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Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Manvel teacher accused of working drunk, kissing student

A Spanish teacher at Manvel High School has been accused of being drunk on campus and kissing one of his students, according to school officials.
Cesar Flores, 34, was arrested about 8 a.m. Monday at the school at 19601 Texas 6, near Texas 288, after his students alerted campus police that he appeared intoxicated and had kissed a young woman in class, said Shirley Brothers, spokeswoman for the Alvin Independent School District.
Brothers said Flores is charged with public intoxication and assault by contact.
Flores, who was completing his first year at the school, was arrested and will no longer be a teacher with the district because of the allegations, Brothers said. Prior to the accusations, he already had resigned from the district effective June 5.
Brothers said that Cesar's students in a Spanish II class for 10th and 11th graders told district police that they thought their teacher was acting inappropriately and seemed to be drunk.
They said he tried to kiss a student on her head, but the young woman moved away and he kissed her on her back.
"The good thing is the kiddos noticed something was wrong and reported it," Brothers said. "We're proud of the youngsters for reporting something was wrong."

Video film on stainless steel wins award

The video, “Stainless Steel - Recycled for Lasting Value” has received the Sustainable Business film award at the 2009 Festival van de Bedrijfsfilm (Corporate Film Festival) in Antwerp, Belgium. In less than four minutes, it demonstrates how stainless steels’ durability and recyclability make this material a sustainable choice. Stainless is a champion of recycling, with nearly 90% of end-of-life stainless steel being collected and recycled into new stainless steel – without loss of quality. Trading platform that even a 5 year old can trade. Join nowThe Festival, which celebrates its tenth anniversary this year, is conducted by the Department of Communication at the Plantijn Technical University (Hogeschool) Antwerp. The Team Stainless video was shortlisted in the Sustainable Business category at the beginning of May. The award was announced during a ceremony on 28 May at the Provincial House of Antwerp. The video was created by Brussels-based production house Sovifo (www.sovifo.com). The video is the last in a series of three. The other ones also demonstrate the alloying and self-repairing properties of stainless steel.

Australia says racism not behind student attacks

Australia's government said on Wednesday that racism was not behind a string of violent attacks on Indian students, including the latest slashing of a man in Melbourne by a group of five unidentified youths.
"There's no allegation, no substantial allegation that these are racially motivated. I don't believe so, and neither does the Indian government," Trade and Acting Foreign Minister Simon Crean told local television.
The latest attack has added to fears that violent attacks and robberies of Indian students could seriously damage Australia's third-biggest export earner, the A$15 billion ($12.16 billion) market for overseas students.
Around 93,000 of the 430,000 foreign students in Australia are Indians, up from around 30,000 only a few years ago.
Around 120 students protested against the attacks on a street leading to India's parliament in New Delhi, police said on Wednesday.
They waved placards with slogans such as "Shame shame Australia" and "Stop harassing Indian students" and burnt effigies of Australian politicians.
Since India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh raised concerns last week with his Australian counterpart Kevin Rudd, several senior ministers have been wheeled out by the Australian government to try to avert a foreign student exodus.
TASK FORCE FORMED
Rudd and Foreign Minister Stephen Smith also formed a new task force to deal with the problem, led by former special forces commander turned National Security Adviser Duncan Lewis.
Crean said while Australia would do everything possible to stop the attacks, he believed the issue was being sensationalised in both Australian and Indian media, potentially making the problem worse.
"Australia, I believe, is an inclusive, welcoming, tolerant society. It's easy-going. That is a brand worth preserving," Crean said.
Crean's defence came after 21-year-old Indian student was attacked by a group of five males and slashed across the chest with a box-cutter knife in suburban Melbourne after they stopped him on Tuesday and demanded cigarettes and money.
Australia's government said that hate crimes would be made and offence in the state of Victoria where most of the attacks occurred.
Police said the latest in a string of assaults on Indian students was not racially motivated, as has been claimed in sections of India's media.
"I would say this is an opportunistic fight. It could have happened to any individual of any nationality," police Senior Constable Karla Dennis said.
Crean said no one senior in India's government had alleged racism as a motivation for the attacks, which some Indian students said were also occurring in Sydney.
"They all are aware of the very conscious efforts that the Australian governments are taking to address this problem. They know we are sincere," Crean said.

America's Most Dangerous Cities


Zack O'Malley Greenburg, Forbes.com
In March 2008, Kwame Kilpatrick was charged with eight felonies, including perjury and obstruction of justice. In August, he violated his bail agreement and was thrown in jail. His actions were deplorable for anybody, but Kilpatrick was no Average Joe--he was the mayor of Detroit.
Unfortunately for the Motor City, Kilpatrick, 38, is just one ripple in the area's sea of crime. Detroit is the worst offender on our list of America's most dangerous cities, thanks to a staggering rate of 1,220 violent crimes committed per 100,000 people.
In Pictures: America's Most Dangerous Cities
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"Detroit has, historically, been one of the more violent cities in the U.S.," says Megan Wolfram, an analyst at iJet Intelligent Risk Systems, a Maryland-based risk-assessment firm. "They have a number of local crime syndicates there--a number of small gangs who tend to compete over territory."
Detroit was followed closely on the list by the greater Memphis, Tenn., and Miami, Fla., metropolitan areas. Those three were the only large cities in America with more than 950 violent crimes committed per 100,000 people.
Behind the Numbers To determine our list, we used violent crime statistics from the FBI's latest uniform crime report, issued in 2008. The violent crime category is composed of four offenses: murder and non-negligent manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery and aggravated assault. We evaluated U.S. metropolitan statistical areas--geographic entities defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget for use by federal agencies in collecting, tabulating and publishing federal statistics--with more than 500,000 residents.
Though nationwide crime was down 3.5% year over year in the first six months of 2008, the cities atop our list illustrate a disturbing trend: All 10 of the most dangerous cities were among those identified by the Department of Justice as transit points for Mexican drug cartels.
Run by crime lords like Joaquin Guzman Lorea, these gangs--and their violent turf wars--are spreading into the American Southwest and beyond. Places like Stockton, Calif., nearly 500 miles from Tijuana, have seen an uptick in related violent crime.
"Stockton is a major transit point along the I-5 corridor on the way to Seattle and Vancouver," says Wolfram. "A lot of it is similar to crime happening in the Southwest. For the most part, it's drug gang on drug gang."
Motown Blues The situation in Mexico has escalated in recent years, but Detroit has been dealing with the same problems for decades. An industrial boomtown during the first half of the 20th century, the population of Detroit proper swelled from 285,000 in 1900 to 990,000 in 1920, reaching a peak of 1.8 million in 1950.
Only half that number still lives within city limits. Starting in the 1960s, Detroit began a precipitous decline. Most scholars blame rapid suburbanization, outsourcing of manufacturing jobs, and federal programs they say exacerbated the situation by creating a culture of joblessness and dependency. Residents fled to the suburbs and to other regions of the country entirely, leaving behind a landscape littered with abandoned buildings.
"Factories that once provided tens of thousands of jobs now stand as hollow shells, windows broken, mute testimony to a lost industrial past," wrote Thomas J. Sugrue in his book The Origins of the Urban Crisis. "Whole sections of the city are eerily apocalyptic."
Detroit isn't the only city on the list that's suffering from abandonment issues.
In Las Vegas, Nev., for example, the housing boom created loads of excess inventory. When the market tanked, homeowners suddenly found themselves with properties worth far less than the mortgages they'd taken out. In the worst cases, banks foreclosed, leaving people without homes--and with more debt than they'd had to begin with. As a result, Sin City is even emptier than Detroit.
"Detroit has trouble showing improvement in its crime rate because dedicated, desperately needed and appropriate resources are not invested in public safety. Painfully, it is not a priority," says Wayne County Prosecuting Attorney Kym L. Worthy. "I wish that those with the resources would view domestic terrorism like they do terrorism across the water. It used to be that we were keeping our head above water and treading quickly. Now we are drowning, and no one seems to really care. All they tell me to do is cut some more."
Few Signs of Improvement Making matters more difficult, as municipal budgets shrink during this recession, crime-fighting funds are often among the first casualties.
"There's less public spending during downturns," says Wolfram. "Police departments and incarcerations systems are tough to fund."
The news has been bad for decades, but there may yet be hope for Detroit. The city's new mayor, Kenneth V. Cockrel Jr., assumed office on Sept. 19, 2008--and hasn't committed a single felony.

Monday, June 1, 2009

The hottest, highest-paid models in the world


Business magazine Forbes magazine has released it's international list of this year's top-earning models. Which sexy ladies have the deepest pockets? Find out right here!
'The world's top earning model' is based on estimated earnings of models from June 2008 to June 2009. Four Brazilian models have found a place in the rankings.
"(The) modelling industry has been hard-hit by the economic crisis, but the value of the beauties at the top is as strong as ever," the magazine noted.
At Number One: Gisele Bundchen
Brazilian beauty Bundchen has topped the list of top-earning models. At 28, she has earnings to the tune of USD 25 million from numerous campaigns, including those for brands like Versace, True Religion jeans and Dior.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Prabhakaran's parents in govt custody: Report

The parents of the now dead Tamil Tigers chief Velupillai Prabhakaran are in the "protective custody" of the Sri Lankan government, a media report said Thursday.

Thiruvenkatam Velupillai (76) and his wife Parvathi (71) surrendered to the army several days ago, The Island newspaper quoted a government official as saying. They were reportedly among the civilians holed up in the no fire zone along the coast in Mullaitivu district before the army launched its final assault against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Prabhakaran and other LTTE leaders were killed May 18. "Velupillai and Parvathi were among the early batch of Sri Lankan Tamils to go to India. They settled in Tiruchi," the report said. They returned to the LTTE zone in northern Sri Lanka in 2003, a year after the Tigers and Colombo signed a Norway-brokered ceasefire agreement. Prabhakaran had fled their home in Jaffna way back in 1972. Prabhakaran's death and the decimation of the LTTE ended a dragging Tamil separatist conflict that left some 90,000 people dead in Sri Lanka

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Canadian TV rapped for Obama assassination joke

Canada's public broadcaster was wrong to show a skit that joked about the possible assassination of U.S. President Barack Obama and suggested he could be a thief, an industry panel ruled on Monday.
The New Year's Eve "Bye Bye" comedy program -- shown by the French-language Radio Canada network -- generated more than 200 complaints. In one segment, two hosts discussed Obama's election in November 2008. Obama, who took office in January, is the first black U.S. president.
"We're not racists. It will be good to have a ***** in the White House. It will be practical. Black on white, it will be easier to shoot him," one of the show's hosts remarked.
The Canadian Broadcasting Standards Council said it found "nothing redeeming in the allegedly comedic notion that an American president should be shot, still less that this would be easier to achieve because of the color of the president's skin. It was a disturbing, wounding, abusive racial comment".
The show also featured an interview with an actor pretending to be Obama. The host said, "The blacks, you all look alike," and then warned viewers to hide their purses.
The council said the comments and sketches breached regulations, adding they went "too far in terms of Canadian broadcast standards."
The producers of the show denied the skits had been racist, saying they had meant to mock the characters making the offensive remarks.
Complaints about Radio Canada are usually handled by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). In this case the CRTC asked the council -- which deals with commercial channels and has more experience in handling such complaints -- for advice.
The CRTC, which is due to conduct its own probe into the show, does not have the power to fine Radio-Canada but can issue a public reprimand.
A spokeswoman for the commission said such reprimands could cause problems for networks when it came time for them to seek renewal of their broadcasting license. Radio-Canada is due to apply for a license renewal in 2011.
Polls regularly show that Canadians like Obama far more than they do their own leaders. Tens of thousands turned up to cheer him when he made a brief visit to Ottawa in February. A spokeswoman for the U.S. embassy said she did not know whether the White House had complained about the show

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

N-capable Agni-II successfully test-fired

India
on Tuesday successfully tested the nuclear capable Agni-II missile from a defence base in Orissa, official sources said. The surface-to-surface missile with a range of over 2,000 km was test-fired from the Wheeler's Island near Dhamara in the district of Bhadrak, some 150 km from here at 10.06am. "It was a user trial," the sources said, adding that the aim of the test was to give the Army confidence to fire the missile on its own. The Agni II missile, which is a part of India's Integrated Guided Missile Development Programme, is 20 metres long. Weighing 16 tonnes, the missile can carry a payload of around 1,000 kg and its range can also be increased to 3,000 km by reducing the pay load. "It can be fired from both rail and road mobile launchers. It takes only 15 minutes for the missile to be readied for firing," the sources said, adding that the Agni II-version of the Agni series of missiles was first test-fired in 1999 from the same location.

LTTE Chief Prabhakaran's body found

Sri Lankan troops recovered the body of slain rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran on Tuesday, a day after he was killed in the Tamil Tigers' last stand against government forces in the north, the military said. Sri Lankan TV stations aired video of what appeared to be his corpse, with the top of its head blown off. There was no independent confirmation available. Private TV stations Derana and Swarnavahini showed soldiers surrounding what they said was Prabhakaran's body, with his trademark moustache and distinctive Tiger stripe camouflage fatigues. The military said the body was found in a lagoon. A blue cloth covered the top of the head, which appeared shorn off. The video showed a copy of a military ID tag written in Tamil, bearing the number "0:01", and what appeared to be a Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) identity card with his photograph. The Army's commander, General Sarath Fonseka, moments earlier had gone on state TV and radio to announce that the body had been found on Tuesday and positively identified. "The good news from the war front is that the body of the leader of the terrorist organisation which destroyed the country for the last 30 years, Prabhakaran, has been found this morning by the army. We have identified the body," he said. Fonseka's announcement came after the LTTE made a statement on a pro-rebel web site saying Prabhakaran, 54, was still alive. "I wish to inform the global Tamil community distressed witnessing the final events of the war that our beloved leader Velupillai Prabhakaran is alive and safe," the website quoted LTTE diplomatic head Selvarajah Pathmanathan as saying.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Producer-director Prakash Mehra dead

Producer-director Prakash Mehra dead

Veteran Bollywood filmmaker Prakash Mehra passed away on Sunday morning after a prolonged illness. He was 69-year-old.
Mehra died of pneumonia and multiple organ failure at the Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital, said family sources.
Mehra ventured into filmmaking with 1968 Shashi Kapoor starrrer Haseena Maan Jayegi followed by the 1971 hit Mela, which had Feroz Khan and Sanjay Khan in lead roles.
However, it was Amitabh Bachchan starrer blockbuster hit Zanjeer (1973) that not only catapulted him into the big league but also gave the Hindi film industry its 'angry young man'.
He later teamed up with Amitabh in hits like Muqaddar Ka Sikandar, Sharabi, Laawaris and Namak Halal before their last film together Jaadugar that turned out to be a dud.
Recently he was visited by Amitabh while he was in the intensive care unit in the hospital.
Mehra's health is said to have worsened after his wife's death. He is survived by two sons - Sumeet and Amit

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

About 300 Satyam staff join Bank of America

About 250-300 employees at fraud-hit Indian outsourcer Satyam Computer Services are joining Bank of America, the Business Standard newspaper said on Wednesday.
The employees were working on a Satyam project for Merrill Lynch, which was taken over by the U.S. bank after it was hit by the subprime crisis last year, it said.
The project was not renewed by Merrill after Satyam was caught in India's biggest corporate scandal and the work of managing its database and providing infrastructure support would now be done in house, the paper said.
The first of these employees will join Bank of America between April 2 and 8, it said, adding they have been given salary increases of around 10 percent and joining bonuses.
A spokeswoman for Satyam said: "The report is speculative." An official at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch in India said she could not immediately comment.
Satyam, whose market value has slid to $505.6 million from $7 billion last May, is in the midst of a bidding process to find a new buyer. It plunged into a crisis in January after its founder quit as chairman revealing profits had been falsified for years.
Indian engineering conglomerate Larsen & Toubro and mid-sized outsourcer Tech Mahindra are among the suitors, and local media have said U.S. private equity WL Ross & Co was also among the bidders.
(For full coverage on Satyam click http://in.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage/satyamstory)
(For Quotes and Interactive Charts of Satyam Computer Services click http://in.reuters.com/money/quotes/chart?symbol=SATY.BO)

Friday, March 27, 2009

Hot News :Advani challenges PM to a live TV debate

Seppa (Arunachal Pradesh), Mar 26 (PTI) Senior BJP leader L K Advani today challenged Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to a live TV debate similar to the practice in the US where rival political leaders take on each other. Advani, who is locked in a war of words with Singh in the recent days, threw the challenge at a poll rally here after again dubbing the Congress leader as the "weakest prime minister the country ever had.
" The former deputy prime minister said he was ready for a live debate with Manmohan Singh on various issues on TV channels like the practice followed in the US. Reacting to the challenge, Congress spokesperson Jayanti Natrajan said the BJP seems to be "obsessed" with everything US. However, Natrajan said it was upto the prime minister to respond to the challenge

Monday, April 7, 2008

Study ties bedroom TV to unhealthy habits in teens

Teenagers with a bedroom television tend to have poorer diet and exercise habits and lower grades in school than those without one, U.S. researchers said on Monday.
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While many studies have examined TV viewing habits of young people, researchers at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health said little had been known about the consequences in particular for older adolescents of having a bedroom TV.
They questioned 781 adolescents, ages 15 to 18, in the Minneapolis area in 2003 and 2004. Of them, 62 percent reported having a television in their bedroom.
Not surprisingly, those with a bedroom TV were more apt to watch it a lot, clocking four to five more hours in front of a television per week, the researchers said. Twice as many of the teens with a bedroom TV were classified as heavy TV watchers -- at least five hours a day -- compared to those without one.
Girls with a bedroom television reported getting less vigorous exercise -- 1.8 hours per week compared to 2.5 hours for girls without a TV. They also ate fewer vegetables, drank more sweetened beverages and ate meals with their family less often, the researchers said.
Boys with a bedroom TV reported having a lower grade point average than boys without one, as well as eating less fruit and having fewer family meals, the researchers said.
"It really clearly points out that there's some merit to not allowing your child to have a TV in the bedroom," said Daheia Barr-Anderson, one of the researchers.
"When you upgrade your TV in the living room and you have this smaller TV that's out of date but still usable, parents should really resist putting it in one of your children's bedrooms -- and resist the pressure from the child to have a TV in their bedroom," she said in a telephone interview.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Airport staff go on flash strike

Air services were partially affected after Airports Authority of India and Air India employees went on a flash strike at Begumpet airport on Friday afternoon. Air India flights scheduled for New Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai were delayed for half an hour because of the strike. However, the carrier responded quickly and made alternate arrangements for smooth operations. It said that passengers had not faced much trouble as pilots and senior officials were not participating in the strike.
Air India officials added that all the 20 flights would be operated as per schedule on Saturday. The Airport director, Mr R.K. Singla, also said that the strike had little impact on the movement of flights. Ground handling staff of AAI and Air India launched the strike to protest against the civil aviation ministry’s decision to close down the airport. On Thursday, the ministry directed its officials at Begumpet airport to intimate all the staff about the closure of commercial operations from Saturday midnight, when the new airport at Shamshabad would start functioning.
“We sought the intervention of senior leaders of Left parties in the issue,” said Mr V.S. Gupta, secretary of AAI Employees Union. “They will discuss with ministry officials on Saturday.” The employees continued the strike till 10 pm after which the Air India management agreed to hold talks with them. Union leaders said the strike would resume from Saturday morning if talks failed.

Friday, March 7, 2008

The Bandra-Worli Sea Link: Connecting Mumbai


: It is set to become the new landmark of Mumbai. Travel after its commissioning is all set to change on this stretch of western Mumbai. It is the 4.7 kilometer, eight-lane, Bandra-Worli Sea Link. And it promises to cut travel time between Lovegrove Junction in Worli to Mahim Junction, which is anywhere between 35 minutes to an hour during peak hour traffic at present.
The Bandra-Worli Sea Link is an engineering marvel.
It weighs as much as 50,000 African elephants, the tallest tower equals a 43-storey building and steel wires that could be lined up to form the circumference of the earth have been used to make it.
Putting it all together was a feat in itself.
Each of the concrete girders weigh more than 150 metric tonnes. The massive gantry cranes help move these girders. A 96-wheel trolley helps carry the enormous structure to fit one into another and form a continuation of a bridge that will go on and connect to the other end.
Maharashtra PWD Minister, Anil Deshmukh says, "With aesthetically blended facades, we truly aim to make this a destination' for tourists in Mumbai. We plan to open it by December 2008."
Stuck in busy traffic, 43-year-old investment banker, Mahindraa Keval Ramani is eagerly awaiting the day the bridge shrinks his 45-minute ride to office to about six minutes.
Ramani says, "I just can't wait for this link to open. It'll truly be a link opening more possibilities and give people free time to do more. Imagine, six minutes flat."
Come December 2008, and one side will be opened for use. Six months more and the project should be completed, after which it will then be stretched on, all the way up to Nariman Point.
That though is something Mumbaikars will have to wait a couple of years more for. Till then, it is the Bandra-Worli Sea Link all the way.

'Osama bin London' arrested

: A British man convicted of being a major recruiter for Islamist extremism was on Friday given indefinite prison sentence and was told to serve at least seven and a half years before being considered for parole.
Fifty-year-old Mohammed Hamid, from east London, was sentenced at Woolwich Crown Court in south London for organizing secret training camps for terrorists in Britain to prepare them to fight in Afghanistan.
The court heard that the four men who have been sentenced to life for the failed London transport bombings of July 21, 2005 attended the camps set up by Hamid in southwest Britain and in Yorkshire in the north.
Tanzanian-born Hamid, who called himself "Osama bin London", was heard saying on a tape played to the court that the murder of 52 Londoners on the Tube and bus system July 7, 2005 was "not even a breakfast" for him.
His accomplice, Atilla Ahmet, who made "hate speeches" alongside Hamid, was also jailed for six years and 11 months.

Kashmir's spy confession puts Pak minister in soup


: He hit headlines for making a historic homecoming.
But Kashmir Singh - who spent 35 years in a Pakistani jail on charges of espionage and was released by Pakistan on Monday – has put the man responsible for his release in a tight spot.
Pakistan’s Minister for Human Rights Ansar Burney - who had played a vital role in Kashmir’s - has expressed shock over Kashmir’s confession that he was indeed an Indian spy.
Speaking with CNN-IBN from Pakistan on Saturday, a harried Burney said he was facing a lot of criticism for aiding Kashmir’s release.
“I am shocked to hear these statements. I did not know if he was a spy or not. I was working on humanitarian grounds for a man who was in jail for 34 years,” he said.
Burney also said the development will affect chances of other Indians in Pakistani jails being released and vice-versa.
“I do not know if he (Kashmir) is saying this on his own or whether people are putting words in his mouth. But it will surely make it difficult for Indian prisoners in Pakistan and Pakistani prisoners in India,” he said.
Importantly, Burney had said he would look into the case of Indian prisoner Sarabjit Singh, who is on death row in Pakistan.
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf on Wednesday rejected Sarabjit’s mercy plea.
Kashmir Singh made the statement at a press conference on Friday, telling reporters that he had crossed the border several times on duty.
He says he used to spy for military intelligence in Pakistan, Afghanistan & and Iran. But he refused to disclose the names of the officers he used to work for.
To questions by reporters, he refused to narrate details about the torture he faced in Pakistan.
Singh also accused the Indian Government of failing to help his family. “After my arrest in 1974 the successive governments did nothing for my family. I did the duty assigned to me as a spy but the government after my arrest did not bother to spend a single penny for my family," he said.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Indian workers jailed in Dubai for strike


Indian workers jailed in Dubai for strike
Forty-five Indian workers have been sentenced to six months in jail followed by deportation for indulging in violent protests demanding better salaries.''This is a first-of-a-kind ruling. There are legal channels and legitimate methods for workers, who deem they are underpaid, to claim their rights instead of rioting violently and unlawfully,'' Judge Jasem Baqer, head of the Dubai Criminal Court, told the Gulf News newspaper.''Workers should resort to the concerned authorities to claim their rights and not through violent rioting,'' said Baqer.The workers were found guilty of endangering public security, damaging properties and inciting other workers to strike work late last year.The newspaper report said court records showed some of the accused confessed to organising the strikes by distributing pamphlets in labour camps.