Archive for January, 2008
900,000, Birds Visit Chilika Lake
Posted in Environment on 01/09/2008 05:10 pm by Colrama900,000, Birds Visit Chilika Lake
Bhubaneswar: You could call it a bird lover’s paradise. Nearly 900,000 migratory birds of 158 different species have been sighted this winter in Orissa’s Chilika Lake in this eastern Indian coastal state.
“Of the 900,000 birds, 450,000 birds were sighted in Nalabana, an island in the lake,” Abhimanyu Behera, divisional forest officer of Chilika Lake, told IANS.
“In 2007 nearly 840,000 birds visited the lake, of which 198,000 were spotted in Nalabana,” he said.
On Jan 5, a bird census for 2008 involving 85 wildlife officials was conducted in the 1,000 sq km lake, which is said to be Asia’s largest salt water lake. The Chilika, nearly 100 km from here, is spread over Puri, Khordha and Ganjam districts of Orissa. “We removed the weeds from the sanctuary and that might be the reason why the lagoon has attracted more birds this year,” he said.
Chilika offers the largest congregations of migratory birds in the country. It was declared one of the six wetlands of international importance at the Ramsar Convention on Migratory Species of Arctic and Central Asian Waterfowl.
Besides Chilika, migratory birds also flock to three other spots in the state – the Hirakud dam in Sambalpur district, the Nandankanan biological park and the Bhitarkanika national park in Kendrapada district.
“The migratory birds, mostly from Siberia, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan and from the Himalayas arrived here early this winter,” Behera said.
Man’s best friend: Dog saves boy from fire
Posted in Miscellaneous on 01/09/2008 04:58 pm by ColramaMan’s best friend: Dog saves boy from fire by biting foot
Portage, Indiana: A black Labrador that bit a 13-year-old boy’s foot repeatedly, waking him up, is being credited with saving the boy and two of his friends from a house fire. Christopher Peebles said he woke up on Friday morning to feel his dog Laney biting his foot repeatedly in the basement of his family’s home, where he and two friends spent the night.
“I thought she had to go to the bathroom, but she never bites me,” Peebles said. He and his friends walked upstairs and noticed smoke everywhere in the home. “We came up the stairs and thought it was a dream, but it was cold when we opened the door — then we knew it wasn’t a dream,” Pebbles said.
Firefighters arrived about 10 am and found the home’s garage on fire. Assistant fire chief Mike Bucy said the damage was mostly in the attached one-car garage of the ranch home. Fire chief Bill Lundy said the fire, which caused an estimated $25,000 in damage to the home, appeared to have started in an electrical heating unit in the garage.
Peebles’ parents, Dave and Vicky Peebles, were both at work at the time of the fire. They said they were relieved that their son and his friends were not injured. Dave Peebles said that one point after Laney had ushered Christopher and his friends out of the house the dog ran back inside and wouldn’t come out until he went in to get her. AP
Women from NE molested again in Delhi
Posted in Issues of Interest on 01/07/2008 08:22 am by Colrama
It is a shameful episode. Once again women have been molested because they are from NE.
Delhi Police must initiate strict action against the culprits.
NEW DELHI: Days after the country was shocked on New Year’s Day by the news of a mob molesting two women outside a Mumbai hotel, two women staying near Delhi University’s north campus have alleged that a crowd of 25 men abused and molested them on Saturday.
The two sisters from Manipur have alleged that they were molested after an altercation over the “morality of women from the northeast”.
Police said they were investigating the matter but no case has been registered. “The accused have been identified,” DCP (north) Devesh Srivastav said. According to police, one of the victims runs a cybercafe from a rented accommodation in Gandhi Vihar near Timarpur. She told the cops that she was staying with her brother and a younger sister, who had recently come from Manipur.
“On Saturday evening, my sister had gone to the market to buy vegetables. On her way back, she was followed by two men who started passing lewd comments. When she told me about the incident, I decided to ignore it. After sometime, two men came in front of my cafe and started hurling abuses,” one of the two women said in her complaint to the police.
A senior police officer said, “The older sister, along with her younger brother, came out to question the men. During the argument, she slapped one of the men, who reportedly returned at around 9.30pm with a group of 25 men. Most of them were in a drunken state and beat up the sisters and the brother.”
“They threatened us and said that women from the northeast were spreading immorality in Delhi and that we should pack our bags and leave,” one of the sisters, Sonia (name changed), told TOI. She also alleged that she and her sister were molested.
Sonia alleged that the same men had been teasing her and her sister for over a month and they had repeatedly complained to the police but without any avail. A senior police officer said, “The vicims had an altercation with their neighbours after which they called the police.”
In September 2007, students were molested by aspiring cops who had come for a police recruitment test near the north campus. Police registered cases but no arrests were made and the matter was later transferred to the crime branch.
NRIs:government assures: will do whatever possible
Posted in Issues of Interest on 01/07/2008 08:13 am by ColramaNEW DELHI: Describing them as the “voice of Indian diaspora”, the UPA government has assured people of Indian origin that it will do whatever possible for their assistance.
“We have taken many initiatives to meet the growing aspirations of overseas Indians and to look into their grievances and our government is always there to assist you,” Minister of Overseas Indian Affairs Vayalar Ravi told a gathering of people of Indian origin on Sunday.
Besides, the issue of OCI cards and creation of “Overseas Indian Facilitation Centre (OIFC), we are also in process of setting up a university, an Overseas Workers Resource Centre (OWRC) and a Council for Promotion of Overseas Employment, he said.
Ravi also gave away Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin (GOPIA)’s community service awards to five persons.
Baroness Prashar, Ram Lakhina (Netherlands), PNC Menon (Oman), Moses V Nagamootoo (Guyana) and Mani Bhaumik (USA) received the awards.
Lord Bhikhu Parekh (UK) received GOPIA Roll of Honour award and J C Sharma, a former IFS, received distinguish service award. ZEE TV bagged special recognition award for its outstanding reach to NRI communities and help in bringing them together.
GOPIA was formed in 1989 to bring the Indian community together on one platform.
Two Nations, Two Choices
Posted in Governance on 01/07/2008 06:50 am by Colrama
Am placing Vir Sangvi’s article in HT of 6th Jan on the results of the different roads taken by India and Pakistan since independence in 1947. The results are there for all to see.
THERE’S BEEN a lot about Pakistan in the Indian media over the last 10 days: obituaries of Benazir Bhutto; predictions about the forthcoming election; attacks on General Musharraf; and conspiracy theories about the assassination.
I have no problems with much of the coverage, but I am disappointed by the unwillingness of most commentators to go further back in history After all, Pakistan was once a part of India.
Both countries secured independence within a day of each other in 1947. And both made many important choices in the decades that followed: choices that explain why Pakistan and India have developed so differently And yet, there was a complete absence of historical perspective in much of the analysis.
Even a decade ago, I suspect that we would have covered Pakistan’s tragic slide into anarchy very differently It’s still fashionable for a certain kind of north Indian to say about Pakistan and Pakistanis, “we are the same country divided by politicians. And we are the same people.”
But as the years go by and new generations take over, this sentiment is fading. Punjabis may feel a kinship with Pakistan – many belong to families divided by Partition – but the rest of India seems much less empathetic.
I’ve been in Bombay and Bangalore since Benazir’s assassination and it was interesting to note how little people cared about events in Pakistan and how quickly even that interest has begim to fade. And if you follow the international press, you’ll note that the old equivalence, where India and Pakistan were always talked about in the same breath, has now vanished. If Pakistan is compared to any country it is to Afghanistan. India, on the other hand, tends increasingly to be compared to China. Few foreign journos even bother with the cliches they once used when they referred to Pakistan – such as, for instance: “compared to its democratic neighbour India”. And rarely does the prospect of another India-Pakistan war (a traditional obsession with Western journalists) intrude into their analysis of events in that troubled country.
I remind you of all this to make two separate points. One: we must not let the largely Delhi- and north Indian-dominated ‘national’ media blind us to the increasing irrelevance of Pakistan as a factor in determining India’s future. Punjabi journos may be fascinated by Pakistan; the rest of us are merely curious.
But it is the second point that I regard as more significant. In the 1950s and in the 1960s, when India was ruled by a Nehruvian consensus, there were many critics – usually on the political right – who thought we had got it badly wrong. How did it benefit India, they asked, to follow some crackpot policy of non-alignment which involved a surreptitious tilt to the Soviet Bloc when we could so easily be friends with the US, the world’s most powerful democracy?
Look at Pakistan, they said. Its rulers recognised that there was much to be gained from linking up with Washington and enjoying the benefits of American patronage. A steady stream of American aid dollars flowed into Pakistan. The armed forces had access to the latest weaponry The streets of Karachi and Lahore were full of imported cars – not a Landmaster or an Ambassador in sight. Nor did Pakistanis have to put up with all this socialist nonsense. They valued free enterprise and were proud to say so.
The America-Pakistan equation frequently annoyed Indians. It sent us into paroxysms of rage when Richard Nixon and Harry Kissinger backed Pakistan’s whisky-sodden General Yahya Khan while his troops were committing genocide in Bangladesh. And anti-Americanism reached a peak when Nixon sent the Seventh Fleet to the Bay of Bengal during the 1971India-Pakistan war (He wanted to warn us off invading West Pakistan).
During the Zia-ul-Haq era, when Pakistan’s economy seemed robust and billions of dollars were pumped into the state treasury while we struggled to make ends meet, many educated Indians sincerely wondered whether we were paying the price for Pandit Nehru’s mistaken choices. Hadn’t Mohammed Ali Jinnah’s heirs got it right while we floundered? Wouldn’t India have been better off on America’s side?
There was a corollary to all this. In the 1960s, the Jan Sangh and Swatantra parties, which wanted us to renotmee Nehruvian non-alignment and rush into Washington’s embrace, also made the point that there was no harm in declaring that Hinduism was India’s state religion. If Pakistan could flourish as a Muslim country then why should India be shy of owning up to its Hindu heritage?
With the benefit of hindsight, we can today safely say that every single one of those propositions was flawed.
There were only two major Asian coxmtries that rejected the US prescription for development and foreign policy: India and China. And look where they are today And look at America’s client states.
The case of Pakistan is especially instructive. Because it believed all the American dogma about free trade, it never built for itself the kind of industrial base that India constructed at such huge sacrifice in the name of self reliance. Because it tied itself so closely to US foreign policy its diplomats did whatever America wanted, even helping pimp the first assignation between Kissinger and the Chinese in 1971.
There’s no denying that Pakistan got many Sabre jets and Patton tanks (remember the 1965 War?) along with billions of dollars in aid. It also got away with genocide in 1971. And the US turned a blind eye while its scientists ran a nuclear black market. Treat those benefits as rent paid by America. Because Washington turned Pakistan into its largest military base, an entire country at the service of Uncle Sam. In the 1960s, it was used to keep a watch on Russia (the U2 spy planes took off from there); in the 1970s, it served as a back channel for China-US diplomacy; in the 1980s, it was used for the Afghan ‘iehad’; and now, it is a launch pad for a crucial part of the ‘War on Terror’.
The Americans had no interest in developing Pakistan’s economy or in promoting the institutions of democracy They preferred to deal with a succession of military dictators (Ayub Khan, Yahya, Zia and now Musharraf) because it was both easier and quicker And they actively exploited Pakistan’s lack of secularismits very raison d9tre was its status as an Islamic nation – to launch the world’s first high-tech jehad, thereby unleashing the fxmdamentalist and terrorist forces that are tearing Pakistan apart today Looking back, it is hard to see how any country could have got it more wrong than Pakistan did. Every single choice it made – foreign policy economic, religious, political etc – seems, in retrospect, to have been a disastrous mistake.
In contrast, Nehru created the modern Indian republic, one of 21st century’s potential superpowers. The same Americans who once dismissed India as a Russian lackey now throng our airports looking for investment opportunities.
When their President comes to India, he talks to our Prime Minister on equal terms and discusses foreign policy When he goes to Pakistan on the other hand, he merely instructs their President on which terrorists to hand over to US authorities. Of course, Nehru made mistakes. But can anybody really deny that the principal reason why India and Pakistan, once part of the same country, have followed such divergent paths is because of the choices both countries made in the years following independence?
At first, India’s priorities may have seemed (from a middle-class perspective) wrong-headed and muddled. Pakistan’s may have seemed glamorous and instantly gratifying. But, in the long run, we ended up as the superpower And Pakistan as the failed state. The divergent paths we have taken and the different destinations we have reached explain why outside of the north, Pakistan seems like no more than a curiosity to most Indians.
There is a historical legacy, but our presents are very dif ferent, and our futures have nothing in common. I respect Punjabi sentimentality about Lahore with its filmi notion of brothers separated by circumstances. But if our history was really a Hindi film and if we were brothers, then at this point in the plot, Pakistan is the brother who has gone astray the mawaali for whom there is no hope. India is the good brother, working hard, respecting the law: and finding success.
But, Punjabi sentimentality and Bollywood aside, how can one not feel sorry for the people of Pakistan, betrayed by a succession of incompetent leaders, seduced by a superpower concerned only with its own interests, and bewildered by the tricks that fate has played on their beleaguered country?
History is full of ifs and buts. So who knows how things would have turned out? But just suppose there had been no Partition. Would these same people have lived a very different life? Would they have been part of the Indian success story? That’s a question for the ghost of Mohammed Ali Jinnah to answer
counterpoint@hindustantimes.com
Outrage as mob in Mumbai molests women
Posted in Miscellaneous on 01/03/2008 04:37 pm by ColramaOutrage as mob in Mumbai molests women
It is with a sense of shock and disgust that we are placing this piece of news on the blog.
Bombay was known as a cosmopolitan city with its citzens being among the best behaved, considerate and helpful. Women felt secure travelling by local trains, moving around even at late hours.Not any more. We hear of more and more cases of women being molested.
Bombay police was known for its integrity and efficiency. They would compare themselves to the Scotland Yard. Alas things are diferent today.
Mumbai is changing. Have the people changed along with its name?
Mumbaikar of today different from Bombayyia of yesteryears?
3 Jan 2008, 0113 hrs IST , Nitasha Natu , TNN
MUMBAI: Mumbai’s reputation of being a safe city for women has once again come under a cloud with two women being molested publicly by a mob on New Year’s eve in the heart of suburban Juhu. The incident has evoked outrage across all sections of the city with the police coming under criticism for failing to act swiftly against the culprits.
Mumbai police commissioner D N Jadhav on Wednesday received a dressing-down from deputy chief minister R R Patil for describing the incident as “just an offence” which was blown “out of proportion” by the media.
The victims and their partners were among a group of non-resident Indians who were visiting their hometown in Valsad (Gujarat) and had come to Mumbai especially to ring in the New Year. The Juhu police recorded a complaint of molestation and assault against 40 unidentified members of the mob more than 24 hours after the incident.
This despite the women being brought to the Juhu police station within minutes of the incident by traffic police inspector Amarjeet Singh.
Eve-Teasing and Violence: Minister’s sons
Posted in Miscellaneous on 01/03/2008 03:34 pm by Colrama|
Bodyguard’s pistol is vital clue in probing eve-teasing by Lalu sons
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A MISSING weapon may be the link to two cases of eve-teasing by railway minister Lalu Prasad’s sons. |
NRIs; Kenya violence targets Gujaratis
Posted in Issues of Interest, Security on 01/02/2008 03:33 pm by ColramaKenya violence targets Gujaratis
2 Jan 2008, 0000 hrs IST , Sachin Sharma & Darshana Chaturvedi , TNN
VADODARA: Ever since post-election riots broke out in Kenya, the Gujarati diaspora there has been living in fear. Although no lives have been lost, there has been massive damage to property and businesses owned by Indians, particularly Gujaratis.
In the small town of Kisumu near Nairobi, almost three out of every four businesses owned by Indians have been burnt down, residents said. Many Indians have been holed up in temples for the past two days and are gradually running out of food.
There are close to one lakh Indians in Kenya with 3,000 in Kisumu, the worst-hit town. Kisumu is the stronghold of defeated presidential challenger Raila Odinga. His party, the Orange Democratic Movement, has accused President Mwai Kibaki of rigging the elections. Kibaki won after results were declared on Sunday. Since then, some 300 people have been killed in widespread violence across the country.
Anand Rana, a resident of Kisumu, said, “The town has come to a standstill. Supermarkets and shops are charred beyond recognition. Most Gujaratis are staying in the Swaminarayan temple in Kisumu. We ventured out on Tuesday to take stock of the situation. Almost three-fourths of Indian businesses have incurred huge losses.”
Amit Shah, who lives in Nairobi, said the situation was grim on the outskirts of the capital. “The riots have resulted in massive damage to Indian properties.” Shail Patel from Nairobi, who is in Gujarat now, said things are under control in the city with the government deploying troops and imposing curfew. var RN = new String (Math.random()); var RNS = RN.substring (2,11); var b2 = ‘ ‘; if (doweshowbellyad==1) bellyad.innerHTML = b2; Help violence-hit expats in Kenya, Modi urges PM
2 Jan 2008, 1827 hrs IST , ANI
AHMEDABAD: Expressing concern over attacks on Gujarati expatriates in Kenya, Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi wrote a letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh urging him to ensure their safety in that country.
Modi has asked Dr. Manmohan Singh to take up the issue with the Kenyan Government to ensure safety of Gujaratis in Kenya.
In his letter, Modi voiced concern over the safety of about 400 Gujaratis who have taken shelter in a Swaminarayan temple in Kisumu, a town located in Western part of Kenya.
“I request the Indian Government to immediately beef up security for our Indian brothers in Kenya. Indian youth in Kenya who want to return should be brought back, and if required through the sea route or they should be taken to Nirobi and arrangements made for their stay there. Since their houses have been burnt, missing documents must be overlooked and they should be allowed to move to safer areas without any hitch, keeping in mind their Indian blood,” said Modi.
Ever since post-election riots broke out in Kenya, the Gujarati diaspora has been living in fear.
Hundreds of Gujarati businessmen have taken shelter in a temple in the Kenyan town of Kisumu after the violence.
Offices and factories belonging to Gujaratis had been looted and their houses attacked by residents.
With defeated Kenyan presidential challenger Raila Odinga sticking to his guns after an allegedly rigged election and freshly re-elected President Mwai Kibaki vowing to assert his authority, the east African nation is locked in a crippling crisis.
Scores of people were killed and several thousand have fled after President Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner in a disputed election. The estimated death toll has risen to about 250 till today.
Police beat protesters and flushed looters out of buildings in Nairobi’s Kibera slum, which is within opposition leader Raila Odinga’s constituency.
Kenyan opposition supporters burnt houses in Nairobi’s Korogocho slum as police fired teargas and shots in the air to disperse the crowd.
Much of the fighting pitched Luos, who support opposition leader Raila Odinga, against Kibaki’s ethnic Kikuyu group.
There are about 43,000 Gujaratis in Nairobi and about 3,000 in Kisumu.
NRIs : Positive News
Posted in Miscellaneous on 01/01/2008 07:42 am by ColramaNow there is help for parents of Pune NRIs
Pune: Their children live and work far away, but many parents of NRIs have formed new bonds in their twilight years – not just companionship but also support – thanks to a unique organisation.
Set up in 1994 with just 30 members, Non-Resident Indian Parents’ Organisation (NRIPO) is now a registered charitable trust with 1,000 members. The support group helps the lonely and aging parents.
Seventy-three-year-old M.H. Paranjape, who has a son in the United States, says that with a large number of youngsters finding jobs overseas, more parents live alone these days.
“Sometimes when members are sick and there is no one to take them to a hospital, NRIPO takes charge. We have tied up with 11 top hospitals in Pune, which admit members of the trust without deposits,” Paranjape said.
The trust has grouped parents according to geographical locations. They meet once every month to discuss issues.
According to 66-year-old Nanda Kumar, a retired banker, who has a son in Houston, US: “We have found great friends in this trust. The meetings help us to bond so that members do not hesitate to ask for help.”
“Communication with kids abroad starts thinning down over a period of time because the children become busy in their families. In such situations, meeting people facing similar situations provide solace and comfort.”
Nanda Kumar said: “Two months ago, a member’s son in Paris faced racial discrimination. We took it up with the ministry of external affairs. The issue has not been resolved, but what counts is the fact that we initiated it.”
The trust organises programmes by inviting banks and other financial institutions to educate members about various investment schemes available in the market.
It insists on members preparing their wills. A copy of each is deposited with the trust, which is opened after the death of the member.
“We have legal consultants who help children deal with legal issues after the parents’ death.
We also take care of funeral arrangements and the bodies till the children arrive. The scheme is called Will and After Assistance,” said Paranjape.
NRIPO has another scheme called “one-by-two” under which two families act as minders to single parents and help them in times of need.
“These families regularly call the single parent, meet him/her at regular intervals and help in times of sickness or other emergencies. The volunteers also take care of daily shopping and bill payments,” Paranjape said.
Younger NRIPO members in their 50s help older colleagues, he said, adding that some of their senior members were as old as 95.
NRIPO has also formed a National Confederation of NRI Parents Organisation with members from Bangalore, Coimbatore, Nagpur, Baroda and Ahmedabad.
| Sunday, 30 December 2007 |
NRI opens multi-specialty non-profit hospital in Haryana
Banchari: For nearly a million residents of this backward area of Haryana, it is a blessing indeed. A multi-speciality hospital has opened here, thanks to a US-based non-resident Indian (NRI).
The 55-bed multi-specialty non-profit hospital, with facilities for 24-hour intensive care unit (ICU) and emergency trauma services, started operations in Haryana’s Faridabad district, adjoining the Indian capital, on Saturday.
It has been built by Ohio-based NRI Rajesh K. Soin in the memory of his father, Sukhdev Raj Soin. The NRI’s Nasdaq-listed company in the US has interests in defence equipment manufacturing, software development and other products.
At hand for the inauguration of the hospital were Ohio Senator George Voinovich and Congressmen Mike Turner, Phil Gingrey, Rob Bishop and Steve Pearce.
Nearly 100 villages spread over an area of 4,600 sq km in Faridabad and Mewat – among the most backward districts of Haryana – will benefit from the new hospital. Villagers will now not have to travel to big cities to avail of top health facilities.
The smiles on the faces of villagers from this village and surrounding ones said it all.
“We don’t have to take patients to hospitals in Faridabad (town) and Delhi. The hospital is a boon,” said Puran Lal, resident of Khera Sarai, one of the most populated villages of the area.
“The facility will particularly be beneficial to women,” said sarpanch (headwoman) Gayatri of Rundhi village.
Even though Raj Soin originally hails from Jammu city, he chose to set up the Sukhdev Raj Soin hospital in this part of Haryana after land was donated to the hospital trust and the Soin Foundation by the Maharishi Dayanand memorial campus based here.
“Every individual has the right to good healthcare. We want to provide comprehensive, cost-effective and sustainable and specialized healthcare at par with international health quality standards at the doorstep of the villagers who otherwise cannot afford it,” Raj Soin told IANS.
The hospital, which will further be expanded to 150 beds and add a medical college later, will have surgical and super-specialty services like neuro surgery, gastroenterology, ophthalmology and paediatrics.
Medical facilities will be offered free-of-cost to poor patients. Drugs will be made available at highly subsidized rates, Soin said.
Located close to the Delhi-Mathura highway, the new hospital will also cater to accident victims.
Source: IANS
US students raise funds for a well in Indian village
Nagpur: A 13-year-old student of Indian origin in the US and his American friends washed cars, sold pizzas and cakes and held sports tournaments to raise money for a tube well in a water-starved village in India.
Shocked by the story of water shortage in Paras village and its environs in Akola district that Rujul related to them, a group of 15 American boys and girls decided to rise to the occasion.
The eighth-grade students of Princeton Day School, New Jersey, also went from home to home seeking donations — for a group of people no one but Rujul had seen in the distant Maharashtra state.
On a visit to Nagpur, Rujul explained what drove him to do what he accomplished with the help of his friends.
Scenes of women carrying heavy pots of water on their heads from long distances are a common image depicting water woes in rural India. For Rujul, who was visiting Paras village, it was an astounding sight.
It was in Paras, nearly 250 km from Nagpur, where his father was born and educated up to middle school. Rujul asked himself whether there wasn’t anything he could do to mitigate the hardship of women, some of whom were older than his mother. That was in 2006.
He retuned to the village this year with an answer backed by his 15 classmates — fund raised through voluntary labour to dig a tube-well on its outskirts.
“In the US, water is taken for granted. You turn on the faucet and get a continuous flow of water. Coming from there, I was really surprised to see the women’s arduous trek. I could not imagine what living in such circumstances could be like”, said Rujul.

