Tag: Connecticut

  • US Senate confirms Brennan as CIA director

    US Senate confirms Brennan as CIA director

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The US Senate has confirmed John Brennan as the next director of Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Currently the counter terrorism adviser to the US President Barack Obama, Brennan was nominated by a vote of 63 to 34 on Thursday. The vote was delayed by a 13-hour long filibuster by Republican Senator Rand Paul of Connecticut in pursuit of more information about the administration’s domestic drone policy.

    Welcoming the nomination, Obama said that the Senate has recognised Brennan’s qualities and determination to keep US safe along with his commitment to work with Congress and build relationships with foreign partners. “With John’s 25 years of experience at the agency, our extraordinary men and women of the CIA will be led by one of their own. I am especially appreciative to Michael Morell for being such an outstanding acting director and for agreeing to continue his service as deputy director,” he said.

    He added that the timely accurate intelligence is absolutely critical to disrupting terrorist attacks, dismantling al-Qaida along with its affiliates and meeting the broad array of security challenges that we face as a nation. “John’s leadership and our dedicated intelligence professionals will be essential in these efforts. I am deeply grateful to John and his family for their continued service to our nation,” he said.

    The vote on confirmation was moved through the Senate as Paul lifted his filibuster after receiving response to his question from the attorney general, Eric Holder. “Does the president have the authority to use a weaponised drone to kill an American not engaged in combat on American soil? The answer to that question is no,” according to Holder’s letter to Senator Rand Paul. “This is a major victory for American civil liberties and ensures the protection of our basic Constitutional rights. We have separation of powers to protect our rights. That’s what government was organised to do and Constitution was put in place to do,” Paul said.

  • Another Jewel In The Crown Of The Indian Consulate

    Another Jewel In The Crown Of The Indian Consulate

    NEW YORK (TIP): Bank of India sponsored a concert in the ornate ball room of the Indian Consulate here February 24, by Varsha Joshi, a well known singer in the Tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. The event was yet another jewel in the crown of the Indian Consulate.

    Mr. B.B. Joshi, C.E. of the bank welcomed guests and introduced the artist of the evening Varsha Joshi who was accompanied by a male singer and her DJ husband. Consul General Mr. Prabhu Dayal spoke highly of Varsha’s musical talent and hoped the gathering would enjoy the evening.

    He took the opportunity to thank his colleagues and invited them over to the stage and had the gathering applaud them. The artists regaled the audience with the magic of their musical cadence that seemed to be unending for over two hours.

    The 24th February concert was the last musical event for Dayals in the Consulate, as Mr. Dayal was to retire in the next four days.

  • Obama Vows To Take America Forward

    Obama Vows To Take America Forward

    WASHINGTON (TIP): The second inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States took place in a private swearing-in ceremony on Sunday, January 20, 2013 in the Blue Room of the White House.

    A public ceremony marking the occasion took place the following day, on Monday, January 21, 2013 at the United States Capitol building. The inauguration marked the beginning of the second term of Barack Obama as President and Joe Biden as Vice President. The inauguration theme was “Faith in America’s Future”, a phrase that draws upon the 150th anniversary of President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and the completion of the Capitol dome in 1863. The theme also stresses the “perseverance and unity” of the United States, and echoes the “Forward” theme used in the closing months of Obama’s reelection campaign.

    The inaugural events held in Washington, D.C. from January 19 to 21, 2013 included concerts, a national day of community service on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, the swearing-in ceremony, luncheon and parade, inaugural balls, and the interfaith inaugural prayer service. The presidential oath was administered to Obama during his swearing-in ceremony on January 20 and 21, 2013 by Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts.

    While Beyonce sang the National Anthem at the ceremonial swearing-in for President Barack Obama at the U.S. Capitol during the 57th Presidential Inauguration, it was Richard Blanco, the 44-year-old Madrid-born Cuban-American poet who read his poem “One Today” at the swearing-in ceremony for President Obama. Blanco is only the fifth poet – Robert Frost (1961), Maya Angelou (1993), William Miller (1997) and Elizabeth Alexander (2009) were the previous ones – reading at a presidential inauguration. He is also the first Hispanic as well as the first openly gay one. In his 18 minute speech, Obama tied current issues to founding principles.

    He sought to link the past and future, tying the nation’s founding principles to the challenges confronting his second term in a call for Americans to fulfill the responsibility of citizenship.

    Eschewing poetic language for rhetorical power, Obama cited the accomplishments of the past four years while laying out a progressive agenda for the next four that would tackle thorny issues like gun control, climate change and immigration reform. “We have always understood that when times change, so must we; that fidelity to our founding principles requires new responses to new challenges; that preserving our individual freedoms ultimately requires collective action,” he said. “My fellow Americans, we are made for this moment and we will seize it so long as we seize it together,” he added later.

    Analysts called the speech politically astute and an important expression of new forcefulness by the president as he enters his second term following re-election last November. “It’s a real declaration of conscience, about principles, about what he believes in,” said CNN Senior Political Analyst David Gergen. “He basically said, ‘When I came in the first term, we had all these emergencies, we had these wars. We’ve now started to clear the decks.

    Let’s talk about what’s essential.’” The foundation of the address, and Obama’s vision for the future, were the tenets he quoted from the Declaration of Independence — “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” “Today, we continue a neverending journey, to bridge the meaning of those words with the realities of our time,” Obama said to gathered dignitaries and flag-waving throngs on the National Mall. “For history tells us that while these truths may be self-evident, they have never been self-executing; that while freedom is a gift from God, it must be secured by His people here on Earth.” In particularly pointed references, the president made a forceful call for gay rights that equated the issue with the struggle for women’s rights in the 19th century and civil rights in the 1960s. “We, the people, declare today that the most evident of truths — that all of us are created equal — is the star that guides us still; just as it guided our forebears through Seneca Falls, and Selma, and Stonewall,” Obama said, mentioning landmarks of the women’s, black and gay rights movements. “It is now our generation’s task to carry on what those pioneers began,” he continued, prompting the loudest applause and cheers of his address when he said “our journey is not complete until our wives, our mothers, and daughters can earn a living equal to their efforts.” More cheers came when Obama called for “our gay brothers and sisters” to be treated “like anyone else under the law — for if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well.” According to observers, it was the first time a president championed gay marriage in an inaugural address. With further mention of topical issues such as immigration reform and gun control, Obama came to his key point — that adhering to America’s bedrock principles requires taking action on today’s challenges. “Being true to our founding documents does not require us to agree on every contour of life; it does not mean we will all define liberty in exactly the same way, or follow the same precise path to happiness,” he said. “Progress does not compel us to settle centuries-long debates about the role of government for all time — but it does require us to act in our time.” A deep partisan divide in Washington and the country characterized Obama’s first term, with Congress seemingly paralyzed at times and repeated episodes of brinksmanship over debt and spending issues bringing the first-ever downgrade of the U.S. credit rating.

    Acknowledging the political rift, Obama called for leaders and citizens to work for the greater good of the country. “We cannot mistake absolutism for principle, or substitute spectacle for politics, or treat name-calling as reasoned debate,” he said. “We must act, knowing that our work will be imperfect.” At the same time, he made clear he would fight for the central themes of his election campaign. “For we, the people, understand that our country cannot succeed when a shrinking few do very well and a growing many barely make it,” he said.

    While “we must make the hard choices to reduce the cost of health care and the size of our deficit,” he said, “we reject the belief that America must choose between caring for the generation that built this country and investing in the generation that will build its future.” In particular, he defended the need for popular entitlement programs that provide government benefits to senior citizens, the poor and the disabled, saying they were part of the American fabric. “The commitments we make to each other — through Medicare, and Medicaid, and Social Security — these things do not sap our initiative; they strengthen us,” Obama said. “They do not make us a nation of takers; they free us to take the risks that make this country great.” On Monday, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, one of Obama’s harshest critics, called the president’s second term “a fresh start when it comes to dealing with the great challenges of our day; particularly, the transcendent challenge of unsustainable federal spending and debt.” Other issues also appear difficult, if not intractable.

    Obama made a reference to gun control, saying that the nation needed to ensure that “all our children, from the streets of Detroit to the hills of Appalachia to the quiet lanes of Newtown, know that they are cared for, and cherished, and always safe from harm.” However, congressional Republicans and some Democrats, as well as the powerful gun lobby, have rejected proposals Obama recently announced in response to the Connecticut school shootings that killed 20 Newtown first-graders last month.

    In citing climate change as a priority, Obama raised the profile of the issue on the national agenda after a presidential campaign in which it was almost never mentioned. “We will respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations,” he said, warning of a “long and sometimes difficult” path to sustainable energy sources in a nation dominated by its fossil fuel industries such as oil and coal. “America cannot resist this transition; we must lead it,” Obama said. “We cannot cede to other nations the technology that will power new jobs and new industries — we must claim its promise.” Obama infused his speech with references to two assassinated American icons — President Abraham Lincoln and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. In one passage, Obama cited “blood drawn by lash and blood drawn by sword” in mentioning the Civil War and slavery.

    It mimicked Lincoln’s second inaugural address in 1865, when he spoke of the possibility that “every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn the sword.” Of King, Obama referred to those who came to Washington almost 50 years ago “to hear a preacher say that we cannot walk alone; to hear a King proclaim that our individual freedom is inextricably bound to the freedom of every soul on Earth.” The inauguration coincided with the national holiday honoring King.

    The president concluded by urging Americans to fulfill their responsibility as citizens by meeting “the obligation to shape the debates of our time — not only with the votes we cast, but with the voices we lift in defense of our most ancient values and enduring ideals.” At a little more than 2,100 words, Obama’s speech was about 300 shorter than his first inaugural address four years earlier.

    In 2009, he was fresh off his historic election as the nation’s first African- American president, facing an economic recession, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the ongoing terrorist threat.

    David Maraniss, author of the book “Barack Obama: The Story,” said the difference from four years ago was palpable, adding: “I could feel his heart beating this time.” The inauguration was attended by approximately a million people.

    Obama Inauguration:
    The Inaugural Poem WASHINGTON (TIP): Inaugural poet Richard Blanco read his poem “One Today” at the swearing-in ceremony for President Obama. Blanco, the 44-year-old Madrid-born Cuban-American poet, is only the fifth poet – Robert Frost (1961), Maya Angelou (1993), William Miller (1997) and Elizabeth Alexander (2009) were the previous ones – reading at a presidential inauguration. He is also the first Hispanic as well as the first openly gay one.
    Here is the Poem
    One sun rose on us today, kindled over our shores,
    peeking over the Smokies, greeting the faces
    of the Great Lakes, spreading a simple truth
    across the Great Plains, then charging across the Rockies.
    One light, waking up rooftops, under each one, a story
    told by our silent gestures moving behind windows.

    My face, your face, millions of faces in morning’s mirrors,
    each one yawning to life, crescendoing into our day:
    pencil-yellow school buses, the rhythm of traffic lights,
    fruit stands: apples, limes, and oranges arrayed like rainbows
    begging our praise. Silver trucks heavy with oil or paperbricks
    or milk, teeming over highways alongside us,
    on our way to clean tables, read ledgers, or save livesto
    teach geometry, or ring-up groceries as my mother did
    for twenty years, so I could write this poem.

    All of us as vital as the one light we move through,
    the same light on blackboards with lessons for the day:
    equations to solve, history to question, or atoms imagined,
    the “I have a dream” we keep dreaming,
    or the impossible vocabulary of sorrow that won’t explain
    the empty desks of twenty children marked absent
    today, and forever. Many prayers, but one light
    breathing color into stained glass windows,
    life into the faces of bronze statues, warmth
    onto the steps of our museums and park benches
    as mothers watch children slide into the day.

    One ground. Our ground, rooting us to every stalk
    of corn, every head of wheat sown by sweat
    and hands, hands gleaning coal or planting windmills
    in deserts and hilltops that keep us warm, hands
    digging trenches, routing pipes and cables, hands
    as worn as my father’s cutting sugarcane
    so my brother and I could have books and shoes.

    The dust of farms and deserts, cities and plains
    mingled by one wind-our breath. Breathe. Hear it
    through the day’s gorgeous din of honking cabs,
    buses launching down avenues, the symphony
    of footsteps, guitars, and screeching subways,
    the unexpected song bird on your clothes line.

    Hear: squeaky playground swings, trains whistling,
    or whispers across café tables, Hear: the doors we open
    for each other all day, saying: hello, shalom,
    buon giorno, howdy, namaste, or buenos días
    in the language my mother taught me-in every language
    spoken into one wind carrying our lives
    without prejudice, as these words break from my lips.

    One sky: since the Appalachians and Sierras claimed
    their majesty, and the Mississippi and Colorado worked
    their way to the sea. Thank the work of our hands:
    weaving steel into bridges, finishing one more report
    for the boss on time, stitching another wound
    or uniform, the first brush stroke on a portrait,
    or the last floor on the Freedom Tower
    jutting into a sky that yields to our resilience.

    One sky, toward which we sometimes lift our eyes
    tired from work: some days guessing at the weather
    of our lives, some days giving thanks for a love
    that loves you back, sometimes praising a mother
    who knew how to give, or forgiving a father
    who couldn’t give what you wanted.

    We head home: through the gloss of rain or weight
    of snow, or the plum blush of dusk, but always-home,
    always under one sky, our sky. And always one moon
    like a silent drum tapping on every rooftop
    and every window, of one country-all of usfacing
    the stars
    hope-a new constellation
    waiting for us to map it,
    waiting for us to name it-together.

  • A Tale Of Two Tragedies The Different Ways In Which The Us And India Have Reacted To Horrific Incidents Is Telling

    A Tale Of Two Tragedies The Different Ways In Which The Us And India Have Reacted To Horrific Incidents Is Telling

    As2012 made its exit, it left two horrific tragedies in its wake: the massacre of 26 students and teachers in my country of residence, the US, and the gang rape of a medical student in my country of citizenship. The two tragedies produced markedly contrasting reactions by leaders and people in the two countries, however. The relatively young African-American president of the US instantly connected with the tragedy and its immediate victims in Newtown, Connecticut. Addressing the nation the very same day on the television, the normally steely President Barack Obama could be seen wiping tears multiple times. “We’ve endured too many of these tragedies in the past few years, and each time I hear the news I react not as a president but as anyone else would, as a parent,” he said.

    Two days later, the president travelled to Connecticut to be with the families of the victims. In New Delhi, the aging leadership greeted the news of the gang rape with total indifference. Having deliberately insulated itself for years from the reality that real people with real problems live in the cities too, it went about business as usual. It was a full week of swelling crowds and rising rage of tens of thousands of men and women in the streets that finally led the Prime Minister’s Office to break its silence. Even then, the December 23 statement by it reflected aloofness, opening with the words, ”We are all joined in our concern for the young woman…” The slight personal touch, with this line rephrased as “My wife, my family and I are all joined in our concern…” came only in the terse televised speech by the prime minister the next day. Even more disappointing, as a woman, Congress President Sonia Gandhi was well positioned to offer a healing touch to the families of the two victims and the entire nation. But beyond a brief appearance outside her home to speak with the protesters, no such touch was forthcoming.

    As late as December 24, an intransigent home minister Sushil Kumar Shinde refused to meet the protesters at India Gate. Abhijit Mukherjee, the son of the president and a Member of Parliament, added insult to the injury by describing the women demonstrating in the streets as “highly dented and painted”. An entirely different contrast characterized the responses of the ordinary citizens in India and the US. As the news of the ghastly crime spread, tens of thousands of ordinary residents converged on India Gate in Delhi to protest on behalf of the victim and to shake the political class out of its slumber. Remarkably, not only did the protests successfully sustain in Delhi despite suspension of buses and metro trains on key routes, they also spread to many other cities.

    And when the victim passed away on December 29, the entire nation chose to abstain from the New Year’s Day celebrations. In contrast, while the Newtown tragedy shook up every American at the personal level, it sparked no mass protests at the White House or the doorstep of the National Rifle Association (NRA). Four massacres of innocent citizens in a school, a shopping mall, a movie theatre and a gurdwara have characterized the first term of President Obama. Easy access to assault weapons has been an important key to each of them. Yet, there have been no sustained protests that would force the hand of the government against the lobbying power of the NRA. A March 2011 proposal would have outlawed the possession of magazines with more than 10 bullets in Connecticut thereby removing from circulation the Bushmaster AR-15 rifle with 30-round magazine that the Newtown shooter used.

    But the NRA successfully defeated that proposal. Earlier, in 2009, gun manufacturer Colt had defeated another even weaker reform by threatening to move its facility employing 900 workers to another state. So, sadly, Connecticut ended up trading the possibility of the loss of 900 jobs for 26 lives. Following the latest shootings, the NRA had the audacity to suggest posting armed guards in every school in the country as the solution! “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun,” contended its executive vice-president. Yet, no protests against the NRA emerged. Already, American newspapers can be found devoting more space to the tragedy in Delhi than in Newtown. It is this contrast in the way people have reacted to the tragedies that gives greater hope of change in India. Yet, it is important to appreciate that just making punishment yet more stringent will scarcely improve safety. Rape is only one of many manifestations of insecurities that women in urban India experience every day. On literally dozens of trips to Delhi since the early 1980s, my wife has never once felt safe enough to take a taxi on her own from the airport to Mayur Vihar where her sister lives.

    While social reform is the ultimate key, the immediate relief must come from effective implementation of existing laws. And, first and foremost, that requires police reform. On the one hand, the police, who are expected to risk their lives every day to secure the lives of all others, must be paid several times their civilian counterparts. On the other hand, they must face substantially greater risk of dismissal, not just temporary suspension, should they fail in their duties.

  • Gun Found In 7-Yr-Old’s Backpack At New York City School

    Gun Found In 7-Yr-Old’s Backpack At New York City School

    NEW YORK (TIP): A handgun was found in the backpack of a 7-year-old boy at a New York City public elementary school on January 17, triggering a brief lockdown amid heightened concern about gun violence in U.S. schools, officials said. New York City Police Department spokesman John Grimpel said authorities are investigating how the unloaded .22-caliber handgun ended up in the child’s backpack. Police also found an ammunition clip and a flare gun in the bag belonging to the second-grade student, Grimpel said.

    Officials locked down the Wave Preparatory Elementary School, located in Queens, for an hour, the New York City Education Department said. In December a gunman killed 20 first-graders along with six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. President Barack Obama launched the biggest U.S. guncontrol push in generations, urging Congress to approve an assault weapons ban and background checks for all gun buyers to prevent mass shootings like the Newtown massacre.

  • Accused Colorado Theatre Massacre Shooter Posed With Weapons

    Accused Colorado Theatre Massacre Shooter Posed With Weapons

    CENTENNIAL (TIP): Self-portraits of accused Colorado movie house gunman James Holmes posing with firearms and body armor ended prosecutors’ pretrial case against the former graduate student on January 9, but defense lawyers declined to present evidence or witnesses of their own. The pictures, which police said Holmes took of himself with an iPhone before his shooting rampage at a midnight showing of a “Batman” film last summer, capped three days of hearings in which prosecutors laid out their case for putting him on trial. The onetime neuroscience doctoral student is charged with multiple counts of first-degree murder and attempted murder for the 12 people who were slain and dozens of others wounded at the opening of ” The Dark Knight Rises” in the Denver suburb of Aurora.

    Prosecutor Karen Pearson said in her closing arguments that Holmes would have killed more people had his rifle not jammed, adding, “He certainly had the ammo to do so.” The July attack marked one of the most lethal mass shootings in U.S. history and one of a string of mass shootings last year capped by the massacre of 20 children and six adults in December at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut. Wrapping up the prosecution’s case against Holmes on Wednesday, Aurora police sergeant Matthew Fyles ran through pictures Holmes took roughly six hours before the deadly assault on the Century 16 multiplex near his home. In one picture, Holmes grinned while holding the muzzle of a handgun near his face. He stuck his tongue out in another photo. His brightly dyed red hair was visible in both pictures, and he wore black contact lenses that made his pupils appear abnormally large. In another picture taken the same evening, his bed was strewn with guns, ammunition magazines, body armor, a gas mask and other gear.

    Booby-trapped apartment
    In a self-portrait taken on July 5, Holmes posed with a semi-automatic rifle and wore the tactical body armor he was wearing when he was arrested. A separate photo taken on July 16 showed the booby-trapped explosives Holmes is accused of rigging up inside his apartment, which according to police he had intended as a diversion to draw authorities away from the theater the night of the assault. The explosives were safely dismantled after the shooting. Holmes’ lawyers, seen by legal experts as preparing for an insanity defense, had been planning to call two witnesses to testify this week about their client’s state of mind around the time of the shootings. But in a surprise twist to the proceedings after the prosecution rested its case on Wednesday, public defender Daniel King told the judge his team had decided not to present its own evidence or testimony. “This is a preliminary hearing and not the proper venue or time to put on a show or truncated defense,” King said. The defense also declined to make a closing statement before the hearing was adjourned. Arapahoe county district judge William Sylvester said he was taking evidence presented this week under advisement and scheduled a new court hearing for Friday that he said would serve as a “status hearing and/or arraignment.” If the judge orders the case to proceed to trial, Holmes, 25, is widely expected to enter a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. Authorities have offered no motive for the slayings. Holmes’ lawyers have said he suffers from mental illness, but they have not been more specific.

  • Ambassador Prabhu Dayal A Job Well Accomplished

    Ambassador Prabhu Dayal A Job Well Accomplished

    It is not easy to describe a man who has so many attributes of near perfection. A brilliant student, an accomplished sportsman, a forceful debater, a successful career diplomat, a loving husband, a doting father and a friend of friends. That, to some extent, describes Mr. Prabhu Dayal. Ambassador Prabhu Dayal has been heading the Indian Consulate in New York since September 2008. The New York Consulate is one of the most important and prestigious Diplomatic Missions of the Government of India and its jurisdiction covers Connecticut, Maine,

    Vermont, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, ,Puerto Rico, ,Rhode Island and Virgin Islands. Says Ambassador Dayal about his posting in New York, ‘This assignment gives me the opportunity to interact with the creme de la creme of New York — including people from the world of business, finance, media, culture, politics etc. Iam delighted that so many Americans of Indian origin have done so well in the United States and made their countrymen back home proud of their achievements:’ India has always chosen a senior and experienced diplomat to head the New York Consulate. Prabhu Dayal joined the Indian Foreign Service in 1976 and has served in a number of high-ranking positions including as Ambassador to Morocco (2004- 2008),Ambassador to Kuwait (1998- 2001) and Consul General in Dubai (1994-1998). His other postings have been to Egypt, Pakistan,, India’s Permanent Mission in Geneva and Iran. He is of the rank of Secretary to the Government of India ,and is one of the senior-most Foreign Service officers of India.

    During his tenure in New York, ,he has tactfully handled some of the ticklish issues that arose concerning NRIs (Non-Resident Indians) and PIOs (People of Indian Origin) such as the requirement of cancellation of Indian passport requirement for OCI/PIO cards and hike of surrender fee and its revocation. He oversaw the outsourcing of some of the consular functions to improve efficiency and convenience of people seeking consular services. And, of course, he is the gracious host to frequent visits of Indian ministers and dignitaries, particularly in September/ October when the United Nations General Assembly is in session. Dayal has a refreshing style of functioning and reaching out to the community. He is accessible and obliges as and when possible when invited to grace community events as a guest or honor or to address conferences and conventions. But what Indians in Tri-State area are grateful to Ambassador Dayal for is introducing a number of cultural events and holding of Indian festivals besides the mandatory celebration of Republic Day and Independence Day.

    In his own words, “,India has a rich culture, and not only Indian Americans but other friends of India here like to avail of opportunities to attend cultural events”. “We have been inviting a number of prominent artistes to perform at the Consulate from time to time under the “Jewels of India” series. Prominent artistes who have performed under the series include Ustad Amjad Ali Khan, Anup Jalota, Sivamani and Sujata Mahapatra. We also celebrate various Indian festivals such as Diwali, Dussehra, Eid, Baisakhi, Hanukkah and Christmas. These events reflect the cultural diversity of India and provide members of Indian community and friends of India, regardless of religion, an opportunity to take part in them. The idea is to promote unity in diversity”, says Dayal Ambassador Dayal is all praise for the Indian American community. Indian Americans have served as a bridge of friendship between India and the US. .They have become patriotic Americans while remaining proud Indians at the same time. They have left Indian shores but have retained their Indianness. It has been correctly said that ‘you can take an Indian out of India, but you cannot take India out of an Indian’. “My message to the community is that they should continue to do the wonderful work which they have been doing to bring India and America closer.” Born in 1953, Dayal holds a Masters Degree in Political Science from Allahabad University where he was amongst the toppers. He taught for a while before joining t the Indian Foreign Servicein1976. He is married to Mrs. Chandini Dayal and the two have a son, Akshay Dayal and a daughter, Akansha Dayal. Post superannuation, Dayal plans to play golf and bridge, relax and write a book detailing his experiences as a diplomat.

  • North American Heat Wave

    North American Heat Wave

    The summer heat wave in North America led to morethan 82 heat-related deaths across the United States andCanada. The intense three-week-long spell began aroundJune 20, when a high pressure system centered over BajaCalifornia moved into the plains, creating temperaturesnear or exceeding 110 degrees. The heat spread east fromthe Rocky Mountains, causing high temperatures in thecentral states rivaling records from 80 years ago. On June25, Denver tied its all-time high with a temperature of 105degrees. Hill City, Kansas, was the warmest spot in theUnited States on June 26, reaching 115 degrees. All of thisheat was probably the engine for the June Derecho, whichformed in the Midwest and tore through the Mid-Atlantic.The heat wave even reached New England, as Hartford,Connecticut, hit 100 degrees on July 18.

  • Newtown Schoolkids Back In Class

    Newtown Schoolkids Back In Class

    MONROE (TIP): Classes resumed on January 3, for the students of the Connecticut school where gunman Adam Lanza last month killed 20 children and six adults before killing himself. It was the second largest school shooting in US history. With their school still being treated as a crime scene, the more than 400 students of Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown attended classes in neighbouring town Monroe. Law enforcement officers guarding the new facility called it “the safest school in America”. The school district said parents who wanted to be close to their children were welcome to visit and stay in classrooms or an auditorium. Newtown superintendent Janet Robinson said officials would do their best to make the students feel at ease.

    Colorado victims’ kin blast theatre
    Relatives of victims killed by a gunman during the premier of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Denver, Colorado, criticized an invitation to its re-opening as a “ridiculously offensive” publicity ploy. Family members of nine of the 12 victims said the invitation’s timing was particularly painful over the Christmas holiday.

  • India offers sympathies to families affected by Newton school tragedy

    India offers sympathies to families affected by Newton school tragedy

    NEW DELHI (TIP): India has expressed grief over the massacre of 20 children and seven adults in an American school, saying the horrific violence “leaves the whole world diminished”. External affairs minister, Salman Khurshid, sent condolences to US secretary of state Hillary Clinton. “I was deeply saddened to learn the terrible news.

    The killing of the children is a particularly abhorrent act, one which leaves the whole world diminished,” Khurshid said. Offering sympathy to families of the victims in Connecticut, he said “Please accept my personal sympathy and solidarity, and that of the people of India for the friendly people of the US. “As you and the American people try to come to terms with this act of complete senselessness, and to address the trauma caused by it, I want you to know that the government and people of India share your grief and prayers for consolation,” he added.

    A gunman Friday opened fire at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut. He too was killed. It is the second worst massacre of its kind in the US after the Virginia Tech Massacre of 2007 that left 33 dead.

  • Texas Town Allows Guns For Teachers

    Texas Town Allows Guns For Teachers

    HARROLD (TEXAS) (TIP): In this tiny Texas town, children and their parents don’t give much thought to safety at the community’s lone school – mostly because some of the teachers are carrying concealed weapons. In remote Harrold, the nearest sheriff’s office is 30 minutes away, and people tend to know – and trust – one another. So the school board voted to let teachers bring guns to school. “We don’t have money for a security guard, but this is a better solution,” Superintendent David Thweatt said.

    “A shooter could take out a guard or officer with a visible, holstered weapon, but our teachers have master’s degrees, are older and have had extensive training. And their guns are hidden. We can protect our children.” In the aftermath of last week’s Connecticut elementary school shooting, lawmakers in a growing number of states – including Oklahoma, Missouri, Minnesota, South Dakota and Oregon – have said they will consider laws allowing teachers and school administrators to carry firearms at school.

  • Master Chef Sanjeev Kapoor Hosts First Varli Culinary Awards in NY

    Master Chef Sanjeev Kapoor Hosts First Varli Culinary Awards in NY

    NEW YORK (TIP): Master Chef Sanjeev Kapoor and renowned Indian-American actor Manu Narayan hosted the Varli Culinary Awards in Manhattan on November 15. The inaugural awards are a revolutionary concept that honors the best culinary skills amongst varied categories related to Indian cuisine. Varli Singh, the brand owner, is a prominent member in the field of world cuisine and has been consistently promoting Indian cuisine internationally. “We really wanted to recognize and applaud the contributions and amazing achievements of Indian chefs, restaurateurs, and key influencers on the international culinary stage,” Singh said in a statement to the press at the event. Celebrated Chef Sanjeev Kapoor also extended his appreciation for the event.

    “This is a wonderful platform to promote our Indian cuisine on a world stage. But most of all, this is a great opportunity to bring in the best chefs of Indian cuisine under one roof and celebrate our food together,” said Mr. Kapoor. Bollywood actor Chandrachur Singh, Ambassador Manjeev Singh Puri and many other celebrity chefs, attended the exclusive black-tie event. Chef Jehangir Mehta judged the event along with popular UAE food critic Gaurav Tandon. The other panel of judges included culinary experts such as Vikas Khanna, Rajesh Bhardwaj and Hari Nayak. The award function also had a sample tasting of incredible Indian cuisine and delicious cocktails made by some of the best restaurants in the Tri-state area. “Guests will experience a classy and entertaining affair filled with celebrity personalities, delicious tastings, and of course drinks!” Varli Singh added. The event also introduced a new line of kitchenware called ‘Varliware’ which was much welcomed by the international attendees, as most are starved of traditional Indian cooking utensils.

    The award categories and winners from the event are:Varli Appreciate Award
    Sarina Amin – Diku Bhai – Hemant Mathur – Rajesh Bhardwaj – Avtar Walia – Sanjeev Kapoor

    Varli Cook Off Contestants
    Preet Singh – Reshma Bathija – Sonny Chatrath – Jyoti Singh – Roni Mazumdar – Niru Kumria (Runner up) – Saira Malhotra (Winner)

    Best Mixologist
    Raju Somerpet

    Best Food Critic, UAE
    Gaurav Tandon

    Best Dessert & Pastry – Presented by Mithaas
    Sweet Silk – Confections by Shefalee Patel

    Best Restaurant, UAE – Presented by Nanking Restaurant Group
    Signature by Sanjeev Kapoor, Dubai

    Influential Women in the Restaurant Scene
    Rohini Dey, Vermilion restaurants

    Best Dessert & Pastry Chef
    Jehangir Mehta, Grafitti & Mehtaphor

    Best Chef 2012
    Vikas Khanna, Junoon

    Rising Star Chef – Presented by Junoon
    Shravan Shetty, Urban Spice

    Lifetime Achievement – Restaurateur
    Avtar Walia, Tamarind restaurants

    Lifetime Achievement – Chef
    Sanjeev Kapoor

    Best Chef, India
    Sabyasachi Gorai

    Best Restaurant, India
    Indian Accent, New Delhi

    Best Restaurant, Toronto
    Amaya

    Best Restaurant, Washington, DC
    Indique Heights

    Best Fast Food
    Mithaas

    Best Restaurant Upstate, NY
    Jaipore

    Best Restaurant, Connecticut
    Thali

    Best Restaurant, Long Island
    Mint

    Best Restaurant, New Jersey
    Palace of Asia

    People’s Choice – Best Restaurant New York City
    Bukhara Grill

    Critic’s Choice – Best Restaurant New York City
    Junoon

    Movers & Shakers
    Rakesh Agarwal – Shaun Mehtani – Sneh Mehtani – Nitin Vyas – Shiva Natrajan – Avtar Walia – Kamal Arora – Rajesh Bhardwaj – KN Vinod – Surfy Rahman – Gary Sikka – Prasad Chirnomula – Munish Narula

  • Nor’easter adds to the Woes of Sandy battered NY, NJ

    Nor’easter adds to the Woes of Sandy battered NY, NJ

    NEW YORK (TIP): The nor’easter that stymied recovery efforts from Superstorm Sandy pulled away from New York and New Jersey Thursday, leaving hundreds of thousands of new people in darkness after a blanket of thick, wet snow snapped storm-weakened trees and downed power lines. From Brooklyn to storm-battered sections of the Jersey shore and Connecticut, about 750,000 customers in the region were without power in temperatures near freezing, some living for days in the dark.

    Throughout Staten Island’s beach area, the storm had blanketed growing piles of debris with several inches of snow. By mid-morning, it was starting to melt, filling the streets with filthy sludge. Roads in New Jersey and New York City were clear for the morning commute but there were traffic snarls on many roads. And rail lines into New York were not running smoothly. The nor’easter, as anticipated, brought gusting winds, rain and snow, but not the flooding that was anticipated

  • More than 110 Perish-NY hardest hit with 48 lives lost

    More than 110 Perish-NY hardest hit with 48 lives lost

    NEW YORK (TIP): Hurricane Sandy will be remembered as one of the biggest in the history of the states located North of Washington D.C. It was eight hundred miles long and four hundred miles wide. The winds were gusting at 90 to 115 miles per hour, which is equal to 150 to 190 kilometers. Unprecedented rainfall ranging from 8 inches upwards was wreaking havoc with the communities falling in its unexpected route. The winds shattered doors and windows of several homes and blew off many roofs.

    It originated in the warm Caribbean Islands (West Indies) and its cyclonic rains took 69 lives in the tropical archipelago. Such storms, of smaller proportions have been hitting the Caribbean Islands and America before too, but the dimensions have never been so massive and these storms have never made landfall as far North as New Jersey.was not so much in the area of its eye. The worst damage was within a radius of hundred to two hundred miles around the eye.

    This circular path of devastation included entire New Jersey and Long Island area of New York. Some areas of New York city, including Staten Island, Queens and Lower Manhattan were hit hard. The full moon high tides in the Hudson and the East River inundated the low lying areas. The hundred year tidal elevation in coastal New Jersey ranges between ten and twelve feet, but the tidal surges of this storm exceeded those figures by several feet. As a result, there were massive power outages and some fires in the flooded regions. Days after the storm, a lot of communities all over New York and New Jersey are still without electricity. More than a hundred deaths have been confirmed so far. Some fatalities are still being found in houses. The worst property and infrastructure damages occurred in New Jersey. But New York suffered the highest death toll, after 9/11.

    There are hundreds of barrier islands in New Jersey. These barrier islands are a natural protection for the hinterland of the state. There are small bushes, wild grass and dwarf trees on these islands. During the coastal storms and Nor-Easters, the vegetation gets destroyed, but roots stay and the lost vegetation comes back. Before the European immigrants arrived in this country, these islands were practically uninhabited. Some of the adventurous Red Indians used to fish on these beauties during the day, but used to return home by nightfall. But the modern days Americans built communities with all modern facilities on some of these islands. During this hurricane, these barrier islands suffered the brunt of the fury. Some were wiped out in entirety and some were badly obliterated. It will be a gigantic task to restore normalcy on these islands. Some may have to be abandoned.

    Hurricane Sandy has done extensive damage to vital installations and properties in all states. Most heavily impacted municipalities are in the coastal regions of Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Connecticut and New York. On the first day, the financial losses have been roughly assessed at thirty five billion dollars. By now the losses have been revised to put the final figure at well past one hundred billion dollar mark. When final figures are tallied, the figures may increase substantially. This impact of the unprecedented storm is going to be harsh on the insurance companies. Most of them will ask for increased home insurance costs from their customers, when the next premium paying time comes. The FEMA has been very helpful with its generous financial and logistics help and so was the U.S. Army. Eight thousand electric experts from other states, along with their massive equipment, were in New Jersey alone. They have been working day and night to restore power in all affected states. Giant C-130 cargo planes have transported heavy electrical equipment from far flung areas like California.

    Considering massive damage to the properties and installations, the restoration of all electricity and other services shall need billions of dollars of new expenditure. Damaged home appliances, furniture, carpets and fittings shall have to be replaced. Hundreds of thousands of permanent gas operated generators shall have to be installed. Indubitably, Sandy has not only been the biggest storm in tears but also one of the most expensive.

  • Miss India Connecticut Joins AmeriCares Airlift to Guatemala

    Miss India Connecticut Joins AmeriCares Airlift to Guatemala

    STAMFORD, CT (TIP): The recently crowned Miss India Connecticut, Ronita Choudhuri, traveled to Guatemala with AmeriCares this week to tour the humanitarian organization’s aid programs. The West Hartford native was one of 75 supporters who left the AmeriCares Airlift Benefit on Saturday night on a chartered plane destined for Guatemala. Airlift passengers were taken on a whirlwind tour of the hospitals, clinics and homes for children and the elderly AmeriCares supports with donated medicines and supplies. The 24-hour trip gave supporters of the Stamford-based charity a glimpse into its work in more than 90 countries.

    “The work AmeriCares is doing in Guatemala and the impact they are having is truly amazing,” Choudhuri said. “I feel so fortunate to have been able to witness firsthand just a slice of the great work the doctors, nurses, volunteers and caretakers do every day. This was a journey of hope, and with the resources and aid provided by AmeriCares, we are ensuring Guatemalans have a better and healthier tomorrow.”

    The 25th annual AmeriCares Airlift Benefit “A Journey of Hope” raised more than $1.2 million for the organization’s relief efforts worldwide. More than 750 supporters attended the sold-out event in the Panorama hangar at Westchester County Airport in White Plains, N.Y. on Sept. 29.

    “We were pleased to have Ms. Choudhuri accompany the airlift to Guatemala as our special guest of honor,” said AmeriCares President and CEO Curt Welling, one of the judges at last month’s Miss India Connecticut pageant in New Haven where she was crowned. “Through her community service work with HIV and cancer patients, she embodies our core values and determination to help more people live longer, healthier lives.”

  • FIA in the Eye of a Storm

    FIA in the Eye of a Storm

    One of the oldest and supposedly a “representative body of Indian Americans in Tri-State area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut”, Federation of Indian Associations of NY,NJ,CT, popularly known as FIA, seems to be in the eye of a storm that it may not have weathered during the more than three decades of its existence.

    The organization is known principally for its annual India Day Parade in Manhattan. For years now FIA has been organizing the India Day Parade, creating an opportunity for Indian Americans to come together to celebrate India’s Independence. The organizers over the years came to gain attention and recognition in community and at Government of India outposts in the Tri-State area.

    The Indian Consulate recognized them and extended them due courtesy, even importance and the government of India establishments extended them all courtesies and cooperated with them in making the Parade a success, year after year.
    The recognition seems to have gone in to the heads of the top brass of FIA. Over the last couple of years they have become rude to the point that they forgot, not once, but a couple of times that the Consul General represents government of India; that Permanent Representative to the United Nations is the government of India. They have got so heady that this year they misbehaved with at least two journalists who were covering the India Day Parade and related events. The gentlemen known for their professional competence have not retaliated, not because they cannot but because they thought with Jesus Christ “They know not what they do”.

    A number of allegations are now flying against some of the FIA officials, particularly its Chairman (for ever?) Ramesh Patel. A few of its top brass is said to have been under investigation by government agencies in India and here for various kinds of irregularities and offences. At least, one Past President of FIA and currently a Trustee on the 13 member Trust had the CBI in India probing a case against him, with warrants issued against him when he was appointed President of FIA.

    The Indian Panorama has received a number of communications, supported with documents, from a few wide awake Indian Americans leveling allegations of impropriety on various counts which are being looked in to at our level. We invite comments from our readers on the issue. We will soon present before our readers the true story.

  • Dawoodi Bohra Community Celebrates Eid

    Dawoodi Bohra Community Celebrates Eid

    NEW YORK (TIP): The Dawoodi Bohra community in New York hosted a special Eid celebration event on Friday, September 7, at their community center in Springfield Boulevard in Queens. Dawoodi Bohra community resides in many countries around the world under the spiritual guidance of his Holines Dr Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin. The local Amil Saheb Yusufbhai Saheb Mohammedi has been appointed by His Holiness for New York/Connecticut jamaat under whose guidance the Eid program was organized for the community to acquaint them with the political and community leaders.

    The event was attended by a host of dignitaries from New York City and Queens including New York City Comptroller John Liu, City Councilmen Leroy Comrie, Peter Koo and Robert Jackson, New York State Assembly Member Grace Meng and Nassau county Legislator Richard Nicolello. The event also included professionals from the South Asian American community such as Dr. Sudhir Parikh, Chairman of Parikh Worldwide, Prof. Indrajit S Saluja, Chief Editor of The Indian Panorama and Zahid Syed, Chair of the Nassau County Human Rights Commission.

    The event was kicked off with a presentation on the Dawoodi Bohra community and their spiritual leader, His Holiness, Dr. Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin T.U.S., who is widely recognized as an ambassador of peace and goodwill. The Dawoodi Bohras are a one-million strong sect across the world with the current center of leadership being based in Mumbai, India, where a majority of the community resides. Over the last five decades, several thousand Dawoodi Bohras immigrated to the U.S., for whom the community center, or jamaat, serves as a great source of social, religious, and community support helping to secure their faith, customs, traditions, and culture.

    “This event was not only an opportunity for us to celebrate the culmination of the month-long period of Ramadan but to also reach out to our local community and promote mutual understanding in accordance with the teachings of our spiritual leader,” said Yusuf Hatim Bhaisaheb Mohemmadi, the President of Anjuman-e-Badri, New York, the non-profit organization administering and managing the affairs of the Dawoodi Bohra Community in New York and Connecticut.

    The Eid celebration presented a unique opportunity for the Dawoodi Bohra community members to learn more about their local elected officials, and in turn, acquaint them with their own community here in New York and around the world. Dr. Sudhir Parikh, who was felicitated at the event along with other guests, spoke about the importance of working together as Indians and part of the larger South Asian immigrant community that has always played a huge role in the economic progress of the United States.

    “Community outreach, especially in the current climate, is extremely important,” said Ahmed Shakir, Honorable Secretary of the Public Relations Committee of Anjuman-e-Badri, New York. “And this event was a huge success in helping us create a more inclusive environment that extends beyond our own community and crosses religious and cultural barriers,” he added.

    About Anjuman-E-Badri

    Anjuman-e-Badri is a non-profit organization administering and managing the affairs of the Dawoodi Bohra Community in New York and Connecticut. The Anjuman-E-Badri community center is located at 131-24 Springfield Boulevard, Springfield Gardens, NY 11413. For more information, visit http://www.nyjamaat.org.

    (Based on a Press Release)