Year: 2015

  • Indian American Anoushka Shankar among 2016 Grammy Nominees

    Indian American Anoushka Shankar among 2016 Grammy Nominees

    NEW YORK (TIP): Indian American sitarist Anoushka Shankar and Indo-British director Asif Kapadia are among the Indian-origin nominees for the 58th Grammy Awards, which will be held in February 2016.

    Shankar, 34, has been nominated in the Best World Music Album category for her solo album ‘Home’, which is a pure Indian classical album showcasing the meditative and virtuosic qualities of the Indian raga.

    ‘Home’ features two ragas, one of which is a creation of her late father Ravi Shankar. This is her fifth nomination in the same category.

    Indo-British director Asif Kapadia features in the nominees list of Best Music Film category for ‘Amy’, his documentary on late singer Amy Winehouse.

    Indian origin musician Jeff Bhasker features in the top category -Record of the Year – for Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars’ ‘Uptown Funk’. His other nomination is in the Producer of the Year, Non-Classical category.

    ‘The Afro Latin Jazz Suite’ in the Best Instrumental Composition category has garnered a nod to Indian origin Rudresh Mahanthappa. He and fellow artistes will be competing with another Indian origin talent – composer David Balkrishnan (Confetti Man) in the same section.

    The 58th Annual Grammy Awards will take place on February 15 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, next year.

  • Indian-Origin Researchers Developing Portable Sensor Capable of Detecting Severity of Eye Injuries

    Indian-Origin Researchers Developing Portable Sensor Capable of Detecting Severity of Eye Injuries

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Researchers, including those of Indian-origin, are developing a portable sensor that can quickly and inexpensively determine whether an eye injury is mild or severe.

    The device called OcuCheck measures levels of vitamin C in the fluids that coat or leak from the eye.

    The sensor could speed efforts to determine the extent of eye injuries at accident sites, in rural areas lacking ophthalmology specialists or on the battlefield, the researchers said.

    The new sensor uses graphene platelets that are layered one nanometre thick on filter paper.

    Upper layers include a unique polymer that interacts with the graphene; gold electrodes; and ascorbate oxidase, an enzyme that binds to ascorbic acid.

    “The sensor takes advantage of the fact that the ocular tear film – the viscous fluid that coats the eyeball – contains low levels of ascorbic acid, which is just vitamin C, while the interior of the eye contains much higher levels,” said Dipanjan Pan, a bioengineering professor at the University of Illinois in US.

    “So the concept is, if there is severe damage to the eye that penetrates deeply, the ascorbic acid will leak out in high concentration,” said Mr Pan, who is creating the device in collaboration with ophthalmologist Leanne Labriola.

    Two postdoctoral researchers in Pan’s laboratory, Santosh Misra and Manas Gartia helped develop the new sensor. At present, those with eye injuries must find their way to a hospital to have their injuries assessed, which is complicated, time-consuming and imprecise.

    In tests with clinical samples from 16 patients undergoing eye surgery, the team found that their sensor could – with high sensitivity, accuracy and specificity -detect a range of ascorbic acid concentrations. No current techniques for assessing eye injuries involve measurements of ascorbic acid, researchers said. “The idea is that the moment that the ascorbic acid comes in and binds to the ascorbate oxidase, it will pull the polymer out of its interaction with the graphene, changing the sensor’s electrical properties,” said Mr Pan.

    “This technology has the ability to impact a large number of patients, particularly in rural settings, where access to an ophthalmologist can be limited,” Ms Labriola added. The findings were published in the journal Scientific Reports.

  • Indian-American Elected Vice-President of International Association for Dental Research

    Indian-American Elected Vice-President of International Association for Dental Research

    WASHINGTON (TIP): An Indian-American doctor and professor of dental sciences has been elected vice-president of the International Association for Dental Research (IADR).

    Rena N D’Souza, an internationally regarded researcher and highly honored dental educator is an alumni of Government Dental College – University of Bombay, is currently serving as the professor of dental sciences, neurobiology & anatomy, and pathology at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City.

    D’Souza would later on serve as the president-elect, president and immediate past president of International Association for Dental Research, a media release said. A past president of the American Association for Dental Research (2012-2013), she has been an active IADR member since 1984 and is nationally and internationally known for her research in craniofacial development, genetics, tooth development and regenerative dental medicine.

    As a leader in the field, D’Souza has led an active research program for more than 25 years on tooth development and genetics, matrix biology and tissue regeneration, the release said.

    She has also directed two comprehensive National Institutes of Health (NIH) institutional research training and development programs and served on several grant review panels.

    She served on the NIH’s National Advisory Dental and Craniofacial Research Council, the Physician-Scientist Workforce Working Group for NIH Director Francis Collins and as chair of its subcommittee on dentist-scientist training. D’Souza is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, director on the Friends of NIDCR Board and member of the German National Academy of Sciences (Leopoldina).

  • Hillary Clinton: Donald Trump no longer funny

    Hillary Clinton: Donald Trump no longer funny

    WASHINGTON: Hillary Clinton took aim at fellow White House hopeful Donald Trump over his call to ban Muslims from entering the United States, saying: “I no longer think he is funny.”

    Appearing on NBC’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers” later Thursday, the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination said Trump had overstepped the mark with his latest comments.

    “You know, I have to say, Seth, I no longer think he is funny,” Clinton said, according to NBC News.

    “I think for weeks you and everybody else were just bringing folks to hysterical laughter, but now he has gone way over the line.

    “And what he is saying now is not only shameful and wrong, it is dangerous.”

    Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican nomination, came under fire at home and abroad this week for his proposal to temporarily bar Muslims from entering the US.

    It came in the wake of last week’s shooting by a Muslim couple in Sen Bernardino, California, that left 14 dead.

  • Church of England’s condemnation of cinemas showing Hindu film ‘out-of-line’

    Church of England’s condemnation of cinemas showing Hindu film ‘out-of-line’

    LAS VEGAS (TIP): Hindus term The Church of England’s condemning United Kingdom (UK) cinemas for showing a Hindu-themed short animation film as “out-of-line”. The Animated Superhero Movie is on Hindu Deities undirected by Indian American Director Sanjay Patel.

    Rajan Zed, in a statement from Nevada said that accusing UK cinemas of “hypocrisy” and “on-the-hoof policy making” for exhibiting a Hindu-themed animation film was simply out-of-line for The Church of England which talks of “strengthening community life” and which “seeks to build up good relations with people of other faith traditions”.

    Religious organizations should not be in the business of condemning businesses for what they decide to do with the products highlighting “other” religions, Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, added.

    Zed noted that despite our seriously different traditions, we as religions; should promote love, harmonious living, mutual loyalty; as we are headed in the same direction. And we should at least cooperate in common causes such as social development, peace, ecological responsibility, etc.

    sanjays-super-team-pixar-2“Sanjay’s Super Team”, a recently released seven minute animation Pixar film nominated for Annie Awards, revolves around Hindu gods.

    About Sanjay’s Super Team: theindianpanorama.news/united-states-america/animated-superhero-movie-on-hindu-deities-indian-american-director-sanjay-patel-article-2015-48016.html

  • Witness turns hostile, tells 26/11 trial that Kasab is alive

    Witness turns hostile, tells 26/11 trial that Kasab is alive

    LAHORE (TIP): Prosecution in Mumbai attack case faced embarrassment when a key witness turned hostile saying that Ajmal Kasab, the lone gunman caught alive after the assault and later hanged, was alive.

    “Mudassir Lakhvi, the headmaster of a primary school in Faridkot, where Ajmal Kasab studied for three years told the court that he taught Kasab and he is alive,” a court official said on Thursday.

    The hearing of the case was held by the Anti-Terrorism Court Islamabad judge at Adiala Jail Rawalpindi on Wednesday, around the same time when Pakistan assured India of “steps being taken to expedite the early conclusion” of the Mumbai attack trial. The headmaster made no reference to Kasab (hanged in India) and did not mention if he (Kasab) was the same person who studied in the school in Faridkot. The witness earlier had also claimed that Kasab could be produced in court if needed. The next hearing in the case would be held on December 16.

  • 46 killed in Taliban siege at Afghanistan airport

    46 killed in Taliban siege at Afghanistan airport

    KANDAHAR (TIP): With final mopping up operations continuing late on Wednesday in Kandahar, 24 hours after Taliban insurgents attacked its airport, 37 civilians and members of Afghan security forces had been killed and 35 wounded, the defence ministry said, even as a key district in neighbouring Helmand province fell to the insurgents.

    The attack on the airport, one of the most heavily protected bases in the country, underlined the Taliban’s ability to inflict serious damage on security forces, still shaken by the insurgents’ brief capture of the northern city of Kunduz in September.

    In addition, nine Taliban men were killed and another wounded with a final survivor still resisting security forces, the ministry said. One security official said the assailants held some civilians as “human shields”, which had complicated their operation. Adoctor at a local hospital, said 41people (37 civilians and 4 soldiers) had been killed.

    In a separate incident in neighbouring Helmand province, where the Taliban has been increasing pressure for weeks, insurgents captured the district of Khanishin, a major control point for drug smuggling routes through the south. Fourteen policemen were killed and 11others wounded, provincial council chief Karim Atal said. The airport in Kandahar has for years been a major hub for operations of international forces, most of whom had withdrawn from Afghanistan by 2014-end.

    A spokesman for Nato’s resolute support mission said there had been no reports of casualties among the hundreds of international personnel at the air base.

    The raid coincided with President Ashraf Ghani’s visit to Islamabad on Wednesday for the Heart of Asia conference, where he made a plea for more support from neighbours to fight the growing insurgency. The Taliban, fighting to re-establish Islamist rule after US-led military intervention ousted them from power in 2001, have been struggling to settle a leadership dispute of late. But the attack in Kandahar showed their ability to inflict damage and also increase pressure on Ghani’s government to contain the spreading insurgency. Officials said fighters attacked a perimeter area of the huge and heavily fortified complex on Tuesday evening, initially taking up position in a school in a residential area, which houses both a civilian airport and military base.

    Earlier, the Taliban said in a statement 150 soldiers had been killed after suicide attackers had entered the base and attacked international forces and their Afghan allies. (Reuters)

  • Nepal police break up anti-India protest over blockade

    Nepal police break up anti-India protest over blockade

    KATHMANDU (TIP): Police in Nepal detained about 50 activists protesting outside the Indian Embassy on Thursday to demand an end to a monthslong blockade of supplies from India. The protesters held banners demanding India halt the border blockade, calling it a “crime against humanity.”

    Police said they would be released later Dec 10. India has restricted fuel, medicine and other supplies for Nepal since the ethnic Madhesi group in the country’s south began protesting a new constitution adopted in September.

    Members of the ethnic group say the constitution unfairly divides Nepal into seven states with borders that cut through their ancestral homeland. India has close cultural ties with the group and has asked Nepal to consider its demands for a bigger state, more seats in Parliament and greater local authority. Landlocked Nepal gets most of its fuel from India, as well as many other goods including medicine.

    Protesters have blocked a key border point with India, and Nepalese officials say imports through other border points where there are no protests are difficult. India denies it has imposed a blockade. At least 50 people have been killed in the protests since August.

  • B’desh ’71 trial prosecutor packs a punch

    B’desh ’71 trial prosecutor packs a punch

    DHAKA: She’s one of the most talked-about women in Bangladesh today and also one of the most admired and reviled. Tureen Afroz is the person responsible for sending the 1971 war criminals to the gallows and her feisty but well-crafted arguments as the chief prosecutor in the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) of Bangladesh has won her legions of followers across the country.

    It also earned her a lot of death threats, abuse and even Molotov cocktails hurled at her bungalow in Dhaka’s chic Uttara Model Town.

  • Heavy security deployment in Islamabad for Afghan conference

    Heavy security deployment in Islamabad for Afghan conference

    ISLAMABAD: A three-tier security arrangement headed by police and backed up by para-military and the army was put in place by Pakistan for a regional conference on Afghanistan with security forces keeping a strict vigil as top leaders were here to attend the high-profile meeting.

    The two-day ‘Heart of Asia’ conference started yesterday but the key ministerial meeting attended by Foreign Ministers of several countries, including External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, and senior officials was today jointly inaugurated by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani.

    An Interior Ministry official said a three-tier security was in place for the safety of the leaders of 14 members and 17 supporting countries as well as officials of 12 international organisations.

    “Police is on the front and is backed by para-military Rangers and Army,” he said.

    The intelligence officials — both military and civilian –combed the entire area around the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the plush Serena hotel where most of the delegates were staying.

    Entry to the area of the conference is restricted and only people having special permits and media were allowed to go there.

    Traffic police also made special arrangements to control the vehicular movement in the city.

    An intelligence official said that religious schools in the capital and neighbouring Rawalpindi were also being monitored.

    Security officials in plain clothes were also deployed at key places to keep a vigil on everything.

  • Nassau Legislator Solages: “Tell us where you’re placing the Casino in Nassau Now!”

    Nassau Legislator Solages: “Tell us where you’re placing the Casino in Nassau Now!”

    ELMONT, NY (TIP): Legislator Carrie Solages is upset over the delay in announcement of the location of the Casino. “For months we have all heard the rumors of a Casino being built somewhere in Nassau County. It was rumored to be placed in Uniondale, then Inwood in the 5 Towns and now the Belmont property in Elmont, NY. The problem is; this is more than just rumor! The County has cited $20 million dollars of revenue source in the 2016 from a Casino; and yet 21 days before that budget year begins the same officials citing the revenue in their budget have yet to announce where it will be placed”, he said.

    “It’s irresponsible!  A community like Elmont, Floral Park, North Valley Stream etc. deserve to know what is being placed in their neighborhood that could forever change their community landscape.” exclaimed Nassau County Legislator Carrie Solages. “This affects us as moms and dads, community leaders and how we can all plan for the future. To not know is not just wrong; it’s cruel.”

    While speaking to the issue of where this casino will be placed Legislator Solages, joined with other activists to share their frustration with the lack of any open process. “These communities deserve better and at minimum they deserve communication and honesty. This process has proven itself to completely lack transparency and it has got to stop now!” shared Legislator Solages who goes onto mention that there has been no official public meeting or hearing that would educate community members on what a video lottery parlor would look like and more importantly to listen to the residents who would be affected by such a development.

    “The time is NOW to tell the truth. Be honest and don’t wait to the holiday weeks in hopes that the victimized community will be not watching. Show some respect and announce NOW!” concluded Legislator Solages.

  • Farha Sayeed  Redefines ‘Eggsperience’, ‘Eggcellence’, ‘Eggxotica’, and ‘Eggspressions’ using Faberge-styled exotic art

    Farha Sayeed Redefines ‘Eggsperience’, ‘Eggcellence’, ‘Eggxotica’, and ‘Eggspressions’ using Faberge-styled exotic art

    CHICAGO (TIP): Farha Sayeed of Chicago has been bringing laurels through her love for an array of arts and crafts and her contributions to welfare of downtrodden, thereby emerging as a role model for women in the Indian Sub-continent.

    Farha has a passion for creating Faberge-styled exotic Objets d’Art from egg shells of Ostrich, Emu, Goose, Duck, Turkey, Guinea, and Hen.

    Faberge-styled exotic art 3These eggshells are intricately cut, carved, and ornamented, using pearls, beads, crystals, brocade, velvet, satin, golden laces, etc., and finally are mounted on beautiful silver and golden stands, making each end-product a customized masterpiece.

    Farha, thus, transforms a humble eggshell into a breathtakingly beautiful and precious piece of art, which can adorn even a palace with its elegance and beauty.

    An interesting aspect of Farha’s egg sculpting is her successful experimentation with the fusion of Indian and Islamic elements in this unique art form, which is otherwise Western.

    Farha’s collection of decorated eggs was first displayed by Art Lovers’ Group of a renowned Danish Pharmaceutical Company.

    This was followed by a series of full-fledged solo exhibitions titled “EGGSPERIENCE” in Copenhagen, “EGGCELLENCE” in Jeddah, “EGGXOTICA” in New Delhi, and “EGGSPRESSIONS” in Sana’a, to great appreciation. Farha also participated in the Annual Dallas Egg Show along with other international egg artists.

    Faberge-styled exotic art 1A member of International Egg Art Guild, Farha is considered as a pioneer in promoting Egg Art in India.

    Farha, in addition to pursuing her interest in varied art forms like Painting, Zardori Work, Soft-toy Making and Calligraphy, finds time for philanthropy too to ameliorate the lot of destitute women, orphans, and children of special needs.

    “I had a passion for arts and craft since my childhood; When I came across a new medium of eggshells it attracted me instantly. I thought I would challenge my creative imagination by testing my skills using a fragile surface”, said Farha.

    “Eggs reflect the origin of life. To me egg sculpting is a reflection of my self-expression and a way of looking at objects in a different perspective”, she added.

    When asked about her plans to exhibit her collections in the United States, she said “I am planning an exhibition in the coming Easter”.

    Farha is the spouse of India’s Consul General in Chicago, Dr. Ausaf Sayeed.

  • US Air Force to double number of drone squadrons

    US Air Force to double number of drone squadrons

    WASHINGTON: The US Air Force says it plans to more than double the number of squadrons that fly drones, and will spread them out in more locations across the US and overseas.

    The decision would add about 3,000 personnel, including at least 700 more pilots, 700 sensor operators, and other maintenance and crew. There are currently eight squadrons.

    Gen. Herbert Carlisle, head of US Air Combat Command at Langley Air Force Base in Virginia, says adding squadrons to potential sites such as Langley and Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona could help connect drone operations with intelligence-gathering units.

    He says the Air Force will work with the Pentagon and Congress to get the needed funding.

    Pentagon officials have repeatedly said they need more unmanned aircraft for intelligence gathering and attack missions.

  • INDIA-PAKISTAN TALKS BACK ON TRACK

    INDIA-PAKISTAN TALKS BACK ON TRACK

    ISLAMABAD (TIP): As External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj walked past the Pakistani media waiting in the Foreign Office corridor on Dec 9 evening, she was asked, “Ma’am, koi breakthrough hai.” Standing behind a lectern, she didn’t disappoint. “I was being asked whether there is a breakthrough or big news,” she began in chaste Hindi, adding “Hum dono deshon ne samagra vaarta prarambh karney ka faisla le liya hai.” When her audience, mostly from Pakistan, couldn’t follow her Hindi and protested mildly, she said, “Let me finish. What was being done as composite dialogue, and was later called the resumed dialogue, will now be called the comprehensive bilateral dialogue.”

    Sushma Swaraj with Nawaz Sharif and Sartaj Aziz in Islamabad on December 9.
    Sushma Swaraj with Nawaz Sharif and Sartaj Aziz in Islamabad on December 9.

    Sartaj Aziz, the Pakistan Prime Minister’s adviser on foreign affairs, also standing behind a lectern, did not add anything and let the joint statement do the talking. Qazi M Khalilullah, spokesperson of the Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, fished out the one-page document for the cameras. Almost three years after the “resumed dialogue” was stalled following the killing of Indian soldiers, including one who was beheaded, India and Pakistan agreed to restart the dialogue process under the new rubric of “Comprehensive Bilateral Dialogue”. The composite dialogue was stopped after the Mumbai terror attacks in 2008. The comprehensive bilateral dialogue will have all the “pillars” of Indo-Pak relationship and will include confidence building measures (CBMs), Siachen, Sir Creek, Wullar barrage/Tulbul navigation project, economic and commercial cooperation, counter-terrorism, narcotics control, people-to-people exchanges. Two new pillars have been added— humanitarian issues and religious tourism.

    Sources said the idea was not to “disown the past” but make it more contemporary: “After the Geeta and Salman cases have come to light, humanitarian issues have been made another pillar of the relationship.” Swaraj said foreign secretaries of the two countries will meet to decide modalities and schedule of the dialogue. Buoyed by the “success” of the Bangkok meeting, the National Security Advisors will continue to keep talking on “terrorism” — on a parallel track. “We will figure out how it doesn’t duplicate,” a source told The Indian Express, since home secretaries handled counter-terrorism in previous dialogues. From India’s perspective, the Pakistan government’s realisation and acceptance of terrorism as the major challenge was the reason for resumption of the dialogue process. The three-para joint statement gave primacy to terrorism. The second paragraph underlined: “The EAM and the Adviser condemned terrorism and resolved to cooperate to eliminate it. They noted the successful talks on terrorism and security-related issues in Bangkok by the two NSAs and decided that the NSAs will continue to address all issues connected to terrorism. The Indian side was assured of the steps being taken to expedite the early conclusion of the Mumbai trial.”

    Hours before she announced the breakthrough, Swaraj had a “warm” meeting with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Receiving the Indian delegation at his residence, Sharif was at his humorous best. As he introduced Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahsan Chaudhary, he said, “Yeh hamaare Foreign Secretary hain joh dheeme se muskura rahe hain (this is our Foreign Secretary, he has a faint smile).” Swaraj and Sharif, sources said, chatted a lot in Punjabi. And she met four generations of Sharifs — his mother, daughter Maryam, and his granddaughters. A source privy to the conversation said Sharif gave an “assurance” to Swaraj on speedy conclusion of the Mumbai attack trial. Sources said during the meeting it became clear that Pakistan accepted terrorism as a reality that needs to be confronted and addressed. Sharif told Swaraj that he and Prime Minister Narendra Modi — they met briefly in Paris last month— are “very determined” to take the process forward. Swaraj, in turn, replied that the Bangkok meeting between the two NSAs showed that the two sides can engage on “difficult issues” in a “constructive” and “non-accusatory” manner. Sources said Swaraj discussed the Mumbai attack trial with both Sharif and Aziz, and they both dwelt on the issue for a while. “After all, terrorism colours public perception of Pakistan. So, it appears that they have accepted it as a challenge and are ready to accept it, and address. This was not the case before,” an Indian source, familiar with the bilateral conversations, said. The source also said India was not here to win the war of words against Pakistan. “We are here to bring the relationship back on track,” the source said. But the source was cautious and did not declare that Modi will visit Pakistan next year for the SAARC summit, although Swaraj confirmed it earlier in the day. “Thoda bahut change aaya hai… We don’t say it is permanent. So, we will not predict the future. PM has accepted the invitation in Ufa. There’s still some time.” Earlier in the day, Swaraj said it was time for India and Pakistan to display “maturity and self-confidence to do business with each other”. “Let me take this opportunity to extend our hand to Pakistan as well. It is time that we display the maturity and self-confidence to do business with each other and strengthen regional trade and cooperation.

  • Twelve Charged with Stealing $3 Million in Elaborate Credit Card Fraud Scheme

    Twelve Charged with Stealing $3 Million in Elaborate Credit Card Fraud Scheme

    NEW JERSEY (TIP): 12 people have been charged with first-degree money laundering and other crimes in a joint federal and state investigation targeting an elaborate fraud scheme in which the defendants allegedly used fictitious identities to obtain credit cards and open bank accounts which they used to steal approximately $3 million from various banks.

    They were among a dozen foreign nationals and U.S. citizens charged with money laundering this week in a crackdown on an “elaborate” credit card scheme, acting Attorney General John Hoffman announced Wednesday, December 09.

    The accused – some of them family members, some business associates living mostly in Hudson County – stole millions by passing bad checks and making phony credit card payments, authorities claim.

    Each of the following 12 defendants was charged by complaint with first-degree money laundering, second-degree theft by unlawful taking, and third-degree fraudulent use of credit cards:
    Twelve Charged with Stealing $3 Million

    • Naim Tahir, 47, of Clark
    • Hassan Shahbaz, 42, of Jersey City
    • Aqeel Ahmed, 60, of Secaucus
    • Shama Munir, 49, of Secaucus
    • Faisal Mushtaq, 37, of Secaucus
    • Mohammad Shakeel, 46, of Jersey City
    • Muhammad Farooq Bhatti, 64, of Jersey City
    • Rilvan Junaid, 49, of Spring Valley, N.Y.
    • Shakeela Ahmed, 56, of Secaucus
    • Aqeel Sheikh, 54, of Secaucus
    • Mahamed Khan, 53, of Piscataway
    • Huda Ahmed, 27, of Secaucus

     

    Charged with first degree money laundering, they face up to 20 years in prison. All 12 defendants have been arrested and are being lodged in the Union County Jail with bail for each set at $1 million, no 10 percent option.

    The defendants, many of whom live in Secaucus and Jersey City, allegedly created “synthetic” identities by pairing real Social Security numbers with fictitious names and birth dates, using them to open numerous checking and credit card accounts.

    They allegedly opened the accounts online so as to avoid face-to-face interaction with the financial institutions. Bad checks were deposited into the bank accounts so that the accounts could be used to make payments on the credit cards, which temporarily inflated the lines of credit on the cards. In addition, funds were withdrawn from the bank accounts via ATM and U.S. Postal Money Order Purchases before the bad checks were discovered.

    It is alleged that the defendants ultimately “busted out” the credit cards by running up the unpaid balances until they reached or exceeded the credit limits. The scheme included a group of
    “merchants” who in many cases allegedly ran shell businesses set up solely for the purpose of participating in this fraud. The merchants allegedly swiped the fraudulent credit cards using point of sale terminals and received reimbursement from credit card processing companies via wire transfer, while never actually providing any merchandise or services.

    The ring members allegedly split the proceeds. The bank accounts of the shell companies set up by the merchants also allegedly were used to launder the proceeds of the scheme, with checks being written from one company to another as if they were conducting business.

    Naim Tahir, of Clark, allegedly was primarily responsible for creating the synthetic identities and applying for the bank accounts and credit cards used in the fraud. Shahbaz is the owner of USA United Trading, a business in Jersey City that he allegedly opened for the sole purpose of defrauding financial institutions. It is alleged that USA United Trading conducted approximately $1.6 million in fraudulent credit card transactions over the past 22 months. USA United Trading held itself out as a carpet retailer, with a store front at 150 Monticello Avenue in Jersey City that had several rolled up carpets in the window.

    “While the credit card holders, businesses and purchases in this scheme were fictitious, the losses suffered by the banks were very real and totaled an alarming $3 million,” said New Jersey Acting Attorney General John J. Hoffman.

    “Between 2012 and 2015, these defendants allegedly obtained hundreds of credit cards with fake identities, engaging in millions of dollars in phony transactions at a network of shell businesses, most of which were created solely to commit this fraud,” said Director Elie Honig of the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice.

    The charges are merely accusations and the defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

  • Donald Trump Vs. Adolf Hitler

    Donald Trump Vs. Adolf Hitler

    After Trump’s call to ban Muslims from America drew comparisons with the Nazi dictator, Adolf Hitler, some have started refereeing to him as “The New Fuhrer”. A spokesperson for the Council on America-Islamic Relations compared Trump’s  venomous attack on Muslims to Nazi rhetoric from the 1930s, saying the Republican candidate “sounds more like a leader of a lynch mob than a great nation like ours.”

    Whatever one may think of it, businessman Donald Trump’s recent call for a temporary ban on Muslim immigration is in no way directly comparable to the very genuine horrors of the Holocaust, or the murderous regime of Adolf Hitler; however, it does share some early signs of the horror to come which Hitler showed in his book “Mein Kampf”.

    Words can be wielded both for good and for evil. Mr. Trump’s continuous use of dark powerful words in his bid for the White House  will have an everlasting effect on American way and the values we are known for.

    Free speech Vs. Hate speech Vs. Plan Sedition – His way with words has rarely been seen in modern politics, except used by the very people that Trump is trying to save America from. He continues to move on hate politics with his potent language to connect with, and often stoke the fears and grievances of Americans.

    Difference of Opinion Vs Right to Co-Exist – We have seen this grow into the WWII and must see this together from the philosophical as well logical viewpoint.

    Philosophical view tells us that to have dissent is a way of life and logically if everyone shared the same view, then there would not have been any disagreement  ever. There is no limit to how much a person can rise or fall when it comes to morals and we have had plenty of examples from the last 2000 years of documented history on this.

    But it is because of history that our society has evolved and it has taken us a long time to break from the clutches of slavery, oppression and dictatorship.

    In this era  where radicalization /suppression has become the tool to justify one man’s fight for justice to become terrorism for another man words play a much larger role and have to be weighed properly.

    Still Donald Trump has said he will never leave the 2016 race despite widespread criticism of his remarks, especially about Muslims. Mr. Trump is the current frontrunner among the Republicans running for president, six weeks before the primary contests begin for each party to pick their nominee. Republican Party officials fear a third-party Trump campaign would spilt the Republican vote, and give Democrats a winning advantage.

    A White House spokesperson said Mr. Trump was “disqualified” from running after he said the US should ban Muslims from entering the country.

    The latest world leader to reject his remarks was Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said Israel “respects all religions”, hours after Mr. Trump announced he will be visiting the country this month.

    Here are some of Mr. Trump’s comments :

    • Arab Americans cheered on the 9/11 attacks, despite a lack of evidence
    • A “great, great wall” should be built between the US and Mexico
    • Many Mexicans in the US are criminals and rapists
    • There should be a mass deportation of illegal migrants in the US
    • Muslims should be banned from entering the US solely on grounds of their religion

    5 Ways Donald Trump Perfectly Mirrors Hitler’s Rise to Power

    ● 5. He blames a Specific Group of Immigrants for all our problems (and promises to eliminate them from our society)

    ● 4. He’ll sell his hate as hope for the poorest citizens in this country

    ● 3. Don’t think concentration camps; just think prisons

    ● 2. Not taking him seriously makes him more dangerous

    ● 1. He used to keep a copy of Hitler’s sequel to Mein Kampf by his bed

    Reasons Why Trump might  just Win

    • Despair: Imagine if on almost every issue important to you over the last eight years you’re watching the other side win. It is hard to underestimate the anger of the Republican primary voter. First, The President and then the Pope and it feels to you like the world is collapsing. Think about gay marriages and socialized medicine.
    • Issues: Three of the main issues animating Trump’s candidacy?- ?immigration, free trade, and political corruption.
    • Desire: One of the things about political campaigns is that generally speaking the candidate who wants it most tends to win. You have to really want it.
    • Poll trends: Opinion Polls don’t always tell the truth in a snapshot but that the trends in polls over time are worth trusting.
    • Confidence: Trump sticks to his guns and seemed untroubled even after making wrong statements. He doesn’t apologize

    Republican Party voters will begin voting on 1st  February in Iowa, followed by New Hampshire and then a bevy of other states, to decide who will represent the party against the Democratic nominee.

    Ideally, time will prove if there are more crazy comments in store, but approaching the Trump candidacy as a comedy sketch that will never come true could potentially be the most tragic mistake this country will ever make, and you don’t need to look any further than the publicly documented words and actions of the man himself to see just how true that is.

    My Opinion: No to nomination or presidency. 

    For the avoidance of doubt, we are merely comparing rhetoric here. Whatever the perceived similarities  in the things they say, there remains a vital difference in what they do: Hitler caused the deaths of millions; Mr. Trump has no criminal record and is a democratic politician running in a free election.

  • Reviving Indo-Pak talks

    Reviving Indo-Pak talks

    The lessons learnt from the Indo-Pak joint statement at Ufa finally produced a breakthrough in Islamabad. The clincher was the hush-hush meeting in Bangkok. It produced a joint statement clearly spelling out all issues both sides plan to discuss. As in Bangkok, the Ufa statement had all the ingredients to move the dialogue process forward. But it failed to clearly spell out that “all outstanding issues” also meant Kashmir. The Indian media, present in strength in Ufa, immediately hailed – with a gentle nudge from South Block – the statement as a victory for India. This foray into a kind of triumphalism triggered an opposite reaction in Pakistan. And that terminated the Ufa breakthrough. Two other opportunities went abegging because India drew red lines that Pakistan could not have honoured.

    This time the dialogue platter has more subjects than the comprehensive dialogue process that began in 1997. It endured despite being buffeted by the Kargil conflict in 1999, the Parliament House attack in 2001 and a change in government in 2004. But the Mumbai attacks finally killed the spirit behind it just when a breakthrough was imminent. This time, statements by leaders from both countries seem to indicate they intend staying the course. Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj promised to move at a pace Pakistan is comfortable with and Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif maintained that working for the achievement of a peaceful neighborhood is a “cardinal principle” of Pakistan’s foreign policy.

    On a wider geo-political plane, the gesture has travelled far and wide. At hand in Islamabad were high-ranking delegations from 18 countries, assembled to bring closure to the Afghan conflict. Thus the filling of the Indo-Pak breach raises India’s stock for responding to Pakistan’s overtures despite no movement to accelerate the trial of its citizens accused of masterminding the Mumbai attacks. If carried forward with perseverance, it will not just outflank the spoilers in India and Pakistan, but Afghanistan as well. The NSAs of both countries now need to put the rowdier elements under strict vigilance to maintain a conducive environment.

  • Japanese PM Shinzo Abe’s India visit begins December 11

    Japanese PM Shinzo Abe’s India visit begins December 11

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrives on a three day visit to India on December 11. He comes with the conviction that Japan and India have “a bilateral relationship with the greatest potential in the world”. Abe said, “I will turn this potential into reality. I am convinced that Prime Minister Modi and I can achieve this by working together”.

    Key priorities for the discussions between Japanese Prime Minister Abe and Indian Prime Minister Modi will be to make progress with bilateral negotiations regarding civil nuclear energy co-operation and defense ties. A deal for India’s first ‘bullet train’ based on Japanese technology and financing is all set to be concluded. Collaboration on higher education, too, is on the agenda.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to sign a deal with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the country’s first bullet train, with Tokyo financing the bulk of the high-speed rail project between Mumbai and Ahmedabad at a cost of $14.7 billion, one of India’s biggest foreign investments in its infrastructure sector.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe will issue a joint statement on the deal on Saturday during the latter’s visit to India.

    India ranked as the second-biggest recipient of Japanese government-backed yen loans as of fiscal 2013, with a running total of 4.45 trillion yen.

    The railway loan deal could propel it ahead of the largest borrower, Indonesia, which had a 4.72 trillion yen tally.

    Once India decides to adopt Japanese train technology, it will hold a tender for contracts. A consortium including JR East, Kawasaki Heavy Industries and Hitachi is expected to bid.

    The Japan International Cooperation Agency and India’s rail ministry began a joint feasibility study on high-speed rail two years ago.

    With trains zipping along at up to 320 kph, the Mumbai-Ahmedabad railway is expected to shorten travel time between the two western Indian cities from around eight hours to roughly two.

    Construction is supposed to begin in 2017, with completion slated for 2023. India has plans for seven high-speed rail corridors, starting with this one.

  • Obama vows to destroy ISIL & any other organization that ‘tries to harm us’

    Obama vows to destroy ISIL & any other organization that ‘tries to harm us’

    WASHINGTON (TIP): President Barack Obama on Sunday, December 6 issued his most passionate denunciation yet of ISIS, vowing to “destroy” the group in a relentless, strong and smart campaign that is consistent with the nation’s values.

    “This was an act of terrorism designed to kill innocent people,” Obama said. “Here’s what I want you to know. The threat from terrorism is real, but we will overcome it. We will destroy ISIL and any other organization that tries to harm us.”

    But “freedom is more powerful than fear,” said President Obama, warning that falling prey to divisiveness in American society would play into the hands of extremists.

    He also said the US must make it harder for potential attackers to obtain guns.

    Obama, speaking in the symbolic surroundings of the Oval Office, unequivocally told millions of television viewers in prime-time that last week’s mass shooting in San Bernardino, California, was a terrorist attack by a couple who had gone down the “dark path of radicalization” and embraced a
    “perverted” form of Islam.

    Obama vowed that the US would overcome the evolving threat of terrorism, but warned that Americans “cannot turn against one another by letting this fight be defined as a war between America and Islam”.

    “If we’re to succeed in defeating terrorism, we must enlist Muslim communities as some of our strongest allies, rather than push them away through suspicion and hate,” Mr. Obama said. He reminded his audience that Muslim-Americans were part of US society.

    “And, yes, they are our men and women in uniform who are willing to die in defense of our country. We have to remember that,” he said.

    The president warned that turning against America’s Muslim communities would be exactly what Islamist extremists in the so-called Islamic State group want.

    “We will prevail by being strong and smart, resilient and relentless,” Obama said, calling on Congress to take action to outlaw anyone on a terrorist “no fly list” from buying weapons and asking lawmakers to pass a final authorization for U.S. armed forces to wage war on the group.

    And in an appeal that will likely anger conservatives, Obama demanded tougher gun control, saying it was a key part of combating ISIS. He said it is currently too easy for people who want to harm Americans to buy guns.

    “Congress should act to make sure no one on a no-fly list is able to buy a gun. What could possibly be the argument for allowing a terrorist suspect to buy a semiautomatic weapon?This is a matter of national security,” Obama said, and also argued it should be harder to buy powerful assault weapons like those used in the San Bernardino attacks that killed 14 people.

    “What we can do, and must do, is make it harder for them to kill,” Obama said.

    But in a Congress dominated by Republicans, passing a force authorization bill or revisiting gun laws could prove nearly impossible.

    While the speech was mostly a reiteration of Obama’s existing strategy against terrorism, it unfolded against a highly political context.

  • US successfully tests NATO missile defenses off Hawaii

    US successfully tests NATO missile defenses off Hawaii

    HONOLULU (US): The US military says it has shot down a missile off Hawaii in a test of a missile defense system designed to protect NATO forces in Europe from attack.

    The Missile Defense Agency said yesterday that an Air Force C-17 aircraft launched a medium-range target over the ocean southwest of Hawaii on Dec 9.

    The Aegis Weapon System at the Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai launched an interceptor missile after radar detected the target. The SM-3 interceptor moved into the target’s path and destroyed it.

    Defense contractor Raytheon Co said the test’s success keeps the Aegis Ashore program on track for deployment in Romania by year’s end. It says it is expected to operate in Poland in 2018.

  • German Leader Angela Merkel is Time Magazine’s Person of the Year

    German Leader Angela Merkel is Time Magazine’s Person of the Year

    NEW YORK (TIP): Angela Merkel, the Chancellor of Germany, has been named Time Magazine’s Person of the Year 2015. She is the fourth woman to win the award since its inception in 1927 – until 1999 it was known as the Man of the Year award.

    German Leader Angela MerkelIn a profile of Merkel, clocking in at almost 10,000 words, Time dubbed her “Chancellor of the Free World”.

    The magazine’s editor, Nancy Gibbs, wrote in an article announcing the decision : “For asking more of her country than most politicians would dare, for standing firm against tyranny as well as expedience and for providing steadfast moral leadership in a world where it is in short supply, Angela Merkel is Time’s Person of the Year”.

    From helping avert a ‘Grexit’, to taking a leading diplomatic role mediating the conflict in Ukraine, to spearheading Europe’s response to the refugee crisis, 2015 has been a landmark year for Merkel. This year also marked her tenth year as leader of Germany, during which time she has been credited with overseeing the rebuilding of the nation’s economy and its return to power on the world stage.

    In late August, when tens of thousands of migrants fleeing war in the Middle East streamed into Hungary, threatening a humanitarian crisis, Merkel agreed to suspend the European Union’s asylum rules and allow them to continue into Germany. She declared to skeptical countrymen: “Wir schaffen das,” which translates as, “We can do this.”

    Her “open-door” stance has led to a fall in support for her conservatives and in her own popularity ratings, which have slid to 54 percent from 75 percent over eight months.

    Time also noted her leadership this year in leading the West’s response to Vladimir Putin’s “creeping theft of Ukraine” and welcoming refugees to Germany despite “the reflex to slam doors, build walls and trust no one.”

    Merkel topped a short list of finalists that included U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, who came in third, and Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who was runner-up.

    She is the first individual woman to hold the title since Corazon Aquino in 1986, though women have been honored as part of a group. Last year, a group of Ebola doctors and survivors won the title.

  • SEC, Nassau DA demand Harendra Singh documents from Oyster Bay

    SEC, Nassau DA demand Harendra Singh documents from Oyster Bay

    MINEOLA, NY (TIP): The federal Securities and Exchange Commission has requested documents from the Town of Oyster Bay regarding disputed $20 million loan guarantees obtained by indicted contractor Harendra Singh, says a  December 11 Newsday report.

    The town has also received inquiries from acting Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas about the loan guarantees.

    Oyster Bay disclosed the inquiries in a borrowing prospectus for $3.3 million in bond anticipation notes that were sold last week.

    Oyster Bay’s outside counsel Jonathan Pickhardt of Manhattan said Thursday that the inquiries were about Singh’s companies “and their agreements with the town related to the various concessions, and the SEC in addition has asked for information around some disclosures by the town.”

    Oyster Bay officials said in the borrowing document that they have and will continue to comply with the requests.

    Federal authorities indicted Singh in September on 13 charges that included bribing an Oyster Bay official to obtain loan guarantees. He pleaded not guilty.

    Pickhardt said in an email that the town was also providing documents to federal investigators relating to Singh’s indictment.

    The loans were supposed to finance capital construction at town facilities where two Singh companies, S.R.B. Convention & Catering Corp. and SRB Concessions Inc., have concessions agreements that extend for at least 50 years.

    Newsday has reported that the town’s failure to disclose those potential liabilities in past bond documents could bring sanctions and criminal charges by the SEC. The town said in its new disclosure document that the loan guarantees are invalid, unenforceable and were “entered into without the involvement or knowledge of necessary town officials.”

    Singas said in a statement that “Taxpayers should not guarantee loans to a private business.” She could not comment on pending investigations but said that “any allegation that public resources have been illegally used for private gain will be fully investigated by my office.”

    Singas’ office requested the information on Aug. 25, according to the Oyster Bay disclosure document, two days after Newsday published an article about the town guaranteeing loans on behalf of Singh.

    SEC spokeswoman Judith Burns declined to comment on the requests made on Oct. 20.

    Singh’s attorney, Anthony LaPinta of Hauppauge, said in a statement that “no crimes were committed in obtaining the loans, I am more than willing to discuss this investigation with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Nassau County DA’s office, as I have with the U.S. Attorney’s Office.”

    The disputed $20 million loan guarantees bear notarized signatures of Town Attorney Leonard Genova. Pickhardt said he could not comment on Genova’s signatures.

    In 2010, the town board authorized the town attorney to sign contracts if the town supervisor was “absent or unavailable.” The $20 million loan guarantees were signed in 2011 and 2012.

    Town officials have portrayed the loan guarantees as the actions of a lone wolf in the town attorney’s office.

    Singh and Town Supervisor John Venditto and other officials have been intertwined through political contributions and the family charity, the Raj & Rajeshwari Foundation. No town officials have been charged in the federal investigation.

  • Stirring the communal pot | Crushing a minority’s way of life will only lead to more alienation

    Stirring the communal pot | Crushing a minority’s way of life will only lead to more alienation

    Since November 13, when seven coordinated attacks in Paris causing 130 deaths, reminiscent of the 26/11 carnage in Mumbai in 2008, shook Europe and made the world pause, public opinion in Western Europe and the US has lurched more to the right. The December 2 shooting spree by a couple of Pakistani origin in Bernardino, California, that left 14 dead has raised questions about the role of Islam in the West.

    In the US, a paroxysm of anti-Islam sentiment has erupted, reflected in the 24 Republican governors, almost half the total, plus a Democrat, refusing to admit any of the 10,000 Syrian refugees that President Barack Obama announced will be admitted. They refused to take even infant orphans, compelling the President to dub such behavior “potent recruitment tool” for the Islamic State. President Obama, quoting Pope Francis in support, added that the US must “protect people who are vulnerable”, irrespective of their faith.

    France reacted to the attack with unforeseen ferocity, with French President Francoise Hollande asserting they will act “without pity”. The unprecedented success thereafter in regional polls of right-wing National Front, combining star power of niece Marion and aunt Marine Le Pen, sweeping six out of 13 regions, had the German Social Democrats declaring it as “wake-up call for democrats in Europe”.

    The most politically incorrect statement came from Donald Trump, front runner amongst US presidential Republican candidates. He said if elected, he would shut the door for all Muslim immigrants, pending a proper review. The White House reacted saying this disqualifies Trump from the race.

    Against this backdrop, India chose to allow its National Security Adviser meet that of Pakistan in Bangkok on December 6-7, accompanied by the foreign secretaries. Questions were raised by the Indian media and the Opposition how this squared with BJP’s much-professed red-lines. In reality, both nations readjusted their positions for mutual accommodation. The Indian condition that the Ufa statement only required terror to be discussed first was dropped as the joint statement indicated discussions having covered peace and security, terrorism and Jammu and Kashmir.

    Pakistan’s insistence to mainstream its proxy, the Hurriyat, was negated by the dialogue moving overseas. On the positive side, Pakistan has positioned Lt Gen Janjua, recently retired corps commander based in Quetta, overseeing operations in Baluchistan, as their NSA, in lieu of Sartaj Aziz. This opens a line to the Pakistani military, though it could also backfire if an obdurate line is adopted by the nominee, who may not be amenable to urgings from the civilian government.

    Literally hours after this meeting, Ms Sushma Swaraj, External Affairs Minister, landed in Pakistan to attend a 14-nation Hearts of Asia conference, pursuant to the Istanbul Process on the regional nations acting in concert to stabilize Afghanistan via confidence-building measures. As is normal, the focus was more on Ms Swaraj’s interaction with Pakistani leaders than the conference. Counting on Pakistani assurances on curbing India-specific terror machinery on Pakistani soil will be risky till concrete change is visible. Afghanistan in this context can be either a bridge for India-Pakistan cooperation or a theatre for lethal contestation.

    In an unprecedented move, Anton Blinken, visiting US Deputy Secretary of State, in a press interview in Delhi, revealed that the US had urged Gen Raheel Sharif, Pakistan’s chief of army staff, during his Washington trip to act against Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e- Mohammed with the same vigor he was showing against the Tehrike Taleban Pakistan. The US planned to hold the general to his promise.

    The conclusion from these choreographed events is that much spade work has gone into reviving the India-Pakistan parleys and mutual commitments on each side addressing the other’s core agenda. However, the lesson from observing the flip-flops in the Modi government’s Pakistan policy, with bonhomie suddenly dissipating into public acrimony, is that there may be more turbulence in the future, particularly once electioneering commences for the polls in W Bengal and Assam.

    The bigger danger to India is from succumbing to the mindless majoritarianism being witnessed in the US and Europe. The debate in India on tolerance has been dismissed by figures close to the Modi regime as baseless. Also ignored is the reasoning that making any group – religious, ethnic or ideological -insecure causes its alienation and increases the possibility of it resorting to extra-constitutional means. Many Donald Trumps occupy responsible positions in India today, but there is no President Barack Obama to confront their bigotry. Even during his state visit to India in January this year, one of Obama’s last messages to PM Modi was for India to retain its commitment to freedom of faith and expression.

    India has, so far correctly, focused on Pakistan-sponsored terror. But today, global jihad emanating from the caliphate of the ISIS is a parallel danger to the entire South Asia. Its initial manifestation is visible in Bangladesh with attacks on foreigners by self-starter groups. As the IS finds itself starved of funds and recruits in its current catchment area, due to migration of population and military pressure by the US and its allies on the one side and Iran and Russia on the other, it may seek to expand to new domains like South Asia.

    Thus the BJP must not ignore when its misguided elements stir the communal pot. Punjab has just seen the shadows of old passions swirling at the behest of politicians losing relevance or others seeking to re-emerge from the sidelines where history cast them. Let two examples suffice. The Congress let the Punjabi Suba agitation persist from 1956 to 1966 before finally conceding a linguistic state, obtained by other regions a decade earlier. It was, in fact, PM Lal Bahadur Shastri’s gift to a state that proved more than its loyalty in the 1965 War. But after his demise, a moth-eaten award was handed out, leaving bitterness and alienation that eventually allowed the radicals to seize control of political processes. Secondly, the fate of Kashmiri Pandits shows that majoritarianism crushing a minority’s way of life is not religion specific.Hopefully, PM Modi having imbibed the Bihar lesson will now deliver on his own slogan – Sabka saath, sabka vikaas, not just nationally but regionally.

  • Gurdwara Vandalized in Los Angeles With Anti-ISIS Graffiti

    Gurdwara Vandalized in Los Angeles With Anti-ISIS Graffiti

    BUENA PARK (TIP) Dec 6: A Gurdwara has been vandalized in Buena Park, Greater Los Angeles Area with Gang graffiti scribbled on the exterior of the Sikh Center. An expletive and the word “ISIS” was scrawled on a community member’s truck, according to the Sikh Coalition. The incident, which occurred early on Sunday, December 6, morning is being investigated by local law enforcement agencies.

    “We are concerned about the safety and security of our community members. We are of the opinion that this is a hate crime and that this is a direct result of a possible backlash from the San Bernardino killings,” said Inderjot Singh, president of Sikh Gurdwara in Buena Park.

    “We believe that the Gurdwara Singh Sabha was vandalized because it is a Sikh house of worship,” the coalition’s attorney Gurjot Kaur said in a statement. “We call on local and federal agencies to investigate this vandalism as a hate crime and request increased law enforcement security at the gurdwara immediately.”

    “The Gurdwara was vandalized during early hours of Sunday and a hateful graffiti was seen on the walls of the Gurdwara and also a truck parked in the parking lot. The graffiti included the phrase, “F@#k ISIS,” and the words “Islam” and other reference of gangs,” Washington-based Sikh Council on Religion and Education said in a statement.

    The Gurdwara is attended by over 800 community members on a weekly basis. The White House, which was informed about the incident, has forwarded the incident to the Department of Homeland Security to investigate.

    “The Sikh community across the nation is in a heightened state of alert and is deeply troubled by this latest incident. We are appealing to all Sikh place of congregation to be in touch with the local law enforcement agencies as well with the elected officials,” Dr Rajwant Singh of the Sikh Council on Religion and Education, said.

    Dr Singh also expressed concern over the recent anti-Muslim rhetoric made by some of the contenders of the American presidency.

    “This will directly result in elevated level of violence against minority religions in America and particularly the Sikhs. We are fearful that this kind of hate speech against Muslims with engulf Sikhs and members of the Muslim community across the nation,” he said.

    Buena Park police are investigating the incident, Cpl. Bret Carter said.

    When officers arrived at the temple, they saw the vandalized truck leaving the parking lot and noticed the ISIS scrawl on it, Carter said. It was unclear when the graffiti was sprayed on the vehicle, because officers were unable to speak to or identify the driver.

    In the wake of the shooting rampage in San Bernardino, the Sikh community is fearful of assaults on their members.