Month: December 2012

  • INOC AP Chapter Accords Warm Reception To Visiting Andhra Pradesh Minister K. Lakshaminarayana

    INOC AP Chapter Accords Warm Reception To Visiting Andhra Pradesh Minister K. Lakshaminarayana

    NEW YORK (TIP): Farmers and farming policy makers in Andhra Pradesh will benefit from the expertise of American researchers and educators in near future. K. Lakshminarayana, AP’s Minister of Agriculture, recently signed memos of understanding with the universities of Maryland and Mississippi during his recent visit to the two universities, which will facilitate exchange of faculty members and academicians between USA and Andhra Pradesh. Lakshminarayana, stopped in New York City on his way home from the visit.

    He was accorded a warm welcome and reception by the Andhra Pradesh Chapter of Indian National Overseas Congress at Cotillion Restaurant in Long Island, New York. Lakshminarayana (52), who has been credited for winning all elections since 1991, complimented the people of Andhra Pradesh for playing a predominant role in the IT sector in Silicon Valley and other parts of USA. Lakshminarayana, who won the Assembly seat from Pedukurapadu, Guntur (West) constituency for the fourth term, outlined his government’s plans to help farmers in Andhra Pradesh and said that Congress party believed in a farmer friendly policy. He said that hundred of thousands of farmers were benefitted by government’s free electricity; crop insurance and the credit plan called Kissan Credit.

    The minister informed that his state will host the world Agricultural Summit in November 2013 for which Hyderabad was selected as the venue. He invited those whose primary interest was agricultural development. Andhra Pradesh chapter of INOC honored the minister by presenting him a shawl. A proclamation from the Chief Executive of Nassau County was also presented to him. Mahesh Saladi, AP chapter president of INOC, said that Congress party embarked on ambitious projects to help the poor in Andhra Pradesh. “Many of those programs were initiated by K. Lakshminarayana and were timely completed”, he said George Abraham, president of INOC said that his party was engaged in building public opinion on a variety of issues.

    “We are united over raising the issues concerning Non-Resident Indians”, he said adding that NRI Interface council was formed for the purpose of dealing with issues such as property protection in India. It was reported in the past that in India locals forcibly grabbed properties bought and owned by NRIs. Abraham said that he also initiated Business council for the purpose of promoting investment in India and discussing matters of trade and commerce with the Indian government. “We want the council to be thank tank for developmental issues”, he said. Others who spoke on the occasion included Dr. Neil Mandava, Dr. Gaddam Reddy, D. Dhasratharam Reddy, M. Nageshwar Rao and Mohinder Singh Gilzian.

  • Shortage of Primary Care Physicians does not bode well for the Nation

    Shortage of Primary Care Physicians does not bode well for the Nation

    American medicine has long had the reputation of being the most advanced in the world. But the US today faces a looming shortage of the versatile doctors who form the backbone of its health system – generalists known as “primary care physicians” – a trend that industry experts call a threat to the nation’s health. If you look worldwide at the countries that have much better scores on health care quality measures than the United States, almost all of them have a higher percentage of their physicians engaged in primary care.

    The US is projected to have 52,000 fewer primary care physicians than needed by 2025, according to a report published in the current issue of the medical journal Annals of Family Medicine.

    The shortage threatens to exacerbate already skyrocketing medical costs in the US by diminishing access to the crucial preventative care offered by primary care physicians and prompting patients to turn to pricey specialists to treat routine maladies, health industry experts say.

    What’s more, such higher costs may actually result in worse outcomes for patients. If patients are bouncing from specialist to specialist, not only are the costs enormous, they get uncoordinated care. They get unnecessary tests, chase spurious information, and can get drug interactions because people get some medication from one physician, and other medicine from another.

    The value in primary care, medical professionals say, is the holistic approach the doctor takes when assessing a patient’s health. Building a stable relationship with a primary care doctor can help a person head off chronic diseases that incur significant financial and quality-of-life costs, they say.

    There’s something to be said for having a place to go and a therapist who knows who the patient is. They don’t have to go to see 20 different doctors and see 20 different records. The knowledge about you is all in one place.

    The increasing scarcity of primary care physicians is driven in part by the projected population growth in the US over the next two decades, as well as by the medical needs of an aging population and the tens of millions of Americans expected to be newly insured under the Affordable Care Act, US President Barack Obama’s signature health care reform.

    It is also driven by the growing income gap between primary care physicians and their counterparts in more financially lucrative specialist fields such as cardiology, medical professionals say.

    For many medical students weighed down with escalating levels of student debt, opting for a career as a specialist is a no-brainer. When young people graduate from medical school $250,000 in debt and see they can make $150,000 a year as a primary care physician, or be a cardiologist and make $450,000 a year, which one do they pick?

    The average salary for a primary care doctor in the US in 2010 was $202,392 compared to $356,885 for medical specialists, according to the US Bureau of Labor and Statistics. The reasons for this disparity are varied. One key factor, however, is that the primary care is holistic and consists of time-consuming patient encounters. These visits, however, have lower reimbursement rates than most medical procedures.

    According to a study published this week in the American Medical Journal, just 22 percent of medical students said they are planning a career in general internal medicine. Meanwhile, 64 percent of the 17,000 students polled said they wanted to become a specialist in fields such as oncology and dermatology.

    It’s a sad picture because primary care is very important. And it’s going to become even more important over the next 20 to 30 years.

  • Bharat Ratna Lata Mangeshkar Adds Another Jewel To Her Crown!

    Bharat Ratna Lata Mangeshkar Adds Another Jewel To Her Crown!

    NEW YORK (TIP): Lata Mangeshkar’s voice is a gift from God! What she does with it is her gift to the world. She was born to sing and has always maintained that she will continue to sing and also serve the music world till God wills it. Throughout her career, Lataji has been the most loved singing icon of India. She has been hailed as the Melody Queen, the Voice of India, the Nightingale, and has been at the pinnacle of the music world. After seven decades of a luminous career, Lataji or Didi as she is fondly called, offers a precious gift to music lovers.

    In an effort to create music that inspires her, Lataji launches a new music label, LM MUSIC. Mr. Mayuresh Pai has been appointed as the CEO of LM MUSIC and New Jersey based Mr. Sanjay Chitale as its Chief Strategist. Mr. Chitale will also oversee all the business of the company in North America besides the corporate strategy for LM MUSIC worldwide. All through her glorious career, she wished to do more non film recordings, but these were limited to special projects from time to time, due to her extremely busy schedules and film commitments.

    In recent years, the music industry has faced some challenges and thus existing music labels have been less forthcoming in releasing non-film albums. The few that were made, faced many restrictions of content, disparate views on market acceptability, lack of promotion, awareness and thus availability. This situation caused concern to the doyenne of the music world and has led to the genesis of LM MUSIC. LM MUSIC is Lataji’s foray into a venture that will give her unfettered creativity, to produce albums that she believes in, to create content that will satisfy her, to release albums that will inspire listeners to embrace melodic music, as they always did. LM MUSIC will release albums featuring Lataji herself, as well as talent that she will handpick personally.

    LM MUSIC will encourage young talent that needs an outlet for its creativity including budding artistes, who Lataji feels have the potential to maintain the high standards set by our legends. LM MUSIC will go a step further and will strive to bring back the focus on music as an art, and as an integral part of our heritage. Cineviews Media and PR has been appointed as the official Publicity company for LM MUSIC in the North American region. For all North America press related inquiries and interviews, you may contact Nutan Kalamdani at nutan@cineviews.com

  • Lively Pre Election Debate On Gujarat In New Jersey

    Lively Pre Election Debate On Gujarat In New Jersey

    EDISON, NJ (TIP): New Jersey based Indian Americans with strong ties with native Gujarat state along with the Gujarati language channel TV 9 hosted an open forum public debate on the current election in Gujarat at Royal Albert’s Palace in Fords New Jersey on Monday, December 10, 2012. There were more than 300 people who were quite entertained as an event of this nature was very unique in concept. The hosts of the event Hitesh “Lalbhai” Patel and Albert Jasani were overjoyed to see the turnout at this historic event.

    The event was started by a very patriotic Guajarati song, sung by Nafish Khan. The moderator had 10 questions to ask the panel. It started with a coin toss to see who would go first. The first question went to the Congress panel and they would each get 2 minutes to answer the question and 1 minute for rebuttal. There were two panels on stage, one panel held the views and beliefs of the BJP party and the other panel represented the views and beliefs of the Congress Party. The third political party headed by former BJP leader Keshubhai Patel was not represented at the debate.

    The BJP team introduced by Mukesh Kashiwala, included Jayesh Patel who headed it, Suresh Jani, Arvind Patel, Rajubhai Patel, and Nimesh Dikshit. The Congress team was introduced by Viru Patel and included Anil Patel as head, Atma Singh, Mahesh Patel, Juned Qazi, and Pradip “Peter” Kothari. The moderator for the debate was Sanjeev Pandya and the moderator coordinator was Bharat Mehta. Many dignitaries from various Gujarati organizations witnessed this event. Some said that corruption was still a pivotal topic on people’s minds that still needed to be addressed. It was a very disciplined and interesting debate though the panels were not always focused on the questions, often deviating from the main theme.

    The fact that they represented their party reflected in all of their answers. Often combative, the debaters were well prepared and took jibes at each other as also praising opponents on certain issues. But neither side could claim victory in the debate which may have a great impact on the people that are going to view it back in Gujarat as well as those viewing it here in the United States. Anil Patel, leader of Congress panel was given two minutes to make a case. BJP supporters argued that Gujarat was making great stride under the leadership of Chief Minister Narendra Modi.

    Juned Qazi, president of Madhya Pradesh chapter of Indian National Overseas Congress criticized Modi’s leadership in Gujarat, and said that Modi didn’t deserve any credit for the progress of Gujarat. He accused Modi of promoting communal policies in Gujarat. Qazi said that there was no place for religiocentric politics in India. Atma Singh, president of Indian Congress Party, USA, said that Modi should leave Gujarat and try his luck in national politics indirectly indicating that Modi was unable to succeed in national politics of India.

  • US, Nato Behind ‘Insecurity’ in Afghanistan: Karzai

    US, Nato Behind ‘Insecurity’ in Afghanistan: Karzai

    Afghan President Hamid Karzai sharply criticized the United States in an exclusive interview with NBC News on Thursday, December 4 blaming American and NATO forces for some of the growing insecurity in his country. “Part of the insecurity is coming to us from the structures that NATO and America created in Afghanistan,” Karzai said during a one-on-one interview at the presidential palace.

    However, he also acknowledged that much of the country’s violence was caused by insurgent groups. The Taliban are regaining land and power lost after they were toppled by U.S.-backed forces in 2001. Meanwhile, Karzai has gone from being a favorite of Washington under the presidency of George W. Bush, to a thorn in the White House’s side with his criticism of American night raids and mounting civilian casualties at the hands of NATO troops.

    Many in Washington have also grown weary of Karzai, viewing him as ineffective and presiding over a deeply corrupt government.

    Karzai, who is serving his second five-year term, also told NBC News that he had sent a letter to President Barack Obama saying that Afghanistan would not sign any new security agreements with the United States until hundreds of prisoners held in U.S. custody were transferred to Afghan authorities.

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts. His criticism of the United States, Afghanistan’s most important ally, has come after the start of complex bilateral talks on a security pact on the role the United States would play after most of its troops are withdrawn by the end of 2014.

    Karzai said the inmates in American detention in Afghanistan were being held in breach of an agreement he and Obama signed in March and must be handed over immediately. A vehicle filled with explosives detonated near one of the gates of the Jalalabad airfield in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday morning. “We signed the strategic partnership agreement with the expectation and the hope … the nature of the United States’ activities in Afghanistan will change,” Karzai said.

    But American behavior had not changed, he said, adding that terrorism would not be defeated “by attacking Afghan villages and Afghan homes.” The dispute between the two countries centers around Bagram Air Base and a nearby detention facility, which have long been seen as a symbol of American impunity and disrespect by many Afghans. “I have written to President Obama that the Afghan people will not allow its government to enter into a security agreement, while the United States continues to violate Afghan sovereignty and Afghan loss,” he said.

    In southern Afghanistan, the focus of the U.S. war effort, nearly all the Afghan soldiers are foreigners too. Photographer Kevin Frayer shows these soldiers in a series of portraits. During the interview, Karzai also said that he didn’t think al-Qaida “has a presence in Afghanistan.” He added: “I don’t even know if al-Qaida exists as an organization as it is being spoken about. So all we know is that we have insecurity.” In the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the United States led the invasion to topple the Taliban, which was harboring al-Qaida and its then-leader, Osama bin Laden.

    While weakened, especially after the death of bin Laden at the hands of U.S. special forces in Pakistan in 2011, al-Qaida is still thought to have strong links with the Taliban and other Afghan insurgents. Karzai said Afghans were thankful to foreign forces for being “liberated” in 2001, but complained that since then his countrymen had suffered the most in the fight against extremism. “In the name of the war on terror the Afghan people have paid the greatest price of any. That has not been recognized,” he said.

    While there have been more than 2,000 American military casualties since the invasion of Afghanistan, civilians have borne the brunt of the violence. In the first six months of 2012 alone, more than 3,000 civilians were killed or injured, according the United Nations.

    This number was down 15 percent from a year earlier. Anti-government and coalition insurgents were responsible for 80 percent of the civilian casualties, the U.N. says.

    A suicide bomber, disguised as an Afghan police officer, blew himself up outside a mosque in northern Afghanistan, killing 40 people and wounding more than 50. NBC’s Tazeen Ahmad reports from Kabul.

    Karzai also addressed the issue of graft during the interview, saying there was “no doubt that there is corruption in Afghanistan.” “The bigger corruption is the corruption in contracts,” he added.

    “The contracts are not issued by the Afghan government. The contracts are issued by the international community, mainly by the United States.” In 2010, the country received $6.4 billion in official development assistance, representing more than 40 percent of its gross domestic product, according to humanitarian news site AlertNet. Two-thirds of the funds aren’t channeled through the government because of concerns about corruption and the government’s ability to use the money properly, AlertNet added.

    Afghanistan is tied with Somalia and North Korea at the bottom of Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index 2012. A 2012 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime report estimated that Afghans paid $2.5 billion in bribes over 12 months, which is equivalent to almost a quarter of the country’s GDP. The international community had fostered graft to keep the Afghan state weak, Karzai said.

    “I’ve come to believe (that) … corruption comes from the United States through contracts and through the corruption in both systems,” he said, adding that the “perception of corruption is deliberate to render the Afghan government exploitable, to weaken it,” he said. “This is something that I have began to believe in firmly now after the experiences that I’ve gained in … working on this issue.”

  • “Dark Money Has No Place In Our Elections”, Says NY State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman

    “Dark Money Has No Place In Our Elections”, Says NY State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman

    NEW YORK (TIP): NY State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman is reaching out to New Yorkers to garner support for his proposal to have new regulations to make donations to federal, state and local electioneering more transparent.

    The text of his letter reads:
    “You and I both know that dark money has no place in our elections.”

    “Ever since filing cabinets stuffed with untraceable cash were found at President Nixon’s campaign headquarters during the Watergate scandal, there has been a broad consensus in America: when people spend money to try to influence our elections, the public needs to know where that money is coming from, and how it is being spent.Simply put, transparency reduces the likelihood of corruption.”

    “But since the Supreme Court decision in Citizens United, nonprofits, and particularly 501(c)(4)’s have been used to subvert transparency and avoid accountability.”

    “This week, my office has filed new regulations requiring nonprofit groups, including 501(c)(4) “social welfare” organizations, to report the percentage of their expenditures that go to federal, state and local electioneering. Those groups that spend at least $10,000 to influence state and local elections in New York will be required to file itemized expenses and report contributions of $100 or more. Under the proposed new rules, those disclosures will be posted online.”

    “We know that more money is being spent on our elections, with less disclosure of where that money is coming from, than ever before. By shining a light on this dark corner of our political system, New York will serve as a model for other states, and for the federal government, to protect the integrity of nonprofits and our democracy.”

    “In the coming weeks, my office will hold public hearings on the proposed regulations across the state. I would appreciate your input. Together, we can stamp out the corrosiveness of secret money in our state’s elections. “Thank you, as always, for your commitment to the civic process. Sincerely, Eric Schneiderman “

  • Three countries, one center of gravity

    Three countries, one center of gravity

    United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Australia’s Defense Minister Stephen Smith, India’s National Security Advisor Shivshankar Menon and Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai have all spoken of the “Indo-Pacific” – a region spanning the Indian and the Pacific Oceans – as the world’s new “strategic centre of gravity.” What is behind this new-found discovery of the Indo- Pacific and does it imply a strategic convergence between these three democracies?

    A closer analysis suggests that the Indo- Pacific regional construction is driven more by a desire to resolve distinctive domestic and foreign policy preoccupations rather than promote a common regional vision. For the U.S., central policy issues include reversing the slide in its economic fortunes and dealing with the shift of power to Asia in ways that preserve existing international rules and the U.S.’s position as the world’s foremost rule-maker. Australia has long been preoccupied by the disjuncture between its geographical positioning in Asia and its historical links with the West.

    The implications of continuing a close alliance with the U.S., while growing increasingly economically enmeshed with Asia, have dominated recent foreign policy debates. The Indo-Pacific regional construction is a key part of the U.S.’s “pivot to Asia,” which Australia has supported. For both the Australian and U.S. policymakers, adopting and shaping the “Indo-Pacific” as a geostrategic category helps them resolve their key domestic and foreign policy dilemmas while maintaining their positions in the global order as a great power and middle power respectively.

    Fitting in India
    But how does India fit into this emerging concept? While India supports a basic adherence to international law, freedom of navigation and peaceful dispute settlement, it is increasingly clear that its preferred regional architecture in the “Indo-Pacific” will be shaped by the demands of its domestic economic restructuring and its continuing adherence to the principle of strategic autonomy.

    For this reason, any assumption that India will sign up to an Indo-Pacific security architecture devised in Washington and Canberra fundamentally misreads the domestic political projects that animate India’s own vision of the Indo- Pacific. To see how different domestic imperatives lead to distinctive Indo-Pacific regional constructions, we can examine some of the major regional initiatives that have recently been promoted by the U.S., Australia and India.

    Leaving out China
    The U.S. has recently launched the Trans- Pacific Partnership (TPP), a free trade initiative that does not involve China and includes trade, investment, intellectual property, health care, environmental and labor standards. It has also called for a “regional architecture of institutions and arrangements to enforce international norms on security, trade, rule of law, human rights, and accountable governance” in the Indo-Pacific region.

    These regional initiatives are built on the promotion of regulatory frameworks in the Indo-Pacific – in areas such as intellectual property rights – that serve domestic political and economic agendas, namely increasing the competitiveness of the American economy and maintaining U.S. prominence as a global rule-setter. It is thus central to emerging geo-economic competition over the regulation and rules of the regional and global political economy.

    The Australian bridge
    Australia, meanwhile, is attempting to act as a classic middle power bridge between the East and West by balancing its commitment to a U.S.-driven framework of rules and regulations with the knowledge that its economic future is increasingly intertwined with Asia and China, in particular.

    To manage these growing tensions, it has encouraged the U.S. pivot to the Indo- Pacific while advocating greater political, economic and strategic enmeshment between the U.S. and China and refocusing its attention on the Indian Ocean Rim- Association for Regional Cooperation (IORARC). Australia has also welcomed both the U.S.-centred TPP as well as the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN)- centred Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP).

    The RCEP includes China and focuses on a narrower set of issues than the TPP, excluding issues such as labor standards, which would deter China from ascension. Despite the differences between the two schemes, Australia regards the TPP and RCEP as complementary pathways to a regional free trade area and has vowed to promote the inclusion of elements such as environmental and labor standards during RCEP negotiations.

    Despite embracing the Indo-Pacific concept, India is not a member of the TPP but has joined the RCEP. The TPP’s rigid objectives of regulatory coherence do not fit with India’s stated desire for a “plural, inclusive and open security architecture in the Indo-Pacific” and India has long resisted the inclusion of non-trade related provisions in multilateral trade negotiations.

    RCEP’s provisions for “the different levels of development of the participating countries” and ASEAN’s emphasis on consensual decision-making are far more conducive to the type of regional architecture that India desires, since they are more congruent with its domestic imperatives of development and autonomy. This suggests the contested nature of the Indo-Pacific.

    Domestic imperatives also drive India’s increased attention to regional groupings like the IOR-ARC and smaller, more specialized forums that deal with issues like piracy, energy and food security. These initiatives focus on non-traditional security issues, which India sees as posing the most significant external threat to its economic development.

    This bottom-up, issue-driven approach to Indo- Pacific regionalism may prove, over the long run, to be more sustainable than the elitedriven regional projects that were the hallmark of Asia-Pacific regionalism. Hence, a new “Indo-Pacific” era may well be dawning. But the adoption of the concept in the foreign policy debates and vocabularies of India, Australia and the United States reflect a heightened focus in all three countries on domestic political and economic challenges rather than a strategic convergence or a common regional vision.

  • Nasa Photo Error Puts Mount Everest In India

    Nasa Photo Error Puts Mount Everest In India

    KATHMANDU (TIP): The world’s highest mountain should not be hard to spot but American space agency Nasa has admitted it mistook a summit in India for Mount Everest, which straddles the border of Nepal and China. The agency said on its website that Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko’s snap from the International Space Station, 370 kilometres above Earth, showed Everest lightly dusted with snow.

    The picture spread rapidly via Twitter and was picked up by media around the world, including the USbased magazine The Atlantic, astronomy website Space.com and US cable news channel MSNBC. But Nepalis smelt a rat and voiced their suspicions on social media. Journalist Kunda Dixit, an authority on the Himalayas, tweeted: “Sorry guys, but the tall peak with the shadow in the middle is not Mt Everest.” Nasa confirmed on Thursday that it had made a mistake and removed the picture from its website.

    “It is not Everest. It is Saser Muztagh, in the Karakoram Range of the Kashmir region of India,” a spokesman admitted in an email to AFP. “The view is in mid-afternoon light looking northeastward.” He did not explain how the picture from the space station, a joint project of the US, Russia, Japan, Canada and Europe, had been wrongly identified. Everest, which is 8,848 metres (29,028 feet) high, is an sought-after photographic target for astronauts in orbit but is tricky to capture, according to astronaut Ron Garan, who lived on the International Space Station last year. “No time is allotted in our work day normally for Earth pictures. So if we want to capture a specific point on the ground we have to first know exactly when we will fly over that spot,” he told The Atlantic.

  • An Indian grammar for International Studies

    An Indian grammar for International Studies

    A little over three years ago I wrote in The Hindu that at a time when interest in India and India’s interest in the world are arguably at their highest, Indian scholarship on global issues is showing few signs of responding to this challenge and that this could well stunt India’s ability to influence the international system.

    As we meet here now, at the first real convention of scholars (and practitioners) of International Studies from throughout India, we can take some comfort. A quick, albeit anecdotal, audit of the study of International Studies would suggest that the last three years have been unusually productive.

    So much so, that we are now, I believe, at a veritable “tipping point” in our emergence as an intellectual power in the discipline. Hoffman, Professor of International Relations (IR) at Harvard, once famously remarked that IR was an American social science.

    The blinding nexus between knowledge and power (particularly stark in the case of IR in the United States) perhaps made him forget that while the first modern IR departments were created in Aberystwyth and in Geneva, thinking on international relations went back, in the case of the Indian, Chinese and other great civilizations, to well before the West even began to think of the world outside their living space. Having absorbed the grammar of Western international relations, and transited to a phase of greater self-confidence, it is now opportune for us to also use the vocabulary of our past as a guide to the future.

    2011 survey
    Recovery of these Indian ideas should not be seen as part of a revivalist project or as an exercise that seeks to reify so-called Indian exceptionalism. Rather, interrogating our rich past with its deeply argumentative tradition is, as Amartya Sen put it, “partly a celebration, partly an invitation to criticality, partly a reason for further exploration, and partly also an incitement to get more people into the argument.”

    In the context of international relations it offers the intellectual promise of going beyond the Manichean opposition between power and principle; and between the world of ideas and norms on the one hand, and that of statecraft and even machtpolitik, on the other. In doing so we are not being particularly subversive.

    A 2011 survey of American IR scholars by Foreign Policy found that 22 per cent adopted a Constructivist approach (with its privileging of ideas and identity in shaping state preferences and international outcomes), 21 per cent adopted a Liberal approach, only 16 per cent a Realist approach, and a tiny two per cent a Marxist approach. When academics were asked to “list their peers who have had the greatest influence on them and the discipline,” the most influential was Alexander Wendt, the Constructivist, and neither the Liberal, Robert Koehane, nor the Realists, Kenneth Waltz or James Mearisheimer.

    Mohandas Gandhi once said that “if all the Upanishads and all the other scriptures happened all of a sudden to be reduced to ashes, and if only the first verse in the Ishopanishad were left in the memory of the Hindus, Hinduism would live forever.” Let me make what may seem like another astounding claim, and which I hope, in the best argumentative tradition, will be heavily contested.

    If all the books on war and peace were to suddenly disappear from the world, and only the Mahabharata remained, it would be good enough to capture almost all the possible debates on order, justice, force and the moral dilemmas associated with choices that are made on these issues within the realm of international politics.

    Uncertainty in the region

    Beyond theory, we are faced with a period of extraordinary uncertainty in the international system and in our region. Multilateralism is in serious crisis. While the U.N. Security Council remains deadlocked on key issues, there is little progress on most other issues of global concern, be it trade, sustainable development or climate change. As academics, we cannot remain unconcerned about these critical failures.

    Our continent is being defined and redefined over time. Regions are, after all, as much shaped by the powerful whose interests they seek to advance as by any objective reality. Whatever nomenclature we adopt, and whatever definition we accept, we are faced with, what Evan Feigenbaum and Robert Manning described as two Asias: the ‘Economic Asia’ whose $19 trillion regional economy drives global growth; the “Security Asia,” a “dysfunctional region of mistrustful powers, prone to nationalism and irredentism, escalating their territorial disputes over tiny rocks and shoals, and arming for conflict.” The Asian Development Bank says that by nearly doubling its share of global GDP to 52 per cent by 2050, Asia could regain the dominant economic position it held 300 years ago.

    Yet, as several academics have pointed out “it is beset by interstate rivalries that resemble 19th century Europe,” as well the new challenges of the 21st century: environmental catastrophes, natural disasters, climate change, terrorism, cyber security and maritime issues. An increasingly assertive China that has abandoned Deng Xiaoping’s 24-character strategy of hiding its light and keeping its head low, adds to the uncertainty of the prevailing strategic environment. India’s military and economic prowess are greater than ever before, yet its ability to influence South Asian countries is less than what it was, say, 30 years ago.

    An unstable Nepal with widespread anti-India sentiment, a triumphalist Sri Lanka where Sinhalese chauvinism shows no signs of accommodating legitimate Tamil aspirations, a chaotic Pakistan unwilling to even reassure New Delhi on future terrorist strikes, are symptomatic of a region being pulled in different directions. Can our thinking from the past help us navigate through this troubled present? Pankaj Mishra, in his brilliant book, From the Ruins of Empire: the Revolt Against the West and the Remaking of Asia, describes how three 19th century thinkers, the Persian Jamal-al Din al-Afghani, Liang Qichao from China and India’s Rabindranath Tagore, navigated through Eastern tradition and the Western onslaught to think of creative ways to strike a balance and find harmony.

    In many ways, these ideas remain relevant today as well. For if Asia merely mimics the West in its quest for economic growth and conspicuous consumption, and thAlittle over three years ago I wrote in The Hindu that at a time when interest in India and India’s interest in the world are arguably at their highest, Indian scholarship on global issues is showing few signs of responding to this challenge and that this could well stunt India’s ability to influence the international system. As we meet here now, at the first real convention of scholars (and practitioners) of International Studies from throughout India, we can take some comfort. A quick, albeit anecdotal, audit of the study of International Studies would suggest that the last three years have been unusually productive. So much so, that we are now, I believe, at a veritable “tipping point” in our emergence as an intellectual power in the discipline. Hoffman, Professor of International Relations (IR) at Harvard, once famously remarked that IR was an American social science. The blinding nexus between knowledge and power (particularly stark in the case of IR in the United States) perhaps made him forget that while the first modern IR departments were created in Aberystwyth and in Geneva, thinking on international relations went back, in the case of the Indian, Chinese and other great civilizations, to well before the West even began to think of the world outside their living space. Having absorbed the grammar of Western international relations, and transited to a phase of greater self-confidence, it is now opportune for us to also use the vocabulary of our past as a guide to the future. 2011 survey Recovery of these Indian ideas should not be seen as part of a revivalist project or as an exercise that seeks to reify so-called Indian exceptionalism.

    Rather, interrogating our rich past with its deeply argumentative tradition is, as Amartya Sen put it, “partly a celebration, partly an invitation to criticality, partly a reason for further exploration, and partly also an incitement to get more people into the argument.” In the context of international relations it offers the intellectual promise of going beyond the Manichean opposition between power and principle; and between the world of ideas and norms on the one hand, and that of statecraft and even machtpolitik, on the other. In doing so we are not being particularly subversive.

    A 2011 survey of American IR scholars by Foreign Policy found that 22 per cent adopted a Constructivist approach (with its privileging of ideas and identity in shaping state preferences and international outcomes), 21 per cent adopted a Liberal approach, only 16 per cent a Realist approach, and a tiny two per cent a Marxist approach. When academics were asked to “list their peers who have had the greatest influence on them and the discipline,” the most influential was Alexander Wendt, the Constructivist, and neither the Liberal, Robert Koehane, nor the Realists, Kenneth Waltz or James Mearisheimer.

    Mohandas Gandhi once said that “if all the Upanishads and all the other scriptures happened all of a sudden to be reduced to ashes, and if only the first verse in the Ishopanishad were left in the memory of the Hindus, Hinduism would live forever.” Let me make what may seem like another astounding claim, and which I hope, in the best argumentative tradition, will be heavily contested. If all the books on war and peace were to suddenly disappear from the world, and only the Mahabharata remained, it would be good enough to capture almost all the possible debates on order, justice, force and the moral dilemmas associated with choices that are made on these issues within the realm of international politics. Uncertainty in the region Beyond theory, we are faced with a period of extraordinary uncertainty in the international system and in our region. Multilateralism is in serious crisis. While the U.N. Security Council remains deadlocked on key issues, there is little progress on most other issues of global concern, be it trade, sustainable development or climate change. As academics, we cannot remain unconcerned about these critical failures. Our continent is being defined and redefined over time. Regions are, after all, as much shaped by the powerful whose interests they seek to advance as by any objective reality.

    Whatever nomenclature we adopt, and whatever definition we accept, we are faced with, what Evan Feigenbaum and Robert Manning described as two Asias: the ‘Economic Asia’ whose $19 trillion regional economy drives global growth; the “Security Asia,” a “dysfunctional region of mistrustful powers, prone to nationalism and irredentism, escalating their territorial disputes over tiny rocks and shoals, and arming for conflict.” The Asian Development Bank says that by nearly doubling its share of global GDP to 52 per cent by 2050, Asia could regain the dominant economic position it held 300 years ago.

    Yet, as several academics have pointed out “it is beset by interstate rivalries that resemble 19th century Europe,” as well the new challenges of the 21st century: environmental catastrophes, natural disasters, climate change, terrorism, cyber security and maritime issues. An increasingly assertive China that has abandoned Deng Xiaoping’s 24-character strategy of hiding its light and keeping its head low, adds to the uncertainty of the prevailing strategic environment.

    India’s military and economic prowess are greater than ever before, yet its ability to influence South Asian countries is less than what it was, say, 30 years ago. An unstable Nepal with widespread anti-India sentiment, a triumphalist Sri Lanka where Sinhalese chauvinism shows no signs of accommodating legitimate Tamil aspirations, a chaotic Pakistan unwilling to even reassure New Delhi on future terrorist strikes, are symptomatic of a region being pulled in different directions.

    Can our thinking from the past help us navigate through this troubled present? Pankaj Mishra, in his brilliant book, From the Ruins of Empire: the Revolt Against the West and the Remaking of Asia, describes how three 19th century thinkers, the Persian Jamal-al Din al-Afghani, Liang Qichao from China and India’s Rabindranath Tagore, navigated through Eastern tradition and the Western onslaught to think of creative ways to strike a balance and find harmony.

    In many ways, these ideas remain relevant today as well. For if Asia merely mimics the West in its quest for economic growth and conspicuous consumption, and the attendant conflict over economic resources and military prowess, the “revenge of the East” in the Asian century and “all its victories” will remain “truly Pyrrhic.”e attendant conflict over economic resources and military prowess, the “revenge of the East” in the Asian century and “all its victories” will remain “truly Pyrrhic.”

  • Hamid Karzai To Meet Obama In Washington, Leon Panetta Says

    Hamid Karzai To Meet Obama In Washington, Leon Panetta Says

    KABUL (TIP): Defense secretary Leon Panetta says Afghan President Hamid Karzai has accepted an invitation from President Barack Obama to meet in Washington. Panetta said at a joint news conference with Karzai that the meeting is to be held during the week of January 7. The two leaders will use the meeting to discuss Afghanistan’s future. Karzai said he and Obama will discuss the number of US troops that will remain in Afghanistan after the combat mission ends there in December 2014.

    Panetta also said that a suicide car bomber who staged an attack at the Kandahar Air Base killed one American serviceman and wounded three others. Two Afghan civilians were also killed in the attack Thursday. Taliban spokesman Qari Jusuf Ahmedi claimed responsibility for the attack in an email, saying a suicide car bomber had targeted foreign military vehicles that were stopped near the gate of Kandahar Airfield. It was unclear if the attack had anything to do with Panetta’s unannounced visit to Kandahar Airfield. Kandahar is a huge and sprawling facility that houses more than 20,000 service members from 20 countries and has more than 11,000 civilian contract workers.

  • Taliban Leaders Send Their Girl Children To School : UN

    Taliban Leaders Send Their Girl Children To School : UN

    NEW DELHI (TIP): A top UN official today claimed that some Taliban leaders, who issued fatwa against girls’ education during their rule in Afghanistan, have themselves sent their female children to schools run with the support of the international body. Louis-Georges Arsenault, who was Unicef representative in Afghanistan from 1998 to 2001, also claimed that Taliban issued fatwa against girls’ education during their regime (1996 to 2001) as the group feared that “movement” of women and girls on the streets would “distract the focus” of their fighters from their “task ahead”.

    Arsenault, who took over as Unicef India representative a couple of months ago, made these remarks this while addressing the National Consultation on Education in Areas Affected by Civil Strife here. During their rule, Taliban issued Fatwa against girls’ education and declared that there will be no girl education in the country, Arsenault said. He said top Taliban officials had “openly” told UN officials who were talking to them at that point of time that the fatwa was issued because they needed their troops to focus the task ahead and not be distracted by the movement of women and girls. Despite the diktat, there were NGOs, community leaders and teachers who were in hiding providing some kind of education to the children in some parts of the country.

    The Unicef went about quietly without attracting media attention in working on school education in collaboration with these segments of population and taking expertise from Government officials and academicians. “Some of the Taliban fighters were sending their girls in schools any way,” said Arsenault, who is credited with managing one of Unicef’s largest humanitarian operations, including the coordination of relief and rehabilitation services to over 250,000 women, children and men displaced by Afghan conflict. According to the Unicef, Arsenault, despite Taliban’s edicts against girls’ education, initiated several projects to arrange private schooling for them.

  • Leon Panetta In Afghanistan To Meet With Hamid Karzai

    Leon Panetta In Afghanistan To Meet With Hamid Karzai

    KABUL (TIP): US defense secretary Leon Panetta, who has flown to Afghanistan for talks with President Hamid Karzai, says President Barack Obama will decide in the next few weeks how many US troops will after the combat mission ends there. Panetta arrived on Wednesday on an unannounced visit to Kabul to consult with top military commanders as well as confer with Karzai. The visit comes at a difficult juncture in the Western coalition’s efforts to shift more security responsibilities to Afghan forces so the combat mission can end in December 2014. While security has generally improved lately, the Afghan government’s ability to effectively govern and to root out corruption is in great doubt.

    Peace talks with the Taliban are on a back burner. Speaking to reporters earlier Wednesday in Kuwait, Panetta did not reveal what options Obama is considering, but officials have said he may settle on a figure between 6,000 and 10,000 troops. There currently are about 66,000 US troops in Afghanistan. The post-2014 mission is expected to focus on counterterrorism and advising Afghan security forces. Before flying to Afghanistan, Panetta spoke to about 100 US service members inside an aircraft hangar at a desert base west of Kuwait City. He thanked them for their service and emphasized that the US is winding down its involvement in lengthy wars.

  • Afghan Attacks Down Overall, Insider Threat Rises : Pentagon Report

    Afghan Attacks Down Overall, Insider Threat Rises : Pentagon Report

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The US and its allies have made only spotty and incremental progress in the Afghan war, with overall violence declining just slightly in the past year and widespread corruption continuing to hamper the shaky government, according to a new Pentagon report. It also noted that the ongoing insider attacks, in which Afghan forces or people dressed in Afghan uniforms turn their weapons on coalition troops, “have the potential to significantly disrupt the Coalition mission in Afghanistan.” The report comes as the US Army is updating its handbook for soldiers on how to detect and prevent such attacks.

    A draft of the 70-page handbook includes a pullout tip card that details indicators of a possible insider attack, such as reclusive behavior, desire for control, increased focus on violence and abrupt behavioral changes. It also reminds soldiers to be aware of cultural differences, including the need to avoid doing things in front of Afghans that are considered offensive. Troops, the handbook says, should not blow their noses, put their feet up on desks, wink, spit, point fingers at Afghans or use the “ok” hand signal, which some Afghans interpret as an obscene gesture, The handbook, titled “Insider Threats-Afghanistan, Observations, insights and Lessons Learned,” also details the more than 320 casualties caused by insider attacks between May 2007 and Oct. 1, 2012.

    A recent review of the data by The Associated Press revealed that the Haqqani insurgent network, based in Pakistan and with ties to al-Qaida, is suspected of being a driving force behind a significant number of the insider attacks. Military leaders have worked to reduce the insider threat, noting that it is driving a wedge between coalition and Afghan troops, rattling the trust between them and raising questions about how effectively the allied forces can train the Afghans to take over security of their own country in 2014 and beyond. The senior US official acknowledged Monday that the US continues to be very concerned about the attacks, even though there have been fewer in recent months. The coalition forces are trying to identify high-risk groups and Afghans, and the handbook is aimed at helping them do that.

  • Karisma Tight-Lipped on her Divorce Rumours

    Karisma Tight-Lipped on her Divorce Rumours

    Karisma Kapoor is tight-lipped about the rumours of her divorce with husband Sanjay Kapur. Karisma was recently spotted attending a promotional event in Delhi where she looked perfectly dressed in her black short dress.

    When asked about the rumour about her divorce news with her husband Sunjay Kapur , she refused to comment and politely told us sipping her cup of tea , ” No comments please.” On other hand she happily spoke about her two kids and told us, “I have been busy with both of my kids these days.

    My son has taken liking for sports and is most of the time playing cricket and football. It is so much fun being with them as I’m enjoying every phase of motherhood.

    There is so much to do with them that I hardly get time to think about anything else.” Ask about movies? And she adds, “I have not given up movies but I’ m in no hurry. I’m just taking it easy. Jab aayega tab dekha jaayega. But at the moment, what keeps me more busy is my family and my kid Samiara and Kiaan.

    I would like to spend more time with them.” The 38 years old actor loves to endorse all kinds of brands and tells us, “It’s a way to connect with people I feel endorsing for all lifestyle products helps me to connect with all my fans.” Karisma who has been the face for a leading Pakistani designer label Crescent by Pakistani designer Faraz Manan shares her experience, ” Its always nice to dress up in an traditional wear and I find the Pakistani outfits very stylish and wearable.” Karisma will be shooting again with Pakistani designer Faraz Manan for his upcoming collection in month of January next year in Jaipur. A

  • kareena to prep up for Prakash Jha’s film

    kareena to prep up for Prakash Jha’s film

    Every director who has worked with the camera-friendly Kareena Kapoor knows she is a slip-in-slip-out actress who doesn’t believe in preparing for her characters. That is about to change.

    For the first time in her career Kareena Kapoor would be follwing an elaborate preparation plan for Prakash Jha’s Satyagrah. Most of our actresses are not well-informed on current political trends.

    That’s about to change. Kareena Kapoor will have to get into her journalist-activist’s character’s mind for Satyagrah.

    Playing a character modelled on CNN’s super-scribe Christiane Amanpour is not going to be a cakewalk for Kareena Kapoor. Prakash Jha, we hear, has worked out out a gruelling regime for Kareena which includes “getting into the mind” of the activistjournalist. Says a source close to the project, “Kareena would have to become thoroughly familiar with presentday political affairs .And that doesn’t mean just newspaper headlines. Prakash wants her to become sensitized to India’s contemporary politics. Her character is a fiercely militant investigative journalist.

    For her too look credible Parkash feels the words about present day politics and politicians should not come from the script.

    They should flow naturally from the actress’ sensitivities as an Indian .” Apparently Kareena’s preparation for the part would include going through the rigorous research material that Prakash Jha has accumulated for Kareena’s character.

  • Zardari Among Pak Leaders Who Evade Taxes: Report

    Zardari Among Pak Leaders Who Evade Taxes: Report

    ISLAMABAD (TIP): A majority of Pakistani parliamentarians and politicians, including President Asif Ali Zardari, are tax dodgers, a report on rampant tax evasion among the country’s political elite has revealed. The Centre for Investigative Reporting in Pakistan’s report said two-thirds of the country’s elected political leaders failed to submit any income tax returns last year. The 70-page report said that out of 446 members of the Senate and National Assembly, 300 did not file their tax returns. Those who did paid an amount that does not match their living standards.Out of 126 parliamentarians, who paid their taxes, only 15 paid above $10,500 and 68 below $1,060. PM Raja Pervez Ashraf paid only $1500 income tax which is an insignificant amount not matching his declared wealth.Out of 54 ministers, 34 did not file tax returns.

    The prominent among them include deputy PM Chaudhry Pervez Elahi, interior minister Rehman Malik, railways minister Ghulam Ahmad Bilour, Benazir Income Support Programme chairperson Farzana Raja and commerce Minister Makhdoom Amin Fahim. Fahim is not registered for even National Tax Number (NTN). Foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar, considered among the richest cabinet members, paid just $725. In the Senate, Aitzaz Ahsan was the highest taxpayer with $136,589 while Mushahid Hussain the lowest taxpaying senator. He paid less than a dollar in 2011. Jehangir Tareen was the highest taxpaying National Assembly member with $179,507. The lowest taxpaying was PML-N’s Sheikh Rohail Asghar, who paid $ 175. Former PM Yousaf Raza Gilani and his 25 cabinet members had acknowledged in their nomination papers for the February 2008 general elections that they did not pay a single penny as income tax. Gilani even registered for NTN in 2010, one-and-halfyear before quitting. According to the World Bank, Pakistan has one of the lowest tax collection rates in the world and the government is largely reliant on loans and foreign aid.

  • ‘Race 2’ has been most challenging: Jacqueline Fernandez

    ‘Race 2’ has been most challenging: Jacqueline Fernandez

    Actress Jacqueline Fernandez considers ” Race 2″ as her most challenging film and says a lot of hard work has gone into it. “It is the most negative character I have played. It is very challenging to do something like that. I had to tackle each scene with an underlying thought that the character is concealing a deep dark secret. Every character is dark and that is the beauty of the film,” she said in an interview.

    “It is a nice change. It’s something new to try. It was very challenging. To be this evil person and be negative, you have to work on yourself,” she added. Comparing “Race 2” to her previous hit “Housefull 2”, Jaqueline said: “‘Housefull 2’ was like a walk in the park. It was fun, everyone was having a good time. Everything was spontaneous. ‘Race 2’ is more calculative, you have to rehearse. You need to understand that certain messages need to be sent to the audience. So ‘Race 2’ was most challenging.”

  • Nelson Mandela ‘Recuperating’ South Africa President

    Nelson Mandela ‘Recuperating’ South Africa President

    LOEMFONTEIN, SOUTH AFRICA (TIP): South African President Jacob Zuma on Dec 13 honoured anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela, who has been hospitalized since the weekend and who the president said is recovering from a lung infection. Zuma was to unveil a statue of Mandela on Thursday in the city of Bloemfontein, also called Mangaung, which next week hosts the ruling African National Congress party’s convention. “We will be able to yet again pay tribute to a man who became a symbol of both our struggle for freedom and the free and democratic South Africa,” Zuma said. Mandela, 94, was admitted on Saturday to 1 Military Hospital in the capital.

    “As we meet, Madiba is recuperating from a lung infection at a Pretoria hospital,” Zuma said, using Mandela’s clan name. “We wish him a speedy recovery and assure him yet again of the love and support of many in the country and abroad.” Zuma made the remarks while dedicating an airport in the name of Bram Fischer, a white South African who was also a key figure in the struggle against apartheid, the system of racist white rule which collapsed in the 1994 elections which made Mandela the nation’s first black president. Fischer was a Communist Party leader and a lawyer who defended Mandela at trial. Mandela has a history of lung problems. He fell ill with tuberculosis in 1988 when he was still in prison. He largely retired from public life after serving one five-year term as president.

  • Movie Review: Khiladi 786

    Movie Review: Khiladi 786

    Cast: Akshay Kumar, Asin, Himesh Reshammiya, Mithun Chakraborty, Raj Babbar
    Direction: Ashish R Mohan
    Genre: Action
    Duration: 2 hours 20 minutes

    STORY: Akela hai Mr. Khiladi, Ms. Khiladi chahiye. It’s that simple, really.

    MOVIE REVIEW: Barah baras baad, Khiladi ka number aa gaya. Bollywood’s original Khiladi is back from selfimposed exile; still with a heart of gold, the pride of a true-blooded Singh and mighty-muscles of steel.

    And of course, a truck-load of even more Singhs – welcome the players. But before we lose count, let’s ‘count’ the global Singhs – each of them with a Number for a name.

    To start with, Bahattar (read: 72) Singh, aka Khiladi bhaiyya ( Akshay Kumar), his father Sattar Singh ( Raj Babbar) with his Canadian wife and African mother. Add on Ikhattar Singh ( Mukesh Rishi) and his Chinese wife.

    Just in case you realize number 73 is missing, keep guessing. The Singhs are a family of proud con-cops (partly for a cause), and while 72 Singh can single-handedly thrash thugs at supersonic speed, he believes in driving women around in what he calls a mardon ki sawaari – a vibrantly colourful truck – on date nights.

    No wonder, matrimonial rejects are aplenty (everyone wants a sawaari in a Ferrari, you see) and Khiladi bhaiyya is left ‘lonely-lonely’, with little or no action in his love life.

    Enter Mansukh Desai (Himesh) a weddingfixer, who takes on the challenge of finding a girl to match his machismo. And he finds one in the feisty Indu Tendulkar (Asin) – Mumbai’s wanted don, TT’s (Mithun) sister. Well, she turns out to be nothing short of a psycho baiko, in love with a parttime- prisoner called Azad. Akshay is in his top-form, his punches are as powerpacked as his one-liners.

    With kurtas as colourful as his character, nonchalant charm and playful references to recent hits (Rowdy Rathore, Housefull 2, Singham), he proves to be sabse bada khiladi, yet again. Asin has, without a doubt, looked her best in this film.

    As Ms. Khiladi, she’s pulled out a few guns, stepped on the gas (crashing and speeding up cars) and romanced her balma. Mithun, dons the role of goonda, but with his funny liners, he leaves us with a lot of laughs. Himesh is decent as a caricature-ish Gujju boy.

  • Recovering After Operation, Chavez May Miss Swearing-In

    Recovering After Operation, Chavez May Miss Swearing-In

    CARACAS, VENEZUELA (TIP): Somber confidants of President Hugo Chavez say he is going through a difficult recovery after cancer surgery in Cuba, and one close ally is warning Venezuelans that their leader may not make it back for his swearing-in next month. Information minister Ernesto Villegas said on Dec 12 that Chavez was in “stable condition” and was with close relatives in Havana. Reading a statement, he said the government invites people to “accompany President Chavez in this new test with their prayers” . Villegas expressed hope about the president returning home for his Janurary 10 swearing-in for a new sixyear term, but said in a written message on a government website that if Chavez doesn’t make it, “our people should be prepared to understand it” .

    He said it would be irresponsible to hide news about the “delicateness of the current moment and the days to come.” He asked Venezuelans to see Chavez’s condition as “when we have a sick father, in a delicate situation after four surgeries in a year and a half.” Moving to prepare the public for the possibility of more bad news, Vice President Nicolas Maduro looked grim when he acknowledged that Chavez faced a “complex and hard” process after his latest surgery. At the same time, officials sought to show a united front amid the growing worries about Chavez’s health and Venezuela’s future. Key leaders of Chavez’s party and military officers appeared together on television as Maduro gave updates on Chavez’s condition.

  • Kate Middleton Hoax Call : Nurse Found Hanging In Her Room; Left Three Suicide Notes

    Kate Middleton Hoax Call : Nurse Found Hanging In Her Room; Left Three Suicide Notes

    LONDON (TIP): A nurse at the hospital treating Prince William’s pregnant wife Catherine was found hanging in her room after being duped by a hoax call from an Australian radio station, an inquest heard on December 13. 46-year-old Jacintha Saldanha, who was found in nurses’ quarters near the private King Edward VII’s Hospital in central London on December 14, left three notes before she died, a police officer told the hearing. The Indian-born mother-of-two also had injuries on one of her wrists. Detective Chief Inspector James Harman told the opening of the inquest: “Jacintha Saldanha was found by a colleague and a member of security staff.

    Sadly she was found hanging. There were also injuries to her wrist.” “The London Ambulance Service was called to the scene.” Two notes were found in her room and another was among her possessions, Mr Harman told the hearing at Westminster Coroner’s Court, without revealing their contents. Police are also looking at telephone calls and emails to see if they shed more light on her death, he said. Scotland Yard will “in the very near future” be in contact with Australian police to ask them interview witnesses there, he added. Ms Saldanha’s husband Benedict Barboza and two teenage children did not attend the hearing.

    The full inquest – which could record any one of a number of possible verdicts including suicide or misadventure – will be held in March 2013 after toxicology tests and further investigations. In England, inquests are held to examine sudden or unexplained deaths. They set out to determine the place and time of death as well as how the deceased came by their death. They do not apportion blame. Setting a provisional date of March 26 for the next hearing, coroner Fiona Wilcox told the court: “I would like the police to pass on my sympathies to her family and everybody who has been touched by this tragic death.” Australia’s media watchdog on December 13 opened an investigation into the prank call.

    The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) said its probe was into the broadcaster, 2Day FM, and not presenters Mel Greig and Michael Christian who have borne the brunt of worldwide anger. The station’s right to broadcast could either be cancelled, restrictions put on its licence or it could be fined. Ms Saldanha, a nurse originally from near Mangalore on the southwest Indian coast, was found dead on December 14. Three days earlier she answered a prank call to the hospital made by two Australian radio presenters impersonating Queen Elizabeth II and her heir Prince Charles, William’s father.

  • Kim Kardashian strips for Sexiest Shoot yet in French Mag

    Kim Kardashian strips for Sexiest Shoot yet in French Mag

    Kim Kardashian, who has done a lot of sexy lingerie shoots, draped herself in nothing but fur and pearls for a glamorous photoshoot for the French magazine Factice.

    In the new spread, the TV reality star displays a whole new level of hotness, which has been achieved only by fellow celebrities David Beckham and Rosie Huntington Whitely.

    Posing for French publication, the 32-yearold looks simply stunning in various nude coloured underwear and suspender sets – showing all the skinny lingerie models how it’s really done.

    Kim released these snaps online. “Here are the inside shots from my cover issue of Factice Magazine, shot by Vijat Mohindra. I’m so pleased with the way the shots turned out.

    This was such a glamorous and feminine shoot and it was an honor to work with Vijat,” the Mirror quoted her as writing. “Thanks to my glam squad for the shoot, Chris McMillan for hair and Joyce Bonelli for makeup,” she added.

  • Lea Michele calls her Breasts ‘Prizewinners’

    Lea Michele calls her Breasts ‘Prizewinners’

    Lea Michele boasts about her tendency to don cleavage-baring ensembles on the red carpet, admitting that it took some time during her transition from Broadway star to up-and-coming Hollywood actress before she felt comfortable enough to show off her assets. Now that the ‘Glee’ star has found her footing in Hollywood, the actress is much more comfortable with getting things off her chest. “These babies are great.

    They are my prizewinners,” the New York Daily News quoted her as telling Marie Claire magazine. “For a while they were out and about, showing off on Broadway every night, then they came to LA and were like, ‘No one else looks like me here!’ “They were nervous to make their appearance but feel they’ve earned their place. So they asked if they could come out, and I was like, ‘All right, you guys.’ They definitely rose to the occasion, so I’m going to continue to give them more opportunities,” she said.

  • Defiant North Korea Holds Mass Rally, Vows More Launches

    Defiant North Korea Holds Mass Rally, Vows More Launches

    SEOUL (TIP): Hundreds of thousands of North Koreans held a mass rally on Friday to celebrate the nuclear-armed state’s rocket launch, as its youthful leader vowed new launches in defiance of US-led outrage. Days before his first anniversary in charge of the isolated country, Kim Jong- Un upheld North Korea’s “unshakable stand” that the rocket programme will continue despite UN condemnation and calls for new sanctions. The huge rally in Pyongyang, shown on state television, came two days after the launch of the three-stage rocket and just ahead of the anniversary Monday of his father Kim Jong-Il’s death. The huge crowd standing in organised ranks in Kim Il-Sung Square — named after Kim Jong-Un’s grandfather — cheered as top officials hailed the success of the launch and praised the “bravery and wisdom” of the dynasty’s scion.

    Refuelling its criticism of Wednesday’s launch, the US State Department said Kim had the chance as new leader “to take his country back into the 21st century” but instead was making the “wrong choices”. Unbowed, Kim stressed the need “to launch satellites in the future… to develop the country’s science, technology and economy”, according to the North’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA). It gave new details of the launch of the rocket to propel a satellite into space, which the United States, China and others on the UN Security Council said violated a ban on long-range ballistic missile tests by North Korea. Kim had issued the final written order for the launch on Wednesday morning and “keenly observed” the whole process, KCNA said.

    By placing a satellite in orbit, North Korea “showed at home and abroad the unshakable stand… to exercise the country’s legitimate right to use space for peaceful purposes”, Kim said according to the agency. The UN Security Council held emergency talks on Wednesday after the North, already under international sanctions for nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009, ignored pleas from friends and foes and went ahead with the launch. The council warned of possible measures over what the United States called a “highly provocative” act as countries including South Korea and Japan pressed for stronger sanctions against Pyongyang. China — North Korea’s leading patron — backed the UN statement but its foreign ministry also pushed back against the pressure for stronger action, arguing that any response by the international community should be “prudent”.

    Analysts say the symbolism of the launch was a prime motivating factor for North Korea as Kim, who is not yet 30, shores up his leadership credentials. “The launch means the fulfilment of Kim Jong-Il’s last wish,” said Yoo Ho-Yeol, a political science professor at Korea University in Seoul. “As such, it helps cement Jong-Un’s grip on power and strengthens his authority over the North’s military elites, securing their loyalty and a sense of solidarity under his leadership,” Yoo said. The rocket launch has been seen as a timely boost for Kim, laying to rest the humiliation of a much-hyped but failed launch of North Korea’s Unha-3 rocket in April, when the carrier exploded shortly after take-off. Outrage over the recent launch was mixed with concern that North Korea may follow past practice in following up a missile or rocket launch with a nuclear test. The North’s first nuclear test in 2006 came three months after it tested a longrange missile. On that occasion, Pyongyang announced the test six days before it exploded the device. The second test, in May 2009, came a month after a rocket launch that North Korea claimed had put a satellite in space.

  • Mali Gets New Prime Minister After Military Ouster

    Mali Gets New Prime Minister After Military Ouster

    BAMAKO (TIP): The troubled nation of Mali swore in a new interim prime minister on Thursday, just days after soldiers behind this year’s military coup arrested his predecessor and forced his resignation. Diango Cissoko officially took office in the Malian capital of Bamako, where he said the former prime minister would be available as needed during the political transition. Earlier this week, Cheikh Modibo Diarra announced his resignation as prime minister on state television at 4am hours after soldiers stormed his house. “I am moved and pleased that the prime minister Diarra said he will be close by to assist me as needed,” Cissoko said.

    Mali’s interim government was intended to return the West African nation to civilian rule following the March military coup. However, the coup leader has maintained his hold on the country and the political instability has raised concerns about a proposed military intervention to retake Mali’s north from radical Islamists. The former prime minister, Diarra, was initially seen as being in-step with Sanogo. Critics lambasted him for frequently driving to the Kati barracks to see the coup leader, long after Sanogo was supposed to have handed power to civilians. In recent weeks though, Diarra had taken stances that sometimes conflicted with Sanogo.

    The new Prime Minister Cissoko, won favor with Sanogo by giving him equal standing with the interim president and prime minister during mediation efforts to resolve Mali’s political crisis. The military’s meddling in state affairs has concerned the international community. Many worry that supporting the operation will simply further arm and embolden the very officers responsible for Mali’s current state. Radical Islamists were able to gain hold of northern Mali during the power vacuum that followed the March coup.

    Over the past eight months, they have implemented their strict version of Islamic law known as Shariah, carrying out public executions, amputations and whippings. Many worry that, under the Islamists’ rule, northern Mali will become a base from where al- Qaida will be able to launch terror attacks on other countries, including into Europe. A proposed military intervention to oust the Islamist rebels that would include Malian forces is still pending final approval from the United Nations.