Thursday, 19 February 2015

Home remedies for Urinary Tract Infection

                                          Home remedies for Urinary Tract Infection 

Here are some measures you can take when suffering from UTI

UTI's are extremely common among men and women these days, but especially among women. These can be very dangerous if not taken care of properly. Here are some things you should keep in mind when suffering from one.

1. UTI's can be diagnosed with the help of simple urine test. The urine samples show the presence of pus cells and depending on how many there are, it can be decided whether the infection is mild or strong.

2. Once diagnosed you must increase you liquid and fluid intake by at least 5 times. Drink a lot of water and natural cranberry juice. While water helps flush out the infection from the system, cranberry juice has medicinal properties that disallow the bacteria from sticking to the tract.

3. Stop using all public washrooms and ensure personal hygiene at all times, wherever you go.

4. Wear clean, dry and loose clothing when suffering from an infection as rough, tight or synthetic fabric can irritate you even more.

5. If not taken care of, the infection can spread upto your kidney and cause awful problems, so ensure that care is taken at all times. If the infection lasts longer, seek medical help immediately. - TNN

Home remedies for backache

                                                      Home remedies for backache 

Backache is the most common problem and here are few home remedies to cure it

Stressful life, travelling, workouts or aging — all these lead to one most common health problem i.e. backache. It is one health issue which makes us restless and if not taken care of results in making our routine terrible. Here are a few home remedies to get rid of that backache:

1. Mix camphor in coconut oil and boil it for 5 minutes. Cool it and store it in a bottle.Massage it twice in a week before going to sleep to get rid of backache.

2. In a bucket of lukewarm or slightly hot water, add few drops of eucalyptus oil. Taking a bath with this water will help you get rid of backache as well as body pain. Not just that, it makes you feel stress-free.

3. While you're spending some time watching TV, put a hot-water bag on back supported by a cushion. The heat based treatment will help you recover backache.

4. Massage your back with mustard oil an hour prior to going for a shower. Make sure you take a hot water shower.

5. In a warm glass of milk, add a pinch of turmeric and few drops of honey. Make it a habit to have this regularly to get rid of backache, body pain as well as cough and cold too.

6. Add ginger while brewing your tea, it will help you lower the chances of backache.

7. Using a herbal oil for massaging your back also ensures a quick recovery.

8. Take a tube sock and fill it with rice.(make sure to tie off end of the sock). Heat in microwave for 3-5 minutes, then just lay it wherever you have the pain. It works wonders for lower back pain. - TNN

Tuesday, 17 February 2015

Alabama Governor Bentley apologises for assault against Indian

                                              Robert Bentley, Governor of Alabama.

The governor of the US state of Alabama has apologised to the Indian government for the treatment of an Indian man left partially paralysed after being thrown to the ground by a policeman.

Mr. Bentley ordered the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency to launch a parallel investigation — the Federal Bureau of Investigation has already started its own probe — into the use of “excessive force” against Sureshbhai Patel, 57,  on February 6.


The officer involved was charged with the assault but has pleaded not guilty.

Mr Patel, who had recently arrived in the US, has filed a legal case alleging race played a part in the incident.

He was walking outside his son's home in an Alabama suburb when police said they received a call from a neighbour about a suspicious person.

Footage from police cameras showed Mr Patel - who speaks no English - trying to walk away when the officers approached him. They detain him and eventually shove him to the ground.

                                    Sureshbhai Patel left the hospital on Monday after surgery

Mr Patel suffered injuries, including partial paralysis in his leg. His lawyer said he was now in rehabilitation after leaving hospital on Monday.

“Please accept our sincere apology for this tragic incident to your government, Patel, and the citizens of India who reside and work in our state,” Mr. Bentley said in a letter written to the to India’s General Consul in Atlanta, Ajit Kumar.

“I deeply regret the unfortunate use of excessive force by the Madison Police Department on Sureshbhai Patel and for the injuries sustained by Mr. Patel,” he said.

“I sincerely hope that Mr. Patel continues to improve and that he will regain full use of his legs,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mr. Patel has been transferred from Huntsville hospital to a rehabilitation centre following improvement in his condition, his attorney Henry F Sherrod said.

An online fund raising campaign has collected USD 187,000 for Mr. Patel’s medical expenses. More than 4,300 people have contributed to it.

The governor said the state would investigate the incident along with the FBI. Police officials in Madison have apologised to Mr Patel and his family. - PTI

Seven Things Happen To You When You Die......


By Steven Bancarz|

What happens to us when we die? Where does our soul go? Chances are, if you were brought up in a religious background you believe that there are only 2 places you can go: Heaven and Hell.  If you are a good person and believe the right things, you spend eternity in Heaven. If you are a sinful person, you spend an eternity in hell.  Thankfully, this is a false dichotomy.

On top of the fact that it doesn't even make sense to think about only 2 options (both of which are eternal), there has been a lot of scientific investigation into what happens when people leave their bodies when it dies and then return after experiencing time in the spirit world. Thousands of near-death experiences have given us the information we need to form a more accurate picture of what awaits us on the other side.  Some do report hellish realms, and almost all report heavenly realms, but there is another side of the coin here that needs to be addressed.

Dr. Michael Newton is a psychologist who specialized in hypnotherapy, where he would put people into hypnosis to bring out any past traumas they experienced in their lives and walk them through the memories into healing.  He soon discovered that he was able to bring people back so far into their memories that they were remembering things that weren't even taking place in this life anymore.  They were taking place in between lives!
  
In his books Journey of Souls and Destiny of Souls (which together have sold over half a million copies) he shares case studies that he has gathered over the course of four decades of bringing people back into the memories of their souls journey.  Surprisingly, they all said the exact same things, and coincided very nicely with a lot of the NDE accounts that have occurred.  Here are 7 things which these two fields of study have strongly suggested happen to us when we die:

1). Life Flash
An extremely common phenomenon within people who are dying is that they see their entire life flash before their eyes.  The brain snaps into hyper-speed mode and starts revisiting your memory databank before your soul separates from your body.

2) You Can See Your Body
Many people will see their physical body right as they exit it at the moment that consciousness disconnects from the physical body. You will be able to see your surroundings and the things that are happening around your dead body.  This will not scare you however, because it will feel as natural as anything.  Some people report feeling frustrated or angry over the way they died and wishing that they could go back into their body to seek revenge, but this feeling passes with time as you begin to fall into the Light.

3) The Light
People always report seeing a light when they die.  The light appears off in the distance, and you will slowly be pulled towards it, almost as if you are being pulled by a magnet.  The light is always accompanied by a sense of love and peace.  This is your transition phase back to your home in the spirit world.

4) Seeing Dead Relatives
Right when you enter into the spirit world after being pulled through the light, you are greeted by loved ones who are there to embrace you and comfort you.  It's sort of like a reunion.  These are not necessarily your relatives from your current earth life.  They may be family members of yours from previous lives who have been with you throughout your whole souls evolution.  Essentially, you have family members you don't currently know about from a totally different bloodline who will greet you as you enter the spirit world.  You will, of course, remember their names and recognize their faces upon return.

It's important to note here that the souls will take on the image they had in physical form to create a sense of home and familiarity for you.  Souls don't look like they did on earth necessary.  The body is just a body. The soul is formless, but can take various shapes to serve different purposes.  It is said that advanced souls who have lived many lives don't necessarily have relatives that greet them, because they understand what the spirit world is about and have been through many times before.  It is said in the books that advanced souls sometimes skip this step because it is not needed for them.

5) Guardian Angels/Spirit Guides
You have your own assigned guardian angel, or 'spirit guide' depending on which term you like to use better.  Whatever you wish to call them, you will encounter your guide in the spirit world and they will comfort you and make you feel at home.  But, this is also the time where the fun and games are over.  After you experience some of the heavenly realms, duty begins to call.  Your guide has been with you and watching you throughout your life, and wants to go over some things with you.  It's time to take out your report card from the life you just lived:

6) Life Review
You meet with your angels/guides and go over everything that happened in your life.  People report seeing their entire life as a sort of movie film in front of their eyes or on the pages of a book.  You may have to see some things that make you feel ashamed and like you failed, but this is not a time of judgment.  This is a time of review, and discussion about what needs to be improved upon as a soul.  After you see your whole life, you may come to an agreement with your guides to come back to Earth to work on things after a certain period of time in the spirit world

7) You Don't Want To Return
You feel such an overwhelming amount of peace and love that you don't want to return.  You don't have to worry about illness or earthly tasks.  You are boundless, safe, and free.  No stress, no pain, and no suffering.

But remember, reincarnation may await you.  You may either volunteer to come back to help other souls on earth, you may NEED to come back to alleviate Karma, or you may choose to come back to evolve more as a soul and experience the richness of life.

Keep in mind, these are what thousands of people have been saying about their memories/experiences of the afterlife, and these conclusions are being drawn from forty years of professional work. I personally confidently believe in the reality of such a process, as I think it makes the most sense and is well supported by evidence.

That being said, there are people who report going to realms which resemble Hell where they see demons and other nasty things.  We can't turn a blind eye to the reality of dark realms just because they may scare us.  Although Dr. Newton did not report any such findings, many people who have had NDEs have had very frightening experiences which had deterred them away from bad behavior and inspired them to live better lives.

The main thing to take away from this, is that you are taken care of. You are infinitely loved and will be looked after.  There is no death, only transition. You WILL get to reunite with the souls of loved ones, and you will experience magical realms. Peace, love, and serenity awaits. But so does accountability.  The destiny of your soul is related to your behavior as a human being in this life. That will be good news to some, and for others may inspire the desire to improve themselves.  Either way, we should be asking ourselves the following questions:

How am I treating other souls in this world? What am I doing to help myself and the people around evolve?

Monday, 16 February 2015

‘Not a war between Islam and West,’ says PM as Denmark reels

Danish-born suspect (22) shot dead after two people killed in separate terror shootings

Danish prime minister Helle Thorning Schmidt arrives at the synagogue in Krystalgade in Copenhagen to show her sympathy. Photograph: Simon Laessoee/Scanpix/Reuters

Queen Margrethe of Denmark has called on Danes to defend together their shared values after police yesterday shot dead a 22-year-old Danish-born man suspected of two fatal shootings hours earlier in Copenhagen.

Local media named the Danish-born suspect as Omar Abdel Hamid El-Hussein, reporting that he had been released from prison a few weeks ago after serving a sentence for knife crime. Police did not confirm the name.

After a frantic manhunt, prime minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt said Denmark had “tasted the ugly taste of fear” when two civilians were killed in suspected copycat Charlie Hebdo attacks – at a synagogue and, hours earlier, at a cafe during a discussion on free speech.

Five police officers were injured during the attacks and the unprecedented manhunt, which ended early yesterday morning with the fatal shooting of the chief suspect. He opened fire after arriving at an apartment block in Copenhagen’s Nørrebro neighbourhood that was being watched by police officers, who then shot him.

Danish investigators say there is no indication more than one person was involved, but yesterday afternoon they raided an internet cafe. Local television showed police leading away two men. “We cannot yet say anything concrete about the motive . . . but are considering that he might have been inspired by the events in Paris some weeks ago,” said Jens Madsen, Denmark’s intelligence chief, at a news conference.

He said the dead man had been “on the radar” of Danish investigators for some time but to their knowledge had received no training in jihadist camps in the Middle East.

The Copenhagen attacks began at about 3.30pm on Saturday afternoon at the Krudttønden cafe, where a discussion had just begun on the topic “Art, Blasphemy and Freedom of Expression”.
Eyewitnesses say the gunman, wearing a dark winter coat and purple hat and balaclava, shot at least 40 rounds through the cafe door and window. A member of the audience, 55-year-old film director Finn Nørgaard, was shot after reportedly going outside the cafe during the attack.

Security
Swedish artist Lars Vilks, the organiser of the cafe event, was the subject of repeated death threats and attacks since depicting the prophet Muhammad as a cartoon dog in 2007. Security was tight at the cafe, with attendees searched by guards. Attendees were urged to flee during the shooting, and the gunman was unable to enter.

Yesterday, Mr Vilks said he was unharmed and unaffected by the attack, “but the audience . . . got to experience fear and horror and tragedy”. The cartoonist said he had little doubt the gunman was inspired by the attacks on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper and a kosher supermarket in Paris that left 17 people dead last month.

About 10 hours later, 5km away from the cafe, he struck again, targeting a synagogue in the Krystalgade neighbourhood, behind which a bat mitzvah celebration was taking place. The gunman killed a 37-year-old man standing guard, named locally as Dan Uzan, and injured two police officers. Eyewitnesses said the gunman fled in a car, and police found an abandoned Volkswagen Polo nearby. He then called a taxi to take him home and police traced him using information from the driver.

Danish prime minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt, laying flowers yesterday at the synagogue, described the attacks as a “cynical act of terror” that had given Denmark “some hours which we will never forget”.

Freedom of speech
“We know there are forces that want to hurt Denmark, who want to rebuke our freedom of speech [but] this is not a war between Islam and the West.” Denmark would do “everything in our power to defend the Jewish community in our country”, she said.

Queen Margrethe said: “It is important that we stand together in such a serious situation and guard the values on which Denmark is founded.”

Leaders across Europe promised the Danish government support in tackling terrorism. - irishtimes

Sunday, 15 February 2015

Police kill man believed behind two shootings in Copenhagen

Policemen secure the area around a building that was hosting a freedom of speech event in Copenhagen where shots were fired Saturday. | AFP-JIJI

COPENHAGEN-(AP)  Danish police shot and killed a man early Sunday suspected of carrying out shooting attacks at a free speech event and then at a Copenhagen synagogue, killing a Danish documentary filmmaker and a member of the Scandinavian country's Jewish community. Five police officers were also wounded in the attacks.

Officials said it is possible he was imitating the terror attacks that took place in Paris last month carried out by Islamic radicals at the Charlie Hebdo newsroom and at a kosher grocery store that left 17 dead.

"Denmark has been hit by terror," Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt said on Sunday. "We do not know the motive for the alleged perpetrator's actions, but we know that there are forces that want to hurt Denmark. They want to rebuke our freedom of speech.

Jens Madsen, head of the Danish intelligence agency PET, said investigators believe the gunman was inspired by Islamic radicalism.

"PET is working on a theory that the perpetrator could have been inspired by the events in Paris. He could also have been inspired by material sent out by (the Islamic State group) and others," Madsen said.

Denmark’s Jewish Community identified the victim of the attack at the synagogue as 37-year-old Jewish man Dan Uzan. He was guarding the building during a bar mitzvah when he was shot in the head. He later died from the injuries sustained in the attack.

Three officers were injured in the attack, but a 55-year-old man died from the injuries he sustained, authorities said.

Minutes after midnight Sunday, Uzan was killed and two officers were wounded in the second shooting outside the synagogue.

Later Sunday, at least two people with handcuffs were taken out by police from an Internet cafe in Copenhagen, Danish media reported. Police spokesman Steen Hansen told The Associated Press that "the action was part of the police investigation" but declined to give further details.

The Danish Film Institute said the 55-year-old man killed at the free speech event was documentary filmmaker Finn Noergaard.

The institute's chief Henrik Bo Nielsen said he was shocked and angry to find out Noergaard was gunned down while attending a discussion on art and free speech.

Noergaard directed and produced documentaries for Danish television, including the 2004 "Boomerang boy" about an Australian boy's dreams to become a world boomerang champion and the 2008 "Le Le" about Vietnamese immigrants in Denmark.

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decried the attack and said his government plans to encourage a "massive immigration" of Jews from Europe.

Other leaders also condemned the attacks, including British Prime Minister David Cameron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and EU President Donald Tusk,

"The shootings in Copenhagen are an appalling attack on free speech and religious freedom," Cameron said. "Two innocent people have been murdered simply for their beliefs and my thoughts are with their loved ones and all those injured at this tragic time."

Leaders across Europe condemned the violence and expressed support for Denmark. Sweden’s security service said it was sharing information with its Danish counterpart, while U.S. National Security Council spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan said U.S. officials were ready to help with the investigation and have been in touch with their Danish counterparts.

Vilks has faced several attempted attacks and death threats after he depicted Muhammad as a dog in 2007. A Pennsylvania woman last year got a 10-year prison term for a plot to kill Vilks. In 2010, two brothers tried to burn down his house in southern Sweden and were imprisoned for attempted arson.

The depiction of the prophet is deemed insulting to many followers of Islam. According to mainstream Islamic tradition, any physical depiction of Muhammad — even a respectful one — is considered blasphemous.

While many Muslims have expressed disgust at the deadly assault on the Charlie Hebdo employees, many were also deeply offended by its cartoons lampooning Muhammad

Monday, 9 February 2015

For Saudis and Pakistan, A Bird Of Contention

Pakistanis last year in Baluchistan Province with their catch of houbara bustard. Foreign hunting permits have been canceled. 

For decades, royal Arab hunting expeditions have traveled to the far reaches of Pakistan in pursuit of the houbara bustard - a waddling, migratory bird whose meat, they believe, contains aphrodisiac powers.

Little expense is spared for the elaborate winter hunts. Cargo planes fly tents and luxury jeeps into custom-built desert airstrips, followed by private jets carrying the kings and princes of Persian Gulf countries along with their precious charges: expensive hunting falcons that are used to kill the white-plumed houbara.

This year's hunt, however, has run into difficulty.

It started in November, when the High Court in Baluchistan, the vast and tumultuous Pakistani province that is a favored hunting ground, canceled all foreign hunting permits in response to complaints from conservationists.

Those experts say the houbara's habitat, and perhaps the long-term survival of the species, which is already considered threatened, has been endangered by the ferocious pace of hunting.

That legal order ballooned into a minor political crisis last week when a senior Saudi prince and his entourage landed in Baluchistan, attracting unusually critical media attention and a legal battle that is scheduled to reach the country's Supreme Court in the coming days.

Anger among conservationists was heightened by the fact that the prince - Fahd bin Sultan bin Abdul Aziz, the governor of Tabuk province - along with his entourage had killed 2,100 houbara over 21 days during last year's hunt, according to an official report leaked to the Pakistani news media, or about 20 times more than his allocated quota.

Still, Fahd faced little censure when he touched down in Dalbandin, a dusty town near the Afghan border on Wednesday, to be welcomed by a delegation led by a Cabinet minister and including senior provincial officials.

His reception was a testament, critics say, to the money-driven magnetism of Saudi influence in Pakistan, and the walk-on role of the humble bustard in cementing that relationship.

"This is a clear admission of servility to the rich Arabs," said Pervez Hoodbhoy, a physics professor and longtime critic of what he calls "Saudization" in Pakistan. "They come here, hunt with impunity, and are given police protection in spite of the fact that they are violating local laws."

The dispute has focused attention on a practice that started in the 1970s, when intensive hunting in the Persian Gulf nearly rendered the houbara extinct there, and with it a cherished tradition considered the sport of kings.

As the houbara migrated from its breeding grounds in Siberia, newly enriched Persian Gulf royalty flocked to the deserts and fields of Pakistan, where they were welcomed with open arms by the country's leaders.

For the Pakistanis, the hunt has become an opportunity to earn money and engage in a form of soft diplomacy.

Although only 29 foreigners have been permitted houbara licenses this year, according to news media reports, they include some of the wealthiest and most powerful men in the Middle East, including the kings of Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, the Emir of Kuwait and the ruler of Dubai.

Their devotion to the houbara can seem mysterious to outsiders. The bird's meat is bitter and stringy, and its supposed aphrodisiac properties are not supported by scientific evidence.

But falcon hunting, and the pursuit of the houbara, occupy a romantic place in the Bedouin Arab culture.

In Pakistan, the lavish nature of the winter hunts, which take place largely away from public scrutiny, have become the stuff of legend. In the early '90s, it was reported, the Saudi king arrived in Pakistan with a retinue of dancing camels.

To curry favor with local communities, the Arab hunters have built roads, schools, madrassas and mosques, as well as several international-standard airstrips in unlikely places.

The only airport, at Rahim Yar Khan in the south of Punjab province, is named after Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahayan, the former ruler of Abu Dhabi.

In recent times the hunts have also played a role, albeit unwitting, in the United States' war against al-Qaida.

Osama bin Laden took refuge at a houbara hunting camp in western Afghanistan in the late 1990s, by several accounts, at a time when the CIA was plotting to assassinate him with a missile strike.

                                    The Houbara Bustard, which is an endangered species.

The journalist Steve Coll wrote in his Pulitzer Prize-winning book, "Ghost Wars," that U.S. officials declined to take the shot, fearing that the Arab sheik who was hosting Bin Laden would have been at risk of dying in the attack.

For several years starting in 2004, the CIA used an Arab-built airstrip at Shamsi, a barren desert valley in central Baluchistan, to launch drone strikes against Islamist militants in Pakistan's tribal belt.

When news of the American base stirred a scandal in Pakistan's Parliament in 2011, the country's Air Force chief sought to deflect blame onto the United Arab Emirates government.

The deserts around Dalbandin, where Fahd landed on Wednesday, were the site of Pakistan's first nuclear test explosion in 1998, and are an established way station for heroin smugglers and Taliban insurgents.

But the growing influence of Gulf Arab countries is not universally appreciated. Progressive Pakistanis bemoan their conservative influence on society, and the infusion of petrodollars for jihadi groups.

The hunts have also come under attack. In Baluchistan, where the houbara is the provincial symbol, some royal hunts had to be curtailed after Baluch separatist rebels opened fire on hunting parties.

Now the battle has shifted to the capital, Islamabad. The Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif, enjoys close relations with the rulers of Saudi Arabia, where he spent much of his exile between 2000 and 2007 - one reason, critics believe, for the indulgence shown toward Prince Fahd.

Sharif sent his federal planning minister, Ahsan Iqbal, to greet Prince Fahad in Dalbandin, as well as Baluchistan's minister for sports and culture.

"Not a single political leader reacted against illegal hunting by Arab princes," Asma Jahangir, a prominent human rights campaigner, posted on Twitter.

Although Sharif never confirmed it, Saudi Arabia is widely believed to have injected $1.5 billion into Sharif's government last year to help prop up the ailing economy. Last year in Islamabad, Sharif laid out a lavish welcome for the other Saudi hunting permit holder: Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, who last month was inaugurated as king.

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature has termed the houbara a vulnerable species, and India has banned the hunt. The Baluchistan court order in November cited Pakistan's obligation to international conservation treaties.

Hunt supporters say the houbara population has never been scientifically surveyed, and complain that the royal visits are being unnecessarily politicized.

"The foreigners are a blessing, not a problem," said Ernest Shams of Houbara Foundation International Pakistan, a charity that works with the United Arab Emirates government to boost houbara stocks. "They bring so much money into the country."

In a bid to overcome the court ban, the Baluchistan government has lodged an appeal in Pakistan's Supreme Court that is likely to be heard on Wednesday, officials in Islamabad said Friday.

Prince Fahd is currently at his hunting camp in Bar Tagzi, surrounded by his falcons and a contingent of security - and most definitely not hunting any houbara, according to Pakistani officials.

"They are visiting development sites," said Obaidullah Jan Babat, an adviser to the Baluchistan Chief Minister. "They are not hunting." - nytimes