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Celine Dion feels ‘stronger’ since husband’s death

IANS |

Singer Celine Dion feels "stronger" since the death of her husband Rene Angelil.

Angelil, a talent manager, passed away in January 2016 at the age of 73 after having suffered from throat cancer since 2013.

Dion, 48, feels her late husband will "always be with" her, and now she feels like the "leader of the family".

"When he left, he came inside of all of my kids' hearts and mine, he gave the rest of his 50 percent for me to be complete, to continue the rest of my life, to feel strong and to believe that I can still do this and he will always be with me," Dion told etonline.com.

"I feel stronger. He gave me the rest of him. I feel stronger, I step forward. I say what I mean, I mean what I say. I stand up for my kids and I feel like I'm the leader of the family," she added.
 

Celine Dion feels ‘stronger’ since husband’s death

IANS |

Singer Celine Dion feels "stronger" since the death of her husband Rene Angelil.

Angelil, a talent manager, passed away in January 2016 at the age of 73 after having suffered from throat cancer since 2013.

Dion, 48, feels her late husband will "always be with" her, and now she feels like the "leader of the family".

"When he left, he came inside of all of my kids' hearts and mine, he gave the rest of his 50 percent for me to be complete, to continue the rest of my life, to feel strong and to believe that I can still do this and he will always be with me," Dion told etonline.com.

"I feel stronger. He gave me the rest of him. I feel stronger, I step forward. I say what I mean, I mean what I say. I stand up for my kids and I feel like I'm the leader of the family," she added.
 

Artworks from Sotheby’s March sale on view in Delhi

PTI | New Delhi |

Celebrated Indian painter Raja Ravi Varma's Untitled portrait of Damayanti will go under the hammer at Sotheby's upcoming New York sale of Modern and Contemporary South Asian Art on March 14.

Estimated at a whopping 500,000 700,000, the iconic painting reimagines a scene from a popular Sanskrit play 'Nala and Damayanti' by combining elements of classic Indian mythology with European Realism to create a painting of brilliant resonance.

Varma's work will also be among the 16 artworks by some of the most pre-eminent creators of South Asian art that will be on display at an exhibition here, to give art connoiseurs a glimpse of the auction that will feature 58 lots in all.

Jehangir Sabavala's monumental 'City-II' (1999), which will be part of both the exhibition, is one of the many artworks that manifest the artist's obsession with the sky.

Estimated at 250,000 – 300,000, the artwork masterfully combines the vibrant hues of yellow and ochre to create a canopy of clouds and sky.

"With the South Asian art market going through one of its most exciting phases at the moment, we are thrilled at the opportunity to exhibit such a strong collection of works by some of the most celebrated South Asian artists of the 20th century in New Delhi.

"Star pieces by artists such as Raja Ravi Varma and Jehangir Sabavala which are notable for their rarity on the international market, are particular highlights," Yamini Mehta, International Head of South Asian Art, said.

The sale also boasts works of extraordinary provenance, including a group consigned from an important Swiss collection, acquired from the outstanding Herwitz sales held at Sotheby s in 1996 and 1997, coming to the market for the first time in over two decades.

Bringing together 2,000 years of Indian art under one roof, the auction will also feature works by modernists like M F Husain, Syed Haider Raza and F N Souza will also be part of the sale as well as the exhibition.

According to Sotheby's, 97 per cent of the lots have never appeared at auction before, and the featured works have been housed for decades in prestigious private collections, including paintings by artists rarely seen on the international market.

"The auction is characterised by its freshness and museum-quality lots. We are honored to be entrusted with outstanding works from well-established collections across Europe and North America in our upcoming auctions," Anu Ghosh-Mazumdar, Head of Department, Indian and Southeast Asian Art, said.

The exhibition of highlights at The Leela Palace here scheduled to be held on February 24 and 25, will form part of a wider programme of events and activities, including a two-day contemporary art course in collaboration with Sotheby's Institute of Art.

Telecom stocks help Nifty advance for 6th day

Statesman News Service | New Delhi |

Telecom giant Bharti Airtel's purchase of smaller rival Telenor helped local stocks bypass weak overseas cues on Thursday. New Delhi-based Bharti led the Nifty to a fresh 5-month high as the index clocked its sixth session of gains.

Bharti surged 4.7 per cent to 377.85 rupees, its highest level since August 2015. Bharti's purchase of Telenor will fetch an additional 43 MHz of crucial 4G spectrum which is critical in its fight to take on the new entrant Reliance JiO, owned by India's most profitable private company, Reliance Industries.

Over the past 7 months Reliance JiO has unleashed a price war in the booming telecom market as it tries to attract high paying customers from rivals such as Bharti, Idea Cellular and Vodafone Plc. Several brokerages have informed investors that JiO's competitive pricing may dent the customer base of rivals and force them to offer services at lower price points. As a consequence, Reliance Industries, which fully owns Reliance JiO, had surged more than 10 per cent on Wednesday.

Meawhile, here are the major events of the trading day:

* The Nifty added 33 points to quote at 8,960 points on the NSE. The index is up for the sixth day in a row and trades near its highest level since September 9.

* Idea Cellular, which is merging with larger rival Vodafone, was the top gainer, up 6.4 per cent. Bharti, TCS, HDFC Bank and HCL Tech gained 1.1-6.1 and were among 22 shares advancing on the Nifty.

* Power Grid, NTPC, Axis Bank, Grasim and ICICI Bank fell 1.1-1.4 per cent and were among 29 shares to lose ground on the Nifty.

* Telecom stocks dominated traders and investors' buy lists Bharti Airtel was the top traded stock with Rs 766 crore worth of shares changing hands on the NSE alone. Reliance Industries slipped a bit after Wednesday's sharp rally. Idea Cellular, HDFC Bank and TCS were traded heavily as well.

* Suzlon, Reliance Communications and Bharti Airtel were also on the list of most actively traded stocks tracked by volume.

* The Sensex gained 100 points to quote at 28,964 points on the Bombay Stock Exchange. Bharti Airtel was the top gainer while Reliance Industries shed the most on the Sensex. ICICI Bank was the top traded counter on the Sensex.

* The broader markets inched up in trade as well with the Nifty 100, 200 and 500 indices adding 0.4 per cent each.

* Gains on the sectoral indices were on the higher side with the Nifty IT index posting the highest gain of 1.5 per cent. All four banking benchmarks edged higher.

* The bulls controlled sentiment on Dalal Street with 915 shares rising compared to 651 that fell.

Share multi-photo album on Instagram now

IANS | New Delhi |

 If you feel constrained to share multiple photos or videos from your trip on Instagram, a new feature rolled out on Thursday will make your vacation look beautiful in a single album.

Earlier this month, photo-sharing app Instagram was testing the feature in beta stage.

"Now, you can combine up to 10 photos and videos in one post and swipe through to see them all," Instagram said in a press statement.

To match the user experience, Instagram has increased carousel ad units to 10 photos or videos with a new design. 

Earlier only advertisers were able to share the gallery which users could swipe through horizontally, but now the feature has made its way to all 600 million users.

To upload multiple photos, users can select up to 10 photos from their galley, slap on filters to each photo they choose, then upload the photos as an album to their timeline. 

From their followers' perspective, they will see the album and can then slide through the various shots, liking photos as they go.

Police seal Haryana-Punjab border, traffic disrupted

IANS | Chandigarh |

 

Thousands of people, especially motorists, faced inconvenience on Thursday morning after security forces sealed a busy portion of a national highway on the Haryana-Punjab border that links Delhi with Amritsar.

A 24 km stretch of the NH-1 was sealed off on the Ambala (Haryana)-Rajpura (Punjab) section in wake of the Indian National Lok Dal's call of 'Water War'.

The traffic was diverted, a Punjab police officer said.

The NH-1 is taken by thousands of motorists daily to and from Punjab to go towards Delhi via Haryana.

While the Punjab Police sealed the highway in the state, their counterparts in Haryana did the same on their side of the road to prevent any escalation.

Heavy presence of the police and central para-military forces, in riot gear and riot control vehicles, were seen on both sides of the states' border at the Shambhu barrier, the entry point into Punjab from Haryana.

Daily commuters from both states, who travel across the border for work, were the worst affected.

"I have walked for three kilometre already to go towards Ambala. I don't know if we will get any transport ahead," Surjit Kaur, a woman employee who works in Ambala and travels from her village near Rajpura town in Punjab, said.

Border areas in Ambala and Patiala districts were on high alert with Haryana's principal opposition party the INLD expected to start digging of the controversial Sutlej-Yamuna Link (SYL) canal to get water for the state.

The situation along the border was also being monitored with a helicopter.

The INLD activists and leaders started gathering at the Subzi Mandi ground in Ambala city, 10 km from the border.

Haryana Director General of Police (DGP) KP Singh said that the state police was prepared.

Following a Presidential Reference, the Supreme Court in November 2016, held the passing of the Punjab Termination of Water Agreements Bill, 2004, by the Punjab assembly as "unconstitutional".

The Punjab legislation terminated all water-sharing agreements between the state and its neighbouring states, thereby jeopardising the construction of the SYL canal.

1st Test, Day 1: Australian openers dominate opening session

Umesh Yadav made the breakthrough for India, but the Australians are sitting pretty!

SNS | New Delhi |

India struck late via Umesh Yadav to get India a vital breakthrough after Australian openers David Warner (38) and Matt Renshaw (36 retired hurt) had initially frustrated the home side on the first day of the 1st Test in Pune to put the visitors at 84/1 at lunch.

Australian skipper Steve Smith won the toss and chose to bat and his openers looked to be emerging from the opening session unscathed before Virat Kohli’s strategy of bringing Umesh Yadav into the attack paid immediate dividends.

Kohli had persisted with spinners on a placid track but to no avail, with the tall Renshaw and pint-sized Warner looking well set and in sight of half-centuries.

Jayant Yadav had clean bowled Warner, but had overstepped the line by a huge margin so much to Australia’s relief, the opener remained in the game and he and the young Renshaw combined well for the opening hour and a half to put some runs on the board.

Renshaw even hit a massive six off Ravindra Jadeja and even Ravichandran Ashwin was unable to find much joy on a home wicket for a change.

Warner eventually fell to Umesh, an inside edge smacking the stumps to end his innings and with Renshaw retiring ill immediately, Australia have two new batsmen at the crease.
Captain Smith (1*) and Shaun Marsh (1) are batting currently and with the pitch already turning, face an tough task if they are to preserve their wickets. 

AAP govt seeks Delhi’s administration control, moves Supreme Court

SNS | New Delhi |

After the Delhi High Court’s verdict to hold Lieutenant Governor (LG) as administrative head of Delhi, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government on Thursday approached the Supreme Court for setting up a five-judge constitution bench to decide on the issue.

The AAP government mentioned the matter before Chief Justice of India (CJI) requesting for an early decision of the constitutional bench, according to reports.

The high court in August 2016 had said that Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung was the “administrative head” of the national capital.

The court had given its verdict on the plea challenging Centre’s two notifications which had led to bitter turf war between Jung and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal for control over the capital’s administration.

Meanwhile, after the high court’s verdict, the AAP government sources had said that the party will approach the Supreme Court against the judgment.

India welcomes proposal for new UN counter terrorism office

IANS | United Nations |

India has welcomed a proposal by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to create a new office headed by an under-secretary-general to ramp up UN's counter-terrorism efforts.

Guterres announced his proposal on Wednesday to consolidate the scattered efforts in a new Office of Counter Terrorism (OCT) in order to "ensure that due priority is given to counter-terrorism across the UN system and to see that the important work on Preventing Violent Extremism is firmly rooted in the Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy."

The post of an under-secretary-general would be created to oversee the counter terrorism efforts, he said while outlining the proposal at an informal meeting of the General Assembly on helping member countries implement the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy.

"India welcomes the initiative and fully supports the proposal for creation of the OCT," said Syed Akbaruddin, India's Permanent Representative to the UN. "We will extend all possible support in taking the proposal to its fruition."

He added: "We envisage the Under-Secretary-General for CT to be able to take positions and speak on behalf of all of UN and develop a comprehensive narrative on terrorism including on all issues relating to counter-terrorism."

Under the proposal, the Counter-Terrorism Implementation Task Force (CTITF) Office and the Counter-Terrorism Centre will be moved out of the Department of Political Affairs.

In the chaotic UN bureaucratic structure, 12 so-called Thematic Inter-Agency Working groups and 38 CTITF entities as well as numerous outfits under other UN bodies deal with fighting terrorism.

The mission of the OCT and its under-secretary-general will be to "enhance coordination and coherence" of the entities under the CTITF to implement counter-terrorism strategy and help countries build their capacity to meet the terrorism challenge according to the Guterres plan.

However, Guterres made clear that he would not be stepping on the toes of the Security Council.

"The only objective is to improve efficiency — not to change the different mandates in the field of counter-terrorism," he said. "This new Office would not have supervisory responsibilities over CTED (Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate), or other Security Council Subsidiary bodies. It would report through me to the General Assembly."

Enmeshed in partisan politics, the Council's subsidiary bodies on terrorism are often ineffective as is the case of China blocking the designation of Jaish-e-Mohammad chief Masood Azhar as a terrorist by a sanctions committee.

The US also backed the Guterres proposals for reforming the UN counter terrorism structure.

US Permanent Representative Nikki Haley said: "This new under-secretary-general will need to set clear priorities to implement the UN's Global Counterterrorism Strategy."

She said the UN could do more to fight terrorism, especially by working to stop the movement of terrorists across border.

Trump administration withdraws protections for transgender students

IANS | Washington |

US President Donald Trump's administration revoked federal guidelines specifying that transgender students have the right to use public school restrooms that match their gender identity, a media report said.

Officials with the federal Education and Justice departments notified the US Supreme Court late Wednesday that the administration is ordering the nation's schools to disregard memos the former President Barack Obama's administration issued during the past two years regarding transgender student rights, The Washington Post daily reported. 

Those memos had stated that prohibiting transgender students from using facilities that align with their gender identity violates federal anti-discrimination laws.

The two-page "Dear colleague" letter from the Trump administration, which is set to go to the nation's public schools, does not offer any new guidance, instead it says that the earlier directive needed to be withdrawn because it lacked extensive legal analysis, did not go through a public vetting process, sowed confusion and drew legal challenges.

The administration said that it would not rely on the prior interpretation of the law in the future.

The departments wrote that the Trump administration wants to "further and more completely consider the legal issues involved," and said that there must be "due regard for the primary role of the states and local school districts in establishing educational policy," the daily said. 

Although it offered no clarity or direction to schools that have transgender students, the letter added that "schools must ensure that all students, including LGBT — lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender — students, are able to learn and thrive in a safe environment."

Attorney General Jeff Sessions said that his department "has a duty to enforce the law" and criticised the Obama administration's guidance as lacking sufficient legal basis. 

Sessions wrote that the Department of Justice remains committed to the "proper interpretation" of the anti-discrimination law known as Title IX but said deference should be given to lawmakers and localities.

The new letter scrambles the calculus for a number of lawsuits working their way through the courts, particularly the case of Gavin Grimm, a transgender Virginia teenager who sued his school board for barring him from the boys' restroom. 

The case is scheduled for oral arguments before the US Supreme Court next month.

Grimm said he was disheartened that the Trump administration is withdrawing Obama's guidance which was "incredibly empowering", the daily added.

The guidance led to outrage all across the country, CNN reported.

Sarah Warbelow, legal director of Human Rights Campaign, said rescinding the guidance will lead to confusion among schools that look to the federal government for best practices, because the change does not affect existing federal law, only the Department of Education's interpretation of it.

Mara Keisling, the executive director of the National Centre for Transgender Equality, told the media that the decision was "simply and dangerously wrong and incorrect".

"Laws like Title IX are not state-by-state options, they are the responsibility of the federal government," she said.
 

BMC polls updates: Sena leading on 39 seats, BJP on 25

PTI | Mumbai |

The Shiv Sena is leading on 39 and BJP on 25 in the 227-member Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation, as per the latest trends.

Besides, the Congress is leading on 9, NCP on 2 and MNS on 3 seats, a State Election Commission official said.

Counting got underway for polls to 10 civic bodies, including cash-rich BMC, and 25 zilla parishads and 283 panchayat samitis across Maharashtra at 10 AM.

Practice what you preach: Sahitya Akademi president

IANS | New Delhi |

 In what may lead to another controversy surrounding the Sahitya Akademi, an evening that was expected to be a celebration of outstanding literary works at the presentation of the Sahitya Akademi Awards on Wednesday turned out to be a sermon of sorts as the Akademi President, in his about half-an-hour long speech, not only quoted several slokas from religious texts but also went on to remind the fraternity to practice what they preach.

Mumbai-based author Jerry Pinto, Tamil writer Vannadhasan and Hindi writer Nasira Sharma were among 24 persons who were conferred the Sahitya Akademi awards.

Sharma's Hindi novel "Paarijat," Pinto's "Em and the Big Hoom" and Vannadhasan's "Oru Sru Isai" won them the literary honour.

The awards were presented during the Akademi's ongoing annual Festival of Letters.

Akademi President Vishwanath Prasad Tiwari presented the winners with a casket containing a cheque of Rs.1 lakh, a shawl and an engraved copper plaque.

Noted physicist and Marathi Writer Jayant V Narlikar, who was earlier awarded the literary honour in 2014 for his autobiography in Marathi, was the chief guest.

The evening, however, began on a rather unusual note as Tiwari, in his address, seemed to be presenting some sort of a sermon to the writing fraternity.

Examining the behavior of the writers "critically", he said that the solution to the problem of some writers is that they should practise what they preach.

"Writers should always remember that he is being seen and judged by thousands of people when he writes a book or speaks from a stage. They should know what to say," Tiwari said.

He also reminded the audience that he was not giving advice to the writers but merely using "logic".A

"Whatever you preach to your readers and expect them to change, why don't you apply the same preachings to you and change yourself also," he said.

Tiwari said that the 21st century began with an attack on the arts and reminded the audience of an incident in March 2001 when a statue of Buddha was blasted in Afghanistan.

Many in the audience were surprised that while the Akademi president found it relevant to relate an almost two decades old incident of another country, he had nothing to say on the death of writers like Govind Pansare and Narendra Dhabolkar or the increasing threats of banning books and artists in India.

"As the president of the Sahitya Akademi, he would have done much better by expressing his solidarity with writers who were attacked or those whose books were banned. His speech was more of a RSS sermon than a Sahitya Akademi president," said Jahana (21), a student of Political Science from DU.

Noted poet Ashok Vajpeyi, who had returned his award in 2015, had recently criticised the Akademi for its "mediocrity". He had said that the body is dominated the mediocre, academics of low distinction and lacking in courage.

In an apparent reference to Vajpeyi, Tiwari said that the Akademi aims to reach to the farthest village of the country and therefore it is difficult to run it only with "talented souls" as they are so few in number.

Consistency and practice are as important as talent, he said.

Tiwari quoted several slokas from religious texts to establish that science and literature has been prevailing in India since ancient times.

Among the winners are eight books of poetry, seven books of short stories, five novels, two on criticism, one of essays and one play. The books were chosen on the basis of recommendations made by a jury of three in the languages concerned and approved by its executive board, the Akademi said.

The awards have been given to books first published between January 2010 and December 2014.

Practice what you preach: Sahitya Akademi president

IANS | New Delhi |

 In what may lead to another controversy surrounding the Sahitya Akademi, an evening that was expected to be a celebration of outstanding literary works at the presentation of the Sahitya Akademi Awards on Wednesday turned out to be a sermon of sorts as the Akademi President, in his about half-an-hour long speech, not only quoted several slokas from religious texts but also went on to remind the fraternity to practice what they preach.

Mumbai-based author Jerry Pinto, Tamil writer Vannadhasan and Hindi writer Nasira Sharma were among 24 persons who were conferred the Sahitya Akademi awards.

Sharma's Hindi novel "Paarijat," Pinto's "Em and the Big Hoom" and Vannadhasan's "Oru Sru Isai" won them the literary honour.

The awards were presented during the Akademi's ongoing annual Festival of Letters.

Akademi President Vishwanath Prasad Tiwari presented the winners with a casket containing a cheque of Rs.1 lakh, a shawl and an engraved copper plaque.

Noted physicist and Marathi Writer Jayant V Narlikar, who was earlier awarded the literary honour in 2014 for his autobiography in Marathi, was the chief guest.

The evening, however, began on a rather unusual note as Tiwari, in his address, seemed to be presenting some sort of a sermon to the writing fraternity.

Examining the behavior of the writers "critically", he said that the solution to the problem of some writers is that they should practise what they preach.

"Writers should always remember that he is being seen and judged by thousands of people when he writes a book or speaks from a stage. They should know what to say," Tiwari said.

He also reminded the audience that he was not giving advice to the writers but merely using "logic".A

"Whatever you preach to your readers and expect them to change, why don't you apply the same preachings to you and change yourself also," he said.

Tiwari said that the 21st century began with an attack on the arts and reminded the audience of an incident in March 2001 when a statue of Buddha was blasted in Afghanistan.

Many in the audience were surprised that while the Akademi president found it relevant to relate an almost two decades old incident of another country, he had nothing to say on the death of writers like Govind Pansare and Narendra Dhabolkar or the increasing threats of banning books and artists in India.

"As the president of the Sahitya Akademi, he would have done much better by expressing his solidarity with writers who were attacked or those whose books were banned. His speech was more of a RSS sermon than a Sahitya Akademi president," said Jahana (21), a student of Political Science from DU.

Noted poet Ashok Vajpeyi, who had returned his award in 2015, had recently criticised the Akademi for its "mediocrity". He had said that the body is dominated the mediocre, academics of low distinction and lacking in courage.

In an apparent reference to Vajpeyi, Tiwari said that the Akademi aims to reach to the farthest village of the country and therefore it is difficult to run it only with "talented souls" as they are so few in number.

Consistency and practice are as important as talent, he said.

Tiwari quoted several slokas from religious texts to establish that science and literature has been prevailing in India since ancient times.

Among the winners are eight books of poetry, seven books of short stories, five novels, two on criticism, one of essays and one play. The books were chosen on the basis of recommendations made by a jury of three in the languages concerned and approved by its executive board, the Akademi said.

The awards have been given to books first published between January 2010 and December 2014.

Johnny Depp blames years of tax problems on ex-managers

PTI |

Hollywood star Johnny Depp has accused his former managers of costing him more than USD 6 million in tax penalties and fines as part of their ongoing legal battle.

The Pirates of the Caribbean star sued bosses at The Management Group (TMG) for fraud last month, alleging they mishandled his finances by collecting USD 28 million in fees he never agreed to, repeatedly failing to file his taxes in a timely manner, and loaning roughly USD 10 million of his money without being authorised to do so.

TMG heads Joel and Robert Mandel fired back with their own complaint, blaming the 53-year-old actor's tendency to live beyond his means for his money issues.

Depp's lawyer has now filed new papers in the dispute in a bid to have the countersuit dismissed.

In the documents, the actor provides a string of receipts from America's Internal Revenue Service (IRS) detailing the tax troubles he found himself in from 2000 to 2015 as a result of TMG's alleged "negligence and misconduct".

According to TMZ, the actor also had to deal with a costly mistake they reportedly made on his California state taxes.

He has since settled all the IRS bills but maintains he wouldn't have fallen foul of tax authorities if TMG representatives had done their jobs in the first place.

After TMG bosses filed their countersuit, Depp's attorney Adam Waldman wasted no time in hitting back, accusing the fired managers of using the actor's worldwide fame to their advantage by attempting to turn the public against him.

"(TMG) have chosen to employ a reprehensible 'blame the victim' strategy in a transparent attempt to save their own skin and deflect away from their malfeasance, which is chronicled in Depp's 48-page complaint," Waldman wrote in a statement to People.

"Depp did not sue his former business managers for his own personal investment decisions or the 'financial distress' they wildly allege – Depp sued them for fraud and multiple breaches of their fiduciary duty, among other claims.

Gaslighting the public with global press releases will not save the defendants in court from their gross misconduct set forth in the complaint."

Johnny Depp blames years of tax problems on ex-managers

PTI |

Hollywood star Johnny Depp has accused his former managers of costing him more than USD 6 million in tax penalties and fines as part of their ongoing legal battle.

The Pirates of the Caribbean star sued bosses at The Management Group (TMG) for fraud last month, alleging they mishandled his finances by collecting USD 28 million in fees he never agreed to, repeatedly failing to file his taxes in a timely manner, and loaning roughly USD 10 million of his money without being authorised to do so.

TMG heads Joel and Robert Mandel fired back with their own complaint, blaming the 53-year-old actor's tendency to live beyond his means for his money issues.

Depp's lawyer has now filed new papers in the dispute in a bid to have the countersuit dismissed.

In the documents, the actor provides a string of receipts from America's Internal Revenue Service (IRS) detailing the tax troubles he found himself in from 2000 to 2015 as a result of TMG's alleged "negligence and misconduct".

According to TMZ, the actor also had to deal with a costly mistake they reportedly made on his California state taxes.

He has since settled all the IRS bills but maintains he wouldn't have fallen foul of tax authorities if TMG representatives had done their jobs in the first place.

After TMG bosses filed their countersuit, Depp's attorney Adam Waldman wasted no time in hitting back, accusing the fired managers of using the actor's worldwide fame to their advantage by attempting to turn the public against him.

"(TMG) have chosen to employ a reprehensible 'blame the victim' strategy in a transparent attempt to save their own skin and deflect away from their malfeasance, which is chronicled in Depp's 48-page complaint," Waldman wrote in a statement to People.

"Depp did not sue his former business managers for his own personal investment decisions or the 'financial distress' they wildly allege – Depp sued them for fraud and multiple breaches of their fiduciary duty, among other claims.

Gaslighting the public with global press releases will not save the defendants in court from their gross misconduct set forth in the complaint."

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B-Town galore at Rangoon screening

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B-Town galore at Rangoon screening

B-Town galore at Rangoon screening

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