Pages

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Insider’s info on Hyderpora attack can’t be ruled out: J&K Police

Dr. S.Jalal

Militants change strategy, carry out lethal attacks

“Security forces are investigating the possibility of insider’s information about the movement of an Army convoy that was attacked at Hyderpora in Srinagar last month in which eight Army personnel were killed and over a dozen were injured”, a senior police officer said here.

Militants chose an Army vehicle in the convoy with un-armed soldiers for the lethal attack on Hyderpora Bypass, a day before Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh visited Srinagar last month.

“We can’t rule out insider’s information about the particular vehicle of the convoy in which the Army men were without weapons. The attack was targeted at that vehicle only when there were up and down convoys plying on the highway. We are investigating various angles about what led to the targeting of that particular vehicle”, the officer said.

He added that militants have infiltrated into security forces ranks but police have been able to identify and nab them. The officer cited the example of Constable Abdul Rashid Shigan and Sub-Inspector Shiv Kumar Sharma alias Sonu who were working at the behest of the militants and were involved in the militancy related incidents in the State.

“We were able to identify and arrest them. We can’t rule out more infiltrations in police. Such infiltrations do take place in the security force ranks in conflict situations”, the officer said.

The officer said that militants in Kashmir have changed their strategy with the aim to inflict more casualties on security forces and in return incite them for collateral damage that could lead to public anger against the Government and street protests.

“Two police men were killed at point blank range in Hari Singh Street, Srinagar on June 22 in busy market place but we didn’t fire back as it could have caused civilian casualties”, the officer said.

The officer said that such type of provocative attacks where they were expecting collateral damage was Bemina attack on CRPF camp in March this year where children were playing cricket, Hyderpora attack on Army convoy, and attack on Dr. Sheikh Jalal in busy street at Pampore where two police men were killed and the doctor was critically wounded.

“The aim of these attacks at public places was to incite the security forces for collateral damage so as to incite people against the Government and trigger street protests”, the officer said. “But security forces didn’t fell prey to the militant designs and maintained utmost restraint during recent attacks on the security forces”, he added.

The officer said that soon after the attack on Army convoy in Hyderpora, Police directed the Army not to open fire. “We told the senior Army officers that there was no point to fire back as the militants had fled and the firing can only cause civilian casualty”, he added.

The officer said that this year there were more lethal attacks on the security forces in Kashmir valley in which casualty figure on security forces is higher than the previous years.

With the changing strategy of carrying out lethal attacks on security forces, so far 33 security men were killed in militant attacks since March this year. The biggest one being the Hyderpora attack of last month in which 8 Army personnel were killed and over a dozen injured.

Militants in most of these lethal attacks took security forces by surprise. In March 13 this year, 5 CRPF jawans were killed when militants attacked them at Bemina and most of the jawans were without weapons as they were on law and order duty.

In Hygam Sopore, militants on April 26 attacked a police party and killed four police men. The police party had gone to investigate a theft case which militants had faked.

In Tral on May 25, four Army men were killed when militants took them by surprise after trapping them in their drag net.
(Fayaz Bukhari in Dailyexcelsior )

Ginkgo and Skin condition

HERB HELPS SKIN CONDITION

Up to two percent of the population has vitiligo, a difficult-to-treat skin disorder in which a loss of pigment-producing cells creates white patches on various parts of the body. A recent review of potential natural treatments for vitilago highlights a study using 40 mg of Ginkgo biloba, three times per day for six months. Of those taking ginkgo, disease progression was halted in 80%, and 40% experienced complete repigmentation, compared with only 8% in the placebo group. "Ginkgo’s apparent efficacy without the need for phototherapy – thus eliminating the adverse events inherent with phototherapy make sit a therapeutic option worth investigating," said the authors.
Source: BMJDermatol 2008;doi:10.1186/1471-5945-8-2

 Grow your own : Buy Ginkgo plants at http://jkmpic.blogspot.in

Cutivation of Ginkgo tree

Two recent studies support earlier research on the use of ginkgo for improving cognitive function, particularly in older people with dementia and Alzheimer’s disease.

Seniors with dementia scored better on memory tests and had other improvements. In the first, researchers from Ukraine enlisted 400 patients with dementia in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 22-week study. They found that treatment with a gingko biloba extract (240 mg per day) to be associated with improvements in scores for a simple and short test for assessing cognitive impairment of memory and attention (SKT test) and neuropsychiatric symptoms. In addition, care giver distress scores were reduced significantly among care givers of patients in the ginkgo group, as compared to a worsening found among care givers of patients on the placebo. The researchers reported significant differences between the ginkgo and placebo groups in terms of apathy/indifference, anxiety, irritability/lability, depression/dysphoria,and sleep/nighttime behavior. They say the results suggest that supplementing with an extract of gingko biloba may benefit patients with dementia.

In a second study by German researchers, 404 patients with mild to moderate dementia (333 with Alzheimer’s disease and 71 with vascular dementia) supplemented with the same type and dose of gingko biloba extract for a period of 6 months. Similarly, the herb was found to improve cognitive functioning, non-cognitive symptoms, and functional abilities. Patients treated with the gingko had improvements on the SKT cognitive test battery as compared to deterioration or no change inpatients on placebo. Scores on the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) also improved in patients taking the supplement, compared to either a slight deterioration or only slight improvement in placebo patients. The researchers say that supplementation with gingko may be of benefit to patients with mild to moderate dementia due to either vascular dementia or Alzheimer’s disease.
Source: Wien Med Wochenschr,2007;157(13-14):295-300; Alzheimer’s and Dementia, July 2008

Walnut plantation/Cultivation of Walnut

WALNUTS SLOW GROWTH OF PROSTATE CANCER

Research in mice by UC Davis shows that walnuts slow the growth of prostate cancer.
Mice fed a diet with walnuts had smaller, slower growing tumors, the researchers reported in the current issue of the British Journal of Nutrition.

A low-fat diet is often recommended for reducing the risk for developing or slowing growth of prostate cancer. However, the UC Davis study suggests that not eating walnuts may be a mistake.
Walnuts are rich in omega-3 polyunsaturated fats, antioxidants and other plant chemicals. Eschewing walnuts may mean foregoing the protective effects of walnuts on tumor growth.

One in six men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer, usually later in life. One in 36 will die from the disease because most tumors do not spread beyond the local site, according to the National Cancer Institute.

“Our findings suggest that eating a diet containing walnuts may slow prostate tumor growth so that the tumor remains inside the prostate capsule,” said Paul Davis, research nutritionist in the Department of Nutrition and researcher with the UC Davis Cancer Center. “If proven applicable in humans, men with prostate cancer could die of other causes — hopefully old age.”

The research was funded by the California Walnut Board, according to a UC Davis Cancer Center press release. Visit The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.) at http://www.sacbee.com

Buy Walnut plants at : http://jkmpic.blogspot.in