Month: September 2012

  • EX-COAL MINISTER BAGRODIA’S BROTHER GOT HEFTY MINING CONTRACT

    EX-COAL MINISTER BAGRODIA’S BROTHER GOT HEFTY MINING CONTRACT

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Between 2006 and 2010, PSU power giant National Thermal Power Corporation awarded a coal mine contract worth over Rs 23,000 crore to a joint venture company in which 10% shares are held by the family of former coal minister Santosh Bagrodia. Significant parts of the tender for awarding Pakri-Barwadih (PB) coal block took place when Bagrodia was minister of state for coal in the UPA government. The company which lost out in the race for the contract was another PSU, Singareni Collieries, that reported directly to Bagrodia. Bagrodia, a former Rajya Sabha MP from Rajasthan, was the minister of state for coal, with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as the cabinet minister, between April 2008 and May 2009. The commercial bid submission, regarded as a crucial step in awarding the contract, happened when Bagrodia was in office.

    NTPC board awarded the PB coal block mining project to Thiess Minecs India, in which the Bagrodia family holds a 10% stake, in the first week of December 2010. When contacted, Bagrodia denied any role in Thiess Minecs getting the contract, while claiming that he has been estranged from his family in business matters since 1986 when he became an MP. Bagrodia: I wasn’t aware of bros’ bid Vinod is my brother, but I have no idea whatsoever about what kind of business he is doing. We don’t consult each other, advise each other or interfere in each other’s business,” Bagrodia said. Thiess Minecs, too, said Bagrodia played no role in the contract.

    The company said in a statement: “Thiess Minecs India Private Ltd denies any role of Mr Santosh Bagrodia in winning the Pakri Barwadih Project, which has been awarded to TM by NTPC Ltd following a 56-month long, competitive tender process.” The estimated contract price is “Rs 230,030 million equivalent to $5111.78 million (considering 1$= Rs 45)” and the contract was for 27 years, NTPC told TOI in a written statement. NTPC said Thiess Minecs is a joint venture company where “90% of the shares are held by Thiess (Mauritius) Pty Ltd which is a 100% subsidiary of Thiess Pty Australia and 10% of the shares are held by Minecs Centre Pvt Ltd, a 100 % subsidiary of Cuprum Bagrodia Ltd.” Cuprum Bagrodia is owned by the Bagrodia family.

    The former minister’s brother Vinod and Vinod’s son Songit are directors of the company. NTPC said the “ownership details of Minecs Centre Pvt Ltd are neither available in the bid nor sought for by NTPC as Thiess Minecs India Pvt Ltd have been qualified on the technical experience and financial strength of its promoter Thiess Pty, Australia (Majority share holder).” When asked if it was aware of the minister’s family’s involvement, NTPC said, “A general description of Minecs Centre Pvt Ltd has been given in the bid.” On Singareni Collieries losing out the contract, NTPC said, “Both the bids were technically and commercially responsive. Thiess Mines India Pvt Ltd’s bid price was lowest and has been awarded the contract.”

    The contract to Thiess Minecs is mired in allegations that the award price of coal is almost Rs 200 per tonne higher than what was estimated by NTPC’s advisors, MECON Ltd, a government owned engineering consultancy firm, and others. The price is allegedly higher than the award price of Coal India in the region. “It can be said that the price is broadly in line with the estimates, considering implication of strict quality parameters and risks involved in execution of the nature of contract which is for 27 years,” NTPC said. Dr R Srikanth, Thiess India’s chief executive said that Cuprum Bagrodia had been a dealer for Komatsu Mining, a Japanese construction and mining equipment maker that was working with Thiess in other parts of the world. It was because of Komatsu’s reference that Thiess got into JV with Cuprum Bagrodia, he said.

    “It is no sweat equity, they have to pay for it,” Srikanth, a former Tata executive, said, arguing that the presence of Bagrodia had no impact on the contract. “We were L1 by a huge margin,” he said. “TM was formed in December 2005 (more than 27 months before Mr Santosh Bagrodia was appointed as minister of state for coal in April 2008) to bid for and execute specific coal mining projects in India as a mine developer & operator,” Thiess Minecs said in a statement. And on March 31, 2006, NTPC invited bids for the 15mt per annum Pakri-Bawardih (PB) coal mining project in Jharkhand. While the technical bids were submitted in April 2007, much before Bagrodia became coal minister, the crucial commercial bids were submitted in July 2008, when he was the coal minister overseeing Singareni Collieries.

  • BEST FOODS FOR STAMINA

    BEST FOODS FOR STAMINA

    You need tons of energy to cope with your hectic lifestyle, especially if you are into sports. Here’s a list of foods that give you enough stamina to keep you active throughout the day.

    While certain foods in your diet can actually reduce stamina, healthy foods help to build up your stamina and increase your energy levels, especially if you’re interested in sports and athletics.

    As sportsperson, you need foods that are designed to not only give you energy but also keep you feeling full all day long. Says nutritionist Smruti Gokhale, “Nutrients like complex carbs, proteins, fibre and vitamin C is crucial for those who are into sports. These nutrients keep you active and feeling energetic.

    “Essential nutrients”
    Complex carbs:
    When you are talking about building stamina, you just cannot miss out on complex carbs. Carbs are the main source of fuel for your body and brain. Says Priya Kathpal, nutritionist, “Carbs are the food that the body uses to get glucose, which provides energy.

    Complex carbs are present in foods like bread, pasta and rice, which unlike simple carbs, keep you feeling energetic all daylong.

    Vitamin C:

    Vitamin C helps strengthen your immune system and protects you from infections like cold and cough, which sap your energy. Also, when you are outdoors, you are more susceptible to bacterial infections which hamper your health. Thus ensure that you consume foods and fruits rich in vitaminC.

    Proteins:

    Protein is an important nutrient for the growth, development and repair of muscle and body tissues. Protein has a higher metabolic rate than fat, so an individual can burn more calories. It is also said to increase satiety, which prevents a person from overeating. Healthy sources of protein include lean chicken, fish, eggs and nuts.

    Iron:

    Lack of iron in your diet can cause loss of stamina. You can get iron from meat, beans, nuts and some vegetables such as broccoli and spinach. Consult your doctor about taking iron supplements.

  • India inks three MoUs with Palestine,  pledges $10 m

    India inks three MoUs with Palestine, pledges $10 m

    New Delhi (TIP): Reiterating New Delhi’s support for Palestine’s bid for full and equal membership of the United Nations, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh announced that India would contribute $10 million to Palestine’s budget for this year to help address its financial requirements.

    India and Palestine also signed three MoUs in the areas of information and communication technology, vocational training and education after wide-ranging talks between the PM and Palestine President Mahmoud Abbas here. The two leaders exchanged views on regional issues, particularly the developments in the West Asian and the Gulf region. In the context of the ongoing war in Syria, they agreed that the developments in the region must be addressed through political dialogue and peaceful means without recourse to violence and outside interference, while taking into account the legitimate aspirations of all people.

    “Support for the Palestinian cause has been a cornerstone of India’s foreign policy,” the PM said in a media statement issued after his meeting with the Palestine leader. He said he had reassured Abbas of India’s firm support for the struggle of the Palestinian people to achieve a sovereign, independent, viable and united state of Palestine with East Jerusalem as its capital, living within secure and recognised borders, side by side and at peace with Israel.

    The PM pointed out that India had also played an active role in supporting the efforts of Palestine to secure full membership status at UNESCO. “We also look forward to early resumption of peace talks between the Palestinians and Israelis leading to a comprehensive resolution between the two sides,” he said. Manmohan Singh said India would continue to support the development and nation-building efforts of Palestine. The MoUs signed today were indicative of India’s commitment to contribute in the areas of information and communication technology, vocational training and education.

    Noting that the Palestine leader would inaugurate the new Palestinian Embassy building built in New Delhi with India’s support, the PM said the building was a symbol of the enduring friendship between the two countries and its people. Abbas, who was accorded a ceremonial welcome at the forecourt of the Rashtrapati Bhawan in the morning, described India as a true friend of Palestine.

  • Judges will head RTI panels now, rules SC

    Judges will head RTI panels now, rules SC

    New Delhi (TIP): The Central Information Commission (CIC) and State Information Commissions will now be headed by judges, courtesy a Supreme Court controversial judgment on Thursday that ended the tradition of retired bureaucrats gracing the statutory bodies constituted under the Right to Information 2005.

    Going by the rule that the functions of the CIC and the State Information Commissions was necessarily judicial in nature, the apex court held, “Chief Information Commissioner at the Centre or State level shall only be a person who is or has been a Chief Justice of the High Court or a Judge of the Supreme Court,” said a bench of Justices AK Patnaik and Swatanter Kumar. Such appointment shall be in consultation with the Chief Justice of India, it added.

    The court further ruled that the Commissions at Centre and States would hold sittings in benches comprising of two members each, one being a judicial member and the other an expert member, drawn among persons of public eminence having wide knowledge and experience in law, science and technology, social service, management, journalism, mass media, or administration and governance. By stating so, the court held that the Centre may preferably consider appointing judges and lawyers as Information Commissioners as well.

    While the slew of directions would require the Centre to suitably amend the RTI Act, particularly Sections 12(5), 12(6), 15(5) and 15(6) of the 2005 Act, the court directed the Centre to undertake this exercise at the earliest to bring it in consonance with the Constitutional mandate. It upheld the validity of the above Sections of the Act along with the recommended changes.

    The order of the court came on a PIL filed by one Namit Sharma, who pointed out that the role of CIC and State commissions under RTI being largely judicial work, interest of justice demanded having judicial members to head such bodies. Currently, none of the eight CIC members have a judicial background.

    It found the duties of these statutory bodies to be largely adjudicatory in nature. It said, “They are required to give notice to the parties, offer them the opportunity of hearing and pass reasoned orders.” In doing so, the court held, the authorities need to strike a balance between freedom under Article 19(1)(a) — right to know, and Article 21 relating to right to privacy. Regarding appointment of expert members, the bench suggested drawing up a panel of persons empanelled by DoPT or the concerned State Ministry, three months prior to the creation of vacancy.

  • After SC rap, Vigilance to file take on JPSC scam

    After SC rap, Vigilance to file take on JPSC scam

    Ranchi (TIP): The Jharkhand Vigilance Bureau is all set to file an inquiry report in the Supreme Court in connection to the Jharkhand Public Service Commission scam in light of the apex court’s comment about possible action against the bureau.

    In a veiled indication, the apex court has warned the bureau of dire consequences if it failed to file the inquiry report.

    The bureau did not file the report for want of directions while the apex court was hearing the petition against the HC order in the JPSC case and subsequently passed an interim order on August 7 staying the order of the subordinate court in the matter.

    The Vigilance Bureau had contended that since it had little to do with the investigation in the matter after the case was handed over to the CBI at the behest of the High Court, it did not think it necessary to file the inquiry report in the apex court.

    The Vigilance Bureau viewed that unless a specific order was issued to it in this regard, it was not supposed to act on its own. If well-placed sources in the Vigilance Bureau are to be believed, before the High Court order on June 13 for the CBI probe into the JPSC scam came, the bureau was dealing with the case and charge-sheets were filed against many bigwigs including the Commission’s chairman, Dilip Prasad, and its different members. Prasad and his associates are still languishing in jail.

    In its subsequent report, the Bureau came out with recommendations for punitive action against candidates selected by unfair means, sources claimed. Acting upon the Bureau’s recommendation, the State Government dismissed 19 candidates selected through the second JPSC examination that was subsequently upheld by the High Court.

    However, when the High Court ordered a CBI probe on June 13 into 12 of the 16 examinations conducted by JPSC over the years and debarred 167 candidates of the second Combined Civil Service Examination from their services and salaries while acting upon a PIL in this regard, the role of the bureau was supposed to be over, sources said.

    Subsequently, when the affected parties moved to the apex court in appeal against the High Court order, the court issued an interim order to reinstate incumbents debarred by the High Court and directed the CBI to file a status report within a stipulated period of time.

  • HOME REMEDIES  for dandruff

    HOME REMEDIES for dandruff

    I for dandruff t’s a rampant problem amongst the population as it affects many kids, teenagers and adults. Dandruff can be described as a condition wherein, there occurs flaking of the scalp that falls on one’s shoulders and face too.

    This occurs due to infection by bacteria and fungus, and it is an infectious condition. It leads to frequent itching coupled with excessive formation of scales on the skin. It is advised that one should not share towels, combs or hair brushes as dandruff is infectious.

    Its best to treat dandruff using natural remedies than artificial chemical based products. Here are some ways to do so: It is important to comb your hair daily as this promotes blood circulation inside the scalp.

    Also, regularly massage your scalp with herbal oil. Use hot olive or sesame oil on the scalp before bedtime. Next morning, rub little lime juice on your scalp one hour prior to bathing. Wash and rinse your hair well. Prepare a mixture of equal amounts of vinegar and water. Apply this on your scalp and leave it on overnight. Wash your hair the next morning with a mild baby shampoo. Soak a handful of fenugreek or methi seeds in some water overnight. Next day, grind the seeds to a paste. Apply this on your scalp and leave to rest for a couple of hours. Rinse your hair with shikakai or ritha. Massaging the scalp with fresh apple juice is said to fade dandruff away. A solution of beetroot juice, vinegar and some ginger juice, when applied on the scalp helps toget rid of dandruff.

  • Easy cross-LoC travel, trade bring happy tidings

    Easy cross-LoC travel, trade bring happy tidings

    Srinagar (TIP): The governments of India and Pakistan on Saturday took a giant step in making the Line of Control (LoC) “a line on the map”, as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had put it when cross-LoC travel between the two parts of Jammu and Kashmir became a reality a little over seven years ago.

    The nod to ease cross-LoC travel and trade has brought happy tidings for the people of the state at a time when the LoC had once again begun showing signs of turning into the “line of confrontation”.

    With cross-LoC travel to be expanded to include group visits for tourism and pilgrimage, travel would not remain restricted to the state’s divided families. “It opens new vistas for the people of the state who want to visit the other side of the LoC,” says Khalid Ahmad, who was on the first cross-LoC bus flagged off on April 7, 2005.
    “There is a yearning among the people across the LoC to visit this part of Jammu and Kashmir. Many are plain curious and want to see what this part of Kashmir looks like,” says Ahmad.

    Kashmiri Hindus have for long wanted to visit the Sharda Devi temple in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) and have repeatedly urged the Centre to make it possible for them to visit the revered shrine. “It is a welcome step. It should have been done much earlier,” says RL Bhat, one of the trustees of the Sanjeeveni Sharda Kendra.
    “The Sharda Peeth is an integral part of Kashmir. We should be directly allowed to visit the Sharda Devi temple from Handwara side, rather than being made to visit Muzzaffarabad, the capital of PoK,” he says.

    Likewise, many from across the LoC who have seen the beauty of the Valley in Bollywood films or heard of it from their elders are keen to visit Jammu and Kashmir. Visiting the Sufi shrines and Hazratbal is also on many itineraries.

    With both sides agreeing to facilitate speedy clearance of applications for travel with process time of 45 days, residents are upbeat. “Crossing for such visits will initially be from Chakothi-Uri and Rawalakot-Poonch crossing points (between April and October),” says the clause.

    Spirits have also soared on the trade front. It has been agreed that the list of 21 permissible products for cross-LoC trade will be respected by both sides. Regular meetings between traders on both sides will be facilitated on a monthly basis. There is also a provision to upgrade the road and communication infrastructure.

  • US choppers on Osama mission crossed Indian air space?

    US choppers on Osama mission crossed Indian air space?

    New Delhi (TIP): The flight path taken by two American MH-47 Chinook helicopters to Abbottabad in Pakistan to kill Osama bin Laden in May last year has triggered a controversy with questions being raised as to whether they flew over the Indian air space.

    A just-published book, containing a first-hand account of the raid on the al-Qaida leader’s hideout in the Pakistan garrison town near Islamabad, contains a map showing the flight path of the two helicopters after they took off from Jalalabad in Afghanistan in the dead of the night on May one.

    The map shows the helicopters crossing Pakistan’s eastern border with India before looping around and approaching Abbottabad from the South East. The book — No Easy Day: The Autobiography of a Navy SEAL — is written by one of the US Navy SEALS Matt Bissonnette, who participated in the operation, using pseudonym “Mark Owen”.

    Questions about whether the helicopters flew over the Indian air space have been raised by a popular US website Redstate, described as a leading conservative news blog. This has set off a debate in the cyber world.
    The blog states that “this apparent use of Indian air space” raises questions including whether the Indian government had advance knowledge about the Abbottabad mission and whether the US had sought and was granted permission to use Indian air space.

    Indian Air Force sources in New Delhi on Wednesday dismissed this hypothesis and said the US helicopters had not crossed into Indian air space at all.

    B Raman, a noted security expert who retired as a senior officer of India’s external intelligence agency RAW, has doubted whether the helicopters would have been flown into Pakistan via India.

    He has written that in planning operations of this nature involving air and missile action, the US is always worried that if the Pakistanis detect the action, they may misinterpret that the action had been originated by India and this could lead to a war between the two nuclear powers.

    The book gives fascinating details of the mission undertaken by 22 SEALS, an EOD tech and a CIA interpreter, who flew in two Black Hawk helicopters into Abbottabad, where Pakistan’s military academy is located, on the night of May 2, 2011 from a US base in Jalalabad. They killed Osama and four others hiding in a house.

  • SC refuses to stop fuel loading in Kundankulam

    SC refuses to stop fuel loading in Kundankulam

    New Delhi (TIP): Declining to put on hold for now the loading of fuel rods in one of the two reactors of Kudankulam nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu, the Supreme Court Thursday said it would hear Sep 20 the plea seeking to restrain the central government.

    The apex court’s decision came as hundreds of people from Tamil Nadu’s Idinthakarai village, the epicentre of the protests against the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KNPP), stood in the sea water Thursday to protest moves to load uranium fuel in one of the two reactors.

    The apex court bench of Justice K.S. Radhakrishnan and Justice Dipak Misra declined to pass any immediate order on a petition seeking to restrain the government and Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd (NPCIL) from going ahead with the loading of nuclear fuel rods in the reactor of the plant.

    The petitioner alleged that the 17 safety measures recommended by an expert panel had not been implemented.
    “Whether these 17 safety measures had to be taken before the commissioning of the plant,” Justice Misra asked Attorney General G.E. Vahanvati. “They are the third (layer) of safety steps by way of abundant caution for safety enhancement,” Vahanvati told the court. The court said it would hear Sep 20 the plea seeking to restrain the central government from loading nuclear fuel rods in the reactor of the plant.

    The judges said that they wanted to go through the two judgments of the Madras High Court not accepting petitioner P. Sundarrajan’s plea.

    Counsel Prashant Bhushan, appearing for the petitioner, pressed for an order restraining the government from going ahead with the loading of the fuel rods but Justice Misra asked “was there any stay at any point of time”. Sundarrajan, an IT professional, moved the apex court Tuesday contending that the government should not go ahead with the loading of the fuel rods till the 17 safety steps recommended by an expert committee were implemented.
    Mentioning the matter before the bench, Bhushan told the court that the expert committee was set up by the government after Fukushima nuclear power plant accident in Japan.

    Bhushan told the court that out of the 17 safety steps recommended by the expert committee only six had been implemented.

    As Justice Radhakrishnan inquired about the time gap between the loading of the fuel rods and the actual commissioning of the plant, Vahanvati said that it would take two months. Bhushan, however, told the court that once the enriched uranium fuel rods were loaded in the reactor then there would be no scope for going back.
    The attorney general told the court that the Tamil Nadu government had certain reservations about the safety of the plant and it had set up an expert committee headed by former chairman, Atomic Energy Commission M.R. Srinivasan, which had cleared the KNPP for commissioning.

  • Former Pakistani PM’s son arrested

    Former Pakistani PM’s son arrested

    Islamabad (TIP): Former prime minister Yousuf Raza Gilani’s son Ali Musa Gilani was arrested Friday from the gate of the Supreme Court while he was on his way to appear for a hearing in a case related to quotas for the drug ephedrine, a media report said. Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) personnel took Musa Gilani into custody when he arrived at the apex court’s gate to appear for the hearing in the ephedrine quota case, reported Dawn.

    Musa Gilani offered resistance when ANF personnel tried to take him into custody. The ANF has named eight accused in a petition, including Musa Gilani. On April 9, the government removed two ANF officials who were investigating the scam of illegal sale of ephedrine.

    The scam came to light when the ANF informed a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court that the ephedrine quota worth Rs.7 billion was given to two Multan-based companies.

  • HAIRCUTS TO LOOK YOUNGER

    HAIRCUTS TO LOOK YOUNGER

    How do you instantly trim a decade off your face with nothing but scissors? Get an age-de fying haircut that will turn the clock way back.

    The bob

    A wavy bob with a side parting lends a fun and flirty vibe to 40-year-old Lisa Ray’s face, and can be styled in different ways. The shape of this bob makes 33-year-old Katie Holmes’ cheeks look fuller, which creates a youthfull appearance. Victoria Beckham, 38, has made the bob famous again. Classic yet modern, her version has spawned over a dozen copycats.

    Bangs and fringes

    Long, wispy and face-framing bangs can help hide crows’ feet. Pooja Bedi, 42, prefers side-swept bangs across her forehead. If you want to keep your hair long, take a tip from36-year-old Rashida Jones. Get bangs that fall between your brows and lashes.

    The pixie cut

    Mandira Bedi, 40, has an easy-to-manage super short pixie cut that can go from out-of-bed sexy to sleek in no time. Ask your stylist to cut short, shaggy layers throughout your hair. 45-year-old Halle Berry’s look is heavily layered and defined. A slightly messy, androgynous crop looks sweet, easy and face-flattering on 34-year-old Ginnifer Goodwin. Gul Panag, 35, wears her wavy hair in a rocking cut that is halfway between a crop cut and a pixie.

    Hot tip

    Don’t want to get a haircut? Wear your hair in a high ponytail with a little volume at the crown and a few loose tendrils on the sides, suggests Renee. “When you pull your mane all the way up from the roots, you’ll notice an upward pull that literally lifts your face up,” she says. The same rule applies to buns.

  • HAQQANI NETWORK AS  FTO: WHAT IMPACT?

    HAQQANI NETWORK AS FTO: WHAT IMPACT?

    By B.Raman

    In a report to the US Congress on September 7,2012, Mrs. Hillary Clinton, US Secretary of State, intimated it of her decision to designate the Haqqani Network, an affiliate of the Afghan Taliban operating from the Kurram-North Waziristan areas of Pakistan, as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) under the Immigration and Nationality Act.

    She said in a separate statement:

    “Today, I have sent a report to Congress saying that the Haqqani Network meets the statutory criteria of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) for designation as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO). This action meets the requirements of the Haqqani Network Terrorist Designation Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-168). Based on that assessment, I notified Congress of my intent to designate the Haqqani Network as an FTO under the INA. I also intend to designate the organization as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist entity under Executive Order 13224.

    “The consequences of these designations include a prohibition against knowingly providing material support or resources to, or engaging in other transactions with, the Haqqani Network, and the freezing of all property and interests in property of the organization that are in the United States, or come within the United States, or the control of U.S. persons. These actions follow a series of other steps that the U.S. government already has taken against the Haqqanis. The Department of State previously designated key Haqqani Network leaders under E.O. 13224, and the Department of the Treasury has designated other militants with ties to the Haqqanis under the same authority. We also continue our robust campaign of diplomatic, military, and intelligence pressure on the network, demonstrating the United States’ resolve to degrade the organization’s ability to execute violent attacks.

    “I take this action in the context of our overall strategy in Afghanistan, the five lines of effort that President Obama laid out when he was in Afghanistan in May: increasing the capacity of Afghan security forces to fight insurgents; transitioning to Afghan security lead; building an enduring partnership with Afghanistan; pursuing Afghan-led reconciliation; and putting together an international consensus to support peace and stability in the region. We will continue to work with both Afghanistan and Pakistan to move these efforts forward and build a more peaceful and secure future.”

    For some weeks now, the State Department had been under pressure from sections of the Congress to declare the Haqqani Network as an FTO because of its role in killing US and other NATO troops in Afghanistan. The State Department was resisting the pressure because US intelligence reportedly believed that Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl of the US Army, who disappeared from southern Afghanistan in June, 2009, might be in the custody of the Network. They were worried that the designation of the Network as an FTO could hamper efforts to rescue him. The decision now to designate the Network as an FTO would indicate that the US intelligence is pessimistic about its chances of being able to rescue him.

    The Agence France Presse (AFP) reported as follows on September 8,2012:

    “The network’s founder is Jalaluddin Haqqani, a disciplined Afghan guerrilla leader bankrolled by the US to fight Soviet troops in Afghanistan in the 1980s and now based with his family in Pakistan.

    “In the 1980s, Jalaluddin was close to the CIA and Pakistani intelligence. He allied himself to the Taliban after they took power in Kabul in 1996, serving as a cabinet minister under the militia’s supreme leader, Mullah Omar.

    “When American troops arrived after the 9/11 attacks, Haqqani looked up old friends and sought refuge in North Waziristan, becoming one of the first anti-US commanders based in Pakistan’s border areas.

    “He has training bases in eastern Afghanistan, is close to al Qaeda and his fighters are active across east and southeastern Afghanistan and in Kabul.

    “Militarily the most capable of the Taliban factions, the network operates independently but remains loyal to Omar and would probably fall behind any peace deal negotiated by the Taliban.

    “Now in his late 70s and frail, Jalaluddin’s seat on the Afghan Taliban leadership council has passed to his son Sirajuddin, who effectively runs a fighting force of at least 2,000 men.

    “The United States blames the network for some of the most spectacular attacks in Afghanistan, such as a 2011 siege on the US embassy and, in 2009, the deadliest attack on the CIA in 25 years.

    “Washington has long since designated Jalaluddin and Sirajuddin “global terrorists” but in July Congress urged the State Department to blacklist the entire network.

    “Supporters of the designation say the financial sanctions will help disrupt the Haqqani network’s fundraising activities in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

    “But Pakistanis fear it could further worsen ties between Islamabad and Washington just as cooperation had resumed after a series of major crises in 2011, particularly the killing of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.

    “Any such decision will take the relationship back to square one, ruining the improvement seen in ties between the two countries during the last couple of months,” a senior Pakistani security official said.

    “Last year, the outgoing top US military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, called the Haqqanis the “veritable arm” of Pakistan’s ISI, although other American officials later distanced themselves from the remarks.”

    The designation of an organization as an FTO impairs its ability to collect funds from the Diaspora in the US. Where an organization does not depend on flow of funds from the Diaspora in the US, it has very little impact on its operational capabilities.

    The US started the practice of declaring foreign terrorist set-ups as FTOs in 1997. Since then, there has not been a single instance of any terrorist organization withering away due to drying-up of funds because of its being declared an FTO. All organizations declared by the US as FTO continued to maintain their terrorist activities without any problem.

    The US declared the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) as an FTO in 1997. It had no impact on the activities of the LTTE. The LTTE was crushed 12 years later in May 2009 not by the US designation, but by the counter-insurgency operations of the Sri Lankan Army.

    Since 1997, the US has declared the Harkat-ul-Ansar also known as the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM), the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) and the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI) of Bangladesh as FTOs. The declarations have had no impact on their activities. They continue to be as active as before

    This is because the jihadi terrorist organizations based in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan get their funds not from the Diaspora in the US, but from the Diaspora in the Gulf, from so-called charitable organizations in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries and from the intelligence agencies sponsoring them such as those of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. They also get their funds from the narcotics trade in the Af-Pak region.

    Unless these real sources of funding are tackled, just designating an organization as an FTO and making it illegal for persons in the US to help it financially will not help.

    The US war of attrition based on precise intelligence, which has been effective against Al Qaeda in the tribal areas, has not been that effective against the Haqqani Network. Al Qaeda is perceived largely as an Arab organization. Some Pashtuns have had no qualms over co-operating with the US against Al Qaeda as one saw in the case of the Pashtun doctor, now in Pakistani custody, who allegedly collaborated against Osama bin Laden. But the Haqqani Network is a Pashtun organization. It has been more difficult to find Pashtun sources willing to collaborate against the leadership of the Network.

    Only the Shias of Kurram, who have been suffering due to the atrocities committed by the Afghan Taliban and the Network, and the Tajik remnants of Ahmed Shah Masood’s pre-2001 organization might be in a position to help in neutralizing the Haqqani Network through ground and air operations. The suspicions between the US and the former followers of Masood have come in the way of such operations. The US has been reluctant to seek the co-operation of the Shias of Kurram because of their reported links with Iran.

    New ideas, new operational methods and new allies are required to neutralize the Network without having to depend on Pakistan. The US has been bereft of such ideas, methods and allies. Designating the Haqqani Network an FTO alone will not help.

    The US and other NATO forces have been facing problems in Afghanistan because of the mix of conventional and terrorist strikes adopted by the Afghan Taliban and the commando style complex terrorist strikes in which the Haqqani Network specializes. Unless an effective answer is found to the capabilities and techniques of the Afghan Taliban, there is unlikely to be an improvement in the ground situation in Afghanistan.

    Only punitive pressure against Pakistan can help in neutralizing the Haqqani Network. The Network operates from sanctuaries in North Waziristan and Kurram. It maintains close links with the ISI, which is well-informed regarding the location and movements of its leaders. The ISI is in a position to help the US in neutralizing the Network, but is hesitant to do so as it looks upon the Network as its strategic ally for recovering its influence in Afghanistan after the withdrawal of the US and other NATO forces from there.

    The US is not prepared to declare Pakistan a state-sponsor of terrorism for its collusion with the Network. Declaration of Pakistan as a State-sponsor of terrorism could entail follow-up steps such as a rupture of diplomatic relations with Pakistan, termination of all military-military and intelligence-intelligence co-operation and suspension of all economic and military assistance. No US Government would be prepared to take such actions. The US has to tolerate Pakistan and find ways of getting along with it whatever the difficulties and consequences of such a policy.

    In the absence of a capability to mount an Abbottabad style unilateral strike against the Haqqani leadership, the only transit option left to the US is to have the Network designated as an FTO. That is what it has done without any illusions that it will lead to the neutralization of the Network.

    (The author is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate of the Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com Twitter @SORBONNE75)

  • As I See It: PHASING OUT CANADIAN STUDIES PROGRAM

    As I See It: PHASING OUT CANADIAN STUDIES PROGRAM

    Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT) has lately announced that it will phase out the funding for the International Canadian Studies program, which lasted for about forty years. I received this announcement with mixed feelings.

    I strongly believe that instead of phasing it out, its money should be channeled into other programs. The five million dollars that Canada invests every year in Canadian Studies programs in 55 countries is a huge amount that can be used in better ways to promote Canadian Literature abroad.

    Before touching the issue of better ways, I would like to say something about myself and personal experiences.
    I am an Indo/Canadian writer who has been in Canada for the last about fifty years. Since 2010, I have been to India thrice on the invitations of two or more universities, each time as a special guest at their national and international conferences of teachers of English at college and university levels. In those conferences, I met knowledgeable lecturers and professors. Once within India, I was invited further usually by more campuses to talk to their students at the master’s level where their teachers and scholars at the doctorate level were also present. I was also a paid life member of the Indian Association of Canadian Studies. I am convinced that I am in a position to state my observations about the impact of International Canadian Studies program in India.

    I support the decision of Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT) because I had frustrated experiences where the Canadian Studies existed. On the other hand, I had positive experiences where the Canadian Studies did not exist. I can share those experiences if anyone would like to know.

    I believe that the program should be phased out in its present structure, but not its money. I would suggest channeling its money to other related programs because the Canadian Studies Program did not work as it was expected. This program has given rise to politics among some university teachers who look for positions in associations related to Canadian Studies to travel abroad to attend meetings. Those days when elections for office bearers took place were horse trading gatherings.

    To get better results, this money should be used to sponsor Canadian authors widely for literary tours abroad, and for more translation grants to foreign book publishers. I would suggest that:

    1. Canadians who are invited abroad by at least two universities in one tour should be sponsored with only to and fro air tickets and some travel allowance. Once the invitee is in a foreign land, most domestic expenses should be met by the host organizations. It would help authors more than the present Canadian Studies program did.

    2. Canadian universities should be encouraged more to give grants to foreign students to study Canadian literature. Any grant given to foreign students remains within the country.

    3. More funds should be available to foreign book publishers to translate and sell Canadian authors in their languages, and to attend foreign book fairs. It should be based on cost sharing.

    I would like to repeat that the International Canadian Studies Program has given rise to filthy politics among university teachers in India. I heard that the Indian Association of Canadian Studies has been split into two factions and both claim to be the real representative of Canadian Studies Program. This has less to do with Canadian Studies and more with dollars and going abroad for official meetings. Some universities which had Canadian Studies refused to buy Canadian authored books because they received them free from the Canadian Government. It certainly did not create awareness about Canadian Literature, considering the amount that was spent. The money would be used more fruitfully if Canadian authors are widely and partly sponsored to visit universities abroad. Also, more incentive should be made available in the form of translation grants to foreign publishers.

    It is notable that overseas literary tours and translation grants are available in some shape even now. However, it is shrouded in mystery that who gets benefits and how often they have been benefited. I would suggest that the overseas literary tours should be handled also by organizations like the Writers Union of Canada for their members. I would also suggest that the present Canadian reading program handled also by the Writers Union of Canada should include the entire North America.

    ( The author is an eminent writer and has written a number of books, most of them literary. More information on him can be obtained from www.stephengillcriticism.info; )

  • PRIYANKA TO ROMANCE IMRAN IN MILAN TALKIES

    PRIYANKA TO ROMANCE IMRAN IN MILAN TALKIES

    After making several socio-political films, Tigmanshu Dhulia decided to make his first ‘pure love story’ – Milan Talkies. While ImranKhan was signed on to play the male lead, it was rumored that Sonakshi Sinha will be the one to romance the actor. However, it has been found that Priyanka Chopramay be finalized as the female lead in the project.

    When contacted, the CEO of producers Balaji Motion Pictures, Tanuj Garg refrained from revealing the name of the actress but said that they were “speaking to someone and will make a formal announcement once ready.”Interestingly, Garg added, “Sonakshi was never signed so the question of replacing her doesn’t arise.”However, while Garg refused to name an actress, a source close to Priyanka Chopra maintained that the actress has indeed accepted the offer to star opposite mran in the film. Tigmanshu had earlier revealed that Milan Talkies would be a small town romance.

    “The crux of the story is that though the communication has become easy thanks to mobile phones and everything, it is still very difficult to fall in love in small towns,” he had said in an interview. “Priyanka loved the subject and wanted to work with Tigmanshu,” said the source.

  • DEEPIKA TO BECOME ABUSIVE FOR HER ROLE

    DEEPIKA TO BECOME ABUSIVE FOR HER ROLE

    Deepika is running scared. So far the most abusive word she has usedis ‘slut’ in Cocktail. For Ram Leela she needs to get a lot more colorful. Playing Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Juliet in Ram Leela is not going to be a cakewalk for Deepika Padukone.

    It requires a drastic andcomplete makeover, and not just from her Armani outfits to ghagra cholisto look like a firebrand from Kutch. She would also have to work seriously on her Gujarati accent to sound credible. However, there’s a lot more to her character than clothes and diction. Deepika’s character Leela has a peppery tongue. Says asource, “She plays a no-holds-barred daughter of the soil. Uninhibited totally oblivious to the niceties of ladylike conduct, she does and says exactly what she wants to, without caring about what the other person would think. Known to think twice before uttering even a syllable outof line, Deepika has never played such an unabashed character before.

    She would have to learn a lot of words, which she has never heard let alone used before.”According to sources, the heroine in Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s film is “a very earthy woman with a hearty laugh, an earthy Juliet who is like a wild flower in adesert.” The character also has to share many seriously intimate moments with her co-star. This basically meant that whoever played Bhansali’s Leela had to lose all her inhibitions and submerge herself in the soil of Kutch, the area where the film is to be shot.

  • PRACHI DESAI turns twenty four

    PRACHI DESAI turns twenty four

    Surti by birth, Prachi Desai will be blowing out 24 candles today, but her friends haven’t allowed her to make any plans for her birthday just yet! “I just got back from the US and got busy with the preparations for the Hindi remake of the Tamil film, ‘Saamy’ in which she will be paired opposite Sanjay Dutt.

    It looks like my friends have been planning a surprise birthday party for a while and now that they have warned me against making any plans, I am eagerly waiting to see what’s in store for me! After that, I am all set to fly to Hyderabad to shoot for Saamy,” says Prachi who’s riding a professional high with her last screen outing Bol Bachchan hitting the BO jackpot.

    Talking of her US trip, Prachi says, “I was at Grand Marshal at the Chicago and New Jersey Parade and took a small vacation after that.

    I visited the Princeton University and the Coke museum in Atlanta; I saw the most amazing 4D movie and also visited the beautiful and picturesque Helen Village. On one of the days, I went to a care centre for senior citizens and was touched to see how well they are taken care of. I’m sure I left with infinite blessings from them!”

  • MOVIE REVIEW RAAZ3

    MOVIE REVIEW RAAZ3

    STORY: Shanaya is a fading superstar whore sorts to black magic to salvage her career, and raze rising star Sanjana’s chances atstardom.MOVIE REVIEW: There’s only one raaz about stardom. That it’s nobody’s ‘keep’ – but every body’s ‘mistress’. Easily seduced by then next hot number on the bloc. Sometimes it walks away silently into the dark night, butmostly it screams like multiple orgasms in the vanity van. Shanaya ( Bipasha Basu) is atop star who is gradually falling off the dizzying heights of stardom, while hot new aspirant Sanjana (Esha Gupta) is sweeping away movies, awards and the coveted top spot.

    In denial of her waning career, the self-obsessed and fiercely ambitious Shanaya will do anything to cling to thelast fringes of her career. Even if that means risking love, manipulating her director boyfriend, Aditya ( Emraan Hashmi) and losing Godly faith. She moves over to the dark side – of Kali Vidya (black magic), tantra-mantra, meeting (and mating) with aatmas and seducing her boyfriend into becoming partner-in-crime, with a lot of jism show, sex (and dialogues like, “If you love me you can be stupid for me!” Bah!).

    Sanjana is haunted by spells of black magic, and in between shrieks, screams (and yeah, steamy sex too, courtesy Aditya) she loses her mind and heart. Throw in a bhatakti aatma ( Manish Chaudhury) and some shocks, shivers and songs – and there you have the third part of the Raaz series. With a storyline that’s fairly simple withone-dimensional characters, Vikram Bhatt, dishes out this horror show (which turns ‘horny’ as hell at times) in 3D, with glossy production values (and cliched elements like the usual fog, kabrastans and howling voice overs aplenty), dollops of sex, horror and a few terrifying scenes. The 3D effectisn’t state-of-the-art, but a few innovative scenes impress.

    The music, however, is disappointing for a Bhatt film, with songs used as patches between insignificant scenes. Bipasha looks scarily stunning in this role with only one shade – deep, dark black. It’s a challenge and she takes it onwith a vengeance. Emraan, shows different shades, but in the struggle between pecks, passion and possession he comes across asa confused soul. Esha Gupta is an attractive package and strikes in emotional scenes (when she’s not shrieking, that is).

    For all those who want to move over from the Ramsay Bros… go watch ‘Raaz 3’in 3D, at your own risk. But don’t take it to your grave.

    Cast: Bipasha Basu, Emraan Hashmi, EshaGupta, Manish Chaudhury

    Direction: Vikram BhattGenre: Horror

    Duration: 2 hours 20 minutes

  • Guest Comment: Parliament fracas It’s a dull world, let members have some fun too

    Guest Comment: Parliament fracas It’s a dull world, let members have some fun too

    By Akshaya Mishra

    Why grudge poor parliamentarians the little fun they have? The whole of this session they have had no work. And when they finally had the chance to come together, some got carried away by the occasion. A minor bout of pushing and shoving followed. That was it. There’s no point dwelling too much on the conduct of the two Samajwadi Party and Bahujan Samaj Party members of Parliament. Members too are entitled to some entertainment at work.

    The sense of shock over the incident is amazing indeed. There should have been words of appreciation at the graceful bout between two aging members. Our parliamentarians are known to shout at each other, tear papers, hurl expletives and rush to the well of the house at the smallest provocation. This time they went a notch ahead. There was apparently no objection from other members when the two got into their antics. From what is visible from the video grab, no one was trying to intervene and keep the duo apart.

    The whole talk about the dignity of Parliament is nonsense. The proceedings within the house mirror the way our democracy functions outside. Trust me, it is as chaotic, as nonsensical and as interesting. When one party stops Parliament from functioning for two weeks we don’t notice the righteous outrage or those complaints of desecration of the dignity of institutions. When another tries to play games with parliamentary institutions the reaction is muted. When activists hurl abuses at the august house from the streets they are lustily cheered. There’s enough damage done to the dignity of the house already. A small wrestling bout between two members could not damage it more.

    So let’s stop being hypocritical about the whole issue. Let’s welcome the future of parliamentary democracy in India with grace. In the days to come we might get to watch more intense physical combats with karate kicks flying and boxing skills at play. Some honorable members would lift their mundus to deliver the knock-out kick to their political rivals. You might see Salman Khanesque muscle act, ripping of the shirt and all, in response. Ah! democracy would be such a wonderful experience the future generations. One is already jealous of them.

    However, all this entertainment would be possible only when Parliament functions, which one is sure will happen once in a while. Imagine a test of numbers during a trust vote being settled through fisticuffs. The members losing out will be declared unfit for voting. The situation will necessitate induction of young and healthy members in parties. The consequence is good for the democracy. Finally, there will be relief from the old faces and youthfulness in Parliament. The young in the country will have their due. The only problem, they will be from akhadas or karate classes, not educational institutions and professions requiring high intellect.

    The makers of our Constitution, wherever they are, would be groaning at the state of our parliamentary institutions already. They would not be finding parliamentarians settling issues through trading of blows a great idea. But they lived in different times, simpler times. They thought nation-building was possible through civilized debates on the floor of the houses of Parliament. They would never have perceived that stalling of Parliament could be used as a political strategy. They thought that is how mature people and nations address issues. We live in different times. The situation is far more complex now. Nation-building is subservient to party-building under the everything goes philosophy of the new age.

    Probably we all are responsible for the pathetic state of our Parliament. The two members who had a fight are symptoms of how far things have fallen. It’s time to sit back and introspect. Democracy is a serious business, not entertainment.

  • London’s Big Ben is now Elizabeth Tower

    London’s Big Ben is now Elizabeth Tower

    London (TIP): The iconic Clock Tower of Britain’s Parliament was officially renamed Wednesday in honor of Queen Elizabeth II.

    The 315-foot (96-meter)-high structure – widely, though incorrectly, known as Big Ben – is one of Britain’s most recognizable landmarks. House of Commons Speaker John Bercow unveiled a new name plaque designating the structure the Elizabeth Tower.

    The renaming ceremony is the culmination of a campaign by lawmakers to mark the monarch’s 60 years on the throne.
    The tower was completed in 1858. It houses a four-faced chiming clock and the famed 13.5 ton Big Ben bell. Over the years, people began calling the whole tower Big Ben – and likely will continue to do so.

    “There’s not one chance in 10,000 that visitors, that people in this country, will think of this tower as anything but Big Ben,” Labour Party lawmaker Paul Flynn said.

  • California law bars discrimination against Sikhs, Muslims

    California law bars discrimination against Sikhs, Muslims

    Washington (TIP): California Governor Jerry Brown has signed two bills aimed at battling workplace discrimination against Sikhs and Muslims by shunting workers wearing turbans, beards and hijabs to backroom jobs out of public view.

    “This bill, AB 1964, makes it very clear that wearing any type of religious clothing or hairstyle, particularly such as Sikhs do, that that is protected by law and nobody can discriminate against you because of that,” Brown told an enthusiastic crowd of 500 Sikhs on Saturday, the ‘Sacramento Bee’ reported.

    “Breaking down prejudice is something you’ve got to do every day, and to help us do that, I’m going to sign a couple of bills,” he said at a rally of the North American Punjabi Association on the steps of the Capitol in the state capital of Sacramento. “Sikhs everywhere can see that in California, they are a powerful presence,” he was quoted as saying.

    The Workplace Religious Freedom Act, Assembly Bill 1964 by Democrat Mariko Yamada, ensures that employees receive equal protection under law, protecting workers who wear turbans, hijabs and yarmulkes. In California, employers faced over 500 cases of religious discrimination in 2011.

    Brown himself declined to wear a turban, saying, “I’ve worked hard to get my head cleared,” but honoured the thousands of Sikhs who have given their lives in a long history of struggle for religious freedom, both in India and the United States, the Bee said.

    Brown also signed the Senate Bill 1540, sponsored by Democrat Loni Hancock, changing how history and social sciences are taught in schools so that students learn about the history, tradition and theology of California Sikhs. Education can blunt hatred, prejudice and fatal misunderstandings, such as the massacre of Sikhs outside a Wisconsin temple, Brown said.

    ‘Both bills represent landmark achievements that will increase protection for all religious observers in the workplace and expand awareness of the 100-year history of Sikhs in California,’ said Balbir Dhillon, president of the Sacramento Sikh Temple.

  • Taliban insurgents posing as “attractive women” on Facebook for spying

    Taliban insurgents posing as “attractive women” on Facebook for spying

    Melbourne (TIP): Taliban insurgents are posing as “attractive women” on Facebook to befriend coalition soldiers for gathering sensitive intelligence about operations in Afghanistan, an Australian government report has warned.

    The dangers of social media have been pointed out in a federal government review of social media and defence, which was finalised in March but has not been acted upon, defence sources said.

    The review found an “overt reliance” on privacy settings had led to a “false sense of security” among personnel. It warns troops to beware of “fake profiles, media personnel and enemies who create fake profiles to gather information. For example, the Taliban have used pictures of attractive women as the front of their Facebook profiles and have befriended soldiers”.

    Australian soldiers are now being given pre-deployment briefings about enemies creating fake profiles to spy on troops. Personnel are also being warned that geo-tagging, a function of many websites that secretly logs the location from where a post is made or a photo is uploaded, is a significant danger.

    Family and friends of soldiers are inadvertently jeopardising missions by sharing confidential information online, Australia’s ‘Daily Telegraph’ reported.

    Three Australian soldiers were murdered inside their base this month, allegedly by an Afghan Army trainee.
    Many of the 1,577 defence members surveyed for the review had no awareness of the risk, it said, adding 58 per cent of defence staff had no social media training.

    Surveyed troops said social media open ‘a whole can of worms when it comes to operational, personnel and physical security’. ‘Many individuals who use social media are extremely trusting,’ the review said.

    ‘Most did not recognise that people using fake profiles, perhaps masquerading as school friends, could capture information and movements. Few consider the possibilities of data mining and how patterns of behaviour can be identified over time,’ the review added.

    The review recommended education for family and friends on the dangers of sharing details like names, ranks and locations. Several troop members have argued for a total social media ban. ‘I see too many members who post info/pics of themselves which identify what unit they belong to and where they are serving,’ a soldier said.

    Security expert Peter Hannay, from Edith Cowan University’s school of computer and security science, said geo-tag information ‘can be data-mined and sold to anybody’.

  • Anti-Islam Film ‘Innocence of Muslims’ Film Maker’s Real Identity Found

    Anti-Islam Film ‘Innocence of Muslims’ Film Maker’s Real Identity Found

    NEW YORK (TIP): An AP report says that Federal authorities have identified a southern California man once convicted of financial crimes as the key figure behind the anti-Muslim film that ignited mob violence against U.S. embassies across the Middle East, a U.S. law enforcement official said Thursday, September 13.

    Attorney General Eric Holder said that Justice Department officials had opened a criminal investigation into the deaths of the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other diplomats killed during an attack on the American mission in Benghazi. It was not immediately clear whether authorities were focusing on the California filmmaker as part of that probe.

    A federal law enforcement official said Thursday that Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55, was the man behind “Innocence of Muslims,” a film denigrating Islam and the Prophet Muhammad that sparked protests earlier in the week in Egypt and Libya and now in Yemen. U.S. authorities are investigating whether the deaths of U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans in Libya came during a terrorist attack.

    The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss an ongoing investigation, said Nakoula was connected to the persona of Sam Bacile, a figure who initially claimed to be the writer and director of the film. But Bacile quickly turned out to be a false identity and the Associated Press traced a cellphone number used by Bacile to a southern California house where Nakoula was found.

    Bacile initially claimed a Jewish and Israeli background. But others involved in the film said his statements were contrived as evidence mounted that the film’s key player was a southern Californian Coptic Christian with a checkered past.

    Nakoula told The Associated Press in an interview outside Los Angeles Wednesday that he managed logistics for the company that produced “Innocence of Muslims,” which mocked Muslims and the prophet Muhammad.

    Nakoula denied that he was Bacile and insisted he did not direct the film, though he said he knew Bacile. But federal court papers filed against Nakoula in a 2010 criminal prosecution said that he had used numerous aliases in the past. Among the fake names, the documents said, were Nicola Bacily, Robert Bacily and Erwin Salameh, all similar to the Sam Bacile persona. Other aliases described in the documents included Ahmad Hamdy, Kritbag Difrat and PJ Tobacco.
    During a conversation outside his home, Nakoula offered his driver’s license to show his identity but kept his thumb over his middle name, Basseley. Records checks by the AP subsequently found that middle name as well as other connections to the Bacile persona.

    The AP located Bacile after obtaining his cellphone number from Morris Sadek, a conservative Coptic Christian in the U.S. who had promoted the anti-Muslim film in recent days on his website. Egypt’s Christian Coptic populace has long decried what they describe as a history of discrimination and occasional violence from the country’s Arab majority.
    Pastor Terry Jones, of Gainesville, Fla., who sparked outrage in the Arab world when he burned Qurans on the ninth anniversary of 9/11, said he spoke with the movie’s director on the phone Wednesday and prayed for him. Jones said he has not met the filmmaker in person but added that the man contacted him a few weeks ago about promoting the movie. Jones and others who have dealt with the filmmaker said Wednesday that Bacile was hiding his real identity.

    “I have not met him. Sam Bacile, that is not his real name,” Jones said. “I just talked to him on the phone. He is definitely in hiding and does not reveal his identity. He was quite honestly fairly shook up concerning the events and what is happening. A lot of people are not supporting him. He was generally a little shook up concerning this situation.”

    The YouTube account under the username “Sam Bacile,” which was used to publish excerpts of the provocative movie in July, was used to post comments online as recently as Tuesday, including this defense of the film written in Arabic: “It is a 100 percent American movie, you cows.”

    Nakoula, who talked guardedly about his role, pleaded no contest in 2010 to federal bank fraud charges in California and was ordered to pay more than $790,000 in restitution. He was also sentenced to 21 months in federal prison and ordered not to use computers or the Internet for five years without approval from his probation officer.
    Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Leigh Williams said Nakoula set up fraudulent bank accounts using stolen identities and Social Security numbers; then, checks from those accounts would be deposited into other bogus accounts from which Nakoula would withdraw money at ATM machines.

    It was “basically a check-kiting scheme,” the prosecutor told the AP. “You try to get the money out of the bank before the bank realizes they are drawn from a fraudulent account. There basically is no money.”

    Prior to his bank fraud conviction, Nakoula struggled with a series of financial problems in recent years, according to California state tax and bankruptcy records. In June 2006, a $191,000 tax lien was filed against him in the Los Angeles County Recorder of Deeds office. In 1997, a $106,000 lien was filed against him in Orange County.

    American actors and actresses who appeared in “Innocence of Muslims” issued a joint statement Wednesday saying they were misled about the project and alleged that some of their dialogue was crudely dubbed during post-production.
    In the English-language version of the trailer, direct references to Muhammad appear to be the result of post-production changes to the movie. Either actors aren’t seen when the name “Muhammad” is spoken in the overdubbed sound, or they appear to be mouthing something else as the name of the prophet is spoken.

    “The entire cast and crew are extremely upset and feel taken advantage of by the producer,” said the statement, obtained by the Los Angeles Times. “We are 100 percent not behind this film and were grossly misled about its intent and purpose. We are shocked by the drastic rewrites of the script and lies that were told to all involved. We are deeply saddened by the tragedies that have occurred.”

    One of the actresses, Cindy Lee Garcia, told KERO-TV in Bakersfield that the film was originally titled “Desert Warriors” and that the script did not contain offensive references to Islam.

    She wants her name cleared.

    “When I found out this movie had caused all this havoc, I called Sam and asked him why, what happened, why did he do this? I said, ‘Why did you do this to us, to me and to us?’ And he said, ‘Tell the world that it wasn’t you that did it, it was me, the one who wrote the script, because I’m tired of the radical Muslims running around killing everyone,’” she said.

    Garcia said the director, who identified himself as Bacile, told her then that he was Egyptian.
    The person who identified himself as Bacile and described himself as the film’s writer and director told the AP on Tuesday that he had gone into hiding. But doubts rose about the man’s identity amid a flurry of false claims about his background and role in the purported film.

    Bacile told the AP he was an Israeli-born, 56-year-old Jewish writer and director. But a Christian activist involved in the film project, Steve Klein, told the AP on Wednesday that Bacile was a pseudonym and that he was Christian.
    Klein had told the AP on Tuesday that the filmmaker was an Israeli Jew who was concerned for family members who live in Egypt.

    Officials in Israel said there was no record of Bacile as an Israeli citizen.

    When the AP initially left a message for Bacile, Klein contacted the AP from another number to confirm the interview request was legitimate; then Bacile called back from his own cellphone.

    Klein said he didn’t know the real name of the man he called “Sam,” who came to him for advice on First Amendment issues.

    About 15 key players from the Middle East – people from Syria, Iraq, Turkey, Pakistan and Iran, and a couple of Coptic Christians from Egypt – worked on the film, Klein said.

    “Most of them won’t tell me their real names because they’re terrified,” Klein said. “He was really scared and now he’s so nervous. He’s turned off his phone.”

    An official of the Coptic Orthodox Church in Los Angeles said in a statement Thursday that the church’s adherents had no involvement in the “inflammatory movie about the prophet of Islam.” An official identified as HG Bishop Serapion, of the Coptic Orthodox of Los Angeles, said that “the producers of this movie should be responsible for their actions. The name of our blessed parishioners should not be associated with the efforts of individuals who have ulterior motives.”

    The Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors hate groups, said Klein is a former Marine and longtime religious-right activist who has helped train paramilitary militias at a California church. It described Klein as founder of Courageous Christians United, which conducts protests outside abortion clinics, Mormon temples and mosques.
    It quoted Klein as saying he believes that California is riddled with Muslim Brotherhood sleeper cells “who are awaiting the trigger date and will begin randomly killing as many of us as they can.”

    In his brief interview with the AP, the man identifying himself as Bacile called Islam a cancer and said he intended the film to be a provocative political statement condemning the religion.

    But several key facts Bacile provided proved false or questionable. Bacile told the AP he was 56 but identified himself on his YouTube profile as 74. Bacile said he is a real estate developer, but Bacile does not appear in searches of California state licenses, including the Department of Real Estate.

    Hollywood and California film industry groups and permit agencies said they had no records of the project under the name “Innocence of Muslims,” but a Los Angeles film permit agency later found a record of a movie filmed in Los Angeles last year under the working title “Desert Warriors.”

    A man who answered a phone listed for the Vine Theater, a faded Hollywood movie house, confirmed that the film had run for a least a day, and possibly longer, several months ago, arranged by a customer known as “Sam.”
    Google Inc., which owns YouTube, pulled down the video Wednesday in Egypt, citing a legal complaint. It was still accessible in the U.S. and other countries.

    Klein told the AP he vowed to help make the movie but warned the filmmaker that “you’re going to be the next Theo van Gogh.” Van Gogh was a Dutch filmmaker killed by a Muslim extremist in 2004 after making a film that was perceived as insulting to Islam.

    “We went into this knowing this was probably going to happen,” Klein said

  • UNITED SIKHS Condemns Violence in Libya and Egypt

    UNITED SIKHS Condemns Violence in Libya and Egypt

    NEW YORK, NY (TIP): UNITED SIKHS has strongly condemned attacks on the American Consulates in Benghazi, Libya and in Egypt, resulting in the death of the U.S. Ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens, along with three members of his staff.

    Once again, American lives were lost on September 11, 2012 due to senseless violence, widespread hatred and a lack of understanding. The reported cause for these horrific attacks was extremist response to an online video in which Prophet Muhammad was defamed. As per the New York Times, officials suspect that “an organized group had either been waiting for an opportunity to exploit like protests over the video or perhaps even generated the protests as a cover for their attack.”

    Harpreet Singh, Legislative Policy Director said, “UNITED SIKHS team expresses its condemnation for such acts of violence and stands with the families in grief”.

    President Barack Obama in Washington condemned the attack, in the “strongest possible terms”, saying that the U.S. will work with the Libyan government to bring the perpetrators of the attack to justice. “Right now, the American people have the families of those we lost in our thoughts and prayers. They exemplified America’s commitment to freedom, justice, and partnership with nations and people around the globe, and stand in stark contrast to those who callously took their lives,” the President said in his press release.

    The attacks in Libya and Egypt, as well as the recent Wisconsin shooting, are examples of very specific, violent acts of hatred that unfortunately result in the loss of innocent lives. UNITED SIKHS calls for solidarity and education in these unfortunate times, and for all Americans to unite and stand together.

  • Attack on US Consulate in Benghazi:  Libya arrests 4

    Attack on US Consulate in Benghazi: Libya arrests 4

    NEW YORK (TIP): Libyan authorities have made four arrests in the investigation into the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi in which the U.S. ambassador and three embassy staff were killed, the Libyan deputy interior minister said in Tripoli on Thursday, September 13, says a Reuters report.

    “Four men are in custody and we are interrogating them because they are suspected of helping instigate the events at the U.S. consulate,” Wanis Sharif told Reuters.

    He gave no more details.

    U.S. ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens and three other Americans died after the gunmen attacked the U.S. consulate and a safe house refuge in the eastern city of Benghazi on Tuesday, September 11 night. The attackers were part of a mob blaming America for a film they said insulted the Prophet Mohammad.

    Demonstrators attacked the U.S. embassies in Yemen and Egypt on Thursday, September 13 in protests against the film, and American warships were moved closer to Libya.

    President Barack Obama has vowed to bring to justice those responsible for the Benghazi attack, which U.S. officials said may have been planned in advance. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Washington had nothing to do with the video, which she called “disgusting and reprehensible”.

  • India takes up case of child in foster care in US

    India takes up case of child in foster care in US

    NEW YORK (TIP): The Consulate General of India in New York has taken up with the US authorities the case relating to an Indian child, Indrashish Saha, who is currently in Children’s Specialized Hospital, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
    Prior to this, he had undergone treatment at Goryeb Children’s Hospital in Morristown, New Jersey, for an injury sustained by him last month at his home.

    US authorities took the one-year-old boy, Indrashish, under their care after the accident at the New Jersey home of an Indian engineer Debasish Saha (28) on August 9.

    The Consulate General has been informed of the case filed in this regard by the Division of Child Protection and Permanency, New Jersey in the Morristown County Court.

    Mr. Debashish Saha, the father of the child, has conveyed to the Consulate General his concern and that of his wife and other family members that the child has not yet been handed over to them. The Consulate General has requested the US Department of State (Office of Foreign Missions) in New York to have the concerns of the parents addressed.

    The Embassy of India in Washington D.C. has also taken up the matter with the US Department of State in Washington D.C.
    The matter came up before a New Jersey court Friday, September 7 and it asked Saha to appear with a lawyer September 14.
    The court has asked Saha to suggest names of relatives who could be given custody of the child.