Tag: Lord Rami Ranger

  • A World Without Childhood Blindness: Hope for Tomorrow – A Fundraiser for The Eye Foundation of America Planned in New Delhi, India

    • By Ajay Ghosh

    MORGANTOWN, WV (TIP): “Every child deserves to see the world with clarity and purpose. Let’s join hands to eradicate childhood blindness and unlock a brighter future for generations to come,” says Dr. Vadrevu K. Raju, a world-renowned ophthalmologist, philanthropist, and the founder of the Eye Foundation of America (EFA).

    In response to this noble call, Grant Thornton, The Rotary Club District – 311 (Delhi) in collaboration with the Young Rotarians, who are truly committed, and the Gautami Institute have joined hands with the Eye Foundation of America to organize a major Fundraiser with the theme, “Hope for Tomorrow” at the prestigious India Habitat Centre, New Delhi on Friday, January 31, 2025.

    Among the many initiatives Dr. Raju has undertaken, the upcoming Fundraiser in New Delhi is a pan-India Roll Out Program with the objective of raising $500,000, which will be matched by the Eye Foundation of America. The funds raised will be utilized towards establishing 100 ROP screening centers across India; Training 500 healthcare professionals in ROP screening and treatment; and, Treating 10,000 ROP-affected babies annually across India.

    Lord Rami Ranger, a well-known philanthropist, and successful businessman from the United Kingdom, who will be the Chief Guest at the Fundraiser, while echoing the mission of EFA says, “Childhood blindness is a solvable problem, but it requires our collective action.” According to Lord Ranger, a Board Member of the Eye Foundation of America and Eye Foundation of UK, who has been honoured by Her Majesty the Queen on Eight occasions for his Business leadership in and for community services, “Together, we can ensure that every child has access to quality eye care and a chance to reach their full potential.”

    Dr. Raju, a physician with a noble vision, who has dedicated his entire life to helping make “the world where every child can see, learn, and thrive without the shadows of blindness,” while referring to scientific studies says, “Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) affects 200,000 premature babies in India annually, leading to irreversible blindness.”
    According to the South Indian Journal of Ophthalmology, of the 3.5 million premature babies born in India, nearly one in six (600,000) babies are born less than 32 weeks gestational age. Estimating that 40% of them receive neonatal care and 80% of them survive, over 200,000 chilkdren are at risk for developing Retinopathy of Prematurity.

    Dr. Raju, who has lived in England and the USA longer than in India, has visited India more than 140 times since 1977. Each visit is a working vacation to combat avoidable blindness among Indians, especially children.  He founded “Eye Foundation of America” in 1979, which is active in India and 31 other developing countries across the globe.

    A Faculty of the Department of Ophthalmology at Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Raju believes that Retinopathy can cause blindness; however, early detection and treatment can prevent blindness in up to 90% of cases. The EFA is now a global organization, whose noble initiatives have resulted in screening and treating a total of over 3.5+ million people in addition to one million school children, and the mission continues to impact many more every day around the world. EFA has performed hundreds of thousands of surgeries, and trained hundreds of eye care professionals to join in the global fight against preventable blindness.

    Born in Rajahmundry, Andhra Pradesh, India, Dr. V.K. Raju is a Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology at West Virginia University, Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, Director of the International Ocular Surface Society, Director of the Ocular Surface Research and Education Foundation, Chairman of Goutami Eye Institute in Rajahmundry and is the President and Founder of the Eye Foundation of America, a non-profit organization dedicated to realizing a world without childhood blindness. Dr. Raju earned his medical degree from Andhra University and completed an ophthalmology residency and fellowship at the Royal Eye Group of Hospitals in London.
    For the past four decades, Dr. Raju and the EFA have been actively and tirelessly on a crusade to eliminate avoidable blindness in areas plagued by poverty and poor access to medical care. The EFA’s mission is to eliminate avoidable blindness under the guiding principles of service, teaching, and research.

    This is accomplished through eye camps and brick-and-mortar hospitals in developing countries, training of medical personnel to serve the needy, and educating the population at large on preventative eye care and healthy lifestyle choices. With adequate education, patients are empowered to take charge of their lives and their own health and prevent further deleterious consequences of their poor lifestyle choices, while sharing this knowledge with their friends and families.

    The public is educated on eye care and injury prevention, and local teachers are taught how to screen for early eye problems in children. Patients, their families, and the greater community benefit from preventative medical care, free procedures, and access to education.

    When education and preventative measures are insufficient, medical and surgical interventions are performed. With the aim of permanently providing world-class state-of-the art services to populations with poor access to health care, the EFA helped to build 2 hospitals in rural India: the Srikiran Eye Institute and the Goutami Eye Institute.

    With all of Dr. Raju’s momentous achievements, he has also ensured that his life’s work and vision are self-sustaining. The Goutami Institute, which has been honoured as the Best Eye Hospital in the state of Andhra Pradesh by the state Government continues to add new buildings, more staff and equipment, and mobile clinics to meet the growing demand for treatment for children and adults.

    The Goutami Institute has a wing dedicated exclusively for children, and the EFA has future plans to build a service and research eye hospital in India where no child will be denied treatment and children from around the world can come to receive services. Dr. Raju and the EFA are also committed to finding new cures for age-old eye disease in children.

    “I feel so incredibly thankful for my personal and professional gifts, and I make great efforts to share those gifts with those in need of my services,” says Dr. Raju. “I am ever grateful to India for giving me stellar medical education for almost free. The work of EFA and the Goutami Eye institute wouldn’t be possible without the support of our Board Members, who go beyond to enhance and help realize our mission to make the world free of blindness.”

    Dr. Raju has generously and freely given his own time, money, and medical expertise to help the less fortunate for the past several decades. Dr. Raju’s over 40 years of noble work have helped and is continuing to restore vision to millions in India and abroad. Never too tired to give his best for preventing, caring for, and sustaining the vision of the visually impaired, Dr. Raju says, “Our work is only just beginning.”

    Dr. Raju says childhood blindness has far-reaching consequences. 75% of blind children never attend school. Blindness reduces employability by 50%. Blindness increases poverty and social isolation. Urging everyone to be part of this noble mission, Dr. Raju says, “Together, Let Us Illuminate Young Lives and Create A World Without Childhood Blindness. Your Support Can: Change Lives, Restore Vision, And Empower Futures. Now, Let’s All Join the Movement; Be Part of Something Extraordinary.” For more information, please contact
    info@eyefoundationofamerica.org

  • India-Canada diplomatic spat: Dialogue is the only way out feels a vast majority in Indian Diaspora

    By Prabhjot Singh

    The diplomatic spat between India and Canada continues unabated,  a vast majority in the Indian Diaspora wants an early end to it suggesting both sides should exercise extra restraint and sit across the table to resolve the issues amicably. “Both India and Canada as members of the Commonwealth have well organized administrative structures to take care of all such aberrations than taking in washing their dirty linen in public.

    “Nothing comes out of such tit-for-tat policies as the public at large is the sufferer,” say several members of the Indian Diaspora, both in Canada and elsewhere in the world. Both countries affirm that their sovereignty is based on the Rule of Law and they have strong law enforcement pieces of machinery to tackle sensitive issues like foreign interference. Besides, they have diplomatic channels open to them to thrash out issues that are transnational or related to internal security or the overall well-being and security of the people. The two nations have strong people-to-people contacts besides huge bilateral trade.

    We talked to a cross-section of people from different walks of life, including politics, academics, social organisations, immigration, public affairs and media on this raging spat. Here are excerpts from what they said:

    Gurbax Singh Malhi

    Gurbax Singh Malhi, the first turbaned Sikh to sit in a federal Parliament outside India, says: “For the public, it is not good. The  public suffers.”

    Herb Dhaliwal

    Herb Dhaliwal, the first Indo-Canadian to become a federal Minister in Canada, says: “In regard to the Canada/ India relationship it has come to the lowest point in history. The Modi government is now seen, in the West, as a bunch of criminals and gangsters and the media as a mouthpiece for them.

    “India was the Centrepiece of the Canadian Indo-Pacific strategy is dead. A Canadian security team travelled to India to provide evidence of the killing of a Canadian citizen to get the cooperation of India but no cooperation came only stonewalling. I hope the media and the citizens of India will hold their government accountable for its actions.

    Tejinder Aujla

    Tejinder Singh Aujla, a social activist and hockey promoter from Surrey, says that Canada is a soft target for India and its agency Research and Analysis Wing (RAW). He feels that Canadian politicians are not as cunning as their Indian counterparts and it is why the Canadian Prime Minister spoke about foreign interference in the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar in the House of Commons.

    “We all come from farming backgrounds and know that irked by farmers’ agitation, the Indian government pointed fingers at Canadians of Punjabi origin blaming them for supporting the farmers back home.

    “Canadian Sikhs were happy that their Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stood by them and exposed the alleged interference of Indian agents in targeting Canadians on Canadian soil. A blame game does not help anyone. It is time for the Indian Government to cooperate with the investigations and stop blaming overseas Sikhs,” concludes Tejinder Aujla, holding that Five Eyes is supportive of the Canadian stand.

    Prof. I S Saluja

    Prof.  I S Saluja, a veteran journalist and Editor-in-Chief of The Indian Panorama, one of the most credible newspapers in North America, says: “The diplomatic tensions between India and Canada are not the result of a sudden incident but have deep historical roots. For decades, the two countries have had differing perspectives, particularly around the presence of a sizable Punjabi Sikh community in Canada. Punjabis, especially Sikhs, began settling in Canada almost a century ago, contributing significantly to its economy, particularly in agriculture and transportation. Over time, the community became politically influential, with many Sikhs holding positions of power in Canadian politics.

    “The relationship between India and Canada, however, began to sour in the 1980s, when Sikh separatists in Canada began supporting the demand for an independent Khalistan, a movement India strongly opposed. India accused Canada of providing sanctuary to these separatists, which Canada denied. This longstanding issue resurfaced with the assassination of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Khalistani leader, in 2023. Canada accused India of orchestrating the murder, a charge India has vehemently denied.

    “This accusation has further strained relations, with Canada insisting that it had intelligence from the Five Eyes alliance supporting its claims. India, on the other hand, remains sensitive to foreign criticism of its handling of separatist threats. The expulsion of diplomats and media narratives on both sides have exacerbated the situation, leading to a diplomatic standoff. Resolving these tensions will likely require diplomatic intervention, possibly through a neutral third party like the United States, to prevent further damage to bilateral ties and ensure the welfare of the Punjabi community in Canada.

    Seema Jham

    Seema Jham, a Public Relations and Communications professional, based in Toronto, writes:  “The ongoing diplomatic tensions between India and Canada are undoubtedly complex. Both nations, as two of the world’s largest democracies, have much to offer each other.

    “This diplomatic strain could have implications for various sectors, including trade, education, and the movement of people between the two countries.

    What’s happening now should be resolved through diplomatic action and open discussion, aimed at fostering collaboration, intelligence sharing, and mutual respect, rather than blame and accusations. Both countries have enjoyed a longstanding relationship, and there is immense potential for continued cooperation.

    Economically, the stakes are high. India is Canada’s 9th largest trading partner, with bilateral trade reaching $8 billion in 2023. This figure could grow significantly if current issues are resolved. As a developing country, India relies heavily on foreign direct investment, with Canada being one of its major investors. A prolonged diplomatic standoff could hinder growth for both nations.

    To move forward, both sides must engage in diplomatic dialogue, showcase mutual respect, and explore new avenues for collaboration and intelligence sharing. “I hope that both governments can engage in constructive dialogue and work toward a solution that benefits both nations,” she adds.

    Shefoli Kapur

    Shafoli Kapur (with pic), the Toronto-based Immigration specialist, says: “For the Indian community in Canada, this situation is particularly delicate. As one of the largest immigrant populations in Canada, Indian Canadians have significantly contributed to the country’s economic, social, and cultural fabric. However, this spat could increase polarization within the community, especially among Sikhs and Hindus, potentially giving rise to distrust and divisions. Many fear that the political rhetoric may amplify xenophobic sentiments or mischaracterizations of Indian diaspora groups. Additionally, visa restrictions and travel warnings could impact businesses, students, and family connections between the two countries.

    “In essence, while diplomatic disagreements can evolve, the Indian community in Canada may bear a more personal brunt of the fallout, navigating rising tensions both between their home and adopted nations.

    Naveen Prudhvinad Chintada

    Naveen Prudhvinadh Chintada (with pic), who moved from Hyderabad some years ago to make Canada his new home, says: “As I observe the changing diplomatic ties between India and Canada over the past year, it is evident that both countries have hit rock bottom in their relationship. The deterioration became more pronounced when Mélanie Joly, Canada’s foreign minister, made a strong and bold statement, indicating that there are active plans to impose sanctions on India. Such measures could have far-reaching consequences, directly impacting the vital trade relationship between the two nations. Currently, Canada exports $4.3 billion worth of goods and services to India while importing $3.8 billion from India. In this scenario, any aggressive actions could potentially hurt Canada’s economy more, given the trade imbalance.

    “Moreover, during a recent press conference, the Canadian government was unable to convincingly present or explain the evidence they claim to have against the Indian government. This raised concerns not only about the credibility of their allegations but also about the potential international fallout.

    “At the same time, many Canadians are growing increasingly dissatisfied with the current government, citing weak leadership and poor decision-making. Canada, once celebrated for being a beacon of multiculturalism and inclusivity, is no longer as open or welcoming, especially toward its growing South Asian communities. These recent allegations against India could escalate tensions and make the situation for Indian communities in Canada even worse, leading to greater division and mistrust.”

    Nirmal Singh, a scholar based in Florida, says: “The Five Eyes (FVEY) is an Anglosphere intelligence alliance comprising Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. These countries are party to the multilateral UK-USA Agreement, a treaty for cooperation in signals intelligence and are understood to have supported the Canadian position so far.

    The picture changed  when Canada declared India’s High Commissioner and some of the High Commission staff as persons of interest in the ongoing controversy. Media reported that NZ conditionally supports Canada in its action – the caveat being if proven. The UK and Australia also have let their positions known in support of Canada. The US had a clear position so far but the stakes have been raised by recent developments.

    New India Abroad in an analysis reported that “The prime ministers of India and Canada could benefit politically in the short term from the unprecedented expulsion of top diplomats from each country, analysts said on October 15 ” https://www.newindiaabroad.com/english/news/deepening-canada-india-standoff-seen-as-a-short-term-boost-for-modi-trudeau

    As for Sikhs in India, they are weighed down by the problems that seem to be only getting worse for Indian Punjab as evidenced by a news report a day or so back where a Farmers group and the Arhtiyas et al were protesting together.  It indicates that the fear of a failing farm economy is now affecting all Punjabis.

    My submission is that it is well recognized that there is hardly any support among Sikhs in India including those living in Punjab for the creation of Khalistan. Therefore, the development of Punjab could be delinked from the Khalistan-related happenings elsewhere.  This could go a long way in the optimization of the Punjabis in national endeavours.

    Lord Rami Ranger

    Lord Rami Ranger, a senior and respected member of the Indian Diaspora in the UK, feels strongly about this tiff. He says: ” First, Canada should not support the Khalistanis. They will damage the Canada-India relationship.

    “Second, not allowed parade showing  Mrs Gandhi being shot and PM Modi in a cage.

    “Thirdly, Canada should not allow the Indian flag to be desecrated in public.

    “If Canada had the evidence, it should have been discussed with India in private.

    “Finally, Canada should give land to make Khalistan,” he concludes.

    Tarlochan Singh

    Tarlochan Singh, a former MP and Chairman of the Minorities Commission in India, comments: “ I feel Trudeau is overstretching the killing of Najjar. For so many months they have been investigating and could not go to the Court to convict the assailant. They are only after the collaborators. They want to blame the Indian Embassy and Raw. This is a political game. Fault lies with Trudeau who himself addresses Press Conferences. No Prime Minister of any country has done this.

    (Prabhjot Singh is a Toronto-based  award-winning independent journalist, He was celebrated by AIPS, the international body of sports journalists, for covering ten Olympics at its centennial celebrations held at UNESCO Centre in Paris  during the 2024 Olympic Games. Besides, he has  written extensively about  business and the financial markets, the health industry, the public and private sectors, and aviation. He has worked as a political reporter besides covering Sikh and Punjab politics. He is particularly interested in Indian Diaspora and Sikh Diaspora in particular. His work has also appeared in various international and national  newspapers, magazines and journals. He can be reached at prabhjot416@gmail.com

    Visit www.probingeye.com; https://www.facebook.com/PrabhjotSingh.Journalist/?ref=pages_you_manage)