Tag: Apple News

  • WhatsApp is not as private as you may think despite end-to-end encryption

    WhatsApp is not as private as you may think despite end-to-end encryption

    Social media giant Facebook touts WhatsApp as a safe messaging platform where users chats are end-to-end encrypted. A recent report has now found out that WhatsApp may allow content moderators to access users’ messages in certain cases. According to a report in ProPublica, there are more than 1,000 contract workers in office buildings in Austin, Texas, Dublin, and Singapore. These hourly workers, according to the report, can only view messages that the users have reported. This means that these moderators can only see users messages, images and videos only when the receiver hits the report button to report the message to WhatsApp.

    The report in ProPublica says that this messages review is one element in a broader monitoring operation in which the company also reviews material that is not encrypted, including data about the sender and their account. A 49-slide internal marketing presentation from December 2020 accessed by ProPublica emphasizes the “fierce” promotion of WhatsApp’s “privacy narrative.” It compares the brand character to “the Immigrant Mother.” This marketing material doesn’t mention the company’s content moderation efforts.

    WhatsApp’s director of communications, Carl Woog acknowledged that teams of contractors in Austin and elsewhere review WhatsApp messages to identify and remove abusers. However, he told the publication that Facebook does not consider this work to be content moderation. “The decisions we make around how we build our app are focused around the privacy of our users, maintaining a high degree of reliability and preventing abuse,” Wong was quoted in the report as saying.

    A ProPublica investigation that draws on data, documents, and dozens of interviews reveals how WhatsApp’s security has been compromised since Facebook’s purchase of the platform in 2014.

  • iPhone 14 Pro Max allegedly leaks ahead of iPhone 13 launch

    The iPhone 13 series is all set to be launched on September 14. While hearing rumours and leaks ahead of a launch isn’t something new, a leaker has taken things to a whole different level. Popular tipster Job Prosser has leaked details of the iPhone 14 Pro Max a week before even the iPhone 13 lineup is announced. The leaker has revealed several ley details alongside design changes on both the front and back of the device. Here’s what the tipster has revealed about next year’s iPhone 14 Pro Max.

    Jon Prosser has shared alleged details about next year’s iPhone 14 Pro Max on his Front Page Tech website. As per the tipster, the 2022 high-end iPhone will feature a new design that will bid adieu to the infamous notch. It is tipped that the iPhone 14 Pro Max will feature a hole-punch front camera – in the past, analyst Ming Chi-Kuo has also claimed that this design change is incoming. Furthermore, the 2022 iPhone is said to have a thicker chassis allowing for no rear camera bump, with the lenses, LED flash, and LiDAR Scanner sitting flush with the rear glass. It could come with a titanium frame.

    Apple is also allegedly borrowing design elements from the iPhone 4 for its 2022 iPhone lineup. As per the leak, the iPhone 14 series will feature round volume buttons that look similar to the iPhone 4 and iPhone 5 design.

  • NASA rover Perseverance collects first Martian rock sample

    NASA’s Mars science rover Perseverance has collected and stashed away the first of numerous mineral samples that the US space agency hopes to retrieve from the surface of the Red Planet for analysis on Earth.

    Tools attached to Perseverance and operated by mission specialists from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los Angeles drilled a rock core slightly thicker than a pencil from an ancient Martian lake bed, then hermetically sealed it in a titanium specimen tube inside the rover.

    The feat, accomplished on September 1 and publicly confirmed by NASA late on Monday, marked the first such mineral sample obtained from the surface of another planet, according to the space agency.

    NASA chief and former astronaut Bill Nelson hailed it as “a momentous achievement.”

    The space agency plans to collect as many as 43 mineral samples over the next few months from the floor of Jerezo Crater, a wide basin where scientists think water flowed and microbial life may have flourished billions of years ago.

    The six-wheeled, SUV-sized vehicle is also expected to explore walls of sediment deposited at the foot of a remnant river delta once etched into a corner of the crater and considered a prime spot for study.

  • Steps to enable two-factor authentication on your Google account

    Steps to enable two-factor authentication on your Google account

    Staying safe online is one of the most important things in today’s time. Keeping a strong password for all your digital accounts is no longer enough and so most applications and websites now give you the option of enabling a two-factor authentication system. Through this, users get the option of verifying a login, enabling an extra layer of security. Usually, two-factor authentication requires a code sent through SMS or a code generated by specific apps like Duo. This security measure lessens the chance of hacking and misuse. If you have enabled the two-factor authentication then you will have to enter a code after correctly entering the password. Google also offers a variety of two-factor authentication methods, however, the easiest one to enable is the Google Prompt. Once this is activated, whenever you sign in to a new or an unknown device, the technology giant will send a prompt on your phone and till the time you don’t confirm the prompt, you will not be able to sign in to the account on the unfamiliar device. For enabling the two-factor authentication system on Google, follow these easy steps:

    –              Step 1: Open any internet browser of your choice and search for https://myaccount.google.com

    –              Step 2: On the left column of the homepage you will find an option that reads security. Click it

    –              Step 3: You will be directed to a new page where you will find the ‘2-Step Verification option. Click it

    –              Step 4: A pop up will appear though which you will have to confirm the enabling by clicking the “Get Started” tab

    –              Step 5: A new window will open wherein you will be asked to enter your Gmail password for security purposes

    –              Step 6: Once done you will be taken to a new page on which you will have to choose the device on which you want to get the prompt

    –              Step 7: After you have confirmed the device hit the “try it” tab to confirm if the two-factor authentication is working or not

    –              Step 8: Make sure you have confirmed your phone number in the backup field tab

    –              Step 9: A code will be sent via text message to your mobile number. Enter it and hit on “Next”

    –              Step 10: On another page click on “Turn On” to enable the two-factor authentication. After you have done that the two-factor authentication will be activated for your google account.

  • Dahi Lasooni Chicken

    Dahi Lasooni Chicken

    Ingredients:

    Chicken boneless – 7 pcs, 170 gms

    Cheese – 15 gms

    Garlic chopped – 15 gms

    Ginger paste – 5 gms

    Coriander chopped – 2 gms

    Green chilli paste – 7 gms

    Fresh cream – 18 gms

    Curd – 40 gms

    Kaju paste – 10 gms

    Salt – 2 gms

    Black salt – 0.5 gms

    Chicken masala – 1 gram

    Chat masala – 0.5 gms

    Elaichi – 0.5 gms

    Jeera powder – 1 gram

    White pepper powder – 1 gram

    Salad oil – 5 gms

    Daniya powder – 1 gram

    Method:

    -The first step is to marinate the chicken with all the ingredients.

    – Marinate the chicken pieces with curd and then add chopped garlic, ginger paste, kaju paste, green chilli paste, chopped dhaniya, salt, kitchen king masala

    – Add black salt, chat masala, elaichi, dhaniya, jeera powder, white pepper powder, salad oil, cream and cheese.

    – Keep aside for 30 minutes to abstract flavour.

    – Apply 5 ml of butter.

    – Grill it in charcoal tandoor for 8 – 10 minutes.

    – Serve in a platter.

  • DIY facemasks that Bollywood divas swear by

    DIY facemasks that Bollywood divas swear by

    Do you also want glowing looking skin like one of your favourite Bollywood celebrities? There is a lot that they do to keep their face glowing. We have unravelled some of their secrets, and we are surprised by them.

    Most of the young stars love to try out DIY facemasks and recipes for their skin. Yes, it is true. They have revealed their secret for that instant red carpet glow. Do you also want to look radiant like them? Then keep on reading!

    Pro tip: Always try a small patch of these before just to check if you are allergic or not.

    Radhika Madan

    Once starting with television shows, Radhika Madan has now set her foot in the Bollywood Industry. She is known to be one of the most hardworking actresses. Always glowing and smiling, she also has her own beauty secrets.

    The Angrezi Medium actress shared a DIY face pack recipe given by her mom.

    Ingredients:

    Two-Three tablespoon Chickpea Flour (Besan)?

    One teaspoon Turmeric (Haldi)

    Five-Six Soaked Almonds

    Milk (As required)

    Few strands of Saffron (Kesar)

    Procedure:

    Take the chickpea flour and add turmeric to it. Now make a paste of the almonds by grinding them and mix it all. Add milk as much as required to get a paste consistency. Saffron is the magic ingredient so add it as well. Apply it all over your face and keep it on for as long as you can.

    While washing, keep in mind not to wash with water. Either use milk or just wet your hands and scrub it off by massaging. Don’t use a soap or a face wash later to retain the effects.

    Benefits:

    Makeup, dirt, pollution, etc., can damage your skin. This face pack helps with tanning by acting as a scrub and will leave you with a natural glow. It also helps with acne and breakout.

    Janhvi Kapoor

    The Roohi actress is loved for her style. Have you ever seen her in everyday routine? She is always bare-faced with no hints of makeup. Her love for homemade remedies is not hidden, and she has even shared some facemask that she uses, even for a red carpet look.

    Ingredients:

    One tablespoon Curd/Yogurt (With Malai if possible)?

    One teaspoon Honey

    Mashed seasonal fruit (Anything that’s available)

    Half-cut Orange Procedure:

    Wash your face and pat dry. Mix the yogurt, honey and the mashed fruit in a bowl and make a paste. Apply it all over your face. Now, take an orange cut in half. Squeeze a bit to loosen it, and the juice comes out easily. Take the orange and scrub it gently all over your face. Avoid getting cut. Wash your face with cold water.

    Benefits:

    The curd and honey make your skin moisturizing and glowy. Orange acts as a scrub and helps remove the tan and dead skin.

    Priyanka Chopra

    Our desi girl has proved she may be living outside India but is still desi at heart. Priyanka has been a superstar of the Bollywood industry and has also made us proud with her Hollywood performances. She is loved for her beauty. Do you also want to know her secrets? Mrs Jonas revealed her skincare secret, and it is none other than a DIY recipe learned from her mom.

    Ingredients:

    One cup Gram Flour (Besan)?

    One tablespoon Curd/Yogurt

    Half Lemon

    Milk

    Two-Three Teaspoons Sandalwood Powder (Chandan Powder)

    One teaspoon Turmeric (Haldi)

    Procedure:

    Take the gram flour and yogurt according to your requirements and mix them well. Squeeze some lemon juice and mix it. If your paste is thick add some milk to make it smooth. Add the sandalwood powder and turmeric. Mix all of it well into a paste.

    Apply it over your face or your body. Let it dry completely. Scrub it off with your hands and remove it. Wash your face with water afterwards.

    Benefits:

    It is a scrub used on the face as well as the body. It is an exfoliator, hydrator, and moisturizer for the skin. It will also remove any kind of tanning. It also removes baby face hair.

    Ananya Panday

    Ananya has been a fashion inspiration for many young girls. We love her style but we also love her bare face looks when she steps out. Ananya shared her secret on Instagram stories for naturally glowing skin and it’s just an easy DIY recipe.

    Ingredients:

    One-Two tablespoon Curd/yogurt?

    One teaspoon Honey

    One teaspoon Turmeric (Haldi)

    Procedure:

    Mix all the ingredients in a bowl altogether. Apply it all over the face.

    Leave it for 10-15 minutes. Also apply it in scrubbing motion for exfoliation. It dries so wash your face in rubbing motion with normal water.

    Benefits:

    It helps in hydrating and moisturizing the skin. Also makes your tan and dead skin go away. It purifies your skin and also has healing properties.

                    Source: Pinkvilla

  • Mandira says it’s a long way ‘to feel normal again’, months after Raj’s death

    Mandira says it’s a long way ‘to feel normal again’, months after Raj’s death

    Actor Mandira Bedi on Sept 9, Thursday said that there is a ‘long way to go’ before she feels normal again, months after the death of her husband Raj Kaushal. Taking to Instagram, she shared a picture collage of herself and her fitness band.

    In the photo, Mandira Bedi posed for the camera with a no-makeup look. She wore a black sports bra paired with a pink and white leggings. She captioned the post, “It’s a long way to go to feel normal again. Emotionally, mentally and physically. But I wake up every morning with purpose and aim for as much positivity that I can muster.”

    “And in all of this I still practice #gratitude .. because there is always, always something to be grateful for. Have a nice day all of you #nirbhaunirvair,” Mandira added.

    Reacting to the post, Gaurav Gera wrote, “Love.” Adil Hussain said, “You are such an inspiration… Lots of love.” Aditi Govitrikar commented, “Big hug.” Mandira has been giving her fans glimpses of herself on social media after Raj’s death. He died on June 30 after suffering a heart attack at the age of 49. He directed films like Pyaar Mein Kabhi Kabhi and Shaadi Ke Laddoo. Mandira had performed Raj’s last rites.

  • Olivia Munn expecting first child with John Mulaney

    Olivia Munn expecting first child with John Mulaney

    Actor Olivia Munn and her beau John Mulaney are all set to embrace parenthood for the first time together. According to E! News, during a visit to Late Night With Seth Meyers show on Tuesday, John confirmed that Olivia is pregnant with the couple’s first child. “In the spring, I went to Los Angeles and met and started to date a wonderful woman named Olivia–Olivia Munn. I got into this relationship that’s been really beautiful,” John told host Seth Meyers. John also recalled how Olivia held his hand throughout his recovery process amid addiction issues. “She’s held my hand through that hell, and we are having a baby together. I’m going to be a dad. We’re both really, really happy,” he said.

  • Kartik loses his voice during shoot of Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2 climax

    The shooting of Anees Bazmee’s comedy-horror Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2 has turned out to be far more adventurous than was expected. Firstly the pandemic put a brake on the shooting for an entire year. Now during the shooting of the climax of the film Kartik Aaryan lost his voice.

    As the shocking news spread across the country, I tried to find out the veracity of the incident.

    A source from the film’s core crew confided, “Tabu and Kartik Aaryan were shooting the climax of Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2. It is a massive undertaking, with lots of drama and action and Kartik had an insane amount of screaming and shouting to do. At the end of it, Kartik just lost his voice. It was frightening. We all panicked.”

    Medical assistance was immediately summoned. Everyone breathed a sigh of relief when the doctors assured Kartik his voice needed some rest, nothing more serious.

  • The Matrix Resurrections trailer: Priyanka sends Keanu after white rabbits

    The first trailer for The Matrix Resurrections is out. The fourth film in the Matrix franchise marks the return of Keanu Reeves as Neo. The film also stars Carrie-Anne Moss as Trinity, Priyanka Chopra, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, and Jada Pinkett Smith, among others.

    The action-packed trailer, set the tune of White Rabbit, opens with Neo having no memory of his past. However, he has glimpses of the life in the Matrix. As the trailer opens, he crosses paths with some old and some new characters, one of whom is played by Priyanka Chopra. The actor, wearing a huge pair of glasses, appears to be seated in a coffee shop and is waiting for Neo to arrive.

    Ahead of the trailer release, Warner Bros resurrected the old Matrix website and offered fans titbits of information about the new film. Users were given the option to choose between the red and the blue pill. Based on their choice and the time of the day, they were shown glimpses from the movie. According to Entertainment Weekly, more than 180,000 video variations, with narrations from each cast member was featured as part of the tease.

    Priyanka had filmed for her role last year in Berlin. Although the actor hasn’t revealed details about her part in the film, she wrote in a social media post that she is simply a small fish in a large pond.

    Directed by Lana and Lilly Wachowsky, the first Matrix film released in 1999. It was followed by The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions in 2003. The Matrix Resurrections, which is solely directed by Lana, is set to release on December 22.

  • Emergency landing facility for Indian Air Force inaugurated in Barmer

    Emergency landing facility for Indian Air Force inaugurated in Barmer

    Jaipur (TIP): Defense Minister Rajnath Singh and Union Minister for Surface Transport & Highways Nitin Gadkari jointly inaugurated an emergency landing facility (ELF) for the Indian Air Force (IAF) at Satta-Gandhav stretch on NH-925A near Barmer district of Rajasthan on September 9, Thursday. The two ministers travelled to Barmer on C-130J aircraft to inaugurate the facility.

    This is the first time that a National Highway has been used for emergency landing of aircraft of Indian Air Force. This landing strip will be able to facilitate landing of all types of IAF aircraft.  The strip is 3.5 km long and 33 meter wide on the national highway in Barmer-Jalore districts (NH-925A) that is readied to meet any emergency landing of IAF fighter jets, Sukhoi, Hercules and other aircraft.

    Speaking after witnessing the aircraft operations, Rajnath Singh said EFL near the International border was a shining example of the government’s commitment to protect the unity and sovereignty of the nation.

    “This highway and landing field will further cement the basic infrastructure along the western border and strengthen national security. Such emergency fields will provide more edge to the operational and civil assistance of our forces. It will also play a crucial role in facing natural calamities,” Defense Minister said.

    Singh commended the Armed Forces for displaying the same level of courage, dedication and promptness during natural calamities as they show when they face their adversaries. He lauded the Indian Air Force for playing a central role in dealing with the situation arising out of the COVID-19 pandemic. He also lauded the Indian Air Force for playing a central role in dealing with the situation arising out of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Referring to the Cabinet’s approval to procurement of 56 C-295MW transport aircraft for Indian Air Force, Singh said the decision was a big step towards ‘Aatmanirbhar Bharat’ as envisioned by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as the aircraft would be manufactured under the ‘Make in India’ initiative.

    Singh further hailed the IAF, NHAI & the private sector for joining hands and completing the construction of Emergency Landing Field in 19 months despite COVID-19 restrictions. It is a great example of coordination among multiple departments & Ministries; Government & private sector and Civil & Defence.

    Union Minister for Jal Shakti Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, Chief of Defense Staff General Bipin Rawat, Chief of Air Staff Air Chief Marshal RKS Bhadauria, Secretary, Department of Defence R&D & Chairman, Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) Dr G Satheesh Reddy and other senior central & state government officials were present during the inauguration of the Emergency Landing Facility.

    About ELF

    The NHAI has developed the three-kilometer section as an ELF for Indian Air Force. It is part of the newly-developed two-lane paved shoulder of Gagariya-Bakhasar & Satta-Gandhav Section having total length of 196.97 kilometres and costing Rs 765.52 crore under Bharatmala Pariyojana. The work commenced in July 2019 and was completed in January 2021.

    This project will improve connectivity between villages of Barmer & Jalore districts located on the international border. The stretch located in the western border area will facilitate the vigilance of the Indian Army and strengthen the basic infrastructure of the country. During normal time, the ELF will be used for smooth flow of road traffic.

    Apart from the Emergency Landing Strip, three helipads have been constructed in Kundanpura, Singhania & Bakhasar villages under this project as per the requirements of the Armed Forces.

  • The hunt for Osama bin Laden

    The hunt for Osama bin Laden

    In September 2001 President Bush announced that he wanted Osama bin Laden captured—dead or alive—and a $25 million bounty was eventually issued for information leading to the killing or capture of bin Laden. Bin Laden evaded capture, however, including in December 2001, when he was tracked by U.S. forces to the mountains of Tora Bora in eastern Afghanistan. Bin Laden’s trail subsequently went cold, and he was thought to be living somewhere in the Afghanistan-Pakistan tribal regions.

    U.S. intelligence eventually located him in Pakistan, living in the garrison city of Abbottabad, and in the early morning hours of May 2, 2011, on orders from U.S. Pres. Barack Obama, a small team of U.S. Navy SEALs assaulted his compound and shot and killed the al-Qaeda leader.

    One World Trade Center and the National September 11 Memorial and Museum

    The physical and symbolic void left by the destruction of the Twin Towers was filled on November 3, 2014, with the opening of One World Trade Center, a 1,776-foot (541.3-metre) skyscraper, which instantly became a dramatic new landmark on the Manhattan skyline. Adjacent to One World Trade Center are the National September 11 Memorial and Museum (completed in 2011 and 2014, respectively). Within the 8-acre (3.2-hectare) memorial plaza, twin 1-acre (0.4-hectare) reflecting pools occupy the footprints of the Twin Towers. The pools feature the largest man-made waterfalls in North America and are edged by bronze panels inscribed with the names of the victims of the September 11 attacks as well as the names of the six people who died as a result of the truck bombing of the World Trade Center in February 1993. Among more than 400 trees in the grove that surrounds the pools is the “Survivor Tree,” a Callery pear tree that was discovered badly damaged at Ground Zero, removed and nursed back to health, and then returned to the site in 2010. The memorial and plaza were designed by architects Michael Arad and Peter Walker, winners of a design competition that featured 5,201 submissions from 63 countries.

    The museum includes a glass-encased pavilion with an atrium that features two 80-foot (24-metre) trident-shaped steel columns that were part of the facade of the North Tower. The museum’s Memorial Hall is adorned with 2,983 tiles (representing the victims of the September 2001 and February 1993 attacks), each one a blue watercolour with which artist Spencer Finch attempted to capture the colour of the sky on the day of the September 11 attacks. At the centre of the tiles is a quote from Virgil’s Aeneid:

    “No day shall erase you from the memory of time.”

    The museum’s Foundation Hall is a high-ceilinged, nearly 15,000-square-foot (1,400-square-metre) room that encompasses part of a surviving retaining wall of the World Trade Center and displays the “Last Column,” a 36-foot (11-metre) steel beam to which workers and others attached messages and posters during Ground Zero cleanup operations. The international impact of the September 11 attacks is demonstrated along the ramp that descends into the museum by a multimedia exhibit featuring recorded reminiscences by people from 43 countries in 28 languages.

    9/11: Lessons for America

    September 11, 2021 marks the 20 years of 9/11 terror attacks in America. The image of two passenger planes flying into the twin towers of the World Trade Center is permanently etched on public memory. This was, however, not the first time that the World Trade Center was under attack from terrorists.

    In 1993, a suicide bomber had driven a truck to the World Trade Center in New York but it did not bring down the towers. Six people had died back then.

    In 2001, the World Trade Center was also not the only target to have been hit by the terrorists – 19 of them belonging to al Qaeda. Four passenger planes had taken off from different airports in the US with three pre-decided targets. Two planes hit the New York buildings.

    Third one hit Pentagon, the headquarters of the US Department of Defence and caused little damage to the building. The fourth had a bigger target – the Capitol Hill, the seat of US government in Washington DC.

    The passengers of the United Airlines flight showed remarkable sense of courage and willingness to sacrifice their lives to protect the US. They challenged the terrorists and thwarted their attempt to take the flight to Washington DC. It crashed into an open field in neighbouring Pennsylvania.

    For that one day on September 9, 2001, terror seemed to have become the master of the world. There was panic in every country. This was the first time that the US had been attacked by an outside force since 1941 when Japan targeted Pearl Harbour in the Hawaii Islands and the first ever on the mainland America since the Revolutionary War of 18th century.

    The terror attack taught several lessons not only to the US but the whole world. These lessons could be summarised as ahead.

    No country is invulnerable

    The audacity and the meticulous planning by Al Qaeda exposed the vulnerability of the security establishment of all the countries of the world. No country could now be seen as invulnerable.

    For long, terror attacks in India from Paskistan-based groups were treated by the international community as localised affair arising out of the long-held animosity between India and Pakistan and religious bigotry in the two countries.

    The 9/11 attacks shattered that myth. For the first time, the world learnt this lesson that terrorism is a policy of some state and groups aspiring to acquire political powers by stoking religious fundamentalism.

    Policing is key

    Policing is key to stop any crime including terrorism. Policing is, by the way, not only done by the police forces but all the vigilance agencies. A few days after the 9/11 attacks emerged videos showing hijackers of the plane that crashed on to the Pentagon were being screened at Washington’s Dulles airport.

    The security person is seen in the video doing just a routine job of screening the hijackers, two of whom were on an anti-terrorism watch list and one person had no photo-ID. Still they all were given clearance to board the plane. This happened in the US, which was known to frisk even high and mighty from the other countries.

    Had the policing been done efficiently, the plot might have been exposed or at least one target could have been saved and terrorists caught alive. Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar, now the UN-designated terrorist, had been arrested in Kashmir in 1994 due to simplest of policing.

    Intelligence info should not be ignored

    Most powerful countries or the ones aspiring to be powerful boast of their robust intelligence gathering. The Central Intelligence Agency of the US is the most powerful and resourceful of them all. The CIA had picked up definite intelligence about an “imminent” terrorist attack on the US soil.

    Reports suggest that the CIA had sent its report to Condoleezza Rice, then national security advisor to US President George Bush, apparently several months before the 9/11 attacks happened. The CIA intelligence was specific that al Qaeda was planning “multiple” and “spectacular” attacks in the US in immediate future.

    Similar warnings have reached the White House of George Bush but the state agencies largely ignored them, considering “usual reports” from the ground operative with no “actionable intelligence”. This proved massively fatal. The lesson learnt was that intelligence of terror plots cannot be taken lightly irrespective of the number of reports ground operatives send.

    Terrorism follows money

    In every single case of terror attack, money has been involved. In 9/11 attacks, money flowed through international agencies but the authorities ignored it.

    Probe into the 9/11 attacks revealed that money was sent to terrorists who hijacked the planes from overseas. The hijackers, in turn, sent money to United Arab Emirates in four batches only three days before they stunned the world.

    All the four payments were made through Western Union but the company or the security agencies fail to notice the transactions, which were suspicious in nature in the backdrop of intelligence inputs.

    The agencies have become more alert and money laundering laws in most countries have been tightened. Still, some safe havens for money laundering are in play and they can play perfect foil to future terror plots. A country can forget this lesson from the 9/11 attacks only on its own peril.

    Political instability

    breeds terror

    Political instability or infighting could be a breeding ground for terrorism. This is a disguised yet very important lesson from the 9/11 terror attacks. It acts both ways – political instability in the source country (e.g. Pakistan, Afghanistan) and a target country (e.g. the US, India).

    The US witnessed an unusual political instability in the months and years before the 9/11 attacks. Then US President Bill Clinton survived impeachment after the House of Representative voted to commence the proceedings. The motion fell in the Senate.

    This had followed a sexual harassment case against Bill Clinton by a former Arkansas state employee Paula Jones. This case brought to light another massive scandal involving Bill Clinton and a White House intern Monica Lewinsky.

    The political infighting at that time in the US was unseen for decades. When presidential election happened in 2000, it remained unresolved for 41 days. The US was living a political mistrust. Ten months later, coordination among the government machinery failed and terrorists succeeded in killing 2,977 people in one swoop.

    Fight against terror is not over

    That the fight against terrorism is far from over is a lesson that is not lost on any country except for those sponsoring terror and hobnobbing with terror masters. The US is fighting to destroy terror infrastructure and groups in the Middle East and Afghanistan.

    India is fighting its own battle against Pakistan-backed terrorism. According to Global Terrorism Index, 77 countries witnessed acts of terror in 2017. This number is only half the story as only three years ago in 2014, there were 106 countries as victims of terrorism.

    Clearly, the lesson from 9/11 attacks that the world cannot afford to forget is that the national and global security agencies cannot lower their guard at any point of time in their fight against terrorism. These agencies need to be foolproof every single time while terrorists need just one loophole to succeed and kill humanity.

  • India in history this Week -September 10 to September 16, 2021

    11 SEPTEMBER

    1895       Birth of freedom fighter fighter, social activist and famous Gandhian leader Vinoba Bhave.

    1906       Mahatma Gandhi named the first non-violence movement in South Africa as ‘Satyagraha’.

    1961       World Wildlife Fund was established.

    1965       During the Indo-Pakistan War, the Indian Army captured the city of Burki near South East Lahore.

    1996       First time elected a female president in Commonwealth Parliamentary Union

    2006       Eminent Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen demanded Indian citizenship.

    1911       Birth of cricketer Lala Amarnath, who scored India’s first century in international cricket.

    2009       Moninder Singh Pandher, an accused in the Nithari case, was acquitted by the High Court of Allahabad in one of the 19 cases in the Ripa Haldar case. The Supreme Court stayed the construction of the Kanshi Ram memorial site.

    12 SEPTEMBER

    1931       Mahatma Gandhi arrived in London to attend the Round Table Conference.

    1966       Indian swimmer Mihir Sen swam across the Dardanless Strait.

    2008       Sahara India Investment Corporation closed its non-banking financial business.

    1912       The birth of Feroze Gandhi, a famous freedom fighter and influential member of the Lok Sabha.

    1922       Renowned litterateur Chandradhar Sharma Guleri passed away.

    2009       The Indian women’s team defeated America 3–1 in the final round at the World Chess Championship, finishing seventh.

    13 SEPTEMBER

    1947       Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru suggested mutual transfer of 40 lakh Hindus and Muslims.

    1929       Jatin Das died after 63 days of hunger strike in Lahore jail.

    1971       The World Hockey Association was formed.

    1977       The first diesel automobile was introduced by General Motors.

    2000       India’s top chess player Vishwanathan Anand won the first FIDE Chess World Cup in Shenyang.

    2008       Four bomb blasts occurred one after another at three places in Delhi, killing 30 people and injuring more than 130.

    1948       Deputy Prime Minister Vallabhbhai Patel ordered the army to enter Hyderabad and take action and integrate it with the Indian Union.

    2006       The first summit of IBSA (India-Brazil-South Africa Trilateral Organization) begins in Brasilia, the capital of Brazil.

    2009       ISRO-NASA’s campaign to find ice on the moon failed.

    2009       Charles Dias of Kochi was nominated as the representative of the Anglo Indian community in the Lok Sabha.

    1845       Indian Cotton Congress President Henry Cotton was born.

    1926       India’s revolutionary woman Nagendra Bala was born.

    1929       India’s famous revolutionary Jatindranath Das died.

    14 SEPTEMBER

    1803       British general Lord Lake captured Delhi during the Second Anglo-Maratha War.

    1949       The Constituent Assembly adopted Hindi as the official language of India. Since 1953, 14 September is celebrated every year throughout India as Hindi Day.

    1947       The famous poet Chandra Kunwar Bertwal died as Kalidas of Hindi.

    2009       India won the Compaq Cup of the tri-series by defeating Sri Lanka by 46 runs.

    1923       Birth of eminent serialist and former Union Law Minister Ram Jethmalani.

    1985       Renowned composer of Hindi cinema, Ramakrishna Shinde, passed away.

    15 SEPTEMBER

    1860       M Visvesvaraya, considered India’s greatest engineer, was born. It is celebrated as Engineers Day in the country.

    1948       The first flag of independent India INS-Delhi reached the port of Bombay (now Mumbai).

    1958       The deadly disease trachoma virus was first discovered in medical science.

    1959       India’s national broadcasting service Doordarshan started in Delhi for the first time.

    2004        ‘Woman of the Year’ award to British citizen Gurinder Chadha.

    1931       Gandhi-Irwin Pact.

    1909       Famous Tamil Nadu leader and former Chief Minister C.N. Birth of Annadurai.

    1939       Birth of Subramanian Swamy for Indian Economist, Educational, and Politician, Law Minister and Justice India.

    1946       Jokin Arputham, a man who struggled for the slums of Mumbai, was born.

    16 SEPTEMBER

    1916       Classical singer and actress MS awarded Bharat Ratna, the country’s largest civilian honor. Subbalakshmi was born.

    2008       The employees of Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited (BHEL) were awarded the Vishwakarma Award.

    2009       The Incredible Bharat Vigyan Abhiyan, presenting India as an outstanding tourist destination to the world, received the British Award.

    1882       Freedom fighter Balwant Singh was born.

    2017       The most senior of the Indian Air Force and the only Marshal to reach the five-star rank, Arjan Singh died.

    1965       Indian soldier AB Tarapore, awarded with Paramveer Chakra,  died.

     

  • Active Covid cases in India decline to 3,90,646

    Active Covid cases in India decline to 3,90,646

    New Delhi (TIP): India logged 34,973 new coronavirus infections taking the total tally of Covid cases to 3,31,74,954, while the active cases declined to 3,90,646, according to the Union Health Ministry data updated on Friday, September 10.

    The death toll climbed to 4,42,009 with 260 fresh fatalities, according to the data updated at 8 am.

    The active cases comprise 1.18 per cent of the total infections, while the national Covid recovery rate was recorded at 97.49 per cent, the ministry said.

    A reduction of 2,968 cases has been recorded in the active Covid caseload in a span of 24 hours.

    As many as 17,87,611 tests were conducted on Thursday taking the total cumulative tests conducted so far for detection of Covid in the country to 53,86,04,854.

    The daily positivity rate was recorded at 1.96 per cent. It has been less than three per cent for last 11 days. The weekly positivity rate was recorded at 2.31 per cent. It has been below three per cent for the last 77 days, according to the ministry.

    The number of people who have recuperated from the disease surged to 3,23,42,299, while the case fatality rate was recorded at 1.33 per cent.

    The cumulative doses administered in the country so far under the nationwide vaccination drive have exceeded 72.37 crore.

    The 260 new fatalities include 125 from Kerala and 55 from Maharashtra.

    Maharashtra has reconciled the data leading to a decrease in total number of cases and discharges as compared to Thursday. A total of 4,42,009 deaths have been reported so far in the country, including 1,38,017 from Maharashtra, 37,462 from Karnataka, 35,094 from Tamil Nadu, 25,083 from Delhi, 22,863 from Uttar Pradesh, 22,126  from Kerala and 18,539 from West Bengal.

    ICMR: 2 doses give 97.5% protection against death

    Two Covid vaccine doses offer near-total protection against death and even one dose is more than 96 per cent effective in averting fatality, the first government analysis of vaccine efficacy among the inoculated population has shown.

    The Indian Council of Medical Research’s (ICMR) vaccine effectiveness study conducted between April 18 and August 15 this year found that vaccines were preventing serious disease and death. It also revealed a high rate of mortality among the non-vaccinated.

    “We synergised the data from several sources, including CoWIN, and found vaccine effectiveness in preventing mortality with one dose to be 96.6 per cent and with two doses 97.5 per cent,” ICMR chief Balram Bhargava said.

    “Reinfections and breakthrough infections are under analysis. We first looked at deaths, which is what most people are interested in and vaccines are definitively averting serious disease and death,” the ICMR DG said. As of today, India has administered over 72 crore doses with 58 per cent people above 18 years covered with one dose while the two-dose coverage is a little over 16 per cent.         Source: PTI

  • ‘No mafia will get party ticket’: BSP drops Mukhtar Ansari, to field Bheem Rajbhar from Mau

    New Delhi (TIP): Bahujan Samaj Party chief Mayawati Friday, Sept 9,  attempted an image makeover for her party as she announced that it would not field bahubalis (strongmen) or mafia members in the 2022 Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections and dumped Mau MLA Mukhtar Ansari, the jailed gangster-turned-politician, as a poll candidate. Mayawati said the party will instead field state chief Bheem Rajbhar from the constituency. Rajbhar had lost to Ansari, then an Independent, from Mau in 2012.

    Just hours after the announcement, the All India Majlis-e-Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen (AIMIM) opened a door for Ansari, currently incarcerated in Banda district jail on the charges of criminal intimidation and extortion. The AIMIM state chief Shaukat Ali said if Ansari approaches the party, it would give him a ticket and induct him. “The cases lodged against him are under trial. BSP used him and threw,” Ali said.

    Mayawati, meanwhile, said the BSP has resolved to put in place the rule of law in Uttar Pradesh to change the state’s image. The former chief minister said in a series of tweets that she has asked party leaders to keep that resolution in mind while short-listing candidates. “In upcoming assembly polls, the BSP’s effort will be to not field ‘bahubali’ and mafia elements. So, the name of Bhim Rajbhar, the BSP UP president, has been finalised from the Mau assembly seat in place of Mukhtar Ansari,” she said in a tweet in Hindi. Ansari has had an on-again-off-again relationship with the BSP over the years, getting expelled and reinducted multiple times. He was elected the MLA from Mau in 1996 on a BSP ticket. In the next two assembly polls in 2002 and 2007, he won from the same seat as an Independent candidate.

    Before the 2009 Lok Sabha polls, Ansari rejoined BSP but the party fielded him from Varanasi, where he lost to BJP veteran Murli Manohar Joshi. In April 2010, Mayawati expelled Ansari from the party citing his alleged involvement in criminal activities. Mukhtar’s brother Afzal Ansari was also removed. Ansari then floated his own political outfit, Quami Ekta Dal (QED), and was again elected from Mau in 2012. Ansari’s family again returned to the BSP in 2017 after Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav denied a merger of QED with his party.

  • RSS leaders’ books in varsity syllabus fan row

    Thiruvananthapuram (TIP): The Kannur University on Friday set up an external panel to review the inclusion of books authored by prominent Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) ideologues in one of its postgraduate courses, in view of protests by several student unions against the varsity’s alleged attempts to saffronise the academic syllabus.

    The books, written by RSS ideologues VD Savarkar, MS Golwalkar and Deendayal Upadhyaya, are among 30 others included in the third semester of the public administration course at Government Brennen College in Thalassery.

    Extracts of ‘Savarkar’s Hindutva: Who is a Hindu?’, Golwarkar’s ‘We or Our Nationhood Defined’, Upadhyaya’s ‘Integral Humanism’ and Balraj Madhok’s ‘Indianisation, What, Why and How’ are among those included in the syllabus.

    According to news agency PTI, vice-chancellor Gopinath Ravindran said a two-member committee, comprising experts outside the varsity, was directed to submit its report within five days, after which decision on the syllabus will be taken.

    “The saffronisation allegation is completely baseless. If you raise such allegations against Kannur University, you can raise similar charges against Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi also. V D Savarkar is included in the syllabus of JNU also,” he told the media.

    Members of various student unions burnt copies of the books on Thursday, prompting state higher education minister R Bindhu to seek a report from the V-C. “This is a sensitive issue. I have sought details from the V-C. I feel that such content is not good,” Bindhu said.

  • Punjab to send unvaccinated govt employees on compulsory leave

    Punjab on Friday, Sept 9,  announced that government employees without even one Covid-19 jab for any non-medical reasons will be compulsorily sent on leave after September 15, becoming the latest in a handful of states to attempt a mandatory vaccine mandate.

    A government statement said chief minister Amarinder Singh took the “strong measure” to protect the people of the state and ensure that vaccinated people do not pay the price for continued vaccine hesitancy.

    “Special efforts are taken to reach out to government employees, and those who continue to avoid getting vaccinated will now be asked to go on leave till they get the first dose,” the chief minister said at a a high-level virtual Covid review meeting.

    Till Friday, Punjab had administered nearly 15.9 million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine, of which 12,039,477 were first shots and 3,826,637 were second. This translates to roughly 53% of the state’s adult population having received at least one shot of the vaccine, which puts Punjab among the bottom 10 of India’s states.

  • Nearly 73 crore vaccine doses administered in India so far

    Nearly 73 crore vaccine doses have been administered in the country so far, the Union Health Ministry said on Friday, September 9.

    According to a provisional report, more than 56 lakh vaccine doses have been administered till 7 pm on Friday.

    The daily vaccination tally is expected to increase with the compilation of the final reports for the day by late in the night, the ministry said.

    The vaccination exercise as a tool to protect the most vulnerable population groups in the country from Covid-19 continues to be regularly reviewed and monitored at the highest level, the health ministry said.

  • 9/11: 20 years of the tragedy

    9/11: 20 years of the tragedy

    In the worst terrorist attack ever against the United States, hijackers struck at the preeminent symbols of the nation’s wealth and might, flying airliners into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and killing or injuring thousands of people.

    September 11 attacks, also called 9/11 attacks, series of airline hijackings and suicide attacks committed in 2001 by 19 militants associated with the Islamic extremist group al-Qaeda against targets in the United States, the deadliest terrorist attacks on American soil in U.S. history.

    The attacks against New York City and Washington, D.C., caused extensive death and destruction and triggered an enormous U.S. effort to combat terrorism. Some 2,750 people were killed in New York, 184 at the Pentagon, and 40 in Pennsylvania (where one of the hijacked planes crashed after the passengers attempted to retake the plane); all 19 terrorists died. Police and fire departments in New York were especially hard-hit: hundreds had rushed to the scene of the attacks, and more than 400 police officers and firefighters were killed.

    The plot

    The September 11 attacks were precipitated in large part because Osama bin Laden, the leader of the militant Islamic organization al-Qaeda, held naive beliefs about the United States in the run-up to the attacks. Abu Walid al-Masri, an Egyptian who was a bin Laden associate in Afghanistan in the 1980s and ’90s, explained that, in the years prior to the attacks, bin Laden became increasingly convinced that America was weak. “He believed that the United States was much weaker than some of those around him thought,” Masri remembered, and “as evidence he referred to what happened to the United States in Beirut when the bombing of the Marines base led them to flee from Lebanon,” referring to the destruction of the marine barracks there in 1983, which killed 241 American servicemen. Bin Laden believed that the United States was a “paper tiger,” a belief shaped not just by America’s departure from Lebanon following the marine barracks bombing but also by the withdrawal of American forces from Somalia in 1993, following the deaths of 18 U.S. servicemen in Mogadishu, and the American pullout from Vietnam in the 1970s.

    The key operational planner of the September 11 attacks was Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (often referred to simply as “KSM” in the later 9/11 Commission Report and in the media), who had spent his youth in Kuwait. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed became active in the Muslim Brotherhood, which he joined at age 16, and then he went to the United States to attend college, receiving a degree from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in 1986. Afterward he traveled to Pakistan and then Afghanistan to wage jihad against the Soviet Union, which had launched an invasion against Afghanistan in 1979.

    According to Yosri Fouda, a journalist at the Arabic-language cable television channel Al Jazeera who interviewed him in 2002, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed planned to blow up some dozen American planes in Asia during the mid-1990s, a plot (known as “Bojinka”) that failed, “but the dream of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed never faded. And I think by putting his hand in the hands of bin Laden, he realized that now he stood a chance of bringing about his long awaited dream.”

    In 1996 Khalid Sheikh Mohammed met bin Laden in Tora Bora, Afghanistan. The 9-11 Commission (formally the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States), set up in 2002 by Pres. George W. Bush and the U.S. Congress to investigate the attacks of 2001, explained that it was then that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed “presented a proposal for an operation that would involve training pilots who would crash planes into buildings in the United States.” Khalid Sheikh Mohammed dreamed up the tactical innovation of using hijacked planes to attack the United States, al-Qaeda provided the personnel, money, and logistical support to execute the operation, and bin Laden wove the attacks on New York and Washington into a larger strategic framework of attacking the “far enemy”—the United States—in order to bring about regime change across the Middle East.

    The September 11 plot demonstrated that al-Qaeda was an organization of global reach. The plot played out across the globe with planning meetings in Malaysia, operatives taking flight lessons in the United States, coordination by plot leaders based in Hamburg, Germany, money transfers from Dubai, and recruitment of suicide operatives from countries around the Middle East—all activities that were ultimately overseen by al-Qaeda’s leaders in Afghanistan.

    Key parts of the September 11 plot took shape in Hamburg. Four of the key pilots and planners in the “Hamburg cell” who would take operational control of the September 11 attacks, including the lead hijacker Mohammed Atta, had a chance meeting on a train in Germany in 1999 with an Islamist militant who struck up a conversation with them about fighting jihad in the Russian republic of Chechnya. The militant put the Hamburg cell in touch with an al-Qaeda operative living in Germany who explained that it was difficult to get to Chechnya at that time because many travelers were being detained in Georgia. He recommended they go to Afghanistan instead.

    Although Afghanistan was critical to the rise of al-Qaeda, it was the experience that some of the plotters acquired in the West that made them simultaneously more zealous and better equipped to carry out the attacks. Three of the four plotters who would pilot the hijacked planes on September 11 and one of the key planners, Ramzi Binalshibh, became more radical while living in Hamburg. Some combination of perceived or real discrimination, alienation, and homesickness seems to have turned them all in a more militant direction. Increasingly cutting themselves off from the outside world, they gradually radicalized each other, and eventually the friends decided to wage battle in bin Laden’s global jihad, setting off for Afghanistan in 1999 in search of al-Qaeda.

    Atta and the other members of the Hamburg group arrived in Afghanistan in 1999 right at the moment that the September 11 plot was beginning to take shape. Bin Laden and his military commander Muhammad Atef realized that Atta and his fellow Western-educated jihadists were far better suited to lead the attacks on Washington and New York than the men they had already recruited, leading bin Laden to appoint Atta to head the operation.

    The hijackers, most of whom were from Saudi Arabia, established themselves in the United States, many well in advance of the attacks. They traveled in small groups, and some of them received commercial flight training.

    Throughout his stay in the United States, Atta kept Binalshibh updated on the plot’s progress via e-mail. To cloak his activities, Atta wrote the messages as if he were writing to his girlfriend “Jenny,” using innocuous code to inform Binalshibh that they were almost complete in their training and readiness for the attacks. Atta wrote in one message, “The first semester commences in three weeks…Nineteen certificates for private education and four exams.” The referenced 19 “certificates” were code that identified the 19 al-Qaeda hijackers, while the four “exams” identified the targets of the attacks.

    In the early morning of August 29, 2001, Atta called Binalshibh and said he had a riddle that he was trying to solve: “Two sticks, a dash and a cake with a stick down—what is it?” After considering the question, Binalshibh realized that Atta was telling him that the attacks would occur in two weeks—the two sticks being the number 11 and the cake with a stick down a 9. Putting it together, it meant that the attacks would occur on 11-9, or 11 September (in most countries the day precedes the month in numeric dates, but in the United States the month precedes the day; hence, it was 9-11 in the United States). On September 5 Binalshibh left Germany for Pakistan. Once there he sent a messenger to Afghanistan to inform bin Laden about both the day of the attack and its scope.

    The attacks

    On September 11, 2001, groups of attackers boarded four domestic aircraft at three East Coast airports, and soon after takeoff they disabled the crews, some of whom may have been stabbed with box cutters the hijackers were secreting. The hijackers then took control of the aircraft, all large and bound for the West Coast with full loads of fuel. At 8:46 AM the first plane, American Airlines flight 11, which had originated from Boston, was piloted into the north tower of the World Trade Center in New York City. Most observers construed this initially to be an accident involving a small commuter plane. The second plane, United Airlines flight 175, also from Boston, struck the south tower 17 minutes later. At this point there was no doubt that the United States was under attack. Each structure was badly damaged by the impact and erupted into flames. Office workers who were trapped above the points of impact in some cases leapt to their deaths rather than face the infernos now raging inside the towers. The third plane, American Airlines flight 77, taking off from Dulles Airport near Washington, D.C., struck the southwest side of the Pentagon (just outside the city) at 9:37 AM, touching off a fire in that section of the structure. Minutes later the Federal Aviation Authority ordered a nationwide ground stop, and within the next hour (at 10:03 AM) the fourth aircraft, United Airlines flight 93 from Newark, New Jersey, crashed near Shanksville in the Pennsylvania countryside after its passengers—informed of events via cellular phone—attempted to overpower their assailants.

    At 9:59 AM the World Trade Center’s heavily damaged south tower collapsed, and the north tower fell 29 minutes later. Clouds of smoke and debris quickly filled the streets of Lower Manhattan. Office workers and residents ran in panic as they tried to outpace the billowing debris clouds. A number of other buildings adjacent to the twin towers suffered serious damage, and several subsequently fell. Fires at the World Trade Center site smoldered for more than three months.

    Rescue operations began almost immediately as the country and the world sought to come to grips with the enormity of the losses. Nearly 3,000 people had perished: some 2,750 people in New York, 184 at the Pentagon, and 40 in Pennsylvania; all 19 terrorists also died. Included in the total in New York City were more than 400 police officers and firefighters, who had lost their lives after rushing to the scene and into the towers.

    On the morning of September 11, President Bush had been visiting a second-grade classroom in Sarasota, Florida, when he was informed that a plane had flown into the World Trade Center. A little later Andrew Card, his chief of staff, whispered in the president’s right ear: “A second plane hit the second tower. America is under attack.” To keep the president out of harm’s way, Bush subsequently hopscotched across the country on Air Force One, landing in Washington, D.C., the evening of the attacks. At 8:30 PM Bush addressed the nation from the Oval Office in a speech that laid out a key doctrine of his administration’s future foreign policy: “We will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbor them.”

    On September 14 Bush visited “Ground Zero,” the smoking pile of debris of what remained of the World Trade Center and the thousands who had perished there. Standing on top of a wrecked fire truck, Bush grabbed a bullhorn to address the rescue workers working feverishly to find any survivors. When one of the workers said that he could not hear what the president was saying, Bush made one of the most memorable remarks of his presidency:

    Bush’s robust response to the attacks drove his poll ratings from 55 percent favourable before September 11 to 90 percent in the days after, the highest ever recorded for a president.

    The aftermath

    The emotional distress caused by the attacks—particularly the collapse of the twin towers, New York City’s most visible landmark—was overwhelming. Unlike the relatively isolated site of the Pearl Harbor attack of 1941, to which the September 11 events were soon compared, the World Trade Center lay at the heart of one of the world’s largest cities. Hundreds of thousands of people witnessed the attacks firsthand (many onlookers photographed events or recorded them with video cameras), and millions watched the tragedy unfold live on television. In the days that followed September 11, the footage of the attacks was replayed in the media countless times, as were the scenes of throngs of people, stricken with grief, gathering at “Ground Zero”—as the site where the towers once stood came to be commonly known—some with photos of missing loved ones, seeking some hint of their fate.

    Moreover, world markets were badly shaken. The towers were at the heart of New York’s financial district, and damage to Lower Manhattan’s infrastructure, combined with fears of stock market panic, kept New York markets closed for four trading days. Markets afterward suffered record losses. The attacks also stranded tens of thousands of people throughout the United States, as U.S. airspace remained closed for commercial aviation until September 13, and normal service, with more rigid security measures, did not resume for several days.

    The September 11 attacks were an enormous tactical success for al-Qaeda. The strikes were well coordinated and hit multiple targets in the heart of the enemy, and the attacks were magnified by being broadcast around the world to an audience of untold millions. The September 11 “propaganda of the deed” took place in the media capital of the world, which ensured the widest possible coverage of the event. Not since television viewers had watched the abduction and murder of Israeli athletes during the Munich Olympics in 1972 had a massive global audience witnessed a terrorist attack unfold in real time. If al-Qaeda had been a largely unknown organization before September 11, in the days after it became a household name.

    After the attacks of September 11, countries allied with the United States rallied to its support, perhaps best symbolized by the French newspaper Le Monde’s headline, “We are all Americans now.” Even in Iran thousands gathered in the capital, Tehran, for a candlelight vigil.

    Evidence gathered by the United States soon convinced most governments that the Islamic militant group al-Qaeda was responsible for the attacks. The group had been implicated in previous terrorist strikes against Americans, and bin Laden had made numerous anti-American statements. Al-Qaeda was headquartered in Afghanistan and had forged a close relationship with that country’s ruling Taliban militia, which subsequently refused U.S. demands to extradite bin Laden and to terminate al-Qaeda activity there.

    For the first time in its history, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) invoked Article 5, allowing its members to respond collectively in self-defense, and on October 7 the U.S. and allied military forces launched an attack against Afghanistan. Within months thousands of militants were killed or captured, and Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders were driven into hiding. In addition, the U.S. government exerted great effort to track down other al-Qaeda agents and sympathizers throughout the world and made combating terrorism the focus of U.S. foreign policy. Meanwhile, security measures within the United States were tightened considerably at such places as airports, government buildings, and sports venues. To help facilitate the domestic response, Congress quickly passed the USA PATRIOT Act (the Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001), which significantly but temporarily expanded the search and surveillance powers of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and other law-enforcement agencies. Additionally, a cabinet-level Department of Homeland Security was established.

    Despite their success in causing widespread destruction and death, the September 11 attacks were a strategic failure for al-Qaeda. Following September 11, al-Qaeda—whose name in Arabic means “the base”—lost the best base it ever had in Afghanistan. Later some in al-Qaeda’s leadership—including those who, like Egyptian Saif al-Adel, had initially opposed the attacks—tried to spin the Western intervention in Afghanistan as a victory for al-Qaeda. Al-Adel, one of the group’s military commanders, explained in an interview four years later that the strikes on New York and Washington were part of a far-reaching and visionary plan to provoke the United States into some ill-advised actions.

    But there is not a shred of evidence that in the weeks before September 11 al-Qaeda’s leaders made any plans for an American invasion of Afghanistan. Instead, they prepared only for possible U.S. cruise missile attacks or air strikes by evacuating their training camps. Also, the overthrow of the Taliban hardly constituted an American “mistake”—the first and only regime in the modern Muslim world that ruled according to al-Qaeda’s rigid precepts was toppled, and with it was lost an entire country that al-Qaeda had once enjoyed as a safe haven. And in the wake of the fall of the Taliban, al-Qaeda was unable to recover anything like the status it once had as a terrorist organization with considerable sway over Afghanistan.

    Bin Laden disastrously misjudged the possible U.S. responses to the September 11 attacks, which he believed would take one of two forms: an eventual retreat from the Middle East along the lines of the U.S. pullout from Somalia in 1993 or another ineffectual round of cruise missile attacks similar to those that followed al-Qaeda’s bombings of American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998. Neither of these two scenarios happened. The U.S. campaign against the Taliban was conducted with pinpoint strikes from American airpower, tens of thousands of Northern Alliance forces (a loose coalition of mujahideen militias that maintained control of a small section of northern Afghanistan), and more than 300 U.S. Special Forces soldiers on the ground working with 110 officers from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). In November, just two months after the September 11 attacks, the Taliban fell to the Northern Alliance and the United States. Still, it was just the beginning of what would become the longest war in U.S. history, as the United States tried to prevent the return of the Taliban and their al-Qaeda allies.

    In December 2001, faced with the problem of where to house prisoners as the Taliban fell, the administration decided to hold them at Guantánamo Bay, which the U.S. had been leasing from Cuba since 1903. As Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld put it on December 27, 2001, “I would characterize Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, as the least worst place we could have selected.” Guantánamo was attractive to administration officials because they believed it placed the detainees outside the reach of American laws, such as the right to appeal their imprisonment, yet it was only 90 miles (145 km) off the coast of Florida, making it accessible to the various agencies that would need to travel there to extract information from what was believed to be a population of hundreds of dangerous terrorists. Eventually, some 800 prisoners would be held there, although the prison population was reduced to less than 175 by the time of the 10th anniversary of the September 11 attacks.

    In his State of the Union speech on January 29, 2002, President Bush laid out a new doctrine of preemptive war, which went well beyond the long-established principle that the United States would go to war to prevent an adversary launching an attack that imminently threatened the country. Bush declared:

    “I will not wait on events while dangers gather. I will not stand by as peril draws closer and closer. The United States of America will not permit the world’s most dangerous regimes to threaten us with the world’s most destructive weapons.”

    Bush identified those dangerous regimes as an “axis of evil” that included Iran, Iraq, and North Korea. At the graduation ceremony for West Point cadets on June 1, 2002, Bush elaborated on his preemptive war doctrine, saying to the assembled soon-to-be graduates and their families, “If we wait for threats to fully materialize, we will have waited too long.” Bush believed that there would be a “demonstration effect” in destroying Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq that would deter groups like al-Qaeda or indeed anyone else who might be inclined to attack the United States. Undersecretary of Defense Douglas J. Feith later explained,

    What we did after 9/11 was look broadly at the international terrorist network from which the next attack on the United States might come. And we did not focus narrowly only on the people who were specifically responsible for 9/11. Our main goal was preventing the next attack. Thus, though there was no evidence that Saddam Hussein’s government in Iraq had collaborated with al-Qaeda in the September 11 attacks, the United States prepared for conflict against Iraq in its global war against terror, broadly defined.

    On March 19, 2003, on the eve of the invasion of Iraq, President Bush issued the order for war:

    For the peace of the world and the benefit and freedom of the Iraqi people, I hereby give the order to execute Operation Iraqi Freedom. May God bless the troops.

    On March 20 the American-led invasion of Iraq began. Within three weeks U.S. forces controlled Baghdad, and the famous pictures of the massive statue of Saddam Hussein being toppled from its plinth were broadcast around the world.

    The September 11 commission and its findings

    In 2002 President Bush had appointed a commission to look into the September 11 attacks, and two years later it issued its final report. The commission found that the key pre-September 11 failure at the CIA was its not adding to the State Department’s “watch list” two of the “muscle” hijackers (who were trained to restrain the passengers on the plane), the suspected al-Qaeda militants Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar. The CIA had been tracking Hazmi and Mihdhar since they attended a terrorist summit meeting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on January 5, 2000. The failure to watch-list the two al-Qaeda suspects with the Department of State meant that they entered the United States under their real names with ease. On January 15, 2000, 10 days after the Malaysian meeting, Hazmi and Mihdhar flew into Los Angeles. The CIA also did not alert the FBI about the identities of the suspected terrorists, which could have helped the bureau locate them once they were inside the United States. According to the commission, this was the failure of not just a few employees at the CIA but a large number of CIA officers and analysts. Some 50 to 60 CIA employees read cables about the two al-Qaeda suspects without taking any action. Some of those officers knew that one of the al-Qaeda suspects had a visa for the United States, and by May 2001 some knew that the other suspect had flown to Los Angeles.

    The soon-to-be hijackers would not have been difficult to find in California if their names had been known to law enforcement. Under their real names they rented an apartment, obtained driver’s licenses, opened bank accounts, purchased a car, and took flight lessons at a local school; Mihdhar even listed his name in the local phone directory.

    It was only on August 24, 2001, as a result of questions raised by a CIA officer on assignment at the FBI, that the two al-Qaeda suspects were watch-listed and their names communicated to the FBI. Even then the FBI sent out only a “Routine” notice requesting an investigation of Mihdhar. A few weeks later Hazmi and Mihdhar were two of the hijackers on the American Airlines flight that plunged into the Pentagon.

    The CIA inspector general concluded that “informing the FBI and good operational follow-through by CIA and FBI might have resulted in surveillance of both al-Mihdhar and al-Hazmi. Surveillance, in turn, would have had the potential to yield information on flight training, financing, and links to others who were complicit in the 9/11 attacks.”

    The key failure at the FBI was the handling of the Zacarias Moussaoui case. Moussaoui, a French citizen of Moroccan descent, was attending flight school in the summer of 2001 in Minnesota, where he attracted attention from instructors because he had little knowledge of flying and did not behave like a typical aviation student. The flight school contacted the FBI, and on August 16 Moussaoui was arrested on a visa overstay charge. Although Moussaoui was not the “20th hijacker,” as was widely reported later, he had received money from one of the September 11 coordinators, Ramzi Binalshibh, and by his own account was going to take part in a second wave of al-Qaeda attacks following the assaults on New York and Washington.

    The FBI agent in Minneapolis who handled Moussaoui’s case believed that he might have been planning to hijack a plane, and the agent was also concerned that Moussaoui had traveled to Pakistan, which was a red flag as militants often used the country as a transit point to travel to terrorist training camps in Afghanistan. On August 23 (or 24, according to some reports) CIA director George Tenet was told about the case in a briefing titled “Islamic Extremist Learns to Fly.” But FBI headquarters determined that there was not sufficient “probable cause” of a crime for the Minneapolis office to conduct a search of Moussaoui’s computer hard drive and belongings. Such a search would have turned up his connection to Binalshibh, according to Republican Sen. Charles Grassley, a leading member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which has oversight of the FBI. The 9-11 Commission also concluded that “a maximum U.S. effort to investigate Moussaoui conceivably could have unearthed his connection to Binalshibh.”

  • MOS for External Affairs Meenakshi Lekhi Welcomed at the Jan Aashirwad Aabhar Meet in New York

    MOS for External Affairs Meenakshi Lekhi Welcomed at the Jan Aashirwad Aabhar Meet in New York

    “Indians abroad are informal ambassadors of India”, said minister Meenakshi Lekhi.

    NEW YORK (TIP): Jaipur Foot USA and Gracious Givers foundation welcomed Ms. Meenakshi Lekhi, Minister of State for External Affairs and Culture at the Jan Aashirwad Abhar event organized in New York City. Mr. Randhir Jaiswal, Consul General, New York, was also present at the event. Alok Kumar, former FIA president, did the introductions.

    Ms. Meenakshi Lekhi, Minister of State for External Affairs and Culture spoke on occasion. She highlighted that Indian diaspora acts as goodwill ambassadors for the country, and their achievements in the professional, business, and education fields add value to the country’s goodwill. She also appreciated the contributions of the powerful Indian community in helping the country whenever in need. She also highlighted the COVID pandemic impacts in India and the capacity to deal with such grave situations and coming together to dealing with these. The contributions of the Indian community, including doctors & nurses, oxygen help during COVID was commendable. She also voiced that the whole world is one big family and each member country supported each other during the COVID crises, considering the COVID infections and waves going in circles affecting the entire world. She also highlighted India’s contributions through providing vaccines and other required help to the world. She also praised honorable PM Narendra Modi ji and the timing of his leadership and the serious health crisis India and the world is going through. She mentioned that bureaucracy has been in place before and will be in the future, but the way current

    leadership under Shri Modi ji is taking right decisions at the right time and drive bureaucracy relentlessly to implement these decisions so people on the ground get help and positive impacts very quickly. She also praised Shri Modi ji’s quick decision-making, allocating Rs 3000 crore for vaccine research to enable medical scientists to conduct research and development rolling out vaccines in less than one year, which used to take years. This is a great achievement for our Indian scientists and is a great level playing for India on international research and development in the medical field.

    Earlier, Mr. Prem Bhandari, Jaipur Foot USA Chairman and social activist, strong voice for the Indian diaspora spoke at the event. He spoke about the difficulties the Indian diaspora faced due to lockdown and travel restrictions that came into place during COVID and the help, and excellent support received from MEA and secretaries from Home, External Affairs, and Civil Aviation. He also briefed about the partnership of BMVSS, the parent organization of Jaipur Foot USA and MEA under India for Humanity banner to conduct prosthetics fitment camps to help differently abled people around the world and reinforce India’s soft power. He also thanked honorable Prime Minister Narendra Modi ji, the guiding force and blessed this partnership. The host countries very well received these 13 camps and BMVSS helped over 6000 differently abled people. The Government of India provided funding for all these 13 camps and the Ministry of External Affairs offices coordinated and facilitated these prosthetics fitment camps.

    Prem Bhandari also extended his heartfelt thanks to Shri Harsh Vardhan Shringla, Foreign Secretary of India for extending the partnership to organize another 12 prosthetic fitment camps on a historical day, Aug 5th, 2020. Under this partnership, BMVSS already conducted the first prosthetics fitment camp last December in Uganda. Mr. Bhandari voiced words of Padma Bhushan, D.R. Mehta, Founder & Chief Patron of BMVSS, about the bravery of our leg-warriors, who conducted this Uganda camp in the middle of the COVID pandemic. He also expressed that Jaipur Foot USA is working under the guidance and mentorship of Mr. Mehta and his vision to expand the help of the prosthetic within India and abroad.

    Another important point Mr. Bhandari brought forward was related to 6 million-plus OCI cardholders who suffered tremendously since 2019 due to cumbersome renewal regulations and administrative issues when one is traveling with OCI. These regulations are eased, made simple and frequent OCI renewal is not required. Earlier, there were many difficulties and to name a few, the most difficult one was the necessity to renew OCI every 5 years; every time foreign passport is renewed, OCI needed renewal due to regulation to carry the passport which has OCI stamp along with the new passport until the age of 20 years, as well as renewal of OCI at the age 50 again. As a result of this requirement, 1000s of passengers and their families around the world were not allowed to travel without carrying old, expired passport with OCI number and it caused emotional pain and resulted in significant financial loss and logistical nightmares.

    (Based on a press note issuedby Nishant Garg, Secretory, Jaipur Foot USA.)

  • Bank of Indiacelebrates 116th Foundation Day

    Bank of Indiacelebrates 116th Foundation Day

    Chief Executive CM Kumra cut the cake.
    Seen in the picture, from L to R: Jinen Jain, Mukesh Desai, Kamlesh Vaswani, C M Kumra, Appen Menon, Nitin Parikh, Meghav Parikh

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): One of the top 10 banks of India, Bank of India celebrated its 116th Foundation Day on September 07, 2021 at its New York Branch located at277 Park Avenue Park Avenue, New York.

    Many distinguished guests, customers, staff members and their family members were present to celebrate the joyous occasion.

    Chief Executive, US Center Mr. Chander Mohan Kumra welcomed all the distinguished guests and family members.

    Narrating the glorious history of the Bank of India, which was founded in 1906, Mr. Kumra said that BOIis a leading commercial bank in India with a very large network of more than 5000 branches, spread all across the world, with its presence in 18 countries spread over 5 continents. These branches are situated in key banking and financial centers, such as New York, Tokyo, London, Singapore, Hong Kong, Belgium, Kenya, and Paris. Due to its large and diverse presence in different time zones, it is said: “Sun Never Sets in the Branches of Bank of India”.

    Mr. Kumra expressed his sincere gratitude to all the guests, customers and the staff members for their presence at the celebration of the 116th Foundation Day of the bank, and their continued patronage to achieve proud milestones. Guests were profusely felicitated followed by a cake cutting ceremony. Assistant Vice President at the Bank of India US Center, Mr. Tapana Patro,who emceed the program, thanked the gathering.

     

  • Hindutva movement’s massive effort to silence dissent and restrict Academic freedom decried

    Hindutva movement’s massive effort to silence dissent and restrict Academic freedom decried

    NEW YORK (TIP): George Abraham, Vice-Chair of Indian Overseas Congress, USA, decried the Hindutva movement’s massive effort to silence dissent and restrict Academic freedom. “The massive effort undertaken by the Hindutva forces in the U.S. to silence its critics and restrict Academic freedom in response to a conference titled ‘Dismantling global Hindutva’ reveals how deeply entrenched, resourceful and dangerous these forces are in challenging America’s own value system’ said George Abraham, Vice-Chairman of the Indian Overseas Congress, USA. “It is quite amazing to witness their efforts to turn American Institutions similar to what they have accomplished with JNU. It is time for Indian Americans who truly believe in democracy, freedom and human rights to come together and condemn the campaign of harassment and intimidation metered out to the organizers and speakers of this event,” Mr. Abraham added.

    The ‘dismantling of global Hindutva’ conference was co-sponsored by 70 plus departments of Universities in the U.S. to discuss the impact of the growing clout of the Hindutva movement globally and the corresponding escalation of violence against religious minorities and marginalized communities in India. According to the organizers, global research networks have noted the overall erosion of democratic practices and freedoms in India. The meeting may also focus on the need to develop a comprehensive understanding of Hindutva and its different iterations in the large Indian Diaspora and its potential for building links with other supremacist ideologies to expand their influence well beyond India.

    The Hindutva groups are making concerted efforts to paint this conference anti-Hindu, confusing the public and intimidating academia. Over the past three weeks, the Viswa Hindu Parishad of America and Hindu American Foundation claims to have collectively sent 1.3 million emails to universities to withdraw their support for the conference. Speaking to the media, Gyanendra Pandey, Professor of History at Emory University, one of the participating schools, said a deliberate attempt is being made to create confusion over the usage of Hindutva and Hinduism.  Mr. Pandey said, “Anyone with any serious knowledge of South Asia knows the difference between Hindutva and Hinduism. Hindutva is almost the polar opposite of Hinduism. It is an aggressive political movement aimed at installing an exclusionist, Hindu nationalist regime in India, in line with right-wing authoritarian movements in many parts of the world.”

    Stanford University anthropologist Thomas Hansen, who has been at the receiving end of Hindu right-wing attacks over the last few years, called on US-based institutions to vigorously defend academic freedom. Mr. Hansen said, “It is important not to give up and not to cave into pressure from the forces that represent themselves as representing Hindus as such but who actually represents the interests of a foreign government.”

  • Vice President Kamala Harris meets with Partnership for Central America Leaders Ajay Banga and Jonathan Fantini Porter

    Vice President Kamala Harris meets with Partnership for Central America Leaders Ajay Banga and Jonathan Fantini Porter

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Vice President Kamala Harris, on September 5, spokewith Ajay Banga, Executive Chairman of Mastercard and Board Member of the Partnership for Central America (PCA) and Jonathan Fantini Porter, PCA’s Executive Director, about their work in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras and applauded their efforts to increase private sector investment and improve livelihoods in the region in partnership with the Department of State, USAID, and other agencies. The Vice President shared her vision for the Root Causes Strategy and the Call to Action she announced in May, updates from her trip to Guatemala and Mexico in June and discussed ways to continue working together. In addition, they also discussed her trip to Singapore and Vietnam.

    The Partnership for Central America is a non-profit organization created in response to a Call to Action by Vice President Kamala Harris, in her role overseeing diplomacy towards the Northern Triangle and Mexico. The Partnership aims to coordinate practical solutions to advance economic opportunity, address urgent climate, education and health challenges, and promote long-term investments and workforce capability in support of a vision of hope for Central America.

    Partnership members will make significant commitments to help send hope to the people of the region and sustainably address the root causes of migration by promoting economic opportunity.

    (Source: Partnership for Central America)

  • IRS highlights employer tax responsibilities and benefits during Small Business Week

    IRS highlights employer tax responsibilities and benefits during Small Business Week

    WASHINGTON (TIP): In support of National Small Business Week, the Internal Revenue Service will issue numerous online materials that focus on getting small business owners the information they need to comply with filing and paying requirements.

    The IRS also reminds employers of the tax benefits available to them.

    Here are some of the covered topics:

    Employer Responsibilities

    Employee vs. Independent Contractor

    Work Opportunity Tax Credit

    Employment Tax Compliance

    Expanded Tax Benefits

    During Small Business Week, the IRS also encourages employers to help get the word out about the advanced payments of the Child Tax Credit. Employers have direct access to their employees, who may receive this credit. More information on the Advanced Child Tax Credit is available on IRS.gov. The website has tools employers can use to help spread the word.

    Below are some helpful resources for small businesses and the self-employed:

    “A Closer Look” at Celebrating Resilience and Renewal During National Small Business Week.

    The Small Business and Self-Employed Tax Center provides a variety of resources, forms and tools in Spanish, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Russian and Haitian Creole. The Center includes a Self-Employed Individuals Tax Center, information on independent contractors vs. employees, filing and paying your business taxes and more.

    The Gig Economy Tax Center is a resource for people who earn income providing on-demand work, services or goods.

    The Online Learning and Educational Products page has tools to help business owners learn at their own pace such as the Small Business Virtual Tax Workshop.

    The IRS YouTube Video Channel has videos for small businesses on the Small Business playlist.

    E-News for Small Businesses is a free, electronic mail service that offers tax information for small business owners and self-employed individuals including reminders, tips and special announcements.

     

  • Justice Department sues Texas to block six-week abortion ban

    Justice Department sues Texas to block six-week abortion ban

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The Biden administration sued Texas on Thursday, Sept 9 to try to block the nation’s most restrictive abortion law, which bans the procedure as early as six weeks into pregnancy and allows private citizens to take legal action against anyone who helps a woman terminate her pregnancy, a Washington Post report says.

    The law took effect Sept. 1, effectively ending most abortions in the nation’s second-most-populous state, with no exceptions for rape or incest.

    The suit filed by the Justice Department in federal court in Austin asks a judge to “protect the rights that Texas has violated” by declaring the abortion law unconstitutional and issuing an injunction blocking its enforcement. At a news conference, Attorney General Merrick Garland said the ban “is clearly unconstitutional under long-standing Supreme Court precedent.”

    “This kind of scheme to nullify the Constitution of the United States is one that all Americans, whatever their politics or party, should fear,” said Garland, warning that what he called the “bounty hunter” element of the law may become “a model for action in other areas by other states and with respect to other constitutional rights or judicial precedents.” The U.S. government, Garland added, has a responsibility “to ensure that no state can deprive individuals of their constitutional rights.”

    A spokeswoman for Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) defended the law and accused the Biden administration of acting for political reasons — to distract Americans from the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan and the influx of migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.

    “We are confident that the courts will uphold and protect that right to life,” press secretary Renae Eze said in a statement.

    The case was assigned to District Court Judge Robert L. Pitman, who is already deeply familiar with the law: he is also presiding over a separate pending legal challenge to the abortion ban brought by a coalition of abortion providers and advocates.

    In that case, Pitman had scheduled a hearing for Aug. 30 to consider whether to block enforcement of the ban before it took effect. But the conservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit called off the hearing and refused to consider the legal challenge on an expedited basis. That action led to an emergency petition to the Supreme Court, which decided 5-4 to allow the Texas law to stand while the litigation continues.

    Pitman, a 2014 nominee of President Obama, previously served as U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Texas and as a magistrate judge.

    The Biden administration’s suit argues that the Texas law violates the 14th Amendment’s due process clause, saying the measure deprives women in Texas of the right to an abortion and imposes an “undue burden” — and that the Constitution generally takes precedence over state laws.

    The suit also says the measure interferes with the federal government’s constitutional obligation to provide access to abortion, including in cases of rape or incest, to people in the custody or care of federal agencies or government contractors, including at prisons.

    President Biden and Democrats in Congress have criticized the Texas law and the initial refusal of the high court to block the ban.

    Any action Pitman takes in response to the lawsuit is likely to be appealed to the 5th Circuit and, eventually, to return to the high court.

    A dozen other states have passed legislation banning abortions after about six weeks into pregnancy. But federal judges have stopped those measures from taking effect, finding the laws inconsistent with Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision guaranteeing the right to choose abortion before viability, usually around 22 to 24 weeks.

    Texas created a blueprint to restrict abortion. Other red states may follow.

    The Texas law was designed to withstand a similar preemptive legal challenge. It intentionally bars enforcement by state government officials, whom abortion providers would typically target in a lawsuit. Instead, the law empowers private citizens to file civil lawsuits against anyone who helps a woman get an abortion after the six-week window. Individuals can receive a $10,000 award if their lawsuits are successful. They can sue abortion providers, clinic workers or those who help a woman pay for the procedure or drive her to a clinic.

    In its 5-to-4 decision last week, the Supreme Court’s conservative majority said abortion providers and civil rights groups had “raised serious questions regarding the constitutionality of the Texas law.” But the court allowed the ban to take effect while the legal battle plays out, saying the abortion providers and advocates who had challenged the law could not show they were suing the right people.

    Their lawsuit targeted state court judges and court clerks, who would have to accept lawsuits alleging violations of the ban for those suits to go forward. The majority said it was premature for the court to step in because it is “unclear whether the named defendants can or will seek to enforce the Texas law.”

    All of the dissenting justices wrote separately, with the court’s three liberal justices characterizing the Texas law as an end run around the Constitution and court precedent.

    Justice Breyer calls Supreme Court decision on Texas case ‘very, very, very wrong’

    Garland said Monday that his agency would do all it could to guarantee access to abortion in Texas. But advocates said the pledge lacked specifics; they urged a direct challenge.

    Asked Thursday about the intense pressure from Democrats to take action, Garland said the department “does not file lawsuits based on pressure. We carefully evaluated the law and the facts, and this complaint expresses our view of the law and the facts.” The lawsuit seeks to stop not only the state but also private individuals who would bring civil lawsuits to enforce the Texas law.

    In response, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) tweeted, “Today the Biden Administration sued every individual in Texas” and said Biden should not meddle in a state’s “sovereign rights.”

    Steve Vladeck, a constitutional law professor at the University of Texas law school, called the lawsuit “an ambitious and powerful” effort “to protect the constitutional rights of citizens.” The question, he said, is whether citizens who try to enforce the law are “agents of the state and therefore subject to the injunction the government is seeking.”

    “That’s a very broad request for relief,” said Vladeck, who has been publicly critical of the way the law was designed to avoid judicial review, “but also perhaps necessary given the novel and cynical procedural traps Texas created.”

    Supporters of the law put out a statement criticizing the federal lawsuit even before Garland’s news conference. They called the suit a “desperate attempt” to block the measure.

    Biden “is a puppet of the radical abortion agenda, and his DOJ will quickly find that they do not have jurisdiction to stop the Texas Heartbeat Act,” said Elizabeth Graham, vice president of Texas Right to Life.

    Can Texans still get abortions out of state? We answered your questions.

    The law is already having an effect. Abortion clinics in Texas say they are abiding by the six-week ban and sending women who are further along in their pregnancies across state lines to seek the procedure.

    Texas Right to Life, which backed the law, was collecting anonymous tips on its website about potential violations of the law, but so far, no lawsuits have been filed against abortion providers in state court.

    If such a lawsuit is filed, it would almost certainly be challenged, creating a new path for the constitutionality of the abortion ban to be reviewed by the courts.

    Several advocacy organizations that help women access abortions already have won temporary restraining orders in local courts that bar Texas Right to Life and others from using the law to sue them.

    But those court orders are limited to the people involved and do not stop other individuals or organizations from filing lawsuits against anyone involved in an abortion banned under the Texas law.

    (Source: Washington Post)