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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Video of Imran Khan\'s Fall at Election Rally in Pakistan

Video from Pakistan's Express Tribune showed the former cricketer Imran Khan falling at an election rally in Lahore on Tuesday.

Last Updated, 2:36 p.m. Imran Khan, a former cricket superstar who has been drawing huge crowds to campaign rallies in Pakistan ahead of Saturday's election, was rushed to a hospital in Lahore on Tuesday after he was knocked off a forklift at the edge of a stage and fell headfirst to the ground, nearly 15 feet below.

As video of the incident posted on Vimeo by Karachi's Express Tribune showed, Mr. Khan was being lifted up to the stage when a security man clambered on to the forklift causing the candidate and two other men to lose their footing. According to initial reports from Pakistani journalists and bloggers, Mr. Khan was in stable condition.

Footage of the accident broadcast by Pakistan's Geo TV also showed Mr. Khan being rushed from the scene after the fall, with blood on his face.

Video from Pakistan's Geo News showed a bloodied Imran Khan being carried away after his fall on Tuesday.

According to updates on his condition posted on the official Twitter feed of his party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, the 60-year-old suffered “a minor fracture” and was “stable, alert, awake and conscious” after getting 12 stitches.

Mr. Khan's former wife, the British writer and socialite Jemima Khan, also confirmed that he was conscious, and praying aloud, as he was rushed to the hospital, according to a family member.

Pakistani commentators - including Umar Cheema, Nadeem Paracha, Beena Sarwar and the blogger who writes as Raza Rumi - noted with relief that rival politicians, bloggers and activists mostly paused the often-fractious debate about the nation's problems online and on the campaign trail in sympathy with Mr. Khan.

Before being taken seriously as a politician, Mr. Khan was perhaps best known as a member of the international jet set. His former wife was close friends with Princess Diana, who helped Mr. Khan raise funds for Lahore's Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital, which he founded in memory of his late mother. On Tuesday night, Mr. Khan was being treated there.

A television image of Imran Khan, the Pakistani politician who was injured in a fall at a campaign rally in Lahore on Tuesday.Express News/Agence France-Presse - Getty Images A television image of Imran Khan, the Pakistani politician who was injured in a fall at a campaign rally in Lahore on Tuesday.

Late Tuesday, Mr. Khan was well enough to resume campaigning in a television interview from his hospital bed with Pakistan's Dunya News channel.

Mr. Khan's celebrity appeal, loud opposition to American drone strikes, and calls to engage rather than fight Taliban militants have earned him a strong following in the final days of this general election campaign. As Pankaj Mishra explained in a profile of Mr. Khan for The New York Times Magazine last year, the glamorous former cricketer initially “struggled to break into Pakistani politics,” but has successfully reworked his image:

He now casts himself as the archetypal confused sinner who has discovered the restorative certainties of religion and is outraged over the decadence of his own class. “In today's Lahore and Karachi,” he writes, “rich women go to glitzy parties in Western clothes chauffeured by men with entirely different customs and values.” His avowals of Islam, his identification with the suffering masses and his attacks on his affluent, English-speaking peers have long been mocked in the living rooms of Lahore and Karachi as the hypocritical ravings of “Im the Dim” and “Taliban Khan” - the two favored monikers for him. (His villa is commonly cited as evidence of his own unalloyed elitism.)

Nevertheless, Khan's autobiography creates a cogent picture out of his - and Pakistan's - clashing identities. There is the proud young man of Pashtun blood born into Pakistan's Anglicized feudal and bureaucratic elite - an elite that disdained their poor, Urdu-speaking compatriots. There is the student and cricketer in 1970s Britain, when racism was endemic and even Pakistanis considered themselves inferior to their former white masters. Then we meet the brilliant cricket captain who inspired a world-beating team; the D.I.Y. philanthropist who pursued his dream of building a world-class cancer hospital in Pakistan; the jaded middle-aged sybarite who found a wise Sufi mentor; the political neophyte who awakened to social and economic injustice; and finally the experienced politician, who after 15 years of having his faith tested by electoral failure is now convinced of his destiny as Pakistan's savior.

Robert Mackey also remixes the news on Twitter @robertmackey.



On Facebook, Cleveland Kidnapping Suspect Hid Secret Under ‘LOL\'

Ariel Castro, the kidnapping suspect in Cleveland, opened a Facebook account in February, adding 41 friends in the ensuing months. He “liked” a handful of other Facebook pages, including a tourism page for Virginia Beach, another for the musician Rey Ruiz and a page devoted to Chinese Cresteds, described by the American Kennel Club as a “fine-boned, elegant toy dog that craves human companionship.”

None of the posts or photos on his profile hint at the horrifying secret he kept since 2002 in his dilapidated Cleveland home. Nor do they reveal a disturbed mind. In one of his first posts, he sounds downright cheerful, writing: “This morning i woke up to the sound of a chirping cardinal. Yes! come on spring!”

On Wednesday, Mr. Castro, 52, was charged with four counts of kidnapping and three counts of rape after the dramatic escape on Monday of three women - Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michele Knight - held captive since they were abducted between 2002 and 2004. His brothers, Pedro and Onil, were taken into custody at the time of Mr. Castro's arrest but have not been charged in connection with the case. Police said there was no indication at this point that they had known that three women were hidden behind padlocked doors.

As my colleagues have reported, Mr. Castro presented himself to neighbors as a friendly enough man, waving hello and stopping to chat with families on their porches from time to time.

He drove a school bus until last November and played bass in local Latin bands. Neighbors, friends and family members have all expressed shock at the allegations that he was behind the disappearances of the three women.

He created a similar appearance online. On his Facebook page, he presented himself as a highly social user, engaging regularly with people who commented on his posts and frequently adding “lol,” for “laughing out loud.” His updates related mostly to motorcycles, music, family and friends. He shared photos of a guitar he admired and said he had an eye for quality.

On his Facebook page, Ariel Castro often shared photos and posts about music. On his Facebook page, Ariel Castro often shared photos and posts about music.

At 10:53 p.m. on May 1, just a week ago, he posted: “That was a nice rumble that just passed in front of my house, makes me wanna jump and get out and ride! lol.”

A friend commented, “Ride baby ride…lol!!!! hope the weather is nice if u do enjoy.”

He replied, “Like tomorrow… hello?” And then: “I'll try to enjoy, but the question is which bike should i take out….they all run so good, I think i'll give the R1 a rest and jump on the Harley….”

He “liked” more than 100 photos. They included a picture of one of the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings in the hospital with the actor Bradley Cooper at his side, and another of Jennifer Lopez. He also “liked” several photos containing Christian messages that do not fit easily with the events said to have unfolded since 2002, or with the more than 200 pieces of evidence taken from his home since Monday.

He “liked” a photo that read: “It's really nice to wake up in the morning, realizing that God has given me another day to live. Like if you agree!” Another message read, “Like if you need Jesus' help.”

In a recent post, he congratulated his daughter, Arlene, 22, on the birth of her son, writing: “Wishing you a fast recovery. She gave birth to a wonderful baby boy. That makes me Gramps for the fifth time, (2boys 1girl 2boys. Luv you guys!”

Arlene Castro was a classmate and close friend of Gina DeJesus, one of the three women held captive. They were both 14 when Ms. DeJesus vanished in April 2004. As The Lede has reported, Arlene appeared on America's Most Wanted in 2005 to talk about the last time she saw Ms. DeJesus, as they walked home from middle school.

Mr. Castro wrote frequently on the Facebook timelines of his grown children, suggesting that their relationships might have improved since he and his former wife, Grimilda Figueroa, who died last year at age 48, divorced in 1996.

The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported that Mr. Castro had physically abused his wife and that he did not have visitation rights with his children after the divorce.

Court records indicate Ariel Castro fought with his former wife, Grimilda Figueroa, over the custody of their children. Figueroa twice suffered a broken nose, as well as broken ribs, a knocked-out tooth, a blood clot on the brain and two dislocated shoulders, according to a 2005 filing in Cuyahoga County Domestic Relations Court. In the filing, her attorney requested that a judge “keep [Castro] from threatening to kill [Figueroa].”

Attorney Robert Ferreri said Figueroa “has full custody with no visitation for [Castro]. Nevertheless, [Castro] frequently abducts daughters and keeps them from their mother.” Figueroa died last year. Ferreri could not be reached. Any record of charges being filed could not be located.

While none of the posts on his Facebook page reveal his views of women, he did share a photo on his timeline that said: “A real women will not use their child as a weapon to hurt the father when the relationship breaks down.”

Mr. Castro added a note: “True that.”

His final post was on May 2, four days before the dramatic escape of the three women and Ms. Berry's 6-year-old child. It read, “Miracles really do happen, God is good. :)”



Many Air Passengers Never Turn Off Electronics, Survey Finds

Take a guess at how many people actually fail to turn off their gadgets during takeoff and landing of a flight. Ten percent? No, that’s too low. Twenty percent? Still too low.

In a study released on Thursday by two industry groups, the Airline Passenger Experience Association and the Consumer Electronics Association, as many as 30 percent of all passengers said they had accidentally left a device on during takeoff or landing. About 67 percent said they had never done this, always ensuring that their electronics were turned off. Four percent were unsure.

In another segment of the study, passengers were asked if they turn their devices to “off” when instructed to do so by the pilot. Although 59 percent of passengers said they do fully turn their electronics off, 21 percent said they often simply switch to “airplane mode,” which disables the main radios of a gadget. Five percent sometimes adhere to the rule. And others were either unsure or do not carry electronic devices on a plane.

The device most often left on is the smartphone, the study found.

The Federal Aviation Administration did not respond to a request for comment about the study.

“Airline passengers have come to rely on their smartphones, tablets and e-Readers as essential travel companions,” said Doug Johnson, vice president of technology policy at the C.E.A., in the study.

Last year, after months of pressure, the F.A.A. said it would begin a review of its policies on electronic devices in all phases of flight. But the agency does not have a time frame for announcing its findings or for possibly changing the rules.

On Thursday, Senator Claire McCaskill, Democrat of Missouri, sat down with Anthony R. Foxx, the mayor of Charlotte, N.C., who has been nominated to be the next secretary of transportation, to discuss changing the F.A.A’s rule.

Senator McCaskill has been pressing the F.A.A. to reconsider the policy and has threatened to do it legislatively if the agency does not change the rules in a timely manner.

Late last year, Senator McCaskill also sent a letter to Michael P. Huerta, acting administrator of the F.A.A., that said airline customers were “growing increasingly skeptical of prohibitions on the use of many electronic devices during the full duration of a flight.”

John LaBombard, a spokesman for the senator, said in an e-mail on Thursday that her office planned to make the prohibition of gadgets on planes a topic during Mr. Foxx’s upcoming confirmation hearing.

The study published by the A.P.E.A. and C.E.A. found that four out of 10 passengers would like to use their devices during all phases of flight, including takeoff and landing.

As I reported in 2011, travelers are told to turn off their iPads and Kindles for takeoff and landing, yet there is no proof that these devices affect a plane’s avionics. To add to the confusion, the F.A.A. permits passengers to use electric razors and audio recorders during all phases of flight, even though those give off more electronic emissions than tablets.



Imran Khan Gives Speech From Hospital as Pakistan Vote Nears

Imran Khan, who was rushed to the hospital this week after falling from a forklift during an election event, addressed supporters of his party at a rally on Thursday via video link from his hospital bed, taking advantage of a final opportunity to campaign before Pakistan’s general elections on Saturday.

The official Twitter feed of his party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, which carried the live video stream, has also posted updates on the condition of Mr. Khan, 60, since his fall on Tuesday, when he and two other men were knocked off a mechanical lift after another man climbed aboard.


It also carried updates from the rally on Thursday, the last day of campaigning before Saturday’s elections.

Before his appearance, Mr. Khan had been updating his official Twitter feed from the hospital.

Arif Rafiq, a Pakistan analyst at the Middle East Institute, posted a screen grab on his Twitter feed @ArifCRafiq showing Mr. Khan getting ready for the speech and then speaking.

Video of Mr. Khan’s fall had been widely broadcast this week, including this footage from Pakistan’s Geo TV.

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Footage of Mr. Khan’s fall broadcast by Pakistan’s Geo TV.

As my colleague Salman Masood reported on Thursday, the already violence-ridden campaign was thrown into further tumult when unidentified gunmen kidnapped Ali Haider Gilani, a son of former Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani.

The younger Mr. Gilani, believed to be in his mid-20s, was campaigning in a suburb of Multan, the family’s power base, as a candidate for the Punjab provincial assembly.

Pakistan’s Taliban has threatened to disrupt the voting on Saturday by carrying out suicide bombings.

Follow Christine Hauser on Twitter @christineNYT.



Accessories Market Is Expanding for Samsung Phones

Here’s a sign that Samsung Electronics continues to rise as a challenger to Apple in the handset market: the proliferation of third-party accessories supporting its Galaxy phones.

Incase, a popular case maker in San Francisco, on Thursday started selling its first protective cases for the new Galaxy S4 phone, adding to the hundreds of thousands of accessories in the market made for Samsung products. Before, it had sold a case for the earlier model, the Galaxy S3.

Various accessory makers like Mophie, OtterBox, Tech Armor and Aduro also sell gear for Samsung phones. A quick search in Amazon.com’s cellphone accessories category for “Samsung Galaxy accessories” turns up over 537,000 results. A search for “iPhone accessories” turns up about 1 million results.  By contrast, a search for “Lumia accessories” â€" products made for Nokia’s less-popular Windows phones â€" gets about 52,000 results.

A similar search on BestBuy.com turns up about 2,200 results for “iPhone accessories,” about 1,600 results for “Samsung Galaxy accessories” and 51 results for “Lumia accessories.”

These are hardly scientific surveys. But they give an idea of just how big a rival the Samsung Galaxy phones have become â€" not just in terms of sales, but also in terms of the number of third-party companies backing them.

Why care about support from accessory makers? If consumers buy extras for their phones, they’re likely to keep buying phones from the same company so they can keep using those accessories. Accessory makers must be confident in Samsung’s products in order to be devoting manufacturing for them.

It used to be the case that “case maker” was synonymous with “iPhone case maker.” But as Nick Wingfield and I reported this week, the accessories market has substantially broadened to support devices other than Apple’s.



Accessories Market Is Expanding for Samsung Phones

Here’s a sign that Samsung Electronics continues to rise as a challenger to Apple in the handset market: the proliferation of third-party accessories supporting its Galaxy phones.

Incase, a popular case maker in San Francisco, on Thursday started selling its first protective cases for the new Galaxy S4 phone, adding to the hundreds of thousands of accessories in the market made for Samsung products. Before, it had sold a case for the earlier model, the Galaxy S3.

Various accessory makers like Mophie, OtterBox, Tech Armor and Aduro also sell gear for Samsung phones. A quick search in Amazon.com’s cellphone accessories category for “Samsung Galaxy accessories” turns up over 537,000 results. A search for “iPhone accessories” turns up about 1 million results.  By contrast, a search for “Lumia accessories” â€" products made for Nokia’s less-popular Windows phones â€" gets about 52,000 results.

A similar search on BestBuy.com turns up about 2,200 results for “iPhone accessories,” about 1,600 results for “Samsung Galaxy accessories” and 51 results for “Lumia accessories.”

These are hardly scientific surveys. But they give an idea of just how big a rival the Samsung Galaxy phones have become â€" not just in terms of sales, but also in terms of the number of third-party companies backing them.

Why care about support from accessory makers? If consumers buy extras for their phones, they’re likely to keep buying phones from the same company so they can keep using those accessories. Accessory makers must be confident in Samsung’s products in order to be devoting manufacturing for them.

It used to be the case that “case maker” was synonymous with “iPhone case maker.” But as Nick Wingfield and I reported this week, the accessories market has substantially broadened to support devices other than Apple’s.