Year: 2015

  • 41 WRITERS RETURN INDIAN AWARD IN PROTEST

    41 WRITERS RETURN INDIAN AWARD IN PROTEST

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Many in India’s literary community are disgusted. Dozens of writers say every day brings more evidence of intolerance and bigotry going mainstream — a man lynched allegedly for eating beef, an atheist critic of Hindu idol worship gunned down — all met by a deafening silence from the government.

    As of October 14, 41 novelists, essayists, playwrights and poets had returned the awards they received from India’s prestigious literary academy to protest what they call a growing climate of intolerance under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.

    The writers are also angry that India’s Sahitya Akademi, or National Academy of Letters, has said little about the murder of the well-known rationalist Malleshappa Kalburgi, an award-winning Kannada-language writer, gunned down in August for his writings against superstition and false beliefs.

    The government has dismissed the writers’ protests, questioning their motives and accusing them of being politically motivated.

    “If they say they are unable to write, let them stop writing,” culture minister Mahesh Sharma told reporters.

    The writers say they cannot remain mute spectators to numerous incidents of communal violence, attacks on intellectuals and increasing curbs on free speech.

    “It’s become a question of an individual’s right to speak, to think, to write, to eat, to dress, to debate,” said Maya Krishna Rao, a playwright and theater actress, who returned her award to the academy this week.

    When Modi won a landslide victory in May 2014, many voiced fears of right-wing Hindu nationalism leading to communal violence and religious intolerance. Modi, who had spent years dodging allegations of failing to stop riots in Gujarat state in which around 1,000 Muslims died, assured the nation that he was prime minister for all and would work for everyone.

    But the last year has seen a rising crescendo of violence by Hindu fringe groups, trying to force a regressive Hindu nationalism on all, causing fear among India’s minority communities. State governments ruled by the BJP have cracked down on cow slaughter, and even buffalo meat, a key source of protein for poor Muslims and lower caste Hindus, has become scarce. The ban on cow slaughter has given rise to Hindu vigilante groups and mob violence has risen. Last month a Muslim man was lynched in northern India over false rumors that his family had eaten beef for dinner.

    On Wednesday, in response to persistent demands that the prime minister break his silence on the lynching, Modi said the mob killing was “sad and undesirable,” but added that his government could not be blamed as the local administration was responsible for the state.

    Last week, well-known writer Nayantara Sahgal returned her academy award, triggering the return of awards by other writers. Sahgal, a niece of India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, is known as a fiercely independent political writer who had crossed swords with her cousin and another former prime minister, Indira Gandhi, when she imposed a state of emergency in India in the mid-70s.

    Referring to recent violence by Hindu groups, Sahgal said in an interview to The Indian Express newspaper that there was “an attempt to blow up the idea of India and to put in its place a kind of travesty of Hinduism, a kind of monoculture, which has nothing to do with Hinduism.”

    Sahgal’s views are echoed across the literary spectrum.

    Ghulam Nabi Khayal, a Kashmiri language writer, said earlier governments would try to restore peace in situations of communal conflict.

    “But that’s no more the case with the rise of Hindu rightwing BJP,” Khayal said in Srinagar. “For the past one year, the Indian state has become suffocating and extremely intolerant.”

    The government was “now brazenly and institutionally backing this communal hatred,” he said, justifying his decision to return his award.

  • SC DECLARES NATIONAL JUDICIAL APPOINTMENTS COMMISSION UNCONSTITUTIONAL

    SC DECLARES NATIONAL JUDICIAL APPOINTMENTS COMMISSION UNCONSTITUTIONAL

    NEW DELHI (TIP): In a landmark judgment, the Supreme Court declared the National Judicial Appointments Commission, set up by the NDA government, unconstitutional. The collegium system, where semior judges appoint judges,will continue, the court said.

    “I’m really surprised by this verdict, Union Law Minister VS Gowda, said.

    The top court struck down the the 99th Constitutional amendment brought by the NDA government. The bench revived the collegium system of appointment of judges, commonly referred to as judges-selecting-judges.

    A five-judge constitution bench headed by Justice J S Khehar , by a 4:1 majorit, termed both the amendment and the NJAC Act unconstitutional, because it interfered with the independence of the judiciary.

    One of the contentious provisions of the new law was the inclusion of two eminent persons to the Commission which included the Chief Justice of India, two “senior most” judges of the apex court and the Union law minister. The two persons were to be nominated by a committee of the Chief Justice, the Prime Minister and the leader of opposition in the Lok Sabha. TheNarendra Modi government said the Commission would bring transparency in the appointment of judges to the high courts and Supreme Court.

    The apex court has scheduled November 3 for further hearings on the issue of improving the collegium system of appointment of judges.

    The petitions challenging the new legislation were filed by the group, the Supreme Court Advocates on Record Association, and others, who contended that the new law would hurt the independence of the judiciary.

    The Centre had defended the introduction of the new law saying that the two-decade-old collegium system was not free from defects. It added that the Supreme Court Bar Association supported the new Commission. The creation of the Commission was also supported by 20 state governments that ratified the NJAC Act and the amendment.

    The collegium system — by which the body of senior SC judges headed by the Chief Justice of India selected persons and recommended their names for appointment as judges –was created by two judgments of the SC in the 1990s.

  • Sena likens NCP to blood sucking leech

    Sena likens NCP to blood sucking leech

    MUMBAI (TIP): In a vitriolic attack on Sharad Pawar for equating the Shiv Sena to “ants that will be stuck to jaggery of power,” the ruling alliance partner on Friday described NCP as “blood sucking leech” waiting to join hands with the BJP to be a part of Maharashtra government.

    “Before calling others ants, it would have been better if Pawar had self-introspected. The NCP is infamous for sucking the blood of Maharashtra like leeches. These are leeches whose stomach will remain empty despite sucking out all the blood of the state,” the Sena said in stinging remarks in an editorial in party mouthpiece ‘Saamana’.

    Pawar had recently said that power was like a block of jaggery and termed the BJP and Shiv Sena as ants drawn to it, sucking as much sweetness as they could.

    On Pawar’s taunt that Sena was hungry for power and would not “dare” to leave the government, the Sena said the Maratha strongman first needs to answer why the NCP stuck to power with the Congress for 10 years, despite being humiliated several times by its ally.

    “You spoke of (Congress president) as being a foreigner, but ate Italian pizza with her for 10 years. Congress leaders accused the NCP of corruption. (Former Maharashtrachief minister) Prithviraj Chavan abused the NCP time and again. But the way the NCP still stuck to power is nothing but a miracle,” the editorial said.

    The Sena claimed that Pawar is waiting for an opportunity to come to power.

    “The truth is that Pawar is only waiting for an opportunity to come to power in the government after the Sena-BJP alliance breaks,” it said.

    “After the (Maharashtra) Assembly polls (last year), this was the same NCP that tried to cling onto the ‘pro-Hindutva’ BJP like ants,” the Sena said.

  • SUPREME COURT DISMISSES PLEA AGAINST PRIME MINISTER NARENDRA MODI

    SUPREME COURT DISMISSES PLEA AGAINST PRIME MINISTER NARENDRA MODI

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The Supreme Court on October 15 dismissed a petition seeking initiation of proceedings against Prime Minister Narendra Modi for allegedly concealing information about his marital status during 2012 assembly polls.

    A bench headed by Justice J Chelameswar did not find merit in the plea filed by Ahmadabad resident Nishant Varma who moved SC after the Gujarat HC order refused to entertain his plea to proceed against Modi.

    The complaint was filed in April 2014 when Modi while filing his nomination papers for the Lok Sabha elections had mentioned the name of his spouse in the affidavit.

    After a brief hearing, the apex court asked how a man could be punished for disclosing the name of his spouse at a later stage.

    The petitioner alleged that in 2012, Modi, contesting the state assembly election from Maninagar constituency, had left the space of spouse blank, which amounted to concealing information and hence action should be taken against him under the provisions of Representation of People (RP) Act.

    Soon after Modi’s affidavit in the 2014 general election, Verma had filed a criminal complaint in a magisterial court demanding an FIR be lodged against Modi and P K Jadeja, the election officer.

    The court rejected the complaint while stating that though an offence has been committed but cognizance can’t be taken since the complaint was lodged after a delay of one year and four months. He then approached the HC which also refused to entertain the plea.

  • Suspected Bajrang Dal members lynch man over alleged cow smuggling in Himachal

    Suspected Bajrang Dal members lynch man over alleged cow smuggling in Himachal

    SHIMLA (TIP): Suspected Bajrang Dal activists lynched a man from Uttar Pradesh at a village near Shimla because they suspected he was smuggling cattle, his relative has alleged.

    A seriously injured Noman was found by Himachal Pradesh Police on October 14 morning inside a truck at Sarahan village near Nahan, and rushed to a nearby hospital where he succumbed to his injuries.

    His relative Imran Asgar, who was travelling with him, said Noman was severely beaten up by Bajrang Dal activists after they stopped the truck carrying cattle.

    The four other occupants of the truck were booked under the Himachal Pradesh Cow Slaughter Act and the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act after police found the truck was carrying cattle.

    Police also registered a case of murder under section 302 of the IPC and are investigating whether Bajrang Dal activists were behind the attack.

    The incident came three weeks after a 55-year-old man was lynched in Bisada village of Uttar Pradesh over rumours that he had slaughtered a cow on the occasion of Eid-ul-Azha.

  • Modi bats for timely, transparent, trouble-free RTI replies

    Modi bats for timely, transparent, trouble-free RTI replies

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday asked government departments to keep in mind three ‘T’s — timeliness, transparency and trouble-free approach — while replying to RTI applications as that would help in reducing errors in governance.

    Addressing the 10th anniversary of Central Information Commission, the Prime Minister said more openness in governance will help citizens as there is no need for secrecy in this day and age.

    “RTI replies should be timely, transparency and trouble-free. It will help in reducing possibilities of errors,” he said at the function which was boycotted by leading RTI activists, including Aruna Roy, after authorities restricted the invitations to some activists citing security reasons.

    Modi said right to information is not only about the right to know but also the right to question as this will increase faith in democracy.

  • PM Modi heaps praise on Dr Abdul Kalam on his birth anniversary

    PM Modi heaps praise on Dr Abdul Kalam on his birth anniversary

    CHENNAI (TIP): Recalling that Dr A P J Abdul Kalam wished to be remembered as a teacher, Prime Minister Narendra Modi  said the former President was well-aware of the importance of nurturing future generations. Modi mentioned several vital sectors where innovation was essential, including cyber-security, housing for all, river-linking, enhancing agricultural productivity, blue economy, and zero-defect, zero-effect manufacturing. “Kalam had not only risen from humble beginnings to the highest office in India, but had also built great institutions, virtually from scratch. All of us should draw inspiration from his example,” said Modi.

    A memorial would be constructed for Dr Kalam at Rameswaram in Ramanathapuram district in Tamil Nadu where he was buried, announced Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a function in DRDO Bhavan in New Delhi held to commemorate the former President’s birth anniversary.

    A committee of Union ministers Venkaiah Naidu, Manohar Parrikar and Pon Radhakrishnan and former chief election commissioner N Gopalaswamy will work out the details of the memorial. Land has already been acquired for this at Rameswaram, said urban development minister Naidu in an official release.

    Soon after Kalam’s death on July 27, the state government had also identified a piece of land close to Rameswaram for a memorial.

    “A memorial for Kalam would be built at Rameswaram to inspire future generations,” said Modi. “While most people look for opportunities in life, Kalam always sought fresh challenges to overcome,” said Modi. The Prime Minister recalled how he worked closely with Kalam during the post- earthquake reconstruction work in Kutch area of Gujarat. A commemorative postal stamp on Kalam was released to mark the occasion and the Prime Minister unveiled a statue of the former President at the Bhavan. He inaugurated a photo exhibition titled “A Celebration of Kalam’s Life.”

    Meanwhile, IIM-Shillong, where Kalam gave his last lecture before fainting, said a 2,000sqft auditorium with capacity to seat 200 students would be set up in Kalam’s name and his bust would be placed there.

    Across Tamil Nadu, Kalam’s birth anniversary was observed by politicians, students and various cross sections of the people as youth resurgence day as announced by chief minister J Jayalalithaa soon after his death. DMK treasurer M K Stalin who is on a state-wide tour said in a Facebook post that the Centre and state government must consider distributing calipers developed by Kalam to the disabled.

    The Centre also included Rameswaram in the Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation (AMRUT) for providing basic urban infrastructure in the pilgrim town. This was announced by Naidu. With its inclusion, Rameswaram would be the 498th town to be brought under the Amrut scheme and Tamil Nadu would have 32 cities and towns under the Atal mission, said the release.

  • Border chaos: 3-year wait for deportation hearings, just 1 in 6 minors show up

    Border chaos: 3-year wait for deportation hearings, just 1 in 6 minors show up

    WASHINGTON (TIP): A new report on the utter chaos in immigration courts finds that the average wait time for adult illegals to get a deportation hearing has reached a whopping 1,071 days and that 86 percent of minors ordered deported are simply let go in part because they never show up for legal hearings. The Migration Policy Institute report issued Thursday said that the surge in minors flooding over the Mexico-U.S. border beginning last year has so clogged immigration courts that the system is stalled.

    Starting in spring 2014 and through today, some 102,000 unaccompanied children from Central America and Mexico were arrested on the border. The surge was so big, Justice implemented a special rush system to put the minors ahead of illegal adult immigrants.

    But, said the report, 61 percent of the cases involving minors were still unresolved as of August 31, and that has helped to push the backlog for others like adults facing deportation hearings to 1,071 days.

    The report also revealed:

    • One in six minors fail to appear at immigration hearings and are automatically ordered deported in absentia.
    • Most deportation orders of minors go unexecuted.
    • Of 13,204 minors ordered removed in fiscal 2014, just 1,863 were actually deported.

    “Most cases are still pending in the courts, while the children wait in the United States in unauthorized status. For those cases that have been resolved, the ones that ended in an order of deportation have largely been unexecuted; and of those ending in some form of relief, many children have not received lawful immigration status,” wrote report author Sarah Pierce, an MPI research assistant. “The end result is similar: The children become more fully settled in the United States-while remaining unauthorized.”

    The report also draws attention to the problems schools are having dealing with the illegal minors.

  • John Kerry Peace Mission to Middle East ‘in Coming Days’

    John Kerry Peace Mission to Middle East ‘in Coming Days’

    WASHINGTON (TIP): US Secretary of State John Kerry denounced the recent spate of “terrorist attacks” against Israeli civilians and said he would head to the region to try to calm tempers.

    No timetable or itinerary has been released for the trip, but Kerry said: “I expect to be traveling to the region in the coming days and we will remain very closely engaged in order to support efforts to stabilize the situation.”

    Israeli security forces were deployed in force around Jerusalem today, with soldiers joining police after a spate of knife and gun attacks killed seven Israelis and wounded dozens.

    At least 30 Palestinians have also died, including alleged attackers, and hundreds more have been wounded in clashes with Israeli forces.

    “In recent days we have seen an eruption of tragic, outrageous and unjustified attacks on innocent civilians who were simply trying to go about their daily business in Israel, the West Bank, Gaza and Jerusalem,” Kerry said.

    “We strongly condemn the terrorist attacks against innocent civilians and there is absolutely no justification for these reprehensible attacks and we will continue to support Israel’s right to defend its existence,” he said in an address at Indiana University.

    “It is critically important that calm be restored as soon as possible and we the administration will continue to stress the importance politically and privately of preventing inflammatory rhetoric, accusations or actions that could lead to violence.”

    The recent eruption of unrest has raised fears of a third major Palestinian uprising or “intifada” against Israeli occupation.

    In the first two intifadas, between 1987 and 1993 and 2000 to 2005, hundreds of people were killed and many more hurt in near daily violence.

  • Intolerance in the Name of Tolerance | 13-year-old Palestinian boy struggling for last breath

    Intolerance in the Name of Tolerance | 13-year-old Palestinian boy struggling for last breath

    “Die you son of a bitch”: Israeli shouts at 13-year-old Palestinian boy struggling for last breath…

    12105413_994372807287210_1125129372_nThanks to mobile recording technology, Palestinian and Israeli leaders have lost control of the narrative—and of their own extremists. The recent wave of increased violence between Palestinians and Israeli settlers is quickly reaching a boiling point.

    In a mobile video capture, Ahmad Manasra, a 13-year-old Palestinian boy, is lying on the ground, bleeding and struggling to cry out for help while an Israeli settler shouts obscenities at him. Throughout the length of the video, none of the officers or bystanders attempt to give the dying boy first aid or comfort as he bled out on the sidewalk, his lungs audibly filling with blood as he tried to speak. “Die, you son of a whore!! Die!!” shouted Israeli men at a seriously wounded Palestinian child, who was left to die while police stood around him doing nothing. One of the officers repeatedly pushed the boy down with his foot, whenever he tried to sit up.

    manasra_ahmad13The officers did not shoot him, but left him bleeding with head injuries, broken legs and other serious injuries on the ground. The boy was able to raise his head a few times, but the police officers kicked him back down.

    According to Middleeastrising.com, Ahmad was being chased through the Pisgat Zeev neighborhood in Jerusalem by a mob of Israeli settlers alleging he stabbed two Israelis. The settler filming the video shouted “Die! Die, you mother fucker, die! Die, you faggot, die! Die, you son of a bitch!” The man shouted the slurs in both Hebrew and Arabic, to make sure Ahmad knew exactly what he was saying.

    Ahmad remained in critical condition for several hours, but is now in stable condition.

    ahmadhospitalAccording to the Times of Israel, Manasra is accused of carrying out a stabbing spree on Monday with his cousin Hassan Manasra, 15, seriously injuring a 13-year-old boy and 25-year-old man. Hassan Manasra was shot and killed after charging at police with a knife, while Ahmed Manasra was injured after being hit by a car while fleeing.

    The 25-year-old victim of the stabbing is in moderate condition. The 13-year-old is still unconscious. His condition was upgraded from critical, when he was stabbed, to serious but not life threatening.

    According to the Washington Post, 30 Palestinians have been killed by Israelis in recent weeks, while 8 Israelis have been killed in attacks by Palestinians.

  • Cop Filmed Spitting on Handcuffed Black Man in Baltimore

    Cop Filmed Spitting on Handcuffed Black Man in Baltimore

    An officer has been caught on camera doing the unthinkable – spitting in a detained man’s face.

    ALL THIS IS ON VIDEO

    Sgt. Robert Mesner — a 34-year-veteran of the Baltimore Police Department — was filmed arresting 31-year-old Alfred Evan outside an apartment building. This incident occurred after police appeared to follow a group of people around, and according to the videographer, the police were taunting the men and trying to escalate the situation.

    As the event unfolded, Evan was arrested and charged with second-degree assault of a law enforcement officer, second-degree assault, resisting arrest, and disorderly conduct. He was briefly held on $25,000 bail.

    Witnesses on the scene along with Kwame Rose, the man who filmed the video, allege that Sgt. Mesner spit on Evan while he was handcuffed and lying on the ground face-first. At the 1:25 mark of the video, Mesner is seen leaning over Evan and appearing to spit on him.

    “I think it’s disgusting,” Baltimore mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake told the Baltimore Sun. “There are very few things that you can do to another human being that are that disgusting. We take it very seriously.”

    Baltimore PD issued the following statement:

    The investigation continues into the incident that occurred last night (October 12, 2015) in the area of Old York Road. The incident led to an arrest of a man for disorderly conduct. During the arrest, the officer appears to have spit on the suspect while he was in handcuffs.

    This is now a criminal and internal investigation. Based on additional video and witness interviews, the decision has been made to suspend the officer’s police powers.

    “Our internal investigation progressed rapidly today with the review of available video and interaction with witnesses. The video appears to depict the police sergeant spitting on the arrestee. That is outrageously unacceptable and it directly contradicts the necessary community relationships we are striving to rehabilitate. The police powers of Sergeant Robert Mesner are now suspended, and a criminal investigation is underway. Our entire community deserves to be treated with dignity and respect.” Said Interim Police Commissioner Kevin Davis.

  • Hillary Clinton turns up heat on Sanders in sharp first Democratic presidential debate

    Hillary Clinton turns up heat on Sanders in sharp first Democratic presidential debate

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Hillary Rodham Clinton, seeking to halt the momentum of her insurgent challenger, Sen Bernie Sanders of Vermont, aggressively questioned his values, positions and voting history on Tuesday night in the first Democratic presidential debate, turning a showdown that had been expected to scrutinize her character into a forceful critique of his record.

    In a series of sometimes biting exchanges, Clinton declared that Sanders was mistaken in his handling of crucial votes on gun control and misguided in his grasp of the essentialness of capitalism to the American identity. Mocking Sanders’ admiration for the health care system of Denmark, she interrupted a moderator to offer a stinging assessment of his logic, suggesting he was unprepared to grapple with the realities of governing a superpower.

    “We are not Denmark,” Clinton said, adding, “We are the United States of America.”

    The crowd erupted in applause.

    A few moments later, Clinton took aim at what may be Sanders’ greatest vulnerability with the Democratic left, asking why he had voted to shield gun-makers and dealers from liability lawsuits. Sanders, who linked his record on gun control to his representation of a rural state, called the bill “large and complicated.”

    “I was in the Senate at the same time,” Clinton replied. “It wasn’t that complicated to me. It was pretty straightforward.”

    Asked if Sanders had been tough enough on guns during nearly a decade in the Senate, Clinton offered a sharp reply: “No, not at all.”

    “I think that we have to look at the fact that we lose 90 people a day from gun violence,” she said. “This has gone on too long, and it’s time the entire country stood up against the NRA.”

    It was a dominant performance that showcased Clinton’s political arsenal: a long record of appearances in presidential debates, intense and diligent preparation, and a nimbleness and humor largely lacking in her male counterparts. She let no opportunity pass her by. When Sanders described the conflict in Syria as “a quagmire within a quagmire” but said he did not support sending U.S. ground troops there, Clinton interjected energetically: “Nobody does. Nobody does, Senator Sanders.”

    For Sanders, the gathering in Las Vegas provided an evening of unexpectedly forceful challenges, both from Clinton and from the moderator, Anderson Cooper of CNN. At times, he seemed somewhat exasperated and unsure about how to match Clinton’s agility. A memorable moment came when he sought to shield Clinton from criticism of her email practices.

    “Let me say something that may not be great politics,” he said. “But I think the secretary is right, and that is that the American people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails.”

    Clinton flashed a wide smile and shook her rival’s hand. “Thank you,” she said, setting off huge applause in the auditorium.

    Sanders regained his footing when the debate turned to one of his signature issues: Wall Street and its excesses.

  • US Elections: Donald Trump’s top campaign expense: hats and t-shirts

    US Elections: Donald Trump’s top campaign expense: hats and t-shirts

    WASHINGTON(TIP): Republican frontrunner Donald Trump spent more on hats, bumper stickers, yard signs and t-shirts than he did on any other category in the third quarter, according to his latest campaign finance report filed on October 15.

    Donald Trump's top campaign expense1The Trump campaign shelled out $825,000 on the logo-emblazoned gear that he sells on a website and routinely tosses to supporters at his rock concert-like campaign events.His next biggest line item was for flights on his personal 757 jet: more than $700,000. The finance report is just the latest illustration of how, when it comes to the 2016 presidential election, Trump is breaking with tradition.

    Donald Trump's top campaign expenseThe real estate developer and former star of the hit television show ‘The Apprentice’ stunned the Republican political elite last summer when he blew past establishment contenders like former Florida Governor Jeb Bush to become an unlikely frontrunner, a title he has maintained since then.

    In typical presidential campaigns, top expenditures are usually payroll, mailings and consultants.

    But those items did not feature largely on Trump’s report. The filing, made with the Federal Election Commission, contained no line item for payroll at all. The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment.

    Trump raised nearly $4 million in the third quarter. In total, the campaign has raised $5.8 million and spent $5.6 million. Despite proclamations that he would self-fund his candidacy, Trump still raked in unsolicited donations from nearly 74,000 people, who gave an average of $50.46.

    By contrast, Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton raised $30 million in the third quarter. Bush, once the Republican favorite, raised $13.4 million. Despite his lesser standing in the money race, Trump has benefited from a seemingly endless stream of free news and television coverage, a trend that has irked his competitors and helped to upend the conventional political thinking about how the 2016 race for the White House would play out. He has also drawn record crowds, who routinely leap and claw for the free hats that are mostly emblazed with the campaign slogan “Make America Great Again.”

  • Major websites go down in simultaneous crashes

    SAN FRANCISCO (TIP): Dozens of major websites including Netflix, Uber and the BBC went down simultaneously on October 15 in some areas of the United States, but were soon back up again in most cases.

    The cause of the crashes remained unclear, but in some of the cases could have been connected to trouble at a cloud service relied on by companies.

    “We’re aware that members are experiencing issues streaming on all devices,” streaming television service Netflix said in a tweet at its customer service Twitter account.

    “We’re working to resolve the problem.”

    Netflix spokesman Joris Evers told AFP that the outage was the result of “technical issues” at an UltraDNS cloud service provided by Neustar and affected mostly US subscribers.

    “UltraDNS is working to address the issue,” Evers said.

    “We apologize for the inconvenience.”

    Neustar confirmed in a tweet that there was an issue with its UltraDNS and that getting service back to its customers was top priority.

    Internet trouble tracker CurrentlyDown.com displayed a list of two dozen websites that were or had been out of service during the day. The list also included Ameritrade and The Economist. It was unclear whether all those affected relied on UltraDNS. The outages sparked chatter at Twitter and other social networks.

    “Netflix, HBOGo, Chase Bank, Uber, ETrade… all websites down at the same time,” tweeted Joseph Colarusso from the Twitter account @jcolarusso.

    “Coincidence or Cyber Attack?

  • Nassau County Director of Economic Affairs Kamlesh Mehta resigns

    Nassau County Director of Economic Affairs Kamlesh Mehta resigns

    MINEOLA, NY (TIP): There was some talk in the last few days about  Mr. Kamlesh Mehta having resigned his post with Nassau County. However, since there was no confirmation, we could not come up with news.

    However, we now have confirmation from County Attorney Carnell Foskey who  stated in an email to The Indian Panorama : “Mr. Mehta resigned at the close of business on Thursday October 1, 2015.”

    There was no word about under what circumstances he resigned. So, all kinds of speculations  are rife. We will get back to our readers with an update as and when we  get authentic information .

  • Indian American billionaire to distribute 10,000 stationary bikes to generate electricity in India

    Indian American billionaire to distribute 10,000 stationary bikes to generate electricity in India

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Indian American billionaire Manoj Bhargava plans to distribute 10,000 stationary bikes to India in a concerted effort to provide electricity for millions of households.

    Manoj Bhargava, 62, plans to test the first 50 bikes in 15 or 20 small villages next year in Uttarakhand, before large-scale distribution commences.

    According to Bhargava, who accrued his colossal fortune by creating the now ubiquitous 5-Hour Energy drinks, just one hour of pedaling on one of his bikes will provide lights and basic appliances with energy for an entire day.

    “This is going to affect a few billion people,” Bhargava said, according to NDTV. The primary hurdle bearing down on the project is distribution, and how to incentivize distributors with profits.

    Ideally, if need be a village could pool its resources to buy one bike that could then be used to charge multiple batteries that could be swapped out of different homes.

    Regardless of the personal cost, Bhargava, whose family moved to the US in 1967, is set to distribute 10,000 free electric battery- equipped bikes in India next year.

    Bhargava’s Stage 2 Innovations laboratory in Farmington Hills, Mich. is responsible for several innovations that are geared specifically toward alleviating critical issues facing the world’s population.

    Several practical inventions created by engineers at Stage 2 Innovations are based on relatively simple technologies that have been around for decades, but adapted to be more compact, mobile or efficient, reported USA Today.

    He also has scientists in Michigan and Singapore delving into the graphene, which is 100 times more conductive than copper and 207 times stronger than steel by weight, according to Laptop Magazine.

  • Indian-American Leader recommends investment in Philanthropy

    Indian-American Leader recommends investment in Philanthropy

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Citing the example of American India Foundation (AIF), dedicated to catalyzing social and economic change in India, an Indian-American business and philanthropy leader has advised donors to treat philanthropy as an investment.

    If one wants to do philanthropy “properly,” one has “to treat it like an investment requiring thorough due diligence and regular goals and metrics tracking and assessment,” AIF Chair Lata Krishnan said in Washington at an event over the weekend.

    AIF has more than 200 people in India who “source and screen” projects, monitor them while they are being implemented and deliver values to “investors,” she said delivering the second American Bazaar Philanthropy Lecture.

    The essence of philanthropy is listening to those in need, she said. “It isn’t about what we want to get done,” said Ms Krishnan. “It is about those who are underprivileged and in need;(and finding out) what do they want, and how can we best deliver that.”

    Ms Krishnan, who co-founded two enormously successful companies with her husband Ajay Shah, stressed the need for bringing business-oriented values to philanthropy, which, she said, is one of the two core things AIF focuses on.

    Ms Krishnan and Mr. Shah along with a friend, bootstrapped SMART Modular Technologies “with only $110,000 in angel funding” in the early 1990s. By 1995, when the duo took the company public, the firm had more than $1 billion in revenue. They sold the company in 2002.

    Currently, she is the chief financial officer of Shah Capital Partners, which invests in technology companies.

    Earlier Ms Krishnan was introduced by US Assistant Secretary for Commerce for Global Markets, Arun M Kumar, one of the highest ranking Indian Americans in the Obama administration.

    “She has pursued with the American India Foundation, a model, a concept of how the diaspora can support development in India in a very organized and professional way,” he said.

    The philanthropy lecture was part of the second American Bazaar Philanthropy Dialogue, whose mission is to bring together stakeholders in the Indian American and South Asian American Philanthropy community.

    The organizations represented included Sehgal Foundation, AIF, Pratham, Ekal Vidyalaya, Global Wheels Foundation, and Association of Indian Muslims, among others.

    Besides Indian American entrepreneur and philanthropist Frank Islam, who was presented the American Bazaar Philanthropy award, the Dialogue also honored three young philanthropists from the South Asian American community.

    They were: Shreya Bhatia, a 17-year-old senior at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in Fairfax, Neev Saraf, an 8-year-old from Laurel, Maryland, and Swetha Prabhakaran, of Ashburn, Virginia.

    Ms Bhatia raised $7,000 for the Insight Memory Care Centre, a Fairfax facility dedicated to providing care, support and education to individuals afflicted with the Alzheimer’s disease.

    Saraf raised nearly $40,000 for the Nepal earthquake victims earlier this year.

    Prabhakaran, a 15-year-old junior at Thomas Jefferson, is the founder and CEO of Everybody Code Now! a non-profit working to empower the next generation of youth to become engineers.

  • ECUADOR GROUNDS MADE-IN-INDIA DHRUV CHOPPER, TERMINATES CONTRACT

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Ecuador has unilaterally terminated a contract with Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) after four of the seven Dhruv advanced light helicopters bought from the state-run Indian firm were involved in crashes.

    Defense minister Fernando Cordero announced the action during a news conference on Wednesday. He said two of the crashes were caused by mechanical failures. The three remaining Dhruv helicopters have been grounded.

    The development is a major setback for HAL, which has sought to market the Dhruv as a low-cost alternative to military and utility helicopters from Western nations. Work on the Dhruv began in 1984 and it first flew in 2002 after a troubled development programme.

    Four of the seven Dhruv helicopters delivered to Ecuador between 2009 and 2012 have crashed. One was assigned to transport President Rafael Correa, though he was not in the aircraft at the time.

    Ecuador earlier complained that HAL had failed to ship some parts for the helicopters, which were bought for a total of $45.2 million.

    HAL, which completed deliveries of the helicopters in 2012, has contested Ecuadorian claims that it failed to ship spares on schedule. A HAL spokesperson told leading defence publication Jane’s that maintaining the aircraft was “exclusively” the responsibility of the Ecuadorian Air Force as the 24-month warranty period for HAL to provide after-sales service support for the seven helicopters had long expired.

    Besides Ecuador, the Dhruv is also operated by the security forces of Nepal, Mauritius and the Maldives. The Dhruv has also been offered to Malaysia and Indonesia.

    More than 200 Dhruv helicopters are in service with the Indian military. They have been used extensively in relief operations after natural disasters such as the flash floods in Uttarakhand in 2013.

  • Trump, Carson threaten Republican debate boycott

    Trump, Carson threaten Republican debate boycott

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Republican US presidential frontrunner Donald Trump and the candidate who is hot on his heels on Thursday threatened to boycott their party’s next televised debate over its “ridiculous” format.

    Trump and Ben Carson wrote to cable broadcaster CNBC, host of the October 28 showdown, to say they were displeased with an agenda recently sent to their campaign teams that explained the debate would last two hours plus four commercial breaks that would add 16 minutes to the format.

    In another major change, candidates’ opening and closing statements will not be included in the show.

    Trump took to Twitter to blast the “ridiculous” format as a way for CNBC to sell more ads.

    “Why is the GOP being asked to do a debate that is so much longer than the just-aired and very boring #DemDebate?”

    In their letter published by NBC News — NBC Universal owns CNBC — Trump and Carson wrote that neither of the changes were acceptable.

    “Neither Mr. Trump or Dr. Carson will participate in your debate if it is longer than 120 minutes including commercials and does not include opening and closing statements.”

    Trump has dominated the broad Republican field. He leads with 23.4 percent, according to a RealClearPolitics poll average. Carson, a retired neurosurgeon, is second at 19.1 percent. A boycott by Trump, the brash billionaire largely responsible for drawing record viewership to the Republican Party’s first two debates, would spell trouble for CNBC — and for the Republicans — because it could risk driving away viewers.

    The Democrats, led by former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, held their first debate of the 2016 cycle Tuesday, with a party record 15.8 million tuning in. But that was well shy of the Republican debut in August, which drew 24 million viewers, the largest-ever audience for a primary debate.

  • 3 Indian Americans earn honorable mentions, Indian teen places 2nd at Action For Nature awards

    3 Indian Americans earn honorable mentions, Indian teen places 2nd at Action For Nature awards

    NEW YORK (TIP): A cadre of Indian American youth was among the winners announced by Action For Nature’s International Young Eco-Hero Awards, with three individuals earning honorable mentions while one youngster of Indian-origin took home a second place prize.

    According to its website, Action For Nature’s award honors the work of young people between the ages of 8 and 16 who have executed creative environmental projects.

    The judges are experts in environmental science, biology, and environmental health, and the winners receive a cash prize and a special certificate.

    Aarushee Nair was the sole prize winner, slotting in at runner-up in the competition’s 13 to 16 age group.

    Nair, of Haryana, India, earned the award for her design of the Blu Pak, a biodegradable container that can hold 350 milliliters of clean drinking water and has a packet of oral rehydration salts pasted on the side. It also has a small beak-shaped outlet so that fluids can be easily administered to infants. She designed the Blu Pak after learning that thousands of Indian children under the age of 5 were dying due to a lack of clean drinking water.

    Sai Sameer Pusapaty, 16, of Texas, received an honorable mention in the 13-16 age group for his efforts in promoting the importance of recycling, according to Action for Nature. After realizing many people don’t understand what can be recycled and how, he developed tools for his community to make recycling easier and more efficient.

    He even developed a mobile app that he calls Recycle Buddy. It can scan a UPC or QR code and display the recycling information for any given product. It can also perform generic lookups for disposal information based on the material and the item type.

    Anuj Sisodiya, 16, of Connecticut also earned an honorable mention for embarking on a project to mitigate the energy waste caused by holiday lighting that is left on during the day.

    He created a project that encouraged the use of an electrical light timer to prevent lights and lighting displays from being left on for extended hours.

    Using social media such as Facebook and Twitter, his Web site, public canvassing, and booths at grocery stores, he distributed free electrical light timers to help save energy across town.

    Furthermore, he formed a team of school volunteers who devoted approximately 500 volunteer hours, and he worked with town leaders, energy company program managers, and vendors to effectively execute his project.

    By creating a sample study of his local community he learned that this campaign had the potential to save about 1 million-kilowatt hours of power in the town of Trumbull, Conn. preventing up to 1.3 million pounds of carbon dioxide being released into the environment.

    Anirudh Suri notched a third honorable mention for Indian Americans after he masterminded a successful recycling program in his local community to cut down on battery waste.

    With the help of his school principal, Anirudh developed the One Cell program. He purchased envelopes for collecting batteries, customized them, and sent them home with students to return with all the used batteries inside their homes.

    Anirudh began the program when he was 9 years old and 5 years later the program is still growing. His goal for One Cell is to expand the program to more schools so that he can collect more batteries.

    In the past three years, he has collected more than 1100 pounds of batteries. This year his goal is to collect over 700 pounds.

  • PM’s remark dilutes his credibility: Congress

    PM’s remark dilutes his credibility: Congress

    NEW DELHI: Congress on Thursday said the Prime Minister’s credibility had taken a beating after his statement on Dadri lynching and banning of Ghulam Ali concert even as it dubbed as “perverse and cynical” the finance minister’s reaction that writers were manufacturing a protest.

    A day after Narendra Modi dubbed as “unfortunate and undesirable” the lynching of a Muslim in Dadri, AICC spokesman Anand Sharma said, “It is not adequate to reassure the country and the world… the PM was complicit by his silence for long and it was because of national pressure and mounting international criticism that he has spoken just two words.”

    About Modi dubbing it a law and order issue under state’s purview, Sharma said, “It is not merely a law and order issue, it is a well orchestrated, planned campaign to polarize in furtherance of a diabolical agenda of the so-called Hindutva forces to create an environment of fear and to suppress dissent.”

    Congress also criticized finance minister Arun Jaitley for attacking writers who are returning awards by calling their action a “manufactured paper rebellion” and “politics by other means”.

    “Jaitley’s statement is perverse and cynical. He is targeting those who have made notable contribution for which they are celebrated nationally and globally. There cannot be a greater insult,” Sharma said.

    He argued that the writers are not aligned politically but believe in free of expression. “It is expected of the government to listen to what they are saying but this government is bent upon encouraging the forces which we can call as divisive with an agenda which will undermine the very idea of India,” the spokesperson said.

  • F-1 Visa : OPT STEM EXTENSION INCREASE TO 24 months : DHS PROPOSES NEW RULE

    F-1 Visa : OPT STEM EXTENSION INCREASE TO 24 months : DHS PROPOSES NEW RULE

    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) proposes to amend its F-1 non-immigrant student visa regulations on optional practical training (OPT) for certain students with degrees in science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) from U.S. institutions of higher education after this rule was vacated by a Federal Court on procedural grounds in August 2015.

    DHS HAS PROPOSED AN EXTENSION OF 24 MONTHS FROM THE EARLIER 17-MONTHS EXTENSION TO THE OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET (OMB). THE PROPOSED RULE WILL BE SUBJECTED TO THE COMMENT PERIOD ON OR TILL NOVEMBER 18TH, 2015 AS PER THE FEDERAL REGISTER WEBSITE. (After the comment period, the comments will be reviewed and analyzed – OMB will then either recommend changes to the rule or clear the rule for publication – before publishing the final rule)

    This 24-month extension would effectively replace the 17-month STEM OPT extension currently available to certain STEM students.

    As with the current 17-month STEM OPT extension, the proposed rule would authorize STEM OPT extensions only for students employed by employers enrolled in U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’ (USCIS’) E-Verify employment eligibility verification program.

    The proposal also includes the “Cap-Gap” relief first introduced in 2008 for any F-1 student with a timely filed H-1B petition and request for change of status.

    This Cap-Gap relief allows such students to automatically extend the duration of F-1 status and any current employment authorization until October 1 of the fiscal year for which such H-1B visa is being requested.

    Source : Federal Register: https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2015/10/19/2015-26395/improving-and-expanding-training-opportunities-for-f-1-nonimmigrant-students-with-stem-degrees-and

  • Aunt loses lawsuit against nephew, boy was sued because of a hug

    Aunt loses lawsuit against nephew, boy was sued because of a hug

    Jennifer Connell sued her 8-year-old nephew for being negligent when he jumped in her arms, knocked her down and broke her wrist.

    The lawsuit Cornell filed in 2013 sought $127,000 in damages from Sean Tarala, now 12. He was the only defendant named. His father, Michael, accompanied him to court. His mother, Lisa, died last year.

    On March 18, 2011, Connell, who is unmarried and has no children of her own, arrived at the Tarala home in Westport for the party.

    The boy had gotten his first two-wheeler for his birthday and was riding the bright red bike around the home, according to her testimony.

    When he spotted Connell he dropped the new bicycle on the ground, exclaiming, “Auntie Jen, Auntie Jen.”

    “All of a sudden he was there in the air, I had to catch him, and we tumbled onto the ground,” Connell testified of her encounter with the 50-pound boy. “I remember him shouting, ‘Auntie Jen I love you,’ and there he was flying at me.”

    Although hurt, Connell said she didn’t complain to the boy at the time.

    “It was his birthday party, and I didn’t want to upset him,” she told the jury.

    But Connell continued that her life was turned upside down as a result of the injury. Her problems didn’t stop at hors d‘oeuvres.

    Judge Edward Stodolink instructed the jury to consider what a “prudent” 8-year-old boy would have done when his aunt came to his birthday party.

    “Prudent,” the judge emphasized.

    It only took 20 minutes for six Superior Court jurors to decide Connell, 54, deserved zero in her civil claim against the boy.

     

  • Apple loses patent lawsuit over A7, A8 CPU chips, faces $862M Fine

    Apple loses patent lawsuit over A7, A8 CPU chips, faces $862M Fine

    Apple faces a hefty legal bill after a jury found it guilty of using technology owned by a US university without permission. The licensing arm of the University of Wisconsin claims Apple’s A7 chip infringes on a patent it filed in 1998.

    Apple denied the accusations and argued that the patent is invalid, Reuters reported. It had previously tried to convince the US Patent and Trademark Office to review the patent’s validity, but in April the agency rejected this bid.

    According to Reuters, the iPhone maker could face up to $862 million in damages for infringing on a patent that improves chip efficiency.

    The University’s non-profit patent management body, Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF), sued Apple in January 2014, claiming Cupertino infringed on WARF patents with its A7, A8, and A8X processors, which are found in the iPhone 5s, 6, and 6 Plus, and the iPad.

    The court must decide how much Apple must pay.

    WARF last month filed a second lawsuit against Cupertino over its newer A9 and A9X chips, which are in the next-gen iPhone 6s, 6s Plus, and iPad Pro.