Month: December 2017

  • YET TO FIND THE RIGHT PERSON TO MARRY, SAYS PRIYANKA CHOPRA

    YET TO FIND THE RIGHT PERSON TO MARRY, SAYS PRIYANKA CHOPRA

    Actress Priyanka Chopra said that marriage doesn’t happen as per plans and she is yet to find the right person to marry.

    Priyanka attended an event on Tuesday and during a media interaction she was asked about her marriage plans to which she replied, “Marriage doesn’t happen as per plans. You just have to find the right guy for yourself. If I find a right guy then I will do it. I still haven’t found that person.”

    Priyanka, a global star, has two Hollywood films in her kitty – ‘A Kid Like Jake’ which also features Jim Parsons, Claire Danes, Octavia Spencer and she has also begun shooting for ‘Isn’t it Romantic’ with Rebel Wilson, Adam DeVine and Liam Hemsworth.

  • India inks deal on sharing Swiss bank data

    India inks deal on sharing Swiss bank data

    NEW DELHI (TIP): In a move aimed at combating black money stashed abroad, India signed an agreement with Switzerland today that would allow automatic sharing of tax-related information from January 1 next year, the CBDT said.

    “With the completion of the parliamentary procedure in Switzerland and signing of the agreement, India and Switzerland are set for automatic exchange of information for the period beginning from January 1, 2018,” the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) said.

    A joint declaration for the implementation of Automatic Exchange of Information signed last month provided that both countries would start collecting data in accordance with the global standards in 2018 and exchange it from 2019 onwards.

    While Switzerland has conformed to the global standards on automatic exchange of information with the signing of the declaration, India, on its part, has promised to safeguard the confidentiality of the data.

    “It will now be possible for India to receive from September, 2019 onwards, the financial information of accounts held by Indian residents in Switzerland for 2018 and subsequent years, on an automatic basis,” the government earlier said.

    Switzerland, at the centre of the debate on black money allegedly stashed by Indians, used to be known for very strong secrecy walls till a few years ago around its banking practices.

  • INDIA, CHINA HOLD SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE-LEVEL TALKS ON BORDER ISSUES

    INDIA, CHINA HOLD SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE-LEVEL TALKS ON BORDER ISSUES

    NEW DELHI (TIP): India and China on December 22 held special representative-level talks on key aspects related to border issues.

    National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and China’s State Councillor Yang Jiechi met along with senior officials for the 20th round of the India-China border talks.

    During the day-long talks the Doklam episode and other concerns pertaining to unresolved issues of boundary between India and China were discussed.

    The Doklam standoff began on June 16 over People’s Liberation Army’s plans to build a road in an area claimed by Bhutan after the Indian troops intervened to stop it as it posed a security risk to Chicken Neck, the narrow corridor connecting India with its North-eastern states.

    The standoff ended on August 28 following mutual agreement between India and China.

    Source: PTI

  • Support for terror outfits must be forced to stop: India at United Nations

    Support for terror outfits must be forced to stop: India at United Nations

    UNITED NATIONS (TIP): Supporters of terror organisations like Taliban, Haqqani network and Lashkare- Taiba must be forced to stop and all safe havens must end, India has told the UN Security Council, expressing concern over the collapse of security situation in Afghanistan.

    Terrorists continue to attack the most vulnerable, including the sick in hospitals, children in schools, devotees in mosques and even mourners at funerals. Terrorist groups have gained territory, Deputy Permanent Representative of India to UN, Tanmaya Lal, said during an open debate of the Security Council on Afghanistan.

    “The support for terrorist organisations like the Taliban, the Haqqani Network, Daesh, Al Qaeda and its designated affiliates such as Lashkare- Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed from outside Afghanistan, must be forced to stop,” Lal said.

    “All safe havens and sanctuaries available to such groups outside Afghan borders must end. The Security Council has an important responsibility in this regard in our collective interest,” Lal said. “The continued resilience shown by the Afghan people and security personnel has been exemplary but hopes of a better future still appear distant.

    Our regular consultations and the work done by the Council have not been enough to more effectively reverse the situation on the ground,” he added.

    Lal said it had been painfully clear since long that the security situation in Afghanistan had implications not only for the region but the entire world.

    “While new threats emerge from the Daesh, the Security Council cannot even decide whether to designate the new leaders of Taliban or to freeze the assets of the slain leader of the group more than a year after the issue was brought to its attention,” Lal said.

    In his address to the Security Council Afghan Ambassador to the UN Mahmoud Saikal said Afghanistan’s patience on indiscriminate shelling from across the border by Pakistan should not be tested.

    “Under the pretext of receiving fire from our side, Pakistan’s violations across the Durand Line, including indiscriminate artillery shelling, have continued unabated throughout 2017, resulting in the loss of innocent lives and destruction of villages,” he said.

    The proposal of Afghanistan for engagement and operational coordination towards addressing these concerns had not seen any response, he told the UN Security Council.

    “At the same time, Afghanistan has the will and the capacity to defend its territory and our patience should not be tested,” Saikal said.

    Afghanistan believed that confidence building measures could be successful only when violations of this nature came to a complete halt, he said. “In a similar vein, we are also in communication on the imperative of addressing terrorists’ regional safe havens and hope to see positive developments on this front soon,” he said, adding that Afghanistan looked forward to the upcoming trilateral meeting in Beijing next week between the Foreign Ministers of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and China. Source: PTI

  • INDIA TO SEEK SUPPLY OF RADARS, MISSILES BY 2018

    INDIA TO SEEK SUPPLY OF RADARS, MISSILES BY 2018

    NEW DELHI (TIP): India is all set to take a big stride in exports of arms and equipment with the defence ministry in the process of tying up with Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Myanmar and Armenia for supply of radars, helicopters and missiles, and tank upgradation by 2018.

    South Block sources confirmed deepening of military ties with these countries with high-level delegations interacting with defence ministry and Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) units in Bengaluru this month. For the first time, Saudi Arabia is sending 10 of its nationals for training to become officers at the National Defence Academy (NDA) next year.

    The proposed tie-ups assume significance as India is the largest importer of arms in the world but figures nowhere in the list of global arms exporters.

    Government sources confirmed that two joint committee meetings have already taken place with Riyadh as the latter is interested in a joint venture to manufacture weapons and equipment in Saudi Arabia.

    Source: HT

  • BJP’s, Thakur favorites for Himachal CM post

    BJP’s, Thakur favorites for Himachal CM post

    SHIMLA (TIP): BJP central observers Nirmala Sitaraman and Narendra Singh Tomar arrived here today to meet the newly elected party MLAs to elicit their views and arrive at a consensus on a new chief minister.

    A meeting of BJP Legislature party has been convened for the interaction of central observers along with in charge for party affairs Mangal Pandey with party MLAs and a meeting of core committee is also scheduled later in the evening, the BJP sources said.

    The shock defeat of the BJP’s chief ministerial candidate Prem Kumar Dhumal from Sujanpur has opened up the race for the top post in Himachal Pradesh.

    Union Health Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda and Jairam Thakur, five-time MLA from Seraj in Mandi district, are being seen as front-runners for the chief minister’s post.

    The central observes would also hold a meeting with members of core committee which included Dhumal, state party chief Satpal Singh Satti, all five MPs from the state and organisation secretary, Pawan Rana.

    The central members are also likely to meet the MLAs individually to elicit their views and the leader would be elected by consensus, the party sources said.

    The BJP has 44 members in the 68-member Assembly.

  • ‘Gujarat poll results zabardast jhatka for BJP’

    ‘Gujarat poll results zabardast jhatka for BJP’

    NEW DELHI (TIP): A day after the Gujarat result , Congress president Rahul Gandhi said the polls had delivered BJP a “zabardast jhatka (terrific shock)” that exposed PM Narendra Modi’s credibility crisis , prompting BJP to respond that the leader was enjoying “defeat as victory”.

    In his first comments on the Gujarat election result where Congress ran rival BJP close, Rahul told reporters, “It is a very good result for us. Agreed that we lost and could have won, we fell short. But BJP suffered a massive jolt in Gujarat. People of Gujarat do not accept Modi’s model. It is high on propaganda but it’s hollow.”

    Senior BJP leader and HRD minister Prakash Javadekar said Rahul was under an illusion that the Gujarat polls were a jolt to the ruling party. “We (BJP) won both state assembly elections and in Gujarat for the sixth time. Actually this is a jolt for Congress,” he said.

    Javadekar alleged that Congress adopted divisive politics in Gujarat, but people put their faith in Modi and his development agenda. “It seems Rahul Gandhi is under an illusion and he is enjoying defeat as victory. This shows his dynastic arrogance and is an insult to the people’s mandate,” he said.

  • Raja, Kanimozhi, all other 2G scam accused acquitted

    Raja, Kanimozhi, all other 2G scam accused acquitted

    CBI court says prosecution failed to prove any charge; agency to file appeal in HC

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Former telecom minister and DMK leader A Raja, Rajya Sabha MP Kanimozhi and others were today acquitted in the politically sensitive 2G spectrum allocation cases by a special court which held that the prosecution miserably failed to prove the scam involving corruption and money laundering.

    The court, which held there was no scam in the 2G spectrum allocation in 2007-08 when Raja was the telecom minister in the erstwhile UPA regime headed by Manmohan Singh, also set free all accused in two offshoot cases lodged by the ED and the CBI.

    It said some people created a scam by “artfully arranging a few selected facts and exaggerating things beyond recognition to astronomical levels”.

    In the main CBI case, besides Raja and Kanimozhi, the 15 other accused allowed to walk free include former telecom secretary Siddharth Behura, Raja’s erstwhile private secretary R K Chandolia, Swan Telecom promoters Shahid Usman Balwa and Vinod Goenka, Unitech Ltd MD Sanjay Chandra and three top executives of Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group (RADAG) — Gautam Doshi, Surendra Pipara and Hari Nair.

    Bollywood film producer Karim Morani, Kalaignar TV’s director Sharad Kumar, Asif Balwa and Rajiv Aggarwal of Kusegaon Fruits and Vegetables Pvt Ltd were also acquitted. The companies which were not found guilty are Shahid Balwa’s Swan Telecom Pvt Ltd, Chandra’s Unitech (Tamil Nadu) Pvt Ltd and Reliance Telecom Ltd of Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group.

    Raja and Kanimozhi, daughter of DMK supremo M Karunanidhi, along with 17 others were also let off in another case lodged by the Enforcement Directorate under the money laundering law arising out of the 2G scam. Raja remained in jail for over 15 months while Kanimozhi was in prison for six months before they were granted bail.

    Other accused persons were also in jail for varying term.

    The court also acquitted Essar Group promoters Ravi Kant Ruia and Anshuman Ruia and six others in a separate CBI case arising out of the 2G scam probe. Besides Ruias, Loop Telecom Promoters I P Khaitan and Kiran Khaitan and Vikash Saraf, one of the Essar Group Directors, Loop Telecom Ltd, Loop Mobile (India) Ltd and Essar Teleholdings Ltd were also acquitted.

    While giving clean chit to all the accused in the three case connected with the 2G spectrum allocation, Special Judge O P Saini was critical of the CBI and the apex court-appointed special public prosecutor Anand Grover, saying the quality of prosecution had “totally deteriorated” and by the end it became “directionless”.

    It observed that the CBI had started its case with “great enthusiasm and ardour” but at the final stage of the trial, SPP Grover and the regular CBI prosecutor moved in “two different directions without any coordination”.

    Further, the judge was not convinced with the prosecution theory that the then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was misled by Raja or that the facts were misrepresented to him, saying such arguments were taken “just to prejudice the mind of the court by invoking the high name and authority of the prime minister of the country.

    In embarrassment to the CBI, the court said the genesis of the instant case lies not so much in the actions of Raja but in the action or inaction of others and “there is no material on record to show that the telecom minister was ‘mother lode of conspiracy’ in the case”.

    “There is also no evidence of his no holds barred immersion in any wrong doing, conspiracy or corruption,” it said about the alleged scam in which high profile witnesses like the then Attorney General G E Vahanvati, Anil Ambani, his wife Tina Ambani, corporate lobbyist Niira Radia, then TRAI Chairman Nripendra Mishra, then DoT secretary D S Mathur, former RBI governor D Subba Rao and former Law Secretary T K Vishwanathan deposed.

    In the main CBI case involving Raja, Kanimozhi and others, the court held that the depositions of senior officers of Department of Telecom (DoT) and key prosecution witnesses were contrary to the record and they were just passing the buck without suggesting anything.

    However, it said Raja’s statements matched with the official record and “appeared to be cogent, truthful and as such acceptable”.

    Source: PTI

  • As I see It  : The ‘do-more’ chorus by US for Pak

    As I see It : The ‘do-more’ chorus by US for Pak

                                     By Lt-Gen Bhopinder Singh (retd)

    Given the insipidities and banalities of diplomatic-speak, ‘do more’ is as direct an expression of dissatisfaction that the US can convey to Pakistan, given the American compulsions.

    The slyest foreign policy warrior, Henry Kissinger, propounded the term ‘constructive ambiguity’ to describe the language of diplomacy that seeks to disguise, retain and still suggest the actual intent in a construct-of-words that are generally palatable (allowing some concessions), yet, allude to future necessity of actions towards a certain goal. The art of diplomatic wordsmithing has been tested to its limits in the Indian subcontinent, given the irascible tempers and the evolving narrative that besets the tempestuous fundamentals in the trilogy of the US-Pakistan-India equations.

    In 1971, as National Security Adviser, Henry Kissinger had underlined the US position and bias in the Indo-Pak war by stating, “We’re in the position where a Soviet stooge, supported with Soviet arms, is overrunning a country that is an ally of the United States.” The cold war binaries had cemented the Pakistani status as a ‘major non-NATO ally’, and then the annexation of Afghanistan by the USSR in 1979 had led to the largest covert joint operation in history, ‘Operation Cyclone’, — the US and the murky General Zia-led Pakistani establishment funded, trained and supplied manpower and weaponry to mujahideen.

    Later, the end of cold war and the disintegration of the USSR ensured the selfish and thoughtless withdrawal of interest and bankrolling in the region by the US. However, the kettle of intrigues and virulent religiosity was kept boiling by the shadowy Pakistani-ISI to fertilize the environment into a breeding ground for terrorists, who today haunt the subcontinent, and beyond.

    Like in Afghanistan, the US, after achieving its limited objectives in the Gulf wars, left a festering trail of destruction and chaos for the germination of the uber-intolerant and militant pan-Islamism that manifested in the unprecedented tragedy of 9/11, which recalibrated the global equations, thereafter. The decades-old cold war wiring in the US-Pakistan-India underwent a sudden relook and the inter-nation expectations, conversations and transactions underwent a complete re-haul.

    The Pakistanis, under General Musharraf, were embarrassingly coerced into joining the global ‘war on terror’ as George W Bush threatened Pakistan with bombing, ‘into the stone age’, should it fail to cooperate. Expected reluctance emanated from the sudden retraction from the consistent Pakistani position, e.g. treating terror organizations as ‘state assets’ and the principle of ‘strategic depth’ in Afghanistan — the half-hearted Pakistani commitment soon exposed its machinations as a double-dealing ‘ally’. The ‘taking out’ of Osama bin Laden from Abbottabad, continuing drone attacks on to Pakistani territories and the parallel warming of the Indo-Afghan ties further vitiated the US-Pakistani equation. It led the Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, to specifically ask the Pakistanis to ‘do more’ and ‘squeeze’ out terror networks by famously stating, “You can’t keep snakes in your backyard and expect them only to bite your neighbors. Eventually, those snakes are going to turn on whoever has them in the backyard.” The subtext of subsequent US-Pakistan conversations, have remained fixated on the expression of ‘do more’, much to the irritation of Pakistanis.

    In the 2016 presidential campaign, Trump had maintained his line of fire, saying, “Pakistan is a very very vital problem and really vital country for us because they have nuclear weapons and they have to get a hold of the situation.” Nearly one year into his presidency, Trump’s insistence on Pakistan to change its tracks has found expression in a persistent and forceful ‘do more’.

    Perforce, the US has to maintain a functional working relationship with Pakistan to sustain its operations, manpower and assets in Afghanistan and within the Pakistani narrative. The expansive import of ‘do more’ within the context of diplomatic language suggests both a perfunctory acknowledgement of efforts by the Pakistanis (critical to retain engagement), and yet clearly points to insufficiency of efforts on account of doing the needful. Often, Trump’s bluster results in a brazen statement, like: “We are paying Pakistan billions and billions of dollars; at the same time, they are housing the very terrorists that we are fighting. But that will have to change.”

    This leads to an equally jarring counter-narrative from the Pakistanis who decry the American hypocrisy and selective amnesia to remind the US of its historical support for jihadism in the 80s. However, the fact that the playing field, cards and the essential game of the 21st century have evolved but the Pakistanis remain fixated to the dynamics of the earlier times, that is haunting the Pakistanis the most.

    ‘Do more’ is also contextualized to future aid as the promised $250 million in military aid to Pakistan is withheld, subject to further evidence of Pakistani actions. The chorus for ‘do more’ was echoed by US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in October when he reiterated that Pakistan must do more to eradicate militants in its country.

    In November, the commander of the NATO-led coalition in Afghanistan, Gen John Nicholson continued to lament, “Haven’t seen any change yet in their behavior”, and earlier this month, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis goaded the Pakistanis to “redouble” efforts and urged for the “need to move forward with issues at hand.” Given the banalities of diplomatic-speak, ‘do more’ is as direct an expression of dissatisfaction that the US can convey to Pakistan. With the ongoing specter of a free-run for the internationally designated terrorists, seminaries spewing hatred, state supporting extremist ideologues and the still selective action against terror organizations, the pressure from the Americans to ‘do more’ will remain relentless and cryptic. India needs to reassure and satisfy itself with the American pressure of ‘do more’ as its implied context is deeply suggestive, perceptive and conducive to the change required in the situation in Pakistan.

     

     

  • Guest Comment : India in US global strategy: Limits to friendship with Uncle Sam

    Guest Comment : India in US global strategy: Limits to friendship with Uncle Sam

    A new US national security strategy under Donald Trump was bound to induce great interest, especially about India’s place in how the global system should be ordered. The 68-page document is confined to a macro view of the world’s complex and interconnected problems. However, India clearly emerges as a useful cog in US attempts to prevent a shift in the balance of power in the Asian heartland. More than West Asia, the US has chalked out a more prominent role for India in the maritime domain in line with its strategy to prevent a free hand to hobble China’s bid to expand its regional influence.

    What are the payouts? Trump explicitly asks India to loosen its purse strings in Central and South Asia, perhaps as compensation for declining to put Indian boots on Afghan soil.  The price for partnering the US in the Indo-Pacific is both tangible — more orders for US military companies at a time when the US budget is facing constraints — and intangible — greater Indian visibility in the near neighborhood. Just as the US is single-mindedly devoted to advancing American influence, India will have to cut its cloth according to its own national interests. It cannot view Russia and China from the American lens of unremitting hostility: its only two make-in-India defense projects are of Russian origin and there is already word that a Sino-India trade-off on NSG and One-Belt One-Road may be in the offing. India can ill afford to shrink the room for dialogue with both Russia and China.

    A reality check is also in order: the US mentions India as only one of the eight potential allies in the Asia Pacific. If India is described as a “leading world power”, there is approbation for the others: Japan is a “critical ally”, Australia “a key partner”, and friendship with South Korea “forged by trials of history”. In West Asia too, India has a marginal role as the US has several irons in the fire. Whether it was Obama earlier or Trump now, proximity with the US has its limits as well as advantages.

    (Tribune, India)

  • Gandhi Samaj of Chicago Celebrates 33 Anniversaries in a traditional way

    Gandhi Samaj of Chicago Celebrates 33 Anniversaries in a traditional way

    CHICAGO, IL (TIP): Gandhi Samaj of Chicago (“GSC”) hosted its 33rd Anniversary at Waterford Banquet, 933 S Riverside Dr, Elmhurst, IL in celebration of 33rd Anniversary, led by Executive board of Gandhi Samaj. Attendance at event was house full over 700 people, along with their families and friends. Gandhi Samaj of Chicago includes over 320 “Gandhi” families, native of South Gujarat part of India (Surat to Vapi), from Chicago and its close vicinity.

    The event started with social hour accompanied by Traditional Gujarati (Indian) Cuisine dinner, which was followed by a cultural program and open dance. This is a tradition observed by GSC for last 33 years, where families come together to celebrate and socialize and enjoy cultural program performed by members of all ages.

    Dr. Anuja Gupta, CEO of Verandah Retirement Community, was invited as chief guest.  Community Service Awards were presented to Mr. Ashwin Gandhi and Mr. Hary Gandhi in honor of their active support in the community. The 2014-2015 committees were also presented with an award to recognize their service to the GSC community.  Educational Achievement Awards were also awarded, to those who pursued higher education.  Mr. Hitesh Gandhi will lead the Samaj as President over the next two years.

    Cultural program touched everyone’s hearts as imaginations of performers (from age 5 to 60) showcased their talents. Program started by a small Prayer followed with American & Indian National Anthems. The Kathak performance of Ganesh Vandana by Mansi Gandhi, Maya Ghayal, and Suhani Gandhi added a beautiful touch. The children and adults of Gandhi Community performed Classical and Bollywood Dance performances, songs, and showcased other talents. Group dance performance on “Luv Letter” and “Badri Ki Dulhania” songs became the highlight of the event when Roma Bhagat, Ami Gandhi, Riya Ghayal, Keyur Ghayal, Bhumika V. Gandhi, and Vimal Gandhi performed with high energy and brought everyone to their feet.

    Some of the other highlights of evening included

    Madhuri Medley family dance performed by Riya Ghayal, Keyur Ghayal, Maya Ghayal, and Milan Ghayal;

    Mixed Bollywood dance performance by Tushar Modi, Gemini Modi, Krishna Gandhi, Dennis Gandhi, Nikita Gandhi, Minesh Gandhi, Freya Gandhi, Ashish Gandhi, and Bharat Ghayal;

    Sun Sathiya dance performance by Risha Bhagat;

    Shiva Tandav performed by Freya Gandhi, Misha Gandhi, Manya Gandhi, Riya Gandhi, and Krishna Gandhi;

    Kheech Meri Photo song performed by Maya Ghayal, Milan Ghayal, Suhani Gandhi, Ishan Gandhi, Aashini Sheth, Keshav Sheth;

    Kabhi Jo Badal Barse on Instrument by Isha Guard & Daksh Guard;

    The event ended after 2.5 hours of continuous entertainment with astounding performances by various members of the Gandhi Samaj Community.  It was followed by open dance, where the members and community supporters were able to join the performers on the dance floor and dance the night away.

    2019 Hitesh Gandhi will be president of Gandhi Samaj of Chicago. He has lots of feathers in his hat such as Executive Vice President of FIA, President of Adbhut Entertainment, Director of GOPIO, and Vice President of North Mount Prospect Home Owner Association. I am fortunate and privileged that I have the opportunity to serve various organizations and Asian Community. I am honored and grateful to GSC Board and members for their trust in me in heading the well-respected service oriented Gujarati organization in Chicago land area.  I would also like to thank all our volunteers, supporters and “Gandhi” families for their enthusiasm to support and promote our cultural, educational, social and community affairs.

    “Gandhi Samaj of Chicago is proud of to make this magnificent event successful and thus keeping the Indian culture alive in the USA. Thanks to all the sponsors of the grand event without their support it would not be possible to have such a wonderful event also thanks to audience of Chicago and well-wishers who attended the event” Said by Mr Hitesh Gandhi, Exec Vice President of Gandhi Samaj.

    A special mention goes out to the 2017 committee members of Gandhi Samaj of Chicago for a memorable evening full of wonderful memories, including Mr. Keyur Ghayal (President), Mr. Hitesh Gandhi (Executive Vice President), Mrs. Bhumika V. Gandhi (Vice President), Mr. Ashwin Bodalia (Treasurer), Mr. Manhar Gajjar (Secretary), Mrs. Roma Bhagat (Cultural Secretary), Mr. Bharat Ghayal, Ramesh Gandhi, Dipak Ghayal (Joint Secretaries) & Priya Ghayal, Hiren Ghayal (Youth Secretary).

    (Photograph and Press release by: Asian Media USA)

  • An uplifting and powerful evening as Suzy’s place celebrates its first winter gala

    An uplifting and powerful evening as Suzy’s place celebrates its first winter gala

    CHICAGO, IL (TIP): Suzy’s Place held its First Winter Gala on Saturday, December 2nd at Pearl Banquets and Conference Center in Roselle, Illinois.

    After a Capella performance of the national anthem, the evening kicked off with the high-energy acrobatics of the world-famous Jesse White Tumblers.  Their performance, set to intense music, revved up the crowd. The audience needed that strength, as the evening dealt with the very serious issue of domestic violence, and what it takes to fix it.   Suzy’s Place was honored by the presence and thoughts of the two keynote speakers of the evening, the Hon. Judge Divya Sarang of Kane County and Dr Shastri Swaminathan, Chairman, Department of Psychiatry at Advocate Illinois Masonic Center. They talked effectively about the legal and medical/mental aspects of domestic violence. The law and mental health go hand in hand as Suzy’s Place helps survivors through its shelter and services.

    Shahida Khan, President of Suzy’s Place, welcomed everyone. Arshia Hasnain, Executive Director of Suzy’s Place introduced the organization’s structure and presented the organization’s activities. Member of the Advisory Board, Stephanie Pelzer, presented an artistic personal and emotional video collage of women helped by Suzy’s Place.  She used her pencil sketches and art to tell their stories while respecting their privacy.  The audience was visibly moved.

    There was a short fundraising session, including artwork, a football signed by Richard Dent of the Chicago Bears, and many colorful items at silent auction. Everything was donated, and everything went. The audience recognized that it took money to do what Suzy’s Place did and they were generous.

    The evening’s entertainment was the well-known Bollywood singer Poonam Bhatia who mesmerized the audience with her vocal talents and reminded her fans of the importance of tackling the issue of domestic violence.

    Several elected officials attended. Toni Preckwinkle, Cook County Board President, recognized domestic violence as a major problem and lauded the work of Suzy’s Place and organizations like it.  Mayor Tim Baldermann of New Lenox reminded everyone that there needed to be a conversation on domestic violence at the local and community level.  Members of law enforcement were well-represented.  Chiefs of Police from multiple cities and senior executives of NOBLE were present and fully participated in the evening’s activities.

    Suzy’s Place provides emergency and transitional housing, and services, to women survivors of domestic violence in Rogers Park in Chicago. It serves a very diverse community spanning ethnic, religious, socio-economic and cultural groups. Its shelter can accommodate 15 women at a time for up to 3 months. It provides emotional support and diversified continuum of services focused on safety, empowerment and self-sufficiency. Through community partnerships, it raises awareness, provides services and educates community members about domestic violence. Services include counseling, educational support, job skills training and job placement, basic health, language assistance, legal assistance, parenting and life-management skills, and wellness.

    (Photograph and Press release by: Asian Media USA)

  • Perspective : Christmas Musings…..

    Perspective : Christmas Musings…..

    I was merely happy to be invited to the ‘Holiday Party’ organized by the South Asian Community in Queens. However, I have learned that the main purpose of the gathering was to honor the newly appointed Consul General Sandeep Chakraborty of India and introduce him to various elected officials from Queens, New York. The program ran in typical Indian style, with as many of the community leaders jockeying for VIP seats and later on putting up a brave struggle to position themselves for a celebrity photo for their next Facebook post.

    These politicos in New York City appear to show very little respect for the South Asian Community. To them, we are an ATM they could push a button and get their so-called campaign contributions. They seem to be quite confident as well that we are ‘simple-minded’ and would go away happily after an embrace and a Selfie shoot for the next edition of one of those Indian weekly newspapers.

    I wonder why the South Asian Community, probably the largest concentration anywhere in the U.S. has so far failed to get a footing in the mainstream politics in New York City! Indians who live even in the old Confederacy seem to have more success than their peers who live in the most liberal city in the U.S.

    I had long wanted to vent this long and boiling frustration within me to somebody when Professor Saluja, the emcee for the evening, informed me that I would have an opportunity to say few words at the function felicitating the Chief Guest before all those public officials from the Queens. However, it never came to pass, and they simply had too many speakers who paid the bill, they said!

    However, I had an opportunity to speak to Ms. Letitia James, the Public Advocate for the New York City Council. I tried to make my case and requested her to help appropriate one city council seat, probably District 23, for an Asian Indian if not a South Asian. She tried to convince me that we have to come together and fight the election. I responded to her stating that we are quite observant of the dynamics and unless Democratic Party officially put their weight behind a South Asian, the effort will be futile! We have indeed learned how the single-party system in New York is lately reduced into machine politics and unless you are in it, ‘you ain’t going anywhere’!

    As I sat there listening to speaker after speaker greeting the audience, not a single one uttered the word “Merry Christmas”. A number of them were eager to say “Happy Hannukah’, that was mostly addressed to the visiting Jewish public officials. Anyway, we could confirm by now that ‘Merry Christmas’ has become a toxic greeting phrase in New York.  As a Christian who is sitting there, probably one of the few in the audience, my mind wandered back to the younger days of growing up in Kerala, India where we all greeted each other with ‘Merry Christmas’ for the simple reason for the season.

    Upon my return that evening home, Gujarat poll results started coming in. Congress has indeed outperformed all the expectations and appeared to have thoroughly thrashed the much-heralded exit poll results. However, people of Gujarat still handed BJP another term despite becoming miserable and more impoverished through their demonetization policies as well as the messy GST implementation. The verdict sends a clear message to the world that hate and bigotry trumps over economic troubles and personal misery!

    Opening up the Internet browser the following day, I am once again reminded that this is not a season of peace and goodwill toward men as right-wing fringe groups have threatened to disrupt Christmas and New Year celebrations in some Uttar Pradesh towns. A series of warnings have come from these groups just days after an alleged attack on priests in a Madhya Pradesh town. In Aligarh, a group called the Hindu Jagran Manch has warned schools against celebrating Christmas, saying they could do so “at their own risk”.

    In 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had declared that December 25, Christmas Day, would be observed as Good Governance day. India has a history of 2000 years of Christianity that was long before even England embraced that religion. Why then this alienation of a religious group in India that has contributed much to the educational and social development of the poor and the downtrodden! However, it is quite impressive to note that as the first generation Indians to the US, we are already lobbying to make Diwali a holiday in New York City!

    By this time you may have heard about the decimation of ISIS and its Caliphate in Syria and Iraq. Recently, Iraqi forces with overwhelming support from U.S. Airforce have retaken the city of Mosul. ISIS has pushed Iraq’s religious minorities to the edge of extinction. However, the sad story of one Christian family brings the ugly face of religious discrimination home to us all.

    The story is told as follows:  A family of four lived in a small village about sixteen miles outside of Mosul. Shortly after the Islamic State took over, the father, a construction worker, took his wife of twenty-eight years to Mosul to continue her breast cancer treatments. But at the hospital, a guard refused to allow the man’s wife to enter because they were Christians. He told her that to continue receiving medical care, she would have to convert to Islam. She refused and the couple was forced to return to their village. Ten days later she died with her husband and sons at her bedside.

    As we are on the threshold of a new year, the human effort to bring peace and security appear to be is as elusive as ever! Will the year 2018 bring us a ray of hope?

    (The author is chairman, INOC USA).

  • Perspective : How Gujarat was won

    Perspective : How Gujarat was won

                                By Shreyas Sardesai/ Sanjay Kumar

    The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has managed only a modest victory in Gujarat, confirming some earlier psephological predictions and ground reports of a close electoral contest. Two polls conducted by us at Lokniti, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), one in end-October and another in end-November, had found the electoral race between the BJP and the Congress to have tightened considerably. In fact, the November survey had found the race to be neck-and-neck in terms of vote share. That trend, however, did not hold entirely till Voting Day. It now seems that a last-minute swing by some voters towards the final stages of the campaign ended up giving the edge to the BJP.

    We say this based on evidence gathered from a post-poll, a survey of voters at their residences after they voted, conducted by Lokniti. The poll reveals that over two in every five voters (43%) took a final call on who they would vote for in the last two weeks of campaigning — and more than half of them (53%) said they voted for the BJP while only about 38% went with the Congress. In fact, a majority of these late deciders are those who decided at the last minute, either on the day of voting or a day or two before it. In 2012 the share of late deciders had been much lower, at 31%, and back then they had split their vote evenly between the BJP and the Congress.

    The question then is, what really happened, between the last week of November when our final pre-poll took place and the second week of December when actual voting took place, that made some disaffected voters planning to vote for the Congress change their minds? The answer to this question is not so difficult to find.

    The late shift

    We believe that it is quite obviously Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s campaigning, which was for the most part controversial and divisive, that played a role in turning a section of voters towards the BJP, thus saving it from a possible defeat. This is the period when the Prime Minister, who is hugely liked in Gujarat (by 72% of those surveyed, post-poll), campaigned extensively in the State. Starting from November 27 right up till December 11, he addressed more than 30 election rallies across the State. Most of his speeches, especially the ones made at rallies post-December 5, focused on divisive themes. Mandir-Masjid, Mughals, Pakistan, Ahmed Patel, Salman Nizami, etc., he practiced classic dog-whistle politics by using coded language that might have stoked passions among some sections of the electorate.

    In our final pre-poll done in end-November, we had found only about 45% of Hindu voters to be voting for the BJP. In the post-poll, we noticed that eventually nearly 52% of them ended up voting for the incumbent party. This is also three points higher than the Hindu support that the BJP received in 2012. While our post-poll also suggests an increase in Muslim votes for the BJP compared to last time, at the same time it also points to a consolidation of Hindu votes behind the party in Assembly seats where the Muslim population is much higher than average. In constituencies where Muslims in the population are less than 10%, the BJP’s lead over the Congress among Hindu voters is only 4 percentage points. In seats where Muslims constitute 10-20% of the population, the gap is six times higher at 25 points. And in areas where Muslims are over 20% of the population, the BJP leads the Congress by 42 points among Hindu voters. In our pre-poll, these gaps had been minus-3, 16 and 11 points, respectively.

    The Hindu card

    Among the major worries of the BJP all throughout the campaign had been the Patidar disaffection with the party as well as the Congress’s attempts to build a rainbow coalition of different castes by roping in young Patel, Dalit and OBC (Other Backward Classes) leaders on its side. By giving communal overtones to the campaign, the Prime Minister seems to have ensured a subsuming of some of these caste identities within the Hindu fold, thus helping the BJP hold on to its bastion. We notice a shift away from the Congress among all Hindu communities, be it Patidars, Kshatriyas, Dalits, and Adivasis, between the pre-poll and the post-poll. To be fair, it wasn’t just the BJP that played the Hindu card; the Congress tried doing it too, albeit covertly. All throughout the campaign, Rahul Gandhi, who led the party campaign, steered clear of raising issues concerning Muslim voters and instead chose to appeal to majoritarian sentiments by visiting temples across the State.

    However, eventually it seems that in this competition to woo the Gujarati Hindus, most Hindu voters, particularly urban ones, were more convinced by Mr. Modi’s insinuations than by Mr. Gandhi’s attempts at asserting his Hindu-ness. The Congress’s strategic abandonment of its pluralistic legacy for electoral gains is to our mind as worrying as the communal rhetoric in Mr. Modi’s campaign.

    Also, the fact that a seemingly neck-and-neck election can be turned around in such a short span by appealing to the majoritarian impulses of voters raises troubling questions about the health of our electoral democracy.

    A section of the Gujarati press may have also played a role, perhaps inadvertently, in effecting the late swing of some voters. A day after Mr. Modi raised a hue and cry at one of his rallies about Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar’s remark calling him a “neech kisam ka aadmi (a low type of man)”, the hugely popular Gujarati newspaper, Gujarat Samachar, which has otherwise been quite critical of Mr. Modi over the years, ran a headline on its front page: “Modi neech jaatino maanas chhe: Mani Shankar Aiyar (Modi is a man from a lower caste says Mani Shankar Aiyar)”. While Mr. Aiyar had described Mr. Modi as “neech”, the newspaper chose to give the remark its own spin, or rather Mr. Modi’s spin, by adding the word “jaati” to it. Such misreporting of Mr. Aiyar’s comment in sections of the press just a day before voting was to take place in Saurashtra-Kutchh and South Gujarat may well have affected the mood of a significant proportion of voters. Our series of surveys in Gujarat suggest that on an average about one-third of voters in Gujarat are daily readers of newspapers. Among such voters, the BJP’s lead over the Congress widened from 8 points in the pre-poll to 14 points in the post-poll.

    Uncomfortable questions

     Winning the trust and confidence of a majority of voters election after election is no mean achievement, and there’s no doubt the BJP should be commended for this. But at the same time the uncomfortable question we must be asking is this — was this trust of voters won by the BJP fairly and squarely on the performance plank alone or whether a large part of it was also won through divisive innuendos, falsehoods and fear mongering?

    (Shreyas Sardesai is Research Associate at Lokniti, CSDS. Sanjay Kumar is a Professor and currently the Director of CSDS, Delhi)

  • December 22 New York Print Edition

    December 22 New York Print Edition

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  • 2022 Commonwealth Games to be held in Birmingham

    2022 Commonwealth Games to be held in Birmingham

     LONDON (TIP): The Commonwealth Games Federation announced, December 21, that Birmingham has been chosen as the host for the 2022 Commonwealth Games. It has been a rocky road, with the second city facing competition from Liverpool and then having to wait for the announcement.

    After the South African city of Durban expressed its inability to host the 2022 Commonwealth Games citing financial reasons, the Commonwealth Games Federation on Thursday, December 21, chose Birmingham in England as the new venue.

    Now the multi-sports mega event that features member nations of erstwhile British empire will return to Great Britain after a gap of eight years. Before Glasgow (2014), Manchester played host to the 2002 Commonwealth Games.

    The next edition of the Games will be hosted by Gold Coast, Australia, in April next year.

    (With input from Prabhjot Singh)

     

  • UN General Assembly rejects Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital

    UN General Assembly rejects Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital

    India votes to challenge US decision

    Israel calls preposterous vote against Jerusalem at UN General Assembly

    UNITED NATIONS (TIP) India joined 127 other countries, on December 20 to vote in the UN General Assembly in favor of a resolution opposing the recent decision of US President Donald Trump to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Nine countries voted against the resolution, while 35 countries abstained.

    India’s decision to vote against American recognition of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital comes a day after Trump warned countries against opposing the US position. India did not speak on the floor of the Assembly in New York, but after Trump recognized the holy city of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, it had said that its Palestine position was independent and consistent.

    The countries that joined the US in voting against the resolution were Honduras, Israel, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Palau and Togo. Among major nations who abstained voting were Australia, Bhutan, Canada, Columbia, Hungry, Mexico, Panama, the Philippines, Poland and Uganda.

    Israel rejected as “preposterous” the vote by 127 countries, including India, at the UNGA that opposed Donald Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israeli capital.

  • UN owes India $54.60 million for peacekeeping operations

    UN owes India $54.60 million for peacekeeping operations

    NEW DELHI (TIP): The United Nations owes $54.60 million to India for its peacekeeping operations, the government said on December18.

    In a written response to a question in the Rajya Sabha, Minister of State in the Defense Ministry Subhash Bhamre said the reimbursements due on on-going missions is $41.93 million and $12.67 million in case of closed missions.

    India is an active participant in several UN peace- keeping missions.

  • Congress votes to avert shutdown, provide money for children’s health insurance

    Congress votes to avert shutdown, provide money for children’s health insurance

    WASHINGTON (TIP): To everybody’s relief, Congress has once again averted a government shutdown — with a short-term funding measure through mid-January — and temporarily extended funding for health insurance for children from low-income families.

    The House voted 231-188 Thursday to approve a short-term spending bill that would fund most government programs at current levels through Jan. 19.

    The Senate quickly followed suit, passing the bill on a 66-32 vote.

    Congress was forced to act because the government was scheduled to run out of money at midnight Friday, raising the possibility of a partial shutdown heading into Christmas.

    Temporary funding is needed because Congress has been unable to agree on long-term government spending levels since the 2017 fiscal year ended last September. Instead, the government has been operating on a series of short-term extensions of last year’s budget.

    The measure approved Thursday, December 21, keeps the government operating for a few more weeks but puts off until next year a number of tough decisions, including the reinstatement of government subsidies for health insurers providing coverage to low-income clients and protections for young Americans brought into the United States illegally by their parents.

     

     

  • Indian-American Ajit Pai at center of US move to repeal net neutrality rules

    Indian-American Ajit Pai at center of US move to repeal net neutrality rules

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Ajit Pai, a son of immigrant Indians, also the one who heads the US FCC is at the center of the debate ever since the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the telecom regulator of the United States of America, has repealed a landmark law the country passed in 2015 to ensure net neutrality in the US. Net neutrality, they say, ensures that no service provider will speed up or throttle a particular service because of its business interests.

    Pai is a Republican and was made the FCC chief in January 2017, the same month the Trump administration took over the White House. Ajit Pai was appointed a commissioner in the FCC in 2012 by then president Barack ObamaThe move by Pai, whose FCC bio states that “consumers benefit most from competition, not pre-emptive regulation and regulators should be skeptical (sic) of pleas to regulate rivals”, has sharply divided America with critics saying repealing the net neutrality law will kill the spirit of free internet.

    Critics argue that the repeal plan will benefit only few big telecom players who wield immense power over the flow of internet and telecommunication channels. Opponents of the repeal bill, named Restoring Internet Freedom Order, say it will effectively shut down or marginalize small players and will start a rush of predatory discriminating practices where one telecom company will try all to disadvantage a rival company’s data flowing through its cables.

    And above all, internet users will be the ultimate losers with their freedom to get unrestrained access to all content and data gone, the critics add.

     

  • Indian Americans Celebrate 10th Hamara Desi Christmas

    Indian Americans Celebrate 10th Hamara Desi Christmas

    HOUSTON, TX (TIP):  Houston’s one and only Indian Christmas celebration was hosted last Saturday, December 16, at the Stafford Civic Center.

    This year it was a sold-out event and as always, the auditorium was packed, and the audiences were treated to an awe-inspiring program by the Houston Indian Fellowship team.

    The Houston Indian Fellowship (HIF), a group of Indians from across the metropolitan Houston area, conduct an annual Christmas Celebration to share with joy and cheer, the true meaning of Christmas to Houstonians from different walks of faith, religion, and social status.  This year during the Christmas event HIF conducted spelling bee competition in addition to the usual painting competition.

    The admission for the event was free, and it was followed by complimentary dinner for all the attendees.  The dinner was catered by Amma’s Kitchen.

    HIF, by hosting events like these, strives to bring Christmas cheer to people from different faiths and regions of India.

    The MCs Sharon Samuel and John Jeevarajan hosted this year’s event with elegance. They were engaging, entertaining, and kept the audience feeling at home.

    Dr. Robello Samuel, President of HIF kicked off this year’s event with a welcome speech and spoke briefly about the history of Hamara Desi Christmas.

    This year’s celebration included a variety of dances from different parts of India, all presented professionally to an awestruck audience.

    This year HIF also introduced their very own production ‘The Birth of A Savior’ A screen and staged play retelling the life of Jesus, from His birth to resurrection.

    The stage was overflowing with vibrant colors as costumes from different parts of India were used for the variety of dances enriching and bringing to life our very own culture several thousand miles away.

    Deepak Israel, Secretary of Houston Indian Fellowship awarded the winners of the painting competition. Dr. Sushma of Spring Medical awarded the winners of Spelling bee competition. Tablets were given to the first prize winners in each category and the second prize winners were given a gift card.

    Finally, the HIF children performed a Christmas Carol medley of Angels we have heard on high, Away in a manger, O come all ye faithful and Feliz Navi dad, as others in the audience joined Santa and the HIF team in wishing everyone a merry Christmas.

    The audience was raving about the event. “Wow! This is the best organized Desi event I have been to in the Houston area! Well organized and well catered event. The programs were crisp, clear and very professional.”

    Sheena Reuben, one of the coordinators of the event said “Christmas is the season of love, peace and Joy. Nothing gives us more joy than preparing for this Christmas event for the South Asian community in Houston. She further added that when we see that the audience thoroughly enjoy the show it gives us the reason to do better and more shows in the coming years.”

    Deepak Israel, of HIF proudly stated, “This event brings an opportunity to bring our own south Asian culture to be enjoyed thousands of miles away here in Houston. With the help of the many volunteers we plan on bringing more competitions and dances to the event. More importantly it is a free event accessible for everyone, so we can all share the Christmas spirit with joy!”

    Dr. Robello Samuel, of HIF, said “Seeing the spirit of Christmas freely shared with free food, dances, plays and competitions gives me great satisfaction as that is the whole idea behind the celebration!”

    The University of Houston students along with several other families and friends helped behind the scenes activities– all of which helped make this celebration a memorable one. (Source: indoamerican-news.com)

     

     

     

  • Indian -American Amritraj Singh Athwal to face death penalty for murder of Indian student

    Indian -American Amritraj Singh Athwal to face death penalty for murder of Indian student

    SACRAMENTO (TIP): Indian American Amritraj Singh Athwal who is serving jail term, is facing the death penalty after the Madera County district attorney slapped additional special charges against him for allegedly killing a 21-year-old Indian student in California on November 13.

    According to a Times of India report, with the additional charges slapped by Madera County District Attorney David Linn, the accused may face penalties to life without the possibility of parole, or the death penalty.

    “We do not take capital cases lightly, however, based upon the facts that have been reported to us from law enforcement, we believe that either life without the possibility of parole, or the death penalty, is the appropriate sentence in this case,” said a press release issued by Linn.

    “Although prior election propositions and action by the State Legislature and Governor Brown have stripped law enforcement of effective tools to properly punish the defendant, my staff and I are fully committed to pursuing the most serious penalties available under existing California law,” he added.

    Dharampreet Singh Jassar, a student from Punjab, who was studying accounting and criminal justice at Fresno State University, was killed by four armed robbers on November 13 while he was on duty at a grocery store next to a gas station in Fresno city in California.

    Athwal was among the gang who entered the store to steal cash and cigarette. Jassar was found dead by a customer next day morning.

    Athwal was arrested November 14, and arraigned on December 7. His cousin Savirant Singh Athwal was also arrested in connection with the incident on December 15, two days after the attack, and arraigned December 19.

    They are charged with murder, second-degree robbery, and a special allegation of murder while in the commission of a robbery. They are being held in Madera County Jail without bail.

    Jassar was, reportedly, the only son of the Punjabi parents.

    Sukhi Chahal, chairman of the Punjab Foundation told The Times of India that drug was the root cause of such killings and such incidents bring shame to the Punjabi community.

    “We cannot deny that drug is the root cause of many of these killing among the Punjabis in North America which brings shame to the community. It is the responsibility of the community leaders to accept the hard reality and work together to find the solution of these problems,” Chahal was quoted as saying by The Times of India.

    (Source: Times of India)

     

     

  • Indian American Sonya Jain, founder and CEO eGlobalTech passes away battling cancer

    Indian American Sonya Jain, founder and CEO eGlobalTech passes away battling cancer

    VIRGINIA (TIP): Sonya Jain, the Indian American founder and CEO of Virginia-based technology and cybersecurity consulting firm eGlobalTech, died on Sunday Dec. 17, at the age of 54 after battling cancer.

    Jain, who was born in India, completed her graduation from Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi and later pursued masters from Isenberg School of Management, Massachusetts, in the 1980s.

    Jain’s first job was as an engineer and later she worked for the government of Michigan, building a specialized software system for the state.

    She joined Booz Allen Hamilton in 1992 as an associate and continued to work there until 2004 when she decided to become an entrepreneur and started eGlobalTech.

    eGlobalTech is a management consulting company offering strategy and business services. It has alliances with HIT Venture, Clinton Rubin LLC, IBM, Ernst & Young, UCSA International, Microsoft, CSC, Dewberry, Dell Perot Systems, Nortec, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, HMS, ARX, Pitney Bowes, Torres, and Definite Logic.

    “Sonya was a truly remarkable person,” Branko Primetica, the CSO of eGlobalTech, told Washington BizJournals. Primetica was one of the two employees Jain hired in 2004. He dropped out of business school to help launch the start-up.

    Jain was an inspiration for young entrepreneurs as she started a company from scratches without the guidance of a mentor and advised the youth not to fear about failure, he said.

    “She was constantly energetic, always wanting to be in touch with customers. She loved life to the fullest,” Primetica added.

    Jain is survived by her husband, Sanjiv Jain, and two daughters.

    Jain said in a number of interviews that she gained inspiration to become an entrepreneur from Indira Gandhi, who was the Prime Minister of India and her teenage fascination.

     

     

  • Indian- American Actress Mindy Kaling turns mom, names baby daughter Katherine

    Indian- American Actress Mindy Kaling turns mom, names baby daughter Katherine

    LOS ANGELES (TIP): Hollywood actress and The Mindy Project star Mindy Kaling reportedly gave birth to a baby girl on December 15.

    According to sources, the 38-year-old actress, who will next be seen in Ocean’s 8, has named her baby Katherine Kaling, although the news is yet to be officially confirmed.

    Meanwhile, speculations are rife about the father of the child as Mindy is not believed to be dating anyone.

    “She is not telling anyone, not even close friends, who the father is,” a source told the publication.

    Mindy, who announced her pregnancy back in August, had earlier said, “I’m very, very pregnant. I’ve had a pretty great time of it so far, but I think I took a lot for granted before this, now that I’m in my current situation. Like, sitting, I’m obsessed with sitting and even when I was standing back there I was looking at this chair and I was like, ‘Awww, can’t wait to sit in that chair!”

    Although the news of the pregnancy was leaked by legendary TV host Oprah Winfrey before Kaling’s official announcement, the actress had said that she wasn’t upset about the goof-up.

    “At first, I was like, OK if anyone was going to announce big news about your private life, Oprah Winfrey’s the person. You can’t complain that much about it, and you can’t be like, ‘Hey, Oprah, zip it!’ because she’s almost like a religious figure. I thought, ‘OK, if there’s one person I have to tell my daughter who revealed her existence to the world, Oprah’s pretty good,” Mindy had said.

    Mindy Kaling was born to Indian parents in 1979. Her dad is a Tamilian architect and her mom is a Bengali doctor.

    She rose to fame playing the character of Kelly Kapoor in the TV show The Office. In 2012, Mindy wrote, produced and starred in The Mindy Project, becoming one of the first Indian-American actors to headline a show on American television.

  • Indian American Preeti Patel appointed the Vice President of Technology at Rauxa

    Indian American Preeti Patel appointed the Vice President of Technology at Rauxa

    NEW YORK (TIP): Full-service agency Rauxa appointed Indian American Preeti Patel its new Vice President of Technology.

    Patel, who will be based in Rauxa’s New York office, is an industry veteran in the IT, digital and market research industries, with more than 20 years of experience providing technology, vision and strategic leadership to organizations in competitive marketplaces, reported marketwired.com.

    At Rauxa, Patel will lead long-term strategy and innovation opportunities for a group of clients including Vans and Frontpoint Security.

    “Not only does Preeti come to us with years of relevant experience leading digital transformations for brands, but she also has a strong drive and determination to be innovative,” Gina Alshuler, President & CEO of Rauxa, was quoted as saying by marketwired.com.

    “Our clients want to win, and Preeti is here to help them do just that,” Alshuler added.

    A graduate of MIT Pune, Patel currently holds three patents for electronic media communication, creation and distribution systems.

    Patel joined Rauxa after her successful career at 360i and the Marlin Company. Most recently, she was senior director of technology for IPG agency Huge. There, she delivered award-winning campaigns, led platform strategy and product development for Thompson Reuters, Verizon and Morgan Stanley and Exxon Mobile.

    “It’s an exciting time to join the Rauxa team. I’ve been in this industry for more than 20 years, and it’s refreshing to join a female-led management team that’s looking to use data and creativity to answer clients’ business challenges,” said Patel.

    Rauxa is the country’s largest woman-owned independent advertising agency. Rauxa applies data, technology, and content to create measurable impact at maximum speed for clients that include Gap Inc., TGI Fridays, and Verizon.