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You are here: Home / 2018 / Archives for July 2018

Archives for July 2018

‘Anti-trafficking bill ignores consenting sex workers’

July 25, 2018 by Nasheman


Geeta (name changed), a resident of Sangli village in Maharashtra, was 19 when she became a sex worker, not as a victim of trafficking but as an option to feed herself and support her family financially.

Now 32 and a mother of 10-year-old son, Geeta is facing a new hurdle — that of forced rehabilitation by the government of sex workers. And she expressed her anxiety that if Parliament clears an anti-human trafficking bill pending before it, it causes chaos in her life.

“I don’t want to go to any rehab center, I don’t want to learn stitching work or making pickles. Nobody forced me to be a sex worker; it was my choice and I am earning well enough to survive with my son,” Geeta told IANS.

This is not just the voice of Geeta — many other sex workers to believe the anti-trafficking bill will create turmoil in their lives.

Kusum, 40, who only uses her first name, lives in one of the brothels on Delhi’s GB Road. She said she is not ashamed of being known to the world as a sex worker and insisted on not changing her name.

“I had chosen to go ahead as a sex worker, nobody pressurized me. This is my profession, just like other jobs. Had I wanted to move out of it, I could have done so a long time ago. Now, the government is pushing for rehab but they don’t understand that sex worker are not perceived by the society with dignity,” said Kusum, who is also President of the All India Network of Sex Workers (AINSW).

“Not all sex workers are victims of human trafficking and the government needs to understand the difference between the two. There are many like me who have chosen it as a source of income,” she added.

As the monsoon session began on July 18, the Trafficking of Persons (Prevention, Protection, and Rehabilitation) Bill, 2018, was tabled in the Lok Sabha by Women and Child Development Minister Maneka Gandhi.

According to National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) figures, around 8,100 cases of trafficking were recorded in India in 2016 and around 23,000 victims of trafficking were rescued the same year (61 percent of these were children).

Trafficking, under the Section 370 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), has been defined as “any act” of physical and sexual exploitation, slavery or practices similar to slavery and servitude.

Legal experts and social activists also expressed their worry that the bill might have a direct negative impact on the lives of many sex workers as it does not address the legal and real-time challenges in trafficking in persons.

“The clauses of the bill do not directly point at sex workers; however, some of the clauses are linked to them,” Samarjit Jana, Director, Sonagachi Research and Training Institute, Kolkata, told IANS.

According to the activists, the bill must clearly state that it does not include consenting adults and they should be enabled to continue with their chosen occupation.

“Trafficking of persons into forced or coerced labour should not be equated with sex work undertaken by consenting adults. This conflation can lead to misuse and over-broad application of the provisions in this bill,” Jana, who has for long been associated with the rights of sex-workers, stated.

Another issue that the experts are concerned about is that the government does not offer a proper rehabilitation programme.

“What the government is offering as rehabilitation cannot be called a substantive package for surviving. In the name of rehabilitation, all they offer is stitching classes. How can a sex-worker, who is also a mother, earn enough through simply sewing work,” asked Aarthi Pai, an activist, and lawyer associated with the Bengaluru-based NGO Sangram.

“There is also the social-stigma factor which the government has been totally ignoring. Indian society will never accept an individual who has been a sex worker. The government needs to have a deeper insight into such factors,” she noted.

Jana pointed out that certain guiding principles were shared with the government, asking the WCD Ministry to consider certain factors before drafting the bill — but these have been ignored.

Earlier this month, around 4,300 sex workers had also written to Maneka Gandhi appealing to her to ensure that the new law does not lead to their incarceration. There has apparently been no action on this either.

Filed Under: Women

State Siddaramaiah suspends state government official for delapidation of duty

July 25, 2018 by Nasheman


Following heading from the former chief minister and Badami MLA Siddaramaiah, a government official has been suspended for dilapidation of duty by the state government on Tuesday, July 24.

The state government on Tuesday, July 24 ordered the suspension of Venkatesh Nayak, from his service as an assistant engineer of drinking water department.

On July 18, Siddaramaiah amid KDP meeting sought for data of execution of local authorities in the region. Amid the meeting, Siddaramaiah learned that the official was not performing his duty efficiently. Thus, he quickly called CEO Vikas Suralkar and ordered to suspend him.

It is learned that 163 water purification units out of 165 were not working. When Siddaramaiah looked for a response for the same and took the official to task.

The official requested not to suspend for his negligence. However, Siddaramaiah ordered for his suspension and furthermore cautioned of strict action against the officials for dereliction of duty.

Filed Under: News & Politics

As campaigning closes, Pakistan’s Imran Khan makes final push

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman

by Asad Hashim, Al Jazeera

Electioneering officially came to a close ahead of Pakistan’s general election later this week in what has been a fraught campaign, with all three major parties accusing each other of wrongdoing.

In the eastern city of Lahore, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan made a final push at a series of rallies across the city on Monday, aiming to displace the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party from its political heartland.

Pakistan votes in a general election on Wednesday with 272 national parliamentary seats up for grabs, as well as for each of its four provincial assemblies.

PML-N President Shehbaz Sharif addressed a rally in the central town of Dera Ghazi Khan, urging the nation to “give respect to the vote”, a party rallying cry that refers to their allegation that the military and judiciary have been interfering in the political process.

Earlier this month, Sharif’s elder brother Nawaz – a three-time prime minister – was convicted and jailed by an anti-corruption court. Nawaz’ daughter Maryam and son-in-law Muhammad Safdar were also imprisoned.

Nawaz Sharif claims he did not receive a fair trial, and that the judiciary was influenced by the country’s powerful military, which has ruled Pakistan for roughly half of its 70-year history. Both institutions deny the allegation.

At a colourful rally attended by thousands in Lahore’s Walton area, Khan dismissed as a foreign conspiracy accusations that the military has aided his party by threatening opponents.

“The Western media is concerned that there is rigging going on in Pakistan, and that the military is doing it,” he said.

“I wonder how the … media has become so concerned about rigging. When I was on the roads for 126 days protesting against vote rigging, where were they?”

Khan was referring to a four-month protest in 2014 against the results of the country’s last general election.

“The man who did the rigging was the favourite of India … and of the international establishment. That’s why no one said anything!”

Time for change?
At an earlier PTI rally near Lahore’s historic Data Darbar shrine, supporters said they believed Khan was the man to bring change to Pakistan.

“I will vote for Imran Khan because he will bring about the change the others have proved unable to do,” said Adnan Ali, 20, who will be voting in his first election.

Abdullah Butt, 54, a retired civil servant who was at the rally with his grandson, felt similarly.

“My whole life, I’ve only seen these two parties in power,” he said, referring to the PML-N and the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), led by Bilawal Bhutto Zardari. “Isn’t it time we saw a change?”

Not all voters, however, have been convinced by Khan’s ambitious promises to end corruption and bring about systematic change to how power functions in the country.

“I will vote for Nawaz Sharif because he has been wrongly imprisoned,” said 30-year-old Muhammad Tariq, who sells toys off a pushcart a few hundred metres away from the site of the PTI’s rally.

“I am not looking at the party, I am only looking at Nawaz Sharif. I think he’s a very good man.”

Ahead of the campaign’s close, Sharif released an audio message from jail exhorting supporters to go to the polls to register their protest at his arrest.

“Imprisoned people of my free nation, you must change all of this,” he said. “The time has come for you to … show such a verdict that buries all those other verdicts that have made Pakistan a graveyard for justice.”

Press intimidation
The run-up to the polls has been marred by widespread allegations of pre-poll engineering and censorship of the press by the military.

On Monday, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) said journalists in the country faced a sustained and concerted series of curbs, including disruptions and closures of the country’s top news organisations.

“Overall, continuing intimidation and the perceived need to self-censor has severely hampered objective journalism,” the report said.

It documented instances where television channels had been forced off the air, as well as how news coverage of Sharif’s conviction was shaped by the “establishment”, a common euphemism in Pakistan for the military and intelligence services.

“It has become very difficult to tell the truth,” said HRCP spokesperson Ibn-e-Abdur Rehman. “Often it is a threat to one’s life.”

Journalist Marvi Sirmed, also a member of the HRCP, said her work had been targeted, with managers pressured to censor her work.

“Free and fair elections are just a dream, which is not going to be realised any time soon,” she told Al Jazeera. “This is not elections, this is a joke, this is a selection.”

Filed Under: Muslim World

Several killed, hundreds missing after Laos dam collapses

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman

Several people have been killed, hundreds remain missing and around 6,600 are homeless after a hydroelectric dam under construction collapsed in Laos, authorities said on Tuesday.

Officials did not specify the exact number of fatalities. The Xepian-Xe Namnoy dam, situated around 550 km southeast of the capital, collapsed on Monday, unleashing flash floods in six villages, Lao News Agency reported.

The administration of the province of Attapeu, where the dam was built, requested basic humanitarian assistance for the affected. Prime Minister Thongloun Sisoulith postponed government meetings and went to the affected area in Sanamxay district with senior officials to monitor relief efforts, the state media said.

Pictures showed villagers stranded on the roofs of submerged houses and boats carrying people to safety. “The disaster claimed several human lives (and) left hundreds of people missing,” according to the agency.

The Xe-Pian Xe-Namnoy Power Company (PNPC) began building the dam in 2013 and it was due to begin generating power this year.

Thai company Ratchaburi Electricity Generating Holding, a partner in the PNPC project, said that the collapse occurred due to continuous rain, which caused a high volume of water to flow into the project’s reservoir.

“Xe-Pian Xe-Namnoy Power Company Limited and related agencies had evacuated the people who reside around the area to temporary shelters (…). In addition, urgent assessment of the situation is being made in order to be able to immediately resolve the situation once the water level of the dam has decreased,” the company said in a statement.

Filed Under: Environment

Delhi Police chief bans flying of objects until I-Day

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman

The Delhi Police Commissioner on Tuesday banned flying of objects in the national capital from July 25 as a precautionary measure for the Independence Day.

The order by Police Commissioner Amulya Patnaik will remain in force up to August 15.

It prohibits flying of “sub-conventional aerial platforms” like paragliders, para-motors, hang-gliders, UAVs, UASs, microlight aircraft, remotely piloted aircraft, hot air balloons, small sized powered aircraft, quadcopters, or para jumping from aircraft.

“It has been reported that certain criminal, antisocial elements or terrorists inimical to India may pose a threat to the safety of the general public, dignitaries and vital installations by using sub-conventional aerial platforms,” Patnaik said in his order.

Hence, he said, flying of objects over the jurisdiction of National Capital Territory (NCT) of Delhi on the occasion of Independence Day celebrations 2018 is prohibited and shall be punishable as per the law.

Filed Under: Culture & Society

Maratha allocation stir turns violent in Maharashtra, policeman hurt

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


A policeman and two others were injured as the campaign for a Maratha quota turned violent here even as protests were held in different parts of Maharashtra by the Maratha Kranti on Tuesday.

A large number of protestors torched a fire brigade vehicle near Kaigaon in Aurangabad district where a 28-year-old, Kakasaheb Dattatreya Shinde, committed suicide by jumping in the Godavari river on Monday evening demanding reservations.

The repercussions of Shinde’s death were felt in different parts of the state with spontaneous shutdowns, road and rail blockades, processions and stray incidents of arson on Tuesday.

A fire brigade vehicle was torched in Aurangabad and a police jeep was set ablaze in Hingoli even as the issue was raised in the Lok Sabha by Shiv Sena MP Vinayak Raut.

All major political parties including Congress’ Ashok Chavan and Sachin Sawant, Nationalist Congress Party’s Jitendra Awhad and others have urged the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party government to resolve the issue of Maratha reservations expeditiously.

Various Maratha groups have announced a Maharashtra shutdown on August 9 – celebrated as August Kranti Day – to intensify the agitation going on since nearly two years

Filed Under: Campaign

Rahul demands probe into alleged NEET data leak

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


Congress President Rahul Gandhi on Tuesday demanded a probe into the alleged massive breach of personal data of candidates who had appeared for NEET 2018 exams.

In a letter to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) Chairperson Anita Karwal, Gandhi highlighted media reports about the breach of over 2,00,000 students’ data who appeared for the National Eligibility and Entrance Test.

“It is alleged that this data is available on certain websites for a price,” he said.

The media reports have claimed that details of the candidates, including their phone numbers, e-mail IDs, and addresses, were put up online for a price of Rs two lakh.

The Congress leader said that he was shocked by this wide-scale theft of personal data that could compromise the privacy of candidates across the country.

“This highlights the serious lack of safeguards to prevent the data breach, and calls into question the ability of the CBSE to ensure the sanctity of the examination process,” he said.

Gandhi said: “I strongly urge you to order an inquiry against this shocking lapse and take action against the officials responsible for the same.”

He also asked the CBSE to put in “additional safeguards” to prevent the recurrence of such data lapse in future.

Filed Under: EDUCATION

Aadhaar driving IT security spending in India : Report

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


The government’s steps towards bringing transparency in governance through Aadhaar have resulted in an increase in IT security spending by Indian organizations, says a report on Tuesday by French group Thales, which caters to both the defense and civil sectors.

A striking 93 percent of Indian respondents plan on increasing IT security spending this year, the highest among all countries surveyed and well above the global average of 78 percent, according to the India edition of the “2018 Thales Data Threat Report”.

According to the report, digital transformation across the globe has led to the growth of new business models that are focused on driving growth and profitability for organizations including Cloud, Internet of Things (IoT), Big Data and Blockchain.

Indians recognize encryption with Bring Your Own Key (BYOK) capabilities as the top security tool for securing sensitive data in Cloud environments and continue to spend their resources on the same technology, the findings showed.

Around 52 percent of Indian respondents reported a data breach last year, way above the global average of 36 percent, the study showed.

“This year’s India Data Threat Report 2018 emphasizes the need for change in security strategies to prevent the continuous increase in data breaches and also highlights privacy and data protection practices,” said Emmanuel de Roquefeuil, VP and Country Director, Thales in India.

The findings are based on inputs from 1,200 IT security managers in eight countries, including India, and across four major vertical markets.

Present in India since 1953, Thales has offices in several cities including in New Delhi, Gurugram, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, and Mumbai.

Filed Under: Cabinet of Curiosities

Ramachandra Guha pens ‘the most ambitious book’ on Gandhi

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


Renowned historian and author of several bestselling books, including the highly acclaimed “India After Gandhi” and “Gandhi Before India”, Ramachandra Guha has penned a new book on the father of the nation, which has just gone to the press and will be out in September.

Billed as the most definitive new biography of Gandhi, the upcoming book is titled “Gandhi: the years that changed the world (1914-1948)” and will be published by Penguin Random House India.

“This magnificent book,” sources said, “will not only tell the story of Gandhi’s life, from his departure from South Africa to his dramatic assassination in 1948, but also the history of our freedom movement and its many strands”.

It is said to be a book with “a Tolstoyan sweep”, revealing Gandhi to the readers just as he was understood by his contemporaries. The book will also include new readings of his arguments with B.R. Ambedkar, Mohammad Ali Jinnah and Subhas Chandra Bose, among others.

Drawing on never-before-seen sources and animated by its author’s unparalleled sense of drama and politics, Guha’s latest work will be marketed as the “most ambitious and integral book” on Bapu.

The book will be relevant, particularly in the context of religious tensions and communal disharmony engulfing the country in contemporary times. At the same time, the 60-year-old historian is known for his profound research and objective portrayal of his subjects, and readers can look forward to drawing lessons from Gandhi’s life in current times.

It is a follow up to “Gandhi Before India” (2013). Further details on the book and a formal announcement is awaited from the publisher.

Guha’s large body of work, covering a range of fields and yielding a number of rational insights has made him a significant figure in Indian historical studies. He is valued as one of the major historians of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.

Filed Under: Books

Mahadayi water already diverted towards Malaprabha: Minister  

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


he Karnataka government has already diverted the flow of the Mhadei river at Kalsa-Bhandura and the Goa government will file a contempt petition before the central tribunal, appointed to resolve the inter-state dispute, as a counter-measure, Water Resources Minister Vinod Palienkar said on Tuesday.

“Digging work was carried out at the Kalsa-Bhanduri nullah and the flow of (Mhadei) water towards Goa has been stopped and diverted to the Mahaprabha (river) basin. Therefore, our team will be filing an application in court tomorrow, including contempt of court, before the Tribunal,” Palienkar said.

Goa, Karnataka, and Maharashtra are in a dispute over the controversial Kalsa-Bhandura dam project across the waters of the Mhadei river at a central Tribunal.

Mahadayi also was known as the Mandovi river is the lifeline of the northern parts of the State. It originates in Karnataka and meets the Arabian Sea in Panaji in Goa, while briefly flowing through the territory of Maharashtra.

Karnataka also aims to build seven dams at various points along the river, including at Kalsa village, aimed at diverting the flow into what it claims is the water-starved Malaprabha basin in North Karnataka. The state has demanded that Goa should allow the transfer of over seven TMC of water to tide over its irrigation and drinking water needs.

Diversion of the water was one of the key issues in the North Karnataka region during the recently concluded assembly election.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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