Sunday, September 10, 2006

Tell-tale entries found in Preeti Jain's diaries

12 Sep 2005 08:27:01

MUMBAI: The Agripada police have recovered three personal diaries from aspiring actress Preeti Jain which, they say, contains "vital" information about the monetary transaction between her and Gawli aide Naresh Pardeshi. The police have accused Preeti paying supari to Pardeshi to kill film-maker Madhur Bhandarkar.

On Sunday, Preeti, 30, and Pardeshi, 25, were produced before additional chief metropolitan magistrate D K Sonawane, who remanded them to police custody till September 16.

Police told the court that the diaries, recovered from Preeti's residence in Ganga Jamuna building at Versova, revealed Pardeshi's mobile number and codes which indicated that Rs 30,000 was paid to him in two instalments. Pardeshi used the money to lease a flat in central Mumbai, the police said.

Code words used in the diary 'N5' and 'N25' can be interpreted as money paid to Pardeshi for carrying out the crime, the police said.

Deposing before the magistrate, assistant commissioner (Agripada division) Manasi Mohite said the investigators wanted to conduct lie-detector and brain mapping tests on Preeti in this connection. The police also plans to carry out similar tests on Pardeshi.

The police told the court that they had records to prove that Preeti had spoken to Pardeshi 22 times over the phone. The actress denied this, stating that she had telephoned Pardeshi only on three occasions. During a search of her flat, the police also recovered 14 CDs, two floppy disks and a burkha.


The remand application mentioned that Preeti met Pardeshi on
June 6, 2005, and again on June 11, after which Pardeshi rented an apartment. The police also recovered Bhandarkar's photograph, telephone numbers and vehicle number from Pardeshi's papers. The vehicle number was also listed in Preeti's diary.

Pardeshi's advocate Osman Chishty argued that his client was never a shaka pramukh of the Akhil Bharatiya Sena as alleged by the police.

The remand application stated: "Pardeshi was the pramukh of the Worli shakha of ABS till September 3. Subsequently, he sat at the reception counter of Dagdi chawl in Byculla." The police are now investigating whether other Gawli aides are involved in the conspiracy.

Source: The Times of India

Portia De Rossi Nixed Nude Lesbian Scene with Angelina Jolie


Sunday, September 25th, 2005

Arrested Development star Portia De Rossi has reportedly revealed that she nixed a nude lesbian scene in a movie with puffy lipped superstar Angelina Jolie. The movie was the 1998 (T.V.) film Gia, and the film was based on the life of fashion model Gia Marie

Hindustan Times, New Delhi, 20.09.2005


Portia's gay fear

Portia De Rossi refused to do a gay sex scene with Angelina Jolie in Gia because she feared she'd have to 'come out' as a lesbian. the star, who reportedly hated being part of Ally McBeal when the show went gay, was intent on hiding her lesbian tendencies. "I wouldn't even drive down Santa Monica Boulevard (gay capital of Los Angeles) in fear that someone would look and think I was gay," Contact music quoted her as telling gay magazine The Advocate.

ANI, Washington

Invasive army

THE TELEGRAPH

Calcutta

| Sunday, October 03, 2004 |

NILANJANA S. ROY

At the best of times, a gynaecological exam is an ordeal. It requires the patient to be naked in front of a stranger who?s going to employ instruments straight out of a torture chamber in order to examine intimate bits and bobs.

For some women, the procedure is on par with most other medical procedures ?nasty and brutish, but mercifully short. Women who see a gynaecological exam as no more invasive and painful than a visit to the dentist?s office are likely to choose their doctor on the basis of proficiency rather than on the basis of the medical practitioner?s gender.

But for many women, the gynaecological exam is also about modesty. Salman Rushdie?s Midnight?s Children describes the courtship of a woman by a doctor who is only allowed to see the specific bits of her that need medical attention through a perforated sheet, thus preserving his patient?s modesty. This is extreme, perhaps ? but for most Indian women, the idea of stripping naked in front of a male stranger is traumatic. A woman doctor may not make a gynae exam more pleasant, but she can make it less of a violation.

Some of us believe that medical pros are all equal, that there is no difference between a male gynaecologist and a male surgeon, for instance. If we?re comfortable with the idea of being examined by a man, we are free to exercise that choice.

And if we do feel a strong sense of discomfort, even distress, we can turn to a female gynaecologist. For many women, the gynaecological exam is terrifying enough as it is. And the fact is that a woman who is relaxed is going to have a much easier time on the examination table. In a gynaecological exam, quite apart from mental trauma, you?re likely to experience significantly more pain if you are too tense to trust your doctor.

In civilian life, most women who have gynaecological exams have a choice when it comes to the gender of their doctors. In the army, as several women recruits including Surya Moudgil have discovered, choice is a joke. Moudgil protested that she was unable to complete her entrance exams because she refused to be examined by a male doctor. An army spokesperson said that a female attendant was present at the examinations, indicating that this was enough and that it isn?t necessary to arrange for a woman gynaecologist for candidates who would prefer that option.

Moudgil, please note, has no bias against male doctors: she didn?t ask for her eye test to be conducted by a female. She merely has a problem with this specific procedure, intimate by its very nature, being carried out by a man.

Perhaps the army might argue that it doesn?t have enough lady doctors to perform so many tests. In which case, we?re all entitled to ask why the army shouldn?t work to induct more women onto its medical board.

Moudgil isn?t asking for special treatment ? she?s only asking for her rights not to be violated. And if the men in the army have a problem understanding this, perhaps they should contemplate how comfortable they?d be if they were told that they had no choice but to have their prostate and hernia exams carried out only by women.

(Scource: The Telegraph)

MY HEART IS ON FIRE

Translated from an unknown Hindi paper of unknown date

Mumbai: The Firemen stationed at the Jawahar fire station become all jittery if they hear a woman's voice on the phone. This policestation gets calls from anonymous women at an average of 70 calls per day. These calls filled with sexual enuendoes started a few months ago. The callers ask strange questions of the firemen. Sample this: "What all kinds of fire do you extinguish?" or "My heart is on fire" The station officer A.R. Purab says that many women even give their addresses, but when we reach the place we get scolded. The officials at the fire station have lodged a complaint with the police but with no result. Now they plan to go to the court to get rid of this menace.

Fired for Complimenting Client's Good Looks

My, how nice you look!

by Nancy Ahern

Reuters

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - A female receptionist in an office in south Sweden was sacked for sexual harassment when her employer heard she had complimented a male client of the company on his good looks, a Swedish newspaper reported Monday.

"I joked with a client about how handsome he was," the receptionist told the daily Sydsvenska Dagbladet. The man said he had not been offended by the woman's remark.

It is not uncommon in Sweden for women to accuse men of sexual harassment, but the opposite is rare.

The woman's employer declined comment, said the newspaper, which did not identify the company or the people involved.