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You are here: Home / Archives for 2018

Archives for 2018

In Pakistan’s election, PML-N battles PTI in political heartland

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


Narowal and Lahore, Pakistan – Driving through the flooded rice paddies of the eastern Pakistani district of Narowal, the sunlight streaming in through the monsoon clouds, Ahsan Iqbal is in turns confident and concerned.

He steps off his bulletproof pick-up truck and is immediately surrounded by well-wishers showering him with rose petals and placing colourful garlands around his neck.

Armed bodyguards form a ring around him as he walks towards a large tent, where a couple of hundred people have been waiting all day to hear him speak.

Ahead of him, some children lead the way, happily chanting the slogan of Iqbal’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) political party, and dancing to the beat of a dhol.

“Look who’s come, it’s the lion, it’s the lion,” they sing, a reference to the party’s election symbol.

If massive political rallies, attended by tens of thousands and addressed by party chiefs, are the muscles that power electoral campaigning in Pakistan, then “corner meetings” such as this one, under a small tent in a rice field in the middle of nowhere, are its heart and soul.

Pakistan goes to the polls on Wednesday, and if the PML-N is to fight off the challenge from the opposition PTI, the contest will be decided in constituencies such as this one, in the heart of Punjab province, where 141 of the 272 national parliamentary seats that are up for grabs are located.

Iqbal begins his stump speech, one he has repeated dozens of times.

He lists the achievements of his party’s last five years in power, pointing out his opponent’s relative lack of experience, and drawing attention towards his work in the constituency.

“You now sleep in comfort under a fan,” he says, referring to reduced electricity blackouts, “but the leader who gave you this has no comfort in jail.”

Nawaz Sharif, the chief of the PML-N, and his daughter Maryam Nawaz were jailed earlier this month after being convicted by an anti-corruption court.

His party says he received an unfair trial and alleges the country’s powerful military – which has ruled Pakistan for roughly half its 70-year history – pressured the judiciary to convict him. Both institutions deny the charge.

“You have a debt to him, to release him from jail through the power of your vote,” Iqbal continues.

Nearby, a young man on a tractor looks on impassively.

‘Engineering’ and ‘aliens’
Away from the crowds, Iqbal strikes a different note.

This has been no ordinary campaign, with widespread allegations that the military has been “engineering” the electoral process, and encouraging PML-N supporters and candidates to switch loyalties.

Political news coverage has also been tightly controlled, with the country’s two largest news organisations seeing their distribution networks disrupted when they refused to follow the military’s editorial guidelines.

“Our hope is that we get a high turnout on voting day so that we have a margin of victory that is too large to manipulate,” Iqbal told Al Jazeera.

Countrywide, dozens of PML-N candidates switched parties to the opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), led by cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan, weeks ahead of the polls.

In Narowal, two key PML-N candidates defected.

Abrar-ul-Haq, a pop star-turned-politician, is hoping to lead the PTI to victory in the Punjab district of Narowal [Asad Hashim/Al Jazeera]
The party’s opponents dismiss allegations of rigging.

“Honestly, I’m still waiting for the aliens,” says Abrar-ul-Haq, the PTI’s candidate against Iqbal in Narowal, using a euphemism for the military popularised by PML-N chief Sharif.

“It has been much better than the last elections,” says ul-Haq, a pop star-turned-politician, about his experience on the campaign trail. “We’ve had huge rallies, boiling with enthusiasm, especially from the youth.”

In 2013, Haq lost the race in this constituency to Iqbal by a margin of more than 27 percent of the 154,637 votes polled.

This time, he is confident that he will win more support, having engaged more heavily with local kinship group leaders, who control thousands of votes in rural constituencies such as Narowal.

“Last time we only concentrated on big political rallies, but this time we have spoken to a lot of the [village and kinship leaders] as well, and many of them have switched their votes to us,” says Naeem Ahmed, an official with Haq’s campaign.

“In local politics, we cannot ignore those blocks of votes, those biraderis [kinship groups], that were with the PML-N last time, they are now with the PTI,” says Haq.

Iqbal, meanwhile, appears to be preaching a post-biraderi brand of politics, campaigning mainly on service delivery rather than engaging with influential locals.

The PML-N has led the government in Punjab for a decade, and socioeconomic indicators have shown improvement during their reign.

“I am going direct to the people,” he says, en route to another corner meeting. “Citizens are now empowered and informed, and they prefer candidates to come to them directly.”

Dangerous games
Narowal may be a sleepy town on the edges of Pakistan’s mainstream, but there is a dangerous edge to the campaign here, one that is being replicated across the country.

In May, Iqbal was shot while at a campaign event, the bullet shattering his elbow and lodging in his stomach.

The attacker accused Iqbal of having committed blasphemy by supporting a minor change to an electoral oath pushed through parliament by the PML-N last year.

That shooting came after supporters of the far-right Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) party had blockaded the Pakistani capital for weeks over the issue, finally dispersing only after securing the resignation of a federal minister and legal immunity for damage caused during the rioting.

Haq, Iqbal’s opponent, has frequently repeated the blasphemy allegations at political rallies.

Elections banners for the PML-N and PTI parties fly across Lahore, as the two leading parties in the elections face off for control of the country [Asad Hashim/Al Jazeera]
Blasphemy is a sensitive issue in Pakistan. At least 74 people have been murdered in connection with accusations of the crime since 1990, according to an Al Jazeera tally.

In Pakistan’s largest city of Karachi, Jibran Nasir, an independent candidate, has faced a series of attacks by charged TLP members, also accusing him of blasphemy.

“[Haq’s] main argument is inciting hatred against me on religious grounds,” says Iqbal, gesturing towards a dozen armed guards in two police escort vehicles. “It does restrict you […] but at the same time, you also have to take a risk. Because politics, or public life, cannot be done from behind a curtain.”

Asked if he believes it is dangerous to accuse Iqbal of having committed blasphemy, Haq is nonchalant.

“As far as it being dangerous is concerned, well in Pakistan it is also dangerous to walk down the street,” says the PTI candidate.

The battle for the crown
The streets of Lahore are a couple of hours from Narowal, but the differences are stark.

Sharif may be in jail, but in Lahore, he is everywhere. Banners across the city repeat his rallying cry: “Give honour to the vote.”

In the narrow, congested lanes of Gulshan-e-Ravi, PTI candidate Yasmin Rashid is conducting her own corner meetings, despite the rain.

Her supporters blast the Sharif family and their alleged corruption, as she smiles and waves from underneath an umbrella.

Rashid is attempting to do what many believed, up until a few months ago, to be impossible: to win Lahore’s historic NA-125 seat, in the heart of the provincial capital, from the PML-N.

PTI candidate Yasmin Rashid addressees a corner meeting in the eastern city of Lahore
The incumbent party has never lost this seat, the jewel in its crown of dominance over Punjab province over the last three decades.

“Imran Khan has worked constantly for 22 years … he says that until there is justice in Pakistan, he will not stop,” she says, as the crowd calls out: “The PTI is coming, the PTI is coming.”

Rashid’s message focuses on the corruption convictions against the Sharifs, while she promises honest, efficient government.

“You can feel the pulse is different, and now the majority of them are convinced that Nawaz Sharif has been convicted correctly,” she tells

Rashid’s chances – and those of the PTI across this province – will hinge on how many PML-N voters she is able to convert.

“Ever since we were young, we have always voted for the PML-N,” says Muhammad Rizwan, 32, a participant at the PTI meeting. “But just look at the state of these streets.”

The PML-N “have changed nothing” and he will vote for the PTI, he says.

Others, however, are unmoved by the PTI’s promises to use their electoral symbol, a cricket bat, to strike corruption out of the arena.

“I will vote for the PML-N, as I always have,” says Muhammad Siddiq, a 62-year-old who sells vegetables on a pushcart.

His wife, Nadira, interjects.

“Look, whoever wins, whether it’s the lion or the bat, the truth is that we’re still going to be out on the street, pushing that cart.”

 

Aljazeera

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Congress lacks an alternative policy vision to challenge Modi

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


Given the election calendar, Congress now needs to continuously ensure Rahul Gandhi stays front and center in national attention as a credible political figure. Here’s an irony: when it’s easy for Gandhi to appear credible, it’s thanks to BJP, when it’s tough for him to do so, it’s thanks to Congress. And, further irony, the impact of the second outweighs that of the first.

The weekend following Friday’s parliamentary debate saw Rahul Gandhi chairing his first Congress Working Committee (CWC) meeting, and yet another terrible lynching incident, this time in Alwar, Rajasthan. CWC let everyone know that in the event Congress commands the most number of seats in general elections, Gandhi will be applying for the PM’s job. You can hardly get more underwhelming than this when trying to market a potential prime ministerial figure.

The statement betrayed the well-recognized reality that Congress is in absolutely no position to (a) command anything close to a national electoral majority, and (b) ensure fealty from regional political overlords whom it seeks as allies. Congress, or Gandhi, at this point, doesn’t seem to have a story that can lift him — or, at least, appear to lift him — above this brute reality.
The Alwar tragedy, in contrast, afforded Gandhi a ready platform to critique BJP and Narendra Modi. Congress’ president appears more convincing when he takes on BJP leaders for their inability and/or unwillingness to respond in time and adequately to Alwar-like incidents.

Think back to Gandhi’s no-confidence motion speech in the Lok Sabha. He appeared more convincing when he positioned himself and his party against what he described as BJP’s wink-wink, nudge-nudge approach to the uglier manifestations of majoritarian politics. In contrast, when he listed those jumps, supposed to be a critique of the Modi government’s performance, Gandhi’s own performance was tepid.

That tepidness comes from a fundamental weakness in Gandhi’s and his party’s politics: neither he nor Congress has anything close to an alternative policy vision that challenges Modi-led BJP’s.

Build a Better Mousetrap
In an earlier comment in these pages, we had argued that Modi needs a new narrative if he’s to lead BJP to another majority in general elections ( Read here). The PM’s speech didn’t give enough evidence that he’s started fashioning such a story. But he has the political talent and just about enough time to execute a major rewrite.
Gandhi is nowhere near as talented as a politician, and given that Congress has done little to brand-differentiate itself from BJP on policy, there may be very little time. That’s why Congress is a weak point for Gandhi when he tries to come across as a credible political challenger.

One can, of course, appreciate Congress’ difficulties. On policy, Modi-led BJP has frequently repackaged and relaunched a bunch of Congress ideas and reworked a traditional Congress political economic approach to making it appear grander.

Modi’s message is that he’s for high welfare spending for the poor and against iniquitous behavior by the rich. That used to be a default Congress message. Congress’ messaging, and indeed policy execution, was poorer than Modi’s is. But the fact remains, Modi has cleverly repackaged a largely Congress story and basically left Congress with no story.

Gandhi’s and his party’s policy critiques consist of carping about execution and results. GST could have been better implemented. More jobs should have been created. Growth should have been faster. China could have been better handled.

All of that, at some level, is true. But they don’t tell voters what Congress wants to do sharply differently. True, Congress’ performance bar for next general elections is set lower than BJP’s. Modi is seriously aiming for nothing less than another majority. Congress will be beside itself if it gets around 130 — provided anti-BJP, non-Congress parties get enough to start talking about government formation.

But even with this lower bar, Congress’ lack of an alternative policy story is a serious weakness in part because it makes the man Congress wants to project as a prime ministerial candidate appear less credible.

Aren’t their votes in Congress’ critique of BJP’s inadequate responses to Alwar-like incidents? Especially because Gandhi looks more convincing when he takes on BJP in this fashion? It’s by no means certain that there will be a counter-reaction from a sizeable section of Hindu voters to past and future Alwars.

Voters mostly dislike law and order breakdowns and punish incumbents. But awful incidents like the last weekend’s haven’t, in their cumulative impact on perception, coalesced into a popular feeling that BJP can’t be trusted to maintain order. If that remains the case, Congress will receive limited electoral dividends from BJP’s anemic responses to Alwars.

Who Moved My Cheese?
So, maybe, while BJP knows that every time it doesn’t confront an Alwar head-on, it makes Gandhi look better.

It also knows that’s not enough for Gandhi and Congress. And, perhaps, BJP reckons there are dividends to be earned from their current approach. Of course, in a volatile democracy like ours, there’s no iron-clad guarantee that future Alwars won’t change public perception about BJP and maintaining order.

But unless that happens, Rahul Gandhi will be handicapped by a double irony.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Lok Sabha clears bill to deal firmly with cheque bounce cases

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


In a bid to reduce the number of cheque dishonour cases pending in courts, the Lok Sabha on Monday passed the Negotiable Instruments (Amendment) Bill, 2017.

The bill aims to counter the delaying tactics employed by people who want to avoid paying cheques issued by them. If it gets Parliament’s nod, it will preserve the sanctity of cheque transactions by stopping the practice of people trying to deliberately delay cases through the filing of appeals and obtaining stay on proceedings.

The bill proposes to insert a new provision wherein a court can order the drawer of the dishonoured cheque to pay interim compensation to the complainant, in a summary trial or a summons case upon framing of charges. The interim compensation will be up to 20% of the amount of the cheque. A similar provision has also been inserted in case of an appeal by the drawer of the cheque against a conviction. The appellate court may order the appellant to deposit at least 20% of the fine or compensation awarded by the trial court.

The changes were envisaged after the government received several representations from the public including traders relating to the pendency of cheque dishonour cases. “It is proposed to amend the said Act with a view to addressing (ing) the issue of undue delay in final resolution of cheque dishonour cases so as to provide relief to payees of dishonoured cheques and to discourage frivolous and unnecessary litigation which would save time and money,” said the statement of objects and reason of the bill.

“The proposed amendments will strengthen the credibility of cheques and help trade and commerce in general by allowing lending institutions, including banks, to continue to extend financing to the productive sectors of the economy,” it added.

The bill will now go to the Rajya Sabha for its nod.

Filed Under: Business & Technology

India to open its first mission in Rwanda

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


In yet another manifestation of India’s growing engagements with Africa, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday said that India will soon open a High Commission in the East African nation of Rwanda.

Stating that India and Rwanda were looking forward to further elevate their ties, Modi, while addressing the media in Rwandan capital Kigali following delegation-level talks with Rwandan President Paul Kagame, said: “We will soon open a High Commission in Rwanda.”

India’s current High Commissioner to Rwanda has a residence in Uganda.

New Delhi elevated its ties with Rwanda to that of a Strategic Partnership as it sees that country as an important gateway to eastern Africa.

External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Raveesh Kumar tweeted that following a one-on-one meeting, Modi and Kagame held delegation level-talks “to strengthen partnership in trade and investment, capacity building, development partnership and people-to-people ties”.

Modi reached Kigali on Monday evening in the first leg of his three-nation tour of Africa that will also take him to Uganda and South Africa.

This is the first ever Prime Ministerial visit from India to Rwanda.

In his address, Modi appreciated the steps for peace that have been adopted in Rwanda following the mass genocide in that country in 1994.

Around 500,000 to one million people were killed in the mass genocide against the Tutsi people by the majority Hutu government of tha time.

“For us, it is a matter pride that India is a trusted development partner of Rwanda,” Modi said.

“We have been helping Rwanda in capacity building, infrastructure development and ICT,” he said.

Following the bilateral talks, the two sides several agreements, including in the areas of defence, agriculture and dairy production.

On his part, Kagame, in his address to the media, said that both sides discussed a range of bilateral, regional and global issues.

He also thanked India for its development aid cooperation with Rwanda.

Filed Under: Cabinet of Curiosities

42 girls ‘raped’ in Bihar shelter, police dig for ‘buried’ body

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


Acting on court orders, the Bihar Police on Monday dug up aground on the premises of a Muzaffarpur shelter home run by an NGO in search of the body of an inmate who was allegedly murdered after sexual assault. The excavation work ended as nobody could be found.

The matter came to light after a social audit report of the TISS (Tata Institute of Social Sciences) claimed that 42 girl inmates of the Muzaffarpur Balika Grih had allegedly been sexually assaulted. The inmates were allegedly beaten up or drugged before being sexually abused.

One of the victims alleged that those who resisted rape were killed. A girl was beaten up and killed and her body was buried on the stay home premises, she had alleged. The court ordered excavation to exhume her body in presence of magistrate Sheela Kumari.

“On court’s permission, the excavation was carried out at the stay home run by NGO Seva Sankalp and Vikas Samiti on Monday with the help of sniffer dogs but nothing was found. Further probe is on to ascertain the veracity of the allegations,” said Muzaffarpur SSP Harpreet Kaur.
“One of the inmates had alleged that staff members often assaulted girl inmates and one of them had died in the process. We dug up the spot on the premises to verify her claims,” she said.

A special investigation team (SIT) had been formed. “The police have arrested 10 persons in connection with the Muzaffarpur stay home incident, while raids are on to nab other accused,” said the SSP.

The girl inmates were shifted from Muzaffarpur to other homes, while medical tests were carried out to ascertain rape. At least 16 of the 21 medical reports submitted to the officials concerned had confirmed rape, while other reports are yet to come,” said sources, adding some other girls had disappeared in the past and the matter was under investigation.

At least 30 traumatized rape survivors were under medical observation at various hospitals. Madhepura MP Pappu Yadav had demanded a CBI probe into the incident.

Filed Under: Crime

BJP attacks Rahul on Rafale remarks, calls him irresponsible

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


The BJP on Monday attacked Congress President Rahul Gandhi for his remarks on the ‘secrecy pact’ in the Rafale deal, calling him irresponsible for “misleading Parliament” and for dragging French President Emmanuel Macron into the matter.

It also advised Rahul Gandhi to “do homework and improve understanding” of India’s foreign policy and security issues.

“Rahul Gandhi is irresponsible; he makes false statements in Parliament. He was irresponsible on two fronts: First, by saying there was no confidential agreement (between India and France on the Rafale fighter jet deal); and second, by dragging French President into an internal political debate,” Union Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told reporters here.

“This is unfortunate. I have often said that Rahul Gandhi needs to improve his homework. Now I have to add that his understanding of (Indian) foreign policy and national security and strategic concerns also need to be upgraded,” Prasad said.

During the no-confidence debate in Parliament on July 20, Gandhi had said that there was no secrecy pact on the Rafale deal, alleging that Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had “lied” to the nation” about it.

“I met the French President and asked him if there was a secrecy pact with India. He told me that no such pact was signed between the two countries. He said that he had no hesitation in saying this and that I can tell this to my country,” Gandhi had said.

Prasad said that the Congress was worried over the “transparent and honest” functioning of the BJP-led government and was hence making allegations about the Rafale deal.

“We can say with complete responsibility that Rahul Gandhi clearly misled the house when he said that there was no confidentiality agreement. His reference to the French President’s conversation was formally denied the same day by the French government,” the Minister said.

He added that sensitive armed forces operations can’t be made public, a fact which was acknowledged in Parliament by A.K. Antony and Pranab Mukherjee, both Ministers in the then UPA government.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Youth killed, another injured in accident during police chase

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


A young man was killed and his pillion rider injured in an accident during a police chase, following which his family, neighbors and friends on Monday protested outside a police station in the city.

Ashok was killed on the spot late Sunday night of head injuries after his motorcycle hit a Chandigarh Police Control Room (PCR) vehicle chasing him for jumping a red traffic light.

His friend was seriously injured and admitted to a hospital.

Ashok is survived by his wife and two children aged four years and three months respectively. He was the sole breadwinner of the family.

Police has not yet initiated action against the policemen.

His family and neighbours from the locality they live in protested outside the Sector 31 police station and demanded action against the erring policemen and compensation to the family.

Filed Under: Culture & Society

Goa BJP calls Rahul ‘loafer’ for winking in Parliament

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


A Goa BJP spokesperson on Monday called Congress President Rahul Gandhi a “loafer” for winking in Parliament, a day after the state Congress chief called Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar a “kathputli” (puppet) for bowing to unreasonable demands of ruling coalition allies in the coastal state.

“Rahul Gandhi, who does not have substance or the understanding of issues related to the people of India, had to resort to hugging the Prime Minister in the temple of democracy and then winking like a loafer,” said state Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) spokesperson Dattaprasad Naik in a press statement.

“We have only heard of loafers winking at girls in colleges in the past and never such a shameful act has ever happened in the temple of democracy,” Naik said, adding that the Congress party had become a “kathputli” in the hands of Gandhi family.

Naik said state Congress president Girish Chodankar had forgotten that even former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was a puppet in the hands of then Congress president Sonia Gandhi and that all Goa Congress presidents in the past were “kathputlis” in the hands of the Congress high command.

On Sunday, the state’s top Congress leader, Chodankar in a press conference had said: “The Chief Minister has been reduced to string puppet by alliance partners like Goa Forward, whose leader Vijai Sardesai has tried to save those behind the fish mafia, after formalin was found in fish imported into Goa from other states by rogue fish traders. Hundreds of thousands of Goans love their fish thali. The government has put the fish thali in peril”.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Altair to open design centre in Karnataka’s Hubballi

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman


US-based Altair Engineering plans to open a design innovation center in Karnataka’s Hubballi town with a private university to benefit locals in using software tools and become industry ready, said a top company official on Monday.

“Industry-academia tie-up to benefit students from technologies and tools making them industry ready,” Altair India Managing Director Pavan Kumar told reporters here.

The center will be housed in the sprawling KLE Technological University campus, run by BJP’s Rajya Sabha member Prabhakar Kore.

“The objective of the center is to develop competency on commercial finite element analysis (FEA) software of Altair called Hyper-Works,” said Kumar.

The center, which will help in providing skilled power to Altair customers worldwide, will also provide the university’s undergraduate and post-graduate students license to work on Altair technology.

“The Altair-KLE partnership will produce future ready engineers for the industry across the country,” said Kumar.

Varsity Vice-Chancellor Ashok Shettar said collaboration with Altair would expose the students to technologies and tools and make them industry-ready.

“Collaboration with Altair will help us to expose our students to industry relevant technologies and tools making them industry-ready,” he said.

The Troy-based Altair in Michigan state transforms design and decision making by applying simulation, machine learning and optimization through product life cycles.

“Our portfolio of simulation technology and patented units-based software licensing model enable simulation-driven innovation for our customers,” added Kumar.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Father-son duo arrested for duping over 150

July 24, 2018 by Nasheman

A father-son duo have been arrested for cheating more than 150 people by making them invest in different schemes, police said on Monday.

Deputy Commissioner of Police, West, Vijay Kumar said that the accused — Balkrishan Kushwaha, 58, his son, Rajender Singh, 32, along with their accomplices — started a company named “Ex-Serviceman Success Vision”.

Kushwaha and his partner, Ompal Singh, used to introduce themselves as retired army officers and the directors of the firm and so far, has cheated around 150 to 200 people of Naraina village in west Delhi by inducing them to invest in the firm’s different investment schemes, promising a “lucrative bonus and high return”.

Kushwaha and his son were arrested from Sector-61, Noida while two of their partners are absconding.

“With their arrest, four cases of cheating have been worked out,” the police officer said.

Filed Under: Crime

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