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Bangladesh seal rare Test victory

First Test, St Vincent (day five, stumps):
Bangladesh 238 & 345 beat West Indies 307, 181 by 95 runs

Match scorecard


Mahmudullah celebrates dismissing West Indies skipper Floyd Reifer

A superb bowling spell from Mahmudullah saw Bangladesh record only their second ever Test victory with a 95-run win against a weakened West Indies side.

Set 277 to win, the home side crumbled to 181 all out as the debutant off-spinner ripped through the batting order with 5-51 in St Vincent.

David Bernard (52 not out) was the only batsman to provide any resistance.

Earlier, Bangladesh lost their last five wickets for 23 runs to finish on 345 with Darren Sammy claiming 5-70.

The victory is Bangladesh’s first overseas – their previous win came against Zimbabwe over four years ago in Chittagong – in 60 matches since their introduction to Test cricket nine years ago.

The victory was made the more remarkable considering captain and strike bowler Mashrafe Mortaza missed the West Indian innings with a knee injury, with vice-captain Shakib Al Hasan deputising in his absence.

"It was probably a blessing in disguise when we got bowled out (on Monday morning) which gave us more time," said Mortaza, skippering his first Test match since succeeding Mohammad Ashraful last month.

"I thought we let ourselves down in the first innings"

Captain Floyd Reifer

"We were looking to bat until lunch and get a lead of about 300 or more, but we lost our last five wickets quickly."

However, Bangladesh’s achievement came against a second-string West Indies side missing 13 of its best players because of an ongoing contract dispute with the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB).

The board has insisted it will field the same squad – seven of whom made their debuts at Arnos Vale – if no settlement can be reached ahead of the second Test, which starts in Grenada on Friday.

The final day began promisingly for the home side as Sammy claimed three dismissals for his second Test five-wicket haul.

But with 80 overs to chase down 277 on a wearing wicket encouraging turn, the inexperienced West Indies batting line-up succumbed to Bangladesh’s triple spin attack.

Openers Dale Richards and Omar Phillips each fell for 14 before captain Floyd Reifer became the first of Mahmudullah’s five victims for 19.

Reduced to 85-5, Bernard found support in Sammy, but the vice-captain was dismissed by Shakib Al Hasan to leave the home side precariously placed at 119-6.

606: DEBATE
Your thoughts on Bangladesh’s victory

Despite reaching his second half century of the match, Bernard could not find adequate support as Bangladesh wrapped up their historic victory 40 minutes from the scheduled close.

"It is disappointing to lose but I think the guys, brought here the night before a Test, fought well," said 36-year-old stand-in skipper Reifer, who made his first international appearance in more than 10 years.

"I thought we let ourselves down in the first innings, when the batsmen did not capitalise on the starts that they got.

"Many of us got a start, but never really carried on. Young Omar Phillips scored 94, but I thought that a lot of other guys, including myself, got starts, and we never carried on to a big score."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Kalsoom Lakhani: Pakistan Refugees Reluctant To Return For Lack Of Trust In Government Security

This past Thursday, Prime Minister Gilani announced that a “phased return home” for the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) of Malakand Province will begin today, July…

30,000 involved in organised crime

Home secretary unveils strategy to target 30,000 criminals with more powers to seize assets and close front businesses

Between 25,000 and 30,000 criminals are involved in the “long tail” of a serious organised crime business in Britain that is worth more than £30bn a year, according to a government study.

The home secretary, Alan Johnson, has endorsed a renewed “Al Capone-style” drive to use tax powers to target organised criminals, providing stronger powers to seize assets and shut down front organisations such as saunas and massage parlours.

The study warns of an explosion in new criminal activities as a result of the recession, including sharp increases in “phishing” – taking over bank accounts – the flourishing trade in counterfeit goods and a boom in other types of financial fraud.

The joint report, by the Cabinet Office’s strategy unit and the Home Office, does not directly criticise the performance of the beleaguered three-year-old Serious and Organised Crime Agency (Soca) but it says much tighter oversight is needed by ministers to keep a grip on the problem.

The Home Office said a “strategic centre” for organised crime would be created in the department to clearly define roles in tackling drug trafficking, organised immigration crime and organised fraud. Further action will be taken next summer if needed.

At the same time the capacity of the police is to be augmented by a further four regional asset recovery teams to complete the network across England and Wales. Each will have tax inspector attached and the Home Office is to extend the legal power to “reverse the burden of proof” in civil recovery cases to make it easier to seize assets of those in organised crime.

Renewed efforts to break up organised gangs even after conviction will be made through an attempt to ban the use of mobile phones in prisons and curb the “abuse” of legally privileged visits between lawyers and clients.

The strategy was published as Home Office research placed a question mark over the credibility of Britain’s controls on people trafficking. A Home Office study, based on interviews with 45 convicted people smugglers, found that Britain was seen as a “relatively easy” market offering healthy profits. Those questioned were, however, surprised at the severity of their sentences.

Home Office polling data published today also shows that the public have little recognition that money generated by sales of pirate and counterfeit goods can flow into the criminal economy. The estimate of 25,000 to 30,000 involved in organised crime in Britain is said to include the “lifetime criminals who form the durable core of organised crime groups and loose criminal networks, through to the clusters of subordinates, specialists and others at the lower end of organised criminality”. This covers the “top of the chain” through to the “long tail” of organised crime.

Soca says more than 5,000 of them are already on its radar.

The £30bn a year estimate covers the total cost of economic and social harm caused by organised crime. This figure breaks down into £17.6bn in the costs of drug-related crime, £7.8bn in financial fraud, £4.1bn in smuggling of spirits, tobacco and diesel and £2.4bn a year in organised immigration crime.

The Cabinet Office strategy unit also warns that the recession is creating new opportunities for organised criminals. They cite an increased risk of loan-sharking and trading in counterfeit goods, with a warning of a rise in gang-related violence as they battle for market share.

The banking crisis has also made the public more susceptible to frauds that offer high returns on investments; an increase in “phishing” scams has led to a 75% increase in illegitimate access to victims’ bank accounts in the first three months of 2009 alone.

Another threat comes in the form of a rise in cases of cybercrime, with the number of malware – malicious software programme – attacks on IT systems increasing by 250% last year.

Ministers are also concerned about growing links between weak and failing states and organised crime. Gangs are increasingly basing themselves in places such as Somalia, where drug trafficking networks are increasingly located.

The home secretary said the new strategy went further than ever in taking the fight to organised criminals.

But Deputy Chief Constable Jon Murphy, of the Association of Chief Police Officers, said political decisions could be behind a gap between the scale of the problem and the ability of law enforcement agencies to tackle it. “I think we all acknowledge that gap does exist. Why does it exist?” said Murphy. “Arguably, it could be because it’s a political decision. I think equally it’s because of the changing nature of criminality.

“British organised crime gangs are fluid, flexible and opportunistic. There are no set ranks, rules or structures which you can see with international crime gangs.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


30,000 involved in organised crime

Government backs fresh drive to tackle drugs, immigration and fraud gangs after data shows surge in organised illegal activity

Between 25,000 to 30,000 criminals are involved in the “long tail” of a serious organised crime business in Britain that is worth more than £30bn a year, according to a study published today.

The home secretary, Alan Johnson, has endorsed a renewed drive to use tax powers to target organised criminals, taking even stronger powers to seize their assets, and shut down front organisations such as saunas and massage parlours.

The joint report, by the Cabinet Office’s strategy unit and the Home Office, warns of an explosion in new types of crime as a result of the recession, with sharp increases recorded this year in the counterfeit goods trade, “phishing” – taking over other people’s bank accounts – and other types of financial fraud.

The study does not directly criticise the performance of the beleaguered serious organised crime agency, but it does say much tighter oversight is needed by ministers to keep a grip on the problem.

The Home Office plans create a new strategic centre for organised crime to ensure that clear roles are laid down for tackling drug trafficking, organised immigration crime, and organised fraud. Further action will be taken next summer if a more aggressive approach is not achieved.

At the same time the capacity of the police is to be boosted by a further four regional asset-recovery teams to complete the network across England and Wales. Each will have its own tax inspector, and the Home Office is to extend the teams’ legal powers to “reverse the burden of proof” in civil recovery cases, to make it easier to seize the assets of those involved in organised crime.

The data was published as another Home Office study called into question the credibility of Britain’s controls to curb people-trafficking. The research, based on interviews with 45 convicted people-smugglers, showed that most thought Britain was a soft touch, with a low risk of detection and a market that conferred healthy profits. Many of those surveyed did, however, express surprise at the severity of the sentences they had received.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Promise Technology Offers Digital Media Server

Promise’s NAS media server offers cost-conscious businesses and home office users power and performance while reducing the amount of power needed to run it.
– Promise Technology, known as the originator of SATA/ATA redundant
array of inexpensive disks (RAID) products, announced a digital media server
aimed at small business and home office users, the SmartStor NS4600. The
server, priced at $399 and available through retail and reseller channels,
offer…


Serb attacked in his home in Croatia

Police in Croatia have filed criminal charges against two persons who on Saturday assaulted a Serb man in his home near Knin. Radovan RaÅ¡ković, 52, was attacked in the village of Žargović, when the pair of 19-year-olds, allegedly under the influence of alcohol, broke into his house at three o’clock in the morning breaking furniture, hurling insults and threats and physically assaulting him.

Back on side

Iraqi football fans at the match in Irbil, 10 July

By Neil Arun
Irbil

Iraq thrashed Palestine 3-0 in a football match that will be remembered less for its scoreline and more for celebrations better suited to the lifting of a siege.

Forced by violence at home to play all its games abroad, the Iraqi national side ended its six-year exile on Friday in the northern city of Irbil.

Fans who had followed the fortunes of their team on TV roared deliriously as they saw the first players jog on to the pitch.

Chants of "Iraq, Iraq" rang through stands which felt, in the blazing afternoon heat, like the rim of an exploding volcano.

"Sport was under sanctions," yelled Iraq’s most famous football fan, a man from Baghdad known only by one name, Khaddouri. "Now the embargo has been lifted."

Before kick-off, scores of white doves were released. They swirled around the stadium, unwilling to leave. Heavily armed soldiers shooed them off the pitch.

Welcoming the Palestinians

Iraq’s national team is a regional superpower. Traditionally one of the strongest sides in the Middle East, in 2007 they were crowned Asian champions after defeating Saudi Arabia.

Palestine player Amar Abu Salil (L) vies for the ball against Iraqi player Hawar Mulla Muhammad in Irbil, 10 July

The victory coincided with the climax of the sectarian conflict that engulfed Iraq after the US-led invasion in 2003. Fans celebrated in the streets, briefly defying the threat of bombings that had become a daily norm.

The Palestinian team is one of the weakest in the region. It has developed fitfully, with the movements of its players constantly curtailed by the conflict with Israel.

At the game in Irbil, no Iraqi fans commented on the footballing disparity between the two teams. Instead, they focused on what they saw as a bond with the Palestinians – another Middle Eastern society brutalised by violence.

As the visiting team stepped on to the turf, the stadium loudspeakers urged the crowd to welcome them. The stands obliged, erupting in passionate cries of "Long Live Palestine!"

Parts of Iraq may now be safe enough to host a foreign team but the Palestinians’ home is not. Like the Iraqi side a few years ago, the players must ply their trade abroad.

With few away fans accompanying them, they rely on charitable cheers from the home crowd.

Adjusting the Palestinian scarf around his neck, veteran Iraq fan Khaddouri said: "The Palestinians are our brethren. If they can send their team to Iraq, so can everyone else."

Kurdish scorer

The first goal came in the 30th minute of the first half, scored off a corner kick. The stadium erupted.

The scorer was Hawar Mulla Mohammed, a Kurd. In Irbil, capital of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, Hawar is a local hero.

He gives the Kurds a strong reason to support the largely Arab Iraqi team at a time of rising tensions between Baghdad and Irbil, most notably over Kirkuk, a violent, oil-rich city claimed by both Kurds and Arabs.

Another two goals followed in the second half. The Palestinians defended gamely, stifling the Iraqi strikers’ more flamboyant efforts.

Khaddouri stalked the sidelines as if squaring up for a fight. He exhorted the crowd with his arms.

The chant came back from the stands for a man as famous as the players themselves: "Khaddouri! Khaddouri!"

Outside the stadium, traffic came to halt. Horns blared and young men leaned out of cars and pick-up trucks, draped in Iraqi flags or the Kurdish region’s distinctive tricolour.

They lingered in the streets long after the game ended – like the doves, unwilling to leave. A few soldiers tried half-heartedly to usher them away.

Neil Arun is based in Iraq as an editor for The Institute for War and Peace Reporting.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Judith Ellis: Being Undermined by National News

I will not subscribe to the Washington Post. But how can we come together as citizens of our great democracy and make them feel the impact of their action?

McNair Funeral: Thousands Expected To Attend In Mount Olive, Miss.

MOUNT OLIVE, Miss. — A capacity crowd of 8,000 was expected Saturday at the funeral for former NFL quarterback Steve McNair on the University of Southern Mississippi campus.

The funeral for McNair, who was shot and killed by a girlfrien…

Mumbai revisited

Despite India’s economic success, it is still home to millions of the world’s poorest people. Martin Buckley lived in Bombay, as it was known, in the 1980s. He recently went back and found, as he walked about after sunset, that the essential character of the city remains unchanged.

Mumbai at night

Bombay by night. It is hard to think of three words more expressive of history, exoticism, and empire.

And I do not begrudge the "new" name, Mumbai (the city was renamed in 1995).

The city’s presiding goddess is Mumba-Ai, and I spent a chunk of the 1980s living close to her temple in the heart of the city.

It was my first job after university, working on a magazine called Business India. Very few foreigners worked in Bombay then.

Pre-boom India was still locked into its Soviet-style command economy.

Paid local rates, I lived in a succession of seedy rooms in downtown Bombay.

We sometimes put the magazine to bed at 0300 local time, and I would walk home.

On the pavements were string beds, where men lay, totally abandoned in sleep.

I never felt threatened for an instant.

Slum living

We have heard a lot lately about Mumbai’s slums, so I thought it would be interesting to revisit my old haunts.

Dharavi slum

Mumbai is a long, thin city, and on its northern fringes, residential suburbs are mushrooming.

I went to visit Dharavi, the slum made famous by the film Slumdog Millionaire, which is nearer the city centre on land the developers would love to get their hands on.

This "slum" has electricity, workplaces, temples and mosques.

I asked a street trader selling school exercise books if he had heard of Slumdog Millionaire.

"Of course," he said, adding that tourists had been turning up in droves to see where the film was shot.

But he said they should go home, as no-one wanted them there.

I felt no danger in Dharavi, at least, not from people.

Stepping on a sleeping dog – an actual "slum-dog" – was far more of a worry.

‘Light beatings’

The next night, a hot, sticky evening, my first stop was at a downtown police station in central Mumbai, to interview a police inspector.

Child actor Azharuddin Ismail in his Mumbai slum

He was a sleek character, with manicured nails, dyed hair and an expensive-looking Swiss watch.

Sipping sweet tea from an improbably refined china cup, I sheepishly asked about the brutal police torture shown in Slumdog Millionaire.

"Ridiculous," he replied, though he did admit that what he called "light beatings" were routine. And no, I could not visit the cells.

He moved hastily on to more comfortable territory, showing me his CCTV screens, and declaring how modern forensics had transformed criminal investigation.

His biggest task, he stressed, was managing tensions between Hindus and Muslims.

Doggedly, I asked about police corruption and drugs mafia, but received peremptory replies.

Prostitution he claimed, was sharply down, but not through policing. Rather, he claimed it was because people were terrified of catching Aids.

Decomposing facades

Physically, central Mumbai has changed far less than I expected.

There are some elevated highways from which, I am told, motorcyclists periodically plunge.

A market in Mumbai

But the great tenements still rise in terraces draped with washing, their Victorian or art deco facades slowly decomposing.

Few of the 1960s-style Fiat taxis have been replaced by newer cars.

There are bullock carts toting jute bales, tiny shops with colonial interiors, hawkers selling fruit from trolleys, men sitting cross-legged in the street selling shoes, basket-weavers working and living on the pavements.

Markets sell everything from metal ware to fresh fish, and as 2200 approached, I could still see live mullet writhing in baskets.

Nearby were the entrepots of Mumbai’s thriving dockyards, with the seedy, raffish air of a Conrad novel. And it is much easier to buy a beer in contemporary Mumbai than it was in my day.

Religious tensions have worsened, but I passed Hindu and Muslim traders working side by side.

Decay and ambition

In Bhuleshwar, in the old heart of Mumbai, I visited the city’s presiding Hindu goddess.

The pillars of Mumba-Ai’s tiny temple were entwined with flowers to resemble an indoor forest, and people urgently jostled for a glimpse of the deity.

By midnight I had reached Falkland Road, Mumbai’s infamous red light district.

Women stood around gloomily, their faces showing none of the flirtation that is supposed to be their profession’s stock in trade.

Mumbai’s sex industry caters to millions of poor men, and its squalor and joylessness are all too evident.

A pimp was hanging onto my arm. I asked him if it was true that client numbers were down. He became aggressive. Was I there to spend money or ask nosy questions

I flagged down a taxi, and slid on to the back seat. Through the open window, the air was now pleasantly cool.

The essential character of the great city I had known and loved 25 years ago, seemed to me unchanged, and it was still a Dickensian canvas of decay, ambition, and exploitation.

But Mumbai is pragmatic. It looks chaotic, but it works.

How to listen to: From our own Correspondent

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This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Button out for revenge

Brawn-GP’s Jenson Button has a score to settle with Sebastian Vettel at tomorrow’s German F1 Grand Prix. Vettel, the Red Bull driver, seeks a victory on home soil, but Button, who was foiled by the 22-year-old in his bid to win his own home race at Silverstone three weeks ago, will be out to

Sejdiu makes annual address to assembly

Kosovo President Fatmir Sejdiu says that the province has “demonstrated that it is a home for all citizens, regardless of ethnicity or religion”. In this annual address to the assembly in PriÅ¡tina, Sejdiu said that the institutions of Kosovo had “proven to the citizens and international community that they are a serious partner and that Kosovo is an important factor for peace and stability.”

The week in brief

Iceman Cometh Home Perhaps slightly disappointed by his poor Formula One season, Kimi Raikkonen confirmed on Monday that he will racing in the World Rally Championship in Finland at the end of this month.?”It’s superb news for the championship and hugely exciting that he’ll be competing at

Send forbidden files back home using Gmail

So if you have some files you want to email home but they are .exe files, and as we all know, everybody’s favorite email client is in the habit of blocking any executable files to prevent people from sending malware to their friends, unintentionally or otherwise.
Gmail’s Flash-based attachments grabs your files as you select them, [...]

Glover set for major career

With the home favourite and current world No2 raising the decibels around Bethpage Black on Monday, Lucas Glover exhibited remarkable composure to win his first Major in golf.  The unassuming American even dismissed a bogey on 15 – his only three-putt of the elongated tournament – to birdie 16With the home favourite and current world No2 raising the decibels around Bethpage Black on Monday, Lucas Glover exhibited remarkable composure to win his first Major in golf. The unassuming American even dismissed a bogey on 15 – his only three-putt of the elongated tournament – to birdie 16

A Derby Clash, One Glittering Prize

A WIN for second-placed Home United and they will almost certainly lift
the NTUC Income-Yeo’s S-League 2007 title.

All league leaders SAFFC need is one point, and they will in all
probability defend their league crown.

There is so much at stake when the two teams meet this Friday at Bishan
Stadium, in what has been billed as the match of the season.

Both sides will have just one game to go after the clash – Home will visit
Geylang United next week while SAFFC will host Gombak United – and look
quite capable of winning their respective matches. So it almost certainly
comes down to the 90 minutes on Friday.

Both camps were in upbeat mood yesterday.

Protectors’ coach Vincent Subramaniam held a special training session for
the players who will fill in for his four Lions – Shahril Ishak, Shi
Jiayi, Indra Sahdan and Lionel Lewis – away on World Cup qualifying duty.

“We wished all the national team players farewell and good luck after
Sunday’s win over Balestier. Now, we are concentrating on plugging the
holes in our midfield,” said Vincent.

“We won’t have Qiu Li also after he picked up another yellow card on
Sunday, so there’s a lot of thinking to do.

“But we don’t need to work the rest of the players hard on the training
field now. It is mental preparation that’s important at this stage.”

Vincent insisted home ground advantage would count for little on Friday.

“I really think they (SAFFC) have the upper hand with their talented
foreigners and the fact that they have not had a game since Nov 5,” he
said.

“Since they played at Woodlands last Monday, they will have had 11 days
rest by the time Friday comes, while we are still recovering from our
match on Sunday.”

SAFFC coach Richard Bok was only interested in how his men were doing and
he was happy to report the Warriors’ were up for the battle ahead,
especially after the recovery of their Thai star.

After struggling with a thigh injury for a few weeks, midfielder Therdsak
Chaiman came through a practice game yesterday showing no ill effects.

“We didn’t play him against Woodlands last week to give him time to
recover from his injury as he needed the rest,” said Bok. “All is good for
us now and we just have to go to Bishan and do our job. It now comes down
to hunger and desire, it is about how much the players want the
championship.”

“While a draw at Bishan will suit us, we will go there to win. We want to
win both our remaining games,” he insisted.

Meanwhile, in last night’s S-League match, Albirex Niigata beat Liaoning
Guangyuan 2-0 at Jurong East Stadium.

A first-half brace from 19-year-old striker Akira Takase ensured the three
points for the home side. – Paul Green