Friday, 21 February 2014

Obama to host Dalai Lama at White House

File photo: President Barack Obama meets the Dalai Lama in the Map Room of the White House, 18 February 2010China has been angered by previous meetings between the Dalai Lama (left) and Barack Obama

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US President Barack Obama will meet exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama on Friday, US officials say.
China has urged the US to cancel the meeting, saying it will "seriously impair China-US relations".
China describes the Dalai Lama as a separatist, while the spiritual leader says he only advocates greater autonomy for Tibet, not independence.
Officials say the US does not support Tibetan independence but is concerned about human rights in China.
The two men last met in 2011, in talks that angered China.
Tibet is governed as an autonomous region in China.
China has been widely accused of repressing political and religious freedoms in Tibet. Beijing rejects this and says economic development has improved Tibetans' lives.
'Respected leader'
Mr Obama will host the Dalai Lama in a private meeting in the White House Map Room on Friday morning, US officials said.

The Tibet Divide

  • China says Tibet has always been part of its territory
  • Tibet had long periods of autonomy
  • China launched a military assault in 1950
  • Opposition to Chinese rule led to a bloody uprising in 1959
  • Tibet's spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, fled to India
  • Dalai Lama now advocates a "middle way" with Beijing, seeking autonomy but not independence
Mr Obama traditionally hosts foreign leaders in the Oval Office, so the decision to use the Map Room is viewed as an attempt to give the visit a lower-profile.
Caitlin Hayden, a spokeswoman for the National Security Council, said Mr Obama would meet the Dalai Lama "in his capacity as an internationally respected religious and cultural leader".
"We do not support Tibetan independence," she said, adding that the US "strongly supports human rights and religious freedom in China.
"We are concerned about continuing tensions and the deteriorating human rights situation in Tibetan areas of China."
Meanwhile, Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said that Beijing was "firmly opposed" to the meeting.
"The US leader's meeting with the Dalai is a gross interference in China's internal affairs, a severe violation of codes of international relations and will seriously impair China-US relations," she said in a statement.
China had "already lodged solemn representations" with the US on the matter, she added.
In recent years more than 110 ethnic Tibetans - mostly young monks and nuns living in areas outside Tibet - have set themselves on fire in apparent protest against Beijing's rule.
The Chinese government accuses the Dalai Lama of orchestrating the protests, a charge he strongly rejects.
The Dalai Lama fled to India in 1959, after Chinese troops crushed an attempted uprising in Tibet.
He now advocates a "middle way" with Beijing, seeking autonomy but not independence.

Ukraine crisis: Tense Kiev as Yanukovych announces 'deal'

Ukrainian protesters and police have reached a stand-off in the capital Kiev, after dozens were killed in clashes on Thursday.
Thousands of protesters remain camped in Kiev's main square, despite attempts by the security forces to move them.
The presidency announced that a deal had been reached with the opposition after talks went on through the night.
It gave no details, but said the deal would be signed later. There is no confirmation by the opposition.
Earlier in the crisis, opposition leaders refused to agree any deals with the government until they were approved by the protesters.
The talks were brokered by French, Polish and German foreign ministers.
On Thursday, EU foreign ministers said in a statement sanctions would be put on some officials over the violence.
The US has warned Kiev that it would follow suit.
Thursday was the bloodiest day since the unrest began in November, with many of the anti-government protesters reportedly killed by police snipers.
Amateur footage appears to show police hostages - wearing blue uniforms with black collars - being kept in a line by men in plain clothes in Kiev
In all, 77 people - including policemen - have been killed since the violence first flared up on Tuesday, Ukraine's health ministry said.
Another 577 were injured.
Protesters had captured 67 police, the interior ministry said. A number of them were later released.
'Forces of peace'
On Thursday, the foreign ministers of France, Poland and Germany conducted several hours of discussions with Mr Yanukovych on a "roadmap towards a political solution" before going on to talks with opposition leaders.
They returned for another meeting with Mr Yanukovych in the evening and the talks continued late into the night.
Anti-government protesters on Kiev's Independence Square, known as the Maidan. Photo: 21 February 2014Thousands of protesters on the Maidan remained on high alert overnight, amid fears of new police attacks
Video still provided by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty shows a riot police standing next to a sniper firing from a fortified position in the direction of protesters in Kiev (20 February 2014)A video still released earlier shows a riot policeman standing next to a sniper firing in Kiev
Anti-government protesters carry an injured man. Photo: 20 February 2014Dozens of activists were injured, some seriously
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Mr Yanukovych had expressed willingness to hold early elections this year.
Mr Yanukovych's aide Hanna Herman was later quoted as saying that the president was ready to make concessions to "restore peace".
She added that "forces of peace" among presidential advisers defeated the "hawks".
The snap presidential and parliamentary elections are one of the key demands by Maidan activists and opposition leaders.
Currently, the presidential poll is scheduled for next year.
'Dismay'
Also on Thursday, the statement from an emergency EU foreign ministers' meeting in Brussels said "no circumstances can justify the repression we are currently witnessing".

Key dates

  • 21 November 2013: Ukraine suspends preparations for a trade deal with the EU, triggering protests
  • 30 November: Riot police take action against protesters, injuring dozens and fuelling anger
  • 17 December: Russia agrees to buy Ukrainian government bonds and slash price of gas sold to Ukraine, taking wind out of protest movement
  • 25 December: Renewed outcry after anti-government activist and journalist Tetyana Chornovol is beaten
  • 19 January: Protests take a violent turn as demonstrators torch police buses and throw petrol bombs; police respond with rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannon. Several die in following days
  • 18 February: Clashes see many civilians and police officers killed
  • 20 February: A truce negotiated the previous day breaks down
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the "prime responsibility" to get talks between the two sides under way lay with President Yanukovych.
She said ministers had expressed their "dismay" at the latest violence and had agreed to "suspend export licences for equipment for internal repression".
Implementation of the measures "will be taken forward in light of developments in Ukraine", she added.
The EU had until now refrained from imposing sanctions, preferring to emphasise dialogue and compromise.
US Vice President Joe Biden also warned President Yanukovych in a telephone conversation that Washington was ready to impose sanctions against Ukrainian officials guilty of ordering troops to fire on protesters.
The US state department had already announced visa bans on 20 members of the Ukrainian government but has not provided any names.

Monday, 20 January 2014

दस साल के बच्चे ने अंधाधुंध दौड़ाई कार, टक्कर से युवक के दो टुकड़े

दस साल के बच्चे ने अंधाधुंध दौड़ाई कार, टक्कर से युवक के दो टुकड़े
दस साल के बच्चे ने अंधाधुंध दौड़ाई कार, टक्कर से युवक के दो टुकड़े
दस साल के बच्चे ने अंधाधुंध दौड़ाई कार, टक्कर से युवक के दो टुकड़े
दस साल के बच्चे ने अंधाधुंध दौड़ाई कार, टक्कर से युवक के दो टुकड़े
जोधपुर. 10 साल के बच्चे ने पिता की कार की चाबी उठाई और स्टार्ट कर सड़क पर आ गया। बच्चे से कार संभली नहीं। अंधाधुंध तरीके से सड़क पर दौड़ी। कार की चपेट में एक युवक आ गया। रफ्तार इतनी तेज थी कि युवक के दो टुकड़े हो गए। 
पिता की कार लेकर सड़क पर आया बच्चा, दूसरे वाहन से टकराने के बाद रुकी कार, घटना के बाद हंगामा, पुलिस ने शांत कराया।
कार फिर भी दौड़ती रही। गनीमत रही कि निगम के एक वाहन से टकराकर रुक गई। घटना जोधपुर की है। रविवार दोपहर भगत की कोठी निवासी पूरण सिंह ने अपनी सफारी कार घर के बाहर खड़ी की थी। उनका बेटा कार स्टार्ट कर गली से निकल मुख्य सड़क पर आ गया। सड़क पर नगर निगम में संविदा सफाई कर्मचारी नेहरू कॉलोनी निवासी संजय कंडारा (23) पुत्र प्रेम कंडारा खड़ा था। कार की चपेट में संजय आ गया।
आगे की स्लाइड्स में जानें जब बच्चे ने गली में 125 किमी की रफ्तार से चलाई कार तो क्या हुआ...

फोटो- घटना के बाद मौके पर लोगों का जमावड़ा लग गया। हंगामा करने की कोशिश हुई, लेकिन पुलिस ने मामला शांत करा दिया।

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I am not thinking of marriage right now: Jacqueline Fernandez

I am not thinking of  marriage right now: Jacqueline Fernandez
Jacqueline Fernandez
Jacqueline Fernandez's last outing on the big screen, Race 2, might not have found too many takers, but her fans still gathered to greet her with loud cheers when she recently visited Ahmedabad.

And she was worth every moment's wait as she made an appearance looking stunning in an orange anarkali. Flashing her pearlies, Jaqueline said, "I am sorry for the delay, I hope you will forgive me for coming late. This is my third visit to Ahmedabad and it has always been fun coming here."

READ: Sajid Khan and Jacqueline Fernandez part ways

Jacqueline, who has been missing from the limelight for sometime now, seems to have a packed year ahead. With movies like Roy, alongside Ranbir Kapoor and Arjun Rampal, and Kick, opposite Salman Khan, in the list of her forthcoming films, she is all excited. She says, "I am really excited about my next films as I am working with big names like Salman and Ranbir. It has been an amazing experience working with these two, especially Salman from whom I got to learn a lot regarding the tricks of the trade." On asked about how it's different from other films she's done in the past, she quips, "Earlier I have mainly done glam roles, but in my recent films, I'm playing a simple and deglam role which was a challenge."

This Sri Lankan beauty, who will soon be seen in an "English film called According to Mathew, a Sri Lankan production," says that "Bollywood is getting bigger and better", and she is happy to be a part of the Hindi film industry. "Bollywood was all about 100 crore last year, but things are getting bigger now. Films have already started doing bigger business and I am sure this year will bring even bigger collections at the box office."

And as she gets up to leave, one final questions leaves her stumped. So when is the beautiful actress tying the knot? She says, "I am speechless. Well, right now I am not thinking about getting married. I'm concentrating on my career which is my top priority. The rest will follow eventually."

Salman Khan promised but didn't help social worker

Salman Khan promised but didn't help social worker
Salman Khan
Known for supporting social causes, helping people and especially promoting his Being Human foundation, Salman Khan it seems has forgotten to help a social worker he promised in 2010.

According to a report in Mid-Day, Salman Khan who was promoting his film 'Dabangg' in 2010 helped raise funds for a professor turned activist,Sandeep Desai who was working for the cause of setting up schools for under priviledged children.


READ: Salman Khan cuts 'Jai Ho' promotional budget for charity

The actor had reportedly even tweeted on micro-blogging website Twitter about the same and wrote "I shall make sure that I will make one school every year till the time I am here so please don't stress (sic)". Not just that, Sallu bhai also reportedly urged his fans to donate generously. But three years later, Sandeep Desai is yet to receive any help.

The social worker who quit his job as a professor at SP Jain Institute of Management and Research is disheartened by the actor's false promise and is reportedly still waiting for some help.

READ: Aamir Khan wants to see Salman Khan's 'Jai Ho'

According to the report, Salman's spokesperson said that someone from the Being Human foundation will look into the matter.

Salman whose next film ' Jai Ho' releases on January 24, 2014 was in the the news for asking the producers to donate some of the money used for promotion to be charity. We hope Salman is quick to respond this time around.

Kareena not a part of Singham 2?

Kareena not a part of Singham 2?
Kareena Kapoor Khan
Kareena Kapoor Khan’s dream of working with Ajay Devgn in 'Singham 2' has been shattered.Rohit Shetty has decided to cast a newcomer opposite Devgn in the sequel. 

A source close to the development told TOI, “Rohit had offered Kareena 'Singham 2' even before 'Chennai Express' hit the theatres. Kareena was keen to do the film and had also consented in principle.”

So what prompted Rohit to change his mind? The source revealed, “Rohit felt that the role is too small for an established and talented actress like Kareena. He discussed this with the producers, Reliance Entertainment, who also subscribed to his view.”

TOI has it that a newbie from South will be roped in to play Ajay’s love interest in the film. Added the source, “There is no bad blood over this between Rohit and Kareena. They have worked in 'Golmaal Returns' and 'Golmaal 3', and will work together in future as well.”

A sequel to the 2011 Ajay Devgn and Kajal Aggarwal starrer 'Singham', the film is expected to go on floors early next year.

Rohit Shetty officially launches Singham 2

Rohit Shetty officially launches Singham 2
The highlight of the police function in Mumbai last night was the launch of Rohit Shetty's Singham 2, a film that brings together Ajay Devgn and Kareena Kapoor Khan. Just before the trio launched the sequel, a promo (made by Rohit) specially shot for the occasion played.

READ: Rohit Shetty postpones 'Singham 2' for 'Fear Factor'

Cops spoke about their sense of pride when Singham (2011) released. The short film showed many policemen and lady constables fighting back tears as they recounted how their families started respecting their jobs much more after watching the film. Slightly embarrassed at some of their team-members' emotional outbursts, senior officers seen in the film cleared the lump in their throats and spoke of how it felt good to wear khaki.

ALSO READ: Kareena not a part of Singham 2?

Says Kareena, "I'm looking forward to starting work on the film, which goes on floors in the first week of March. We will hit screens on August 15 (Independence Day) this year. Like our police force, Singham 2 is an emotional journey for me too, as it means I will join Rohit and Ajay with whom I did two of the Golmaal films. Not to forget, Singham is a franchise that one is privileged to be associated with. The earlier film had its heart in the right place and that's why it went on to become a calendar event for India."

Assad says quitting 'not under discussion'

Assad says quitting 'not under discussion'
"If we wanted to surrender, we would have surrendered from the start," Assad told Russian parliament members during a meeting in Damascus.
MOSCOW: A defiant Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Sunday said that he had no plans to stand down, stressing that only the Syrian peoplehad the right to determine the country's future. 

"If we wanted to surrender, we would have surrendered from the start," Assad told Russian parliament members during a meeting in Damascus, according to Russian news agency Interfax. 

"This issue is not under discussion," he said when asked to comment on Western and opposition calls for him to stand down and take part in elections. 

"Only the Syrian people can decide who should take part in elections," he said in remarks translated into Russian. 

The regime has repeatedly refused to countenance the possibility of Assad stepping aside, setting up a clash with Syria's opposition, which has made that its sole aim at peace talks in Switzerland beginning on Wednesday. 

These diametrically opposed positions cast a shadow over the so-called Geneva II conference aimed at setting up a transitional government to lead Syria out of a nearly three-year war estimated to have killed more than 130,000 people and forced millions from their homes.

'Diabolical' Arab countries behind Iraq strife: Maliki

'Diabolical' Arab countries behind Iraq strife: Maliki
The premier said suicide bombers were coming to Iraq from as far afield as Morocco, Libya and Yemen.

BAGHDAD: Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Malikiblamed "diabolical" and "treacherous" Arab countries for a protracted surge in nationwide violence in a speech on Sunday, but stopped short of naming individual countries.

The premier said suicide bombers were coming to Iraq from as far afield as Morocco, Libya and Yemen, but did not single out countries he described as "evil" which he said were supporting violent extremists in Iraq.

"Iraq is the target for some countries that are backing terrorism, and backing evil," Maliki said in a speech in the southern city of Nasiriyah.

"The world has united with us," he continued. "The (UN) security council, the European Union, and most Arab countries, except some diabolical treacherous countries."

The Iraqi leader warned countries that supported violence in Iraq would also suffer, arguing "this evil has started to expand, and it will reach those same countries, as it reached others previously."

Iraqi officials have alleged that Saudi Arabia and Qatar in particular have supported disaffected Sunni Arabs in western Iraq as they have staged anti-government protests in the past year.

More recently, Sunni-dominated western Iraq has erupted into a deadly standoff with security forces and their tribal allies facing off against anti-government militants and tribes.

A large section of Ramadi and all of Fallujah, both former insurgent bastions west of Baghdad, fell from government control late last month.

It was the first time anti-government fighters have exercised such open control in major cities since the height of the insurgency that followed the US-led invasion of 2003.

Fighting originally erupted in the Ramadi area on December 30, when security forces cleared a year-old Sunni Arab protest camp.

It spread to Fallujah, and militants moved in and seized the city and parts of Ramadi after security forces withdrew.

Diplomats including UN chief Ban Ki-moon have urged Iraqi authorities to pursue political reconciliation in a bid to end the standoff, and a months-long surge in nationwide violence, but Maliki has said the unrest is not due to domestic factors, and has blamed outside forces
.

Iran invited to Syria peace conference: UN chief Ban Ki-moon

UNITED NATIONS: Iran will attend this week'sSyria peace conference after it pledged to play a "positive and constructive role" in efforts to end the three-year-old war, UN leader Ban Ki-moonsaid. 

Ban said on Sunday he made a late invitation to Iran after intensive talks with Iran's foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who agreed to attend. 

Iran's involvement means that all the key countries linked to the worsening war will now be at the opening of the peace conference in Montreux, Switzerland on Wednesday. 

Talks between President Bashar al-Assad's government and the opposition are due to start in Geneva on Friday. 

"Foreign minister Zarif and I agree that the goal of the negotiations is to establish, by mutual consent, a transitional governing body with full executive powers," Ban said. 

"It was on that basis that foreign minister Zarif pledged that Iran would play a positive and constructive role in Montreux," the UN secretary-general added. 

The United States and other Western powers had opposed Iran's attendance at the meeting as long as it refused to accept a communique adopted by the major powers in Geneva on June 30, 2012 calling for a transition government in Syria. 

"I believe strongly that Iran needs to be part of the solution to the Syrian crisis," Ban said. 

Ban said that as convener of the peace conference he has also invited Australia, Bahrain, Belgium, Greece, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, South Korea and the Vatican. 

He said the extra countries would be "an important and useful show of solidarity in advance of the hard work that the Syrian government and opposition delegations will begin."

Strong 6.3-earthquake jolts New Zealand: US Geological Survey

WELLINGTON: A strong 6.3-magnitudeearthquake rattled New Zealand on Monday, halting train services and knocking merchandise off shelves, but there were no immediate reports of major damage or injuries. 

The quake, which struck at 3.52pm (0252 GMT), was centred in the North Island about 115 kilometres (71 miles) northeast of the capital city Wellington, the US Geological Survey said. 

The tremor hit at a depth of 27 kilometres and was widely felt throughout the North and South islands. It was followed by a series of smaller aftershocks. 

"I've seen the neighbours and they're a bit shaken up but apart from that no damage," Brian Smith of Eketahuna, near the centre of the quake, told Radio New Zealand, describing the tremor as as a sharp jolt. 

"My wife was outside in the garden and she said she couldn't stand up and had to sit down." 

Some houses in the small township of Eketahuna suffered broken windows and structural damage but police said there had been no reports of injuries. 

Pam Lochore, wife of All Blacks great Brian Lochore, said photographs had fallen off shelves and "a rugby ball went flying across the room" in their home at Masterton in the North Island's south. 

One casualty of the quake was a giant model eagle which fell to the ground from the roof of Wellington airport where it was being used to promote the "Hobbit" movie trilogy. 

All train services in the Wellington region were suspended due to the quake. 

New Zealand is on the boundary of the Australian and Pacific tectonic plates, forming part of the so-called "Ring of Fire", and experiences up to 15,000 tremors a year. 

A devastating 6.3-magnitude temblor in the South Island city of Christchurch in 2011 killed 185 people -- one of the nation's deadliest disasters of the modern era. 

Wellington was the scene of the country's most powerful earthquake in 1855. 

That devastating 8.2-magnitude quake caused four deaths and changed the city's entire geography, pushing the shoreline out 200 metres (660 feet) as it thrust the harbour floor upwards.

Prince William, heir to £400m estate, gets hefty discount on Cambridge fees

LONDON: Prince William has been given a hefty discount on his fees for a special course at Cambridge University, a media report said on Sunday. 

William, 31, is paying around £10,000 to study agricultural management but the Mirror quoted sources as saying that they had expected the cost to be higher because the crash course has been especially organized just for him. 

The 10-week study stint is to prepare him for when he inherits the Duchy Of Cornwall from Prince Charles. Student leaders on Saturday attacked the cut-price deal, which comes as ordinary undergraduates struggle with £9,000 annual tuition fees and leave university with an average £25,000 debt, the report said. 

"It's not as though the Queen has had to remortgage Buckingham Palace to help him through university," National Union of Students (NUS) vice president Dom Anderson said. "There are surely more deserving postgraduate students in Cambridge than the heir to the British throne who will inherit a £400 million estate. Many feel the royal family receives quite enough of a subsidy as it is," he was quoted as saying. 

UAE mulls introducing compulsory military service


DUBAI, The United Arab Emirates (UAE) Prime Minister, Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al-Maktoum, has said that the Gulf state will introduce mandatory military service for its nationals aged between 18 and 30.

"The service will cover military training in the armed forces, 9 months for high school graduates and two years for those less than high school," Xinhua quoted Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid on tweeter.

"UAE reserve forces will consist of retired armed forces' soldiers and national service program graduates," the UAE prime minister tweeted.

"Protecting the nation and preserving its independence and sovereignty is a sacred national duty. The new law will apply to everyone," tweeted Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid. The UAE has 8.8 million inhabitants of which only 20 percent are UAE nationals.

The UAE prime minister, who is also the country's vice president and ruler of Dubai, has ordered his cabinet to draw up a bill for national defence and reserves.

'Exciting two years ahead for SL' - Ford



Graham Ford, Edgbaston, June, 1, 2013
Graham Ford: "Beating South Africa in a one-day series was something special for me. The World Tweny20 was very special, and the fact that the boys worked and got themselves into such a good position" © PA Photos 
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Players/Officials: Graham Ford
Teams: Sri Lanka
At the end of Graham Ford's penultimate training session as coach, the Sri Lanka cricketers worked themselves up to a frenzy in anticipation of a challenge that has brewed for some time. Padded up and wielding willow, physio Steve Mount stepped into one of the practice nets at Sharjah Stadium and took a middle-stump guard with umpire Kumar Sangakkara's assistance. 

At the bowler's end, Sri Lanka's smallest player Kaushal Silva marked out a run-up: about a dozen paces for someone of average height, but no less than 20 for him. A wicketkeeper by trade, his task was to dismiss the batsman in three overs. Silva set an imaginary field and ran in hard.



The first ball was defended solidly, but Silva saw enough cause to approach Mount, chest puffed out, malice in his eyes. His team-mates howled in enjoyment as the protagonists hammed up the dramedy. No one remarked Silva would have had to pitch it less than a metre from the bowling crease if he wanted to bounce Mount, perhaps because the joke was a little obvious.

With only few balls to go, Silva struck Mount low on the front pad and went up in raucous appeal. Sangakkara raised his finger, along with several others, and sent Silva into raptures, sprinting up and down the net. Mount asked for a review, but there was not enough evidence in the footage - shot by the team analyst - to overturn the decision. 


After the shouts had subsided and his team had cleared out, Ford reflected on the event. "There's been a lot of talk on the bus - every day the challenge has been the main topic. It just shows the lads are in a good place in terms of team spirit and getting on together."
Seemingly not the gregarious type, Ford has nonetheless had much to do with his team's high spirits. He has overseen a year of intensive transition in the top team, and in the first two Tests in the UAE, Sri Lanka's investment in youth has begun to pay dividends. After the third Test, Ford will end his two-year stint with Sri Lanka, handing over to Paul Farbrace.
"From a performance point of view, during my time, we've seen some of these young players really start to put their hands up an make runs. Some of the Test match records for some of the younger players have been great. If look at your Test statistics of Dinesh Chandimal and Lahiru Thirimanne, and now we see Kaushal Silva coming into Test cricket - they have been good. Dimuth Karunaratne is developing. 

"Also very, very pleasingly, we see some of the seam bowlers really start to construct spells, particularly Test-match spells. With the seam-bowling unit developing, it certainly seems as if things can go well away from home and they can cause problems for opposition on more seamer-friendly wickets. Overall the processes that have been put in place,the gradual improvements and the foundations that have been set should lead to a very exciting 18 months or two years ahead for Sri Lanka cricket.

"At the same time, the old guard have been good. It's not easy to fill the shoes of the retiring greats because they are real talents - special greats. But there's enough young talent within Sri Lanka to ensure that the team will always be a competitive international team."
The team has had largely positive results under Ford, though the 0-3 whitewash in Australia is the conspicuous exception. In 2012, Sri Lanka won their first series in three years, against Pakistan, and have more recently had a 4-1 victory over South Africa in ODIs.
"There have been a lot of satisfying memories," Ford said. "Beating South Africa in a one-day series was something special for me. The World Tweny20 was very special, and the fact that the boys worked and got themselves into such a good position - a lot of that went to plan and it was something to be proud of. Unfortunately it was also a massive disappointment to lose the final, having been so well placed. That's probably the most disappointing time."



Sri Lanka had had a nine-month lay-off from Tests, but have a busier 12 months ahead, with full tours of Bangladesh, England and New Zealand on the horizon. Ford said the Tests in England, in particular, could be a defining series.
"I think that's going to be really exciting for the players. It's going to be a good opportunity to gauge where they're at - especially being able to play in foreign conditions. The Australia tour was a disappointment, but if they can go and play very well in England, which I believe they can, they've got the players to do that. That's going to show just what a capable Test unit they are."
In limited-overs cricket, the World Twenty20 in Bangladesh and World Cup in Australia and New Zealand loom as the greatest challenges. Sri Lanka have made four major tournament finals since 2007, but have not won a trophy.
"I think they are certainly ready for the T20 World Cup, and we've got an outstanding chance of winning that in those conditions," Ford said.  "I would say they are not quite ready for the 50-over World Cup yet - got to be realistic about that. There's quite a bit of cricket to be played. There's cricket in England which will help preparations. There's cricket in New Zealand before the World Cup. I would think that with quite a number of the players that would be key to that challenge making progress, by the time the World Cup comes, we should be in a good position."
Ford's next assignment is with Surrey, with whom he begins a three-year stint in February. He did not rule out returning to coach Sri Lanka in future, citing with particular affection the bonds he had formed with the players.
"I can't say enough about the group of players that I've worked with," he said. "I'll have the fondest memories. It's a very sad time for me to be leaving them. It's been very, very special for me. I've coached a lot of teams but this group of players stand out as being absolutely fantastic. It's pretty tough as far as that's concerned. I will sit at home for many years to come thinking about the great players and great people who I've worked with in Sri Lanka."

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