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  • Ishant Sharma, three Sri Lankans charged for misconduct

    Ishant Sharma, who was fined 65 percent of his match fees for giving send-offs to Lahiru Thirimanne and Dinesh Chandimal in the second test, landed in trouble with the Sri Lankans in the final contest as well.

    Thirimanne, Chandimal and paceman Dhammika Prasad, who had an animated altercation with Ishant on Monday, have also been charged with code of conduct breaches, the ICC said.

    “Details to be announced after the conclusion of the Test,” the governing body said on Twitter.

    Tempers flared on Tuesday when Ishant, after taking a single and running past Prasad, was seen smacking his own head, as if daring the bowler to try and bounce him.

    Chandimal joined from the slip, brushing shoulders with Ishant.

    At the end of India’s second innings, Ishant ran towards the Indian dressing room to change and get ready to bowl and Prasad was also seen sprinting behind the Indian, as if trying to catch up with him.

    Ishant gave animated send-offs to Upul Tharanga and broke into wild celebration after Chandimal’s dismissal.

    The umpires have spoken to both captains and the players, especially Ishant, face stringent punishment.

  • Pakistan's inflation rate falls to 1.72 percent in August

    It was the lowest year-on-year inflation in over 12 years.

    “Pakistan’s inflation has been relatively low in the past year, mainly due to lower electricity and international oil prices,” said Chief Statistician Asif Bajwa.

    On a month-on-month basis, prices fell by 0.24 percent in August from July.

    The average annual inflation rate for July-August 2015-16 over July-August 2014-15 was 1.76 percent.

  • Anti-Muslim Buddhist group moves toward Myanmar's mainstream

    It is from here, at an unremarkable roadside monastery just outside the city of Yangon, that the abbot is propelling the radical Buddhist group he co-founded into the mainstream of Myanmar’s politics.

    Four bills drafted by his Committee for the Protection of Race and Religion, better known as Ma Ba Tha, have been passed by parliament and signed into law. Critics say the new laws effectively legalise discrimination against women and the country’s minority Muslims.

    Along with political clout, Ma Ba Tha is also ratcheting up its public image ahead of elections in November that will be the first free vote in Myanmar in the last 25 years. The radical Buddhist group has regular programming on one of the country’s most popular satellite TV channels and has launched a magazine.

    Ashin Tilawkar Biwonsa (C), 77, Ma Ba Tha’s founder and chairman, talks during a meeting at Ma Ba Tha’s head office in Yangon onAugust 26, 2015.

     

    “There should be lawmakers in parliament who are reliable for the country,” Ashin Tilawkar Biwonsa said in an interview. “There might be some people, especially Muslims, who are working on weakening Buddhism, so we need strong people for our religion.”

    Ma Ba Tha has shown no signs of contesting elections itself but says it will “remind” the public of candidates who opposed its four laws. These include Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and her opposition National League for Democracy (NLD), which is going head to head with conservatives and military figures in the polls.

    Established two years ago, Ma Ba Tha sprang from the “969” movement, a loose collection of monks linked to a wave of violence against the country’s Muslim minority in 2012 and 2013.

    Staff members work at Ma Ba Tha’s head office in Yangon

    Senior Ma Ba Tha officials said the 969 movement had raised awareness about threats to Buddhism from a burgeoning Muslim population, but was disorganised and lacked leadership.

    “It was (concerned with) only the symbols of Buddhism,” said Ashin Tilawkar Biwonsa.

    Now, a growing number of professionals are offering their expertise on everything from media relations to legislation, helping to shape Ma Ba Tha into a slick organisation with popular support and real political clout.

    One such expert is Aye Paing, who spent two decades toiling as a lawyer in Myanmar’s musty courtrooms before finding a dramatic new use for his legal skills.

    Aye Paing and a team of Ma Ba Tha-linked lawyers drafted the protection of race and religion bills, the last of which was signed by President Thein Sein on Monday.

    Lawyers, economists, IT experts and other professionals had made Ma Ba Tha “very efficient, systematic and legal” said Aye Paing, 52, who wears a black “taik pone”, a short collarless jacket worn over a shirt that is common among Myanmar’s legal professionals.

    “We discuss, give advice and share our visions,” he said.

    INTERNATIONAL VISITORS

    In another sign of its growing influence, foreign diplomats regularly visit the group’s monastery headquarters.

    One was U.S. ambassador Derek Mitchell, who went there twice in May to discuss “the need for increased interfaith dialogue” and “the importance of keeping religion out of politics”, according to a statement from the U.S. embassy in Yangon.

    Myanmar’s revered and influential monks led many pro-democracy protests during nearly half a century of military rule in the Buddhist-majority nation. But after a quasi-civilian, reformist government took power in 2011, some outspoken monks claimed Islam was eclipsing Buddhism and weakening the country.

    A copy of Aung Zay Yathu, a weekly promoting nationalism published by Ma Ba Tha, is seen at the head office of the Buddhist group, in Yangon.

    Now, Ashin Tilawkar Biwonsa says Ma Ba Tha has 250 offices nationwide. He couldn’t estimate how many supporters it has, but in June more than 1,500 people attended the group’s annual conference in Yangon.

    Ma Ba Tha recently struck a deal with Myanmar’s popular satellite television provider, SkyNet, to broadcast its sermons.

    The broadcasts would help the public “know the truth” about Ma Ba Tha, said Khine Khine Tun, 25, an articulate former teacher and interpreter who heads the group’s international relations department.

    Through media training courses, she said, she has learnt to speak to visitors with a smile, confounding expectations of the abrasive and sometimes confrontational style for which the group is known.

    The television deal bolsters an information campaign that already includes a bi-monthly magazine with a circulation of 50,000 that contains sermons delivered by Ma Ba Tha monks nationwide.

    RACE AND RELIGION

    In contrast to long-delayed legislation on banking, mining and property, the Ma Ba Tha-backed “race and religion” bills moved swiftly through parliament.

    One bill requires some women to wait at least three years between pregnancies. Another requires Buddhist women to seek official permission before marrying a non-Buddhist man.

    This will stop Muslim men “torturing and forcing (Buddhist women) to change religion,” Ashin Tilawkar Biwonsa said.

    Suu Kyi and her NLD opposed the laws. But government officials and politicians rarely criticise Ma Ba Tha, because they either sympathise with the group’s views or fear upsetting its many supporters during an election year.

    “They are afraid of Ma Ba Tha,” said May Sabi Phyu, the director of the Gender Equality Network, a women’s empowerment group that opposed the bills.

    Any plans to sway voters would be “violating the law,” said NLD spokesman Nyan Win, adding: “It’s the government’s responsibility to control and stop them.” – Reuters

  • Morgan leads England to dramatic win over Australia

    Captain Eoin Morgan smashed a superb 74 off 39 deliveries to lift the home team to 182 for five and despite a brilliant 90 by Australia skipper Steve Smith, the touring side fell just short of their target.

    “It was brilliant, a great game of cricket to win,” Morgan told Sky Sports. “You can learn a lot from playing in close games against top opposition.”

    He shared a third-wicket stand of 135 with Moeen Ali (72 not out) after Smith had won the toss and England openers Alex Hales and Jason Roy fell cheaply.

    Morgan struck seven sixes and three fours and Moeen hit three sixes and six fours to put England on course for a total in excess of 200.

    But quick bowlers Pat Cummins and Mitchell Starc slowed down the run-rate in the closing overs to keep Australia in the game.

    Australia openers David Warner and Shane Watson then failed but Smith and Glenn Maxwell put together a fluent partnership.

    Maxwell was brilliantly caught by Ben Stokes off man-of-the-match Moeen for 44, the all-rounder running round from long-on to end a third-wicket stand of 112.

    “Ben Stokes’ catch changed the momentum of the game because the wicket meant it was difficult for a new batsman to come in and score quickly,” Morgan said.

    Smith made his 90 off 53 balls, including four sixes, but he was caught by Sam Billings off David Willey in the 19th over and Stokes conceded just six runs off the last six balls to leave Australia stranded on 177 for eight.

    “It was impressive the way Ben Stokes bowled that final over and delivered his skills after just finishing a five-game test series,” Morgan said.

    “He stuck his chest out and bowled very well.”

    Smith was left to rue his team’s inconsistent bowling.

  • Explosion in Spain’s fireworks factory kills five

    The cause of the blast at the factory on the outskirts of the city near the airport was unknown.

    The explosion at the factory, which makes fireworks and matches, was heard in a large area of the city. Television pictures showed a large column of smoke rising from the factory.

    Emergency services urged local residents to stay away from the area. The airport continued operating.

    A spokeswoman for the regional government of Aragon said five people were killed in the blast.

    “As well as the deaths, at the moment there are six people injured to varying degrees,” she said.

    She said firefighters were continuing their work at the factory, which exports products to other European countries and Canada.

    El Pais newspaper said accidents at fireworks factories around Spain in the last 25 years had claimed more than 110 lives.

  • Healthy workplace tied to fewer obese young workers

    About 17 percent of young employees in workplaces that encouraged several healthy lifestyle practices were obese, compared to about 24 percent in spaces that promoted one or no healthy practices, researchers found.

    “I have personally experienced a range of workplace environments that I feel have influenced my eating habits and my physical activity, both positively and negatively,” said lead author Allison Watts, of the School of Public Health at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.

    Those environmental factors include support for colleagues, lunchtime yoga classes and food availability, she said in an email to Reuters Health.

    Obesity

    “I wanted to see if this was true of other young adults as well,” she added.

    Researchers used data collected on 1,538 people who answered surveys while in middle or high school during 1998 and 1999. As young adults, the participants answered more questions 10 years later.

    At the second survey, the average age of participants was 25 years. Most were white and nearly half were from high social and economic backgrounds.

    Among the factors the participants reported to the researchers were their typical diets, weekly exercise routines, and specifics about their workplaces and their locations.

    Less than half ate at least five servings of fruits and vegetables per day, 27 percent had at least one sugary drink and 20 percent ate fast food at least three times per week. More than half completed at least 2.5 hours of moderate-to-vigorous exercise per week and took active transportation, such as walking or cycling.

    Soda and sweet snacks were available at most of the young adults’ jobs. About half said eating a healthy diet and being physical active was easy at work. Less than half reported working within a 30-minute walk from home, but about half worked within a 10-minute walk to fitness facilities. More than half worked within a 10-minute walk of a fast food restaurant.

    Overall, about 19 percent of participants were obese, but those who reported working in spaces with three or more healthy factors were less likely to be obese than those working at jobs with fewer healthy factors.

    “Working young adults are dealing with many stressors such as being pressed for time, juggling personal and work responsibilities, and stretching limited resources,” Watts said. “So, many young adults (will) reach for what is convenient and affordable.”

    The appealing nature of convenience and thriftiness is why it’s so important for workplaces to take these factors into account, she said.

    The study shows the importance of environment on healthy eating and activity, according to Carolyn Dunn, professor and head of the Department of Youth, Family and Community Services at NC State University in Raleigh, North Carolina.

    Discouraging employees from leaving unhealthy leftovers in the break room or only stocking sugar-free beverages could help employers promote a healthier lifestyles, noted Dunn, who was not involved with the new study.

    “The environment is so important and so often policies drive that environment,” Dunn told Reuters Health.

    Dunn, who has developed programs on nutrition and wellness, said workplace environments could help compensate for fast food establishments nearby.

    “You certainly are not going to turn down a great job just because there’s a McDonald’s on the corner,” she said. But creating a healthy environment at work that’s supported by management may chip away at the unhealthy factors, she added.

  • Sharapova pulls out of US Open due to leg injury

    Sharapova, 28, has not played a match since losing to Serena Williams in the Wimbledon semi-finals in July and withdrew from hardcourt tournaments in Toronto and Cincinnati in August, citing a right leg strain.

    “Unfortunately, I will not be able to compete in this year’s US Open,” she tweeted.

    “I have done everything possible to be ready but it was just not enough time. To all my amazing fans, I will be back in the Asian swing in a few weeks and look forward to finishing the year healthy and strong.”

    It marks the second time in three years that the 2006 champion has withdrawn from the year’s last grand slam event.

    Her absence robs the US Open of some star power and a possible marquee showdown.

    Sharapova, who has won each of the four grand slam tournaments during her career, was seeded to meet top-seeded American world number one Serena Williams in the semi-finals.

    The 33-year-old Williams is campaigning to win a fourth US Open title in a row that would give her a rare grand slam sweep of the year’s four majors.

    The Russian, however, has not proven much of an obstacle to the big-serving Williams, who has beaten Sharapova in 18 of their 20 career meetings and has not lost to her in 11 years.

    The US Tennis Association said on Sunday that Russian Daria Kasatkina is the lucky loser who will replace Sharapova in the main draw.

  • Rachel Platten tops British singles chart for first time

    Fight Song climbed 67 places since last week and has proven a big hit across the globe, entering the Top 10 in the United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Belgium.

    Platten’s first Top 40 hit ended the week narrowly ahead of Felix Jaehn’s “Ain’t Nobody (Loves Me Better),” with last week’s Number 1, Glynne’s “Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself” falling to Number 3.

    Calvin Harris & Disciples’ “How Deep Is Your Love” at Number 4 took the title of the most streamed track for a third week running, racking up 2.4 million listens in the last seven days.

    Glynne’s first album, which includes her five Number 1 singles, had sales of just under 60,000, giving her the second-biggest opening week of any debut record in 2015.

    Last week’s Number 1 “The Very Best of Cilla Black” slipped into second place, and Bon Jovi’s 13th album “Burning Bridges” entered the charts at Number 3.

    The highest climber of the week was English singer Ella Eyre whose new single “Good Times” climbed 143 places to the 37th spot.

  • Swansea end Manchester United’s unbeaten start in Premier League

    After an entertaining first half ended goalless Manchester United’s Juan Mata fired Luke Shaw’s teasing cross into the roof of the net in the 48th minute before Swansea took control.

    Andre Ayew restored parity with a headed effort 13 minutes later before Bafetimbi Gomis maintained his superb form with a low shot five minutes later as the Welsh side registered their third successive 2-1 league victory over United.

    “It was a very difficult game,” Swansea captain Ashley Williams told Sky Sports. “We had to dig deep.

    “Any time you can beat one of the top teams shows our improvement. We keep working every day and every week. We want to be a consistently good side.”

    Earlier, Dusan Tadic’s brace and a goal from Graziano Pelle gave Southampton’s stuttering league campaign lift-off with a comfortable 3-0 victory over promoted Norwich City at St Mary’s .

    Norwich defender Steven Whittaker was sent off having received two yellow cards within four first-half minutes for professional fouls as the south-coast club registered their first victory of the season.

    United’s solid yet unspectacular start to the season had been built on a steely defence which had yet to concede and had restricted opponents to just five shots on target in three matches this season.

    Swansea, however, achieved a Premier League double over United last season and had started the season unbeaten, including an impressive opening-day draw at champions Chelsea.

    United started brightly, though, with Memphis Depay and Mata sending early warnings of United’s attacking threat.

    Swansea began to grow into the game having weathered United’s early attacking raids with Gylfi Sigurdsson firing agonisingly wide before Bafetimbi Gomis curled an effort against the post.

    Wayne Rooney netted a midweek Champions League hat-trick but continued his underwhelming domestic form, squandering a host of inviting chances and having fewer first-half touches than every other United player.

    After the break Mata fired in before the hosts turned the game on its head.

    Ayew headed home Sigurdsson’s cross before the Ghanaian’s stunning pass created space for Gomis to slide home his ninth goal in his last 10 Premier League matches.

    SOUTHAMPTON CANTER

    The surprise packages of last season having finished seventh, Southampton had been out-of-sorts, taking just two points from three games and failing to score since the opening day.

    Sunday’s first half was a microcosm of their season, plenty of possession and chances but a lack of killer instinct in front of goal.

    James Ward-Prowse, Fonte, Pelle and the impressive Sadio Mane all went close in a dominant yet fruitless opening 20 minutes before Whittaker was dismissed.

    After Pelle stabbed home in the 45th minute Tadic fired home Mane’s cross for a superb second then applied the finishing touch after Pelle’s header was parried into his path two minutes later.

    Jay Rodriguez, still making his way back from a long-term knee injury, was brought on after the break and was lively throughout, forcing John Ruddy into a number of saves.

    “We haven’t had the start we wanted in the league,” Saints captain Jose Fonte told Sky Sports. “But the most important thing today was getting back to winning games.

    “We have massive responsibility now we are seen as a good team so we need to win and that’s the mentality we have to implant in every game.”

    Swansea, who have eight points from four games, leapfrogged United, with seven, into fourth. Southampton moved up to 10th with five points while Norwich sit one point adrift in 14th.

    Manchester City top the standings going into the international break with a maximum 12 points from four games, three ahead of Crystal Palace.

  • Investors still in the dark as cyber threat grows

    Banks have led the way in developing cyber defenses and some top fund managers have ramped up pressure on companies to do more, but the broader picture is less encouraging.

    “I don’t see any visible stand asset managers are taking, like they do on other social responsibility items,” said Malcolm Harkins, information security chief at U.S. cyber security start-up Cylance Inc.

    The soft underbelly of companies outside the banking sector was exposed again this month when hackers leaked details of nearly 37 million clients of Ashley Madison. The infidelity website had to postpone its stock market listing and now faces a $750 million lawsuit.

    More than half the value of companies worldwide is in intangible assets, such as intellectual property, much of which is stored on computers and could therefore be vulnerable to hackers.

    That figure could be as high as $37.5 trillion of the $71 trillion in enterprise value of 58,000 companies, according to Brand Finance, a consultancy specializing in valuation of intangible assets. The World Economic Forum said that robust protection against cyber risk could add as much as $22 trillion to the global economy by 2020.

    The global financial cost of attacks is rising fast — up more than 10 percent last year, a report by specialist researcher Ponemon Institute said.

    Though some might argue that investors can sell out of businesses they consider to be performing badly on cyber safety, the reality is less straightforward. Passive funds that track a specific index or sector have no leeway, while pension funds tend to demand a longer-term view from asset managers.

    But even those keen to evaluate cyber risk face an uphill struggle, hampered by a lack of resources, poor data and weak disclosure from companies.

    Sacha Sadan, corporate governance head at the fund arm of insurer Legal & General, told Reuters that cyber risk is one of his team’s top priorities for corporate engagement but described the approach of some rivals as “hit and miss”.

    “We would rather a company, when they come to talk to us, had a slide that said ‘this is what we’re doing’. At the moment, it’s us asking them and they say, ‘well, most other shareholders don’t ask’.”

    MIXED PRIORITIES

    A Reuters survey of fund firms with a combined $16 trillion in assets showed pressure on company boards is far from uniform.

    Only four of 12 governance chiefs at British, French, German and U.S. fund houses interviewed by telephone and email said they considered cyber risk a “top priority” across all of their investments. The remainder said they either discussed the issue case by case or that there was too little information for proper risk-assessment.

    BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, is among those that have engaged with companies, though it declined to provide further detail on examples in its quarterly governance report.

    In its latest report BlackRock said it had spoken to a large insurer and “shared perspectives” gained from speaking to cyber experts and other companies.

    As for the types of business meriting closer examination, Jessica Ground, global head of stewardship at Schroders, said that less-obvious targets such as travel agents need to do more. Another chief named online gaming as a sector laggard.

    Most fund managers do have dedicated teams supervising governance. But these often number fewer than 10 people to analyze and speak to thousands of companies on a broad range of topics, with matters such as executive pay regularly given higher priority than cyber security.

    On the other side of the fence, the companies themselves are far from united in their approach.

    “There is significant divergence across companies as to how prepared they are,” said Antony Marsden at Henderson Global Investors.

    Though attitude to cyber risk is inherently difficult to quantify, analysis of the most recent annual reports of the 10 biggest companies in Europe and the United States showed variable communication on the issue.

    Only three of the Europeans — Novo Nordisk, HSBC and Royal Dutch Shell — had a separate section on cyber risk or information security. Across all 10 reports there were a mere 14 mentions of keywords “cyber”, “information security”, “hack” or “hacking”.

    That compares with five of the U.S. companies — Apple, Wells Fargo, Facebook, General Electric and JPMorgan  —  and 63 keyword references, partly influenced by more banks featuring in the list.

    WHEN, NOT IF

    “You can look at an annual report and see some companies talk a lot about what would happen if the euro were to fail … But just as important is what happens if you get hacked,” L&G’s Sadan said. “You will get hacked. So what’s your contingency planning?”

    Several smaller U.S. investment firms with a mandate for socially responsible investment are already pressing companies publicly over data security matters, including the filing of proxy resolutions at shareholder meetings.

    Arjuna Capital, for example, had American Express shareholders vote on whether it should report annually on how its board oversees privacy and data security. Amex opposed the idea, saying its board receives regular updates, and the proposal won only 22 percent of the vote at the annual meeting.

    Highlighting the lack of a consistent approach from asset managers, a number of large fund firms opposed the resolution.

    It is little wonder, then, that some have yet to address a skills gap that leaves them ill-equipped for proper risk-assessment.

    “The frameworks for dealing with cyber risk, about what it means for our business and what can we do about it, are only now being put in place,” said Sandra Carlisle at Newton Asset Management.

    Rules in the United States requiring companies to report data privacy breaches are likely to be replicated in Europe in the near future, which will aid funds’ understanding of the risks.

    In the meantime, investors are very much in the dark.

    “What you get is assurance that people are looking at these things,” said Iain Richards at Anglo-U.S. fund firm Columbia Threadneedle. “There’s a scarcity of meaningful disclosure.” – Reuters