Tag: Apple News

  • India among 11 ‘countries of concern’: US intel report on climate change

    India among 11 ‘countries of concern’: US intel report on climate change

    New Delhi (TIP): India is among the 11 countries which have been identified by United States intelligence agencies as ‘countries of concern’ with regard to climate change.

    According to a US intelligence report, these 11 countries, including Afghanistan and Pakistan, are highly vulnerable in terms of their ability to prepare for and respond to environmental and societal crises caused by climate change.

    A senior intelligence official told news agency Reuters that in a fresh National Intelligence Estimate report of the National Intelligence Council, the office of the director of national intelligence (ODNI) predicted that global warming will increase geopolitical tensions and risks to the United States’ national security up to 2040. The report has been released ahead of the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) in Glasgow.

    Among the countries of concern, heat, drought and the ineffective government in Afghanistan make the situation in the war-torn country worrying, the above official said. Meanwhile, in India and the rest of South Asia, water disputes has been predicted as important geopolitical flashpoint.

    The report threw light on India and China playing a critical role in determining the trajectory of temperature rise. India and China are the fourth and first largest emitters respectively, it said.

    Both the countries are growing their total and per capita emissions. On the other hand, the United States and the European Union (EU), as the second-and third-largest emitters, are reducing their emissions.

    “Both China and India are incorporating more renewable and low-carbon energy sources, but several factors will limit their displacement of coal,” the report said.

    “They need to modernise their grids, have sunk costs that make it relatively cheaper to use coal compared with other energy sources, want to minimise reliance on fuel imports for national security reasons and are trying to appease domestic constituencies who rely on the coal industry for jobs,” it added.

    Source: HT

  • SIT chief probing Lakhimpur Kheri violence transferred, will continue to head probe

    SIT chief probing Lakhimpur Kheri violence transferred, will continue to head probe

    Lucknow (TIP): The Uttar Pradesh government on Friday transferred DIG Upendra Kumar Agarwal, heading the SIT probing into the Lakhimpur Kheri violence, to Gonda but will continue to supervise the investigation. While transferring Agarwal to Gonda from the UP PHQ, the state police headquarters made it clear that it was a routine exercise and he will continue to head the Special Investigation Team set up to probe into the October 3 Lakhimpur Kheri violence in which eight people, including four farmers, were killed. Agarwal is a 2005-batch IPS officer of the Uttar Pradesh cadre. As per the UP PHQ’s transfer notification, five other IPS officers have been given new postings as well. When asked about Agarwal’s transfer, UP Additional Director General of Police (Law and Order) Prashant Kumar told PTI that he will continue to lead the SIT team investigating the Lakhimpur Kheri case.

    Union Minister of State for Home Ajay Mishra’s son Ashish Mishra was arrested by the SIT after 12 hours of grilling on October 9. Besides the minister’s son, 10 others too have been arrested in this case so far.

    After an intensive and extensive, nine hours of questioning, DIG Agarwal had on October 9 said Ashish Mishra has been arrested for not cooperating in the investigation and making evasive replies to police queries.

    An FIR was lodged at the Tikonia police station on October 3 over the Lakhimpur Kheri violence.

    Besides, Agarwal five other officers who have been transferred include Ayodhya IG Sanjeev Gupta who has been posted as IG (Law and Order) with Allahabad IG K P Singh taking over his place in the temple town.

    Singh’s place as Allahabad IG was taken over by Rakesh Singh. Basti IG Anil Kumar Rai has been transferred to Central Zone’s PAC with IG (Law and Order) Modak Rozas taking his place in Basti.     Source: PTI

  • Pakistan PM Imran Khan accused of selling gifts received from other countries’ heads

    Lahore (TIP): Pakistan’s Opposition parties on October 20 accused Prime Minister Imran Khan of selling gifts he received from other countries’ heads, including an expensive watch worth USD 1 million.

    Gifts are routinely exchanged between heads of states or officers holding constitutional positions during a state visit. According to the gift depository (Toshakhana) rules, these gifts remain the property of the state unless sold at an open auction. Rules allow officials to retain gifts with a market value of less than Rs 10,000 without paying anything, The Express Tribune newspaper reported.

    “Imran Khan has sold the gifts he received from other countries,” PML-N vice president Maryam Nawaz tweeted in Urdu. “Caliph Hazrat Omar (companion of Prophet Muhammad) was accountable for his shirt and robe and you (Imran Khan), on the other hand, looted foreign gifts from Toshakhana and you are talking of setting up a state of Madina? How can a person (Khan) be this insensitive, deaf, dumb and blind?” asked the daughter of deposed Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

    Opposition alliance—Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) — president Maulana Fazlur Rehman said there are reports that Prime Minister Khan has sold a precious watch he received from a prince. “This is shameful,” he said. (PTI)

  • Death toll reaches 104 as rains lash Nepal, trigger floods and landslides

    Kathmandu (TIP): The death toll from flooding and landslides triggered by heavy rains in Nepal climbed to 104 on October 21 after 16 more fatalities were reported from various parts of the country, officials said.

    Forty-one people have gone missing and the same have been injured in the incidents so far, according to the latest data published by the ministry’s Disaster Management Division.

    According to a Home Ministry statement, the highest number of fatalities, 62 were reported from Province No. 1, followed by Sudur Paschim Province with 31 fatalities and Karnali Province with seven fatalities. At least 104 people lost their lives in the recent incidents of flood, landslides and inundation that hit different parts of the country, following incessant rains over the past three days, health ministry officials said.

    Three persons were killed in Lumbini province and one in Bagmati province.

    In Province 1, where the death toll has reached 62, 20 have been injured and 13 have gone missing. Of the total 62 fatalities, 14 were reported in Ilam, 26 in Panchthar, seven in Dhankuta, eight in Sunsari, two in Udayapur, and one each in Morang, Solukhumbu and Bhojpur.

    In Sudur Paschim where a total of 31 deaths were reported, 16 cases were reported in Doti, eight in Bajhang, four in Baitadi, two in Dadeldhura and one in Kailali.

    In Karnali Province, where seven deaths were reported, six from Humla and one from Kalikot. In Lumbini where three deaths were reported, two from Pyuthan and one from Kapilvastu.

    Similarly, the Sindhuli district of Bagmati Province reported a single fatality in the disaster.

    The natural disaster hit 20 districts of Nepal. However, weather conditions have started improving from Thursday, the officials said.

    Meanwhile, Home Minister Balkrishna Khand has directed the Nepal Police, Armed Police Force, National Investigation Department and Nepal Army to promptly rescue the foreign tourists stranded at Humla district.

    Twelve people, including four Slovenian tourists and three guides, are stranded at Nakhla in Humla district, 700 km west of Kathmandu after heavy snowfall blocked the road at Limi area. They were on their way back to Simikot after completing their trekking expedition at Limi, Humla Chief District Officer Ganesh Acharya said.

    Snowfall started in the area on Sunday and the rescue works could not be carried out on Wednesday due to bad weather. The local administration has sought a helicopter from the home ministry to carry out the rescue operation, officials said. —PTI

  • Bangladesh Prime Minister orders strict action against arsonists

    Bangladesh Prime Minister orders strict action against arsonists

    Dhaka (TIP): Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on October 21 instructed her home minister to initiate immediate action against those who incited violence using religion, as she asked people not to trust anything on social media without fact-checking. Attacks on Hindu temples have intensified in Bangladesh since last Wednesday after an alleged blasphemous post surfaced on social media during the Durga Puja celebrations. Late Sunday night, a mob damaged 66 houses and set on fire at least 20 homes of Hindus in Bangladesh. During the weekly Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Hasina instructed Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan to initiate immediate action against those who incited violence using religion, Cabinet Secretary Khandker Anwarul Islam was quoted as saying by a daily.

    PM Hasina, who joined the meeting through video-conferencing from her official residence, also urged the people of the country not to trust anything on social media without checking facts, he said.

    She has instructed the Home Ministry to remain vigilant and take steps to prevent such incidents from recurring, Islam said. Local media reported that six Hindus were killed in separate attacks, but the figures could not confirmed independently.

    Hasina has promised to bring to justice the perpetrators of recent violence. She has announced to provide all possible assistance to the affected families. The foreign ministry statement underlined that the Government of Bangladesh “unequivocally condemned those incidents and took serious note of the reactions from within and outside the Hindu community”. Regrettably, it said, the domestic elements that opposed Bangladesh’s independence from Pakistan were still propagating their “toxic narratives to instigate violence, hatred and bigotry”. — PTI

  • Pakistan joined on FATF grey list by close ally Turkey

    Pakistan joined on FATF grey list by close ally Turkey

    Lahore (TIP): The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on October 21 kept Pakistan on the grey list as it “needs to further demonstrate that investigation and prosecution of proscribed terrorists and terror groups is being seriously pursued,” said FATF chief Marcus Pleyer at the end the global finance watchdog’s deliberations that began on Sunday. “On the action plan from 2019, we require Pakistan to demon that terrorist financing investigators are targeting UN proscribed senior leaders and commanders,’’ said Pleyer but discounted any possibility of moving it to the Black List. “Pakistan has already completed 30 out of 34 action points. So this shows the clear commitment of Pakistan Government. So there was no discussion on blacklisting. The Government is cooperating with FATF and we urged it to very quickly address the remaining four items of as soon as possible,’’ he said.

    Pleyer denied that it was pressure by India that led to Pakistan’s retention on the grey list. “FATF is a technical body and we take our decisions by consensus. It is not one country but 39 jurisdictions and the decision is taken by consensus on a jurisdiction to be put under increased monitoring,’’ answered Pleyer when asked whether it was India which is instrumental in keeping Pakistan on the grey list in June 2018.

    In a further blow to Pakistan, Turkey, its closest ally in FATF, was also put on the Grey List along with Jordan and Mali.

    Pakistan is estimated to have lost over $ 30 billion in foreign investments since it was it was grey listed. Till the meeting, FATF has 22 countries under “grey listing”, including Albania, Morocco, Syria, South Sudan and Yemen. It has removed two – Botswana and Mauritius – and added three – Mali, Jordan and Turkey – making it a total of 23 countries on the Grey List.

    Since June, the FATF has been focusing on Pakistan’s money laundering deficiencies after the Asia Pacific Group found a number of serious issues. On terror financing, Pakistan had addressed all but one of the 27 action points.

    The revelation of Pandora Papers has also led the FATF to recommend a sweeping number of changes in which anonymous shell companies are used by criminals and the corrupt. “The same money is often used to facilitate further crime. (TNS)

  • South Korea test-launches 1st domestically made space rocket

    Seoul (TIP): South Korea test launched its first domestically produced space rocket on October 21 in what officials describe as an important step in the country’s pursuit of a satellite launch programme. It wasn’t immediately clear whether the three-stage Nuri rocket succeeded in delivering a dummy payload – a 1.5-ton block of stainless steel and aluminum – into orbit 600 to 800 km (372 to 497 miles) above Earth. Live footage showed the 47-meter (154 foot) rocket soaring into the air with bright yellow flames shooting out of its engines following blastoff at Naro Space Centre, the country’s lone spaceport, on a small island off its southern coast.

    The launch, which was observed by South Korean President Moon Jae-in, was delayed by an hour because engineers needed more time to examine the rocket’s valves. There had also been concerns that strong winds and other conditions would pose challenges for a successful launch.

    Officials at the Korea Aerospace Research Institute, the country’s space agency, said it would take about 30 minutes to determine whether the rocket successfully delivered the payload into orbit.

    Nuri’s largest first stage, the core booster stage, was expected to land in waters southwest of Japan after separation, and its second stage was expected to fall in remote Pacific waters east of the Philippines, about 2,800 km (1,740 miles) away from the launch site. (AP)

  • Britain, New Zealand strike free trade deal after 16 months of talks

    Britain, New Zealand strike free trade deal after 16 months of talks

    London/Wellington (TIP): Britain and New Zealand have reached agreement in principle on a free trade deal designed to reduce tariffs, improve services trade, and take London one step closer to membership in a broader trans-Pacific trade agreement. Prime Ministers Boris Johnson and Jacinda Ardern sealed the deal in a Zoom call on October 20 after 16 months of negotiation.

    “This is a great trade deal for the United Kingdom, cementing our long friendship with New Zealand and furthering our ties with the Indo-Pacific,” Johnson said in a statement.

    It comes only months after a similar British agreement with Australia as ministers in London look to flesh out a post-Brexit pivot away from relying on commerce with the European Union.

    “This deal serves New Zealand’s economy and exporters well as we reconnect, rebuild and recover from COVID-19, and look forward into the future,” Ardern said at a news conference in Wellington, adding the deal was the country’s best ever. Tariffs on 97% of the products will be eliminated for both countries the day the deal comes into force, Ardern said. The immediate economic impact of any deal on Britain’s 3 trillion dollar economy is expected to be negligible according to British analyses published in 2019 and 2020. An updated economic analysis will be published when the deal is signed, for which a date has not been set.

    New Zealand said the deal would provide a boost of almost NZ$1 billion to its GDP. It’s the South Pacific nation’s second deal this year after sealing an upgraded trade pact with its biggest trading partner China in January.

    PACIFIC TILT : UK-New Zealand trade was worth £2.3 billion pounds ($3.18 billion) last year. The agreement signals a return of close trade ties between the nations that were curtailed when Britain joined the then European Economic Community in the 1970s. It also aligns with Britain foreign policy push for more influence in the Indo-Pacific to try to moderate China’s global dominance.

    The deal took longer than expected to reach, coming nearly two months after a target date. Britain’s opposition Labour Party criticized it, saying it harmed farmers and failed to deliver on jobs, exports or economic growth.

    However, ministers see it as another stepping stone toward joining the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) – an 11-country bloc including Australia, Singapore and Mexico. CPTPP membership has emerged as Britain’s top post-Brexit trade aim after the prospects of a quick and comprehensive deal with the United States faded. (Reuters)

  • China arrests star pianist with sex worker, warns celebrities

    Beijing (TIP): Police in China’s capital Beijing say famed international pianist Li Yundi is a suspect in a prostitution case. A message on the force’s microblog said a suspect had been placed in administrative detention and an investigation opened on Thursday involving a woman identified by her surname Chen and a man named as “Li di”, with the first part of his personal name deleted as is standard in police cases. The post was followed by another message depicting a piano keyboard and the words “one must definitely see clearly the difference between black and white”.   The official China Musicians Association also said it was expelling Li from the organisation based on the Beijing Chaoyang District police notice that he had been arrested. Li, 39, began playing piano as a small child and studied in China and Germany before becoming the youngest winner of the International Chopin Piano Competition in 2000 at age 18. He has since toured the world and recorded frequently, making him one of China’s best known international artists. AP

  • Swedish rapper shot dead, stoking outrage over gang violence

    Stockholm (TIP): Einar, one of Sweden’s most popular rappers, was shot dead in Stockholm late on October 21, heightening outrage over gang-related violence that has afflicted the Nordic country in recent years. Einar, 19, whose real name was Nils Gronberg, was killed in the upmarket Stockholm suburb of Hammarby Sjostad, and no arrests had been made so far. In a previous incident last year, Einar was abducted and assaulted by rival rappers. “A young life has been extinguished, and I understand that he meant a lot to many young people. It is tragic,” Prime Minister Stefan Lofven told TT. Gronberg, who made his debut at 16, issued four albums, had tens of millions of streams on music platforms and won several Swedish Grammys and other awards.

    Last year, he was kidnapped and beaten up by rival rappers with ties to a Stockholm crime gang. Several people, including Yasin Byn, another of Sweden’s most successful rappers, were given prison terms for their role in the kidnapping. Johan Forsell, law and order spokesperson for the main Moderates opposition party, said it was time to put an end to gang violence in Sweden. “The limits of what can be accepted in a civilized country have been passed a very long time ago,” he wrote on Twitter. “We need action not words to turn the tide and get Sweden in order.” Sweden has suffered gang-violence for years and gone from having one of the lowest rates of gun crime in Europe to having one of the highest over the past two decades. (Reuters )

  • UK police charge 25-year-old man with lawmaker’s murder

    UK police charge 25-year-old man with lawmaker’s murder

    London (TIP): British authorities said October 21 a man has been charged in the stabbing of a Conservative lawmaker who was killed as he met constituents at a church hall last week.  Authorities say a 25-year-old British man with Somali heritage, Ali Harbi Ali, has been charged in the death of David Amess.

    The Crown Prosecution Service says it will “submit to the court that this murder has a terrorist connection, namely that it had both religious and ideological motivations”.

    The death of Amess, who had served in Parliament for almost 40 years and was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2015, has shocked Britain, especially its politicians, who pride themselves on being accessible to their constituents. It has prompted conversations at the highest levels about how the country protects its leaders and grapples with extremism at home.

    The slaying came five years after Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox was shot and stabbed to death by a far-right extremist. Cox was the first British lawmaker to be killed since a peace accord ended large-scale Northern Ireland violence almost 30 years earlier. AP

  • Indian American nominated as a Vice Chair of Nassau Republican Committee

    Indian American nominated as a Vice Chair of Nassau Republican Committee

    NEW YORK (TIP): Joseph Cairo, Chairman of Nassau Republican Committee on Oct. 18, 2021 has nominated Sharanjit Singh Thind, as a Vice Chairman of the party. Sharanjit Singh Thind, becomes the first, and the only Sikh American to hold this position in Nassau County Republican Committee.  After the nomination, an elated Sharanjit expressed, “I am thankful to Chairman Joe Cairo for bestowing such honor, approving his conviction and confidence in me. I ensure every assistance to help him in strengthening the Republican Party in Nassau County, serve my community and Nassau residents. I am also obliged to my political mentor, Zahid Syed, political & community activist, for introducing me to Chairman Cairo.”

    Of late, Sharanjit has served as a Commissioner, Nassau County Human Rights Commission. Born in a Sikh family from Kapurthala, Punjab, India, Sharanjit possesses an MBA degree and a Masters’ Program in Journalism.

    Settled in New York since 2000, Sharanjit is an established businessman, nature and fitness enthusiast. He is the founder and CEO of Media Partners Capital Inc., a digital media investment company, which owns a slew of popular South Asian media brands. Resident of Nassau County for long, he lives in Wantagh with his wife, two kids and parents. He serves a number of religious, non-profit and community action organizations on board.

    (Based on a press release)

  • Indian American Ravi Chaudhary nominated to a key position in Pentagon

    Indian American Ravi Chaudhary nominated to a key position in Pentagon

    WASHINGTON(TIP): US President Joe Biden on Thursday, October 14, announced his intent to nominate Indian American Ravi Chaudhary to a key position in the Pentagon. A former Air Force officer, Chaudhary has been nominated for the position of the assistant secretary of the Air Force for Installations, Energy and the Environment.

    He needs to be confirmed by the United States Senate before he can be sworn in for this key Pentagon position.

    Chaudhary previously served as a senior executive at the US Department of Transportation where he was Director of Advanced Programs and Innovation, Office of Commercial Space, at the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), according to his bio released by the White House.

    In this role, Chaudhary was responsible for the execution of advanced development and research programs in support of the FAA’s Commercial Space Transportation mission.

    While at the Department of Transportation, he also served as the executive director, Regions and Centre Operations, where he was responsible for the integration and support of aviation operations in nine regions located nationwide.

    On active duty from 1993 to 2015 in the US Air Force, he completed a variety of operational, engineering, and senior staff assignments in the Air Force, the White House said.

    As a C-17 pilot, he conducted global flight operations, including numerous combat missions in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as a ground deployment as Director of the Personnel Recovery Center, Multi-National Corps, Iraq.

  • Indian American economist Gita Gopinath to return to Harvard University in January

    Indian American economist Gita Gopinath to return to Harvard University in January

    BOSTON (TIP): Indian American Gita Gopinath, Chief Economist and Director of the Research Department at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), will resign in January 2022 and return to Harvard University, the Fund’s Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva announced on October 19.

    The IMF appointed the 49-year-old economist as Chief Economist in January 2019. When she joined the global lender, she was the John Zwaanstra Professor of International Studies and Economics at Harvard.

    The university granted her a one-year leave of absence on an exceptional basis, allowing her to work for the IMF for three years. Gopinath, who was born in Mysuru, is the IMF’s first female Chief Economist.

    She is the head of the IMF’s research department, which publishes the World Economic Outlook report every quarter, which contains the closely followed GDP growth estimates.

    “Gita’s contribution to the Fund and our membership has been truly remarkable —quite simply, her impact on the IMF’s work has been tremendous,” Georgieva said. “She made history as the first female Chief Economist of the Fund and we benefitted immensely from her sharp intellect and deep knowledge of international finance and macroeconomics as we navigate through the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.”

    According to the IMF, Gopinath co-authored the Pandemic Paper on how to end the Covid-19 pandemic, which established universally recognized objectives for vaccination the world, as one of her major achievements.

    She is the third woman to hold a tenured post in Harvard’s prestigious economics department, and the first Indian to do so since Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen.

    Gopinath has been widely published in top economics journals and has received numerous honors, including election as a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    Growing up in India, Gopinath did not know anyone who worked in economics, the profile noted. It was more common for children to aspire to become a doctor or an engineer.

    She studied science through high school and when her parents’ friends suggested that she would enjoy success working for the country’s administrative services, she went to Delhi to study economics.

  • 6-year-old Indian-origin sets Singapore record by memorizing 1,560 Pi digits

    6-year-old Indian-origin sets Singapore record by memorizing 1,560 Pi digits

    SINGAPORE (TIP): Six-year-old Indian-origin Ishani Shanmugam broke Singapore’s national record for most digits of Pi memorized by reciting 1,560 decimal places.

    Sitting in her living room on October 13, Ishani calmly recited the digits in about 10 minutes, with personnel from the Singapore Book of Records verifying the numbers.

    Her mother, Vennila Munusamy, 36, told The Straits Times on Saturday that her heart was pounding during the event.  The housewife said, “But Ishani was so calm and collected. (The people from Singapore Book of Records) were asking her if she was nervous, but she said, I’m so excited, we can start now.”

    In September last year, Ishani, who attends PCF Sparkletots (Kindergarten), could recite 409 digits of Pi. But she told her parents she wanted to learn more digits.

    Her father, Shanmugam V S, 42, a tech manager in an investment bank, said he and his wife started her training in April by introducing a few new digits each day.

    “We’re really proud of her. We didn’t expect her to get it on the first try as she had to get every single digit correct. After she broke the record, we shed some happy tears,” he said. Vennila said she and her husband realized Ishani had an exceptional memory and a hunger for learning when she was two.

    She said, “Ishani was able to read story books by herself – it was always one after another without stopping. We would show her flash cards of country flags and she would memorize all 195 of them.

    “Then we realized she had an interest in science and geography. She would grasp the details of geographical TV programs and explain them to us.”  Shanmugam said, “We never pushed her to do anything, we just want to hone her interests and we’ll help her out in whatever she wants to pursue.”

    Ishani’s latest hobby is playing the piano but this does not mean she has moved on from her Pi endeavors.

    Vennila added, “She wants to learn even more Pi digits now, to add more digits to her record.”   She beat memory trainers Sancy Suraj, who held the previous record with 1,505 digits in 2018. The current Guinness World Record is held by Rajveer Meena, who as a 21-year-old in 2015, recited 70,000 digits at the VIT University in India.

  • 3 Indian Americans appointed White House fellows

    3 Indian Americans appointed White House fellows

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The White House on Monday, October 18, named 19 young emerging leaders as its fellows for 2021-22, three of whom are Indian-Americans.

    The prestigious White House Fellowship programme embeds professionals from diverse backgrounds for a year of working as a full-time, paid fellow for White House staff, cabinet secretaries and other senior government officials.

    The Indian-Americans who made it to the list are Joy Basu and Sunny Patel from California; and Aakash Shah from New Jersey. Joy Basu from San Francisco has been placed at the White House Gender Policy Council.

    Placed at the Department of Homeland Security, Patel is a child and adolescent psychiatrist and public health physician with interests in building equitable health systems that serve children and families. Shah has been placed at the Department of Health and Human Services.

    (Source: PTI)

  • Indian American scientist gets Lifetime Achievement Award

    Indian American scientist gets Lifetime Achievement Award

    NEW YORK (TIP): Indian American scientist Dr Vivek Lall was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award at Ritossa Family Summits in Dubai recently. “Your Lifetime Achievement Award is well-deserved and I congratulate you on your many accomplishments, which are making our world a much better place. I look forward to hearing more as you continue to make waves around the world through your incredible work,” said Sir Anthony Ritossa during the award presentation ceremony.

    Dr Lall, who is known for playing a key role in enhancing India-US defense trade and instrumental in some of the top deals between the two countries was presented with the award in recognition of his “outstanding vision, dedication and success,” a media release said. The award was given to Dr Lall in the presence of UAE Minister of State for Foreign Trade Dr Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi.

    Also present on the occasion were the emerging young business tycoon Sheikh Mohamed Bin Ahmed Bin Hamdan Al Nahyan, a member of the ruling family of the United Arab Emirates and princess Märtha Louise, daughter of King Harald and Queen Sonja of Norway.

    Ritossa Family Summits is the world’s leading family office investment conference, where world leaders and elite family office investors unite together to invest and create a brighter future.

    The event was attended by influential world leaders. Over 400 elite family offices, prominent conglomerate business owners, Sheikhs, royal families, private investment companies, sovereign wealth funds and industry professionals representing over USD4.5 trillion in investor wealth attended the event.

  • American Association of Physicians of Indian-origin’s women’s panel hosts conference on domestic violence

    American Association of Physicians of Indian-origin’s women’s panel hosts conference on domestic violence

    NEW YORK (TIP): Domestic violence is “a serious public health concern,” said Dr. Anupama Gotimukula, president of the Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI). Delivering welcome speech at a virtual conference on “Ways to Prevent Domestic Violence,” hosted by AAPI’s Women’s Committee on October 17, she pointed out that nearly “one in four women and one in seven men in the U.S. have experienced physical violence at the hands of their domestic partners.”

    The AAPI president said the conference, which was addressed by a number of prominent speakers from the United States and India addressed the conference, was “aimed at helping” her organization’s members “and the larger society to learn on ways to help promote healthy, respectful and nonviolent relationships.”

    “October is ‘Domestic Violence Awareness’ month,” said Dr. Seema Arora, chair of the Women’s Committee. “AAPI women’s physicians committee is trying to increase awareness towards this very prevalent but subdued age-old problem that can affect any gender, race, region & socio-economic strata in a panel discussion with renowned panelists from around the world,” she said.

    Lata Rao, a domestic violence survivor and activist shared her experience referring briefly to her past life and its impact on her physical, emotional and mental wellbeing.

    “I encourage women not to be what I went through” but to be more independent, Rao said. She told the audience how meeting with mentors and having a support system gradually changed her life, while forgiving and staying positive helped me start a new phase in her life. “Today, I use my experiences as a tool to support and educate other women,” she said.

    Dr. Pretti Saran, another domestic violence survivor and currently practicing Family Medicine & Obesity Specialist at RNJ Barnabas Hospital, in New Jersey, also shared her experience and pointed out that domestic violence is prevalent in all parts of the world. “Coming from a very traditional society back in India, initially I thought it was happening to me because of my background,” she said.

    Dr. Saran said she had suffered immensely from insecurity and complications of married life with intimidation and worry for her own life since she was married to a dominating person who was demanding yet suspicious and had trust issues. She was able to turn her life around, though, and has left a positive impact on society.

    Another speaker, Deanne Mazzochi, spoke about her work as a state legislator and an attorney who works with women and families in Illinois to ensure that people who are victims of domestic violence are protected. She went over the many statutes and legal systems that victims in Illinois have access to. She said that one should “ensure that you have a safe place to live,” if and when you want to leave an unhealthy relationship.

    Dr. Manju Sheth, an internist, practicing medicine at Beth Israel Lahey in Massachusetts, urged fellow physicians “to stay vigilant and collaborate” and look for signs and red flags to identify violence “as the patients can present with a multitude of unrelated symptoms that only compassionate questions can reveal clearly.” She requested her colleagues to be prepared to collaborate with medical and psychological professionals as “women are very reluctant to speak to you and we often notice PTSD, trauma, depression and anxiety.”

    Dr. Sheth is the chair and advisory board member of SAHELI and a member of Asian Task Force Against Domestic Violence. Dr. Nandita Palshetkar, the president of Federation of OB/GYN Society of India and chair of GAPIO Women’s Forum, provided a worldwide perspective on how the pandemic has influenced the rise in domestic violence incidences. “Nearly one third of women across the world face Shadow Pandemic Domestic Violence,” she said. Palshetkar also serves

    Jaya Nelliot, a board member and outreach director of the nonprofit ASHIANA, described domestic violence as a “pandemic”. “The best way is to create awareness and provide resources and help lead the victims of Domestic Violence to be strong and independent and safe,” she said.

    ASHIANA has been assisting South Asians in the United States for the past 25 years in empowering domestic abuse survivors to attain self-sufficiency via a culturally sensitive approach.

    Navneet Bhalla, executive director of Manavi, a nonprofit that campaigns against gender-based violence, spoke about how frequently abusers frame and wrongly accuse victims as criminals and threaten deportation, based on personal experiences.

    “Manvai supports such victims and help them gain justice and needed services. We take a survivor-center approach to understand and to provide support them holistically,” she said.

    Bhalla was introduced by Dr. Hetal Gor, a member of AAPI Women’s Committee.

    (Press release)

  • IRS, Security Summit partners remind families to make online safety a priority during National Cybersecurity Month

    IRS, Security Summit partners remind families to make online safety a priority during National Cybersecurity Month

    WASHINGTON(TIP): The Internal Revenue Service, on October 22, reminded families, teens and senior citizens about the continued importance of protecting personal and financial information (.pdf) online. Although the IRS and its Security Summit partners continue making strides in fighting identity theft and fraudulent tax returns, help is needed. The Security Summit works to protect taxpayers from criminals that file fraudulent returns for refunds. The Summit coalition includes representatives of the software industry, tax preparation firms, payroll and tax financial product processors as well as state tax administrators and the IRS, which work together year-round to protect taxpayers.

    During National Cybersecurity Month, the IRS is asking parents, families and others to be mindful of the pitfalls that can be found by sharing devices at home, shopping online and through navigating various social media platforms. Often, those who are less experienced can put themselves and others at risk by leaving an unnecessary trail of personal information for fraudsters.

    Staying safe online

    Here are a few common-sense suggestions that can make a difference for children, teens and other vulnerable groups to potential dangers to protect their personal data:

    Teach them to recognize and avoid scams. Phishing emails, threatening phone calls and texts from thieves posing as the IRS or legitimate organizations pose ongoing risks. Do not click on links or download attachments from unknown or suspicious emails. Remind them why security is important. Be careful not to reveal too much personal information. Keeping data secure and only providing what is necessary minimizes online exposure to scammers and criminals. Birthdates, addresses, age, financial information such as bank account and Social Security numbers are among things that should not be shared freely.

    Teach them about public Wi-Fi networks. Connection to Wi-Fi in a mall or coffee shop is convenient but it may not be safe. Hackers and cybercriminals can easily intercept personal information. Always use a virtual private network when connecting to public Wi-Fi.

    Always use security software with firewall and anti-virus protections. Make sure the security software is always turned on and can automatically update. Remember, to encrypt sensitive files such as tax records stored on computers. Be sure all family members have comprehensive protection especially if devices are being shared. Use strong, unique passwords for each account.

    Remember, the IRS does not use text messages or social media to discuss personal tax issues, such as those involving tax refunds, stimulus payments or tax bills. For more information, visit the Tax Scams and Consumer Alerts page on IRS.gov. Additional information about tax scams is also available on IRS social media sites, including YouTube videos. Also see Publication 4524, Security Awareness for Taxpayers (.pdf).

    (Press Release)

  • A Revolt against Vaccine: Police in crime-hit Chicago oppose Vaccine mandate

    A Revolt against Vaccine: Police in crime-hit Chicago oppose Vaccine mandate

    CHICAGO (TIP): A standoff in Chicago, where the head of the city’s largest police union is urging officers to defy a vaccine mandate, is the latest battle line being drawn in a nationwide fight over Covid-19 jabs, a BBC report said.

    Chicago, a city of nearly three million people, has seen more than 1,600 sexual assaults, nearly 3,000 shootings and 649 murders this year – a 14% increase over last.

    Just as violent crimes have risen, though, thousands of the city’s police force may not show up to work.

    Officers are weighing whether to resist a mayoral mandate requiring all public employees to report their vaccine status. City employees must now show proof of vaccination or submit to bi-weekly testing, unless approved for a religious or medical exemption. By the end of this year, all employees must be vaccinated.

    Nearly one-third of Chicago’s almost 13,000-member police department have so far refused to register their vaccination status, putting them on track for dismissal.

    Twenty-one have been officially removed from active duty so far, but some officials have warned that the mandate could leave Chicago’s police force dangerously depleted.

    During a CNN town hall on Thursday, October 21 night, President Joe Biden said US emergency responders who defy vaccine mandates should be fired.

    Chicago is not alone in facing this problem. Police departments across the US have been stymied in their efforts to coax officers into getting vaccinated against Covid-19 – now the leading cause of death for police in the US, according to the Officer Down Memorial Page, a non-profit that tracks police officer deaths.

    In the decade before the Covid-19 pandemic, an average of 166 US police officers died in the line of duty each year, according to the non-profit. Last year, 374 officers died – 245 of them due to Covid-19, more than any other cause combined.

    “This virus is no different than the gunfire we take as cops,” Chicago police superintendent David Brown said on Tuesday. “I will do everything I can and I will say anything I need to in order to convince officers to do everything they can to save their lives.”

    Yet vaccination rates among officers have mostly lagged behind the general public.

    “It’s hard to understand,” said Art Acevedo, who has served as chief of police in Miami, Houston and Austin, of vaccine hesitancy among police. “You’d think we’d be closer to 100% vaccination.”

    Mr Acevedo said he has urged reluctant officers to use their training and “look at the data”.

    “Every living president on both sides of the aisle has been vaccinated,” he said. “In my business, we call that a clue.” Mr Acevedo attributed the resistance to a mistrust in government. Others have expressed irritation with what they see as government overreach, as well as skepticism of the vaccines’ safety.

    In Chicago, the head of the city’s largest police union John Catanzara has called on its some 11,000 members to defy the city’s requirement to report their vaccination status.

    “It is the city’s clear attempt to force officers to ‘Chicken Little, the sky is falling’ into compliance,” he said last week. “Do not fall for it. Hold the line.”

    Mr Catanzara, who did not respond to the BBC’s request for comment, has compared the mandate to “Nazi Germany” and has suggested the vaccine requirements are an illegal violation of privacy.

    A judge last week granted the city’s request for a temporary order barring Mr Catanzara from making any public comments that encourage members of his union to resist the order. However, he has continued to post videos to the union’s public YouTube channel, in apparent defiance of the order.

    According to Mr Catanzara, as many as 50% of Chicago’s 13,000 officers would take unpaid leave rather than report their vaccine status – threatening to bring a public safety crisis to America’s third-largest city.

    Police resistance to vaccine mandates has been seen in at least a handful of other cities across the US.

    Los Angeles Sheriff Alex Villaneuva, who oversees the largest sheriff’s department in the country, has said he will not enforce the county’s vaccine requirements on his staff. Mike Solan, president of Seattle’s rank and file police union, described the city’s Covid-19 mandate as a “political betrayal”, and said this week that up to 350 of his officers could be out of a job.

    And in Massachusetts, the state police union is suing the governor over vaccine requirements.

    In Chicago, some say the divide between police and politicians has been widened by the mayor, Lori Lightfoot, a Democrat, whose 2019 campaign was animated by promises to reform the city’s force.

    Police feel “vilified” by city authorities, said Raymond Lopez, a city council representative. “There’s a general sense that our officers are not appreciated in the city they seek to serve and protect. Morale is low among the ranks.”

    Ms Lightfoot – who was criticized this month for breaking mask rules when she was photographed bare-faced at a Chicago basketball game – has held firm to her vaccine mandate.

    She has accused Mr Catanzara of trying to “induce an insurrection”. And she has dismissed concerns of widespread police shortages, insisting there has been no disruption to the force so far.

    Asked about the risk at a news conference, she said on Monday: “I don’t engage in a lot of hypotheticals.”

    The number of police who have continued to say “no” after being given opportunities to comply with the reporting requirement “is very small”, she said.

    Still, other city officials fear the mandate will ignite a public safety crisis.

    Last week, two city council representatives, Marty Quinn and Matt O’Shea, wrote a letter to Ms Lightfoot asking for the mandate to be delayed, citing “a dwindling police force and rising incidents of crime and violence”.

    Mr Quinn, who is vaccinated, told the BBC that a potential shortage of police is overwhelmingly the primary concern of his constituents.

    “Since last week, my phones have been burning up about what’s going on,” he said. “What I’m hearing loud and clear is we have to make sure that every single officer that’s capable of being on the job, is on the job.”

    Even before the mandate, Chicagoans had been left with a pared-down police force due, in part, to record levels of retirement and budget cuts which eliminated 614 vacant positions in the department this year.

    “We can ill-afford to lose any more police,” said Mr Quinn.

    “This is not about the mandate, it’s not about Mayor Lightfoot and John Catanzara. It’s about public safety”.

    The need for police is now at odds with another need of public safety: vaccinated frontline workers.

    Their resistance to vaccine mandates reflects a broader American trend, said Chief Acevedo. “Police officers don’t grow in petri dishes, they come from society.” But while battles over vaccines have broken out across professions, police officers and other frontline workers pose a particular threat.

    “The issue here is when you have interactions with police officers, it’s unpredictable,” said Dr Abraar Karan, an infectious disease expert at Stanford University. Like a doctor, EMT or nurse, police officers have to interact with “everyone”, including the elderly and immunocompromised – all of whom could be put at risk.

    Indeed for some, a meeting with an unvaccinated officer or other first responder could be deadly. “Not having police, especially in areas with high crime, will be a huge cost to citizens there,” he said. “But we know that vaccines are safe… I think the risk to others is something we need to consider more seriously.”

    BBC

  • Biden may address filibuster reform soon

    Biden may address filibuster reform soon

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The White House on Friday offered a strong signal that it is preparing to seek changes soon to a long-standing Senate tradition that has allowed Republicans to block voting rights legislation and other major Democratic initiatives, according to Reuters.

    Democratic President Joe Biden, who spent 36 years in the Senate, has previously opposed any significant overhaul of a Senate rule known as the filibuster, which requires 60 of the 100 senators to agree on most legislation.

    His opposition has angered Democrats and activists who say an arcane rule should not stand in the way of important issues such as voting rights and immigration.

    “I expect you’ll hear more from the president about it in the coming weeks,” White House spokesperson Jen Psaki told reporters on Friday, October 22, about the filibuster. Asked what more he would want to address with filibuster reform beyond voting rights, Psaki said to “stay tuned.”

    During a televised town hall event on Thursday, October 21, Biden said the Senate should “fundamentally alter” the filibuster process but did not offer specifics on how.

    The White House’s potential shift on the issue comes after the latest successful effort by Republicans to block Democratic legislation aimed at thwarting restrictive new voting laws enacted in Republican-led states. On Wednesday, Republicans used the filibuster to block beginning a debate on the measure. When Republicans control the White House and the Senate, Democrats have used the filibuster as well. Psaki suggested Biden had lost patience with Republican resistance to Democrats’ ideas on voting rights, saying the president is “frustrated” and “disappointed.” “When a hand has been extended by Democrats to work together to protect the fundamental right, Republicans have not only recoiled, but they have also blocked the … ability to make any semblance of progress,” Psaki said. While Democrats are united on voting rights, they are not unified in whether to overhaul the filibuster. U.S. Senator Joe Manchin, a moderate Democrat from West Virginia, has publicly opposed eliminating the filibuster, even for specific issues. With a 50-50 split in the Senate, Democrats would need all of its members to support changes.

  • Giuliani associate Lev Parnas convicted in campaign finance fraud case

    Giuliani associate Lev Parnas convicted in campaign finance fraud case

    NEW YORK (TIP): Lev Parnas, a Florida businessman who is an associate of Rudolph W. Giuliani, was found guilty on Friday, October 22, of using funds from a foreign investor to try to influence political candidates through campaign donations.

    It took the federal jury in U.S. District Court in Manhattan less than a day to find that Parnas committed fraud through donations to several state and federal candidates that were bankrolled by a Russian financier. Parnas was also found guilty on counts related to a $325,000 donation in 2018 to a joint fundraising committee that supported then-president Donald Trump.

    Prosecutors told the jury that the illegal fundraising efforts documented in text messages and other trial evidence gave Parnas access to elected officials and candidates. They showed photos of Parnas with Trump and Giuliani, who was the president’s personal lawyer, schmoozing at high-end political fundraisers.

    Prosecutors also said Parnas lied to the Federal Elections Committee about the source of the hefty 2018 donation, which he said in filings was from his start-up company Global Energy Producers. The company was in fact not profitable and not functioning as a real business, prosecutors argued. The donation was actually sourced through a mortgage refinance loan obtained by Parnas’s business partner, Igor Fruman, the jury found.

    Fruman — whose alleged role in the events was regularly discussed in testimony at the trial — pleaded guilty last month to one count of soliciting foreign campaign contributions. He’s due to be sentenced early next year.

    Parnas is also slated to face a second trial in U.S. District Court in Manhattan for charges related to defrauding investors in what prosecutors say was another sham company — Fraud Guarantee.

    The venture purported to offer a service to other companies that protected them from fraud. But prosecutors allege that Parnas and another man, David Correia, were actually stealing from their investors. Correia has pleaded guilty to charges related to his role in that case.

    Parnas’s ties to Giuliani when Giuliani was Trump’s personal attorney played prominently in the ex-president’s first impeachment trial. The Ukrainian native was recruited to help Giuliani seek damaging information on President Biden — and his son Hunter — before the 2020 election.

    Trump was accused of threatening to withhold badly needed aid to Ukraine if officials there did not announce a criminal investigation into the Bidens.

    In the campaign-finance trial, prosecutors argued Parnas knew that donations to candidates from outside the U.S. were illegal and took steps to conceal that a Russian investor was behind the funds that went to candidates in several states where cannabis had recently been legalized. Giuliani was not charged in the case.

    Prosecutors alleged that Parnas used money from Russian financier Andrey Muraviev to try to curry favor with candidates he believed could help him and Fruman win licenses to operate cannabis businesses.

    In his closing argument Thursday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Hagan Cordell Scotten noted that Parnas’s own former assistant, who testified under an immunity agreement with the Justice Department, said Parnas knew the laws he was skirting by concealing the true source of the funds.

    “Parnas was told again and again that he couldn’t donate someone else’s money, and he couldn’t donate except from a citizen or a legal resident,” Scotten said.

    One donation at issue in the trial was $10,000 in Fruman’s name that went to Adam Laxalt, the former attorney general in Nevada, who had ties to Trump and filed lawsuits on his behalf to try to overturn the election results in his state. Laxalt lost a race for Nevada governor in 2018. Prosecutors say Muraviev sent two $500,000 payments that were meant to be infused into campaign coffers for people seeking offices like governor and state attorney general. Parnas and Fruman allegedly used some of the money to pay bills. Parnas’s lawyer Joseph Bondy argued Thursday, October 21, in summations that the case was “absurd” and that Parnas wasn’t hiding his activities.

    Andrey Kukushkin, who was also on trial for allegedly conspiring to use Muraviev’s money to get licenses for marijuana businesses, was convicted on multiple counts.

    His attorney Gerald Lefcourt argued in summations that his client was unaware of Parnas’s maneuvering in politics circles and that he “never intended to do anything illegal.” Lefcourt said Parnas and Fruman thought Kukushkin was a “rube … someone they could get over on” to help them get to Muraviev’s money.

    Parnas and Kukushkin are both naturalized U.S. citizens.

    (Source: Agencies)

  • Meet the Forbes Seven richest Indian Americans

    Meet the Forbes Seven richest Indian Americans

    NEW YORK (TIP): Forbes recently released its list of 400 wealthiest Americans for the year 2021. Seven Indian Americans, with a combined net worth of $42.4 billion, have made it to the list — the same number as 2020. While six of the seven billionaires retained their positions on the list, Google investor Kavitark Ram Shriram fell off it. However, he was replaced by Baiju Bhatt, Co-founder of Robinhood. Here is the complete list:

    Jay Chaudhury
    CEO, Zscaler
    Rank: 45
    Net worth: $16.3 billion
    Age: 62

    The richest Indian American on the list the wealthiest 400 Americans, Chaudhury saw his net worth increase by nearly a whopping $10 billion in the past year. His ranking also increased from 85th in 2020 to 45th this year. Chaudhry founded Zscaler, a cyber security firm, in 2008. He, along with his family, owns 42 percent of the company’s shares. The firm went public in March 2018. Chaudhry moved to the United States to study in Nevada back in the 1980s. Zsclaer is not Chaudhry’s first venture. Along with his wife, he founded a number of companies which were subsequently acquired.

    Vinod Khosla
    Founder, Khosla Ventures
    Rank: 92
    Net worth: $8.6 billion
    Age: 66

    The net worth of Khosla, the co-founder of Sun Microsystems and the founder of Khosla Ventures, increased from $2.8 billion in 2020 to $8.6 billion. His ranking went up from 353 to 92.

    A graduate of IIT Delhi, Khosla grew up in the Indian capital before moving to the United States to do an MBA from Stanford, in 1980. He founded Sun Microsystems with his classmates from Stanford. He later left the company to become a venture capitalist. He founded Khosla Ventures, based in Menlo Park, California, in 2004.

    Rakesh Gangwal
    Co-founder, Interglobe Aviation
    Rank: 253
    Net worth: $4.5 billion
    Age: 68

    Co-founder and co-owner of India’s Indigo Airlines, Gangwal previously served as the CEO of US Airways group. His network increased from $2.3 billion to $4.5 billion in the past year. An IIT, Kanpur graduate, he earned an MBA from Wharton School of Pennsylvania. He has also served as the executive vice-president for Air France. He lives in Miami, Florida with his wife and a daughter.

    Romesh Wadhwani
    Founder, Symphony Technology Group
    Rank: 333
    Net worth: $3.5 billion
    Age: 74

    Founder and CEO of Symphony Technology Group, Wadhwani was born in Karachi before Indian independence. His net worth last year was $3.4 billion.

    A graduate from IIT Bombay, he earned his masters and doctorate from Carnegie Mellon University.

    He lives in Palo Alto, California with his wife and has a married daughter.

    Niraj Shah
    CEO, Wayfair
    Rank: 340
    Net Worth: $3.4 billion
    Age: 47

    At number 340 on the list, online retailer Wayfair CEO Niraj Shah grew up in Massachusetts. His net worth increased from $2.8 billion to $3.4 billion in the past year.

    He graduated from Cornell University and co-founded Wayfair in 2002 with his classmate.

    In 2017 he also became the director of Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and lives in Boston with his wife Jill Shah.

    Aneel Bhusri
    CEO, Workday
    Rank: 363
    Net Worth: $3.2 billion
    Age: 55

    Born in Pittsford, New York, Bhusri co-founded Workday with David Duffield.

    He became the vice chairman of the company in 1999, until the takeover by Oracle in 2004.

    He is also a partner at Greylock Partners which is a software investment fund. He is placed number 363 on the list.

    Baiju Bhatt
    Co-founder, Robinhood
    Rank: 389
    Net Worth $2.9 billion
    Age: 36

    At just 36, Bhatt is the youngest Indian American on the list. He is placed at number 389.

    He founded Robinhood, a financial services company, along with Vladimir Tenev.

    Son of Indian immigrants, Bhatt grew up in Virginia. He studied mathematics at Stanford University.

    He co-founded the trading platform in 2013. After a funding run in 2018, he became a billionaire along with his co-founder. He lives in Palo Alto, California.

  • Emmy – nominated Tirlok Malik’s motivational short film ‘To New India with Love’ Screened

    Emmy – nominated Tirlok Malik’s motivational short film ‘To New India with Love’ Screened

    The Indian Panorama and Indian American Forum host a panel discussion on the film

    NEW YORK (TIP): The Indian Panorama and the Indian American Forum, on October 17, hosted a panel discussion, virtually on Zoom, on the Emmy-nominated Indian-American filmmaker Tirlok Malik’s new short film ‘To New India with Love,’ which was also screened on the occasion. The short film examines the subject of youth aspirations. ‘To New India with Love’ is a non-commercial venture, produced with a public-service spirit, appealing broadly to Indians worldwide. It is presented by Padma Shri Dr Sudhir Parikh. The screenplay and dialogues are written by Murtaza Ali Khan and Rakesh Zharotia is the film’s editor and assistant director.

    While beginning the proceedings for the day, Indu Jaiswal, Chairperson, Indian American Forum introduced the moderators and the panelists while welcoming the guests and underlining the agenda of the event. She congratulated Trilok Malik on the success of ‘To New India with Love’ which has been praised worldwide by audience and critics alike for his inspiring and empowering message to the youth of India.

    The panel discussion was moderated by Prof. Indrajit S. Saluja, Chief Editor, The Indian Panorama and Dr. Renee Mehrra, a celebrated TV anchor. While congratulating Tirlok Malik on his latest film, Prof. Saluja reflected upon the overwhelming love for India that each and every film of Malik oozes with. Dr. Mehrra praised the film’s message and its relevance. The panelists included Padma Shri Dr. Sudhir Parikh, Tirlok Malik, Dr. Azad Anand, Dr. Bhupi Patel, Dr. Urmilesh Arya, Shashi Malik, and Animesh Goenka. Each of them praised the film’s subject and its timely message. Sudhir Vaishnav, Neeta Bhasin, Anju Sharma, Lal Motwani, and Andy Bhatia who were also present on the occasion appreciated the film while sharing their views about Malik’s remarkable contribution as a filmmaker over the last three decades. Pam Kwatra, Jyoti Gupta, Chitranjan Sahay Belwariar, and Anurag Sharma were also present.

    Murtaza Ali Khan who wrote the film’s screenplay and dialogues also joined the discussion and gave his comment.

    Talking about his association with the film, Dr. Sudhir Parikh praised the film’s inspiring message. While highlighting the positive changes that have taken place in India over the last five decades, he reminded that the India of today is very different from when he first came to the US. He asserted that the Indian youth today has so many opportunities while touching upon the new initiatives of the present Indian government which have been instrumental in empowering the youth. Sharing the vision behind the film, Tirlok Malik said that the film aims to inspire the youth of India to not give up on their dreams. Even if someone doesn’t have the means to realize his/her dreams, he/she can achieve success through their hard work and determination. My film ‘To New India with Love’ is an inspiring and motivational film that gives a message of hope to the youth to pursue their dreams.

    Tirlok Malik is best known for making films about Indian immigrants in the US, starting with his pioneering work, ‘Lonely in America,’ which was shown in 74 countries and as well as on HBO and participated in 37 film festivals, winning several awards. He subsequently made films such as ‘Love Lust and Marriage,’ ‘Khushiyaan,’ and ‘On Golden Years’. He has also acted in films like ‘Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar,’ ‘Lajja,’ ‘Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu,’ ‘Ta Ra Rum Pum,’ ‘Sivaji: The Boss,’ and ‘Mehbooba,’ among others.

  • Aryan’s case does not fit the bill for denial of bail  

    Inordinately prolonging his custody is uncalled for

    A special NDPS court had on Wednesday, October 20,  denied bail to Aryan, noting that his WhatsApp chats prima facie revealed that he was ‘dealing in illicit drug activities on a regular basis’ and therefore ‘it cannot be said that he is not likely to commit a similar offence if released on bail’.

    Arrested by the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) in a drugs case on October 3, movie star Shah Rukh Khan’s son Aryan Khan will have to wait till early next week for the hearing of his bail application in the Bombay High Court. A special NDPS court had on Wednesday denied bail to Aryan, noting that his WhatsApp chats prima facie revealed that he was ‘dealing in illicit drug activities on a regular basis’ and therefore ‘it cannot be said that he is not likely to commit a similar offence if released on bail’. Section 37 of the NDPS Act has the provision for bail, provided there are reasonable grounds to believe that the accused is not guilty of the offence in question and that he is not likely to commit any crime while on bail. The all-important term, ‘reasonable grounds’, seems to have been interpreted in a disproportionately harsh manner in Aryan’s case. As of now, the NCB appears to be banking solely on the WhatsApp chats as evidence against him.

    It had taken film actor Rhea Chakraborty a month to get bail in a drugs case allegedly linked to Sushant Singh Rajput’s death last year. The High Court had imposed stringent conditions while ordering her release: she was told to surrender her passport to the investigating officer; she could leave the jurisdiction of the special NDPS court in Mumbai only after submitting her itinerary; and she had to report to the NCB office on the first Monday of every month for six months. It’s reasonable to argue that Aryan can be set free with similar riders. If he thumbs his nose at the rule book, his bail can obviously be cancelled.

    Bail, not jail — this basic rule of legal proceedings was set forth in the Supreme Court’s landmark judgment in State of Rajasthan vs Balchand (1977). The order had also cited exceptions to the rule: cases ‘where there are circumstances suggestive of fleeing from justice or thwarting the course of justice or creating other troubles in the shape of repeating offences…’ Aryan’s case does not fit the bill for denial of bail.

    (Tribune, India)