Month: March 2016

  • If educated and over 18-yrs, woman can’t allege rape after consent: HC

    If educated and over 18-yrs, woman can’t allege rape after consent: HC

    NEW DELHI (TIP): If a woman is educated and above 18 years of age and yet does not exercise her right to say ‘no’ to a sexual relationship, then she cannot later allege rape when the relationship turns sour, the Bombay high court has held.

    The court also observed that although
    “society has taboos around sexual relationships”, yet, if a woman does not say no to a sexual relationship, the same must be considered “consensual”.

    The observations came while the court was hearing a plea filed by a 25-year-old man seeking pre-arrest bail. According to his plea, the man was in a year-long relationship with a 24-year-old woman from Goregaon.

    The two were also physically intimate and the man had promised to marry her. However, at the end of the year, he could not keep his promise and the two broke up.

    Soon after, the woman accused the man of having raped her. She registered an FIR against him with the police on several charges, such as rape, cheating and assault. She alleged that while they were in a relationship, the man would take her to several hotels across the city and force her to have sexual intercourse, all the while assuring that he would marry her.

    The woman also alleged that she got pregnant during this period, and the man forced her to undergo an abortion. The woman also said she used to help him financially. Fearing arrest, the man approached the high court.

    The woman’s counsel, meanwhile, opposed the plea, saying the woman had been
    “wronged and physical relationship on false promise of marriage must be considered as rape”.

    But Justice Mridula Bhatkar, presiding over the matter, junked the woman’s plea.

    “This cannot be considered as rape. You are a major, educated, and you have a choice of saying no. But if you did not say no at the time, then it will be considered as mutual consent. When the woman is educated and mature, she can say no. When she says yes, then it becomes mutual,” Justice Bhatkar said while granting pre-arrest bail to the man. She, however, directed him against “contacting or harassing the woman or her family members in any manner”.

     

  • Maumoon Abdul Gayoom says India remains Maldives’ most important strategic ally

    Maumoon Abdul Gayoom says India remains Maldives’ most important strategic ally

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Amid the current thaw in bilateral ties, former Maldivian president Maumoon Abdul Gayoom on Tuesday said India remains the “most important strategic” partner of Maldives.

    “India was and remains the most strategically important partner of Maldives, whether it is our ties in education and army and navy training and the recent goodwill visit of ships to our country only prove that. And, we wish to continue our ties,” he said.

    Indian aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya along with its support ships INS Mysore and INS Deepak recently were on a four-day visit to Maldives.

    The former Maldivian president said this in response to a question after delivering an address on “Islam: A Religion of Peace” at the Observer Research Foundation here.

    Gayoom also condemned acts of terrorism perpetrated globally in the name of Islam and said militant outfits like Islamic State (ISIS) are “not fighting a holy war” or upholding the rights of Muslims with their mindless violence born out of religious ignorance.

    “The nature of acts committed by ISIS only stem out of ignorance about Islam. Anyone who understands the basic tenets of this religion knows that it forbids violence and killing of any kind unless prescribed by law for crimes like murder …

    “ISIS by its terror activities is neither fighting a holy war or upholding the rights of the Muslim community. Thousands of people are being killed in terror attacks and I condemn all such violence and wars waged in the name of religion,” Gayoom said.

    “But, let me add here that those committing acts of violence in the name of Islam are barely one per cent of the global Muslim population, which is largely peaceful and therefore fear and suspicion about Muslims generated among people in many parts of the world after events like September 11 attack also show lack of understanding of Islam on their part. So, the image of Islam gets tarnished both ways,” he said.

    The Maldivian leader further said, a Muslim is not someone who says so but he becomes a Muslim by his act, or for that matter a Hindu or a Christian.

    “And that act as the Holy Quran says is of kindness and compassion and tolerance … The tenets in our holy books say that killing one man equals killing whole of mankind,” he said.

    “But acts of terrorism have been committed by non-Muslims groups too like the Ku Klux Klan, the IRA, Red Army and the LTTE. So, people must understand that Islam or for that matter any religion teaches peace and harmony and a few people use it for waging a war,” he said.

  • 15 IS militants killed in Afghan airstrikes

    15 IS militants killed in Afghan airstrikes

    KABUL (TIP): At least 15 members of the Islamic State (IS) militant group were killed in airstrikes in the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar, the government said on Monday. “Acting upon confirmed intelligence reports, the pilotless plane of the coalition forces stormed a hideout of IS militants in Achin district last night,” Xinhua quoted a government statement as saying.

    The district, bordering Pakistan, has been the scene of heavy clashes between IS militants and security forces, backed by pro-government local militiamen over the past couple of months.

    In an unrelated incident, six Taliban militants were killed and seven injured after security forces repelled an attack on three villages in Darqad district of Takhar province, a police spokesperson said.

     

  • Bangladesh top court upholds Jamaat leader’s death sentence

    Bangladesh top court upholds Jamaat leader’s death sentence

    DHAKA (TIP): Bangladesh’s Supreme Court has upheld the death sentence of a top Islamist leader for war crimes during the country’s independence struggle against Pakistan in 1971, paving the way for his execution.

    Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha announced the apex court’s verdict to dismiss the appeal of Jamaat-e-Islami stalwart and media tycoon Mir Quasem Ali, who was convicted of murder and abduction during Bangladesh’s liberation war.

    “The sentence (death penalty) is maintained,” Sinha announced in a crowded courtroom.

    The decision of the five-member bench of the top court came 16 months after the country’s International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) sentenced 63-year-old Ali to death for atrocities committed during the liberation war in 1971. He had challenged the verdict.

    He was convicted of running a militia torture cell, Al Badr, that carried out killings of several people.

    The court found as valid most of the charges against him, including carrying out murders and tortures siding with the Pakistani troops in line with the policy of Jamaat, which was opposed to Bangladesh’s 1971 independence.

    Ali headed a media corporation aligned with Jamaat before his arrest in 2012.

    He was the Al Badr’s third most important functionary after Jamaat-e-Islami chief Motiur Rahman Nizami and Secretary General Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid. (PTI)

  • China helped Pak to block India’s NSG membership bid: Aziz

    China helped Pak to block India’s NSG membership bid: Aziz

    ISLAMABAD (TIP): Pakistan along with its “all-weather” ally China has successfully blocked India’s bid to become a member of the elite Nuclear Suppliers Group, Pakistan Prime Minister’s Advisor on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz has said.

    India has been seeking membership to the 48-member nuclear club, whose members can trade in and export nuclear technology. NSG is a powerful multinational body concerned with reducing nuclear proliferation.

    Pakistan with the cooperation of China had successfully blocked India’s bid to seek membership of the NSG, Aziz told the Senate yesterday. While countries like the US have backed India’s membership in the NSG, China has only offered conditional support to New Delhi.

    China’s Foreign Ministry had called for “prudence and caution” over expanding the NSG. Asked whether China wants to back any other country’s entry into NSG, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Hua Chunying had said, “as for the expansion of the group, the members should make the decision on consensus after thorough discussions. India’s inclusion into this group is an internal matter of the group. It needs prudence and caution and thorough discussions among all members.”

    “We support such discussion and we also support India’s inclusion into this group if it meets all the requirements,” she had said in January last year. In November, media reports said China had assured Islamabad that if India is granted membership of the NSG, China would ensure that Pakistan also joined the group.

    Pakistan has been saying that if it is deprived of NSG membership while India is accommodated, it would be taken as discrimination and lead to an imbalance in the region. Chinese and Pakistani leaders have views their relationship as “all-weather”.

  • NCPD Officers, Police Medics and Residents honored for Saving Life of Seaford Referee

    NCPD Officers, Police Medics and Residents honored for Saving Life of Seaford Referee

    Nassau County Executive Edward P. Mangano and Acting Police Commissioner Thomas C. Krumpter honored members of the Nassau County Police Department and residents whose heroic actions helped save the life of Terry Twibell, a Seaford resident who went into cardiac arrest while refereeing a basketball game.

    County Executive Mangano states, “We are blessed to have such caring residents as well as professional, hard-working and dedicated members of the Nassau County Police Department. Together, their collective efforts saved the life of Terry Twibell and I commend them for their actions.”

    On February 1st of this year, Terry was in the middle of refereeing a basketball game at Seaford Middle School when he suddenly went into cardiac arrest. With the help of several spectators, they were able to come to Terry’s aid by implementing CPR and utilizing an AED, which provided a life-saving shock. Nassau County Police Officers and Police Medics arrived on the scene shortly after receiving the 911 call. Police Officers were able to lower Terry’s core temperature to preserve vital organs and the patrol officers who arrived were instrumental in providing a full emergency escort from Seaford to Winthrop University Hospital in Mineola. Terry joined the County Executive and Police Commissioner at an event in Carle Place to thank all involved for helping to save his life.

  • Dr. VK Raju addressed the AIMS Delegates in India – PICNEWS

    Dr. VK Raju addressed the AIMS Delegates in India – PICNEWS

    Morgantown, West Virginia based eminent ophthalmologistDr. VK Raju who holds various positions including Chairman, Goutami Eye Institute, AP, Advisor – Indo-US Healthcare Summit, Director, International Ocular Surface Society was recently in India where he addressed the All India Ophthalmological Society (AIOS)delegates at the 74th Annual Conference in Kolkata. Over 10,000 ophthalmologists attended the congress.

    Dr. VK Raju is passionately committed to preventing blindness all across the world, particularly in India, and more particularly among children. He is most of the time touring various countries, holding eyes camps. He has set up an eye hospital in Hyderabad in India. His Eye Foundation America has raised millions to help prevent and treat blindness.

    The AIOS was established in the year 1930. The objects of the Society are cultivation and promotion of the study and practice of ophthalmic sciences, research and man-power development with a view to render service to the community and to promote social contacts among ophthalmologists of the country.

    The Society organizes Annual Conferences in different parts of the country. In these conferences a number of scientific programs, Symposia, Seminars, Workshops, Refresher Courses, Wet Labs etc. are conducted for the promotion and mutual exchange of knowledge in the field of Ophthalmic Science.

  • HAB BANK Hosts Healthcare Professional Dinner on Long Island

    HAB BANK Hosts Healthcare Professional Dinner on Long Island

    GARDEN CITY, NY (TIP): HAB BANK, nation’s oldest and largest South Asian American bank, hosted a dinner for Healthcare Professionals at Akbar Restaurant, Garden City, New York, Sunday, March 6, 2016. The event was organized under the auspices of Mr. K.K. Mehta, President & Senior Partner of K.K. Mehta Associates PLLC.

    Mr. Saleem Iqbal, President & CEO of HAB BANK welcomed invited guests and thanked them for taking the time out, during a weekend, to be at the Healthcare Professional dinner. He advised the guests that HAB is honored and thankful to Mr. K.K. Mehta for co-hosting the event with HAB. Mr. Iqbal, in his presentation highlighted the rich history and strengths of HAB. During his presentation, Mr. Iqbal announced HAB’s new product solely targeted to Healthcare Professionals especially doctors. HAB’s new Healthcare Professional loan goes up to $500,000 and can be used for various purposes including working capital, equipment acquisition, and Insurance premium financing. He pointed out that the loan decisions are made within 72 hours once the documentation requirements are complete. Mr. Iqbal told the guests that the Bank believes in building long-term relationships and has a wide range of products and services such as online banking, Remote Deposit Capture, Merchant Services for businesses. He also brought up the Bank’s Commercial Real Estate loans designed to help investors acquire properties with loans up to $5,000,000. Mr. Mehta, in his remarks, thanked the guests for their presence and being part of dinner highlighting HAB Bank’s Healthcare Professional loans and other services for individual and businesses. He urged the guests to consider moving to HAB Bank and establishing their relationship. However, he clearly mentioned that in order to maintain integrity and independence, he, nor his firm, KK Mehta CPA PLLC, does not enter into any alliance with third party organizations. The attendees should evaluate their banking needs on their own, and KK Mehta CPA PLLC does not take any responsibility.

    HAB’s management was in attendance including, Rizwan Qureshi, SEVP, Zilay Wahidy, EVP, Nasir Khan, SVP, Kamal Puri, Branch Manager Jackson Heights, Mehmood Syed, Senior Business Development Officer, Danial Tariq, Manager Hicksville Branch, Ismail Ahmed, Manager Richmond Hill Branch, Girish Vazirani, Manger Iselin Branch, and Moazam Ali, Hicksville Branch.

    ABOUT HAB BANK: HAB BANK was founded in 1983 and since its inception, it has played a key role in nurturing and strengthening the South Asian community with branch network located in New York, New Jersey and California. Through the years, the Bank has evolved in response to needs of its customers and maintains a close relationship with the community it serves. The Bank’s core products are Commercial Real Estate Mortgages, International Trade Services, US Small Business Loans and a well-designed commercial banking products and services for small to medium sized businesses. The Bank also has a wide range of consumer products and services including personal checking, savings, CDs, and full-service online banking. The Bank is fully committed to remain engaged and pro-active in meeting the banking requirements of its customer and, above all, continues to work towards “Building Relationships”.

    ABOUT K.K. MEHTA CPA ASSOCIATES PLLC : K. K. Mehta CPA Associates PLLC is a full service accounting, tax and consulting firm serving the New York Metropolitan region since 1978. Firm’s clients range from individuals to multi-national organizations of all types and sizes. The company serves a broad range of industries and professions. Our firm is committed to providing the highest level of professional and personalized services in a cost effective manner.

    K.K. Mehta CPA Associates are one of the largest accountants for healthcare and hospitality industry. The firm strives hard to look for strategies and techniques to minimize your taxes and assist you in growing your business.

  • DiNapoli: Audit Finds NYC Needs to Improve Income Verification and Enforcement at Mitchell-Lama Housing

    DiNapoli: Audit Finds NYC Needs to Improve Income Verification and Enforcement at Mitchell-Lama Housing

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Some residents of Mitchell-Lama apartments in New York City make far more than the program’s maximum allowed incomes and pay a modest monthly surcharge as their only penalty, according to an audit released today by New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli. The audit found the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) has not done enough to verify that residents are reporting their true income and are paying the correct surcharge when their income exceeds allowable limits.

    “The severe shortage of affordable housing in New York demands that subsidized apartments go to the families who need them,” DiNapoli said. “In some Mitchell-Lama buildings, unfortunately, that isn’t the case. HPD needs do a better job of ensuring that apartments are occupied by qualified residents and protect the integrity of the residences built under the Mitchell-Lama program.”

    Residents of Mitchell-Lama’s rental and co-op apartments must submit annual affidavits of their household income. For calendar year 2012, 32,341 households submitted affidavits reporting a wide range of incomes. According to this data, more than half had incomes below $50,000, while 230 units had incomes of $250,000 and above; and several households had incomes exceeding$500,000.

    DiNapoli’s audit examined income affidavits for 2012 reported by 191 residents at five Mitchell-Lama developments – one per borough. The developments were Big Six Towers (Queens); Confucius Plaza (Manhattan); Kings Bay II (Brooklyn); North Shore (formerly Arlington Terrace, in Staten Island); and Tracey Towers (Bronx). These were chosen because they had a number of higher-income residents.

    Resident Incomes Well Over Maximum : If a Mitchell-Lama resident’s self-reported income exceeds the maximum allowable income level, the building management adds a surcharge ranging from 5 to 50 percent of the individual’s monthly rent or co-op fees. Under state law, if a household’s income exceeds the maximum limit by 25 percent or more, the resident must get HPD approval to stay or HPD can remove them. Of 191 sampled tenants, 59 (30 percent) exceeded the maximum limit by at least 25 percent. Many of these tenants exceeded the allowable income by 50 percent. HPD officials said they have not enforced this requirement and instead are pursuing legislative changes to increase surcharges and eliminate the removal clause.

    Of those with incomes exceeding the maximum by 25 percent or more, auditors found several households reporting annual earnings of more than $500,000, including:

    At Kings Bay II (Brooklyn) a household with an income of $801,377 paid $636 in monthly rent (which included the 50 percent maximum surcharge of $191) for a four-room apartment. This monthly rent represented less than 1 percent of the household’s income.

    At Tracey Towers (Bronx) a household making $721,144 paid $911 in monthly rent (which included the 50 percent maximum surcharge of $377) for a five-room apartment. This monthly rent represented 1.5 percent of the household’s income. Inaccurate Income Data : The income that residents list on their affidavits is electronically entered by an outside vendor and sent to the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance (Tax and Finance) for verification. The 2012 affidavits were the most recent available that had gone through this process. The audit found data entry errors related to the income amount in 28 (14 percent) of 191 affidavits sampled.

    Other errors occurred when tenants’ incomes exceeded $1 million and required more than the standard six-digit field for data entry. Two tenants at Penn South, a Manhattan co-op under HPD oversight, earned more than $1 million in 2012. One tenant reported an annual income of$1,167,620 on the affidavit, but the vendor entered only $116,762. The second tenant’s affidavit showed income of $1,422,594, but the vendor input$142,259.

    Failure to Verify Self-Reported Income : HPD officials said they became aware of the data-entry errors when tenants asked why they were subject to an income verification audit. When self-reported income doesn’t match with Tax and Finance records, the building’s management is supposed to conduct an income verification audit by comparing the tenant’s tax returns to his or her affidavit. In December 2014, HPD told Mitchell-Lama’s managing agents to contact all residents whose self-reported 2012 income didn’t match and conduct income verification audits. At Kings Bay II, management told auditors they had not done an audit in five years.

    DiNapoli’s audit recommended that HPD:

    Ensure data sent to Tax and Finance to verify tenant incomes is accurate;

    Ensure that self-reported income is verified and surcharges are properly assessed; and

    Develop formal policies for households that exceed the maximum allowable income limit.

    The full audit can be found at www.osc.state.ny.us/audits/allaudits/093016/15n 3.pdf.

    Background : More than 50 percent of renters and 40 percent of homeowners in New York City exceeded the federal “home affordability threshold” of 30 percent (i.e., percentage of income spent on housing costs). This audit is part of the Comptroller’s statewide initiative to examine public programs designed to improve housing opportunities for working-class residents.

    The Mitchell-Lama program was created in 1955 to provide affordable rental and cooperative housing to moderate-income families. The program offered low interest mortgages financed with tax exempt bonds and real property tax exemptions in exchange for government oversight and limits on profits and residents’ incomes. There are 97 HPD-supervised Mitchell-Lama rental and co-op developments in New York City with more than 45,000 units.

    A related audit in July 2015 found that HPD needed to improve its oversight of the waiting lists of thousands of prospective tenants for Mitchell Lama apartments. Tenants who were next in line for the coveted apartments were sometimes wrongly skipped over.

  • Michael Bloomberg says no to 2016 Presidency run

    Michael Bloomberg says no to 2016 Presidency run

    NEW YORK (TIP): Michael Bloomberg, the former New York City mayor, has said that he will not run for the post of US president as an independent candidate, citing his fear that a three-way race could lead to the election of a candidate like Donald Trump who he thinks would endanger the country.

    “As the race stands now, with Republicans in charge of both Houses, there is a good chance that my candidacy could lead to the election of Donald Trump or Senator Ted Cruz. That is not a risk I can take in good conscience,” Bloomberg wrote in an op-ed yesterday.

    The 74-year-old billionaire businessman had in February publicly announced the idea of leading a third-party campaign. Blomberg slammed Trump, 69, for running a divisive campaign.

    “I have known Mr. Trump casually for many years, and we have always been on friendly terms. I even agreed to appear on ‘The Apprentice’ – twice,” he said.

    “But he has run the most divisive and demagogic presidential campaign I can remember, preying on people’s prejudices and fears,” Bloomberg, the three-term mayor of New York and founder of financial titan Bloomberg, said.

    “Threatening to bar foreign Muslims from entering the country is a direct assault on two of the core values that gave rise to our nation: religious tolerance and the separation of church and state,” he alleged.

    “Attacking and promising to deport millions of Mexicans, feigning ignorance of white supremacists, and threatening China and Japan with a trade war are all dangerously wrong, too,” he said.

    “These moves would divide us at home and compromise our moral leadership around the world. The end result would be to embolden our enemies, threaten the security of our allies, and put our own men and women in uniform at greater risk,” Bloomberg said.

    Bloomberg was similarly critical of Ted Cruz, saying the Texas senator’s “pandering on immigration may lack Trump’s rhetorical excess, but it is no less extreme”.

    His refusal to oppose banning foreigners based on their religion may be less bombastic than Trump’s position, but it is no less divisive, he said.

    “We cannot ‘make America great again’ by turning our backs on the values that made us the world’s greatest nation in the first place. I love our country too much to play a role in electing a candidate who would weaken our unity and darken our future — and so I will not enter the race for president of the United States,” he said.

    “However, nor will I stay silent about the threat that partisan extremism poses to our nation. I am not ready to endorse any candidate, but I will continue urging all voters to reject divisive appeals and demanding that candidates offer intelligent, specific and realistic ideas for bridging divides, solving problems, and giving us the honest and capable government we deserve,” Bloomberg wrote.

  • Implementation of 2030 Agenda to be the focus at single largest forum on women and girls

    Implementation of 2030 Agenda to be the focus at single largest forum on women and girls

    UNITED NATIONS (TIP): Following a milestone year in international development in which world leaders endorsed the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the 60th Session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) will focus firmly on implementation of the ambitious agreement. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by UN Member States in September 2015 are a universal roadmap for people and planet, addressing the key challenges of the 21st century, such as poverty, inequality and climate change. Gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls is a goal in itself, and recognized as a central means to achieving the SDGs. Success depends on rigorous implementation.

    The Commission is the single largest forum for Member States and other stakeholders to commit to new actions for advancement of women and their empowerment. This year’s CSW is the first after the adoption of the new 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. The session thus will build on the momentum garnered in September 2015 when, in conjunction with the adoption of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, more than 90 governments answered UN Women’s call for action to “Step It Up for Gender Equality”. World leaders pledged measurable actions to tackle structural barriers and remaining challenges to the achievement of gender equality in their countries. Civil society and businesses leaders complemented these pledges committing to combat stereotypes and shift practices towards fostering greater equality and opportunity.

    “This gathering of so many of the key partners in the implementation of Agenda 2030 makes this a crucial opportunity to combine our strengths and align decisively around the central issues for action,” said UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka.

    The priority theme for the 60th session will be women’s empowerment and its link to sustainable development.

    Discussions by governments will focus on creating a conducive environment for gender-responsive implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, through actions to ensure enabling laws and policies, solid institutional infrastructures, adequate financial resources, strengthening of participation mechanisms, and investment in sex-disaggregated data, to guide national action.

    Research underlines the benefit of women’s empowerment and gender equality for societies everywhere: for instance, if women played an identical role to men in labor markets, as much as USD 28 trillion could be added to global annual GDP by 2025. When women are at the peace tables, their participation increases the probability of a peace agreement lasting at least two years by 20 per cent, and 35 per cent over 15 years. And a child born to a mother who can read is 50 per cent more likely to survive. Yet, global reviews undertaken in 2015, during the 20 years’ commemoration of the historic Beijing Conference, revealed while there has been progress on women’s rights and gender equality, it has not been enough. Today, only one in five parliamentarians is a woman and women continue to earn less, have fewer assets and bear the burden of unpaid work and care.

    Violence against women continues to affect one in three women, making it one of the most widespread human rights violations. The Commission will evaluate progress in the implementation of its agreed conclusions of 2013, on ending violence against women and girls, a pandemic that also comes with enormous economic costs to society.

    The high-level meeting from 14-24 March underlines the determination of governments and activists to move the needle on women’s rights and gender equality. This year over 1,000 NGOs have pre-registered more than 8,100 of their representatives for the meeting. More than 200 side events will be hosted on the UN premises by Member States and UN entities, many of them in collaboration with civil society, about 150 of them in the first week of CSW alone, alongside 450 parallel events by NGOs, in the vicinity of the UN.

  • India’s Foreign Secretary holds talks with US Officials

    India’s Foreign Secretary holds talks with US Officials

    WASHINGTON (TIP): India’s Foreign Secretary Dr. S. Jaishankar visited Washington D.C. on 6-9 March 2016. The visit was aimed at reviewing the India-U.S. bilateral relations and preparing for India’s participation at the forthcoming Nuclear Security Summit later this month.

    During his visit, Foreign Secretary had meetings with NSA Ambassador Susan Rice, Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker, U.S. Trade Representative Mike Froman, Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Under Secretary of State Thomas Shannon, Under Secretary of State Rose Gotteemoeller as well as other senior officials. The meetings focused on further consolidating bilateral relations in the year ahead and enhancing convergence on regional and global issues. In this context, both sides agreed to work for achieving concrete results in key areas of bilateral cooperation including defense, trade& investment and civil nuclear energy. Foreign Secretary also previewed with the U.S. interlocutors the 4th Nuclear Security Summit and India’s participation therein.

    In the U. S. Congress, Foreign Secretary had meetings with Chairman of Senate Foreign Relations Committee Senator Bob Corker, Chairman of Senate Armed Services Committee Senator John McCain and Chairman of Senate Intelligence Committee Senator Richard Burr to exchange views on bilateral, regional and international issues.

  • US Senate kills bid to block F16 sale to Pakistan

    US Senate kills bid to block F16 sale to Pakistan

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Eight US-made F16s have not exactly flown out to Islamabad yet, but well may the engines be fired up and the planes ready to taxi.

    The US Senate on Thursday rejected by a 71-24 margin efforts by some lawmakers to block the sale of eight F- 16 fighter jets to Pakistan, although the debate that accompanied the vote showed how ragged Washington-Islamabad ties have become.

    Full court press from an Obama administration guided by tactical considerations and an arms lobby driven by jobs and money was always going to win the day. But the fact that 24 Senators (12 Democrats; 12 Republicans) went against the Democratic executive and the Republican legislative leadership showed the extent of bipartisan distrust in a country one lawmaker described during the debate as a “Frenemy…part friend and a lot of enemy.”

    Indian and American diplomats keenly watched the legislative dogfight engineered by Kentucky Senator Rand Paul (Republican), who employed a rarely-used provision in the Arms Export Control Act to force a vote – after an hour of debate — in the full Senate to block the sale of the F-16s.

    “We’ve got a lot of things going on in our country that need to be taken care of, and we don’t have enough money to be sending it to Pakistan,” Paul argued on the Senate floor, citing everything from Pakistan’s nurturing of terrorists to its persecution of Christians to stop the sale. “I can’t in good conscience look away as American crumbles at home and politicians tax us to send the money to corrupt and duplicitous regimes abroad,” he added, pointing to some $ 15 billion Washington has given Pakistan post 9/11.

    But the Senate’s foreign relations committee leadership maintained that it was better to dangle the planes before Pakistan so that Washington could have leverage over Islamabad, lest it gravitate towards China and Russia for such purchases. The debate essentially answered the question: why eight jets, and why now.

    “They are just throwing out some bones to Pakistan to keep them in line for the next few months,” one legislative observer explained.

    Republican Senator Bob Corker, who has said he supports the sale but will not allow US taxpayer to subsidize it, explained it more tactfully.

    “It’s about whether we as a country would prefer for Pakistan to buy American made fighter jets or whether we would prefer them to buy Russian jets or French jets,” he observed, adding that he and Senator Cardin, his Democratic counterpart, have called for a hold on financing “to assure there are behavior changes that take place in Pakistan before any US dollars go towards this sale.

  • Barack Obama says Saudi Arabia needs to learn to share region with Iran

    Barack Obama says Saudi Arabia needs to learn to share region with Iran

    WASHINGTON (TIP): President Barack Obama believes that Saudi Arabia, one of America’s most important allies in the Middle East, needs to learn how to “share” the region with its archenemy, Iran, and that both countries are guilty of fuelling proxy wars in Syria, Iraq and Yemen.

    In a series of interviews with the magazine Atlantic published on Thursday, Obama said a number of US allies in the Persian Gulf — as well as in Europe — were “free riders,” eager to drag the United States into grinding sectarian conflicts that sometimes had little to do with US interests. He showed little sympathy for the Saudis, who have been threatened by the nuclear deal Obama reached with Iran.

    The Saudis, Obama told Jeffrey Goldberg, the magazine’s national correspondent, “need to find an effective way to share the neighbourhood and institute some sort of cold peace”. Reflexively backing them against Iran, the president said, “would mean that we have to start coming in and using our military power to settle scores. And that would be in the interest neither of the United States nor of the Middle East.”

    Obama’s frustration with much of the Arab world is not new, but rarely has he been so blunt about it. He placed his comments in the context of his broader struggle to extract the United States from the bloody morass of the Middle East so that the nation can focus on more promising, faster-growing parts of the world, like Asia and Latin America.

    “If we’re not talking to them,” he said, referring to young people in those places, “because the only thing we’re doing is figuring out how to destroy or cordon off or control the malicious, nihilistic, violent parts of humanity, then we’re missing the boat.”

    Obama also said his support of the Nato military intervention in Libya had been a “mistake,” driven in part by his erroneous belief that Britain and France would bear more of the burden of the operation. He defended his refusal not to enforce his own red line against Syria’s president, Bashar Assad, even though Vice-President Joe Biden argued internally, the magazine reported, that “big nations don’t bluff.”

    The president disputed criticism that he should have done more to resist the aggression of President Vladimir Putin of Russia in Ukraine. As a neighbour of Russia, Obama said, Ukraine was always going to matter more to Putin than to the United States. This meant that in any military confrontation between Moscow and the West, Russia was going to maintain “escalatory dominance” over its former satellite state.

    “The fact is that Ukraine, which is a non-Nato country, is going to be vulnerable to military domination by Russia no matter what we do,” he said. “This is an example of where we have to be very clear about what our core interests are and what we are willing to go to war for.”

    Obama, who has spoken regularly to Goldberg about Israel and Iran, granted him extraordinary access. The portrait that emerges from the interviews is of a president openly contemptuous of Washington’s foreign-policy establishment, which he said was obsessed with preserving presidential credibility, even at the cost of blundering into ill-advised military adventures.

    “There’s a playbook in Washington that presidents are supposed to follow,” Obama said. “And the playbook prescribes responses to different events, and these responses tend to be militarized responses.” This consensus, the president continued, can lead to bad decisions. “In the midst of an international challenge like Syria,” he said, “you are judged harshly if you don’t follow the playbook, even if there are good reasons.”

    Although Obama’s tone was introspective, he engaged in little second-guessing. He dismissed the argument that his failure to enforce the red line in Syria, or his broader reticence about using military force, had emboldened Russia. Putin, he noted, invaded Georgia in 2008 during the presidency of George W Bush, even though the United States had more than 100,000 troops deployed in Iraq.

    Similarly, the president pushed back on the suggestion that he had not been firm enough in challenging China’s aggression in the South China Sea, where it is building military installations on reefs and islands, some of which are claimed by the Philippines and other neighbours.

    “I’ve been very explicit in saying that we have more to fear from a weakened, threatened China than a successful, rising China,” Obama said.

    The president refused to box himself in as a foreign-policy thinker.

    “I suppose you could call me a realist in believing we can’t, at any given moment, relieve all the world’s misery,” he said.

    But he went on to describe himself as an internationalist and an idealist. Above all, Obama appeared weary of the constant demands and expectations placed on the United States.

  • I think Islam hates us: Trump

    I think Islam hates us: Trump

    WASHINGTON (TIP): In yet another round of controversial remarks, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has said he thinks “Islam hates us” and asserted that those having hatred against the US cannot be allowed to enter the country.

    “I think Islam hates us,” Trump told CNN, Wednesday, March 9, deploring the “tremendous hatred” that he said partly defined the religion. Trump, 69, maintained that the war was against radical Islam, but said, “it’s very hard to define. It’s very hard to separate. Because you don’t know who’s who.”

    Asked if the hate was “in Islam itself,” Trump said that was for the media to figure out. “You’re gonna have to figure that out, OK?” he said when asked if there was hatred in the religion itself.

    “We have to be very vigilant. We have to be very careful. And we can’t allow people coming into this country who have this hatred of the United States,” Trump said. The real estate tycoon-turned politician made headlines in December when he called for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the US “until our country’s representatives can figure out what is going on.”

    Despite widespread condemnation of the remarks, Trump has stood by the proposal. When asked yesterday to outline how he would project power overseas, Trump said “there can be no doctrine” Trump also tried to clarify his position on how far he would go in targeting the families of terrorists.

    He has said in the past that he is in favor of “expanding the laws” that govern how the US can combat and deter terrorism. Trump has also called for bringing back water-boarding, even vowing the US “should go a lot further than water-boarding.”

    But Trump yesterday declined to say what specific measures he would support. “I’ll work on it with the generals. We have to play the game at a much tougher level than we’re playing it now,” he said, without elaborating.

    Meanwhile, fresh from his triple victory on Tuesday in Michigan, Mississippi and Hawaii, Trump held a massive rally in Fayetteville, NC. “Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, and Hawaii. Wow, so we’ve been winning a lot and now this week we have Florida which is an amazing place you know I mean it’s gonna be amazing and as you know we have Ohio where you have an absentee governor,” Trump said referring to his opponent and sitting Ohio Governor John Kasich.

    Trump was cut off during his rally by 17 interruptions from protesters, at one point asking the crowd, “Where do these people come from?”

    Outside, the protesters ejected were joined by many others protesting the billionaire shouting, “No Trump, No KKK, No Fascist USA”.

  • US to make rules-of-the-sky test must for drone users?

    US to make rules-of-the-sky test must for drone users?

    WASHINGTON (TIP): All US drone operators would for the first time have to prove they understand aviation regulations under a legislation introduced on Wednesday in the Senate.

    A bill, setting policy for the Federal Aviation Administration includes several new drone provisions, including a requirement for unmanned fliers to pass an online test, according to summaries of the legislation released by the Senate commerce, science and transportation committee.

    The measure is one of several provisions to improve drone safety following a year of record reports of unmanned aircraft flying too close to planes and helicopters. The bill would also beef up enforcement of drone violations, require safety features on drones and fund programs to intercept wayward drones near airports. While the FAA started this year to require all drone users to register with the agency, there’s no test to ensure they understand restrictions, such as a prohibition on most flights within eight kilometers of an airport.

     

  • Former first lady Nancy Reagan dies at 94 in California

    Former first lady Nancy Reagan dies at 94 in California

    LOS ANGELES (TIP): Nancy Reagan, the helpmate, backstage adviser and fierce protector of Ronald Reagan in his journey from actor to president – and finally during his 10-year battle with Alzheimer’s disease – has died. She was 94.

    The former first lady died on Sunday at her home in Bel-Air, California, of congestive heart failure, said assistant Allison Borio.

    Her best-known project as first lady was the “Just Say No” campaign to help kids and teens stay off drugs.

    When she swept into the White House in 1981, the former Hollywood actress partial to designer gowns and pricey china was widely dismissed as a pre-feminist throwback, concerned only with fashion, decorating and entertaining.

    By the time she moved out eight years later, Mrs. Reagan was fending off accusations that she was a behind-the-scenes “dragon lady” wielding unchecked power over the Reagan administration – and doing it based on astrology to boot.

    All along she maintained that her only mission was to back her “Ronnie” and strengthen his presidency.

    Mrs. Reagan carried that charge through the rest of her days. She served as a full-time caretaker as Alzheimer’s melted away her husband’s memory.

    After his death in June 2004 she dedicated herself to tending his legacy, especially at his presidential library in California, where he had served as governor.

    She also championed Alzheimer’s patients, raising millions of dollars for research and breaking with fellow conservative Republicans to advocate for stem cell studies.

    Her dignity and perseverance in these post-White House roles helped smooth over the public’s fickle perceptions of the former first lady.

    The Reagans’ mutual devotion over 52 years of marriage was legendary. They were forever holding hands. She watched his political speeches with a look of such steady adoration it was dubbed “the gaze.”

    He called her “Mommy,” and penned a lifetime of gushing love notes. She saved these letters, published them as a book, and found them a comfort when he could no longer remember her.

    In announcing his Alzheimer’s diagnosis in 1994, Reagan wrote, “I only wish there was some way I could spare Nancy from this painful experience.” Ten years later, as his body lay in state in the US Capitol, Mrs. Reagan caressed and gently kissed the flag-draped casket.

    As the newly arrived first lady, Mrs. Reagan raised more than $800,000 from private donors to redo the White House family quarters and to buy a $200,000 set of china bordered in red, her signature color.

    She was criticized for financing these pet projects with donations from millionaires who might seek influence with the government, and for accepting gifts and loans of dresses worth thousands of dollars from top designers. Her lavish lifestyle – in the midst of a recession and with her husband’s administration cutting spending on the needy – inspired the mocking moniker “Queen Nancy.”

  • First uterus transplant in US has failed

    First uterus transplant in US has failed

    OMAHA  (TIP): The first uterus transplant in the United States has failed, and the organ was surgically removed March 8, officials at the Cleveland Clinic said on March 9.

    The recipient, a 26-year-old woman, suddenly developed a serious complication on March 8, according to Eileen Sheil, a spokeswoman for the clinic. She did not specify the nature of the problem but said the uterus was being analyzed by pathologists to determine what went wrong.

    The transplant, which used a uterus from woman in her 30s who had died suddenly, was performed on February 24. It was the first of 10 uterine transplants planned by the clinic, in an experimental program meant to enable women without a uterus to become pregnant and give birth. In a statement released on Wednesday afternoon, the clinic said it would continue that effort.

    “The study, which has been planned to include 10 women, is still ongoing with a commitment to the advancement of medical research to provide an additional option for women and their families,” the clinic said.

    The failure occurred only a day after the clinic held a news conference to describe what had seemed to be a successful transplant, with remarks from members of the surgical team and a brief appearance by the patient, who asked to be identified only as Lindsey. In an interview after the session, the lead surgeon, Dr Andreas G Tzakis, said that Lindsey had already undergone one biopsy to check for rejection and that there were no signs of it.

    In its statement announcing the failure, the clinic said, “While this has been difficult for both the patient and the medical team, Lindsey is doing well and recovering.”

    Lindsey, who was born without a uterus, also released a statement.

    “I just wanted to take a moment to express my gratitude towards all of my doctors,” she said. “They acted very quickly to ensure my health and safety. Unfortunately I did lose the uterus to complications. However, I am doing okay and appreciate all of your prayers and good thoughts.”

    Doctors at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden have performed nine uterus transplants, resulting in five births. Two of the nine transplants failed during the first year after the surgery and had to be removed.

    Three other medical centers in the United States are planning to perform uterus transplants on an experimental basis: Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas, Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.

    Dr Alexander Maskin, from the University of Nebraska, called the failure in Cleveland disheartening. He said he knew the surgeons there well and described them as talented and thoughtful. Regarding why a transplant might fail, he said there were several possibilities, including rejection by the patient’s immune system, infection or a problem with the veins and arteries that were connected to the uterus to provide it with blood flow.

    “I figure in the next few days or weeks they’ll figure out what happened,” Maskin said. “I think when the Cleveland team is ready to discuss it with others, I’m sure we’ll share and learn from it. It’s a steep learning curve.” He said that the various medical centers working on uterus transplantation had been sharing information and that the four teams from the United States and 15 from Europe attended a conference about the procedure in January in Gothenburg, sponsored by the Swedish team.

    “We’re still moving forward,” Maskin said. “Sweden had such a positive experience, we hope it will translate to future positive experiences.”

     

  • US man jailed for 40 years for abusing Kenyan orphans

    US man jailed for 40 years for abusing Kenyan orphans

    OKLAHOMA CITY (TIP): A former missionary from Oklahoma convicted of sexually abusing children at an orphanage in Kenya was sentenced on March 7 to 40 years in a federal prison. US district judge David L Russell handed down the sentence to Matthew Lane Durham, 21, who had faced up to 30 years on each of four counts of engaging in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places. He also ordered Durham, of Edmond, to pay restitution of $15,863.

    “These were heinous crimes committed on the most vulnerable victims. He was their worst nightmare come true,” Russell said. Durham, wearing an orange prison-issued jumpsuit, read a statement before sentencing in which he asked the court for mercy but did not express remorse for the offenses he was convicted of. Durham showed no emotion when the sentence was issued. Prosecutors alleged Durham targeted orphans while volunteering at the Upendo Children’s Home in Nairobi between April and June 2014. Durham had served as a volunteer since 2012 at the orphanage, which specializes in caring for neglected children.

    “All I wanted was to follow God’s plan for me,” Durham told the judge. He said he will try to commit himself to serving others while he serves his prison sentence. Although Durham claims he is innocent of the charges, he said he was sorry that the accusations against him had damaged the orphanage and those it cares for. “The Upendo kids do not deserve this,” Durham said.

    In a sentencing memorandum, prosecutors said Durham’s actions have had a chilling effect on the lives of dozens of foreign volunteers in Kenya and elsewhere “who must now live under the cloud of suspicion, distrust and apprehension when they volunteer their time, talent and resources for the betterment of children in East Africa and beyond.”

     

  • ‘H-1B Fee issue will impact Indo-US defense trade’

    ‘H-1B Fee issue will impact Indo-US defense trade’

    WASHINGTON(TIP): The doubling of H-1B visa fee would impact India’s purchase of defense equipment from the US as the move would affect the country’s IT exports that generate money to buy the American military hardware, a top American industry advocacy group has warned.

    “If India’s export gets impacted because of H-1B issue, then it would have an impact on India’s purchase of defense equipment from the US, because India is (one of) the largest buyer (of military hardware in the world),” told Mukesh Aghi, president of US India Business Council.

    “For India IT services in the US is slightly over $60 billion. It is the largest export of India into the US,” he said.

    “And if it (India) does not earn foreign exchange then how it will pay. So I think, it does have an impact directly or indirectly on job creation in the US,” Aghi said responding to a question on the recent discriminatory policies of US against Indian IT companies.

    Indian companies, he said have invested over $19 billion in the United States creating large amounts of jobs. “Secondly the (Indian) IT workers do make US companies much more competitive on a global basis. And classic example is the banking industry in the US after 2008 financial crisis a big chunk of our work is being done by Indian companies and they become world class stronger,” he said.

    “We are very much against the imposition of this discriminatory penalty on Indian companies,” Aghi said in response to a question.

    Meanwhile, the Senate Judiciary Committee has scheduled another hearing on ‘Impact of High Levels of Immigrations on US Workers’. This is the second such similar hearing in less than a fortnight.

    The hearing has been convened by Senator Jeff Sessions, Chairman of the Senate subcommittee on Immigration and National Interest of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

    Sessions had recently endorsed Donald Trump the Republican presidential front runner.

    During a Congressional hearing on February 25, Senator Jeff Sessions and Senator Dick Durbin agreed on need to reform two temporary work visas, the H-1B and L-1, because corporations use them to keep wages low.

    Last year, US President Barack Obama had signed into law a $1.8 trillion spending package which among other things introduces a hefty $4,000 fee for certain categories of H-1B visa and $4,500 for L1 visa. Companies having more than 50 employees and having more than 50 per cent of their US employees on H-1B and L1 visas would have to pay the new fee when the next visa application session kicks off on April 1. India alleged that the recent US measures “appear to raise the overall barriers for service suppliers from India seeking entry into the United States.”

  • Volume 10 Issue 10 | New York

    Volume 10 Issue 10 | New York

    Celebrating 10 Years of The Indian Panorama

    10 years

    This Week’s Print Edition

    Reimagined for the Web
    Volume 10 Issue 10 | Desktop Edition | Mar 11

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    VOL 10 ISSUE 10 of The Indian Panorama Weekly Indian American Newspaper
    VOL 10 ISSUE 10

     

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    As a home delivery subscriber to The Indian Panorama, you enjoy the convenience and reliability of having the printed newspaper delivered to you first thing in the morning every Saturday.

    This incredible offer is available for 2016 at an introductory price of $5 per month (including shipping & handling – US Only). To know more email subscriptions@theindianpanorama.news

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  • Mr. Trump, blaming Islam amounts to barking at the wrong tree

    Mr. Trump, blaming Islam amounts to barking at the wrong tree

    I want to assure Mr. Trump that Islam does not hate America, nor does Islam kill people, just as Guns don’t kill, but individuals do.

    Mr. Trump is seeking guidance when he says, “we have to get to the bottom of it” and I am pleased to offer my services to coach him in Islam and Muslim psyche.

    Jesus did not give permission to Christians to go on the crusades, inquisitions, genocides of Native Americans, Holocaust, Bosnia and massacres etc.? It is not Christians, but the men who did not get Christianity committed those crimes.

    Muhammad did not give permission to Muslims to gas the Kurds, commit 9/11, genocide of people in Darfur? He did not give permission to the ISIS animals to forcibly subject Christian, Yazidi and Shia women to sex abuse?  It is not Muslims, but the men who did not get Islam committed those crimes.

    If we are inclined to believe in that non-sense, we have a serious responsibility to find the truth, and truth shall set us free.

    Bad things happen because those creeps did not get their religion right.

    Who do you blame, religion or the creeps?

    If you blame the creeps what happens? You’ll hunt them down wherever you can find them, and punish according to restore trust in the society, so no one can live in apprehension or tensions.

    If you blame the religion what happens? Mr. Trump, nothing happens! It is the dumbest thing to blame the religion!  Religion is not a being, it is an intangible item, and you cannot shoot, kick, beat, thrash, hang, kill or bury a religion. Let’s not bark at religion, it does not good and no problem will be solved except aimless barking.

    Problem remains, people will continue to remain apprehensive and fearful of each other. Let’s find solutions to these problems.

    We are indeed committed to build a cohesive America, where no American has to live in Apprehension or fear of each other.


    (The author is a community consultant, social scientist, thinker, writer, news maker, and a speaker on Pluralism, Interfaith, Islam, politics, terrorism, human rights, India,  Israel-Palestine and foreign policy. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions on issues of the day. Visit him in 63 links at www.MikeGhouse.net for his writings at TheGhousediary.com)

  • No, Trump, Islam Doesn’t Hate America

    No, Trump, Islam Doesn’t Hate America

    Donald Trump told CNN that Islam hates America. Like the Muslims who fight and die for, and otherwise serve, this country? Outrageous.

    Donald Trump’s interview to CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Wednesday, March 9 has invited sharp reactions. Trump had said, “I think Islam hates us”.

    Donald Trump took his anti-Muslim jihad to a new, bone-chilling level on Wednesday night. That’s when he declared to CNN’s Anderson Cooper that “Islam hates us.” Trump is wrong, but let me blunt. I hate Trump. Not because he demonizes Muslims, but because he’s a threat to our nation’s soul.

    If Trump truly thinks “Islam hates us,” then he should tell that to the families of Muslim Americans who have died for our country. I doubt Trump has the balls to tell the family of U.S. Army Capt. Humayun Khan, who received the Purple Heart and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery after being killed in Iraq in 2004. And let’s see Trump tell that to the family of Corp. Kareem Khan, who also received the Purple Heart and is buried in Arlington after giving his life in 2007 in defense of our nation.

    “We have to be very vigilant. We have to be very careful. And we can’t allow people coming into this country who have this hatred of the United States,” Trump said. The real estate tycoon-turned politician made headlines in December when he called for a temporary ban on Muslimsentering the US “until our country’s representatives can figure out what is going on.”

    Does Trump even have the courage to tell the Muslims who have volunteered to serve our nation, including my cousin who served in the U.S. Marines, that they hate America?In fact, almost 6,000 Muslims are currently serving in our armed forces fighting to ensure that all Americans-not just ones of certain faiths-have the same rights.

    Will Trump tell the Muslims serving in our Congress, Keith Ellison and Andre Carson, that they hate America? Will he say that to the thousands of Muslims serving as police officers, paramedics, judges, schoolteachers, and others in professions designed to help the people of our nation?

    Nah, Trump won’t ever do that because bullies are cowards. But what Trump despicably did during his interview on CNN was to paint all Muslims as potential threats to our country. “It’s very hard to define” and “very hard to separate” the good from the bad Muslims, “because you don’t know who’s who,” Trump stated.

    I want you to think about what Trump is saying here. The GOP frontrunner is telling Americans to fear every single Muslim because any one of them might be plotting to kill you and your family. If you believe Trump’s words, what’s the next likely step?Trump has already proposed policies to discriminate against Muslim Americans, which polls show his supporters overwhelmingly support. What could be in store next for American Muslims?

    Maybe because I recently read an article saying that Trump, according to his ex-wife, kept by his bedside a book of Hitler’s speeches that the Fuhrer gave during his ascent to power, I couldn’t help but wonder, what did Jews living in Germany when Hitler first sought office think? Did they dismiss his extreme rhetoric as nothing more than political talk to get the support of people? Or were they frightened, like many Muslim Americans are today?

    To be clear, I’m am in no way saying that if he became president, Trump would be like Hitler, seizing emergency powers and worse. But perhaps we need to pause as a nation when Anne Frank’s stepsister, Eva Schloss, an Auschwitz survivor, warned us in January that Trump “is acting like another Hitler by inciting racism.”

    But Trump’s hate has not just been about Muslims. His campaign from Day One can best be best summed up as putting minorities back in their place. That’s why we have seen white supremacists flock to Trump’s side. For example, the vile white supremacist leader Jared Taylor, a man who publicly endorsed Trump and has made robocalls on Trump’s’ behalf, wrote a few months ago: “Donald Trump may be the last hope for a president who would be good for white people.”

    And Trump has given these hatemongers exactly what they have been dreaming of for years. He has stirred up hate versus Latinos, implying that they were coming to rape your wives and daughters. He has defended his white supporters in November beating up a Black Lives Matter protester and calling the man a “monkey” and the n-word. And we just saw Trump refuse to denounce the support of former Klan leader David Duke.

    But let’s return to Trump’s comment that Islam hates us. Is there a fraction of Muslims who hate our nation? No doubt. Is that because of Islam, a religion that came into being over a thousand years before America was founded? The counter-terrorism experts I have spoken to have made it clear that the anger directed against our nation is generally grounded in foreign policy grievances or personal issues such as wanting to join an organization that makes them feel a sense of self-worth. But there is a fraction of radical religious leaders who will try to teach younger Muslims that somehow America is a religious-based enemy. We must be united to countering their hateful message, not divided along religious lines as ISIS hopes we become.

    Perhaps Trump is simply making the remarks about Muslims now because the GOP race is tightening and he knows bashing Muslims plays well with the GOP base. Trump noted as much after Ben Carson stated in October that no Muslim should be president of the United States, and he got a big boost in the polls. Trump then remarked, Carson’s “been getting a lot of ink on the Muslims… I guess people look at that and they probably like it.” Within weeks Trump began first using Muslims as a scapegoat.

    Or perhaps Trump’s info comes from Frank Gaffney, whose poll Trump read from on the campaign trail about alleged hatred of Muslims. Gaffney is a discredited figure whom the Southern Poverty Law Center recently listed as the leader of an Anti-Muslim group. And Gaffney has also been a supporter of the very same White Supremacy leader, Jared Taylor, who has been campaigning for Trump. As the SPLC notes, Gaffney invited Taylor on his radio show and has heaped praise upon his work that promotes “anti-Black and anti-Latino racists.”

    No, Islam doesn’t hate America. But Trump clearly hates American values.


    (The author is a former lawyer turned political comedian and writer, is the host of The Dean Obeidallah show on SiriusXM radio. He co-directed the comedy documentary The Muslims Are Coming! His blog is The Dean’s Report)

  • Three most dangerous Presidents in America on Day one

    Three most dangerous Presidents in America on Day one

    On Day #1, they want to repeal Obama care. Forget their hatred for the President, but look at their political meanness to deprive 22 Million Americans of their health insurance. Many of those Americans may be facing life threatening ailments. When they repeal Obama-care on Day # 1, a number of them may die for lack of access to the necessary health care. Do American lives matter to them?

    For the first time in American history, the U.S. Government has put the money to right use, to care for Americans rather than blow it on destroying other nations like Iraq and Afghanistan. For the first time pre-existing conditions were covered by health insurance, it is important to know that many American lives have been saved and will continue to be saved. These three men care less about ordinary Americans. While they can afford to buy any insurance, the average Americans living from pay check to pay check cannot.

    Our country needs a strong defense system to fight off external aggression as well as internal health aggressions. The three should be grateful to Obama for having implemented the measures and means of paving the way for a healthier America and saving American lives.

    Furthermore, on Day #1 – they also want to tear up the Iran deal. That would certainly appease Netanyahu, but completely disregards the long term security of Israel, and as a consequence it would free Iran to pursue the Nuclear Weapons program which brings uncertainty and instability to the region.

    President Obama has removed a potential threat to Israel with this deal; and the American Jews have the wisdom to recognize this and support it.

    President Carter, the architect and the facilitator of a permanent Peace Treaty between Israel and its onetime arch enemy Egypt brought relief, after that Israel had one less enemy to worry and thus saved tension, tanks and lives. I am sure the thoughtful American Jewry will express their gratitude to President Carter. Indeed, Israel should install a statue of President Carter at the Ben Gurion Airport to express their gratitude to him.

    President Clinton on the other hand took out another enemy on the east; Jordan, and President Obama has given the iron dome to Israel and has removed another enemy; Iran.

    Tearing up the Iran Deal would be one of the gravest blunders in the US Foreign policy. It would amount to recklessly rejecting Iran’s partnership treaty with Russia, China, UK, Germany, France and the United States. How do you build coalitions if you are disrespectful to nations that work with us on common goals of reducing conflicts and focusing on economic development?  If we mess with this deal; Iran is likely to become another Rogue Nuclear nation like North Korea and pose a direct and greater threat to Israel.

    For the first time in fifty years, a U.S., President has done the right thing, a conservative thing to develop and implement a foreign policy based on friendship and treaties rather than animosity and hostilities.

    We may destroy Iran, but we will also destroy ourselves much more. Gas prices will go up for millions of servicemen/repairmen to make service calls, as it happened towards the end of the Bush era. Small businesses will fold, divorces will become routine, home foreclosures will be back, loss of lives of our men and women, and a few more trillion dollars of deficit will be added to our budget.

    Why is little Rubio screaming in every sentence to save our ally Israel? Israel does not need friends like him who will ruin their long term security. Israel needs prudent, wise and visionaries like Obama, Clinton and Carter who will bring long term peace and security to them by turning enemies into friends and partners in peace and cooperation.

    The things Rubio has been clinging on to are repeal Obama-care, tearing up the Iran Deal and supporting Israel’s paranoia. Every sentence he utters is about supporting Israel, and I am sure Trump supporters resent that, because they want America first and not Israel. Rubio’s non-sensual rhetoric may increase anti-Semitism in the form of resentment. He and Cruz are dangerous to Israel not only from Americans, but also from those five nations (Russia, China, UK, France and Germany) whose nuclear contracts with Iran they plan to trash, and it is like spitting in their faces. The costs of the idiotic behavior of Rubio will not fall on themselves, but on the average. I wonder if Saudi Arabia, Germany or UK can throw enough bones at him to let him bark for them. He does not give a crap about the 22 Million Americans’ health care or our economy. He has a serious character flaw.

    Ted Cruz, the bloody war monger will carpet bomb other nations like Bush did, and he will add a few more trillion dollars of deficit to the budget, and shoot the unemployment rate through the roof to go up to 12%, more divorces will follow, home foreclosures will rise, and businesses will start closing down. Yes, neither Cruz does care what happens to America. He and some of his macho men may draw sadistic pleasure from destroying other nations, but we the people do not want destruction, for which we end up paying again.

    Furthermore, Cruz has been disrespectful towards the Supreme Court Justices and their decisions. Is he above the law to use such vulgar language about them?  He does not seem care, he would let our government shut down and ruin our credit ratings, and he does not give a rat’s ass about the 22 Million Americans’ health care either. Voting for Cruz is regressing to the big bad times of Bush Administration.

    Trump will turn his back on nuclear Non-proliferation Deals and peace negotiations just to advance his own agenda, and not necessarily what is good for America. Foreign leaders are not his employees whom he fires at his whim; instead they will turn around and tell him to take a hike. The Muslim nations, some 56 of them would not want to be humiliated by these idiots and will turn to Russia or the UK to purchase their military hardware. Who will be the losers? The men and women employed in our export and defense industry. That is a large number of people and it may hurt our economy severely.

    These three men, Rubio, Cruz and Trump are wrecking balls, and we will be screwed on Day # 1 if we were to elect them as our President. It is time to redefine conservatism; none of the three loose mouths are conservatives in my books.


    (The author is a community consultant, social scientist, thinker, writer, news maker, and a speaker on Pluralism, Interfaith, Islam, politics, terrorism, human rights, India, Israel-Palestine and foreign policy. He is committed to building cohesive societies and offers pluralistic solutions on issues of the day. Visit his 63 links at www.MikeGhouse.net and TheGhousediary.com for his writings)

  • Positions harden: Opposition, government spar as Bills await action

    Positions harden: Opposition, government spar as Bills await action

    After the Opposition amendment to the motion of thanks to the President’s Address and the Prime Minister’s speech in the Rajya Sabha on Wednesday, hopes of Congress-BJP patch-up for passing crucial Bills pending in Parliament have further receded. The Prime Minister’s cursory appeals for Opposition cooperation and the withdrawal of the amendments proposed to the motion of thanks coupled with strident attacks on the Congress leadership indicate the government itself has given up all hope of seeing the GST and other Bills through.

    For the second consecutive year the Opposition has embarrassed the Modi government in the Rajya Sabha, where it outnumbers the ruling alliance. This time, however, cracks appeared in Opposition unity. The BJD and BSP MPs staged a walkout, while the Trinamool Congress did not participate in the voting. The amendment, moved by the Congress, regretted the failure of the President’s Address to mention the government’s commitment to securing the right of all citizens to contest elections. Haryana and Rajasthan have laid down educational qualifications for contesting the  panchayat elections – a controversial decision upheld by the Supreme Court. Since opinion is clearly divided on the issue, the Opposition only wanted to score a point and it did succeed in putting the government in its place.

    Prime Minister Modi’s strategy is clear: divide the Opposition and isolate the Congress. Last month he blamed “Ma-Beta” for the Rajya Sabha logjam. He quotes Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi to run down the present Congress leadership, including Dr Manmohan Singh. Nobody has ever accused him of being an economist, leave alone of the caliber of Dr Manmohan Singh. He is firm on his resolve on a “Congress-mukt Bharat”. Modi has a penchant for oratory but knows when to keep quiet. He has skipped the hot countrywide debate on nationalism and did not utter a word either on JNU or riots in Haryana. His battalion of warriors, joined lately by Anupam Kher, is busy dividing people into “national” and “anti-national”. Few expect Modi to control them. Divisive issues occupy the national center stage now. In this combative national mood, legislators indulge in theatrics and refuse to do the job on hand: pass the Bills.