Tag: LeadStory

  • Indian-American Attorney Ajay Raju Recognized with Philanthropy Award

    Indian-American Attorney Ajay Raju Recognized with Philanthropy Award

    Previous recipients of the award include, Indian-American philanthropist Frank Islam and Suri Sehgal, founder of the SM Sehgal Foundation.

    WASHINGTON (TIP):  Noted Indian-American attorney Ajay Raju has been honored with the third American Bazaar Philanthropy award in recognition of his philanthropic activities in the US.

    “Raju was honored for his commitment to revive Philadelphia through the Germination Project,” said Asif Ismail, publisher of The American Bazaar, an online ethnic news publication about Indian-Americans.

    “The Germination project is a signature initiative of the Pamela and Ajay Raju Foundation that recruits talented teenagers and prepare them to be tomorrow’s leaders,” Mr. Ismail said in a statement.

    Previous recipients of the award include, Indian-American philanthropist Frank Islam and Suri Sehgal, founder of the SM Sehgal Foundation.

    In his remarks on the occasion, Mr. Islam underscored the need of philanthropy. Mr. Raju, he said, has done a fabulous job in regenerating the city of brotherly love.

    “We are living in an increasingly dangerous world and times. World peace is essential for the future of this planet. There is much deadly conflict now and threats of it around the globe which must be controlled,” he said.

    Recognizing this, he has supported both the US Institute for Peace and the Woodrow Wilson Center, which bring scholars and practitioners to develop programs to try to find peaceful means for conflict resolution, Mr. Islam said.

    Navneet S Chugh, a California-based attorney, said the US has a rich tradition of charity and giving.

    India and Indian-Americans still have a long way to go, as he citied some of the recent figures with regard to non-profits.

    Last year Americans gave USD 500 billion in donations to charities. As many as 70 percent of this was given by individuals and only five per cent came from corporate sector.

    One third of the donations went for religious purposes, 20 per cent went to education and 10 per cent to social services.

     

     

     

     

  • Book Review: Musings on Medicine, Myth and History- India’s Legacy By VK. Raju, M.D with Leela Raju, M.D.

    Book Review: Musings on Medicine, Myth and History- India’s Legacy By VK. Raju, M.D with Leela Raju, M.D.

    Reviewed by Gopala Rao, retired Head of Medical Physics Group and a Research Professor of Physics, Johns Hopkins University

    This book of twelve small essays by a highly recognized Ophthalmologist also known for his free services to underprivileged children with eye problems across the world gives a wonderful overview of the cultural heritage of India from ancient times with particular reference to Medicine.

    If you are an M.D or some other Medical Professional, you will be especially thrilled that you discovered it. The Co-author Leela Raju. M.D is his own daughter.

    Starting with a brief reference to the ancient Vedas and the Upanishads, the author begins with the publication of Susruta Samhita by an ancient surgeon known as Susruta who lived sometime during the period 800 to 600 BCE. Then comes the publication of Charaka Samhita by the ancient physician Charaka who is believed to have lived sometime during the period 300 BCE to 100 CE. We can relate to this part of India’s Legacy in Medicine in terms of modern Allopathy by remembering the contributions of the Surgeon William Halstead and the Physician William Osler both of whom made their contributions in the middle part of the 19th Century.

    Then around 400 BCE, Sage Patanjali publishes his Yoga Sutras laying the foundations for a stage by stage of eight stages procedure for transcendence beyond our minds leading to our Soul’s union with God. Of these, today what we are emphasizing are only the Asana (Postures), Pranayama (Regulated Breathing Routine) and a little bit of meditation at the end. Still, the benefits of Yoga are as powerful as or even more powerful than Physical Therapy or Chiropractic manipulations.

    Last but not the least is the evolution of Ayurveda with its foundations based on the discovery that a proper balance of three personality traits Vata, Pita and Kapha is essential for the proper functioning our bodies and minds. Imbalances among them came to be recognized as causes for disease and all treatments are based on correcting these imbalances. We can make sense in this concept in terms of Modern Medicine by equating it with the notion of Homeostasis when we try to restore vital parameters such as temperature, blood pressure, sugar levels etc. to normal values.

    Once you browse through it for the first time, you won’t put the book down till you read it from page to page. Thereafter, you will treasure it as a valuable addition to your home library. That is because of the highly researched end notes and references to the author’s other publications that it contains.

     

  • Indian Origin British MP Virendra Sharma calls for an apology and recognition of the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre

    Indian Origin British MP Virendra Sharma calls for an apology and recognition of the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre

    Nirpal Shergill in London

    LONDON (TIP):   Virendra Sharma MP tabled a Parliamentary Early Day Motion (EDM) earlier this week calling for the British Prime Minister to apologise for the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre of 1919. The EDM went further and calls for this shameful piece of history to be taught n British schools, especially in the centenary year.

    Virendra Sharma MP stated: “This was an important moment in the history of Britain in India. Many suggest it was the beginning of the end, a moment that finally emboldened the Independence Movement. It must be commemorated, and the British Government should make clear its repudiation of such a barbaric act.”

    The massacre left maybe, a 1,000 peaceful protesters dead and began a period of cruel repression in the region. At the time Winston Churchill proclaimed the massacre “monstrous” and the British Government condemned Colonel Dyer for his actions, but no apology has since been forthcoming. Prime Minister, David Cameron visited the site of the massacre in 2013 but stopped short of issuing an apology.

    Virendra Sharma ‘s EDM states: “That this House recognises the importance of the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre of 1919 for its importance as a turning point in the history of the Raj and British Empire in India; notes that the centenary of this event is approaching and that it is appropriate to commemorate it; further recognises that former Prime Minister, David Cameron, referred to the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre as a deeply shameful act; further notes that this event does not represent modern British values; urges the Government to ensure that British children are taught about this shameful period and that modern British values welcome the right to peaceful protest; and further urges the Government formally to apologise in the House and inaugurate a memorial day to commemorate this event.

     

  • US for stronger economic, defense ties with India, says Tillerson

    US for stronger economic, defense ties with India, says Tillerson

    WASHINGTON (TIP): US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson made it abundantly clear that US valued ties with India. He said, October 18, before a visit to India next week that the Trump administration wanted to “dramatically deepen” cooperation with New Delhi.

    “India and the United States should be in the business of equipping other countries to defend their sovereignty, build greater connectivity, and have a louder voice in a regional architecture that promotes their interests and develops their economies,” Tillerson added.

    The US decision to expand relations with India almost certainly will upset India’s rival, Pakistan, where Tillerson also will stop next week, said a senior State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    Pakistan was the main US ally in South Asia for decades, but US officials are frustrated with what they charge has been Pakistan’s failure to cut support for the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan, where the administration wants India to play a bigger role in economic development.

    As part of a South Asia strategy unveiled by Trump in August, Tillerson is expected to press Islamabad, which denies aiding the Taliban, to take stronger steps against extremists and allied groups and intensify efforts to pressure them to agree to peace talks with Kabul.

    “We expect Pakistan to take decisive action against terrorist groups based there that threaten its own people and the broader region,” Tillerson said.

    Trump has threatened further cuts in US aid to Pakistan if it fails to cooperate.

    Speaking less than a month before President Donald Trump is due to make his first state visit to China, Tillerson said the United States had begun to discuss creating alternatives to Chinese infrastructure financing in Asia.

    In another comment likely to upset Beijing, he said Washington saw room to invite others, including Australia, to join US-India-Japan security cooperation, something Beijing has opposed as an attempt by democracies to gang up on it.

    The remarks coincide with the start of a week-long Chinese Communist Party congress at which President Xi Jinping is seeking to further consolidate his power.

    “The United States seeks constructive relations with China, but we will not shrink from China’s challenges to the rules-based order and where China subverts the sovereignty of neighboring countries and disadvantages the US and our friends,” Tillerson told the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank.

    China, a strategic rival to the United States and India, is also vital to Trump’s efforts to roll back North Korea’s efforts to create nuclear-armed missiles capable of reaching the United States, an issue expected to top the agenda in Trump’s Nov. 8-10 Beijing visit.

    A senior State Department official defended the timing of the speech, saying Tillerson also said he wanted a constructive relationship with China.

    “For many decades the United States has supported China’s rise,” said the official. “We’ve also supported India’s rise.

    But those two countries have risen very differently.” The Chinese Embassy in Washington said in a statement that Beijing “contributes to and defends the rules-based world order” and seeks to enhance international cooperation.

    “We will never seek hegemony or engage in expansion, never pursue development at the expenses of others’ interests,” it said.

    Tillerson did not say what he meant by creating an alternative to Chinese infrastructure financing, but said the Trump administration had begun a “quiet conversation” with some emerging East Asian democracies at a summit in August.

    He said Chinese financing was saddling countries with “enormous” debts and failing to create jobs.

    “We think it’s important that we begin to develop some means of countering that with alternative financing measures.” “We will not be able to compete with the kind of terms that China offers, but countries have to decide what are they willing to pay to secure their sovereignty and their future control of their economies and we’ve had those discussions with them as well,” he said.

  • President Trump Celebrates Diwali at White House; Praises India, Indian Americans

    President Trump Celebrates Diwali at White House; Praises India, Indian Americans

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Following in the footsteps of his predecessor Barak Obama, President Trump himself led from the front by hosting a Diwali celebration in the White House on October 17.

    In his first Diwali celebration in the Oval Office of the White House, Trump was accompanied by senior Indian-American members of the administration, including US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, Seema Verma, administrator of Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Ajit Pai, Chairman of the US Federal Communications Commission and Raj Shah, Principle Deputy Press Secretary. Many community leaders and President’s daughter Ivanka Trump also joined the celebration.

    “Today, I was deeply honored to be joined by so many administration officials and leaders of the Indian-American community – to celebrate Diwali — the Hindu Festival of Lights,” Trump said. “Today, we proudly celebrate this holiday in THE PEOPLE’S HOUSE. In so doing, we reaffirm that Indian-Americans and Hindu-Americans are truly cherished, treasured and beloved members of our great American family.”

    “As we do so, we especially remember the People of India, the home of the Hindu faith, who have built the world’s largest democracy. I greatly value my very strong relationship with Prime Minister Modi,” he further added.

    Trump also lit diyas on the occasion and hailed the Indian American community’s contribution in different fields.

    “Our Indian-American neighbors and friends have made incredible contributions to our country – and to the world. You have made extraordinary contributions to art, science, medicine, business and education. America is especially thankful for its many Indian-American citizens who serve bravely in our armed forces and as first responders in communities throughout our great land,” he said.

    Diwali, he said, is one of the most important celebrations in the Hindu religion.

    “A time of peace and prosperity for the New Year, it is a tradition that is held dear by more than 1 billion Hindus worldwide and more than 2 million Hindus in the United States. It is also celebrated by millions of Buddhists, Sikhs, and Jains in America, India and around the world,” he said.

    The tradition of Diwali celebration at the White House was first initiated by President George Bush.

     

  • October 20 New York Print Edition

    October 20 New York Print Edition

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  • Indian American Neal Katyal Honored with ‘The American Courage Award 2017’

    Indian American Neal Katyal Honored with ‘The American Courage Award 2017’

    WASHINGTON (TIP): Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC celebrated its 2017 American Courage Awards to recognize and celebrate individuals, groups, and corporations for their commitment and contributions to civil rights, on October 5, 2017. Prominent Supreme Court attorney Neal K. Katyal is among this year’s honorees.

    Neal K. Katyal, former Acting Solicitor General of the United States and is the representing attorney for the state of Hawaii in its challenge to the President’s Muslim ban, received the American Courage Award. The honor is for an individual who has shown extraordinary courage or commitment to civil rights. Neal’s prolific body of work includes defending the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act and defending the rule of law and due process in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld.

    At the age of 47, Katyal has already argued more Supreme Court cases than any other minority attorney in U.S. history, except for Thurgood Marshall, with whom he is currently tied. Neal is best known for his work as lead counsel for the Guantanamo Bay detainees in the landmark decision Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, and for successfully defending the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. In 2011, Katyal led efforts to issue a confession of error by the Solicitor General’s office, formally acknowledging and apologizing for its role in Korematsu v. United States. Recently, Katyal served as the lead attorney for the state of Hawaii’s challenge to the President’s travel ban. It is clear from his work that he has a personal as well as professional commitment to the advancement of civil rights.

    Katyal was deemed “one of the finest lawyers who has argued before a court,” by Chief Justice John Roberts. In 2011, Neal received the highest award given to a civilian by the U.S. Department of Justice, the Edmund Randolph Award. Neal has also served as a law professor for nearly two decades at Georgetown University Law Center, where he was one of the youngest professors to have received tenure and a chaired professorship in the university’s history. He also fought to overturn the patents held by Myriad Genetics that could help diagnose breast cancer winning a unanimous Supreme Court decision.

  • A Reprieve for Talwars:  Allahabad High Court says the couple did not kill Aarushi

    A Reprieve for Talwars: Allahabad High Court says the couple did not kill Aarushi

    ALLAHABAD (TIP): In a welcome reprieve to Talwars, the Allahabad High Court, on October 12, reversed a CBI court judgment and acquitted dentist couple Rajesh and Nupur Talwar of the charge of murdering their 14-year-old daughter Aarushi and domestic help Hemraj, 45, in May 2008.

    The 263-page verdict ends, at least for now, the nine- year ordeal of the Noida couple, who were sentenced to life by a Ghaziabad CBI court in November 2013 for the double murder that not only transfixed but also shook the nation with its element of filicide. But the central question remains — who killed Aarushi and Hemraj?

    The Division Bench of Justices BK Narayana and AK Mishra read out the operative part of the judgment in a jam-packed courtroom and acquitted the couple, saying neither the circumstances nor the evidence was enough to hold them guilty.

    Ending the Talwars’ nine-year ordeal, the court said the Central Bureau of Investigation had based its case purely on circumstantial evidence that did not quite add up. Finding no direct evidence, the court gave the benefit of doubt to the couple and quashed the CBI court’s sentence of life imprisonment.

    On November 25, 2013, the CBI trial court had held them guilty of the double murder. Since then, the Talwars have been imprisoned in Dasna jail, Ghaziabad. They challenged the CBI verdict in the Allahabad High Court in January 2014. Their repeated pleas for bail were turned down. After daily hearings, the High Court concluded the arguments and reserved its judgment on September 7 this year.

    According to the counsel for the Talwars, the court said there was a “strong alternative theory” in the case. He said the court refuted the CBI theory that there was no third person in the house when the murders took place.

    CBI counsels said they would first study the entire judgment and then decide if the verdict was to be challenged in the Supreme Court or not.

    Dasna prison jailer Dadhiram Maurya said the Talwars felt they had got justice and were praying. “After having breakfast, they had been praying. Their schedule was normal. She (Nupur Talwar) said they got justice today and had tears of joy.”

    Aarushi was found dead inside her room in the Talwars’ Noida residence with her throat slit in May 2008. The suspicion initially fell on 45-year-old Hemraj, who was missing at that time. But his body was recovered from the terrace of the house a day later.

    As the Uttar Pradesh Police drew flak over shoddy investigation into the case, the then Chief Minister Mayawati recommended a probe by the CBI.

    Group Captain BG Chitnis (retd), Nupur Talwar’s father, said, “I am grateful to the judiciary for the verdict. They have really suffered. They are emotionally drained. At my age, it was very trying to see my daughter behind bars.”

    Lawyer Rebecca John, who was part of the Talwars’ legal team, claimed the whole case was based on “innuendos”.

    (Source: PTI)

  • Trump Signs Executive Order to Weaken Obamacare; Says the order is “only the beginning”

    Trump Signs Executive Order to Weaken Obamacare; Says the order is “only the beginning”

    WASHINGTON (TIP): President Donald Trump on Thursday, October 12, used his presidential powers to weaken Obamacare after fellow Republicans in Congress had failed to repeal the 2010 law which he loathed no end and have been itching to do away with.

    Trump signed an executive order aimed at letting small businesses band together across state lines to buy cheaper, less regulated health plans for their employees with fewer benefits.

    It is Trump’s first definitive step to dismantle Obamacare since taking office in January. He had promised during his election campaign that one of his top priorities will be to dismantle former President Barack Obama’s signature domestic policy achievement.

    Trump has come under severe criticism at the hands of Femocratic leaders for having taken to signing an executive order on the issue where Republicans had earlier failed in their repeated attempts to bring down Obamacare.

    Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer accused Trump of “using a wrecking ball to single-handedly rip apart our healthcare system.”

    “Having failed to repeal the law in Congress, the president is sabotaging the system”, Schumer said.

    The House of Representatives in May passed Republican legislation to gut Obamacare. But attempts by Senate Republicans to repeal and replace Obamacare failed in July and September, in part because the proposed legislation would have caused millions of Americans to lose healthcare coverage.

    Republicans call Obamacare, which extended health insurance to 20 million people, a government intrusion into Americans’ healthcare, and have been promising for seven years to scrap it.

    Trump’s order weakens Obamacare in part by giving people more access to plans that do not cover essential health benefits such as maternity and newborn care, prescription drugs, and mental health and addiction treatment.

    Obamacare, known formally as the Affordable Care Act, requires most small business and individual health plans to cover those benefits.

    The order also sought to change an Obama-era limit on the time span people can use short-term health insurance plans, which are cheaper but cover few medical benefits. Those plans are currently limited to three months.

    Trump said the order was “only the beginning” and that his administration would take additional actions. He said he would “pressure Congress very strongly to finish the repeal and the replace of Obamacare once and for all.”

    The action could open Mr. Trump to legal challenges from Democratic state attorneys general, who have said they will sue Mr. Trump if he tries to destroy Obamacare.

    California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, a Democrat, said Trump’s executive order is just another step toward imploding the Affordable Care Act. “It should come as no surprise that California is prepared to fight in court to protect affordable healthcare for its people,” Becerra said. “We’re heading in a different direction.”

    Trump has taken a number of other steps since January to weaken or undermine Obamacare. He has not committed to making billions of dollars of payments to insurers guaranteed under Obamacare, prompting many to exit the individual market or hike premiums for 2018.

    The administration also halved the open enrolment period, which begins Nov. 1, and slashed the Obamacare advertising and outreach budget.

  • October 13 New York Print Edition

    October 13 New York Print Edition

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  • Netherlands Rocked by “Gujarati Garba-Dandia”; Hindi & Hindustan Kept Alive by Arya Samaj

    Netherlands Rocked by “Gujarati Garba-Dandia”; Hindi & Hindustan Kept Alive by Arya Samaj

    AMSTERDOM (TIP): Recently Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Amsterdam. There he met Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, King Willem Alexander & Queen Maxima. Mr. Modi was presented bicycle by Dutch PM as a gift.   

    To celebrate 70 years of Indo-Dutch Diplomatic Relations, Indian BJP leader Vijay Jolly along with prominent UK Sikh leader Sardar S.S. Ahluwalia recently visited Netherlands. This visit was undertaken to Promote People to People Friendship between India & Netherlands.

    A massive Gujarati Garba-Dandia evening was organized by local Indian community where performers from UK participated along with local youngsters in large numbers. Indian Embassy in Netherlands was represented by Director Indian Cultural Centre Mr. D.V.N. Rao and colleagues.

    During visit to Arya Samaj temple, Mr. Jolly was blessed & also participated in religious hawan ceremony for purification, where Sanskrit shlokas were chanted by local citizens. President Arya Samaj Netherlands Dr. Surya Prasad Biere presided while certificates were distributed to the best students excelling in Hindi language courses by Mr. Jolly. He was surprised to find “Hindi & Hindustan” alive in the hearts & minds of PIO’s & NRIs hailing from Surinam.

    During visit to local Sri Guru Singh Sabha Gurudwara in Hague, Mr. Jolly & Ahluwalia were welcomed by President Sardar Harjeet Singh. Guru’s blessings were bestowed & overseas visitors performed Guru Ki Seva and had langar.  

    A memorable visit to International Court of Justice in Hague along with visit to a remote village where they were warmly welcomed by Senior Dutch citizens Mrs. Heny & Mr. Jan, who live in a make shift windmill. Famous NRI Vijay Sharma & wife Seema Sharma organized a fabulous luncheon for the duo. This visit helped in fostering new lively friendships & evergreen memories.  

    (As related by Vijay Jolly)

  • Time to Review Gun Policy

    Time to Review Gun Policy

    Prof I.S.Saluja

    We are in to the sixth day since Sunday’s shooting at a country music festival in Las Vegas, and still at a loss to know why Paddock took to massacre of people who had come to celebrate the harvest festival and life’s goodness. Whatever, the motive of the shooter, one cannot escape the stark reality that it was a horrific human tragedy and, probably the worst shooting in the history of modern America which snuffed out 59 lives, injured more than 520, some quite seriously and shattered a whole lot of people. The Las Vegas shooting has shattered the nerves of Americans everywhere, not just who were present on the fateful day at the scene; not only the people in Las Vegas but the entire populace of America. The gory incident surpasses all dozens of the worst shootings and killings in the last few decades.

    The question is how recurrence of such shootings can be stopped. Mass deaths caused by guns have long been a part of American history. But describing those events and recent ones accurately is more complicated than simply drawing a chronological line between them. There have been times when the shootings and killings were related to the economic status -the haves and the have nots. Racially motivated shootings also have been a part of history of violence in America.

    But the present shooting does not qualify for either description. It is a mass shooting of mostly whites by a white. Indubitably, there are no racial overtones to this shooting. And, it will not be proper to dismiss the incident as the vile, vicious, heinous act of “pure evil” and forget about it, as we have forgotten dozens of such tragedies in yesteryears.

    A little soul searching is necessary. Americans have a love of guns, in particular, a particular class. As long as these are used for hunting and as status symbols, there is hardly anything wrong. But when these guns fall in to hands of hot headed and wicked people we can expect gory shootings like the one we witnessed last Sunday in Las Vegas.

    It is time the administration seriously revised gun policy and prevented deadly weapons from being acquired by anybody. Some kind of a check will surely help in preventing the recurrence of loss of life at the hands of people in possession of deadly guns. Let lawmakers value human lives more than their brand of politics.

    God Bless America!  

  • October 06 New York Print Edition

    October 06 New York Print Edition

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  • 148th Birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi Celebrated

    148th Birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi Celebrated

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): The Consulate General of India in collaboration with Bhartiya Vidya Bhavan, and the Manhattan Borough President’s Office celebrated 148th Birth Anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi and the International Day of Non- Violence on Monday, October 2, 2017 at Union Square Park, near Gandhiji’s Statue. The occasion was graced by Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, Manhattan Borough President Ms. Gale Brewer, Deputy Borough President. Mathew Washington and Dr. Navin Mehta, Chairman of Bhartiya Vidya Bhavan.

    The program began with offering of floral tribute to Mahatma Gandhi by Consul General Sandeep Chakravorty, Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney and other dignitaries. In their remarks, the speakers were united in conveying the relevance of Gandhian principle in today’s world. Some remarked that even though we might think that Gandhism is too idealistic to be practiced in today’s world, these principles resonated with Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela, two great leaders who followed them successfully. His principles could be solution for religious extremism and terrorism being witnessed today.

    The event concluded with Ram Dhun followed by floral tributes to Gandhiji the gathering.

    (Based on a press release)

  • Las Vegas Massacre: No Clue yet to Motive behind Shooting

    Las Vegas Massacre: No Clue yet to Motive behind Shooting

    Can Shooter’s girlfriend help Investigators in establishing the Motive?

    LAS VEGAS (TIP): Six days on to the worst massacre in the history of modern America which claimed the lives of 59 and injured more than 520, some quite seriously, the police are still groping for the shooter’s motive.

    They seem to have hope from the girlfriend of Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock, who told investigators Wednesday, October 4 that she was concerned about Paddock’s mental stability, a law enforcement source said to CBS.

    Danley was interviewed by investigators for four hours on Wednesday after she returned from the Philippines, where she was during the shooting. Her attorney, Matt Lombard, said after the interview that she had no knowledge of Paddock’s plans.

    Lombard said that Danley thought the large amount of money Paddock wired her was to buy a home — and that he was going to break up with her.

    Investigators believe Danley is key in understanding what motivated Paddock to open fire on the Route 91 Harvest Festival, killing 58 people and wounding more than 450 others. Law enforcement found Paddock dead in the hotel room on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay, where he fired down on the crowd of over 20,000.

    Paddock and Danley bought a Hyundai Tucson from a dealership in Reno, Nevada on Aug. 1, CBS News has confirmed.

    Employees at the car dealership tell CBS News Danley was “extremely complimentary” of her boyfriend, adding that he “saved her” from an abusive relationship with her former husband. One employee at the car dealership called Danley kind and caring, “extremely nice customer”.

    The car was undoubtedly for Danley, the employee said. Danley test drove the vehicle with a female car dealer.

    The employee called the transaction “innocuous” & “ho-hum” with no red flags, but added he got the impression that Mary Lou may have been a “bit of a kept woman”.

    The employee called Paddock an “educated consumer”who clearly “knew his facts” and “knew what he wanted” from the dealership, adding that he was not going to settle for more than a car’s worth.

    Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said Wednesday that Paddock had an escape plan and did not leave a suicide note.

    His brother, Eric Paddock, told reporters earlier this week that his brother did not have mental health issues, and described Paddock as a “highly intelligent” person.

    “My heart is destroyed, for all these people, but I can’t tell you why Steve did what he did” Eric Paddock said.

  • Note ban a disaster, GST poorly conceived: Yashwant Sinha lambasts Modi govt

    Note ban a disaster, GST poorly conceived: Yashwant Sinha lambasts Modi govt

    Contradicting BJP chief Amit Shah’s stand that the economy was sluggish due to ‘technical reasons’, Sinha says it is here to stay and the slowdown in demand has only aggravated the situation

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader and former finance minister Yashwant Sinha launched a scathing attack on the BJP-led central government’s economic policies,saying that the economy is headed for a downward spiral.

    In an opinion piece for the Indian Express, Sinha lambasts the government’s decisions on the economic front. “I shall be failing in my national duty if I did not speak up even now against the mess the finance minister has made of the economy,” writes Sinha, adding that many within the BJP are aware of the situation, but fear speaking up. In the no-holds barred piece, Sinha says demonetisation proved to be an “unmitigated economic disaster” and that the Goods and Services Tax (GST) was a “badly conceived and poorly implemented” havoc.

    Finance minister Arun Jaitley comes in for the bulk of the criticism, as Sinha writes, “Arun Jaitley is considered to be the best and the brightest in this government.

    It was a foregone conclusion before the 2014 elections that he would be the finance minister in the new government.”

    Sinha further took on BJP president Amit Shah for citing ‘technical’ reasons for slowdown in the GDP rate and wrote, “Even the SBI, the largest public sector bank of the country, has stated with unusual frankness that the slowdown is not transient or “technical”, it is here to stay and the slowdown in demand has only aggravated the situation. It has openly contradicted what the BJP president said just a few days ago that the slowdown in the last quarter was on account of “technical” reasons and will be corrected soon.”

    On that note, the figures of the first quarter of fiscal 2017-18, released last month, showed the GDP growth rate falling at 5.7 percent, while in the concurrent period last year, the GDP was soaring ahead at 7.6 per cent.

    In his article, Sinha also took a jibe at raids conducted by Income Tax department, Enforcement Directorate and Central Bureau of Investigation and said that it has become “a new game to instill fear in the minds of people,” adding, “We protested against raid raj when we were in opposition. Today it has become the order of the day.”

    He also ridiculed the “massive” loan waivers given to the farmers “varying from one paise to a few rupees.”

    Sinha concluded his article by saying, “The prime minister claims that he has seen poverty from close quarters. His finance minister is working over-time to make sure that all Indians also see it from equally close quarters.”


    SINHA A JOB APPLICANT AT 80: JAITLEY

    NEW DELHI (TIP): Finance minister Arun Jaitley on September 28 took a dig at predecessors Yashwant Sinha and P Chidambaram, who have been critical of his handling of the economy.

    In a speech at a book release function, Jaitley reminded Sinha, a colleague of his in the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), that when he was finance minister in the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government in 1998-2002, non-performing assets (NPAs) of commercial banks stood at a “staggering” 15% of total advances. And in 1991, Sinha had left the office of finance minister with only $4 billion of foreign exchange reserves.

    “The Reserve Bank of India had to bring down interest rates radically to deal with the high level of NPAs,” Jaitley said.

    Jaitley said he does not have the luxury of being a former finance minister who has turned a columnist and cannot conveniently forget the past record.


    Sinha’s unsually sharp piece caused quite the stir and he started trending on social media. The Opposition has reacted strongly to the piece, with senior Congress leader and former finance minister P Chidambaram lauding Sinha’s words as proof that truth will prevail.

    “Yashwant Sinha speaks Truth to Power. Will Power now admit the Truth that economy is sinking?,” tweeted Chiadambaram.

  • September 29 New York Print Edition

    September 29 New York Print Edition

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  • A crusade for the Turbaned Sikhs

    A crusade for the Turbaned Sikhs

    By Prof Jaswant Singh Gandam

    It is really unsettling that turbaned Sikhs are subject to racial profiling, hate crimes and hate graffiti in some countries as they are messed up with another religio-ethnic group. It is more disquieting that even after a century of their regular migration across seven seas and their stellar role in the developments of the countries of their adoption, Sikh diaspora is still struggling to spread awareness among natives about the distinctiveness and uniqueness of Sikh turban. The recent vandalization of Vermont Gurdwara in Los Angeles, also known as the Hollywood Sikh temple, with a hate graffiti is indeed very disturbing. As per media reports, one of the messages scrawled on the pristine white walls of this California Gurdwara in the USA was a menacing call for ‘nuking’ the Sikhs. The vandal also ominously threatened to slit the throat of the brave man who had confronted him while scrawling the graffiti. Earlier too, Sikh religious places and turbaned Sikhs had been targeted and killed at several places; their business establishments damaged and their dress derided.

    France had banned turban a few year ago. Many others, including Italy, are finding fault with it. This, when the Sikh community follows a scripture -the holy Guru Granth Sahib, the living ‘shabad’ Guru- that is universal in character, secular and scientific in approach, wedded to inter-faith harmony and committed to the amelioration of the whole mankind. The ready help given by Sikhs to people in distress by organizing free community kitchen(‘langar’), providing medicines and other necessary items of daily use to them, never ever even thinking about their caste, creed or color, is the hallmark of the all-inclusive Sikh credo.

    After all, the Sikh ‘Ardas'(prayer) concludes with the Sikh cardinal principle of ‘Sarbat Da Bhala'(well-being of all). Even then, sadly enough, the Sikh diaspora is singled out for snides, insinuendoes /insinuations, racial remarks, attacks and discrimination.

    In such a grim scenario, eminent journalist and writer N.S. Shergill has emerged at the center-stage as a torch-bearer of the turbaned Sikhs’ cause. Seeming to have been catapulted by ‘Waheguru’ as a crusader for the dignity and distinctiveness of Sikh turban, Shergill has done a Yeoman’s service to the cause in his latest publication “International Vaisakhi Souvenir-2017”.

    He had championed it in his earlier publication “Indians Abroad”, brought out on the occasion of the 350th ‘Parkash Purb’ of Guru Gobind Singh ji, the tenth Guru of Sikhs and creator of new socio-religious revolutionary Order ie Khalsa Panth. Though Shergill is virtually a ‘one-man-army’, others will definitely join his campaign. The first turbaned Sikh MP of the UK Mr Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi {Tan Dhesi) and the first turbaned Sikh Defence minister of Canada Mr Harjit Singh Sajjan would hopefully do their bits, and best, on this burning issue exercising the minds of Sikh diaspora. Turban is the crowning glory of a Sikh. It is an inalienable and inviolable article of faith for Sikhs. It is their unique identity. It is their ‘aan, baan, shan’. I pray that ‘Pagri sir da taj rahe/paij, patt atey laaj rahe”!

    Let us all join Shergill’s crusade for the distinct Sikh turban! As Majrooh Sultanpuri said famously- “Main akela hi chala tha janib-e- manzil, magar log saath aate gaye aur caravan banta gaya”.

     (The author is a veteran Journalist)

  • Indian American Couple Makes $200 Million Donation to Nova Southeastern University

    Indian American Couple Makes $200 Million Donation to Nova Southeastern University

    TAMPA, FL (TIP): Nova Southeastern University (NSU) in Florida announced the largest philanthropic gift in its history from Tampa-area cardiologist Dr. Kiran C. Patel and his wife, pediatrician Dr. Pallavi Patel. The commitment will significantly expand its programs in osteopathic medicine and health care sciences, and be used to develop a new 27-acre campus for NSU in Clearwater, Fla. The Patels are renowned in Florida for their philanthropy, community service and entrepreneurship.

    The commitment from the Patel Family Foundation includes a $50 million gift and an additional $150 million real estate and facility investment in a future 325,000 square-foot medical education complex that will be part of NSU’s new Tampa Bay Regional Campus, in Clearwater. The campus will house a new site for NSU’s College of Osteopathic Medicine, as well as its existing programs in the Tampa area.

    Their transformational commitment will advance health care in Florida and internationally, with a particular focus on multicultural and underserved communities. The goal is to put patients first and integrate medical and health care expertise.

    “This gift and additional investment will enrich NSU’s ability to educate highly-qualified physicians and health care professionals who understand how the medical disciplines can and must work together. These future leaders will represent the cultural diversity of our region, our nation and our world so that they can better serve their patients and communities,” said NSU President Dr. George Hanbury.

    Their $50 million gift, one of the seven-largest to any Florida university in history, catapults NSU to more than 84% of its goal to raise $250 million by 2020 for its Realizing Potential philanthropic campaign.

    “I feel that it is more important than ever to advance the current state of health care,” said Dr. Kiran C. Patel. “It is rare for someone to have the opportunity to impact the world in this way, and, as an immigrant to the United States, I am particularly honored to be able to make a difference in people’s lives around the world. I believe that NSU is the future of multi-disciplinary medical education. Together, we will be able to capitalize on an opportunity that will be beneficial to millions of human lives, many right here in Florida and many others across the globe.”

    “This partnership will benefit thousands of patients, students and doctors,” added Dr. Pallavi Patel. “Over the next 20 years, NSU will train thousands of new doctors and other health care professionals who will directly touch millions of lives, making a real difference.” 

    NSU’s Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine and Dr. Pallavi Patel College of Health Care Sciences are both part of the university’s Health Professions Division, comprised of seven health-related professional degree-granting colleges. NSU operates its Health Professions Division from its Fort Lauderdale/Davie campus as well as from several regional campuses located across Florida and in Puerto Rico. Currently, NSU is seeking accreditation for a new M.D. college and is planning the development of a teaching hospital and major medical center in partnership with HCA East Florida at its Fort Lauderdale/Davie location.

  • Over 130,000 flee fearing volcano eruption on Bali tourist island

    Over 130,000 flee fearing volcano eruption on Bali tourist island

    BALI (TIP): More than 130,000 people have fled the region around the Mount Agung volcano on the Indonesian tourist island of Bali, fearing it will soon erupt, according to an Associated Press report. .

    The disaster mitigation agency’s command post in Bali said the number of evacuees has swelled to about 134,200 by September 28 evening. That’s more than double the estimated population within the immediate danger zone, but people farther from the mountain are leaving too.

    Those who have fled are scattered in more than 500 locations across the island famed for its beaches, lush green interior and elegant Hindu culture, taking shelter in temporary camps, sports centers and other public buildings.

    The volcano has been at its highest alert level for a week, sparking the exodus. Thousands of cows were left behind in the rural communities where farming is an important livelihood, but local animal husbandry officials were arranging trucks to remove them.

    The exclusion zone around the mountain extends as far as 12 kilometers (7.5 miles) from the crater in places. The local observatory reported a small plume most likely of water vapor after daybreak Friday, but no ash cloud.

    Agung, which dominates the landscape in the northeast of the island, last erupted in 1963, killing more than 1,100 people. It remained active for about a year.

    Volcanologists say the past week’s dramatic escalation in tremors indicates an eruption is more likely than not, but they can’t say with certainty when it will happen.

  • Trump unveils sweeping tax reforms, stirs deficit concerns

    Trump unveils sweeping tax reforms, stirs deficit concerns

    Proposes to reduce seven tax brackets to just three, double standard deductions

    Republicans welcome; Democrats oppose

    WASHINGTON (TIP): US President Donald Trump has unveiled sweeping tax reforms which if passed by the Congress would bring down the business tax rate to 15 per cent, introduce territorial tax system that would offer level playing field to American companies.

    However, it immediately prompted criticism that the plan favors business and the rich and could add trillions of dollars to the deficit. The proposal drew a swift, skeptical response from Senator Bob Corker, a leading Republican “fiscal hawk,” who vowed not to vote for any federal tax package financed with borrowed money.

    Aimed at targeting the middle-class families, which constitutes the core of nation’s vote bank, Trump has proposed to reduce the current seven tax brackets to just three of 10, 25 and 35 per cent; double the standard deductions and provide relief for families with child and dependent care expenses.

    “This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity, and I guess it’s probably something I can say that I’m very good at. I’ve been waiting for this for a long time. We’re going to cut taxes for the middle class, make the tax code simpler and more fair for everyday Americans, and we are going to bring back the jobs and wealth that have left our country—and most people thought left our country for good,” Trump said in his speech in Indiana yesterday.

    “We want tax reform that is pro-growth, pro-jobs, pro-worker, pro-family, and, tax reform that is pro-American. It’s time to take care of our people, to rebuild our nation, and to fight for our great American workers,” he said.

    Observing that for several months, his administration has been working closely with Congress to develop a framework for tax reform, Trump said over the next few months, the House and Senate will build on this framework and produce legislation that will deliver more jobs, higher pay, and lower taxes for middle-class families, and for businesses of all sizes.

    Ruing that the total business US tax rate is 60 per cent higher than its average foreign competitors in the developed world, Trump said by doing so the US has surrendered its competitive edge to other countries.

    “But we’re not surrendering anymore. We’re not surrendering anymore. Under our framework, we will dramatically cut the business tax rate so that American companies and American workers can beat our foreign competitors and start winning again,” he said.

    “We will reduce the corporate tax rate to no higher than 20 per cent. That’s way down from 35 and 39 which is substantially below the average of other industrialized nations.

    “This is a revolutionary change, and the biggest winners will be the everyday American workers as jobs start pouring into our country, as companies start competing for American labor, and as wages start going up at levels that you haven’t seen in many years,” he said. Trump said corporations have parked many trillions of dollars in foreign countries, and many have incorporated abroad in order to avoid the punitive tax system altogether.

    Republicans have welcomed tax reforms. Paul Ryan, House Speaker said, “Today, we move one step closer to fixing our broken tax code so that it puts Americans first. This is our best opportunity in a generation to deliver real middle-class tax relief, create jobs here at home, and fuel unprecedented economic growth”.

    Democrats, on the other hand have opposed the idea. Indian-American Democrat Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi said, “As the details of the plan have been trickling out, I’ve been disappointed that the House Republican leadership has taken the same secretive approach to taxes that they brought to healthcare”.

    (Source: PTI)

  • September 22 New York Print Edition

    September 22 New York Print Edition

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  • Indian American Physician Vanila Singh named Chief Medical Officer at HHS

    Indian American Physician Vanila Singh named Chief Medical Officer at HHS

    STANFORD (TIP): Stanford anesthesiologist Vanila Singh has been named Chief Medical Officer for the office of the Assistant Secretary of Health at the Department of Health and Human Services.  Health Secretary Tom Price, who appointed Singh, congratulated the Stanford anesthesiologist on her new role via twitter Aug. 25.  Vanila Singh will serve as the primary medical advisor to the Assistant Secretary for Health on the development and implementation of HHS-wide public health policy recommendations. Dr. Singh’s portfolio includes issues related to pain medicine, including opioid use and misuse; medical ethics; and public health. “I feel very honored to go into public service, and feel very fortunate that the president and Secretary Price have chosen such important priorities,” said Dr. Singh.

     Singh graduated from the University of California, Berkeley where she double-majored in economics and molecular and cell biology and completed her M.D. in medicine from the George Washington University Medical Center.  Dr. Singh has served as a clinical assistant professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Medical Center and as a clinical associate professor at Stanford University Medical School for anesthesiology, perioperative and pain medicine. Dr. Singh received a master’s degree in academic medicine through the University of Southern California’s Keck School of Medicine in 2016.

     Dr. Singh has been active in national medical organizations, serving as the Vice Chair of the National Physicians Council on Health Policy; an editorial board member of the Pain Physician Journal for the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians; and a member of the California Medical Association’s (CMA) House of Delegates. In 2014 with various Republican endorsements, Singh contested against incumbent Democrat Mike Honda as the US Representative in California’s 17th District (Silicon Valley) in 2014.

  • “You are the backbone of our country”, Rahul Gandhi says to NRIS in New York

    “You are the backbone of our country”, Rahul Gandhi says to NRIS in New York

    Bidisha Roy

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Congress vice President Rahul Gandhi stated  that NRIS are the backbone of India and “original Congress movement was an NRI movement.”

    Addressing a gathering in a hotel in Times Square here on Sept 20 he said Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, B. R Ambedkar, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, and Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel were all NRIs who “went to the outside world, saw the outside world, returned to India and used some of the ideas they had got and transformed India.”

    He also urged NRIs to contribute to resolving the economic and social challenges in India. “You need to get involved. You have tremendous knowledge, you have tremendous understanding, you work in different fields. I invite you to come and work with the Congress party and discuss the vision going forward. We want to take your help.”

    Congress Vice president Rahul Gandhi addresses the gathering at University of California, Berkeley
    Photo / courtesy Jay Mandal-on assignment

    At one of his last events in two-week long US trip, Rahul Gandhi also criticized Modi government without mentioning any name for their ‘Divisive Politics.’ “Divisive politics is ruining India’s reputation of  peace and harmony abroad. There are forces in our country that are dividing India and it is very dangerous, it ruins our reputation abroad. Divisive politics is going on and it has to be fought,” he said.

    Rahul Gandhi said he had met leaders from the Democratic and Republican Party over the past few days and was asked about the situation in the country. “Many, many people in the Democratic Party and the Republican Party asked me what is going on in your country. We always believed that your country worked together, we always believed your country was peaceful. What is going on in your country?”

    He said many countries in a violent world were looking towards India as the “answer for peaceful coexistence. ”So,  we cannot afford to lose our most powerful asset. Our most powerful asset is that 1.3 billion people live happily, non-violently, peacefully… This is something that as Congress people, every single one of us has to defend,” he said.

    Rahul Gandhi asserted that he would visit America, whenever he is asked to, and remain in touch with the community. His close aide Sam Pitroda, U.S.-based telecom expert who pioneered the telecom revolution in India and is in charge of the Indian Overseas Congress, said the organization’s footprint was expected to expand to 30 countries from the present 18 and in every state in the US.

    Earlier, on arrival in the US, Rahul Gandhi addressed students at the University of California, Berkeley, and, later, at Princeton. One of the striking features of Gandhi’s interaction with students at Berkeley was his frank admission that a “certain amount of arrogance” had crept into the Congress midway through UPA II, and it had stopped having “conversations with people.

    Post his lecture on ‘India At 70: Reflections On The Path Forward’, during a question-answer session, Gandhi took a question on dynastic politics, and said, “Most parties in India have that problem (dynastic politics). So, don’t give us the stick… Akhilesh Yadav is a dynast. Stalin (Tamil Nadu) is a dynast. (Prem Kumar) Dhumal’s son is a dynast… Even Abhishek Bachchan is a dynast. That is how India runs…don’t get after me because that is how the entire country is running. By the way, last, I recall, Ambani’s kids were running their business and that was also going on in Infosys. That is what happens in India.”

    At Princeton University,  the Congress leader said it was imperative for the Indian government to ensure blue-collar jobs for its people as nearly 30,000 youngsters are joining the job market every day and only 450 get the job. Gandhi appreciated one of PM Modi’s flagship projects – ‘Make in India’ but said the scheme should be aimed at small and medium businesses. “Not many small and medium businesses are getting access to finance or to the legal system or the political system. The small companies that should be turning into large is not happening. If Make in India is implemented well, it is a powerful idea,” he remarked.

     

  • Pakistan is “Terroristan”, says India in Strong Rebuttal to Pakistan PM at UN

    Pakistan is “Terroristan”, says India in Strong Rebuttal to Pakistan PM at UN

    UNITED NATIONS (TIP):  Pakistan is now “Terroristan”, India said in a formidable rebuttal at the UN to Pakistani Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi calling for a UN special envoy on Kashmir, alleging that the “struggle of the people in the region is being brutally suppressed” by India.

    Exercising its Right of Reply after Mr Abbasi’s belligerent speech at the UN General Assembly, said it was “extraordinary” that the state that sheltered Osama bin Laden was creating narratives based on deception and deceit.

    “In its short history, Pakistan is a geography synonymous with terror. The quest for a land of pure has actually produced ‘the land of pure terror’. Pakistan is now Terroristan with a flourishing industry producing and exporting global terrorism,” Eenam Gambhir, India’s First Secretary to the UN, said on September 21.

    India caustically described Pakistan as a country whose counter-terrorism policy was to “mainstream and upstream terrorists” by either providing safe havens to terror leaders in its military town or protecting them with political careers.

    “Its current state can be gauged from the fact that Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, a leader of the UN designated terrorist organization Lashkar-e-Taiba, is now sought to be legitimized as a leader of a political party,” Ms Gambhir said.

    None of this, she said, can justify Pakistan’s avaricious efforts to covet territories of its neighbors. “In so far as India is concerned, Pakistan must understand that the state of Jammu and Kashmir is and will always remain an integral part of India. However, much it scales up cross-border terrorism, it will never succeed in undermining India’s territorial integrity.”

    Ms Gambhir also said Pakistan, after diverting billions of dollars in aid towards creating a dangerous infrastructure of terror, was paying the price.

    “Even as terrorists thrive in Pakistan and roam its streets with impunity, we have heard it lecture about human rights in India. The world does not need lessons on democracy and human rights from a country whose own situation is charitably described as a failed state,” she said.

    Earlier, the Pakistan Prime Minister, in his first address to the UN General Assembly, had accused India of terror against his country and had warned of a “matching response” if it “ventures across the Line of Control or acts upon its doctrine of limited war against Pakistan”.