Year: 2015

  • DRONE BREACHES WHITE HOUSE SECURITY

    DRONE BREACHES WHITE HOUSE SECURITY

    WASHINGTON (TIP): A device, possibly an unmanned aerial drone, was found on the White House grounds during the middle of the night while US President Barack Obama and the first lady were in India, but his spokesman said on January 27 that it posed no threat.

     

    It was unclear whether their daughters, Sasha and Malia, were at home at the time of the incident with their grandmother, Marian Robinson, who also lives at the White House. The White House had said before the president’s trip that the daughters would remain in Washington so not to miss school. The Secret Service had no immediate comment on what it found.

     

    Obama’s press secretary, Josh Earnest, speaking in New Delhi, did not deny that the object found at the White House was an aerial drone. Drones come in various sizes, some quite small, with purposes ranging from surveillance to recreational toys. “There is a device that has been recovered by the Secret Service at the White House,” Earnest said when asked if a drone was found. “The early indications are that it does not pose any sort of ongoing threat to anybody at the White House.” 

     

    Police, fire and other emergency vehicles swarmed around the White House in the predawn hours, with several clustered near the southeast entrance to the mansion. The White House was dark and the entire perimeter was on lockdown until around 5am, when those who work in the complex were allowed inside.

     

    While the circumstances of this incident were not immediately clear, previous security breaches at the White House have led to questions about the Secret Service’s effectiveness. Four top executives were reassigned this month, and former director Julia Pierson was forced to resign last year after a Texas man armed with a knife was able to get over a White House fence in September and run deep into the executive mansion before being subdued.

  • Dallas hospitals among nation’s most expensive

    Dallas hospitals among nation’s most expensive

    On Wednesday, the U.S. Government Accountability Office reported Dallas has some of the most expensive hospitals in the country. GOA reported some hospitals in the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metropolitan area  charging above-average for heart artery stents, total hip replacements and appendectomies.

    GAO found that more than 90 percent of the difference in spending across the country for the above three surgeries was due to hospital charges and the difference in charges vary by upto three times in the case of total hip replacements.

    Government Accountability Office (GAO) is  an independent arm of the federal government

  • Oil crash may kill the Texas housing boom

    Oil crash may kill the Texas housing boom

    DALLAS, TX (TIP): The days of$100 oil are gone — maybe forever –and that means oil companies are cutting jobs — thousands of them.

     

    That’s scary for a Texan real estate industry that had been cruising along in recent years thanks in part to the state’s booming energy business. Credit Suisse believes home construction could tumble 20% in Texas this year.

     

    “Employment growth is one of the most important drivers for housing, with job and income growth driving both local demand and increased population from relocations,” Credit Suisse analyst Michael Dahl wrote in a research report this week.

  • California woman pleads guilty in Texas to passing fake cash

    California woman pleads guilty in Texas to passing fake cash

    SAN ANTONIO (TIP): A California woman has pleaded guilty to making and passing nearly $58,000 in fake cash.

     

    The San Antonio Express-News (http://bit.ly/1y9eIqk ) reported Saturday, January 17 that Tela Lee Conerly faces up to 20 years in federal prison during sentencing this spring.

     

    Conerly pleaded guilty Friday in San Antonio to manufacturing and distributing counterfeit currency. Investigators tracked serial numbers of some of the fake bills passed since 2011 in California, Oregon, Arizona and Texas.

     

    Investigators say Conerly bleached real $1 bills and changed them to fake $100s.

     

    Police in Hondo, 50 miles west of San Antonio, arrested Conerly last March on a tip that she was printing fake money in a hotel room. Officers recovered a computer, a printer, bogus bills and other counterfeiting equipment.

     

    Information from: San Antonio Express-News, http://www.mysanantonio.com.

  • Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II now world’s oldest monarch

    Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II now world’s oldest monarch

    LONDON: Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II is now the world’s oldest monarch after the death of King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia.

     

    King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia who was 2 years older than the Queen died earlier this week on 23rd January 2015.

     

    She is one of eight octogenarian ruling monarchs of the world, with others including the King of Thailand and the Emperor of Japan.

     

     

  • Obama cancels Agra Visit |Air Force One takes off from Andrews Air Base

    Obama cancels Agra Visit |Air Force One takes off from Andrews Air Base

    US President Barack Obama just (saturday Morning 24th January) embarked on his highly watched three-day landmark trip to India where is he a special special for the Indian Republic Day. He is the first US president who has been invited and participating in the Indian grand event of the year.

     

    Earlier today, the White House issued a statement confirming that The US President Barack Obama regrets the cancellation of his visit to the Taj Mahal during his three-day visit to India. 

     

    Barack Obama is scheduled to fly to Saudi Arabia on 27th January instead to meet the new Saudi king following the demise of King Abdullah.

     

    The US President is being accompanied by multiple members of his cabinet, influential business leaders and lawmakers, including Nancy Pelosi, the minority leader of the US House of Representatives during the Historic India Visit.

    Air Force One will have a refuelling halt in Germany (Ramstein) and will touch down in Delhi at 10 am on Sunday at Air Force Station, Palam

  • Friends of Madhya Pradesh Conclave on February 1

    Friends of Madhya Pradesh Conclave on February 1

    Friends of Madhya Pradesh Conclave on February 1 at Avery Fisher Hall, Lincoln Center

     

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): The Government of Madhya Pradesh, India, in association with, the Consulate General of India, New York, will be organizing the “Friends of Madhya Pradesh Conclave” at the Avery Fisher Hall, 10 Lincoln Centre Plaza, New York, NY 10023, on Sunday, 1st of February, 2015.

     

    “Friends of MP” is a talent pool of individuals of Indian origin, or otherwise, living outside MP, who are passionate about becoming a part of the State’s success story. This initiative is aligned to the vision of the  Prime Minister of India, who suggested that each state should constitute its own global talent pool as a network of its friends —  wherever in the world they may be, and utilize their experience and talent for the country’s development.

     

    Madhya Pradesh has taken a lead in creating such a talent pool with the involvement of the vast and widespread well-wishers of MP all  over the world. Through a web-enabled platform, five sectors – education, health, skill development, rural development and tourism would initially be thrown open for engagement and would be further expanded in due course. The “Member Friends” can share an idea, sponsor a project or undertake volunteer work.

     

    The first conference of “Member Friends” is being held in the United States of America. Chief Minister of MP, Shri Shivraj Singh Chauhan, will be visiting the US and will launch the “Friends of MP” initiative at the “Friends of Madhya Pradesh Conclave” in New York city on 1st February 2015 at 10.00 am.

     

    All interested associations, groups and individuals are invited to join the Conclave. A simple registration process has been set up to facilitate the invitees. Please visit www.friendsofmp.com for further details.

  • The Indian Panorama Photojournalist in Obama entourage

    The Indian Panorama Photojournalist in Obama entourage

    NEW YORK (TIP): Mohammed Jaffer, The Indian Panorama Photojournalist and Photo Editor of SnapsIndia  will travel  as a member of the White House Press Corps on the President’s trip to India, Jan24-28th 2015

     

    Jaffer is the only Indian American photojournalist who has traveled with President Bill Clinton to South Asia, including India and Pakistan  in 2000. He also traveled with  President Obama in November, 2010 to India. He has also covered many visits of secretary of State, Hillary

     

    Clinton to India. He also covered Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s State visit and , earlier, Prime Minister Vajapyee ‘s visit to the White house.

     

    Jaffer  hails from Hyderabad, Telangana in India. His father late  M.A.Rahim was  the founder of SnapsIndia News photo Service established  58 years ago. The news photo service has offices in Dubai, Toronto and New York.

     

    Former President Bill Clinton had  inaugurated Jaffer’s photo exhibition at  Regent Wall Street hotel, in New York, on June 12, 2001. That same year, Jaffer covered the inauguration and oath ceremony of President George W. Bush in Washington  DC.

     

    Jaffer’s photo of Clinton sitting cross legged  under a tree in Gandhi’s Sabarmati Ashram  adorns  the Presidential Library.

     

    Mohammed Jaffer was honored by the New York City Council with the ‘Outstanding Citizen’ award in August, 2007 for his ‘exemplary services’ to media in the US and India.

  • Rights  Group Sues Secretary of State John Kerry

    Rights Group Sues Secretary of State John Kerry

    Rights  Group Sues Secretary of State John Kerry: Wants Hindu group RSS declared Terrorists

     

    MANHATTAN , NY (TIP): Sikhs For Justice, a Sikh rights group, has sued Secretary of State John Kerry, asking him to declare the Hindu nationalist group Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh a terrorist organization, for its efforts to forcibly convert all Indians to Hinduism.

     

    Comparing the Hindu group to Nigerian terrorists Boko Haram, Sikhs for Justice sued the Secretary of State on Wednesday, January 21 in Federal Court.

     

    It asked the court to declare “India’s Hindu supremacist group known as ‘Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’ (RSS) as a ‘foreign terrorist organization,’ for believing in and practicing a fascist ideology and for running a passionate, vicious and violent campaign to turn India into a ‘Hindu’ nation with a homogeneous religious and cultural identify.”

     

    The RSS name in Hindi means “National Volunteer Organization.” It was founded to unite the Hindu community against British colonialism in India. A former RSS member, who left to join a more militant organization, assassinated Mahatma Gandhi for his support of Indian Muslims.

     

    Sikhs for Justice claims the RSS instigated the June 1984 Indian military attack known as Operation Blue Star, which raided Sikh shrine the Golden Temple, targeted Sikhs in the countryside, and burned down the Sikh Reference Library. The Indian government claims about 500 civilians died in the operations, but other estimates run much higher.

     

    Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated months later by two of her Sikh bodyguards in revenge, launching the ensuing anti-Sikh riots in which more than 3,000 Sikhs lost their lives.

     

    The 83-page lawsuit also accuses RSS of the “1992 demolition of historical Babri Mosque, the burning churches and rape of Christian nuns in Orissa and elsewhere in 2008, the 2002 massacre of Muslims in Gujarat; attacks on several other places of worship belonging to different religious minorities; [and the] bombing of public places such as trains and buses.”

     

    Sikhs for Justice claims RSS has gained more influence since RSS member Narendra Modi became prime minister of India last year.

     

    “On August 22, 2014, RSS Chief Mohan Bhagwat unequivocally announced his party’s agenda by stating that, ‘The entire world recognizes Indians as Hindus, therefore India is a Hindu state.’ In December 2014, RSS launched a nationwide campaign called ‘The Home Coming’ to forcibly convert Christians and Muslims to Hindus, resulting into engulfing of thousands of members of religious minorities into the ‘Hindu fold,’” the complaint states.

     

    The Daily Mail reported on Dec. 20, 2014 that Bhagwat told supporters: “We are not out to convert anybody or change anybody’s religion, but if Hindus do not bring about change, then Hinduism will never undergo change. We stand firm on this issue. We will save people from those who behead people. … When the thief is being caught and my property has been recovered, when I am taking back my own property, what is new in it?”

     

    The complaint compares RSS to the Nigerian terrorist organization Boko Haram, which Sikhs for Justice claims “lives by the motto ‘convert or die’ in its actions against religious minorities specifically the conversion of Christians.”

     

    Sikhs for Justice wants the Department of State to declare RSS a foreign terrorist organization, which will eliminate, or at least complicate, its fund-raising sources in the United States.

     

    Sikhs for Justice is represented by Babak Pourtavoosi with Pannun The Firm in Jackson Heights.

  • RANA to organize ‘RAJASTHAN MAHOTSAV’ on April 19 2015

    RANA to organize ‘RAJASTHAN MAHOTSAV’ on April 19 2015

    NEW YORK (TIP): The Rajasthan Association of North America (RANA) will be celebrating “Rajasthan Mahotsav” – Festival of Festivals Event on Sunday April 19, 2015 in New York at SUNY Old Westbury, 223 Store Hill Road, Old Westbury, NY 11568 from 12.00 pm onwards. This information was given to The Indian Panorama by RANA President Naveen  C Shah.

     

    The Mahotsav is a celebration of three important festivals of India -Gangaur, Holi & Teej. These colorful and important festivals are celebrated by the people of Rajasthan, Gujarat, Punjab, Marwar and Sekhawati regions and is an integration of regional cultures and communities celebrated with great enthusiasm and devotion during the spring season.

     

    RANA is committed to promote the rich culture of India by observing many traditional festivals and celebrating them in North America periodically. We expect people from all Communities -Rajasthani’s, Gujarati’s, Punjabi’s and all other Indian Communities to attend the day’s events and partake of the celebrations. RANA aims at bringing about harmony and celebrating the festivals of India jointly with other communities to foster the spirit of brotherhood and comradeship.

     

    This year’s Festival is being planned on a scale unlike any other and the festivities planned have never been seen before in the Tri-state area. The program for the day includes a Grand Traditional Parade featuring Elephants, Horses, Camels and Traditional Folk Music & Artistes, Authentic Rajasthani along with Continental, Punjabi, Gujarati and South Indian Cuisines, Hasya Kavi Sammelan and much more.

     

    More details about the day’s program, celebrations planned, artistes performing, folk musicians playing at the event etc. will be communicated in due course.

     

    Shah said, “We would like to extend an invitation to Indians from all communities to come celebrate Holi, Teej & Gangaur under the auspices of Rajasthan Mahotsav like it is celebrated in India – complete with Grand Parade, Traditional Cuisine, Color, Pomp & Pageantry, Music and Folk Artistes with a promise to relive the Glory of Indian festivals in New York. For more information, please visit our website www.ranausa.org or email
    info@ranausa.org”.

  • The Kindergarten Applications Invited

    The Kindergarten Applications Invited

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): The kindergarten application process is officially underway! All students born in 2010 who currently live in New York City are eligible to attend kindergarten in September 2015. All families, including those of students with disabilities and current pre-k students, must submit an application in order to receive a kindergarten placement. Admission is not first-come, first-served. All applications received by the February 13 deadline will be treated the same, according to schools’ admissions priorities.

     

    Families are able to apply in one of three ways

     

    • Online at nyc.gov/schools/kindergarten. The online application is available in ten languages (English, Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Arabic, Korean, Haitian Creole, Bengali, Urdu and French)

     

    • Over the phone, by calling 718-935- 2400. Families can access translation services over the phone in over 200 languages.

     

    • Or in person at one of the DOE’s Family Welcome Centers. Families can find their local Family Welcome Center by visiting our website 

     

    Families looking for more information about the application process should review the kindergarten directory which is available online here, and translated into nine languages.

     

    (Press Release, department of education) 

  • MADHYA PRADESH CHIEF MINISTER COMING TO WIN FRIENDS AND WOO INVESTORS

    MADHYA PRADESH CHIEF MINISTER COMING TO WIN FRIENDS AND WOO INVESTORS

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Come February 1 and Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center in Manhattan will witness a rare scene of multitudes pouring in to claim friendship with Madhya Pradesh, interestingly just less than two weeks before the day of friendship and love-Valentine’s Day.

     

    Shivraj Singh Chauhan, Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh  is coming all the way from Bhopal, India  to launch his ambitious project ‘Friends of MP’.

     

    Chauhan’s principal secretary, S. K. Mishra is camping in the city to ensure that a sizable crowd is gathered to listen to the Chief Minister on a Sunday morning.

     

    “Friends of MP” is a web portal, which invites people with and without their roots in MP, to post their ideas for engaging in a variety of projects aimed at development of the state, economically, cultural and philanthropically.

     

    In preparation for the momentous event, Mishra along with the Consul-General Dnyaneshwar Mulay, on January 15, addressed a gathering of representatives of cultural and social organizations as well as business professionals about the goals of the initiative launched for promoting Madhya Pradesh. They pointed out that launching of ‘Friends of MP’ portal was inspired by the vision of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who recently asked all states of India to build their intellectual resources scattered around the world. “Madhya Pradesh wants to be the first state to have realized the goals set by the prime minister of India.”

     

    The organizers are hoping that a huge crowd will assemble on Sunday, February 1, at Avery Fisher Hall in the Lincoln Center complex at 10 am where MP’s chief minister will inaugurate the MP Conclave and unveil the web portal for the public.

     

    Ambassador Dnyaneshwar Mulay, and Mishra said that Mrs. Yashodhara Raje Scindia, Industry Minister, and other senior officials will accompany Chief Minister Chauhan during his US visit. Chauhan is expected to meet with leading industrialists and businessmen for soliciting foreign investment in his state.

     

    Mishra pointed out that the ‘talent pool’ will serve as a forum where ‘friends’ could share original ideas about improving the lives of people in MP.

     

    Initially it will cover education, health, skill development, rural development and tourism sectors, which will be expanded in course of time to include other areas.

  • Obama outlines India vision – from natural to global partners

    Obama outlines India vision – from natural to global partners

    NEW DELHI (TIP): As he arrives in India for a three-day visit, his second in six years, US President Barack Obama has exuded hope about enhanced ties with “natural partner” India, saying he would like to think that the stars are aligned to finally realize his vision of the two countries being “global partners”.

     

    In an email interview with India Today weekly magazine, which is to be published in its upcoming issue, the US president, who arrives January 25, touched on several issues, including his relationship with former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, acknowledging that the two countries have differences and can work around them, his appreciation of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s desire for wanting to take the relationship forward, and also the reason for accepting the invite.

     

    ‘ Obama, who is the first US president to be chief guest at the Republic Day parade, also spoke strongly on terror emanating from Pakistan, saying that Washington has made it clear that “even as the US works with Pakistan to meet the threat of terrorism, safe havens within Pakistan are not acceptable and that those behind the Mumbai terrorist attacks must face justice”.

     

    He said Modi’s “remarkable life story – from tea-seller to Prime Minister – is a reflection of the determination of the Indian people to succeed”.

     

    Obama said Modi has a “clear vision of the big things he wants India to achieve, and I’ve been impressed with his energy and his readiness to address many of the barriers that have stood in the way of greater economic growth… In particular, I appreciate the prime minister’s eagerness to take the India-us partnership to the next level”.

     

    On former prime minister Singh, with whom he had interacted several times during bilateral summits, Obama said he had “a strong relationship with prime minister Singh, and he was a close partner”.

     

    “Now, Prime Minister Modi’s election and his commitment to a new chapter in the relationship between our countries gives us an opportunity to further energies our partnership.” 

     

    “I’d like to think that the stars are aligned to finally realize the vision I outlined in Parliament – India and America as true global partners,” he said.

     

    “That’s why I accepted the generous invitation to become the first US president to attend Republic Day as the chief guest,” he said and added that he was deeply honored to join in celebrating the 65th anniversary of the Indian Constitution.

     

    Acknowledging the differences between the two nations, the US president said: “No two nations agree on everything, and so, of course, sometimes India and the United States will disagree. But I believe that we can work through any differences in a spirit of mutual respect. Moreover, whatever differences we may have are greatly outweighed by the many interests we have in common.” 

     

    He said that for this, “good communication and coordination” is required not just between the leaders but between governments.

     

    “When those of us at the leadership level agree on a course of action, our governments have to actually implement our decisions. We have to make sure that words are matched by deeds,” he said, in a tacit indication of the delay in implementation of the Indo-US civil nuclear deal. The deal was inked in 2005 and the US Congress approved of the 123 agreement bill and it was signed into law in 2008. But India’s tough civil nuclear liability law, which puts the onus on suppliers, has held up implementation of the mega deal.

     

    Obama also voiced keenness in working together with India in multilateral fora, saying no country can alone meet the challenges thrown up by the world. “That’s why I’m committed to forging a greater partnership with India, both on a bilateral basis and within multilateral organizations.” 

     

    “And even as we expand our cooperation on a bilateral basis, we have to keep working to make sure that multilateral institutions are effective. That’s why I pushed for elevating the role of the G20 to give emerging economies, including India, a greater voice in global economic decision making. And that’s why I believe that a reformed UN security council should include India as a permanent member.” 

     

    On ways to improve the bilateral relationship, Obama said the specific areas that both can improve ties in include creating jobs, improving education and creating more opportunities, including for girls and women. He called for reducing the barriers to trade, investment, and high-tech collaboration.

     

    “American companies are ready to help build the infrastructure that will be the catalyst for the next wave of Indian growth,” he said and outlined other areas of cooperation including deeper security cooperation, including in maritime security in the Asia-Pacific, and climate change.

  • Not a Trustworthy Neighbor

    Not a Trustworthy Neighbor

    Indians need to be proud of their achievements in the last 65 years that India has been a Republic. They have a reason to be happy, looking at their neighbor, who started off almost, with the same advantage of democracy, but is far removed from a democratic temper. The result, a near anarchy prevails there. However, India would not have bothered what the neighbor was going through had it not been for the spill over of that anarchy across India’s borders.

     

    The whole world knows by now what Pakistan is up to. The elements Pakistan nourished to foment trouble for India have done enough harm within the Pakistani borders. Whether or not Pakistan will ever learn a lesson is a difficult question to answer. But, surely enough the world knows Pakistan’s character and India has learnt not to trust the neighbor.

     

    As India celebrates the 65th anniversary of Republic Day, people have  the satisfaction that  their nation  is a functional democracy and republic, unlike the neighbor who suffers the pangs  of an uncertain  democracy, always on the brink of slipping in to a dictatorship of military.

     

    Happy Republic Day!

    Author: Prof I.S.Saluja

  • INDIA’S RELATIONS WITH THE US MUST NOT BE ONE-SIDED

    INDIA’S RELATIONS WITH THE US MUST NOT BE ONE-SIDED

    ‘It is in the interest of both sides that the visit is seen as being successful. Both sides have invested considerable political capital in it…….This rapid exchange of visits and the decisions taken have to be justified, beyond the symbolism, which is no doubt important in itself. This opportunity to impart a fresh momentum to ties should not be missed………. What we need is a pragmatic approach by both sides. On the side this is assured by Modi. He has shown that he is essentially pragmatic. The only principle he is attached to is India First”, says the author. 

     

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ready acceptance of United States President Barack Obama’s invitation to visit Washington in September 2014 came as a surprise against the background of the visa denial humiliation heaped on him for nine years.

     

    Modi’s invitation to Obama to visit India as chief guest at our 2015 Republic day celebrations came as an equal surprise, as did Obama’s acceptance at such short notice.

     

    The messaging from both sides is clear. Modi wants to give a fresh impetus to the India-US relationship, seen as languishing for some time now. Obama has conveyed that he is ready to respond.

     

    Now that Obama is coming and the two sides want to reinvigorate the relationship, the outcome of the visit will be watched closely not only in India and the US, but internationally too.

     

    To look ahead, we should look backwards a little bit so that the potential for the future can be seen through a better understanding of the past.

     

    There are no instant solutions to the issues in India-US relations. The US demands in many cases require policy, legislative and administrative responses by India, not to mention care by us that a balance in our external relations is maintained.

     

    Obama had said during his visit to India in 2009 that he saw the India-US relations as potentially a ‘defining partnership of the 21st century.’ It is very hard to define what a defining partnership is, but what he meant presumably is that relations between the oldest and the largest democracy, between the world’s foremost economic power and, in time, the third biggest economy will define the contours of international relations in the decades ahead.

     

    Our leaders say that India and the US are natural partners. This is not borne out objectively by the history of the relationship, the differences that currently exist on a whole host of issues and the inherently unequal nature of the relationship.

     

    The US is the world’s only superpower with global interests whose contradictory pulls and pressures they have to manage even in our region, and we are not even a credible regional power yet.

     

    If the argument is that it is the shared values of democracy, pluralism and respect for human rights make us natural partners, then the US relationship with Pakistan and China — often at our cost — which are not democracies, has to be explained. US interests often take precedence over its declared values.

     

    Even if rhetoric does not measure up to realities, the fact remains that improvement of India-US ties has been the most important development in India’s external relations in the last decade.

     

    It is the 2005 nuclear deal that opened the doors to a transformative change in bilateral ties. Reflecting the new intensity of bilateral engagement, about 28 dialogues were set up between the two sides covering the fields of energy, health, education, development, S&T, trade, defence, counter-terrorism, nonproliferation, high technology, innovation etc.

     

    The US now supports India’s permanent membership of the UN Security Council in principle. It is backing India’s membership of the four international export control organisations — the Nuclear Suppliers Group, the Missile Technology Control Regime, the Wassenaar Arrangement and the Australia Group.

     

    Trade in goods and services between the two countries has grown to almost $100 billion (about Rs 620,000 crore).

     

    A big breakthrough has been made in defence. In the last five or six years the US has bagged defence orders worth about $10 billion (about Rs 62,000 crore). These include C-130, C-17 and P-80 I aircraft and heavy lift, attack and VIP helicopters. The US has emerged as the biggest supplier of arms to India in this period.

     

    The US has proposed joint manufacture of several defence items in India under its Defence Trade and Technology Initiative. While India has overcome its mistrust of the US and fears that at critical moments the US may cut off spares for its equipment as part of its liberally used sanctions instrument, India has been reticent in its response to the DTTI, possibly because it is still not convinced that the US will transfer the technologies that India would want or not tag unacceptable conditions to it.

     

    The US proposed at one time three ‘foundational’ agreements covering the areas of logistics, interoperability and access to high technology equipment, but India has been cautious, presumably because it was concerned about slipping into the US defence orbit and losing its autonomy.

     

    To balance this, India and the US have been conducting a large number of military exercises, far more than with any other country. The naval exercises in the Indian Ocean to protect the sea lanes of communication are particularly important because of their geopolitical implications. Trilateral India-US-Japan naval exercises have obvious significance.

     

    In Obama’s second term, however, the ties lost momentum for various reasons. Economic reforms in India slowed down, its growth rates fell, India was seen as reluctant to deepen the strategic partnership, it was lukewarm to the US pivot towards Asia, US nuclear firms saw their business opportunities in India blocked because of our Nuclear Liability Act, major US corporations began campaigning against India’s trade, investment and intellectual property rights policies in the US Congress and instigated investigations into them by the US International Trade Commission and the US Trade Representative.

     

    The US began criticising India for being a fence sitter, a free-loader on the international system because of its reluctance to uphold it even at the cost of its interests as other Western powers were supposedly doing. This was the sense of the ‘burden sharing’ demand of the US.

     

    India had its own complaints against the US regarding the implications of the new US immigration legislation for India’s IT industry, the movement of its professionals, the increase in cost of H1B and L1 visas, the totalisation agreement and outsourcing.

     

    During his Washington visit, Modi struck an unexpectedly good rapport with Obama who accompanied him personally to the Martin Luther King Jr Memorial and later in Myanmar described him as a ‘man of action.’

     

    Modi clearly signalled during the visit that he intends to reinvigorate bilateral ties and that he views them as vital for his development agenda at home.

     

    The joint press conference by the two leaders and their joint statement set an ambitious agenda, with many positives, if all goes according to plan.

     

    The two leaders agreed to increase the bilateral trade five-fold to $500 billion (about Rs 36 lakh crore).

     

    Modi asked publicly for more openness and ease of access to the US market for Indian IT companies, even if Obama failed to give any response.

     

    In order to raise investment by institutional investors and corporate entities, it was agreed to establish an Indo-US Investment Initiative led by India’s finance ministry and the US department of treasury, with special focus on capital market development and financing of infrastructure.

     

    It was also agreed to establish an Infrastructure Collaboration Platform convened by the ministry of finance and the US department of commerce to enhance participation of US companies in infrastructure projects in India.

     

    Modi invited the US to send two trade missions to India in 2015 focused on India’s infrastructure needs with US technology and services.

     

    It was decided to activate the Trade Policy Forum that had not been convened for a long time. An empowered annual working group was approved for addressing IPR issues and it was agreed to set up a contact group for implementing the India-US civil nuclear deal.

     

    US involvement was sought in the railways sector and in smart city projects (Ajmer, Visakhapatnam and Allahabad).

     

    It was also agreed that USAID will serve as knowledge partner to support Modi’s 500 Cities National Urban Development Mission and Clean India Campaign.

     

    Obama offered to reinvigorate the higher education dialogue, which has languished. He welcomed India’s proposal to establish the Global Initiative of Academic Networks under which India would invite and host up to 1,000 American academics each year to teach in centrally-recognised Indian universities, at their convenience.

     

    The decisions and understandings reflected in the joint statement on the energy front are potentially problematic as they could give the US more handle to put pressure on India on climate change issues.

     

    Both leaders expressed their commitment to work towards a successful outcome in Paris in 2015 of the conference of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, including the creation of a new global agreement on climate change.

     

    The two leaders, in recognition of the critical importance of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving resilience in the face of climate change, agreed to ‘a new and enhanced strategic partnership’ on energy security, clean energy, and climate change, to further which a new US-India Climate Fellowship Programme to build long-term capacity to address climate change-related issues in both countries was launched.

     

    A MoU was concluded between the Export-Import Bank and the Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency, which would make up to $1 billion (about Rs 6,200 core) in financing available to bolster India’s transition to a low-carbon and climate-resilient energy economy, while boosting US renewable energy exports to India.

     

    Modi and Obama stated their intention to expand defence cooperation to bolster national, regional, and global security. This broad-based formulation has important geopolitical implications. They agreed to renew for ten more years the 2005 Framework for the US-India Defence Relationship with plans for more ambitious programs and activities.

     

    They welcomed the first meeting under the framework of the DTTI in September 2014 and its decision to establish a task force to expeditiously evaluate and decide on unique projects and technologies for enhancing India’s defence industry and military capabilities.

     

    To intensify cooperation in maritime security, the two sides considered enhancing technology partnerships for India’s Navy, besides upgrading their existing bilateral exercise Malabar.

     

    They committed to pursue provision of US-made mine-resistanta ambush-protected vehicles to India.

     

    On terrorism, they stressed the need for dismantling of safe havens for terrorist and criminal networks, to disrupt all financial and tactical support for networks such as Al Qaeda, Lashkar-e-Tayiba, Jaish-e-Mohammad, the D-Company, and the Haqqani Network.

     

    The two countries also expressed the intention to start a new dialogue on space situational awareness.

     

    Obama affirmed that India met MTCR requirements and was ready for NSG membership. Noting India’s ‘Act East’ policy and the United States’ rebalance to Asia, the leaders committed to work more closely with other Asia Pacific countries through consultations, dialogues, and joint exercises. They underlined the importance of their trilateral dialogue with Japan and decided to explore holding this dialogue among their foreign ministers.

     

    Modi spoke of great convergence on the issue of peace and stability in Asia-Pacific and more joint exercises with Asia-Pacific countries.

     

    Very significantly, he stated that the US was intrinsic to India’s Look East and Link West policies, according thus a central role for the US in India’s foreign policy.

     

    They agreed to continue close consultations and cooperation in support of Afghanistan’s future.

     

    The principal points agreed during Modi’s visit will serve as a guide to what can be realistically achieved during Obama’s visit. To assess that, we should take into account some limitations and negatives that mark the India-US relationship.

     

    Already, what was agreed to is mostly not capable of quick implementation or rapid results. These are largely medium term objectives and not always clear in implications. In the course of implementation, many issues will provoke internal political debates, will require detailed processing and negotiations, parliamentary approval and intensive diplomatic effort on the international front by both parties. In some cases real differences have been glossed over by use of diplomatic language.

     

    On IPR issues it will not be easy to reconcile US demands on IPRs and our position that our IPR policies are in conformity with the World Trade Organisation’s Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights agreement. Legal issues involving our courts are involved.

     

    The USTR decided to put unilateral pressure on India by investigating India’s IPR policies under Section 301, but this has been halted in November 2014 in view of some forward looking announcements by the Modi government. The USTR’s ‘cautiously optimistic’ statements during his Delhi visit in November suggest that the US will wait and watch what the Modi government actually delivers.

     

    The US Congress has extended the investigation of India’s investment, trade and IPR policies by the USITC by another year.

     

    On climate change issues, under cover of its ‘political’ agreement with China, the US seems determined to put pressure on India to agree to some reduction commitments. In actual fact, this is political pressure unrelated to the merits of India’s case. Climate change is a multilateral issue, but the US is making it a bilateral one, with the commercial interests of its companies in mind.

     

    While the US claims that what it is offering under the DTTI has the green light from all those in the US who control technology exports, it can be doubted whether the US will be as liberal in transfer of technologies as it would have us believe. The US record in this regard with even its allies and partners is not inspiring.

     

    The US has shown no activism in pushing for India’s membership of NSG or MTCR as a start. It is to be hoped that it is not looking

     

    for a resolution of the nuclear liability issue and the finalisation of the vexed question of ‘administrative arrangements’ that is needed to complete the India-US nuclear deal before

     

    it does the heavy lifting again to promote India’s membership of the cartels in question.

     

    Surprisingly, the list of terror organisations against whom US and India have agreed to work together excludes the Taliban, pointing to a crucial difference between the two countries on the issue of accommodating this extremist force with its close Pakistani links into the power structure in Afghanistan.

     

    In reaching out to the Taliban the US gives priority to orderly withdrawal of its forces from Afghanistan, treating India’s concerns as secondary. The language on Afghanistan in the Modi-Obama joint statement in Washington was remarkably perfunctory.

     

    Worse, the US wants to retain complete freedom of action in dealing with Pakistan, irrespective of India’s concerns about its continuing military aid to that country. General Raheel Sharif, the Pakistani army chief, was accorded high level treatment during his recent visit to the US, meeting Secretary John Kerry who indirectly endorsed the role of the Pakistani army in nation building and politics by terming it as a truly binding force.

     

    It is worth recalling that after accepting the invitation to visit India, Obama felt diplomatically obliged to phone Premier Nawaz Sharif to say he could not visit Pakistan now and would do so later.

     

    The US involvement in developing our inadequate infrastructure — our ports, airports, railways highways etc — seems unrealistic as its companies are hardly likely stand up to international competition in India.

     

    As regards our nuclear liability legislation, it appears that the US government may be moving away from its fundamentalist position that supplier liability cannot be accepted and may be open to some practical solution to the issue in terms of limiting the liability in time and costs. The lawyers at Westinghouse and General Electric will, of course, have to be convinced.

     

    This is a highly charged issue politically and it is doubtful whether the decks can be cleared before Obama’s visit. The larger question of the economic viability of US-supplied nuclear power plants remains, not to mention the fact that GE does not have as yet a certified reactor.

     

    Work on a bilateral investment treaty will take time It appears that our side wants to be able to announce a couple of projects under the DTTI during Obama’s visit. In this connection anti-tank missiles, naval guns, pilotless aircraft and magnetic catapult for our aircraft carrier are being mentioned as possibilities.

     

    The US would want at least one project to be announced. Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar has let it be known publicly that US proposals are being seriously examined.

     

    The announcement of a more ambitious Defence Cooperation Framework Agreement valid for another 10 years is a certainty.

     

    The government’s decision on the GST, raising the FDI ceiling in insurance, the amendment to the land acquisition law are advance signals of its commitment to reform and attracting FDI, which is a positive from the US point of view.

     

    The emphasis on Make in India and developing India’s manufacturing sector, coupled with a commitment to ease doing business in India, have begun to change investor sentiment towards India, and this creates a better atmosphere for Obama’s visit.

     

    It is in the interest of both sides that the US President’s visit is seen as being successful. Both sides have invested considerable political capital in it.

     

    This rapid exchange of visits between the two leaders, leaving little time to process the decisions taken in Washington in September, has to be justified, beyond the symbolism, which is no doubt important in itself. This opportunity to impart a fresh momentum to ties should not be missed.

     

    But there is need also to be clear-headed about the relationship that is not easy to manage given US power, expectations, impatience and constant endeavour to do things the way it wants.

     

    It is a bit disturbing that an atmosphere has been created in which the focus is on what we can do for the US and Obama and not what the US must do to meet our needs and concerns. The agenda has become one-sided.

     

    The US should not expect India to support all its demands and polices, however questionable. India does not have to prove it is a responsible country by supporting even irresponsible US policies. Of course, India too should not expect the US to always adjust its policies to suit us.

     

    What we need is a pragmatic approach by both sides. On the side this is assured by Modi. He has shown that he is essentially pragmatic. The only principle he is attached to is India First.

     

    (By Kanwal Sibal who is a former Foreign Secretary of India)
    (British English)

  • India-US strategic partnership

    India-US strategic partnership

    In future, India may be willing to conduct joint military operations with the US in its area of strategic interest in a contingency in which India’s vital national interests are threatened, preferably as a Chapter 7 intervention under the UN flag and failing that, as part of a “coalition of the willing”, says the author.

     

    President Barack Obama’s forthcoming visit as the chief guest on Republic Day is likely to give a fresh impetus to the Indo-US strategic partnership. While the relationship is substantive and broad based, the impressive achievements of the strategic partnership are to a large extent attributable to the successful implementation of the 10-year Defence Framework Agreement signed in June 2005. The renewal of this agreement will be a major item on the bilateral agenda during the summit meeting.

     

    During the Obama-Narendra Modi meeting in September 2014, the two leaders had stated their intention to expand defence cooperation to bolster national, regional, and global security. It was agreed that the two countries would build an enduring partnership in which both sides treat each other at the same level as their closest partners, including defence technology transfers, trade, research, co-production, and co-development.

     

    Prime Minister Modi and President Obama welcomed the first meeting under the framework of the Defence Trade and Technology Initiative in September 2014 and endorsed the decision to establish a task force to expeditiously evaluate and decide on unique projects and technologies which would have a transformative impact on bilateral defence relations and enhance India’s defence industry and military capabilities.

     

    For several decades, India’s procurement of weapons platforms and other defence equipment had remained mired in disadvantageous buyer-seller, patron-client relationships like that with the erstwhile Soviet Union and Russia. While India has been manufacturing Russian fighter aircraft and tanks under licence, the Russians never actually transferred weapons technology to India.

     

    The country has now diversified its acquisition sources beyond Russia to Western countries and Israel. From the US, India has purchased weapons platforms and other items of defence equipment worth around US $10 billion over the last five years. However, none of the recent deals with the US have included the transfer of technology clauses. There is now a growing realisation in India that future defence acquisitions must simultaneously lead to a transformative change in the country’s defence technology base and manufacturing prowess. Hence, it is imperative that whatever India procures now must be procured with a transfer of technology clause being built into the contract even though it means having to pay a higher price. The aim should be to make India a design, development, manufacturing and export hub for defence equipment in two to three decades.

     

    In September 2013, Deputy Secretary of Defence Ashton Carter, now the US Defence Secretary designate, had offered India a “Defence Trade and Technology Initiative” under which the US will share sensitive cutting-edge defence technology and permit US companies to enter into joint production and co-development ventures in India. Carter had then said, “We changed our mindset around technology transfer to India in the Department of Defence from a culture of presumptive no to one of presumptive yes.” 

     

    The Javelin anti-tank guided missile is another key candidate for joint production, though so far the US has been hesitant to offer its seeker and warhead technology. India is also looking for high-end counter-IED technologies. In future, the two countries will conduct joint research and development for new weapons systems and the US may offer even nuclear power packs for submarines and aircraft carriers and fighter aircraft engines. Cooperation of such a high order will raise India’s technology base by an order of magnitude and help the country move several notches higher in its quest for self-reliance in defence production. stepping down as Secretary of Defence, Chuck Hagel had nominated Frank Kendall, the Department’s Undersecretary for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics, as the defence initiative’s American lead. With Ashton Carter soon to become Secretary of Defence, the initiative will get a fresh boost. The biggest boost will come from a show-piece joint development project like the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile jointly developed with Russia.

     

    The extended Defence Framework Agreement should take stock of the goals of the 2005 agreement that have not been fully achieved. For example, there has been no progress in cooperation on BMD technology. This needs to be rectified. Intelligence sharing is limited to ongoing counter-terrorism operations at present. It should be extended to the sharing of data bases as well, particularly the terrorism data base maintained by the US NCTC and India’s NATGRID.

     

    Prime Minister Modi’s government has raised the FDI limit for defence joint ventures to 49 per cent equity participation. It is likely to be open to modifying the offsets policy and amending export laws, which are considered a stumbling block. The agreement should take into account the Indian PM’s exhortation to industry to “Make in India”. The two governments should act as facilitators for their public and private sector companies to form joint ventures for the design and development, co-production and export of future weapons platforms.

     

    There is a mutual recognition of the adverse implications of China’s increasing assertiveness in the South China Sea and in dealing with the dispute over the Senkaku (Diaoyu) islands with Japan. This has undermined international and regional confidence in China’s desire to resolve disputes peacefully. There is need to work in unison with the international community to uphold the unfettered use of the global commons. India is building robust military intervention capabilities and the armed forces are engaged in the process of formulating a doctrine to give effect to these capabilities.

     

    Though India values its strategic autonomy and recognises that each bilateral relationship is important in its own way, the policymakers realise that the geo-political contours of the 21st century and peace and stability, particularly in the India-Pacific region, will be shaped through cooperative security. In future, India may be willing to conduct joint military operations with the US in its area of strategic interest in a contingency in which India’s vital national interests are threatened, preferably as a Chapter 7 intervention under the UN flag and failing that, as part of a “coalition of the willing”.

  • Resolving the nuclear liability deadlock

    Resolving the nuclear liability deadlock

    “By putting in place a comprehensive, fair and pragmatic legislation on civil nuclear liability, there is no reason why India cannot reap the long-term benefits of civilian nuclear energy and resolve a prickly foreign policy issue”, say the authors. 

     

    On January 26, Barack Obama will become the first U.S. President to attend India’s Republic Day celebrations. It will also mark nearly 10 years since the first announcement on the India-U.S. civil nuclear agreement. In contrast to those heady days when the promise of nuclear power meeting India’s gargantuan energy needs was in the air, the present situation is bleak. A target of installing 63 Gigawatts of nuclear capacity by 2032 has been reduced to 27.5 Gigawatts and none of the landmark deals envisaged has been struck. The Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage (CLND) Act, 2010 which contains a speedy compensation mechanism for victims of a nuclear accident has been deemed responsible for this deadlock. Specifically, provisions on recourse liability on suppliers (Section 17(b)) and concurrent, potentially unlimited liability under other laws (Section 46) have been viewed as major obstacles in operationalising nuclear energy in India and bilateral relations with key supplier countries.

     

    A question of recourse

     

    Under Section 17(b), a liable operator can recover compensation from suppliers of nuclear material in the event of a nuclear accident if the damage is caused by the provision of substandard services or patent or latent defects in equipment or material. This is contrary to the practice of recourse in international civil nuclear liability conventions, which channel liability exclusively to the operator. Specifically, it contradicts Article 10 of the Annex to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage (CSC), an international treaty which India has signed.

     

    “U.S. President Barack Obama’s visit is an opportunity to address misgivings over the nuclear liability law and to also meet foreign governments and the supplier community halfway on the issue.”

     

    That Section 17(b) is contrary to the global norm is undeniable. However when the global norm itself is inequitable, there are justifiable reasons to depart from it. The inclusion of Section 17(b) recognises historical incidents such as the Bhopal gas tragedy in 1984 for which defective parts were partly responsible. The paltry compensation paid to the victims was facilitated by gaps in legislation and an extraordinarily recalcitrant state machinery. This is not a peculiarly Indian phenomenon – accidents such as Three Mile Island occurred partially due to lapses on the part of suppliers. More recently, forged quality certificates were detected for parts supplied to nuclear plants in South Korea. That Section 17(b) incentivises supplier safety and reduces the probability of a recurrence of such instances is equally undeniable.

     

    A step too far

     

    India can retain Section 17(b) while ensuring compliance with its international legal obligations in two ways. First, the CSC allows countries to make reservations to certain provisions in treaties despite being signatories to them. India could make a reservation to Article 10 of the Annex to the CSC since it satisfies the requisite criteria for making a valid reservation under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, thereby excluding its application. Second, Article XV of the CSC implies that the rights and obligations of States under general rules of public international law are exempt from the application of the CSC. One such principle of international law is the “polluter pays principle” – applicable both to the state and private entities. The principle comes into operation via the mechanism through which compensation can be recovered from a polluting entity for the environmental harm it causes. Exercising either of these options will allow India to retain Section 17(b) without violating the international treaty regime.

    However in pursuing the safety of supply, Section 17(b) goes too far in keeping liability for suppliers entirely open-ended. If liability on suppliers is unlimited in time and quantum, the possibility of getting adequate insurance cover will reduce. Even if such insurance is available, it could make  nuclear energy economically unviable. To address this, Rule 24 of the CLND Rules dilutes the right of recourse conferred by Section 17(b) by limiting compensation payable by suppliers to a specified amount and for a specified time period. Both these are made standard terms of the contract entered into between the supplier and operator.

     

    Though the end that Rule 24 seeks to achieve is justifiable, the means adopted are questionable. Rule 24 arguably violates Article 14 of the Constitution of India because there is no specific power in the CLND Act to limit liability in the manner that Rule 24 does. Further, the terms of the contract potentially dilute Section 17(b), which gives operators an untrammelled right to proceed against the supplier by way of recourse. It is a basic principle of law that a contract cannot violate the provision of a statute – if it does so, it is opposed to public policy. For these reasons, Rule 24 should be deleted. The limitation on time during which the supplier can be held liable should be inserted by means of a provision in the main Act. This will ensure that not just the end but also the means of limiting liability are legally tenable.

     

    As far as the limitation on the amount is concerned, without Rule 24, the liability for each supplier potentially extends to the general liability cap of Rs.1,500 crore. If all suppliers have to be insured up to this value, insurance costs will be unnecessarily pyramided. To address this, countries with a history of nuclear power have in place mechanisms to provide for insurance coverage through international insurance pools where insurers, operators and states share the risks of an accident, providing access to a wide pool of compensation. There are about 26 such pools in existence, which also provide reinsurance to each other. Insurance pools typically require members to be signatories to an international convention (such as CSC), and to allow reasonable inspections of their nuclear installations.

     

    While provisions for the creation of a domestic insurance pool for operators exist in Sections 7 and 8 of the Act and Rule 3, they need to be made explicit and amended to include suppliers in order to prevent the pyramiding of insurance premiums. This is particularly relevant to India’s domestic nuclear suppliers who would otherwise need to individually take out coverage, which would be prohibitively expensive. In order to access international reinsurance pools, the Central government could utilise the provisions in Section 43 and 44 of the CLND Act (Power to Call for Information from Operators) to establish a satisfactory inspections regime.

     

    Sanctity of a special mechanism

     

    Finally, Section 46 of the CLND Act contradicts the Act’s central purpose of serving as a special mechanism enforcing the channelling of liability to the operator to ensure prompt compensation for victims.

     

    Section 46 provides that nothing would prevent proceedings other than those which can be brought under the Act, to be brought against the operator. This is not uncommon, as it allows criminal liability to be pursued where applicable. However, in the absence of a comprehensive definition of the types of ‘nuclear damage’ being notified by the Central Government, Section 46 potentially also allows civil liability claims to be brought against the operator and suppliers through other civil law such as the law of tort. While liability for operators is capped by the CLND Act, this exposes suppliers to unlimited amounts of liability. Obtaining insurance coverage for any future liability costs on account of claims by victims in such a case would be next to impossible.

     

    Section 46 should thus be limited to criminal liability, and should clarify that victims who suffer on account of ‘nuclear damage’ can institute claims for compensation only under the CLND Act and not by recourse to other legislations or Courts. A clarification issued by the Attorney General’s office, if not an amendment to the law itself, will provide much needed assurance to suppliers while furthering national interest.

     

    The issue of the liability law has, for far too long, been a thorn in India’s bilateral relations especially with the United States. Mr. Obama’s visit provides a historic opportunity to address these misgivings and meet foreign governments, as well as the entire supplier community, Indian and foreign, halfway on the issue. This will signal the seriousness of the Government of India in setting its own house in order and put the ball firmly in the court of the supplier community. By putting in place such a comprehensive, fair and pragmatic legislation on civil nuclear liability, there is no reason why India cannot reap the long-term benefits of civilian nuclear energy and resolve a prickly foreign policy issue, the time for whose resolution has come.

     

    (Anupama Sen is Senior Research Fellow, Oxford Institute for Energy Studies and Arghya Sengupta is Research Director, Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy. They are co-authors of a report, “Operationalising India’s Nuclear Agreements: Issues and Solutions on Nuclear Liability”.) (British English) 

  • Obama’s India visit an opportunity to tap real potential in ties: Biswal

    Obama’s India visit an opportunity to tap real potential in ties: Biswal

    WASHINGTON (TIP): US President Barack Obama’s unprecedented second visit to India offers an “incredibly important opportunity” for the world’s two largest democracies to tap the “real potential” of their strategic ties, a top American diplomat has said.

     

    The “real potential” of Indo-US strategic and economic relationship, which leaders of the two countries have been striving for the past two decades, is coming to “fruition” after Narendra Modi became the Prime Minister of India with an impressive mandate, Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal said.

     

    “We are starting to see that strategic importance actually manifested in the quality of our engagements. In the nature of the conversations we are having on the whole – they are not just bilateral, but also regional and global issues. That has always been and that is what both countries have aspired to, but I think, we are now achieving it in real and tangible ways.

     

    “The pace and the level of engagement is the most intense and at the most senior level, that I have ever seen,” Biswal told media ahead of Obama’s visit to New Delhi.

     

    At the invitation of Modi, Obama will be in New Delhi as the chief guest of the Republic Day parade on January 26, making him the first US President to visit India twice while in office.

     

    The Obama Administration’s top diplomat for South and Central Asia was in India recently along with Secretary of State John Kerry. After the September 30 White House meeting between Obama and Modi, there has been an unprecedented level of engagement between the two countries. In the last three months, at least three dozen high-level meetings have taken place both in India and the US, with several of them as late as this week and a few of them scheduled for the next week as well.

     

    Biswal said Kerry’s recent visit to attend the Vibrant Gujarat Summit, a state-level meeting, in Ahmedabad “represents the importance that the United States places on India’s economic transformation”.

     

    “We want to be partner in this endeavor,” Biswal said, noting that though the meeting was on investing in Gujarat, but was also on economic agenda for India as well.

     

    The occasion as also used by Kerry to meet Modi in Ahmedabad and give a final shape to the agenda of talks for the Obama-Modi summit in New Delhi later this month.

     

    “It was also an opportunity, two weeks before the President’s visit to be able to engage with the Prime Minister and members of his cabinet on the important agenda for the President’s visit. “We see this as an incredibly important opportunity,” she said, adding that the two leaders were able to have good conversations about the priorities for Obama’s visit as well as to be able to talk about the bilateral and the economic relationship.

  • Rep. Crowley to Travel with President Obama for Historic Visit to India

    Rep. Crowley to Travel with President Obama for Historic Visit to India

    WASHINGTON DC (TIP): Rep. Joe Crowley, Vice Chair of the Democratic Caucus and former co-chair of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian Americans, announced, January 22 that he will travel with President Barack Obama aboard Air Force One to India on Saturday. The delegation will hold a series of meetings, including participating in the country’s Republic Day celebration, which marks the enactment of India’s constitution.

     

    “The principles of India’s democratic constitution serve as a shining example for the world, and what better time for the President of the United States to make this historic visit than to join India in celebrating its Republic Day,” said Rep. Crowley. “It is an honor to join President Obama on this trip and I look forward to robust discussions on how we can open the next chapter in U.S.-India relations. I strongly believe that the United States-Indian relationship should and will serve as a key building block of U.S. foreign policy in the decades ahead. Working together, the United States and India can be a transformational force in meeting global challenges.”

     

    Crowley will depart on Saturday with President Obama to Delhi, India, where the delegation will attend Republic Day events as well as meet with Indian officials to discuss strengthening and expanding the U.S.-India strategic partnership.

     

    Crowley, who served as co-chair of the India Caucus in the 112th and 113thCongresses, is a recognized leader on Indian issues in the House of Representatives. Formed in 1993, the India Caucus is a bipartisan group of members that is dedicated to championing strong ties between the U.S. and India and supporting the Indian-American community.

     

    During his term, Crowley has helped grow the India Caucus to become one of the largest caucuses in the House and initiated several key events, including the first-ever Congressional Diwali celebration in 2013.

     

    Crowley also led the Democratic whip effort as part of the Congressional push to secure the enactment of the U.S.-India Civil Nuclear Agreement, a landmark agreement that brought U.S.-India relations into the century after decades of distance during the Cold War. A recognized leader in Congress on issues related to the Hindu and Sikh-American communities, Crowley spearheaded a multi-year, successful effort to convince the federal government to begin collecting data on hate crimes committed against Sikh-Americans and Hindu-Americans, an important issue brought to the national spotlight by the massacre of Sikhs worshipping at a temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin. He is also the leading voice calling for an end to the presumptive ban on Sikhs serving in the U.S. military.

     

    Congressman Crowley is the nine-term representative from the 14th Congressional District of New York, which includes sections of Queens and the Bronx. He is a member of the powerful Ways and Means Committee and serves as Vice Chair of the Democratic Caucus in the House of Representatives.

  • ‘Frustrating’ White House refuses to recognize Radical Islam as threat: Tulsi Gabbard

    ‘Frustrating’ White House refuses to recognize Radical Islam as threat: Tulsi Gabbard

    WASHINGTON (TIP): One common refrain this week among conservatives is that President Obama and the White House have a very steadfast resistance to referring to terrorists like the ones in Paris as “Islamic extremists” or “Islamic radicals.” Josh Earnest argued it’s a matter of “accuracy,” but the administration hasn’t provided much of an explanation beyond that.

     

    And now, Democratic Congresswoman and Army veteran Tulsi Gabbard is joining in on that criticism, saying “It’s frustrating how, as we look at the situation there, our administration refuses to recognize who our enemy is.”

     

    Gabbard said rather definitively “this is about radical Islam” and lamented how the White House won’t be more honest about discussing the threat:

     

    “I’m upset that the President and the White House…[are] not actually saying, ‘This is a war that the Islamic extremists are posing against the United States and against the West and we recognize who our enemy is and come up with a strategy to defeat that enemy.’”

    (Source: Tulsi to Wolf Blitzer on CNN)

  • US rushes through to meet its promises to India on anti-terror

    US rushes through to meet its promises to India on anti-terror

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Ahead of Obama’s visit to India, the US is rushing through to meet his commitment to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on counter- terrorism, including targeting underworld don Dawood Ibrahim and dismantling LeT, JeM, al-Qaeda and the Haqqanis networks.

     

    Recently, US Treasury Department slapped sanctions against two key aides of India’s most wanted underworld don Dawood, who runs his D-Company criminal network from Karachi. By targeting Mehran Paper Mill, a Kotri City, Pakistan-based paper company owned by Anis Ibrahim, brother of Dawood, is a clear indication from the US about how entrenched D-Company is in Pakistan. Anis and Aziz Moosa Bilakhia (Bilakhia) have been designated as Narcotics Traffickers under Kingpin Act due to their ties to D-Company.

     

    Following their White House meet on September 30, Modi and Obama had stressed the need for joint and concerted efforts, including the dismantling of safe havens for terror and criminal networks, to disrupt all financial and tactical support for networks such as al-Qaeda, Lashkar-e-Taiba, Jaish-e-Mohammad, the D-Company, and Haqqanis.

  • Modi to Present 100 Banarasi Sarees to Michelle Obama

    Modi to Present 100 Banarasi Sarees to Michelle Obama

    New Delhi (TIP): Prime Minister Narendra Modi plans to present 100 Banarasi silks sarees to Michelle Obama when she and President Obama visit India this weekend. 

     

    “Banarasi silk sarees with old, unique designs and finest quality Banarasi dress material for the U.S. first lady from PM’s constituency are on its way to New Delhi,” a senior BJP leader of Varanasi, now closely associated with the PM, said. 

     

    Michelle Obama’s “love for Indian silk is no secret,” and she has “been spotted wearing Jacquard silk dresses designed by international bigwigs Tracy Resse, Naeem Khan and Alexander McQueen.”

     

    Jacquard silk is a specialty of weavers of Banaras, the constituency Modi represents in parliament.

     

    The Ministry of Textiles also has sent a separate request to the Varanasi Vastra Udyog Sangh with details about the Banarasi silk sarees and fabric to be presented to Michelle Obama. 

  • OBAMA ITINERARY A MIX OF EXPERIENCES

    OBAMA ITINERARY A MIX OF EXPERIENCES

    NEW DELHI (TIP): U.S. President Barack Obama will finish his first day of a landmark India trip on Sunday, Jan. 25, at a star-studded ceremonial banquet within the Rashtrapati Bhavan — the official residence of India’s President Pranab Mukherjee — where the guest list boasts up to 200 of India’s leading industrialists, politicians, academics, physicians, and actors . Expected guests include Bollywood legend Amitabh Bachchan, cricket star Sachin Tendulkar, Tata Sons Chairman Emeritus Ratan Tata, and a host of other top industry leaders. The business-heavy invitation list reflects the high priority the United States and India are placing on reviving bilateral trade ties.

     

    Sunday’s grand affair will follow a lunch between Obama and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and a series of bilateral meetings spanning a range of issues at Hyderabad House.

     

    On Monday, Obama will attend India’s Republic Day Parade alongside Modi, becoming the first U.S. president to attend this occasion. Obama is then expected to join Modi for back-to-back meetings with Indian business leaders: the Indo-U.S. CEO Forum and the India-U.S. Business Council.

     

    Obama will visit Agra to have a look at the monument of love and the 8th wonder of the world The Taj Mahal, the following day, before returning to Washington.

  • UNPRECEDENTED SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS FOR OBAMA

    UNPRECEDENTED SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS FOR OBAMA

    NEW DELHI (TIP): A seven-layer security ring will be thrown around the VVIP enclosure on Rajpath for the Republic Day parade to be witnessed by US President Barack Obama and the airspace over the area would be monitored by a radar to be specially set up. This will form part of the planned unprecedented ground-to-air security drill that will turn the national capital into an impregnable fortress during the visit of Obama as Chief Guest for the main Republic Day celebrations on January 26 – the first by any American President.

     

    A multi-agency control room will monitor the surveillance operations in every area of the national capital which has been put on the highest alert because of the visit of the US President. Obama is arriving here on January 25 on a three-day visit to the country. Threat perception is the highest for the event but there is no specific intelligence input about a possible terror strike, officials engaged with the preparations said today while giving a broad overview of the security drill.

     

    American Secret Service personnel, who have landed in the capital and Agra, have already conducted a preliminary survey of the routes to be taken by the US President and Rajpath where Obama will be seated along with President Pranab Mukherjee, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and hosts of other VVIPs to watch the annual parade.

     

    There is a possibility that the chief guest, for the first time, will arrive at the venue separately rather than with the President in his bullet proof limousine. If he does come with the President, he will be possibly the first US President not to travel in his own highly-secured ‘Beast’.

     

    A seven-layer security ring will be thrown around the VVIP enclosure with elite Special Protection Group and Secret Services personnel forming a part of the Close Proximity ring, official sources said, adding a radar has been exclusively kept for monitoring air space over the VVIP enclosure. Central Security agencies have brought in their Concealed Anti-Terrorists (CAT) squads to the national capital who form part of teams that carryout surprise checks at hotels, guest houses and vulnerable localities.

     

    The ITC Maurya hotel, where the US President will be staying, has been taken over by the Secret Services personnel and multi-frequency control room manned by the US officials have been set up. American security personnel will also be part of the teams manning the control rooms set up to watch footage of nearly 15,000 CCTVs installed in the capital.

     

    A power-point presentation of the Republic Day was given to the US officials about the events of the day including the cultural programme that will be performed by various artists before the VVIPs at Rajpath. Besides the 80,000-member strong Delhi Police, additional 20,000 paramilitary personnel and armed police forces from neighbouring states including Haryana, Rajasthan and India Reserve Battalions have been pressed into service to ensure fool-proof security in the capital especially around Rajpath where the main Republic day function will be held.

     

    Anti-aircraft guns have been placed at strategic locations to thwart attempts to violate the air space over the venue, which has been traditionally a no-fly zone. Metro underground and offices around the Rajpath area will be taken over 72 hours in advance at the request of the US security personnel. Snipers will take up positions at vantage points while Indian Air Force(IAF) will provide air cover to the parade area and the VVIPs on the ground.

  • PADMA AWARDS 2015 : REPORTS

    PADMA AWARDS 2015 : REPORTS

    PADMA AWARDS 2015 TO RAMDEV, AMITABH BACHCHAN, RAJINIKANTH, ADVANI, OTHERS: REPORTS NEW DELHI (TIP): Yoga exponent Baba Ramdev, Bharatiya Janata Party patriarch LK Advani, spiritual leader Shri Shri Ravi Shankar and veteran actors Amitabh Bachchan and Rajinikanth are among this year’s recipients of the prestigious Padma awards that recognises lifelong service to the country, according to a report.

     

    The awards this year, to be conferred on Republic Day, has several names seen as sympathetic to the ruling party, including lyricist and adman Prasoon Joshi, who worked on the BJP’s advertisement campaign for the Lok Sabha elections, and journalists Swapan Dasgupta and Rajat Sharma. Economist Bibek Debroy, a member of the newly instituted NITI Aayog, is also on the list.

     

    Padma awards, given since 1954 on Republic Day in honour of contributions in wide-ranging pursuits, have often been subject of controversy due to the arbitrary nature of the selection process and inevitable charges of favouritism by the government and the ruling party. They are given in three categories–Padma Shri, Padma Bhushan and Padma Vibhushan, in ascending order of distinction. It’s unclear which names have been picked for which awards.

     

    Punjab Chief Minister Prakash Singh Badal and Advani are the only two politicians in the list of 148 recipients, the report stated.

     

    Yoga exponent Ramdev, whose dedicated yoga television channel and camps are popular, is nonetheless a controversial figure, having said in the past that he can
    “cure” homosexuality, among other things. His company Patanjali Ayurveda makes consumer products such as soaps, oil and breakfast cereals and in five years had sales worth Rs. 450 crore, with a turnover expected to touch Rs. 2,000 crore.

     

    Actor Dilip Kumar, director Sanjay Leela Bhansali and scriptwriter Salim Khan, badminton player P V Sindhu, wrestler Sushil Kumar and Arunima Sinha, the first woman amputee mountaineer to climb Mount Everest, are among those honoured.

     

    Badminton player Saina Nehwal, who had kicked up a storm about not being nominated and was subsequently included in the list of contenders, has not been awarded, if reports are accurate. The official list is expected to be out today or tomorrow.

     

    T V Mohandas Pai, the Chairman of Manipal Global Education and a former director of Infosys, shares the honour with former bureaucrat N Gopalaswami (ex chief election commissioner), K S Bajpai and P V Rajaraman.

     

    Eminent vocalists Sudha Raghunathan, A Kanyakumari, Girija Devi and Malini Awasthi, actor Smriti Biswas, music directors Anu Malik and Ravindra Jain and Assamese film director Jahnu Barua are said to be on the list. This year two scientists from ISRO–S Arunan of the Mars Mission and S K Shivkumar of Chandrayaan–will also be felicitated, the Express report said.

     

    Padma Awards not yet announced: Govt 

     

    The Ministry of Home Affairs on January 23 said that the government has not yet announced any names for the Padma Awards, 2015, and added that the names appearing in the media are speculative.

     

    “Government has not yet announced Padma Awards for 2015. These awards are announced on 25th of Jan every year, on the eve of the Republic Day,” it said.

     

    “The names appearing in the media are speculative and there is no official confirmation for the same,” it added.

     

    Media 3reports have been speculating that spiritual guru Baba Ramdev, actor Amitabh Bachchan and BJP veteran L K Advani may be conferred the Padma awards on Republic Day.