Year: 2014

  • AT&T creating new jobs in Dallas and around Texas

    AT&T creating new jobs in Dallas and around Texas

    DALLAS (TIP): Dallas-based AT&T Inc. said it was hanging out a help wanted sign. The company wanted to fill more than 1,800 jobs in Texas, including 770 in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

    More than 1,000 of the positions statewide were newly created. Monday, AT&T said it was still looking to hire. Now it has more than 1,000 jobs to fill in Texas, just over half of them newly created. That includes 350 jobs to fill in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, 61 of them new, a spokeswoman said.

    The jobs range from technicians to call center employees to retail employees. Applications can be done online. The company currently employs 36,000 in Texas, up 1,000 since June, the company said. It employs 246,000 nationwide, up from 240,000 in June.

  • Texas ranks No. 2 for human trafficking crime

    Texas ranks No. 2 for human trafficking crime

    DALLAS (TIP): The National Human Trafficking Resource Center has released its 2013 data and it may or may not come as a surprise to you that Texas ranks No. 2 in number of calls placed to the hotline.

    Texas maintained its No. 2 position, behind California, even as overall calls skyrocketed last year. It’s safe to say that a large number of those calls came from the North Texas region, as the Dallas-Fort Worth traditionally has been a relative hotbed for human trafficking.

    Experts have said that has to do with the convergence of highways in the region as well as the area’s proximity to the U.S.-Mexico border. While it’s difficult to capture the specific data because of the hidden nature of the crime, Mosaic Family Services in Dallas, for example, typically serves 100 victims a year. And in 2012, the national hotline received about 250 calls from the city of Dallas alone.

  • Texas woman charged with murdering 10-year-old son

    Texas woman charged with murdering 10-year-old son

    FRISCO, TX (TIP): A North Texas woman was charged with murder Thursday, January 30, in the death of her 10-year-old son, whose body was found in a bathtub in the family’s suburban Dallas home.

    Pallavi Dhawan was booked into the Frisco City Jail after her Wednesday night arrest. Bond is set at $50,000. Police said Sumeet Dhawan, the suspect’s husband of 15 years, called officers to the family home Wednesday evening after he returned from an out-of-town trip and could not find his wife. When officers arrived, the husband also expressed concern about the welfare of their only child, Arnav Dhawan.

    His father said he had received an email that the child had been absent from school for several days, according to a Frisco Police Department statement. At that point, Pallavi Dhawan arrived at the house. Officers asked where the child was, but she asked to speak privately with her husband first, according to the statement.

    During the conversation, her husband became visibly upset, called officers over and pointed toward a bedroom door. They found the door locked. “Officers asked Mrs. Dhawan if the child was in the room, and she nodded her head ‘yes.’ Officers asked her if she killed the child, and Mrs. Dhawan nodded her head ‘yes,’” said police Sgt. Brad Merritt at an afternoon news conference. Police said officers forced the door open and found the child’s body in the tub, wrapped in a cloth up to his neck and with plastic bags in the tub around him.

  • Mexican beauty queen arrested in South Texas for allegedly interfering with an officer

    Mexican beauty queen arrested in South Texas for allegedly interfering with an officer

    LAREDO, TX (TIP): Police say the reigning beauty queen from a Mexican state bordering South Texas could have avoided her weekend arrest for allegedly interfering with an officer.

    Laredo police spokesman Joe Baeza said Thursday, January 30, that 24-year-old Barbara Falcon Prieto and a friend were arrested in the early morning hours of Jan. 26. Falcon was charged with interfering with public duties, a class B misdemeanor. Police were called to a Laredo bar because people in Falcon’s group were trying to leave with alcohol.

    Baeza said that when police tried to interview one of the men, Falcon yelled at them, pushed an officer and tried to pull his hands away. Her friend also tried to intervene when police turned their attention to Falcon, Nuestra Belleza 2013 for Tamaulipas. The men were not arrested.

  • Texas Democrats back Obama’s call for wage increase

    Texas Democrats back Obama’s call for wage increase

    WASHINGTON (TIP): For the second straight year, President Obama called for an increase in the national minimum wage during January 28 State of the Union address. Texas Democrats expressed strong support for the proposal.

    “This has gained a lot of momentum,” said Rep. Al Green, DHouston. “Every poll that I see indicates that people are for raising the minimum wage. It can make a difference in the lives of people not only at the very bottom in the entry level jobs, but also in the lives of people up the ladder as well, because it tends to raise the other boats as it raises that boat that’s at the very lowest level.”

    Conservatives, however, say that raising wages would add more expenses for business owners already struggling to stay afloat. Many Republicans point to studies suggesting that raising the minimum wage will slow job growth. The current federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour. Obama called for a boost to $10.10, spotlighting a bill by Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa and Rep. George Miller, DCalif. currently attempting to raise the national minimum wage to that level. The president also announced an executive order to raise the minimum wage paid to federal contractors, to $10.10.

    That came with pledges for other executive orders, drawing the ire of conservatives, who called such actions “imperialist.” “Shame on us,” said Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Houston, of Congress’ inability to raise the minimum wage. “The actions that the president is taking are not overbearing or far-reaching. They respond to the outcry of the American people for a decent wage and a decent quality of life.” Texas’ minimum wage is the same as the federal minimum. In 2013, Texas had more minimum wage workers than any other state – 452,000 of the 3.6 million nationwide.

    According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, a quarter of all Texas workers- more than 2.5 million- make less than $10 an hour. More than 700,000 workers in the Dallas metro area make around that level, or less. “I believe in a decent living wage,” said Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Dallas. She said businesses she’s spoken to in her district are on board with the boost. “They don’t have a problem with $10 an hour. I’ve talked with fast food owners [and] Costco…. They all feel it’s worthy to get the wages up, to get money in circulation so employees can live a decent life.

  • Doomsdayers’ underground survival shelters spread across Texas

    Doomsdayers’ underground survival shelters spread across Texas

    HOUSTON (TIP): Texas is a home for survivalists. Underground bunkers are being built faster here than in any other state. Doomsdayers see Texas as a safe haven for bunkers and guns. And a Houston man is responsible.

    His atlas survival shelters are among the most popular in the country, and now we’re getting to know him. Ron Hubbard may seem eccentric. He’s got plenty of weapons, ammunition, food, water and a secret bunker. “It’s strictly defensive. Nobody is looking for a fight,” he said. “A shelter is more secretive than a bank account.” But far from eccentric, Hubbard is a businessman. “The U.S. Constitution is under attack,” Hubbard said.He’s selling bunkers to a booming clientele.

    “It’s got four bunks, it will have a couch, and a little entertainment center and a TV,” Hubbard said. And it all starts in Los Angeles, his construction hub. “They are afraid of the U.S. government and where this country is headed,” Hubbard said. “They see a battle in the future. They see the Constitution being trampled. They see the 1st Amendment gone, they see the 2nd Amendment gone.” That brings U.S. back to the Lone Star State.

    Hidden deep in the most remote areas of Texas are hundreds of survival shelters, secret bunkers. “People who have bunkers are not looking for a fight, they’re looking to sit a fight out,” Hubbard said. “You can drive within 20 feet of a bunker and not know it’s there.” The ideal setting for a bunker is in the middle of nowhere. It’s a secret location for most, surrounded by plenty of weapons, enough food, water and of course, ammunition to last for several years.

    “You have a sense that you’re invisible because nobody can get to you down here,” Hubbard said. The living quarters are like a regular home. You’re 20 feet underground, but the bunkers carry all the conveniences of home and much more. Their cost ranges from $40,000-$400,000. None of his buyers want to go on camera, but there reasons for buying a bunker are the same — they fear a collapse of the Constitution and a one world order. “The people who buy shelters are typically very professional, they’re very patriotic, they believe in the Constitution,” Hubbard said. And in the past year, sales have dramatically increased.

    “When they think of a zombie, they think of people that in the worst-case scenario are looking for food and water, they’re desperate. And they will look like zombies because they will be starving and desperate. They will be willing to kill you to take what you got,” Hubbard said. So, the Doomsdayers wait, prepared for the worst, hoping for the best. And they’re always ready for a fight.

  • Obama calls for action, with or without Congress

    Obama calls for action, with or without Congress

    WASHINGTON (TIP): He talked a good game of acting on his own if necessary, calling for 2014 to be a “year of action, but President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address showed he knows that true progress depends on cooperation with a divided and recalcitrant Congress.

    “Sometimes we stumble; we make mistakes; we get frustrated or discouraged,” he said near the end of the more than hour-long speech, seeming to describe his bad 2013 that lowered his approval ratings. “But for more than 200 years, we have put those things aside and placed our collective shoulder to the wheel of progress.”It was vintage Obama, blending hopeful calls for a unified approach with declarations of presidential independence through executive orders.

    There were the now familiar calls to recalibrate the tax code, spend more to rebuild roads and bridges, bolster education and avoid war if at all possible. He brought many to tears with a tribute to Sgt. First Class Cory Remsburg, a disabled war veteran who sat next to first lady Michelle Obama and waved with wounded limbs to a prolonged standing ovation. Even Republicans relentlessly critical of the President conceded his oratorical skill. “A speech by Barack Obama is a lot like sex,” said GOP strategist and CNN contributor Alex Castellanos. “The worst there ever was is still excellent.”

    According to a snap CNN/ORC International poll, 44% of respondents had a “very positive” response to Obama’s speech, while 32% described a “somewhat positive” response and 22% didn’t like it at all. Last year, 53% of respondents in a similar poll rated their response to the 2013 address as very positive. The underlying theme of Obama’s fifth State of the Union address was his call on Tuesday for the government to work on behalf of all Americans in 2014, and his pledge to do so even if Congress refused to join him in an election year. “Let’s make this a year of action,” Obama said. “That’s what most Americans want — for all of us in this chamber to focus on their lives, their hopes, their aspirations.”

    It’s an optimistic goal for a President with a 43% approval rating entering his sixth year in office and facing a determined opposition in the Republican-led House of Representatives with congressional elections looming in November. “What I offer tonight is a set of concrete, practical proposals to speed up growth, strengthen the middle class, and build new ladders of opportunity into the middle class,” Obama said. “Some require congressional action, and I’m eager to work with all of you. But America does not stand still, and neither will I.”

    On issue after issue, he invited Congress to work with him but said he also would go it alone. Obama called for more government support to rebuild the nation’s infrastructure, but also said that “I will act on my own to slash bureaucracy and streamline the permitting process for key projects, so we can get more construction workers on the job as fast as possible.”The President also promised an executive order to raise the minimum wage for some government contract workers.While the action is relatively narrow and affects less than half a million people, Obama urged Congress to follow suit for all low-wage workers in America.

    Earlier Tuesday, House Speaker John Boehner chafed at such unilateral action, telling reporters that Republicans are “just not going to sit here and let the President trample all over us.”In the official Republican response, Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington complained that Obama’s policies “are making people’s lives harder.” “We hope the President will join us in a year of real action — by empowering people — not by making their lives harder with unprecedented spending, higher taxes, and fewer jobs,” she said. One area of possible progress is immigration reform. Obama got a long ovation when he urged Republicans in the House to join Democrats in passing a Senate plan that got bipartisan support.

    McMorris Rodgers also brought up the issue backed by some Republicans as a way to bolster their weak support among Hispanic Americans, the nation’s largest minority demographic. “We’re working on a step-by-step solution to immigration reform by first securing our borders and making sure America will always attract the best, brightest, and hardest working from around the world,” she said in describing the more limited GOP approach to the comprehensive Senate measure that includes a path to legal status for immigrants living illegally in the country.

    On another major reform issue, Obama chided Republicans for trying to undermine his signature health care law that passed in 2010 without GOP support. He cited the millions of people helped by the reforms that ended denial of coverage for pre-existing conditions among its benefits. “The American people aren’t interested in refighting old battles,” Obama said. “Let’s not have another 40-something votes to repeal a law that’s already helping millions of Americans. …The first 40 were plenty. …We all owe it to the American people to say what we’re for, not just what we’re against.”

    In her response, though, McMorris Rodgers continued the GOP attack line on the health care reforms as big government run amok and causing harm to people by raising costs and limiting their personal choices of doctors and medical treatment.The CNN/ORC poll indicated 59% of respondents thought Obama’s policies as presented in the speech would help the economy, a lower figure than in recent years. Obama said he will order the U.S. Treasury to create a new federal retirement savings account called MyRA, a savings bond that would guarantee “a decent return with no risk of losing what you put in.”

    It will be available to those whose jobs don’t offer traditional retirement savings programs, he said. Additionally, Obama called for: — Eliminating $4 billion in tax subsidies for the fossil fuel industries “that don’t need it” and instead “invest more in fuels of the future.” — Equal pay for women, noting they make 77 cents for each dollar a man earns, which he called “wrong” and “an embarrassment” to prompt loud and long applause. — Setting new fuel standards for American trucks to help reduce U.S. oil imports “and what we pay at the pump.”– Reworking the corporate tax code.

    He urged Congress to work with him to close “wasteful, complicated loopholes that punish businesses investing here” and instead “lower tax rates for businesses that create jobs right here at home.”– Congress to lift restrictions on transferring detainees from Guantanamo Bay so the prison cna be closed in 2014.Obama also reiterated that he will veto any new sanctions bill from Congress that would derail talks on preventing Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, adding that “for the sake of our national security, we must give diplomacy a chance to succeed.”

  • Dallas Indian American Community Celebrates Republic Day

    Dallas Indian American Community Celebrates Republic Day

    DALLAS (TIP): Dallas Indian community celebrated 26th January, the 65th Indian Republic Day at the Jefferson Park, Irving. A lot of individuals and families were a part of this celebration which was highlighted to “Celebrate the Spirit of India”.

    The event also emphasized on a corruption free India and various ways in which NRI’s can add value to this very cause. The Aam Aadmi Party of Dallas took a major initiative to spread the social messages through skits, and patriotic songs.

    Earlier in the day there was an online video session with Yoginder Yadav who is the think tank of Aam Aadmi Party. The event’s message of social awareness and national responsibilities was much appreciated by one and all.

  • Hillary Clinton has a Massive Lead in Early Primary Polling

    Hillary Clinton has a Massive Lead in Early Primary Polling

    NEW YORK (TIP): The Washington Post and ABC News, January 30 morning, bring an early look at the leader board for the 2016 presidential nominations. The fact that Hillary Clinton is the front-runner for the Democrats will surprise absolutely no one-but the sheer size of her lead is something to behold: 61 points.

    If the 2016 Democratic primary were today, 73 percent of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents would vote for Clinton, according to a new Washington Post/ ABC poll. Just 12 percent said they would vote for Vice President Biden, while 8 percent said they’d vote for Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. While Warren is a favorite among liberals, she is among the several lawmakers who have said they’d support Clinton if she were to run.

    Clinton’s lead in the survey, conducted Jan. 20-23 among a national sample of 1,003 adults, is the largest lead in an early primary match up that the Post/ABC poll has recorded in 30 years. The overall margin of error for the poll is 3.5 points. Over on the GOP side of things, meanwhile, we find a much more crowded field.

    Here’s the full breakdown of the Republican field: Paul Ryan, 20 percent; Jeb Bush, 18 percent; Chris Christie, 13 percent; Ted Cruz, 12 percent; Marco Rubio, 10 percent; and Rand Paul, 11 percent. 9 per cent had no opinion. 4 per cent said none of these. 2 per cent said favored other and 1 per cent would not vote. Meanwhile, reports are coming in that the major super PAC that supported President Obama’s re-election now will begin raising money to help elect Hillary Clinton to the White House if she chooses to run. CNN said the group confirmed its support for Hillary.

    Priorities USA Action is reaching out to major Democratic donors as it starts to build support for her potential run and plans to raise tens of millions of dollars to begin to lay the groundwork for a potential candidacy. But the big question is:Will Hillary agree to run? She has yet to say whether she’ll run for President in 2016.Vice President Joe Biden, who harbors ambition to be the President, says Hillary Clinton’s decision on whether she will or won’t run for president in 2016 will not directly impact his own decision on whether to launch another bid for the White House. And Biden, making the rounds on the morning network newscasts, said he thinks he’d “make a good president.”

  • SIT TO PROBE ANTI-SIKH RIOTS: DELHI GOVT

    SIT TO PROBE ANTI-SIKH RIOTS: DELHI GOVT

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Delhi Government on January 29 decided on a probe by a Special Investigation Team into the 1984 anti- Sikh riots, two days after Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi said some of the partymen were probably involved in the violence but were punished.

    The politically sensitive decision to form the SIT to investigate the riots which left around 3,000 Sikhs dead following the assassination of the then prime minister Indira Gandhi on October 31, 1984, may create trouble in the relationship between AAP and Congress which has been providing outside support to Kejriwal dispensation.

    But the move was welcomed by riot victims with one of their prominent lawyers saying it gave them a “ray of hope”. “Government is going to form a SIT to probe the 1984 riots. The modalities of the probe will be discussed at a cabinet meeting on Friday. Lt Governor Najeeb Jung has in-principle agreed to the proposal to appoint the SIT,” PWD Minister Manish Sisodia told reporters. Earlier in the day, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal discussed the issue with Jung.

    To a query on effectiveness of SIT as the riots had taken place nearly 30 years back, Sisodia said “honest efforts will definitely yield results”. Two days back, in an interview to a TV channel, Gandhi had admitted that “some Congress men were probably involved in 1984 anti-Sikh riots and they have been punished for it”. Gandhi had insisted that the Congress government in 1984 “was not aiding and abetting the riots” but had tried to stop the violence.

    Congress leaders Jagdish Tytler and Sajjan Kumar are facing allegations of involvement in riots after Indira Gandhi was assassinated on October 31, 1984. Claiming that effective investigation into the anti-Sikh riots was part of AAP’s agenda, Sisodia said the party had held a day-long fast atJantar Mantar to express solidarity with the victims. Senior lawyer HS Phoolka, who joined AAP recently, said, “The decision of government to form SIT has given a ray of hope to riot victims that justice would be done to them.”

    Phoolka has been taking up the causes of victims of anti-Sikh riots. Phoolka said SIT should be formed on the lines of the special team which probed Gujarat cases. “Police officers from other states should head the SIT while Delhi police should only assist them,” said Phulka. Delhi Police and CBI have investigated the riots cases so far.

  • Supreme Court of India stays Bhullar’s execution

    Supreme Court of India stays Bhullar’s execution

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Supreme Court on Friday, January 31, stayed the execution of Khalistani terrorist Devinderpal Singh Bhullar and agreed to review its judgment by which it had rejected the 1993 Delhi bomb blast convict’s plea to commute his death sentence to life term.

    A four-judge bench headed by Chief Justice P. Sathasivam issued notice to the Centre and Delhi government on a curative petition filed by Bhullar’s wife Navneet Kaur. The bench also comprising justices R.M. Lodha, H.L. Dattu and S.J. Mukhopadhaya directed the Institute of Human Behaviour and Allied Sciences (IHBAS), where Bhullar is being treated, to file a medical report within a week on the condition of the death convict who is alleged to be suffering from a mental illness.

    “We would examine whether our judgment (pertaining to commutation of death sentence to life term on the ground of delay in deciding the mercy plea) is applicable or not in this case,” the bench said, adding “we also want to know his present condition”. “We direct Institute of Human Behaviour and Allied Sciences to send to us a report on condition of Devinderpal Singh Bhullar within a week,” the bench said.

    The plea of Bhullar’s wife for commutation of death sentence assumes significance in view of the apex court’s January 21 verdict holding that inordinate and inexplicable delay by government in deciding mercy plea of death row convicts can be a ground for commuting their sentence. Bhullar’s wife has filed the petition for relook against the apex court verdict which rejected her plea to commute his death sentence to life imprisonment on grounds of delay on the part of the government in deciding his mercy plea.

    Bhullar was convicted and awarded death penalty for triggering a bomb blast in New Delhi in September 1993, which killed nine persons and injured 25 others, including then Youth Congress president M.S. Bitta. The apex court had on March 26, 2002 dismissed Bhullar’s appeal against the death sentence awarded by a trial court in August 2001 and endorsed by the Delhi High Court in 2002. He had filed a review petition which was also dismissed on December 17, 2002.

    Bhullar had then moved a curative petition which too had been rejected by the apex court on March 12, 2003. Bhullar,meanwhile, had filed a mercy petition before the President on January 14, 2003. The President, after a lapse of over eight years, dismissed his mercy plea on May 14, 2011. Citing the delay, he had again moved the apex court for commutation of the death sentence but his plea was rejected.

    The apex court on January 21 had held inordinate delay by government in deciding mercy plea of death row convicts can be a ground for commuting their sentence and had granted life to 15 condemned prisoners including four aides of forest brigand Veerappan. In a landmark judgment, the court had held that prolonging execution of death sentence has a “dehumanizing effect” on condemned prisoners who have to face the “agony” of waiting for years under the shadow of death during the pendency of their mercy plea.

  • ‘Former Pak Taliban head among 50 killed in military operations’

    ‘Former Pak Taliban head among 50 killed in military operations’

    PESHAWAR/ISLAMABAD (TIP): The former interim chief of the Pakistani Taliban was among 50 militants, including 36 foreign fighters, killed in heavy air strikes in the lawless North Waziristan region, military sources said on January 24.

    The Pakistan Air Force jets had bombed suspected militant hideouts in North Waziristan — a key haven for Taliban and al-Qaida elements — on Monday night, which was backed by army gunship helicopters. At least 50 militants were killed in the attack. “Most of the terrorists killed in North Waziristan strikes on night of January 20/21 are foreign fighters which include 33 Uzbeks, three Germans and reportedly important terrorist commanders,” a Pakistani military source said.

    He named the militant commanders as “Wali Mohammad (predecessor of Qari Hussain), Asmat Shahin Bittani, Noor Badshah and Maulvi Farhad Uzbek”. Bhittani served as the acting TTP chief after the killing of Hakeemullah Mehsud and also headed the Taliban supreme shura (decision-making council). Wali, alias Toofan, earlier headed the ‘fidayeen squad’. Pakistani combat jets had pounded militant bases in the North Waziristan, including the home of Taliban commander Adnan Rashid in retaliation for a string of deadly attacks on security forces. The operation by air force jets took many by surprise.

    This was the first time the air force resorted to air strikes in North Waziristan since a ceasefire was finalised with local Taliban chiefs in 2007. Meanwhile, minister for defence production Rana Tanveer said no military operation is being carried out in North Waziristan. Talking to mediapersons in Wah Cantonment on Wednesday, he said political and military leadership have unanimity of views with regard to the strategy on Taliban. He said decision whether talks or the operation will be taken in the next few days. The minister said some groups have been contacted for the dialogue process.

    North Waziristan is one of seven regions in Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas governed by tribal laws. An insurgency led by the banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan plagues the region. Local media reports said many civilians have started moving out from North Waziristan fearing impending full-scale military operations.

  • President Hamid Karzai again asks US to end air strikes in Afghanistan

    President Hamid Karzai again asks US to end air strikes in Afghanistan

    KABUL, AFGHANISTAN (TIP): Afghanistan’s president demanded on January 21 that the United States no longer carry out military operations or air strikes and must jump-start peace talks with the Taliban before his country signs a security deal to keep US troops in Afghanistan after 2014.

    President Hamid Karzai’s deepening anti-American rhetoric comes as the Taliban intensifies its assaults ahead of the planned withdrawal and after Friday’s militant raid on a popular Kabul restaurant, the deadliest single attack against foreign civilians in the course of the nearly 13-year US-led war. Although Karzai has made similar demands in the past, he has in recent weeks ratcheted up his condemnations of alleged US failures as Afghans look fearfully ahead to an uncertain future. Karzai made the statement after being presented with the findings of an investigation into a joint Afghan-US military operation last week that resulted in civilian casualties which he blamed on a US military air strike.

    The US-led international military coalition, however, provided a sharply different account Sunday of what happened during the two-day operation against insurgents in eastern Parwan province, saying it was an Afghan-led effort and carried out at the request of the government. Karzai convened his National Security Council on Sunday to discuss the Parwan attack. “Air strikes are a matter of concern for the Afghan people. The National Security Council said there should be an immediate end to all operations and airstrikes by foreign forces,” a statement said. Karzai sent a delegation to investigate the January 15 airstrike in the Ghorband district of Parwan province, which borders Kabul. The delegation blamed the US for ordering an operation it said killed 12 civilians and four Taliban fighters.

    It further said local authorities were not informed about the operation. The coalition, which is carrying out its own investigation, said the government was not only aware but had requested the operation ahead of the country’s April 5 presidential elections because the area had fallen under Taliban control. “The operation was requested by the governor in response to those conditions,” the coalition said in a statement. “The resulting plan, approved through the Ministry of Defense, was a deliberate clearing operation to disrupt insurgent activity, based on intelligence obtained primarily by Afghan forces.”

    The coalition said a team of more than 70 Afghan commandos with a few US Special Operations Forces carried out the operation. Senior US military officials, who requested anonymity as they weren’t allowed to brief journalists about an ongoing investigation, said the commandos came under heavy fire almost immediately. An Afghan commando and US soldier were killed, they said. Afghan National Security Forces had nine US advisers with them when they became trapped by withering fire from residential homes, they said.

  • 6 Pak cops die protecting Spaniard from jihadis

    6 Pak cops die protecting Spaniard from jihadis

    PESHAWAR (TIP): At least six Pakistani tribal policemen, escorting a Spanish cyclist, were on January 24 killed and the tourist critically injured as militants tried to abduct him in the highly volatile southwest Balochistan province.

    Militants tried to abduct a Spanish tourist, travelling on a bicycle from Dalbandin area of Balochistan, triggering an exchange of gunfire between the militants and Levies personnel, the local tribal police. At least six Levies men were killed during the clash while 10 others, including the Spanish national, were injured.

    The kidnapping bid that occurred in Koshak was foiled while the injured were shifted to a hospital in Mastung district. The Levies personnel were accompanying the Spaniard — said to be a cycling tourist who was coming through Iran into Pakistan — for security.

  • Nepal doctors’ strike continues despite SC order

    Nepal doctors’ strike continues despite SC order

    KATHMANDU (TIP): Strike by doctors in Nepal to push for reforms in medical education entered the third day on January 22 despite the Supreme Court ordering them to resume services in hospitals across the country.

    Tens of thousands of people had assess only to emergency services as doctors boycotted work in solidarity of a colleague on huger strike against the government appointment of a new dean at the state-run Tribhuvan University’s Institute of Medicine. Orthopaedic surgeon Govinda K C, who works at the Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, began a hunger strike 11 days ago to protest the alleged political appointment of the institution’s new dean.

    Doctors attending to him said his health is deteriorating. Dr KC said the appointment is part of a corruption conspiracy to give affiliation to new medical colleges which do not fulfill the basic standards to run medical courses and his protest is against the interference of a “medical mafia and politicians” in the Institute. On Monday, the Supreme Court had ordered doctors to resume services in hospitals but Nepal Medical Association (NMA) said only out-patient services have been suspended and patients have been provided services through emergency services. “Our protest will continue till Dr K C’s demands are met,” NMA senior vice president Dr Pashupati Regmi said.

  • After Little India riots, Singapore mulls booze control

    After Little India riots, Singapore mulls booze control

    SINGAPORE (TIP): Rattled by the December 8 riots in Little India, the Singapore government now plans a nationwide restriction on consumption of liquor in public places.

    Deputy PM Teo Chee Hean, who also handles home affairs, told the Singapore Parliament on Monday that the government is reviewing processes to tighten liquor control in areas where large number of foreign workers congregate. There are 1.2 million foreign workers in Singapore. Nearly three lakh Indian workers are employed in the construction industry alone.

    Post the riots, for which 25 migrant workers were charged and 57 deported, the police imposed a total ban on sale and public consumption of alcohol in public areas in Little India. While the government has allowed retail outlets (330 liquor licences issued in the 1.1sq km area of Little India) to sell alcohol up to 8pm, it cannot be consumed in public areas. Singapore officials said the riot had brought into focus the country’s lax liquor laws that allowed alcohol to be consumed in public places.

    “No other country allows such public consumption of alcohol. It is highly retrograde and we need to put a stop to it,” said J Devan, the government’s chief communicator. In Parliament, deputy PM Hean said the ministry of home affairs had in October begun consultations on proposals to restrict sale and public consumption of alcohol. “We will draw on the experience with measures taken in Little India and take in views of stakeholders as well as any findings and recommendations from the commission of inquiry. The full set of liquor control measures will be announced when they are ready,” Hean said.

  • Queens Borough President Katz receives spiffing welcome from ICCD

    Queens Borough President Katz receives spiffing welcome from ICCD

    NEW YORK (TIP): Interfaith Council for Community Development hosted a welcome party for Melinda Katz, the new Queens Borough President. The event was held at Richie Rich Palace hotel at Richmond Hill on Thursday, January 16 evening. Speaking at the event, Mr. Jarnail Singh Gilzian said, “We are extremely happy having Melinda Katz as President of Queens Borough.

    She grew up in Queens and only someone who is from this background can understand and solve the woes of our community. Queens has the most diverse languages spoken than any other city and with that comes problems in many ways. We are positive under her Presidentship Melinda Katz will be able to address our problems and work with us in promoting a better life in Queens.”

    Katz, who attended the welcome meeting on her 15th day at the office, said she was thrilled to be part of such a stimulating environment. “We are the borough of Queens. There are over 160 languages spoken here which is the largest number compared to any other city. This is a cause for much dismay and curiosity for other countries and cities. We do it because we all belong to a common value. We come here to build a better life for ourselves and give our children a wonderful education and nourished future.”

    On being asked about her immediate plans for the borough, she said, “There is an excitement in the city. It’s a new mayor, new council members. We all are here to strive to provide the best for our city. Our goal is to provide the best education for our kids, secure their future and provide multi-lingual and multi-cultural senior care for our elders.” The ceremony was attended by members of the Interfaith Council for Community Development and other distinguished personalities of the Indian American community.

  • Indian-American professor Rakesh Khurana named dean of prestigious Harvard College

    Indian-American professor Rakesh Khurana named dean of prestigious Harvard College

    NEW YORK (TIP): Indian-American professor Rakesh Khurana has been appointed dean of the prestigious Harvard College, becoming the latest addition to a long list of Indianorigin academicians assuming leadership roles at renowned global universities.

    Khurana, 46, is currently the ‘Marvin Bower’ professor of leadership development at Harvard Business School (HBS), professor of sociology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), and co-master of Cabot House at Harvard. He succeeds Evelynn Hammonds, professor of history of science and of African and African American studies at Harvard and will assume his new role on July 1. Harvard College is the school within Harvard University that grants undergraduate degrees.

    Khurana earned his PhD through a joint programme between HBS and Harvard’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in 1998. Harvard president Drew Faust described Khurana as a “faculty leader who embodies the interconnectedness” of Harvard. “His experiences as a graduate student, an award-winning teacher at HBS, and the master of an undergraduate house give him a unique perspective on the university, and his deep respect for the liberalarts model and the residential education will serve him well as he guides Harvard College,” Faust said in a statement issued on January 22.

  • Indian Consulate to Screen Frontier Gandhi: Badshah Khan, A Torch for Peace

    Indian Consulate to Screen Frontier Gandhi: Badshah Khan, A Torch for Peace

    NEW YORK, NY (TIP): As part of the Republic Day 2014 celebrations, the Consulate General of India in association with Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, New York, is screening a film on Frontier Gandhi Badshah Khan on 27 January 2014 at 5.30 pm at Consulate General of India, 3 East 64th Street, between 5th and Madison Avenue, New York.

    Titled Frontier Gandhi: Badshah Khan, A Torch for Peace, the film is directed by Teri C McLuhan. All are welcome. Please bring your identity proof. Limited seating: on first-cum-firstserve basis.

  • Neel Kashkari, Indian-American of Kashmiri origin, to run for California governor’s post

    Neel Kashkari, Indian-American of Kashmiri origin, to run for California governor’s post

    WASHINGTON (TIP): When Neel Kashkari was drafted by the Bush administration in 2008 to oversee the massive bailout program following the mortgage meltdown, an online wiseacre quipped: “Seriously? The guy overseeing the $700 billion is named ‘CashCarry’?”

    On January 21, after declaring he will be running for governor of California, the 40-year old Indian-American whose parents emigrated from Kashmir will be hoping the name resonates with contributors and donors — not to speak of voters — whose help he will need to win America’s biggest gubernatorial prize.

  • Council Member Daniel Dromm elected Education Committee Chair

    Council Member Daniel Dromm elected Education Committee Chair

    Award-winning Educator Brings Classroom Experience to City Hall
    NEW YORK, NY (TIP): Council Member Daniel Dromm was elected as the NYC Council’s Education Committee chairperson at a meeting in City Hall on January 22. Daniel has a long career as a former New York City public school teacher and child day care center director prior to being elected to the Council. “I want to thank Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito and my colleagues in the Council for this honor’, said Daniel.

    He said he had identified several areas of focus for this legislative session:

    • Providing universal prekindergarten to all New York City children
    • Improving teacher morale and ensuring teachers and parents have a role in the decision making process
    • Reducing class size in all grades
    • Child-centered curriculum, with reduced emphasis on testing, and expand whole-child efforts (including art, physical education, music, foreign language)
    • Establishing a safe and supportive environment for all students but especially for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning (LGBTQ) students

    Daniel graduated from Marist College in Poughkeepsie in 1977 with a degree in Spanish Language Studies and Communications. He originally wanted to be a Spanish teacher but was convinced by his mother, Audrey Gallagher, a long time elementary school teacher, to apply for a position at the Grant Day Care Center in Harlem. While there, he earned his master’s degree in education from City College and in 1984 accepted a position with the old NYC Board of Education as a fourth grade teacher at PS199Q in Sunnyside, Queens where he stayed for 25 years.

    In 1992, he came out as an openly gay teacher in response to my local school board’s (District 24) opposition to the inclusive “Children of the Rainbow” curriculum that sought to teach tolerance of all of New York’s diverse communities including lesbian and gay families. The curriculum, which contained three pages of optional material regarding the teaching of tolerance of LGBT families, was opposed by the religious right. The curriculum was written as part of an overall approach to ending hate crimes against African Americans, Latinos, gays and other minorities. Having known of the connection between politics and education, he resolved to change the devastatingly homophobic environment for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) students and teachers in the New York City public schools.

    At first, it required organizing the Queens LGBT communities by founding the first Queens LGBT Pride Parade and Festival. He went on to help found most of the existing LGBT organizations, such as Generation Q and SAGE Queens, in the borough. To develop political power within the community he also spearheaded the creation of the Lesbian and Gay Democratic Club of Queens. In 2009, he was elected as the NYC Council Member for the 25th District. He was appointed to the Education Committee and has been an active member ever since. In 2013, he ran unopposed for re-election. Daniel Dromm says, “I am proud to have been elected by my peers to this position and look forward to working with schools in my district and citywide to improve education”.

  • Two men were shot and killed on Staten Island on Monday, police said

    Two men were shot and killed on Staten Island on Monday, police said

    NEW YORK (TIP): Cops raced to a stretch of road along Park Hill Ave. in Clifton around 6:15 p.m. and found two men on the pavement with gunshot wounds, officials said.

    A 34-year-old man was shot in the head and rushed to Richmond University Medical Center, cops said. The other victim was a 42-year-old man who was shot in his chest and leg and rushed to Staten Island University Hospital, cops said.

    Both victims – whose names were not immediately released – died on their way to the hospital, cops said. A 35-year-old man is being questioned in connection to the shooting, sources said. So far no one has been arrested, cops said.

  • NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio admits snow removal mistakes in Upper Manhattan

    NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio admits snow removal mistakes in Upper Manhattan

    NEW YORK, NY (TIP): Mayor Bill de Blasio, facing one of the first flashpoints of his weeks-old tenure, initially defended what he called a “coordinated, intense, citywide response” to a storm he said caused a worse-than-expected headache when it ramped up at rush hour.

    And de Blasio, who campaigned on closing gaps between rich and poor city residents, at first rebuffed complaints that the effort had lagged on Manhattan’s posh Upper East Side, saying “no one was treated differently.” But he backtracked Wednesday, January 22 evening, saying he’d determined “more could have been done to serve the Upper East Side.”

    Thirty more vehicles and nearly 40 more sanitation workers were sent to the area to finish the cleanup, de Blasio said in a statement that noted he still felt the citywide response, overall, “was well-executed.” In a city where snow removal has proven a political hot potato, the flap was almost a mirror image of complaints about how de Blasio’s predecessor, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, handled a 2010 blizzard.

    Bloomberg, who lives on the Upper East Side, faced criticism that outer boroughs had gotten short shift from plows. Brooklyndwelling de Blasio, then the city’s public advocate, was among the critics. This time, de Blasio found himself being asked why some Upper East Side avenues still were covered in snow when a Brooklyn thoroughfare was plowed clear to the pavement. NBC weatherman Al Roker criticized de Blasio for his late response on the “Today” show Wednesday, January 22.

  • U.S. Attorney Issues Subpoena to Christie’s Reelection Campaign

    U.S. Attorney Issues Subpoena to Christie’s Reelection Campaign

    TRENTON, NJ (TIP): Federal prosecutors in New Jersey conducting a preliminary inquiry into accusations that aides to Gov. Chris Christie shut down access lanes to the George Washington Bridge as political retribution have issued grand jury subpoenas to Mr. Christie’s re-election campaign and to the state Republican Party, the lawyer for the campaign and the party said Thursday.

    A person briefed on the matter said the prosecutors had also issued grand jury subpoenas to a number of the 20 people and entities – including both potential witnesses and people who have come under scrutiny in the inquiry – that received subpoenas last week from a New Jersey legislative committee whose investigation largely parallels the federal inquiry.

    “We can confirm that the Christie for Governor reelection campaign and the New Jersey Republican State Committee received subpoenas for documents from the U.S. Attorney’s office, in addition to the subpoena the campaign previously received from the state legislative committee,” the lawyer, Mark D. Sheridan, said in an email. Mr. Sheridan is representing the campaign along with Robert D. Luskin; both men are partners at Patton Boggs. Mr. Sheridan said that all three subpoenas focus on the closing of lanes on the George Washington Bridge.

    “The campaign and the state party intend to cooperate with the U.S. attorney’s office and the state legislative committee and will respond to the subpoenas accordingly,” Mr. Sheridan said. The inquiry by the office of Paul Fishman, the United States attorney in Newark, was confirmed earlier this month. The office said at the time that it would seek to determine whether any federal laws had been broken. The subpoenas issued this week show that prosecutors have begun taking the necessary basic steps to answer that question.A spokeswoman for Mr. Fishman’s office said Thursday, January 22 afternoon that she could neither confirm nor deny whether any specific investigative steps had been taken.

  • Opinion poll predicts gains for BJP, losses for UPA

    Opinion poll predicts gains for BJP, losses for UPA

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Despite an apparent wave of Arvind Kejriwal-led Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) till recently, the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) would have won 200-odd seats if the general elections were held in January 2014, the findings of the latest India Today Group’s Mood of the Nation opinion poll suggest.

    The opinion poll gives the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) only around 100 seats, down by over 150 seats in the current Lok Sabha. It also underlines the significance of a possible Third Front in the forthcoming Lok Sabha election as the non-UPA, non-NDA parties and Independents are expected to win 220-odd seats. The NDA thus crosses the 200-mark for the first time since 2010. Both, the NDA and the likely Third Front, gains substantially in numbers and vote share. The opinion poll suggests that the NDA’s vote share of 34 per cent will be significantly more than the UPA’s 23.

    However, the others will have the maximum vote share of 43 per cent. Under the leadership of Narendra Modi as its prime ministerial candidate, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) looks all set to become the single largest party as it is also likely to emerge the biggest gainer in the Lok Sabha polls. Its 2009 tally of 116 is expected to rise to 188 in 2014, an increase of more than 60 per cent. Congress, under the leadership of its vice-president Rahul Gandhi, might win just 91 seats, as compared to its current tally of 206, a drop of about 55 per cent. The Congress ploy of propping AAP to counter Modi at the national level seems to have a limited impact, as Kejriwal’s gains are restricted to areas around Delhi and a few metro cities only.

    Modi consolidates his position
    Modi, who emerged as the strongest leader within his party after the BJP’s hat-trick in Gujarat in December 2012, cemented his position further through strong campaigning across the country. As the party’s lead campaigner in the recently held assembly elections in Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Rajasthan and Delhi he consolidated his position further. In the latest India Today Mood of the Nation opinion poll, as many as 47 per cent people voted him as the best prime ministerial candidate against his previous best of 42 per cent polled in August 2013.

    The Gandhi scion was way behind Modi with just 15 per cent votes, followed by Kejriwal with 9 per cent votes and 6 per cent votes each to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress president Sonia Gandhi. During these five months Modi was also able to improve his image from being a communal leader to being pro-development. To a question “what does Modi represent”, the option “communalism” saw a drop of 11 per cent from 18 per cent in August 2013, while “economic development” increased by 6 per cent to 30 per cent. The number of people thinking Modi should apologize for the 2002 Gujarat riots also fell drastically during this period to 39 per cent from the previous figure of 51 per cent.

    Modi as a role model
    The Gujarat chief minister emerged as a role model for the highest 17 per cent respondents, a gain of as much percentage as nobody earlier saw him as one among the overall personalities of India. Modi was followed by Kejriwal with 14 per cent votes, up from 2 per cent. Bollywood superstar Salman Khan too saw a big jump in his popularity as 10 per cent people saw him as a role model, up from the previous 1 per cent, followed by legendary singer Lata Mangeshkar’s 9 per cent against 2 per cent in the earlier opinion poll.Veteran anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare’s position as a role model remained unchanged with 7 per cent votes.