Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Singapore refutes Gen Sonthi's remarks

SINGAPORE has strongly refuted Thai General Sonthi Boonyaratglin's suggestion that telephone lines in Thailand could be tapped in the Republic.

'We do not know what Gen Sonthi's remarks meant,' a spokesman of the Foreign Affairs Ministry here said in response to media queries yesterday.

'Domestic calls are not routed through Singapore. It does not make business or technical sense to route domestic calls via another country.

'Doing so will incur additional and unnecessary network resources (including costly international bandwidth) and degrade the quality of service.'

Addressing a forum last week, Gen Sonthi, who heads the Council for National Security (CNS), had said foreign ownership of the telecoms industry could jeopardise national security.

'The armed forces are currently experiencing a problem,' he told the forum.

'We pick up the phone, and the line runs to Singapore. We can talk about confidential official matters, but it goes to Singapore.

'National security is an important matter for the nation, one that is entirely domestic.'

It was not immediately clear what he had meant, and neither did he elaborate on what he meant.

But a day later, Thai leaders warned telecom companies that their licences could be revoked if they were caught bugging conversations.

The message was seen as aimed at two Thai telcos in which Temasek Holdings has a controlling stake.

Both companies - Advanced Info Service and Shin Satellite - denied the charges.

Yesterday, the MFA spokesman here reiterated that strict professional standards are adhered to safeguard the integrity of all communications in the Republic.

'As an international telecommunication hub, Singapore maintains a strict and professional operating environment to safeguard the integrity of all communications which terminate in or transit through Singapore,' a statement issued yesterday said.

'In this age of globalised and extensively networked economies, many countries have fully liberalised their telecommunication markets and allowed foreign operators in their markets.

'Appropriate licensing requirements and regulatory safeguards put in place by the host countries have effectively been able to address the national security concerns arising from foreign ownership of local telephone operators.

'We believe this would have been effectively achieved in Thailand as well.'

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Stackhouse stems Miami rally with late surge

MIAMI - JERRY Stackhouse regained his scoring touch at the right time for Dallas, helping them to stave off a Miami comeback on Sunday.

The Mavericks won 99-93 in the first match-up between the National Basketball Association finalists.

Stackhouse, who is working his way back after spraining his left ankle last month, scored 16 of his 23 points in the final quarter.

Josh Howard added 25 points, Dirk Nowitzki 22, and Jason Terry 11 points and 11 assists.

Dallas, who have lost only once in 21 games, improved their NBA-best record to 34-8.

Plus, they got some tiny measure of revenge over the Heat, who lost the first two games of last year's Finals before rallying to triumph 4-2.

'We just had to keep grinding,' Stackhouse said. 'It was a great game, which had some great players making great plays.'

Dwyane Wade, who suffered a left-ankle injury after stepping on Nowitzki's foot in the first quarter, returned and played 44 minutes.

'A stupid play,' he said.

The guard finished with 31 points, six rebounds and six assists for Miami.

But he missed a three-pointer that would have tied the game with 5.8 seconds left.

Jason Williams added 17 points, Udonis Haslem 15, who missed his first eight shots, and Antoine Walker 11.

Miami were without centre Shaquille O'Neal for the 34th straight game following knee surgery.

Down by 13 points early in the second half, they pulled to within one - 75-76 - on Wade's three-point play with 10min 44sec left.

But Stackhouse scored seven straight points to quell the rally to restore some breathing space.

He landed another jumper with 5:34 left to push the advantage to 90-84.

Miami responded with the next six points, with Wade tying it with a jumper.

'They're the world champions. You knew they were going to come back with a champion's heart,' Stackhouse said.

But his team scored the next six points, with baskets from Nowitzki and Howard 26 seconds apart to put them back on top.

Miami got back to within 93-96 on a Wade lay-up with 57 seconds left. But they would fail to score again.

It turned out to be their 10th home loss of the season, matching the total from all of last year.

'We gave up a big lead, they tied it up. But we didn't give up either,' Mavs coach Avery Johnson said.

'They didn't give up. We didn't give up. That's what I think championship teams and championship organisations are all about.'

Dallas never trailed in the game, which was tied only once after the tip-off.

They held a 16-5 rebounding edge - 48-35 in total - in the first quarter. Nowitzki had six of his 11 boards in that period alone.

They disrupted Miami's attack so much that the hosts managed just three assists in the opening half.

And, while Miami clearly improved after half-time, the Mavs' edge in rebounding and second-chance points (19-5) proved to be crucial.

'That's the bottom line,' Miami interim coach Ron Rothstein said.

'If we held our ground there, I think I would be sitting up here really happy with a win.'

ASSOCIATED PRESS

M1 dishes out cash bonanza on surprise 2.2% income rise

M1 SHAREHOLDERS had much to cheer about after the telco announced a bumper cash payout and a surprise rise in its annual profits yesterday.

The mobile operator, the smallest in Singapore, is paying out a larger-than-expected $296 million in cash to its shareholders - yielding an investor holding 1,000 shares a $297 bonanza.

It also managed to surprise, somewhat, with a 2.2 per cent improvement in its bottom line, which clocked in at $164.6 million for the year ended Dec 31.

Revenues, however, slipped 0.7 per cent to $773 million.

The latest payout is the largest by M1 so far.

The telco is distributing a final dividend of 7.5 cents per share.

It is also conducting a capital reduction exercise in which it will buy back and cancel about 10 per cent of its share capital at $2.22 apiece.

In all, M1's total cash distribution for last year will amount to $353 million, including an interim dividend of 5.8 cents a share paid out earlier.

Analysts had expected a big cash distribution from M1, whose shares continue to find favour among investors banking on good dividend returns, rather than capital gains.

But they were caught out this time around as many were predicting a total distribution of 20 cents a share, or $200 million in aggregate.

The experts were also surprised by M1's resilient performance after the telco's own predictions of flat earnings.

After a weak showing in the first nine months of the year, the telco sprung back to life in the final quarter, registering a 7.6 per cent rise in quarterly profit to $39.8 million.

The telco added 88,000 customers in the quarter and saw its market share inch up to 28.5 per cent, from 28.4 per cent at end-August.

It also lost fewer customers as the churn rate fell to 1.3 per cent, from 1.5 per cent in the third quarter.

Looking ahead, M1 said operations should remain stable but declined to give specific guidance for the top line and the bottom line.

Chief executive Neil Montefiore said he is first waiting to see if the rapid uptake of M1's mobile broadband service will be sustained into the first quarter of this year.

The telco has signed up 10,000 customers for the new service, launched last month.

M1 is expecting to spend between $70 million and $100 million on its network while it continues to pledge that it will pay out at least 80 per cent of its profits in dividends.

Earnings per share were 16.6 cents, up from 16.4 cents the previous year. Net asset value per share fell to 38.6 cents from 47.1 cents a year ago.

M1 shares rose three cents yesterday to close at $2.29.

bryanlee@sph.com.sg

Monday, January 22, 2007

Water woes for Jakarta as dry spell persists

JAKARTA - A PROLONGED dry spell in Jakarta is leaving the city authorities hard-pressed to maintain normal water supplies.

The city's water company PAM Jaya has turned on all 17 of its water pumps - it normally operates 11 - to maintain normal production.

Water tankers are also doing the rounds in areas where supplies have been disrupted for the past 10 days, said the company's top official, Mr Haryadi Priyohutomo.

And in a cruel twist, Indonesian scientists predicted this week that rains may arrive by the end of the month and trigger floods in the capital.

Dry weather has caused water levels to fall from 105m to below 85m in the Jatiluhur dam, an important source of water for Jakarta. Consequently, several parts of the Indonesian capital, mainly the northern, central and eastern areas, have been experiencing water shortages.

January is usually a rainy month and meteorologists had predicted higher-than-normal rainfall for this month. But they revised their forecast last week after temperatures in Jakarta and the outlying areas soared to 36 deg C.

The weathermen warned that a drought could hit the city, evoking memories of the severe droughts of 1997 that caused serious crop failures and major forest fires.

Currently, about one-fifth or 192,000 of the 720,000 customers of PAM Jaya and its two foreign partners face water supply disruptions. Although the company has turned on all its water pumps, it warned that shortages may be unavoidable.

Mr Haryadi said the company was planning to obtain more water from Cirata dam, which is located near Jatiluhur dam.

Water shortage has been compounded by the irrigation needs of farmland on the outskirts of the capital. Farms that lie between the Tarum Barat river and the Bekasi river are known to draw water from the Jatiluhur dam.

A resident at the housing estate of Kelapa Gading in North Jakarta told the Jakarta Post that the flow of water from her tap has been erratic for the past week.

'The tap water in my house doesn't flow well, especially between 6am and 8am,' said Ms Sarah, who pays 130,000 rupiah (S$22) a month to PAM Jaya.

Meanwhile, a team of scientists from the Bandung Institute of Technology said that average rainfall of 16mm an hour is expected at the end of the month.

But it would hardly be a blessing, they added. 'We are particularly worried about the ability of the soil to absorb run-off water. If the rain continues for more than two hours, a number of areas will be flooded,' said Mr The Houw Liong, one of the scientists.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

New hopes for India's gateway to S-E Asia

NEW DELHI - INSURGENCY and infrastructural bottlenecks have hampered the progress of India's north-east, described as the gateway to South-east Asia.

But analysts say that the region is changing with the insurgents losing their popular appeal.

India, taking a page from what China has done in Tibet, has been undertaking development projects, including road construction in far-flung frontiers.

Analysts say that if the trend is sustained, the region could hope to benefit soon from India's increasing engagement with South-east Asian nations.

An India-Asean car rally two years ago from Assam's capital Guwahati to Indonesia's Batam, traversing nine countries and 8,000km, had raised visions of highways and rail lines linking India's north-east with South-east Asia.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said while flagging off the car rally: 'Our north-eastern states are India's gateway to Asean. Our growing interaction with Asean is critical to fulfilling the promise of the 21st century being an Asian Century.

'We want our north-eastern states to be in the forefront of these interactions and to reap the benefits of enhanced peace and prosperity.'

But that has not happened, says Mr Sanjoy Hazarika, an expert on the region.

'The car rally was a one-off thing. There has to be a sustained effort to bring about trade and economic integration of the north-east with South-east Asia,' said Mr Hazarika, who is a director of the Centre of North East and Policy Research, a think-tank.

'We have had visits by experts from both sides to discuss follow-up measures but they remain to be translated into action,' he said.

Despite the problem of insurgency, brought into the spotlight within a few days of the New Year when 70 migrant workers were gunned down in Assam, the largest among the eight north-eastern states, the outlook for the region looks promising, analysts said. The United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), which is campaigning for independence of Assam from India, like many other separatist outfits in the region, has been blamed for the carnage.

Mr Hazarika reflected the disillusionment of the people with the rebel groups when he said: 'The conflicts in the north-east, in terms of armed revolts, ethnic struggles or fights against the Indian state, no longer draw on the romanticism and idealism that sustained fighting groups and communities for decades.

'Dreams have degenerated into nightmares; the fighters have turned on each other and on the people in whose name they claim to speak. The entire network of cadres, recruits, informers and political leaders is based on extortion and extraction: extortion from business houses and petty traders, from professionals, contractors and politicians. Few are spared.'

The ULFA, Mr Hazarika says, is the clearest manifestation of this development.

Analysts said the growing number of people from the region migrating to other parts of India for educational and employment opportunities had also contributed to the erosion of the alienation they felt in the past and the separatist movements losing their popular appeal.

It was not surprising, therefore, that Prime Minister Singh, on a visit to Assam last Tuesday to meet the relatives of the victims of the bombings, questioned the ULFA's support base.

An official report had listed 24 active insurgent groups in the region and several dormant ones. The government has declared four states - Assam, Manipur, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh - as 'disturbed areas' and deployed troops to quell the groups.

jayaramp_@hotmail.com

Son molested by captor, say parents

THE parents of an American boy, who was held by a kidnapper for more than four years, say they believe their son was molested during the time he was missing.

The news came on Thursday, the same day the man suspected of kidnapping 15-year-old Shawn Hornbeck in 2002 pleaded not guilty to charges of capturing another boy on Jan 8.

Michael Devlin, a 41-year-old pizzeria manager, was accused of abducting 13-year-old Ben Ownby, who was found with Shawn.

Shawn disappeared at the age of 11 while riding his bicycle in St Louis, Missouri. Prosecutors say Devlin is also charged with kidnapping Shawn.

During an interview with Oprah Winfrey on a show aired on Thursday, Shawn's parents nodded when asked if they believed he was sexually abused.

His grandmother, Ms Anna Quinn, said Shawn told his family that at times during his captivity, he would be awakened every 45 minutes by his captor to deprive him of sleep.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Organ trading OK with checks and balances in place

I REFER to Mdm Lim Chiong Luan's comment ('Will this day come? 'O $ Pay $, No $ Sell Kidney''; ST, Jan 18) on Dr Lee Wei Ling's call to allow organ trading.

It is not easy to be objective when we are thinking about issues that evoke basic human emotions like love and fear. Mdm Lim is quite right to say that if we allow the sale of human organs in Singapore, the rich will buy and the poor will sell. That is the nature of demand and supply in a free market, so why are we suddenly so shocked and fearful that money can do quite a bit of magic? In fact, Singaporeans are already buying organs from outside Singapore because we can afford it and it is an option.

However, I do not think that's the spirit of Dr Lee's argument for legalising the sale of human organs in Singapore. Someone has to be objective. If a good person like Mdm Lim could point out the possible evil consequences of such a proposal, then I am infinitely grateful that there is another person such as Dr Lee, who's both objective and brave enough to point out the obvious good in such a proposal: It will save lives, and each life is precious.

I am sure that any competent government would have the ability to put in place checks and balances to prevent abuse and to stop the poor from being further disadvantaged, and implement them well enough for real benefits to be seen.

Jim Chow Wen Kah

Gunners patchy at home

LONDON - ALEX Ferguson, the master of mind games, heated up tomorrow's clash at Arsenal by claiming the Gunners had 'over-achieved' by reaching last season's Champions League final.

In a further swipe, the Manchester United manager claimed Arsenal's patchy Premiership form is down to their failure to adapt to their new Emirates Stadium.

'Nobody expected Arsenal to get to the Champions League final, it was a surprise,' he said.

'But rather than it being a negative it should have been a positive, because they had over-achieved.'

Arsenal have picked up just 23 points from a possible 33 at home this season.

Ferguson will be hoping United can compound that poor record in what could prove to be a key weekend in the title race. The top four are playing each other.

'This season Arsenal have got young players, and a change to a new stadium may have something to do with it,' he told The Mirror.

'A change of environment, a different type of pitch, a lot of things can go into it.'

History points to a United win. Arsenal have not beaten the Red Devils at home since 2001.

United also have the best away record in the Premiership this season, winning 26 points out of a possible 33.

But, on current form, the Gunners have every chance of doing the double over their great rivals.

They beat United 1-0 at Old Trafford earlier this season without captain Thierry Henry.

Tomorrow, they have the advantage of a fully-fit Henry.

They have won four straight games since his return to the squad - though he did sit out the League Cup thrashing of Liverpool - and by an aggregate 15-4 margin.

The French striker has got on the scoresheet in each game he has played, including an absolute stunner at Blackburn last weekend.

Arsenal carved out a 2-0 win despite playing the bulk of the game with 10 men.

That is exactly the sort of match they would have lost earlier in the campaign - just think of their trips to Sheffield United, Bolton and Manchester City.

So, the significance of that performance should not be underplayed.

The one downside is the red-carded Gilberto Silva misses out tomorrow.

That is a blow but the manager Arsene Wenger maintains there is enough resolve within the squad to cope.

'We will replace him with a good player who will give everything against United,' he said.

'Mathieu Flamini did well at Liverpool recently.'

It is not going to be easy to get all three points because United have in Cristiano Ronaldo one of the players of the season.

However, the Old Trafford side have shown signs of vulnerability lately.

They have not kept a clean sheet in any of their five games since Christmas.

And recent trips away from Old Trafford have seen them suffer a shock defeat by struggling West Ham and play out a 2-2 draw with a distinctly average Newcastle United.

Arsenal are always dangerous when teams attack them.

It would be completely out of character for United to be anything other than positive, as they try to maintain their lead at the top of the Premiership.

Friday, January 19, 2007

Top 1, 000 companies cross $1 trillion sales level

FOR the first time, the combined sales of Singapore's top 1,000 companies soared past the $1 trillion mark last year.

That is a mind-boggling figure. Put another way it is $1,000 billion or $1 million million.

But the bottom line is much easier to grasp: The corporate sector had a very good year.

Sales surged 25.7 per cent to $1.16 trillion, while combined net profits were up 18.6 per cent to $72.3 billion, according to credit ratings firm DP Information Group.

In the 2005 ranking, sales for the top 1,000 companies rose by 19.1 per cent, and profits shot up 30.5 per cent.

Record high oil prices played a key role last year.

Snagging top honours in terms of sales were oil and energy-related firms such as Shell Eastern Trading, which took top spot, followed by ExxonMobil Asia Pacific, BP Singapore, Vitol Asia, and SK Energy Asia.

However, the best performing industry was hotels and food establishments. While the number of firms in the industry has remained relatively stable, their combined profits have nearly doubled.

For instance, Raffles Holdings reported a whopping 1,084 per cent jump in net profits to $678.7 million, a figure boosted by the sale of its hotel business to United States fund Colony Capital.

DP Info managing director Chen Yew Nah said: 'Cracking the $1 trillion mark is an amazing achievement for Singapore's corporate sector.'

Ms Chen said that when the Singapore rankings started about 20 years ago, the combined profits of the top 10 firms just broke $1 billion dollars.

'That is nothing compared to today, where our Singapore Airlines (SIA) annual profit exceeds $1.3 billion, while the combined profit of the 10 most profitable companies is $23.1 billion.'

The ranking of Singapore's top 1,000 companies (S1000) and 500 small and medium-sized enterprises (SME500) is co-produced by Ernst & Young Singapore.

It is based on the annualised audited results of more than 7,000 companies incorporated in Singapore, with financial years ending between June 1, 2005 and May 31 last year.

One new entrant to this year's SME500 list was a maker of gilded Italian furniture, Da Vinci Collection, which debuted in the 10th spot.

The firm, whose net profit grew by more than 300 per cent to $16.9 million, has set its sights on the S1000 list for next year, said managing director, Mr Raymond Phua.

'We try to focus on branding, and this aspect is important since we're in the lifestyle business,' said Mr Phua, 36. He told The Straits Times that he plans to list the firm in two years.

Of the S1000 firms, SIA topped the honour roll for turnover in the communications, transport and storage industry, while SingTel took the top spot in terms of net profit.

In the finance category, Toshiba Capital (Asia) had the highest turnover while United Overseas Bank (UOB) was the most profitable.

'We have been around for over 70 years and will continue to stay for the long haul. That's the kind of certainty customers need as reliable long-term bankers,' said UOB's deputy chairman and president, Mr Wee Ee Cheong.

In the services arena, Motorola Trading Centre and Singapore Press Holdings came out on top for sales and profits respectively.

The corporate sector can better the $1 trillion mark again next year if both the Singapore and global economies keep surprising with their strength, said CIMB-GK research head Song Seng Wun.

'Sectors that will lead the way this year will be the construction and hotel sectors,' he predicted.

gabrielc@sph.com.sg

DA VINCI Collection, led by managing director Raymond Phua, debuted on the SME500 in 10th place. It is setting its sights on the S1000 list for next year.

United Overseas Bank is most profitable in the finance category on the S1000 list. Its deputy chairman and president, Mr Wee Ee Cheong, attributes the lender's success to its reliability and says the bank will stay for the 'long haul'.

S1000 AWARDS: MOST PROFITABLE FIRMS BY INDUSTRY

Communications/transport/storage

SingTel: $4.16b

Finance

UOB: $1.73b

Hotels/food establishments

Goodwood Park Hotel: $208.6m

Manufacturing

Glaxo Wellcome Manufacturing: $6.59b

Retail

DFS Venture Singapore: $148.71m

Services

Singapore Press Holdings: $488.39m

Wholesale

Exxonmobil Asia Pacific: $1.83b

Source: DP Information Group

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Results

BADMINTON

Malaysia Open in Kuala Lumpur - Men's singles, 2nd rd: Park Sung Hwan (Kor) bt Lin Dan (Chn) 21-14 21-17. 1st rd: Chen Jin (Chn) bt Chan Yan Kit (Hkg) 21-5 21-9, Sony Dwi Kuncoro (Ina) bt Lee Tsuen Seng (Mas) 21-18 19-21 21-17, Chen Hong (Chn) bt Muhamad Hafiz Hashim (Mas) 9-21 21-13 21-18, Lee Chong Wei (Mas) bt Bjoern Joppien (Ger) 21-14 21-9, Kuan Beng Hong (Mas) bt Ng Wei (Hkg) 21-19 21-17, Bao Chunlai (Chn) bt Kasper Oedum (Den) 21-18 21-14, Wacha Przemyslaw (Pol) bt Sato Shoji (Jpn) 21-17 14-21 21-18. Women's singles, 2nd rd: Hwang Hye Youn (Kor) bt Li Li (Sin) 21-8 21-13, Zhu Lin (Chn) bt Julian Wong (Mas) 21-8 21-16, Petya Nedeltcheva (Bul) bt Maria Kristin Yulianti (Ina) 21-19 21-17, Yao Jie (Ned) bt Tine Rasmussen (Den) 16-21 21-18 21-13. 1st rd: Saina Nehwal (Ind) bt Judith Meulendijks (Ned) 21-10 17-21 21-18, Wong Mew Choo (Mas) bt Pi Hongyan (Fra) 21-18 21-10, Julianne Schenk (Ger) bt Kim Moon Hi (Kor) 21-18 21-10, Xu Huaiwen (Ger) bt Wang Lin (Chn) 15-21 21-17 2
1-5, Lu Lan (Chn) bt Susan Hughes (Sco) 21-10 21-13.

BASKETBALL

NBA: Toronto 101 Sacramento 85, Washington 99 New York 98, New Jersey 92 Charlotte 85, Utah 100 Detroit 99, Chicago 99 Milwaukee 90, Memphis 118 Philadelphia 102, Atlanta 105 Minnesota 88, Phoenix 100 Houston 91, LA Lakers 100 San Antonio 96, Portland 94 Cleveland 76, LA Clippers 115 Golden State 109.

GOLF

SLGA Amateur Open, 3rd and final rd - overall: 226 Melissa Loh (SLGA) 77 75 74 230 Koike Kayo (Jpn)76 79 75 235 Koh Sock Hwee (SLGA) 80 74 81 236 Camille Fallay (Fra) 76 82 78 239 Kristle Koh (SLGA) 88 75 76 242 Stephanie Loi (SLGA) 88 76 78, Sharon Lau (Mas) 83 81 78, Christabel Goh (SLGA) 82 76 84 243 Jolene Ng (SLGA) 79 85 79 245 Hathhaikam Wongwaikijphaisal (Tha) 86 78 81 247 Kathryn Joanna Sim (Mas) 85 85 77, Deborah Lee (SICC) 85 82 80, Nurul Shima Abdul Aziz (Mas) 86 80 81 248 Amelia Yong (Sel) 83 82 83 249 Choosri Hawthorne (Tha) 83 83 83 252 Michelle Ang (TMCC) 89 79 84 253 Joey Poh (SLGA) 86 82 85 254 Chen Yingzhuang (OCC) 84 85 85, Wei Yumei (Twn) 83 84 87 255 Jessica Ang (WGC) 87 83 85. Div A1: 1 Melissa Loh 2 Koike Kayo 3 Camille Fallay. Div A2: 1 Koh Sock Hwee 2 Christabel Goh 3 Nurul Shima. Div A3: 1 Wei Yumei 2 Joanne Goh (Sem) 266; 87 90 89 3 Jennifer Yan (Sel) 27 90 90 87. Div A4: 275 Cheryl Ang (Sel) 96 85 94 278 Louisa Lin (Sel) 96 92 90 280 Annie Lim (OCC
) 92 96 92. Div A5: 283 Shermin Tan (OCC) 98 96 89 284 Melanie Loh (Sel) 94 93 97 291 Regina Wong (Sem) 98 95 98.

ICE HOCKEY

NHL: Buffalo 6 Boston 3, Detroit 5 Nashville 3, Dallas 4 Calgary 2, Colorado 4 Phoenix 3.

SOCCER

English FA Cup, 3rd rd replays: Newcastle 1 Birmingham 5, Tottenham 4 Cardiff 0, Fulham 4 Leicester City 3.

Italian Cup q-finals, 2nd leg: Inter Milan 2 Empoli 0 (Inter win 4-0 on aggregate). Parma 2 Roma 2 (Roma win 4-3), Chievo 1 Sampdoria 2 (Sampdoria win 3-1).

Scottish Cup, 3rd rd replay: Ayr United 1 St Johnstone 2 (After extra time; 90 mins: 1-1).

Spanish King's Cup last 16, 2nd leg: Valencia 2 Getafe 4 (Getafe win 5-3 on aggregate). Deportivo La Coruna 1 Real Mallorca 1 (Deportivo win 3-2), Osasuna 2 Atletico Madrid 0 (Osasuna win 3-1), Real Zaragoza 0 Malaga 1 (Real Zaragoza win 3-1), Sevilla 3 Rayo Vallecano 1 (Sevilla win 3-1), Villarreal 0 Real Valladolid 1 (Real Valladolid win 3-1).

TENNIS

Australian Open in Melbourne - Men, 2nd rd: Tommy Haas (Ger) bt Ilija Bozoljac (Ser) 7-6 (7-3) 6-1 6-3, Sebastien Grosjean (Fra) bt Olivier Rochus (Bel) 4-6 6-1 6-3 4-6 6-4, David Nalbandian (Arg) bt Nicolas Lapentti (Ecu) 6-4 6-4 6-4, Andy Murray (Gbr) bt Fernando Verdasco (Esp) 7-6 (7-4) 7-5 6-4, Robby Ginepri (USA) bt Mischa Zverev (Ger) 6-4 7-5 6-1, Lleyton Hewitt (Aus) bt Frank Dancevic (Can) 6-4 6-4 3-6 6-4. Juan Ignacio Chela (Arg) bt Jarkko Nieminen (Fin) 6-3 2-6 6-4 6-4, Tomas Berdych (Cze) bt Robert Smeets (Aus) 6-3 6-2 6-4, James Blake (USA) bt Alex Kuznetsov (USA) 6-4 6-1 6-2, Gael Monfils (Fra) bt Marcos Baghdatis (Cyp) 7-6 (7-5) 6-2 2-6 6-0, Tommy Robredo (Esp) bt Juergen Melzer (Aut) 6-1 6-3 6-3. Women, 2nd rd: Patty Schnyder (Sui) bt Peng Shuai (Chn) 7-5 6-3, Dinara Safina (Rus) bt Youlia Fedossova (Fra) 6-3 6-2, Maria Sharapova (Rus) bt Anastassia Rodionova (Rus) 6-0 6-3, Ana Ivanovic (Ser) bt Agnieszka Radwanska (Pol) 6-2 3-6 6-2, Li Na (Chn) bt Lourdes Domi
nguez (Esp) 6-0 6-2, Daniela Hantuchova (Svk) bt Emilie Loit (Fra) 4-6 6-3 6-4, Alicia Molik (Aus) bt Kaia Kanepi (Est) 1-6 6-3 6-2, Vera Zvonareva (Rus) bt Tamira Paszek (Aut) 6-1 6-3, Aiko Nakamura (Jpn) bt Sania Mirza (Ind) 6-3 6-2, Martina Hingis (Sui) bt Alla Kudryavtseva (Rus) 6-2 6-2, Kim Clijsters (Bel) bt Akiko Morigami (Jpn) 6-3 6-0.

Monday, January 15, 2007

US raids Iranian consular post

ARBIL (IRAQ) - US FORCES stormed an Iranian consular office in the northern Iraqi Kurdish city of Arbil early yesterday and arrested five people, including diplomats and staff, Iranian officials said.

The US military made no direct mention of Iranians, but in answer to a query, it issued a statement saying six 'individuals' had been arrested during 'routine' operations.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini condemned the raid - the second such operation in the past month - and said it was a violation of international law.

'The activity of all those people at our office in Arbil was legal and was in cooperation with and had the approval of the Iraqi side,' he told Iran's state-owned satellite channel Al-Alam.

The US military said it had detained six people around Arbil on suspicion of being 'closely tied to activities targeting Iraqi and coalition forces'.

Mr Hosseini denied that Iran was meddling in Iraq and denounced President George W. Bush's plan to boost troops in Iraq as a 'continuation of occupation'.

He added: 'The instalment of Patriot missiles is part of the US policy direction to create a support umbrella for the Zionist regime through an Islamic country.'

On Wednesday, Mr Bush unveiled plans to increase the number of US troops in Iraq, as well as to deploy anti-missile Patriot missiles and an aircraft carrier in the region.

REUTERS, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sunday, January 14, 2007

anime singapore sex gifs

You don't seriously think that there's porn here do you? Well shame on you! Go clean your head by reading some of these fine websites:

Singapore Stop
Singapore Serve
Bikini Girl Rate
Porn in Japan
Quirky Heart
Singapore Point
Singapore Times
Singapore Share
Ruby Pan
Singapore Smarts
Ho Jinx
Mr Pussy
Singapore Finger
High Life Girl
Hua Ying Xiong
Xia Suay Xue
Fan Wong
Despot Lee
Zoe A Tay
Dawn Yan
Xenoboy
sg
Yeo Cheow Tong
Fawning
Bread
Pluto-ed
Lao Cheebye
Mr
Wang
Says
So
Commentary Singapore
Mr
Btown
Singapore Sex
Georgie Yeo
Wong Can't Sing
Singapore Woman
Lee Despot
Singapore Surf
Singapore Cock
Singapore Train
Singapore Monkey
Singapussy
Singapore Swing
Singapore Whore