simao)


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INSIGHT - Starvation in Syria: a war tactic

(This story was reported by a visiting journalist whose name has been withheld for security reasons)

DAMASCUS (Reuters) - One Syrian security official called it the "Starvation Until Submission Campaign", blocking food and medicine from entering and people from leaving besieged areas of Syria.

Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have used partial sieges to root out rebel forces from residential areas during the civil war. But a recent tightening of blockades around areas near the capital is causing starvation and death, residents and medical staff say.

At an army checkpoint that separates government-held central Damascus from eastern suburban towns earlier this month, a thin, teenage boy on a bicycle circled a soldier and begged to be allowed to take a bag of pita bread, a staple food, into the eastern suburbs. The soldier refused but the boy kept begging for "just one loaf".

The soldier finally shouted: "I'm telling you, not a single morsel is allowed in there. I don't make the rules. There are those bigger than me and you who make the rules and they're watching us right now. So go back home." The soldier, visibly upset, exhaled quietly and deeply when the boy slipped out of sight.

The incident illustrates how blockades are being used as a weapon in a war that grew out of pro-democracy protests in the summer of 2011, increasing an already grave humanitarian crisis. Blockades are employed mostly by the government but also on a smaller scale by the armed opposition.

Food and medicine, which could be used by the warring parties, are rarely allowed to enter besieged areas and the movement of civilians in and out is restricted.

Over one million Syrians are trapped in areas where aid deliveries have stalled, the United Nations says.

The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a report last month that half of those people are in rural Damascus and around 310,000 people more trapped in Homs province in central Syria.

EID BLOCKADE

At a checkpoint in central Damascus, a state security official, known as Abu Haidar, was heard to say "we like to call it our Starvation Until Submission Campaign". It's a phrase used increasingly by Assad's supporters in the capital.

The Syrian government has not commented on accusations it is using hunger as a weapon of war. It says that residents have been taken "hostage by terrorists". Aid workers say they are denied access. Both sides use checkpoints to mark territory and prevent the movement of enemy fighters and supporters.

Rebel-held towns to the east, south and west of Damascus are under partial or total siege and Abu Haidar said that the army had begun to block off the towns of Qudsayya and Hameh, a 15 minute drive north from central Damascus onto the Qasioun mountain range.

Residents of these two towns said that earlier this month, on the first day of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, many were forbidden from leaving to visit family elsewhere.

Chances of success in getting past the checkpoints depend on your identity card - public sector workers and school children are sometimes allowed through. Parents are told to stay behind.

Some people were allowed to leave on foot and residents reported a small exodus of civilians who feared that artillery bombardment would follow the siege, as it has in other areas where rebels have positioned themselves.

The main checkpoint forbids most cars from entering or leaving the two towns, forcing people to get out of their vehicles, walk down the highway for 20 minutes and use public transport on the other side.

Soldiers conduct vehicle and body searches to prevent "smuggling" of bread, baby milk and medicine into the besieged area - jailing offences. The checks create long queues of residents trying to return home, sometimes forcing them to wait for hours.

All traffic is prevented from entering Hameh, a mostly Sunni Muslim town where many residents support the rebellion. There is some movement into Qudsayya, a more religiously mixed area that is home to tens of thousands of displaced Syrians from other parts of the country.

NO BREAD

During a two-day visit by this journalist last month to the eastern towns, resourceful locals made do with what they had.

They gathered fruit and vegetables from the few orchards they could still access without risking government sniper fire and shelling. Those with cash paid smugglers to bring in bags of flour and other foodstuffs or medicine.

But nowhere in town was pita bread available. Local doctors said they regularly treat patients for water-borne diseases and that aerial bombardment has damaged the infrastructure, contaminating the water with sewage.

Doctors said that they were observing symptoms of malnutrition such as dehydration, severe weight loss, diarrhoea and bloated stomachs.

International have little access to areas hit by violence. Groups like Save the Children are warning of a potential crisis. The agency released a report last month saying that parts of Homs, Aleppo, Idlib and Damascus have been encircled by violence or deliberately besieged.

In a separate development, the World Health Organisation confirmed an outbreak of polio among young children in northeast Syria on Tuesday - a consequence of falling vaccination rates in wartime.

The situation is acute for people living in Mouadamiya, on the southwestern outskirts of the capital Damascus, which has been under siege for a year and suffered from chemical weapons strikes and continuous bombardment.

Unlike East Ghouta, which also endured chemical attacks but is sometimes accessible, Mouadamiya is completely surrounded by the military.

The opposition says 12,000 people face starvation and death in Mouadamiya. About 90 percent of Mouadamiya has been destroyed and few doctors remain, it says.

This month, according to residents who live there reached by Skype, government aerial bombardment hit one of two remaining mains pipelines that deliver drinking water throughout Mouadamiya, further contaminating the local water supply.

Residents say that smugglers used to be able to throw bags packed with baby milk and medicine from moving cars into the town while driving along a nearby highway. But in July, the road became an active frontline between the army and rebels.

"No one can smuggle anything to us anymore," said resident and activist Qusai Zakarya. He said that many smugglers along the highway have been killed by government snipers. "Now, only shelling and bullets enter Mouadamiya, and only the souls of the departed can leave."

DYING OF HUNGER

For months, international pressure has been mounting on Syrian authorities to open humanitarian corridors to deliver aid to the besieged civilians.

Under international law, siege is not specifically prohibited. However deliberate starvation in a conflict is widely held to be a war crime and the law of armed conflict requires all sides to allow free access of humanitarian relief for civilians in need.

Although Syria is not party to the International Criminal Court - which can prosecute war crimes - the United Nations Security Council has the power to refer cases.

Three Security Council resolutions condemning Assad have been vetoed by permanent member Russia, one of his strongest allies, and China, making a referral unlikely.

Earlier this month, 3,000 women and children were evacuated from Mouadamiya, the United Nations said. But their suffering and starvation may continue as many have sought shelter in an abandoned school on the outskirts of Qudsayya, where the siege is starting.

On Tuesday, 1,800 residents were evacuated from the town, a source from the Ministry for Social Affairs said. State media said they were fired on by "terrorists."

Hunger has become so endemic that locals say they eat leaves and grass.

Fatima, who fled Mouadamiya just before the siege last year along with her husband and their five children to central Damascus, said one of her relatives died in Mouadamiya in August from starvation. He was three years old.

Local doctors sent Reuters videos showing six cases of death from malnutrition. Most of the victims were children.

Activist Zakarya said that this month alone, he knows of 11 women and children who died of starvation, including 7-year-old Dua al Sheikh, who was her parents' only daughter.

He said that after months of eating the rice, barley and bulgur wheat in stock, families are now down to little more than olives and olive oil for three meals a day.

"We sometimes roll a bunch of grape leaves together and sprinkle it with salt and pepper and eat it pretending it's yabraa," said Zakarya, referring to a popular Syrian dish of grape leaves stuffed with rice and ground lamb or beef.

Civilians in besieged areas say farmers are targeted as they try to harvest their crop in an open field. They tell also of government shelling that purposely sets entire crop fields ablaze, around Damascus and in Homs province.

In Mouadamiya, people have been planting rocket plants in small patches of earth between buildings so as to avoid any open fields.

And Zakarya says "we use grass sometimes as a salad, with olives and olive oil." (Additional reporting by Oliver Holmes; editing by Janet McBride)


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Kerala-born doctor establishes integrated, end to end healthcare in Middle East

New Delhi, Oct. 30 (ANI): Thirty-six year-old Kerala born Dr. Shamsheer Vyalil Parambath has become an influential figure in the Middle East region, by providing truly integrated quality healthcare to the region's people.

Dr. Shamsheer's contribution has been recognized by the UAE Government, industry and trade associations, as well as the media.

He is a recipient of the Hamdan Bin Zayed Award for Humanitarian Aid 2013; has been adjudged the Ernst and Young "Entrepreneur Of The Year" in 2011 for UAE; is a recipient of the Shiekh Khalifa Excellence Award in 2009 and the Arab Health International Leadership Award in 2012.

In 2013, he was declared one of the top 100 Indian leaders in the UAE" by Forbes Magazine and one of the 100 most powerful Indians in the Gulf by Arabian Business Magazine in 2012.

In just six years, Dr. Shamsheer has set up seven operational hospitals in UAE and Oman that offer primary, secondary and tertiary healthcare services.

"We started work on our first hospital in 2006. Those were really charged up days for us. The core team was practically working 24x7 to commission the hospital. From identifying the ideal location to working out an efficient patient flow; from identifying the most suitable equipment to ensuring that it was installed on schedule; from getting on board the clinical team to ensuring the site readiness - it was all completed in a record 14 months! The hospital opened its doors in 2007. That was the beginning of our journey - a single, secondary care hospital in Abu Dhabi", said Dr. Shamsheer, Founder and Managing Director, VPS Healthcare.

Since then, there has been no looking back for Dr Shamsheer Vyalil and his team.

Being an outsider in a foreign country, he had to face various challenges, but with his determination and experience, Dr Shamsheer managed to overcome all the hurdles.

"Clinical staffing (doctors, nurses and paramedics) is the biggest challenge for the healthcare industry the world over. UAE is no exception. In fact, this challenge is far greater in the Middle-East for a multitude of reasons. We overcame this challenge through an innovative model of deployment of clinical human resources clubbed with technology enabled efficiency tools. The productivity of each doctor just doubled", said Dr. Shamsheer.

His group, VPS Healthcare, is engaged in providing healthcare delivery, pharmaceutical and health support services. The group currently operates in UAE, Oman and India.

The healthcare delivery companies include hospitals offering primary, secondary and tertiary health services as well as industrial and emergency care services.

He has been functional in running seven hospitals which includes Burjeel Hospital, Abu Dhabi, Burjeel Hospital for Advanced Surgeries, Dubai, LLH Hospital, Abu Dhabi, LLH Hospital, Mussafa, Lifecare Hospital, Al Raha, Lifeline Hospital, Sohar, Oman and Lifeline Hospital, Salalah, Oman.

Dr Shamsheer plans to substantially increase his presence in the UAE and the Middle East.

"Seven new hospitals are already in the pipeline and are expected to be commissioned in the coming two years. We are constantly on the lookout for other opportunities in the healthcare domain that may emerge in the region and fit in with our strategic plan", said Dr. Shamsheer. (ANI)


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Sunday, 27 October 2013

Colombia's FARC frees ex-U.S. marine after four months in jungle

BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's FARC guerrillas have freed a former U.S. marine who was kidnapped in June while he trekked through the jungle in a known guerrilla area, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the U.S. government said on Sunday.

Kevin Scott Sutay, a veteran of the war in Afghanistan, had been backpacking through several Central and South American countries before he was captured by the FARC. He had ignored police warnings against hiking through a "red zone" for rebel activity in the southeastern province of Guaviare.

"We are pleased about the liberation today of U.S. citizen Kevin Scott Sutay who was in the hands of the FARC," said a statement from U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, in which he expressed profound gratitude to the Colombian government and President Juan Manuel Santos for their efforts.

Sutay was handed over in Guaviare to a delegation of the governments of Colombia, Cuba and Norway and members of the International Committee of the Red Cross before being delivered to U.S. embassy officials at the airport in the capital Bogota.

An ICRC doctor had deemed Sutay to be in good health and fit to travel, said ICRC spokeswoman Patricia Rey. An official of the U.S. embassy in Bogota said it was working to send Sutay home but could not confirm when he would leave.

Sutay's release may help peace negotiations the FARC has been engaged in with the government for the past year in Cuba. Progress in the talks has been slow with just partial agreement on one of the five points on the agenda.

The FARC had shown willingness to release Sutay in July but hardened its stance, accusing him of being a mercenary, soon after President Juan Manuel Santos refused to allow a high profile left-wing politician to oversee the liberation.

U.S. civil rights campaigner, the Reverend Jesse Jackson, then became involved in September, meeting with the FARC's negotiators in Cuba and asking them to release Sutay. However Santos refused FARC's demand that Jackson be allowed to head a delegation to oversee the release.

It was not immediately clear what had prompted the FARC to release Sutay on Sunday.

The FARC and their smaller counterpart, the ELN, have been fighting the government in a bloody five-decade conflict that has killed more than 200,000. Both are listed as terrorist organizations by the United States and European Union.

The FARC is believed to have around 8,000 fighters according to government data and the ELN around 3,000. Their numbers were roughly halved by a decade-long military offensive with the support of the U.S. government.

(Reporting by Nelson Bocanegra, Luis Jaime Acosta and Peter Murphy; Writing by Peter Murphy; Editing by Christopher Wilson and David Brunnstrom)


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Cricket: Ryder celebrates comeback with a ton

Troubled New Zealand cricketer Jesse Ryder on Monday completed a remarkable comeback from a serious assault by posting a century in his first game for more than seven months.

He scored 117 off 164 balls playing for Otago away to his former side Wellington in a provincial championship match.

It was Ryder's first appearance with the bat since being seriously assaulted outside a bar in the South Island city of Christchurch last March.

He was later suspended for six months after testing positive to a banned substance contained in weight loss pills.

The 29-year-old, who has been in a self-imposed exile from international cricket since early 2012 when he said he needed to sort out personal issues, has announced he now wants to reclaim his place in the New Zealand team.

The left-hander is a prodigious batting talent, averaging 40.93 from 33 Test innings, but his career has been blighted by disciplinary lapses and off-field problems as well as fitness issues.

He appeared to be making progress before he was assaulted outside a bar in the South Island city of Christchurch and suffered a serious head injury.

"We've all heard the stories of guys hitting their heads and dying after being punched and falling to the ground. I look back and think I am lucky not to be dead," he later told reporters.


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Local tastes tempt China diners away from Golden Arches

By Adam Jourdan

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Bearing rice burgers and lotus roots, an army of Chinese fast food firms is cooking up a challenge to McDonald's Corp and Yum Brands Inc , tempting cost-conscious diners with healthy, homegrown fare and causing a drag on growth for the U.S. chains in the country's $174 billion fast food market.

McDonald's said last week it was thinking of slowing expansion in China as diners are tempted by local rivals. KFC-parent Yum warned this month economic weakness in China would drag on a recovery in sales dented by a food safety scare at the end of last year.

Meanwhile, local firms such as chicken chain Dicos, Country Style Cooking , and Kung Fu Catering have been nibbling away at the dominance of their U.S. rivals.

"I'm a bit sick of Western fast food. There's too much oil, and you hear things like chickens having six legs," said student Tang Mei, 25, as she dined at Taiwanese-owned fast food outlet Dicos. "Health concerns have really made people worried."

McDonald's and Yum are still the largest fast food chains in China but, despite heavy investment, McDonald's has seen its market share by value stagnate at 2.3 percent since 2007, according to data from market research firm Euromonitor.

Yum, which held 6.5 percent last year, is up slightly over the same period, but has seen same-store sales hit after a food scare last year and a local outbreak of avian flu. Yum has 5,600 KFC and Pizza Hut China stores, to McDonald's has 1,800 local outlets.

Brands like Ting Hsin International-owned Dicos, the third largest fast food brand in China, have taken note. The firm, which plans to triple its store count to around 3,700 by 2020, says it aims to "break the traditional Western fast food mould".

While conceived in the image of KFC - its name is a play on "Texas" in Chinese - Dicos now also pushes its Chinese roots. Its website displays an ornate blue ceramic bowl steaming with traditional herbal tea, while rice cake burgers and soybean milk flank the chain's more traditional nuggets and crispy wings.

"After all, since ancient times rice has been the key staple of the Chinese people," explained Zhuang Weitang, a spokesman for Ting Hsin International, adding the brand was planning to up its drive towards healthier, Chinese-style cooking.

"It's the mix (of traditional chicken) with new, health-focused Chinese specialities that has helped us create a niche in the fiercely-competitive Chinese fast-food market."

EATING THE COLONEL'S LUNCH

In a slowing economy, many consumers are trading down to cheaper alternatives or simply dining at home, said analysts, which has contributed to the growth rate in the wider fast food market halving over the last 5 years to 8 percent this year.

Lunch at Dicos costs less than 17 yuan compared with a similar offering from KFC, which costs 25 yuan, according to Mintel.

"Local establishments generally also do a better job catering to local tastes," said Karla Wang, associate research director at market research firm TNS China. "These familiar 'comfort foods' often go a long way in soothing frazzled consumers during times of uncertainty."

Diners have even started to question international chains' quality, traditionally a strong point after scandals ranging from the use of recycled "gutter oil" for cooking to industrial chemical-laced milk made consumers wary of local products.

But a number of scares over the last year, including reports that some chicken purchased by KFC and McDonald's had been fed excess antibiotics, seems to have altered consumer views. Only one-in-four Chinese thought Western fast food was healthier and better quality than Chinese alternatives, said a recent report from research firm Mintel.

McDonald's and Yum have taken note.

"We address food quality and food safety in all aspects of our communication; most recently, we launched a Moms' Trust campaign... and we will be doing more in this area," said Jessica Lee, a Shanghai-based spokeswoman for McDonald's.

Yum officials were not immediately available for comment.

The company has trimmed its local supply chain and plans to launch a new China quality assurance campaign in November that will feature KFC employees, suppliers and poultry farmers.

"We still have work to do, but we know we are doing the right things to regain consumer trust and we remain confident that our best days for KFC in China are yet to come," Chief Executive David Novak said in an analysts call on October 9.

HOME STYLE

As trust of domestic brands grows, diners are being increasingly drawn to local dishes, perceived as healthier due to a wider variety of ingredients, while there is mounting interest in traditional Chinese food and dining culture.

Last year a documentary called "A Bite of China" aired on local television drawing more than 100 million viewers, making it the most successful documentary in China since the 1990s.

Chinese heritage has become a key selling point.

Kung Fu Catering, which sports an emblem of martial artist Bruce Lee, underscores its local credentials by playing up the natural ingredients for its Chinese-style food against backgrounds of Chinese mountains, wispy clouds and bamboo.

Others such as Country Style Cooking, CNHLS and Gll Wonton, owned by Shanghai Shihao Catering, all offer fast food with a Chinese flavour. Though some way behind Yum and McDonald's in terms of size, all are taking market share from the huge independent sector of single shops and stalls.

Local brands also perform strongly in regions away from the saturated east coast market, catering to local tastes in areas seen as the China's next drivers for growth.

"Country Style Cooking is really strong in western China, while Kung Fu Catering is from Shenzhen and does well with more rice-based Chinese set meals, which fit the trend towards less oily and healthier food," said James Roy, Shanghai-based senior analyst at China Market Research Group.

China's influential netizens also suggest the U.S. firms are struggling to remain the flavour of the month. Chatter about the two brands on China's Twitter-like Weibo fell to an almost two-year low in September, according to analysis by Reuters.

As one microblogger wrote: "I won't choose anything but Chinese fast food. We've got crab meat dumplings to Hunan-style cooking, fragrant Xinjiang breads and lamb kebabs... What do brands like Pizza Hut and McDonald's possibly have to offer?"

(Additional reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and Shanghai newsroom; Editing by Alex Richardson)


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