Tag: Indian-Americans

  • Indian American community celebrates Veterans Day

    Indian American community celebrates Veterans Day

    LONG ISLAND, NY (TIP): During the beautiful week of Thanksgiving, as Holiday season started, members of Indian American Community joined together and started initiative for Our Veterans Families in USA. Collections for Veterans Families was started by NY State Senator Kemp Hannon in Garden City, Long Island.

    Several members of IAF, IALI, Ladies Club and other groups started collecting nonperishable items to be sent as donations to soldiers and veterans of US Army.

    Donations were given on Nov 22 at Senior Bethpage Community Center in Hicksville Long Island. IAF conducts senior programs at the Bethpage Center every fourth Tuesday of the month.

    Mr Richard Olson, President of Adopt a Battalion Program in Massapequa accepted the donations on behalf of the Veterans Group. Senator Hannon praised the efforts of the Indian American Community and thanked them for this initiative.

    Beena Kothari, President of India Association of Long Island Presented Medals of Appreciation to Senator Hannon, Mr Richard Olson, Mr Vijay Goswamy and to Anu Gulati.

    Special thanks to members of Ladies Club, Dr Manju Sharma, Ranu Jajoo, Dr Usha Bansal, Dr Urmilesh Arya, Dr Ami Walia, Dr Veena Arora, Indus American Bank and HAB Bank for coordinating the collections and donations.

  • Indian-American real estate executive may join Trump administration, says report

    Indian-American real estate executive may join Trump administration, says report

    NEW YORK (TIP): Local media reports speculated that a top Indian-American real estate executive could join Trump administration, after the President Elect met him at the Trump Towers in New York on November 28.

    Sandeep Mathrani, 54, the chief executive officer of Chicago based General Growth Properties had a meeting with Donald Trump. Mathrani earned $39.2 million last year-more than any other CEO of a U.S. real estate investment trust.

    Mathrani joined General Growth in 2011, right after the company emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. With a market capitalization of nearly $23 billion, General Growth is the second-biggest mall owner in the country, with local properties including Water Tower Place, Northbrook Court and Oakbrook Center. Before joining General Growth, Mathrani was president of retail real estate at New York-based Vornado Realty Trust. With more than 20 years of experience in the real estate industry, he joined Vornado Realty Trust in February 2002. Mathrani served as the Chief Executive Officer of Rouse Properties, Inc. until January 02, 2012. He served as an Executive Vice President at Forest City Ratner Companies, LLC from 1994 to February 2002 and was responsible for its retail development and related leasing in the New York City metropolitan area. Prior to Forest City Ratner, he served as a Senior Vice President of Sanford Nalitt & Associates, a regional shopping center developer in New York.

    He has been Director of Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. since July 12, 2016. Mathrani served as a Director at Aliansce Shopping Centers SA since March 2011. He holds a Master of Engineering, Master of Management Science and Bachelor of Engineering from Stevens Institute of Technology, in Hoboken, NJ.

  • Indian American Seema Verma nominated to top administrative post

    Indian American Seema Verma nominated to top administrative post

    WASHINGTON (TIP): On November 29, President-elect #DonaldTrump picked up Seema Verma, a health care consultant, to head the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, putting her in charge of a federal agency within the health department as part of a “dream team” which he said would transform America’s healthcare system. Her nomination came days after

    Indian-American Nikki Haley, Governor of South Carolina, was named as US ambassador to the United Nations.

    “I am pleased to nominate (Dr) Seema Verma to serve as Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,” Trump said in a statement. “She has decades of experience advising on Medicare and Medicaid policy and helping states navigate our complicated systems. Together, Chairman Price and Seema Verma are the dream team that will transform our healthcare system for the benefit of all Americans,” Trump said.

    Verma currently is the President, CEO and founder of SVC, Inc, a national health policy consulting company.Verma worked for the Health & Hospital Corporation of Marion County as vice president of planning and at the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials in Washington, DC. She founded the health policy-consulting firm SVC Inc. in June 2001. She is President and CEO of the company, which has worked with the states of Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Maine, and Tennessee.

    Based in Indianapolis, Vermaworked with Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels on health care policy. She was the architect of the Healthy Indiana Plan. The health insurance program, designed for people with low income, requires participants to pay into a health savings account and has high deductibles.

  • Indian teen wins US quiz show

    Indian teen wins US quiz show

    NEW YORK (TIP): Sharath Narayan, an Indian American teen from Madison, Alabama won Jeopardy! Teen Tournament – a top quiz show in the US. In the finale held in Washington, DC, on November 22, he won first place with just $1, taking home the grand prize of $100,000 and beating the two other finalists, Alex Fischthal and Michael Borecki.

    “I’d still like to go on a trip to Europe with my family (maybe Italy or Germany), but the majority of it will probably go towards taxes and college tuition,” he said after winning the award.

    “I’m definitely more confident since I won the tournament, and it has showed me that I can surprise myself and accomplish things that I never would have thought of,” he said.

    “Jeopardy!” attracts 23 million viewers each week and is in its 33rd season. Narayan, a junior at James Clemens High School,says he has grown up watching the popular game show and have the chance to compete on it was a dream come true.

     

  • Indian professor named AAPS 2016 Fellow

    Indian professor named AAPS 2016 Fellow

    NEW YORK (TIP): Arvind Kumar Bansal, a professor and head of the department of pharmaceutics at the National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (NIPER) in India, has been nominated by The American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (AAPS) as one of its Fellows, 2016.

    AAPS announced the elevation of nine recipients to Fellow, one of the highest honors given to members of the association.

    Each year, AAPS elevates a few members to Fellow in recognition of their professional excellence in fields relevant to AAPS’s mission: to advance the capacity of pharmaceutical scientists to develop products and therapies that improve global health.

    Each Fellow has demonstrated a sustained level of superior and distinguished professional achievement and contributions in fields related to this mission. Fellows are nominated by supporters, selected by a committee of their peers, and elevated by AAPS’ Executive Council.

    Dr Bansal develops technologies to improve water solubility of medicines so that they are more effective for patients. He is currently Professor and Head, department of Pharmaceutics at the National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (NIPER), SAS Nagar, Punjab, India. Dr. Bansal is leading a group of about 15 post-graduate and doctorate students, in various areas of Pharmaceutics like pre-formulation profiling, solid-state characterization, improvement of aqueous solubility, enhancement of oral bioavailability and compaction physics. Dr. Bansal holds a masters (1988) and doctorate degree (1993) in Pharmacy from the University of Delhi. Dr. Bansal served in the pharmaceutical industry as a research scientist in major Indian pharmaceutical companies – JK Pharmaceuticals (now called Regent Drugs after being acquired by Teva Pharmaceuticals, Israel) and Ranbaxy Laboratories Limited.

  • Trump wants Preet Bharara to stay on: Community is pleased

    Trump wants Preet Bharara to stay on: Community is pleased

    NEW YORK (TIP): Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, said after meeting the President-elect at Trump Tower on November 30 that he would remain in office under Donald Trump’s administration.

    Speaking to reporters after the meeting, Bharara said, “The President-elect asked, presumably because he’s a New Yorker and is aware of the great work that our office has done over the past seven years, asked to meet with me to discuss whether I’d be prepared to stay on as the United States attorney to do the work as we have done it, independently, without fear or favor for the last seven years.”

    Bharara said that he had already talked to Senator Jeff Sessions, Republican of Alabama, who is Trump’s choice for attorney general. “He also asked that I stay on, and so I expect that I will be continuing,” he said.

    Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York, for whom Bharara served as chief counsel, issued a statement after Bharara made his announcement, saying, “President-elect Trump called me last week and asked me what I thought about Preet Bharara continuing his role as U.S. attorney.” “I told him I thought Preet was great,” Mr. Schumer added, “and I would be all for keeping him on the job and fully support it. I am glad they met, and am glad Preet is staying on.”

    Indian Americans are happy that Bharara, has agreed to stay in his current role under the Trump administration and hailed President elect Donald Trump for his effort to ‘Reaching across the party lines’ and expressed hope that in near future ‘President Trump will appoint Preet to become a justice of the United States Supreme Court.’

    Rajiv Khanna, President, India-America Chamber of Commerce and a prominent lawyer said in a brief comment, “I am glad that President-elect Trump is reaching across the party lines to pick his team.”

    Ravi Batra, renowned Indian American lawyer said in a statement, “President elect Trump after meeting with the fearless United States attorney Preet Bharara, in a move more poignant then any before, declared that America, a nation of laws, will enjoy law enforcement without regard to political party labels: Republican or Democrat. After all, as has been said before, there is no democratic or republican way to lock up a criminal.

    That Preet shared, within the confines of the law, his areas of interest with POTUS45 resulted in, as I had publicly hoped and urged, Trump offering Preet four more years. To our great benefit, Preet who can do anything he wants and go anywhere he wants, chose to remain the “Horatio Hornblower” of the United States Attorneys for the Southern District of New York and continue to battle against those who play checkers while Preet plays chess.

    The fumigation and disinfectant of Albany and City hall is far from over, because those in dire need of being indicted, convicted and severed from their arrogant corrupt roots of power were playing the “run the clock out game” – suddenly find themselves checkmated by President elect Trump. I know that all hard-working New Yorkers are celebrating with unexpected joy that they have Preet back on their side to eviscerate the casual and comfortable corruption that has taken residence in the great state of New York.

    Given Preet Bharara’s exceptional service to the people of these United States, meeting, and I believe well exceeding, the power that emanates from the chair of the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York – I hope that then-president Trump will appoint Preet to become a justice of the United States Supreme Court when the next vacancy occurs – beyond the one created by the untimely demise of the great Nino Scalia.

    There is inherent greatness and Preet, much like the America we love and the Constitution we cherish and protect from enemies foreign and domestic.”

    As U.S. Attorney, Bharara oversees the investigation and litigation of all criminal and civil cases brought on behalf of the United States in the Southern District of New York, which encompasses New York, Bronx, Westchester, Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland and Sullivan counties. He supervises an office of more than 220 Assistant U.S. Attorneys, who handle a high volume of cases that include domestic and international terrorism, narcotics and arms trafficking, white collar crime, public corruption, gang violence, organized crime, and civil rights violations.

    Since his appointment as U.S. Attorney, the office successfully extradited and prosecuted one of the most notorious arms traffickers in the world, Viktor Bout, who is now serving a 25-year sentence. The office also obtained a life sentence for Faisal Shahzad, the Times Square bomber, and for one of the Al Qaeda plotters of the 1998 bombings of two American embassies in East Africa. In addition, the office has convicted scores of insider trading defendants, including Raj Rajaratnam, who was sentenced to 11 years, and Rajat Gupta.

    Bharara was born in 1968 in Ferozepur, Punjab, India, to a Sikh father and Hindumother. He grew up in Eatontown in suburban Monmouth County, New Jersey and attended Ranney School in Tinton Falls, New Jersey, where he graduated as valedictorian in 1986. He received his B.A magna cum laude from Harvard College in 1990 and his J.D. from Columbia Law School in 1993, where he was a member of the Columbia Law Review.

  • Indian American among 15 appointed to NY City Community Services Board

    Indian American among 15 appointed to NY City Community Services Board

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Indian American Dr. Pankaj Patel, a Board Certified Psychiatrist and Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health Sciences at Richmond University Medical Center is one of the 15 appointed by Mayor Bill de Blasio to New York City Community Services Board.

    Mayor de Blasio announced, November 28, the appointment of 12 new members and the reappointment of 3 members to the Community Services Board, the panel responsible for advising the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene in areas related to the City’s community mental health and substance use treatment services. In addition, the Board will advise on the advancement of a stronger public health approach to mental illness and substance use as outlined in the City’s comprehensive plan: ThriveNYC. Appointees include leaders from the non-profit, public and private sectors with a track record of serving people with mental illness and substance use issues. The Board also will be advised by Sherry Glied, Dean of the New York University’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of public services.

    “Today we’re taking another step forward in our efforts to destigmatizing mental illness and ensuring that best practices are put in place to help our fellow New Yorkers,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “The board, which now consists of professionals whose collective experience span the private, non-profit and public sectors, is well-equipped to support ThriveNYC and the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene in delivering services that will benefit our New Yorkers who are most in need. I look forward to working with the Board.”

    “The dynamic intellect and proven ability of today’s appointees to the Community Services Board will bring an additional dimension of support and vigor to changing the culture and expanding services for untreated mental illness and substance misuse. I am excited to work with them,” said First Lady Chirlane McCray, who spearheads ThriveNYC.

    “Today’s appointees bring a wealth of experience and perspective to the Community Services Board,” said Dr. Mary T. Bassett, Commissioner of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. “Their knowledge will not only help us identify gaps in mental health and substance misuse treatment, but they will also guide us in the development of programs that address the mental health needs of all New Yorkers.”

    The reappointed members of the Community Services Board include Gail B. Nayowith, Dr. Sarah Church and Dr. Roberto Lewis-Fernandez.

    Gail B. Nayowith, Chair of the Board, is the Principal of 1digit LLC, a management consulting and project management practice, and has worked in the health and human services sector for decades leading vital nonprofit provider, advocacy and philanthropic organizations.

    Dr. Sarah Church is a licensed clinical psychologist, with a focus in substance abuse. Dr. Church is also Executive Director for Montefiore Medical Center’s Division of Substance Abuse and Assistant Professor at the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine.

    Dr. Roberto Lewis-Fernández is a licensed psychiatrist whose work includes overcoming disparities in the care of underserved U.S. cultural groups. He is the Director of the New York State Center of Excellence for Cultural Competence and a Professor at Columbia University’s Department of Psychiatry.

    The newly appointed members of the Community Services Board are Dr. Thelma Dye, Dr. Pankaj Patel, Dr. Stepahanie Le Melle, Dr. Rosa Gill, Louis Cohen, Wanda Greene, Jun Matsuyoshi, Diane Arneth, Lynnae Brown, Denise Rosario, Ahmed Jamil and Christy Parque.

    Dr. Thelma Dye is a licensed psychologist and Executive Director and CEO of Northside Center for Child Development, one of New York’s oldest and most respected mental health agencies.

    Dr. Pankaj Patel is a Board Certified Psychiatrist and Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health Sciences at Richmond University Medical Center.
    “Mental illness is a medical illness. There is a broad spectrum of problems,” said Dr. Patel. Still, the common response to almost any of them is fear. “It could be something simple, like a panic attack,” he said, but the gut reaction from most people is “Something is wrong. They’re crazy.”

    For Dr. Patel, however, mental illness is something he’s embraced, something that has shaped most of his day for the past 30 years – ever since he arrived at the former St. Vincent’s Hospital in West Brighton to begin his psychiatric training.

    He said maintaining a clean bill of mental health over the course of time is tough for anyone. “All of us have a certain degree of becoming depressed in their lifetime,” he said.

    Dr. Stephanie Le Melle MD is a licensed psychiatrist with a interest in the treatment and care of people with serious mental illnesses and complex needs. She is co-Director of Public Psychiatry Education at Columbia University’s Department of Psychiatry and New York State Psychiatric Institute.

    Dr. Rosa Gil is the Founder, President and CEO of Comunilife, Inc., whose mission is to expand access to housing, mental health and social services to increase the quality of life of underserved, diverse communities in New York City.

    Louise Cohen is the CEO of the Primary Care Development Corporation (PCDC), a non- profit Community Development Finance Institution, dedicated to expanding and strengthening the primary care safety net in the United States. She has over 25 years of experience in public health, public policy, program operations and community health needs assessment.

    Wanda Greene has over 22 years of family support under the Mental Health Association and is the Director of the Family Resource Center (Mental Association of NYC), where, among other things, she maintains partnerships with public and private entities throughout New York City to provide mental health services to high need, underserved communities.

    Jun Matsuyoshi is Director of Mental Health Services, APICHA Community Health Center, where she oversees all mental health services.

    Diane Arneth is the Executive Director of Community Health Action of Staten Island as well as a member of Brightpoint Health. Brightpoint Health is a community-based organization that provides direct services, education and advocacy to individuals, families, and communities challenged by health disparities related to poverty, discrimination, and lack of access.

    Lynnae Brown is Director of Community Access at Howie the Harp Advocacy Center, a program of Community Access Inc. Brown oversees the peer-run employment program that has trained over 800 peers to work as peer providers in human resources.

    Denise Rosario is the founding Executive Director of Coalition for Hispanic Family Services and has over 30 years of experience in mental health services to children and families of color in urban communities.

    Ahmed Jamil is the President of the Muslim Society Community Center that offers education, youth development and community outreach programs catering to low-income families.

    Christy Parque is President and CEO of the Coalition of Behavioral Health Agencies, an advocacy and training behavioral health coalition of over 140 non-profit substance use and mental health providers that serve over 450,000 residents in New York City and surrounding counties.

    Sherry Glied, a non-member, is the Special Advisor to the Community Services Board. She is the Dean of the New York University’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service and former Professor of Health Policy and Management at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. She was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation at the Department of Health and Human Services, and served in that capacity from July 2010 through August 2012. She had previously served as Senior Economist for health care and labor market policy on the President’s Council of Economic Advisers in 1992-1993, under Presidents Bush and Clinton, and participated in the Clinton Health Care Task Force.

    About the Community Services Board:
    The Community Services Board (CSB) is mandated to advise the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene in all areas related to the City’s community mental health and alcoholism facilities, services and programs. The CSB has been redesigned to advise on the advancement of a stronger public health approach to mental illness and substance use as outlined in the City’s comprehensive plan: ThriveNYC. New appointees represent a broad spectrum of communities, organizations and viewpoints to help engage people whose voices have previously gone unheard.

  • Former Minister Ponnala Laksmaiah given a reception by INOC Telangana Chapter

    Former Minister Ponnala Laksmaiah given a reception by INOC Telangana Chapter

    NEW YORK (TIP): Indian National Overseas Congress USA – Telangana Chapter organized a meet and greet event with Former PCC President and Ex Minister Shri. Ponnala Lakshmaiah on November 12th 2016. This event was attended by NRIs from Telangana based in New Jersey.

    Shudh Parkash Singh, National Chairman of the Indian National Overseas Congress (I) USA and other senior leaders of Telangana chapter addressed the meeting. “Mr. Ponnala is the first leader who blessed the formation of the Telangana chapter of INOC USA when he was the TPCC President”, Shudh said in his speech.

    Ponnala Lakshmaiah while blaming the Telangana government for pressurizing the media not to report any negative news in the state of Telangana, urged all the responsible NRIs to rely on social media to expose the ground reality and the problems faced by the people of the state.

    Ravinder Thota, Sravanth Poreddy and Krishna Chaitanya (KC) also spoke on the occasion.

  • Indian American community leader Harish Thakkar honored at the NYC Council Diwali

    Indian American community leader Harish Thakkar honored at the NYC Council Diwali

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): The New York City Council celebrated Diwali, as usual, this year on November 15. On the occasion, some Indian Americans were recognized and honored for their services to the community. One of them was Harish Thakkar who is a well-known community activist.

    Harish Thakkar is honored. Seen in the picture below, from L to R: Assemblyman David Weprin, Council Member Barry Grodenchik, Harish Thakkar, Democratic Queens District Leader Dr. Neeta Jain, Council Member Rory Lancman and Councilman Peter Koo

    harish-thakkar

  • Seven Indian-Americans honored with New England Choice Awards

    Seven Indian-Americans honored with New England Choice Awards

    WALTHAM, MA (TIP): Seven Indian-American luminaries and two organizations received New England Choice Awards at a black-tie gala last month at Westin Hotel in Waltham, MA. Philanthropists Jaishree and Desh Deshpande, founders of the Deshpande Foundation, were honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award.

    The winners in each category are :

    Academics -Vijay Kumar, Associate Dean of Digital Learning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Art and Culture (Individual) – Jothi Raghavan, Founder, Nrityanjali School of Dance, Art and Culture (Organization) – LearnQuest Academy of Music, Business and Entrepreneurship – Amar Sawhney, Chairman and CEO, Ocular Therapeutix Inc Community Catalyst – Puran Dang, Mithas, IAL, IIT-SINE, TiE-Boston, Ekal and others

    Healthcare – Dr. Dinesh Patel, MD, Associate Clinical Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Harvard Medical School

    Non-Profit Organization – Saheli Philanthropy – Venkat Srinivasan, Vice Chair, American India Foundation (AIF)

    Youth Leadership – Gautam Narula, Award Winning Author: Remain Free

    The New England Choice Awards are presented by INE MultiMedia in collaboration with INDIA New England News, the region’s oldest and largest online, print and video magazine serving the South Asian community. INE received more than 250 nominations for these awards. A jury of 11 individual selected the final winners.

    “The jury has chosen the legends of our community for the first New England Choice Awards,” said Dr. Manju Sheth, CEO of INE MultiMedia, a Waltham, MA-based non-profit organization devoted to promoting and supporting charitable organizations, art, culture, education and empowerment through workshops, seminars and multimedia.

    Philanthropists Gururaj “Desh” Deshpande and Jaishree Deshpande were recognized for their support for education, innovation and entrepreneurship in the New England region and worldwide.

    Upendra Mishra, publisher of INDIA New England News and the IndUS Business Journal, said “We are honoring Jaishree, Desh and the Deshpande Foundation in recognition of their invaluable support of education, innovation, entrepreneurship and helping create a new generation of technology leaders and entrepreneurs in the United States, India, and Canada.” The Deshpande Foundation founded by the couple promotes social entrepreneurship by supporting a variety of non-profit organizations in India working in the areas of health, education, microcredit and agriculture.

  • Indian teen arrested 5 times in November in New Jersey

    Indian teen arrested 5 times in November in New Jersey

    BRUNSWICK, NJ (TIP): A 19-year-old Indian was arrested five times in 12 days in November on multiple charges including attempted assault by auto, driving under the influence and drug possession, according to a report by NJ.com.

    Sai Ramagiri was initially arrested on Nov. 4 by the Plainsboro Police Department for allegedly attempting to run over a friend with his vehicle while under the influence of marijuana, says the report quoting police.

    He was then arrested at around 1:30 p.m. on Nov. 8 after police found Ramagiri “leaned over vomiting” near a Jeep on Monet Court with a shredded rear tire. Officers recovered marijuana and drug paraphernalia from the vehicle and charged Ramagiri with DWI, drug possession and several motor vehicle summonses. He was later released.

    Two days later, Monmouth Junction firefighters found the teen with a white Porsche against a guardrail on Ridge Road, police said. Ramagiri, who was standing outside the vehicle, told officials the vehicle ran out of gas, police said.

    An officer found a marijuana cigarette sticking out of Ramagiri’s front jeans pocket and he was arrested and charged with drug possession and DWI. He was processed and later released on a summons.

    The next arrest came as Ramagiri was driving the 2016 Porche on Ridge Road and the South Brunswick officer who arrested him five days earlier saw him behind the wheel, police said.

    The Plainsboro Police arrested Ramagiri Nov 15 again after police stopped him in his Porsche for failing to maintain lanes while driving on Plainsboro Road. He was charged with DWI, having open alcohol containers in the vehicle and several motor vehicle summonses, according to the report.

  • Singer Ameet Kamath’s second album takes listeners ‘Into The Night’

    Singer Ameet Kamath’s second album takes listeners ‘Into The Night’

    NEW YORK (TIP): India-born, New York City-raised and Minneapolis-based singer/songwriter Ameet Kamath’s second music album “Into the Night” released on Wednesday, November 23, at The Rockwood Music Hall on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. In it, he weaves stories of the night with his evocative interpretation of the pop genre. The sound is reflective of an artist born in one world and shaped by another.

    “A most interesting pop-oriented album that transports the listener into the deepest and darkest regions of the time after sundown” is how music critic Dick Metcalf describes Ameet Kamath’s new Indie-Pop album. Metcalf raves that Kamath’s vocals are “infused with the kind of energy that guides the listener into the spaces he sings about.”

    All 13 songs invite the listener to the nocturnal world with themes of love, loneliness and heartbreak, before metamorphosing into an upbeat promise of dance and dreams. Kamath, an American citizen and native of India, embraced Western pop and jazz music long before he earned his U.S. passport. Many of his songs redefine the Indian Diaspora, with artistic expression straddling both cultures.

    As a young boy growing up in Mumbai, Kamath sang church hymns and anthems at his Jesuit grade school. He was deeply influenced by The Beatles, Culture Club, ABBA and Queen, and treasured his music collection, which included bootleg recordings of American Top 40 and Britain’s Top of the Pops.

    He came to New York City as a techie with a self-described “nice-Indian-boy haircut” in 1995. With the money from his first paycheck, he hired a voice coach and, subsequently, gained his performance moxie by busking in city parks and singing in nightclubs, most notably Marion’s Continental in the NoHo neighborhood.

    “I am not your traditional Indian import. I sought out a life in America in order to express myself; that’s the promise America always had for me,” said Kamath, 42, whose debut album, “Greasy Rails,” was self-produced in 2010 after moving from New York City to San Francisco. His debut effort earned him laudable reviews, along with the critical acclaim of his peers and the musical maestros he had worked and sang with over the years.

    “In my music, I’m telling stories so that the listeners can understand life as I do – constantly negotiating spaces, first as an American immigrant in the 21st century and now as an artist,” said Kamath. “I am not a starving artist, but I am starving to express myself,” he said, laughing.

  • New York City Council honors Ranju Batra for securing Diwali Stamp

    New York City Council honors Ranju Batra for securing Diwali Stamp

    NEW YORK (TIP): The New York City Council honored, November 15, businesswoman, community leader and chairperson of Diwali Stamp Project, Ranju Batra for her singular achievement in having a Diwali Stamp issued by the USPS.

    Batra’s journey to have the US postal department issue a Diwali stamp started in 2010. She discussed the idea of a Diwali stamp with community leaders only to learn that many had already tried only to fail. But this did not deter Ranju. She was able to get support from multiple members of Congress and collected thousands upon thousands of paper petitions. The then-Consul General Dnyaneshwar M. Mulay authored the official poem of the Diwali Stamp Project and during the United Nations General Assembly in 2015, Ranju Batra asked Prime Minister Modi to support the stamp and the Prime Minister wrote to President Obama, as well as to the Postmaster General.

    Ranju Batra’s perseverance and single minded devotion bore fruit. On August 23, 2016, the announcement was made that the Diwali Stamp was approved. On October 5, 2016 at the Consulate General of India, history was made and Diwali Forever Stamp was unveiled at an official function of the USPS jointly with Consulate General of India and Diwali Stamp Project.

    Ranju Batra has dedicated her life to serving the public. Born in India, she immigrated to the United States in 1975. She has a successful business record and still finds time for social, civic, political and charitable activities, including working as a trustee of the Hindu Center in Flushing.

    She served as President of Association of Indians in America (AIA), New York Chapter in 2011-12.

  • AAPI President Ajay Lodha asks Trump to enact medical liability reform

    AAPI President Ajay Lodha asks Trump to enact medical liability reform

    NEW YORK (TIP): Dr. Ajay Lodha, president of the largest body of Indian-American doctors has asked President-elect Donald Trump to enact medical liability reform, which it claimed is driving up the healthcare cost in its current shape through “extra testing and the practice of defensive medicine”. “AAPI (American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin) supports a healthy doctor-patient environment by curbing aggressive litigation targeting physicians,” AAPI president Ajay Lodha said in a statement in which he congratulated Trump on his victory in the presidential election.

    Lodha said, “such lawsuits have had a chilling effect and driven up the cost of healthcare, through extra testing and the practice of defensive medicine”.

    In the 112th Congress, The Help Efficient, Accessible, Low-cost, Timely Healthcare (HEALTH) Act of 2011′, limited the conditions for lawsuits and punitive damages for healthcare liability claims.

    It established a statute of limitations and limited noneconomic damages to USD 250,000, he rued. AAPI wants modification of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), he said.

    Under the ACA, hospitals and primary physicians would transform their practices financially, technologically, and clinically to drive better health outcomes, lower costs, and improve their methods of distribution and accessibility.

    “We believe that the current ACA could be improved upon greatly. To merely repeal the ACA would result in 20 million losing their health insurance coverage and that would be problematic to say the least,” he said.

    “A more reformed system with emphasis on free-market while retaining the provisions protecting consumers with pre-existing conditions would be ideal,”he said.

    AAPI represents the interests of over 60,000 physicians and 25,000 medical students and residents of Indian heritage in the US.

    In the statement, Lodha also invited Trump to address the delegates at the next AAPI Convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey next year.

  • Indian woman among Journalists honored for Courageous Reporting

    Indian woman among Journalists honored for Courageous Reporting

    LONDON (TIP): Journalists from India, Egypt, Turkey, and El Salvador were honored Tuesday, November 22 night in New York, at the Committee to Protect Journalists’ 26th annual International Press Freedom Awards for courageous work amid risks including imprisonment, threats, and legal action.

    “These awardees are truly remarkable journalists, all of whom have carried out their work with the knowledge that doing so puts them in real danger,” said Sandra Mims Rowe, CPJ Board Chairman. “It is heartening to see such resolve, and to know that even under the most threatening conditions, journalists will always find a way to do their job.”

    Malini Subramaniam, who has reported on issues including abuses by police and security forces, and sexual violence against women in her home state of Chhattisgarh, India, received the award from Susan Chira, former deputy executive director for The New York Times and CPJ board member. Award-winning U.S. photojournalist Lynsey Addario presented an award in absentia to Mahmoud Abou Zeid, the Egyptian photojournalist also known as Shawkan, who has been imprisoned since August 2013. Can Dündar, the former editor-in-chief of Turkish daily Cumhuriyet who is facing imprisonment on charges of disclosing state secrets, received his award from Lindsey Hilsum, international editor for the U.K.’s Channel 4 News. Héctor Tobar, op-ed contributor to The New York Times and former LA Times journalist, presented the award to Óscar Martínez, an investigative reporter for the online news magazine El Faro. Martínez has been threatened for his coverage of gang violence and extrajudicial killings in El Salvador.

    Christiane Amanpour, chief international correspondent and anchor at CNN, received the Burton Benjamin Memorial Award for her extraordinary efforts in the cause of press freedom. Her award was presented by Washington Post correspondent Jason Rezaian and Azerbaijani investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova, who appeared via video because she is under a travel ban. Both Rezaian and Ismayilova were imprisoned for their work. Amanpour has consistently used her own journalism to defend the rights of journalists around the world.

    The awards dinner at New York’s Waldorf-Astoria hotel was chaired by Jeff Zucker, president of CNN Worldwide, and hosted by David Remnick, editor of The New Yorker and CPJ board member. The dinner raised $1.75 million for CPJ’s global advocacy and new Emergencies Response Team-including a special appeal during the evening that was matched by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

  • Ravi Batra welcomes Trump’s choice of Nikki Haley as US Ambassador to the UN

    Ravi Batra welcomes Trump’s choice of Nikki Haley as US Ambassador to the UN

    Welcoming President-elect’s choice of Nikki Haley, New York based eminent attorney Ravi Batra, said in a statement released to The Indian Panorama, Wednesday, November 23, “President elect Donald J. Trump’s nomination of Governor Nikki Haley to be our ambassador to the United Nations and to sit at the Horse Shoe table of the Security Council, a cabinet level position, has taken my breath away as I celebrate the highest milestone for the Indian American community and the inherent trust that America has in her citizens’ love of America and our cherished Constitution. A trust that we hold dear and honor with our every act to protect these United States from enemies foreign and domestic.

    Just a little over 100 years ago, they used to be “NINA” signs – which meant No Irish need apply. The same sign was used for no Italians need apply, and then no Indians need apply. But because of America’s ability to continue its unique path of greatness is why every human being on earth wishes to live in America and be an American citizen. Indian Americans, like every other community that landed on the shores, leaving aside our original sin of slavery, has worked hard and honestly while embracing the American dream that rewards hard work, true grit as John Wayne personified, and love of nation and the human family.

    With the appointment of Governor Nikki Haley, America, acknowledged as the world’s sole superpower, POTUS45 declares that America will no longer act insecure and engage in John Boltonesque war lust or arrogance, and in its place use Charm and Respect as its preferred diplomatic arsenal.

    Trump’s Nikki Haley’s appointment, signals that the United States unilaterally declares the end of the rebirth of the Cold War, which in recent years was on a constant simmer to boil over into World War III – such that 40 million Russian citizens were doing weekly anti-nuclear drills.

    I now have hope that the Trump presidency will abstain from the discredited “counterbalance” tactic, the Cocaine of Statecraft, a universally discredited tool of statecraft that has brought us the worst conflicts and un-ending wars and perilous interventions, and use Charm and Respect to work wonders that no Insult ever could or did.

    A bright new dawn welcomes 193 nations of earth, who are members of the United Nations. Every capital of every nation can now step back, breathe in a long breath of relief, and refocus on finding means and methods of working with your neighbor states to not only enhance peace and security of their nation and the world, but honor Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg covenant: to be a government “for” the people.

    While hope may spring eternal, President-elect Trump has announced that it is Spring time in November 2016. As a Democrat, having voted for him to be president of these United States rather than the legally-fatigued Hillary and Bill Clinton, who I knew personally, I am duty-bound to aid and assist the Trump presidency make America greater than it has ever been. To complete Trump’s Confident America Policy (Philippines’ noisy Duterte are you listening?), appointing Gov. Mitt Romney as our secretary of state will give America a head-to-toe body armor of Charm and Respect. The world just got safer and less mean.”

     

  • Trump chooses Nikki Haley to be the US Ambassador to the United Nations

    Trump chooses Nikki Haley to be the US Ambassador to the United Nations

    NEW YORK (TIP): South Carolina’s Governor of Indian origin Nikki Haley has been chosen by President elect Donald Trump to be the US ambassador to the United Nations, the transition team announced Wednesday, November 23. She would be the first woman and minority representative to join Trump administration and the first ever Indian-American Cabinet rank official in any administration. Haley had a face-to-face meeting with Trump at Trump Tower in New York last week.

    Accepting the offer Haley said in a statement that the US “faces enormous challenges” both at home and internationally. She cited a “sense of duty” in accepting Trump’s offer.

    “When the President believes you have a major contribution to make to the welfare of our nation, and to our nation’s standing in the world, that is a calling that is important to heed,” Haley said. “The second is a satisfaction with all that we have achieved in our state in the last six years and the knowledge that we are on a very strong footing.”

    Haley will keep serving as governor until the Senate confirms her nomination.

    “We still have much to do in South Carolina, and my commitment to the people of our state will always remain unbreakable, both while I continue to hold this office, and thereafter,” she said in a statement.

    Ravi Batra
    Ravi Batra

    Welcoming President-elect’s choice of Nikki Haley , New York based eminent attorney Ravi Batra, said in a statement released to The Indian Panorama, Wednesday, November 23, “President elect Donald J. Trump’s nomination of Governor Nikki Haley to be our ambassador to the United Nations and to sit at the Horse Shoe table of the Security Council, a cabinet level position, has taken my breath away as I celebrate the highest milestone for the Indian American community and the inherent trust that America has in her citizens’ love of America and our cherished Constitution. A trust that we hold dear and honor with our every act to protect these United States from enemies foreign and domestic.

    Just a little over 100 years ago, they used to be “NINA” signs – which meant No Irish need apply. The same sign was used for no Italians need apply, and then no Indians need apply. But because of America’s ability to continue its unique path of greatness is why every human being on earth wishes to live in America and be an American citizen. Indian Americans, like every other community that landed on the shores, leaving aside our original sin of slavery, has worked hard and honestly while embracing the American dream that rewards hard work, true grit as John Wayne personified, and love of nation and the human family.

    With the appointment of Governor Nikki Haley, America, acknowledged as the world’s sole superpower, POTUS45 declares that America will no longer act insecure and engage in John Boltonesque war lust or arrogance, and in its place use Charm and Respect as its preferred diplomatic arsenal.

    Trump’s Nikki Haley’s appointment, signals that the United States unilaterally declares the end of the rebirth of the Cold War, which in recent years was on a constant simmer to boil over into World War III – such that 40 million Russian citizens were doing weekly anti-nuclear drills.

    I now have hope that the Trump presidency will abstain from the discredited “counterbalance” tactic, the Cocaine of Statecraft, a universally discredited tool of statecraft that has brought us the worst conflicts and un-ending wars and perilous interventions, and use Charm and Respect to work wonders that no Insult ever could or did.

    A bright new dawn welcomes 193 nations of earth, who are members of the United Nations. Every capital of every nation can now step back, breathe in a long breath of relief, and refocus on finding means and methods of working with your neighbor states to not only enhance peace and security of their nation and the world, but honor Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg covenant: to be a government “for” the people.

    While hope may spring eternal, President-elect Trump has announced that it is Spring time in November 2016. As a Democrat, having voted for him to be president of these United States rather than the legally-fatigued Hillary and Bill Clinton, who I knew personally, I am duty-bound to aid and assist the Trump presidency make America greater than it has ever been. To complete Trump’s Confident America Policy (Philippines’ noisy Duterte are you listening?), appointing Gov. Mitt Romney as our secretary of state will give America a head-to-toe body armor of Charm and Respect. The world just got safer and less mean.”

    Nikki Haley (born Nimrata “Nikki” Randhawa; January 20, 1972) is a Republican who has served as the 116th Governor of South Carolina since 2011. Prior to becoming governor, she represented Lexington County in the South Carolina House of Representatives from 2005 to 2011.

    Haley is the first woman to serve as Governor of South Carolina; at the age of 44, she is the youngest current governor in the United States. She is the second Asian-American of Indian descent to serve as governor in the United States, after Bobby Jindal of Louisiana. As governor, she also serves as chair, ex-officio, of the board of trustees of the University of South Carolina during her term in office.

    Born in Bamberg, the daughter of Indian immigrants, Haley’s first job was keeping the books for her family’s clothing store —at the age of 13. She is a proud graduate of Clemson University where she earned a degree in accounting.

    Haley and her husband, Michael, a Captain in the Army National Guard and combat veteran who was deployed to Afghanistan’s Helmand Province, attend Mt. Horeb United Methodist Church in Lexington. The Haleys have two children, Rena, 18, and Nalin, 15.

  • Indian-Origin Muslim Woman Wins Key Local Election In Maryland

    Indian-Origin Muslim Woman Wins Key Local Election In Maryland

    Washington: A Muslim-American woman, whose parents are from India and Pakistan, has won a key local election in the US state of Maryland which was dominated by anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim rhetoric.

    Raaheela Ahmed, 23, @RaaheelaAhmed won the school board race in Prince George’s county of Maryland by defeating a long-time system administrator by an impressive 15 per cent vote difference.

    She had unsuccessfully run for this position four years ago in 2012. Her father is from India and mother from Pakistan. Her victory gains significance as her district has 80 per cent of African-American population.

    She was endorsed by the former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steel.

    “It’s interesting that on the same day Donald Trump was elected as president of the US, I as a hijabi Muslim young woman was also elected to serve in a public office. I think that speaks volumes about the diversity of American opinion, and that American dream is still well and alive,” Ms Ahmed said.

    “I’d like to act as a form of inspiration for other minorities that they can achieve what they will, given prayer, circumstance and hard work. This win would not have been possible without the support and belief that other people had in me,” she said.

    “For my young minority women, please know that at the end of the day, you are worthy of your highest inspirations. You have to believe that you are able to achieve them, even if societal structures do not yet allow for that. Because one day, those glass ceilings WILL break. And who knows?” Ms Ahmed said.

  • Chemistry professor Pradip Mascharak receives Outstanding Faculty Award

    Chemistry professor Pradip Mascharak receives Outstanding Faculty Award

    An Indian-Origin professor of chemistry and biochemistry, Pradip Mascharak, has received the 2015-16 Outstanding Faculty Award from University of California, Santa Cruz’s Division of Physical and Biological Sciences.

    Mascharak earned his B.S. and M.S. degrees at the University of Burdwan, India, and his Ph.D. at the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur. He joined the University of California, Santa Cruz faculty in 1984.

    The annual award is the division’s highest honor for faculty achievement, recognizing combined excellence in research, teaching, and service.

    Mascharak’s research focuses on the structure and function of enzymes, green chemistry, and designing novel drugs for cancer and other diseases. The author of more than 200 peer-reviewed publications, he is also recognized as a gifted teacher and mentor.

    “Professor Mascharak has an outstanding record in research, teaching and exceptional service to the campus and the broader scientific community. The Outstanding Faculty Award…is a richly deserved campus recognition for his exemplary record,” wrote Paul Koch, dean of physical and biological sciences, in a letter announcing the award.

    In recent years, Mascharak’s lab has been studying and synthesizing photoactive compounds that release nitric oxide or carbon monoxide when exposed to light. Since nitric oxide and carbon monoxide are biological signaling molecules with antimicrobial and other properties, there is great potential to use compounds that release them in biomedical therapies.

    Mascharak’s work with nitric oxide complexes has shown promise for both cancer therapy and antimicrobial treatments. For example, in collaboration with chemistry professor Scott Oliver, Mascharak has developed a composite powder that can be applied directly to a wound or incorporated into a bandage to prevent infection by drug-resistant bacteria. Since he began this thread of work in 2002, Mascharak has published nearly 70 papers in top chemistry and medical journals, and several of the complexes he developed have been patented.

    Despite teaching challenging courses, Mascharak regularly receives exceptional student evaluations. Over the course of his tenure at UC Santa Cruz, he has advised 24 Ph.D. students who have graduated, eight of whom are currently faculty members at other institutions. For his exceptional work mentoring minority students and encouraging them to succeed, he received the Excellence Through Diversity Award.

    Mascharak is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the recipient of a Sloan Research Fellowship. In 2017, he will receive the Chemical Research Society of India Medal, a highly selective award given to scientists of Indian origin who have contributed extensively to the promotion of the field.

    This great honor follows another unique achievement in 2014, when Mascharak was awarded the Mahatma Gandhi Pravasi Samman Gold Medal in a ceremony at the House of Lords in London. This award recognizes outstanding service and achievements by Indians in the international arena.

  • DEMONETIZATION: NRIs concerned over changing old currency notes

    DEMONETIZATION: NRIs concerned over changing old currency notes

    There has been a spate of mixed reactions from the NRIS living in America after India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has imposed nation-wide ban on existing Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 notes in a move to eradicate the consequences of illegal black money transactions. While some welcomed the move and some criticized, NRIs showed more concern about how to exchange their old currency notes.

    Many Indians living in USA and holding Indian currency notes of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 were confused, as they had no idea about what to do. Rajeev B, a New Yorker who just returned from India on Nov 6, is not sure what he will do with his 15,000 cash in Rs 500 denomination. “I did some web research and found out that those holding old currency but living abroad will have to come to India within the next six months and get it deposited in banks or get it exchanged. They can get it exchanged till March from the Reserve Bank. It’s not possible for me to go back so soon. I have to send the old currency notes through his friend who is planning to visit India next month.”

    According to the Reserve Bank of India, Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) have the option of depositing the Indian notes in their non-resident ordinary rupee account (NRO) while Indian tourists can purchase foreign exchange equivalent to Rs 5,000 at airport exchange counters within 72 hours of the notification. However, several foreign exchange centers have declined to exchange the old denomination notes in USA.

    Many rushed to money exchange traders and banks to convert their currency soon after the announcement but their attempts were futile. “I went to HSBC Bank and J P Morgan, and both refused to exchange money. Since there is no way to exchange Rs 500 and 1000 notes at the moment, only possible way is to physically send them to India with someone,” said Diya Datta, a student of NYU.

    Nina Saha a resident of New Jersey went to SBI New York City branch to exchange Rs 20,000 in Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 denomination notes. ‘I was told by the officials that their branches in overseas locations are not authorized to exchange demonetized Indian currency as per the licenses issued to them by local regulators/RBI.

    Regarding eradication of black money from the subcontinent, some people feel Modi’s move won’t do much good. K Sen, a banker in NYC said, “Big honchos don’t keep their black money in notes. It’s all in either Swiss bank or in form of properties in India in real estates or other. This move will only hit small time black money holders. Nothing will change much.”

    Renowned Indian American attorney Ravi Batra feels that if such step reduces or eliminates corruption to any extent in any country, that too is a worthy goal. “I do not interfere in the internal affairs of other countries. So, speaking generally, and not specifically about India, I share with you my views”, he told Indian Panorama. “Eliminating an underground economy is a worthy goal of every government, not only because the tax collection goes up and the tax burden is fairly spread across the population, but also because it unleashes the growth potential of the invisible underground economy upon becoming visible and part of the nation’s economy. After all, money deposited in the bank can be used by the bank to lend it out, with the normal multiplier, to many more people who need money and wish to borrow it. To the extent that it reduces or eliminates corruption in any country, that too is a worthy goal. Finally, like every policy of every government in every nation, the success of the policy will depend upon the means and methods of effectuating same”, said Ravi.

  • Indian-Origin Sentenced To Prison For Helping ISIS in Chicago

    Indian-Origin Sentenced To Prison For Helping ISIS in Chicago

    An Indian American man who tried to go to Syria with his teenaged brother and sister to join the ISIS terror organisation has been sentenced in Chicago to 40 months in prison.

    Mohammed Hazra Khan, 21, became on Friday the first person of Indian origin to be convicted and sentenced in the US for ISIS connections.

    The sentencing hits the news just after the victory of Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump, who had called for intensive investigation of Muslim immigrants and, controversially, suggesting that if necessary their immigration should be stopped temporarily till a mechanism for heightened scrutiny was in place.

    Federal Judge John J Tharp sentenced Khan, who had admitted in court last year to the charges of providing support to the ISIS and trying to go abroad to join it, Mary B McCord, the Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security, said in a statement.

    The judge in the Northern Illinois federal court also ordered that for 20 years after his release, Khan should undergo intensive supervision that includes “violent extremism counselling” and a mental health treatment programme, she added.

    Khan was arrested by anti-terrorism officers two years ago while trying to leave the US from Chicago’s O’Hare Airport, she said. He was 19 years old at the time of his arrest.

    Khan’s brother, who was 16 years old in 2014, and sister, who was 17, were also stopped at the airport but did not face any charges and were let go after officials questioned them.

    Khan is an American citizen born in New York. But his family had immigrated from India and lived in the Chicago area, The Chicago Tribune reported quoting his lawyer Thomas Anthony Durkin.

    In a Tribune picture taken outside the courtroom, Khan’s mother, Zarine, was seen wearing a hijab and his father, Shafi, a long beard. The newspaper said that Khan wore a skullcap inside the court.

    ABC News reported that last year, his mother had publicly asked ISIS leaders to “leave our children alone” and asserted: “The venom spewed by these groups and the violence committed by them find no support in the Quran and are completely at odds with our Islamic faith.”

    Durkin told the judge that Khan did not intend to wage war against the US but was naive and only wanted to join an Islamic caliphate and live according to Muslim doctrine, according to the Tribune.

    Tharp did not buy the argument. The Tribune reported that the judge said: “Mr. Khan set off to join and aid a terrorist organization that believes it is appropriate, indeed believes it is holy, to kill anyone who disagrees with its religious dogma.”

    Tharp referred to the behaviour of ISIS and told Khan that “instead of a public beheading, you have been given a public trial,” ABC News reported.

    Khan could have been sentenced to 15 years, but the prosecutors asked for only five years because he had cooperated in other prosecutions and the judge gave the even more lenient sentence of 40 months.

    With the two years he spent in custody and remission for good behaviour, he would eligible to be free to join college next year, ABC News said.

    The Tribune said that according to prosecutors, Khan helped with investigations against an ISIS terrorist and recruiters and had also offered to testify against a British ISIS recruiter, Mizanur Rahman.

  • US Records Highest Increase in Students from India

    US Records Highest Increase in Students from India

    A record 165,918 Indians were studying in the US during academic year 2015-16, a rise of 25 per cent over the last year, making it the second leading country of origin among international students in America, according to a report released today.

    “This was the highest absolute increase of students ever and followed the previous year’s record growth,” according to the 2016 Open Doors Report on International Educational Exchange.

    For the second year in a row, India has accounted for the largest growth of international students in America with the number of foreign students in US universities surpassing one million for the first time during the 2015-16 academic year.

    The Open Doors report is published annually by the Institute of International Education in partnership with the US Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

    “The new report indicates there were a record 165,918 students from India, a 25 per cent increase on the year before, making it the second leading country of origin among international students in the United States,” it said.

    The US hosts more of the world’s 4.5 million globally mobile college and university students than any other country in the world, more than double the number hosted by the UK, the second leading host country, the US Embassy here said in a statement, quoting from the report.

    China remains the top sending country, with almost twice the number of students in the US as India, but India’s rate of growth and absolute increase outpaced China’s, said the latest reports of Open Doors Report on International Educational Exchange data released by the Institute of International Education (IIE) in partnership with the US Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.

    “In 2015-16, there were nearly 69,000 more international students in US higher education compared to the previous year,” it said.

    “Higher education continues to be the bedrock of our people to people ties. More students from India studied in the United States than ever before – at all levels – and I am especially pleased to see the record back-to-back, year-on-year growth in student numbers,” US Ambassador Richard Verma was quoted as saying in the statement.

    “With efforts such as our Passport to India initiative, we are also seeing the number of American students in India beginning to grow,” he added.

    India accounts for one out of every six international students in the US. Approximately three-fifths of Indian students are at the graduate level and three-fourths are in the STEM fields (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics).

    Open Doors also reports that over 313,000 US students received credit last year for study abroad during 2014-15, an increase of nearly three per cent over the previous year.

    “India is ranked 13th among the top 25 destinations of US study abroad. The number of US students going to India to study for academic credit at their home university in the US decreased by 3.2 per cent to 4,438, although this number has remained relatively flat across the last five years at 4,500,” the report said.

    Students from the top three countries of origin – China, India, and Saudi Arabia – now represent approximately 53 per cent of the total enrollment of international students in the United States, the report said.

  • Indian-American Couple Charged With Human Trafficking In California

    Indian-American Couple Charged With Human Trafficking In California

    An Indian-American couple has been indicted on human trafficking charges related to forced labour of foreign nationals primarily from India, authorities have said.

    A federal grand jury charged Satish Kartan, 43, and his wife Sharmistha Barai, 38, with conspiracy to commit forced labour and the commission of forced labour.

    Mr Kartan has also been charged with fraud in contacting foreign labour and Ms Barai with benefiting from forced labour, the Department of Justice said on Thursday.

    If convicted, each defendant faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

    The couple from California were arrested on October 21, on a criminal complaint and were released on bond with special conditions that prohibit them from hiring any non-relatives to perform domestic services or child care work for them. The arraignment is scheduled for November 21.

    According to court documents, between February 21, 2014, and October 3, 2016, Mr Kartan and Ms Barai hired workers from overseas to perform domestic labour in their homes in Albuquerque, New Mexico; Stockton and elsewhere in the US.

    In advertisements seeking workers on the internet and India-based newspapers, the couple made false claims regarding wages and duties of employment, federal prosecutors alleged.

    “Once the workers arrived at the defendants’ residences, Mr Kartan and Ms Barai forced them to work 18 hours a day with limited rest and nourishment. The defendants did not pay wages and used force, physical restraint and coercive conduct to get the workers to perform the labour and services,” it said.

    The indictment alleges that Mr Kartan and Ms Barai struck one worker on multiple occasions, including in one incident where Mr Kartan grabbed her hands and caused them to be burned over the flames of a gas stove.

    Moreover, the indictment alleges that the defendants failed to pay another worker and told her that they would call the police if she tried to leave.

    When she was ultimately able to arrange to be picked up from the defendants’ house, Mr Kartan refused to provide her with the access code to the gated community so that her ride could not enter, the court papers alleged.

  • Indian-American Woman Politician Threatened For Calling Anti-Trump March

    Indian-American Woman Politician Threatened For Calling Anti-Trump March

    An Indian-American woman politician in the US has received hundreds of angry emails and phone calls, some telling her to “go back to India”, after she called for a nation-wide protest against President-elect Donald Trump.

    Kshama Sawant, a Seattle Councilwoman is one of the few socialist office holders in the US, has been receiving “vicious threats and racist comments” after she appealed her supporters to publicly protest against the inauguration of Trump as the 45th president of the US in January, media reports said.

    “Join me, I appeal to you,… Let’s have a massive protest and tell America we do not accept a racist agenda and let’s make sure that on Inauguration Day, on the 20th and 21st of January, let’s do a nationwide shutdown and occupy inauguration,” Ms Sawant said at a post-election press conference at Seattle City Hall on November 9.

    The video of her press conference has gone viral on the social media. As a result, her office has been receiving all kinds of threatening messages.

    “I will come and tattoo a swastika on your head and on that bitch’s head,” a (Ms Sawant) staffer was told on phone, Council spokesperson Dana Robinson Slote told Q13 News in an email.

    “Go back to India bitch,” another email read. “I am tired of being shamed because I’m a white male. You automatically think I’m a racist. How about you go the (expletive) back to India or wherever you came from?” another email said.

    “Ever stop to think we see (Obama) as a racist? But we carried on and lived to fight another day. Stop being such a cry baby bitch and go hang yourself.”

    In 2013, Ms Sawant made history to become the first socialist elected in Seattle in 100 years by winning a City Council seat.

    Post general election, she has called her movement as “Build the resistance against Trump.”

  • Nikki Haley Elected Vice Chair Of Republican Governors Association

    Nikki Haley Elected Vice Chair Of Republican Governors Association

    Washington: Indian-American South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley has been elected Vice Chair of the powerful Republican Governors Association. 44-year-old Haley’s elevation to this position came amid reports that she is being considered for the position of secretary of state by President-elect Donald Trump.

    After the November 8 general elections, Republican Governors are now in charge of 33 States, something that has not happened in 94 years.

    Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker was elected Chair and Haley, the daughter of Indian immigrants, Vice Chair of the Republican Governors Association (RGA) for the year 2017. Yesterday, Haley met with Trump, 70.

    “Haley was pleased to meet with President-elect Trump. They had a good discussion, and she is very encouraged about the coming administration and the new direction it will bring to Washington,” Rob Godfrey, her deputy chief of staff said.

    “Haley’s strong leadership will be a major asset to the RGA in the upcoming year. She has worked tirelessly for the people of South Carolina, to make every day a great day for her constituents, and that is just the kind of determination the RGA expects of its leaders.

    “Her experience and insight will be integral to the success of our governors and candidates as we enter 2017,” outgoing RGA chair Governor Susana Martinez said.

    Haley said Republican governors are making a difference, delivering results to the people of their states, and the party’s record-breaking majority shows that the RGA knows what it takes to elect effective leaders.

    “I look forward to working with Governor Walker, a trusted friend and colleague, to recruit strong candidates and build on RGA’s historic progress in the months ahead,” she said.

    In an op-ed on CNN, South Carolina’s popular columnist Issac Bailey wrote Haley is perfectly positioned to do what many believed Hillary Clinton would have.

    “#NeverTrumpers have reason to admire her. Trump supporters have reason to embrace her and she has an opening with voting populations who have long been sceptical of the GOP (Republican party) and are now even more so because of Trump. Nobody should be mocking her now. Secretary of state or not, Haley could be a future political titan in a political party that finds itself with unprecedented levels of national power and internal chaos,” Bailey wrote.

    Haley could give Trump something to brag about and his supporters, desperate to deny the bigotry upon which their hero rose to national political prominence, something to point to, his willingness to appoint a woman from a minority group who did not cow to him during the election cycle, Bailey added.