Year: 2022

  • South Korea’s unannounced rocket launch causes UFO scare

    South Korea’s unannounced rocket launch causes UFO scare

    Seoul (TIP): South Korea’s military confirmed it test-fired a solid-fuelled rocket on December 30 after its unannounced launch triggered brief public scare of a suspected UFO appearance or a North Korean missile launch. The Defence Ministry said in a statement that the rocket launch was part of its efforts to build a space-based surveillance capability and bolster its defence posture. It said it didn’t notify the general public of the launch in advance because it involved sensitive military security issues.

    A twisty tendril of vapour in white-to-red ombre could be seen snaking behind a bright white light in parts of South Korea’s sky on Friday evening. South Korean social media and internet sites were abuzz with messages by citizens who said they saw a soaring object, rainbow-coloured vapour trail or other mysterious lights. Some also posted photos and videos.

    “What is this? Is this a UFO? I’m scared,” said one Twitter user.

    Another said they suspected it was a North Korean missile launch and worried about a war, while a third said they believed a North Korean spy operating in South Korea was sending a signal back to the North.

    Others suspected it was a supernatural phenomenon.

    South Korean emergency offices and police received hundreds of citizens’ reports of witnessing of a suspicious flying object and mysterious lights across the country, according to local media. The South Korean rocket launch came four days after the South accused the North of flying five drones across the rivals’ border on Monday for the first time in five years.

    South Korea’s military detected the drones but failed to shoot them down, causing security concerns about its air defense network. The military later offered a rare apology for that.

    South Korean officials said they plan to use a solid-fuelled rocket to put the nation’s first spy satellite into orbit. In March, South Korea conducted its first successful launch of a solid-fuel rocket.

    Solid-fuel rockets reduce launch times, have simpler structures and are cheaper to develop and manufacture than liquid-fuel rockets, South Korean officials said.

    The Defence Ministry said Friday’s launch was a follow-up test of the March launch.

    North Korea is also pushing to develop its first military surveillance satellite and other high-tech weapons systems to cope with what it calls US hostility. Earlier this year, North Korea performed a record number of missile tests in what experts call a bid to prefect its nuclear weapons technology and boost its leverage in future dealings with the United States. (AP)

  • Vladimir Putin bans crude oil exports to countries imposing price cap

    Moscow (TIP): President Vladimir Putin on December 27 delivered Russia’s long-awaited response to a Western price cap, signing a decree that bans the supply of crude oil and oil products from February 1 for five months to nations that impose the cap.

    The Group of Seven major powers, the European Union and Australia agreed this month to a $60-per-barrel price cap on Russian seaborne crude oil effective from December 5 over Moscow’s “special military operation” in Ukraine. The decree, published on a government portal and the Kremlin website, was presented as a direct response to “actions that are unfriendly and contradictory to international law by the US and foreign states and international organisations joining them”.

    “Deliveries of Russian oil and oil products to foreign entities and individuals are banned, on the condition that in the contracts for these supplies, the use of a maximum price fixing mechanism is directly or indirectly envisaged,” the decree stated, referring specifically to the US and other foreign states that have imposed the price cap.

    The decree stated: “This…comes into force on February 1, 2023, and applies until July 1, 2023.” Crude oil exports will be banned from February 1, but the date for the oil products ban will be determined by the Russian government. — Reuters

  • North Korea fires 3 missiles amid tensions over drone flights

    North Korea fires 3 missiles amid tensions over drone flights

    Seoul (TIP): North Korea fired three short-range ballistic missiles towards its eastern waters in its latest weapons display on December 31, a day after rival South Korea launched a solid-fuelled rocket as part of its efforts to build a space-based surveillance capability to better monitor the North. Tensions between the rival Koreas rose earlier this week when South Korea accused North Korea of flying five drones across the rivals’ tense border for the first time in five years and responded by sending its own drones towards the North.

    South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that it detected the three launches from an inland area south of Pyongyang, the North’s capital, on Saturday morning. It said the three missiles travelled about 350 kilometres (220 miles) before landing in the waters between the Korean Peninsula and Japan. The estimated range suggests the missiles tested target South Korea.

    The Joint Chiefs of Staff called the launches “a grave provocation” that undermines international peace. It said South Korea closely monitors North Korean moves in coordination with the United States and maintains a readiness to “overwhelmingly” deter any provocation by North Korea.

    The US Indo-Pacific Command said the launches highlight “the destabilising impact” of North Korea’s unlawful weapons programs and that the US commitments to the defence of South Korea and Japan “remain ironclad.” Earlier on Saturday, Japan’s Defence Ministry also reported suspected ballistic missile firings by North Korea. (AP)

  • Putin, Jinping vow closer ties amid geopolitical tensions

    Putin, Jinping vow closer ties amid geopolitical tensions

    Kyiv (TIP): Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping vowed on December 30 to deepen their bilateral cooperation against the backdrop of Moscow’s 10-month war in Ukraine, which weathered another night of drone and rocket attacks following a massive missile bombardment.

    Putin and Xi made no direct mention of Ukraine in their opening remarks via video conference, which were broadcast publicly, before going into private talks.

    But they hailed strengthening ties between Moscow and Beijing amid what they called “geopolitical tensions” and a “difficult international situation,” with Putin expressing his wish to extend military collaboration.

    “In the face of increasing geopolitical tensions, the significance of the Russian-Chinese strategic partnership is growing as a stabilising factor,” said Putin.

    The Russian leader said he expected Xi to visit Moscow in the spring. Such a trip “will demonstrate to the whole world the strength of the Russian-Chinese ties on key issues, will become the main political event of the year in bilateral relations,” he said.

    Putin said the Kremlin aimed to “strengthen the cooperation between the armed forces of Russia and China.” Xi, in turn, said that “in the face of a difficult and far from straightforward international situation,” Beijing was ready “to increase strategic cooperation with Russia, provide each other with development opportunities, be global partners for the benefit of the peoples of our countries and in the interests of stability around the world”.

    Ties between Moscow and Beijing have grown stronger since Putin sent his troops into Ukraine. Last week, Moscow and Beijing held joint naval drills in the East China Sea. — AP

  • Attack kills 10 in Syria, Kurdish forces arrest 52 militants

    Attack kills 10 in Syria, Kurdish forces arrest 52 militants

    Beirut (TIP): A militant rocket attack in eastern Syria on December 30 targeted a bus with oil industry employees, killing at least 10, the government said. To the north, Syrian Kurdish-led forces announced they arrested 52 militants in an operation against the Islamic State group’s sleeper cells.

    According to Syria’s petroleum ministry, the rocket struck in the Al-Taym gas field in eastern Deir el-Zour province. There was no immediate claim of responsibility but the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition war monitoring group, said IS was behind the attack.

    The Observatory also reported a higher death toll from the rocket attack, saying at least 12 workers were killed.

    Also Friday, the US-backed and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces said their raids had reportedly thwarted an attack planned for New Year’s Eve. The IS militants were hiding in residential areas and farms, a statement from the forces said.

    The years long US-backed campaign had succeeded in crushing the militants’ territorial control in Iraq and Syria, but IS fighters maintain sleeper cells and have staged attacks that have killed scores of Iraqis and Syrians in the past months.

    On Thursday, the Syrian Kurdish-led forces announced their operation, citing a surge in IS attacks and saying that “Operation Al-Jazeera Thunderbolt” aims to target sleeper cells in al-Hol and nearby Tal Hamis areas.

    Since 2011, Syria has been mired in a bloody civil war that has drawn in regional and global powers. Syrian President Bashar Assad has mostly regained control of the country, but parts of its north remain under the control of rebels, as well as Turkish and Syrian Kurdish forces.

    Also, some 900 US troops in Syria support the Kurdish-led forces’ fight against IS and have frequently targeted IS militants, mostly in parts of northeastern Syria under Kurdish control.

    The US Central Command on Thursday reported conducting some 313 operations against IS in 2022 in Syria and Iraq, mostly in cooperation with Kurdish-led forces. According to a CENTCOM statement, 215 militants from the Islamic State group were arrested and 466 were killed in Syria. AP

  • 7 dead in Turkish restaurant gas canister blast

    Istanbul (TIP): A gas canister explosion at a restaurant in western Turkey killed seven people on December 30, officials said. The blast injured five others in the Nazilli district of Aydin province, Gov. Huseyin Aksoy tweeted. One of the injured was in critical condition and intubated, with burns over 80 per cent of the person’s body, and was being transferred to western Izmir province for treatment, Health Minister Fahrettin Koca tweeted.

    The blast occurred at around 3.30 pm as a gas canister was being changed at a Turkish doner kebab shop, the Nazilli public prosecutor’s office said. The statement said there were detention warrants out for five people.

    Earlier, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag tweeted that one person who is “alleged to have caused the explosion” was detained and three prosecutors were investigating.

    Media reported that there was a fire following the explosion at the restaurant, which is located on a busy street. Footage showed fire trucks and ambulances at the scene. AP

  • 3 NGOs suspend work in Afghanistan post ban on women

    3 NGOs suspend work in Afghanistan post ban on women

    Kabul (TIP): Three major international aid groups on December 25 suspended their operations in Afghanistan following a decision by the country’s Taliban rulers to ban women from working at non-governmental organisations. Save the Children, the Norwegian Refugee Council and CARE said they cannot effectively reach children, women and men in desperate need in Afghanistan without the women in their workforces.

    The three NGOs provide healthcare, education, child protection and nutrition services and support amid plummeting humanitarian conditions. The NGO ban was introduced a day earlier.

    The US warned that the NGO ban will disrupt vital and life-saving assistance to millions. The Taliban takeover sent Afghanistan’s economy into a tailspin and transformed the country, driving millions into poverty and hunger. — AP

  • Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ takes oath as Nepal’s new Prime Minister

    Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ takes oath as Nepal’s new Prime Minister

    Kathmandu (TIP): Pushpa Kamal Dahal “Prachanda” was on December 26 sworn in as the Prime Minister of Nepal for a third time, a day after the former guerrilla leader dramatically walked out of the pre-poll alliance led by the Nepali Congress and joined hands with opposition leader K P Sharma Oli.

    The 68-year-old CPN-Maoist Centre chairman was appointed as the country’s new prime minister on Sunday after he submitted a letter to President Bidya Devi Bhandari showing the support of 169 members in the 275-member House of Representatives.

    Prachanda took the oath of office and secrecy from President Bhandari at an official ceremony at Shital Niwas on Monday. President Bhandari also administered the oath to other Cabinet members of the new coalition government. The new Cabinet has three deputy prime ministers – Bishnu Paudel from Oli’s CPN-UML, Narayan Kaji Shrestha from CPN-Maoist Centre and Rabi Lamichhane from Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP).

    Paudel has been assigned Finance ministry, while Shrestha got Physical Infrastructure and Transport and Lamichhane Home Ministry.

    Jwala Kumari Sah, Damodar Bhandari and Rajendra Kumar Rai — all three from Oli’s CPN-UML — have been made ministers. Janamat Party’s Abdul Khan was also appointed as a minister.

    Despite getting appointed prime minister with an overwhelming majority, Prachanda will now have to win a vote of trust from the lower house within 30 days. (PTI)

  • Court in Myanmar again finds Suu Kyi guilty of corruption, sentences her to 7 years

    Bangkok (TIP): A court in military-ruled Myanmar on December 30 convicted the country’s ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi of corruption, sentencing her to seven years in prison in the last of a string of criminal cases against her, a legal official said. The court’s action leaves her with a total of 33 years to serve in prison following a series of politically tinged prosecutions since the army toppled her elected government in February 2021.

    She has also been convicted of several other offences, which previously gave her a total of 26 years’ imprisonment. Her supporters and independent analysts say the charges against her are an attempt to legitimise the military’s seizure of power while eliminating her from politics before an election it has promised for next year.

    December 30 verdict in the purpose-built courtroom in the main prison on the outskirts of the capital, Naypyitaw, was made known by a legal official who insisted on anonymity for fear of being punished by the authorities.

    The trial was closed to the media, diplomats and spectators, and her lawyers were barred by a gag order from talking about it. (AP)

  • Pakistan government convenes NSC meeting; resolves to defeat recent ‘wave of terrorism’

    Pakistan government convenes NSC meeting; resolves to defeat recent ‘wave of terrorism’

    Islamabad (TIP): Top civil and military leaders of Pakistan on December 30 vowed to defeat the recent “wave of terrorism” in the country and warned that nobody will be allowed to harm the key concept of national security.

    The decision to convene the meeting of the NSC, the nation’s highest security decision-making body, was taken during a meeting between Prime Minister Sharif and Chief of Army Staff General Asim Munir on Thursday.

    The NSC meeting discussed the modalities to counter the latest threat by the Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) terror group which has carried out several attacks since November when it officially called off a ceasefire with the government of Pakistan.

    The NSC meeting, chaired by Prime Minister Sharif, was attended by all the service chiefs, key cabinet ministers, and other high officials and discussed the overall situation of peace and security in the country. “The Intelligence agencies presented a detailed briefing on the overall situation of peace and security in the country and factors behind the recent wave of terrorism and steps to curb them,” said the statement issued by the Pakistani government. During the security meeting, the participants expressed an unequivocal opinion that Pakistan’s national interests will not be compromised and nobody will be allowed to harm the key concept of national security. The meeting expressed that “militants are enemies of Pakistan” and it resolved that the “the entire nation is united on one narrative against terrorism and terrorists and those who challenge Pakistan will get a full-force response”, the statement said.

    The NSC expressed the commitment that the fundamental interests of Pakistan’s survival, security, and development will be safeguarded with utmost courage, consistency and perseverance.

    The meeting also reviewed the country’s economy and law and order situation in detail.

    Finance Minister Ishaq Dar briefed the participants about the economic situation and challenges confronting the country as well as economic strategy and measures taken by the government.

    Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Hina Rabbani Khar apprised the forum about Pakistan’s interactions with the interim government of Afghanistan. The meeting also paid rich tribute to the supreme sacrifices in the fight against terrorism. The meeting between the prime minister and the Army chief took place a day after the corps commanders’ conference at the General Headquarters where the top military brass vowed to defeat terrorism.

    The Army said that after the corps commanders’ moot that a comprehensive review of professional and organisational matters of the Army was undertaken by the commanders.

    “It was resolved to fight against terrorists without any distinction and eliminate this menace as per the aspirations of people of Pakistan,” the Army said in a separate statement.

    Earlier it was said that the NSC would also look into the situation in Afghanistan in the wake of the failure of the interim Taliban government to eliminate the use of its soil for terrorist activities across the Afghan borders. (PTI)

  • Amita Singh

     Happy New Year 

    As the world recovered post Covid, a realization definitely set in about the frailty of life and appreciation of being blessed. Gratitude and love!!!

    Through all of life’s trials and tribulations, surviving and overcoming are great motivations. I discovered new levels of my strength and resilience as a single woman that I never dreamt I was capable of. I had enough opportunities to be happy in my own company, reflect on my journey as a learning tool.

    As 2023 is round the corner, I am more thoughtful than in the years past, of my role in life and what I would like to give back to society in general and my dear ones personally. I still dream and pray like everyone wishing for world peace and our responsibility on this planet, for women’s liberation and empowerment. Personally, I want to spend my precious time with those I cherish, laugh a little more and hold hands with those I can help and support. Work excites me and my friends are my existence. I am who I am because of the love of family and friends that surround me.

    As I wish a very happy new year to everyone, my one message is to please love and treat others as you would like to be treated. Be humble and if you can make a positive difference even in one soul, you are a winner.

    Let’s collectively make 2023 our best one yet.

    HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

    (Amita Singh is a mom and owner of Daminis, a retail clothing store in Edison, NJ)

  • ‘In Maa, I’ve always felt that trinity’: PM Modi’s moving tribute to his mother

    ‘In Maa, I’ve always felt that trinity’: PM Modi’s moving tribute to his mother

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi posted a moving tribute to his mother Heeraben Modi who died in the early hours of Friday, December 30,  at the age of 99. “A glorious century rests at the feet of God… In Maa I have always felt that trinity, which contains the journey of an ascetic, the symbol of a selfless Karmayogi and a life committed to values,” the Prime Minister tweeted this morning informing his mother’s death.

    Sharing a photo of her, he recalled what she told him when he met her on her 100th birthday in June.

    “When I met her on her 100th birthday, she said one thing, which is always remembered that work with intelligence, live life with purity, that is, work with intelligence and live life with purity,” said the Prime Minister who attended her last rites in Gandhinagar.

    The UN Mehta hospital in Ahmedabad where she was admitted on Tuesday night said in a statement that she died at 3.30 am. Her body was later taken to Gandhinagar.

    Heeraben used to live with Pankaj Modi, the Prime Minister’s younger brother, at Raysan village near Gandhinagar. PM Modi used to visit her during most of his trips to Gujarat.

    Heeraben was born on June 18, 1923, in an ordinary family in Gujarat’s Visanagar as Heeraben Damodardas Modi. She lost her mother at an early age and her growing-up years were full of struggles.

    Heeraben after marriage lived in a tiny house in Vadnagar with her family, including her husband, Prime Minister Modi and his five siblings.

    To help with the family’s income, she would wash utensils at a few homes and also spun the charkha.

    In an emotional blog post earlier on Heeraben’s 99th birthday, Prime Minister Modi said she has always led a simple life and has no assets in her name. Heeraben was a dutiful citizen and despite her age she was often seen casting her vote on the day of elections. She was also famously seen joining the queue outside a bank when the Prime Minister had declared demonetisation in the country in 2016.

    Even during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, when there was some hesitation among many regarding vaccinations, Heeraben set an example by taking the vaccine.

    Condolences  started pouring in from across the world after the demise of the mother of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida was one of the first world leaders to offer condolences to PM Narendra Modi over the passing away of his mother, Heeraben Modi.

    Mr Kishida tweeted, “PM Modi @narendramodi, I would like to express my deepest condolences for the passing of your beloved mother. May her soul rest in peace.”

    Nepal Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ also expressed sadness over the death of PM Modi’s mother.

    In a tweet, Nepal PM stated, “I’m deeply saddened to learn about the passing away of Smt. Heeraba Modi, loving mother of Prime Minister @PMOIndia At this hour of grief, I express heartfelt condolences to PM Modi ji and the family members and pray for eternal peace of the departed soul.”

    Former Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa condoled the death of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s mother. He tweeted, “Deeply saddened to hear of the demise of Smt. Heeraben Modi. My heartfelt condolences to Prime Minister @narendramodi ji on the loss of his beloved mother. Our thoughts and prayers are with the PM and his family in this hour of grief.”

    Former Nepal Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba expressed condolences over the passing away of Heeraben He tweeted, “My heartfelt condolences to Shri @narendramodi ji and his family at the passing away of his venerable Mother Heeraben Modi. May her eternal soul attain Moksha.”

    Russian Ambassador to India Denis Alipov offered condolences to PM Modi over the death of his mother. He tweeted, “My heartfelt condolences to Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi ji on the biggest loss. My heart breaks for you Om Shanti.”

    German Ambassador to India Philipp Ackermann tweeted, “Deepest and sincere condolences to honorable Prime Minister @narendramodi. We join him and his family in mourning their loss.”

    United States President Joe Biden on Saturday offered “heartfelt” condolences to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on his mother’s demise. “Jill and I send our deepest and heartfelt condolences to Prime Minister @narendramodi on the loss of his mother, Heeraben Modi. Our prayers are with the Prime Minister and his family at this difficult time,” Biden’s tweet read.

    Apart from Biden, several other global leaders also sent their condolences after PM Modi’s mother passed away in Gujarat’s Ahmedabad.

    “There is no greater loss than losing one’s mother,” Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif tweeted adding “my condolences to Prime Minister @narendramodi on the passing away of his mother”.

    “Saddened to hear the news about Indian PM @narendramodi’s mother, Hiraben Modi, passing away. My thoughts and prayers are with PM Modi and his family during this time of mourning,” Maldives President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih tweeted.

    West Bengal CM and Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee took to Twitter to say, “Condolences to PM Narendra Modi on the passing away of his mother, Heeraben Modi. I pray that her soul rests in peace. In this hour of grief, I hope that he and his family members find strength.”

    Former vice president Venkaiah Naidu tweeted: “My deepest condolences to Prime Minister Shri @narendramodi on the sad demise of his beloved mother, Smt. Heeraben Modi.”

    “I am deeply pained by the passing away of Hira Ba, mother of Prime Minister Shri @narendramodi. The death of a mother leaves such a void in one’s life that is impossible to fill. I express my condolences to the Prime Minister and his entire family in this hour of grief. Om Shanti!” Rajnath Singh said in a tweet in Hindi.

    Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) supremo Mayawati said,”Extremely saddened by the news of the demise of Mrs. Heeraben, mother of Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi. My deepest condolences to his entire family. May nature give him and all his loved ones the strength to bear this loss.”

  • Sikh History This Week- December 30, 2022, to January 5, 2023

    30th December

    1734       Mata Sahib Kaur sent a Hukamnama for Bhai Mann Singh Ji.

    1922       Second meeting of Babbars at Jassowal, Dec. 20-31, to decide the reformation of the Jholichuks.

    31st December

    1612       Guru Hargobind left Amritsar for Delhi where he was taken into and sent to Gwalior.

    1925       Haji Mohamad Maskeen offered a “Choar” for Sri Darbar Sahib.

    1929       Congress Convention at Amritsar ignored by the Sikhs.

    1958       Gurudwara Amendment Bill passed.

    1st January

    1806 Maharaja Ranjit Singh, under the advise of Kapurthala’s Sardar Fateh Singh Ahluwalia, signed a friendship treaty with the British. The signatories to this treaty were Maharaja Ranjit Singh, Fateh Singh, and Lord Lake. Under the treaty Maharaja Ranjit Singh accepted not to help Holkar and British agreed to respect territories of Lahore Darbar. Jaswant Rao Holkar left Amritsar disappointed.

    1806 The Marathas and the Sikhs were the only people who offered stiff resistance to the British and the Afghans. While the Maharaja Ranjeet Singh was consolidating his powers, many political events were taking place around him. On the one hand he had to mediate a quarrel between the cheifs of Patiala and Nabha and on the other hand he had to save the face of Jawant Rao Holkar, the Maratha (Marhatta) chief, who had set his sights on whole India.

    The British had clashed with the Marathas and had inflicted heavy defeats upon them. They had first taken over Delhi and Agra, defeated Scindia (a Marhatta chief), and driven out the remaining Marhatta chief Jaswant Rao Holkar.

    Holkar and his Rohilla ally, Amir Khan, after having failed to obtain any support from the Malwa cheifs, moved to Amritsar. They were being followed by the British commandar, Lord Lake. He had been persuing Holkar and encamped himself on the banks of Beas. While Holkar appealed to Maharaja Ranjeet Singh for help in driving the British back, the British commander made it known to the Maharaja that doing so would extend the Anglo-Marathan hostilities to his domain (Punjab). It created a big problem for the Maharaja. The Sikh Maharaja could not afford to make his state the theatre of war between the Marhattas and the British. That is why he offered to mediate in this treaty.

    The Sikh signatories guaranteed that the Holkar’s army would leave and they will have nothing to do with them. They allowed Holkar to take whatever possessions he had and recross the Sutlej without being harrased.

    This was a smart political move on the part of Maharaja Ranjeet Singh. It saved his kingdom from unnecessary bloodshed. It also saved the British face. They really did not want to fight the Sikh ruler.

    2nd January

    1741       Sukha Singh of Mari Kambo and Mehtab Singh of Mirankot entered Harimandir Sahib, Amritsar. They were disguised as Muslims. While Sukha Singh kept guard, Mehtab Singh beheaded Massa Raangadh and escaped together. Massa Rangadh had committed the heinous crime of converting Harimandir Sahib into a dancing hall where he smoked and wined. He was the garrision commander of Madiyala. He took control of Sri Harmandir Sahib as the land was prior property of Rangadhs. Mehtab Singh was later arrested and crushed to death after unspeakable torture on wheels.

    SRI DARBAR SAHIB also known as Harminder Sahib and Golden Temple was constructed by Guru Arjun in the middle of an sacred water tank (sarowar).

    In sunmat 1621, with Guru Amar Das’s permission, Guru Ram Das started the digging of a tank (Taal) near villages Tugh, Gumtala, and Sultanwind. This digging was completed by Guru Arjun Dev in sunmat 1645 and named “Santoksar”.

    Simultaneously, with Guru Amar Das’s permission, a village was established nearby and named “Guru Ka Chaak”. Guru Sahib’s residence in this village were popularly known as “Guru Kae Mahal”. To the west of these residences, next to the tree known as “DukhBhanjani Baeri”, the digging of a tank was started in 1634. However, this digging remained incomplete and was eventually completed by Guru Arjun Dev after he ascended to the Gur Gadhi. Guru Arjun Dev vigorously pushed all of the projects initiated by Guru Ram Das. He invited business people, scholars, and skilled people from all over, to come and settle around this area and establish new markets. As a result this area came to known as “Ramdas Pur”. Bhai Sallo is especially noted for his hard work in establishing and populating this area. His contributions are extremely noteworthy.

    In sunmat 1643, the construction of permanent sarowar began and its name changed to “Amritsar”. As a result the surrounding city also adopted the “Amritsar” name. On magh 1, sunmat 1645, Guru Arjun Dev Patshah asked Sain Mian Meer to lay the foundation stone of Harminder Sahib. The foundation stone was laid right in the middle of the sarowar and upon completion of its construction, Sri Guru Granth Sahib’s prakash was established in sunmat 1661.

    3rd January

    1961       Master Tara Singh was released from jail, where he was confined in connection with Punjabi Suba agitation. Master Tara Singh was born on 24 June, 1885, in Haryal in Rawalpindi district of North Western Province of undivided India. His mother, Moolan Devi, was a pious lady and his father, Bakshi Gopi Chand, was a patwari of the village and was a well known and respected person. Tara Singh’s original name was Nanak Chand. In 1902 Nanak Chand embraced Sikhism and came to be called Tara Singh.

    4th January

    1909       Baba Ratta Singh Ji Nirankari passed away. Barsi celebrations are observed every year.

    NIRANKARI: a particular branch of GurSikh faith, established by Bhai Dayal Singh Ji. A Saehajdhari Sikh resident of Peshwar, GurSahai Ji, had a son named RamSahai Ji who married Ladhaki, daughter of Vasakha Singh (treasurer for the tenth Guru). Bhai Dayal Singh was born from this marriage on 15 Vaisakh sunmat 1840 (1783).

    5th January

    Prakash Utsav (birthday), Tenth Patshah, Guru Gobind Singh Ji.

  • Lily Collins ‘Loves’ Being Compared To Sarah Jessica Parker On ‘Emily In Paris’

    Actress Lily Collins “loves” being compared to Sarah Jessica Parker on the Netflix show, ‘Emily in Paris’.

    The 33-year-old actress takes on the title role of Emily in the Netflix hit about an ambitious marketing executive who relocates from Chicago to the French capital and said that her role is like that of stylish New York columnist Carrie Bradshaw, who was played by Sarah Jessica Parker, 57, in the cult 1990s series ‘Sex and the City’ as well as its spin-off ‘And Just Like That’, reports femalefirst.co.uk.

    Lily told E! News: “That is one that I will always take with utter love. I just love Carrie Bradshaw. I love Sarah Jessica. We both are very much fashion shows and they celebrate the cities in which they film, Paris and New York. They’re characters unto themselves, the fashion and the city.”

    Meanwhile, the ‘Les Miserables’ actress recently revealed she was determined to develop her understanding of “French culture” with her starring role in the series.

    Asked what she most enjoyed about her character’s journey during season three of the show, Lily explained: “For me, I was excited to ground myself more in the French culture, whether that be the language, the fashion, or just feeling a deeper sense of home within the city. And I was excited that the show, itself, leans more into the comedy among the characters, as opposed to all being about Emily’s fish-out-of-water experience.

  • Doesn’t hold patents on Ram, Hanuman: Uma Bharti’s stinging remark on BJP

    Doesn’t hold patents on Ram, Hanuman: Uma Bharti’s stinging remark on BJP

    New Delhi (TIP)- Senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader and former Madhya Pradesh chief minister Uma Bharti said her party does not “hold patents” on Lord Ram, Hanuman or the Hindu religion and anybody can have faith in them. In a series of tweets, Uma Bharti said it was not the BJP which inculcated in her the faith in Ram, the Tricolour, Ganga and cow, but it was “already within” her.

    “The BJP does not hold patents on Ram and Hanuman or the Hindu religion. Anyone can have faith in them. The difference is that our faith is beyond political gains,” she said.

    Bharti also questioned the purpose of Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra while highlighting the BJP-led government’s decision to abrogate Article 370 to end the special status of Jammu and Kashmir. “But where is Bharat breaking? We have abrogated Article 370. What was breaking the country was Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (PoK). Rahul Gandhi should take this yatra to PoK,” she said.

    Her stinging statement on the BJP came days after she courted trouble for her party by telling the Lodhi community that they were free to vote for any party by taking their own interest into account.

    Speaking at a convention of marriageable boys and girls of her community, Bharti said she was loyal soldier of the BJP but the people of her community should take a decision on the basis of their own interests.

    “I will come, I will come on the platform of my party, I will ask for votes. I never say that if you are a Lodhi then vote for the BJP. I tell everyone to vote for the BJP because I am a loyal soldier of my party. But I will expect a little from you that you will be a loyal soldier of the party,” she said.

    “You have to see the surroundings and look for your interests. If you are not a party worker or a party voter, you have to decide for yourself. We are in the bond of love but from my side, you are completely free from the political bonding.”

    Source: HT

  • Will not compromise on national security for good relations with neighbours: Rajnath Singh

    Will not compromise on national security for good relations with neighbours: Rajnath Singh

    Thiruvananthapuram (TIP)- Defence Minister Rajnath Singh on Friday, December 30,  said India wants to have and maintain friendly relations with its neighbours, but it will not be done at the cost of national security.

    Speaking at the 90th annual pilgrimage of Sivagiri Mutt here, Singh recalled former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s remark that we can change friends but not our neighbours.

    “Therefore, we need good and friendly relations with our neighbours. However, we will not compromise on national security to maintain good relations. We do not want good relations with anyone at the cost of our national security,” the Defence Minister said.

    Singh also spoke about Kerala-based social reformer Sree Narayana Guru’s teachings, like ‘prosperity through industry’ which is the basis of the Indian’s government’s ‘Atma Nirbhar Bharat’ policy.

    As a result of the same, the country is considered as one of the top five economies in the world and our military is seen as a force to be reckoned with, he contended.

    “His preaching of prosperity through industry is the basis of the Government of India’s resolution of ‘Self-reliant India’. Today, India is one of the largest economies of the world because of its hard work and enterprise. Today, India has become one of the top five economies of the world.” “The world today recognises India as military power to be reckoned with, due to the government’s pitching for ‘Self-reliant India’ which is based on ‘Prosperity through industry’ preaching of Sree Narayana Guru,” the Defence Minister said.

    Singh said that self-reliance has been an intrinsic part of India’s culture and Sree Narayana Guru spread this message in the public through his teachings, and Sivagiri Mutt was also working to take it forward continuously.

    He further said that while he was working to protect the “body”—boundaries—of India with the help of the armed forces and under the guidance of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the saints of the math were working to protect the soul of the country.

    “I appreciate the work you are doing. We can survive as a nation only when both the body and soul are safe,” Singh said and expressed confidence that this year’s annual pilgrimage would also be a success.

    In January 1928, Vallabhasserry Govindan Vaidyar and T K Kittan jointly requested Guru to have a Sivagiri pilgrimage as all the higher classes and others had their own pilgrim centres, but ‘avarnas’ had nowhere to go, according to the math website.

    Guru gave his consent to the proposal and fixed a date of first of January of every year for the pilgrimage, prior to which pilgrims have to maintain a 10-day long austere life and wear only yellow clothes, the website said.

    The Defence Minister, at the event, also condoled the death of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s mother—Hiraben.

    Singh said that when he learned about the tragic news he was contemplating returning to Delhi, but the Prime Minister told everyone that all should fulfill their official commitments before coming back.

    “So on behalf of everyone here, the Sivagiri Mutt and myself, I would like to pay tribute to Ma Hiraben,” he said.

    Thereafter, a one-minute silence was observed by everyone present there.

    Earlier, in his speech, he said many allege liberty, equality and fraternity are not part of Indian tradition and ideologies and that it reached us through the French Revolution.

    “However, that is incorrect. Sources of liberty, equality, fraternity and world peace can be seen in Indian culture. In fact, the concept of human equality can be seen in our ancient texts and the preaching and literary works of saints, philosophers and poets of the ‘Bhakti’ period.              Source:PTI

  • Rahul Gandhi Opposition’s PM face in 2024 polls, says Kamal Nath

    Rahul Gandhi Opposition’s PM face in 2024 polls, says Kamal Nath

    Congress leader Kamal Nath said on Friday, December 30, that Rahul Gandhi would be the Opposition’s PM candidate for the 2024 Lok Sabha elections. In an email interview, he lauded Rahul for leading the Bharat Jodo Yatra, saying he was not doing politics for power, but for the common people of the country.

    Nath also said no one in the history of the world had undertaken such a long padayatra. The former Madhya Pradesh CM is the lone leader to have come forward in favor of Rahul’s candidature for the 2024 polls.

    Asked if there was any chance of Jyotiraditya Scindia’s return to the party in the future, Nath said, “There is no place for those who betrayed the party.”.              Source: PTI

  • Congress, JD-S dynastic, corrupt parties: Shah

    Congress, JD-S dynastic, corrupt parties: Shah

    Bengaluru (TIP)- Hitting the ground running in poll-bound Karnataka, Union Home Minister Amit Shah called both the Congress and JD(S) as ‘parivaarvadi’ (dynastic politics) and corrupt and urged the people of Mandya and Old Mysuru region to support the BJP and bring it to power with a majority in the state.

    The BJP is considered to be weak in the Vokkaliga-dominated Old Mysuru region, and is focusing on this belt to gain complete majority in 2023 Assembly polls.

    “Enough of JD(S)-Congress, Congress-JD(S) this time Mandya, the Mysuru region should make BJP win with full majority. Congress and JD(S) are both parivaarvadi (dynastic politics) parties, they are corrupt pirates,” Shah said.

    Addressing a massive public meeting as part of the ongoing ‘Janasankalpa Yatre’ of the state BJP, he said, “We have seen administration of both parties, when Congress comes, Karnataka will become Delhi’s ATM and when JD(S) comes it becomes ATM for a family. Repeatedly these two parties have through corruption have stopped Karnataka’s progress.” Stating that the time has come to get free from ‘parivaarvad’ and corruption, Shah asked people to give BJP an opportunity to form the government with full majority once, and bring a “double engine” government.

    “In the next five years under the leadership of Modji we will take Karnataka much forward in the path of progress,” he said, accusing both Congress and JD(S) of being “corrupt, communal and also protectors of criminals”. Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai, Union Minister Pralhad Joshi, state BJP chief Nalin Kumar Kateel, party’s national General Secretary C T Ravi among other leaders were present at the event.

    Reminding that he had begun campaigning for the 2018 Assembly polls from Mandya, he said, the people of Karnataka gave the BJP an opportunity to form the government making us the single largest party. Then again in 2019 Lok Sabha polls under the leadership of Modi with 52 per cent vote-share, Karnataka got 25 out 28 seats for the BJP, he added.

    Source: PTI

  • India makes negative Covid report mandatory for flyers from China, 5 other places

    India makes negative Covid report mandatory for flyers from China, 5 other places

    New Delhi (TIP)- Passengers arriving from China, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, Singapore and Thailand – the countries that have reported massive surge in Covid cases might require mandatory negative RT-PCR tests from next week, news agency PTI reported.

    As the Centre has stepped up surveillance and asked the states to be alert in view of the global spike in Covid cases, at least 39 international travellers arriving in India have tested positive during the random tests being carried at airports.” 39 international passengers were found positive for Covid-19 out of the 6,000 tested on arrival in the last two days,” official sources told PTI. This comes at a time when Union health minister Mansukh Mandaviya is set to visit New Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport tomorrow to review the arrangements made to screen foreign travellers.

    Health experts have predicted that India will see a Covid surge in January. Cases are projected to rise especially in the next 40 days. The alert has been sounded based on the previous year’s readings.

    Following the surge, India has begun to maintain a close watch on the pandemic ahead of New Year. The Centre or the states have not imposed any restriction on celebrations, but urged people to follow Covid-appropriate behaviour. Hospitals across the country conducted a mock drill to ensure readiness to deal with any eventuality related to Covid-19.

    With only 27 per cent of the eligible adult population having taken the precaution dose, government officials have appealed to those due for it to take it.

    India recorded 226 new cases of the novel coronavirus in the past 24 hours. According to the data shared by the Union Health Ministry today (December 31), the total recovery rate reached at around 98.80 per cent and total recoveries data reached to 4,41,44,029.

    The total active cases of COVID-19 in India have increased to 3,653, the health ministry data showed on Saturday. Yesterday, the registered active cases were around 3,609.

    An increase of total 44 cases has been recorded in the active COVID-19 caseload in a span of 24 hours. The active cases comprise 0.01 per cent of the total infections, the ministry said.

    The total death toll in the country is now at 5,30,702. In India, the first death due to the COVID pandemic was reported in March 2020.  According to the health ministry’s website, 220.10 crore doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered in the country so far under the nationwide vaccination drive. India’s COVID-19 tally had crossed the 20-lakh mark on August 7, 2020, 30 lakh on August 23, 40 lakh on September 5, 50 lakh on September 16, 60 lakh on September 28, 70 lakh on October 11, 80 lakh on October 29, 90 lakh on November 20 and the one-crore mark on December 19, 2020.

    The country crossed the grim milestones of two crore cases on May 4, 2021, three crore on June 23, 2021 and four crore on January 25 this year.

  • 11 chargesheeted in PFI conspiracy case

    The NIA today said it had filed a chargesheet against 11 persons accused of being involved in organising terrorist training camps and recruiting youngsters for the banned Popular Front of India (PFI) in Telangana’s Nizamabad district.

    The chargesheet was filed before the NIA Special Court in Hyderabad on Thursday, the agency said in a statement. Those named are Abdul Khader, Abdul Ahad, Abdul Saleem, Shaik Shadullah, Feroz Khan, Mohammad Osman, Syed Yahiya Sameer, Shaik Imran alias “Imran Qureshi”, Mohd Abdul Mubeen and Mohammad Irfan, all of Telangana, and Shaik Iliyas Ahmed of Andhra Pradesh, it said. “Investigations revealed the accused were radicalising gullible Muslim youth and recruiting them into the PFI through speeches filled with hatred against the government of India as well as other organisations,” statement read.

    The NIA on Friday arrested a lawyer in a case related to unlawful and violent activities by the PFI in Kerala. Mohammed Mubarak AI, a resident of Ernakulam district, is the 14th person arrested in the case following searches in the state on Thursday.

  • Gujarat: Bus Crashes Into SUV After Driver Suffers Heart Attack, 9 Dead

    Nine people died and 28 were injured in a horrific crash between a bus and an SUV car in Gujarat’s Navsari district early on Saturday, December 31,  morning. A bus full of people returning from the Pramukh Swami Maharaj Shatabdi Mahotsav event from Surat rammed into a Toyota Fortuner car on the Navsari national highway number 48 after the driver suffered a heart attack and lost control of the vehicle. He was taken to a hospital for treatment, where he died.

    Eight of the nine occupants of the car died, and 28 people in the bus were injured. 11 were taken to a private hospital. The luxury bus was going from Surat to Valsad.

    The accident occurred near Vesma village, while the SUV was coming from the opposite direction, Navsari Superintendent of Police (SP) Rushikesh Upadhyay said.

    Those travelling in the SUV were residents of Ankleshwar in Gujarat, and they were on their way back to their hometown from Valsad, Mr Upadhyay said, adding that the passengers of the bus were from Valsad.

    Union Home Minister Amit Shah condoled the deaths in a Twitter post.

    “The road accident in Gujarat’s Navsari is heartbreaking. My condolences to those who have lost their families in this tragedy. May God give them the strength to bear the pain. The local administration is giving immediate treatment to the injured, praying for their speedy recovery,” he tweeted in Gujarati.

    The crash led to traffic disruption on the highway, after which the police got the bus removed from the road using a crane and traffic resumed as usual.

     

  • December 30 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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  • In the new evolving world, India needs a new vision

    In the new evolving world, India needs a new vision

    The foundation for this new vision is a harmonious and inclusive society that embraces India’s unique plurality; incrementalism using existing tools, structures and processes may not suffice

    By Shashi Tharoor and Praveen Chakravarty

    The year 2022 can perhaps be best summarized by a quote by Vladimir Lenin: ‘There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen.’

    The year began with the ostensible vanquishing of the COVID-19 pandemic, thanks to the remarkable collective vaccination efforts of science, business and governments across the world. This significant accomplishment promised to restore normalcy in daily lives and rekindle the doused human spirit.

    Alas, that was not meant to be. Just two months into the new year, the fallibility of the human mind reared its head in the form of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, throwing the world into disarray again. A global war, soon after a pandemic was both rare and unfathomable. Retaliatory economic sanctions and weaponization of trade dependencies have triggered woes of inflation, recession and gas shortage in winter, making lives miserable for millions.

    ‘Foe trade’ and an aggressive China

    The era of innovative consumer technologies from America and Europe, mass produced in Taiwan, Korea and Japan, and consumed in China, Brazil and India, seems to be nearing its end. America is now championing trade restrictions against its enemies, promoting trading blocs among its allies and incentivizing domestic production through large financial assistance. Trusted free trade among nations has turned into distrustful ‘foe trade’, leading to formation of ‘friend trade’ groups and the glorification of ‘economic nationalism’.

    India’s explosive exports growth over the last four decades has helped create millions of jobs, bring in valuable foreign reserves, and spurred domestic production and consumption. India stands to gain from the established trade order and can ill afford to get squeezed in the emerging bipolar world of western and Russia-China trading blocs.

    In the midst of such profound global changes comes the sudden, and incomprehensible military aggression by China against India. China’s advances into Indian territory are both undeniable and unacceptable. The timing and rationale of China’s military threat are intriguing and, purportedly, has a larger motive than just territorial interests across India’s borders. China has managed to engineer a realignment of the world order through strategic use of debt diplomacy, economic power and a ‘common enemy’ doctrine. The Chinese threat is neither just a border dispute with India nor an isolated bilateral conflict. It marks a fundamental reshaping of global forces.

    China’s economic might as the factory of the world is what gives it the confidence and the power to indulge in such aggression. Knee-jerk reactions such as trade restrictions and economic sanctions against China by western powers are blunt measures that will backfire. The counter to a Sino-centric world order is an economically powerful India.

    Social harmony is a necessary condition

    Factories employing millions of people producing billions of dollars of goods and services for the world in a thriving India is the strongest response to China. But social harmony is a necessary condition for India’s rise as an economic power. Factories cannot afford to differentiate amongst people of multiple identities working together, sowing distrust and hatred on the basis of workers’ religion, identity, caste or class. Ability is all that matters.

    If we accept that India’s economic power holds the key to its internal security, then it follows that India’s social harmony is the foundation of its edifice. It is in this context that the ongoing Bharat Jodo Yatra led by Rahul Gandhi is significant. Sadly, India’s communal harmony is under threat, but of our own doing. There is a lurking danger of one stray communal incident erupting into large-scale violence and unrest. A communally divided India on tenterhooks is a gift to our enemies. Tormented sections of our society can be easy targets for a preying attacker. The yatra is a momentous effort to heal communal wounds and strengthen the nation’s social fabric to help surmount the geopolitical and economic challenges facing the nation and the world.

    Cliched as it may sound, 2022 may go down in history as the year when the global equilibrium that lasted many decades and reaped tremendous benefits was disrupted. Seemingly rational pursuits of peace and prosperity are not the sole or even primary motivator for all nations and leaders. We must contest this ‘no more shared rational pursuits’ premise for the emerging new world order.

    It is time to re-imagine India’s overall strategy and re-evaluate our normative policy framework in this backdrop of an irrational world. We need a holistic military, diplomatic, social and economic strategy and not be afraid to challenge conventional wisdom.

    There is an imminent need to modernize and augment our defense capabilities with state-of-the-art weaponry and not be held hostage to antiquated military purchase norms and processes.

    A belligerent and hostile China will reaffirm who India’s active friends are and who merely observes from the sidelines. The established foreign policy doctrine of non-alignment may now conflict with India’s growing need for trade and market access in the new economic world order and may need to be re-envisioned. India needs a bolder geo-economic strategy to gain preferential access to unique technologies and capital from other nations in return for domestic market access.

    India’s politics will need to craft a new social contract with citizens, as the traditional tools of welfare and governance turn creaky and the gap between the haves and have-nots widens further. India’s economic road map will have to factor in environmental concerns, move away from the monopolies model of private enterprise, carve a new inclusive, labor market focused economic development path of production, and not chase financialization-driven GDP growth that has lost relevance for the common person.

    Look at decentralization

    India’s political governance model calls for greater decentralization and federalism reforms to cater to widening divergence among States. Centralization played a critical role in holding together and building the republic in the first half a century after Independence. The time has now come to let go and move away from a ‘one nation one policy’ mindset. Stronger institutions are a necessary condition for greater decentralization. Reforming public institutions with more powers, autonomy, resources and accountability is essential.

    In a nutshell, the nation needs a new vision in the new world. But the foundation for this new vision is a harmonious and inclusive society that embraces India’s unique plurality. Incrementalism using existing tools, structures and processes may not suffice. It requires the collective efforts of all leaders across the political spectrum to come together and craft a new vision, for which the onus rests with the Prime Minister. We sincerely hope for the sake of our beloved country and its beautiful people that a new awakening awaits.

    (Shashi Tharoor is a Congress Member of Parliament and former United Nations Under Secretary General. Praveen Chakravarty is a senior office bearer of the Congress party and a political economist.)

  • Indian American MIT scholar, VA Shiva Ayyadurai who ‘invented email’, applies for Twitter CEO post

    Indian American MIT scholar, VA Shiva Ayyadurai who ‘invented email’, applies for Twitter CEO post

    NEW YORK (TIP): Indian American VA Shiva Ayyadurai, who “invented email” when he was just 14, has expressed interest in taking up the position of Twitter CEO after Elon Musk said that he wishes to step down from the post. Mumbai-born Ayyadurai, 59, who holds four degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), including a PhD in biological engineering, took to his twitter to apply for the position. “I am interested in the CEO position @Twitter. I have 4 degrees from MIT & have created 7 successful high-tech software companies. Kindly advise of the process to apply,” Ayyadurai wrote in a tweet addressed to Musk. Ayyadurai’s tweet gained attention, with many users coming up with responses ranging from encouraging too sarcastic.

    “I’ve observed that degrees are one of the last things @elonmusk looks at when hiring (sic). (Though your education creds are indeed formidable.),” Greg Autry, a Twitter user wrote in response to Ayyadurai’s Tweet.

    “Best of luck to you. I’d expect your application to be rejected because you mention your education,” another Twitter user wrote in response. Ayyadurai created a computer program in 1978, which he called “email”. It replicated all the functions of the interoffice mail system: Inbox, Outbox, Folders, Memo, Attachments, Address Book, etc.

    The US government awarded him the first Copyright for Email in 1982, thus recognizing him officially as the inventor of email. Before Ayyadurai, YouTuber MrBeast expressed his interest in taking on one of the most vexing jobs in today’s world, media reported earlier.

    Earlier this week, a report said that Musk is actively searching for a new Twitter CEO after losing his own poll on whether he should quit as Twitter CEO or not. His poll revealed that a whopping 57.5 per cent of people wanted him to quit as the CEO of the micro-blogging platform.

    Thereafter, the billionaire said he will resign as Twitter’s chief executive officer when he finds someone “foolish enough to take the job”.

  • Indian American editor steps down to save jobs of his staff members from impending layoffs

    Indian American editor steps down to save jobs of his staff members from impending layoffs

    DETROIT (TIP): An Indian American Pulitzer-winning editor of a prominent US publication has announced his decision to step down next year to save the jobs of his staff members from impending companywide layoffs. Peter Bhatia, 69, editor and vice president of Gannett-owned Detroit Free Press, announced his decision at a staff meeting held last week after the company reported back-to-back quarterly losses. “We’re in a difficult period economically,” Bhatia was quoted as saying in his newspaper, which employs a total of 110 people.

    “The company is going through a layoff process, and I essentially made the decision to lay myself off in the interest of saving other jobs. I do have other opportunities that will probably come to work out at some point,” he added.

    “But if by getting my salary out of the budget it saves some jobs of people on the staff, I think that’s the right thing for the Free Press,” Bhatia, who will step down in January, said.

    Bhatia, who hails from Lucknow, joined The Free Press in September 2017, after two years as editor and vice president of The Cincinnati Enquirer and cincinnati.com.

    There are no reports of Bhatia’s replacement yet but the deadline for the newspaper staffers to volunteer for layoffs is next week, the media reported.

    The staff layoffs are tentatively set to take effect January 18, 2023, the paper reported. Meanwhile, journalists who worked with Bhatia over the years, took to Twitter to say that he stood for “quality journalism” and his quitting is a “big loss” and a “sad day” for Detroit Free Press. “Turns out you can be an amazing journalist, win Pulitzers and keep your principles after all. Peter is one of the absolute best,” a reporter said.