Year: 2022

  • Barcelona sweep Napoli aside to make Europa League last 16

    Barcelona cruised into the last 16 of the Europa League on Thursday, February 24, after comfortably seeing off Napoli 4-2 to go through 5-3 on aggregate in a serious show of force. The Catalan giants were on top almost from the off in Naples thanks to Jordi Alba expertly finishing a lightning counter-attack from a Napoli corner, and Frenkie de Jong’s superb long range effort effectively ended the tie with three quarters of the match to play. Xavi’s thrilling side could have had more before Lorenzo Insigne briefly gave the hosts hope from the penalty spot mid-way through the first half, and Gerard Pique made absolutely sure there would be no Napoli comeback on the stroke of half-time. A sobering night for Napoli, who are chasing a first Serie A title in three decades, was capped just before the hour mark by Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, impressive up front for a dynamic Barca team which looks like it can go all the way in the competition. “We dominated we for 90 minutes and that’s the first time we’ve done that since I became coach,” Xavi told reporters. “It’s a win over a team which I repeat is a Champions League-level team, one which does not concede many goals and is fighting for the league title.”

    -Source: AFP

  • Australia announces first tranche of sanctions on Russia over Ukraine crisis

    Australia announces first tranche of sanctions on Russia over Ukraine crisis

    Sydney (TIP): Australia on February 23 joined the United States, the European Union, Canada, Germany and Britain to impose sanctions on Russia after Moscow ordered troops into separatist regions in Ukraine and recognised them as independent entities.

    Australia will immediately begin placing sanctions on Russian individuals it believes were responsible over the country’s actions against Ukraine, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said during a media briefing. “Australians always stand up to bullies, and we will be standing up to Russia, along with all of our partners,” he said. “I expect subsequent tranches of sanctions, this is only the start of this process.”

    Japan sanctions Russia, separatist Ukraine areas

    Tokyo: Japan’s prime minister has announced sanctions targeting Russia and two separatist Ukrainian regions recognised as independent by Russian President Vladimir Putin, joining an international effort seeking to pressure Russia to return to diplomatic solutions.

    Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said Wednesday that his government will ban new issuance and distribution of Russian government bonds in Japan in response to the “actions Russia has been taking in Ukraine.”

    He said Japan will also suspend visa issuance to the people linked to the two Ukrainian rebel regions and freeze their assets in Japan, and will ban trade with the two areas. Kishida repeated his “strong condemnation” of Russia for violating Ukrainian sovereignty and territorial integrity as well as international law.

    He added: “We strongly urge Russia to return to diplomatic process in resolving the development.” — Agencies

  • CHANCELLOR BANKS ANNOUNCES END OF OUTDOOR MASK MANDATE

    CHANCELLOR BANKS ANNOUNCES END OF OUTDOOR MASK MANDATE

    NEW YORK(TIP): Schools Chancellor David C. Banks  announced on Friday, February 25, that beginning Monday, February 28, 2022 masks or face coverings will no longer be required when outside on school grounds. Masks will still be required for all students, staff and visitors inside schools. “Throughout the pandemic, our schools have remained some of the safest spaces for our students and staff, thanks to our gold standard health and safety protocol,” said Schools Chancellor David Banks. “I am so pleased that we are able to make this exciting announcement and safely allow students and staff to remove their masks when outdoors at NYC public schools.” The safety of our students and staff continues to be the top priority of the Department of Education, and this decision follows the success of our ‘Stay Safe, Stay Open’ plan, which led to the decrease of cases by 99 percent and brought the in-school positivity rate under one percent – far below the citywide average. At this time, in-door masking will continue. We will continue to work in close partnership with the Department of Health & Mental Hygiene and Health + Hospitals to monitor case rates, vaccination rates and other data points.

    The Department of Education continues to maintain stringent COVID protocols, including increased ventilation, distancing when possible, a daily screener to make sure those with symptoms do not come to school and the distribution of test kits—all designed to identify persons with COVID rapidly for isolation and reduce possible transmission of COVID in schools.

  • Row over Japan diplomat’s detention

    Row over Japan diplomat’s detention

    Tokyo (TIP): Japan’s Foreign Ministry said on February 23 it has lodged a strong protest and demanded an apology after its diplomat was detained and questioned by authorities in Beijing. The diplomat from the Japanese Embassy was seized while on duty and held for several hours on Monday, the Foreign Ministry said. The diplomat was carrying out his legitimate work and the detention violated the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, which stipulates the immunity of diplomats from civil and criminal jurisdiction of the host nation, the ministry said. The diplomat, whose name and other details were not disclosed, was released later Monday, a ministry official said on condition of anonymity, citing protocol. — AP

  • Canada’s protests settle down, but could echo in politics

    Canada’s protests settle down, but could echo in politics

    Toronto (TIP): Most of the streets around the Canadian Parliament are quiet now. The Ottawa protesters who vowed never to give up are largely gone, chased away by policemen in riot gear. The relentless blare of truckers’ horns has gone silent.

    But the trucker protest, which grew until it closed a handful of Canada-US border posts and shut down key parts of the capital city for weeks, could echo for years in Canadian politics and perhaps south of the border. The protest, which was first aimed at a Covid-19 vaccine mandate for cross-border truckers but also encompassed fury over the range of Covid-19 restrictions and hatred of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, reflected the spread of disinformation in Canada and simmering populist and right-wing anger.

    “I think we’ve started something here,” said Mark Suitor, a 33-year-old protester from Hamilton, Ontario, speaking as police retook control of the streets around Parliament. Protesters had essentially occupied those streets for more than three weeks, embarrassing Trudeau and energizing Canada’s far right. Suitor believes the protests will divide the country, something he welcomes.

    “This is going to be a very big division in our country,” he said. “I don’t believe this is the end.” While most analysts doubt the protests will mark a historic watershed in Canadian politics, it has shaken both of Canada’s two major parties.

    “The protest has given both the Liberals and the Conservatives a black eye,” said Nelson Wiseman, a political science professor at the University of Toronto. Trudeau’s Liberals look bad for allowing protesters to foments weeks of chaos in the capital city, he said, while the Conservatives look bad for championing protesters, many of them from the farthest fringes of the right.

    The conservatives “have to be careful not to alienate more moderate voters, who are generally not sympathetic to the protesters or right-wing populism more generally,” said Daniel Béland, a political science professor at McGill University in Montreal.

    The self-styled Freedom Convoy shook Canada’s reputation for civility, inspired convoys in France, New Zealand and the Netherlands and interrupted trade, causing economic damage on both sides of the border. Hundreds of trucks eventually occupied the streets around Parliament, a display that was part protest and part carnival.

    Authorities moved quickly to reopen the border posts, but police in Ottawa did little but issue warnings until the past couple days, even as hundreds and sometimes thousands of protesters clogged the streets of the city and besieged Parliament Hill. (AP)

  • China could invade Taiwan after seeing West’s response to Ukraine invasion: Oxford Professor

    Beijing (TIP): China could invade Taiwan after seeing the West’s response to Russia’s brutal war in Ukraine, a leading historian has warned, Daily Mail reported. Professor of European studies at the Oxford University, Timothy Garton Ash, said that Xi Jinping taking over the island militarily would be a ‘worst case scenario’, the report said. The political writer claimed that the Communist leader will be thinking: “If comrade Vladimir (Putin) can get away with it in Ukraine, maybe I’ll have a go.” He also warned Putin’s ‘minimal aim’ is to bring a new iron curtain down over eastern Europe because he wants to create a new empire, Daily Mail reported. Ash’s warnings came a day after Taiwan’s air force scrambled its fighter planes to warn away nine Chinese aircraft in its air defence zone. At the same time, Putin’s forces continued to sweep across Ukraine and reached the outskirts of Kiev by Friday morning. Ash said the devastating conflict – which has already seen hundreds slaughtered – is just the beginning of Russia’s plans. He told BBC Question Time: “He (Putin) has effectively already invaded Belarus, which is just next to Ukraine. Because he put all his forces in there and they’re there for as long as he wants them to be there. “So I think the minimal aim of Vladimir Putin is to create a new iron curtain down the Eastern frontier of NATO so that countries like Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia will be stuck in the Russian empire whether they like it or not,” as per the report.

    -IANS

  • Global warming speeding up world’s water cycle: Report

    Sydney (TIP): Rising temperatures are accelerating the world’s water cycle and triggering natural disasters such as droughts and floods, according to a new report led by Australian researchers. The report, published in Nature journal, released to the public on february 24, said that the hotter temperatures are speeding up the constant cycle of freshwater between the clouds, the land and the ocean, leading to more extreme weather conditions with the world’s wetter areas becoming even more soaked and the dry regions becoming even more parched. TaimoorSohail, the lead author and a mathematician from the University of New South Wales (UNSW), said the findings “paint a picture of the larger changes happening in the global water cycle,” Xinhua news agency reported. Previously, changes to the cycle had been difficult to directly observe, as about 80 per cent of global rainfall and evaporation occurs over the ocean.

    Sohail said his team had instead analysed historical data from 1970 to 2014 to monitor the changing patterns of salt in the ocean, to estimate how much ocean freshwater had moved from the equator to the poles during that time.

    Their new findings showed that between two and four times more freshwater had moved than climate models had anticipated.

    The researchers believe the amount of freshwater that was transported from the equator to the poles during those years had exceeded predictions by up to 77,000 cubic km. “We already knew the global water cycle was intensifying,” Sohail said. “We just didn’t know by how much.” Jan Zika, co-author of the report and associate professor of UNSW School of Mathematics and Statistics, said evaporation in warmer regions removed freshwater from the oceans making those bodies of water saltier.

    In contrast, Zika said the “water cycle takes that freshwater to colder regions where it falls as rain, diluting the ocean and making it less salty.” “Changes to the water cycle can have a critical impact on infrastructure, agriculture, and biodiversity,” Sohail said. “It’s therefore important to understand the way climate change is impacting the water cycle now and into the future.

    “Establishing the change in warm-to-cold freshwater transport means we can move forward and continue to make these important projections about how climate change is likely to impact our global water cycle,” Sohail said. –IANS

  • 2 Chinese, 115 Nepalese held in online loan scam

    Kathmandu (TIP): Two Chinese and more than 100 Nepal nationals have been arrested for their involvement in running an online fraud loan scheme targeting Indians, police said on February 23. The Nepal Police said in a press release that they arrested two Chinese and 115 Nepalese in two separate raids conducted in Kathmandu and Bhaktapur districts in Kathmandu valley on Monday and Tuesday for their involvement in fraudulent cyber activities. Acting on a tip-off, Kathmandu Metropolitan Police Range first detained a group of 37 individuals, including a Chinese from Old Baneshwor on Monday night. The Chinese national, identified as Chang Hu bao, operated illegal business activities targeting Indians with the help of Nepalese youth. “They had officially registered the company called Lewan Group to provide IT services for business houses in the capital,” police said. The Nepalese arrested from Kathmandu include 23 boys and 13 girls. After their arrest, the police also busted a larger racket in Sano Thimi Municipality of Bhaktapur district from where they arrested 80 persons, including a Chinese national named Wang Zinao in the second raid carried on a three-storey office building.A total of 48 laptops and 14 desktop PCs were also confiscated from the office. — PTI

  • Myanmar opposition protests mark general strike anniversary

    Bangkok (TIP): Opponents of military rule gathered February 23 for protests in Myanmar’s cities, defying threats by the authorities to arrest anyone joining demonstrations against the army’s takeover a year ago. The protests on Tuesday marked the anniversary of last year’s ‘Five-Twos Revolution’, a massive nationwide general strike against army rule just weeks after the military seized power.

    Activists often call for actions—usually dubbed strikes—on significant occasions or anniversaries, and opposition activists had designated Tuesday’s protest ‘222222’ or ‘Six-Twos’, derived from the digits in the date.

    Photos and videos on social media showed scattered small groups of people marching in Yangon, the country’s biggest city, and elsewhere. Because of the risks of arrest or injury, urban street protests are usually carried out by flash mobs, which can dissolve before the security forces crackdown. Protesters in Yangon held banners with slogans such as “Gathering together again for the Six-Twos Revolution” and “Revolt in the countryside, defiance in the cities”, referring to the armed resistance carried on against the odds in rural areas, and the marches and other actions in urban areas.

    They also shouted anti-military chants and raised the three-finger salute of their movement, adopted from the ‘The Hunger Games’ movie series. Buddhist monks in the central city of Mandalay participated in a protest while collecting alms. Young people there hung banners with anti-military slogans in public areas in the early morning hours.

    The military seized power on February 1, 2021, ousting the elected government of Aung San SuuKyi, whose National League for Democracy party won the 2020 general election by a landslide and was about to begin a second term in office. Nonviolent protests were met with lethal force by the authorities, escalating the crisis into violence that now includes armed resistance in many parts of the country.

    More than 1,560 civilians have been killed and thousands of others arrested by the security forces according to a detailed tally compiled by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, an independent organization founded in 2000 to track political repression in Myanmar. Tuesday’s strike was designed to encourage public involvement with minimal risk of confrontations with security forces, said PhaungYoe, a leader of the Labor Alliance group and the General Strike Coordination Body. “Today’s strike is a powerful medicine for all the young people on the ground, the militants in the jungle, and all the Civil Disobedience Movement staff. Those in the prisons also know that the people are on their side and aim to continue to overcome difficulties,” she told The Associated Press. (AP)

  • Protests in Nepal over $500-million US grant

    Kathmandu (TIP): The police in Nepal fired rubber bullets and tear gas as hundreds of people protested over a $500 million US grant going before parliament, BBC reported. Nepal signed the Millennium Challenge Corporation pact to fund infrastructure projects in 2017 and it has been a bone of contention between the US and China. Several people were injured in the demonstrations outside the Parliament in Kathmandu. Groups opposing the US funding have said it undermines Nepal’s sovereignty, the report said.

    Protesters were also targeted with water cannon in an attempt to disperse Sunday’s demonstration. Police had stones thrown at them.

    The Nepal Parliament has until February 28 to ratify the deal, which has been delayed by divisions within political parties, including the ruling coalition. Nepalese media has reported that the US administration has held conversations with Nepali politicians urging them to endorse the pact by the end of the month or face the ties between the countries being reviewed. — IANS

  • Pakistan PM Imran Khan’s step-son among three booked on charges of possession of liquor

    Pakistan PM Imran Khan’s step-son among three booked on charges of possession of liquor

    Lahore (TIP): Prime Minister Imran Khan’s step-son was among the three booked on charges of possession of liquor, only to be released after orders from “higher authorities,” police said on February 23.

    According to the FIR, Musa Maneka, the First Lady BushraBibi’s son from her previous marriage, and two of his friends were arrested near Gaddafi Stadium on Monday after police found alcohol in the car they were travelling in.

    “The three youths, including the First Lady’s son, were released the same day after orders from the top. Some legal formalities like personal guarantee from the families of the suspects were met,” a police official told PTI on Tuesday.

    He added that when Maneka was picked up for possessing liquor, he threatened security officials with dire consequences as he was the son of Pakistan’s First Lady, the official said. “The Punjab police chief started receiving calls from the top soon after a case was registered against them. However, the police made no further legal action and released them after a few hours in custody,” he added.

    The sale and consumption of alcohol is illegal in Pakistan, a Muslim-majority country. Last week, reports began to circulate on social media about differences between Prime Minister Khan and his wife. Farah Khan, a close friend of Bibi took to Twitter to announce that the First Lady was living with her husband at the Bani Gala residence. “Fake propaganda was being spread through Whatsapp messages about the first couple,” she said. “The First Lady is not living in my house but at Bani Gala in Islamabad,” she added. Earlier this month, Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency arrested five people as part of the nationwide crackdown against those involved in running a “malicious campaign” against Khan, his wife Bibi and the Army on social media. (PTI)

  • Shaking up Europe’s security architecture

    Shaking up Europe’s security architecture

    An order that does not accommodate Russia’s concerns through genuine negotiation cannot be stable in the long term

    By P.S. Raghavan

    It is too early to say what Mr. Putin’s endgame is, and how costly this adventure will be, in terms of lives and destruction, as well as in its political and economic impact. Without justifying the manner in which Russia has chosen to “right” the perceived “wrongs”, it has to be said that this crisis results from a broken security architecture in Europe. A sustainable security order has to reflect current realities: it cannot be simply an outgrowth of the Cold War order, and it has to be driven from within. Also, a European order that does not accommodate Russia’s concerns through genuine negotiation cannot be stable in the long term. France’s President Emmanuel Macron has been making this point forcefully, arguing for Europe to regain its strategic autonomy. He has called NATO “brain-dead” and said that Europe, as a “geopolitical power” should control its own destiny, regaining “military sovereignty” and re-opening a dialogue with Russia, managing the misgivings of post-Soviet countries.

    The commencement of Russian military action in Ukraine brings down the curtain on the first act of a bizarre drama that has been playing out over the past eight months. At the heart of it is the instability in the post-Cold War security order.

    The first act began with a meeting between U.S. President Biden and Russia’s President Vladmir Putin in June last year, promising to reverse seven years of relentless U.S.-Russia acrimony. Mr. Biden’s decision to reach out to Mr. Putin signaled a U.S. geopolitical rebalancing, seeking a modus vivendi with Russia and disengagement from conflicts in Europe and West Asia, to enable a sharper U.S. focus on domestic challenges and the external challenge from its principal strategic adversary, China.

    These were Putin’s terms: Mr. Putin saw this reengagement as an opportunity to revive Russia’s flagging economy and expand its freedom of political action globally. However, he wanted this engagement on equal terms. Russia would cooperate in this geopolitical rebalancing if its concerns are met, so that it does not constantly have to counter moves to probe its territorial integrity and constrain its external influence – which is how Russia sees the strategic posture of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and U.S. policies. Russia has repeatedly articulated its grievances: that NATO’s expansion violated promises made prior to the breakup of the Soviet Union; that Ukraine’s accession to NATO would cross Russia’s red lines; and that NATO’s strategic posture poses a continuing security threat to Russia. NATO’s expansion as a politico-military alliance, even after the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact, was at the U.S.’s initiative. It was intended to temper European ambitions for strategic autonomy from the sole superpower and to counter Russia’s resurgence. Recent experience shows it may not be succeeding in either goal.

    NATO’s weakened glue: NATO countries today span a geography of uneven economic development and a diversity of political traditions and historical consciousness. Moreover, the original glue that held NATO together — ideological solidarity (free world against communist expansion) and an existential military threat — dissolved with the collapse of communism and the Warsaw Pact. There is no ideology to oppose and threat perceptions vary, depending on geographical location and historical experience. This heterogeneity means a diversity of interests. American leadership has normally succeeded in papering over differences, but the growing ambitions of countries is making this increasingly difficult. The current crisis in Ukraine has illustrated the divisions and exposed the limitations of the U.S.’s ability to bridge them. The irony is that the divisions are of the U.S.’s making. Its pressure on NATO in 2008 to recognize Ukraine’s membership aspirations and its encouragement for a change of government in Kyiv in 2014, provoked the Russian annexation of Crimea. The subsequent armed separatist movement in eastern Ukraine (Donbas) led to the Minsk accords of 2014-15, which provided for a special status for this region within Ukraine.

    Ukraine considers this an unfair outcome, and the U.S. has supported its efforts to reinterpret the accords to its advantage. While some European countries supported this line, France and Germany — which brokered these agreements — have periodically tried to progress implementation, in the effort to break the impasse and resume normal engagement with Russia, which serves their economic interests.

    In recent months, the U.S. signaled that it would support the full implementation of the Minsk accords, but apparently found it difficult to shake the entrenched interests sufficiently to make it happen. This may have finally convinced Mr. Putin that his concerns would not be met through negotiations.

    Energy security: U.S. interests have also divided NATO on energy security. For Germany, the Nord Stream 2 (NS2) Russia-Germany gas pipeline is the cheapest source of gas for its industry. Others deem it a geopolitical project, increasing European dependence on Russian energy. This argument masks self-serving interests. Ukraine fears the diminution of gas transit revenues, and also that if its importance for gas transit declines, so will Europe’s support in its disputes with Russia. The U.S.’s “geopolitical” argument against NS2 dovetails neatly with its commercial interest in exporting LNG to Europe, reinforced by U.S. legislation for sanctions against companies building gas pipelines from Russia. Increasing LNG exports to Europe is explicitly stated as a motivation for the sanctions. European countries that oppose NS2 are ramping up their LNG import infrastructure to increase imports from the U.S.

    The manner in which NATO countries implement the promised harsh sanctions against Russia will demonstrate whether, how much and for how long, this crisis will keep them united.

    It is too early to say what Mr. Putin’s endgame is, and how costly this adventure will be, in terms of lives and destruction, as well as in its political and economic impact. Without justifying the manner in which Russia has chosen to “right” the perceived “wrongs”, it has to be said that this crisis results from a broken security architecture in Europe. A sustainable security order has to reflect current realities: it cannot be simply an outgrowth of the Cold War order, and it has to be driven from within. Also, a European order that does not accommodate Russia’s concerns through genuine negotiation cannot be stable in the long term. France’s President Emmanuel Macron has been making this point forcefully, arguing for Europe to regain its strategic autonomy. He has called NATO “brain-dead” and said that Europe, as a “geopolitical power” should control its own destiny, regaining “military sovereignty” and re-opening a dialogue with Russia, managing the misgivings of post-Soviet countries.

    Outlook for India: India has to brace itself for some immediate challenges flowing from the Russian actions. It will have to balance the pressure from one strategic partner to condemn the violation of international law, with that from another to understand its legitimate concerns. We were there in 2014 and managed the pressures. As Russia-West confrontation sharpens further, the U.S. Administration’s intensified engagement in Europe will inevitably dilute its focus on the Indo-Pacific, causing India to make some tactical calibration of actions in its neighborhood. Geopolitics, however, is a long game, and the larger context of the U.S.-China rivalry could, at some point in the not-too-distant future, reopen the question of how Russia fits into the European security order.

    (The author  is a former Ambassador to Russia and former Chairman of the National Security Advisory Board)

  • Corporate margins aiding rising inflation curve

    Corporate margins aiding rising inflation curve

    By Devinder Sharma

     “Simply put, corporates never had it so good. From groceries to pharmaceuticals, from coffee to consumer products to fuel, so much so that even Netflix and Amazon Prime have increased subscription despite logging a huge increase in net profits and paying the lowest tax. When it comes to fuel, all major oil companies – Exxon Mobil, British Petroleum, Shell, and Chevron – have recorded highest profits in past seven years, and still have expressed helplessness when it comes to high petrol and diesel prices consumers are being made to pay.As retail inflation swings out of proportion, the world is witnessing a new phenomenon. In lot many ways, it was known to exist earlier, but not so starkly. As inflation rises, so does the profit of companies, this time recording a historic increase. While the company’s profits soar, the CEOs and other top executives walk away with hefty salary increases, stock buybacks, and rise in dividend payments.

    Although the companies say there is nothing they can do, consumers are being told that “off the chart” inflation they are faced with is the outcome of higher wages, and a crazy rise in production costs. There is no denying that the pandemic had caused supply chain disruptions, but the high and steady rise in inflation the world encounters defies the simple logic of supply-demand distortions. It hides more than what it reveals.

    In January, retail inflation in the US has hit the highest in 40 years, rising to a peak of 7.5 per cent. In the UK, inflation has already touched a 30-year-high at 5.4 per cent, and the Bank of England warns of inflation further rising to 7.1 per cent by April. As the retail inflation in India soars to 6.1 per cent, fears are already being expressed that imported inflation may drive the consumer prices high. “India does need to be wary of imported inflation, especially from elevated global energy prices,” Economic Survey 2022 had warned.

    In the midst of rising inflation, a headline in international business newspaper The Financial Times (February 7) caught my attention: ‘Tyson Foods loves Inflation’. And left me wondering, whether the high inflation rate the world is witnessing is because of economic reasons beyond control or more so by simply repackaging and marketing corporate greed as inflation.

    The more I researched, the more it became clear as to how greed is very conveniently being packaged as inflation. To understand, let’s first begin with Tyson Foods, one of the four livestock companies controlling 85 per cent of the US meat market, and whom US President Joe Biden had earlier accused of “pandemic profiteering”. Another explainer in Forbes pointed to how Tyson Foods is spending less to earn more. Even agreeing that the feed and shipping costs have risen, but the fact is that operating profit margins for Tyson Foods too has almost doubled since the pre-pandemic days.

    While the profits of the four livestock companies jumped 300 per cent, the retail meat prices too recorded a steep hike, touching almost 20 per cent for beef. This is happening at a time when prices being paid to livestock farmers are the lowest in the past 50 years.

    If you are a beer drinker, here is some bad news. The Guardian reports the sale of the popular Heineken beer brand in Europe to have increased by 4.3 per cent, recording 80 per cent jump in overall profits. With profits touching a record $2.26 billion in 2021, the company has announced that its beer prices will go up significantly in the months to come. This is despite already having raised the beer prices a couple of times during the two years of the pandemic. Meanwhile, another popular beer brand Cobra has also announced that consumers should be ready to shell out extra given the “vicious cycle” of increase in its production costs.

    Now, let’s take the case of Starbucks. Surely, it’s more than just coffee, it’s also about the price you pay. While its profits increased by 31 per cent in the last quarter of 2021, it has also announced plans to further hike coffee prices. This is despite Starbucks turnover exceeding $8.1 billion in 2021. Interestingly, the compensation package of its CEO grew by 39 per cent, reaching a total of $20.4 million. While coffee bean growers are among the lowest paid, the rise in salary packets and bonuses for the top executives remains limitless. It’s like privatizing the profits andsocializing the costs.

    Senator Bernie Sanders cites another example. In a tweet, he says: “Corporate greed is Chipotle increasing its profits by 181 per cent last year to $764 million, giving its CEO a 137 per cent pay raise to $38 million in 2020 and blaming the rising cost of a burrito on a minimum wage worker who got a 50 cent pay raise. That’s not inflation. That’s price gouging.” Chipotle is a restaurant chain.

    In another tweet by Dan Price, the founder of the Seattle-based credit card processing company Gravity Payments, quoting a New York Times report, asks: “Why are groceries so expensive? Kroger (US-based retail company) profits are at record highs. Its stock is up 36 per cent in a year. Its CEO got a 45 per cent raise to $22 million and makes 909 times the median worker. 75 per cent of its workers are food insecure. 63 per cent can’t pay their bills. Many are on food stamps.” Simply put, corporates never had it so good. From groceries to pharmaceuticals, from coffee to consumer products to fuel, so much so that even Netflix and Amazon Prime have increased subscription despite logging a huge increase in net profits and paying the lowest tax. When it comes to fuel, all major oil companies — Exxon Mobil, British Petroleum, Shell, and Chevron — have recorded highest profits in past seven years, and still have expressed helplessness when it comes to high petrol and diesel prices consumers are being made to pay.

    Surprisingly, despite increased production costs, reports say US corporate profits soared to a record $2.8 trillion in the second quarter of 2021. So did the corporate profits in India. But while the working class and the poor bear the brunt of increasing inflation, the top 1 per cent has gained. A whopping increase by

    77 per cent in the sale of super yachts this year and an increase in chartered flights bear testimony to the trend. While a section of market economists will not like to draw any link between inflation and corporate greed, it shouldn’t surprise us anymore.

    (The author is a Food & Agriculture specialist)

  • Indian origin Sikh Students in UK dish out over 500 free meals as part of annual Sikh celebration

    Indian origin Sikh Students in UK dish out over 500 free meals as part of annual Sikh celebration

    Over 500 people from across the city enjoyed the hot meal and gained a greater insight into the Sikh faith

    LONDON (TIP): Students in UK’s Birmingham city have served up more than 500 free meals as part of an important Sikh tradition. Birmingham City University Students’ Union and its Sikh Society hosted the ‘Langar on Campus’ in the Atrium at Millennium Point on Tuesday, February 22. ‘Langar’, which means kitchen in Punjabi language, is an important institution in Sikhism, where free food is offered to anyone who attends. ‘Langar on Campus’ is an event organized by Sikh students in universities all across the world, where students, staff and community members from all backgrounds come together and eat.

    This was the fifth time a large-scale langar has been held at Birmingham City University and the first in over two years since the outbreak of the pandemic. Over 500 people from across the city enjoyed the hot meal and gained a greater insight into the Sikh faith, the university said in a press release on Thursday. President of Birmingham City University’s Sikh Society, Rajveer Singh, said: “Our Sikh Society was delighted to hold our fifth ‘Langar on Campus’ Event. It is always a joy to welcome people of all backgrounds to this communal celebration of oneness and equality. “But this year’s event was particularly poignant as it is the first time we have gathered in such numbers since the outbreak of the Covid pandemic. We sincerely hope everyone enjoyed the event as much as we did.”

    (Source: PTI)

  • Indian American student Jaskaran Singh wins $250K prize in college quiz contest

    Indian American student Jaskaran Singh wins $250K prize in college quiz contest

    AUSTIN, TX  (TIP): In a three-contest winning streak by Indian American students, Jaskaran Singh has won the premiere quiz tournament for students, the National College Championship Jeopardy with a prize of $250,000. The 22-year-old red-turbaned Sikh studying at the University of Texas at Austin on Tuesday beat out 35 other students selected from about the 26,000 who competed for a chance to be on the tournament held over two weeks.  Singh was modest about his success.

    “I just sort of just buzzed fast and know things, pretty much. I don’t think there’s much more,” he told an interviewer from the show.

    The quarter million dollars win will pay for his college fees “and a lot more”, he said.

    The college tournament is an offshoot of Jeopardy, the most popular daily quiz show, which uses the unusual format of the quizmaster or host stating an answer for which the contestant has to frame the right question.

    The puzzle given by the host, TV actor Mayim Bialik, in the final round of the contest was, “An 1873 book title gave us this phrase for the period in the late 1800s of growth & prosperity & also greed & corruption”.

    Singh gave the correct solution in the form of a question: “What is the gilded age”?

    Nibir Sharma from the University of Minnesota won the 2019 tournament and was a semi-finalist in the Jeopardy Tournament of Champions going again the big winners in the main Jeopardy program  next year.

    Dhruv Gaur from Brown University bagged the championship in 2018 and there were no collegiate contests in the last two years because of the Covid-19 pandemic. Before them, Vinita Kailasanath had won the championship in 2001.

    This time four of the students contesting against Singh were of Indian origin and one was of Sri Lankan heritage.

    Singh who is in the final year studying finance and economics said on the show that he had worked for a civil rights organization in Washington after his first year of college.

    He credited his parents for his victory, telling the Austin Statesman newspaper that they “are really amazing. They supported me throughout the whole thing”.

    He said that his mother had made him sign up for the Jeopardy Teen Tournament when he was 13.

    Although he didn’t make it to the teen competition, she kept encouraging his to try for the college championship, he said.

    Congratulating Singh, his university president Jay Hartzell said the university’s tower would be lit up in orange, the university’s colors to honor the victory. Avi Gupta won the last Jeopardy Teen Tournament with a $100,000 prize held in 2019 before the Covid pandemic suspended it. Four other teens of Indian origin had also won the championship in the 36 tournaments held so far.

  • Indian American Rajeev Aluru is New President of  Ekal’s Houston Chapter

    Indian American Rajeev Aluru is New President of  Ekal’s Houston Chapter

    HOUSTON, TX(TIP): Rajeev Aluru is all set to lead Ekal Vidyalaya’s educational initiatives as its Houston Chapter President. Ekal’s youngest president is clearly energized about his new role which he describes as “a divine opportunity that knocked on my door.” A relatively new Houstonian (he moved from North Carolina in 2020), Rajeev, 41, outlined his vision for Ekal with the leadership in Houston. Rajeev’s journey with Ekal began in 2014 in North Carolina when he accepted an invitation to a fundraiser dinner from a colleague. Rajeev became an active volunteer and developed a keen understanding of the foundational impact Ekal was making in rural India’s education. Today the Ekal movement, started in 1989 with one village and one school, has the distinction of overseeing over one lakh schools offering free schooling, vocational training, digital competence, agricultural education and much more. After his engineering degree in India, Rajeev enrolled in Auburn University, Alabama. As we face a post Covid world, Rajeev realizes the need to rewrite Ekal’s outreach strategies. His team is drafting a model to facilitate entrepreneurship, jobs, avenues to profits and an approach that will empower villages to a point where “they don’t need us anymore.” He intends to create a program to encourage donors to visit Ekal schools in India to witness first-hand how their contributions are benefiting millions of underprivileged children. The organization will also leverage digital marketing to augment Ekal’s presence beyond the traditional fundraising events. The new president has an ambitious one million dollar benchmark for this year’s fundraising.

  • Indian American economic advisor Daleep Singh leads Biden admin in executing sanctions on Russia

    Indian American economic advisor Daleep Singh leads Biden admin in executing sanctions on Russia

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday, February 21,  signed decrees to recognize Ukraine’s regions of “Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics” as “independent”, escalating the tension in the region and increasing fears of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. He also ordered Russian troops into eastern Ukraine in what the Kremlin called a “peacekeeping” mission in the Moscow-backed regions.

    Singh, who is Deputy National Security Advisor for international economics and Deputy Director of the National Economic Council, made his second appearance in the White House Press Room in a matter of days.

    White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said that he is “back by popular demand” given the key role Singh is playing in this Russia policy of the administration. “Russia’s long previewed invasion of Ukraine has begun and so too has our response. Today, the president (Joe Biden) responded swiftly and in lockstep with allies and partners. The speed and coordination were historic… It took weeks and months to mount a decisive response,” Singh told reporters in his opening remarks.

    Singh said that after consultations overnight with Germany, Russia’s Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline will not become operational.

    That is a USD 11 billion investment in a prized gas pipeline controlled by Russia that will now go to waste, and it sacrifices what would have been a cash cow for Russia’s coffers, he said.

    It is not just about the money, this decision will relieve Russia’s geostrategic chokehold over Europe through its supply of gas, and it’s a major turning point in the world’s energy independence from Russia. “Second, we’ve demonstrated the potency of our financial sanctions and make no mistake, this is only the sharp edge of the pain we can inflict.

  • Hillside Avenue and Homelawn Street in  Queens co-named “ Little Bangladesh Avenue”

    Hillside Avenue and Homelawn Street in  Queens co-named “ Little Bangladesh Avenue”

    QUEENS, NY (TIP): Queens County District Attorney Melinda Katz, on February 20,  joined  Councilmember Jim Gennaro and members of the Jamaica Bangladeshi-American community for a street co-naming ceremony at the corner of Hillside Avenue and Homelawn Street. This intersection is now co-named “Little Bangladesh Avenue” in honor of the residents and business owners of this vibrant community. The event coincided with International Mother Language Day and also marked the hard-fought efforts of community members on behalf of Bengali speakers in the neighborhood.

  • Lawsuit Regarding SARS-CoV2 – Covid-19

    Batra v Daszak, EcoHealth, et al – Lawsuit Complaint Amended

    New York State Supreme Court – Index #157709-2021

     Batra v Daszak, EcoHealth et al was filed on Aug 19, 2021. New Documentary evidence – Gain of Function (GoF) and US Grant Applications – became public thereafter. So, a new First Amended Complaint (FAC) – with 59 Exhibits – was filed on February 3, 2022. Defendants have elected to withdraw their Motion to Dismiss (MTD), and re-file new MTD or Answer. FAC is NYSCEF Doc. ## 66-131 at link: https://iapps.courts.state.ny.us/nyscef/DocumentList?docketId=nriXB2jLIixu9kt4YVbKUg==&display=all&courtType=New%20York%20County%20Supreme%20Court&resultsPageNum=1

    Overview of Added Causes of Action, and Withdrawal of Bioweapon Allegation

              The FAC adds to original allegations concerning gross negligence and negligence, and adds two new causes of action: abnormally dangerous activity (strict liability); and, private cause of action for public nuisance with special damages. Key additions are a table of contents and Exhibits 44-59 (inclusive of 44-A) which have been added to the original Exhibits 1-43 (inclusive of 25 and 25(a)-( c) that were in the initial verified complaint. A key change in the FAC is Batra has withdrawn that SARS-CoV-2 was created with the intention of making a bioweapon.

              Timeliness updates include reference to the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2, full approval by the FDA of the Moderna vaccine as “Spikevax” on January 31, 2022, and more recent figures as to COVID-19 infections in the USA [as of 1/11/2022]. (FAC ¶¶ 129,230-231,234).

    Overview of Added Exhibits

              Exhibit 44 includes EcoHealth’s applications for the “Understanding the Risk of Bat Coronavirus Emergence” grant, renewals, approvals, and reports submitted by EcoHealth for initial project period June 1, 2014 through May 31, 2019, and as revised extending until June 30, 2025. Exhibit 44-A is a late report yearly filed by EcoHealth or about August 3, 2021, for the period June 1, 2018 through May 31, 2019. Exhibit 45 is the October 17, 2014 White House Announcement concerning the moratorium on gain-of-function research. Exhibit 46 is the associated NIH guide concerning the gain-of-function moratorium.   Exhibit 47 is October 27, 2021 correspondence from Ranking Members James Comer and Jim Jordan to AG Garland seeking an investigation by DOJ into “whether EcoHealth violated federal law by misrepresenting the status of its project to NIAID or NIH.”  Exhibit 48 includes a series of emails concerning efforts by Daszak to block publication of virus sequences secured with federal grant funds.           Exhibit 49 is the publicized grant proposal that Ecohealth submitted to DARPA entitled “Project DEFUSE: Defusing the Threat of Bat-borne Coronaviruses.” Exhibit 50 is DARPA’s rejection of that proposal. As amended, the complaint alleges that the defendants’ disregarded the rejection and did the experimentation anyway – further leading to the genesis of SARS-CoV-2. Exhibit 51 is an article published online on January 10, 2022 by “Project Veritas” entitled “Military Documents About Gain of Function Contradict Fauci Testimony Under Oath.” The article discusses a report to the DOD IG by a Marine Corp Major, Joseph Murphy, dated August 13, 2021, concerning EcoHealth, the rejected DARPA proposal, and the origins of SARS-CoV-2. The report, as published by Project Veritas (and watermarked by that organization with its logo), is appended to the FAC as Exhibit 52. … Exhibit 57 includes emails from and to Dr. Fauci evidencing, amongst other things, efforts to thwart the view that SARS-CoV-2 originated in or otherwise escaped from a laboratory, including the Wuhan Lab.  Exhibit 58 includes January 11, 2022 correspondence from Ranking Members James Comer and Jim Jordan to the HHS Secretary with emails that were only produced with redactions that had the redacted sections transcribed by GOP Committee staff – which showed that numerous researchers that Drs. Fauci and Collins were conferring with in late January to early February 2020 initially believed there was a possibility of a lab leak (one as high as 60/40 in favor), and shortly later they all changed their view. By the FAC it is alleged that the scientists got in line to ensure continued funding for their projects from Fauci. Exhibit 59 is the screenshot of the EcoHealth “FLIRT” tool – showing projected air traffic out of Wuhan after the emergence of SARS-CoV-2. This image is also reproduced in the body of the FAC, with a quote from Daszak, in substance, that once the virus got into a big city like Wuhan it was “game over.”

    (Per Press Release by The Law Firm of Ravi Batra, P.C., February 25, 2022)

  • After Omicron pandemic, it is Russia-Ukraine war afflicting world of sports now

    After Omicron pandemic, it is Russia-Ukraine war afflicting world of sports now

    By Prabhjot Singh

    Gallant attempts by the world of sports to wriggle out of the devastating impact of the Omicron pandemic may be severely hit by the Russia-Ukraine military conflict that threatens to divide the world again. Unfortunately, the timing of the Russian invasion of Ukraine coincides with the holding of a major International Olympic Committee event, the Paralympic Games, scheduled to start in Beijing on March 4. Twice before the Olympic movement had been hit hard by World War II. The  1940 and 1944 editions of the Olympic Games had to be cancelled during the global hostilities at that time.

    Led by the United States, the NATO nations, in expression of their complete solidarity with Ukraine, have already heaped a series of sanctions on Russia in their valiant attempt to force cessation of hostilities.

    It was for almost similar reasons that the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games were boycotted by a group led by the NATO leader, the United States. The boycotters had objected to the presence of the then Soviet Union forces in Afghanistan.

    Interestingly, the Beijing Winter Olympic Games 2022, that witnessed a diplomatic boycott by most of the NATO nations, including the US and Canada,  had the Russian President, V. Putin, as a guest of honor

    Other than NATO, it is the International Olympic Committee (IOC) that has come hard on both Russia and its aide Byelorussia by  urging all International Sports Federations (ISFs)  to relocate or cancel their sports events currently planned in Russia or Belarus. The ISFs should take the breach of the Olympic Truce by the Russian and Belarussian governments into account and give the safety and security of the athletes absolute priority. The IOC itself has no events planned in Russia or Belarus.

    The IOC Executive Board also wants that no Russian or Byelorussian national flag be displayed and no Russian or Byelorussian anthem be played in international sports events that are not already part of the respective World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) sanctions for Russia. In the just concluded Beijing Winter Olympic Games, it was the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) and not Russia that was allowed to send its contingent. Neither any Russian flag was flown, nor the Russian national anthem was played during the Games though the ROC athletes were placed at number two in the overall medals (32) tally with six gold. 12 silver and 14 bronze medals. Norway topped the tally with 37 medals, including 16 gold. Eight silver and 13 bronze medals while Germany took the third spot with 27 medals and Canada finished fourth with a tally of 24. Incidentally, Norway, Germany and Canada are now on the other side opposing the Russian action in Ukraine.

    Though the IOC Executive Board  has expressed its full support to the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) for the upcoming Paralympic Winter Games in Beijing from March 4, the shadow of the Russian action may impact the games in a big way.

    Immediately after Russia launched its military operations, the International Olympic Committee (IOC)  came out with a strong condemnation of the breach of the Olympic Truce by the Russian government by referring to the December 2, 2021 resolution of the UN General Assembly adopted by consensus of all 193 UN Member States. The Olympic Truce began seven days before the start of the Olympic Games, on February 4, 2022, and ends seven days after the closing of the Paralympic Games.

    Earlier in a similar resolution passed by the General Assembly of the United Nations on  9 December 9, 2019, it was decided to include in the provisional agenda of its seventy-sixth session the sub-item entitled “Building a peaceful and better world through sport and the Olympic ideal” and also recalling its prior decision to consider the sub-item every two years, in advance of the Summer and Winter Olympic Games. The Olympic Truce was first taken up by the UN General Assembly  on October 25, 1993, which, inter alia, revived the ancient Greek tradition of ekecheiria (“Olympic Truce”) calling for a truce during the Olympic Games to encourage a peaceful environment and ensure safe passage, access and participation for athletes and relevant persons at the Games, thereby mobilizing the youth of the world to the cause of peace.

    The core concept of ekecheiria, historically, has been the cessation of hostilities from seven days before until seven days after the Olympic Games, which, according to the legendary oracle of Delphi, was to replace the cycle of conflict with a friendly athletic competition every four years. Other than the Paralympic Olympic Games  starting in Beijing on March 4, where winter para athletes of both Russia and Ukraine are scheduled to participate, the first test for any International Sports Federation under the new IOC directive is for field hockey (International Hockey Federation – FIH).

    An elite FIH event – Junior Women World Cup – will be organized at Potchefstroom in South Africa from April 1 where both Russia and Ukraine are among 16 nations confirmed to participate. Going by the hostilities back home, participation of both Russia and Ukraine in the Potchefstroom event looks doubtful, both the South African Hockey Federation and the FIH have a problem on hand.

    The tournament had already been postponed once. The list of participants, too, has witnessed changes. For example, Japan had withdrawn at the last minute. It was replaced by Malaysia. Now the  sword of uncertainty is hanging over the Potchefstroom event again following the Russia-Ukraine war.

    (Prabhjot Singh is a veteran journalist with over three decades of experience covering a wide spectrum of subjects and stories. He has covered  Punjab and Sikh affairs for more than three decades besides covering seven Olympics and several major sporting events and hosting TV shows. For more in-depth analysis please visit probingeye.com  or follow him on Twitter.com/probingeye. He can be reached at prabhjot416@gmail.com)

     

  • How Ukraine imbroglio can impact India

    How Ukraine imbroglio can impact India

    By Gurjit Singh

    The standoff between Russia and US-Europe over Ukraine has come at an inopportune time for India. As a UN Security Council (UNSC) member, India is contributing to ensuring peace, security and stability in the world. This role has opportunities for enhancement due to the inability of the permanent five (P5) to act in unison. In the case of Ukraine, the P5 are threatening to go to war with each other, with the UK, US, France on one side, and Russia supported by China on the other. This takes matters totally out of the hands of the UNSC, making it redundant. The Ukraine crisis is curtailing Indian role in the UNSC. New Delhi is doing its best to remain relevant. India is developing relations with the EU and other European countries. This initiative leads India to support the Normandy process and the Minsk agreement, which are European efforts to engage Russia on Ukraine. India would prefer the European way of dealing with Russia than the tough posture which the US wants NATO to adopt. European countries will toe the US line if war erupts. That reduces the efficacy of India’s European initiative presently. India is calling for diplomacy as that will defuse the tension and also give India more leeway.The Russian posture on Ukraine and the reaction to it, strengthened the Sino-Russian partnership. The Xi-Putin summit at the Beijing Winter Olympics lent firmness and robustness to that relationship. China is challenging India, has overthrown extant agreements and increased its military threat. This does not augur well. For long, India depended on Russia for strategic partnership. It still largely depends on Russia for military hardware. While the defense relationship is mutually beneficial, the Sino-Russian axis curtails the Russian ability and intent to support India as in the past.

    Russia’s confrontation with NATO will lead to rigorously imposed sanctions. India has delicately negotiated to stay out of CAATSA (Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act) with the purchase of S-400 Triumf missile systems which may not work when a war-like situation prevails. Countries like Germany have stark choices on economic issues, and India will be faced with similar choices on defense supplies from Russia with tougher sanctions that the US is ready to impose. India-Russia trade of about $9 billion annually is about 1% of India’s global trade. The significance is the impact on defense, energy, grain delivery and prices.

    Curtailing of defense supplies will impact India’s ability to respond to China. The diversification of defense purchases that India achieved would come into play but without the competitive pricing and transfer of technology of Russian equipment.

    Strategically, Russia will not attempt to restrain China. In exchange for Chinese support for Russian intent in Ukraine, they would concur with Chinese initiatives in the Indo-Pacific. Russia’s nuanced divergence on India could melt away if the Ukraine crises blows up as both NATO and Russia seek clear Indian support which India hesitates to provide.

    The Ukraine crisis brings Russia and China closer and diverts the attention of Western powers towards Ukraine. The Europeans would have a lesser appetite for the Indo-Pacific once they are embroiled in European matters. France held its Indo-Pacific conference right after the Munich Security Conference this month. They wish to continue to deal with the region while engaged with Russia as well. However, the EU member countries do not have diverse abilities and their Indo-Pacific polices are likely to be on hold till the Russian challenge is settled. At present, US naval forces are at strength in the South China Sea and the broader Indo-Pacific as Taiwan is at stake. They will need allies Japan and AUKUS to play a role. They could well call upon India to act in the Indo-Pacific even if India is not directly involved in an operation around Taiwan.

    This is not different from what India is doing in the Indo-Pacific at present, but India expects support for its position with China on the border issue, as was discussed at the Quad foreign ministers’ meeting in Australia recently. Indian activity, in the midst of the Ukraine crisis, may not be ignored by China and Russia.

    India’s energy security is a matter of worry as there is already a $20 per barrel increase in the price of oil over the estimates used by the Economic Survey 2022. This impacts India’s growth story. Russia is a significant oil producer and the Ukraine crisis and sanctions on Russia would destabilize the oil market. This would gravely impact India’s development plans.

    In 2021, India imported merely 1% of its oil and 0.2% of its gas from Russia. GAIL has a 20-year contract to import 2.5 million tons of LNG from Russia annually. It’s not the direct supply but the prices that will be impacted negatively. Thus, India’s repeated calls for peaceful resolution. The diversification of Indian energy supplies over time will perhaps protect supplies but not control prices.

    Similarly, if the Ukraine crisis leads to Europe, particularly Germany, curtailing gas imports from Russia, it will bring other gas providers to strategically shift supplies to Europe impacting Asian economies. The gas prices nevertheless will rise. The pandemic has slowed down India’s investment in Mozambique in gas offtake and this needs to be hastened to diversify gas imports and stabilize gas pricing in India. There are nearly 25,000 Indians in Ukraine, mostly students. They have been advised to leave Ukraine as flights are still available. Indian mission families too are leaving. This is the correct advisory planned well ahead of a full-scale crisis. Students remain averse to depart when it is feasible, to avoid spending on high-priced tickets. They believe that the government will always step in to rescue them once a crisis unfolds. This attitude needs to change.

    This is an inflection point for India as the Ukraine crisis challenges its ability to influence events in its favor, avoid an impact on its economy, without taking sides in a crisis of indirect interest to it. Such impacts of globalization need careful handling.

    (The author is a former ambassador)

  • Ukraine crisis: Treading cautiously serves India’s long-term interests

    Giving  paramount importance to its national interests, India has been sensibly walking a tightrope on the Ukraine crisis. Enjoying good relations with the US, Russia and the European Union (EU), New Delhi has done well to adopt a pragmatic approach that can stand it in good stead no matter how the situation develops from here on. India has been holding its ground despite relentless pressure to take sides. Rather than toeing the US line to hit out at Russia, India has been advocating ‘constructive diplomacy’ to resolve the imbroglio. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar has rightly observed that the crisis has its roots in post-Soviet politics, the expansion of NATO and the dynamics between Russia and Europe.

    Ukraine is banking on NATO membership and stronger ties with EU to stand up to its neighbor. Russian President Vladimir Putin wants Kyiv to recognize Russia’s sovereignty over Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula that Moscow annexed after seizing it from Ukraine in 2014, drop its bid to join NATO and partially demilitarize. However, these terms are not acceptable to Ukraine and the West, which considers the annexation of Crimea as a violation of international law.

    Since 2014, around 14,000 people have been killed in fighting between Ukrainian forces and Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine. Russia’s fears that it will be hemmed in by the US and its allies once Ukraine enters the NATO club, leading to greater instability in the region, are not unfounded. Though there is no dispute that Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity ought to be respected by one and all, Russia’s genuine apprehensions also must be allayed. Both nations, along with the international community, should go back to the Minsk Agreements of 2014-15 and give peace a chance by working out a mutually acceptable framework to end the hostilities. An immediate de-escalation of tensions, factoring in the security concerns of all countries concerned, is the need of the hour to prevent a war that can have far-reaching, disastrous consequences in geopolitical and geoeconomic terms.

    (Tribune, India)

  • Russia’s NATO problem: On the Ukraine war

    Putin seems unwilling to engage diplomatically to address Russian security concerns

    Russia’s unjustifiable incursion into Ukraine following weeks of military troop build-up on their shared border has drastically raised tensions in the region with broader ripple effects across the world, particularly for NATO countries and others with strategic connections to the two nations. Reports said that several Ukrainian cities, including capital Kyiv came under attack on Thursday morning, even as the UN Security Council held an emergency meeting to stop the invasion. U.S. President Joe Biden and the NATO and European Commission leadership vowed to impose “severe sanctions” on Russia. This round of sanctions will overlay prior economic penalties imposed on Russian entities and individuals close to the political leadership, and they are expected to include cutting off top Russian banks from the financial system, halting technology exports, and directly targeting the Russian President. Moscow can hardly be surprised at this backlash, for it has shown little sympathy toward the idea of engaging diplomatically on the Ukraine question to address Russian security concerns. Ever since Russia began amassing troops on the Ukrainian border, the U.S., NATO, and Europe have sought to press for diplomatic solutions. This includes direct U.S.-Russia negotiations, and French President Macron’s meeting with Mr. Putin.

    While the sense of frustration in western capitals over Mr. Putin’s intractability and aggression are palpable, and the use of severe sanctions stemming from that is a strategic inevitability, it is unlikely that the prospect of escalating violence and a devastating toll on human life and property in Ukraine can be ruled out until Mr. Putin’s broader questions on NATO are answered. At the heart of his fears is the prospect of Ukraine joining NATO and NATO troops potentially stationed at the border with Russia. NATO’s historical record, of its penchant for expansionism, has likely fueled such insecurities. After the dissolution of the former Soviet Union, the Eastern European military alliance, NATO, and Russia in 1997 signed the “Founding Act” on mutual relations, cooperation, and security. Disregarding the spirit of this agreement, NATO quietly underwent five rounds of enlargement during the 1990s, pulling former Soviet Union countries into its orbit. Cooperative exchanges, communications hotlines, and Cold War fail-safes such as arms control verification have fallen by the wayside, even more since Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014. It may be the case that owing to Mr. Putin’s failure to develop Russia into an economic powerhouse that naturally attracted neighboring countries and international capital to itself partly explains Moscow’s deflection of attention to strategic questions relating to NATO and Russia’s territorial integrity. But unless western nations give assurances to Mr. Putin that NATO will not seek to relentlessly expand its footprint eastwards, Moscow will have little incentive to return to the negotiating table. But Russia and Mr. Putin must realize that war is not the means to peace and security.

    (The Hindu)

  • We will take all possible steps to bring back Indians from Ukraine, says  Foreign Secretary Shringla

    We will take all possible steps to bring back Indians from Ukraine, says  Foreign Secretary Shringla

    NEW DELHI (TIP): India on Thursday, February 24,  assured its citizens stranded in Ukraine that it will take all possible steps to bring them back safe and sound. Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said at a media briefing that the Indian embassy in Ukraine is extending all possible assistance to the Indians notwithstanding the complicated situation.

    He said a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS), chaired by PM Narendra Modi, was underway on the Ukraine crisis.

    Shringla said Modi conveyed at the CCS meeting that the topmost priority of the government is the safety and security of Indians and their evacuation from Ukraine.

    The foreign secretary said around 4,000 Indian nationals out of 20,000 have already left Ukraine in the past few days.

    “The situation on the ground is difficult and rapidly evolving,” he said. “I want to assure all Indian citizens including students in Ukraine that we will take all possible steps to bring you back safe and sound,” he said. Shringla said External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar will speak to foreign ministers of Romania, Slovakia, Poland and Hungary on the Ukraine crisis.

    (Source: PTI)

  • Ready to hold ‘high-level negotiations’ with Ukraine, Putin tells Xi

    Ready to hold ‘high-level negotiations’ with Ukraine, Putin tells Xi

    BEIJING/NEW YORK (TIP): Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Friday, February 25,  that he was ready to hold “high-level negotiations” with Ukraine as he spoke with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping who stressed that both Moscow and Kyiv should resolve the raging crisis through talks.

    Xi and Putin, regarded as allies and friends as China and Russia enlarged their strategic ties amid the strident US and EU push against them on a host of issues, held their talks on the phone around the same time as the Russian troops closed in on Kyiv, home to over three million people, with heavy bombardment raising fears of bloodshed.

    The Russian side is ready to hold “high-level negotiations” with the Ukrainian side, the official Chinese media here quoted Putin as telling Xi. Around the same time, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday, February 25,  reiterated his call for Russian President Putin to hold talks and stop the conflict.

    “Fighting is going on all over Ukraine. Let’s sit down at the negotiating table,” Zelensky said, the Chinese state-run Xinhua news agency reported, citing a report from Interfax-Ukraine news agency.

    Xi, whose government stonewalled criticism in the last few days for not condemning the Russian “invasion” of Ukraine, sought to play the role of a peacemaker by saying that China supports Russia and Ukraine to solve the issue through negotiation, the state-run CGTN reported. Noting that the recent situation in eastern Ukraine has changed dramatically, causing great concern in the international community, Xi told Putin that China’s position on the Ukraine issue was based on the merits of the matter concerned.

    In an apparent criticism directed against the United States and the European Union, Xi urged all parties to completely abandon the Cold War mindset, respect and attach importance to each other’s legitimate security concerns and strive for a balanced, effective and sustainable European security mechanism through dialogue and negotiation.

    Xi reiterated that China’s position of safeguarding the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all states and abiding by the purposes and principles of the UN Charter has been consistent. China is ready to work with all parties in the international community to promote common, comprehensive, cooperative and sustainable security and firmly uphold the UN-cantered international system and the international order underpinned by international law, he said.

    Putin, for his part, introduced the historical context on the Ukraine issue as well as Russia’s position on launching the special military operation in eastern Ukraine.

    The Russian President stressed that the United States and NATO have long ignored Moscow’s legitimate security concerns, repeatedly reneged on their commitments and kept pushing military deployments eastward, which challenged Russia’s strategic bottom line.

    He also told Xi that the Russian side was ready to conduct “high-level negotiations” with the Ukrainian side.

    During their phone conversation, Xi once again expressed his gratitude to Putin for coming to China to attend the opening ceremony of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, which was boycotted by the leaders and diplomats of the US, the EU and their allies to highlight the allegations of human rights violations against Uygur Muslims in Xinjiang.

    As Xi-Putin held talks, a Xinhua report said the Russian Defense Ministry announced that its airborne forces successfully conducted a landing operation at the Gostomel airfield outside Kiev, blocking the Ukrainian capital city from the west.

    Ever since Putin announced the military operations in Ukraine on Thursday, China has walked a fine line, declining to condemn the military action while remaining silent over Moscow’s move to accord two separatist regions in eastern Ukraine, Donetsk and Luhansk as independent entities.

    In his talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Thursday, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said there was a complex and special historical context of the Ukraine issue and the Chinese side understands Russia’s legitimate security concerns.

    Earlier, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told a media briefing here on Friday that Beijing will make its own effort to push for political settlement of the Ukrainian issue. He said there was a sharp contrast between China’s approach and some other countries’ moves of creating and shifting the crisis, and trying to benefit from it, while responding to questions on White House spokesperson Jan Psaki’s assertion that it’s time for China to pick a side.

    Wang Wenbin said China believed that the Ukraine issue has a complicated history and that the legitimate security concerns of all parties should be respected and the Cold War mentality should be completely abandoned.

    Psaki said at a news briefing on Thursday that “this is really a moment for China, for any country, about what side of history they want to stand on here.”

    The comprehensive settlement of the issue should be sought through dialogue and negotiations so as to form a balanced, effective and sustainable European security mechanism, Wang said, noting that China’s approach formed a sharp contrast with what some countries have been doing in trying to benefit from the crisis.

    Wang said that the door to a peaceful settlement of the Ukraine issue has not been completely closed.

    China hopes that relevant parties remain calm and rational and commit to peacefully resolving relevant issues through negotiations in accordance with the principles of the UN Charter, he said, noting that Beijing will continue to promote peace talks in its own way and welcomes and encourages all efforts for a diplomatic settlement.

    He also played down the impact of the US and EU sanctions against Russia. Europe has imposed financial sanctions against Russia for its military operation against Ukraine.On the question of whether China is worried that not condemning Russia might undermine its relations with the EU, Wang said that he believed everyone was familiar with the results of the sanctions. Unilateral sanctions are never the fundamental and effective approach in solving problems and that they only result in severe difficulties to local economies and livelihoods, he said.

    (Source: PTI)