Thu, 22 Mar 2012 11:22:04 GMT | By Antony Bennison
Week in pictures - 23 March 2012

Shuhama



Noori, a cloned Pashmina goat, is seen at the Faculty of Veterinary Sciences and Animal Husbandry of Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology (SKUAST), in Shuhama. Noori is the world's first cloned Pashmina goat and is doing well so far, said Doctor Riaz Ahmad Shah, who heads the project at SKUAST. Pashmina goats, which grow a thick warm fleece, survive on grass in Ladakh. (© Fayaz Kabli/Reuters)
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  • A boy plays in the mud on the bank of the Bago river in Bago, Myanmar. (© Reuters)
  • Noori, a cloned Pashmina goat, is seen at the Faculty of Veterinary Sciences and Animal Husbandry of Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology (SKUAST), in Shuhama. Noori is the world's first cloned Pashmina goat and is doing well so far, said Doctor Riaz Ahmad Shah, who heads the project at SKUAST. Pashmina goats, which grow a thick warm fleece, survive on grass in Ladakh. (© Fayaz Kabli/Reuters)
  • A vendor rests next to sacks of onions at a wholesale vegetable market in Kolkata. India's headline inflation will ease to about 6.5 percent by the end of this month, and will further ease to about 6 percent or below over the year, the prime minister's chief economic adviser C Rangarajan said. (© Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters)
  • Horsemen take part in a Kok-boru, or goat dragging, competition as part of Navruz celebrations, an ancient holiday marking the spring equinox, in the Kyrgyz capital Bishkek. Considered Kyrgyzstan's national sport, Kok-boru is a traditional Central Asian game where players grab a goat carcass from the ground while riding their horses and try to score by placing it in their opponent's goal. (© Vladimir Pirogov/Reuters)
  • The pods on the London Eye tourist attraction cast shadows against a thick morning fog as the spring sun shine begins to burn it off in central London. (© Andrew Winning/Reuters)
  • People wait to board a train on a railway platform in Mirzapur in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. By the end of the day, about 40 people on average will have died somewhere on the network of 64,000 km (39,800 miles) of track. Many will be slum-dwellers and poor villagers who live near the lines and use them as places to wash and as open toilets. Some will have fallen off overcrowded commuter trains. Of the 20 million people who travel daily on the network, many will arrive hours, even a day, behind schedule, having clattered along tracks and been guided by signalling systems built before India gained independence from Britain in 1947. (© Danish Siddiqui/Reuters)
  • Geoff Huegill of Australia competes in the Mens 100 Metre Butterfly Finals during day seven of the Australian Olympic Swimming Trials at the South Australian Aquatic & Leisure Centre in Adelaide, Australia. (© Morne de Klerk/Getty Images)
  • Onlookers and fire tenders stand near smoke rising from a burnt market in Kolkata. Hundreds of shops were destroyed in a major fire that broke out at Hatibagan market in the old quarters of Kolkata. No casualties have been reported and the cause of the fire is unknown, local media reported. (© Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters)
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Noori, a cloned Pashmina goat, is seen at the Faculty of Veterinary Sciences and Animal Husbandry of Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology (SKUAST), in Shuhama. Noori is the world's first cloned Pashmina goat and is doing well so far, said Doctor Riaz Ahmad Shah, who heads the project at SKUAST. Pashmina goats, which grow a thick warm fleece, survive on grass in Ladakh.

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