Year: 2017

  • Parliament Passes Finance Bill: Jaitley invites suggestions for Transparency in electoral funding

    Parliament Passes Finance Bill: Jaitley invites suggestions for Transparency in electoral funding

    NEW DELHI (TIP): India’s Parliament approved, March 30, the Finance Bill, 2017, subsequent to the Lok Sabha rejecting amendments moved to it by the Rajya Sabha and upholding its form it had adopted earlier. This marks the accomplishment of the budgetary exercise for 2017-18.

    Lok Sabha’s consideration of the amendments was marked by an engaging debate, which was initiated by Congress Whip Deepender Hooda. It was laced by searching questions from the Opposition and combative reply by Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. The core of the amendments revolved against changes in income tax and company laws in the Bills, which, the Opposition said, gave powers to taxmen to raid and seize without being accountable. The objection was to lift the ceiling on electoral funding by companies; and to prevent disclosure of identity of benefactor (donor) company and the beneficiary political parties.

    Winding up the discussion, Jaitley extended “open invitation” to the Opposition to suggest steps to improve transparency in electoral funding. “I am only hearing adjectives like the system must be clean…It must be transparent,” Jaitley said.

    The changes were necessitated on account of ground realities. Companies are inhibited from being identified for obvious reasons. The system of payment and receiving through checks would continue though.

    The identities of companies purchasing electoral bonds and the donee political parties would be known to the Election Commission and the banks. Rejecting amendments and the apprehensions of the Opposition, Jaitley said: “Do not give a fictional argument that anyone has been given power to conduct raids without being accountable.”

    “Never has it happened that the person raided is informed beforehand. It would be a disaster,” he said, and justified the provision of attachment of properties.

     

     

     

  • Sikh-American girl harassed on New York City subway

    Sikh-American girl harassed on New York City subway

    NEW YORK (TIP): Latest in a series of hate crimes against people of South-Asian origin, a Sikh-American girl was harassed on a New York City subway train when a man, mistaking her to be from the Middle East, allegedly shouted “go back to Lebanon” and “you don’t belong in this country”, according to a report in the New York Times.

    According to the report, Rajpreet Heir was taking the subway train to a friend’s birthday party in Manhattan when the man began shouting at her. Heir said she was looking at her phone when the man shouted at her saying, “Do you even know what a Marine looks like? Do you know what they have to see? What they do for this country? Because of people like you.”

    He told her that he hopes she was sent “back to Lebanon” and using expletives said, “You don’t belong in this country,” before he left the subway.

    The report said that anti-harassment group Hollaback has received nearly double the usual number of reports of harassment on the subway and more than usual involve racist, Islamophobic or anti-immigrant comments since the election of Trump.

  • Indian American Physician Couple donate $5 million to Florida Hospital Carrollwood

    Indian American Physician Couple donate $5 million to Florida Hospital Carrollwood

    CARROLLWOOD, FL (TIP): Florida Hospital Carrollwood has received a significant donation of $5 million from Dr. Kiran Patel and his wife, Dr. Pallavi Patel. This gift will help fund a $21 million project aimed to bring a modernized Catheterization (Cath) Lab and sizable Emergency Department expansion to the Tampa Bay community.

    “We are all in, to help make Florida Hospital Carrollwood’s Cardiac Cath Lab second to none and are excited to bring this advanced facility to the community that we call home,” said Dr. Kiran Patel.

    A noted Indian American entrepreneur and philanthropist from Tampa, Dr. Kiran Patel is the Chairman and President of Freedom Health, Inc. and Optimum Health, Inc. in Florida. He sees philanthropy as his responsibility and passion. Dr. Patel built the WellCare Management Group which he sold in 2002 to a private equity group. The Patel’s have used these proceeds to continue their generous philanthropic work in the Tampa Bay community. Recently, Dr. Patel purchased the former Clearwater Christian College property and has plans to create a college of osteopathic medicine to attract more doctors to this area. Their non-profit organization, the Kiran and Pallavi Patel Foundation for Global Understanding, funds a number of initiatives in health, education and culture. It even offers an annual scholarship to the underprivileged youth in the United States.

    As longtime residents of the Carrollwood community, the Patels have been giving back to the Tampa Bay area for decades. In addition to their previous accomplishments, Dr. Patel served as an accomplished Cardiologist and his wife, Dr. Pallavi Patel specialized in Pediatrics.

    “We feel blessed that the Patel’s have chosen Florida Hospital Carrollwood to donate $5 million. This major contribution will help us better serve our community by building a state-of-the-art Cath Lab. In addition, these funds will go directly to expanding our Emergency Department. Most people look forward to receiving gifts on their birthday however, Dr. Patel is celebrating his birthday today, by giving back to the community,” said Joe Johnson, President and CEO of Florida Hospital Carrollwood.

    The new Cath Lab will open in July 2017 and ground-breaking on the “Dr. Kiran C. Patel” Emergency Department expansion will occur in late 2017.

  • Indian Mother and son found dead in South Jersey

    Indian Mother and son found dead in South Jersey

    JERSEY CITY, NJ (TIP): A woman software professional belonging to Prakasam district in Andhra Pradesh and her 7-year-old son were found dead in their home in New Jersey on March 23 evening. N Sasikala, 38, and her son were stabbed “multiple times”. Her husband, Narra Hanumantha Rao, reportedly told the police that he discovered their bodies when he returned home from work.

    Narra Hanumantha Rao and his wife Sasikala, both software engineers, hailing from Thimmarajupalem village of Paruchur Mandal in Prakasam district, had moved to USA 9 years back and both worked for the technology company Cognizant.

    The killing was raised in parliament on March 24. External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Gopal Baglay said, “We are in touch with US authorities who are trying to ascertain the details in the matter. As and when we have details, will let you know.”

    Many people, particularly Indians, have speculated that the killings may have been a hate crime. But a spokesman for the prosecutor’s office, to state that there is no evidence it is a bias incident.

     

  • Air India Washington-Delhi Service from July 7

    Air India Washington-Delhi Service from July 7

    Only Airline to offer Nonstop Flights from Washington, D.C., to Delhi, Service Will be Three Times a Week on Boeing 777

    "Air India is committed to making service faster and more convenient for our customers, whether traveling for business or leisure," said Ms. Vandana Sharma, Air India's Regional Manager-Americas
    “Air India is committed to making service faster and more convenient for our customers, whether traveling for business or leisure,” said Ms. Vandana Sharma, Air India’s Regional Manager-Americas

    NEW YORK (TIP): Air India announced that it is increasing its services to India from the U.S. to 33 flights per week with the launch of the only nonstop service out of Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD) to Delhi (DEL), starting July 7, 2017.

    The Boeing 777-200LR flights will depart Washington three times a week, on Wednesday, Friday and Sunday, with a flying time of just 14 hours – more than two hours faster than its nearest competitor. Flight No. AI-104 will depart Washington at 11:00 AM and arrive in Delhi at 10:30 AM the next morning.

    The westbound flight AI-103 will depart Delhi at 1:15 AM on Wednesday, Friday and Sunday and arrive in Washington at 7:15 AM the same day.

    Washington Dulles is Air India’s fifth U.S. destination, which also includes Chicago O’Hare, New York JFK, Newark Liberty, and San Francisco International Airports. For passengers traveling beyond Delhi, Air India also offers convenient connections to major cities across India, including Bengaluru, Mumbai, Amritsar, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kochi and more. Like Air India’s other nonstop flights, the Washington-Delhi flights will feature First, Business, and Economy Class service, all offering a choice of Continental or Indian cuisine.

    “Air India is committed to making service faster and more convenient for our customers, whether traveling for business or leisure,” said Ms. Vandana Sharma, Air India’s Regional Manager-Americas. “Our expanding service also addresses the growing demand of customers living and working in Indo-American communities throughout the U.S. that are looking for fast, direct service with seamless connections to cities across India, and the added convenience of customs and immigration formalities at the final destination. We are proud and privileged to fill that need.”

    For more information on Air India’s new Washington – Delhi service and for reservations, contact your travel agent or call 1-800-223-7776.

    About Air India

    Air India, India’s national airline, has been in operation since 1932. Today, the airline serves 35 international destinations on four continents, and 66 cities across India. The airline’s fleet of 118 aircraft, including B787 Dreamliners and B777LR’s and ER’s, is one of the world’s youngest. Air India is also a member of the Star Alliance. For more information about the airline, visit www.airindia.in.

  • Indra Nooyi and Fareed Zakaria named recipients of Ellis Island Medal of Honor

    Indra Nooyi and Fareed Zakaria named recipients of Ellis Island Medal of Honor

    NEW YORK (TIP): Six Indian-Americans have been named recipients of prestigious Ellis Island Medal of Honor 2017- the highest civilian award in the US for immigrants.

    Among 88 recipients, the six Indian- Americans are – PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi, Fareed Zakaria, Author and host of CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS” show, Harman International Industries chairman CEO Dinesh Paliwal, Dr Annapoorna S Kini, Yashvant Patel, and Mohan H Patel. The National Ethnic Coalition of Organizations, which awards the medals, announced that 88 people will receive the Ellis Island Medal of Honor during an official ceremony on May 13.

    According to the NECO website, “the Ellis Island Medals of Honor embody the spirit of America in their celebration of patriotism, tolerance, brotherhood and diversity. They recognize individuals who have made it their mission to share with those less fortunate their wealth of knowledge, indomitable courage, boundless compassion, unique talents and selfless generosity; all while maintaining the traditions of their ethnic heritage as they uphold the ideals and spirit of America. As always, NECO remains dedicated to the maintenance and restoration of America’s greatest symbol of its immigrant history, Ellis Island.”

    Indra Nooyi was named President and CEO of PepsiCo on October 1, 2006 and assumed the role of Chairman on May 2, 2007. In addition to being a member of the PepsiCo Board of Directors, Mrs. Nooyi serves as a member of the boards of U.S.-India Business Council, The Consumer Goods Forum, Catalyst, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts and Tsinghua University. She is also a member of the Foundation Board of the World Economic Forum, the American Academy of Arts & Sciences and was appointed to the U.S.-India CEO Forum by the Obama Administration.

    Fareed Zakaria is host of CNN’s flagship foreign affairs show, a Washington Post columnist, a contributing editor for The Atlantic and a New York Times bestselling author. Esquire Magazine called him “the most influential foreign policy adviser of his generation.” From 2010 to 2014, Dr. Zakaria served as editor-at-large for TIME. Before that, he spent ten years overseeing all of Newsweek’s editions abroad. Before joining Newsweek, from 1992 to 2000, he served as managing editor of Foreign Affairs, a post he was appointed to at only 28 years old.

  • Indian American Former US Ambassador to India Richard Verma joins SFS as Centennial Fellow

    Indian American Former US Ambassador to India Richard Verma joins SFS as Centennial Fellow

    GEORGRTOWN (TIP): Former US Ambassador to India Richard Verma has joined Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service as SFS Centennial Fellow, the University announced.

    The Centennial Fellows program at the School of Foreign Service brings distinguished practitioners and scholars to be resources for students, faculty, staff and alumni, as well as the broader public.

    Ambassador Verma will help support Georgetown’s India Initiative, a signature program to advance research and teaching around India, world affairs and the United States. With his 25 years of experience in the national security field, he will also be an important resource for students interested in Asia, security studies, and the US Congress and its role in foreign policy decision-making.

    “The Walsh School of Foreign Service is truly excited to have Rich Verma join us as a Centennial Fellow,” Senior Associate Dean Anthony Clark Arend said. “Ambassador Verma has a wealth of experience in both the public and private sectors. He will bring to the School a unique perspective that will help all of us re-imagine our mission in a new and changing world.”

    “I’m really honored to be a part of the School of Foreign Service and the Centennial Fellows program,” Ambassador Verma said. “Georgetown has always been at the forefront of international relations scholarship, and I look forward to engaging with students, faculty and staff as we compare notes about developments in Asia, and in particular recent trends in India.”

    Ambassador Verma served as the 25th United States Ambassador to India, nominated by President Obama in September 2014 and confirmed by the U.S. Senate in December 2014. During his two-year tenure, U.S.-India relations experienced a significant resurgence, with important gains made in defense, trade and clean energy. The Ambassador managed an unprecedented 9 meetings and 3 summits between President Obama and Prime Minister Modi, leading to over 100 new initiatives and more than 40 government to government dialogues.

    Ambassador Verma previously served as the Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs, where he led the State Department’s efforts on Capitol Hill. He worked in the Senate for many years, serving as Senior National Security Advisor to the Senate Majority Leader and he also worked in the House of Representatives. He is veteran of the U.S. Air Force, where he served on active duty as a Judge Advocate. His military decorations include the Meritorious Service Medal and Air Force Commendation Medal.

    The Ambassador also has a distinguished career in the private sector, serving as partner at the global law firm of Steptoe & Johnson LLP, and as Senior Counselor to the Albright Stonebridge Group. He served as a commissioner on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction and Terrorism Commission and is a co-author of their landmark report, “World at Risk.” He was also a National Security Fellow at the Center for American Progress, a DC-based think tank.

     

  • Indian American tech executive indicted for H-1B visa fraud

    Indian American tech executive indicted for H-1B visa fraud

    FREMONT, CA (TIP): Two Bay Area tech executives, Including an Indian American CEO of an employment firm based in Fremont with an office in India, are accused of filing false visa documents through a staffing agency in a scheme to illegally bring a pool of foreign tech workers into the United States.

    An indictment from a federal grand jury unsealed on Friday, March 24 accuses Indian American Jayavel Murugan, Dynasoft Synergy’s chief executive officer, and a 40-year-old Santa Clara man, Syed Nawaz, of fraudulently submitting H-1B applications to illegally obtain visas, according to Brian Stretch, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California.

    The men are charged with 26 counts of visa fraud, conspiracy to commit visa fraud, use of false documents, mail fraud and aggravated identity theft, according to prosecutors. Each charge can carry penalties of between two and 20 years in prison.

  • Indian American engineer to head Houston’s Public Works Department

    Indian American engineer to head Houston’s Public Works Department

    HOUSTON, TX (TIP): Houston Mayor Mayor Sylvester Turner has nominated Veteran Indian American engineer Karun Sreerama to head the Houston Department of Public Works and Engineering (PWE). Sreerama is a highly respected engineer with 28 years of experience managing multi-million dollar capital projects across the U.S. and abroad. He is a registered Professional Engineer and holds a doctorate in civil engineering as well as a Master’s degree in business administration. He will fill the vacancy created by the retirement of Dale Rudick, who has led PWE since 2014. Pending council approval, the new appointment is to be effective April 3, 2017. In the interim, PWE’s Deputy Director for Engineering and Construction Carol Haddock will manage the department.

    “Karun has developed an impressive 100 day transition plan,” said Mayor Turner. “He is focused on the organization’s culture and spending as well as collaboration with City Council, neighborhoods and the engineering community. He definitely understands the important role the city plays in boosting quality of life for all Houstonians. He will be able to build upon the excellent progress made during Dale Rudick’s tenure. I want to thank Dale for his service and wish him well in this next chapter of his life.”

    Sreerama comes to the city from ESPA Corporation where he served as president and CEO. Under his leadership, the firm secured contracts with the Harris County Hospital District, Harris County Toll Road Authority, the City of Houston, Pearland, Missouri City, Rice University, University of Houston, Houston Independent School District, Aldine Independent School District and the Texas Department of Transportation. Prior to joining ESPA, Sreerama was senior vice president and chief engineer for Professional Service Industries, Inc.

    Sreerama serves on the boards of the Houston Downtown Management District, Houston Community College Foundation, American Council of Engineering Companies of Houston and the Indo American Political Action Committee of Greater Houston.

  • Indian American students win top three spots at USA Brain Bee Championship

    Indian American students win top three spots at USA Brain Bee Championship

    MARYLAND (TIP): Indian American students sweep top three spots at USA Brain Bee Championship hosted by the University of Maryland. The winner of the competition, which took place March 17 through March 19, is Sojas Wagle of Little Rock, Ark. The second- and thirdplace winners, respectively, are Aarthi Vijayakumar of Minneapolis, Minn., and Amit Kannan of Indianapolis.

    This is the 10th anniversary of the Brain Bee, a neuroscience competition for high school students that was founded by Dr Norbert R. Myslinski, associate professor in the Department of Neural and Pain Sciences at the University of Maryland School of Dentistry (UMSOD).

    “Its purpose is to motivate young students to learn about the human brain and inspire them to seek careers in the basic and clinical neurosciences to help treat and cure diseases of the brain and nervous system,” Myslinski said of the Brain Bee. “We build better brains to fight brain disorders.”

    As the first-place winner, Sojas Wagle advances to the international competition, to be held in August in Washington, D.C.

  • Pak court asks govt to explain detention of Hafiz Saeed

    Pak court asks govt to explain detention of Hafiz Saeed

    LAHORE (TIP): A Pakistani court has asked the government to explain under what authority it has detained Jamaat-ud-Dawah chief Hafiz Saeed “without a trial”.

    A Lahore high court’s two-judge bench headed by justice Syed Kazim Raza Shamsi on Monday was hearing a petition of Saeed, his aides – Prof Malik Zafar Iqbal, Abdur Rehman Abid, Qazi Kashif Hussain and Abdullah Ubaid -who had challenged their detention under the anti-terrorism law.

    After hearing the arguments of advocate AK Dogar, counsel for Saeed, justice Shamsi observed the government should tell about its powers to detain a citizen like Saeed without trial.

    Referring to an Indian movie wherein Saeed was portrayed as a villain, the judge said the government should see if there is any “international conspiracy” against Pakistani citizens.

    Dogar concluded his arguments saying the government had detained the JuD leaders without any justification.

    Dogar also questioned the powers of the provincial government to include any citizen in the fourth schedule of the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA). He said such powers were solely vested with the federal government.

    He said the government had detained him (Saeed) and others to please India and the US.

    He further argued that the UN resolution followed by the government action did not seek detention of any citizen. He said the detention of the JuD leaders is a case of mala fide intention and ulterior motive on part of the government. Dogar said the government had no evidence that the petitioners were a risk to security of Pakistan, and merely on the basis of UN resolutions their liberty could not be curtailed.

    The government on January 30 had put Saeed and the four leaders of JuD and Falah-e-Insaniat (FIF) under house arrest in Lahore under the country’s anti-terrorism act.

    The court adjourned the hearing till April 4. (PTI)

  • Facebook blocks 85% ‘blasphemous’ content in Pakistan, Islamabad high court still unhappy

    Facebook blocks 85% ‘blasphemous’ content in Pakistan, Islamabad high court still unhappy

    ISLAMABAD (TIP): Facebook has removed 85 percent of content considered insulting to Islam, but the high court in Pakistan’s capital is unhappy because there’s still “carpet bombing and drone attacks going on at our ideological boundaries”, The News reported.

    “(The) ideology of Pakistan, Sunnah of Hazrat Muhammad (PBUH) and the common binding force for all Muslims in the shape of love and respect for the Prophet (PBUH) regardless of color, creed and sect are the boundaries under attack”, said justice Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui of the Islamabad high court (IHC) yesterday.

    This is the same court that earlier this month ordered the Pakistan government to start an investigation into online “blasphemy” and threatened to block Facebook and other social media networks if they failed to censor content considered insulting to Islam.

    Following that order, Pakistan’s interior minister Nisar Ali Khan reached out to Facebook to comply.+

    “Now there’s only 15 percent of such content left to be removed”, the country’s interior secretary Arif Khan told the Islamabad High Court yesterday.

    “Facebook agreeing to our demands is a big achievement,” said the head of the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority.

    IHC isn’t that impressed.

    “If social media wages a war against us, what remedy (do) we have and where (is) our information technology wing,” the IHC bench asked, chastising the IT ministry for “behaving like silent spectator and having no mechanism to deal with the issue.”

    The IHC futrher sai it got no “satisfactory answer” from the state machinery on the preventive machinery against “he war waged through social media.”

    The top leadership of Pakistan needs to raise a “national firewall enabling Pakistan to monitor its’s internet traffic and all the users”, justice Siddiqui said.

    Pakistan previously banned Facebook for hosting allegedly blasphemous content for two weeks in 2010. As well, YouTube was unavailable from 2012 to 2016, over an amateur film about the Prophet Muhammad that led to global riots. (TOI)

     

     

  • Nepal asks climbers to clean quake-littered Everest camp

    Nepal asks climbers to clean quake-littered Everest camp

    KATHMANDU (TIP): Nepal is urging climbers on Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak, to help remove garbage from a camp abandoned two years ago after an earthquake triggered avalanches killing 18 people, as officials prepare to handle a rush of climbers.

    Tourism and mountain climbing are the main sources of income for the Himalayan nation and make up 4 percent of its economy. Climbing is recovering from a series of earthquakes in 2015 that killed a total of 9,000 people.

    Ten huge canvas bags each capable of holding 80 kg (176 lbs) of trash are to be placed at the ruined site of Camp Two on Mount Everest for climbers to deposit garbage they have retrieved, said Tourism Department official Durga Dutta Dhakal.

    “This way we hope to bring down the trash without any extra cost, using helicopters that return empty after dumping climbing ropes at the high camp,” he told Reuters on Wednesday.

    The helicopters operate during the climbing season that typically runs from March to May to dump climbing ropes.

    Sherpas would be paid to pick up the trash, said veteran climber Russell Brice, a New Zealander who runs the Himalayan Experience guiding company. “We will pay $2 for each kilo of trash the sherpas bring down,” Brice said.

    Mountaineers have removed more than 16 tonnes of trash from Everest in the past, but there are no estimates of how much still litters the mountain.

    Camp Two, located at 6,400 metres (21,000 feet) above sea level above the treacherous Khumbu Icefall known for crevasses and avalanches, is a major camping site for climbers of Mount Everest and Lhotse, the world’s fourth highest peak.

    More than 600 people scaled the 8,850-metre (29,035-foot) Everest summit last year from the Nepali and Chinese sides.

    Hiking officials expect the number to swell this season as many mountaineers, whose $11,000 per-person permits received two-year extensions after the quake, are expected to return.

    A group of hiking companies that sponsor climbers said it was trying to boost coordination between teams at high camps to avoid long queues of climbers forming in the mountain’s “Death Zone”.

    “This will reduce crowding, minimize risks and improve safety,” Dambar Parajuli, chief of the Expedition Operators’ Association, told Reuters. (Reuters)

  • Afghanistan women swim against threats for Olympic dream

    Afghanistan women swim against threats for Olympic dream

    KABUL (TIP): There are 30 pools in Afghanistan, only one that welcomes girls — and it is facing militant threats for doing so. Nevertheless a handful are diving in, pioneers racing to achieve Olympic glory in Tokyo.

    The story of the 25-year-old coach and head of the Women’s Swimming Committee, Elena Saboori, epitomises the struggle to swim in a conservative, conflict-plagued country that largely opposes women taking part in sports. A woman friend first took her for swimming, but after that she taught herself by downloading videos and practicing in the pool in Kabul. “I was afraid of drowning, but that’s when I thought I’d become a coach, because girls do not know how to swim here,” said Saboori, an economics student. Saboori said that she had been advised to stay away from the pool after violent threats were made for allowing her team to train there.

    “I know that I have broken a taboo. I took a big risk by launching this team.” The risks include a burgeoning Taliban insurgency. But Afghanistan’s patriarchal, ultra-conservative society, where many believe women should be veiled and confined to the home, adds another layer of risk. Saboori and her team cannot swim with their backs, arms or thighs exposed. The team is in touch with a Brazilian firm to design swimwear. Until then, they wear tights and black lycra, long-sleeved tops under one-piece swimsuits, with a swimming cap covering their hair.

    “The main obstacle for our swimmers is safety, of course,” said the president of the Afghan Federation of Swimming, Sayed Ihsan Taheri. “We aim to be at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, with a team of at least two men and one woman.” That woman will be Afghanistan’s first ever female Olympic swimmer.

    Challenges of poor infrastructure and a patriarchal culture have been compounded by government’s lack of support. “All Muslim countries except Afghanistan have a women’s team, even the strictest,” said Taheri, citing Qatar, Iran and Saudi Arabia. The government has even blocked the allocation of 500 Afghanis (less than $8) paid monthly to members of national sports teams. He has launched a fundraiser to finance high-level athletes. “We have raised $900 so far.” (AFP)

  • 4 women die as ferry sinks in Bangladesh river, 18 missing

    4 women die as ferry sinks in Bangladesh river, 18 missing

    DHAKA (TIP): At least four people died and several remained missing after a ferry carrying about 80 passengers capsized on March 28 in Bangladesh’s Panguchi River, police said. Rescuers recovered the bodies of four female passengers from the river in Bagerhat, 370 kilometers (230 miles) southwest from Dhaka, police said.

    Rashedul Alam, a police official from Morelganj in Bagerhat, said a combination of strong currents and overloading caused the ferry to sink.

    He added that most of the passengers could swim to safety but at least 18, mainly women and children, are still missing.

    A rescue operation involving emergency services and nearby residents saved two women and a child.

    Low-lying Bangladesh, with extensive inland waterways and slack safety standards, has a terrible track record of ferry accidents and casualties sometimes run into the hundreds.

    Overcrowding is a common factor but little is done to improve safety despite government promises to toughen regulations. (Reuters)

  • Trump to host Xi in Florida in first meeting

    Trump to host Xi in Florida in first meeting

    WASHINGTON (TIP): US President Donald Trump will host his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on April 6-7 next week at his Mara-a-Lago resort in Florida, the White House announced March 30.

    The engagement — the first between the two leaders after a torrid US election campaign during which Trump repeatedly attacked China on various issues — will provide the first clue about how the new administration will handle major global powers, particularly potential adversaries.

    Leaders from nearly a dozen countries, including Ireland and Denmark have breezed through Washington in the nearly ten weeks since President Trump took over.

    But few are so protocol- and optics-conscious as the establishments in Beijing and New Delhi, the latter of whom will watch the Xi visit keenly to read the tea-leaves about the new establishment’s Asia outlook in preparing for Prime Minister Modi’s visit to US that is expected to follow soon. (AFP)

  • China sets rules on beards, veils to fight extremism

    China sets rules on beards, veils to fight extremism

    BEIJING (TIP): China will step up a campaign against religious extremism in the far western region of Xinjiang on March 25 by implementing measures, including prohibiting “abnormal” beards, the wearing of veils in public places and the refusal to watch state television.

    Hundreds have died in recent years in Xinjiang, home to the Muslim Uighur people, in unrest blamed by Beijing on Islamist militants and separatists, though rights groups say the violence is more a reaction to repressive Chinese policies.

    The government denies committing abuses in Xinjiang and insists the legal, cultural and religious rights of Uig hurs, a Turkic ethnic group, are fully protected.

    While China officially guarantees freedom of religion, authorities have taken steps in the past few years to tackle what it sees as a rise in religious extremism. New legislation passed on Wednesday, widens existing rules and will come into effect on April 1.

    Workers in public spaces will be required to “dissuade” those who fully cover their bodies, including veiling their faces, from entering, and to report them to the police, the rules state. It will be banned to “reject or refuse radio, television and other public facilities and services”, marrying using religious rather than legal procedures and “using the name of Halal to meddle in the secular life of others”. “Parents should use good moral conduct to influence their children, educate them to revere science, pursue culture, uphold ethnic unity and refuse and oppose extre mism,” the rules say . The document also bans not allowing children to attend regular school, not abiding by family planning policies, deliberately damaging legal documents and “abnormal growing of beards”.

    While Uighurs have traditionally practiced a more relaxed form of Islam, the popularity of veils for women has grown in recent years in what experts say is an expression of opposition to Chinese controls.

    Chinese President Xi Jinping called for a “great wall of iron” to safeguard Xinjiang during the annual meeting of the parliament earlier this month.

    (Reuters)

  • Paris exhibition explores racism amid tensions in France

    Paris exhibition explores racism amid tensions in France

    PARIS (TIP): A UNESCO-backed Paris exhibition exploring the psychology behind racism aims to shed light on why racist acts in France are on the rise, and to educate against prejudice.

    “We and the Others, Prejudices of Racism,” which opens Friday to the French public at Paris’ Museum of Mankind, comes at a prescient moment _ during a divisive presidential campaign that’s been rife with anti-Islam rhetoric.

    This week, deep racial tensions affecting France’s large Asian community were exposed in violence that spilled onto Paris’ streets.

    Heyer said that some French political parties, especially the far-right, have used fear to fuel anti-Islam and anti-immigration policies.

    “In politics, French people, especially young people, are taking on prejudiced attitudes and extreme views because they have forgotten where it leads,” said co-curator Evelyne Heyer, a professor of genetic anthropology at the National History Museum.

    The exhibit, which includes multimedia, objects and text, makes for uncomfortable viewing.

    It revisits dark historical moments including the Rwandan Genocide, segregation in the United States, the Holocaust, as well as French colonial rule.

    One section’s display features a simple metal funnel dated 1943 that was used to gas people in Natzweiler-Struthof, the only Nazi death camp on current French territory. Elsewhere, cabinets showcase colonial-era French scientific textbooks that teach children hierarchical racial difference.

    But the exhibit is rooted in the present day.

    It presents newly-published research, which shows that while racial tolerance is generally increasing, racist acts and threats have been rising over the last ten years in French society.

    Exhibit organizers launched a prominent campaign in the Paris metro, featuring large poster images of French celebrities of different ethnic backgrounds reduced to simplified black and white shapes.

    The museum hopes that its prime position on the Place du Trocadero, opposite the Eiffel Tower, will help attract tourists from all nationalities.

    “This is a very good moment to look at French society… It’s been 20 years since scientists proved race doesn’t exist, but why is there still racism?” Heyer asked.

    “We hope people _ and some who are prejudiced _ will come and take another look at why they feel the way they do,” she added. (AP)

     

     

  • Britain targets legal certainty with plan to convert EU law after Brexit

    Britain targets legal certainty with plan to convert EU law after Brexit

    LONDON (TIP): The British government set out on Thursday how it will handle the mammoth task of converting European Union laws into domestic legislation in preparation for its exit from the bloc, seeking to ease business uncertainty about life after Brexit.

    Prime Minister Theresa May formally notified Brussels on March 28 of Britain’s intention to leave the EU after more than 40 years of membership. In that time, tens of thousands of EU-related laws have made their way onto the British statute book, governing almost everything from farming to finance.

    Her ministers laid out how they intend to unpick that complex legislative web by initially converting the entire body of EU law into British law – a step seen as necessary to ensure continuity for businesses trading across EU borders.

    The plan centres around a “Great Repeal Bill” due to be laid before parliament in May. The bill will transpose EU law, repeal the 1972 European Communities Act which formalises Britain’s EU membership, and give ministers the power to change existing laws to make sure they work after Brexit.

    “The bill will convert EU law into United Kingdom law, allowing businesses to continue operating knowing the rules have not changed overnight, and providing fairness to individuals, whose rights and obligations will not be subject to sudden change,” Brexit minister David Davis told parliament.

    Analysis by Thomson Reuters says 52,741 laws have been introduced in the UK as a result of EU legislation since 1990, and research published by parliament estimates 13.2 percent of UK primary and secondary legislation enacted between 1993 and 2004 was EU-related.

    Davis said the European Court of Justice (ECJ) would have no future role in interpreting British laws, but that courts would be able to reference ECJ case law.

    The bill is expected to be subject to close scrutiny, with companies saying they cannot plan without knowing what comes after Brexit, forcing them to put investment programmes on hold and sometimes delaying major infrastructure projects.

    Drugmakers are concerned that Brexit will mean the UK leaves the EU-wide European Medicines Agency, forcing the creation of a separate British system for drug approvals. That will mean more red tape and could delay new medicines reaching Britain.

    The government’s proposals did not specifically address such concerns, which are echoed in other industries such as finance and aviation where firms worry that leaving the EU will mean quitting the regulatory bodies that authorise them to trade.

    Aides said membership of EU agencies would be a matter for May’s negotiation.

    POWER GRAB

    The plan also raised hackles among some politicians who fear the government will use the Brexit process to reshape EU laws without proper parliamentary scrutiny as they move them into British law.

    The Liberal Democrats called it a “shameless power grab” and the main opposition Labour Party demanded tighter controls on the powers that the government wants to grant itself to amend legislation without consulting lawmakers.

    The plan to use such powers, often referred to as ‘Henry VIII powers’ after the 16th century monarch who ruled by proclamation, also drew wider criticism.

    Gina Miller, the investment manager who took on the government and won over whether May needed parliament’s approval to begin Brexit talks, said she was concerned that laws affecting citizens’ rights could be changed.

    “If there is any sniff that they are trying to use Henry VIII powers, that would be profoundly unparliamentary and undemocratic, and I would seek legal advice, because what you are doing is setting a precedent that government could bypass parliament,” she told BBC Radio 5 Live.

    Davis rejected such concerns, saying the bill and the powers it will create were designed to ensure legal certainty and that any changes in policy would be carried out through the normal legislative process, during which parliament would have its say.

    “We’re not considering some form of governmental executive orders,” he told parliament. (Reuters)

  • Suicide truck bombing kills 15 in Baghdad: Iraqi officials

    Suicide truck bombing kills 15 in Baghdad: Iraqi officials

    BAGHDAD (TIP): A suicide truck bomb targeted a police checkpoint in southern Baghdad on Wednesday night, killing 15 people and wounding 45, according to Iraqi officials.

    The bomber detonated the vehicle, an oil tanker laden with explosives, security and hospital officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity under regulations. Three policemen were among the dead while the rest were civilians, and a number of policemen were also wounded, the officials said.

    No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but the Islamic State group has carried out similar attacks as their territorial hold in Iraq weakens.

    Iraqi forces are fighting IS in western Mosul, where some 2,000 IS fighters are launching fierce counterattacks. After the beginning the operation to retake Mosul in October, Iraqi authorities in January declared they have liberated eastern Mosul, which is separated from the city’s western neighborhoods by the Tigris River.

    Western Mosul is densely populated and has proven to be a much more difficult fight for Iraqi and coalition forces, which have resorted to greater use of artillery and airstrikes to clear and hold territory.

    A number of airstrikes in western Mosul have resulted in high civilians casualties, according to residents interviewed by The Associated Press. The U.S.-led coalition says a strike in western Mosul on March 17 likely resulted in civilian casualties and is investigating the incident. Iraqi witnesses have said that airstrikes earlier this month killed scores of civilians. U.S. officials have said that the munitions used by the U.S.-led coalition that day should not have taken the entire building down, suggesting that militants may have deliberately gathered civilians there and planted other explosives that were detonated by airstrikes. (AP)

  • South Korea’s ousted leader Park Geun-Hye arrested

    South Korea’s ousted leader Park Geun-Hye arrested

    SEOUL (TIP): South Korea’s ousted president Park Geun-Hye arrived at a detention centre near Seoul early March 31 after being arrested over the corruption and abuse of power scandal that brought her down. The Seoul Central District Court ordered Park’s arrest on charges of bribery, abuse of authority, coercion, and leaking government secrets, after a marathon court hearing the previous day. “It is justifiable and necessary to arrest (Park) as key charges were justified and there is risk of evidence being destroyed,” the court said in a statement.

    Television footage of the former leader showed her looking grim and staring straight ahead as she left the prosecutor’s office to be taken into custody.

    Despite the early hour, when Park arrived at the jail in a black sedan at around 4.45am (1945 GMT), about 50 supporters were at the gates to greet her, waving national flags and chanting slogans demanding her release. Park, 65, becomes the third former leader to be arrested over corruption in Asia’s fourth-largest economy, where politics and big business have long been closely tied.

    She will now be processed and placed in a cell after changing into prison garb with her prisoner number emblazoned on the chest. Being taken into custody is a dramatic step in the disgrace of South Korea’s first woman president, and was a key demand of the millions of people who took to the streets to protest against her as the scandal engulfed her leadership last year. whether she should be arrested.

    (AFP)

  • Several hurt in clashes at Turkey’s Brussels consulate

    Several hurt in clashes at Turkey’s Brussels consulate

    BRUSSELS (TIP): Several people were injured and taken to hospital after supporters and opponents of the Turkish government clashed outside the country’s consulate in central Brussels on Thursday, Belgian police said.

    Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel condemned the violence, which he linked to a forthcoming referendum in Turkey on increasing the powers of President Tayyip Erdogan.

    “The Belgian government has absolute zero tolerance for any spillovers from the Turkish referendum. I condemn the riots at the embassy in Brussels,” he said on Twitter.

    A police spokeswoman said she could give no further details on the number of people hurt or the nature of their injuries. The Turkish mission to Brussels could not be immediately reached for comment.

    Ties between Turkey and European Union states have deteriorated in recent weeks over Turkish government attempts to rally support for Erdogan among expatriate Turks.

    Erdogan reacted with fury after Germany and the Netherlands – which, like Belgium, have big Turkish minorities – moved to restrict political rallies on their soil in the run-up to the April 16 referendum.

    Kurdish news agency Firat said the Thursday incident took place as people arrived at the consulate in Brussels to cast early ‘no’ votes in the referendum. Reuters was not able to confirm that independently. (Reuters)

     

  • Why China is pressuring India to join OBOR meeting

    Why China is pressuring India to join OBOR meeting

    BEIJING (TIP): China is putting pressure on India to participate in an international conference on its One Belt, One Road or Silk Road programme next May after realizing that showcasing the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) would not be enough to sell the OBOR idea.

    This is evident from several comments from Chinese officials and experts about the Indian reluctance to join the OBOR program that involves creating road, rail and port infrastructure connecting China to the world.

    A Chinese expert has now accused India of taking a “biased view” of the OBOR program. The expert, Lin Minwang of the Institute of International Studies at Shaghai’s Fudan University, even tried to shame India by citing some reports about Russia expressing interest in it.

    “New Delhi may also feel embarrassed as Moscow has actively responded to the Belt and Road (OBOR) initiative and will build an economic corridor with China and Mongolia,” Lin said adding, “Since the beginning of this year, there have been reports on Russia and Iran seeking to join the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which will likely put India in a more awkward position”.

    However, Russia has not sanctioned any specific programme for connecting with OBOR apart from making a few statements about its interests.

    China expects heads of at least 20 countries to participate in the OBOR conference, when it will try to persuade governments in Asia and Europe to join the programme. Beijing desperately wants India to participate because that would make it attractive to other South Asian countries.

    China is sore because India’s reluctance has made it difficult for China to extend the OBOR network to Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar. But Lin maintained that these countries are also interested in joining the program.

    He said, “Beijing has expressed, on various occasions, its anticipation to see New Delhi join the grand project and to make concerted effort with India in building economic corridors involving China, India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Myanmar.”

    Writing in the state-backed Global Times, Lin said that “other smaller states in South Asia have shown interest toward the One Belt, One Road initiative. India is definitely reluctant to see itself being left out of all these economic cooperation projects between China and other South Asian nations. Whether to continue to boycott or join the Belt and Road remains a conundrum for New Delhi.”

    On its part, India has pointed out that China is building infrastructure projects in the disputed Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, and thus hurting its interest in the name of China Pakistan Economic Corridor and OBOR. New Delhi cannot join a program that hurts Indian territorial interests.

    “The official reason why the Indian government rejected the offer to join the initiative is that it is designed to pass Kashmir, a disputed area between India and Pakistan. However, it is just an unfounded excuse as Beijing has been maintaining a consistent position on the Kashmir issue, which has never changed,” said Lin.

    He seemed to suggest that India should accept Beijing’s oral assurances in the face of mounting evidence of China creating infrastructure and legitimizing Pakistan’s claim over POK.

    (TOI)

  • Centre accords Z+ VVIP security to UP CM Adityanath

    Centre accords Z+ VVIP security to UP CM Adityanath

    New Delhi (TIP): The Centre has accorded the top category ‘Z+’ VVIP armed security cover to newly-appointed Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath.

    The cover will be provided by a special commando team of the CISF along with a small contingent of the Uttar Pradesh police.

    Adityanath was till now enjoying the smallest category of ‘Y’ category VVIP cover by the CISF in his capacity as a BJP Member of Parliament from Gorakhpur but officials said with his taking charge as CM, a threat perception report of central security agencies required his security paraphernalia to be upgraded.

    “The Chief Minister’s security has been bolstered and he will now be secured by a strong team of CISF commandos everytime he moves across the country. A similar commando contingent will be deployed at his official residence,” a senior officer said.

    As part of the new and upgraded security paraphernalia, Adityanath will have about 25-28 commandos accompanying him with sophisticated weapons at all times he is mobile and his convoy will have pilot and escort vehicles armed with jammers. Under the ‘Y’ cover, he was accompanied by about 2-3 commandos when he travelled, officials said.

    A Central Industrial Security Force squad from its Special Security Group (SSG) has recently taken charge of his security in Lucknow, they said.

  • EC asks analysts not to predict winning margins, seat shares

    EC asks analysts not to predict winning margins, seat shares

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Political analysts must not predict figures — such as winning margins or the number of seats a party is likely to win — in their comments during polls, the Election Commission announced on March 30.

    This is the crux of a fresh advisory by the commission, which widened the ambit of rules that prohibit exit poll until all rounds of voting are completed. The new rule will apply in all future elections.

    “The commission is of the view that predictions of results of elections in any form or manner by way of predictions etc., by astrologers, tarot readers, political analysts or by any persons during the prohibited period is violation of the spirit of Section 126A,” the advisory said.

    According to the communiqué, sent to the National Broadcasters Association and Press Council of India among others, all political analysis citing numbers will be considered as exit poll.

    The poll panel has set limits, a first in the world’s largest democracy, on what can be said by political commentators without violating the Representation of People’s Act, 1951 —the federal law governing Indian elections.

    The law bans exit poll in the middle of an election, as it could influence voting in later rounds.

    The opposition Congress welcomed the advisory, saying analysts put forth views that are as good as an exit poll.

    “It is a forward step. The EC must also take cognizance of so-called surveys conducted by parties during elections,” party spokesperson Tom Vadakkan said.