At least 20 civilians and an American soldier have been killed in a suicide car bomb attack against a US convoy in eastern Afghanistan, officials said.

The attack happened near Jalalabad, the capital of the eastern Nangarhar province.

At least 55 others have been wounded and taken to hospital, officials said.

A large number of foreign and Afghan troops are battling the Taleban in the south and east of the country and are routinely targeted by the militants.

The attacker detonated an explosives-laden vehicle close to the convoy on the road between the town of Torkham, on the Pakistani border, and Jalalabad, news agency AFP reported.

The incident took place near a wholesale fresh fruit market and an animal market in an area often packed with people, it said.

“One American soldier was wounded in the bombing and he died during transportation,” AFP quoted Major John Redfield, a spokesman for the US-led coalition as saying.

There are currently 33,000 US troops in Afghanistan.

US President George W Bush has announced that about 4,500 more soldiers would be sent to Afghanistan early next year.


Sourav Ganguly (left) leads teammate Rahul Dravid onto the ground in his retirement game on the last day of the fourth and final Test match of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy 2008 series between India and Australia at the Vidarbha Cricket Association stadium, Jamtha in Nagpur on November Monday.

Is it just me, or do you get the feeling that the morning papers have been surprisingly unimaginative in celebrating a 2-0 series win over Australia -the first such instance since Clive Lloyd’s marauders blanked Australia 3-0 in the late 1980s?

In Cricinfo, George Binoy looks at Ishant Sharma’s man of the series-winning performance and points at a sea change that has gone largely unremarked: India no longer has to rely on spin to win matches at home. It’s a good time for change: Anil Kumble is the last in a line of great Indian spinners who was unplayable in home conditions; India’s discovery that it can use seam, swing and pace as potent weapons even in Indian conditions could not thus have come at a better time.

The real advantage, which should become increasingly apparent in time, is that this makes India a strong unit at home and abroad: the playing squad will almost invariably comprise of four seamers and two spinners, giving the captain the option of going in with a 3 seam, one spin combination, or two-seam one-spin, or even three seamers and two spinners or no spinner at all in a four-man attack, depending on the conditions and the nature of the opposition.

Ishant comes in for high praise from Steve Waugh in the Hindu:

Ricky Ponting is run out by a direct throw from Amit Mishra. The Australian captain made just eight.

However, the true superstar in the making is Ishant Sharma. India has unearthed a superb bowler in him. He has incredible accuracy, is fast, has height and is a quick learner. He reminds me of Glenn McGrath in his accuracy and of Jason Gillespie in his hand speed.

Cricketing transition is on Suresh Menon’s mind, as he points out that in MS Dhoni and Amit Mishra, we have found the inheritors of the legacy of Anil the captain and Anil the bowler.

Steve Waugh underlines Ponting’s day four captaincy with this pithy comment:

“Winning the Test match is what mattered. You have just spent six weeks in the subcontinent. You just don’t take your foot off the gas.”

Peter Roebuck is none too enamored of the tactics employed by the Indians in pursuit of the win:

But India stooped to conquer. Only 21.3 overs were bowled in the morning session, a ruse designed to slow the scoring and to bring bad light into play in the event of the Australians putting up a sustained fight.

Fieldsmen dawdled, the drinks break lasted seven minutes, balls were thrown over bowlers’ heads, leather-flingers trudged back to their marks, an inexperienced captain took an eternity to set his field. Deliveries came along about once a week – an acceptable rate from Woolworths but not the stuff of positive cricket. In short, India went to the very edge of the laws of the game. Supporters may argue Australia have long followed this strategy but new champions must adopt the strengths of the deposed, not their faults.


Ishant Sharma celebrates taking the wicket of Michael Clarke (22) on Monday.

If this is the best Test cricket has to offer, then it is not worth the bother. For all the weight it carries, it is still a game. Slow over-rates are a blight and an insult to the paying public. Hereafter, lunch must be taken not at a set time but once 30 overs have been bowled, with play to resume on schedule. That’ll hurry things along.

I am not personally a fan of this 30-overs-a-session-regardless theme that has cropped up in the wake of the Nagpur Test. To mandate 90 overs a day is not just fair but necessary, and while on that, Steve Waugh has a point when he says it is time to crack down on the practice of batsmen whistling up drinks at will, under the pretext of getting a new pair of gloves or whatever-if the argument is that slow over rates bore fans, then imagine how it feels for the spectator to sit in the blistering sun watching a bunch of layabouts slowly sipping energy drinks out in the middle, about 10 minutes before a scheduled break in play.

But to insist that a team bowls 30 overs each session is to deny captains the proper use of the new ball. There is an electricity to watching fast bowlers with the shiny ball steaming in off a long run and letting fly; the contest between new ball-wielding fast bowler and opening batsmen is part of cricket’s circadian rhythm and IMHO should not be disturbed. True, savvy captains will then manipulate the rules to bowl their overs slowly in, say, a situation where the opposition is likely to declare in course of the day-but that can be legislated against without creating an absolute session cap.

Greg Baum argues that by going micro in its thinking, Australia stifled its own imagination and with it, its chances.


Mathew Hayden plays a shot on the fifth and final day of the fourth and final Test on Monday.

Process is everything in modern sport. You don’t kick a goal, you go through the process. You don’t hit a cover drive for four, you go through the process. You don’t consciously aim to shape a seven-iron left to right around a tree and stop it on the green, pin-high, you go through the proper damned process.

The theory is that if you follow process correctly, the result will look after itself. It is valid only to the extent that sport can be seen as a mechanical exercise: press this button, pull that lever, get a result. No instinct, no emotion, nothing visceral.

But sport at its best is organic, not mechanical. It is an experience, not a process, powered and animated as much by mental dexterity as muscle memory. When the Australian cricket team was at its best, it followed process, but also hunches and inspiration.

In concentrating all its thinking on its incredibly slow over rate on Sunday night, Ricky Ponting’s team appeared to obsess itself with crossed Ts and properly dotted Is and neglected the essence of its mission in India. It failed where it was once infallible, in its imagination.

Gideon Haigh argues that a game of cricket needs to be judged in totality, and not on arbitrary statistical measures such as X overs per session or Y runs scored equals boredom. An extended clip:

Saturday’s first session contained only 46 runs, but once the Indian tactics and Australian response were clear, each ball was loaded. A wicket or two would change everything. On the stroke of lunch, a reverse-swinging yorker from a toiling fast bowler in the eighth over of a persevering spell; an hour later, an acrobatic save and return by a tyro on his Test debut.

For the rest of the afternoon Australia’s batsmen were like all the king’s horses and men after Humpty-Dumpty’s fall.

For the media to complain about the entertainment value on the basis of the runs scored was like a complaint against Picasso for using too few brush-strokes.

It betrays an unconscious imbibing of the crude assumptions behind Twenty20 : that cricket is only exciting when fours and sixes flow in endless profusion, and that people are too dumb to know better.

Sunday’s final session turned the Test upside down, then inside out. Australia had chipped away at India in the afternoon and retrieved the initiative.


Amit Mishra (right) celebrates with teammate Harbhajan Singh after taking the wicket of Brad Haddin. The spin duo spun a web of deceit to skittle the Australian batting.

This they proceeded to hand back by referencing something beyond the boundary – the playing conditions of the International Cricket Council , which hardly anyone need trouble to consult, but a small elite must know.

Onlookers felt the pressure escape like steam from a leaking valve. We were also granted an insight into the extraneous factors that play on a captain’s mind, which require from him instant decisions, and expose him to blame and ridicule.

The criticism now came from a quite different quadrant – the notion that Test cricket is a matter of national honour and sporting pride; that one must risk defeat, or at least be prepared to incur expense, in order to win.

Here is a tension. We are anxious that Tests justify themselves as spectacle, but can’t abandon the idea that more is at stake. It is a neurosis rooted in Twenty20’s intimidating popularity, and Test cricket’s abiding hold on our imaginations. In fact this Border-Gavaskar Trophy has given great value. Two exquisitely-matched teams with a lot of history and good cause to distrust one another have shown a ton of courage, skill and even civility.

Simon Barnes reframes the question: Are crowds or the lack thereof the true measure of the popularity of Test cricket?


Jason Krejza (4) is stumped by MS Dhoni off the bowling of Amit Mishra on Monday.

The only thing that has marred the series has been the absence of anyone watching it at the grounds. These fraught matches, the frenzied appeals, the furious blows, the stupendous efforts have taken place against an eerie silence, the ball rocketing in among empty seats and the occasional abandoned bottles of the Indian soft drink Thums-Up.

It is like the tree that falls in the deserted forest: does it make any sound at all if there is no one there to hear it? I have no idea, that’s the point of the question. The question of the primacy of Test cricket, then, is nothing to do with public demand. It is, as much as anything, a question of player demand.

Most players are agreed that the complexity and infinite variability of Test-match cricket make it the highest form of the game. It’s just that fewer spectators are interested in the higher form of the game, at least as a paying spectacle. The primacy of Test cricket is being maintained, but it is for reasons other than spectacle or money.

Is it legitimate to run a professional sport for the pursuit of excellence? Is this pursuit more important than the pursuit of money? Is player satisfaction more important than the gratification of your clients? Do the beliefs of your core constituency matter more than the fleeting thrills of the floating voters? After England have played the one-day matches in India, they will play a Test “series” – two matches – which will be be much richer and more satisfying. It will also be poorly attended.

And that larger thought is the perfect grace note to end the Nagpur segment of this round-up with, and to move on to another: the exit of Sourav Ganguly .


Sourav Ganguly waves as teammates carry him on their shoulders as they give him a send-off in his final Test.

The front page of The Telegraph yesterday that goes well with this Soumya Bhattacharya piece on the ultimate Bengali icon; an extended interview in Outlook magazine; a collection of the best Ganguly articles published on Cricinfo; a rare VVS Laxman article celebrating his mate, circa 2004; and a post from Great Bong I remember from way back, that to my mind underlined the schism Sourav’s arrival caused in India’s cricket following public and more importantly, the media, which was divided into those who dared to criticize the player and captain, and those who would brook no criticism and who, at the slightest attempt to query, would launch into a defense based on cultural tropes coupled with a series of ad hominem attacks on the critic. To my mind, that was the essential irony of Sourav’s cricketing career: On the cricket field and in the dressing room, he was in his prime the unifier India badly needed; off the field, within the media and the public, he was the divisive figure. The former was entirely his doing; the latter is in no way his fault.

I was tempted to write an addendum to this post. It is the fashion to rate captains on the basis of their win-loss record, but IMHO that is to take a narrow view of captaincy. MSD has just become the first Indian captain to win three straight Tests; add that to his ODI and T20 wins, does that make him our best captain ever? Not by a long chalk, not yet at all events.

The statistical measurement ignores the ‘leadership’ aspect of captaincy-and IMHO that is the most important-and lasting-attribute. A captain can have a good record, but the best of records will be subsequently broken by others. To my mind, the truly great captains bring an intangible to not just their teams, but to their country’s cricketing mindset-something they alone are uniquely fitted to provide; something that gets enshrined in the dressing room, and is emulated, and even built on, by their successors.


Ganguly and captain Dhoni share a light moment after the win over Australia.

In that sense, Sourav Ganguly’s contribution was way more than those of other Indian captains I’ve followed, dating all the way back to Ajit Wadekar and including Azhar, Sachin, Rahul and Anil.

I could elaborate on that theme-but I had done a piece on this aspect when it was most fresh, and I’d rather leave you with that one, than recreate it all over again.

Again north Indian shows they are the best. Mahendra Singh Dhoni (Jharkhand) again took india on winning path.
Now its time to kick out Sachin Tendulkar.
mishara
Amit Mishra followed up a stunning run out with three wickets in India’s 172-run triumph over Australia © AFP

India 441 (Tendulkar 109, Ganguly 85, Sehwag 66, Laxman 64, Dhoni 56, Krejza 8-215) and 295 (Sehwag 92, Dhoni 55, Harbhajan 52, Watson 4-42, Krejza 4-143) beat Australia 355 (Katich 102, Hussey 90) and 209 (Hayden 77, Harbhajan 4-64, Mishra 3-27 ) by 172 runs

That it happened in the same city where Australia famously conquered the final frontier four years ago was poignant. India regained the coveted Border-Gavaskar trophy, their first series win over Australia in eight years, after they bowled Australia out for 209 to win by 172 runs. It was a dramatic day, with an energetic India following up three early wickets with dropped catches to allow Matthew Hayden score a pugnacious 77 and give Australia a whiff of victory. India’s spinners held their nerve, however, and relentlessly plugged away with precision and hostility to snuff out the seven wickets required to regain the trophy squandered in 2004. India confidently stepped into a new era with their captain, Mahendra Singh Dhoni, winning his third Test in a row.

Lunch Australia 355 and 111 for 3 (Hayden 46*, Hussey 14*) need another 271 runs to beat India 441 and 295

At the end of a schizophrenic session, India maintained their authority over the final Test, taking three wickets in the first two hours on day five to leave Australia at 111 for 3. After a good catch to dismiss Simon Katich and a brilliant run out by Amit Mishra to nail Ricky Ponting, India’s butterfingered fielders dropped Matthew Hayden twice and misfielded with sloppy regularity. Hayden rode his luck to finish the session on 46, helping Australia score 98 at 4.56 an over in the session. The intent was clear, despite the early wickets, but Australia still face a tough ask to square the Border-Gavaskar trophy.

India began the day well. Katich had played the horizontal shot a couple times, once connecting with a swing to the deep square-leg boundary, but trying to work a short ball across to the on side once too often, he skied Ishant Sharma into orbit. Mahendra Singh Dhoni didn’t for a second take his eyes off the swirling ball – 29 for 1.

Zaheer Khan produced an edge from the first delivery bowled to Ponting, squared up on the back foot, but the ball didn’t carry to Rahul Dravid at first slip. One classy on-drive later, Ponting, was wastefully run out for four. He dabbed and set off for an extremely ambitious single and Mishra, screaming in from mid-off, threw down the stumps with a brilliant underarm pick-up and fling – 37 for 2.

Ishant couldn’t believe Michael Clarke wasn’t given lbw by the umpire Billy Bowden in the next over when the ball incriminatingly thudded into his left pad – replays showed it would have clipped leg stump – while Zaheer grit his teeth when the batsman twice edged wide of second slip in three balls. Hayden also chopped through the slips, looking to score off almost every delivery against the new ball. But India missed a big opportunity when he was on 30. Harbhajan Singh came in after 12 overs and cursed under his breath when Dhoni dropped a regulation edge as Hayden went to cut the second ball for four as well.

The dismissal of Clarke for 22, nibbling at a lovely delivery after Ishant plugged away on an exemplary length, seemed to have nailed it decisively India’s way at 82 for 3. Then Dravid, at slip, dropped Hayden on 36 when the batsman went for another powerful reverse-sweep. To add to the mess, needless overthrows and misfields in the circle allowed Australia easy runs as they set about chasing a big score.
=================

India crushed Australia by 172 runs to win the fourth and final Test and regain the Border-Gavaskar trophy, in Nagpur on Monday.

Harbhajan Singh claimed four wickets for 64 runs, while Amit Mishra took three for 27, as Australia, chasing a record 382 for victory, were dismissed for 209 in 50.2 overs, handing India a 2-0 series triumph.
My Son, Sourav
Sourav’s last Test innings

It was an emotional moment for Indian cricket as its most successful captain Sourav Ganguly bid farewell to the international game. The left-hander, who scored 324 in the series, at an average of 54, was even handed charge of the team for a while, after Australia had lost nine wickets.

Gautam Gambhir , who missed the match because of a ban, finished as the top scorer from either side with 463 runs in six innings at 77.16. Fast bowler Ishant Sharma, later named man of the series, and Harbhajan Singh emerged the top wicket-takers with a haul of 15 wickets each. Jason krejza was adjudged man of the match.

India had won the second Test in Mohali by 320 runs, while the first Test and the third were drawn.

Morning session: (98 runs, 21.3 overs, 3 wickets)

Defending a target of 382, India’s plan was clear: set a defensive field and bowl wide outside the off-stump. With a 1-0 lead one would not blame them for doing so. It forced the Australian batsmen to come up with something out of the ordinary, something they have not been accustomed to over the years.

Simon Katich came out firing and swung at a delivery outside the off-stump to the leg side boundary in the fourth over of the innings. However, that was followed by a few moments of sheer madness as the two Aussie openers fished at everything wide and were lucky not to edge a few of those.

Katich’s agony ended on 16 when he tried another wild swipe across the line off Ishant but holed it on the off-side and wicketkeeper Mahendra Singh Dhoni neatly pouched it.

Ricky Ponting survived a close chance when his edge off Zaheer fell short of Rahul Dravid at first slip. But five balls later the Aussie captain was run out for 8 at the non-striker’s end by a direct hit from Amit Mishra at mid-off.

Michael Clarke survived a confident leg before wicket appeal off the third ball he faced, from Ishant. Closer looks at replays indicated that he was trapped in front and lucky to be given not out.

Clarke, who came in with a runner, then survived two more chances when his edges flew just wide off slips in the boundary in the 11th over of the innings, bowled by Zaheer.

Only 10.3 overs were bowled in the first hour of play, with Australia scoring 52 runs and losing two wickets. It was clear India were in no rush to bowl their overs just like Australia did the day before.

Harbhajan Singh came into the attack in the 13th over and was smashed for a boundary by Hayden. The very next ball Hayden, on 30, tried another cut short but the straight forward edge was dropped by Dhoni.

Australia were surely having a dash at the target with Hayden even attempting a reverse sweep off Harbhajan that fetched him a boundary. But their hopes suffered a setback when Ishant claimed the big wicket of Clarke for 22, caught behind by Dhoni, as Australia were reduced to 82 for three.

Hayden, on 35, attempted another reverse sweep off Harbhajan but this time hit it straight to Dravid, at first slip, who failed to hold on to a sharp chance.

At lunch on the final day, Australia were 111 for 3 in 23 overs. Hayden (46 not out) and Hussey (14 not out) are looking to attack at every opportunity, but the target seems a huge mountain to climb.

India’s over-rate, as expected, was pathetic at around 10 overs per hour, but, as Dhoni said on Sunday, their first aim is winning the series, and for that even a draw would do.

By the look of things, they are just playing for that.

Post-lunch session: (98 runs, 7 wickets, 27.2 overs)

Hayden completed his half-century in the first over after lunch when he thumped Sehwag through mid-wicket for a boundary. The left-hander then launched into Harbhajan in the 27th over with two powerfully swept boundaries and followed it up with a big six off Sehwag in the following over.

35 runs had come off the first five overs after lunch, as Australia tried to step up a gear. Immediately Dhoni reacted and his bowlers bowled negative lines and fielders were all back on the boundary.

Mishra was introduced into the attack and the young leg-spinner struck in his very first over. He got one to bounce from the rough, which Hussey could only fend to Dravid at first slip for 19.

In the following over, Harbhajan claimed the big wicket of Hayden for 77. The left-hander walked across his stumps to play on the leg-side but missed the shot and was trapped plumb in front. He hit eight boundaries and a six in his 93-ball knock and his dismissal took India closer to victory.

Brad Haddin also perished cheaply, caught at mid-on by Tendulkar off Mishra for 4. Incidentally, that catch saw Tendulkar achieve another landmark as he completed 100 catches in Test cricket.

Whatever hopes Australia had of at least saving the match were all dashed by their collapse after lunch which saw them lose three wickets for 11 runs in the space of four overs.

Shane Watson prodded around for a while before he was caught behind off Harbhajan for 9.

Jason Krejza could not do much damage with the bat as he was stumped off Mishra for 4, trying a huge shot down the ground.

Interestingly, in a rare goodwill gesture, Dhoni gave Ganguly the perfect farewell by allowing him to lead the team at the fall of the ninth Australian wicket. It brought back memories of the Ganguly of yore as he moved around his fielders and chatted with the bowlers while Dhoni stood and watched for a few overs.

Mitchell Johnson was the final dismissal, trapped leg before wicket by Harbhajan for 11. Australia were out for 209, giving India a huge 172-run victory.

It ensured India their first series win against Australia since 2001.

Defensive tactics or not, Australia were comprehensively outplayed in this Test and had no answers to Dhoni’s quick thinking.

Harbhajan was the star performer for India with the ball as he ended with four for 64 in 18.2 overs, while Mishra claimed three for 27.

Immediately after the victory, Ganguly was chaired to the pavilion by his team mates. Even Anil Kumble and Gautam Gambhir joined in the celebrations.

================
saurabh
Chandidas Ganguly is the proud owner of one of Asia’s best printing business houses, but most Indians know him as the father of cricketer Sourav ‘Dada’ Ganguly, who retired from the game today.

We caught up with the senior Ganguly at his Behala home in Kolkata a few hours after his son missed a century by 15 runs. Sourav’s father had yet to get over the fact that Dada had missed a ton. “But then, cricket is a one-ball game,” he said.

“I am so proud of him. He has had such a wonderful career.”

Last match
saurabh

Sourav Ganguly did a Don Bradman when he fell for a duck in his final Test innings on Day 4 of the fourth and final Test against Australia in Nagpur on Sunday.
The left-hand batsman, who will retire after the ongoing Test, walked out to a standing ovation from the crowd and the Australians in the middle, but returned immediately after being caught and bowled by Jason Krejza off the first ball he faced.

==============
Final scorecard

Played at
Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium, Jamtha, Nagpur, on 6,7,8,9,10 November 2008 (5-day match)

Result India won by 172 runs

India 1st innings R M B 4s 6s SR
V Sehwag b Krejza 66 114 69 9 1 95.65
M Vijay c wicketkeeperHaddin b Watson 33 88 53 2 0 62.26
R Dravid c Katich b Krejza 0 4 2 0 0 0.00
SR Tendulkar lbw b Johnson 109 274 188 12 0 57.97
VVS Laxman c wicketkeeperHaddin b Krejza 64 193 141 5 0 45.39
SC Ganguly c Clarke b Krejza 85 220 153 8 1 55.55
captainwicketkeeper MS Dhoni b Krejza 56 158 97 4 0 57.73
Harbhajan Singh not out 18 40 24 4 0 75.00
Z Khan b Krejza 1 25 16 0 0 6.25
A Mishra b Krejza 0 1 1 0 0 0.00
I Sharma c Katich b Krejza 0 9 7 0 0 0.00
    Extras (b 4, lb 2, w 1, nb 2) 9
    Total (all out; 124.5 overs; 568 mins) 441 (3.53 runs per over)
Fall of wickets1-98 (Vijay, 17.5 ov), 2-99 (Dravid, 18.4 ov), 3-116 (Sehwag, 22.3 ov), 4-262 (Laxman, 68.4 ov), 5-303 (Tendulkar, 82.5 ov), 6-422 (Dhoni, 116.4 ov), 7-423 (Ganguly, 116.6 ov), 8-437 (Khan, 122.3 ov), 9-437 (Mishra, 122.4 ov), 10-441 (Sharma, 124.5 ov)
 Bowling O M R W Econ
 B Lee 16 2 62 0 3.87 (2nb, 1w)
 MG Johnson 32 11 84 1 2.62
 SR Watson 20 5 42 1 2.10
 JJ Krejza 43.5 1 215 8 4.90
 CL White 10 1 24 0 2.40
 SM Katich 3 0 8 0 2.66
Australia 1st innings R M B 4s 6s SR
ML Hayden run out (Vijay) 16 30 26 3 0 61.53
SM Katich lbw b Khan 102 304 189 9 0 53.96
captain RT Ponting b Harbhajan Singh 24 45 41 3 0 58.53
MEK Hussey run out (Vijay/wicketkeeperDhoni) 90 315 229 8 0 39.30
MJ Clarke c wicketkeeperDhoni b Sharma 8 58 44 1 0 18.18
SR Watson b Harbhajan Singh 2 36 22 0 0 9.09
wicketkeeper BJ Haddin c Dravid b Mishra 28 94 80 2 0 35.00
CL White c Sehwag b Harbhajan Singh 46 162 133 4 0 34.58
JJ Krejza lbw b Sharma 5 40 21 0 0 23.80
MG Johnson c Khan b Mishra 5 41 25 0 0 20.00
B Lee not out 1 5 4 0 0 25.00
    Extras (b 12, lb 3, w 2, nb 6, pen 5) 28
    Total (all out; 134.4 overs; 570 mins) 355 (2.63 runs per over)
Fall of wickets1-32 (Hayden, 6.5 ov), 2-74 (Ponting, 17.1 ov), 3-229 (Katich, 70.6 ov), 4-255 (Clarke, 84.4 ov), 5-265 (Hussey, 89.5 ov), 6-266 (Watson, 91.4 ov), 7-318 (Haddin, 115.5 ov), 8-333 (Krejza, 126.1 ov), 9-352 (White, 133.2 ov), 10-355 (Johnson, 134.4 ov)
 Bowling O M R W Econ
 Z Khan 28 8 68 1 2.42
 Harbhajan Singh 37 7 94 3 2.54
 I Sharma 26 8 64 2 2.46 (4nb, 2w)
 A Mishra 23.4 5 58 2 2.45 (2nb)
 V Sehwag 18 2 38 0 2.11
 SR Tendulkar 2 0 13 0 6.50
India 2nd innings R M B 4s 6s SR
V Sehwag c wicketkeeperHaddin b Lee 92 163 107 10 1 85.98
M Vijay lbw b Watson 41 128 81 5 0 50.61
R Dravid c wicketkeeperHaddin b Watson 3 20 17 0 0 17.64
SR Tendulkar run out (White/wicketkeeperHaddin) 12 90 55 1 0 21.81
VVS Laxman b Krejza 4 62 34 0 0 11.76
SC Ganguly c & b Krejza 0 1 1 0 0 0.00
captainwicketkeeper MS Dhoni c Hussey b Krejza 55 117 81 4 0 67.90
Harbhajan Singh b Watson 52 121 94 5 0 55.31
Z Khan c wicketkeeperHaddin b Krejza 6 10 11 1 0 54.54
A Mishra b Watson 7 14 8 1 0 87.50
I Sharma not out 1 9 9 0 0 11.11
    Extras (b 6, lb 3, w 6, nb 2, pen 5) 22
    Total (all out; 82.4 overs; 373 mins) 295 (3.56 runs per over)
Fall of wickets1-116 (Vijay, 28.2 ov), 2-132 (Dravid, 32.5 ov), 3-142 (Sehwag, 35.1 ov), 4-163 (Laxman, 47.1 ov), 5-163 (Ganguly, 47.2 ov), 6-166 (Tendulkar, 49.5 ov), 7-274 (Dhoni, 77.1 ov), 8-286 (Khan, 79.2 ov), 9-288 (Harbhajan Singh, 80.1 ov), 10-295 (Mishra, 82.4 ov)
 Bowling O M R W Econ
 MG Johnson 14 4 22 0 1.57
 B Lee 10 3 27 1 2.70 (2nb)
 JJ Krejza 31 3 143 4 4.61
 SR Watson 15.4 2 42 4 2.68 (1w)
 CL White 2 0 15 0 7.50 (1w)
 MEK Hussey 4 2 3 0 0.75
 MJ Clarke 6 1 29 0 4.83
Australia 2nd innings (target: 382 runs) R B 4s 6s SR
ML Hayden lbw b Harbhajan Singh 77 93 8 1 82.79
SM Katich c wicketkeeperDhoni b Sharma 16 16 3 0 100.00
captain RT Ponting run out (Mishra) 8 6 2 0 133.33
MJ Clarke c wicketkeeperDhoni b Sharma 22 30 3 0 73.33
MEK Hussey c Dravid b Mishra 19 30 2 0 63.33
SR Watson c wicketkeeperDhoni b Harbhajan Singh 9 34 0 0 26.47
wicketkeeper BJ Haddin c Tendulkar b Mishra 4 10 0 0 40.00
CL White not out 26 49 3 0 53.06
JJ Krejza st wicketkeeperDhoni b Mishra 4 17 0 0 23.52
B Lee c Vijay b Harbhajan Singh 0 3 0 0 0.00
MG Johnson lbw b Harbhajan Singh 11 16 1 0 68.75
    Extras (b 6, lb 1, w 4, nb 2) 13
    Total (all out; 50.2 overs) 209 (4.15 runs per over)
Fall of wickets1-29 (Katich, 5.4 ov), 2-37 (Ponting, 6.6 ov), 3-82 (Clarke, 15.5 ov), 4-150 (Hussey, 28.4 ov), 5-154 (Hayden, 29.2 ov), 6-161 (Haddin, 32.4 ov), 7-178 (Watson, 38.4 ov), 8-190 (Krejza, 43.5 ov), 9-191 (Lee, 44.4 ov), 10-209 (Johnson, 50.2 ov)
 Bowling O M R W Econ
 Z Khan 8 0 57 0 7.12 (2w)
 I Sharma 9 0 31 2 3.44 (1nb, 1w)
 Harbhajan Singh 18.2 2 64 4 3.49 (1w)
 V Sehwag 4 0 23 0 5.75
 A Mishra 11 2 27 3 2.45 (1nb)

Nearly 80 kg of deadly Research Development Explosive was used in the October 30 serial blasts in Guwahati alone, officials said on Monday as investigators worked on sketches of the suspects.

Forensic officials claimed that nearly 80 kg of RDX was used in the three Maruti cars planted at the three blast sites in Guwahati. The blasts that took place in several parts of the state claimed over 80 lives.

“Such large quantity of RDX were never used to carry out explosions in Assam before as Ammonium Nitrate, with
plasticers as propellants and Programmable Time Devices were usually used to carry out a blast,” said Padmapani, the Joint Director in the Forensic Science Laboratory in Guwahati.

Each of the cars was laden with 25 to 30 kgs of RDX to carry out the blasts and a total of 75 to 80 kgs was used to cause maximum damage, he said.

How can the 80 Kg of RDX be transported to the blast site without the knowledge of BSF, who is guarding India Bangladesh border ? Is our border so porous ? The Congress Govt in Centre and in Assam is turning a blind eye to illegal Bangladeshis. It is not long before Assam becomes a part of Bangladesh at this rate. Already Harkat Ul Jehadi Islami is wanting merger of lower Assam with Bangladesh. All our politicians are cowards, who talk big , but are not proactive on national security.

Twelve alleged members of the terror outfit Indian Mujahideen, arrested in connection with bomb blasts across the country since 2005, have been remanded to judicial custody till November 17 by a special Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act court in Mumbai.

‘Human catastrophe’ grips Congo

Mourners cry near the bodies of two women killed during violence in Goma, 30 October, 2008

Killings, rapes and looting have been reported around Goma


Fierce fighting between government and rebel forces in the Democratic Republic of Congo has caused a humanitarian catastrophe, the Red Cross says.

Diplomatic efforts are under way to end the crisis, which has threatened to spill over into neighbouring Rwanda.

A tense ceasefire is holding in the eastern city of Goma, where tens of thousands fled as rebels advanced.

But rebel leader Gen Laurent Nkunda has threatened to take the city unless UN peacekeepers guarantee the ceasefire.

Killings and rapes have been reported in Goma and aid has not been reaching the displaced.





Oxfam and other leading international aid agencies have suspended operations in the city, where a main hospital as well as numerous businesses and homes have been looted.

The Red Cross’s Michael Khambatta told the BBC the priority now was providing the vast numbers of civilians forced from their homes with food, medical aid, shelter and some sort of security.

Overstretched peacekeepers

After several days of fighting, Gen Nkunda declared the ceasefire on late on Wednesday, and his Tutsi forces are positioned some nine miles (15km) from Goma – the provincial capital of North Kivu.


While thousands have sought refuge in Goma, many thousands more have fled into the forests, where the militias cannot find them, and the aid agencies cannot help them

Peter Greste
DR Congo-Rwanda border

He said he was opening a “humanitarian corridor” so aid could reach the thousands of people trapped between his forces and UN soldiers backing up government troops in the city.

Much of the looting has been blamed on retreating Congolese troops.

The UN is considering redeploying some of its 17,000-strong force in DR Congo – the world’s largest – to bolster around 5,000 peacekeepers in the city.

As the tense ceasefire held early on Friday, a multi-pronged diplomatic effort was under way to resolve the crisis.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon sent envoys to both DR Congo and Rwanda as each accused the other of launching cross-border incursions.

The African Union is to hold crisis talks on Friday and EU efforts have been ongoing to bring Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Congolese President Joseph Kabila together.

The EU is also to discuss sending troops to the area to aid the humanitarian effort.

Fleeing for the forests

Meanwhile, US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer has held talks with Mr Kabila in DR Congo’s capital, Kinshasa.

Congolese soldier with refugee women in Goma - 30/10/2008

Many in DR Congo say Rwanda supports Gen Nkunda’s forces – something Rwanda denies.

In the past two months, more than 200,000 people have been driven from their homes across eastern DR Congo.

While thousands have sought refuge in Goma, many thousands more have fled into the forests, where the militias cannot find them, and the aid agencies cannot help them.

Gen Nkunda has told the BBC his goal was to protect the Tutsi community from attack by Rwandan Hutu rebels, some of whom are accused of taking part in the country’s 1994 genocide.

Correspondents say a race for the area’s mineral wealth is fuelling the conflict as much as ethnic enmities.

There are growing concerns for the welfare of 39 wildlife rangers who were forced to flee into dense forest after their headquarters in eastern DR Congo were stormed by rebels.


Map

A Wednesday. Will the world survive it?


Image: A woman passes behind layers of the world’s largest superconducting solenoid magnet, one of the experiments preparing to take data at European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)’s Large Hadron Collider particule accelerator.

It is one of the biggest and most controversial experiments to be carried out in recent times. On September 10, a machine costing a staggering $7.75 billion (Rs 31,000 crore) will be fired up to recapture conditions not seen since the birth of the universe almost 14 billion years ago.

The machine, located at CERN, a Geneva-based nuclear research lab, will carry on the experiment inside a 27-km tunnel deep beneath the French-Swiss border.

A Wednesday. Will the world survive it?


Image: A woman passes behind layers of the world’s largest superconducting solenoid magnet, one of the experiments preparing to take data at European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)’s Large Hadron Collider particule accelerator.

It is one of the biggest and most controversial experiments to be carried out in recent times. On September 10, a machine costing a staggering $7.75 billion (Rs 31,000 crore) will be fired up to recapture conditions not seen since the birth of the universe almost 14 billion years ago.

The machine, located at CERN, a Geneva-based nuclear research lab, will carry on the experiment inside a 27-km tunnel deep beneath the French-Swiss border.

8 Indians killed when Pakistan opens firing on Kashmir border. And hence some militents inters in the the Indian border to kill innocent civilians.

Antony said: “The border firing and attempts of infiltration are a matter of concern. Our forces are doing their best to prevent these incidents. By and large, they are able to control the situation. Our forces are ready to meet any challenges in the border. So there is no cause of worry”.

so Indians should sits on holding hands. When large number of causualty is going down then Antony (government) will take strong decision.