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You are here: Home / Archives for News & Politics / India

Nobel Prize for Malala Yousafzai and Kailash Satyarthi, signal to India and Pakistan to make peace?

October 11, 2014 by Nasheman

Nobel Peace Prize

Pakistani teenager Malala Yousafzai, who was shot in the head by the Taliban in 2012 for advocating girls’ right to education, and Indian children’s right activist Kailash Satyarthi won the 2014 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday.

Malala, aged 17, becomes the youngest Nobel Prize winner by far, and is the second Pakistani to win it, after Physicist Dr. Abdus Salam, who shared the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics for his contribution to electroweak unification.

Satyarthi, 60, and Yousafzai were picked for their struggle against the oppression of children and young people, and for the right of all children to education, the Norwegian Nobel Committee said.

“The Nobel Committee regards it as an important point for a Hindu and a Muslim, an Indian and a Pakistani, to join in a common struggle for education and against extremism,” said Thorbjoern Jagland, the head of the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

Yousafzai was shot in the head by the Taliban in 2012 after campaigning for more access to education for girls and has since become recognisable worldwide.

Unable to return to Pakistan after her recovery, Yousafzai moved to Britain, setting up the Malala Fund and supporting local education advocacy groups with a focus on Pakistan, Nigeria, Jordan, Syria and Kenya.

Satyarthi, who gave up a career as an electrical engineer in 1980 to campaign against child labour, has headed various forms of peaceful protests and demonstrations, focusing on the exploitation of children for financial gain.

“It’s an honour to all those children still suffering in slavery, bonded labour and trafficking,” Satyarthi told CNN-IBN after learning he won the prize.

In a recent editorial, Satyarthi said that data from non-government organizations indicated that child labourers could number 60 million in India or 6 percent of the total population.

“Children are employed not just because of parental poverty, illiteracy, ignorance, failure of development and education programmes, but quite essentially due to the fact that employers benefit immensely from child labour as children come across as the cheapest option, sometimes working even for free,” he wrote.

Children are employed illegally and companies use the financial gain to bribe officials, creating a vicious cycle, he argued.

Yousafzai last year addressed the U.N. Youth Assembly in an event Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called “Malala Day”. This year she travelled to Nigeria to demand the release of 200 schoolgirls kidnapped by the Islamist group Boko Haram.

“To the girls of Nigeria and across Africa, and all over the world, I want to say: don’t let anyone tell you that you are weaker than or less than anything,” she said in a speech.

“You are not less than a boy,” Yousafzai said. “You are not less than a child from a richer or more powerful country. You are the future of your country. You are going to build it strong. It is you who can lead the charge.”

The award comes at a time when hostilies have broken out between India and Pakistan and the recongnition is being seen as a highly symbolic push to end a decades-old rivalry between the two nuclear-armed coutries.

Signalling a larger intent behind jointly awarding the prize, the Nobel Committee said it “regards it as an important point for a Hindu and a Muslim, an Indian and a Pakistani, to join in a common struggle for education and against extremism.”

For her part, Malala did not miss the significance of the moment, paying tribute to her co-winner anti-child labour activist Satyarthi and inviting Prime Minister Narendra Modi as well as his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif to celebrate their joint win.

(With input from agencies)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: India, Kailash Satyarthi, Malala Yousafzai, Nobel Peace Prize, Norwegian Nobel Committee, Pakistan

"Centre failed to mobilise the country for rehabilitation of Kashmir valley": CPA Fact finding team

October 11, 2014 by Nasheman

Srinagar_flood

The Centre for Policy Analysis organised a visit (September 27-29, 2014) to Jammu and Kashmir with the purpose of bringing out an interim report on the flood situation in the state. The team comprised Tushar Gandhi, Anand Sahay and Seema Mustafa, with Bula Devi, coordinating the visit. 

The team visited Srinagar that was worst affected in the Valley along with South Kashmir districts. The team visited the affected areas and spoke to residents, shopkeepers, the youth who had organised relief operations and journalists including the Editor of Rising Kashmir Shujaat Bukhari who has also taken up rescue and relief operations. The team also met the Chief Secretary and top officials of the state government as well as Congress party’s Ghulam Nabi Azad and Salman Soz, and Peoples Democratic Party leaders Mehbooba Mufti and Naeem Akhtar, Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umer Farooq, the Jamaat e Islami and its top leaders including the Amir and many others.

Serious trouble has many dimensions. In Kashmir, after the recent floods — the worst not only in the last one hundred years but probably of all times — which devastated not just the habitation of lakhs of people but also every aspect of the economy and an entire way of life, perhaps the most striking feature is the absence of any effort of mobilisation of the national will by the state government and the Centre.The government of Chief Minister Omar Abdullah was caught unawares by nature’s fury and, as might well have happened in any state in India, its inefficiencies and incapacities to rush in relief or rehabilitation (after its initial failure to rescue) even several days after the flood waters rose up to 40 feet in some parts of the city (such as Ram Munshi Bagh) have left the people angry and disillusioned.

The three-member CPA team visiting the Kashmir Valley from September 27-29 heard elaborations of this all over Srinagar, from senior mainstream politicians and important separatist leaders, as well as ordinary people at relief camps and on the streets.

Hardly any less striking has been the failure of the Union government to provide moral support and material assistance on the scale required. High representatives of the Union government made pro forma flying visits. Exactly one month after large parts of Srinagar were submerged on September 7, 2014, following four days of frighteningly heavy and unseasonal rains, it is reasonable to assert that the Centre has failed to mobilise the country behind the gargantuan task of rehabilitation of Kashmir valley.

Immediately after much of the valley was marooned, Prime Minister Narendra Modi used appropriate words to describe the catastrophe.

He called it a “national disaster”. A month after, those words seem empty.There has been no move through radio and television to rally the nation behind Kashmir. Red tape has not been cut to rush finances to the beleaguered state under special dispensations or through special purpose vehicles devised to meet an unforeseen and extraordinary situation, which has negatively impacted lakhs of lives in a state which is routinely described as “sensitive” on account of its geostrategic position. Perhaps this is why the Prime Minister referred to the issue of relief for disaster-hit Kashmir in his speech in the United Nations at the end of September, but his words do not seem to have travelled beyond the four walls of the General Assembly.

In contrast, the promptness of voluntary aid — although this is bound to be a drop in the ocean in relation to the scale of the calamity — from all corners of India has been a touching demonstration of what the human heart is capable of and what individual will can achieve. In Srinagar, the CPA group came scores of relief teams from different parts of the country engaged in offering medical assistance to people at risk of contracting deadly diseases if not attended to with speed.

It is our heartfelt wish that political and social activists from all parts of India visit the Kashmir valley and the hill terrain of Jammu in Rajouri and Poonch to see how their fellow-citizens have suffered, and find ways to help them generously and with the utmost diligence.The state government is not sure even at this stage what exactly happened on the September 7 and 8, 2014 when much of Srinagar –the seat of government, the centres of business, trade and industry, and the tourist spots in Jammu and Kashmir’s capital city –capsized, parts of it such as Ram Munshi Bagh going under 40 feet of water.

The command and control locations and apparatus have not been struck by disaster in any other state capital before. This compounded the Kashmir tragedy in the wake of rain and flood and made the task of rescue, relief and rehabilitation incomparably complex.

The state Chief Secretary, Mr Iqbal Khandey and his senior officials told the CPA fact-finding team that a technical assessment will have to be made about what exactly happened. The Jhelum river snakes its way through the ancient city of Srinagar some 60 kilometres after it takes its rise in South Kashmir. Four days of blinding rain had caused the river to swell. It breached its banks at Kandizal in South Kashmir’s Pulwama district, some 15 kilometres from Srinagar.

This led to the initial assessment that Srinagar might be saved from what looked like certain disaster, the speed at which the water level was rising, as the water might now be discharged away from densely inhabited areas. But this was not to be.The senior officials said the flood refill channel running approximately parallel to the Jhelum in Srinagar had been built in 1902 on the assumption that the river, when in spate, would not be carrying more than 80,000 cusecs of water while passing through Srinagar, and some 35,000 cusecs of this would be discharged into the flood refill channel if need arose. The assumption had held for 112 years. Over the years, however, the flood channel has not been tested. Indeed, housing has come up on and around it and this was bound to impede water flow in an emergency. That emergency struck in the first week of September.

This year, say officials, the gauge stations, which are monitored hourly, went under. They estimate that 1,20,000 cusecs of water was coursing through Srinagar on September 7 and 8, the equivalent of the flow of three Jhelums in Srinagar. How this came to be is wholly unclear, especially after the breaching of the Jhelum banks at Kandizal. To explain this, the top officials say there might have been multiple cloud bursts on the night of September 6 around Srinagar, before the river enters the big city.

This is a completely untested hypothesis and may be a convenient and contrived explanation. Therefore, a thorough inquiry is in order.

In slightly more specific terms the team has attempted to segregate the areas of concern into the following, to give a more specific understanding of the situation on the ground today.

The Floods

Water levels rose alarmingly with the rains and flood waters rising to submerge districts in South Kashmir. The State government and the authorities were caught completely off guard even though the team was told by concerned officials that the water levels of the rivers were monitored almost hourly. However, there seems to have been no effort to warn the people in South Kashmir, and to evacuate the villages, many of them are reported to have been washed away by the torrential waters. People were rescued by the Army and by volunteers from their homes after days, with any number of stories narrated to the team members about the trauma and the suffering of the local residents who barely managed to escape with their lives.

Despite this, there seemed to be little understanding of how the South Kashmir deluge would move to impact on other parts of the State. Some effort — minimalist in our view — was made by the State government to ask the people to evacuate their homes. The radio and the loudspeakers on mosques were used as the communication system for this by the State government. However, no one not even the authorities took the warnings seriously with the government making no effort to evacuate the residents or even itself for that matter. The warnings thus remained at best a token response to the South Kashmir situation where the waters had risen dramatically and the rivers had already started flowing far over the danger mark. The State government in the little time it had made no effort to requisition boats, life jackets and prepare for rescue operations. An indication of the non preparedness comes from the fact that the government that is adept at moving its darbar to Jammu in the winter months, did not even lift a finger to move itself on to safe, dry land where it could remain in contact with the people. Despite the fact that floods hit the State every now and again — of course never as severe as this — there seems to be no disaster management protocol in place.

The result is that when the rivers breached the bands, and came rushing into the city everyone was caught unawares. Resident after resident told the team of how the waters moved from puddles outside on the roads to the second floor of houses with dramatic speed. One young man said that he was running down the street to his house with the waters literally roaring behind him as he ran.

Within hours Srinagar was literally drowning in the torrential flood waters that had acquired a high current. The Army cantonment was flooded as were all the officials, with the government having disappeared from sight.

All communications broke down, and the city blacked out as residents tried to save their lives in the dark. Many who spoke to us broke down in tears while narrating the trauma. They were trapped and were saved only because many of the houses have attics where the families took refuge as the waters swirled around them.

The Rescue

The State government and administration was caught unawares and once Srinagar was flooded under 20+ feet of water the State machinery officials, police and military were all submerged and paralysed. Victims cannot rescue nor can they provide relief and this is exactly what happened as officials, police and Army found themselves marooned and got into the victim frame of mind. So in the moment of crisis they were not able to perform their responsibility as saviours.

In the first stage even as the Army was marshalling boats and its resources, the youth started braving the waters to save their families, neighbours and themselves as the waters kept rising and many buildings were demolished in front of their eyes. To their credit the Kashmiri youth, condemned as rioters and stone pelters, rose to the occasion and became the heroic rescuers. If it was not for their very timely, heroic, innovative and tireless effort the tragedy would have been much more grim and the casualty figure in Srinagar much greater. The youth of Srinagar deserves commendation, congratulations and gratitude. When they extracted themselves from being victims the armed forces too performed commendably but it must be said that they too were absent at the grimmest initial hours.

The Kashmiri youth broke down furniture, water tanks and all they could find to put together rough boats to rescue the people. They were joined soon by the Army that did a great job but was bound to some extent by the protocol of saving VIPs , tourists, and then the civilians in that order. Besides the Army continued with the protocol of security with each rescue boat manned by at least five to six jawans, and therefore having little room for the civilians shouting for help. However, the soldiers worked day and night both in Srinagar and other affected parts of the State, with any number of Kashmiris praising the efforts. But as a journalist said, and it is a view with which this team agrees, the Army did its job with commendation but it was the Kashmiri youth — many of whom did not know how to swim — who were the unsung heroes of what had by then become a mammoth rescue operation.

Relief

Relief Operations perforce had to begin while the rescue was on as the lakhs of people marooned had run out of food and drinking water. The rescue boats started carrying water and food packets, with choppers being used to throw packets that fell into the waters instead of into the hands of the people. There is a six per cent higher than national average of diabetes in the State, with insulin and medicines becoming another essential need.

Again, the State government remained paralysed, and it was the youth, the journalists and others who came together to identify the immediate needs of the people, and send out help calls on the social media for the items required. They formed teams to distribute the relief material with the Army of course taking care of the larger operations on this front. However, the absence of the civilian administration hampered the work of the Army as well in the relief operations with serious problems of coordination that still do not seem to have been rectified.

Individuals and organisations from cities outside Jammu and Kashmir contributed greatly in sending across teams of doctors and volunteers as well as relief material. In fact very soon, because of coordination between civil society groups and the Kashmiris per se, the scarcity of medicines like insulin were overcome. Most Kashmiris spoken to said that there was sufficient material in the form of clothes, medicines, drinking water but the problem remained in the coordination, and the red tapism of the State government in allowing them to clear the material without the usual red tapism. The result was that large piles of relief material collected at the airport while the State government officials wrangled over the paper work. This has also led to a perception, right or wrong, that the National Conference and its government is trying to seize the goods meant for relief for others, and distribute it under its own banner for political mileage.

However, the government has been more visible in this field now than it was earlier and vaccination teams have been moving around the affected areas to prevent an epidemic. The swift clearance of the carcasses is a plus for the government and the local bodies, with the cold weather contributing to the fact that large scale disease has not engulfed the devastated State because of the stagnant water and the continuing rot. A major problem is the onsetting winter with blankets, warm clothes and shelters urgently required. Not much has moved on this front as well, with lakhs still homeless with their homes either washed away or in no state to be occupied because of the damp and the erosion by the flood waters that have rendered most of the houses unsafe.

Rehabilitation

The damage caused to government installations, official housing and infrastructure, public works such as roads, bridges, school and hospital buildings, administrative offices, electrical installations and electronic networks, besides severe damage to agriculture (rice crop) and horticulture (the apple crop this year) is being officially estimated at Rs. 30,000 crore. Unofficially political parties estimate the losses at Rs 100,000 crores.

This, however, seems a guess more than an approximation. If the severe losses sustained by private citizens — their homes, businesses, industries all gone — is considered, any considerably higher amount would seem plausible and the figure of Rs. 100,000 crore may not be extravagant, though this is also something of an educated guess. An urgent damage assessment conducted by top-flight professionals with relevant experience is, thus, strongly indicated.

Mr. Bashir Mir, the president of the apple growers’ association of Wagoora tehsil of Baramulla district, Kashmir’s most valuable apple region, informed the CPA team that approximately 25,000 apple-growing horticulturists of Baramulla district, would have been eligible for kisan loans from the banking sector of the order of rupees two to three lakhs each. They would not be able to repay the loan this year on account of gushing flood waters hitting the apple orchards. Prior to that the crop was already affected by a deadly pesticide. A similar number of horticulturists is likely to be adversely affected for the same reasons in the Pulwama and Shopian districts of South Kashmir. If the horticulturists’ loans are not waived this year, the apple farmers will be driven to rack and ruin.

Their incomes would be down to about 20 per cent of the norm while they would be obliged to pay seven per cent interest on their bank loans if the debt is not discharged within the year. It is situations similar to these that have led to farmers’ suicides in several states, including the well-to-do ones such as Punjab, Karnataka and Maharashtra.

The rehabilitation process is going to be a massive undertaking with conservative estimates putting the reconstruction of Kashmir at a minimum of five years. There is no indication that the government is even seized of this with Kashmiris all speaking of the urgency with which this should be tackled to prevent trauma, depression and of course, more deaths in the deadly winters. The Chief Secretary, however, said this would be done but the speed of governance, despite the urgency, seems to have hit an all time low.

Media

The role of the ‘national’ media television channels needs to be singled out in this report as the coverage has added to the chaos and the trauma of the floods. Most television anchors and editors were flown into Kashmir at military hospitality, were taken over the affected areas in choppers and put together a coverage exalting the role of the Army, as against that of the heroic youth. As senior politicians in Kashmir told the team, and there was rare unanimity in all on this, “if the media had not gone on and on about the role of the Army at the expense of all others, the rescue efforts would have actually brought the Army and the Kashmiris closer together.”

Instead the reverse happened. The insensitive questions while the flood waters were surging about how it felt being rescued by the “occupation” Army had no meaning for the Kashmiris striving to survive. And seeing themselves the bravery of the youth who had come together as never before. The anger spilled out as communications were restored and the news spread through the Valley. Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umer Farooq told the team that the Army had done good work of course and that everyone appreciated its efforts “but no one even bothered to report what our young people did, they really were the heroes of this calamity.”

Mehbooba Mufti was almost passionate in her anger with the media for creating severe complications when none needed to exist. She said that the one sided coverage had done immense damage in Jammu and Kashmir as it gave a lopsided and prejudiced view of the rescue operations. Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad was also highly critical of the senior journalists staying away from the city, in sanitised surroundings, without bothering to report what was happening on the ground.

At a time when the media could have acted as a cementing factor, it created a chasm that has impacted heavily on the Kashmiri psyche in this hour of disaster.

The over reporting of a couple — the team could not document a third — of incidents of stone throwing at the helicopters have also added to the fury. One of these was as the chopper was stirring the waters below and the people in unstable boats were in fear of capsizing. So they picked up pebbles or whatever they could to get the helicopter to leave. The other, as the residents said, was in anger over the non visibility of the government that the Army officers themselves understood.

The media’s insistence on scoring brownie points over the separatists in the midst of disaster has not gone down well in Kashmir at all. JKLF leader Yasin Malik did not hijack a boat as was reported, but insisted that when the relief was distributed in his area he should be also part of it. Also the Army did not save Hurriyat leader Ali Shah Geelani from the floods as the Delhi media reported for the simple reason that there were no floods in Hyderpora, where he stays, to rescue him from.

Recommendations

  1. A judicial probe-based on well-grounded technical assessments –into the causes of the flood waters entering Srinagar. Its terms of reference should include the status of the State government’s preparedness to cope with such a situation, and its actual performance once tragedy struck since in the perception of most people the State government became “invisible”.

  2. A probe by appropriate authority into the rescue operations conducted by the military. Many in Srinagar attest to their effectiveness, but also complain about their prioritisation. The general belief is that the focus of rescue by the armed forces was not ordinary Kashmiris but tourists, select members of the Kashmiri elite, and migrant labourers who have been living in the valley over the years.

  3. The framework of the probe into the conduct of the armed forces should include the work of their PR department which seemed to have gone into overdrive, resulting in very skewed television coverage that has only succeeded in tilting the perception against the Army and the country. This could have security-related repercussions.

  4. The electronic media played a very disruptive and vitiating role and gave reason to the Kashmiris to be hurt and angry. The efficiency of the operations was impacted by the one sided reporting.

Media presence during relief and rescue operations should be sensitively handled as a policy.

  1. An independent enquiry by civil society — including individuals and groups within Kashmir that bravely rushed forward with assistance of their own accord, voluntary organisations from across the country that involved themselves in relief work in Jammu and Kashmir, State political parties, and technical experts of different kinds from State and other parts of the country to assess damage and financial costs that must be made good.

  2. An appeal to all sections of society to maintain calm in the face of this massive tragedy and focus on a constructive approach, rather than look for partisan political advantage.

  3. The government and administration with the help of civil society must create a disaster management protocol and chain of command so that the same mistakes that facilitated the calamity to turn into a disaster of such tragic magnitude will not occur again. A natural and organic chain of command must be established. Young men who performed so heroically and ingeniously must be made a part of a volunteer disaster rescue force. The bureaucracy must be trained to not remain captives of the rule book in times of calamity and work apart from the rule book and in an innovative manner. 8. The State Government must also have a protocol in place where a line of command is established so that in case a calamity incapacitates part of the government, there is a chain of command that can take control and coordinate the emergency response to the calamity.

  4. A national disaster response protocol must be established which intervenes in a tragedy without waiting for an appeal from the State in case of a calamity. One point that angered the people of Kashmir was that they found products which were much past their expiry dates. This must be avoided.

  5. Specifically in Srinagar the stalled proposals to create efficient flood drainage systems must be expeditiously revived and urgently implemented.

  6. A campaign must be urgently launched to provide blankets and warm clothing on a large scale; this should be a civil society initiative.

  7. When rebuilding is commenced after relief is provided there should be a watchdog committee in place which is non governmental and non political to ensure that the rebuilding effort both in Srinagar and in South Kashmir as well as affected parts of Jammu is done in a legal and ethical manner. There is a danger of the politician-official-builder mafia nexus exploiting the tragedy to profiteer and indulge in land grab and encroachment.

  8. It may be time for the army to reevaluate their establishments, too. With climate change the probability of such calamities becoming more frequent and progressively more severe is very likely. The military base was waterlogged even 15 days after the disaster. The initial flood marooned the Army base in Srinagar and rendered it inoperable. Such situation could be strategically disastrous. The Defence ministry will have to rethink about their location in Srinagar and may have to shift to higher elevation. The Army must not be rendered inoperable in an emergency.

When things return to normal in Kashmir the various socio political religious groups who acted responsibly immediately, compassionately and bravely to rescue and provide relief to the marooned and distressed populace must be commended and honoured for their actions.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Anand Sahay, Centre for Policy Analysis, Floods, India, Indian Army, Jammu, Kashmir, Natural Disaster, Seema Mustafa, Srinagar, Syed Ali Shah Geelani, Tushar Gandhi, Yasin Malik

Father, son buried alive as house collapses amid heavy rain and superstition

October 10, 2014 by Nasheman

bangalore-rain

Bangalore: A 37-year-old man and his son were buried alive after a two-storey house collapsed in Jogupalya in Ulsoor amid heavy rains.

The deceased — M. Sumbramani and his 10-year-old son — ran out of the house to safety when they heard the neighbouring building collapse, but went in again to take out a bike and a bicycle when the wall collapsed on them. Two residents of the building that collapsed – Komathi Devi (51) and her son Kiran (16) – escaped with minor injuries.

A police officer said, “It was a 60-year-old building and a creeper had grown along its wall till the terrace. The occupants of the house had refused to remove the creeper as they considered it sacred. The creeper had dampened the wall which made it feeble and weak.”

However, Komathi Devi was adamant about residing in the building, neighbours said.

In another incident, a 40-year-old priest at the Sri Sai Temple in Basaveshwara Nagar in West Bangalore was electrocuted on Thursday morning when he was trying to pump out water that had collected in the cellar of the temple due to heavy overnight rain. The priest Shankar stepped on a live electric wire in the cellar while pumping out water and was killed at the spot.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Bangalore, Karnataka, Rain

India and Pakistan must immediately stop ceasefire violations: PIPFPD, Aaghaz-e-Dosti

October 9, 2014 by Nasheman

India and Pakistan must immediately stop ceasefire violations: PIPFPD, Aaghaz-e-Dosti. © REUTERS/ Mukesh Gupta/Files

India and Pakistan must immediately stop ceasefire violations: PIPFPD, Aaghaz-e-Dosti. © REUTERS/ Mukesh Gupta/Files

New Delhi: While both India and Pakistan continue to accuse and shell each other of violating ceasefire agreement, killing more than 18 innocent civilians and injuring about 60 till date, civil society initiatives from both sides have reprimanded political forces and media for “worsening the situation” and have appealed both countries to restore peace and harmony.

Pakistan-India People’s Forum for Peace and Democracy (PIPFPD) and Aaghaz-e-Dosti, have appealed to both India and Pakistan to immediately stop ceasefire violations.

Since October 1, there has been an exchange of fire on the Indo-Pak border. It is not clear, who had started the ceasefire violation, but as usual, both countries claim to be only responding.

Terming the violation as a “matter of grave concern”, the New Delhi based PIPFPD, accused both the nations of resorting to ‘border nationalism’ to boil political temperature among the people. There are elections round the corner in key Indian states including Jammu and Kashmir and the political turmoil in Pakistan.

The Forum said that wars and military actions have yielded nothing but death, destruction and misery for the people of ‘divided’ Jammu and Kashmir. “The experience shows that the dispute will not be resolved through use of military means and can only be resolved through political dialogue based on mutual trust.”

“We call upon the governments of India and Pakistan to allow the United Nations Military Observers Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) to play an active role in monitoring the ceasefire. UNMOGIP is meant to supervise ceasefire line established under Karachi Agreement in 1949. Joint monitoring of the border is the best option in the prevailing situation. It is required at this point that a team of UNMOGIP brings out a status report after visiting affected areas on both sides of the border.”

Far away from the international border the waters of the Indian Ocean and the fishing activity their have been severely impacted by the increased number of orchestrated arrest of fishermen by India and Pakistan. In last one week Pakistan has caught 22 Indian boats and arrested around 125 Indian fishermen. Indian authorities have also arrested six Pakistani fishermen and one boat. This goes on to prove that the tension on the border is directly impacting fishing communities of both the countries.

Aaghaz-e-Dosti, a joint initiative of India-based Mission Bhartiyam and Pakistan-based The Catalyst – TC, reminded that this is not first time when such violations are happening, and said, “we must know that for both the countries, peace is of utmost importance and also our common need is to being focused on development rather than spending huge money of taxes for arms and ammunition. We also see that how through reducing such tensions, both of us can save billions of rupees and can divert this amount for development. We believe that any dispute can be resolved only by talk and mutual negotiation and agreements and not with violence. Any war like situation will only benefit arms manufacturing companies and will be harmful for both the countries, their development and their people.”

The organisation cautioned saying, “by such news of ceasefire violation, people become provoked, they also express their anger, but at the same time, we also view it as our right to know about the correct situation and the reasons responsible for it. We all have the right to know it because it is our money that is being spent and result in the loss of lives. Also, since such instances affect us, our society and harmony between our countries, we must be concerned about this and we must have the right to know the situation in detail.”

Both organisations appealed to both India and Pakistan to urgently stop ceasefire violations and implement ceasefire agreement in letter and spirit, and asked the media to stop using the event as another opportunity to “proliferate hatred for the sake of their TRPs”

They said that “restoration of dialogue and peace talks at the highest level alone can bring back normalcy and peace to the thousands of suffering people, living in border areas and also the fisher people who have been a casualty to this increased hostility.”

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Aaghaz-e-Dosti, Ceasefire Violation, India, Pakistan, Pakistan-India People’s Forum for Peace and Democracy, PIPFPD

All nine accused get life imprisonment in Shaheed Bava murder case

October 9, 2014 by Nasheman

shaheed-bava-murder

Kozhikode: The Special Additional District Sessions Court at Eranhipalam today awarded life imprisonment to all the nine accused in the Shaheed Bava murder case.

The court imposed a fine on nine accused and directed that an amount of Rs. 2 lakh obtained as penalty from the accused should be compensated to the victim’s father.

Writing the judgment on Wednesday, special judge S. Krishnakumar had found Abdurahiman, aka Cheriyappa (first accused); Abdul Kareem (third accused); Abdul Naser, aka Auto Naser (fourth); Fayas Aboobacker (fifth); Najid Hyder (sixth); Rashid Abdurahiman (eighth); Hijas Rahman, aka Katta (ninth); Muhammed Hamsheer, aka Pala Jamsheer (tenth); and Shahul Hameed (eleventh accused) guilty under various sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

The court had also acquitted five of the accused, namely Muhammed Salim (second accused), Irshad Kuyyil (seventh), Jaffer aka Bichutta (twelfth), E. Ayoob (thirteenth) and K. Murshid (fourteenth accused) as the prosecution failed to prove the charges against them.

Shaheed Bava, from Cheruvadi, Kozhikode was grievously assaulted by an angry mob near Kodiyathur village in 2011 for having an ‘illicit relationship’ with a married woman. According to police, Bava used to allegedly visit a house occupied by women members, late at night. He was apparently warned by the men folk in the neighbourhood to stay away. He was tied to an electric post and beaten up, when he was found at a woman’s house.

He died of injuries in a private hospital in the city on November 13.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Crime, Kozhikode, Murder, Shaheed Bava, SHAHID BAVA

Veteran journalist M.V. Kamath passes away

October 9, 2014 by Nasheman

M.V Kamath had authored nearly 40 books on various topics.(Image via Twitter)

M.V Kamath had authored nearly 40 books on various topics. (Image via Twitter)

Bangalore: Veteran journalist and former chairman of Prasar Bharati M.V. Kamath, died early morning today in his native place Manipal in Karnataka. He was 94.

He had been hospitalised for the past few days and died of cardiac arrest around 7.30 am, said his relative. Kamath was currently the Honorary Director of Manipal Institute of Communication.

Madhav Vittal Kamath was born on Sep 7, 1921 in Udupi, Karnataka. He was a science graduate and initially worked as a chemist for five years before taking up journalism.

A Padma Bhushan recipient, he penned over 40 books, including “Gandhi – A Spiritual Journey”, “Reporter At Large”, and co-authored “Narendra Modi – The Architect of a Modern State” (2009). A journalist well known for his right wing association, Kamath was one of the earliest biographers of Narendra Modi

He started his media career with Mumbai’s daily, the Free Press Journal, as a reporter in 1946 and later worked for its eveninger, Free Press Bulletin.

Later, he joined the Times of India Group and he worked as the editor of ‘The Sunday Times (India)’ for two years during 1967-69 and its Washington Correspondent of ‘Times of India’ during 1969-78. He also served as editor of ‘The Illustrated Weekly of India’.

Kamath was appointed as the chairman of Prasar Bharati, the autonomous public service broadcaster of India.

Expressing his condolences on the death of Kamath, PM Narendra Modi tweeted: “A prolific writer and fine human being, Shri MV Kamath’s demise is a loss to the world of literature and journalism. May his soul rest in peace.

“My mind goes back to the several interactions I had with MV Kamath ji. He was a repository of knowledge, always full of humility and grace,” he said.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Journalism, Madhav Vittal Kamath, Manipal, MV Kamath, Narendra Modi, Padma Bhushan, Prasar Bharati

Nine accused found guilty in Shaheed Bava murder case

October 8, 2014 by Nasheman

Shaheed Bava murder case

Kozhikode: The Special Additional District Sessions Court at Eranhipalam on Wednesday found nine accused guilty in the Shaheed Bava murder case. The court will pronounce the of sentence tomorrow.

In the moral policing case, a special investigation team had submitted the charge sheet against 14 persons in the case.

Shaheed Bava, from Cheruvadi, Kozhikode was grievously assaulted by an angry mob near Kodiyathur village in 2011 for having an ‘illicit relationship’ with a woman. According to police, Bava used to allegedly visit a house occupied by women members, late at night. He was apparently warned by the men folk in the neighbourhood to stay away. He was tied to an electric post and beaten up, when he was found at a woman’s house.

He died of injuries in a private hospital in the city on November 13.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Crime, Kozhikode, Murder, Shaheed Bava, SHAHID BAVA

RSS linked columnist Surya Prakash frontrunner for Prasar Bharati chairman’s post

October 8, 2014 by Nasheman

Prasar Bharati headquarters in New Delhi. File Photo: R.V. Moorthy

Prasar Bharati headquarters in New Delhi. Photo: R.V. Moorthy, The Hindu

New Delhi: A. Surya Prakash, columnist and fellow at the Vivekananda International Foundation (VIF), a New Delhi-based right wing think tank, is likely to succeed journalist Mrinal Pande as the chairperson of public-service broadcaster Prasar Bharati, making VIF a go-to hiring destination for the Modi government.

While Surya Prakash, who is consulting editor for The Pioneer, is the frontrunner for the post, the other people being considered for the post are well known pro- Modi columnists, Swapan Dasgupta, and Kanchan Gupta, among others. Prasar Bharati, operates state broadcaster Doordarshan and All India Radio (AIR), and the government usually appoints a veteran journalist to the post of chairman.

A. Surya Prakash

A. Surya Prakash

The Vivekananda International Foundation, which is affiliated to the Kanyakumari-based Vivekananda Kendra, was established by Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) organiser Eknath Ranade in 1970. National security adviser Ajit Doval—appointed on 30 May—is a former director of the foundation and the Prime Minister’s principal secretary Nripendra Mishra is its executive council member.

Surya Prakash has closely worked with senior leaders of BJP and RSS. In 1998, Surya Prakash wrote a series of articles for The Pioneer about Congress leader Sonia Gandhi’s foreign origins. In 2004, he edited a book, Sonia Under Scrutiny – Issue of Foreign Origin. This book was published by India First Foundation. His columns appear in The Pioneer, Dainik Jagran, Eenadu, Samyukta Karnataka and The Indian Republic. In the past, Surya Prakash has held key positions in several print and electronic media organizations.

A committee headed by vice- president Hamid Ansari along with Bimal Julka, secretary, information and broadcasting, and Markandey Katju, chairman, Press Council of India, will make a decision on the appointment in due course.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: All India Radio, BJP, Doordarshan, Narendra Modi, Prasar Bharati, RSS, Surya Prakash, Vivekananda International Foundation, Vivekananda Kendra

List of Indian American organizations who attended Narendra Modi’s reception at Madison Square Garden in New York

October 8, 2014 by Nasheman

Mr. Narendra Modi waves as he arrives to speak at Madison Square Garden in New York on Sept. 28, 2014. Photo by Lucas Jackson/Reuters

New York: The public reception for the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Madison Square Garden on September 28th, organized by the Indian American Community Foundation (IACF), attracted 19,000 cheering fans, apart from the staff and volunteers.

According to Communalism Watch, the resource website documenting the rise of the far right in India, Mr. Modi’s show at the iconic American indoor arena, was “Hindutva driven and inward looking, communally inclined circuits in the diaspora in the U.S were mobilised”.

Below is the full list of Indian American organizations who requested and were issued tickets by the IACF, and obtained by the India related US based website The American Bazaar:

  • Overseas Volunteer for Better India
  • Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh USA
  • OFBJP USA
  • Gujarati Samaj of New York
  • Indo American Seniors Organization of New Jersey
  • Param Shakti Peeth of America
  • Jain Center of New Jersey
  • US India Political Action Committee
  • NAMO BJP
  • Telugu Association of North America
  • Vishwa Hindu Parishad of America-National
  • BAPS SWAMINARAYAN SANSTHA
  • The Hindu Student Council of NYU
  • Global Indians for Bharat Vikas
  • Indian American Intellectuals Forum Inc.
  • India Association of Long Island Inc.
  • Indian Students Association at Columbia University
  •  Vaishnav Temple of New York
  • North America Telugu Society
  • Hindu Center Inc.
  • Hindi USA
  • Jain Temple of New York
  • North American Telugu Association
  • Network of Indian Professional
  • American Telugu Association
  • Society of Indo American Engineers and Architects
  • Indian Cultural Center of South Jersey
  • BMM North America
  • Graduate Indian Students Association
  • India Association of Rhode Island
  • IIT Bombay Alumni Association Greater New York Chapter
  • Bihar Jharkhand Association of North America
  • NYU Shruti
  • Long Island Gujarati Cultural Society
  • Rajasthan Association of North America
  • Asian American Senior Association of Sayreville
  • Bhartiya Senior Citizens of Chicago
  • Rana Samaj USA
  • Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation of USA
  • Sanskriti of NJ SevaPgh.org
  • Vallabhdham Temple
  • VYOUSA, Inc.
  • Dawoodi Bohra Community
  • India Cultural Association of Central Jersey Capitol Area Telugu Society
  • Gujarati Literary Academy of North America
  • Maharashtra Foundation
  • Vedic Heritage Inc.
  • VHP of America CT chapter
  • Patidar Cultural Association of USA
  • Gujarati Samaj of Lehigh Valley
  • KCO-Brindavana
  • Indo American Pharmaceutical Society
  • Gujarati Samaj of Metropolitan Washington DC
  • New York Tamil Sangam
  • American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin
  • TLCA AIANA
  • Indo American Senior Citizens Association of Bucks County
  • Kannada Koota, New York Inc.
  • The American India Public Affairs Committee
  • Indian Cultural Group
  • Jai Bharat Dhol Tasha Pathak USA
  • Saurashtra Patel Cultural Samaj
  • Anjumane Badri NewYork (Dawoodi Bohra)
  • Telugu Fine Arts Society
  • America Tamil Sangam
  • Brahmin Society of New York
  • Lad Vanik Samaj of North America
  • The Hindu Temple Society of North America Gujarati Samaj of Delaware Valley
  • Divya Jyoti Foundation Inc.
  • India First Alliance
  • Indian Business Association of NJ
  • Society for Promotion of Indian Culture and Experience (United Nations Staff Recreation Council)
  • OFBJP Sewa International
  • IASCAOHC
  • Kashmiri Overseas Association
  • New England Marathi Mandal
  • SAIDATTAPETHAM
  • Zoroastrian Association of Greater New York
  • Sardar Patel Gujarati Samaj
  • Tricity India Association
  • Albany, NY VIBHA-Help Them Grow
  • Aapi Brahmin Samaj of USA
  • Indian American Forum Inc.(IAF)
  • Shree Umiya Parivar of USA
  • Asian Indian Heritage Association
  • Humvatan
  • Sindhi Association of New Jersey
  • South Gujarat Patel Pragati Mandal
  • Asian Indian Americans of Central Pennsylvania
  • Hindu American Foundation
  • Indo-American Arts Council
  • Isha Foundation
  • Bhavsar Samaj of North America
  • Sewa International USA
  • Dada Bhagawan Schchidanand Songh
  • Lead India
  • 2020 Foundation,Inc.
  • Marathi Vishwa NJ
  • Indo-American Cultural Foundation of Central Jersey
  • India Society at Stony Brook
  • Indian Diamond and Colorstone Association
  • National Federation of Indian American Associations
  • OFBJP Canada Toronto
  • The Indo American Senior Citizen Association of Pa.
  • Jain Samaj of New York
  • Pennsylvania Telangana Association
  • NCAIA
  • Orissa Society of Americas NY/ NJ Chapter
  • Sanskar
  • Global Organization of People of Indian Origin
  • Indian American Forum for Political Education
  • International Swaminarayan Satsang Organization
  • Lions Clubs International
  • Rutgers Indian American Students
  • Gayatri Chetna Center of New Jersey
  • Jackson Heights Indian Merchants Association
  • Federation of Jain Associations in North America
  • Konkani Sabha KPCA
  • Shri Navagraha Devasthanam of NA, Inc
  • Friends of India Society Inc.
  • Hindu Temple of Tristates
  • Saurastra Samaj of Toronto
  • South Asian Association of Lancaster
  • The Association of Indians in America-NEC
  • Federation of Indo Americans of N. California
  • Indo American Senior Citizens of Atlantic County
  • People for Loksatta
  • Uplift Humanity India
  • Albany Telugu Association
  • Federation of Asian Indian Association
  • Shri Sanatan Mandir
  • Sri Aurobindo Yoga Foundation of North America
  • Central Jersey Indian Lions Club of Iselin
  • Ekal CT
  • India Cultural Society
  • Indian SA
  • Indo American Cultural Society of North America, Inc.
  • National Federation of Indian American Associations
  • New Jersey Tamil Sangam
  • India American Cultural Association
  • Indo-American Festivals, Inc.
  • Kalabharathi PMVS-VRAJ
  • Sikh Association of Baltimore
  • AAANA
  • Arsha Vidya Gurukulam
  • Ayyappa Seva Sangam New York
  • Indian Jewish Congregation of USA
  • Samskrita Bharati, USA
  • Shibaranjani, Inc.
  • Vegetarian Vision Inc.
  • Arya Samaj of NJ
  • CLPSS
  • Cultural Organization of Bengal
  • Indian Association of Greater Somerset County
  • N.AJ.C. Chamber of Commerce
  • NIAPPI
  • Art of Living
  • Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, USA
  • DwarkamaiI nc
  • India Association of Virginia
  • Jeevan-Jyoti Inc.
  • Prashanthi Charitable Services
  • Bridgewater Seniors Council Canada India Foundation
  • Gujarati Association of Western Mass.
  • Indo- Canada org
  • Jalaram Sevasamaj
  • Sai Temple PA
  • Shradhaa Foundation
  • Shree Rang Avdhoot Parivar (Nareswar)
  • USA Association of Indian in Construction Industry
  • Edison Cricket Club
  • NAMAM
  • Om KriyaYog
  • Rajasthan Association of Jains in America
  • Saptak Music
  • Saraswati Cultural Association of Jersey City
  • Shree Siddhi Dham Mandir. Inc.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Hindutva, IACF, Indian American, Indian American Community Foundation, Indian American Organizations, Madison Square Garden, Narendra Modi

Journalists should accept 'packages', says Nitin Gadkari

October 7, 2014 by Nasheman

nitin_gadkari

Mumbai: Union Minister Nitin Gadkari has courted a controversy asking journalists to “keep the packages (money) they get during the election season”.

“In the next 10-12 days, you journalists will have ‘Laxmi darshan’,” Gadkari said at a poll rally in Sawantwadi in coastal Konkan on Saturday. “Be it reporters or editors, there are separate packages for reporters, newspapers and their owners,” Gadkari said.

“Diwali has come. I have one request, keep whatever you get. Eat whatever you can,” he said. The state secretariat and legislature journalists association flayed Gadkari’s remarks. “Gadkari’s comments are highly objectionable,” president of Mantralaya Vidhimandal Vartahar Sangh, Pravin Puro said.

“Gadkari has said journalists accept ‘packages’ (for election coverage). Due to such statements, the image of journalists gets dented,” Puro said.

(PTI)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: BJP, Journalists, Media, Nitin Gadkari

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