Political and other News of 2013 : Part 2
West
Bengal panchayat elections 2013: Trinamool all set to win big:
The
Trinamool Congress on Monday appeared set to sweep the crucial panchayat poll
in West Bengal with a huge margin in most of the districts.
As per
latest figures, out of total 3215 seats, 3196 seats have been declared. TMC has
bagged 1763 gram panchayats, whereas the Left and Congress have won757 and 246
panchayats respectively. Others won 430 gram panchayats. The ruling party
registered a huge victory in the three districts of Bankura, Purulia and West
Midnapur, former Maoist strongholds, by winning majority of its seats. In the adjoining East Midnapore district too,
the TMC registered a major win except at Nandigram, the cradle of Banerjee's
anti land acquisition campaign, where the party had to struggle with former
Trinamool supporters, who fought as Independents.
In
Nandigram block I and block II, out of 17 Gram Panchayat seats, official
Trinamool candidates won 13 seats, while the Independents bagged three seats
and Left managed one. The TMC also swept erstwhile red bastions of Burdwan,
Birbhum, Howrah, North 24 Parganas and Hooghly. In Singur, the Trinamool bagged
12 out of 16 Gram Pancahayt seats, with Left bagging just one and putting up a
close fight in three others. In the five districts of North Bengal, which went
to polls, resulted showed that Trinamool had widened its reach in Congress
dominated regions. The party registered spectacular victories in Gram Panchayat
in Coochbehar and south Dinajpur, while making inroads in the Congress domain
in North Dinajpur, the home groud of Congress minister and Mamata's bete noire
Deepa Dasmunsi.
On the
directive of the Supreme Court, the five-phase rural poll in the state was held
on July 11, 15, 19, 22 and 25.
According
to State Election Commissioner Mira Pandey, the entire counting process began
at 8 am under tight security cover around all counting centres.
The
district administration clamped section 144 CRPC prohibitory order within 200
metres around all counting centres to avoid crowd or any untoward incident
during the counting process. No mobile phones were allowed inside the counting
centres and generators were kept as standby arrangement against power failure
during counting of votes, reports said. Of the total 58,865 seats going to
polls, 6,274 have been won uncontested, a majority by the Trinamool Congress.
In all
1.7 lakh candidates were in fray in over 17 districts. The apex court order had
come after the high-voltage tussle between the Mamata Banerjee government and
SEC had hit a blind alley as both sides refused to budge on security, with the
government insisting on the state armed police and the SEC demanding Central
forces for the polls.
West Bengal Chief
Minister Mamata Banerjee hailed the results of the panchayat poll as a
"victory of the people and democracy", as her party Trinamool
Congress is set to sweep the elections.
Telangana will be 29th state, Hyderabad to be
common capital for 10 years:
Telangana
will be the 29th state of India comprising 10 districts with plenty of water
and some other natural resources in a backward region lacking development that
was at the heart of the separate state demand.As and when the state is formed,
the jewel in the crown will always be the city of Hyderabad, which may for some
time, at least 10 years to start with, be the joint capital for the rest of
Andhra.With a population of over 3.5 crore, the new state comprising mostly the
areas of the princely Nizam state will have 17 Lok Sabha seats and 119 assembly
seats.
When it
joins the Indian Union, people of the region would hope that the new identity
would help them overcome the challenges of poverty and backwardness which were
at the roots of the separate state movement.The demand for a separate identity
for Telangana is virtually as old as the state of Andhra Pradesh, which came
into existence in November 1956 through the States Reorganisation Act.The
Andhra Pradesh government website says: "Telangana agitation was started
by the people of the region when they felt that Andhra leaders had flouted the
Gentlemen's Agreement which facilitated the formation of Andhra
Pradesh."In the beginning, the movement demanded the implementation of the
safeguards agreed upon earlier, but later it wanted the separation of Telangana
from Andhra Pradesh."That the seat of government in Hyderabad has
persistently ignored the needs of Telangana at the expense of the other regions
of the state has been a constant grouse of the advocates of separate statehood.
The new
Telangana state would comprise the 10 districts of Hyderabad, Medak, Adilabad,
Khammam, Karimnagar, Mahbubnagar, Nalgonda, Nizamabad, Rangareddy and
Warangal.Now, according to the Backward Regions Grant Fund 2009-10, 13 districts
in Andhra Pradesh have been identified as being backward, of which nine are in
Telangana.Classified as a semi-arid region with a predominantly hot and dry
climate, Telangana is not amongst the most fertile regions of the country.But
it does have its share of natural resources and notably contains 20% of the
country's coal deposits.Among other natural resources are mica and bauxite
along with some limestone reserves.But given the lack of development, Telangana
has served as a fertile ground for the Maoist insurgency to take root.A clutch
of leaders of the Naxalite movement hail from the region. Slain Maoist
Kishanji, who was No.3 in the rebels' hierarchy, hailed from Karimnagar
district.
As
proponents of a separate Telangana claim, the carving out of a new state would
give a fresh impetus for the people of the region to aspire for growth and
development.Especially with the inclusion of Hyderabad, Telangana would find
itself in control of one of the primary centres of India's tech story.Offices
of major national and international corporates houses are present in Hyderabad,
drawing people from across the country to the city.Needless to say it is the
loss of Hyderabad which would rankle most with 'Unified Andhra' supporters.
But the
people of Telangana argue that the seat of the Nizams was always an integral
part of their region.The Telangana agitation, as they point out, was started by
the people of the region who complained that "Andhra" leaders had
flouted the "Gentlemen's Agreement" which had facilitated the
formation of the state, in November 1956.The feeling of betrayal was also
implicit in the discontent, which spread among Telangana officials and the
unemployed youth of the region, who felt they were being exploited by the
people from the rest of the state who had flocked to the new capital.
BCCI to
move to Supreme Court against Bombay HC order, Dalmiya to continue as interim
president:
Board of
Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) Chief Administrative Officer Ratnakar
Shetty said the Indian Premier League (IPL) Governing Council has decided to
file a Special Leave Petition (SLP) in the Supreme Court against the order of
the Bombay High Court, which had declared the probe panel report as invalid.
Shetty
said that the IPL Governing Council met this morning and lawyer and BJP leader
Arun Jaitley explained the important points in the Bombay High Court order to
the members. After a brief discussion, the committee decided to file an SLP
against the order of the Bombay High Court."The Governing Council believes
that the probe commission was properly constituted in accordance with the IPL
Operational Rules," said Sanjay Patel, the Honorary Secretary of the BCCI
in a statement.
Patel
also said Jagmohan Dalmiya would continue as the interim President, in light of
the pending appeal made to the Supreme Court.Shetty assured that the decision
to move to the Supreme Court was taken in absence of President-in-exile N.
Srinivasan.
"Mr.
Srinivasan recused himself from the IPL Governing Council meeting today. It is
only after that that the meeting started and the decisions were taken,"
assured Shetty here today.Earlier this week, BCCI's internal investigation had
handed a clean chit to the Chennai Super Kings and the Rajasthan Royals
following allegations of betting and spot-fixing against them in the sixth
edition of the tournament. The two-member probe panel declared that there was
no evidence of fixing by N. Srinivasan's son-in-law, Gurunath Meiyappan. Mr
Srinivasan's firm, India Cements, owns the Chennai Super Kings.
Acting on
a petition filed by the Bihar Cricket Association, the Bombay High Court ruled
that the BCCI's internal investigation was invalid alleging that there was a
conflict of interest with regard to Srinivasan being the father-in-law of one
of the prime accused.Shetty also announced that Sanjay Jagdale and Ajay Shirke,
who had resigned from the committee after corruption in IPL 6 came to light,
will be replaced on the Ethics Committee by Sanjay Patel (Honorary Secretary,
BCCI) and Ravi Sawant (Honorary Treasurer, BCCI).Meanwhile, Shetty refused to
comment on the reason for which the BCCI Working Committee meeting was called
off today. According to reports, the Working Committee was scheduled to meet
shortly after the IPL Governing Council met, but was cancelled at the last
moment.
The BCCI
has been inflicted with several controversies after multiple allegations were
made against players and owners, as part of the IPL spot-fixing scandal at the
tournament's sixth edition.N. Srinivasan, who owns India Cements, had stepped
aside as the BCCI chief after his son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan, part of the
Chennai Super Kings management, was arrested on charges of betting in IPL
matches. He was later released on bail.Earlier, Rajasthan Royals co-owner Raj
Kundra was questioned by Delhi Police and was reported to have been betting on
IPL matches.The scandal broke up with the arrest of three cricketers - S
Sreesanth, Ankeet Chavan and Ajit Chandila - amidst IPL 6.
Lucknow court concerned over illegal mining,
won't stay Durga order:
Voicing
concern over illegal mining, the Allahabad high court today sought a reply from
the Centre and the state government on the issue while declining to interfere
in the suspension matter of IAS officer Durga Shakti Nagpal, who had clamped
down on the mining mafia in Uttar Pradesh.Hearing a PIL on the suspension of
the woman IAS officer, the Lucknow bench of the court comprising justices Devi
Prasad Singh and Ashok Pal Singh fixed August 19 as the next date of hearing.
Observing
that illegal mining disturbed the ecological balance, the court sought reply as
to how many FIRs were lodged, how many dumpers were seized and how many people
were arrested after the suspension of Nagpal.It also directed the counsel to
seek instruction from the Centre on what it has done on the issue.
The
court, however, refused to interfere in Nagpal’s suspension, saying that it was
"a matter between the master and the servant".Appearing on behalf of
the state government, additional advocate general Bulbul Godiyal raised
objection on the maintainability of the PIL on the ground that the petitioner
has not disclosed her credentials for filing the litigation as per the Supreme
Court ruling.She also submitted that the PIL was not maintainable in service
matters.
The PIL
was filed in the registry of the court on July 30 against the suspension of
Nagpal. Social activist Nutan Thakur filed the PIL seeking a direction to the
department of personnel and training to summon the file related to the suspension
of Nagpal and cancelling the suspension if it was found to be illegal and
improper.According to petitioner's counsel Ashok Pandey, another prayer was
made in the petition that the central government direct the state governments
against harassing officers working to check illegal construction of religious
plea.
Drug trade/smuggling finances Pakistan's
anti-India regiment:
A
regiment of 30,000 fighters for the Pakistan army in India depends largely on
the money, a staggering amount, that is generated through illegal animal skin
trade and drug smuggling, a report of the military intelligence bureau has
said. Vicky Nanjappa reports.
During
each of these operations which involve five terrorists or less, two officers of
the Pakistan army always accompany them. The officers who train these are the
ones who read the logistics and even give the command for an attack.During the
duration of the attack, the army officers are constantly in touch with the army
base in Pakistan that offers instructions. This report of the military
intelligence confirms beyond doubt that officers of the Pakistan army are
physically present during every attack in the valley.These terrorists, who are
part of the Mujahideen regiment of the Pakistan army have always relied on the
grants that the military gets from the United States or the Gulf. A large part
of the funds that come in from America are grants for Pakistan, are often
diverted to fund the Mujahideen regiment.
This
regiment, which is commanded by an officer of brigadier rank also depends on
the funds that are generated through donations from Gulf which has set up
financial institutions in the form of Madrasas and charities in Qatar.This
regiment, which is commanded by an officer of brigadier rank, also depends on
the funds that are generated through donations from the Gulf.However, with the
help of the Inter-Services Intelligence, the Pakistan army found that procuring
funds through the above mentioned means was coming under scanner. So it was
decided that the funds from the US and Qatar and the drug trade would be used
for the bigger operations and the smaller ones had to be financed through a
smaller mechanism.It was at this time that the ISI and Pakistan decided that
they would use the border trade agreements through which dry fruits are
exported. At least 50 operatives have been masquerading as dry fruits vendors
were handpicked by the Pakistan army to smuggle animal skin.The interrogation
of Ahmed Gulam Hasan Naiku, an activist of the Hizbul Mujahideen (which has a
very high percentage of operatives in the Mujahideen regiment) revealed that
the Pakistan army had insisted that they capitalise on the border trade
agreement. Naiku was taken by his handler to meet the head of the Mujahideen
regiment.
“The
handler was a brigadier and the head of the regiment. He personally instructed
me to impersonate a vendor and operate between Khandahar and India via
Pakistan,” Naiku reportedly told his interrogators.This trade is allegedly done
with the approval of the Pakistan government who has instructed its officers to
look the other way when such a consignment enters India through
Kandahar.According to investigators, the money earned through this trade
amounts to nearly Rs 10 crore a month and the Pakistan army has been
encouraging it since the past three years now.The consignment of animal skin is
collected from Khandahar and then brought into the Punjab province in Pakistan.
According to the report, stalls have been set up in this part of Pakistan to
collect the consignment and this happens in the open despite the government’s
knowledge that the trade is illegal. While some part of the consignment remains
in Pakistan, the rest is smuggled to other parts of the world including India.
Animal skin is in great demand at places where the leather industry flourishes
and this in fact generates a lot of money.According to the Intelligence Bureau,
a large part of this money goes to the Pakistan military which uses is
specifically to fund activities in the Valley. The Pakistan military and the
ISI have recruited at least 50 persons for this trade and have even set up
their moles in India to further this trade.The moles help collect the material
and distribute it in the market, the officer also pointed out. Naik, for
instance was one such mole operating in Maharashtra, the investigation on him
has shown.
Train
kills dozens of Hindu pilgrims in Bihar:
A
high-speed train plowed into a crowd of Hindu pilgrims who were crossing the
tracks at a remote station in east India on Monday, killing at least 37 people
and leaving behind a scene of carnage.
An
enraged crowd dragged the driver out and began beating him, and set parts of
the train on fire, sending up a pillar of thick black smoke that could be seen
from miles away. The crowd remained so furious that hours passed before
firefighters and rescue workers were able to approach the site of the accident,
officials said. A train dispatched to assist the wounded was forced to halt on
the tracks a mile away. The disaster stood out even in a season of terrible accidents.
The
station was a remote one - inaccessible by road - and the high-speed Rayja Rani
Express typically barrels through without stopping at a speed of around 50
miles an hour. Railway officials said the driver had been given clearance to
pass through. But Monday was the last day of a holy month in India, and
hundreds of people were disembarking from two stopped passenger trains, on
their way to a temple a half-mile away to offer holy water to Shiva, the Hindu
god of destruction. A top official at the railway ministry, Adhir Ranjan
Chowdhury, said the driver had pulled the emergency brake when he saw people on
the tracks but was unable to stop the train. "It was all quite
frightening," said Rohit Kumar, a passenger, who jumped off the train and
ran for a quarter-mile to the nearest station when the crowd began to attack.
"I'm standing here and watching smoke billowing out from the train. It was
nightmarish. So scary." SK Singh, the deputy magistrate of the Saharsa
District, said 37 people were confirmed dead, including several children.
India's railway minister, Mallikarjun Kharge, said 28 had died, and noted that
the pilgrims were crossing the tracks illegally. Parliamentary discussion
Monday afternoon deteriorated into a shouting match over whether the government
bore responsibility. The chief minister of Bihar, the state where the disaster
occurred, called it "the rarest of rare tragedies." He pledged
200,000 rupees (around $3,180) to the victims' families, and urged the Railways
Ministry to do the same. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh released a statement
calling for "calm in the area so that the relief and rescue operations can
be carried out without any hindrance." The station, Dhamara Ghat, was also
inaccessible by car during the current flood season, so rescue workers were
compelled to walk more than two miles from the nearest road to reach the
injured, a regional police spokesman said.
A series
of disasters have befallen pilgrims in India this year. In June, thousands
drowned when flash floods struck the northern state of Uttarakhand, and the
Indian authorities evacuated more than 100,000. In February, dozens were killed
in a train-station stampede at the Kumbh Mela, a Hindu religious festival on
the banks of the Ganges and Yamuna Rivers
It is a WAR
out there in Egypt:
More than
a month after the unceremonious ouster of President Mohamed Mursi, Egypt
continues to burn with rage and throb with grief.We bring you some of the most
poignant images from Egypt's season of discontent.Smoke rises near Al-Fath
Mosque during clashes at Ramses Square in Cairo. Thousands of supporters of
ousted President Mohamed Mursi took to the streets, urging a 'Day of Rage' to
denounce the assault by security forces on Muslim Brotherhood protesters that
killed hundreds.
The army
deployed dozens of armoured vehicles on major roads in Cairo, and the interior
ministry has said police will use live ammunition against anyone threatening
state installations.A torn poster of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi
is seen as riot police clear the area of his supporters, at Rabaa Adawiya
square, where they had been camping, in Cairo.At least 95 Egyptians were killed
after security forces moved in on protesters demanding Mursi's reinstatement,
and the government imposed a state of emergency as unrest swept the most
populous Arab nation. Egyptian army soldiers guard with armoured personnel
carriers near Tahrir Square in Cairo.Suspected Islamist militants killed at
least 24 Egyptian policemen in the Sinai peninsula, where attacks on security
forces have multiplied since the army overthrew President Mohamed Mursi on July
3.Supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood and ousted Egyptian President Mohamed
Mursi shout slogans against the military and interior ministry during a protest
in front of Al Istkama mosque at Giza Square, south of Cairo. Egypt's
army-backed rulers met on Sunday to discuss their bloody confrontation with
deposed President Mohamed Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood amid contrasting proposals
for compromise and a fight to the death.
In a
televised speech to military and police officers, army chief Abdel Fattah
el-Sisi vowed to crack down on anyone using violence, but also struck an
apparently inclusive note, telling Mursi's supporters, "There is room for
everyone in Egypt". A member of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporter of
ousted Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi shouts slogans after being injured
during clashes in front of Azbkya police station during clashes at Ramses
Square in Cairo.Islamist protests descended into a bloodbath across Egypt, with
around 50 killed in Cairo alone, on a 'Day of Rage' called by followers of
ousted President Mohamed Mursi to denounce a crackdown by the army-backed
government.As automatic gunfire echoed across Cairo, the standoff appeared to
be sliding ever faster towards armed confrontation, evoking past conflict
between militant Islamists and the state in the Arab world's most populous
nation.Riot police and army soldiers protect themselves with riot shields as
members of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of ousted Egyptian President
Mohamed Mursi throw stones during clashes around the area of Rabaa Adawiya
square, where they are camping, in Cairo.
The death
toll from an Egyptian police raid on supporters of Mursi at a Cairo protest
camp has climbed to 60 at one hospital, according to a nurse, who said she
counted the bodies.
Bhatkal's journey: From engineer to India's
most wanted terrorist:
Branded
as the face of modern day terrorism, Zarar Ahmed Siddibaba alias Yasin Bhatkal
of the banned Indian Mujahideen arrested on Wednesday night gained cult status
in the homegrown terror network after the 2008 Delhi serial blasts.
After he
managed to give the slip to police on two occasions, 30-year-old Yasin, one of
India's most wanted terrorists, is a prize catch for which Intelligence Bureau
sleuths worked day and night after picking up his presence in Nepal. Scores of
people have lost their lives in terror attacks in which Yasin had a hand. Yasin
is stated to have planted bombs personally in some attacks
Caught on
close-circuit television at least on three occasions, he managed to give the
slip to the Mumbai and Kolkata police twice before the long arm of law caught
up with him at the Indo-Nepal border near Gorakhpur on Wednesday night.
Yasin was
one of the several cases where well-educated youths became radicalised and took
to terror activities. At the age of 21, Yasin had emerged as one of the close
confidante of ganglord-turned terrorist and founder of IM Amir Reza Khan and
was the key figure in ensuring that bombs and anti-national material were
transported from a beach house in Karnataka's coastal district of Bhatkal to
other parts of the country in 2004.
His first
brush with terror is believed to have started from Vitthalamakki and
Hakkalamane in North Karnataka from where bombs were supplied to specialised
Indian Mujahideen training camps spread across the country. Yasin was detained
in Kolkata and Mumbai from where he managed to get released by concealing his
identity.
He was
caught on CCTV just before the German bakery blast in Pune in 2010 and later at
blasts at Cyberabad's Dilkhush Nagar earlier this year. Earlier, he managed to
flee less than an hour before police raided the IM safe house in the Bhadra
forests outside Chikmagalur in October, 2008.
Yasin is
believed to be jailed in November 2009 and walked out on bail after he had
identified himself as Muhammad Ashraf. His questioning will be helpful to the
security agencies in understanding the rise of the modern day terror in
India.After the Delhi serial blasts in 2008, his role started surfacing in a
big way during a check on his background and previous involvements.
'We told
Sushmita not to return to Afghanistan':
Family
members of author Sushmita Banerjee, who was shot dead by masked gunmen in
Afghanistan, on Friday claimed that they had asked her not to return to the
troubled country, but she did not listen insisting that the situation had
changed there."When Sushmita decided to return in January, we had told her
not to return. But she argued that the situation has changed in Afghanistan in
the past several years. Let me go. If I find that I can't stay, I will come
back", Sushmita's sister-in-law Debalina said."We always lived here
in tension thinking about the situation in Afghanistan. But when she rang up
about a fortnight back, saying that the situation was normal, we felt assured.
Sushmita was doing a paramedical job there," she told a news channel in
Kolkata.Sushmita also wanted to write more on the people of Afghanistan and
their lives, she said.
Asked
about the Taliban's denial of involvement in the killing, she quipped, "It
has to be seen if the Taliban was speaking the truth. It seemed that she was
the target as nothing happened to other members of her in-laws'
family."She said they failed to contact Sushmita's husband Jaanbaz Khan in
Afghanistan.The police said in Kabul on Thursday that Sushmita Banerjee, whose
memoir about her dramatic escape from the Taliban was turned into a Hindi film,
was shot dead in Afghanistan by militants.Banerjee, 49, was killed outside her
home in Paktika province. The Taliban on Friday denied killing Sushmita
Banerjee, whose murder Afghan officials blamed on the insurgent militia
fighting against the government for 12 years.Banerjee's book Kabuliwalar
Bangali Bou (A Kabuliwala's Bengali Wife), about her escape from the Taliban in
1995, became a bestseller in India and was made into a Hindi film "Escape
From Taliban" in 2003.A candle light vigil was observed in the city's
Beliaghata area today to mourn the death of the writer who hailed from the
city.Meanwhile, the brother of the author, Gopal Banerjee, on Friday told PTI
that the family had contacted the external affairs ministry pleading that the
body be brought to Kolkata. He said that they were yet to get a response from
the ministry.
"We
have contacted the External Affairs Ministry and we have clearly stated that we
want to bring back the body of our sister back in Kolkata," he said.The
family members also alleged foul play in the killing of Sushmita. He said they
had sent mails and got in touch with the Communist Party of India-Marxist
leader Brinda Karat to help them bring back the body.Gopal said that it was
since the end of last year that she was planning to go back to the country.
"We warned her that it would be dangerous. But all our pleas and warnings
fell on deaf ears. She pleaded that Afghanistan was safe."Reminiscing
about the last conversation he had with her sister, Gopal said, "Eight to
ten days back Sushmita had called for the last time. She didn't say anything
about any threat or problem there. Maybe she didn't want us to get tensed on
account of her."
190 people
killed in Bihar floods; Nitish makes aerial survey:
Chief
Minister Nitish Kumar conducted aerial survey of 12 inundated districts to take
stock of the situation arising out of flood which has claimed 190 lives so far
in Bihar.Returning from the survey, the CM told reporters that the state
government has readied all arrangements to meet the challenge of heavy rains
next week in Nepal and North Bihar forecast by Meteorological
department.Accompanied by Principal Secretary Disaster Management, Vyasji, the
CM took round of 12 flooded districts by air. These were Patna, Samastipur,
Begusarai, Khagaria, Munger, Lakhisarai, Bhagalpur, Katihar, Bhojpur, Saran,
Vaishali and Buxar.Kumar said water level of swollen Ganga river was
receding.He also said that nearly 60 lakh people were affected by the
flood.Kumar said relief was distributed among the marooned on a war footing.
Relief camps have been set up in the affected areas and necessary items like
foodgrains were given to the victims.
The chief
minister said he talked to the collectors of all the districts on the shore of
the Ganga and gave them necessary instructions.the Bihar CM said that he
himself would review flood relief and rehabilitation work and prepare a report
on damage to be sent to the Centre.
He said
flood relief work was carried out under Disaster Management law in which 75 per
cent of the cost was borne by the Centre while state's share was 25 per
cent.Meanwhile, a report from Disaster Management Department said that 190
people have lost their lives in the flood across the state so far.The highest
toll of 30 people was reported from Purnea district while the casualty was 26
in Bhojpur and 21 in Munger, it said.The report said that nearly 4 lakh animals
were affected in the floods.
Narendra
Modi is BJP's PM candidate:
The
Bharatiya Janata Party on Friday formally declared Gujarat Chief Minister
Narendra Modi as the party's prime ministerial candidate after hectic parleys
by senior leaders to convince L K Advani, Sushma Swaraj and Murli Manohar Joshi
to give up their opposition to him.
The BJP
Parliamentary Board, which met at the party headquarters in Delhi on Friday
evening, took the decision.
BJP
President Rajnath Singh said, "Shri Narendra Modi will be our PM
candidate. We congratulate him and convey our best wishes."
The
decision to convene the panel meeting came after Rajnath Singh held a meeting
with Advani.
Modi, who
flew in a chartered plane from Ahmedabad to Delhi on Friday afternoon, was
present at the party HQ when the announcement was made.
86 days
later, bells peal at Kedarnath temple once again:
The
pealing of bells may have brought alive the Himalayan shrine of Kedarnath on
Wednesday, but heaps of broken doors and razed walls just a few meters away are
a tell-tale sign of the massive devastation suffered in the June
calamity.Several structures close to the shrine are lying in a shambles, with
heaps of wooden planks, broken doors and razed walls lying just a few meters
away from the temple. Structures lying close to the temple are still cluttered
with tonnes of debris under which a large number of bodies might be lying,
officials saidThe huge rock that saved the shrine was also worshipped on
Wednesday, by a team of priests as pujas resumed at the shrine after a gap of
86 days.
"The
road route to the shrine has also been opened for a limited number of pilgrims
from the nearby areas at their own risk," Rudraprayag DM Dilip Javalkar
said.Full-fledged yatra has not yet resumed.A review meeting will be held on
September 30 to take stock of the situation and decide on the possibility of
resuming the full-fledged yatra.
Indian treasure worth Rs 2 crore found on
frozen French peak!:
A French
climber recently found a box full of precious stones while trekking at Mont
Blanc, the highest mountain range in the European Union, with jewellery worth
over Rs 2 crore.The metal box had nearly 100 pieces of emeralds, rubies and
sapphires packed into sachets that were marked 'made in India'.The box is
believed to have belonged to a passenger of one of the two ill-fated Air India
flights that crashed at the spot, in 1950 and in 1966.Incidentally, a bag of
surprisingly well-preserved Indian diplomatic mail was found by two climbers at
Mont Blanc last year.The bag, marked 'ministry of external affairs', was
believed to have belonged to someone on board the Boeing 707 that had crashed
at the site in January 1966.As many as 11 crew members and 106 passengers had
been killed in the crash.
Since one
of the passengers killed in the crash was Homi Jehangir Bhaba, considered the
father of India's nuclear programme, many conspiracy theories had surfaced
after the mishap.The real reason behind the crash was never ascertained.An Air
India propeller plane had crashed in the same region 16 years earlier -- in 1950
-- killing 48 passengers and crew members.The French climber, who remains
unnamed, carried the box on his way down from the summit and handed it over to
the local police."You can say the climber who made this find is someone
very honest," the local police chief was quoted as saying by the
Guardian.The daily also described Mont Blanc as “one of the world's most
beautiful mountains, with a deadly history of dangerous storms and fatal
avalanches.”The French authorities will now contact their Indian counterparts
and try to return the jewel box to its rightful owner.If Indian authorities
fail to find the owner of the treasure, the jewels can be given back to the
climber who found them, said the Guardian.
SC ruling
gives voters Right to Reject all candidates in polls:
In a
landmark verdict, the Supreme Court on Friday held that citizens have right to
cast negative vote rejecting all candidates contesting polls, a decision which
would encourage people not satisfied with contestants to turn up for voting.The
apex court directed the Election Commission to provide 'none of the above
options' at the end of the list of candidates in electronic voting machines and
ballot papers to allow voters to reject those contesting polls.A bench headed
by Chief Justice P Sathasivam said that negative voting would foster purity and
vibrancy of elections and ensure wide participation as people who are not
satisfied with the candidates in the fray would also turn up to express their
opinion rejecting contestants.It said that the concept of negative voting would
bring a systemic change in the election process as the political parties will
be forced to project clean candidates in polls.The bench noted that the concept
of negative voting is prevalent in 13 countries and even in India, parliamentarians
are given an option to press the button for abstaining while voting takes place
in the House.The court said right to reject candidates in elections is part of
fundamental right to freedom of speech and expression given by the Constitution
to Indian citizens.
It said
that democracy is all about choice and significance of right of citizens to
cast negative voting is massive.With the concept of negative voting, the voters
who are dissatisfied with the candidates in the fray would turn up in large
number to express their opinion which would put unscrupulous elements and
impersonators out of the polls, it said.The bench, while reading out the
operative portion of the judgement, did not throw light on a situation in case
the votes cast under no option head outnumber the votes got by the
candidates.It said that secrecy of votes cast under the no option category must
be maintained by the Election Commission.
Fodder
scam: Lalu jailed for 5 years, fined Rs 25 lakh:
Rashtriya
Janata Dal leader Lalu Prasad was on Thursday sentenced to 5 years imprisonment
in a 17-year-old fodder scam case by a special court of the Central Bureau of
Investigation after he was convicted on corruption and other charges four days
back.The sentencing by special CBI judge Pravas Kumar Singh disqualifies Prasad
from Parliament and renders him ineligible for contesting elections for 11
years.
65-year-old
Prasad and other convicts are currently lodged in the Birsa Munda Central Jail
in RanchiThe former Bihar chief minister, who was convicted on September 30
dealing a body blow to RJD ahead of next Lok Sabha polls, was also fined Rs 25
lakh.Another former Bihar chief minister Jagannath Mishra was sentenced to four
years imprisonment in the case.Six other politicians and four IAS officers,
among the convicted, were also sentenced to prison terms for fraudulent
withdrawal of Rs 37.7 crore from Chaibasa treasury when Prasad was heading the
RJD government in the early 1990s.
Of the 45
convicts, the judge had delivered the sentence against eight of them on
September 30 itself.Earlier today, arguments on the quantum of sentence Prasad
and 36 other convicts were completed in the special court in Ranchi with CBI
seeking maximum prison term of up to seven years for them.The counsel of Yadav,
Mishra, sitting JD(U) MP Jagdish Sharma, former legislator R K Rana and others
had pleaded for lesser sentence.Former Development Commissioner Phoolchand
Singh, former Science and Technology Secretary Mahesh Prasad, former AHD
Secretary Beck Juleus, former Income Tax Commissioner Adhip Chandra Choudhary,
former Class I officers Gouri Shankar Prasad, Brajnandan Sharma, K M Prasad
(all three were with the Animal Husbandry Department) and other officials,
suppliers were among those found guilty.A sitting from Jahanabad, Sharma also
faces disqualification in the wake of a Supreme Court judgement that an MP or
MLA would stand disqualified immediately if convicted by a court for crimes
with punishment of two years or more and under some other laws even without jail
sentence.RJD spokesperson Manoj Jha has said that the verdict would be
challenged in a higher court.
US
shutdown: NSA staff asked to go home:
The
United States National Security Agency has sent some staffers home because of
the government shutdown despite crucial security services being exempted from
the shuttering of offices due to lack of funds.
Though
the shutdown makes an exception for "national security", some
employees of the NSA were surprised to get a letter on Tuesday that told them
their jobs did not fall under that category, Forbes reported on Thursday.
In a memo
sent to thousands of NSA staffers, the associate director of human resources
noted that despite exceptions to the shutdown that include "activities
required for national security, including the safety of human life or the
protection of property," recipients of the letter were being sent home
indefinitely.
"We
very much regret the shutdown furlough and recognise the difficult financial
implications of any furlough, no matter how limited its length," reads the
unclassified letter. While everyone at the NSA provides vital services, because
the duties you perform do not support 'excerpted' functions, you will be placed
in a furlough status effective 1 October 2013."The report said it was not
clear how many staffers had been furloughed. Among those sent home were
staffers from the surveillance-focussed signals intelligence group, the
security-focussed information assurance division and the research division.The
NSA hasn't officially stated the scope of the furlough, but the Hill has
reported that as many as 70 per cent of civilian staffers have been put on
indefinite leave.The move by the NSA comes in the wake of questions being
raised about the agency's role by the US Congress and the media following
revelations of its massive pervasive surveillance by former security contractor
Edward Snowden.
Musharraf
arrested over Lal Masjid operation:
Beleaguered
former President Pervez Musharraf was on Thursday arrested for ordering a
crackdown on the radical Lal Masjid, less than 24 hours after his lawyers claimed
he could walk out of house arrest after being granted bail in the Akbar Bugti
murder case."He (Musharraf) has been arrested," said Aasia Ishaque,
spokesperson for Musharraf’s All Pakistan Muslim League party. She confirmed
that the 70-year-old former military was arrested in the Lal Masjid
case."The SSP of Islamabad and the chief of Aabpara Police Station went to
his house and arrested him," she told PTI.On September 2, police filed a
case against Musharraf over the killing of cleric Abdul Rashid and his mother
during the 2007 military operation against extremists holed up in the Lal
Masjid.
The
operation, ordered by Musharraf, ended with a bloody eight-day siege that
killed nearly 100 people, including Pakistani troops.The case was filed on the
directions of Justice Noorul Huque Qureshi of the Islamabad high court, who was
annoyed over the non-compliance of an earlier order.The court issued the order
in response to a petition filed by Haroon Rashid, the son of Abdul Rashid,
against Musharraf for his alleged involvement in the killing of the hardline
cleric and his mother.
On
Wednesday, the Supreme Court granted Musharraf bail in the case related to the
killing of Baloch nationalist leader Akbar Bugti in a 2006 military
operation.Musharraf's lawyers said this was the last case in which he was still
under arrest and he had been granted bail in other cases, including those
related to the assassination of former premier Benazir Bhutto and the
imposition of emergency in 2007.The former military strongman is currently
being held at his farmhouse on the outskirts of Islamabad, guarded by nearly
300 security personnel, including soldiers and snipers.Musharraf took power in
a 1999 coup and ruled as President until he resigned when he was threatened
with impeachment in 2008. He then went into self-imposed exile and returned to
Pakistan in March in a bid to resurrect his political career.
Cyclone Phailin: Odisha braces for 1999
supercyclone revisit:
Defence
Minister A K Antony has asked armed forces to be ready to move in to Odisha and
Andhra Pradesh in view of cyclone Phailin.The severe cyclonic storm over east
central Bay of Bengal further intensified on Friday and is all set to make a
landfall close to Gopalpur in Odisha at a wind speed of at least 205 kmph on Saturday.
"The
very severe cyclonic storm, PHAILIN over east central Bay of Bengal moved
west-northwestwards with a speed of 15 kmph and lay centred about 520km
south-southeast of Paradip, 530km from Gopalpur and 530km east-southeast of
Kalingapatnam," the IMD said in its latest bulletin."It would move
northwestwards and cross north Andhra Pradesh and Odisha coast between
Kalingapatnam and Paradip, close to Gopalpur (Odisha) by the evening of October
12," the IMD said.Satellite images showed the storm in the Bay of Bengal
to be about half the size of India.
Orissa
Special Relief Commissioner PK Mohapatra said Phailin would be 'no less than
1999 supercyclone'Tropical Storm Risk, a London-based storm tracking service,
has categorised Phailin as a Category 4 storm, one notch below the most
powerful Category 5 storms.The Indian Meterological Department has forecast a
risk to life and extensive damage to property when it makes landfall in 36
hoursIMD, which till Thursday night expected that the wind speed would remain
limited within 185 kmph during landfall on Saturday, said in its latest
bulletin that Phailin would hit with increased intensity with a maximum
sustained speed of 205-215 kmph.
Similarly,
though IMD forecast a storm surge of 1.5 meter to 2 meter in Ganjam, Khurda,
Puri and Jagatsinghpur districts in the coast on Thursday, it said on Friday
that the storm surge height will be around 2 meter to 2.5 meter above
astronomical tide. This would inundate low lying areas of Ganjam, Khurda, Puri
and Jagatsinghpur in Odisha.
Squally
winds speed reaching 45-55 kmph gusting to 65 kmph have already started along
Odisha coast this morning under the influence of Phailin. "It would
increase in intensity with gale wind speed reaching 205-215 kmph along and off
coastal districts of south Odisha at the time of landfall," the IMD
said.Meanwhile, a worried state government held several meetings and took stock
of the situation in the changed circumstances. The state government has already
asked the district authorities to start evacuation of people living in low
lying areas close to the sea. "We have ordered that nobody should be
allowed to stay in thatched and weak houses," Special Relief Commissioner
(SRC) P K Mohapatra said.The personnel of Odisha State Disaster Rapid Action
Force and fire men have already been deployed.
Phailin aftermath: Epidemic threat in Odisha's
Ganjam district:
The
threat of epidemic is looming large in worst-hit Ganjam district as the debris
is yet to be cleared even six days after Cyclone Phailin left behind its trail
of destruction.
Five
diarrhoea cases have already been reported from Sorala, a fishermen village in
the coastal area. The disease was also reported from the nearby
villages.Confirming it, Ganjam chief medical officer P K Kar, however, said the
situation was not alarming.“We have received some sporadic cases. But the
situation is totally normal,” he said.Kar said at least ten teams of doctors
along with paramedical staff were touring the cyclone-ravaged areas.At least
two teams were deputed to the district from Bhubaneswar and all the senior
doctors in the area have been alerted to be prepared to meet the situation, Kar
added.Managing Director of National Rural Health Mission Roopa Mishra on
Thursday reviewed the preparedness of the health sector to meet the outbreak of
any epidemic.Locals complained that the situation was the worst in Berhampore
Municipal Corporation area as heaps of garbage, branches of trees lay piled up
in the south Odisha town.Fowl smell was emanating from the clogged drains,
while drinking water supply is yet to normalise in the town.
“We are
trying our level best to clean up the town. The work is on in full swing and
more people have been hired for it. Several persons with required machinery
from Bhubaneswar Municipal Corporation were also at work to clear the town, BMC
commissioner Ajit Mishra said.
Rains,
floods unleash fury on Andhra, Odisha; 48 killed:
Incessant
rains and floods have claimed as many as 45 lives in Andhra Pradesh and Odisha,
with hundreds of villages submerged in nearly 30 districts and road and rail
links disrupted in the region.Three persons were also killed in heavy rains in
south Bengal with normal life thrown out of gear in Kolkata and adjacent
districts.
Rain and
flood-battered Andhra Pradesh, where 29 people have been killed in the last
four days, is unlikely to get respite anytime soon as the Met department has
forecast heavy downpour in the next 48 hours in the state as also in many
Odisha districts and south Bengal.At least 16 people have died in flood-related
incidents in Odisha, where the situation remained grim despite major rivers
receding.As many as 3,230 villages in 16 districts of Andhra Pradesh were badly
affected due to torrential rains and 6,600 houses have been damaged, Disaster
Management Commissioner T Radha said.
He said
405 minor irrigation tanks and a 935 km road stretch had been damaged while
breaches occurred in canals in different districts, inundating settlements and
crops.More than 72,000 people were evacuated from low-lying areas in nine
districts, said Andhra Pradesh Agriculture Minister Kanna Lakshmi Narayana,
adding that crops in 6.77 lakh hectares of land had been damaged.The government
has set up 178 relief camps in nine districts, including 36 in Srikakulam.A
flood alert has been sounded due to rising water level in river Krishna.In
Odisha, two deaths each were reported from Bhadrak, Jajpur and Nayagarh
districts, Special Relief Commissioner P K Mohapatra told reporters in
Bhubaneshwar after the situation was reviewed by Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik.
"All
the deaths were due to wall collapse and drowning," Mohapatra said.Major
rivers like Rusikulya, Godahada and Vansadhara were flowing below the danger
mark .Over 5.32 lakh people in 2,276 villages in 13 districts were affected by
the floods in Odisha, while about 1.47 lakh people were evacuated, officials
said.Of the 129 villages inundated in Ganjam district by flash flood on Friday,
water had receded in 69 villages.An IMD bulletin said that heavy to very heavy
rainfall would occur over the next 48 hours at one or two places over Koraput,
Malkangiri, Nawarangpur, Rayagada, Gajapati and Kalahandi districts.Vast
stretches of the Vijayawada-Hyderabad Highway were submerged in floodwater,
leading to traffic diversion.
The rail
track at Bommayipalli on the Secunderabad-Guntur section was damaged and
repairs were being carried out. All important trains on this route are being
diverted via Warangal and Vijayawada, official sources said.The East Coast
Railway has cancelled the Bhubaneswar-Bengaluru Prasanthi Express and
Bhubaneswar-Visakhapatnam Express trains due to heavy rains. The Puri-Tirupati
Express and Coromandel Express also stand cancelled.In West Bengal, Sanjoy
Mondal and his son Ashish were killed after the balcony of an old house
collapsed on Cotton Street in Kolkata, which received the season's highest of
140 mm rainfall.A woman, Dulai Mohanta, died in a wall collapse at Bhurigram in
Burdwan district.
Widespread
showers lashed Durgapur in Burdwan district, which reported 112-114 mm of
rain.Purulia district reported 65 mm of rain which affected Bagmundi, Jhalda
and Jaypore blocs.Altogether, 1,334 huts collapsed in the rains in Burdwan
district, district disaster management sources said.Bankura District Magistrate
Bijoy Bharati said the rains affected Barjora, Sonamukhi, Patrasayar, and Mejia
blocks while the Kangasabati River crossed the danger level
SC verdict
may wipe out AMRI's entire profit:
The
Supreme Court order asking Kolkata-based Advanced Medicare and Research
Institute Hospital to pay Rs 5.96 crore as compensation for medical negligence
could wipe out an entire year’s profit. With interest, the compensation
translates to a little more than Rs 11 crore.AMRI has two units, of which the
one at Dhakuria was gutted by a fire in 2011 that claimed 91 lives and it might
have to wait longer to see the light of day again.The apex court on Thursday
had ordered the hospital and three of its doctors to compensate, with interest,
a United States-based Indian-origin doctor for medical negligence which led to
the death of his wife in 1998.
The
compensation, with interest, translates to more than Rs 11 crore.The hospital,
co-founded by industrialists R S Agarwal and R S Goenka, had booked a profit of
around Rs 12 crore on a turnover of Rs 187 crore in FY10. Then the fire
accident happened and since then, the hospital remains closed.When contacted,
Emami director Aditya Agarwal refused to comment, saying he is not involved in
the day-to-day operations and, hence, has no idea about the impact of the payout
of the compensation.Rahul Todi, managing director of Sharachi group, too,
refused to comment on the impact of the SC verdict on the company's financials.
Emami and Sharachi are co-owners of AMRI.The buzz around AMRI Dhakuria has been
positive in the past few months with chances of reopening of the unit gaining
ground. The fire accident had soured the relationship between AMRI promoters
and the state government, which arrested six directors of AMRI.West Bengal
Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee had publicly said the government was not in
favour of a ‘killer’ industry.However, of late, Emami promoters have been seen
sharing the dais with West Bengal ministers at public events, signalling
improvement of relations. The latest Supreme Court verdict could change all that.Subrata
Majumdar, a Trinamool Congress leader, said, “This s being handled by the chief
minister directly. Since the verdict came from the Supreme Court, it may delay
things for AMRI.”The apex court verdict could also mean that AMRI may have to
wait for a longer period before they can resume operations.AMRI had major
expansion plans of about Rs 2,000 crore, which were put on hold after the fire
accident.The group also had plans to set up seven hospitals across the east and
north-east with an investment of nearly Rs 1,750 crore. Plus, it was planning
to invest Rs 300 crore to add beds in the existing hospitals.
Nuclear-capable
Agni-I missile successfully test-fired:
India on
Friday successfully test-fired its indigenously developed nuclear-capable
Agni-I ballistic missile with a strike range of 700 km from a test range off
Odisha coast as part of a user trial by the army.
The
surface-to-surface, single-stage missile, powered by solid propellants, was
test-fired from a mobile launcher at 9.33 am from launch pad-4 of the
Integrated Test Range at Wheeler Island, about 100 km from Balsore."The
test-fire of the ballistic missile was fully successful," ITR Director M V
K V Prasad said."Agni-I missile was launched by the Strategic Forces
Command," he said, adding the Defence Research and Development
Organisation developed medium-range ballistic missile from the production lot
was launched as part of regular training exercise by the armed forces.The
Agni-I missile has a specialised navigation system, which ensures it reaches
the target with a high degree of accuracy and precision, he said.
Weighing
12 tonnes, the 15-metre-long Agni-I, which can carry payloads up to 1000 kg,
has already been inducted into the Indian Army.Agni-I was developed by advanced
systems laboratory, the premier missile development laboratory of the DRDO in
collaboration with the Defence Research Development Laboratory and Research
Centre Imarat and integrated by Bharat Dynamics Limited, Hyderabad.The last
trial of the sophisticated Agni-I missile was successfully carried out on
December 12, 2012 from the same base.
Tejpal
faces ARREST after being booked on rape charge:
Tehelka
Editor Tarun Tejpal faces possible arrest after Goa police booked him on rape
charge following an allegation by a colleague that he sexually assaulted her
during an event a fortnight ago.A special investigating team of the Goa crime
branch will visit Delhi to question Tejpal and police are not ruling out his
arrest."An FIR has been filed on charges of rape and outraging of modesty
(against Tejpal). This is one part of the process of investigation and law will
take its own course," Director General of Police Kishan Kumar said in
Panaji.The charges relate to Sections 376 (rape), 376 (2) (rape by a person of
a woman in his custody taking advantage of his official position) and 354
(outraging modesty) of the Indian Penal Code, he said.Asked whether Tejpal
would be arrested, the DGP said, "As I told you, this is a matter of
investigation. Let us leave it to investigating officers. It is a process under
law which has logical consequences. I cannot say how the IO will do."Goa
Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar made it clear that his government will show
"no tolerance for this type of crime and we should crack down on such
high-profile crimes".He said Goa police has not received any response from
Tehelka to the letter sent to it seeking details of the alleged
incident."I am not saying someone is guilty but the girl's email (to her
office) is explicit," he said and commended her for showing the courage to
report the incident.
While
Tejpal issued a statement offering to extend the "fullest
cooperation" to the police and all other authorities, the magazine's
Managing Editor Shoma Chaudhury said they would not go to police on the issue
as it was for the victim to decide on it.
Facing
allegations that Tehelka was indulging in a cover-up, Chaudhury defended her
actions in the matter, saying she had confronted Tejpal about the incident
"very, very angrily", after which he stepped down from his post for
six months and apologised to the victim.
"The
right to go to police is hers (victim's). I am not going to the police on my
own," she said, adding she will cooperate in the probe."If it is hard
for me to cooperate, then I will step down," Chaudhury said.She came under
a fresh attack when she referred to her conversation with Tejpal, who, she
said, has a "different version" of the incident, which she claimed to
have overruled.
"I
do feel a sense of outrage and betrayal but he has a different version,"
she said.Asked if Tehelka. which claims to have set high standards via its
investigative reports, was following double standards in this case, Chaudhury
said a three-member committee has been set up which will hear both the sides.
"You
are jumping to conclusions that it is sexual assault and rape," she shot
back.Meanwhile, the Bharatiya Janata Party today said suggestions that the
victim can opt for an in-house inquiry by Tehelka and not go for a criminal
probe is an "accused-friendly" approach and insisted that the two
options should complement each other, instead of being alternatives.Leader of
the Opposition in Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley issued a statement on the issue and
emphasised that everybody should encourage victims to depose "truly and
faithfully" as punishing an offender acts as a deterrent in the larger
interest of society.Referring to debates in various news channels on the Tejpal
issue, Jaitley said "regretfully, some participants provided an escape
route for the accused. They argued that the victim has a freedom of choice
whether to pursue her complaint before the in-house inquiry or pursue the criminal
investigation."
24 gold bars found in aircraft toilet in
Kolkata:
Cleaners
working on a commercial plane in Kolkata have found 24 gold bars worth more
than $1 million stuffed into a toilet compartment, officials said on Wednesday.
India,
which rivals China as the world's biggest gold consumer, has witnessed a spike
in smuggling after import duties were hiked three times this year to try to
dampen demand for the precious metal.
The plane belonging to Jet Airways was being cleaned at Kolkata airport
on Tuesday after a trip from Patna. It had previously been flying on
international routes.
"The
cleaning staff of the airport were going though their routine duties and found
two bags in the toilets of the plane," director of the airport B P Mishra
told AFP.
The
one-kilogram gold bars "have not been claimed by anyone. No arrest has
been made as yet".Senior customs official R S Meena estimated the value of
the haul at about 70 million rupees, or $1.1 million.
CNR Rao first Indian elected to Chinese
Academy of Science:
Eminent
Scientist and Bharat Ratna awardee Prof C N R Rao has become the first Indian
scientist to be elected as honorary foreign member of Chinese Academy of
Science.
"Prof
Rao is the first Indian Scientist to be elected to this prestigious
academy,prestigious academy which consists of several Nobel laureates and
eminent scientists of the world," Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced
Scientific Research, of which Rao is a founder and honorary President, said.
Stating
that Rao, awarded the Bharat Ratna last week, was elected by CAS at its General
Assembly held on November 4, the Centre said in a release that the academy had
bestowed on him the prestigious Award for International Scientific Cooperation
in January 2012.
It said
Rao has been elected to almost all scientific academies of the world including
The Royal Society-London, ationalAcademy of Science-USA, Pontifical Academy of
Science, JapanAcademy and RoyalSpanishAcademy of Sciences, among others.
He has
also been conferred 60 Honoris Causa (Honorary Doctorates) by various
universities across the globe, it added.
Nelson
Mandela dead at 95: Anti-apartheid hero and former South African president dies
in Johannesburg:
Nelson
Mandela led the fight to end apartheid, government-sanctioned racial
segregation in South Africa, ultimately succeeding with the odds stacked
against him. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
The lion
of South Africa sleeps forever tonight.Nelson Mandela, who led the fight
against apartheid and then pushed for reconciliation as his country’s first
black president, died after a prolonged illness Thursday. He was 95.
“He
passed on peacefully in the comfort of his family,” South African President
Jacob Zuma said in an address to the world just before midnight Thursday in the
African nation. “We’ve lost our greatest son.” As word of the death of the man
South Africans called Madiba spread across the heartbroken country, hundreds of
weeping mourners converged on Mandela’s home in Johannesburg, chanting, “Viva
Mandela, viva!”
Fittingly,
blacks and whites mourned Mandela together.“If it wasn’t for Mandela, I
wouldn’t be chilling with my black friends,” said 19-year-old Dominic Sadie,
who is white and was part of the giant crowd of people holding candles and
paying their respects. “I love him.” Mandela died at 8:50 p.m. local time, but
Zuma didn’t make his sad announcement until a little before midnight.Weeping
South Africans raced out into streets in their pajamas, including one black mom
who rushed over to Mandela’s house with her two daughters.“I am glad that he is
in a better place, but I hope South Africans will be able to deal with his
death,” she said through her tears. Mandela shared the Nobel Peace Prize in
1993 with F.W. de Klerk, South Africa’s last president during the era of
state-sanctioned racial segregation.
“I liked
him and I immediately felt that this is truly a man of greatness,” de Klerk
recalled. “I think Nelson Mandela’s legacy is don’t be bitter about the past,
take the hands also of your former enemies.”In Washington, President Obama said
Mandela “no longer belongs to us, he belongs to the ages.”Mandela died at 8:50
p.m. local time, but Zuma didn’t make his sad announcement until a little
before midnight.Weeping South Africans raced out into streets in their pajamas,
including one black mom who rushed over to Mandela’s house with her two
daughters.“I am glad that he is in a better place, but I hope South Africans
will be able to deal with his death,” she said through her tears.
Mandela
shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 with F.W. de Klerk, South Africa’s last
president during the era of state-sanctioned racial segregation.“I liked him
and I immediately felt that this is truly a man of greatness,” de Klerk
recalled. “I think Nelson Mandela’s legacy is don’t be bitter about the past,
take the hands also of your former enemies.”In Washington, President Obama said
Mandela “no longer belongs to us, he belongs to the ages.”
“I am one
of the countless millions who drew inspiration from Mandela’s life,” Obama said
at the White House. “So long as I live, I will do what I can to learn from
him.”
Obama
ordered that flags be flown at half-staff until sunset Monday and prepared to
fly out to South Africa for a state funeral. Former President Bill Clinton,
another politician who drew inspiration from the mighty South African, was in
his New York City office when he got the word.
The
eminent lawyer claimed a criminal offence is not just a crime against a victim
but also a crime against society."This is precisely why the State pursues
a criminal action. The public exchequer pays for it. There is a larger public
interest in punishing a criminal. A departmental or an in-house inquiry and a
criminal trial complement each other. They are not alternatives," Jaitley
said
Mars
orbiter's first ever image of earth:
The
Indian Space Research Organisation has released the first ever image of the
earth taken by the country’s Mars Orbiter Spacecraft.
This
image was taken on November 19 at 1350 hours using the Mars Colour Camera from
a height of almost 70,000 km above earth and has a spatial resolution of 3.5
km.
In a post
on social networking website Facebook, ISRO said: “In the process of testing
our payloads, we turned the Mars Colour Camera towards the earth and switched
it on, and here is the first ever image. We are certain we are going to get
some great shots in the orbit of Mars.”
The picture
has captured the Indian subcontinent and parts of Africa, especially Cyclone
Helen, hovering off the Andhra Pradesh coast.The Mars Orbiter Mission is aimed
at establishing India's capability to reach the Red Planet. It focuses on
looking for the presence of methane, an indicator of life on the planet.
The
spacecraft would go around the Earth for 25 days before the ISRO plans to do
trans-Mars injection on December 1, enabling it to undertake the long voyage
towards Mars.In its 300-day, 780-million-kilometre journey, the spacecraft will
orbit Mars and survey its geology and atmosphere. The satellite will enter the
Mars orbit in September 2014.
Assembly
Elections 2013 Results
Mizoram
Seats
Declared: 39/40
Parties Won Total
(L + W)
Cong 0 31 31
MPC 0 0 0
MNF+ 1 7 8
Others 0 1 1
Mizoram
election result 2013: Lal Thanhawla Cong's lone face saviour
Delhi
Seats
Declared: 70/70
Parties Won Total
(L + W)
Cong 0 8 8
BJP 0 31 31
AAP 0 28 28
Delhi
Elections 2013: President's Rule appears imminent in Delhi
Rajasthan
Seats
Declared: 199/200
Parties Won Total
(L + W)
Cong 0 21 21
BJP 0 162 162
BSP 0 1 1
Rajasthan
assembly election results: 'Maharani' brings BJP back to power
Madhya
Pradesh
Seats
Declared: 230/230
Parties Won Total
(L + W)
Cong 0 58 58
BJP 0 165 165
BSP 0 4 4
Shivraj
Chouhan's son of the soil image proves to be winner
Chhattisgarh
Seats
Declared: 90/90
Parties Won Total
(L + W)
Cong 0 39 39
BJP 0 49 49
BSP 0 1 1
Others 0 1 1
Raman
Singh was sworn in as chief minister of Chhattisgarh's third consecutive BJP
government at a glittering public ceremony.
Devyani
row: 'Why no focus on crimes committed against maid?':
The
lawyer for a domestic help employed by Devyani Khobragade on Thursday said it
is frustrating and disappointing that the focus in the case has shifted from
the crimes that were committed against her client to the Indian
diplomat."There is frustration and disappointment that the media (and the
officials) has portrayed this story in the way that they have," Dana
Sussman, staff attorney in the anti-trafficking programme at victim assistance
agency Safe Horizon, told PTI.Sussman is the lawyer for the Indian woman
Sangeeta Richard, who had been employed by Khobragade as a domestic help and
babysitter.Senior director of the anti-trafficking programme at Safe Horizon
Avaloy Lanning said the victim and other advocates are "frustrated"
that the crime in the case is being "overshadowed" and the focus
should be on the "crimes that were committed rather than on the criminal
defendant."
She said
irrespective of the position of the Indian officials about Richard's conduct,
the charges against India's Deputy Consul General in New York "speak for
themselves".Sussman stressed that the case is about Khobragade lying to
the federal government about the wages she was required to pay to her
client.Khobragade "did not pay those wages, she grossly underpaid my
client and required that my client work far more than she had expected"
and Khobragade wrongly represented this information the US government."My
client worked for her for quite a while and eventually she decided that she
could not tolerate the situation any longer," Sussman said.
Sussman,
however, did not comment on the whereabouts of Richard and her family, on the
police complaint lodged against her in India and the fact that she had been
absconding since June.She also said she would not comment on the legal proceedings
ongoing in India against Richard.She added that her client will not "at
this point" come out and talk to the media.
She said
Richard wants "justice" for herself and the story that is being lost
in this case is that Richard is a witness in a federal investigation and
criminal case against Khobragade.She will continue to cooperate with
authorities, Sussman added.Richard is "not on trial here and we think that
the message here has been lost in the fact that there are charges against
Khobragade for violating US law and those charges relate to the underpayment of
wages to a domestic worker. That is the story. The actual story has been
lost" in the diplomatic row that has erupted between US and India.Sussman
said the case is representative of the experiences of a significant number of
domestic workers of diplomats and consular officials from all over the world
who come on special visas to the US but face labour issues."We would like
to see this story told in a broader way that discusses the issues of domestic
workers of diplomats and consular officials and the issues that they face and
the vulnerability they have in labour abuses and underpayment of wages,"
Sussman said, adding that her agency applauds the US government's action in the
case.
Sussman
said the action of the government demonstrates that the US is taking crimes
which lead to exploitation and abuse of domestic workers seriously.
On the
case being made by Indian authorities that Khobragade enjoys diplomatic
immunity, Sussman said Khobragade enjoyed only a "limited form of consular
immunity" given to consular officials and employees of the
consulate."That does not pertain to her private actions in employing a
domestic worker. The receiving country, in this case the US, determines what
level of immunity a diplomat or consular official enjoys," she
said.Whether Khobragade's transfer to the Indian Mission to the United Nations
would weaken their case, Sussman said it is not upto Khobragade to determine
what level of immunity she has."The receiving state determines the level
of immunity for any individual. I am sure the US government has considered
this," she said.Meanwhile, the Indian diplomats at India's Permanent
Mission to the UN remained tight-lipped about the transfer of Khobragade from
the Consulate to the mission, neither did they comment on the developments in
the case.
Another
controversy over Taslima, TV serial postponed:
Exiled
Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen ran into another controversy when protest by
Muslim fundamentalists forced a Bengali channel to postpone the broadcast of a
TV serial based on a story written by her.'Dusahobas' (translated roughly as
living difficult), was scheduled to be shown on the small screen from tonight
on the "Aakash Aath" channel.
"Although
Aakash Aath is willing and is ready to commence the telecast of 'Dusahobas' on
Thursday at 10pm as was envisaged, but due to reasons beyond the purview and
control of our channel we may be forced to defer the telecast of this serial
indefinitely," a spokesperson of the channel said.
In a
statement, the channel said the serial was based on women empowerment and had
nothing to do with any religion or community whatsoever.
Abdul
Aziz of minority group Milli Ittehad Parishad told PTI that they had written to
the producers asking them to withdraw Taslima's name and reference from the
serial and withdraw scenes which might create a controversy.
"We
have been told that there are some scenes in the serial which might hurt our
sentiments. Through this serial she is trying to come back to Kolkata.
Therefore we have opposed this," Aziz said.The minority groups have
already forced the channel to withdraw all hoardings about the serial which has
Taslima's name.
Maulana
Nurur Rahman Barkati, Shahi Imam of the Tipu Sultan Mosque in Kolkata, said,
"We will not allow the channel to show the serial at all". Idris Ali,
president of All India Minority Forum, alleged that Taslima is trying to break
peace and harmony in the state.
"We
will not let her break communal harmony," Ali said. Exiled from Bangladesh
in 1994 for allegedly hurting religious sentiments with her novel 'Lajja'
(Shame), the doctor-turned-author had taken refuge in the city in 2004, after a
long stay in Europe.
But after
violent protests in the city in November 2007, the government took her away to
an undisclosed location in New Delhi where she has been residing since then
Huge
relief for Narendra Modi, gets clean chit in 2002 riots:
In a
major relief to Chief Minister Narendra Modi, a metropolitan court on Saturday
rejected the protest petition filed by Zakia Jafri, wife of a former Congress
MP, against the clean chit given to him and others by the Special Investigation
Team in the 2002 Gujarat riots.Metropolitan Magistrate B J Ganatra while pronouncing
the order in open court told Zakia's counsel Mihir Desai that her petition has
been rejected and they have the liberty to approach a higher court.Jafri, whose
husband Ehsan Jafri, a former Congress MP, was among the 68 people killed in
the Gulbarg society massacre here during the post-Godhra riots, had filed a
protest petition on April 15, this year objecting to the Supreme
Court-appointed SIT's closure report absolving Modi of complicity in the
conspiracy behind the carnage.Seventy-four-year-old Zakia, who was present at
the court, broke down after the verdict was out and said she will appeal
against it in the higher court in a month.
"The
only hurdle in the acceptance of SIT's recommendations was the protest petition
and the protest petition was rejected, obviously the SIT report has been
accepted. So, SIT's investigation, integrity, impartiality, all have been given
a judicial stamp," R S Jamuar, SIT's counsel, told reporters after the
verdict.After completing its investigation on Zakia's complaint, the SIT had
had filed its closure report on February 8, last year. It concluded that
despite difficulties in obtaining evidence in the case because of the lapse of
eight years, whatever material it could gather was not sufficient enough to
prosecute those against whom allegations of hatching the conspiracy had been
levelled.
In her
petition, Zakia had demanded rejection of the SIT report and an order by the
court to file chargesheet against Modi, BJP's prime ministerial candidate, and
others.
Zakia had
filed a complaint against 63 persons, including Modi, his ministerial
colleagues, top police officers and BJP functionaries accusing them of a wider
conspiracy in the riots, which left more than 1,000 people dead, mostly
Muslims.Jamuar said the complainant had the option to move the court of the
district judge or the high court against the order.The apex court had ordered
an inquiry into Zakia's complaint by SIT headed by the Central Bureau of
Investigation former Director R K Raghavan.
The SIT
had submitted its report to the Supreme Court after investigations into the
complaint. It had interrogated several people, including Modi, who was quizzed
for more than nine hours in March 2010.The Supreme Court, after going through
the report, had asked amicus curiae Raju Ramchandran to independently verify
the SIT investigations. Ramchandran had also submitted his report to the
Supreme Court and, according to Zakia, it had sufficient grounds to put Modi
and others on trial.After going through both the reports, the Supreme Court had
on September 12, 2011 directed the SIT to submit the final report along with
the entire material collected during the investigation to the metropolitan
court.
Zakia had
filed a complaint against 63 persons, including Modi, his ministerial colleagues,
top police officers and BJP functionaries accusing them of a wider conspiracy
in the riots, which left more than 1,000 people dead, mostly Muslims.Jamuar
said the complainant had the option to move the court of the district judge or
the high court against the order.The apex court had ordered an inquiry into
Zakia's complaint by SIT headed by the Central Bureau of Investigation former
Director R K Raghavan.
The SIT
had submitted its report to the Supreme Court after investigations into the
complaint. It had interrogated several people, including Modi, who was quizzed
for more than nine hours in March 2010.The Supreme Court, after going through
the report, had asked amicus curiae Raju Ramchandran to independently verify
the SIT investigations. Ramchandran had also submitted his report to the
Supreme Court and, according to Zakia, it had sufficient grounds to put Modi
and others on trial.After going through both the reports, the Supreme Court had
on September 12, 2011 directed the SIT to submit the final report along with
the entire material collected during the investigation to the metropolitan
court.
Kejriwal
to be sworn in as Delhi CM on Saturday at Ramlila Maidan:
Activist-turned-politician
Arvind Kejriwal will take oath as Delhi's seventh chief minister on Saturday at
historic Ramlila Maidan in New Delhi, capping his party's stunning electoral
debut in the December 4 assembly polls.The date for the swearing-in ceremony
was finalised at a meeting Kejriwal held with Chief Secretary D M Spolia.
Top
officials in the Delhi government said Kejriwal and six Aam Aadmi Party members
of Legislative Assembly will be sworn-in in a public ceremony at 12 pm at the
Ramlila Maidan, the venue of Anna Hazare's anti-corruption movement two years
ago.The cabinet ministers to take oath along with Kejriwal are Manish Sisodia,
Rakhi Birla, Somnath Bharti, Saurabh Bhardwaj, Girish Soni and Satendra
Jain.Born in Haryana and a resident of Kausambi in nearby Ghaziabad district of
Uttar Pradesh, the IIT-Kharagpur graduate in mechanical engineering, had
defeated three-time chief minister Shiela Dikshit in the New Delhi constituency
by a huge margin of over 25,000 votes.
Forty-five-year-old
Kejriwal had met Lt Governor Najeeb Jung on Monday and handed over him a letter
staking claim to form the government with outside support from the
Congress.Following this, Jung had sent a proposal to President Pranab Mukherjee
detailing AAP's stake to form the government. The President approved the
proposal on Tuesday and left it to the Lt Governor to finalise the date for
swearing-in ceremony in consultation with the Chief
Minister-designate.One-year-old AAP had made an electrifying debut in elections
winning 28 seats in the 70-member assembly and decimating the Congress, which
bagged only eight seats. The Bharatiya Janata Party, along with its ally
Shiromani Akali Dal's one seat, had 32 MLAs but the party declined to form the
government, citing lack of majority.
Sources
in the AAP said Anna Hazare, Kiran Bedi, Santosh Hegde and all those associated
with the anti-corruption movement will be invited to the swearing-in ceremony.
Kejriwal
had announced formation of AAP on October 2, the birth anniversary of Mahatma
Gandhi, last year and it was formally launched on November 26 coinciding with
the anniversary of India's adoption of its Constitution in 1949. The party's
name reflects the phrase ‘aam aadmi’, or common man, whose interests Kejriwal
pledged to represent.
The party
produced a separate manifesto for each of the 70 constituencies for the Delhi
polls. The candidates were screened for potential criminal backgrounds and the
party claimed to have selected honest candidates.From 26-year-old Birla to 41-year-old
Sisodia, the Cabinet is not just going to be the youngest ever but also
probably the first in which all members, including the chief minister, are
debutant MLAs.Birla had emerged as a giant killer after thumping four-time MLA
and Public Works Department Minister Raj Kumar Chauhan in the SheilaDikshit
government in Mangolpuri by around 10,500 votes. Before joining AAP, Birla had
worked with a private news channel.Sisodia, a trusted aide of Kejriwal, came to
prominence during Anna Hazare's movement for Janlokpal Bill in 2011. The
41-year-old journalist turned-activist-turned-politician defeated BJP's Nakul
Bhardwaj by over 11,000 votes from Patparganj constituency in East
Delhi.Another face in Kejriwal's team is Saurabh Bhardwaj, an engineering graduate
who had also studied law. The 34-year-old defeated Ajay Kumar Malhotra, son of
veteran BJP leader V K Malhotra, by a margin of around 13,000 votes from
Greater Kailash constituency.
Kejriwal
has another IITian in his cabinet in Somnath Bharti who is an MLA from Malviya
Nagar. He holds a Master's degree from IIT, Delhi, and a degree in law. The
39-year-old defeated BJP's Arti Mehra and another Delhi government minister
Kiran Walia.MLA from Shakur Basti (North) Jain, who will also be inducted as a
minister, is an architect by profession. Girish Soni, an MLA from Madipur, had
participated in Bijli-Pani agitation of the AAP and motivated people to join
the movement.
Blast by
suspected militants kills 5 in West Bengal's Jalpaiguri district:
Five
people were killed and four others injured when suspected Kamtapur Liberation
Organization (KLO) militants triggered a bomb blast in Jalpaiguri district of
northern West Bengal on Thursday evening, police said.
"Five
people have been killed. Some others are injured. Our reading is that the blast
was caused by an improvised explosive device (IED) kept in a cycle," said
inspector general of police, north Bengal range, Sashikant Pujari. Jalpaiguri's
deputy superintendent of police Prabhat Chakraborty told IANS that four injured
people were admitted in Jalpaiguri District Hospital. The blast occurred around
7pm in Bajrapara area.
"We
suspect KLO militants are behind the blast. Recently some of their activists
have been arrested. The blast could be a retaliatory action on their
part," said Pujari. The blast took place two days ahead of December 28,
the foundation day of KLO, which came up in 1996. Following the incident, a
high alert has been sounded across north Bengal.
"There
is high alert also in the international borders with Bhutan, Nepal and
Bangladesh and the Bengal-Assam inter-state border," said Pujari. A bomb
disposal squad has already reached the spot from Siliguri in Darjeeling
district.
A
forensic team would arrive on Friday. Two days back, three KLO militants were
rounded up in Jalpaiguri district for their alleged involvement in extortion
from tea garden owners and other businessmen from north Bengal by issuing
threats.
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