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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

British jury finds Butt, Asif guilty of spot fixing


The jury at London s Southwark Crown Court found former captain Butt guilty of both counts of conspiracy to cheat and conspiracy to accept corrupt payments. Asif was found guilty of a single count of conspiracy to cheat. The judge ordered the jury to retire again to continue deliberating on the second charge against Asif. Butt could face seven years in jail when the pair are sentenced later this week. The lesser charge of conspiracy to cheat carries a possible punishment of two years imprisonment. The judge presiding over the fixing trial of Butt and Asif had sent the jury home Monday. However he had said that he would accept majority decision. When the jury met today, they gave the decision against the duo, finding them guilty of spot fixing. The jurors reported back to south London s Southwark Crown Court at 10 a.m. Tuesday after judge Jeremy Cooke said he would accept a 10-2 verdict on whether the pair plotted the deliberate bowling of no-balls during the fourth test against England at Lord s in August 2010. Butt, Asif and bowler Mohammad Amir have already received lengthy suspensions by an International Cricket Council anti-corruption tribunal in Doha for fixing parts of the Lord s test. Butt was banned for 10 years, five of which are suspended, Amir was banned for five years and Asif was given a seven-year ban, with two suspended. Cooke previously told the 12 jurors to accept that Amir was involved. The jury initially retired at midday Thursday but reported to Cooke on Monday that it was unable to reach a unanimous decision. The allegations originally surfaced after Majeed was recorded by an undercover reporter working for the now-defunct News of the World tabloid saying that the three Pakistan players had accepted money to fix betting markets. Majeed was secretly filmed accepting 150,000 pounds ($242,000) in cash from the journalist. Butt said he had ignored the requests from Majeed, his agent, and Asif said he had only bowled the no-ball at precisely the time Majeed said it would be delivered because Butt had told him to run faster moments before bowling.

World population reaches 7 billion


Asia welcomed the world s first symbolic "seven billionth" baby on Monday, but celebrations were tempered by worries over the strain that humanity s population explosion is putting on a fragile planet. The United Nations says that by its best estimates the seven billionth baby will be born somewhere on October 31, and countries around the world have planned events surrounding the demographic milestone. Zambia is throwing a seven billion song contest; Vietnam is staging a "7B: Counting On Each Other" concert; Russian authorities are showering gifts on selected newborns and the Ivory Coast is putting on a comedy show. The Philippines was the first country to declare a seven billionth baby, in the form of a little girl called Danica May Camacho. Weighing 2.5 kilos (5.5 pounds), Danica was delivered just before midnight Sunday under an explosion of media camera flashes at Manila s Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital. Danica is the second child for Dalura and her partner, Florante Camacho, who stood quietly in a corner wearing a white hospital gown as television crews and photographers crowded to get a shot of his daughter. UN officials presented the child with a cake. Other gifts came from local benefactors including a scholarship grant, and a financial package to help the parents open a general store. Also on hand to witness the birth was 12-year-old Lorrize Mae Guevarra, who the Philippines declared as its own six billionth baby when the world reached that demographic landmark in 1999. The UN named a Bosnian child, Adnan Mevic, as the Earth s six billionth inhabitant on October 12, 1999. The secretary general at the time, Kofi Annan, was pictured in a Sarajevo hospital with Mevic in his arms. The Mevic family is now living in poverty, which is partly why no single baby will be put in the global spotlight this time. Instead Danica May Camacho is one of a number of children whose birth will be marked throughout the day. The world has added a billion babies -- or almost another China -- since Adnan Mevic was born. Having taken millennia to pass the one-billion mark, the world s population has now doubled in 50 years. Mounting concern over humanity s environmental impact and fears we may not be able to feed ourselves in 100 years  time have cast a cautionary tone over the buildup to the seven billion milestone. Current UN chief Ban Ki-moon will not be seen cuddling a newborn. He has said the seven billionth baby will be entering a "world of contradiction", especially if the child is born on the wrong side of the poverty line. The UN chief will be taking his message to the Group of 20 summit this week, where leaders of rich and developing nations will discuss the threat of global recession and efforts to tighten rules on bankers  bonuses and tax havens. With about two babies being born every second, the seven billion figure will keep racing ahead in decades to come -- to more than 10 billion by 2100, according to UN estimates. The UN predicts that India will overtake China as the world s most populous nation by 2025, when it will have almost 1.5 billion people. A new UN Population Fund (UNFPA) report highlights how the world will face growing problems finding jobs for the new army of young people, especially in poor countries. It also sounds alarms over how climate change and population growth are adding to drought and famine crises; the management of megacities like Tokyo; and ageing populations such as Europe s.