Sunday, July 10, 2016

Most people don?t know what?s in cigarette smoke

Many people in a recent study said they?d tried to find out what chemicals are in tobacco products or smoke, but most were not familiar with components other than nicotine. 

Surveyed by phone, more than half the respondents said they?d like to see this information on cigarette packs and a quarter would like to have access to it online.

Of the 7,000 constituents of cigarette smoke, 93 in particular are quite toxic, said Dr. Kurt M. Ribisl of the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

?It?s pretty surprising how relatively few people have heard of these yet many were interested in hearing more about them,? Ribisl told Reuters Health by phone.

The most simple and effective messaging may be to list the chemicals and, briefly, their health effects, he said. For example, cigarette smoke contains arsenic, which causes heart damage, and formaldehyde, which causes throat cancer.

Ribisl and colleagues surveyed nearly 5,000 U.S. adults by phone, targeting high smoking/ low income areas and cell phone numbers.

Almost a quarter of respondents reported being smokers, most saying they had smoked every day for the past month.

The researchers chose 24 harmful chemicals in tobacco and divided them into six groups of four. Each participant answered questions about one group of four chemicals, selected at random.

More than a quarter of respondents said they had looked for information on the constituents of tobacco smoke, most commonly young adults and smokers. More than half said they would most prefer to see this information on cigarette packs.

Only eight percent of respondents knew that at least three of the four chemicals they were asked about are present in cigarette smoke, the researchers reported in BMC Public Health.

?Many people seek information on smoke components but not many find it,? said Dr. Reinskje Talhout of the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment at the Center for Health Protection in The Netherlands.

?Here they also seek it but in general don?t understand it very well, so we developed fact sheets for the general public,? Talhout told Reuters Health by phone.

Having this information may help smokers make an informed decision, but there is no evidence yet on how it may change smoking behavior, Talhout said.

?If people hear about these components they are quite shocked,? she said.

The US Food and Drug Administration has a list of harmful and potentially harmful tobacco components available to consumers (online here: bit.ly/1lNyDVo), and tobacco manufacturers are obliged to send this list and amounts in their products to the FDA, Talhout said.

It?s still not clear how providing this information on packs might change behavior, Ribisl noted, and it is possible that listing amounts of chemicals will simply lead consumers to ?comparison shop? and choose a brand with marginally lower amounts of the same dangerous chemicals, rather than quitting altogether.

?Both the Centers for Disease Control and FDA are very credible sources about this information,? he said.

?One of the things I would like the FDA and others to think about is what they can put on the side of the cigarette pack, what kind of message can we put there to help create informed smokers,? he said.

40 arrested in Paris over Euro 2016 violence

Paris: Around 40 people were arrested in Paris Sunday after police used tear gas and water cannon against football fans hurling glass bottles at officers at the Eiffel Tower during the Euro 2016 final.

Crowds of supporters, some donning French or Portuguese flags, gathered at the base of the Paris landmark before and after Portugal´s stunning 1-0 victory over France after they were refused entry to the fan zone which was packed to its 90,000 capacity, Paris police said.

Other arrests took place outside the Stade de France where the match was played. They were for public order offences.

The base of the Eiffel Tower was engulfed in clouds of tear gas as riot police repelled the youths, who started fires on the pavement and threw bottles and other objects at the police lines, AFP photographers said. Police in riot gear faced off with crowds, as at least one police truck fired water at demonstrators.

The police, who had posted a message on Twitter and issued warnings in the Metro informing supporters the fan zone was full, used water cannon to extinguish the blazes.

The ground was littered with broken fencing and shattered glass as evening fell, with piles of rubbish burning and firefighters were later deployed to put out larger blazes on the streets of Paris, including at least one car that was set on fire.

Meanwhile, nine people were taken into custody in the eastern city of Lyon for violent behaviour, insults or possession of fireworks and one officer was lightly injured by a spray can, police said.

Last week, riot police fired tear gas in clashes with youths on the Champs Elysees avenue in Paris after France´s qualification for the Euro 2016 final.

Earlier clashes between fans at the June 11 England-Russia match in Marseille left 35 people injured in violence that French prosecutors have largely blamed on around 150 "well-prepared" Russian supporters who carried out targeted attacks on England supporters.

Portugal´s shock win over France in the European Championship final was the country´s first international title, though superstar Cristiano Ronaldo was forced to watch the match injured from the touchline.

The buildup to the football tournament had been overshadowed by fears of jihadist violence following November attacks that left 130 people dead. In the days before it kicked off, unions disrupted trains and grounded planes and uncollected rubbish built up in the streets in strikes and protests against labour reforms.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Man dies of suffocation as girl hides him from family in trunk

MUZAFFARGARH: A man died on Monday as a girl in an attempt to conceal him from her family members hid him in a chest, which led to his death by suffocation.

According to police, the man identified as Mushtaq and a resident of Langar Sarai went to meet his cousin clandestinely at her residence.

When the girl’s family members arrived home, she tried to hide Mushtaq in a chest and locked him up. After remaining locked up for one and a half hour in the box, he died due to lack of oxygen.

Police sent the dead body for post mortem to a hospital.

Police registered the case and arrested two people for interrogation.

 

 

Man dies of suffocation as girl hides him from family in trunk

MUZAFFARGARH: A man died on Monday as a girl in an attempt to conceal him from her family members hid him in a chest, which led to his death by suffocation.

According to police, the man identified as Mushtaq and a resident of Langar Sarai went to meet his cousin clandestinely at her residence.

When the girl?s family members arrived home, she tried to hide Mushtaq in a chest and locked him up. After remaining locked up for one and a half hour in the box, he died due to lack of oxygen.

Police sent the dead body for post mortem to a hospital.

Police registered the case and arrested two people for interrogation.

 

 

US transfers Yemeni from Guantanamo to Italy, 78 prisoners left

WASHINGTON: The United States said on Sunday it has transferred a Yemeni inmate from the Guantanamo Bay prison to Italy, bringing the number of detainees at the US naval base in Cuba to 78.

Fayiz Ahmad Yahia Suleiman was approved for transfer nearly six years ago by six US agencies: the Departments of Defense, State, Justice and Homeland Security; the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

US President Barack Obama, who had hoped to close the prison during his first year in office, rolled out his plan in February aimed at shutting the facility. But he faces opposition from many Republican lawmakers as well as some fellow Democrats.

Most of the 78 prisoners who remain at Guantanamo have been held without charge or trial for more than a decade, drawing international condemnation.

The Guantanamo prisoners were rounded up overseas when the United States became embroiled in wars in Afghanistan and Iraq following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington.

The facility, opened by Obama's Republican predecessor George W. Bush, came to symbolize aggressive detention practices that opened the United States to accusations of torture.

Obama's plan for shuttering the facility calls for bringing the several dozen remaining prisoners to maximum-security prisons in the United States.

US law bars such transfers to the mainland.

The United States has struggled to persuade other nations to accept the prisoners because of concerns that they could launch attacks and America´s unwillingness to accept them on the US mainland.

"The United States is very grateful to the Government of Italy for its continued assistance in closing the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay," said Lee Wolosky, the US special envoy for Guantanamo closure.

Chairman PCB proposes to rename Qaddafi stadium after Abdul Sattar Edhi

Chairman Pakistan Cricket Board, Najam Sethi took to Twitter late Sunday evening to announce that he has proposed for the famous Qaddafi stadium to be named after the late humanitarian, Abdul Sattar Edhi.

The chairman has requested the governing board to consider his request of renaming the stadium.

Another online petition to rename the new Islamabad airport after Edhi has also been gaining popularity across the internet; the petition has been signed by more than 36, 000 people.

Earlier this week famed Pakistani humanitarian Abdul Sattar Edhi passed away leaving the nation in great distress.

The deceased is best known for his humanitarian efforts and his charitable organization. The Edhi Foundation runs the country’s largest ambulance service. It also operates free nursing homes, orphanages, clinics, women's shelters, and rehab centres for drug addicts and mentally ill individuals.

 

Dozens more arrested in Louisiana after leaders warn against protest violence

MINNEAPOLIS/BATON ROUGE, LA.: Police arrested dozens more protesters in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Sunday after authorities warned they would not tolerate violence during street demonstrations over the fatal police shootings of two black men.

Photos and video posted on social media by witnesses and journalists showed protesters being arrested in different parts of the city by police officers who told the crowds they were no longer holding peaceful demonstrations or that they were blocking major thoroughfares.

Louisiana media, citing Baton Rouge police, reported that at least 48 people were taken into custody after demonstrators clashed with police on Sunday evening following an earlier peaceful march to the state capitol.

The protests follow the shootings by police of Alton Sterling, 37, in Baton Rouge and Philando Castile, 32, in a suburb of St. Paul, Minnesota.

Calls for demonstrations to remain peaceful in Louisiana and Minnesota came as authorities grappled with a wave of protests against police use of force that has swept the country in the past week.

A US military veteran shot and killed five police officers at a spontaneous march in Dallas on Thursday, sending a chill through law enforcement as well as those involved in the mostly peaceful demonstrations.

In Baton Rouge, police arrested 102 people on Saturday night and Sunday morning, mostly for misdemeanors for not leaving a major thoroughfare known as Airline Highway. Those arrested included DeRay Mckesson, an activist and former Baltimore mayoral candidate, officials said.

Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards told a news conference earlier on Sunday that he was proud of how the police had handled the protests so far, saying law enforcement had responded in a "moderate" manner. He also said the vast majority of protesters had acted lawfully and non-violently.

Protesters from Louisiana or out of state will not be allowed "to incite hate and violence, to engage in unlawful activities," Edwards told a news conference. "Now I want to be very clear. That will not be tolerated."

In Minnesota, state police said more than 200 protesters shut down Interstate 94 in St. Paul for hours on Saturday night to protest against Castile's killing. Officers were hit with rocks, bottles, concrete, construction materials and fireworks, police said.

The city's mayor and a protest leader both decried the violence, which injured 21 officers and led to 102 arrests. St. Paul police said one officer suffered a broken vertebrae when a concrete block was dropped on his head during the protest on the interstate.

"We will not tolerate the kind of shameless violence we saw throughout the course of the night," St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman told a news conference. "This doesn't honor anyone's memory."

Outside agitators

In St. Paul, Rashad Turner, leader of the local chapter of the Black Lives Matter group, told WCCO-TV that the throwing of rocks and bottles at officers was disturbing. He blamed outside agitators for the violence, not the protesters on the freeway.

"It's ridiculous. It cannot happen. It's not what we do here in St. Paul," Turner said. "It does not honor Philando Castile."

Authorities said 50 protesters were arrested on the Minnesota interstate and 52 others later on a street near the governor's mansion, the site of most of the protests since Castile was shot on Wednesday.

"Protesters last night turned into criminals," St. Paul Police Chief Todd Axtell said. "And I am absolutely disgusted by the acts of some, not all, but some."

Some 300 people attended a peaceful protest on Sunday afternoon at the St. Anthony Police Department. St. Anthony police patrol the Falcon Heights suburb where Castile was shot.

In Baton Rouge, the capital of Louisiana, police said protests outside their headquarters appeared to be becoming more violent as protesters arrived from out of town.

After his arrest, Mckesson was booked on a misdemeanor charge of obstructing the highway and released from the East Baton Rouge Parish jail, according to the sheriff's website.

Baton Rouge police confiscated three rifles, three shotguns and two pistols at Saturday night's protest and were wearing helmets, shields and body armor.

Police said those arrested had ignored repeated orders to stay out of the street, while demonstrators said officers charged into the crowds seemingly without any obvious provocation.

"The only people who were violent last night were the Baton Rouge Police department," Mckesson told reporters after his release. "The protesters remained peaceful, both here and across the country."

Chairman PCB proposes to rename Qaddafi stadium after Abdul Sattar Edhi

Chairman Pakistan Cricket Board, Najam Sethi took to Twitter late Sunday evening to announce that he has proposed for the famous Qaddafi stadium to be named after the late humanitarian, Abdul Sattar Edhi.

The chairman has requested the governing board to consider his request of renaming the stadium.

Another online petition to rename the new Islamabad airport after Edhi has also been gaining popularity across the internet; the petition has been signed by more than 36, 000 people.

Earlier this week famed Pakistani humanitarian Abdul Sattar Edhi passed away leaving the nation in great distress.

The deceased is best known for his humanitarian efforts and his charitable organization. The Edhi Foundation runs the country?s largest ambulance service. It also operates free nursing homes, orphanages, clinics, women's shelters, and rehab centres for drug addicts and mentally ill individuals.

 

Death toll in IHK clashes mounts to 21

SRINAGAR: Protesters and government forces in Indian Held Kashmir (IHK) clashed for a second day on Sunday as anger over the death of an influential pro-independence leader boiled over, with 21 people martyred in some of the worst civilian unrest to hit the region since 2010. Another 200 people have been wounded in the violence, many of them protesters who were hit when the Indian security forces fired tear gas canisters and live ammunition on Saturday.

Among the dead was a policeman who drowned when angry protesters pushed an armoured vehicle into a river in the southern district of Sangam on Sunday, a police officer said. Thousands of residents of Occupied Kashmir are defying a government-imposed curfew to take to the streets in protest at the killing on Friday of rebel leader Burhan Wani. Protests were held in different cities of the occupied Valley with protesters waving Pakistani flags. 

The state government, which has also cut off internet and mobile phone networks to try to stop the protests spreading, called for calm on Sunday. ?They (protesters) should not take their protests to a level where a man holding a gun is forced to open fire,? said spokesman Nayeem Akhtar.

There were also reports of security forces attacking hospitals and ambulances treating the wounded. ?Attacking hospitals and ambulances is a crime under the international humanitarian law and Indian armed forces have been repeatedly accused of this crime in Kashmir,? said the Jammu Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society, a rights group, in a statement.

More Indian troops have also been sent to the occupied Valley to control the unrest. Wani, a 22-year-old commander of Kashmir?s largest rebel group Hizbul Mujahideen (HM), was killed along with two other rebels during a brief gun battle with the Indian security forces. Police say protesters have set police stations on fire and thrown rocks at army camps in the south of the restive region.

It is the worst civilian violence to hit the restive region since 2010, when mass protests broke out against the Indian rule. Wani joined the HM rebel group at the age of just 15, and was viewed as a hero by many in Kashmir. The state?s former chief minister Omar Abdullah tweeted after his death that he had become the ?new icon of Kashmir?s disaffected?.

Witnesses said tens of thousands attended his funeral on Saturday despite the curfew, chanting independence slogans and firing pistol shots in his honour. HM is one of several groups that for decades have been fighting around half a million Indian troops deployed in the region, calling for independence for Kashmir or a merger with Pakistan. Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have died in the fighting since 1989.

Violence has sharply declined in recent years following a major crackdown by the hundreds of thousands of forces deployed in the region. But a recent uptick in militant attacks has galvanised frustrated young Kashmiris, many of whom deeply resent the military´s presence.

In recent months there have been several instances of protesters converging on the scene of gunbattles, throwing stones and hurling abuse at security forces to provide a distraction and enable trapped rebels to escape.

- Originally appeared in The News

 

Ronaldo´s Portugal deliver final knockout in Euro 2016 of shocks

Paris: A thundering out-of-the-blue shot by substitute Eder gave Portugal a shock 1-0 win over France in the European Championship final, delivering the country´s first international title as superstar Cristiano Ronaldo watched injured from the touchline.

Ronaldo was stretchered off in tears in the first half and limped on crying with joy again after his side delivered the final knockout blow in the month-long tournament of upsets.

Hosts France dominated the game, as they had nearly every match since the start. But they could not break down a Portuguese defence in which man-of-the-match Pepe was majestic and goalkeeper Rui Patricio produced a string of dramatic saves.

"It was not the final I wanted but I am very happy. It is a trophy for all Portuguese, for all immigrants, all the people who believed in us so I am very happy and very proud," said Ronaldo.

Up against a French team with a whole nation behind them, Portugal healed their own football wound from a shock they suffered twelve years ago. In the 2004 Euro final, Portugal lost to Greece 1-0 on home territory.

Portugal can now expect a momentous national welcome when they return to Lisbon and a tickertape parade through the capital on Monday.

Portugal´s coach Fernando Santos and the other players paid tribute to Ronaldo´s role in urging the team not to give up in the tense match at the Stade de France. Ronaldo returned from treatment at the end of 90 minutes to give pep talks to his teammates.

He fell the ground in agony in the eighth minute following a clattering challenge from Dimitri Payet. After twice going off for treatment and trying to come back, Ronaldo was definitively carried off.

"He told me I was going to score the winning goal," said Eder who plays for French side Lille and only went on in the 79th minute. "He gave me strength and positive energy."

Dancing Ronaldo 

Victory also gave Ronaldo energy. He danced past reporters with other Portugal players as they left the stadium. 

"Cristiano is fundamental to us," said Santos. "It would be utopian to not use Ronaldo and all his added value. 

"Cristiano could score at any moment and sort everything out on his own but I always said we are a team we win as a team."

Portugal defended doggedly and threatened occasionally without their inspirational skipper. With 109 minutes gone, Eder beat off a Laurent Koscielny challenge to fire a shot from outside the penalty area that French captain and goalkeeper Hugo Lloris could not even get a hand to.

The tournament featuring 24 teams for the first time failed to produce classic football. And Lloris was the latest to raise questions about the manner of Portugal´s wins.

"If they won the tournament it is because they deserved it," Lloris said.

But he described France´s luck as "cruel" and added "one can always argue about the way they play, but they are efficient and you must congratulate them."

Santos had always said he does not care if Portugal win "ugly" as long as they win. 

The 51 games produced 108 goals, one of the lowest averages for recent international tournaments. The quality was not memorable. But the upset results will go down in history.

Iceland stunned England 2-1, Wales beat Belgium 3-1 in a classic quarter-final and Portugal will long celebrate their win in a stadium that was invaded by swarms of moths.

France started the match as strong favourites after beating Germany 2-0 in the semi-final. Antoine Griezmann scored twice in that game to take his tournament total to a Golden Boot winning six goals.

But the striker who has spent his entire career in Spain and has never played in the French league could not penetrate the Portugal defence. His early header drew a finger-tip save from Rui Patricio. Griezmann said defeat had been a double blow as he also missed a penalty in Atletico Madrid´s defeat to arch-rivals Real Madrid in the Champions League final seven weeks ago.

Moussa Sissoko also drove a thundering shot over the bar while French substitute Andre-Pierre Gignac sent an extra time shot against the post.

"The disappointment is there and it´s immense," French coach Didier Deschamps said. "We´ve let a big chance to be champions pass us by."

Deschamps contract runs until 2018 and the World Cup in Russia. He said he would take time to "digest" the disappointment before thinking about his own future.

France spent 450 million euros ($500 million) preparing 10 stadiums for Euro 2016 which could be the last hosted in one country. Euro 2020, the 16th tournament, will be held in 13 cities in 13 different countries from Azerbaijan to Wales.

Despite some doubts about the 24-country format, UEFA´s executive committee "praised the competitiveness of the competition" in a statement after a meeting on Saturday.

Police guns down youth in Karachi

KARACHI: At least one person was killed and another injured on Sunday by police at Sindhi Muslim Housing Society.

According to details, Abrar and Dilnawaz were trying to close a mobile phone deal when Dilnawaz drove away his car without paying. Abrar hung on to the car as it sped on, eye witnesses said.

A police mobile crossing by opened fire at the car killing Abrar and injuring Dilnawaz.

Abrar?s family have protested against the killing and demanded justice.  

Police guns down youth in Karachi

KARACHI: At least one person was killed and another injured on Sunday by police at Sindhi Muslim Housing Society.

According to details, Abrar and Dilnawaz were trying to close a mobile phone deal when Dilnawaz drove away his car without paying. Abrar hung on to the car as it sped on, eye witnesses said.

A police mobile crossing by opened fire at the car killing Abrar and injuring Dilnawaz.

Abrar’s family have protested against the killing and demanded justice.  

Masterful Murray claims second Wimbledon title

Britain's Andy Murray put the finishing touch to an almost faultless fortnight to claim a second Wimbledon title with a 6-4 7-6(3) 7-6(2) defeat of big-serving Canadian Milos Raonic in the Centre Court sunshine on Sunday.

The world number two, champion in 2013, was in control throughout the two hour 48 minute contest as the power game that sixth seed Raonic employed to crush Roger Federer in the semi-finals made little impact on the 29-year-old Scot.

Unlike three years ago when near hysteria broke out as Murray ended Britain's 77-year wait for a Wimbledon men's singles champion, there has been an air of inevitability about title march since top seed Novak Djokovic crashed out early.

Murray did not disappoint as he claimed a third grand slam title in almost routine fashion as he blunted Raonic's 140mpnh serve and made only 12 unforced errors in the final.

"This is the most important tournament for me every year. I had some great moments here and tough losses too so that makes it extra special," Murray, who sobbed into his towel on his courtside chair as the triumph sank in, said on court.

"I'm proud to get my hands on the trophy again."

The final was billed as a showdown between one of the world's biggest servers and arguably the best returner.

Murray broke the Raonic serve only once, midway through the opening set, but always seemed in control as the Canadian struggled to lay a glove on the elusive Scot.

Second Best

Raonic had been hoping to become Canada's first grand slam singles champion and while he battled gamely to the end he conceded he had been second best.

"Andy has been playing great and he deserves to be winning here for the second time," he said.

"This one is going to sting so I'm going to make sure that as long as these courts are green I'll do everything I can to be back here for another chance."

The first chink Raonic's armour came in the seventh game when he netted a forehand volley to hand Murray a break.

The Scot pressed repeatedly for another break in the second set but Raonic showed great resilience to take it to a tie break, only for Murray to raise his game to a new level.

The match was more than two hours old when Raonic finally had two break points at 2-2 in the third set, but Murray saved both and held -- roaring angrily towards his coach Ivan Lendl.

Twice Raonic held serve to stay in the match, at 4-5 and 5-6, but Murray again upped the ante in the tie break, winning the first five points as he surged towards victory.

Raonic saved one match point but Murray wrapped it up when he forced the Canadian to net a backhand.

Murray's win meant he avoided becoming the first man to lose in the final of the first three majors of the year in the professional era -- having succumbed to Djokovic in Australia andFrance

Oppressive measures cannot deter the valiant people of Jammu and Kashmir: PM

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister of Pakistan Nawaz Shairif on Sunday expressed his deep shock at the killing of the Kashmiri leader Burhan Wani and many other civilians in the Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir by the Indian military and paramilitary forces.

In a statement, the prime minister said, "It is deplorable that excessive and unlawful force was used against the civilians who were protesting against the killing of Burhan Wani. Oppressive measures such as these cannot deter the valiant people of Jammu and Kashmir from their demand of exercising their right to self determination in accordance with the UN Security Council resolutions."

The Prime Minister has also expressed serious concern over the continued detention of the Kashmiri leadership in Indian Occupied Kashmir and called upon the Indian government to fulfill its human rights obligations as well as its commitments under the United Nations Security Council Resolutions.

Masterful Murray claims second Wimbledon title

Britain's Andy Murray put the finishing touch to an almost faultless fortnight to claim a second Wimbledon title with a 6-4 7-6(3) 7-6(2) defeat of big-serving Canadian Milos Raonic in the Centre Court sunshine on Sunday.

The world number two, champion in 2013, was in control throughout the two hour 48 minute contest as the power game that sixth seed Raonic employed to crush Roger Federer in the semi-finals made little impact on the 29-year-old Scot.

Unlike three years ago when near hysteria broke out as Murray ended Britain's 77-year wait for a Wimbledon men's singles champion, there has been an air of inevitability about title march since top seed Novak Djokovic crashed out early.

Murray did not disappoint as he claimed a third grand slam title in almost routine fashion as he blunted Raonic's 140mpnh serve and made only 12 unforced errors in the final.

"This is the most important tournament for me every year. I had some great moments here and tough losses too so that makes it extra special," Murray, who sobbed into his towel on his courtside chair as the triumph sank in, said on court.

"I'm proud to get my hands on the trophy again."

The final was billed as a showdown between one of the world's biggest servers and arguably the best returner.

Murray broke the Raonic serve only once, midway through the opening set, but always seemed in control as the Canadian struggled to lay a glove on the elusive Scot.

Second Best

Raonic had been hoping to become Canada's first grand slam singles champion and while he battled gamely to the end he conceded he had been second best.

"Andy has been playing great and he deserves to be winning here for the second time," he said.

"This one is going to sting so I'm going to make sure that as long as these courts are green I'll do everything I can to be back here for another chance."

The first chink Raonic's armour came in the seventh game when he netted a forehand volley to hand Murray a break.

The Scot pressed repeatedly for another break in the second set but Raonic showed great resilience to take it to a tie break, only for Murray to raise his game to a new level.

The match was more than two hours old when Raonic finally had two break points at 2-2 in the third set, but Murray saved both and held -- roaring angrily towards his coach Ivan Lendl.

Twice Raonic held serve to stay in the match, at 4-5 and 5-6, but Murray again upped the ante in the tie break, winning the first five points as he surged towards victory.

Raonic saved one match point but Murray wrapped it up when he forced the Canadian to net a backhand.

Murray's win meant he avoided becoming the first man to lose in the final of the first three majors of the year in the professional era -- having succumbed to Djokovic in Australia andFrance

Oppressive measures cannot deter the valiant people of Jammu and Kashmir: PM

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister of Pakistan Nawaz Shairif on Sunday expressed his deep shock at the killing of the Kashmiri leader Burhan Wani and many other civilians in the Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir by the Indian military and paramilitary forces.

In a statement, the prime minister said, "It is deplorable that excessive and unlawful force was used against the civilians who were protesting against the killing of Burhan Wani. Oppressive measures such as these cannot deter the valiant people of Jammu and Kashmir from their demand of exercising their right to self determination in accordance with the UN Security Council resolutions."

The Prime Minister has also expressed serious concern over the continued detention of the Kashmiri leadership in Indian Occupied Kashmir and called upon the Indian government to fulfill its human rights obligations as well as its commitments under the United Nations Security Council Resolutions.

PHF pays tribute to Edhi, renames largest facility in hometown after him

KARACHI: Paying tribute to world renowned philanthropist Abdul Sattar Edhi, the Pakistan Hockey Federation (PHF) has renamed Karachi’s Hockey Club of Pakistan stadium as “Abdul Sattar Edhi Hockey Stadium.”

In a statement released on Sunday evening, the PHF said that Edhi’s story is an inspiration for Pakistan Hockey especially in present times when our country's national game is in dire straits.

“PHF believes that renaming of Hockey's biggest facility in Abdul Sattar Edhi's home town in his name would be the most appropriate way to pay tribute to our great national hero,” the statement said.

PHF’s president Brigadier retd. Khalid Sajjad Khokhar said it was an honor for PHF to have one of its stadium named after a great humanitarian.

Abdul Sattar Edhi, the founder of Edhi Foundation, passed away on Friday after prolonged illness.

Qadri demands Qisas for Model Town victims

ISLAMABAD: Founder of the Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) Dr. Tahir ul Qadri called on Awami Muslim League (AML) Chairman Sheikh Rasheed at his Laal Haveli residence in Rawalpindi on Sunday.

While two leaders were exchanging pleasantries, Dr. Tahir ul Qadri?s guards scuffled with Punjab Police personnel after they were stopped from taking a bag inside the residence. Later the Laal Haveli administration resolved the matter.

Dr. Qadri had been invited by Sheikh Rasheed to attend a reception in his honour. While addressing the event, Dr. Qadri demanded to know why only policemen are being sent to India for treatment when such a practice is not witnessed in any other department in Punjab be it education, engineering or otherwise.

He claimed the practice of sending policemen to India is tantamount to treason and fall sunder the ambit of Article 6 of the constitution of Pakistan.

Dr. Tahir ul Qadri claimed that the is up for the current leadership in Pakistan, he added that it is unclear if they will even get time to wrap up their affairs.

Dr. Qadri said the relatives of those martyred in Model Town Lahore did not sway before wealth, pressure and fear. He added, that Qisas will have to be paid for the 14 lives that were taken away.

Qisas is the law of retaliation by which an immediate relative of the dead victim if approved by court may take the life of the killer.

The Awami Tehreek leader added, that he will announce the future plan of action for his protest at the end of the month after consulting with all political parties at the national advisory conference.

Qadri demands Qisas for Model Town victims

ISLAMABAD: Founder of the Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) Dr. Tahir ul Qadri called on Awami Muslim League (AML) Chairman Sheikh Rasheed at his Laal Haveli residence in Rawalpindi on Sunday.

While two leaders were exchanging pleasantries, Dr. Tahir ul Qadri’s guards scuffled with Punjab Police personnel after they were stopped from taking a bag inside the residence. Later the Laal Haveli administration resolved the matter.

Dr. Qadri had been invited by Sheikh Rasheed to attend a reception in his honour. While addressing the event, Dr. Qadri demanded to know why only policemen are being sent to India for treatment when such a practice is not witnessed in any other department in Punjab be it education, engineering or otherwise.

He claimed the practice of sending policemen to India is tantamount to treason and fall sunder the ambit of Article 6 of the constitution of Pakistan.

Dr. Tahir ul Qadri claimed that the is up for the current leadership in Pakistan, he added that it is unclear if they will even get time to wrap up their affairs.

Dr. Qadri said the relatives of those martyred in Model Town Lahore did not sway before wealth, pressure and fear. He added, that Qisas will have to be paid for the 14 lives that were taken away.

Qisas is the law of retaliation by which an immediate relative of the dead victim if approved by court may take the life of the killer.

The Awami Tehreek leader added, that he will announce the future plan of action for his protest at the end of the month after consulting with all political parties at the national advisory conference.

UN Secretary General says Edhi was a ?living example? of compassion

UNITED NATIONS: UN Secretary General Ban Ki moon Saturday expressed his ?profound condolences? on the passing away of Abdul Sattar Edhi, saying he was ?a living example of social justice, compassion and solidarity in action.?

?Through his humility and humanity, he changed countless people?s lives for good,? he said in a statement issued through his Deputy Spokesman Farhan Haq.

?I join with his immediate family and his larger family of Pakistan in mourning the loss of a legendary man of faith and an epic humanitarian,? the secretary general added.

72-inch diameter pipeline supplying water to Karachi ruptures

KARACHI: Water supply to major parts of Karachi was briefly suspended on Sunday following the rupture of a 72-inch pipeline supplying water to Karachi from Thatta.

The major part of the city faced deficiency of water supply for four hours.

KWSB officials said that back pressure due to power failure at Dhabeji water pumping station caused the supply line burst.

Authorities said that the restoration process could take up to 24 hours while advising citizens to use water carefully.

Karachi could not get a supply of 121 million gallons of water.

Dhabeji water station’s electricity was restored after a four-hour shortage.

Water supply to Karachi was restored through eight water pipelines, although maintenance of the ruptured line remained in progress.

 

 

 

Death toll from fighting in South Sudan capital Juba climbs to 272 people: government source

The death toll from fighting in South Sudan's capital Juba has climbed to 272 people, including 33 civilians, a source at the country's ministry of health told Reuters on Sunday.

The fighting broke out last week between troops loyal to President Salva Kiir and vice president Riek Machar. Both men have said they did not know what had triggered the latest violence between their factions.

Mourning for rebel leader as Indian held Kashmir on lockdown

SRINAGAR: Tens of thousands of mourners attended the funeral of a top rebel commander as tensions intensified in Indian-administered Kashmir on Saturday, with authorities imposing a curfew on large parts of the disputed region and suspending mobile networks and internet.

Burhan Wani, a 22-year-old commander of the restive region´s largest rebel group, Hizbul Mujahideen (HM), was killed on Friday along with two other rebels during a brief gun battle with government forces.

Authorities handed the body of Wani, viewed by locals as a hero since he joined the rebel group at the age of 15, over to his family early Saturday morning.

"As people keep turning up to have a glimpse of the commander´s body, multiple funeral prayers are being held. His body is floating on a sea of people," a witness said.

"The actual burial may not happen before dark."
Streets in the main city of Srinagar were deserted except for hundreds of soldiers and police ordering people to stay indoors.

"Yes we have imposed a curfew, but of course his (Wani´s) funeral was allowed," director general of police for the Indian-held region, K. Rajendra told AFP.

Another police officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, said angry residents defied restrictions in many places across the Himalayan valley and clashed with government forces who fired tear gas and warning shots into the air.

Wani´s death had sparked protests and clashes throughout the night Friday while mosque loudspeakers blared "Azadi" (freedom from Indian rule) in most areas, including the capital Srinagar.

"Aftr many yrs I hear slogans for ´Azadi´ resonate from the mosque in my uptown Srinagar locality," former chief minister of the disputed state, Omar Abdullah, said on Twitter.

"Kashmir´s disaffected got a new icon y´day."

Resistance groups opposed to Indian rule of Kashmir have called for three days of mourning and a shutdown in the territory after the rebel commander´s killing.

Kashmir has been divided between rivals India and Pakistan since 1947, but both claim the territory in its entirety.

HM is one of several groups that for decades have been fighting around half a million Indian troops deployed in the region, calling for independence for Kashmir or a merger with Pakistan.

Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have died in the fighting since 1989.

Protests over shootings block roads in US cities, arrests made

BATON ROUGE, LA./MINNEAPOLIS: Protests against the shootings of two black men by police officers shut down main arteries in a number of US cities on Saturday, leading to numerous arrests, scuffles and injuries in confrontations between police and demonstrators.

Undeterred by heightened concerns about safety at protests after a lone gunman killed five police officers in Dallas Thursday night, organizers went ahead with marches in the biggest metropolis, New York City, and Washington D.C., the nation's capital, among other cities.

It was the third straight day of widespread protests after the fatal shooting of Alton Sterling, 37, by police in Baton Rouge on Tuesday and the death of Philando Castile, 32, on Wednesday night in a St. Paul, Minnesota suburb, cities which both saw heated protests on Saturday.

The most recent shooting deaths by police come after several years of contentious killings by law enforcement officers, including that of Michael Brown, a teenager whose death in the summer of 2014 caused riots and weeks of protests in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson.

On Saturday evening, hundreds of protesters shut down I-94, a major thoroughfare linking the Twin Cities, snarling traffic.

Protesters, told to disperse, threw rocks, bottles and construction rebar at officers, injuring at least three, St. Paul police said. Police made arrests and used smoke bombs and marking rounds to disperse the crowd.

Protesters at the scene said police fired tear gas and rubber bullets. Police said early on Sunday they had begun clearing the highway of debris in preparation for re-opening it.

A march in Baton Rouge saw scuffles between riot police and Black Panther activists, several of whom carried shotguns. Louisiana law allows for weapons to be carried openly.

After a short standoff later in the evening, riot police arrested as many as 30 demonstrators and recovered weapons. Prominent black activist and former Baltimore mayoral candidate Deray McKesson was among those arrested.

Protests also took place Saturday in Nashville, where protesters briefly blocked a road, and in Indianapolis. A rally in San Francisco also briefly blocked a freeway ramp, according to local media.

Hundreds of protesters marched from City Hall to Union Square in New York. The crowd swelled to around a thousand people, closing down Fifth Avenue.

Some chanted "No racist police, no justice, no peace" as rain fell in New York.

"I'm feeling very haunted, very sad," said Lorena Ambrosio, 27, a Peruvian American and freelance artist, "and just angry that black bodies just keep piling and piling up."

New York police said they arrested about a dozen protesters for shutting down a major city highway.