Month: October 2013

  • AMANDA HOLDEN REVEALS BEING SEXUALLY ASSAULTED

    AMANDA HOLDEN REVEALS BEING SEXUALLY ASSAULTED

    Amanda Holden has revealed that a famous comedian had sexually assaulted her while she was married to Les Dennis. The 42-year-old actress wrote in her autobiography that she kept this incident a secret as she didn’t want her then husband to create a scene, the Daily Star reported. The ‘Britain’s Got Talent’ judge explained that she was cornered by the comedian while she was coming back from the loo, at a public event which she had attended with Dennis. She resisted as the unnamed celebrity tried to kiss her and put his hands in places that he shouldn’t have. When she caught the sight of their reflection on a mirror, her body went limp as he groped and nuzzled her. Holden and former husband Dennis separated in 2003 and now she is married to music producer Chris Hughes.

  • About Time

    About Time

    STORY: Tim (Gleeson) gets clued onto a family secret – all the gents in the house have the ability to travel through time! He then goes about using this power to sort out various wrongs in his life and win over his lady love. REVIEW: With a movie title that couldn’t possibly be more literal, About Time features an amalgamation of love and philosophy. From the director with a filmography including Notting Hill, Four Weddings and a Funeral, Love Actually and Bridget Jones’s Diary, you could safely come to the conclusion that Curtis could spin out another romcom blindfolded. He manages to move beyond flightiness and stops just short of being maudlin or mawkish. Tim’s dad (Nighy) reveals the time-travelling secret to junior one day. Forget about quantum physics and those lifelong labours of Stephen Hawking and his ilk; apparently, all it takes to time-travel is to close your eyes, clench your fists and focus really hard. Not one to waste such a phenomenal gift, Tim is certainly a man with his priorities in order.

    Forgetting about everything else, he decides to focus on romance in general, Mary (McAdams) in particular, and use his new time-travelling trick to set right certain wrongs. Mary is a bit airy. She has her faults but attempts to be endearing. Indeed, Tim and she share an easy chemistry. Gleeson is no Hugh Grant, but McAdams is a highlight in this film. The film is inexplicably long but the genuinely funny jokes that pepper the plot save the film from plodding into a sentimental soup. There is a strong idealistic streak running through About Time. After all, which one of us wouldn’t want to go back in the years and change certain things? What if we had said the right thing at the right time to him or her…or perhaps avoided that misunderstanding? Wouldn’t that relationship have worked out? Ultimately, the message is simple and visceral enough to have crossover appeal. Give it a shot if romantic comedies float your boat.

  • KAREENA CUTS SHORT MOVIE PROMOTION FOR KARVA CHAUTH

    KAREENA CUTS SHORT MOVIE PROMOTION FOR KARVA CHAUTH

    Kareena Kapoor Khan, who has been married for a year now, has fallen in line with other Bollywood superstar wives and made place for important personal commitments in her work calendar. The actress, who celebrated her first wedding anniversary recently in London has told the Gori Tere Pyaar Mein team that she will be available only for four hours on October 22. The reason: She is keeping the Karva Chauth fast and wants to partake in the pujas and rituals that mark the special occasion. Years ago, Hema Malini had told Yash Chopra, with whom she was shooting, that she would like to be let off early on Karva Chauth because the fasting always got to her by the evening. Besides which she would, of course, need to be home in time to break her fast. Sridevi, who is another follower of the tradition, is also said to be getting ready for the special fast this year. Aishwarya Rai Bachchan has been observing the Karva Chauth fast for the last six years. And it is said that the matriarch of the Bachchan family, Jaya Bachchan, encourages even Kajol, who is a neighbour, to come over to Jalsa and participate in the puja with her and her bahurani.

  • SHRADDHA KEEN TO MOVE BEYOND ROMANCE IN FILMS

    SHRADDHA KEEN TO MOVE BEYOND ROMANCE IN FILMS

    Actress Shraddha Kapoor, recently seen in successful love saga ‘Aashiqui 2’, says she wants to go beyond the genre of romance on screen, and try her luck at different roles, especially a grey character. “The fact that people liked Aashiqui 2 and my character (Aarohi) in it, they now want to see me in a lot more romantic films. I would like to do romantic films, but honestly I would like to do beyond that as well,” Shraddha told reporters at an event. “I would like to do other genres also and it will be interesting,” she added. Shraddha, daughter of actor Shakti Kapoor, made her Bollywood debut with Teen Patti in 2010. But she earned popularity only with Aashiqui 2. Asked about the kind of roles she wants to play, Shraddha said: “If I will get the opportunity to be a part of a very interesting character that has grey or white shades, then why not? I would love to play it.” Meanwhile, the actress will soon be seen in Mohit Suri’s next The Villain. Besides, she has also teamed up with director Rohit Shetty for his next project, which is expected to go on floors soon.

  • Boss

    Boss

    STORY: Satyakanth Shastri (Mithun) is the righteous father, who adores his ‘sanskari’ younger son but disowns the elder, as he resorts to violence to fight injustice. They part ways and the ethical but shorttempered son grows up to become Boss (Akshay Kumar) – a contract killer who learns to laugh in the face of adversity. Do they reunite? REVIEW: ‘Apne ko kya hai, apne ko toh bus paani nikalna hain’ is Boss Akshay’s punch line in the movie. If you rephrase it a little with ‘Apne ko toh bus Akshay Kumar ka stunts dekhna hai’, then Boss is a ‘kick-ass’ entertainer. After all, we all know who the Boss of action in Bollywood is. A remake of 2010 Malayalam film, Pokkiri Raja, Boss is a formulaic action comedy. There are truckloads of stunts throughout and whatever falls in between constitutes the plot so don’t expect logic. It seems the action was probably chalked out before and the 70’s-like melodramatic story was inserted later as filler, which explains why most characters end up being silent spectators, once Akshay makes an entry.

    The very vicious ACP Ayushman Thakur (Ronit Roy, brilliant) in particular gets easily outplayed by our Haryanvi hero. The romantic track between Shiv Pandit and Aditi Rao Hydari is terribly inconsequential. To cut a long story short, Boss solely relies on Akshay’s star power and he carries the film on his shoulders with aplomb. It’s his dialoguebazi and filmygiri that make you smile, no matter how corny the one-liners. He climbs the walls at a lightning speed like a Spiderman, jumps over rooftops, trucks and makes his way in a crowded place by walking over the heads of his enemies. He makes gravity-defying stunts look believable. We particularly liked this elaborate chase sequence which looks like it’s been shot in one-take. From cracking of bones to the crunching of chanas that the villain munches on, the sound effects add to the intensity of the slow-mo stunt scenes. Mithun Chakraborty goes overboard with his preachy Nirupa Roy-esque character and is thus unintentionally funny. Ronit Roy has a superb presence.

    Sadly, he gets meagre footage. Aditi Rao Hydari and Shiv Pandit are used as mere props. SHRADDHA KEEN TO MOVE BEYOND ROMANCE IN FILMS Actress Shraddha Kapoor, recently seen in successful love saga ‘Aashiqui 2’, says she wants to go beyond the genre of romance on screen, and try her luck at different roles, especially a grey character. “The fact that people liked Aashiqui 2 and my character (Aarohi) in it, they now want to see me in a lot more romantic films. I would like to do romantic films, but honestly I would like to do beyond that as well,” Shraddha told reporters at an event. “I would like to do other genres also and it will be interesting,” she added. Shraddha, daughter of actor Shakti Kapoor, made her Bollywood debut with Teen Patti in 2010. But she earned popularity only with Aashiqui 2. Asked about the kind of roles she wants to play, Shraddha said: “If I will get the opportunity to be a part of a very interesting character that has grey or white shades, then why not? I would love to play it.” Meanwhile, the actress will soon be seen in Mohit Suri’s next The Villain. Besides, she has also teamed up with director Rohit Shetty for his next project, which is expected to go on floors soon

  • Washington becomes the biggest risk to the US economy

    Washington becomes the biggest risk to the US economy

    WASHINGTON: Consensus may be hard to find in Washington these days, but many corporate executives and economists seem to agree on one point: the biggest risk to the world’s largest economy may be its own elected representatives. Down-to-the-wire budget and debt crises, indiscriminate spending cuts and a 16-day government shutdown may not be enough to push the US economy back into recession. But Washington’s policy blunders in recent years have significantly slowed economic growth and kept roughly 2 million people out of work, according to recent estimates. Steep spending cuts are a big reason. But the governance-by-crisis also may be prompting businesses to sit on their cash rather than building new factories, buying more equipment and hiring more workers, some economists say. “Increasingly I’m of the view that the reason why our economy can’t kick into a higher gear is because of the uncertainty created by Washington,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics. Congress on Wednesday voted to reopen the government and extend its borrowing authority through February of next year.

    But the deal did nothing to resolve the underlying disputes that led to the crisis in the first place – leading many to fear that the standoff may play out again in a few months. The plan sets up a forum to try to forge a more permanent budget deal, but few expect it to succeed. “We have crisis after crisis after crisis and it has a corrosive impact on the economy,” said Greg Valliere, an analyst with Potomac Research Group. “If you’re a business, how do you make plans in this environment?” Leading chief executives agree. “Most CEOs I speak to in the United States say they’re seeing a slowdown in business because of this,” said Laurence Fink, the CEO of giant asset manager BlackRock Inc, in an interview on Wednesday. “I was on a conference call with many of them, and I heard across the board, a slowdown from the American consumer because of this narrative, so it’s having an impact on our economy already – and it’s going to have an impact on job creation at a time when we need more job creation.” Not all economists agree that the political circus in Washington is hurting the economy in a measurable sense. While worries over the debt ceiling have pushed up the government’s borrowing costs over the past week, those increases are minimal, and the S&P 500 stock index remains near its all-time high.

    SLOW RECOVERY
    But the pace of recovery since the 2008-2009 recession has been unusually slow. While America’s total economic output is now higher than it was before the recession, the level of private investment remains lower than it was in 2007. Employers also continue to hire workers at a slower pace than before the recession. Since the financial crisis eased, Washington has sent out one jolt after another. Democrats passed sweeping reforms of the healthcare system and the financial sector in 2010 which, whatever their merits, imposed wrenching changes on two pillars of the United States’ post-industrial economy. Public unease with the healthcare law helped Republicans win control of the House of Representatives in 2010, ushering in an era of divided government that has led to repeated standoffs over taxes and spending. A near-shutdown in April 2011 led to the debt-ceiling impasse in July and August of that year, which took the country to the edge of default and prompted the country’s first-ever debt downgrade. Like this most recent crisis, Congress averted disaster at the last possible moment. But the brinkmanship pushed consumer confidence to rock-bottom levels, where it remained for months.

    The S&P 500 tumbled 17 percent and took more than six months to recover its gains. That debt-ceiling deal called for steep cuts to national defense, highway construction, scientific research and other forms of discretionary spending that Congress must approve annually. Another budget deal, reached in January of this year after another round of brinkmanship, included tax increases to help narrow budget deficits further. Neither of those deals addressed the health and retirement spending that poses the greatest threat to the country’s long-term fiscal health. A failure to cut back these programs or find savings elsewhere prompted a round of deliberately disruptive acrossthe- board spending cuts – the so-called “sequester” – to take effect in March. Along with an improving economy, those steps helped US budget deficits fall from 8.7 percent of GDP in the 2011 fiscal year to an anticipated 3.9 percent of GDP for the fiscal year that ended on September 30. But this has all come at a steep cost.

    JOBS NOT CREATED
    In a report released on Monday, Macroeconomic Advisers estimated that 1.2 million more Americans would be working today if Congress had kept discretionary spending at the levels that were in place in 2010. The forecasting firm estimated that Washington’s erratic behavior had also driven up unemployment by a further 900,000 jobs. Zandi estimates the fiscal austerity has cost 2.25 million jobs. Without those measures, the unemployment rate would stand at 6.3 percent now rather than 7.7 percent, he says. Even many of those who disagree with the notion that policy uncertainty has hurt the economy agree that the spending cuts and tax increases should have been phased in more gradually. “Fiscal consolidation has been a big drag on the economy,” said Paul Ashworth, an economist with Capital Economics. The International Monetary Fund called the United States’ deficitreduction efforts “excessively rapid and ill-designed” in June and said the sequester cuts would nearly halve US economic growth this year. Meanwhile, Congress has punted on other important legislation like immigration reform that could boost the economy. Construction firms have seen federal work plummet over the past several years.

    With the government shut down, they have been unable to use the federal E-Verify system to check workers’ immigration status or get permits to build in environmentally sensitive areas, said Ken Simonson, chief economist of the Associated General Contractors of America. The delays could be more than an inconvenience for builders trying to line up financing for a new project, he said. “You never know when the market’s going to turn and … for some reason you may have missed the boat,” he said. There’s more turbulence on the horizon. Simonson said lawmakers may not have the stomach to avoid further cuts on transportation spending when they take up the issue next year. Though Washington may be responsible for lackluster business on Main Street, it may not have much of an impact on Wall Street. Many economists had expected the Federal Reserve to begin scaling back its massive monetary stimulus program last month. The chaos in Congress means it now probably won’t begin pulling back its bond purchases until next year. “I think the markets are beginning to learn how to live with Washington dysfunction,” said Valliere.

  • Presidential polls in Maldives on October 19

    Presidential polls in Maldives on October 19

    MALE (TIP)s: The Maldives returns to the polls on October 19 for another attempt to choose a president after judges annulled last month’s election results, deepening concern about political stability in the fledgling democracy. Regional power India sent a top envoy for talks with presidential candidates october 15 as international pressure mounted on Maldivian authorities to stage a peaceful election. “They (the Indians) believe that there will be no further issues and a smooth elections will be held,” former president Mohamed Nasheed, who topped the September 7 ballot, told reporters after meeting India’s Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh on Thursday. There was no immediate comment from Indian diplomats about Singh’s talks with candidates, but New Delhi had urged Male to ensure they have a new president by November 11, a constitutional requirement. Election officials were working overtime to ready the luxury tourist destination for Saturday’s polls, after the Supreme Court last week scrapped the first round of voting, citing irregularities, even though international observers said those polls were free and fair.

    Nasheed, a pro-democracy campaigner who claims he was ousted in a coup last year, won the September 7 election with 45.45 percent of the vote, and remains the frontrunner in the new contest. Britain urged the Maldives to hold fair and smooth elections, where political tensions have remained high ever since Nasheed was toppled following a mutiny by police in February 2012. “We are urging all the presidential candidates to act in line with the interest of the people of the Maldives and to respect the democratic process,” British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka and the Maldives, John Rankin, said. “We have made it clear that there must be no intimidation of the independent Elections Commission or of domestic NGOs monitoring the elections,” Rankin told reporters in Colombo on Wednesday. Rankin warned that further political instability in the Indian Ocean islands nation could undermine its tourism industry, which drew nearly a million holidaymakers last year. “So, it’s vital that the country gets this right,” he said. Elections Commission chief Fuwad Thowfeek said his staff were working hard to prepare for the vote, even though another legal challenge from one of Nasheed’s opponents could still stop it from going ahead.

    “We are very certain the election will be held as scheduled, but not everything is within our control,” Thowfeek told reporters in Male late on Wednesday, referring to a possible last-minute challenge. Nasheed’s party views Saturday’s election as a chance to capitalise on its win last time around, by garnering more than 50 percent of the vote from the nation’s 239,000 registered voters and avoiding a runoff. His main challenger is Abdullah Yameen, the half brother of former autocrat Maumoon Abdul Gayoom who ruled the islands under a oneparty system for 30 years till 2008 when the nation adopted multi-party democracy. Yameen garnered 25.35 percent of the vote in September, pushing resort tycoon and businessman Qasim Ibrahim to a close third place. Ibrahim lodged the initial court case alleging irregularities on the electoral list, which could have influenced the order of the second and third-placed candidates President Mohamed Waheed, a former UN diplomat who has antagonised foreign allies since taking office after Nasheed, has announced he will not run on Saturday and has promised to ensure a smooth transition of power. He was humiliated at the September 7 poll, winning just over five percent of the vote. Diplomats have urged candidates against derailing Saturday’s vote. “There is a lot of potential for trouble if there is another legal challenge to the elections,” a Colombo-based Western diplomat said. “If they fail to have a president elected soon, we will be getting into unchartered waters,” the diplomat said. The United States said last week that it was important the election process “(goes) forward unimpeded in a fair, inclusive and transparent way.”

  • Contemplate over degrading environment issues of Kashmir too: Pakistan thinktanks

    Contemplate over degrading environment issues of Kashmir too: Pakistan thinktanks

    ATTARI (TIP): While candidly admitting that the media was more or less towing the line of security establishments and their policies while reporting contentious issues of Kashmir, Pakistani thinktanks opined that there were more to reports beyond demographic and territorial issues especially those concerning with the fragile environment of valley that had always remained unnoticed but has now become a global issue. The views were expressed by a delegation of Pakistani political analysts and thinktanks who had arrived India via Attari land border on Wednesday to participate in an international seminar being held to mark the birth anniversary of noted Gandhian Didi Nirmla Deshpanday on October 17 at Patiala. During the seminar, the Pak thinktanks would also deliberate over the exit of Nato forces from Afghanistan and its impact on India-Pak relations. “I think, instead of towing the old notions of war wherein both nations stake claim on territories, the concentration should be more on Kashmir’s environmental degradation which has become an major issue for global community,” said senior advisor, policy advocacy and civil society interface Zulfiqar Halepto.

  • 86 stranded tourists rescued near Mt Everest

    86 stranded tourists rescued near Mt Everest

    BEIJING (TIP): Chinese rescuers have safely evacuated 86 tourists, including 13 foreigners, who were trapped in heavy snow at the north base camp of Mount Everest in central Tibet. The government of Tibet Autonomous Region said that 78 tourists, who had been stranded at the camp, were safely moved to a nearby hotel. A total of 86 tourists were initially trapped at the camp but Monday evening report said eight of them had left Rongbuk, the world’s highest monastery located at an altitude of 5,100 metres. The tourists included 13 foreigners mainly Australian and Dutch citizens, state-run Xinhua news agency reported. The tourists were about to go downhill after sightseeing at the base camp of the Mt Everest known in Tibet as Mout Qomolangma when a snowstorm blocked the roads. The local government said they had mobilized more than 40 rescuers and machinery to clear the way.

  • Musharraf denies any role in Lal Masjid operation

    Musharraf denies any role in Lal Masjid operation

    ISLAMABAD (TIP): Pakistan’s former military ruler Gen Pervez Musharraf has denied having ordered the Lal Masjid operation in 2007, even as a fresh petition was filed in a court seeking action against him under the blasphemy law. A three-member joint investigation team (JIT), whose two members had earlier refused to be part of it, interrogated 70-year-old Musharraf yesterday at his Chak Shahzad farmhouse which has been declared a sub-jail. He was interrogated in connection with a double-murder case registered by Aabpara police on a complaint of Haroon Rasheed, son of Abdul Rasheed Ghazi, deputy chief of Lal Masjid, who was killed in the 2007 operation at the mosque. Haroon has alleged that Musharraf issued the order for the operation in which his father and grandmother Sabiha Khatoon were killed. The former president told the JIT that the operation had been ordered by the then elected government and he had nothing to do with it, Dawn daily reported quoting sources.

    “I was wrongly implicated. I did not issue any written order regarding the operation,” Musharraf was quoted as saying by the sources. He said the then capital administration had called the army for help which led to the operation. He also denied other allegations levelled against him in the FIR. Over 100 people, including 10 army personnel and a Rangers man, were killed during the operation. Meanwhile, a Pakistani lawyer has filed a petition in the Islamabad High Court seeking action against the former president under the controversial blasphemy law for allegedly desecrating religious books during the Lal Masjid operation. In his petition, advocate Tariq Asad, who is the counsel for the newly-established Shuhada Foundation of Pakistan Trust, contended that Musharraf was responsible for launching the operation during which “not only a large number of civilians were killed but also copies of the holy Quran, religious books and research materials were destroyed.” The petition said the objective of the operation was “not only to commit murders of religious scholars, preachers and teachers but also to destroy the mission of the preaching of Islam, which prima facie was tantamount to the commission of the offence of blasphemy.”

  • Suicide bomber kills Pak minister, 7 others

    Suicide bomber kills Pak minister, 7 others

    PESHAWAR (TIP): A suicide bomb attack in northwestern Pakistan killed at least eight people, including a provincial law minister, and injured 28 others on the first day of Eid-ul-Zuha. The attack happened on Wednesday evening when law minister Israrullah Gandapur was exchanging Eid greetings with people at his residence in Kullachi town of Dera Ismail Khan, bordering the country’s volatile tribal regions. According to police officials, the attacker first killed the guard at the house and then blew himself up inside the guest room of the minister’s residence. “The suicide bomber was on foot and entered the hujrah (male guest house) of law minister for Eid greetings. Law minister Israrullah Gandapur and seven others were killed in the attack while 28 others were injured,” said Shah Farman, information minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) province. Gandapur was a member of the ruling party in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, the Pakistan Tehreek-i- Insaf (PTI), a party led by former cricketer Imran Khan which favours peace talks with the Pakistani Taliban. He was the third PTI lawmaker from KPK to be killed in a suicide bombing since the elections. The attack was claimed by Ansar-ul-Mujahideen group of militants, associated with the Tehreek-i- Taliban Pakistan. While claiming responsibility of the attack, Abu Baseer, the group’s spokesman said: “We targeted the KPK law minister to avenge the killing of our friend by security forces a couple of days ago.”

  • RAGING AUSTRALIAN WILDFIRES DESTROY HOMES, KILL 1

    RAGING AUSTRALIAN WILDFIRES DESTROY HOMES, KILL 1

    SYDNEY (TIP): Nearly 100 wildfires raged across Australia’s most populous state on Friday, killing one person, destroying dozens of houses and forcing hundreds of evacuations as the nation’s annual fire season got off to an unusually early start. Milder conditions were helping firefighters after Thursday’s unseasonably hot temperatures and strong winds fanned flames across the parched landscape and threatened towns surrounding Sydney. Rural Fire Service spokeswoman Natalie Sanders said the number of fires in New South Wales state had dropped from more than 100 overnight to 94, burning across 86,000 hectares (330 square miles). But 28 continued to burn out of control, she said. Roads and schools in the worsthit areas were closed and fire assessment teams and police were moving into the destruction zones in search of survivors and victims. Officials were trying to determine how many homes were destroyed; Prime Minister Tony Abbott said it could be hundreds, but the exact number was not known. “I know some information that’s been passed to me that just in one street, there were 40 homes lost,” Rural Fire Service Deputy Commissioner Rob Rogers told Nine Network television.

    Rogers said interstate firefighters were on their way to help fight the blazes, including one burning near the town of Lithgow, west of the Blue Mountains, across a front 25 kilometers (16 miles) wide. Blue Mountains Mayor Mark Greenhill visited the devastated village of Winmalee, on Sydney’s western fringe, where some streets were almost entirely razed. “It’s been an awful 24 hours for the Blue Mountains” region, Greenhill told Nine. “We’ve lost possibly scores of homes – I can’t put the number closer than that.” The Fire Service said a 63-yearold man had a fatal heart attack while he was fighting a fire at his home at Lake Munmorah, north of Sydney, late Thursday. Two people suffering from smoke inhalation, including a 68-year-old man from Winmalee, were in intensive care at Sydney’s Concord Hospital on Friday, hospital spokeswoman Kate Benson said. She had no details on the second victim. Two injured firefighters were treated and released from a hospital, and another firefighter remained hospitalized Friday after undergoing surgery, Fire Service spokesman Matt Sun said. He had no information on the nature of their injuries. Wildfires are common in Australia, though they don’t tend to pop up in large numbers until the summer, which begins in December.

    This year’s unusually dry winter and hotter than average spring have led to perfect fire conditions. “We’re not called the land of droughts and flooding rains – the sunburnt country – for nothing,” the prime minister told reporters in Winmalee. In February 2009, wildfires killed 173 people and destroyed more than 2,000 homes in Victoria state. A plane carrying infrared imaging equipment flew over the fires Thursday night and recorded heat spots where maps showed homes were located, emergency services minister Mike Gallacher said. The red and orange spots indicated the homes were burning. “Sadly, where most of these little red dots were, that’s where yesterday morning there used to be houses,” Gallacher told Nine. The fire front was still visible from Winmalee on Friday, but had moved toward the neighboring village of Springwood where homes were evacuated. Hundreds of residents spent Thursday night in dozens of evacuation centers in the Blue Mountains and elsewhere in New South Wales. Most were unaware of the fate of their houses. Temperatures west of Sydney were expected to reach around 23 degrees Celsius (73 degrees Fahrenheit) on Friday – around 10 degrees Celsius (18 degrees Fahrenheit) cooler than on Thursday. Gentle breezes had replaced strong winds. “It’s calmed down a lot since yesterday, but make no mistake: We’ve got thousands of kilometers of fire front that we are faced with trying to deal with,” said Rogers, of the fire service. “This is absolutely far from being over,” he added.

  • Arvind Kejriwal to hold hangouts with US and Canadian supporters

    Arvind Kejriwal to hold hangouts with US and Canadian supporters

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader Arvind Kejriwal plans to hold hangouts with his supporters in the US and Canada later this month, seeking contribution from the Indian diaspora for nation building. Kejriwal would hold the hangouts on October 20, a statement issued through Bay Area chapter of AAP, USA said. “We see expatriate Indians as an integral part of India. They have plenty to contribute to the country in terms of knowhow and expertise in every possible field imaginable,” Kejriwal said in the statement. “Most importantly, they are eager to give back to their mother land. We will leave no stone unturned when it comes to tapping into this resource,” he said. “I am looking forward to hosting this special get together at my home with my friends and family. They are keen on hearing Arvind first hand. I am sure this will have a ripple effect as they carry AAP’s message to their respective circle of friends,” AAP volunteer in US, Mohan Thirumalai, said. We anticipate a significant turnout with thousands of attendees as volunteers reach out to their respective networks, a Chicagobased organization development consultant, Shalini Gupta said. Formally launched in November 2012, the party is contesting its first election – the assembly polls in Delhi — in December 2013.

  • First US Sikh soldier gets corporal rank

    First US Sikh soldier gets corporal rank

    CHANDIGARH (TIP): Twenty-nineyear- old Delhi-born Simranpreet Lamba, the US army’s only enlisted Sikh soldier, has also now become the first of the community to be promoted to the corporal rank in America in three decades. Corporal is the 5th rank in the US army, above specialist and directly below sergeant. Lamba, who went to the US in 2006 to finish his education, is thrilled. “I’m a proud US army soldier today. There’s nothing about my beard and hair that bars me from doing anything any other soldier would do,” Lamba told TOI over phone from the US. After his January 2009 graduation from New York University with a master’s degree in industrial engineering, Lamba had decided to stay in the US and started a career in a private sector. His enlistment in 2009, however, triggered a nine-month review in which army officials pondered over if he could serve while sporting a turban, uncut hair and a beard.

    Later that year, two Sikh officers, a doctor and a dentist, were allowed to serve in the Army while wearing a beard, unshorn hair and a turban, inspiring him to apply to a combative rank profile. US army policies since 1984 had effectively prevented Sikhs from enlisting in the soldier rank. But Lamba requested a waiver from the Army to allow him to keep his articles of faith. He was then recruited under the Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest recruiting program, which enlists legal non-citizens with language skills, such as his knowledge of Punjabi and Hindi. Throughout his training, Lamba wore a turban, that was patterned on army combat uniform, instead of the regular patrol cap, which fit underneath his Kevlar helmet. He used petroleum jelly to get a grip between his beard and gas mask, and was able to keep his hair clean under all conditions, meeting the military’s concerns about training and appearance. Lamba hopes his story will encourage other Sikhs to serve, even though the path to US military service might not be an easy one for them.

  • Indian-American arrested in high school friend’s killing

    Indian-American arrested in high school friend’s killing

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Rahul Gupta, 24, is being held on $2 million bond after a night of drinking and birthday celebrating ended in a bloody stabbing of Mark Edward Waugh on Sunday, October 13 morning inside a high-rise apartment in Silver Spring, a Washington suburb in Maryland, the Washington Post reported. Gupta was pursuing a master’s degree in biomedical engineering at George Washington University. Waugh was in his first year of law school. According to police, a woman called 911 Sunday at 3.25am. When police arrived at the apartment, they found Waugh and Gupta inside. Police say they found Waugh suffering from cuts and he was unresponsive. It was later determined he was dead. Both Waugh and Gupta attended Langley High School in McLean, Virginia, where they took several advanced placement and honors classes together, the Post said. Waugh was in an afterschool robotics club. Gupta played on the varsity tennis team. Arrest records in the case paint a picture of several friends going out on Saturday to celebrate Gupta’s birthday, the newspaper said. But things later appear to have turned to alcohol-fuelled confusion and – at least based on the perception of one member of the party – a jealous rage, it said. “I walked in on my girlfriend cheating on me,” Gupta told the police, according to the charging papers cited by Post. “My girl and my buddy were cheating. My girl was cheating with my buddy. I walked in on them cheating and I killed my buddy,” Gupta said. Gupta later told a police officer he’d made a mistake and added that “he tried to kill me, though”, the arrest records cited by the newspaper recount him as saying.

  • Senate confirms Indian American to key arts position

    Senate confirms Indian American to key arts position

    WASHINGTON: An exponent of Bharatanatayam, Ranee Ramaswamy was confirmed on October 17, as a member of the prestigious National Council on the Arts. Ranee founded the Ragamala Music and Dance Theatre in 1992 at Minneapolis, Minnesota and started popularizing this classical Indian dance form in the US. The National Council on the Arts advises the Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, who also chairs the Council, on agency policies and programs. It reviews and makes recommendations to the Chairman on applications for grants, funding guidelines, and leadership initiatives. Renee has been confirmed for a term expiring September 3, 2018. According to her bio posted on her website she has been a disciple of Alarmel Valli, one of India’s greatest living masters since 1984. Ranee has worked with celebrated artists such as poet Robert Bly, jazz musician Howard Levy and legendary composer L Subramaniam, the Cudamani ensemble of Indonesia and Wadaiko Ensemble Tokara of Japan. Among her many grants and fellowships are 13 McKnight Artist Fellowships, a Bush Fellowship, and an Artist Exploration Fund grant from Arts International. Her work is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Dance Project, and the Japan Foundation. In 2011 she was chosen as the McKnight Foundation Distinguished Artist. Ranee and co-Artistic Director Aparna Ramaswamy were named the 2011 “Artist of the Year” by the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

  • Edward Snowden says he took no secret documents to Russia

    Edward Snowden says he took no secret documents to Russia

    WASHINGTON (TIP): US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden says he did not bring any secret documents with him to Russia when he fled there, ensuring Moscow had no access to the files. In an interview with The New York Times published on October 18, Snowden said he gave all the classified papers he had obtained to reporters he met in Hong Kong before flying to Moscow, where he later secured asylum. The former National Security Agency contractor did not take the documents with him “because it wouldn’t serve the public interest,” Snowden told the Times. “What would be the unique value of personally carrying another copy of the materials onward?” Snowden also insisted he was able to protect the documents from China’s spy services because he was familiar with that country’s intelligence capabilities through his work as an NSA contractor. In his job, he had targeted Chinese operations and taught a course on Chinese cyber-counterintelligence.

    “There’s a zero percent chance the Russians or Chinese have received any documents,” he said. The interview took place last week over several days through encrypted online communications. US officials and critics of Snowden have expressed concern that the documents in his possession could have fallen into the hands of Russian, Chinese or other potentially hostile foreign intelligence agencies. Snowden, however, insisted the National Security Agency knew he had not cooperated with Russian or Chinese spies. “NSA has not offered a single example of damage from the leaks. They haven’t said boo about it except ‘we think,’ ‘maybe,’ ‘have to assume’ from anonymous and former officials,” Snowden added. “Not ‘China is going dark.’ Not ‘the Chinese military has shut us out.’” Snowden also said he never considered defecting while in Hong Kong or Russia, where he has been given asylum for one year. Snowden said his decision to leak secret documents evolved gradually, and that his doubts about intelligence agencies dated back to his time working for the CIA in Geneva.

    He said he clashed with a senior manager when he tried to warn the CIA about a vulnerability in its personnel Web applications. The episode convinced him that trying to work through the system would only lead to punishment. The 30-year-old, who faces espionage charges over his bombshell leaks, defended his disclosures as serving the country’s interests by sparking a public debate and informing the public about secret surveillance. “So long as there’s broad support amongst a people, it can be argued there’s a level of legitimacy even to the most invasive and morally wrong program, as it was an informed and willing decision,” Snowden said. “However, programs that are implemented in secret, out of public oversight, lack that legitimacy, and that’s a problem. “It also represents a dangerous normalization of ‘governing in the dark,’ where decisions with enormous public impact occur without any public input.” The NSA was not immediately available to comment on Snowden’s interview.

  • US Senate confirms Nisha Desai Biswal as assistant secretary of state

    US Senate confirms Nisha Desai Biswal as assistant secretary of state

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The US Senate has confirmed Indian- American woman administrator Nisha Desai Biswal as the assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, making her the first person from the community to hold the top diplomatic position. Biswal, who is currently the assistant administrator for Asia at the US Agency for International Development ( USAID), will replace incumbent Robert Blake to head the key bureau in the state department. President Barack Obama had nominated her for this top position on July 18. The Senate foreign relations committee had held her confirmation hearing last month, during which she received bipartisan support and was praised by lawmakers from both the parties. “I consider you another compelling argument for comprehensive immigration reform,” said Senator John McCain of the Republican Party. “Despite your misguided political affiliation, I would like to say that you’re a great example to all of us of people who come to this country.

    I know you were very young … and the opportunities that this country provides,” McCain said in praise of Biswal, who is from the Democratic Party. McCain who lost out to Obama in the 2008 presidential elections rarely praises someone from the Democratic Party. From 2005 to 2010, she was the majority clerk for the state department and foreign operations subcommittee on the Committee on appropriations in the US House of Representatives. From 2002 to 2005, she served as the Policy and advocacy director at interaction. Previously, she served on the professional staff of the US House of Representatives international relations committee from 1999 to 2002. Daughter of first generation Indian Americans, Biswal draws her inspiration from her parents’ story of journey far from rural India to pursue the American Dream and a better life for their children, which she told lawmakers during the confirmation hearing of her current position on July 21, 2010.

  • Fooled by forged files, jailers release 2 US killers

    Fooled by forged files, jailers release 2 US killers

    HOUSTON (TIP): Authorities in the US state of Florida have launched a massive manhunt for two murderers who were mistakenly released from prison after jailers were conned by forged court documents. Charles Walker and Joseph Jenkins, both 34, were released separately from the Franklin correctional institution in Carrabelle after officials received forged paperwork indicating their sentences had been reduced, The Orlando Sentinel reported. While Jenkins was serving a 50-year sentence for murder and armed robbery, Walker was serving 15 years for murder. The Florida department of law enforcement, which is investigating the case to determine how this happened, was not notified of the releases until Tuesday. Department of corrections spokeswoman Jessica Cary said state corrections officials acted on the court documents, not realizing they were falsified. Florida department of corrections secretary Michael Crews said that the agency is reviewing the releases to make sure that no other inmates have been released based on falsified documents. “The top priority of the department is the safety of Florida families and we’ll continue working with law enforcement to ensure these men are returned to custody,” Crews said.

  • eBay founder to bankroll project for journalists

    eBay founder to bankroll project for journalists

    NEW YORK (TIP): For years, the tech billionaire Pierre M Omidyar has been experimenting with ways to promote serious journalism, searching for the proper media platform to support with the fortune he earned as the founder of eBay. He has made grants to independent media outlets in Africa and government watchdog groups in the United States. In a more direct effort, he created a news website in Hawaii, his home state. Then last summer, The Washington Post came calling in its pursuit of a buyer. The Graham family ended up selling The Post to a different tech billionaire, Jeffrey P Bezos of Amazon. But the experience, Omidyar wrote on his blog on Wednesday, “got me thinking about what kind of social impact could be created if a similar investment was made in something entirely new, built from the ground up.” Omidyar also confirmed that he would be personally financing a new “mass media” venture, where he will be joined by journalist Glenn Greenwald of The Guardian, the British daily.

  • US-India Relations Hit a Rough Patch

    US-India Relations Hit a Rough Patch

    The author feels that there are a number of vital issues which are unlikely to be settled within the tenures of either Obama or Singh, leaving a lingering note of ambivalence in the US-India relationship even as it deepens outside of the high politics.

    When Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited Washington last month for the first time in four years, the mood was distinctly subdued. India’s once-stratospheric growth rate is stubbornly depressed. The Indian government is low on political capital and stuck in risk-averse mode until next year’s general elections, with a huge question mark over Singh’s personal future. Most Indians anyway focused on Singh’s New York meeting with his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif – underwhelming, as it turned out, and marred by a perceived slur – rather than his meetings with President Obama. More generally, the promise of USIndia relations remains far below the levels anticipated only a few years ago.

    Why the stasis?
    There are any number of reasons. Indian journalist Indrani Bagchi suggests that ‘there remains a strong lobby within this government starting with [ruling Congress Party chairwoman] Sonia Gandhi and [Defense Minister] AK Antony downwards, which retains an instinctive aversion to America’. That same government’s slow rate of economic reform irks American companies who want to invest in India. In particular, a strict nuclear liability law limits those companies’ ability to exploit a landmark civil nuclear cooperation agreement initiated by the Bush administration in 2005. Also, India’s Byzantine procurement rules madden the American defense companies eager to sell into what is one of the few growing arms markets in the world. A sense prevails that the low-hanging fruit in the bilateral relationship was picked some years ago. But one less-noticed problem is that the limited bandwidth of US foreign policy is presently occupied by issues in which India is either wary of US policy or simply apathetic.

    The Middle East
    In his speech to the United Nations General Assembly on 24 September, President Obama noted that ‘in the near term, America’s diplomatic efforts will focus on two particular issues: Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons and the Arab-Israeli conflict’. India has much to gain from a rapprochement between Iran and the United States, not least the ability to once again freely import Iranian oil. India was circumventing international sanctions by paying for a diminished flow of Iranian oil in rupees, but the new Iranian government is insisting that India can only pay for half this way. India is a bystander rather than active participant in the broader dispute, watching from the sidelines as the P5+1 bloc, which includes Russia and China, participates in negotiations. On Syria, India is sympathetic to the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. It views the issue through the lens of the Afghan jihad in the 1980s, which Indians see as indelibly associated with the subsequent uprising in Kashmir and the growth of anti- Indian militancy. When the Indian Government summoned the Syrian Ambassador in Delhi last month, it was not because of Syrian policies but because the ambassador had alleged that Indian jihadists were fighting with the rebels. The ambassador stated, tellingly, that ‘he was always deeply appreciative of India’s position on Syria’.

    India unsurprisingly opposes efforts to arm the Syrian rebels, tends to see the armed opposition as irredeemably compromised by jihadists and reflexively opposes US proposals for military action, particularly outside the ambit of the UN Security Council. India has already had to abandon several oil fields in Syria and, in September 2013, India’s foreign secretary even referred to an existing Indian line of credit to the Syrian government. Yet, despite these equities, India has no leverage over the parties to the conflict. In May, an Iranian suggestion of greater Indian involvement went nowhere. There is little that Singh would usefully have been able to say to Obama on the subject. At a broader level, the more the Middle East distracts from US attention to Asia- Pacific – including the so-called ‘pivot’ of American military forces eastwards – the less high-level attention India receives in Washington. India was not mentioned once in Obama’s UN address (to compare: China was mentioned once, Iran 26 times, and Syria 20).

    Afghanistan
    India’s attitude to US policy in Afghanistan is even more conflicted. India is ostensibly supportive of US policy, and has formally signed on to an Afghan-led peace process. But Indian officials and strategists scarcely disguise their discomfort towards what they see as undue American haste in withdrawing troops, an overeagerness to accommodate the Taliban as part of political reconciliation, and a continued indulgence of Pakistan despite its support for Afghan insurgents. India felt that its views were vindicated by the June debacle over the opening of a Taliban office in Doha, which deviated from the agreed protocol, handed a propaganda victory to the Taliban, and angered the Afghan government. Indian national security reporter Praveen Swami summed up many Indians’ views in complaining that the US was ‘subcontracting the task of keeping the peace in Afghanistan to the ISI’, Pakistan’s premier intelligence service.

    In recent months, Indians have taken offence at statements by James Dobbins, the US Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, echoing earlier Indian anger at the late Richard Holbrooke, and have chafed at what they see as a Western equivalence between Indian and Pakistani policy in Afghanistan. For their part, US and British officials have grown increasingly frustrated with India’s approach to the issue, arguing that India offers no plausible alternative to the policy of reconciliation given the long-term weakness of the Afghan state. Yet it is in Obama’s interests to assuage Indian concerns, emphasize that reconciliation with the Taliban will be constrained by the established ‘red lines’, that the US will not abandon counterterrorism efforts in Afghanistan after 2014, and that India’s role in Afghanistan is not only welcome, but also necessary to the strengthening of the Afghan state. India rebuffed Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s request for arms earlier this year, wary of provoking Pakistan. But one area that deserves more discussion is greater direct cooperation between India and the NATO-led coalition in Afghanistan to train and equip Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF).

    According to one report, Obama asked Singh last week for an ‘increased effort’ in Afghanistan, although it’s unclear whether this included an implied or explicit training dimension. India, entirely reasonably, sees a potential eastward flow of militants from Afghanistan and Pakistan as a major security threat, particularly with violent trends in Kashmir worsening this year. India would therefore be particularly receptive to a US commitment to monitor and disrupt militant movement in the years after 2014. In truth, it will be difficult to make progress on these issues until Washington settles its own internal debates over what its posture in Afghanistan will be after 2014 (for example, how many (if any) troops will remain in a training capacity?), which in turn will depend on the peace process itself, President Karzai’s domestic political calculations in the face of presidential elections next year, the integrity of that election, and trends in Afghanistan.

    Where next?
    The level of US-India tension should not be exaggerated. It is telling that recent revelations over US intelligence collection against Indian diplomatic targets have, unlike in the case of Brazil, had negligible impact on the relationship. Indian officials chose to brush the issue under the carpet, presumably hoping that the issue had little domestic salience and perhaps even tacitly acknowledging that the NSA’s activities against Indian internet traffic were indirectly beneficial to Indian policy objectives. Twenty years ago, the Indian response may have been very different. It is these changes in tone that convey strategic shifts as much as any large policy initiative. And although the two countries differ on the contentious big-picture issues outlined above, this has not prevented the relationship from advancing on other tracks. In September, US Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter visited India to push ahead with the bilateral Defense Trade Initiative (DTI), which Carter co-chairs with India’s National Security Advisor, Shivshankar Menon.

    Carter reiterated his suggestion, dating from last year, that US and Indian firms cooperate to produce military equipment – including helicopters, nextgeneration anti-tank missiles, mine systems, and naval guns – for both countries’ use. India has been bafflingly slow and reticent to respond to these overtures, despite the possibility of much-needed technology transfer to Indian industry (though many analysts are skeptical as to its capacity for technology absorption). The negotiations nevertheless reflect the US perception that the defense strand of its relationship with India are a priority. The road ahead is rocky. Over the next eighteen months, the US-India relationship will be severely buffeted by US policy towards Afghanistan. As the American drawdown accelerates, one possibility is that the US intensifies diplomatic efforts to peel away moderate factions within the Afghan Taliban, Whether that amounts to anything or not (and few are optimistic) the process is certain to involve at least a period of deeper USPakistan consultations, at the expense of India. Later this month, for instance, a fourth Afghanistan-Pakistan-UK trilateral summit will take place in London.

    India has quietly seethed at the previous three, viewing them as a coordinated effort to reduce Indian influence. Yet, for the United States at least, the centre of gravity of the US-India relationship is not Afghanistan, but China. The Middle East’s fast-moving and highly visible crises have briefly distracted from a slow-moving background trend: the political and economic rise of China. Yet this remains where Indian and American strategic interests are most collectively at stake, if not necessarily congruent. Following India’s most recent crisis with China, involving deep Chinese incursions into disputed territory a few months ago, New Delhi’s instinctive response was not to make a prominent feint towards Washington – something that might have been the natural response of other states eager to balance against Beijing – but to engage China more intensively, including on the border dispute itself. Indeed, Singh will make a trip to Beijing next month, with indications that he may sign an upgraded border agreement. Nothing better underscores how India’s internal debate over the desired scope of its relationship with the United States is unsettled, on-going, and erratic. More generally, much of India’s press and strategic community have accepted the popular narrative that American leadership, as well as American power, is in decline, and that US reliability is therefore in question. These issues are unlikely to be settled within the tenures of either Obama or Singh, leaving a lingering note of ambivalence in the USIndia relationship even as it deepens outside of the high politics.

  • India-US Partnership

    India-US Partnership

    Defense Trade to be the Driving Engine

    Contrary to the forecasts of doom and gloom and the skepticism surrounding his visit to Washington, the third Manmohan- Obama Summit meeting on September 27 has been quite productive. With hindsight, one can say that media reports about growing impatience of US NSA Susan Rice, impact of the comprehensive immigration law, lobbying in the Capitol Hill by Microsoft, IBM and American drug manufacturing giants against Indian IT and drug manufacturing companies and differences on Afghanistan, Iran, Syria, nuclear liability Act etc were highly exaggerated. An honest and dispassionate assessment of India-US relations in the last decade clearly shows that they have been transformed beyond recognition; India-US strategic partnership is for real and it is in for a long haul in spite of serious differences on some issues in the short run. Nothing demonstrates this better than the exponential expansion of defense trade; US exports of defense and military hardware to India in the last five years have crossed US$ 9bn; with the long shopping lists of the Indian Army, Air Force and Navy this is bound to expand further.

    If the promise of transfer of defense technology, joint research and co-production mentioned in the joint statement is taken to its logical conclusion, this collaboration could become the driving engine of closer Indo-US strategic partnership. In this regard, the US decision to supply offensive weapons to India will be the leitmotif of this burgeoning relationship. Notwithstanding these positive signals, well-known strategic analyst Brahma Chellaney feels that India-US strategic relationship is somewhat “lopsided and unbalanced” on account of structural and strategic limitations of India. A lot is made out of the flattering phrases such as the “defining relationship of the 21st century” (used by Obama and John Kerry) which might transcend into the 22nd century and India being the “lynch pin” of the US policy in Asia (used by Leon Panetta) and optimistic projections made by the heads of think tanks such as Ashley Tellis of Carnegie Endowment. Visiting American dignitaries seldom fail to stress the commonalities between India and the US: democracy, rule of law, human rights, and multi-ethnic, multireligious, multi-lingual, plural societies. These are, no doubt, important factors but must be taken with a pinch of salt.

    In the real world, so long as it serves their national interests, countries don’t mind doing business with other countries where these factors don’t hold water. The US-China relations are an obvious example of this phenomenon. While the US IT companies might continue urging the US government to apply some indirect brakes on the Indian IT companies, the fact is they have been receiving “great service, great quality at low costs” from Indian companies and it has enabled them to operate efficiently and profitably. The misperception created by media reports that the US wishes to “contain” China and hence is trying to warm up to India warrants closer scrutiny. The US-China economic, financial, trade, business and investment ties are so huge and millions of jobs in the US depend on this collaboration that the US will never risk them. As a matter of fact, the US has been quite careful not to hurt China’s sensitivities; it’s decision to call its new approach in Asia now as “Asia Rebalance” instead of “Asia Pivot” is a “course correction” keeping China in mind. On the issues of alleged incursions into Indian territories by the Chinese troops and the India-China spat regarding the ONGC-Vietnam offshore oil drilling collaboration, the US has maintained strict neutrality.

    Conversely, it is also a fact that the US won’t like to see a China-dominated Asia. This, apart from the economic considerations, explains its concerted efforts to come closer to India, ASEAN and beyond to shore up its influence in Asia-Pacific and maintain pressure on China to keep trade routes through the South China Sea open to international trade according to international laws. Some recent developments have eased the alleged “drift”, “wrinkles” and imaginary or real “plateau” in relations. The preliminary contract between the US nuclear companies, Westinghouse and NPCIL for setting up a nuclear plant in Gujarat is a welcome beginning. The establishment of “an American India- US climate change working group” and convening the “India-US Task Force on HFCs” are viewed as positive developments. And the reiteration of US support for a place for India in the reformed UNSC should be music to Indian ears. Besides, a temporary postponement by the US Federal Reserve to end the stimulus package should give countries like India some breathing time to put their finances in order. Though nothing concrete has been promised, some negotiated compromise on the new Immigration laws shouldn’t be ruled out.

    In the field of foreign affairs, the biggest relief has come from Iran. There is thaw in the air in the US-Iran relations thanks to the speech of the newly elected President Rouhani in the UN General Assembly and his wishes on the Jewish New Year on his Twitter which prompted Obama to make the historic Presidential phone call for the first time in 30 years! Unless, this process is cut short by the Iranian supreme leader, US-Iran relations should see some further easing of tension and resolution of the nuclear issue which has led to the imposition of crippling UN sanctions on Iran. This thaw has the potential of lightening India’s oil import bill if more Iranian oil comes on the market. India’s expectations from the US to put further pressure on Pakistan to bring the perpetrators of 26/11 Mumbai attack to book and rein in the terrorist groups like Al-Qaida and LeT and dismantle terror infrastructure and go slow on co-opting the Taliban in the talks on the future of Afghanistan aren’t likely to be met fully because of the US priorities to exit from Afghanistan smoothly. In the meanwhile, India should brace itself for a Taliban-dominated Afghanistan after the withdrawal of the American troops in 2014.

    What role India could play in Afghanistan after the US exit can’t be guaranteed by the US; it will have to work out a strategy with countries like China, Russia, and Iran and, of course, the US. As the economies of India and the US aren’t doing as great as they would have expected, there are domestic pressures in both countries which impact negatively on the bilateral relations. The IT and pharma MNCs in the US and the constituencies in India which didn’t favor FDI in retail and pressed for a more stringent nuclear liability Bill are manifestations of such domestic pressures. As both India and the US have strategic partnership with a number of countries, in crises situations each country will take a decision based on its strategic interests. From this perspective, KS Bajpai, a former Ambassador to the US, injects a reality check: “If ever India finds herself in an open conflict with another country, she will be just by herself; none will come to her help”. That should give us a wake-up call to mend our fences with our neighbors and create an environment of goodwill and warmth without lowering our guards and ignoring defense preparedness.

  • Back from the Brink

    Back from the Brink

    The financial markets worldwide felt relieved after the US Congress reached an agreement shortly before the deadline was to expire on Wednesday. A debt default would have raised the cost of borrowings for the US. The 16-day government shutdown over a budget fight between the Democrats and the Republicans caused losses not just to the domestic economy but to all those countries dependent on US exports for growth. Many such countries were relying on a US demand pick-up to compensate for the sluggish economic conditions at home. There is one positive outcome that should cheer the emerging economies like India and China. There is hope that the US Federal Reserve will not rush to roll back its $85 billion a month bond-buying program, giving more time to the Asian countries to stabilize their economies and currencies, which had been shaken by dollar outflows in recent months.

    The Republicans had brought the US government to a halt, demanding that President Barack Obama’s favorite health care program should be either delayed or defunded and the existing taxes should be cut. Two years ago when there was a similar confrontation over raising the debt ceiling, President Obama had retreated, agreeing to a staggered slashing of domestic spending. This time Obama was firm and assertive, and called the Republicans’ bluff. The deal that was signed at the last minute indicated a complete Republican surrender. There was a minor concession on health care which required the administration to audit incomes of those seeking insurance subsidies. But the damage the Republicans have caused to the US reputation is incalculable. Americans dependent on government programs and Federal employees were the main sufferers. A fringe group in the Republican Party took the entire nation to ransom and ended up hurting its own leadership. The approval ratings of the Republicans are at the rock-bottom. But the relief is for a limited period. “Our drive to stop the train wreck that is the President’s health care law will continue”, said the Republican leader, Speaker John Boehner. Early next year the battle is expected to resume.

  • Indian-American Woman is Running for Seattle City Council

    Indian-American Woman is Running for Seattle City Council

    SEATTLE (TIP): Kshama Sawant, trained as a computer engineer in her native India and now a professor of economics, is running for a seat on the City Council of Seattle under an unambiguously far-left banner. Even in this liberal bastion of the Northwest, Sawant’s political views stand out. Having gained sufficient electoral support in the August primary (44,000 votes, or about 35 percent of the total, finishing second in a threeway race), Sawant is now challenging the entrenched 16-year Democratic incumbent Richard Conlin for a council seat in the November general election. A veteran of the Occupy Wall Street movement, Sawant espouses an explicitly anticapitalist creed that champions the rights of the poor, low-wage workers,women, immigrants, the homeless, the disabled, homosexuals and other marginalized segments of the population. Her current political campaign rests on three principal platforms: a $15-per-hour minimum wage; higher taxes on millionaires to fund mass transit and education; and rent control.

    “A majority of workers and young people face an increasingly unaffordable city,” she told local media. “Most are disgusted by the endless parade of politicians who play with progressive rhetoric at election time, then pander to big corporations and the super-rich while in office.” The Stranger, a Seattle area newspaper that has endorsed Sawant, along with six labor unions, said she is the only element of the campaign season that is providing any excitement or interest. After Sawant performed well in the August primary, John Halle wrote in the North Star, a Socialist newspaper, that her success should not have come as a surprise. “Recent polls have indicated a widespread sympathy to socialism, a sign that the many years of indoctrination equating ‘free markets and free people,’ capitalism and democracy, and of there being ‘no alternative’ to neo-liberal austerity are finally losing their power to convince,” Halle wrote. “Sawant’s candidacy is the first to give a concrete indication that these attitudes are beginning to find expression in terms of real political power.” The Socialist Alternative newspaper called Sawant’s showing in the run-off “stunning” and a “breakthrough.”

    A well-known political commentator in Seattle, Tom Barnard, wrote of Sawant’s campaign: “What happened conceptually was even more revolutionary.… For what Kshama did was to simply overturn the common wisdom of how to succeed in local elections in general and City Council races in particular. She took what were viewed as two immutable political laws [the need for big money and Democratic Party endorsements] and essentially threw them out the window… It’s nothing short of an earthquake… Kshama has shown a new path for independent candidates who directly advance working people’s interests and issues.” Sawant is trying to translate her activism into practical terms – for example, she has vowed that if she wins election, she will not accept the full $120,000 annual salary awarded to City Council members. Instead, she will take the average salary for city workers and hand over the rest to social movements. In an interview with International Business Times, Sawant laid out some of her vision and her disappointment with the administration of President Barack Obama. “I don’t support the Democrats because they are largely financed by corporate interests, [just] like the Republicans,” she said. “After the initial campaign of ‘Hope and Change’ in 2008, disillusion has set in among much of the electorate.

    The hopes of progressive people have been dashed after five years of Obama.” Sawant cited such issues as the government’s treatment of Wikileaks’ source Bradley Manning, the saber-rattling over Syria, the assault on public schools, drone missile attacks in Pakistan and the deportation of thousands of immigrants, among others, for the disillusionment with Obama. “I think in the current environment, the appeal of independent and alternative candidates has greatly increased,” she noted. “And I don’t think my embrace of socialism has much stigma as it might have had in the past.” Sawant is quick to point out that she embodies the principles of democratic socialism, not the repressive, bureaucratic nature of the former Soviet Union. She also suggests that after the devastation of the housing market collapse, the huge government bailouts of banks and large corporations, and the emergence of a whole new generation of debt-strapped college graduates with bleak job prospects, many members of the American public may simply be “sick of capitalism.” “I think many Americans, particularly the youth, feel demoralized, dejected and disenfranchised by corporate-driven politics,” she said. Indeed, with respect to Seattle, the economy is weakening. After driving the bulk (70 percent) of the state of Washington’s job growth since 2010, in August of this year, the Seattle area (which includes Bellevue and Everett) shed 4,300 jobs, including 1,600 manufacturing jobs, pushing up the local jobless rate to 5.2 percent. For the state as a whole, the jobless rate edged up to 7.0 percent.

    Still, these figures represent a much brighter picture than the rest of the country, particularly California (which is suffering under a nearly 9 percent jobless rate). Even if Seattle has a much healthier economy than other parts of the nation, the cost of living is rising and wages are stagnant. Sawant, a professional economist, contends that one of her fundamental campaign proposals – a $15/hour minimum wage – makes sense, citing that if consumers don’t have enough money to buys goods and services, small businesses will collapse. “Some corporate executives make more in one day than their lowest-paid employees make in a whole year,” she said. “Many companies could easily increase employee salaries. And even at $15/hour, that’s hardly an income that one can easily live on.” Sawant’s proposal even has the support of some local capitalists. Nick Hanauer, founder of Second Avenue Partners, a Seattle venture capital fund, wrote in Bloomberg that the widening wealth gap in the U.S. presents some difficult challenges for the economy. Hanauer noted that low-wage jobs are quickly replacing middle-class jobs in the U.S. economy. “Sixty percent of the jobs lost in the last recession were middle-income,while 59 percent of the new positions during the past two years of recovery were in low-wage industries that continue to expand such as retail, food services, cleaning and health care support,” he wrote. “By 2020, 48 percent of jobs will be in those service sectors.”

    Hanauer also indicated that if the federal minimum wage had simply tracked the rate of U.S. productivity gains since 1968, it would now be $21.72 an hour — three times the current wage. He also estimated that raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour would inject about $450 billion into the economy each year. “That would give more purchasing power to millions of poor and lower-middle-class Americans, and would stimulate buying, production and hiring,” he declared. Separately, as an Indian-American, Sawant presents a rather unusual alternative for most voters. Indeed, the two most famous and prominent Indian-American politicians – Govs. Nikki Haley of South Carolina and Bobby Jindal of Louisiana – are both right-wing Republicans, the polar opposite of Sawant’s decidedly leftist ideology. Sawant suggests that Jindal and Haley, as well as Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, represent attempts at window-dressing by the Republican Party in order to appeal to ethnic minorities.”These minority politicians are outliers,” she stated. “Most ethnic minority people in the U.S. do not support the Republican Party.” She also points out that in defiance of the “model minority” image of Indian-Americans earning high salaries, there are many in the Seattle area who receive low wages, including taxi drivers,who support her candidacy. Also, Sawant’s embrace of some social issues, namely abortion, gay rights and marriage equality,might strike observers as rather odd, given the deep conservatism and traditional values inherent in Indian culture. But Sawant counters that many Indians in U.S., particularly among the young, support such issues as gay rights. “It might be more of a problem if I was running for office in India itself,” she conceded. The Seattle election will be held on Nov. 5.

  • Hillary Clinton gets a parking ticket from London traffic warden

    Hillary Clinton gets a parking ticket from London traffic warden

    LONDON (TIP): Hillary Clinton may be tipped as a future US president, but that did not impress a London traffic warden who slapped her vehicle with an £80 (95-euro, $130) parking fine. The former US secretary of state was in town to receive a prize from the Chatham House think tank last week for her work in promoting “a new era of US diplomatic engagement”. But her entourage failed to buy the £3.30 ticket required to park the Mercedes for an hour on the exclusive St James’ Square in central London, and received a £80 fine. “The former US secretary of state was parked for nearly 45 minutes without paying,” said Daniel Astaire, an elected member of Westminster City Council. “I’m sure she will understand that we have to be fair to everyone, regardless of their status on the world stage.” There is some good news for former first lady Clinton, however — if she pays up within 14 days, the fine will be halved to £40. London Mayor Boris Johnson has previously complained about the refusal of US diplomats to pay a ten pound daily charge for the congestion zone in the centre of the capital.