Year: 2015

  • India Considered Air Strikes in Pak Post 26/11

    India Considered Air Strikes in Pak Post 26/11

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Former Pakistan Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri has claimed that after the 26/11 Mumbai attack in 2008, an American delegation led by Senator John McCain had shared the possibility of India carrying out “limited air strikes” at the headquarters of Lashkar e Taiba near Lahore. Mr Kasuri, 74, who is in Delhi for the launch of his book “Neither a Hawk, Nor a Dove” on Wednesday, October7, told the NDTV’s Buck Stops Here that the Americans told him they wanted his advice on whether such a strike could “avert a full blown war” as someone “who knows the military, is close to Pervez Musharraf and has been a minister.”

    The former minister said the bipartisan delegation “must have been talking to important people in India” and implied that a limited air operation could prevent a full blown war

    “I said what are you contemplating?,” Mr Kasuri said, sharing his conversation with the US delegation; McCain was accompanied by Richard Holbrooke, special representative of the Obama administration. McCain said, “I am coming from India and they are very angry after Mumbai and we feel a war can be averted (in this way).”

    “They said to me this is our feeling. There’s a chance of a war, a war can be averted, there is outrage in India,” Mr Kasuri said, adding that when he pressed them on what action India may have been contemplating, the Americans replied – “Limited air strike on Muridke.”

    Muridke is the base of the terror group Lashkar e Taiba around an hour’s drive from Lahore.

    Mr Kasuri, who was foreign minister in 2002-7 under Pervez Musharraf, said he had been asked how he thought Pakistan would respond to a limited air raid by India.

    “I said are you trying to prevent a war?He said we think that this may well prevent a war. I said the Pakistan army will give a measured response. It will be a measured response commensurate with the severity of the attack on Muridke,” he said.

    “They said we are asking you because you will know the public response. I said public response will be so grave that Pakistan army will be delegitimized in the eyes of the people if it does not respond,” he added.

    India has dismissed the claims made in Kasuri’s book and denied that there were ever any such plans of military action post 26/11.

  • Why  is the Cow a Political Animal?

    Why is the Cow a Political Animal?

    Vinoba  Bhave said, ” We stand on the shoulders of our ancestors so we can see much further than they saw, not be limited by their limitations.”

    Chaturvedi said the most appealing explanation he found for this transition was in the thoughts of Vinoba Bhave, MK Gandhi’s spiritual successor. A Sanskrit scholar who trusted his own reading over any rhetoric, Bhave was a complex figure, an ascetic with a fine aesthetic sense; one of modern India’s least understood leaders.

    “Several scholars have shown how the existing Hindu identity – or at least a significant part of it -draws from the colonial encounter. So, while some groups in India have eaten meat and beef since forever, the values of vegetarianism, non-violence and cow veneration have also been common”, says the author.

    In 1979, Bhave sat on a fast, demanding a ban on cow slaughter in Kerala and West Bengal, perpetrating a political crisis for the Morarji Desai government. (In fact, the satyagraha Bhave began became India’s longest-running fast, ending only recently after the Maharashtra government banned cow slaughter in the state.) Yet, in his speeches, he made it clear that if tractors kept rolling in, people should prepare to slaughter bullocks and eat them.

    Bhave’s most striking observation, Chaturvedi stressed, was his frank acknowledgement that ancient Sanskrit texts mention the eating of beef. So I pulled out my copy of Bhave’s Gita-Pravachan and found the section where he says we should not be surprised when we find out that some ancient rishis ate beef and meat was commonly eaten in India. He maintained it is a sign of evolution that such a large population accepted non-violence and turned vegetarian. Bhave said, “we stand on the shoulders of our ancestors so we can see much further than they saw, not be limited by their limitations.”

    I have looked for years, and not met any cow protection activists with the courage to accept the uncomfortable truth with such courage. They tend to emphasize only their reading of the Vedas, determined to bring back the Golden Vedic Age through cow protection. Which alienates me.

    My upbringing in a Hindu family has exposed me to the Gita and the Ramcharitmanas and the Bhagwat Puran, but never to the Vedas. When they need recourse to faith, most Hindus draw upon the devotional poetry of Tulsidas, Gyaneshwar, Meerabai, Raheem and scores of others; they do not chant verses from the Rigveda. In fact, ‘Vediya Dhor’ is an old term in folk culture to mock the carrier of Vedic knowledge as a beast of burden. The Vedic figure of Indra attracts little devotion, even as his nemesis Krishna is perhaps the most popular Hindu god.

    A summary for those not familiar with the story from the Bhagwat Puran: the boy Krishna stops his father from making sacrificial offerings to Indra. The god of rain gets angry and sends down a seven-day-seven-night deluge, causing a flood. Krishna lifts the Govardhan hill as refuge from the flood. Indra is humiliated. The story is as much about appreciating nature and ecology over and above a tyrannical god, as it is a lesson in karma-yog, which is explained in greater detail in the Gita.

    “Laws against cow slaughter will only criminalize the livestock trade, not protect the animals, said Ghotge. Only the smugglers and the law enforcement officials will benefit from the ban on cow slaughter, not the poor farmers or the livestock. Like the agriculture scientist Ramanjaneyulu, Ghotge holds that the cow protection laws are unjust; it is about powerful urban people outsourcing the burden of cow protection on the rural poor.”

    I noticed even at a young age that the term ‘Hindu’ doesn’t occur in any religious text. Several scholars have shown how the existing Hindu identity – or at least a significant part of it – draws from the colonial encounter. So, while some groups in India have eaten meat and beef since forever, the values of vegetarianism, non-violence and cow veneration have also been common – and not just in one or two caste groups, either. Despite the practice of sacrificing animals coming down sharply in the past century or so, several Hindus in India and Nepal still practice the rites of Bali, most prominently during the festival of Gadhimai and at the Kamakhya temple in Assam.

    This co-existence of meat-eating and vegetarianism is unique to India. How did this happen? In his Indian Food: A Historical Companion, after several pages describing meats eaten in India, Achaya explored the roots of vegetarianism and the beef taboo. He referred to the “sheer abundance and wide range of foodstuffs available even from Harappan times that could fashion vegetarian meals of high nutritional quality, and gustatory and aesthetic appeal. It is perhaps no exaggeration to say that nowhere else in the world except in India would it have even been possible to be a vegetarian in 1000 BC.”

    Then I stumbled into a remarkable book: The History of Vegetarianism and Cow-Veneration in India. First published in German in 1962, its English translation appeared in 2010. The author, German Indologist Ludwig Alsdorf, had spent several years studying Jainism, and is regarded the first man to apply the historical method to the vegetarianism question. While it extensively deals with material that Jha also uses, Alsdorf’s writing is free of polemics.

    Vegetarianism and cow-veneration are not directly related in history, neither was vegetarianism the basis of ahimsa (non-violence) to begin with, Alsdorf wrote. The idea of non-violence predates Jainism and Buddhism, even if it was the two movements that really made it popular in the face of Vedic sacrificial rituals. For example, it is believed that the ritual offering of coconut smeared with vermilion is a substitute for the severed head of an animal or even a human sacrificed at the altar; even Achaya refers to it. Which points to what Vinoba Bhave said about accepting our gory past.

    The Buddha was against ritual sacrifice of animals, but not against consumption of meat. His instruction to his monks was that no animal should be killed to feed them; but they were allowed to eat any food they received in alms, including meat. It is widely understood that the Buddha had consumed pork before he died. Yet the origin of vegetarianism and cow-veneration may never get elucidated by available sources, Alsdorf concluded: “For the Indologist, it is indeed not a new experience that the pursuit of pressing problems in the present leads him back to the dim and distant past.”

    The father of the ideology of Hindutva, Vinayak Damodar ‘Veer’ Savarkar, had a complex position on cow protection and cow worship. He saw cow protection as a symbol of compassion and humanism, but no holiness was above logic and nationalism for him. “When humanitarian interests are not served and in fact harmed by the cow and when humanism is shamed, self-defeating extreme cow protection should be rejected,” he wrote. “A substance is edible to the extent that it is beneficial to man. Attributing religious qualities to it gives it a godly status. Such a superstitious mindset destroys the nation’s intellect.”

    Every now and then, an admirer of Savarkar raises the topic. “Can anyone imagine that the ‘Father of Hindutva’ advocated beef-eating (in special circumstances), rejected the divinity of the Vedas, denounced the sanctity of the caste system and launched a virulent attack on the hypocrisy of the priests?” wrote Ved Pratap Vaidik, a journalist close to several Hindutva figures. “Incidentally, Savarkar was a beef-eater,” wrote Varsha Bhonsle on Savarkar’s birth anniversary, February 26, in 1998. “For he was, above all else, a rationalist – a true Hindu – and eons ahead of contemporary Hindutvawadis.”

    The cow’s holiness has long been a source of hurt and humiliation for Dalit communities.
    “There is no untouchable community which has not something to do with the dead cow. Some eat her flesh, some remove the skin, some manufacture articles out of her skin and bones,” wrote BR Ambedkar, the architect of India’s Constitution, in his 1948 book The Untouchables: Who Were They And Why They Became Untouchables.

    Dalit activists and scholars find the ban on cattle meat unethical and another example of caste hypocrisy. “Such laws are immoral,” said ‘Kuffir’ Naren Bedide, a thinker and social activist in Hyderabad, one of the editors behind Round Table India. He said this is about powerful castes imposing their sensibility on people who have consistently consumed beef, a source of cheap nutrition for poor people.

    “Caste-Hindus say this is a matter of their religious sensitivity. What about Dalit traditions and sensitivities? Are they worth nothing?” he asked.

    Why is an animal so sacred when human beings are considered so impure?

    Who needs cow protection laws?

    Not the farmers who are getting rid of cows and bullocks in favor of buffaloes and tractors. So will livestock breeders benefit from it? “Such laws will harm the poorest,” said Nitya Sambamurti Ghotge, a veterinary surgeon who heads Anthra, a group in Pune that has worked with rural livestock rearers since 1992.

    Giving the example of the Rajasthan government amending its cow protection laws to register cattle breeders, and track their animals through microchips, Ghotge called cow protection laws “environmentally daft”, because this will put a great burden on shrinking pastures and fodder resources. “The rich will anyway get what they want, but how will the poor farmers and animal rearers get so much fodder?” she asked. Historically, farmers and animal rearers have been able to get rid of animals in difficult times for their survival, she said; now, that will become difficult.

    Laws against cow slaughter will only criminalize the livestock trade, not protect the animals, said Ghotge. Only the smugglers and the law enforcement officials will benefit from the ban on cow slaughter, not the poor farmers or the livestock. Like the agriculture scientist

    Ramanjaneyulu, Ghotge holds that the cow protection laws are unjust; it is about powerful urban people outsourcing the burden of cow protection on the rural poor, she said.

    (Excerpted from the article “Why is the Cow a Political Animal?” by  Sopan Joshi. Read Full article: https://in.news.yahoo.com/why-is-the-cow-a-political-animal-110119929.html)

  • RETURN OF AWARDS – Writers stand up for right to dissent

    RETURN OF AWARDS – Writers stand up for right to dissent

    Writer Nayantara Sahgal has returned the Sahitya Akademi Award she won in 1986 for her novel “Rich Like Us” to protest against the increasing attacks on the right to dissent, which she says are “unmaking India.” Hindi poet Ashok Vajpeyi has followed suit, returning a similar honor on similar grounds. Earlier, Hindi writer Uday Prakash and six Kannada writers had returned their literary awards. Writers have voiced their protest in the past too. After Operation Bluestar, Khushwant Singh surrendered his Padma Shri award. Nayantara Sahgal had protested against the Emergency too. While returning the award on Tuesday, she said this was “in support of all Indians who uphold the right to dissent, and of all dissenters who now live in fear and uncertainty”.

    Even though most artists and writers would claim to be apolitical, art does not take place in a vacuum. All good art is political, and the return of an award makes a strong political statement. As Toni Morrison puts it, “The ones who try hard not to be political are political by saying, ‘we love the status quo.’”  The present practice of returning awards has been triggered by the killings of writers and rationalists in Maharashtra and Karnataka, including those of MM Kalburgi, Narendra Dabholkar and Govind Pansare. The latest victim of a growing culture of intolerance is Mohammad Akhlaq, who was lynched recently by an organized mob on the suspicion of eating beef. Amidst all this the studied silence of Prime Minister Modi has only added to the prevailing mood of disenchantment.

    The inaction or tacit support of the political leadership has emboldened fundamentalists and parties like the Shiv Sena, which has now created another controversy by demanding the cancellation of a proposed concert by Ghulam Ali. Every such demand diminishes the plurality of India. The courageous gesture of returning awards sends a strong message to the government. Critics have panned Nayantara Sahgal, Jawaharlal Nehru’s niece, for what they have called “selective outrage”, but what she, Ashok Vajpeyi and others have done is an act of bravery -that too at a time when it is convenient to remain silent.

  • Angela Merkel signs key business deals with India’s Narendra Modi

    Angela Merkel signs key business deals with India’s Narendra Modi

    India and Germany have signed agreements for furthering cooperation in the field of Science & Technology. The Union Minister for Science & Technology and Earth Sciences Dr. Harsh Vardhan and the German Federal Minister for Education and Research Ms. Johanna Wanka signed the main agreement and witnessed signing of another agreement by the officials for the purpose after mutual discussions in New Delhi today.

    The deal was agreed during German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s talks with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the opening day of her visit to India.

    Mr Modi visited Germany in April where he sought to convince more industries to begin manufacturing in India.

    Last year, he launched the “Make in India” campaign to boost manufacturing at home and create millions of jobs.

    Chancellor Merkel, accompanied by a large delegation of ministers and senior officials, arrived in the Indian capital on Sunday night and was accorded a ceremonial welcome at the Presidential Palace on Monday morning, Sep 05.

    At the meeting held before the 3rd Indo-German Consultative meeting, both the Ministers expressed their satisfaction on the level of Indo-German Science & Technology cooperation which is now recognised as one of the strategic pillars in the overall bilateral relationship.

    It was reiterated by both sides that they would continue to support and strengthen the basic research component of collaboration which will underpin future technology developments.

    India is investing approximately 14 million euro for the construction of an additional beam line and access to the synchrotron facility at PETRA-III in DESY at Hamburg. Similarly, India is equity share holder with investment of 36 million euro in the construction of the international “Facility for Antiproton-Ion Research” (FAIR) at Darmstadt. Both these state of art facilities will further enable our scientists to conduct high impact and frontier research in material science, nuclear and high energy physics. On the same model, Dr. Harsh Vardhan offered Germany to participate in some of the future mega science projects, which India will be embarking upon.

    A major highlight of the meeting was the agreement on both sides to extend the bi-national Indo-German Science & Technology Center (IGSTC) beyond 2017 with increase in funding from 2 million euro to 4 million euro every year. This was a reflection of the common endeavour on both sides to support industrially relevant R&D projects that have potential to generate novel technologies and new intellectual property in sectors such as advance manufacturing, embedded systems & ICT for automobiles, renewable energy, food security, clean water and health care technologies- all of which are in tune with present national missions of the government of India. India is the only country with whom Germany has such a bilateral R&D Centre dedicated to promote applied and industrial R&D. The Centre is already supporting 15 joint projects and pro-types of some new technologies have been co-developed in solar-thermal energy, stress tolerant chic-pea variety, and high altitude cold resistance plants etc.

    Dr. Harsh Vardhan expressed confidence that the extended tenure of Indo-German Science & Technology Centre (IGSTC) until 2022 along with doubling its financial resources will enable us to co-develop affordable technologies that can contribute to the knowledge economy of both our countries.

    Both the Ministers reiterated the need for concerted effort to promote exchanges of young scientists and student researchers. To this end DST through a Letter of Intent agreed to continue the support for participation of 25 Indian science and medical students to the annual Nobel Laureate meet in Lindau.

    Both the Ministers echoed that the future cooperation should focus on programs to promote innovation and techno-entrepreneurship by linking the SME and Start-up enterprises of both the countries in order to make meaningful contribution to the knowledge economy and use the tools of science and technology to address socially relevant challenges. New areas such as anti-microbial resistance and regenerative medicine, earth science system including monsoon studies and marine sciences required to understand the climate change process was emphasised by the Indian side that needs to be addressed together.

  • Small plane with 2 foreigners on board goes missing in Nepal

    Small plane with 2 foreigners on board goes missing in Nepal

    KATHMANDU (TIP): An ultra-light aircraft with two foreigners on board that took off from Pokhara went missing today during a sightseeing flight of the country’s snow-capped peaks.

    The aircraft, owned by Pokhara ultralight company, had taken off at 10:35am for the purpose of sight seeing and was out of contact after about an hour while flying near the Machhapuchhre mountain, the police officer said.

    The pilot was identified as 50-year-old Russian national Valerie Putin while the passenger is Elizabeth Well, 40, from South Africa, said Pokhara airport chief Dipak Baral.

    The aircraft is missing since 11:30am, according to a police officer. A helicopter has been dispatched for the search and rescue operation works, the police officer added.

    Pokhara, a famous tourist hub of western Nepal, about 150 kilometres west of Kathmandu and flanked by the majestic Annapurna range, attracts thousands of visitors annually.

  • US announces additional funding for demining in Sri Lanka

    US announces additional funding for demining in Sri Lanka

    COLOMBO (TIP): The US on Thursday announced an additional USD 1.745 million for demining activities in Sri Lanka’s Tamil-dominated former war zone.

    The additional fund was announced after a meeting between the US Ambassador in Sri Lanka, Atul Keshap, and minister of rehabilitation, resettlement and Hindu religious affairs D M Swaminathan.

    In total, the United States has dedicated over USD 43 million for demining assistance in Sri Lanka since 1993.

    “I support Minister Swaminathan’s vision of making Sri Lanka mine-impact free by 2020,” Keshap said.

    “As the world’s largest donor of global demining efforts, the United States is committed to addressing the land mine problem in Sri Lanka,” he said in a statement.

    The two also discussed ongoing demining work in northern and eastern Sri Lanka.

    “The United States will continue to work with President Sirisena, Prime Minister Wickremesinghe, minister Swaminathan, and the people of Sri Lanka to help clear the remaining areas,” Keshap said.

  • Sri Guruvanand Swami blesses 2,000 at NY event

    Sri Guruvanand Swami blesses 2,000 at NY event

    NEW YORK (TIP): “In a sign of growing number of devotees of Brahmrishi Sri Guruvanand Swami, an estimated 2,000 people packed the Colden Auditorium in Queens College, Flushing on Oct 4 for the Divya Darshan and Blessings event with the charismatic guru from India” says a press release sent by Beena Kothari to The Indian Panorama, October 8, 2015.

    “They sat spellbound throughout the two-hour long discourse and interaction with Gurudev, as he is known by millions of his followers the world over. As his discourse was preceded by a scintillating dance performance (including enactment of Hanuman Chalisa in Kathak style) by students of Guru Rachna Sarang, the gracious guru started by emphasizing the need for NRI parents to inculcate good values in their children.

    “Easily India’s best spiritual-religious ambassador to the West since Swami Vivekananda (whose turban style he has adopted), Sri Guruvanand drove home the point of the greatness of India, the only land where God has incarnated time and again. Still better, this land has given a body of wisdom “how we can be like God ourselves”, he elaborated.

    “Not confining himself to enunciating India’s spiritual riches, Gurudev made it a point during his discourse to give tips for making our  everyday lives happier and peaceful. For example, “The best way to feel good about yourself is to appreciate others. If you celebrate success of others, success will come to you too.” He also, of course, teaches various mantras and techniques as aids to achieve health, wealth and harmony. During the program rudraksha beads blessed specially by him, were passed on to all attendees.

    “Gurudev is considered one of the most revered saints living today whose blessings have uplifted the lives of numerous people. A disciple of the legendary Yogiraj Devraha Baba, he is a perfected master (Satguru) who is also a renowned scholar of Hinduism and Jainism with a deep understanding of other religions. His core teaching is that we should lead morally uplifting and spiritually fulfilling life, leading to overcoming karmic debts while fulfilling worldly duties.

    “The program last Sunday was emceed by Rakesh Bhargava and began with a brief meditation session conducted by Prabha Bhandari, leaders of the World Spiritual Awareness Forum – NY-NJ, which organized and supported the event. The entire program was live webcast by DesiFuzion.com, which reported that over a million people watched it online the world over.

    Last July, the World Spiritual Awareness Forum had organized a bigger event, Guru Poornima, with Gurudev at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC).”

    Students of Guru Rachna Sarang presenting a scintillating dance performance
    Students of Guru Rachna Sarang presenting a scintillating dance performance
  • Kindergarten Applications Open Between December 7 and January 15

    Kindergarten Applications Open Between December 7 and January 15

    NEW YORK (TIP): Chancellor Carmen Fariña announced, October 8 that the kindergarten application process will begin earlier in order to make the application process easier for families. Families will be able to apply to kindergarten starting December 7 and will receive an offer letter in mid-March – one month earlier than last year. The earlier application process will give families and students more time to learn about their new school, offer greater transparency around zoned waitlists, and help ensure a smoother transition from pre-K to kindergarten for our youngest learners.

    “With a historic number of students enrolled in free, full-day, high-quality pre-K, it’s critical that we build on this strong foundation to make sure students are entering kindergarten prepared. By making kindergarten offers earlier, we will make the process easier for families and strengthen the transition between pre-K and kindergarten. This is a common-sense approach to helping our families and students,” said Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña.

    The application process and priority structure will remain the same. Starting on December 7, families will be able to apply online, over the phone, or in person at a Family Welcome Center through a single application. The application allows parents to apply to up to 12 options, ranking them in order of preference. Online applications are translated into all nine of the DOE’s languages and families can receive assistance in over 200 languages by calling 718-935-2009.

    To inform families of this exciting change, and to guide them through the application process, the DOE will be holding information sessions for families in every borough in December. Additionally, we are providing copies of the kindergarten directory at schools, pre-K sites and Family Welcome Centers around the City, including translated copies where they are needed. The DOE will also reach out directly to families, ensure that all pre-K sites provide information to families on the application process, and inform families of the change at an upcoming pre-K forum.

    Families can learn more about the kindergarten application process by visiting our
    websitewww.nyc.gov/ schools/kindergarten, calling 718-935-2009, or visiting a Family Welcome Center. Families interested in a specific school can reach out to the school about tours and to learn more.

  • US-Pakistan Nuclear Deal | India is the check to Pakistan, Donald Trump declares

    US-Pakistan Nuclear Deal | India is the check to Pakistan, Donald Trump declares

    WASHINGTON: The Obama administration is exploring a possible civilian nuclear deal with Pakistan ahead of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s visit to Washington later this month, if media reports are to be believed.

    One of Washington’s well-briefed columnists, David Ignatius, has revealed this week the outlines of a nuclear agreement that the US is said to be negotiating with Pakistan. These talks could be at the top of US President Barack Obama’s agenda with Pakistan.

    In a Washington Post column on Wednesday, Ignatius says the US is ready to lift international restrictions against civilian nuclear commerce with Pakistan in return for significant voluntary restraints on its nuclear weapons programme.

    According to the report, the deal centers around a civilian nuclear agreement similar to the one the United States arrived at with India, in exchange for a Pakistani commitment that would “restrict its nuclear program to weapons and delivery systems that are appropriate to its actual defense needs against India’s nuclear threat.”

    Pakistan might, for example, agree not to deploy missiles capable of reaching beyond a certain range, the report said, citing the source, who indicated that the US might support an eventual waiver for Pakistan by the 48-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), the same way it has done for India.

    The Obama administration said it was in “regular contact” with the Government of Pakistan on “a range of issues” as it prepared for the visit on October 22 of Prime Minister Sharif, but declined comment on the specifics of the discussions.

    “The United States urges all nuclear-capable states, including Pakistan, to exercise restraint regarding nuclear weapons and missile capabilities. We encourage efforts to strengthen safety and security measures and continue to hold regular discussions with Pakistan on a range of global issues, including nuclear security, counterterrorism, and international norms,” an administration spokesperson said in a tacit acknowledgement that some sort of dialogue is taking place on the nuclear issue.

    Successive US administrations both under Presidents Bush and President Obama, have knocked down the idea of a deal for Pakistan like the one Washington arrived at with India, saying the background and circumstances surrounding the US-India civilian nuclear agreement was entirely different, and pointing to Pakistan’s record of nuclear proliferation.

    In 10 years, Pakistan will have largest N-stockpile after US and Russia, report suggests

    However, President Obama’s recent track record vis-a-vis Iran and Cuba, both regarded for a long time as outlaw nations, suggests there may be some substance to a nuclear outreach towards Pakistan. There is also less pathology about Pakistan in Washington’s official circles, where many veterans have a romanticized recall of Islamabad’s role in the Cold War when it offered its services to Washington, for a price. The strategy helped Pakistan circumvent nuclear non-proliferation roadblocks that the US all too readily winked at.

    In recent months, Pakistan has tried to project itself as a responsible nuclear power, although some of its politicians and generals reflexively brandish the country’s nuclear weapons to assure themselves and their constituents about security against India. “We are a nuclear-armed country and we know how to defend ourselves,” Pakistan’s National Security Advisor Sartaj Aziz boasted recently in a suo motu assertion although no one had talked of a nuclear war.

    While a few regional experts have floated the idea of a nuclear deal for Pakistan in the past, most analysts are aghast at the prospect. It will be “sheer madness wrapped in folly,” said Sumit Ganguly, a South Asia scholar at Indiana University, among several experts who have critiqued Washington frequent free passes to a country that has a reckless history of nuclear proliferation and home-grown terrorism.

    The WaPo report however conceded that inasmuch as Pakistan prizes its nuclear program, “negotiations would be slow and difficult, and it’s not clear that Islamabad would be willing to accept the limitations that would be required.” But, it said, the issue is being discussed quietly in the run-up to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s visit to Washington on October 22.


    On an American radio show, Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump called Pakistan “probably the most dangerous” country in the world today, adding that the only country that can “check” Pakistan is India.

    Pakistan is “a serious problem” because they have nuclear weapons that work and “a lot of them”, just like North Korea and its “mad man”, Trump explained.

    It wasn’t enough that he clubbed Pakistan with North Korea. “India is the check to Pakistan,” continued Trump, adding insult to Pakistan’s injury. “You have to get India involved … They have their own nukes and have a very powerful army. They seem to be the real check … I think we have to deal very closely with India to deal with it (Pakistan),” said Trump, about his foreign policy goals.

  • Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs Celebrates the Graduation of its First-Ever – Immigrant Women Leaders Fellowship

    Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs Celebrates the Graduation of its First-Ever – Immigrant Women Leaders Fellowship

    NEW YORK (TIP): The Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA), de Blasio Administration officials, community leaders, and invited guests celebrated the accomplishments of the first cohort of MOIA’s Fellowship for Immigrant Women Leaders in a ceremony at the New York City Surrogate’s Court. The Fellowship was established by MOIA as part of the Administration’s “One New York Rising Together” platform to build closer relationships between immigrant women and the City and enhance the capacity of emerging and established leaders to promote positive social change in their communities.

    At the conclusion of the Fellowship, Commissioner Nisha Agarwal of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs invited the 13 participants from this year’s inaugural Fellowship to serve on MOIA’s Women’s Advisory Cabinet starting in November. The program was supported by Unbound Philanthropy, a private foundation focused on supporting immigrant communities, and the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City.

    “Mayor de Blasio’s commitment to progressive leadership is nowhere more evident than in his record of diversifying the senior ranks of the City Administration, as he has done to an extent far beyond any of his predecessors,” said Commissioner Agarwal. “And our vision extends beyond City Government to supporting leaders from underrepresented communities across the City through efforts like MOIA’s Fellowship for Immigrant Women Leaders. This first class is made up of dedicated social change agents from non-profit, grassroots, academic, and faith-based organizations representing the best of New York. I look forward to hearing their perspective and guidance on a range of policy issues in the year to come.”

    “Ensuring that our City’s immigrant communities have access to opportunities to succeed is one of our priorities at the Mayor’s Fund,” said Darren Bloch, Executive Director of the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City. “?We’re proud to partner with the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs and Unbound Philanthropy to support the Immigrant Women Leaders Fellowship. We will continue to advocate for similar programs that not only empower individual immigrant New Yorkers, but also allow them to strengthen their respective communities.”

    “It was inspiring to speak with this dynamic, diverse group of Immigrant Women Leaders Fellows, each of whom is working to eliminate the effects of systemic oppressions,” said Commissioner Penny Abeywardena of the Mayor’s Office for International Affairs. “It is vital that, 20 years after the Beijing Declaration, these community leaders are implementing the objectives of the Platform throughout all five boroughs. I look forward to the myriad ways these leaders will improve our international city and our world.”

    “It has been an uplifting and insightful journey with kindred spirits that deepened my emotional intelligence and leadership skills,” commented MOIA Fellow Renee Mehrra, a broadcast journalist and community activist. “The fellowship gave me rare insights and strategic tools to overcome barriers to progress and advancement, including internalized oppression, discrimination and racism, so we can become catalysts for change and heal, transform and empower ourselves and our communities.”

    “For the past few months, we have had the pleasure of…collaborating with each other…a dynamic group of women leaders, representing various immigrant communities in New York City,” added MOIA Fellow Ninaj Raoul, co-founder and community organizer at Haitian Women for Haitian Refugees (HWHR). “Together we explored real-time leadership challenges that we all experience.”

    “I graduate today a more informed and more empowered leader,” shared MOIA Fellow Naheed Samadi Bahram, New York Program Director for Women for Afghan Women. “Through this program, I am now a better listener and I am taking back a wealth of knowledge and experience to share with my community and colleagues. I am grateful to everyone I was able to meet and learn from, from my fellow graduates to the city’s top female leaders.”

    “This fellowship has had a great impact personally and professionally,” said MOIA Fellow Karina Aybar-Jacobs. “I’ve learned that an effective leader is one that listens more than she speaks, and takes the time to emotionally connect & validate the feedback of others, one that isn’t afraid to admit her mistakes, while remaining authentic, true to her passion and identity.”

    MOIA’s Fellowship for Immigrant Women Leaders is a thirteen-week leadership development program that was established in June 2015.  The purpose of the Fellowship is to:

    1. Form a network of immigrant women leaders who, through engagement together, are better networked with one another and with city leadership;
    2. Identify the barriers or challenges to women’s leadership within the immigrant community and solutions available to remove these barriers; and
    3. Develop an agenda for advancing women’s leadership within New York City immigrant communities.

    A Nominating Committee of non-profit and government leaders identified a pool of 45 promising women leaders serving immigrant populations, from which 13 were selected to participate in the Fellowship. The inaugural Fellows cohort features:

    Rita Abadi, Clinician and Operation Manager, Mt. Sinai Sexual Assault and Violence

    Hajia Ramatu Ahmed, Executive Director/Founder, African Life Center

    Afreen Alam, Executive Director, Chhaya CDC

    Naheed Samadi Bahram, Program Director, Women for Afghan Women

    Kajori Chaudhuri, Director of Programs and Operations, Sapna NYC

    Dayanne Danier, Founder, Fleur de Vie

    Karina Aybar-Jacobs, Program Director, Dominican Women’s Development Center

    Renee Mehrra, TV Personality, Providing Our Women Equal Rights

    Kali Ndoye, President, Concerned Cultural Women’s Collective

    Aliza Nisenbaum, Artist, Immigrant Women and the Arts

    Ninaj Raoul, Co-Founder and Executive Director, Haitian Women for Haitian Refugees

    Susan Shah, Chief of Staff, Vera Institute of Justice

    Haydee Zambrana, Executive Director, Latin Women in Action, Inc.

    More information on the Fellowship and biographies of this year’s cohort can be found at: http://www.nyc.gov/html/imm/ht ml/initiatives/immigrant_womens _fellowship.shtml.

  • Pravasi Bharatiya Divas – Format Change

    Pravasi Bharatiya Divas – Format Change

    In a departure from the past, the government on Tuesday announced a change in the annual Pravasi Bharatiya Divas and its engagement with the diaspora. The mega jamboree will now be held every other year and a new event “focused on outcomes” will be held every other year.

    External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, who is also minister of overseas Indian affairs, announced the changed format of India’s engagement with its diaspora at a press conference here.

     

    Swaraj said a scaled-down event would be held in January 2016 with the participation of just 150 invited foreign delegates.

    The invited diaspora guests will be experts who would attend various sessions to brainstorm on issues, including the problem of the Indian diaspora in the Gulf; on the government’s flagship programs like Make in India, Skill India, Digital India, and problems that Persons of Indian Origin face, she said.

    Sushma Swaraj announced that the “smaller events” of the PBD would be held in the Delhi office every alternate year, while the major “mela” would be held every two years in a different state in partnership with that state government.

    Besides, she announced that the Regional PBD, which is held abroad, will be held this year in Los Angeles, U.S., on November 14-15. She said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has said he would attend.

    She also announced a quiz competition “Bharat ko Janiye” in order to involve the diaspora youth in learning about India.

    The 20 winners — 10 from PIO countries and 10 from countries with NRIs — would be awarded at the PBD.

    Announcing the competition, Swaraj said diaspora Indians between the ages 18-35 could apply to join the quiz, in which there would be two rounds.

    After the second round, 10 successful candidates each from the PIO nations and with NRI population would be selected.

    They would be invited to the summit where they would have to participate in the third round.

    The first three winners would be awarded at the plenary of the PBD. The 20 youth would be taken on a “Bharat Darshan”, she announced, with the aim to acquaint them about Indian art, culture, heritage and also modern India.

  • Ghulam Ali Concerts – Mumbai, Pune Cancels | Delhi Invites Him

    Ghulam Ali Concerts – Mumbai, Pune Cancels | Delhi Invites Him

    Ghazal King Ghulam Ali & the organizers “Panache Media” have cancelled the concerts in Mumbai & Pune after Shiv Sena threatened to disrupt it, warning that no artist from that country will be allowed to perform in the city till terror emanating from across the border is stopped.

    The decision was taken despite a snub to Sena by Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis who said adequate protection would be provided to Ali and that the concert, organised in memory of late ghazal singer Jagjit Singh, would be held according to schedule. Despite this assurance, Shiv Sena’s threat has won the cancellation.

    “My government is willing to give full protection to Ali’s concert in Mumbai. The show must go on. It is unfortunate to drag a world-class, renowned ghazal singer into Indo-Pakistan politics… Pakistan artists are always welcome. Our singers and actors also go to Pakistan and perform. We should respect each other’s culture and talent. Why bring politics into culture?” Fadnavis said.

    Shiv Sena spokesperson said in the media, “We can’t have cultural ties with Pakistan when they kill our soldiers.”

    Organisers of the event had announced the cancellation after a meeting with Shiv Sena president Uddhav Thackeray.

    Shiv Sena’s film indutry arm named the Chitrapat Sena, had submitted a letter to the admin department of the Shanmukhananda Hall, asking them to cancel the function and threatened that if their demand will not be followed, they will launch a protest in ‘Sena style’. On the other hand, an official from Pune’s Ganesh Kala Krida Manch stated, “We have not been contacted by any representatives of Shiv Sena. We have just received a letter from the organisers which states the concert has been cancelled.”

    The Arvind Kejriwal Government on Thursday (October 8) invited Pakistani singer Ghulam Ali to perform in the national capital, saying “music has no boundaries”.

    Delhi Culture Minister Kapil Mishra said the Pakistani Singer is welcome to come to Delhi for holding a performance. “Sad that #GhulamAli is not being allowed in Mumbai, I invite him to come to Delhi and do the concert. Music has no boundaries. #BanTheBan (sic),” he wrote on Twitter.

    “Ghulam Ali’s programme has been cancelled. Neither Ghulam Ali nor any Pakistani artiste will be performing at the October 9 event,” organiser Randhir Roy had said.

  • Dead fetus found inside 4 yr boy

    Dead fetus found inside 4 yr boy

    A dead fetus has been removed from the stomach of a four-year-old boy after he complained of pain in West Bengal, India. A CAT scan revealed, what was suspected as a tumor to be a dead foetus inside his abdomen.

    “The dead embryo which had hands, legs, nails and a partially formed head was removed from the child’s body after a long operation,” Dr Shirshendu Giri told International Business Times. “The boy is all right now, still under close observation.”

    Doctors said the boy suffered from the rare medical condition, “fetus in foetu” (baby within a baby), in which a malformed foetus is found in the body of its twin. In the early stages of pregnancy, one of the twin foetuses may absorb the other. The enveloped twin becomes a “parasite” that relies on its host.

    The abnormality has an incidence of one in 500,000 live births, with less than 100 reported cases worldwide, according to a 2005 case report in ANNALS Academy of Medicine Singapore.

    In June 2009, a man in India named Sanju Bhagat underwent surgery to have a parasitic twin, which he carried inside his body for 36 years, removed. In March 2006, doctors in Pakistan removed two foetuses from inside a two-month-old girl.

  • India’s Economy Impacted by Terror Attacks: Moody’s

    India’s Economy Impacted by Terror Attacks: Moody’s

    In a report dated 6 October 2015 Moody’s says “more than 60% of all (terrorist) incidents in 2013 were concentrated in just four countries. Iraq (24% of terrorist incidents, Pakistan 19%, Afghanistan 12% and India 5.8%.” With India facing fourth largest number of terror attacks across the world in 2013, such incidents have a significant and long-lasting negative impact on the economy, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

    India has been mentioned with terrorist havens like Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq; However, unlike these three nations, India does not harbor and nurture terrorists. By Moody’s algorithm, every developed country would be termed as a terror state whereas the truth is they are victims, actual or potential, of terrorist attacks.

    India in 2013 faced 690 terror attacks. Topping the list was Iraq with 2,852 incidents, followed by Pakistan (2,212 attacks) and Afghanistan (1,443 incidents). In 20 years (from 1994 to 2013), India faced 6,024 attacks, a little less than tenth of 68,962 incidents worldwide.

    “Even normalised by the size of the country, Iraq and Afghanistan are at the top of the list with 82 and 47 incidents per million people, respectively, in 2013. This compares with a global average of 2.4 incidents per million people in 2013,” it said. Terrorist attacks, it said, are diverse in terms of the personal and property damage inflicted. Moody’s said its study shows that terrorist attacks significantly weaken economic activity, with long-lasting effects on the economy.

    The study measures the impact of terrorism on a country’s economic growth, investment growth, government expenditure and government cost of borrowing. “For example, in 2013 the 10 countries most affected by terrorism took an immediate and significant hit to growth, dampening GDP between 0.5 and 0.8 percentage points,” says Moody’s Merxe Tudela.

    “Even worse is that the negative impact continues for years after the attack, taking up to five years for the effects to peter out.” Investment growth takes an even greater immediate hit, with Moody’s estimating for the same episodes that investment growth declines between 1.3 and 2.1 percentage points.

    “Terrorist events of the type and frequency seen in the top ten most terrorism-inflicted countries just in 2013 immediately weaken GDP growth between 0.51 percentage points (pps) and 0.80 pps; they further deteriorate growth between 0.37 pps and 0.59 pps after one year, and by 0.05 pps and 0.07 pps after three years,” it said. Terrorist attacks reduce investment growth (and hence impair potential growth) on the year of the terrorism event, by between 1.31 pps and 2.07 pps, for the top ten most affected countries.

    Terrorist events lift the government cost of borrowing. In the most terrorist-inflicted countries, the cost of borrowing jumps between 41 and 65 basis points within one year and by 51-81 bps after one year of the event.

  • Wipro Sued for Sexual Discrimination by An Indian Woman in UK

    Wipro Sued for Sexual Discrimination by An Indian Woman in UK

    London: An Indian woman employee at the London office of IT major Wipro has filed a suit agains the company seeking over a million pounds as compensation for alleged sexual discrimination, unequal pay and unfair dismissal.

    Shreya Ukil alleged she was subjected to a “deeply predatory, misogynistic culture” and forced into an affair with a married boss at the Bangalore-headquartered firm’s U.K. division.

    The 39-year-old told an employment tribunal in London this week how her boss called her “a seductive dancer from Indian mythology.”

    “Women who are confident, capable and express their viewpoints are often called ’emotional’, ‘psychotic’ or ‘menopausal’. Women who supported women are called ‘lesbians,’ ” Ukil said.

    Ukil claimed she was manipulated into an affair with a married senior vice-president. On one business trip to Stockholm in 2013, the 54-year-old allegedly told her the silk blouse she was wearing was “too tight” for her body type.

    The India-born woman said she embarked on the affair despite finding his conversation “inane” and that he suffered on occasion from a “certain body odor”, the Daily Telegraph of London reported.

    The former sales and market development manager, who handled outsourcing business deals for Wipro, said she was treated like “dirty goods” after ending the affair and lodging complaints about her treatment.

    She also claimed she was paid far less than male staff, earning up to 75,000 pounds per annum rather than the typical 150,000 pounds paid to male equivalents.

    However, Wipro refused to comment on the lawsuit. “Wipro does not comment on its ongoing lawsuits and Wipro is committed to the principle of equal employment opportunity and provides all our employees with a work environment that is free from discrimination and harassment of any kind. Wipro is defending these allegations before the court,” a statement by Wipro Ltd said.

    “Following an impartial inquiry, both were relieved from the services of the company after it was established beyond reasonable doubt that they had violated the stated policy,” the statement said.

    “The company has built its business over the years by ensuring it adheres to the highest standards of integrity, fairness, and ethical corporate practices. Any transgression of these beliefs and policies are dealt with expeditiously and with the strictest action,” the statement said.

  • Indo-American Press Club holds Media Conference & Awards Function in New York

    Indo-American Press Club holds Media Conference & Awards Function in New York

    NEW YORK: Eminent journalists and media experts from the US, Canada, India, Australia and the UAE will hold an International Media Conference organised by the Indo-American Press Club (IAPC) from Oct 9 through 12 at the Clarion Hotel and Conference Center, Long Island, New York.

    The Indo-American Press Club provides an effective platform for Indian American journalists and media professionals to associate and network with a sense of belonging, according to the media release.

    It is designed as a uniquely valuable professional development opportunity, featuring educational seminars and workshops, discussing and analyzing new trends and methods with a rare insight into the work of media across the world, it said.

    Public Works Minister V K Ibrahim Kunju has been selected for the Minister of Excellence Award. The Karmashreshta Award is for social worker Daya Bhai and the Sadbhavana Award for Boby Chemmannur.

    Ibrahim Kunju has been chosen for the modernisation activities related to the development of basic infrastructure in the state for the past four years. Daya Bhai has been chosen, taking into account her initiatives among the adivasis in Northern India.

    Topics such as News Reporting and Writing Techniques, Exploring Social and Environmental Causes through Documentaries, Politics and Media, Social Media Impact on Journalism, Live Streaming, Social Activism as a Way of Life, Freedom of Expression, will be addressed by experts in their fields during the seminars and workshops.

    IAPC has envisioned for itself a significant role in recognizing and nurturing the true potential of journalists and media professionals in the US and Canada, while collaborating with media fraternity across the globe, it said.

  • Indian American Sikh shot dead in California’s Oakland city

    Indian American Sikh shot dead in California’s Oakland city

    A 45-year-old Indian American was shot dead by an unidentified gunman in California, prompting police to announce a USD 10,000 reward money for information leading to the arrest of the killer. SF Gate reported earlier today, Oct 8, that Oakland police investigators have identified a 23-year-old man ‘Joevan Lopez’ for shooting 45-year-old Jasvir Singh. Lopez was described as 5 feet 7 inches tall and 158 pounds, with dreadlocks.

    Jasvir Singh was fatally shot inside his ice-cream van on Saturday in California’s Oakland city, San Jose Mercury News reported. According to residents of the locality, a gunman approached Mr Singh, shot him inside his van and ran away through the backyards.

    Local residents described the horror of the broad day-light killing and expressed their fears of rising crimes on the streets of Oakland city.

    “I don’t understand why someone would murder our ice cream man,” said Paula, a nearby resident.

    “I heard five shots and came to my front door. I just feel really bad; he was doing his job, and now he’s gone,” she added.

    “There is something especially poignant when someone engaged in a positive and innocent act — like painting a mural or driving an ice cream truck — falls victim to senseless violence,” Mayor Libby Schaaf said in a statement.
    Police were told that Mr Singh immigrated to the US 17 years ago, was unmarried and had a 13-year-old daughter. He was a resident of Marysville, but also lived in the East Bay area.

    Singh was the second man killed last week while working on an Oakland street. Artist Antonio Ramos was fatally shot on Tuesday while painting a mural in West Oakland. So far this year, Oakland has recorded 74 homicides – 15 more than at the same point last year.

     

  • GOPIO calls for Community Campaign on Immigration Issues like SIJS, H1-B, STEM OPT…

    GOPIO calls for Community Campaign on Immigration Issues like SIJS, H1-B, STEM OPT…

    NEW YORK:  Indian American group GOPIO have called for a campaign on immigration issues affecting the Indian diaspora including use of H-1B visa by technology companies from India and growing backlog of family visas.

    An immigration seminar was organized by Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO-New York), South Asian Council for Social Services (SACSS) and the Kerala Centre in Elmont, New York on Sep 27. The panelists included attorneys Michael Phulwani and David Nachman of NPZ Law Group, P.C. (Ridgewood, NJ) and Anand Ahuja (Law Offices of Anand Ahuja, Hicksville, NY) and was moderated by GOPIO International Founder President Dr. Thomas Abraham.

    Attorney Anand Ahuja, who also serves as GOPIO-New York president, spoke on business and investment visas and special immigrant juvenile status. Attorney Michael Phulwani spoke on the topics such as how to read the visa bulletin which is available to everyone, H-1B alternatives, present status of DACA and DAPA. Attorney David Nachman spoke on AC-21, STEM OPT issues/changes, provisional wavers, President Obama’s immigration reform initiatives and consular processing issues.

    Grass-root actions were also required to support President Barack Obama’s executive actions that were announced in November 2014, participants said.

    While immigration reform holistically seems to be stalled, Obama’s executive actions are designed in a piecemeal manner aimed at improving the overall immigration law system.

    The participants also hoped that extreme backlogs for Indian nationals in many visa classifications may be reduced in some fair manner.

    These backlogs have resulted in families being separated for long periods of time despite one of the major tenets underlying US immigration law being family unity.

    H-1B non-immigrant professional and specialty occupation work visas continue to be scrutinized heavily by such agencies as the US Homeland Security, State, and Labour departments, the seminar noted.

    Additionally, many of the largest users of the H-1B visa are very significant technology companies from India, the seminar noted.

    Grassroots efforts should be made to help the government understand that India is not the only user of these technology visas, it suggested.

    Attempts to avert a form of reverse discrimination should be undertaken soonest, the participants suggested.

    Among other issues raised was India’s exclusion from Treaty Investment and Treaty Trader category for the immigration visa purpose.

    It is not clear why Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka all have E visas but India does not, the participants noted.

    It was resolved that GOPIO and other community groups must campaign on these issues.

    “It is important for the Indian American community to take up such issues with Obama administration and elected officials and make them aware of importance of such issues for the country as a whole,” said GOPIO’s Founder President Thomas Abraham.

  • Two Indian Americans Plead Guilty to Extortion Scam

    Two Indian Americans Plead Guilty to Extortion Scam

    Two Philadelphia Indian-Americans men admitted their roles in a conspiracy to extort victims to load prepaid debit cards with funds that were stolen as part of the scheme, U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman announced.
    Two  today pleaded guilty to charges of conspiring to extort their victims to load prepaid debit cards with funds that were stolen as part of a scam running into more than USD 5.8 million.Alpesh Kumar Patel, 31, and Vijay Kumar Patel, 40, pleaded guilty before a US District Judge in New Jersey to the charges of conspiracy to commit the wire fraud.

    The conspiracy to commit wire fraud charge is punishable by a maximum potential penalty of 20 years in prison and $250,000 fine, or twice the gross gain or loss from the offense.

    According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court: The duo — who are not related — admitted that from September 2013 through March 2014, they were part of a conspiracy to steal money using reloadable debit cards. First, conspirators would purchase reloadable Green Dot Cards, and register them in names other than their own. The conspirators contacted victims by phone and used threats or deceit to induce them to put money on MoneyPak cards, which are used along with assigned PIN codes to add funds to Green Dot Cards.

    Both admitted that they obtained the Green Dot Cards and used them to purchase money orders. Afterwards, they deposited the funds into bank accounts associated with the scheme.

    Phone numbers and IP addresses connected with the conspiracy were tied to approximately 2,500 Green Dot Cards that were funded in excess of $5.8 million.

    Sentencing has been scheduled for January 15, 2015.

    U.S. Attorney Fishman credited special agents, detectives and investigators assigned to the Joint Terrorism Task Force, under the direction of FBI Special Agent in Charge Richard M. Frankel in Newark, and FBI Special Agent in Charge William F. Sweeney Jr. in Philadelphia, as well as special agents of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), under the direction of Acting Special Agent in Charge Kevin Kelly in Newark, with the investigation leading to today’s pleas.

  • Indian American Muslim Council Condemns Dadri Mob Killing

    Indian American Muslim Council Condemns Dadri Mob Killing

    NEW YORK:  The Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC), a US based advocacy group, has strongly condemned the anti-minority violence in India, in the form of a mob lynching of a Muslim man and his son in Dadri, Uttar Pradesh, over mere suspicion of having eaten beef.

    “Beyond the mob’s inhuman behaviour, it is alarming to note that the police have sent the meat from the victim’s refrigerator to a forensic lab to be tested, out of apparent respect for the mob’s feelings,” a statement posted on the IAMC website said.

    “This effectively turns the victim into the accused, despite the fact that even if the family were in possession of beef, they were not in violation of the Uttar Pradesh Cow Protection Act,” the statement added.

    The IAMC also accused the authorities for their inaction, calling on the media to “expose the larger design behind the incident”. The State Government is of Samajwadi Party (SP) & the Centre or National Government is of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), both SP and BJP have been found responsible for the mass violence that claimed over a 100 lives and resulted in the displacement of over 50,000 people in Muzaffarnagar in 2013 by The Sahay Committee.

    A week ago, Mohammad Akhlaq, a resident of Bisara in Greater Noida, was dragged out of his house after a mob of over 200 people alleged he had killed a cow in his house. They beat Akhlaq to death, while his 22 year-old son Danish was injured and is in critical condition. Another son of Mohammed Akhlaq is a serving corporal in the Indian Air Force.

    The IAMC said the incident was made to appear like a spontaneous act of violence by an unruly crowd but there are strong indications that this was a planned act.

    Indian-American Muslim Council (IAMC) is the largest advocacy organization of Indian Muslims in the United States with chapters across the nation, “dedicated to safeguarding India’s pluralist and tolerant ethos”.

  • Indian Scientists Dispute Decade-Old Cancer Biology Principles

    Indian Scientists Dispute Decade-Old Cancer Biology Principles

    Cancers figure among the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, with approximately 14 million new cases and 8.2 million cancer related deaths in 2012, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). The number of new cases is expected to rise by about 70 per cent over the next 2 decades, according to WHO.

    Indian scientists at Columbia University in the US have challenged a decade-old dogma in cancer biology by showing that a gene critical for preventing cancer did not work as thought of previously.

    The gene whose role in cancer development has till now baffled scientists around the world is commonly known as A20 or TNFAIP3.

    It functions properly in healthy individuals. However, individuals develop cancer if for some reason the gene fails to function. Thus, many cancer patients are known to carry a dysfunctional variety of the gene.

    The scientists came up with the first animal model of A20 to understand how this gene works in the body. Based on results over the past decade, they expected that these animals would develop cancer. But to their surprise, they found that the animals had a largely healthy life-span.

    The work was carried out by Indian scientist Arnab De, during his doctorate study at Columbia University with renowned Indian-American immunologist Sankar Ghosh.

    Chozha Rathinam, also of Indian origin, and Teruki Dainichi, currently at the Kyoto University, are the other authors of the report and who supported the research study.

    The research work was highlighted by the peer-reviewed European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) Reports, which highlights only articles considered to be of “fundamental relevance to a general readership”.

    Professor Henning Walczak, Scientific Director of Cancer Research UK and Chairman of University College London, noted the importance the work.

    “If A20 cannot function as a result of hereditary mutations or infection, it results in serious pathologies, including cancer,” he said.

    “Before this work, there was no animal model to understand how this critical tumor suppress or works.

    “Having an animal model now, significantly improves our ability to investigate how A20 works and this study already goes a long way in clarifying how A20 fails to work properly in patients and, as a consequence thereof, in developing potential cancer therapeutics,” Prof Walczak said.

    The WHO website states that more than 100 different types of cancer exists, each requiring unique diagnosis and treatment.

  • 4 Indian-Origin People Selected for Fellowship in Canada

    4 Indian-Origin People Selected for Fellowship in Canada

    TORONTO:  Four Indian-origin professionals in Canada have been selected for a fellowship for a Toronto-based firm that hires civic leaders to tackle issues in Toronto.

    The four Indians, Anita Abraham, Ritesh Kotak, Mrinalini Menon and Pam Sethi, are among the 27 of the region’s top rising leaders as the next cohort of DiverseCity Fellows selected by CivicAction.

    “These passionate leaders were selected who try to shape their community and provide it with the toolkit and network,” a statement on the official website of CivicAction said.

    CivicAction is a coalition of civic leaders in the Toronto region. CivicAction has worked with business, government, community, labour, and academia to address social, economic and environmental challenges in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area.

    Mr Abraham is executive director of Meal Exchange (MX), a non-profit organisation that works in more than 40 communities to use university campuses as a leverage point to build sustainable food systems and fight poverty.

    She is the lead architect for studio impact since 2011 and works with vulnerable youth to teach them about systems thinking and community impact.

    Mr Kotak is a cyber whiz for the Toronto Police and he wants to use the fellowship time to help people like his parents.

    “I see them. I hear their stories. If I can actually do something to help them by eliminating some of these employment barriers to entry, I feel that will have a systemic, positive impact in society,” the 27-year-old was quoted as saying.

    Mr Menon works as a talent sourcing manager at the Royal Bank of Canada and volunteers with the Royal Ontario Museum and Canadian Stage Company.

    She has worked and studied in seven cities around the world, from Washington to Mumbai.

    Mr Sethi has over 10 years of experiences in healthcare and works in health policy, system planning and strategic development with the Ontario government.

    In 2013, she co-founded Lean In Canada, a non-profit organisation geared towards creating a community for women to improve gender equality in the workplace.

  • AAP Leader Somnath Bharti gets bail in the domestic violence and attempt to murder case

    AAP Leader Somnath Bharti gets bail in the domestic violence and attempt to murder case

    AAP leader Somnath Bharti on Tuesday, Sep 6, termed the domestic violence and attempt to murder case against him as a “BJP-sponsored litigation” and had sought bail again before a Delhi Sessions court.

    Additional Sessions Judge Anil Kumar after hearing the arguments on bail yesterday had reserved the order and granted him bail today.

    During an over two-and-a-half hearing on bail plea, advocate Vijay Aggarwal appearing for Bharti claimed it was a case of an “on-and-off relationship” which was blown out of proportion due to political motives and alleged that it was a “BJP-sponsored litigation”.

    “I am an MLA and have to look after the work of my constituency. I have deep root in the society and if granted bail, I will not flee from the justice…Everyone recognizes me where will I escape,” he said.

    “I will join the investigation as and when called by the Investigation Officer and there is no point of influencing the witnesses. If court wants, it can bar me from leaving Delhi or it can confine me at my residing place that is Malviya Nagar constituency,” the lawyer said.

    While citing some transcripts of recorded phone calls and SMSs exchanged between Bharti and his wife Lipika Mitra, he said “the dog in question ‘Don’ was being fed by Lipika, then how can it bite her? She also kept wearing all the jewellery, which meant these were with her.”

    The lawyer also alleged it was Lipika who had threatened to cut herself after which Bharti had called her mother and brother to intervene and settle the matter.

    “Both (Lipika and Bharti) kept on talking in normal terms even after the complaint and FIR was registered. This shows that everything was normal,” he said.

    Opposing Bharti’s plea, Additional Public Prosecutor Shailendra Babbar said when Bharti was not in police custody he tried to misuse his liberty.

    Maintaining that Bharti’s conduct has been “very dubious”, the prosecutor asked “what would he do if he is granted bail.

    “In case he is enlarged on bail, he would influence the witnesses as he is a very influential man. There are witnesses who are not coming forward to depose because of his influence. Granting him bail will hamper investigation which is at a primitive stage,” Babbar said.

    The AAP MLA was arrested in the wee hours on 29 September after the apex court ordered him to surrender.

    Bharti had on 23 September moved the apex court seeking protection from arrest in the case and a direction to restrain the police from arresting him till his plea challenging the High Court order was decided.

    The Supreme Court, however, had on 1 October denied interim bail to AAP MLA and sought the presence of his wife before it to explore the possibility of mediation.

    On 22 September, the Delhi High Court had rejected Bharti’s plea for anticipatory bail, observing that the allegations against him were backed by “documentary proof”.

    Terming the allegations against the legislator by his wife as “very serious”, the high court had said she has been tolerating his “cruelty” and “brutal assault”.