Year: 2022

  • The Kashmir Files crosses Rs 200 crore, shatters records

    The Kashmir Files crosses Rs 200 crore, shatters records

    The Kashmir Files has shattered all the records at the box office. After crossing the Rs 100-crore mark on March 18, the film has now created history by entering the Rs 200-crore club! The Kashmir Files released all over India on March 11 amid many hurdles. The film, which released on March 11, is based on the exodus of Kashmiri Hindus during the Kashmir insurgency in 1990. The film stars Anupam Kher, Darshan Kumaar, Mithun Chakraborty and Pallavi Joshi. After crossing the Rs 100-crore mark in seven days, The Kashmir Files has now shattered records by hitting the Rs 200-crore mark, making it the highest grosser post the pandemic. Trade Analyst Taran Adarsh wrote on Instagram, “#TheKashmirFiles crosses 200 cr mark.. Also crosses *lifetime biz* of #Sooryavanshi… Becomes HIGHEST GROSSING *HINDI* FILM [pandemic era]… [Week 2] Fri 19.15 cr, Sat 24.80 cr, Sun 26.20 cr, Mon 12.40 cr, Tue 10.25 cr, Wed 10.03 cr. Total: 200.13 cr. #India biz (sic).”

  • Missile ‘misfire’: I4 IAF officials under lens

    New Delhi (TIP)-The Court of Inquiry (CoI) probing the “accidental” firing of a BrahMos missile has examined the role of at least four Indian Air Force (IAF) officials — a Group Captain (Commanding Officer), his seniors and also his juniors. The initial probe has indicated a “human error”, and not a technical fault, led to the missile’s launch. Though alleged lapses in handling the missile are being probed, the CoI is looking at multiple angles.

    A BrahMos missile was “accidentally” fired around 7 pm on March 9 from a base near Ambala and it landed some 124 km away at Mian Channu in Pakistan’s Punjab province.

    All missile storage and inspecting protocols have been examined. IAF officials in the chain of command have been questioned to find out why and how the missile was fired. Each data, log and procedure followed by the officials on March 9 has been scrutinised by the CoI. The key question is how the launch codes were fed into the system that enabled the missile to fire. The protocol for firing and storage of BrahMos, a supersonic cruise missile, is such that a series of steps are needed to be completed before actual firing. The missile, which carried no warhead, travelled at Mach2 (some 3,200 km per hour) towards Pakistan.        Source: TNS

  • India-China talks: Border peace must, Jaishankar to Wang Yi

    New Delhi (TIP)- India and China discussed the border situation as well as Beijing’s leaning towards Pakistan during three-hour talks between visiting Chinese Minister Wang Yi and EAM S Jaishankar here on March 25.

    Earlier in the day, Wang met NSA Ajit Doval after arriving from Kabul last night for a visit the Chinese side did not want to announce. On being invited to China, Doval told Wang he would do so after immediate issues were resolved.

    Jaishankar said progress had been made in resolving issues as regards various friction areas along the LAC and that talks today focused on taking forward the momentum in case of remaining areas. Jaishankar told Wang India found his observations on Kashmir at the OIC ministerial in Islamabad objectionable. “It was a subject discussed at some length. There was a larger context. We hope China will follow an independent foreign policy with respect to India and not allow its policy to be influenced by others,” he said.

    “Our effort is to sort out the issue in entirety and look at de-escalation. The challenge has been to implement the agreements on the ground. It is a work-in-progress, obviously at a slower pace than desirable. My discussions were aimed at expediting that process,” he said.      Source: TNS

  • Punjab cabinet: Bhagwant Mann keeps home, Cheema gets finance

    Punjab cabinet: Bhagwant Mann keeps home, Cheema gets finance

    Punjab chief minister Bhagwant Mann on Monday, March 21, allocated portfolios to his 10 ministers, retaining home and justice, and giving the charge of finance and taxation to his seniormost cabinet colleague Harpal Singh Cheema. The portfolios were announced by the new chief minister two days after the 10 cabinet ministers took the oath of office and secrecy here. All the ministers, except Cheema and Gurmeet Singh Meet Hayer, are first-time legislators.

    Besides home, Mann, who was elected from Dhuri assembly segment, has kept 26 departments in his portfolio, including local government, industries and commerce, agriculture and farmers’ welfare, according to an official release. Cheema, who represents Dirba (reserved) seat, has got the portfolios of finance, excise and taxation, planning, programme implementation and cooperation. He was the leader of the opposition in the previous assembly.

    Dr Baljit Kaur, MLA from Malout (reserved) who is the lone woman in the cabinet, has been made the in-charge of social justice, empowerment and minorities, and social security, women and child development. Harbhajan Singh, who represents Jandiala (reserved), has been given the charge of public works and power.

    Mansa MLA Dr Vijay Singla has got the portfolios of health and family welfare, and medical education and research. A dentist, he is among 13 doctors who have made it to the state assembly this time. Lal Chand Kataruchak, who got elected from Bhoa (reserved), is the minister for food, civil supplies and consumer affairs, forests and wildlife.

    Gurmeet Singh Meet Hayer, MLA from Barnala, has been allotted the departments of school education, sports and youth services, and higher education. The 32-year-old minister has a BTech degree.

    Kuldeep Singh Dhaliwal, MLA from Ajnala, has been allotted the portfolios of rural development and panchayats among others. Laljit Singh Bhullar, MLA from Patti, is the new transport and hospitality minister. Bram Shanker, who got elected from Hoshiarpur, has got the charge of revenue, rehabilitation and disaster management besides water and sanitation.

    Harjot Singh Bains, who got elected from Anandpur Sahib, has been allocated legal and legislative affairs, and jails among other departments. An advocate by profession, the 31-year-old first-time MLA is the youngest member of the state cabinet. The portfolio, if any, not allotted to any of the ministers will vest with the chief minister, said the official spokesperson.

  • Kultar Sandhwan unanimously elected Speaker of Punjab Vidhan Sabha

    Kultar Sandhwan unanimously elected Speaker of Punjab Vidhan Sabha

    Kultar Singh Sandhwan, 46, was unanimously elected Punjab assembly Speaker in Chandigarh on Monday, March 21. Chief minister Bhagwant Mann proposed Kotkapura Aam Aadmi Party MLA Sandhwan’s name for the post and he was unanimously elected. Mann and cabinet minister Harpal Singh Cheema escorted Sandhwan to the Speaker’s chair. Mann said that he was happy that a person from an ordinary family had made it to the Speaker’s post. Incidentally, Sandhwan is the grandnephew of former president Giani Zail Singh. Kultar’s grandfather Jangir Singh and Giani Zail Singh were brothers.

  • Calcutta HC orders CBI probe into Birbhum killings case

    Calcutta HC orders CBI probe into Birbhum killings case

    Kolkata (TIP)- The Calcutta High Court on Friday, March 25,  ordered a CBI investigation into Birbhum violence that claimed eight lives earlier this week. The court directed an SIT formed by the West Bengal government to hand over case papers and accused persons arrested by it to the central probe agency.

    A division bench comprising Chief Justice Prakash Shrivastava and Justice R Bharadwaj directed the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to file a progress report by April 7, the next date of hearing of the matter. The bench said that the CBI probe was being ordered in the interest of justice.

    Eight people, including two children, were charred to death in Bogtui village of Bengal’s Birbhum district in the suspected fallout of a TMC panachayat official’s murder.

    The bench had suo motu taken up the case of the gruesome incident.

    A set of PILs seeking CBI or NIA probe into the incident were also taken up for hearing by the court along with the suo motu petition.

    On Thursday, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee visited Bogtui village, where she ensured “speedy justice” to the victims and offered monetary compensation. However, Opposition leaders have accused the Bengal government of a ‘cover up’ and ‘fabrication’.

    Congress leader Adhir Chowdhary, whose car was allegedly stopped more than once before reaching Bogtui, alleged that several bodies had disappeared from the site of violence. He said, “She (CM) alleged a big conspiracy behind this incident and that is why she has instructed the police to take strict action. The bodies of two children have gone missing. The CM is trying to suppress the facts.”

    Meanwhile, after local residents complained to CM that local Trinamool Congress block president Anarul Hussain had hatched the conspiracy to set the houses ablaze, she ordered the DGP to arrest him. However, Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari tweeted, “Can someone instruct an investigating agency to fabricate a case? Rather than directing the investigating agency to conduct a fair investigation and gather evidence that incriminates the real perpetrators, @MamataOfficial is pronouncing & dictating who are at fault. (sic)”.

    ‘Mamata govt fabricating case’: BJP

    The BJP on Thursday slammed the Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress (TMC) government in West Bengal for allegedly “fabricating a case” over the Birbhum killings.

    The statement came after the police arrested TMC’s Rampurhat block president Anarul Hossain in connection with the case at the instruction of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.s

  • Indo-Canadian Gangsters a headache for Punjab Police

    Indo-Canadian Gangsters a headache for Punjab Police

    AMRITSAR / TORONTO (TIP): Canada-based gangster Lakhbir Singh Landa has around 20 criminal cases, including murder, attempt to murder, firing and NDPS Act, registered against him. He originally hails from Harike in Tarn Taran district. Despite the fact that he was facing a number of criminal cases, he managed to escape to foreign shores a couple of years ago, thereby raising a question mark on the intelligence. The Punjab Police have started procedure for his extradition and opening of red corner circular against him. A senior police official said gangsters, including Landa, who had escaped to foreign shores had become a headache for the Punjab Police. They have been running an extortion racket in association with their accomplices. As they contact each other through social media it is not easy to nail them. Though Tarn Taran police had registered only one FIR, there has been several complaints against him in which he extorted huge amounts while threatening traders, colonizers, doctors, hospital owners and other rich people in the region as ransom.

    His name also figured during the interrogation of gangster Daya Singh, aka Preet Sekhon, who was nabbed in a joint operation by Amritsar rural police and Organized Crime Control Unit (OCCU) in July last year.

    He along with his aide Jarmanjit Singh, alias Nikka Khaduria, of Chamba Khurd village in Tarn Taran, was nabbed in Chamiari village of Ajnala. The police seized five country-made pistols, double barrel rifle and three mobile phones and a car from them. They also arrested Gurlal Singh of Kamalpur village in Tarn Taran for sheltering him. During his probe, it was found that Preet Sekhon at the behest of Landa had extorted amounts to the tune of several crores from at least 25 persons which were deposited in a foreign bank account of an international-level Hawala operator. Ironically, victims prefer not to lodge a complaint fearing for their lives, police sources said. Landa’s name was also figured as a key conspirator in the killing of two Akali workers in Patti last year. Immediate after the incident, Tarn Taran police wrote to the Central Government for issuing red corner circular against him. Gulneet Singh Khuranna, SSP, Tarn Taran, said they had urged our higher officials for taking up the matter with the Central Government for speeding up the process of opening red corner circular against him for his extradition. Besides Landa, the police have also received a complaint against another fugitive gangster, Arsh Dhalla, for demanding ransom, he said.

  • Indian-origin economist Jayati Ghosh named on UN high-level advisory board on multilateralism

    Indian-origin economist Jayati Ghosh named on UN high-level advisory board on multilateralism

    UNITED NATIONS (TIP): Indian -origin development economist Jayati Ghosh has been appointed by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres to a new high-level advisory board on effective multilateralism. Ghosh, 66, is a Professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She was previously professor of economics and chairperson of the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University. She is also a member of the UN’s high-level Advisory Board on Economic and Social Affairs. UN chief Guterres on Friday, March 18,  announced the establishment of the Advisory Board on Effective Multilateralism to be co-chaired by former Liberian president and Nobel Laureate Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and former Swedish prime minister Stefan Lofven. Ghosh has been named to the 12-member board, which will be supported in its work by the Centre for Policy Research of the United Nations University in close coordination with the Executive Office of the Secretary-General.

    In January last year, Ghosh was appointed by Guterres, along with 19 other thinkers and personalities from around the world, to a high-level advisory board to provide recommendations for the UN Secretary-General to respond to current and future socio-economic challenges in the post-Covid world.

  • Indian-American diplomat Punit Talwar appointed US envoy to Morocco

    Indian-American diplomat Punit Talwar appointed US envoy to Morocco

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): US President Joe Biden has announced his intent to nominate Indian-American diplomat Punit Talwar as the country’s ambassador to Morocco. Talwar, who is currently a senior advisor at the State Department, has held senior national security and foreign policy positions in the State Department, the White House and the Senate, the White House said as it announced several other senior administration positions.

    He previously served as the Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs, Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director at the National Security Council, and as a Senior Professional Staff Member at the Committee on Foreign Relations in the United States Senate. Talwar’s public service also includes key roles in the US House of Representatives and the State Department’s Policy Planning Staff.

    Outside of government, he has been a Senior Fellow at the Asia Society Policy Institute, a Visiting Scholar at the University of Pennsylvania Penn Biden Centre, a Counsellor to the conflict resolution NGO InterMediate, and a non-resident Scholar at Georgetown University’s Centre for Security Studies.

    Talwar earned his BS Degree in Engineering from Cornell University and his MA in International Affairs from Columbia University. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a native of Washington, DC.

  • Indian-origin student’s boyfriend charged  with her murder in London

    Indian-origin student’s boyfriend charged with her murder in London

    Nirpal S Shergill

    LONDON (TIP): A 22-year-old Tunisian man who was arrested earlier has been charged with the murder of Indian-origin student Sabita Thanwani and appeared in custody at Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court in London on Tuesday. Maher Maaroufe, who the police said had been in a relationship with the student, was hunted down by Scotland Yard after the discovery of Thanwani’s body in her student accommodation in Clerkenwell area of London on Saturday. He was arrested on suspicion of the 19-year-old psychology student’s murder and assault on Sunday. A post-mortem examination carried out at Whittington Hospital in London on Monday gave the cause of Thanwani’s death as sharp force trauma to the neck, the Metropolitan Police said.

    “Detectives investigating the death of Sabita Thanwani in Clerkenwell have charged a man with murder. Maher Maaroufe, 22, of no fixed address, has also been charged with assaulting an emergency worker,” the Met Police said in a statement. “Detectives from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command are investigating and continue to provide support to Sabita’s family,” the statement added.

    Thanwani, a British national, was found with serious injuries to her neck at Arbour House student flats in Clerkenwell area of London and pronounced dead at the scene on Saturday. On Monday, her family paid tribute to their “beautiful and irreplaceable angel” whose life was cut “tragically short”.

    The family said: “Sabita was the most caring and loving person we have ever known. She inspired us every day of her precious 19 years of life. Her mission was to help everyone.

    “She was studying psychology at City University to make this happen. Her whole life was ahead of her, a life where her radiant smile and incredible heart could only spread warmth and kindness.” Over the weekend, the Met Police had issued an urgent manhunt for Maaroufe, who had reportedly been with Thanwani on Friday.

    “Maaroufe had been in a relationship with Sabita but he was not a student. He is a Tunisian national of no fixed address,” Detective Chief Inspector Linda, who is leading the investigation, had said in her appeal.

    A spokesperson for City, University of London said it was working closely with Unite Students, which runs the student accommodation where the body was found. “As a university, we will do everything we can to support our students and staff and we will continue to fully support the police with their investigation,” a university spokesperson said.

    (Source: PTI)

  • Indian American Punjab-born Shree Saini is 1st runner-up at Miss World pageant

    Indian American Punjab-born Shree Saini is 1st runner-up at Miss World pageant

    SAN JUAN, PUERTO RICO (TIP): Indian American Shree Saini was crowned the first runner-up at the Miss World 2021 beauty pageant held in San Juan, Puerto Rico on Thursday, March 17. The coveted Miss World title was won by Karolina Bielawsk. The Indian-American, who represented the United States, has shared a heartfelt note on overcoming facial burns and heart defect. She said that her triumph could encourage and inspire people to defeat their daily challenges. Shree Saini, 26,  added that she was representing not just herself but also “333 million Americans, billions of Indian immigrants” at the global event. Hailing from Ludhiana in Punjab, her family moved to the US when she was just 5 years old. By 12, she had a permanent pacemaker implanted after she was diagnosed with a rare heart condition. She also had a serious accident that left her with facial burns, but Ms Saini did not allow these troubles to hold her back from realizing her potential.

    “I hope my story of overcoming facial burns and heart defect, can encourage people to overcome their daily challenges,” she said in an Instagram post, just before the grand finale of the Miss World pageant.

  • Indian American man apologizes for threat to Haryana CM

    Indian American man apologizes for threat to Haryana CM

    NEW YORK (TIP): US-based Sandeep, alias Mipa Bangru of Narar village, apologized through a video message for using abusive language and threat to the CM and Haryana Police. Sandeep and his family was booked under sedition charges and IT Act. In today’s video, he also accused the police of harassing his family by detaining them. “I apologize to the CM and the Haryana Government for my words, which I had said under the influence of liquor,” said Sandeep in the video message. “I am ready to be hanged if my family is found involved in my mistake. Their phone calls can be checked and they did not have any involvement in it. My family members have been detained by the police,” he added. Maqsood Ahmed, SP, denied the allegations of detaining any family members. “We had registered a case under Sections 124A, 294, 506, 120B of the IPC and IT Act against Sandeep and his four family members as the former’s video went viral on the social media in which he was using obscene remarks against the police and the CM. Investigation is on and the police did not detain any family members,” said SP Ahmed. “We are in correspondence with the authorities concerned for the revocation of passport and to deport him from the US,” he said.

  • Indian American organization EcoSikh plants 400 sacred forests as part of climate action

    Indian American organization EcoSikh plants 400 sacred forests as part of climate action

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): A US-based Sikh organization has announced the planting of 400 forests in India and other parts of the world as part of its climate action. According to the announcement made on the occasion of Sikh Environment Day (SED), EcoSikh said it has planted a forest of 1150 trees in Ireland and of 500 trees in Derbyshire, the United Kingdom. In addition, a forest of 250 trees was planted in Surrey, Canada. EcoSikh, based out of Washington DC, has collaborated with local governments and gurdwaras in its projects. These forests are called ‘Guru Nanak Sacred Forests’, named after the founder of the Sikh faith. This campaign started in 2019 when Sikhs celebrated his 550th birth-anniversary, EcoSikh said in a statement on Saturday. “The Sacred Forest project has become a community-based initiative and many hundreds have joined this massive grass roots campaign all across the globe. This is a solid step to mitigate the effects of climate change and the good news is that all trees planted are surviving in these thriving forests,” said Rajwant Singh, EcoSikh (USA), the founder and global president. He said over the last 36 months, EcoSikh has planted forests in many states across India including, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Delhi, Maharashtra, Gujarat and in Jammu. Each forest has 550 trees of native species. These forests are planted following the Japanese Miyawaki methodology and are tagged on Google maps all across Punjab and India, he said. Every year hundreds of Sikh institutions and Gurdwaras all across the world celebrate SED by taking step to reduce carbon footprints and to save water and energy. EcoSikh released a tool kit for the community to take action on SED which includes organic langar, nature walk, switching to LED bulbs and solar panels.

  • NYIC Applauds Council Member Hanif’s Introduction of Resolution Demanding Health Insurance Coverage for Undocumented Immigrants

    NYIC Applauds Council Member Hanif’s Introduction of Resolution Demanding Health Insurance Coverage for Undocumented Immigrants

    The Immigration Committee Chair Brings Up Council Resolution Calling on The State Legislature to Pass A880A/S1572A

    NEW YORK, NY (TIP):  On March 23,  Council Member Shahana Hanif, alongside Council Members Francisco Moya, Shaun Abreu, Linda Lee, and Lynn Schulman, introduced a resolution calling on the New York State legislature to pass A880A/S1572A also known as the Coverage For All Act. If passed, this legislation would allocate $345 million to create a quality and affordable healthcare plan for the nearly 150,000 low-income undocumented New Yorkers. Modeled off of similar plans in California, Minnesota, and Illinois, this plan would save the state $19 million and potentially hundreds of lives every year. With dozens of cosponsors on both the Assembly and Senate versions of the legislation, the Council’s resolution adds pressure on Albany to take action on the needs of working-class immigrants before the looming budget deadline.

    “Council Members Shahana Hanif, Shaun Abreu, Linda Lee, Francisco Moya, and Lynn Schulman’s resolution comes at a crucial moment in our coalition’s battle for healthcare justice for New York’s immigrant communities,” said Murad Awawdeh, Executive Director, New York Immigration Coalition.  “Each of these leaders embodies the incredible diversity of our city and understand the terrible costs that blocking healthcare coverage can cause. We thank the NYC Council for standing up not only for the immigrant New Yorkers in their districts but across the state. We call on Governor Kathy Hochul and the state legislature to listen to these leaders and include Coverage for All in the state budget.”

    “The Coverage For All plan will improve health outcomes for millions of immigrants and save our state millions every year. This is not only morally sound legislation, it’s smart public policy,” said Council Member Shahana Hanif. “For nearly two years during the COVID-19 pandemic, thousands of low-income undocumented workers have been essential to our state without just compensation. The historic Excluded Workers Fund kept many from losing everything, but it’s legislation like the Coverage For All plan that will fundamentally transform the lives of thousands of working families. I’m proud to introduce this resolution alongside my Council colleagues and make it clear that this Council knows immigrant rights are human rights.”

    “Two years into this pandemic, a quarter-million immigrant New Yorkers are still uninsured despite being disproportionately impacted by the pandemic’s health and financial tolls,” said Comptroller Brad Lander. “Our state has the opportunity to expand health care coverage for all, which will be a boon to our recovering economy and to working families. My office’s analysis found that insuring these New Yorkers would bring a total of $710 million in annual economic benefits, including gains in life expectancy and labor productivity that could save 55 lives a year and 1.5 million hours of work. Families will save a collective $20 million annually on out-of-pocket health care costs and health care providers would save $19 million per year on avoidable and costly emergency room visits. This is a win-win for our City and State, and it’s time to pass Coverage for All.”

    “If COVID-19 has taught us anything, it is that our community cannot stay healthy unless all of us stay healthy,” said Council Member Shaun Abreu, Chair of the Committee on State and Federal Legislation. “Tragically, too many of our neighbors and loved ones–people who have lived here most of their lives, who pay taxes, and who have helped build New York as we know it–have been denied access to affordable healthcare. Government inaction has left hundreds of thousands of immigrant New Yorkers uninsured, but we have the ability to change that. As Chair of the Council’s Committee on State and Federal Legislation, I am proud to call for the passage of the Coverage for All Act and bring vital coverage to this state.”

    “COVID-19 devastated New York City, and in particular our immigrant communities,” said Council Member Linda Lee, Chair of the Committee on Mental Health, Disabilities, and Addictions. “Community-based organizations were forced to step up to the plate to provide essential care and services to thousands of New Yorkers who lacked basic health coverage. New York State now has the opportunity to not only dramatically improve the lives of our working-class immigrant families by providing quality and affordable healthcare with the Coverage for All Act, but also to ease the financial burden of our hospitals and emergency rooms who continued to do their jobs and treat individuals who had no means of paying for their service. Thank you to my colleagues and the leadership of Council Member Shahana Hanif for introducing this resolution.” “Healthcare is a human right. As Chair of the City Council Health Committee, I am proud to join my colleagues in prioritizing the health of all New Yorkers, regardless of immigration status,” said Council Member Lynn Schulman. “COVID-19 exhausted the city’s workforce, especially those who were undocumented and essential in keeping the City’s economy afloat during the height of the pandemic. The State can recognize the sacrifice of these workers by enacting the Coverage for All Act.”

  • Rye Ophthalmologist Ameet  Goyal Sentenced to 96 Months in Prison for Seven-Year Healthcare Fraud Scheme and Covid-19 Loan Fraud

    Rye Ophthalmologist Ameet Goyal Sentenced to 96 Months in Prison for Seven-Year Healthcare Fraud Scheme and Covid-19 Loan Fraud

    NEW YORK (TIP): Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced March 3, 2022  that AMEET GOYAL, M.D., (“GOYAL”) an ophthalmologist in Rye, New York, was sentenced to 96 months in prison for orchestrating a seven-year healthcare fraud scheme by falsely billing for millions of dollars of upcoded procedures, and also for fraudulently obtaining two Government-guaranteed loans intended to help small businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic while he was facing charges on pretrial release for the healthcare fraud scheme.  In imposing the sentence today, U.S. District Judge Cathy Seibel noted, “Fraud doesn’t fully capture how blatant this was and how unjustified this was… This was not about need, it was about greed.”  GOYAL previously pled guilty to all charges in a six-count superseding Indictment before Judge Seibel on September 13, 2021.In addition to the prison term, GOYAL was sentenced on March 3, 2022  to five years of supervised release, and ordered to pay forfeiture of $3.6 million and restitution of $3.6 million.  GOYAL has already paid approximately $1.79 million toward these obligations.

    U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “A prominent ophthalmologist and oculoplastic surgeon who has now surrendered his medical license, AMEET GOYAL was blinded by greed.  Over a seven-year period, he preyed on the trust placed in him and cheated patients and insurance companies of $3.6 million in false charges.  To cover his tracks, he created fictitious operative reports, seeded across hundreds of patient files, violating the integrity of patients’ medical records and making it more difficult for subsequent doctors to evaluate their care.  He sent patients who could not pay the upcoded bills to a collection agency, decimating their credit.  He pressured other doctors to join the scheme and threatened to retaliate against their livelihood and careers. Even after being arrested for this scheme, GOYAL committed a breathtaking new fraud and stole $637,200 from the Paycheck Protection Program in the early days of a devastating pandemic.  For his crimes, GOYAL will serve a substantial sentence in prison.”

    According to the allegations contained in the Indictment, court filings, and statements made during court proceedings:

    At all relevant times, GOYAL owned and operated the ophthalmology practice Ameet Goyal M.D. P.C., doing business as Rye Eye Associates, with offices in Rye, Mt. Kisco, and Wappingers Falls, New York, and Greenwich, Connecticut (the “Practice”).  Between 2010 and 2017, GOYAL engaged in widespread healthcare fraud by consistently “upcoding” simpler, lower-paying surgical procedures and examinations as complex, higher-paying major operations in fraudulent billings submitted to Medicare, private insurance companies, and patients.  As a result, GOYAL fraudulently obtained at least $3.6 million in payments for procedures he did not perform.  GOYAL failed to obtain proper and, at times, any consent for the uncoded procedures he falsely claimed to have performed.  As part of the scheme, GOYAL routinely falsified patient medical records, authoring fictitious templated operative reports that matched the complex operation he billed rather than the different minor procedure he actually performed.  GOYAL also pressured other employees in his Practice to engage in the scheme, and threatened the livelihood of employees who refused to comply.  GOYAL caused patients to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket for fraudulently billed charges, and initiated debt collection proceedings against patients who did not pay the full amounts of those false charges.  As a result of his fraudulent billings, GOYAL was the highest-billing doctor in the tri-state area for several of his fraudulently billed codes, one of which he billed seven times more frequently than all doctors in the tri-state area combined.  GOYAL was indicted for the healthcare fraud charges in November 2019 and was released on bail.

    The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (“CARES”) Act is a federal law enacted on March 29, 2020, designed to provide emergency financial assistance to the millions of Americans who are suffering the economic effects caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.  One source of relief provided by the CARES Act was the authorization of hundreds of billions of dollars in forgivable loans to small businesses for job retention and certain other expenses through the SBA’s Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”).  Applicants with pending criminal charges are ineligible for PPP loans.  The PPP also limits each eligible borrower to one loan, and a maximum loan amount calculated based on a business’s average monthly payroll expenses.

    In or about April 2020, GOYAL applied to the SBA and Bank-1, a federally insured institution, for over $630,000 in Government-guaranteed loans through the PPP.  Specifically, on or about April 21, 2020, GOYAL applied for a loan in the amount of $358,700 for the business “Ameet Goyal,” with his own social security number and e-mail address. On or about April 29, 2020, GOYAL applied for a second loan in the amount of $278,500, with a business name “Rye eye associates,” using the Employer Identification Number for Ameet Goyal, M.D. P.C and a different email address controlled by GOYAL.  To substantiate each loan, however, GOYAL submitted the exact same underlying payroll expense report, showing the same employees and payroll costs.

    On both applications, GOYAL falsely answered that he was not facing any pending criminal charges, and electronically placed his initials “AG” directly under his “No” response.  GOYAL also falsely certified, among other things, that his business would not receive another PPP loan until the end of the year.  After obtaining approval from Bank-1 and the SBA through his fraudulent misrepresentations, GOYAL executed loan notes for two loans.  On May 4, 2020, GOYAL received the first loan of $358,700, and on May 11, 2021, GOYAL received the second loan of $278,500.  GOYAL used the business checking account into which these funds were deposited to pay business and personal expenses, including by making a payment to a country club in Westchester, New York within days of receiving the first loan, as well as payments to a California vineyard and golf merchandise website. GOYAL, 58, of Rye, New York, pled guilty to all six counts in the Superseding Indictment.  The first count charged healthcare fraud; the second count charged wire fraud; and the third count charged making false statements relating to health care matters.  Counts four, five, and six charged that while on pretrial release, the defendant committed the following offenses, respectively: bank fraud, making false statements on a loan application, and making false statements in a matter within the jurisdiction of the executive branch of the Government of the United States.

    Mr. Williams praised the work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General, and the Office of the Inspector General of the SBA.

    This case is being handled by the Office’s White Plains Division.  Assistant U.S. Attorneys Vladislav Vainberg, David Felton, and Margery Feinzig are in charge of the prosecution.  A civil fraud lawsuit relating to healthcare fraud under the False Claims Act is being handled by the Office’s Civil Frauds Unit.  Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey K. Powell is in charge of the pending civil case.

    (Press Release Number 22-068 March 3, 2022:  Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of New York)

  • BOLLYWOOD NOSTALGIA OPENS 24TH NYSJ FILM FEST

    BOLLYWOOD NOSTALGIA OPENS 24TH NYSJ FILM FEST

    Nadira (with cigarette in holder) in “Shree 420.”
    Arati Devi a-k-a Rachel Sofare in “Life Devine.”
    Sulochana in “Daku-ki-Ladki.” (Photos : theculturenews.com)

    By Mabel Pais

    ”SHALOM BOLLYWOOD” opens the 24th edition of the New York Sephardic Jewish Film Festival (NYSJFF). The Festival returns April 3-7, 2022 at the Moise Safra Center located at 130 East 82nd Street, New York City. The NYSJFF (nysephardifilmfestival.org) returns this year, celebrating its 24th anniversary, with movie premières, award ceremonies, filmmaker Q&As, a fashion show with Elie Tahari, and live music! This special edition is presented in partnership with the prestigious Moise Safra Center, located at 130 E 82nd St, from 3-7 April 2022.

    Join the Festival for films about Greater Sephardic experiences in India, Morocco, Greece, Israel, Spain, Germany, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, and Brooklyn!

    ASF Pomegranate Award Winners in attendance:

    André Aciman (Lifetime Achievement Award for Literature)

    The Marvelous Ms. Maazel’s Caroline Aaron (Lifetime Achievement for Acting)

    Lainie Kazan (Lifetime Achievement Award for Acting)

    The Blacklist’s Amir Arison (Achievement Award for Acting)

    Neta Elkayam (Achievement Award for Music)

    Violetta Salama (Ronit Elkabetz, A”H Rising Star)

    The NYSJFF

    The American Sephardi Federation’s NYSJ Film Fest showcases contemporary voices steeped in Greater Sephardic communities’ history, traditions, and rich mosaic culture. The Pomegranate Awards Ceremony on Opening Night celebrates Sephardi excellence in the arts. Past recipients include Senior Counselor to the King of Morocco André Azoulay, French-Algerian recording legend Enrico Macias, filmmakers Lisa Azuelos and Elie Chouraqui, and Film producer Said Ben Said, fashion designer Elie Tahari, legendary actor Sasson Gabay, among others.

    The Pomegranate Award, sculpted by Iraqi artist Oded Halahmy, will be awarded to essential contributors to the society with extraordinary achievements with Actors Lainie Kazan (My Big Fat Greek Wedding), Amir Arison (The Blacklist), Caroline Aaron (Mrs. Maisel), André Aciman, Violetta Salama (Rising Star).

    Artistic director Sara Nodjoumi and Producer David Serero return to this exciting edition.

    “The Moise Safra Center is thrilled to be co-hosting the New York Sephardic Jewish Film Festival with the ASF this year. We are opening our doors for everyone to come and enjoy a week of curated movie selections to learn about Sephardic culture through film. Hope to see you here!”– David Miller, Executive Director – Moise Safra Center

    NYSJFF FILM LINEUP:

    Sunday, April 3rd: Opening Day –

    Sepharad Series: Salonika, Sephardic Shoah Survivors

    3pm – “OTTOMAN SALONICA” and “POVERATA SALONIKA”

    DIR: DR. JOE HALIO l USA l 2001 l SHORT DOC l 60m

    Two 30-minute documentaries on the Jewish history of Salonika (Thessaloniki), Greece. Features rare footage of Sephardic Shoah survivors.

    Q&A with Director Joe Halio

    OPENING NIGHT / From Baghdad to Bollywood

    6pm – “SHALOM BOLLYWOOD”

    DIR: DANNY BEN-MOSHE l Australia l 2018 l Feat Doc l NY Premiere l 1h 25m

    A celebration of the all-singing, all-dancing history of the world’s largest film industry, “Shalom Bollywood” reveals the unlikely story of the Baghdadi and Bene Manashe Jews, especially Jewish women, who became stars and movie moguls in the 1920s, 30s, and 40s.

    AWARDS CEREMONY

    Award Ceremony with Pomegranate Awards for André Aciman (Lifetime Achievement Award for Literature), Caroline Aaron (Lifetime Achievement for Acting), Amir Arison (Achievement Award for Acting), Violetta Salama (Ronit Elkabetz, A”H, Rising Star), followed by a party.

    Monday, April 4th:

    Sepharad Series: Melilla Memories

    3pm – “Alegría”

    DIR: VIOLETA SALAMA l Spain l 2021 l Spanish & Chelja w/Eng Subs l FEAT NARR l NY Premiere l 1h 59m

    An eye-catching directorial debut. This festival favorite explores the ever-blending identities and cultures in this Spanish enclave in Northern Morocco.

    Q&A with Director Violeta Salama

    Persian-Israeli-American Fashion Night with Elie Tahari

    7pm – “THE UNITED STATES OF FASHION DESIGNER ELIE TAHARI”

    DIR: David Serero l USA l 2022 l Doc l NY Premiere l 1h 10m

    Elie Tahari is the definition of courage, determination, and…chutzpah! After fleeing Iran, his parents moved to Israel where he lived in a refugee camp before moving to New York without speaking a word of English. This long-awaited documentary has been screened at film festivals across the globe garnering multiple awards.

    Q&A with Director David Serero & Elie Tahari. Followed by Fashion Show & After Party

    Tuesday, April 5th

    Sepharad Series: Crypto-Jews

    5pm – “XUETA ISLAND”

    DIRS: DANI ROTSTEIN, FELIPE WOLOKITA & OFER LASZEWICKI l Spain l 2021 l Doc Feat l 1h 3m

    “Xueta Island” explores the fascinating legacy of the Xuetas: a unique group of families on the Balearic Island of Majorca who are believed to be descendants of the island’s Inquisition-era Jewish population. A riveting quest to unearth and document Majorca’s rich and tragic Jewish history and an inspirational glimpse into attempts to revive Jewish life on the island.

    Antisemitism in Focus

    7pm  – “WET DOGS”

     DIR: DAMIR LUKACEVIC l Germany l 2021 l German, Farsi & Arabic w/Eng subs l Feat Narr l NY Premiere l 1h 43m

    Based on the provocative true story of Aryeh Sharuz Shalicar was born in Germany to Persian Jewish parents stranded after the 1979’s Revolution, joined an Islamist gang, and later rose to the rank of Major and ran the IDF’s European Desk. “Wet Dogs” explores rising antisemitism and raises questions of cultural diversity, religious identity, and how they intersect with friendship, especially during the phase of rawness and exploration that are one’s teenage years.

    Followed by a panel discussion

    Wednesday, April 6th

    From Egypt to Israel

    3pm – “THREE MOTHERS”

    DIR: DINA ZVI-RIKLIS l Israel l 2006 l Hebrew & Arabic w/Eng subs l

    Feat Narr l 1h 46m

    Nominated for nine Israeli Academy Awards, “Three Mothers” is the multigenerational saga of beautiful triplets: Flora, Yasmin, and Rose Hakim were born in 1942 in Alexandria, Egypt. Director Dina Zvi-Riklis’ (Ma’abarot, 2020 NYSJFF) tale follows the family to Israel and, over the course of 60 years, reveals the Hakim sisters coming to terms with long-buried secrets and passions.

    Brooklyn Tango Night

    7pm – “TANGO SHALOM”

    DIR: GABRIEL BOLOGNA l USA l 2021 l Eng l Feat Narr l NY Premiere l

    1h 55m

    A Tango dancer and a Rabbi develop a plan to enter a dance competition without sacrificing his orthodox beliefs. Family, tolerance, and community are tested one dazzling dance step at a time. Filmed on location in Crown Heights, New York City, with a star-studded cast.

    In partnership with ASF Young Professionals.

    Post-Screening Q&A with the whole cast.

    Pomegranate Award for Lifetime Achievement to Lainie Kazan.

    DJ with Tango Dancers

    Thursday, April 7th

    Sepharad Series: The Ladino Legacy

    3pm – “IN SEARCH OF LADINO”

    DIR: DAVID PERLOV l UK, Israel, France l 1981 l Hebrew & Ladino w/Eng subs l Feat Doc l 49m

    This unique cinematic film about language, memory, and identity follows Ladino speakers—their culture, their memories, and their hopes for the future of their mother tongue. In Search of Ladino is one of the first films to show Ladino-speaking Holocaust survivors in Israel and to document their testimonies and songs.

    From Jerusalem to Tangier & Tinghir: Moroccan CLOSING NIGHT

    7pm – “IN YOUR EYES, I SEE MY COUNTRY”

    DIR: KAMAL HACHKAR l Morocco l 2019 l Arabic & Hebrew w/Eng subs l

    Feat Doc l NY Premiere l 1h 15m

    Neta Elkayam and Amit Haï Cohen live in Jerusalem, creating music that revisits their common Jewish-Moroccan heritage. “In Your Eyes, I See My Country” follows them as they journey for the first time to Morocco. In life, as on stage, they grapple with this dual identity and attempt to heal the wounds of exile carried by their parents. This intimate and musically rich documentary by NYSFF Rising Star Pomegranate Award Recipient, Kamal Hachkar (2015), aspires to build bridges between cultures.

    Pomegranate Award to singer Neta Elkayam, followed by Moroccan Closing Night Party

    TICKETS AND MORE INFORMATION

    For Tickets and more Information on the Festival, visit nysephardifilmfestival.org or call 1.800.838.3006

    THE AMERICAN SEPHARDI FEDERATION:

    To learn more, visit americansephardi.org

    THE MOISE SAFRA CENTER:

    To learn more, visit moisesafracenter.org

    (Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Social Issues, Spirituality, Cuisine and Health & Wellness)

  • Navy Pier, Delhi committee of Chicago Sister Citiespartner for celebration of Holi

    Navy Pier, Delhi committee of Chicago Sister Citiespartner for celebration of Holi

    Holi Bhangra Dance.

    CHICAGO, IL (TIP): First time a large metropolitan city in the United States, Chicago, celebrated the Indian festival of Holi, with over 2000 people in attendance which included live cultural program, music and dances, food and drinks, and color throwing. “The Delhi Committee of Chicago Sister Cities is thrilled to partner with Navy Pier for this event so that Chicagoans and visitors can participate in the celebration of Holi, a holiday that marks new life and energy,” said Smita N. Shah, Chairman of the Delhi Committee of Chicago Sister Cities International, Director on the Navy Pier Board of Directors, and CEO of SPAAN Tech, Inc. “How fitting that we can celebrate this one-of-a-kind event on our beautiful lakefront, with Mayor Lightfoot, in the city blessed by Swami Vivekananda.”  Also in attendance were Consul General Amit Kumar, Indian Community Leader Niranjan S. Shah, Pratima Shah, and ABC 7 News Reporter, Ravi Baichwal. Ravi Baichwal of ABC7 News, provided a welcome for attendees and served as the master of ceremonies. The celebration was the last of three events in the Global Connections series at Navy Pier presented by ComEd, which previously hosted events celebrating the Chinese New Year and International Carnivale.

    “Chicago is a global city, and this partnership is a perfect example of that,” noted Mayor Lightfoot.  She also thanked Smita N. Shah for her commitment to the citizens of Chicago, leadership of the Delhi Committee, and for her appointment by President Biden to the President’s Advisory Commission on Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders Delhi’s position as a sister city to Chicago demonstrates the strong relationship between India and the city as well as the cultural importance of the established Indian American community to the Chicagoland community. Under Smita Shah’s leadership, the Delhi Committee of Chicago founded the Annual Legacy of Mahatma Gandhi Luncheon in 2014, honoring the long-standing exchange of ideas between Mahatma Gandhi and the U.S., and the ever-important principles of truth and non-violence. Shah also helped secure the designation of October 2nd as Mahatma Gandhi Day in Chicago.

    (Photographs and Press release /Asian Media USA)

  • Canadian Politics: Bobby Singh in race for Conservative leadership

    Canadian Politics: Bobby Singh in race for Conservative leadership

    By Prabhjot Singh in Brampton, Canada

    BRAMPTON (TIP): Born and brought up in Scarborough, Bobby Singh, has joined the Conservative leadership race. He comes from an immigrant Punjabi family and is one of nine candidates so far in the run.

    Canada’s Conservatives will have their new leader elected by Saturday, September 10. In choosing its third leader in five years, Conservative Party of Canada members have a tough decision to make as the party has not done well in the federal elections in the recent past. Though it looks a battle of wits featuring Mr Pierre Poilievre, Mr Jean Charest, Mr Patrick Brown, and Ms Leslyn Lewis, others who have entered the race so far include Mr. Roman Baber, Mr. Joseph Bourgault, Mr. Scott Aitchison, Mr. Marc Dalton,  and Mr. Bobby Singh.

    Prospective candidates will have until April 19 to apply to enter the leadership election. The candidates will provide a total entry fee of $200,000, in addition to a compliance deposit of $100,000  which is refundable after the election is concluded.

    Only those members who are enrolled on or before June 3 shall be eligible to vote. The last election in 2020 took little longer as it was conducted by postal battle because of the Corona pandemic.

    Bobby Singh had unsuccessfully contested election to the House of Commons in 2019 from Scarborough Rouge Park. He was also in the run for the party leadership in 2020 before retiring from the contest in favor of another candidate Peter MacKay.

    Early this week, Jagmeet Singh, who became the first non-white immigrant to head a national party – NDP – was in news after signing an agreement with the Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that keeps the minority Liberal government in office till completion of its full term in 2025.

    Bobby Singh jumped in the fray even before the NDP-Liberal agreement was signed. At one stage there were speculations that once the Conservatives have a new leader, it may challenge the minority Liberal government to force yet another federal election. Now after the NDP-Liberal agreement, speculations of an early federal poll have more or less disappeared. The Conservative leadership election has been necessitated after Erin O Toole, elected in 2020, was forced to quit early this year.

    “The son of immigrants, I am a proud Canadian of the Punjabi Sikh community and have lived my entire life in the district of Scarborough, specifically 30 years as a resident in Scarborough Rouge Park. I have watched this community mature and transition, from being a predominantly English-Canadian community to now representing multiple minority groups accounting for over 56% of the population with South Asians serving as the largest visible minority,” Bobby Singh had stated before contesting the 2019 federal elections.

    He claims to be a  successful entrepreneur – business professional with nearly two decades of experience in launching start-up businesses. He says he has also worked within financial, retail, government, and consumer packaged goods industries advising stakeholders within customer service, finance, and strategy capacities.

    In 2016  he expressed interest to run as a candidate in the Ontario Scarborough Rouge River provincial by-election. Subsequently, in 2017  he sought appointment to Toronto City Council.

    He holds a Bachelor of Arts and Science degrees in Finance-Economics and Psychology from the University of Toronto, a Master of Business Administration degree from the Schulich School of Business, York University, and a Master of Public Policy Administration and Law degree and Graduate Diploma in Justice Administration from the School of Public Policy, York University.

    Pierre Poilievre declared himself a candidate for Canadian Prime Ministership even before the election process for Conservative leadership was announced. He had tweeted:

    “Conservatives and Canadians are ready for a leader who will fight #JustinFlation and put them back in control of their lives. That’s why I’m running to be Prime Minister.” He has been a sitting MP since 2004.

    Mr. Patrick Brown, 43-year-old mayor of Brampton, said that he underscored his potential to help the party make inroads in urban and suburban Canada. He  enjoys immense popularity with the Punjabi community.

    “I want people who have never voted Conservative and have voted for other parties to feel welcome in our family. I want people who have been turned off by recent Conservative infighting to get inspired and fight alongside me for a better vision for our country,” Mr. Brown said.

    He has been a former federal Conservative MP and former leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservatives. Ten months after he was forced out of the provincial PC, he became mayor of Brampton.

    He has been vocal in criticizing Bill 21, the Quebec legislation that bars some public-sector employees, including teachers, from wearing visible religious symbols such as hijabs at work. In December, the City of Brampton, led by Mr. Brown, pledged $100,000 in financial support for the legal challenge to the law.

    “When everyone else was silent against legislation that bans religious symbols, I fought to protect religious freedom,” Mr. Brown  was quoted in the media. “No one should ever lose their job based on their faith and we must fight for equality of opportunity for every Canadian, no matter if they wear a turban, a cross, a hijab or a kippah because that is a Canadian value,” the media reports quoting him said.

  • Tax Time Guide: Electronic tax payment and agreement options available to taxpayers who owe

    Tax Time Guide: Electronic tax payment and agreement options available to taxpayers who owe

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): The Internal Revenue Service, on March 22,  reminded taxpayers who have a tax bill that there are several ways to make payments, and there are options for many people who can’t pay their tax bill in full by April tax deadline. The deadline to submit 2021 tax returns or an extension to file and pay tax owed this year falls on April 18, instead of April 15, because of the Emancipation Day holiday in the District of Columbia. Taxpayers in Maine or Massachusetts have until April 19, 2022, to file their returns due to the Patriots’ Day holiday in those states. Some taxpayers who were victims of a natural disaster have even longer to file their returns.

    The IRS reminds people to timely file their tax return and pay whatever they can by the filing deadline to avoid late filing and interest penalties.

    Sign in to pay and see payment history

    Taxpayers can use their Online Account to securely see important information when preparing to file their tax return or following up on balances or notices. Taxpayers can make a same-day payment for a 2021 tax return balance, an extension to file, or estimated taxes, which are all due by April deadline for most taxpayers. They can also view:

    Their Adjusted Gross Income, Economic Impact Payment amounts and advance Child Tax Credit payment amounts needed for their 2021 return,

    Payment history and any scheduled or pending payments,

    Payment plan details and

    Digital copies of select notices from the IRS.

    Ways to pay

    Electronic Funds Withdrawal (EFW): This option allows taxpayers to file and pay electronically from their bank account when using tax preparation software or a tax professional. This option is free and only available when electronically filing a tax return.

    Direct Pay: Direct Pay is free and allows taxpayers to securely pay their federal taxes directly from their checking or savings account without any fees or preregistration. Taxpayers can schedule payments up to 365 days in advance. After submitting a payment through Direct Pay, taxpayers will receive immediate confirmation.

    Electronic Federal Tax Payment System: This free service gives taxpayers a safe and convenient way to pay individual and business taxes by phone or online. To enroll and for more information, taxpayers can call 800-555-4477, or visit eftps.gov.

    Credit card, debit card or digital wallet: Individuals can pay online, by phone or with a mobile device through any of the authorized payment processors. The processor charges a fee. The IRS doesn’t receive any fees for these payments. Authorized card processors and phone numbers are available at IRS.gov/payments.

    Cash: For taxpayers who prefer to pay in cash, the IRS offers a way to pay taxes at one of its Cash Processing Companies at participating retail stores. The IRS urges taxpayers choosing this option to start early because it involves a four-step process. Details, including answers to frequently asked questions, are at IRS.gov/paywithcash.

    Check or Money Order: Payments made by check or money order should be made payable to the “United States Treasury.” To help ensure that the payment gets credited promptly, taxpayers should also enclose a Form 1040-V payment voucher and print on the front of the check or money order: “2021 Form 1040”; name; address; daytime phone number; and Social Security number.

    File by April 18, 2022 for most taxpayers

    The most important thing everyone with a tax bill should do is file a return by the April 18 due date, for most taxpayers (even if they can’t pay in full). Taxpayers may also request a six-month extension to file by October 17, 2022, to avoid penalties and interest for failing to file on time.

    Though automatic tax-filing extensions are available to anyone who wants one, these extensions don’t change the payment deadline. It is not an extension to pay. Visit IRS.gov/extensions for details.

    Usually anyone who owes tax and waits until after that date to file will be charged a late-filing penalty of 5% per month. So, if a tax return is complete, filing it by April 18 is always less costly, even if the full amount due can’t be paid on time. IRS Free File is an easy, quick way to file that is available to eligible individuals and families who earned $73,000 or less in 2021. IRS Free File is available on IRS.gov.

    Pay what you can

    Interest, plus the late-payment penalty, will apply to any payments made after April 18. Making a payment, even a partial payment, will help limit penalty and interest charges. The fastest and easiest way to pay a personal tax bill is with Direct Pay, available only on IRS.gov. For a rundown of other payment options, visit IRS.gov/payments.

    The IRS urges taxpayers to first consider other options for payment, including getting a loan to pay the amount due. In many cases, loan costs may be lower than the combination of interest and penalties the IRS must charge under federal law. Normally, the late-payment penalty is one-half-of-one percent (0.5%) per month. The interest rate, adjusted quarterly, is currently 3% per year, compounded daily.

    If a loan isn’t possible, the IRS can often help.

    Online payment plans

    Most individual taxpayers qualify to set up an online payment plan with the IRS, and it only takes a few minutes to apply. Applicants are notified immediately if their request is approved. No need to call or write to the IRS. The IRS notes that online payment plans are processed more quickly than requests submitted with electronically-filed tax returns. If a taxpayer just filed their return and knows that they’ll owe a balance, they may be able to set up a payment plan online before they even receive a notice or bill.

    There are two main types of online payment plans:

    Short-term payment plan – The payment period is 180 days or less and the total amount owed is less than $100,000 in combined tax, penalties and interest. There’s no fee for setting one up, though interest and the late-payment penalty continue to accrue.

    Long-term payment plan – Payments are made monthly, and the amount owed must be less than $50,000 in combined tax, penalties and interest. If the IRS approves a long-term payment plan, also known as an installment agreement, a setup fee normally applies. But low-income taxpayers may qualify to have the fee waived or reimbursed. In addition, for anyone who filed their return on time, the late-payment penalty rate is cut in half while an installment agreement is in effect. This means that the penalty accrues at the rate of one-quarter-of-one percent (0.25%) per month, instead of the usual one-half-of-one percent (0.5%) per month.

    Taxpayers who do not qualify for an online payment agreement may still be able to arrange to pay in installments. See Additional Information on Payment Plans for more information.

    Other payment options

    Some struggling taxpayers may also consider using these other payment options:

    Delayed collection

    If the IRS determines a taxpayer is unable to pay, it may delay collection until their financial condition improves. However, the total amount owed will still increase because penalties and interest are charged until paid in full. Taxpayers can request a delay by calling the phone number on their notice or 800-829-1040.

    Penalty relief

    Some taxpayers qualify to have their late-filing or late-payment penalties reduced or eliminated. This can be done on a case-by-case basis, based on reasonable cause. Alternatively, where a taxpayer has a history of compliance, the IRS can typically provide relief under the First Time Abatement program. Visit IRS.gov/penaltyrelief for details.

    Offer in Compromise

    Some taxpayers qualify to settle their tax bill for less than the full amount due, through an offer in compromise. Though there is typically a $205 non-refundable application fee, it is generally waived for low-income taxpayers and for offers based on doubt as to liability. The Offer in Compromise Pre-Qualifier tool can help determine eligibility for anyone interested in applying.

    The IRS reminds taxpayers that they have rights and protections throughout the collection process. For details, see Taxpayer Bill of Rights and Publication 1, Your Rights as a Taxpayer. For more information about payments, see Topic No. 202, Tax Payment Options, on IRS.gov. Taxpayers should know before they owe. The IRS encourages all taxpayers to check their withholding with the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator.

    This news release is part of a series called the Tax Time Guide, a resource to help taxpayers file an accurate tax return. Additional help is available in Publication 17, Your Federal Income Tax.

    (Press Release)

  • STAMFORD MAYOR CAROLINE SIMMONS ADMINISTER OATH OF OFFICE TO GOPIO-CT 2022 TEAM

    STAMFORD MAYOR CAROLINE SIMMONS ADMINISTER OATH OF OFFICE TO GOPIO-CT 2022 TEAM

    GOPIO-CT officials with India’s Consul General Randhir Kumar Jaiswal and other dignitaries. From l. to r.: Vikas Mathur, Clif McFeely, Prasad Chintalapudi, Amanda Dubois-Mwake, Don Strait, Dr. Varun Jeph, Marc Jaffe, Suresh Sharma, Dr. Jaya Daptardar, Prachi Narayan, Dr. Thomas Abraham, Ashok Nichani, Srinivas Akarapu, Consul General Jaiswal, Lana Gifas, Yelena Klompus, Betsy McNeil, Prof. Sujatha Sujata Gadkari-Wilcox and Anita Mathur.

    STAMFORD, CT (TIP): “Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) – Connecticut Chapter is a very important service organization for Stamford,” said Stamford Mayor Caroline Simmons at the launch of GOPIO-CT 2022 activities on Friday, March 4 at the Stamford Hampton Inn and Suites. The activities for 2022 was inaugurated by the chief guest for the evening Indian Consul General Randhir Kumar Jaiswal in the presence of several organizations which provide services to the larger society such as Women’s Mentoring Network, Future 5, Children’s Learning Center, Building One community, Grassroots of Norwalk/Stamford and Stamford Public Library. Also present was India’s Deputy Consul General in New York, Dr. Varun Jeph.

    The inaugural event started with a prayer and a moment of silence for the victims of Russia’s war in Ukraine. It was chaired by GOPIO-CT Vice President Prasad Chintalapudi who said in his initial remarks, “GOPIO-CT is a group of like-minded individuals with a commitment for community services.”

    Earlier in the day, a GOPIO delegation met Mayor Caroline Simmons and offered help to the city to attract businesses from India to start outfits in Stamford. Mayor endorsed and thanked GOPIO-CT for this effort.

    GOPIO International Chairman Dr. Thomas Abraham, who is also an advisor and trustee of the chapter, highlighted GOPIO-CT’s outstanding service activities such as replenishing and financially supporting many food pantries during the Covid period. “Of all 100+ GOPIO chapters worldwide, GOPIO-CT is number one in organizing the largest number of activities in the last several years and complimented the chapter officials for their new initiatives every year, adding new programs in its schedule.

    The new team introduced by Dr. Abraham is headed by Ashok Nichani as President. Other officials are Prasad Chintalapudi, Executive Vice President; Dr. Jaya Daptardar, Vice President; Prachi Narayan, Secretary; Mahesh Jhangiani, Jt. Secretary; Srinivas Akarappu, Treasurer; Anita Bhat; Immediate Past President; Board Members: Meera Banta, Fr. Sudhir DeSouza, Prof. Ravi Dhingra, Prof. Sujata Gadkari-Wilcox, Santosh Gannu, Pradeep Govil, Ram Jhunja, Sushanth Krishnamurthy, Anita Mathur, Vikas Mathur and Ashvini Persaud; Trustees: Bhavna Juneja, Thomas Abraham (Secretary & Comptroller), Shailesh Naik, Totty Narang, Joe Simon and Shelly Nichani

    Mayor Simmons administered the Oath of Office to the new team. Mayor Simmons said that Stamford is looking for Indian companies to set up business outfits and that her administration will look into assigning a Cricket Field in Stamford to serve new immigrant groups from cricket playing countries. “New immigrant groups have always enriched Stamford,” Simmons added. The newly re-elected GOPIO-CT President Ashok Nichani in his formal welcome address said that last year the chapter organized some programs in person and this year most programs will be in person and hope to have the Annual Awards Banquet in June.

    GOPIO-CT Treasurer Srinivas Akarappu introduced the Chief Guest Consul General Jaiswal who in his remarks complimented GOPIO-CT for its outstanding list of activities every year.

    “We have met Norwalk Mayor Harry Rilling and now Mayor Simmons, and the Consulate will interact with them for attracting Indian businesses to Connecticut and American businesses to India,” said Consul General Jaiswal. He also said that the US-Indian relations are still going strong with cooperation in several areas.

    GOPIO Joint Secretary Mahesh Jhangiani highlighted the major events planned for this year which include a seminar in Venture Capital Opportunities in April, Holi Festival of Color at Mill River Park in April, the signature event the Annual Awards Banquet in June, India Festival and Kite Flying on August 14that Mill River Park, Welcome Dinner for new UConn and other university Indian students in September, Fall Seminar in October, Diwali Festival of Lights in November, Tax and Investment Seminar in December and Annual Holiday Party along with  election of new officers in December.

    Special guests at the event were CT State Assembly Representative Harry Arora, Women’s Mentoring Network Exec. Director Lana Gifas, Future 5 Founder Clif McFeely and Executive Director Amanda Dubois-Mwake, Children’s Learning Center of Fairfield County CEO Marc Jaffe, Building Community Deputy Director Don Strait, Grassroots Executive Director Betsy McNeil and Ms. Yelena Klompus who serves as the ELL, Citizenship & Cultural Programs Manager at the Stamford Public Library. They thanked GOPIO-CT for its continued financial support for their activities and joint programs. Others present were organization representatives including Association of Indians in America (AIA) represented by its National President Gobind Munjal and Vice President Nilima Madan, National Federation of Indian American Associations (NFIA) represented by its New York Area Vice President Gunjan Rastogi and Milan Cultural Association USA represented by its President Suresh Sharma. The sponsor of the event, First County Bank, was represented by its Vice President Brad Lupinacci. The eventconcluded with  GOPIO-CT Secretary Prachi Narayan thanking the gathering. Narayan said, “I want to thank the political and social leadership of the region, with whom we work closely, for their support without which we cannot achieve our ambitious goal of social service to the society at large.”

    The program ended with a networking dinner followed by musical evening with singers Pallavi Belwariar and Srinivas Gunupuru compered by GOPIO-CT Vice President Dr. Jaya Daptardar.

    Over the last 16 years, GOPIO-CT, a chapter of GOPIO International has become an active and dynamic organization hosting interactive sessions with policy makers and academicians, community events, youth mentoring and networking workshops, and working with other area organizations to help create a better future. GOPIO-CT – Global Organization of People of Indian Origin – serves as a non-partisan, secular, civic and community service organization – promoting awareness of Indian culture, customs and contributions of PIOs through community programs, forums, events and youth activities. It seeks to strengthen partnerships and create an ongoing dialogue with local communities.

    (Press release)

  • AFTER SHOOTING, COMMUNITY RALLIES AGAINST ILLEGAL AIRBNB

    AFTER SHOOTING, COMMUNITY RALLIES AGAINST ILLEGAL AIRBNB

    BAYSIDE, NY (TIP): After a shooting outside a Bayside house on Saturday, March 19th that left one person injured and sent stray bullets into the surrounding community, piercing cars and a nearby child’s car seat, residents, community leaders and elected officials rallied to call on Airbnb to permanently ban listings at this address, and for the city to issue a vacate order on the home. For the last two years, the property, located at 208-16 38th Avenue, Bayside, has been in the early stages of foreclosure and occupied by squatters who have illegally rented it out through Airbnb. Residents report that the illegal rentals have given rise to a constant barrage of late-night parties causing excessive noise, litter, as well as harassment and confrontations with area residents. Concerns culminated this past weekend when a partygoer was shot in the torso. The victim is in stable condition, but no arrests have been made. As the investigation continues, the community is calling for the city to finally put an end to the neighborhood nightmare. Elected officials wrote letters to the Department of Buildings calling for a vacate order, and to Airbnb calling for the company to permanently ban listings at this address.

    NYS Senator John Liu said, “We are calling on the city to stop giving our community the run around and issue a vacate order on this property before anyone else gets hurt. We also call on Airbnb to stop illegally allowing this property to be listed on their website. Two years is too long for our community to have one home hold an entire block hostage. These are not just simple quality of life issues, but serious public safety hazards that need to be addressed immediately.” Community leaders called on the city to redouble its efforts so it can gain access and properly inspect the home. Liu said, “There are several problems at this location that are preventing a satisfying resolution for our community. From Airbnb allowing its illegal rental to the squatters taking advantage of the situation. At the end of the day, the city needs to be the one to step up and recognize the dangers here as reason enough to vacate the premises and keep our community safe.”

    U.S. Rep. Grace Meng said, “This recent shooting in Bayside has shaken our community and has made me deeply concerned about public safety in the area. Airbnb needs to immediately step up and permanently stop this vacant property from being listed on its website. Allowing it to continuously be posted is unacceptable. Neighborhood residents must not have their safety put at risk and their quality of life disrupted. This problem must be addressed at once, and my colleagues and I stand shoulder to shoulder with the community as we push Airbnb for answers.”

    Assemblyman Edward Braunstein said, “The pattern of disregard and disrespect shown by the individuals squatting at the single-family residence on 38th Avenue escalated to violence last week when illegal Airbnb guests brazenly opened fire on the surrounding streets, putting neighbors in danger and their nerves on edge. For the last two years, an absentee property owner has emboldened these squatters to not only illegally list this property on Airbnb, but openly advertise rooms for rent within the single-family home. Enough is enough. Several times in the past, my office has worked with residents to get Airbnb listings at the property shut down, only for it to appear again under another account. While authorities continue their investigation to apprehend the individuals responsible for the shooting, Airbnb must permanently ban listings at this location. As we plan next courses of action, I will continue close collaboration with fellow elected officials, the Mayor’s Office, the 111th Precinct, City agencies and local residents. We must use every tool at our disposal to address this serious matter once and for all.”

    Joseph Marziliano, District Manager of Community Board 11, said, “For five years, this problematic property has plagued our neighbors, first as a zombie home, then as an alleged squatter’s den, and now as an illegal Airbnb with a shooting spilling over into the streets. We are urging Mayor Adams’ administration to issue a vacate order to restore peace to our community.” Roseann Foley Henry, President of the Bellcourt Civic Association, said, “What makes Bellcourt so special is the powerful sense of community here. We are appalled by this incident and will do everything in our power to root out the bad actors and restore our quiet streets to the safe, welcoming neighborhood that we know and love.”

  • Birbhum killings

    Culture of violence the bane of Bengal politics

    Turf wars and bloodshed are synonymous with West Bengal politics, particularly during the election season, with successive governments often fanning the flames rather than dousing them. The killing of eight persons, including two children, in Birbhum district —apparently in retaliation for the murder of a Trinamool Congress (TMC) panchayat leader — adds another tragic chapter to this never-ending saga of violence. The Calcutta High Court has ordered a CBI investigation into the gruesome incident, even as Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee — in the damage-control mode — got a TMC block president arrested and pulled up the local police for not acting in time. The Birbhum horror has provided the BJP, the state’s main Opposition party, ample ammunition to target the ruling TMC. Even though the TMC has promised to cooperate with the CBI, the fierce inter-party rivalry and Centre-state tussle seen in recent years do not bode well for a free and fair probe.

    The Left, during its decades-long rule in Bengal, banked on violence and coercion to force its rivals into submission. It was Birbhum that had witnessed the lynching of 11 laborers in July 2000 during Jyoti Basu’s tenure, while more than 20 lives were lost in clashes during the 2008 panchayat polls. The Mamata-led TMC has inherited this unenviable legacy of repression. With the BJP gaining ground in Bengal on the back of its strong performance in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, the two parties have frequently locked horns, right from the top brass to the grassroots-level workers. Last year’s Assembly elections were also marred by bloodshed, with four voters falling to bullets fired by Central security personnel.

    The onus is on all stakeholders to discourage the culture of violence that is not only a blot on Bengal but is also impeding the state’s progress. It needs political will to rein in the cadres and uphold the rule of law. With warring parties relying on muscle power to silence their detractors, it would be a Herculean task to weed out the criminal elements and help Bengal turn over a new leaf.

    (Tribune, India)

  • India holds its own: Justified in resisting US pressure over Russia

    Singling out India among the Quad members, US President Joe Biden has said that New Delhi has been ‘somewhat shaky’ in acting against Russia over the invasion of Ukraine. There is nothing ‘shaky’ about safeguarding national interests – and that is exactly what India has been doing, holding its own amid relentless pressure from the US and its allies. The country’s ‘independent foreign policy’ has won praise from an unexpected quarter — Pakistan — but it is obvious that America is not happy with New Delhi’s assertion of strategic autonomy. India’s decision to import Russian oil at discounted rates to meet its urgent needs has also riled the US, again unreasonably.

    India’s diplomatic tightrope walk underlines a pragmatic response in view of its time-tested relationship with Russia. The enduring strength of the bilateral ties was witnessed during an in-person summit meeting between PM Modi and President Putin in December last year, when the two nations signed a pact on military cooperation for a 10-year period. What heightened the summit’s significance was its timing: it was held in the golden jubilee year of the historic Indo-Soviet Treaty of Peace, Friendship and Cooperation, which had stood India in good stead during the 1971 Bangladesh liberation war.

    Russia continues to be the topmost arms supplier to India, even though its share in the total imports has dropped from 69 per cent to 46 per cent over the past half a decade, according to a report released recently by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Wedged between China and Pakistan, both dodgy neighbors, India cannot afford to compromise on its defense preparedness. It’s here that old ally Russia has been playing a critical role with its unstinting military-technical support. The threat of US sanctions did not stop India and Russia from going ahead with the S-400 missile deal. With America having a finger in virtually every multilateral pie — be it Quad, AUKUS or the prospective alliance with Pakistan, Uzbekistan and Afghanistan — New Delhi is adopting a wise course by keeping its options open and not abandoning its time-tested ally.

    (Tribune, India)

  • Intel India VPs Receive Award on Behalf of CEO& EVP

    Intel India VPs Receive Award on Behalf of CEO& EVP

    By Brian Grim, RFBF President

    BENGALURU (TIP): Intel Corporation’s CEO Pat Gelsinger and EVP Sandra Rivera received the 2021 Global Business & Interfaith Peace Gold Medal for their work in making Intel’s workplaces worldwide inclusive and welcoming for people of all faiths and beliefs. Due to covid, they were not able to receive their gold medals in person, but only in a virtual ceremony broadcasted from Tokyo, Japan, and Washington, DC, on August 24, 2021.

    On Monday, two vice presidents from Intel India  received the medals on their behalf: Anita Vijaykrishnan, VP / GM Enterprise Operations, and Sumedha Limaye, Vice President of Engineering, Xeon & Networking.

    “We thank the Religious Freedom & Business Foundation and the United Nations Global Compact for recognizing Intel. It’s our honor to accept this award on behalf of Pat and Sandra,” said Sumedha and Anita. “Bringing our authentic self to work resonates with every Intel employee globally. There is more encouragement to realize your strengths and potential when the environment supports diversity of thought and expression.”

    The Intel Corporation is the most religiously inclusive Fortune 100 company in America, according to the REDI Index.

    I’m in the final three days of my 18-day trip to India, preparing for Dare to Overcome 2023. DTO 2023 will be held in New Delhi in tandem with the G20 meetings hosted by India.

    Yesterday I was in Kochi (Cochin), Kerala, on India’s southwest coast, and visited the Paradesi Synagogue, which was established hundreds of years before, which now shares a wall with a Hindu temple. In fact, some Jewish communities in India trace their lineage back to the time of King Solomon. Kochi is also where the Apostle Thomas came soon after the time of Christ in outreach to these Jewish communities. Indeed, the synagogue is very close to several of the most important Catholic churches in Kerala, with communities dating back to the time of Christ.

    Seeing the ancient heritage of such communities in India, helps understand the findings from a recent Pew Research Center poll, which found that a number of religious beliefs and practices are shared across religious groups in India.

  • Is Victory for Ukraine Worth Risking Nuclear War?

    Is Victory for Ukraine Worth Risking Nuclear War?

    By Patrick J. Buchanan

    “The Ukrainian war, now a month old, has demonstrated the utility of nuclear weapons. Putin’s credible threat to use them has caused the U.S. and NATO to flatly refuse Kyiv’s request to put a no-fly zone over Ukraine.And as Russia’s threat to use nuclear weapons has deterred NATO from intervening on Ukraine’s side in this war, other nations will not miss the message: Possession of nukes can deter even the greatest nuclear powers.The longer this war goes on, the greater the suffering and losses on all sides. Thousands of Ukrainian soldiers and civilians are already dead, with 10 million uprooted from their homes, a third of that number having fled into neighboring states of Eastern Europe.The longer the war goes on, the greater the likelihood Putin resorts to indiscriminate bombing and shelling to kill off the resistance, and the greater the possibility that the war expands into NATO Europe.”

    Yet, today, because of a month-old war between Russia and Ukraine, over who shall control Crimea, the Donbas and the Black and Azov Sea coasts of Ukraine, America seems closer to a nuclear war than at any time since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962.

    The question remains: “When did the relationship between Russia and Ukraine become a matter of such vital interest to the U.S. that we would risk war, possible nuclear war, with Russia over it?  How did we get here?”

    During the 70 years that the Soviet Union existed, Ukraine was an integral part of the nation.

    Yet this geographic and political reality posed no threat to the United States. A Russia and a Ukraine, both inside the USSR, was an accepted reality that was seen as no threat for the seven decades that they were united.

    Yet, today, because of a month-old war between Russia and Ukraine, over who shall control Crimea, the Donbas and the Black and Azov Sea coasts of Ukraine, America seems closer to a nuclear war than at any time since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962.

    Why? Time to step back and reflect on what is at stake.

    Exactly what threat does Russia’s invasion of Ukraine present to us that is so grave we would consider military action that could lead to World War III and Russia’s use of battlefield nuclear weapons against us?

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly hinted at the use of such weapons, should NATO intervene in the Ukraine war and Russia face defeat, or in the event of an “existential” threat to the Russian nation.

    We hear from our moral elites that morality commands us to intervene to save the Ukrainian people from the ravages of a war that has already taken thousands of Ukrainian lives.

    But what would be the justification for U.S. military intervention in Ukraine, absent a congressional authorization or declaration of war?

    Consider. The year the Liberal Hour arrived in America with the New Deal, 1933, a newly inaugurated Franklin D. Roosevelt formally recognized Joseph Stalin’s murderous regime as the legitimate government of a Russia-led USSR. FDR met personally with Soviet Foreign Minister Maxim Litvinov even as the Holodomor, the forced starvation of Ukrainian peasants and small farmers, the kulaks and their families, was far advanced.

    Walter Duranty, the New York Times reporter in Moscow, won a Pulitzer for covering up that crime of the century with its estimated 4 million dead.

    The question remains: When did the relationship between Russia and Ukraine become a matter of such vital interest to the U.S. that we would risk war, possible nuclear war, with Russia over it?

    How did we get here?

    We got here by exploiting our Cold War victory as an opportunity to move NATO, our Cold War alliance, into a dozen countries in Central and Eastern Europe, up to the borders of Russia. Then, we started to bring Ukraine into NATO, the constituent republic of the old Soviet Union with the longest and deepest history with Mother Russia.

    Thus, while Putin started this war, the U.S. set the table for it.

    We pushed our military alliance, NATO, set up in 1949 to contain and, if necessary, fight Russia, 1,000 miles to the east, right into Russia’s face.

    In the 1930s, when Britain’s Lady Astor was asked if she knew where Hitler was born, she answered: “Versailles.”

    At the Paris Peace Conference of 1919, which produced the Versailles Treaty, millions of Germanic peoples and the lands they had inhabited were severed from German rule and distributed to half a dozen nations across Europe.

    When we get back on our feet, we will take back all that we have lost, said Gen. Hans von Seeckt of the German General Staff. We hear warnings that if Russia uses chemical weapons in Ukraine, NATO will react militarily. But if no NATO ally is attacked, why would NATO respond to a Russian attack on Ukraine? Though outlawed today, chemical weapons were used by all the major participants in World War I, including the Americans.

    As for atomic weapons, only Americans have used them.

    And while we did not introduce the bombing of cities — the British and Germans did that — we did perfect the carpet-bombing of cities like Cologne, Hamburg, Berlin, Dresden and Tokyo.

    The Ukrainian war, now a month old, has demonstrated the utility of nuclear weapons. Putin’s credible threat to use them has caused the U.S. and NATO to flatly refuse Kyiv’s request to put a no-fly zone over Ukraine.

    And as Russia’s threat to use nuclear weapons has deterred NATO from intervening on Ukraine’s side in this war, other nations will not miss the message: Possession of nukes can deter even the greatest nuclear powers.

    The longer this war goes on, the greater the suffering and losses on all sides. Thousands of Ukrainian soldiers and civilians are already dead, with 10 million uprooted from their homes, a third of that number having fled into neighboring states of Eastern Europe. The longer the war goes on, the greater the likelihood Putin resorts to indiscriminate bombing and shelling to kill off the resistance, and the greater the possibility that the war expands into NATO Europe. Meanwhile, in the secure American homeland, 5,000 miles from Kyiv, there is no shortage of foreign policy scholars beating the drums for a “victory” over Putin’s Russia and willing to fight to achieve that victory — right down to the last Ukrainian.

    (The authoris an American paleoconservative political commentator, columnist, politician and broadcaster. Buchanan was an assistant and special consultant to U.S. Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Ronald Reagan, and was an original host on CNN’s Crossfire).