Saturday, October 31, 2009

Re: [MyTuneBD.Com] Remember me

 

Dear Nosheen,

Thank you for your beautiful mail. But why u say this is your last email???
I request u just keep with us.
Thanx
Nafisa


From: Nosheen <nosheen_dost@ymail.com>
To: MyTuneBD@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sat, October 31, 2009 6:00:15 PM
Subject: [MyTuneBD.Com] Remember me

 

Assalaam Alaikum, Good Morning,

Dear Group Friend,

I don't know anything about you, but as my concern with you as a group member, please look after you family and friends as they care about you. My introduction is not important but important thing is to keep your eyes on and watch the people around you in daily routines. As you know by the latest news in Peshawar - Pakistan . if if if if if the shops keeper could notice and caught that boy who parked the car front of them and went away, then that incident could not be happened, why why why they did not took the notice.

because they forget that few days ago some of us were died by socide bombers attack.  instead of this all, they forget that, this could be happened with them. Oh! my Allah please forgive me, if I forget you.

this is for you even you are not living in Pakistan , where ever in the world, Terrorists are every where.

(may be this will be my last email to you.)

keep smiling like twinkle stats.

Sincerely

Nosheen

 


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[MyTuneBD.Com] Black Eyed Peas - Meet Me Halfway video in 3gp and avi format.

 
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Eva Mendes Photoshoot at Morgan Campaign Ad

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Photoshoot

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[MyTuneBD.Com] Remember me

 

Assalaam Alaikum, Good Morning,

Dear Group Friend,

I don't know anything about you, but as my concern with you as a group member, please look after you family and friends as they care about you. My introduction is not important but important thing is to keep your eyes on and watch the people around you in daily routines. As you know by the latest news in Peshawar - Pakistan. if if if if if the shops keeper could notice and caught that boy who parked the car front of them and went away, then that incident could not be happened, why why why they did not took the notice.

because they forget that few days ago some of us were died by socide bombers attack.  instead of this all, they forget that, this could be happened with them. Oh! my Allah please forgive me, if I forget you.

this is for you even you are not living in Pakistan, where ever in the world, Terrorists are every where.

(may be this will be my last email to you.)

keep smiling like twinkle stats.

Sincerely

Nosheen

 

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MAGIC OF KYLIE CAN NOT WORK FOR BLUE.




The hot number of Kylie Minogue in the film ‘Blue’ can not work as affectively as it was thought. The hotness of the film because of Minogue seems to cool down. The hot number can not play that magic to make the film that hit. It was also reported that the song by this beautiful singer and actress alone costed some 55 crores of rupees. Despite of this it had not worked for the film.

Kylie was critcized for the item song in the film and some newspapers in Australia reported that Minogue had failed in her debut in the Bollywood film.

Although it was also reported that the film
had huge collections durin
g its first week only and is supposed to be a hit. It gained some 55 crores during its first weekend only. Bollywood seems to be very happy from the film as 50 percent of the total collection of bollywood during Diwali is from this film only.

NEHA DHUPIA IN HOLLYWOOD


Recently Neha Dhupia, a hot girl was in Hollwood. She was there regarding the launch of an American T.V. series ‘Bollywood Hero’. ‘Bollywood Hero’ is a three part, mini comedy series in which our hot girl played a role opposite to an American actor Kris. Neha played a role of bollywood actress Alima lakhani in this series.

Although, unlike other bollywood stars, Neha also wants to work in the Hollywood films but it is not as easy to get such an opportunity. Working for a tv series and then working lot hard for its promotion can be a sign of her desires.

Friday, October 30, 2009

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"Neak Na Chea Sdach?" (Who is the real King?) a Poem in Khmer by Sam Vichea

5 killed, 1 seriously injured by electric shock in Cambodia

PHNOM PENH, Oct. 30 (Xinhua) -- Five people were killed and one was seriously injured by an electric shock caused by short circuit on Friday morning in Phnom Penh, police from Phnom Penh authority said.

The incident occurred on Friday morning, at about 6:30 o'clock local time, in a family who's old father, 67-years-old, was first found died at the door, and other four people were killed and one was seriously injured when they wanted to support the old man, according to a policeman who asked not to be named.

Police said the incident was caused by short circuit because the family's house was in a low-lying place and had water standing due to raining for several days. Four were died instantly, and another one was seriously injured. They all killed by short circuit because their house was built mostly by used iron sheets.

from: ki-media.blogspot.com

Cambodian Youth Program Leader Awarded $25,000 Peace Prize



(Posted by CAAI News Media)

Phalen Lim fled Cambodia at the age of 2 in 1975, during the regime of the Khmer Rouge, and has never forgotten what it was like to start over as an immigrant in a new country. Now, the community leader is being awarded with a $25,000 California Peace Prize, reports The Orange County Register.

Lim and her family initially sought out help from the service agency The Cambodian Family (TCF) when they arrived in Santa Ana, California. Now, as the director of youth programs for the organization, Lim's job is to support and inspire young people to become balanced, healthy leaders. Serving refugees and immigrants, The Cambodian Family's emphasis is on community health, such as trauma resolution and stress reduction, employment services and youth programs.

The California Wellness Foundation, a private group whose mission is to improve the health and wellness of Californians, will present the peace awards tonight in San Francisco. It applauded Lim as an "integral leader in an agency that combats gang violence and promotes cultural pride and understanding in Santa Ana."

Lim mentors around 60 Cambodian and Latino youths, and impresses upon them the importance of working with what they have. She plans to put some of the prize money towards her son's education, and allocate a portion of it to the youngsters at The Cambodian Family.

Despite these accomplishments, she remains humble:

"I must have done something good to deserve it," she says now. But she's quick to add: "It's not just about me. It's about the work that I did and about the people that I serve."

You can donate to The Cambodian Family here.

The Holocaust In Cambodia



Written by John Pilger

(Posted by CAAI News Media)

John Pilger recalls the stricken society he found in Cambodia in 1979 which he described in his epic dispatches and documentary, Year Zero: the Silent Death of Cambodia He reminds us that the Pol Pot horror emerged from the bombing ordered by Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, and that Cambodia was again "punished" when its liberators came from the wrong side of the cold war and the Thatcher government send special forces to train the Khmer Rouge in exile

October 29, 2009 "Information Clearing House" -- The aircraft flew low, following the Mekong River west from Vietnam. Once over Cambodia, what we saw silenced all of us on board. There appeared to be nobody, no movement, not even an animal, as if the great population of Asia had stopped at the border.

Whole villages were empty. Chairs and beds, pots and mats lay in the street, a car on its side, a bent bicycle. Behind fallen power lines lay or sat a single human shadow; it did not move. From the paddies, lines of tall wild grass followed straight lines. Fertilised by the remains of thousands upon thousands of men, women and children, these marked common graves in a nation where as many as two million people, or more than a quarter of the population, were “missing”.

At the liberation of the Nazi death camp in Belsen in 1945, The Times correspondent wrote: “It is my duty to describe something beyond the imagination of mankind.” That was how I felt in 1979 when I entered Cambodia, a country sealed from the outside world for almost four years since “Year Zero”.

Year Zero had begun shortly after sunrise on April 17, 1975 when Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge guerrillas entered the capital, Phnom Penh. They wore black and marched in single file along the wide boulevards. At one o’clock, they ordered the city abandoned. The sick and wounded were forced at gunpoint from their hospital beds; families were separated; the old and disabled fell beside the road. “Don’t take anything with you,” the men in black ordered. “You will be coming back tomorrow.”

Tomorrow never came. An age of slavery began. Anybody who owned cars and such “luxuries”, anybody who lived in a city or town or had a modern skill, anybody who knew or worked with foreigners, was in grave danger; some were already under sentence of death. Out of the Royal Cambodian Ballet company of 500 dancers, perhaps 30 survived. Doctors, nurses, engineers, teachers were starved, or worked to death, or murdered.

For me, entering the silent, grey humidity of Phnom Penh was like walking into a city the size of Manchester in the wake of a nuclear cataclysm which had spared only the buildings. There was no power, no drinking water, no shops, no services of any kind. At the railway station trains stood empty at various stages of interrupted departure. Personal belongings and pieces of clothing fluttered on the platforms, as they fluttered on the mass graves beyond.

I walked along Monivong Avenue to the National Library which had been converted to pigsty, as a symbol, all its books burned. It was dream-like. There was wasteland where the Gothic Roman Catholic cathedral had stood; it had been dismantled stone by stone. When the afternoon monsoon rains broke, the deserted streets were suddenly awash with money. With every downpour a worthless fortune of new and unused banknotes sluiced out of the Bank of Cambodia, which the Khmer Rouge had blown up as they fled.

Inside, a cheque book lay open on the counter. A pair of glasses rested on an open ledger. I slipped and fell on a floor brittle with coins.

For the first few hours I had no sense of even the remains of a population. The few human shapes I glimpsed seemed incoherent, and on catching sight of me, would flit into a doorway. A child ran into a wardrobe lying on its side which was his or her refuge. In a crumbling Esso filling station an old woman and three emaciated infants squatted around a pot containing a mixture of roots and leaves, which bubbled over a fire fuelled with paper money: such grotesque irony: people in need of everything had money to burn.

At a primary school called Tuol Sleng, I walked through what had become the “interrogation unit” and the “torture and massacre unit”. Beneath iron beds I found blood and tufts of hair still on the floor. “Speaking is absolutely forbidden,” said a sign. “Before doing something, anything, the authorisation of the warden must be obtained.”

After a while, one sound had a terrible syncopation: rising and falling day and night. Without milk and medicines, children were stricken with preventable disease like dysentery. It seemed that the very fabric of the society had begun to unravel. The first surveys revealed that many women had stopped menstruating.

What compounded this was the isolation imposed on Cambodia by the West because its liberators, the Vietnamese, had come from the wrong side of the cold war, having driven America out of their country in 1975. Cambodia had been the West’s dirty secret since President Richard Nixon and his national security adviser Henry Kissinger ordered a “secret bombing”, extending the war in Vietnam into Cambodia in the early 1970s, killing hundreds of thousands of peasants. “If this doesn’t work,” an aide heard Nixon say to Kissinger, “it’ll be your ass, Henry.” It worked in handing Pol Pot his chance to seize power.

When I arrived in the aftermath, no Western aid had reached Cambodia. Only Oxfam defied the Foreign Office in London, which had lied that the Vietnamese were obstructing aid. In September 1979, a DC-8 jet took off from Luxembourg, filled with enough penicillin, vitamins and milk to restore some 70,000 children -- all of it paid for by Daily Mirror readers who had responded to my reports and Eric Piper’s pictures in two historic issues of the paper which sold every copy.

Following on from the Mirror, on October 30, 1979, ITV broadcast Year Zero: the silent death of Cambodia, the documentary I made with the late David Munro. Forty sacks of post arrived at the ATV studios in Birmingham, with £1 million in the first few days. “This is for Cambodia,” wrote an anonymous Bristol bus driver, enclosing his week’s wage. An elderly woman sent her pension for two months. A single parent sent her savings of £50. People expressed that unremitting sense of decency and community which is at the core of British society. Unsolicited, they gave more than £20 million. This helped rescue normal life in faraway country. It restored a clean water supply in Phnom Penh, stocked hospitals and schools, supported orphanages and re-opened a desperately needed clothing factory.

Such an extraordinary public outpouring broke the US and British governments’ blockade of Cambodia. Incredibly, the Thatcher government had continued to support the defunct Pol Pot regime in the United Nations and even sent the SAS to train his exiled troops in camps in Thailand and Malaysia. Last March, the former SAS soldier Chris Ryan, now a best-selling author, lamented in a newspaper interview “when John Pilger, the foreign correspondent, discovered we were training the Khmer Rouge in the Far east [we] were sent home and I had to return the £10,000 we’d been given for food and accommodation”.

Today, Pol Pot is dead and several of his elderly henchmen are on trial in a UN/Cambodian court for crimes against humanity. Henry Kissinger, whose bombing opened the door to the nightmare of Year Zero, is still at large. Cambodians remain desperately poor, dependent on an often seedy tourism and sweated labour.

For me, their resilience remains almost magical. In the years that followed their liberation, I never saw as many weddings or received as many wedding invitations. They became symbols of life and hope. And yet, only in Cambodia would a child ask an adult, as a twelve-year-old asked me, with fear crossing his face: “Are you a friend? Please say.”

Cambodian beggars in HCM City


Cambodian child beggars in HCM City.


30/10/2009

(Posted by CAAI News Media)

VietNamNet Bridge – A small group of Cambodian child beggars have appeared in HCM City in recent months.

At 6pm at a crossroads on Dien Bien Phu street, three kids in ragged and dirty clothes, holding plastic bowls stand at traffic lights asking for small change.

The two older children collect the cash while a much younger child lies naked on the pavement.

They eventually disperse when they hear a police whistle. Next day they are back – but this time the group includes six children and two women.

The two women sat on the pavement while six children divided into three groups, work around the roundabout of Dien Bien Phu street.

From asking around reporters traced them back to a marshy piece of land along the Nguyen Huu Tho road, District 7, which looks like a dumping ground. There are several tents made of coconut leaves and a small house.

Local residents say the house owner pitied the children so he allowed them to live in the house free. They also said that there are over 50 Cambodian people who have been living in this area for around 7 months.

A Cambodian man, who can speak a little Vietnamese, told VietNamNet that they came from Cambodia and they often return home each 3-4 months.

These Cambodian earn their living by collecting waste and begging.

Local government has several times sent them back home but they returned, said Tran Mong Thanh, chairman of Tan Hung ward. Thanh said there are many other Cambodians in HCM City, not only in his ward.

Mai Thi Hoa from the HCM City Department of War Invalids and Social Affairs said that under the HCM City’s regulations, all beggars will be gathered at social patronage centres and then be sent back to their homes.

Tu Truc

from: khmernz.blogspot.com

Thailand and Cambodia Argue About Thaksin & the Coup

By Richard S. Ehrlich
Scoop (New Zealand)

Thai and Cambodian politicians have been fleeing to each other's country for the past 50 years, seeking sanctuary from coups, arrest warrants, and other threats.

In 1957, when Thai dictator Field Marshall Sarit Thanarat unleashed a military coup against Prime Minister Phibun Songkram, the toppled leader fled Thailand for Cambodia in his Ford Thunderbird car.
BANGKOK, Thailand -- Thailand and Cambodia have descended into a loud political feud about Bangkok's 2006 coup, and Thailand's current threat to demand the extradition of its fugitive former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

The rift between the two Buddhist-majority nations in the heart of Southeast Asia was expected to worsen if Mr. Thaksin accepts Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen's surprise offer of a temporary house.

"There is an extradition process," warned Thailand's powerful Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban on Tuesday (October 27).

"The turmoil following Cambodian leader Hun Sen's remarks, about ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra being welcome in his country, has thrown the government into a spin," the Bangkok Post newspaper, which opposes Mr. Thaksin, reported on Tuesday (October 27).

Ratcheting up his rhetoric, Mr. Hun Sen compared Mr. Thaksin to Burma's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who has languished under house arrest in Rangoon for 14 years.

"Many people are talking about Mrs. Suu Kyi of Burma. Why can't I talk about the victim, Thaksin?" Mr. Hun Sen said on October 23.

"That cannot be regarded as interference by Cambodia into Thai internal affairs. Without the coup d'etat in 2006, such a thing would not have happened," Hun Sen said.

Soft-spoken Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva lashed out Mr. Hun Sen's remarks.

"There are few people in the world who believe Thaksin is similar to that of Mr. Suu Kyi," Mr. Abhisit said later that day.

"I hope Prime Minister Hun Sen will receive the right information and change his mind on the matter."

Cambodia's government spokesman Phay Siphan said on October 23: "Cambodia has a right to offer Thaksin to visit Cambodia, and we have no obligation to send him back to Thailand."

If "former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra wishes to travel to Cambodia anytime...the Cambodian prime minister is ready to prepare a residence for [his] stay in Cambodia," reported Cambodia's government-run TVK television on October 22, according to Agence-France Presse.

Mr. Thaksin has been an international fugitive, based mostly in Dubai, dodging a two-year prison sentence for a conflict of interest.

That conviction involved a Bangkok real estate deal -- for his now divorced wife -- which was arranged when he was prime minister.

Mr. Thaksin became prime minister in 2001 when most voters elected the billionaire telecommunications tycoon, hoping he would boost the economy and modernize Thailand.

Mr. Thaksin was removed in September 2006 by Thailand's U.S.-trained military in a bloodless coup when they used tanks, armored personnel carriers, Humvees and other weapons to seize power.

He has unsuccessfully tried to return to power with the help of allied politicians, and get back his two billion U.S. dollars worth of assets which the coup leaders froze.

International human rights groups, however, want Mr. Thaksin investigated for his role in the alleged extrajudicial murder of more than 2,000 people during his government's "war on drugs."

Mr. Thaksin remains politically active in self-exile.

He helps lead a mass movement of so-called "Red Shirts" who claim to represent Thailand's majority lower classes, especially in the countryside.

Together they demand an immediate election, expecting Mr. Thaksin's allies to win.

They are opposed by the "Yellow Shirts" who claim to support Thailand's urban middle class and constitutional monarchy.

Led by Sondhi Limthongkul, the Yellow Shirts blockaded Bangkok's international and domestic airports in November 2008 for eight days, stranding more than 300,000 people worldwide.

Their blockade helped weaken a government allied to Mr. Thaksin, and paved the way for Parliament to elect Mr. Abhisit.

Mr. Abhisit's fragile coalition government enjoys the military's support, and much of his personal security is handled by the military.

Thailand's wealthy elite have mostly thrown their weight behind Mr. Abhisit as well, and appear nervous about Mr. Thaksin and the Red Shirts plotting to destabilize Bangkok.

Cambodia's prime minister has thrown a wild card into this dangerous mix, apparently hoping to attract big investments by Mr. Thaksin and weaken Bangkok's strategy over a smoldering border dispute, according to some analysts.

"It is true that I would invite former Prime Minister Thaksin to visit Cambodia anytime, and to be my economic advisor," Mr. Hun Sen said on October 22.

Thailand and Cambodia are former war-time enemies -- and current investment partners -- so the stakes are high for all sides to quell their public sniping.

Occasional killings on both sides have continued in and around the ancient stone ruins of Preah Vihear, a Hindu temple on the Thai-Cambodian border.

That dispute dates back to the 1950s, and continued even after the International Court in the Hague, Netherlands, confirmed Cambodia's ownership in 1962.

The conflict flared again after the ruins were declared a World Heritage Site in July 2008 by the World Heritage Committee, based on Cambodia's proposal to cash in on its tourism potential.

Thailand and Cambodia have suffered much worse relations in the past.

After Richard Nixon became president of the United States in 1969, he used Thailand as one of several military staging areas for heavy aerial bombing raids against communists in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, until America's wars ended in 1975 -- one year after Nixon's presidency -- with the U.S. defeated in all three countries.

Washington and Bangkok later indirectly backed Cambodia's communist Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, when his jungle-based guerrillas were in a loose alliance with other Cambodian rebels fighting against Vietnam's 1979-1989 occupation of Cambodia.

Thai and Cambodian politicians have been fleeing to each other's country for the past 50 years, seeking sanctuary from coups, arrest warrants, and other threats.

In 1957, when Thai dictator Field Marshall Sarit Thanarat unleashed a military coup against Prime Minister Phibun Songkram, the toppled leader fled Thailand for Cambodia in his Ford Thunderbird car.
*************
Richard S Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist who has reported news from Asia since 1978. He is co-author of "Hello My Big Big Honey!", a non-fiction book of investigative journalism. His web page is http://www.asia-correspondent.110mb.com


from:ki-media.blogspot.com

City company exports first specialized autos to Cambodia



A street-washing and plant-watering truck to be exported to Cambodia on October 30. (Photo: SGGP)

Friday ,Oct 30,2009

(Posted by CAAI News Media)

The Saigon Transportation Mechanical Corporation (Samco) delivered two specialized vehicles worth US$153,000 to representatives of Phnom Penh City Hall, Cambodia on October 30.

The vehicles include a specially made Isuzu drain-vacuum truck and a Hino street-washing and plant-watering truck.

It is the first time Samco has exported specialized automobiles to Cambodia and the company says it expects to export more such vehicles in the near future.

SAMCO is a state-owned manufacturing company in Ho Chi Minh City that specializes in repair and maintenance services for all types of cars.

It produces, builds and assembles buses and specialized vehicles including top names like Isuzu, Mitsubishi, Daihatsu, Hino, Hyundai, and Daewoo.

The company has a high-tech training center which receives support from international high-profile auto companies.

Samco provides inter-provincial and public transport services as well as builds and provides waterway transportation services.

By Ng.Kh - Translated by T.Huong

from: khmernz.blogspot.com

'Jungle woman' hospitalised

Rochom P'ngieng

October 30, 2009
From correspondents in Cambodia
Agence France-Presse


CAMBODIA'S "jungle woman", whose case gripped the country after she apparently spent 18 years living in a forest, has been hospitalised after refusing food, her father and a doctor said today.

Rochom P'ngieng, now 28, went missing as a little girl in 1989 while herding water buffalo in Ratanakkiri province around 600km northeast of the capital Phnom Penh.

The woman was brought from the jungle, naked and dirty, in early 2007 after being caught trying to steal food from a farmer.

She was hunched over like a monkey, scavenging the ground for pieces of dried rice in the forest.

She could not utter a word of any intelligible language, instead making what Sal Lou, the man who says he is her father, calls "animal noises".

Cambodians described her as "jungle woman" and "half-animal girl".

Sal Lou said Rochom P'ngieng was admitted to the provincial hospital on Monday and had not adjusted to village life.

"She has refused to eat rice for about one month. She is skinny now.... She still cannot speak. She acts totally like a monkey. Last night, she took off her clothes, and went to hide in the bathroom," Sal Lou said.

"Her condition looks worse than the time we brought her from the jungle. She always wants to take off her clothes and crawl back to the jungle," he added.

Doctor Hing Phan Sokunthea, director of Ratanakkiri provincial hospital, said the woman was "in a state of nerves".

"Doctors have injected her with medicine twice a day to treat nervous illness but she still cannot control herself," he said.

Sal Lou said his family found it difficult to house the woman and he would appeal to charities to take over her care.

The jungles of Ratanakkiri - some of the most isolated and wild in Cambodia - are known to have held hidden groups of hill tribes in the recent past.

In November 2004, 34 people from four hill tribe families emerged from the dense forest where they had fled in 1979 after the fall of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime, which they supported.

Interview with Gopika



Following a successful stint in Malayalam and Tamil films, Gopika took a break after getting married to settle in Ireland with husband, Ajilesh. She is now all set to make a comeback with Swa Le

After a break, you are now coming back to acting with Swa Le (Swantham Lekhakan).

I won’t like to call it a comeback, since I wasn’t away from films for too long. It’s hardly over a year that I took a break after getting married. Anyway, it was a good story that came seeking me, a good role which I felt I should do. The team, especially Dileep, P. Sukumar etc, was one that I knew very well and felt at home working with. The dates too were comfortable for me. It was thus that I came to be part of the film.

How was it, acting once again?

As I said, it was not a long break for me. So, it was as usual for me. The people here were all known to me and they all welcomed me back in a grand way. I was happy, but I don’t think I took a break long enough to be accorded a welcome back kind of thing.

Tell us about your role in Swa Le.

I am playing Vimala, the wife of Unni Madhavan, the protagonist of the movie, played by Dileep. Unni Madhavan is a newspaper reporter and is always busy. He gets a meager income and is always late in reaching home. There are lots of problems that Vimala has to face on account of this. Vimala is pregnant and she doesn’t get the care and attention of her husband in a big way because he is always away and busy.

Does the character have any likeness to the one you played in Veruthe Oru Bharya?

No, not at all. The two characters are temperamentally different.

Have you got any plans to act in more movies at present?

It depends. In fact, as I said earlier, I did this film because I liked the subject, the dates suited me and the team was one that I was very comfortable with.

How’s life in Ireland? How do Malayalees there respond to the presence of a star amongst them?

Life is going great. I am very happy in my role as a housewife, looking after my house and my husband. Malayalees, when we meet them, do of course greet me and smile and wave, but their everyone is rather busy with their work and lives.
As for me, in my free time, I contact friends, talk with them, surf the net, chat with my near and dear ones, read etc.

Do you miss doing movies?

Not really. Of course I always loved and still love doing movies. But by nature I am someone who doesn’t like being busy always. Hence I am happy with the way things are.

You have been active in Malayalam as well as Tamil films. Which do you miss the most?

Malayalam, no doubt but this doesn’t mean that I don’t like doing Tamil films. But Malayalam is my mother tongue and Malayalam Cinema made me an actress. Hence, I shall always give priority to Malayalam films.

Which ones have been your favourite roles, till date?

All the roles that I have done are my favourite ones. Still in Malayalam there’s Veruthe Oru Bharya and Chanthupottu; and in Tamil there are many, including Autograph

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Kavya in Christian Brothers




Kavya Madhavan is all set to re-enter the film industry through Joshy’s big budget film Christian Brothers. The actress who was to re-enter via Major Ravi’s Madankolli, has backed out of the project.

The pooja ceremony of the film will be held at Hotel Sarovaram in Marad tomorrow. The film has Mohanlal, Suresh Gopi, Tamil actor Arjun, Dileep and many others. Kavya will play a pivotal role in the film.

The actress, who is getting many offers, has decided to be choosy. She has dedcided not to accept the offers coming her way.

Kavya married to a NRI early this year, is back in the state, and is seeking divorce from her husband.

The film is scripted by Siby K Thomas-Udayakrishnan of Twenty 20. Lyrics are by Girish Puthenchery and Suresh Peters. The film is produced by A V Anoop and Subair under the banners of A V A productions and Varnachitra Big Screen. Manoj Pillai will wield the camera.

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Priyamani’s denies her Bollywood hunt


Actress Priyamani cannot stop speaking about her working experience with the ace filmmaker Mani Ratnam. Of course, a big launch in Bollywood is what every south Indian actresses dreams about. As Priyamani has completed her portions for both Hindi and Tamil versions of “Raavana’, there have been buzzes that she has been camping in Mumbai in search of Bollywood offers.

When we approached the actress regarding this buzz, she clearly admits that every actress loves to be a part of Hindi films. But that doesn’t mean that she is desperately seeking Bollywood film offers. Already talks are going on with some of the leading producers and filmmakers in Hindi Film Industry.

The National award winning actress is now busy shooting Kannada remake of Telugu blockbuster “Ready’ with Puneeth Rajkumar. Looks like, she may pair up with Dhanush for the Tamil remake of this film as well.

Tamannaah eyes National Award



Tamannaah, one of the high-paid actresses in Tamil cinema, is right now focusing on her acting career and says she wants to win a National Award.

“I’m not at all in a hurry to get married. I have just managed to stabilise myself in the film industry. I want to sustain the position that I have earned here,” the actress, who gave two hits this year - “Ayan” and “Padikkathavan”, told reporters here.

“Winning the National Award for best actress is my dream. In fact, I want to win awards in all categories - glamour, acting as well as fighting if there is an award for this,” added the actress who is geared up for the release of “Kandein Kaadhalai”.

She is ready to compromise on her fee if a director will offer her a script that can fetch her the award.

Tamannaah also feels that actresses shouldn’t hide their age.

“I feel that an actress shouldn’t be hesitating to reveal her actual age. Age helps in letting the other person be aware of one’s experience, maturity and tact,” said the 19-year-old.

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