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What a Secularist can and should be Proud of? -- Aravindan Neelakandan

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What a Secularist can and should be Proud of?

Aravindan Neelakandan August 14, 2013

In a recent article titled ‘What Hindus can & should be proud of’ , published in a Chennai based daily, writer Ramachandra Guha presents a classic demonstration of how the pseudo-secular columnists invent arguments against Hindutva.  The writer presents as a Hindutva statement, a statement that is easy to counter and thrash.  An imaginary ‘bhadralok friend’ of his wants victory of 1971 to be considered as a Hindu victory, to make ‘India in general and Hindus in particular’ out of ‘the pacifist, defeatist mindset’. From this statement Guha makes a hyper-jump to Modi’s ‘Hindu nationalist’ statement.
By the time Guha finishes pontificating about how 1971 war was fought by a secular India and not Hindus and how 1992 demolition was a Hindu job, the reader, immersed in rhetoric, would have forgotten the fact that the claim of using the 1971 war victory, as a means to arouse Hindus out of ‘pacifist, defeatist’ mindset, is purely an imaginary invention of Guha. It has nothing to do with any statement by any Hindutva ideologue. Perhaps some brilliant acolytes of Guha may even be hoodwinked to believe that it was a statement actually made by Modi. [1]
But that is only the beginning.
1971 versus 1992
When it comes to Hindutva, the intent of Guha has always been to create binary stereotypes. It is a mission he carries out with equal measure of zest and deception in all his narratives. This involves depicting the Hindutva opposition to pseudo-secularism as the opposition of an obscurantist, orthodox, narrow theocratic dogma to a modern secular democracy. So he ties covertly and overtly all obscurantist features to Hindutva at every given opportunity.  The reader can notice how Guha refers to Indira Gandhi as one who had ‘notoriously been disallowed from entering the Jagannath temple in Puri because she had not married a Hindu’.
But he conveniently leaves out the fact that the same Indira Gandhi who was married to a non-Hindu was praised enormously by the leaders of ‘Hindu nationalist’ Jan Sangh in 1971, so much so that Atal Bihari Vajpayee, a Jana Sangh leader, compared her to Durga.
It would indeed be pertinent to ask Guha whether the mindset of the ‘bhadralok friend’, even if he was Guha’s own invention, would align with the orthodoxy of Jagannath temple authorities or the liberal praise showered on Indira Gandhi by ‘Hindu rightwing’ Jan Sangh?
Creating a Binary through a Trinity
A mediocre historian needs a framework of opposing binaries so that he can always pass rant and rhetoric as substitute for good research. On the other hand, a real historian like D.D.Kosambi or Dharampal deals in paradigms: either creating one with the freshly discovered data as Dharampal did or modifying an existing one as Kosambi did in the case of existing Marxist paradigm with his exhaustive research into ancient India.  
Guha thrives in binaries. Towards this end Guha presents his own trinity: Gandhi-Nehru-Ambedkar and shows how we have to be proud of them and there is nothing much Hindu about them. No. Gandhi was at best only a heterodox Hindu and orthodoxy had opposed him.
A Shankaracharya even petitioned British to declare Gandhi a non-Hindu, points out Guha.  Nehru was a lapsed Hindu whom ‘sants and shaka heads’ love to hate. Of course everyone knows Dr.Ambedkar left Hinduism in protest against caste system.  Guha points out the progressive democratic secular values of India, of which every Indian can and should be proud of, are the result of this not-so-Hindu trinity, which had at best, troubled if not, negative relation with Hinduism. And then he points out that Hindus have much to be ashamed of – like the atrocities on Dalits and women etc.
Against this Trinity of modern secular democracy, he pits the Hindu traditionalists and Hindu nationalists who conveniently get bundled together in Guha’s narrative. The stand that, if one is a Hindu nationalist, then he or she has been historically against the modern secular democratic ideals, needs gigantic negation of data from history. Equally to de-Hinduize Gandhi, Nehru and Ambedkar in the broad sense of the term Hindu, as Hindu nationalists use the term, one has to have an enormous amount of willing suspension of disbelief.
Dr.Ambedkar versus Dharma Shastras
Let us take the case of Dr.Ambedkar. Obviously he is a good candidate for the pseudo-seculars to beat Hinduism with. But a close scrutiny of his works shows that the good doctor has a worldview that gels more with Hindutva than with the pseudo-secularism peddled by the likes of Guha and Co. 
Starting from his emphatic statement that converting to Abrahamic creeds like Christianity or Islam would denationalize the Dalits, to his legal definition of the term ‘Hindu’ in Indian Constitution, there is a continuity of thought that negates everything held dear by today’s pseudo-secularist of every shade -from rustic Lallu to suave Guha.  
The Hindu Code Bill was opposed by orthodoxy including the elements inside the Nehru cabinet and outside.
There is no gain denying this was a blunder on the part of the Hindu nationalist movement that no credible voices of support came in favour of this monumental legal accomplishment in the history of Hinduism. But it has to be seen not as a singular failure of the Hindu nationalists alone as generally the divide was between orthodoxy and the progressive Hindus.
Dhananjay Keer records that ‘Veer Savarkar, the Hindusabha leader, said that Congress leaders should take up the Hindu Code Bill if it really helped the nation.’ [2] But what places the question of Hindu Code Bill debate entirely within the Hindutva framework alone is the statement made by Dr.Ambedkar himself in defense of the bill. On 11th January 1950, he said,
‘The present bill is progressive. This is an effort to have one civil law for all the citizens, under the constitution of India. The law is based on the religious scriptures of Hindus. [3]
The reader can notice that for Dr.Ambedkar the Hindu Code Bill is not only progressive but is also a step towards a common civil law for all citizens of India irrespective of their religion and also it is a law based on the religious scriptures of Hindus. In other words Dr.Ambedkar states that in essence Hindu scriptures can form the basis for drafting a progressive law and that law can and should become the basis for the common civil code for all citizens of Hindustan irrespective of their religion.
Only the Hindu leadership across the political spectrum failed to appreciate this vision of Dr.Ambedkar, which is a historical blunder, no less. However the vision of Dr. Ambedkar and the conflict he had with Hindu orthodoxy had to be placed entirely within the universe of Hindutva and does not belong to the realm of pseudo-secularism.
Gandhi: From ‘Christian influenced thinker’ to ‘Heterodox Hindu’
Now let us take the presiding deity in the Trinity positioned by Guha. For all the sanctimoniouspretensions of Guha in reinventing Gandhi as a heterodox Hindu, Gandhi himself has stated time and again that he was a Sanatani Hindu.
One can trust Ramachandra Guha the intellectual Rambo to rescue Gandhi from Gandhi’s own pseudo-secular incorrect stand.  Even terming Gandhi a heterodox Hindu is a concession Guha allows his native readers to indulge in. Because for Guha Gandhi should be categorized as an ‘intensely political, pragmatic Christian influenced thinker’. The context was the subject of deep ecology.  Guha was then decrying Arne Naess, a Norwegian philosopher who had coined the term ‘Deep Ecology’ and was the intellectual fountainhead behind the ‘Deep Ecology’ movement. His fault was that he considered Gandhi as a major source of inspiration and traced a Vedantic basis to Gandhi’s holistic vision.
Gandhian Vision for Environmentalism
Generally the deep ecologists view the Hindu-Buddhist-Tao worldviews as more consistent with the philosophy of deep ecology.  Guha finds this unbearable. His opposition was on two grounds: one is that deep ecology is not suited for India and even harmful to India. Arne Naess himself had refuted this charge as stemming from a misinterpretation of deep ecology by Guha. [4] However what is relevant to the current discussion is the disdain with which Guha rejects any relation between Hinduism and Gandhi’s vision, which is now being increasingly realized as having a strong relevance to environmental movement across the globe. Guha cannot stand categorizing Gandhi as an Eastern thinker.
Guha criticizes deep ecology because in it the  ”complex and internally differentiated religious traditions -Hinduism, Buddhism and Taoism- are lumped together as holding a view of nature believed to be quintessentially bio centric…” After chiding deep ecologists for ”persistent invocation of eastern philosophies as an antecedent in point of time but convergent in their structure with deep ecology‘ he laments that ‘even an intensely political, pragmatic, and Christian influenced thinker such as Gandhi has been accorded a wholly undeserving place in the deep ecological pantheon‘. [5]
Actually the thoughts of Mahatma Gandhi which have a relevance to ecology in general and eco-friendly people-oriented technologies in particular have a strong Vedantic root. It can be shown that in the development of Gandhian thought which is relevant to the modern environmental movements; the influence has been through the interpretation of Vedanta by Swami Vivekananda and the writings of Gurudev Tagore. Tagore in turn was highly influenced in this aspect by both Vivekananda and Bose. Indic influence on the views of Gandhi which offer a philosophical basis for Indic environmental movement is a well-documented fact.
David Gosling says that Swami Vivekananda, whose insistence on ‘the solidarity of the whole universe’, ranging from ‘the lowest worm that crawls…to the highest beings that ever lived’, might have formed the basis for an environmental ethic, had his main concern not been the removal of social inequality. Gosling further conceded that Vivekananda’s affirmative this-worldly ethic, which he expressed through the Karma-yoga of the Bhagavad Gita, exerted a strong influence on Gandhi. [6] It was a Tamil Christian economist Joseph Cornelius Kumarappa who inherited and enlarged upon this aspect of Gandhian thought.  Interestingly J C Kumarappa had made a criticism of Abrahamic theology that sees physical labour as a curse as the reason for the techno-centric approach of the West and its predatory economic system. [7]
But Gandhiji, with typical Hindu ingenuity, inverses the purport of this Biblical statement though wrongly attributing it to Jesus.  Instead of being seen as a curse to be escaped, Gandhi says that physical work should be seen as a rule for earning food in which case “there would be very little illness on earth and little hideous surroundings.” [8] In other words it is not ‘Christian influence’ on Mahatma Gandhi that was at work in his thoughts that are today considered to have ecological relevance but it was his globalizing of Hindu Karma Yoga and Vedanta contextualizing them for a wider theo-civilizational milieus that makes him relevant for the philosophical frameworks for the environmental movements even outside India.
Here one cannot but be reminded of the classic Lynn White (Jr)’s paper tracing the environmental problems to the West’s Abrahamic theological core. Curiously Lynn White makes the suggestion that Francis of Assisi was influenced consciously or unconsciously by “Cathar heretics who at that time teemed in Italy and southern France, and who presumably had got it originally from India!”[9] It may be historically inaccurate but that does provide how the Indic system is perceived in the context of global environmental crisis – something which Guha wants to undo.
The longer explanation of this issue here is just to show how anxious Guha is to remove any positive association of Hinduism with either Gandhi or with ecology. It is in the context of this problematic mindset of Guha that his categorizing of Gandhi as ‘heterodox Hindu’ should be viewed. And now let us move on to the next question. Was Gandhi a representative of purely modern values of Western democracy merely in the garb of an oriental wise man image, as Guha suggests?
Continuity of Tradition or Imported Modernity?
Contrary to the image of Gandhi as someone who was essentially a modernist, Gandhi was not averse to using the informal Hindu network of saints, ascetics and wandering monks. Many of these monks later played an important role in fighting the social evils as well as in the freedom struggle. A government observer’s report on the Nagpur session of the Congress of 1920 reveals that hundreds of Naga Sadhus attended this session. Gandhi personally thanked these monks and urged them to spread the message of non-cooperation movement in the vicinity of cantonments and military stations. [10] British historian William Pinch, not exactly a person given to like Hinduism much less Hindutva, states that the British were convinced that Gandhi could speak for the peasants of India because he could speak to the monks of India.
In other words ‘the intensely political, pragmatic’ nature of Gandhi has to be seen as a continuation and evolution of the Hindu ascetic who speaks for common Indian peasant. Then it was not the imported Christian-influenced western modernity that made Gandhi unique but it was Gandhi’s rooted nature in Hindu culture and his facing colonialism with this rootedness that made Gandhi unique and makes him relevant to this day.  Thus Gandhi has to be seen both in his vision and mission, rightly as a meta-orthodox Hindu as the so-called orthodox Hinduism contains within it various heterodox traditions.
Hindu Nationalist Criticism of Pseudo-Secularism = Opposition of Orthodoxy to Social Reforms?
At the core of Guha’s bundle of deceptions lies the morphing of Hindu nationalist critique of Gandhi with the opposition of the orthodoxy to social reforms at that time. The Hindu nationalist critique of Gandhi was that he was appeasing the Islamist forces. The orthodoxy was actually opposing Gandhi for his social reform movements like abolition of untouchability, agitation for the civil rights of entering the temples, using the public streets etc.  The truth is some of the greatest supporters of Gandhi’s Hindu-Muslim unity (read Muslim appeasement policy) were the staunchest opponents of social reforms.  On the other side of the coin the Hindu nationalists who were strongly critical of Gandhi’s appeasement policy with Islamist forces, were in many instances, more radical than Congress in implementing the reformist agenda.
Shankaracharya and Shankaracharyas: The Guha deception.
As a proof of heterodox Hindu nature of Gandhi, Guha throws at the face of Hindus the fact that a Shankaracharya petitioned the British that Gandhi be termed a non-Hindu.  But somehow he forgets to mention that Sri Bharathi Krishna TeerthaShankaracharya of Dwaraka, was arrested by the British for taking part in the pro-Islamist Khilafat movement launched by Gandhi.  He was arrested in 1921 for delivering a speech at the Khilafat Conference held at Karachi.
He was again arrested on 26- Dec-1922. He was asked to give a surety not to deliver lecture for one year or undergo imprisonment for one year. Shankaracharya preferred to undergo imprisonment. He was kept in Bhagalpur jail for a year and was released in 1924. [11] In the wake of the assassination of Swami Shradhanand  Gandhi was sceptical of mending the Hindu Muslim relationships again, It was  then Sri Chandrasekarendra Saraswathi , the Shankaracharya of Kanchi who persuaded Gandhi to go forward with Hindu-Muslim unity. [12]
Both the Shankaracharyas were strongly opposed to the social reform programmes of not only Gandhi but also Arya Samaj and Hindu Mahasabha. The Shankaracharya of Kanchi, who advised Gandhi to go ahead with Hindu-Muslim unity undeterred by the assassination of Swami Sharddhanand by Islamist, gave his complete blessings to a team of orthodoxy which left for Kerala to campaign against the temple entry of Dalits which Gandhi supported. [13] And this happened after the Malabar Hindus were cruelly butchered and converted by Moplah Muslims showing them the acute need for social unity.   The high powers of Hindu orthodoxy supported Hindu-Muslim unity.
Ever vigilant Dr.Ambedkar made a brutally blunt yet objective assessment of this phenomenon. Cautioning Dalits against the temptation of siding with Muslims, he pointed out how he  got his first severe jolt when he found that ‘almost all the Muslims got ready to oppose the essential Act like Sarda Act along with the obsolete and puranic, fundamentalists and revivalist orthodox Hindus.’  The second experience was at London during the Round Table Conference, when a special telegram from the president of Varnashram Brahman Sangha was received by a Muslim delegate, Mr. Gazanavi.
It was a message that Muslims should cooperate with orthodox Hindus in opposing the Untouchables temple entry movement. And Dr. Ambedkar records that the Muslims obliged. [14] In other words, Hindu-Muslim unity was forged to oppose the social reform movement pioneered by a Hindu Nationalist as we will see later!
…and those who Opposed the Appeasement Policy
It is interesting to see that some of the greatest social reform fighters had been some of the strongest critics of Gandhi’s Muslim appeasement policy. Swami Shradhanand was one of the bitter most critics of Gandhi. However this Hindu Sanghatan leader was called by none other than Baba Saheb Ambedkar as ‘the greatest and the most sincere champion‘ of Dalits. [15] He was also the first person to give the term Dalit. [16] The letters of Hindu nationalist Swami Shradhanand to the then high command of Congress and its lieutenants reveal an interesting fact. Here we see the Hindu Sanghatanist pursuing vigorously a radical programme for the emancipation of Dalits and the Nehru-Gandhi high command backtracking in the same issue.
In a letter written to Mahatma Gandhi is 1921 (September) Swami Sharddhanand drew the attention of the Mahatma to the fact that in Delhi and Agra all that the Dalits were demanding was that they be allowed to draw water from the wells used both by Hindus and Muslims and that water be not served to them through bamboos or leaves. “Even this appears impossible for the Congress Committee to accomplish.” the Swami pointed out in his letter with a heavy heart. In 1922 he wrote to Congress leader Vithalbhai Patel describing how Gandhi had relegated to an obscure corner the emancipation of Dalits. [17]
When Muslim League placed its 14 point agenda which even the pro-Islamist Simon Commission could not endorse these demands. Sikhs also feared a complete Islamist domination.  In 1928 Congress came out with its Nehru report which also rightly rejected the League demands.  However Gandhi declared at the Jamiat-ul-Ulema on March 1931 that he wished to give Muslims what they wanted. He further urged Congress to concede whatever Muslims wanted as a price for securing a “united nation” in India. One of the strongest opposition to the League demands and Gandhi’s appeasement policy came from M.R.Jayakar, the working committee member of Hindu Mahasabha. In his letter to Gandhi Jayakar pleaded with Gandhi not to yield to Muslim demands warning him that rejection of Nehru report with an aim of Islamist appeasement would have far-reaching consequences.
[18] This fierce opponent of Gandhi and a Hindu nationalist was no traditionalist. He was one of the foremost champions who fought for the educational and job rights of the Dalits.  Dr.Ambedkar sets the background in which M.R.Jayakar raised his voice for Dalits.  Though the legislative bodies were established in India as early as 1861 by the British only on two occasions the Dalits were mentioned. The first occasion was in 1916 when a Parsi member moved the resolution that “a small representative committee of officials and non-officials for an amelioration in the moral, material and educational condition of what are known as the Depressed Classes, and that, as a preliminary step the local government and administrations be invited to formulate schemes with due regard to local conditions.”
The next voice for Dalit empowerment was raised by M.R.Jayakar and that was in 1928. The resolution he moved was that the assembly should recommend to the Governor-General in Council to issue directions to all Local Governments to provide special facilities for the education of the Untouchables and other depressed classes, and also for opening all public services to them, specially the Police.
[19] It was a move to really empower the Dalits. The legacy of Hindu nationalists in effecting the empowerment of the marginalized sections of the society is second to none and in many instances it has been the pioneering guiding light for the future affirmative action programmes of the ‘free democratic sovereign state’ of India – incidentally those were the words introduced by M.R.Jayakar through an amendment at the Constituent Assembly dated 13-12-1946. Let it also be said that despite bitterly opposed to Muslim League, the democratic Hindu nationalist Jayakar thwarted an undemocratic plot by Congress to exclude the Muslim members from attending this session.
Another bitter critic of Gandhi over his Islamist appeasement policy was Dr. Narayan Bhaskar Khare. He was the elected head of the Central Provinces and was dismissed by Nehru following the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi.  Nor was he a traditionalist by any stretch of imagination. In 1930s, he appointed a Dalit minister in his cabinet for which he was taken to task by the then Congress high command and he was sacked by the then Congress high command.  Dr.Ambedkar made a scathing attack on Mahatma for this abject betrayal of Dalit cause. [20] Dr.Khare was also instrumental in securing the Arya Marriage Validation Bill on the Statute Book, which allowed a large scale widow remarriages and marriages breaking the caste boundaries. This was also the forerunner in legally liberating marriages from birth-based priesthood.
Dr. Khare also was the initiator of a fight against racism that was globally significant. He tirelessly laboured to fight for the rights of people of Indian origin in South Africa, petitioning UN against South Africa even before independence. In this he made a wonderful use of his position as the charge of the department of the Indian Overseas in Viceroy’s executive member. It was an unprecedented move. It is another story that Nehru unceremoniously appropriated the results of Khare’s labour with naked nepotism and basked in glory.  Historian Lorna Lloyd grudgingly acknowledges, that it was the chain of events initiated by Khare’s petition to UN against South Africa, that ‘provided an opening for an outright assault on the foundation of the political system of South Africa’ which was then apartheid. [21]
Dr.Ambedkar himself made an elaborate criticism of the appeasement policy which to this day is passed on as ‘secularism’ in Indian political parlance. He minced no words when he warned the Hindus that the Gandhian policy of appeasement would “involve the Hindus in the same fearful situation in which the Allies found themselves as a result of the policy of appeasement which they adopted towards Hitler.”  This policy of Gandhian appeasement which was in many ways the precursor of modern pseudo-secularism is in the view of Dr.Ambedkar “another malaise, no less acute than the malaise of social stagnation“. [22]Today’s pseudo-secularism that is passed on as secularism and for which Guha bats is the continuation of this malaise. What is more the dominant caste vote-banks have also merged with their anti-Dalit disease of the mind with the appeasement of the vote bank politics of the expansionist minorities who have globalized networks – resulting in the colonization of India through theo-imperialism.
The story does not end here.  In fact some of the very important reform achievements of those times, to which we owe the positive aspects of modern Indian democracy, were the results of the sweat and toil of Hindu nationalists.
Hindu Nationalists as the Pioneers of Social Reforms
For any student of social science, studying the women empowerment in a society that is in transition from pre-modernity to modernity, one of the vital indicators would be the marriage age of the girls. Legal prohibition of marrying off the girl children in the name of custom and tradition plays an important role in making women achieve education and get empowerment in the society.
Towards this social reformers in India fought a very tough battle. Important pioneers who paved the way for stopping the child marriage were among them were Hari Singh Gour  who through his repeated appeals to recognize the  standards of modern clinical psychology was able to pass the law that raised the age of consent for girl children from 12 to 14.  That war for raising the marriage age of women and prohibition of child marriage was further taken up by Harbilas Sarda. The struggle was tough.
Many great men like Dr.Ambedkar stood with Sarda shoulder to shoulder. Due to all their efforts ‘The Child Marriage Restraint Act’, also known as the Sarda Act was passed on October 1 1929. It was a crowning glory for the social reform movement in India. While the abolition of Sati was a great victory for social reform, it was actually dealing with essentially localized and invariable colonially exaggerated phenomenon. But Sarda Act had and still has strong implications for the nation as whole and made women participate in large numbers in the coming Gandhian movement. Women empowerment became possible thanks to Sarda Act. The implication of these acts for the participation of large number of women in the struggle for Indian independence is brought out by Dr.Muthulakshmi Reddy, medical practitioner, social reformer and the first woman legislator in India:
… Sir Hari Singh Gour was responsible for raising the age of consent for girls another humanitarian act. Sir Haribalas Sarda worked for the act which restrains child marriages. So we have much for which we must thank our men. It is not strange that now, when they want political freedom, we women are willing to stand beside them in their effort to attain it. [23]
Hari Singh Gour was the member of the Legal Advisory Committee of the Hindu Mahasabha. Harbilas Sarda was one of the strongest proponents of pan-Hindutva. In his book Sarda has envisaged a common Indic based for Buddhism and Vedic religion and groups religions of Indic origin together. [24] Such a broad categorization of Hindu cultural unity, based on Hindu-Buddhist-Jain-Sikh unity, rather than based on the authority of Vedas, is hallmark of the thoughts of both Veer Savarkar and Baba Saheb Ambedkar.
This is even more interesting for Harbilas Sarda was able to enlarge the definition by seeing Buddhism as not differing “materially from the Vedic religion in its scientific aspects“, even though he belonged to Arya Samaj. The fight against the child marriage which Harbilas Sarda gave was part of the larger social emancipation movement created by Arya Samaj of which he was a member.
The Arya Samaj with its anti-caste and pro-woman empowerment played a very important role in the emergence of what is called Hindu Sanghatan (Hindu Unity) movement. Arya Samaj was instrumental in creating an effective chain of schools and service institutions.
The British were alarmed. So much so that from Lucknow Sir Hercourt Butler, the Lieutenant Governor of Oudh and North West Provinces wrote to Sir Dunlop Smith in London that ‘Arya Somaj was a dangerous movement’. Why? Because it combined ‘an appeal to national feeling with a tendency to elevate the low castes’. Why? Because the women education was taken up by ‘Arya Somaj‘ and ‘our position in the country will be almost hopeless, if the women are trained up in hostility to us’.  There was historical precedent too noted the colonial administrator, ‘Shivaji did that and so has every Hindu leader…’ [25]
Thus Hindu nationalism as a political movement has a vibrant heritage of social reform. Inside the vast and diverse realm of Hindu nationalism also the traditionalists and the reformers clashed.  However for the historians of Guha variety this is problematic for their own fabricated narrative of Indian history, where the bad fundamentalist Hindu Right are held at bay by  an ever vigilant  liberal secular progressive forces.
So what does Guha do with such data? Simple. He pretends as if these things simply do not exist or that they are insignificant in the course of history.
As stated earlier any anthropologist worth his salt studying a society’s reforms would have zeroed in on that movement that contributed to the raising of the marriage age of women in that society. But one can go through the 537 pages of ‘Makers of Modern India’ (Penguin/Viking, 2010) and there is not a single reference to Harbilas Sarda, not to mention, Arya Samaj.  So much for objective scientific vision of the Nehruvian school of historians! But they are just following their master. Dhananjay Kheer the official biographer of both Veer Savarkar and Baba Saheb Ambedkar caustically observes:
Have you come across any history of England that does not speak of Trafalgar and Waterloo? Have you come across any history of India without the mention of Chitor? Behold, it is Nehru’s Discovery of India! [26]
Did not that great original fatherland of Nehruvians banish Einstein from the realm of physics because he denied the ether which was the direct fall out of the Marxist Revelation ‘Dialectical Materialism’? So do Guha and Nehruvian historians of his ilk banish the memories of Hindu nationalists who spearheaded the social reform movements in ‘in the most contentious times in the most interesting country in the world’ as back blurb of Guha’s book says?
So what a real secularist should be proud of in India… and what he should be ashamed of?

He can be proud of the sustained battle against caste the pioneers and the greatest and sincere most champions of which came from the ranks of Hindu Sanghatan.    He can be proud that the tradition continues in Vajpayee touching the feet of Chinnathayee and Modi touching the feet of the elderly Sikh lady.  He can be proud of Modi making Dalits temple priests in the conservative Gujarat.  He can be proud of the fact that it was Jan Sangh which first outlawed manual scavenging in India in the municipality it won. And he should be ashamed of pseudo-secularists who stood by Laloo Prasad when his henchmen and Islamist colleague burnt the feet of the Dalit workers and urinated on them.
She can be proud of the continued fight waged by social reformers, even in that colonial age of depravity, against both colonial authorities and orthodoxy, to secure the rights of women, the battle in which soulful contribution was made by Hindu nationalists. And she has to be ashamed of the pseudo-secularism which today is ready to approve a reverse the process because of the lure of vote banks presented by Islamic fundamentalists. She can be proud of the brilliant contribution India made in the fight against racism in which Hindu nationalists made a path breaking innovation. 
But she has to be ashamed that India is today made voiceless to protest against the religious apartheid which is doing a humiliating ethnic cleansing of people of Indian culture in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Malaysia; that it was a mute witness to a genocide war in which Tamils were killed most brutally in Sri Lanka; that it cannot raise its voice for Tibet in a dignified manner.
To say it all in one line: An Indian secularist should be proud of Hindutva and should be ashamed of pseudo-secularism. Perhaps that may be the reason why Gen. Jacob-Farj-Rafael Jacob who beat Pakistan in 1971 war chose to join the ‘Hindu nationalist’ Bharatiya Janata Party which is truly secular and truly democratic than can ever be dreamt of in Guha’s worldview.
… a very Happy Independence Day!
References
[1]Ramachandra Guha, What Hindus can and should be proud of, The Hindu, 23-Jul-2013
[2] Dhananjay Keer, Dr. Ambedkar: Life and Mission, Popular Prakashan, 1954:2011, p.426.
[3]Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar, quoted in Vasant Moon, Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar, National Book Trust, 2004, p.192
[4]Entry for Naess in the Encyclopaedia of Religion and Nature, Continuum, 2005
[5]Ramachandra Guha, Radical American Environmentalism and Wilderness Preservation: A Third world Critique, in Technology and Values: Essential Readings,Ed.Craig Hanks, John Wiley & Sons,2009. p.463
[6] David Gosling, Religion and Ecology in India and Southeast Asia, Routledge 2001, p.49
[7] Kumarappa, J.C. The Philosophy of Work and Other Essays, Wardha, The All India Village Industries Association, 1947, p.1
[8]The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India, 1971,Vol 48, p.415
[9]Lynn White (Jr), The Historical Roots of our Ecological Crisis, Science, Vol. 155, No. 3767 (Mar. 10, 1967)
[10]William R. Pinch, Peasants and Monks in British India, University of California Press, 1996, p.5
[11]Krishnanand Sagar, The story of another Shankaracharya during British Raj, Organiser, Vol.LVI, No.24, 26-Dec-2004
[12]Ra.Ganapathi, Maithreem Bhajatha, Divya Vidya Publishers, 1996, pp.213-4 [Tamil]
[13]Sri Sambamoorthi Shastrigal, Sri Kuppuswamy Iyer, “Sollin Selvan” P.N.Parasuraman, Pujya Sri Mahaswamy Divya Charitram, p.85
[14]Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar, Janata, 24-Dec-1932
[15]Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar, What Congress and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables?, Gautam Book Centre, 1945 p.23
[16]Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Navajivan, 27-3-1927)
[17]Swami Shraddhanand, Inside the Congress: a collection of 26 articles, Vol.1, Dayanand Sansthan, 1984:reprint, p.134, pp.179-80
[18]Prabhu Bapu, Hindu Mahasabha in Colonial North India, 1915-1930: Constructing Nation and History, Routledge, 2012, pp.146-7
[19]Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar,Writings and Speeches: Unpublished writings,The Untouchables and the Pax Britannica, Education Department,Government of Maharashtra, p.139
[20]Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar,What Congress and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables?, Gautam Books, 1945: 2009, p.96
[21]Lorna Lloyd, ‘A Family Quarrel’. The Development of the Dispute over Indians in South Africa, The Historical Journal, Vol.34,Iss. 3, Sep-1991
[22]Dr.Babasaheb Ambedkar, Thoughts on Pakistan, Thacker & Co, 1941, p.268
[23]Muthulakshmi Reddi, Creative Citizenship (1933) in Documenting First Wave Feminisms, Volume 1, Ed.Nancy Margaret Forestell, Maureen Anne Moynagh, Nancy Forestell, University of Toronto Press, 2012 p.203
[24]Harbilas Sarada, Hindu superiority: an attempt to determine the position of the Hindu race in the scale of nations, Rajputana Printing Works, Ajmer, 1906, p.439
[25]Sir James Robert Dunlop Smith, Edited by Martin Gilbert, Servant of India: A Study of Imperial Rule from 1905 to 1910 as Told Through the Correspondence and Diaries of Sir James Dunlop Smith, Longmans, 1966, p.97
[26]Dhananjay Keer, Veer Savarkar, Popular Prakashan, 1966, p.211

20,000 peoples' houses, religious places, houses burnt -- SC directs UP to ensure safe passage to people

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Published: September 12, 2013 17:00 IST | Updated: September 12, 2013 19:02 IST

Bring riots affected areas under control: SC to UP

PTI
A jawan seen inside a burnt house which bore the brunt of communal carnage at Kutba village near Muzaffarnagar. File photo: Sushil Kumar Verma
The HinduA jawan seen inside a burnt house which bore the brunt of communal carnage at Kutba village near Muzaffarnagar. File photo: Sushil Kumar Verma
The Supreme Court on Thursday directed the Uttar Pradesh government to take immediate steps in association with the Centre to bring under control the communal violence in Muzaffarnagar and ensure safe passage to people stranded in the conflict zone.
Taking into account the grim picture of riot affected areas projected by a group of lawyers whose family members were affected in it which has so far claimed 44 lives, the apex court dismissed the plea of UP government that no order be passed on the petitions for the time being.
A bench headed by Chief Justice P. Sathasivam disapproved Akhilesh Yadav government’s stiff opposition to involve the Centre on the issue of law and order in the riot-hit districts.
“We feel that this court has to go into this aspect. We cannot dismiss the petitions in limini (summarily),” the bench, also comprising justices Ranjana Prakash Desai and Ranjan Gogoi said while directing Centre and Uttar Pradesh government to file compliance report on the next date of hearing on September 16.
It directed the state government and the centre to take immediate steps to bring stranded people to a safe place and also rehabilitate them. The bench also directed the authorities to ensure that those injured are provided with immediate medical assistance.
Seeking the immediate intervention of the apex court in the matter, senior advocate Gopal Subramaniam said the situation in the western districts of the state was grim as mobs had set ablaze many religious places, shops and houses and that the state government has failed to contain the situation.
He submitted that the people of that area had approached various authorities including the PMO but the situation has remained serious and tense since August 29.
Subramaniam said on approaching the Home Ministry, they were surprised at the response that they should get an order from the apex court for redressal of their grievances.
UP’s counsel Rajeev Dhawan opposed the petition saying that the petitioner is trying for imposition of President Rule. He said that the state government will get back to the apex court with its report on Monday.
He said probe into the violence will be done by a judicial commission set up by the state government.
The court was hearing PILs filed by a group of residents of riots affected areas and Supreme Court Bar Association for CBI inquiry into the incident.
They said the affected persons should be properly rehabilitated and the culprits behind the violence be brought to book.
The petitioners alleged that houses of around 20,000 people have been burnt and they must be provided temporary shelter and food and medicines be also supplied to the affected families.

NSA and Israeli intelligence: MoU Full text

UPA sabotaging development in Tamil Nadu

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‘UPA SABOTAGING DEVELOPMENT IN TN’

Friday, 13 September 2013 | Kumar Chellappan | CHENNAI

The UPA Government at the Centre is sabotaging ‘Vision Tamil Nadu 2023’ a strategic plan for infrastructure development to catapult the State to a high growth plane, claim senior Government officials, veteran bureaucrats and bankers in Tamil Nadu. 
They point out that major road building and infrastructure development projects in Tamil Nadu financed by the Union Government have come to a grinding halt since May 2011.
“More than 20 infrastructure development projects under the auspices of the Centre have come to a standstill since the AIADMK Government took over the State administration in May 2011. All these projects have been cancelled and stopped on flimsy grounds,” a senior official of the State Highways Department told The Pioneer.
He pointed out that the much-acclaimed Ennore Port -Manali Road Improvement Project (EMRIP) has been sabotaged for no reasons.
“A Japanese multi-national giant had set up a factory to manufacture heavy engineering equipment, each weighing 500 tons, exclusively for export. But with the road project, which is a Central Government initiative, getting stalled, investors are in a state of shock,” said a technocrat.
K Malaisamy, former Home Secretary, said the UPA Government was trying to sabotage ‘Vision Tamil Nadu 2023’ prepared under the guidance of the Chief Minister.
“The document is a comprehensive blue print for all-round development of Tamil Nadu. It has spelt out what infrastructure development projects are to be undertaken on a war footing to make Tamil Nadu a global destination for investment and growth. But during the last two years works on all major infrastructure development projects specified in the ‘Vision Tamil Nadu 2023’ document have come to a halt. This is neither fair nor justice,” said Malaisamy.
Among the causalities is the ambitious Chennai-Bangalore Industrial Corridor, which would have seen a quantum jump in the development and economic growth of Tamil Nadu and power projects to the tune of more than 4,000 MW.
Recently, the National Highway Authority of India decided to withdraw from all major road projects in the State.
“Not a single kilometre of National Highway has been laid in the State since May 2011. The Chennai-Bangalore National Highway NH4, is in a dilapidated condition despite a high toll being charged from users. We do not know what happens to the toll collected by the NHAI. The stretch is going from bad to worse as days pass by,” said Malaisamy.
Road widening between Chennai Port and Maduravoyal, that was being undertaken to facilitate smooth flow of container-laden trucks, too has been called off by the Centre.
“This is an attempt to tarnish the image of the State Government. The man in the street is not aware of the fact that it is the Congress-DMK combine which is pulling the rug from under the feet of the State administration,” charged Malaisamy.
The State Highways Department official pointed out that alignments are being changed by the NHAI without taking the State administration into confidence.
“The UPA Government is demolishing the concept of federalism enshrined  in the Constitution by such acts,” said S Kalyanaraman, former chief executive, Asian Development Bank.
He pointed out that States like Uttar Pradesh and Bihar have been given special packages to suit the convenience of the UPA Government. “What they are doing is nothing but victimising the people of Tamil Nadu for not electing the DMK-Congress combine in the 2011 Assembly election,” opined Kalyanaraman.
The engineer of the State Roads Authority said the works for the connectivity of ports has been frozen since 2011.
“Former Prime Minister AB Vajpayee had declared the Sagar Mala Project for the inter-connectivity of all major and minor ports in India. The UPA Government which came to power in 2004 never uttered the word Sagar Mala till now,” said Kalyanaraman.
Jayalalithaa had said the Vision Tamil Nadu 2023 document has been conceived with the intention of making Tamil Nadu India’s most prosperous and progressive State, with no poverty and where its people enjoy all the basic services of a modern society and live in harmonious engagement with the environment and with the rest of the world.
The Chief Minister had also promised the people of the State that Tamil Nadu would provide the best infrastructure services in the country in terms of universal access to housing, water, sanitation, energy, transportation, irrigation, connectivity, health care and education.
“Jayalalithaa’s triumph  in the 2011 Assembly elections invited supreme indifference and arrogance from the UPA Government, which put a stop to all major ongoing and newly-proposed infrastructure projects in Tamil Nadu.
“All major National Highway projects have been deliberately put on hold by Union Finance Minister P Chidambaram, who is incapable of winning a municipal election by himself in any part of Tamil Nadu,” charged V Sundaram, former Secretary to the Government.     


A contra view is expressed by the following comment received:

The shoe is is on the other leg...This article seems an effort to counter the NHAI statement before the High Court seeking directions to TN Govt to let the road projects proceed without interruption. DINAMANI  had carried a detailed report about a month ago how govt of TN was stalling the road projects and how they have been forced to close the Coimbatore to Mettupalayam road widening . 

Govt. of Tamil Nadu should clarify the position immediately.

Kalyan Sept. 13, 2013

A response to the contra-view follows:

The National Highway Authority of India officials themselves agree that no works (widening or new construction) have been taken up in Tamil Nadu since May 2011.
They do not know the reasons. “The orders came from New Delhi. Please do not ask why, what and how,” said one of the senior officials.
The land for road widening has not been acquired by the State government. But this was due to legal issues than the indifference of the State government. Now that the land acquisition process has been simplified, let’s hope the process would  move forward.
The Maduravoyal-Ennore/Chennai Port widening got stuck because of the callous attitude of the union government. They installed the towers in the Cooum River bed instead of the banks of the river. The state authorities were not taken into confidence while the original plan was subverted.
The mile-long  traffic bloc which you see along the Bangalore Chennai highway extending up to the Chennai Port is an offshoot of the change of government in Fort Saint George.
Take a ride along the Chennai- Bangalore highway. Though the toll is collected promptly, no repair works have been undertaken during the last thee years. It is said that on an average, each toll gate collects Rs 1 million per day. Why a portion of this is not diverted to repair and maintain the road which is in a dilapidated condition. ?
Tug of war between Baalu (who has not been made minister though the UPA returned to power in 2009) and some of the  Congress leaders have resulted in the highway projects coming  to a standstill in Tamil Nadu.
The National Marine  Biotechnology Research Centre, which was to come up somewhere near Mahabalipuram has been given a silent burial. It will be revived only after the AIADMK government goes! The credit should go only to Gopalapuram!

What happened to the Chennai Banglaore Industrial Corridor which was to go to work by mid-2011?
So, clearly, there are many shoes on many wrong feet resulting in denial of development of projects -- a hallmark of SoniaG governance of politicking everywhere.
Kalyan

3.2 m. Bangla migrants in India, the single largest exodus in eastern hemisphere -- UN DESA

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Situation Report on International Migration in South and South-West Asia Click for Full text

3.2 million Bangladeshi migrants in India: UN 

UN-DESA
London: The United Nations has for the first time acknowledged that exodus from Bangladesh into India as the largest migration in the developing world.
Some 3.2 million people from Bangladesh have settled down India until now, according to the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN-DESA).
The report, released by UN-DESA’s population division on Thursday, noted that India has the “single largest bilateral stock of international migrants” in the eastern hemisphere and in the developing world.
The report was released ahead of a global summit on migration and development the UN General Assembly plans to hold in New York on October 3 and 4, reported The Times of India.
While India is the favorite destination for Bangladeshi migrants, Indians prefer the Persian Gulf countries to migrate. Two favorite Middle East destinations for Indians are United Arab Emirates (2.9 million Indian immigrants) and Saudi Arabia (1.8 million).
However, US recorded the biggest rise in the number of Indians migrating to a single country. So far, some 2.1 million Indians are in the US that also accommodates 2.2 million Chinese and 2 million Filipinos.
South Asians were the largest group of international migrants living outside their home region. Of the 36 million international migrants from South Asia, 13.5 million resided in the oil-producing Persian Gulf countries.
The report also noted that more people now love abroad than ever before. This year, 232 million people, or 3.2 percent of the world’s population, were international migrants, compared with 175 million in 2000 and 154 million in 1990.
The developed countries were home to 136 million migrants, compared to 96 million in the developing countries.
Most international migrants were of working age (20-64 years) and accounted for 74 percent of the total. Globally, women accounted for 48 percent of all international migrants.
Asians and Latin Americans living outside their home regions formed the largest global Diaspora groups.
In 2013, Asians represented the largest group, accounting for about 19 million migrants living in Europe, some 16 million in North America and about 3 million in Oceania.
The report also said Europe and Asia combined hosted nearly two-thirds of all international migrants.
Europe has some 72 million international migrants in the latest count, compared to 71 million in Asia.
Asia has seen the largest increase of international migrants since 2000, adding some 20 million migrants in 13 years.
John Wilmoth, director of the division, said, “This growth was mainly fuelled by the increasing demand for foreign labor in the oil-producing countries of western Asia and in south-eastern Asian countries with rapidly growing economies, such as Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand.”

Bangla migration to India largest in developing world

Bangla migration to India largest in developing world
Data revealed on Thursday by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN-DESA) shows that in 2013, India was home to 3.2 million Bangladeshi residents who had migrated into the country and settled there.
LONDON: The exodus from Bangladeshis into India has for the first time been termed by the United Nations as "the single largest bilateral stock of international migrants" in the eastern hemisphere and also in the developing world.

Data revealed on Thursday by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs(UN-DESA) shows that in 2013, India was home to 3.2 million Bangladeshi residents who had migrated into the country and settled there.

Not surprisingly, India was the favourite destination for Bangladeshi migrants in 2013, the report said.

For Indians, however, it was the Middle East that was the clear favourite for migration. Two countries in the Middle East were the main destinations - UAE, having 2.9 million Indian migrants, and Saudi Arabia which had 1.8 million.

However the biggest rise in the number of Indians migrating to a single country was to the US. In 2013, 2.1 million Indians were in the US, which was also home to 2.2 million foreign-born from China and 2 million from the Philippines.

The UN-DESA report said that since 2000, the number of international migrants born in China or India and living in the US had doubled, whereas the number of Mexican foreign-born had only risen by about 31%.

South Asians were the largest group of international migrants living outside their home region. Of the 36 million international migrants from south Asia, 13.5 million resided in the oil-producing countries of west Asia.

The report said more people were living abroad than ever before. In 2013, 232 million people, or 3.2% of the world's population, were international migrants, compared with 175 million in 2000 and 154 million in 1990. The developed countries were home to 136 million migrants, compared to 96 million in the developing countries.

Most international migrants were of working age (20 to 64 years) and accounted for 74% of the total. Globally, women accounted for 48% of all international migrants.

Asians and Latin Americans living outside their home regions formed the largest global diaspora groups. In 2013, Asians represented the largest group, accounting for about 19 million migrants living in Europe, some 16 million in north America and about 3 million in Oceania.

The report, released by UN-DESA's population division, said Europe and Asia combined hosted nearly two-thirds of all international migrants.

Europe remained the most popular destination region with 72 million international migrants in 2013, compared to 71 million in Asia.

Compared to other regions, Asia has seen the largest increase of international migrants since 2000, adding some 20 million migrants in 13 years.

John Wilmoth, director of the division, said, "This growth was mainly fuelled by the increasing demand for foreign labour in the oil-producing countries of western Asia and in south-eastern Asian countries with rapidly growing economies, such as Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand."

In 2013, half of all international migrants lived in 10 countries, with the US hosting the largest number (45.8 million), followed by the Russian Federation (11 million); Germany (9.8 million); Saudi Arabia (9.1 million); United Arab Emirates (7.8 million); United Kingdom (7.8 million); France (7.4 million); Canada (7.3 million); Australia (6.5 million); and Spain (6.5 million).

The US gained the largest absolute number of international migrants between 1990 and 2013 — nearly 23 million, equal to one million additional migrants per year. The United Arab Emirates recorded the second largest gain with seven million, followed by Spain with six million.

Mr Wilmoth said, "Most international migrants settle in developing countries but in recent years they have been settling in almost equal number in developed and developing regions."

The figures are released ahead of a high-level global summit on migration and development to be held by the General Assembly in New York on October 3 and 4.

Selective sand mining probe in Tamil Nadu generates heat -- Economic Times

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With the report just being submitted, critics are questioning why two other districts that see rampant illegal mining have been left out of the purview of the probe.

Selective sand mining probe in Tamil Nadu generates heat


When the Tamil Nadu government ordered a probe last month into the illegal mining of beach sand in Tuticorin, after the contentious transfer of the collector who raised the issue and pinned the blame on mining baron S Vaikundarajan's business, it seemed enough to put the controversy to rest. 

Now, with the report just being submitted, critics are questioning why two other districts that see rampant illegal mining have been left out of the purview of the probe. More so, since the letter of the now-transferred Tuticorin collector Ashish Kumar to chief secretary Sheela Balakrishnan, on the basis of which the state government ordered a probe, clearly mentions illegal mining activity not just in Tuticorin (where the probe was undertaken) but also Tirunelveli and Kanyakumari. ET has a copy of Kumar's letter. 

Former IAS officer V Sundaram, who wrote to the state administrators regarding rampant illegal mining early this year, much before it was brought to light by Kumar, told ET, "In Thoothukudi (Tamil name for Tuticorin), Vaikundarajan's mining operation is only 15%. The balance 85% is in Tirunelveli (65%) and Kanyakumari (20%). Only 15% is being investigated now." He said, "The rest is left out and it's clearly an eyewash." He said he believes only a CBI investigation can result in justice. 

In a three-page letter dated August 6, 2013, the day he was transferred, Kumar wrote to the chief secretary: "Beach sand mining is being done in large scale in the three districts of Tirunelveli, Thoothukudi and Kanyakumari.

Although, most of the quarry owners have obtained quarry leases, a majority of them indulge in illicit mining in and around their lease area because the minerals contained in the beach sand (such as garnet, ilmenite and rutile) fetch very high prices." 

Former IAS officer V Sundaram has alleged that illegal mining by Vaikundarajan has been worth over Rs 96,000 crore over the years. Kumar couldn't be reached for his comments. 

Gagandeep Singh Bedi, who headed the probe, wasn't available for comments as well. His report is not yet public. 

Political leaders have been largely silent on this issue, save for a press release issued byCPM state secretary G Ramakrishnan last month. 

In that, he had called on the government to probe other districts such as Tirunelveli, Kanyakumari, Madurai as well as Tiruchirapalli, where mineral rich sands have been allowed to be mined. 

The letter, in Tamil, said thousands of acre of government and private land have been opened up for mining. In 2006-07 to 2012-13, over 15 lakh tonne of minerals worth billions of dollars was estimated to have been exported from Tuticorin port alone by a few private players. These players, it alleged, have got the mining leases at dirt cheap rates. 

CPI (M)'s Tuticorin secretary KS Arjunan said, "The government should probe into what's happening at Tirunelveli and Kanyakumari too." 

The controversy erupted on August 6 when VV Minerals, the company promoted by Vai kundarajan, was raided following complaints that it as quarrying rich beach sand illegally. Almost immediately, the collector Kumar was transferred.

He's now with the department of social welfare and nutritious meal programme. His transfer came in the wake of the suspension of IAS officer Durga Shakti Nagpal who is said to have cracked down on illegal sand mining in Uttar Pradesh.

Comments
Devidas (Bangalore)
19 Hours ago
What is the Governor doing? What is the Union government doing? If nothing, why are they there?
Vyom (Pune)
20 Hours ago
Silver: 1821

probing abt corruption --politicians raising brows--which is expected from them.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/selective-sand-mining-probe-in-tamil-nadu-generates-heat/articleshow/22513310.cms

UP becoming the new ISI hub -- Priyadarshi Dutta

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UP becoming the new ISI hub


By Priyadarshi Dutta on September 13, 2013

UP becoming the new ISI hub
While fragile peace returns to Muzaffarnagar district, there is rippling out of the communal tension. The recovery of 41 cartridges of AK-47 rifle from Kirthal village in Baghpat district by Uttar Pradesh Police has received insufficient coverage. The person in whose house the arsenal was stored has not been identified by the media. It is true that in communal riots, the convention is to withhold the identity of the perpetrators. But sometimes disclosure becomes necessary to dispel the dubious political discourse around it.  TheDainik Jagran (Baghpat edition) has identified the person as Rozuddin. The intelligence agencies were on alert when news of arms inventory surfaced following communal standoff in Kirthal the previous night. There were stone pelting when the Police raided Rozuddin’s house in a communally divided village. A constable Vijay Kumar has received head injuries. It means Muslims were not exactly sitting ducks in the riots as some portray.
Raid was prematurely called off: No AK-47 could be recovered is no reason for worrying less. It might mean the assault weapons are still beyond law enforcing agency’s reach. What was more scandalous was the raid was called off in the middle. According to the sources, there were instructions from above. The origin of those cartridges befuddled the Police. Rozuddin’s claim that they were brought by his relative who works in Border Security Force (BSF) appears is a lame excuse. Firstly, nobody in Rozuddin’s family works in the BSF. Additionally, it is illegal for serving personnel to carry their arms and ammunition home. It could result in Court Martial, being perceived as an attempt to wage war against the State.
ISI in western UP: The politicians and media are trying to paper over the granular realities of the Western Uttar Pradesh. There have been attempts to attribute the riots to RSS and BJP who allegedly vitiated the communal atmosphere. But there has been zero discussion on ISI’s role in the Western Uttar Pradesh. It is no secret that Pakistan’s Inter Service Intelligence has a credible presence in Western Uttar Pradesh. The region’s connection with ISI resurfaced last month when a most wanted terrorist Abdul Karim alias Tunda, a native of Hapur, was arrested by the Delhi Police. A report in The Statesman (August 18, 2013) by Chandan Prakash Singh highlights the importance of western UP to the ISI. The involvement of the ISI could not be ruled out in purveying of arms and ammunition to a particular community in the western UP.
Srikanta Ghosh, in his book Pakistan’s ISI: Network of Terror (2000) cites, ISI’s prospects received a big push in the Uttar Pradesh following the demolition of Babri Masjid in 1992. It could play upon the hurt psyche of the Muslims in the Urdu heartland. Within two years, at least five districts of the State viz Aligarh, Ghaziabad, Meerut, Saharanpur and Moradabad had been infiltrated. Notably, all these five districts – with large concentration of Muslim population- are in the western Uttar Pradesh.
ISI’s action plan in western UP: DP Sharma, in his book The New Terrorism: Islamist International, (2006) also attributes Muzaffarnagar district to the list where ISI is most active. He says that in these districts Muslims are working as PCO owners, travel agents and transporters. As per intelligence reports, ISI organises meetings of Muslims in these areas to create circumstances, which leads to communal rift. After the Gujarat riots, ISI agents fanned out in western Uttar Pradesh, asking madrasa heads to admit more students from Gujarat who could be later trained as Mujahideen. Farhan Ahmed, who was arrested by Delhi Police on August 23, 2002 had informed during investigation that he enrolled 33 students from Gujarat, from relief camps of Ahmedabad, in various madrasas of Moradabad under this plan.
In January, 2010, Nasir, a resident of Kabari Bazar area of Meerut, was arrested by ATS. He was in possession of highly confidential information on military movements, army codes, numbers of ISI officials across the border, along with postal and e-mail addresses of those who were being sent classified information from India. During interrogation, Nasir revealed that he along with his mother, sister and cousin Muqeem of Najibabad had gone to visit their relatives in Lahore, Pakistan in June 2009. It might also be noted that due to involvement of this region in Pakistan movement, many western UP Muslims have relatives in Pakistan.

On August 13, 2008, ATS had arrested a Pakistani spy from Bahraich and an operative of Jamiat-Ul-Mujahideen from Ghaziabad in simultaneous raids. The Pakistani spy Mohammed Masroor alias Manzoor Ansari has established himself at Lucknow and working in a business house Lalbagh. Though of late, an eastern UP district viz Azamgarh has gained notoriety for terror connections, the western UP continues to be a dependable hub of the ISI. The instances can be multiplied. But why are politicians with vested interests ignoring this aspect in built up to Muzaffarnagar violence? Why shouldn’t there be discussion on ISI’s role in vitiating the communal atmosphere in the western Uttar Pradesh?

http://www.niticentral.com/2013/09/13/up-becoming-the-new-isi-hub-132384.html

In the red: CPM power struggle out in open -- Cithara Paul

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In the red: CPM power struggle out in open

Published: 08th Sep 2013 08:49:39 AM
CPI(M) General Secretary Prakash Karat

Divergences have always been subtle within the Left, especially the CPI(M). But with personal ambitions getting a leg up over ideological differences, the fight is out in the open between CPI(M) General Secretary Prakash Karat and wannabe general secretary Sitaram Yechury.

Though the duo has never had a good equation, except may be in joining hands to stop Jyoti Basu from becoming the Prime Minister, the fight between the two had always been an insider’s secret. But now it is a public secret with one trying to scuttle the political moves by the other just like a political opponent.

The latest cause of rift between the two is over the political line to be taken towards the Congress party as the election date is getting nearer. While Karat, who is still latching on to his once failed Third Front dream, is strictly against the Congress, Yechury, who had played a prominent role during the UPA-I days,  wants an “open and softer” approach towards the Congress party.


Sitaram Yechury

The rift between the two was very evident last week when Yechury tried to snub the SP, BSP and JD(S) in one go, questioning their secular and ideological credentials. And it was not a simple coincidence that it was on the same day that the CPI(M) general secretary had held closed-door discussions with the SP supremo to decide the future of a grand coalition against the Congress and BJP.
Ruling out the possibility of a supporting the Congress again “even if Rahul Gandhi is there”, Karat had said Mulayam would play a decisive role in the coming polls. “Mulayamji had worked with us earlier also and if his party is in a strong position (in the polls), he could well be a Prime Ministerial candidate,” Karat had said.

Read also: Personality overrules ideology

Interestingly, Yechury chose the same day to question the reliability of SP and other possible Third Front partners. Pointing out the  anomaly of SP and BSP jointly supporting the Congress government, Yechury said it is not clear who is the opponent and who is the supporter thereby putting a question mark on the reliability quotient of these parties.

Similarly, he snubbed the JD(S) the same day questioning its secular credentials. “I have directly asked them to take away the term ‘secular’ from the party name. What right do they have to put such a tag in their name after making tacit understandings with the BJP in Karnataka elections?” Yechury said.
“A Politburo member could not be more vocal than this in expressing differences with the party general secretary,” said a party leader. According to him, the duo had always adopted a different line of approach towards Congress within the party forums. “But it never had been this apparent,” said the leader who is a member of the Central Committee (CC).

Comments(3)

problem is both these duffers can't win an elction
Posted by abhijeet at 09/08/2013 12:26 Reply to this Report abuse
The days of communist party (ies!) are over. With the demise of the Soviet Union and China more interested in fishing in troubled waters (which Indian will have a good word for China?), Indian communists are deprived of both ideological and financial support. They should convert themselves as social democrats and accept the supremacy of the people and parliamentary democracy, in place of the so called dictatorship of the proletariat. Karat, Yechury, Buddhadeb, D. Raja can contribute a lot to Indian democracy if they abandon the last of Abrahamic religions and wed Indian parliamentary democracy !

Posted by S K Nair at 09/08/2013 12:48 Reply to this Report abuse
We shouldn't give any importance to China paid agents in Bharat .They are born splitters.
Posted by M Gal reddy at 09/11/2013 14:16 Reply to this Report abuse

http://newindianexpress.com/thesundaystandard/In-the-red-CPM-power-struggle-out-in-open/2013/09/08/article1773395.ece

Advani writes to Rajnath, on a day NaMo nominated as BJP PM Candidate

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Advani writes to Rajnath, expresses displeasure over BJP's affairs CNN-IBN | Updated Sep 13, 2013 at 07:06pm IST 

New Delhi: With the BJP declaring Gujarat Chief Minister and party's campaign committee chief Narendra Modi its prime ministerial candidate for the 2014 elections, senior leader LK Advani not only skipped the party's Parliamentary Board meet on Friday but also expressed his disappointment over party President Rajnath Singh's style of functioning. 

In a letter written to Rajnath, he said, "I had expressed my pain to you and I am disappointed with the way you are running the party." 

ALSO SEE Upset over Narendra Modi, LK Advani skips BJP Parliamentary Board meet 

"I have told you, I will think about coming to BJP Parliamentary Board meet to tell all the members what I feel now. I have decided that it will be better I don't come," he wrote 

In a letter written to Rajnath, he said, "I had expressed my pain to you and I am disappointed with the way you are running party." 

Advani had been against the anointment of Modi as PM candidate. Adamant over his decision, Advani had suggested that any decision on Modi's anointment should be taken after Assembly elections later in November 2013. He had said that announcement of BJP's PM candidate before Assembly elections of Chhattisgarh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Delhi would affect the party's performance in the polls. 

He had been very vocal against Modi's anointment as PM candidate after the Gujarat Chief Minister was made BJP's campaign committee chief in June, 2013 at the Goa meet. Earlier, after Modi's anointment as campaign committee chief Advani resigned from all posts he held in the BJP. However, he later took his decision back after BJP President Rajnath Singh and other senior leaders succeeded in placating him.


Read more at: http://ibnlive.in.com/news/advani-writes-to-rajnath-expresses-displeasure-over-bjps-affairs/421794-37-64.html?utm_source=ref_article

Narendra Modi is the choice for India's PM

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NARENDRA MODI IS THE CHOICE 
BJP declares its candidate for Prime Minister for 2014 poll
NDA allies endorse decision, say they're confident of win
Young India's aspirations get wing, celebrations across India

Campaign to oust corrupt Congress-led UPA regime beginsModi is BJP’s PM candidate


By Niticentral Staff on September 13, 2013
Modi is BJP’s PM candidate
The BJP Parliamentary Board on Friday declared Narendra Modi as party’s Prime Ministerial candidate for the 2014 general election.
The much awaited announcement was made by BJP president Rajnath Singh at a crowded Press Conference at 11, Ashoka Road, in the presence of galaxy of party leaders after a crucial meeting of the BJP Parliamentary Board. Except Advani, the meeting of the party’s apex decision making body was attended by other leaders like Sushma Swaraj, Murli Manohar Joshi, Arun Jaitley and Nitin Gadkari.
Making the announcement, Rajnath Singh said the decision had been taken unanimously by the Parliamentary Board as per the party’s tradition.
Rajnath said the decision was taken keeping in view the mood and aspirations of the people.
Modi is BJP’s PM candidate

Modi is BJP’s PM candidate
Modi is BJP’s PM candidate
Modi is BJP’s PM candidate
As Rajnath declared Modi’s name for the top post, a wave of jubilation has spread in the party cadre.
Accepting the new responsibility, Modi, who will turn 63 next Tuesday, said, “I have served BJP as a worker for many years to the best of my ability. With this big responsibility, I assure everyone that I will leave no stone upturned for the achievement of the goal. I will work tirelessly to ensure that BJP wins the 2014 general election.”
The BJP’s star performer, who has proved his mettle as the Gujarat Chief Minister, sought the blessings of crores of people from Kashmir to Kanyakumari to help BJP win.
Coining a slogan “nayi sonch, nayi ummeed” (new thinking, new hope), Modi said the party will continue to work for good governance and development while fighting against corruption and price rise.
“The country is going through a crisis and the countrymen should support BJP to emerge from this situation,” Modi flanked by Arun Jaitley, Sushma Swaraj, Murli Manohar Joshi, Ananth Kumar among others said.
Modi thanked party leadership and workers for reposing faith in him. The Gujarat Chief Minister also expressed gratitude to NDA allies for supporting him through telephone calls.
Modi also thanked media for its contribution in bringing out the issues that have been raging the country including corruption, inflation and nay other issues.
The announcement was made following a hectic activity to evolve a consensus on Modi’s name.
The decision on Modi came on a day of fast-paced developments and back-to-back meetings and last minute efforts to bring the BJP top brass together. Senior BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi and Sushma Swaraj, who are said to have reservations on Modi’s name, finally changed their stand to join the majority view of the BJP.
The move to formally announce Modi as BJP’s Prime Ministerial face gained momentum after the go-ahead given by RSS last week.

Modi got a shot in the arm when NDA allies Shiv Sena and Shiromani Akali Dal extended their support to him for the post of PM candidate.
http://www.niticentral.com/2013/09/13/modi-is-bjps-pm-candidate-132420.html

Muzaffarnagar, tragedy of Indian Police -- RK Raghavan

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How Muzaffarnagar riots highlight tragedy of police Sep 13, 2013

By RK Raghavan Yet another shameful chapter has become part of Indian social history. We may be right in blaming the British for having divided us on the basis of religion in order to perpetuate their rule. But then, is that available to us as an alibi, six decades after the alien ruler left our shores? Certainly not. The truly secular Indian has every reason to be dismayed by what happened in Muzaffarnagar recently. Uttar Pradesh is no doubt a politically powerful state. Unfortunately however, over the years, the state has acquired a reputation for insensitivity to the sacred task of protecting the minorities. 

The State could now justifiably be looked upon as inhospitable and dangerous by the minorities. Internationally speaking Muzaffarnagar could also become a metaphor for intolerance. The Supreme Court is now seized of the matter thanks to a PIL which demands a CBI enquiry into the whole sequence of events. It is difficult to speculate what will come out of this. In any case criminal investigations are hardly a deterrent, and will offer no balm to the victims. The judicial enquiry that the UP government has ordered is widely looked upon as a joke, that too, a cruel joke, meant mainly to muffle the voices of many sane elements in the area who are privy to facts which do not show the state in good light. This is a trick many chief ministers across the nation resort to in order to silence their detractors. 

Akhilesh Yadav cannot therefore be faulted. The riots in Muzaffarnagar. AP Barring a few details, the pattern in all such unfortunate happenings remains the same. As usual, a small incident – a Jat girl tormented by two Muslim boys – triggered it all, as if it was religion that induced this eve teasing. It is crass religious prejudice that is the agent provocateur for violence in all such instances. It is that kind of prejudice which magnifies what should normally pass off as mere sexual misconduct in a semi-urban context. As in every other religious clash, in Muzaffarnagar also political leaders and their followers belonging to the majority and minority communities have been quick to jump into the fray and indulge in rabble-rousing and more. 

Our politicians seem to believe that every communal clash, even if they did not directly engineer it, provides an opportunity to expand their political base, and such an opportunity should rarely be missed, especially when a major election is round the corner. Whatever has been reported from Muzaffarnagar confirms that the need for restraint on such emotionally surcharged occasions was given a total go-by. Far too many reports by the media suggest that the local administration watched by in the initial stages, particularly when the Hindus convened the so-called Maha Panchayat, and this was a major contributory factor to the violence to escalate as it did. This is why debates on Hindu-Muslim riots need to focus on the administration’s response at the very early stage of trouble. There is the all round charge that the mob who thronged at the Panchayat carried many kinds of arms, and gathered in defiance of the Sec.144 orders. Incidentally, such prohibitory orders have become a joke. 

The administration usually imposes the prohibition for form sake and to keep its record clean. We saw this last year in Mumbai when the Shiv Sena took out a massive procession from chowpatty and the police were a mute spectator. The sequence to police apathy is now well known. The phenomenon of police passivity even when their orders are being flouted is peculiar to India. This meek submission to unruly elements in society and total abdication of responsibility takes place because the police are under the thumb of the ruling political party, which would alone take decisions that should normally fall within the province of the police. This ludicrous situation holds good in the matter of arrests as well. An immediate response to a communal incident should be the swift arrest of all known trouble-mongers on both sides. This has a salutary impact on the further course of events. It is known that this did not happen in Muzaffarnagar. 

A few deserving of arrest were branded by the police as ‘unavailable’. The same persons were however available to the media. Sweeping as it may seem, communal clashes will never be handled professionally by the police as long as they remain an appendage of the ruling party. As things stand now, like in the case of the CBI, no political party will ever agree to insulate the police from the caprice of street-level politicians. This is why it is unfair and preposterous to hold the police responsible for any inaction. We will never know of the numerous directions –both to act and not to act- that the Muzaffarnagar Police may have received in the crucial days. 

Those of us who have toiled for decades in the field know how difficult it is to perform when communal passions are aroused not only by local leaders but by those at the helm of affairs in a State government. I do not hold a brief for the truly incompetent and communally partisan policeman. There are quite a few of them. Fortunately however this species constitutes only a small percentage of the whole police force in the country. The majority are itching for professional freedom. They are however afraid to act in pressure cooker situations, lest they be penalized for doing the right thing. This is the tragedy of the Indian Police. (The writer is a former CBI Director)

http://www.firstpost.com/politics/how-muzaffarnagar-riots-highlight-tragedy-of-the-indian-police-1106649.html

Nationalist to Lead Opposition in Indian Elections -- NYTimes

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jeevema s'aradah s'atam to lead Bharatam to her destined glory in Indian Ocean Community and Comity of Nations.

Nationalist to Lead Opposition in Indian Elections



http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/14/world/asia/polarizing-nationalist-to-lead-opposition-in-indian-elections.html?ref=global-home&_r=0

Happy Onam!

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Congratulations, Narendra Modi ji. Jeevema s'aradah s'atam, live a hundred autumns to make India attain her destined glory. You are the man of the moment.


suprabandhe rashtra samriddhi/सुप्रबन्धे राष्ट्र समृद्धि/ (Better Management for a Better Nation)

dharmo rakṣati rakṣitaḥ / धर्मो रक्षति रक्षितः / dharmo rakShati rakShitaH [Values protect the protector (of Global Ethic)]

नित्यं यातो शुभोदयं / Nityam Yaato Shubhodayam/Let the rise of goodness happen every day

siddhirbhavati karmajā / सिद्धिर्भवति कर्मजा / siddhirbhavati karmajA (Success is born of action)

satyaṃ śivaṃ sundaram / सत्यं शिवं सुन्दरम् / satyaM shivaM sundaram (truth, auspiciousness, beauty)

कल्यणरामन् 
Kalyanaraman

Monazite placer sands: Illegal mining to the tune of Rs. 96k crore. Will DAE wake up and cancel Jan. 2006 notification delisting atomic minerals?

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VV Minerals chairman Vaikundarajan under scanner for illegal mining to the tune of Rs 96k crore

Critics such as former IAS officer V Sundaram accuse Vaikundarajan, 58, of engaging in illegal mining to the tune of Rs 96,000 crore and more in the last decade.

CHENNAI: When Tuticorin collector Ashish Kumar raised the issue of illegal mining of beach sand last month, the spotlight quickly turned on him, as the state government immediately transferred Kumar while also announcing an investigation into his allegations. But there has been only fleeting attention towards the man behind VV Minerals, the company Kumar had accused of illegal mining.

One month on, with the result of the investigations awaited, the focus has finally shifted to S Vaikundarajan, the low-profile chairman and managing director of VV Minerals, India's top exporter of industrial minerals garnet and ilmenite. There are two main reasons for this.

One, critics such as former IAS officer V Sundaram accuse Vaikundarajan, 58, of engaging in illegal mining to the tune of Rs 96,000 crore and more in the last decade. That's more than two-thirds of the state's accumulated debt. Two, the mining baron's perceived closeness to power.

Vaikundarajan's loyalists have blamed business rivals for such allegations. Vaikundarajan's spokesman could not be reached for this story.

The political class, save for the Communists, has largely kept mum on this issue. The Left parties (they are part of the alliance headed by the ruling AIADMK) have even criticised the government probe for limiting its purview to Tuticorin, where only a minor part of the illegal mining takes place.

Sundaram says "Vaikundology" (a pun on the baron's name and geology) is a huge problem. He has been sending letters since January 2013, much before the Kumar expose, to everyone from the industries secretary to the chief secretary, CBI director, Central Vigilance Commissioner and even the chairman of Atomic Energy Commission.

Sundaram says he hasn't received even an acknowledgement from any of them. G Victor Rajamanickam, the mineralogist who worked with Sundaram, says, "We have taken into account the legally authorised tonnage they are allowed to mine and the transport permits they have applied for over 10 years. The transport permits exceed the production capacity."

Vaikundarajan, based out of Tisayanvilai town in Tirunelveli district in south Tamil Nadu, is someone who keeps out of the media glare. People who know him say he's comfortable in his shirt-veshti (dhoti). So reclusive is he that there are no publicly-available photographs of the man. He is self-made, but there are scant details about how he built his business, or his family. He is no stranger to controversy, though. One of the ongoing cases against him, filed by rival businessman D Dhaya Devadas, is based on an allegation that Vaikundarajanopenly admitted at a meeting of the ore panel that he bribed officials to get environmental clearance for beach sand mining in Tuticorin.

What adds to the interest in Vaikundarajan is the fact that he is a shareholder in Mavis Satcom, the company that runs Jaya TV, the AIADMK mouthpiece. In fact, the party, when it was in the opposition in 2007, had fumed at the DMK for harassing him.


http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-industry/indl-goods/svs/metals-mining/vv-minerals-chairman-vaikundarajan-under-scanner-for-illegal-mining-to-the-tune-of-rs-96k-crore/articleshow/22564944.cms?adcode=13

Advani as blogger: Not a single paisa of blackmoney recovered. Advani as history - Radhika Ramaseshan

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Wednesday, April 10th, 2013

WHITE PAPER ON BLACK MONEY NOTWITHSTANDING, NOT A SINGLE PAISA HAS YET BEEN RECOVERED



1
pranab-mukherjee1In May 2012, Shri Pranab Mukherjee, then Finance Minister presented to Parliament a White Paper on Black Money. In this White Paper, the UPA Government promised to curb generation of Black Money in the country, its illicit transfer to tax havens overseas and to take effective measures to secure the repatriation of all this illicit wealth of ours to India.

May, 2013 would mark the first anniversary of the presentation of this important document.   It would be in place first to recall what made Government to present this White Paper, and what has been the follow up till date.

For the last five years now, the BJP has been consistently raising this issue of black money. When it was first raised in 2008, Congress Party spokesmen had ridiculed it. However, on April 6, 2008, I personally addressed a letter to Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh in which I wrote :

Recently, the German Government launched a massive investigation drive against tax-evaders in their country, and, in this process, the German intelligence is reported to have procured from the LTG Bank in Liechtenstein confidential data on more than 1400 clients of this bank. Of these, 600 are Germans and the rest belong to other countries.

The revelations have already led to the resignation of the head of Deutesche Post – the former German mail service – one of the largest logistics company in the world.

The German Finance Ministry is reported to have publicly announced that it is willing to share the information with any government that wanted it without charging any fees for the information.

Some countries of Europe like Finland, Norway and Sweden have already shown interest in getting this data.

Along with this development, there are also reports that pressure is building on Switzerland to treat black money entrusted to its banks from tax evasion to be treated as a crime and modify its internal regulations to cooperate with other countries in tracking such funds.

I think the Government of India, through its appropriate agencies, should request the German Government to share the data of the clients of LTG. Our Government should also be proactive in supporting the possible future steps to be initiated by European governments in bringing in more transparency in banking system of Switzerland and other tax havens particularly related to deposits from other countries.

If we ask for the data from Germany regarding the clients of the LTG group it will re-enforce our position as a responsible member of the comity of nations who stand for financial integrity and transparent regulations. It will also facilitate our future participation in cleaning up the world financial system from some of the pernicious aspects of the functioning of these tax havens.

Presumably, at the instance of the Prime Minister, the Finance Minister Shri Chidambaram replied to me in May, 2008, that his government was seized of this matter and was pursuing it with the German Tax Office.

In March 2010, I wrote a blog on the matter in which I recounted this LTG Bank of Liechtenstein episode, and urged formally that Government come forth with a comprehensive White Paper on Black Money.

Meanwhile the BJP set up a 4-member Task Force to study the matter. This Task Force after studying various sources came to the conclusion that Indian wealth illegally stashed abroad may be anywhere between 25 lakh crores and 70 lakh crores.

So long as the West dominated world economy was doing well for the US and other Western nations, the entire world seemed reconciled to the banking secrecy of these tax havens.  It was felt nothing could be done about the laws of these countries. But the global economic crisis made not only President Obama, but also several European countries like UK, France and Germany change their attitude, and join hands to make a determined effort to have banking secrecy laws in these countries changed.

In 2009, Washington forced the Swiss banking giant UBS to disclose the names of 4,450 American clients suspected of hiding assets in Switzerland.

baba-ramdevIn 2009 Lok Sabha poll, the BJP made black money an election issue. Sanyasis like Swami Ramdev would invariably refer to it in their sermons. In an article published by Financial Times, under title “India’s Curse of Black Money’, Raymond Baker, director, Global Financial Integrity, wrote: ‘India has shown that this issue resonates with voters. Politicians in other developing democracies would be wise to take note’.  

The economic crisis in U.S. and other western countries made these nations acutely conscious of the fact that corruption, black money etc. had become issues that were a problem not just for individual nations, but were a challenge for democracy, the rule of law and good governance in the whole world. Way back in 2004, therefore, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime adopted a comprehensive Convention against Corruption. This 56-page document carries a powerful foreword by Kofi Annan, UN Secretary General who says :

Corruption is an insidious plague that has a wide range of corrosive effects on societies.
·                    It undermines democracy and the rule of law,
·                    Leads to violation of human rights,
·                    Distorts markets,
·                    Erodes the quality of life, and
·                    Allows organized crime, terrorism and other threats to human security to flourish.

Article 67 of this Convention against Corruption requires all member countries of the UN to sign the convention by December 2005, have it ratified by the respective countries shortly thereafter and deposit its instrument of ratification with the secretary general of the United Nations.

In 2010 the UPA Government took formal note of the issue and in the President’s customary address to that year’s Budget Session of Parliament affirmed that “India is an active part of the global efforts to facilitate exchange of tax information and take action against tax evaders”.
jan-chetna-yatra 
The Jan Chetna Yatra organized by the BJP in the last quarter of 2011 had focused attention on three issues: Inflation, Corruption and Black Money. But since the Commonwealth Games of 2008, corruption and price rise had dominated all political discourse both in the media as well as in Parliament, I found the audiences at the meetings I addressed during this last yatra extremely responsive to all that I spoke about Black Money.

The Jan Chetna Yatra of 2011 has been my most recent yatra. It stretched over 40 days. I visited every single state of the country as also all Union Territories. The general impression has been that my first yatra of 1990 - planned from Somnath to Ayodhya, but cut short at Samastipur– had evoked the greatest response. It is also said very often that the enthusiasm aroused was because the core issue was religious, namely, the Rama Temple.  But I would like to affirm here that my latest two yatras, the Swarna Jayanti Rath Yatra of 1997, and the Jan Chetna Yatra of 2011 have evoked the maximum response till date.  Both these were related to good governance and economic well being of the people ! 

In his foreword to the White Paper on Black Money presented to Parliament on May 16, 2012, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee admitted that in 2011, “the public discourse on the issue of corruption and black money has come in the forefront.”

In this Introduction, Shri Pranab Mukherjee also said:

“I would have been happy if I could have included the conclusions of reports of three premier institutions that have been tasked to quantify the magnitude of black money.  These reports are likely to be received by the end of this year.  However I have chosen to present this document now in response to an assurance given to the Parliament”.

Pranab Da did present this White Paper as BJP had demanded and in this, very rightly affirmed :

“There is no doubt that manifestation of black money in social, economic and political space of our lives has a debilitating effect on the institutions of governance and conduct of public policy in the country. Governance failure and corruption in the system affect the poor disproportionately. The success of an inclusive development strategy critically depends on the capacity of our society to root out the evil of corruption and black money from its very foundations”. 

My only regret is that the follow up of the White Paper has been disappointing.

The three premier institutions tasked to quantify the magnitude of black money have still not submitted their reports.  Not only the more powerful nations like U.S., Germany etc. but even smaller countries like Nigeria, Peru and Phillipines have got back their illicitly lost wealth from the tax havens.  We in India, on the other hand, have seen some reports about names who are supposed to have accounts in Swiss Banks or such other tax havens, but have not heard of even a single paisa illegally stashed abroad having been repatriated to our country.

I wish to urge Shri Pranab Mukherjee who is today in a far more exalted position than he was when he presented his White Paper to ensure that the promise made to the people in this document is fulfilled by Government both in letter and spirit.


L.K. Advani
New Delhi
10 April, 2013


TAILPIECE

Abraham Lincoln was elected to Congress in 1846
John F. Kennedy was elected to Congress in 1946
abraham-lincoln john-f-kennedy 
Abraham Lincoln was elected President in 1860
John F. Kennedy was elected President in 1960

Both were particularly concerned with civil rights.
Both wives lost their children while living in the White House.

Both Presidents were shot on a Friday.
Both Presidents were shot in the head.

Lincoln’s secretary was named Kennedy.
Kennedy’s Secretary was named Lincoln.

Both were assassinated by Southerners.
Both were succeeded by Southerners named Johnson.

Andrew Johnson, who succeeded Lincoln, was born in 1808.
Lyndon Johnson, who succeeded Kennedy, was born in 1908.

John Wilkes Booth, who assassinated Lincoln, was born in 1839. 
Lee Harvey Oswald, who assassinated Kennedy, was born in 1939.

Both assassins were known by their three names.
Both names are composed of fifteen letters.

Lincoln was shot at the theater named ‘Ford’.
Kennedy was shot in a car called ‘Lincoln’, made by ‘Ford’.

Lincoln was shot in a theater and his assassin ran and hid in a warehouse.
Kennedy was shot from a warehouse and his assassin ran and hid in a theater.
-
The above tailpiece reminds me of
what Albert Einstein once remarked :
Coincidence is God’s way
of remaining anonymous.
                                                           L.K.A.

http://blog.lkadvani.in/blog-in-english/white-paper-on-black-money-notwithstanding-not-a-single-paisa-has-yet-been-recovered

Advani is history -- Radhika Ramaseshan

Rebirth
- Anointed, Modi says: Nayi soch, nayi ummeed (new thinking, new hope)Anguished, Advani says: I have decided that it is better that I do not attend today’s meeting

New Delhi, Sept. 13: Narendra Modi was proclaimed the BJP’s candidate for Prime Minister after party president Rajnath Singh, prodded and pushed by the RSS, managed to wheedle the support of all dissenters except L.K. Advani.

The declaration marked a remarkable turn in the eventful career of a one-time tea stall boy who is now adored by industrialists and pilloried by those who hold him responsible for the Gujarat pogrom of 2002.

Advani refused to yield to the persistent entreaties of Rajnath and his colleagues, M. Venkaiah Naidu and Nitin Gadkari, to anoint Modi and signal that it was unanimous.

It is believed that Advani almost relented and was set to leave his home with his security cavalcade to attend a meeting of the parliamentary board that finally ratified Modi’s nomination.

However, when it was time to depart, Advani changed his mind and stayed away. Some sources said the sight of a protest outside his home by an aide of a former associate may have upset Advani further.

Rajya Sabha Opposition leader Arun Jaitley later said Advani’s absence had left the rest of them “sad” but added that in anointing Modi, the BJP had taken into account the “overwhelming response” from the party cadres.

Rajnath also cited “popular mood and cadre sentiments” — a combination that has left even the RSS with little option but to throw its weight behind Modi.

Advani sent a missive to Rajnath in which he voiced his “anguish” and “disappointment” with the BJP chief’s “style of functioning” and the way in which the process leading to Modi’s elevation was conducted. Advani said he initially thought he would share his views with the board but later felt it was “inappropriate” to attend the sitting.

Murli Manohar Joshi and Sushma Swaraj, who worked in tandem with Advani in the attempt to scupper Modi’s nomination, finally joined the show. Their grim visages left none in doubt that it was a decision that was pushed down their throats.

Modi, whose political reflexes are canny when it suits his interests, made it a point to genuflect before Joshi and Sushma once the deed was done.

Modi later drove to Advani’s home to “seek his blessings”. In the half hour or so that it took for his retinue to make the trip, huge posters of the putative Prime Minister had lined the streets outside Advani’s home. Modi also called on Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

Earlier at sundown, the BJP headquarters on Ashoka Road had erupted in a flurry of celebrations as Rajnath and the nine other members of the parliamentary board, the party’s highest policy-making body, drove in to formally announce Modi’s name.

Advani’s absence and dissenting note to Rajnath went unnoticed by the BJP workers and office-bearers who had packed the lawns, armed with crackers, joss sticks, flowers and sweets. Before Modi arrived, the office resonated with cries of “Modi PM”.

Sources who were wary of speaking out against Advani in the past today traduced him for being “petty and churlish”. With Modi dominating the BJP’s politicalscape, it is clear that Advani is history.

This morning, when Naidu and Gadkari met Advani, sources said, he told them that his endorsement would follow only if Modi was asked to step down as Gujarat chief minister and relocate to Delhi. Advani also wanted Sushma to replace Modi as the central campaign committee chief.

The nuts-and-bolts campaign panel job acquired a different mandate when Modi was handed the assignment.

Advani, Sushma and the others reportedly felt he would enjoy a veto in candidate selection, strengthen his loyalty base and equip himself to fight the decisive battle in case the BJP emerged as the single largest party in 2014 but needed more allies to stitch a majority.
Rajnath rejected Advani’s conditions out of hand. It is learnt that Rajnath said that as the campaign panel head and candidate for Prime Minister, Modi was not carrying constitutional positions. Therefore, it made “no sense” for him to quit as chief minister.

Sources said Advani had “conveniently forgotten” that in 2008, when he was chosen as the candidate for Prime Minister, he had continued functioning as the Lok Sabha Opposition leader.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130914/jsp/frontpage/story_17348788.jsp#.UjRN69Kw2So

Narendra Modi, India's future -- Kanchan Gupta

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Narendra Modi will rekindle hope, pride and confidence among all Indians


By Kanchan Gupta on September 13, 2013

Narendra Modi, India’s hope We were both at a loose end of sorts. I, having walked out of my job after a bitter row with my editor over an article critical of Sonia Gandhi, was trying to set up a parliamentary research system for the BJP, a project which was dear to Atal Bihari Vajpayee and LK Advani. The task had been assigned Jaswant Singh and my job was to assist him. The project failed to take off for reasons which are not relevant here. I was drafted to help with headquarters work, including election campaigns, and assist Vajpayee with his parliamentary work. At the time of elections and when Parliament was in session, there was work to do; at other times, there was little or nothing to do.
A short walk from my office, across what then used to be a sprawling lawn, at 11 Ashoka Road, the BJP headquarters, was the office of Narendra Modi – Narendrabhai to all, from the chaiwallah to senior leaders – who had shifted base to Delhi after Shankersinh Vaghela’s revolt rocked Kehsubhai Patel’s Government in Gujarat. The first time I had met him was during Murli Manohar Joshi’s Kanyakumari to Kashmir Ekta Yatra which he had organised. It was a brief meeting but I had fond memories. After that he had got engrossed with Gujarat politics which kept him busy till he moved to Delhi. Now he too seemed to have little to do, though I can’t recall an occasion when I saw him doing nothing. Those days the party headquarters would function like any professionally run office. Advani, who was party president, would arrive any time between 9.30 am and 10 am, and work non-stop, holding meetings, reviewing State unit programmes, dealing with the long queue of visitors, till 1.30 pm. He would go home for lunch and be back at 3 pm, to work till 5.30 pm. All of us based at the headquarters had to follow the same routine.
Narendrabhai would arrive sharp 9.30 am – the joke was you could set your watch by his time of arrival – and head straight to his office. He would invariably be neatly turned out in a crisply ironed half-sleeve kurta and sparkling white churidar pajamas, hair combed and beard trimmed. He had a white Ambassador car, one of the three luxuries he allowed himself. The other two were a mobile phone (a rarity those days; he had an Ericsson and later a Motorola with an unfolding antenna which raised a lot of curiosity) and a 386 laptop that weighed a ton. He lived in the outhouse of a party MP’s bungalow – a single room that had a light and a fan, and a window opening into a side lane. In his office, Narendrabhai would work on his desktop (our official issue was standard black-and-white screen monitors, CPUs with tediously slow processors and even slower dial-up Internet connections for which we would have take special permission from Jana Krishnamurthy) and was not fond of unannounced visitors. The message quickly went around and nobody would dare barge into his office, a courtesy extended to only Advani till then.
I was privileged to have his permission to drop in whenever I wished to, which I would do quite often. Arun Jaitley and Arun Shourie would regularly address the media those days. My job was to scan the morning papers, come up with issues and prepare talking points and draft statements. Arun Jaitley would drop in on his way to court and finalise the day’s menu. Work done I would walk across to Narendrabhai’s office for a chai and a chat. He spoke very little, but listened with great attention. And when he spoke, it was to bounce off ideas with which he would be brimming. In those early days of computers and Internet it was amazing how much he knew, much of that knowledge culled from reading journals and surfing the Net. I had made a difficult transition from typewriters to computers, and was fascinated by the effortless ease with which he navigated his way through the information highway. I don’t think he ever used a typewriter; for him the transition was likely from a pen to the keyboard. We would all have lunch at the chummery: roti, dal, rice and a sabzi. Narendrabhai ate with us, sharing the humble meal. Some of us would complain about the bland, tasteless daily fare; I never heard him complaining.
During the crisis precipitated by Vaghela’s rebellion, two words had been coined and gained currency: Khajuriyas and Hajuriyas. Khajuriyas were the rebel MLAs who were whisked off to Khajuraho; Hajuriyas were the jee-hazoor loyalists. Months later, if memory serves me right it was after an episode involving flattery influencing a key decision by the leadership that had left many of us feeling dejected, I casually asked him: “Narendrabhai, we are neither Khajuriyas nor Hajuriyas. What does that make us?” There was a flicker of a smile on his face as he replied, “We are Majuriyas… our work is to toil for the party.” That was not a stray comment, as I was to realise over the years, but a mantra, a belief which he continues to practice.
After the NDA Government came to power, I shifted to the PMO and later to Cairo as Director of the Maulana Azad Centre. By the time I landed in Cairo, Narendrabhai had returned to Gujarat as Chief Minister and immersed himself in reconstruction work, rebuilding large parts of the State after the calamitous earthquake. But before he and I could settle down in our new jobs (his, a high assignment; mine, a lowly Government task) came the grisly attack on Sabarmati Express and the violence that followed. From distant Cairo I could only track the violence, and Narendrabhai’s handling of the situation, through Foreign Office telegrams that came twice a day with updates.
My Ambassador, the kindly SJ Singh, tasked me with dealing with the Arab media which had gone berserk, running wild stories (a great deal wilder than what Teesta Setalvaad could ever think of) on the violence. It was a challenge, not the least because I knew no Arabic and the editors, columnists and writers I had to deal with knew no English. It took more than persuasion and logic but we were able to blunt the hostile edge of the reportage and commentary, and after a while neutralise the hostility altogether. Though dealing with the media was not part of my remit, I did it for three reasons: For India’s image, for the BJP and the NDA Government it led, and for Narendrabhai. Would I have taken on that task had Narendrabhai not been the Chief Minister of Gujarat? That’s a question I would put off for another day.
In the summer of 2004 the NDA lost the general election and exited office. I resigned from my post in Cairo and returned jobless, homeless, family in tow, to Delhi. I got back to writing for The Pioneer, now edited by Chandan Mitra, and one of the early big pieces I wrote was when the US withdrew its visa to Narendrabhai, denouncing that decision. Then, as now, there were few in the media willing to openly defend Narendrabhai but that was never a deterrent for some of us, including Swapan Dasgupta and Chandan Mitra, curiously all of us expatriate Bengalis. Till 2002 I had passing interest in Gujarat. Since then it has been a passion to follow developments in Gujarat primarily for three reasons: Narendrabhai, his governance model and the tremendous delivery of growth and development in that State. Over the past decade I have possibly visited and seen more of Gujarat than West Bengal. And I am of the firm conviction that what has been achieved in Gujarat can be achieved by India.
You could well ask why this firm conviction. Here’s why. I have had the good fortune to work with Atal Bihari Vajpayee, a ‘Majuriya’ whose vision and toil are reflected in his record in office. The NDA’s success story bears witness to Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s leadership. India has suffered grievously over the past decade and the India Story has faded away. The slide needs to be halted. Aspirational India’s dreams need to be realised. This nation deserves far better than what it has received at the hands of a hugely corrupt Congress-led UPA regime. India deserves a visionary leader. More important, India needs a leader who can break, make that demolish, the status quo, and free India from the Delhi Establishment’s evil vice-like grip which has brought this great nation to such a sorry pass. This nation is starved of hope; and hope needs to be rekindled as also pride in being Indian. Having seen Narendrabhai lead Gujarat, give wings to the dreams and aspirations of Gujaratis, infusing hope and confidence in all Gujaratis, I believe he can do for India what he has done for Gujarat.
Narendrabhai is the BJP’s choice for the Prime Minister’s job. If his soaring, giddying popularity is any indication, he is also India’s choice. He is India’s future.

Blockbuster Jaipur rally, waiting for Modi -- Tavleen Singh

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Waiting for Modi?

Friday, September 13, 2013

THERE are things about political rallies that television can never capture, so if I had not been present at Gujarat CM Narendra Modi’s rally in Jaipur, I would have found it hard to believe that his first big rally in northern India could have been the blockbuster, mega hit that it turned out to be. I would have not been able to tell you, as I am about to just now, that I cannot remember a political rally so filled with fervour and hope since the Janata Party’s rallies in 1977.

In that year that Indira Gandhi was defeated because of the ‘excesses’ of the Emergency there were political rallies by the Janata Party that were infused with that curious mixture of hope and anger that only comes when people believe that their active support is needed to change a political reality. This was the atmosphere in Jaipur.

People started to arrive at the romantically named Amroodon ka Bagh grounds from distant villages and desert districts from the early hours of the morning, so by the time I got there, around 11 a.m., there was already an impressive crowd gathered under the white ‘shamiana’ decorated with BJP flags and pictures of Vasundhara Raje. This was her show essentially since Narendra Modi was here to celebrate with her the end of the 78-day ‘yatra’ that took her through every district in Rajasthan. That was the ostensible purpose of this rally, but it was also a chance for Modi to begin his campaign for the 2014 general election and the people who gathered on that afternoon of white, burning heat seemed to know this.

Restless and noisy

The heat was of the kind that is so hard to describe that us hacks scrabble for words in trying to portray it. The white ‘shamiana’ with frilly saffron borders was huge but it offered little protection from the burning sun and as more and more people came the atmosphere became more airless and the heat more intense. People fainted but nobody left. And, the people continued to come and come so that from where I sat next to the stage, I saw an unending mass of humanity that spilled out of the tent in all directions.

They were restless and noisy but sat through long boring speeches by lesser leaders. The only time they showed signs of enthusiasm was when Narendra Modi’s name was mentioned. When someone announced from the stage that Modi had landed in Jaipur the crowd started chanting, ‘Modi, Modi, Modi’, but even this did not prepare me for what happened when the Chief Minister of Gujarat appeared in person. It was as if the vast crowd were suddenly gripped by a collective hysteria. The chants of ‘Modi, Modi, Modi’ grew frenzied and young men pushed forward as if they were about to break the barricades and come up on to the stage. Signs of the situation becoming uncontrollable were so clear that he himself had to appeal to the crowd to calm down.

When Vasundhara Raje began her speech they listened and cheered at the right points. She made a succinct, passionate speech about the betrayal of Rajasthan by successive Congress governments who have ruled the state for 53 years. She emphasised that Rajasthan would not have been left behind by Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh had there been BJP governments ruling in those 53 years. Then the national president of the BJP, Rajnath Singh, made a dull, forgettable speech but hurried through it because it was hard not to sense the crowd’s impatience to listen to the man they had really come to hear.

No sooner did Modi begin his address than the crowd started to go wild shouting, ‘Modi, Modi, Modi’, so loudly that he could not make himself heard over the chanting. A police cordon formed below the stage to keep this human wave from surging forward and swamping the leaders on the stage. There was something unnerving, almost scary, about the emotions he excited in the people and although Modi made an aggressive speech that targeted the Nehru-Gandhi family as much as it did Congress he had to make it in bits and pieces because the chanting of his name did not stop despite his pleas. The crowd seemed more interested in his presence than anything he had to say. It was as if they had made up their minds that this was the man they wanted as their leader.

Those who listened to what he had to say applauded enthusiastically when he said that the Congress Party before India got freedom was very different to the Congress Party after India became free. He said the main difference was that the old Congress had directed their devotion (bhakti) to Bharat Mata and the post-Independence Congress Party directed its ‘bhakti’ to one family.

Anti-thesis of Vajpayee

Modi said, “The Prime Minister has just come back from the G20 summit but   instead of telling us what he did for India at this       meeting, he came back to tell us that he would be happy to work for a new boss (Rahul).” The crowd cheered even louder when he listed the corruption scandals of the past five years.

Adding that, “Congress key paas na neta hai, na naitikta, na neeti, na neeyat.” An alliteration that went down well in Hindi and does not work so well in English. Congress has neither a leader, nor morality, nor policies nor good intentions. He made jokes about how the rupee was in hospital while the government was busy trying to save itself. But, it was not what he said that was important. What was important was the reaction of the people to him.

Then he was gone as quickly as he appeared. On my way home from the rally, I found myself sorting out the impressions he had left with his words and his presence. I concluded that the speech he made was not extraordinary, he has made many that were better, but the effect he had on the people who came to listen to him was truly extraordinary. I tried to remember another leader who had this kind of effect at a political rally and only Indira Gandhi and Atal Behari Vajpayee came to mind from my own experience of covering political rallies. 

Speaking of Vajpayee, I should say that those who believe that Modi models himself on Vajpayee are wrong. He is the anti-thesis of Vajpayee but perhaps what people want in this troubled time when nothing seems to go right and when hopelessness prevails is that anti-thesis.
  

Islamic University, Tirupati

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Website of the said Islamic University headed by a woman Chancellor Ms.Nowehre Shaik : http://www.heerauniversity.com/

Furore over establishment of Islamic University in Tirupati

STAFF REPORTER TIRUPATI, September 14, 2013

 The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has raised serious exception to the establishment of an Islamic University on the outskirts of the temple city of Tirupati.

The Heera International Islamic University is being established as an Arabic learning centre for women at a six-storied building on the banks of the Swarnamukhi at Thondavada village, 11 km from the city centre.
Speaking to the media on Friday, the party’s State official spokesperson G. Bhanuprakash Reddy demanded an explanation from the State and Central government on the setting up of the Islamic institute at a place considered sacred for Hindus.
“In recent times, there had been several intelligence reports about a looming security threat to the temple city. In such a situation, is it necessary to set up a centre dedicated to Islamic studies at the foot of the Tirumala hills?” Mr. Reddy said the party was not against the university and Islamic studies, but had serious concerns about the place where it was being established.
Voicing serious doubts over the activities of the university, including its funding pattern, international grants and reported encroachment of land, he demanded an inquiry by a sitting judge to unearth the facts.
BJP city president K. Ajay Kumar and leaders Samanchi Srinivas and Nageswara Rao spoke.
Meanwhile, Adi Hindu Parirakshana Samithi also wondered how the government gave permission for an Islamic centre in Tirupati. Though Lord Venkateswara was adored by people of all faiths, establishing such a centre in Tirupati, which was already on the terrorist radar, would amount to buying trouble, said its State convener Kalluri Chengaiah in a press release.

The Samithi, which represents Adi Andhra, Adi Dravida and Adivasi communities, also demanded revocation of permission for the centre here.

Underwater survey in Tamil Nadu to verify Ptolemy's account

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Underwater survey in TN to verify Ptolemy's account

A coastal survey is being carried out in Tamil Nadu by a team of professors and students, seeking to throw more light on the ancient ports in south India, mentioned in Greco Roman geographer Ptolemy's accounts.

The survey is being done by experts, specialising in underwater archeology of Thanjavur-based Tamil University, in two coastal stretches -- one between Kanyakumari and Rameswaram and another between Rameswaram and Poompuhar in Nagapattinam district -- intends to gather more information from ruins of coastal towns, which are believed to have existed during the Sangam literature era. 

Facilitated by the Central Institute of Classical Tamil with a funding of Rs five lakh, the survey is headed by N Athiyaman of the Centre for Underwater Archeology in Tamil University.

"The survey intends to study the ancient coastal towns, which have functioned as ports. Our preliminary survey is to locate the area, over which we can focus for further research. We are now looking at ports," Athiyaman told PTI.

Ancient Tamil literature, including 'Akananuru' of the Sangam era, referred to the period between 600 BCE and 300 CE, suggest that some 20 to 25 ports had existed in the region.

"Greco Roman writer Ptolemy's geographical accounts mention some 15 ports. We want to find out whether these ports mentioned in the Sangam era literature and by Ptolemy are the same," Athiyaman said.

For instance, a port known as Manamelkudi near Thondi Port, is mentioned in the 'Akananuru' as Sellur. But ambiguity still remains as to whether that is the same town referred to by Ptolemy as Sallur in his accounts, he said.

http://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/underwater-survey-in-tn-to-verify-ptolemy-s-account-113091300281_1.html

Underwater survey in TN to verify Ptolemy’s account

DC | 14th Sep 2013
A printed map from the 15th century depicting Ptolemy's description of the Ecumene. Photo credit- Wikimedia.
A printed map from the 15th century depicting Ptolemy's description of the Ecumene. Photo credit- Wikimedia.
Chennai: A coa­s­tal survey is being carried out in Tamil Nadu by a te­am of professors and students, seeking to throw mo­re light on the ancient po­rts in south India, mentio­ned in Greco Roman geographer Ptolemy’s accounts.
The survey is being done by experts, specialising in underwater archaeology of Thanjavur-based Tamil Un­i­versity, in two coastal str­etches-  one between Kan­ya­kumari and Rameswa­ram and another between Rameswaram and Poompu­har in Nagapattinam district intends to gather more information from ruins of coastal towns, which are believed to have existed during the Sangam literature era.
Facilitated by the Central Institute of Classical Tamil with a funding of Rs 5 lakh, the survey is headed by N. Athiyaman of the Centre for Underwater Archaeolo­gy in Tamil University.

“The survey intends to study the ancient coastal towns, which have functioned as ports. Our preliminary survey is to locate the area, over which we can focus for further res­earch. We are now looking at ports,” Athiyaman said.
Ancient Tamil literature, including ‘Akananuru’ of the Sangam era, referred to the period between 600 BCE and 300 CE, suggest that some 20 to 25 ports had existed in the region. “Greco Roman writer Ptolemy’s geographical ac­c­ounts mention some 15 po­rts.
We want to find out whether these ports menti­o­ned in the Sangam era literature and by Ptolemy are the same,” Athiyaman said. For instance, a port known as Manamelkudi near Thondi Port, is mentioned in the ‘Akananuru’ as Sellur.
But ambiguity st­ill remains as to whether that is the same town ref­e­r­red to by Ptolemy as Sallur in his accounts, he said.
Asked how has the team planned to conduct the survey, Athiyaman said, “We are presently surveying coastal towns, near where we believe ports might ha­ve existed. If they have ex­isted, there would have be­en a heavy traffic of boats and ships. Also in towns, we are looking for pot shreds and other remains, which can indicate a lot.”
Once the preliminary su­r­vey is over, information fr­om fishermen, who frequ­ent the particular area in the sea would be collected.
“Based on the information from fishermen, we would employ scientific equipment including SON­AR to detect objects under the sea. There are state-of-the-art equipment, which will help us detect objects, if any, under sheets of clay,” he said. 
Athiyaman is leading the team in the Kanyakumari-Rameswaram stretch, while his colleague Rajavelu is looking after the Rameswaram-Poompuhar leg, with the help of research scholars and Ph.D students of Tamil University.
The heavy traffic between coastal towns in Tamil Nadu and commercial hubs in the West has already been established with the use of various text from the ancient times.
“In one of the accounts, Ptolemy talked of a ‘emporia’ north of Cauvery river in the peninsula. When historians and archaeologists looked for the same in the Sangam literature, it was established to be Kaveripoompattinam also known as Poompuhar (a famous port in the Chola period),” Athiyaman said, adding they were hopeful of getting something concrete before this year end.

http://www.deccanchronicle.com/130914/news-current-affairs/article/underwater-survey-tn-verify-ptolemy%E2%80%99s-account

Centre rejects Pachauri panel report, wants Setuchannel project. Centre, declare Ramasetu national heritage site, scrap Setu project.

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NEW DELHI, September 17, 2013

Centre rejects Pachauri panel report, wants Sethusamudram project implemented

J. VENKATESAN

Submits channel will become a “valuable asset in terms of national defence and security”

The UPA government filed an affidavit in the Supreme Court on Monday, saying it wanted to implement the Sethusamudram project through the original alignment, cutting across the Ram Sethu.
A Bench, headed by Justice H.L. Dattu, will hear the case on Tuesday.
The Centre said it did not accept the recommendations of the expert committee, headed by Dr. Pachauri, that it was unlikely that public interest would be served if the project was implemented as per Alignment No. 4 A (an alternative route suggested by the court against the original alignment No. 6 that will cut through Ram Sethu.)
It rejected Tamil Nadu’s stand that the project be scrapped as it “is of questionable economic value and not in public interest.”
Given that Rs. 766.82 crore had already been spent on the project, implementing it further would improve its economic viability, the Centre said. “The project has strategic, navigational and socio-economic benefits and judging the economic viability of the project merely by the internal rate of return — which reflects only the commercial viability — may not be appropriate.”
Faulting the Pachauri Committee’s recommendations, the Centre said: “Though the data did not support blocking of the project… and the evidence showed benefits from the project, the committee arbitrarily and contrary to its own studies has concluded that the project is not viable. The recommendation of the committee is not tenable and is not supported by scientific data and by environmental studies commissioned by the committee itself. If the measures suggested for mitigation and post-commencement are undertaken, the project can be implemented.”
On Tamil Nadu’s stand that the project was untenable, the Centre said the channel would become a valuable asset in terms of national defence and security, facilitating easier and quicker access between Indian coasts. Moreover, it would generate jobs and additional income through small ancillary industries.
“The Environment Appraisal Committee had examined the project and suggested various safeguards which were stipulated in the environmental clearance issued for the project. Therefore, it is incorrect to say that the Environment Impact Assessment did not fully assess the adverse impact of the project,” the affidavit said.
The Centre contended that it would be wrong to state that the project had the potential of affecting the livelihood of fishermen because the expert committee, while commenting on the impact from land environment, indicated that the project would stimulate a lot of ancillary developments, leading to use of barren land for commercial activities.
On the demand of BJP leader Subramanian Swamy and the Tamil Nadu government that the Ram Sethu be declared a national monument, the Centre said the committee of eminent persons had noted in 2007 that there was no need for a study by the Archaeological Survey of India.
Tamil Nadu had sought a directive to the Centre to accept the Pachauri Committee’s report; direct the Centre not to implement the project by adopting either Alignment No. 4 A or No. 6, considering the eco-fragility of the surrounding area and the Gulf of Mannar and also as the project is of questionable economic value and not in public interest; to direct the Centre to declare Ram Sethu a national monument; and to restrain the Centre from undertaking any activity that will adversely affect Ram Sethu.
Karunanidhi happy
Special Correspondent writes from Chennai:
DMK president M. Karunanidhi has welcomed the Centre’s stand. “It is a welcome move, and one hopes the Supreme Court will give a favourable verdict soon,” he said in a statement.

Centre rejects TN opposition


The Centre has reiterated before the Supreme Court its resolve to go ahead with the controversial Sethusamudram project despite opposition from various quarters.

In an affidavit filed before the Supreme Court, the Centre has criticised the Prime Minister-appointed R.K. Pachauri committee report on the project. In the affidavit, the shipping ministry has also claimed that the objections raised by Tamil Nadu on the proposal were not well-founded.

“Even though the data did not support blocking the project from progressing, and the evidence showed the benefits from the project, the (Pachauri) committee arbitrarily and contrary to the findings of its own studies concluded that the project is not viable. Clearly, the recommendations of the committee is not tenable and is not supported by scientific data and environmental studies commissioned by the expert committee itself,” the Centre said in its 16-page submission.

The government dismissed the demand by Tamil Nadu government to declare the Adam’s Bridge as national monument. The affidavit asserted that the Sethusamudram Ship Channel Project (SSCP) has strategic, navigational and socio-economic benefits.

“The committee of eminent persons constituted in 2007 has exhaustively studied the case for and against the project and has noted that no archaeological study has been undertaken in the Ram Sethu/Adam’s Bridge area by the Archaeological Survey of India,” the top court said.

Regarding the state government’s affidavit submitted in April stating that a potential marine diversity hotspot could be affected by the project, the Centre said that the stand was not supported by the expert committee summary report. The government also claimed that the belief that the project would pose potential danger to livelihood of fishermen was wrong.

“The fish catch study carried out during the dredging and dumping operation reveals that there is increase in productivity,” the top court said.
http://www.asianage.com/india/centre-rejects-tn-opposition-178


 

Capt. (R) Balakrishnan who had commanded the Frigate Trishul of the Indian Navy had noted in a series of articles that the Setusamudram Channel Project does NOT make nautical sense. His views have been upheld by the Pachauri committee appointed by the PM for over 2 years and declared that the project was NOT economically nor ecologically feasible.

Any guesses as to why DMK Chief Karunanidhi is raking up the issue despite such counsel from experts? With only 2000 ships worldwide of the category of 15,000 to 35,000 dwt., can Karunanidhi reasonably expect heavy traffic through this mid-ocean, shallow channel -- subject to the risks of perpetual sandbanks -- to make Tamilnadu a vallaras'u -- rivalling the navigation traffic through Suez or Panama canals which are land-based? Which Captain of which ship will choose and will risk navigating through a hazardous channel and subject his vessel to run aground hitting sandbanks?

A two-page article in Tughlak magazine (Tamil) by Venkat provides some details of interest.

Tad Murthy, an international expert on tsunamis had warned about the dangers posed by the channel because the area is tsunami-prone. And, if another tsunami strikes, the waves will rush through the channel devastating the south India coastline ports.

Fisherfolk of Tiruelveli and Kanyakumar districts are opposed to the project since it will ruin their livelihood. Pearl and conch diving industries will be decimated.

Even assuming Rs. 5 lakhs as cess for each navigating vessel, only ships with less than 30,000 tonnage can navigate the channel.

But, the total number of ships all over the world, of less than 30,000 tonnes are only 7,000 according to computations by Lloyd Insurance. Most ships are larger than 50,000 tonnes capacity. The total number of ships navigating ALL Indian ports has not exceeded 12,000 per year. So, the money spent so far on the project is wasted and more expenses should not be incurred for an uneconomical venture with very little nautical sense.

According to intelligence sources, most of the ships out of the 7000 with carrying capacities of less than 30,000 tonnes were either directly or indirectly  owned by LTTE. An Interpol message noted that these 7000 vessels are used for illicit arms and drug trafficking.

DMK which did not raise a war-cry then is now taking up the cause of the channel project which does not make nautical sense, is an economic and ecological disaster. What is the reason? Don't the DMK cadre know the realities outlined? They know. Karunanidhi seems to have this up to feed the political hunger of his party folk.

[End of free translation and excerpting.]

Here is a report on small-sized ships; according to this report, there are only 2000 ships of Handysize, that is of deadweight of 15000 to 35000 tons:

Handysize most usually refers to a dry bulk vessel (or, less commonly, to a product tanker) with deadweight of about 15,000–35,000 tons. Above this size are Handymax bulkers (typically 35,000 - 58,000 tons deadweight); there is no well-defined or widely accepted size sector below 15,000 tons.Handysize is numerically the most common size of bulk carrier, with nearly 2000 units in service totalling about 43 million tons.
Handysize is also sometimes used to refer to the span of up to 60,000 tons, with Handymax being a subclassification, rather than a larger category...Handysize bulkers are built mainly by shipyards in JapanKoreaChinaVietnam, thePhilippines and India, though a few other countries also have the capacity to build such vessels. The most common industry-standard specification handysize bulker is now about 32,000 metric tons of deadweight on a summer draft of about 10 metres (33 ft), and features 5 cargo holds with hydraulically operated hatch covers, with four 30 metric ton cranes for cargo handling. Some handysizes are also fitted with stanchions to enable logs to be loaded in stacks on deck. Such vessels are often referred to as 'handy loggers'.
Despite multiple recent orders for new ships, the handysize sector still has the highest average age profile of the major bulk carrier sectors.

Today, most of handysize vessels operate within regional trade routes. These ships are capable of traveling to small ports with length and draught restrictions, as well as lacking the infrastructure for cargo loading and unloading. They are used to carry small bulk cargoes, often in parcel size where individual cargo holds may have a different commodity. Their dry bulk cargo includes iron ore, coal, cement, phosphate, finished steel products, wooden logs, fertilizer, and grains to name a few.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handysize

With this background information, read the report of Commander Muthiah of Sivakasi:




 

பதிவு செய்த நாள் : ஜூலை 15,2013,00:00 IST

சேது கால்வாய் திட்டம்: உண்மை என்ன?

ஊ.முருகையா, கடற்படை கமாண்டர் (பணி நிறைவு), சிவகாசியிலிருந்து எழுதுகிறார்: என், 35 ஆண்டு கடல்சார் பணிகளில் கிடைத்த அனுபவத்தை கொண்டு, சேது கால்வாய் திட்டத்தின் லாப, நஷ்டத்தை பற்றி மக்களுக்கு தெளிவுபடுத்த விரும்புகிறேன். அதிக நீளம் இல்லாத, சூயஸ் கால்வாயும், பனாமா கால்வாயும் இரு கடலுக்கு இடையே உள்ள, நிலப்பரப்பில் தோண்டப்பட்டு, இரு புறமும் மதில் எழுப்பப்பட்டு, கடல் மண்ணால், கால்வாய் மேவாத அளவுக்கு உருவாக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.


கால்வாயின் இரண்டு புறம் உள்ள, கடல் பகுதியின் தரை மட்டம், கால்வாயின் தரை மட்டத்தை விட அதிகமாக இருக்கும். எனவே, இயற்கை சீற்றத்தாலும், ஆழ்கடல் மணல் அரிப்பாலும், ஆழ்கடல் நீரோட்டத்தாலும் கால்வாயின் ஆழத்துக்கு எந்த பாதிப்பும் இங்கு இல்லை. இதன் மராமத்து செலவும் மிகக் குறைவு. கப்பல் போக்குவரத்து மிக அதிகம். எனவே, வருமானம் அதிகம். சேது சமுத்திர கால்வாய் திட்டம், இதற்கு எதிர் மாறாக உள்ளது. சேது கால்வாய் திட்டம் என்பது, நடுக்கடலில் ஆழம் தோண்டி கால்வாய் அமைப்பது. இயற்கையை எதிர்த்து, நாம் போராட முடியாது. உலகில் உள்ள, அனைத்து கடல்சார் அமைப்புகளுக்கும், பாக் - ஜலசந்தி, மன்னார் வளைகுடாவைப் பற்றி நன்கு தெரியும். உலகிலேயே, மிக அதிகமான ஆழ்கடல் நீரோட்டம் உள்ளது இப்பகுதி. திசை மாறி மாறி வீசும் காற்றின் வேகமும், இந்தப் பகுதியில் தான் அதிகம்.


நாம் மணல் தோண்டிக் கொண்டே போனால், பின்னால், மணல் மேவிக் கொண்டே இருக்கும். இப்பகுதியில், கடலில், ஆறு மணிக்கு ஒரு முறை, நீர் மட்டம் ஏறும், இறங்கும். இந்த கால்வாயின் நீளம் அதிகமாக இருப்பதால், கடல் நீர் மட்டம் உயர்ந்துள்ள நேரத்திற்குள், கால்வாயை கடக்க முடியாது. காற்றின் வேகம், அதிகப்பட்டால் கப்பல் நேர் கோட்டில் செல்ல முடியாது. எவ்வளவு திறமை வாய்ந்த கேப்டன்களாக இருந்தாலும், தவறு நடந்து விடும். ஒரு கப்பல் சுற்றி வந்தால் நேரமும், எரிபொருளும் கூடுதல் ஆகும் என்பது சரி. 5,000 கோடி ரூபாய் மதிப்புள்ள சரக்கு கப்பலை, இம்மாதிரி பயணித்து விட்டு தரைதட்ட விடுவரா? சந்தேகத்தின் அடிப்படையில் உள்ள எந்த கால்வாயையும், கப்பல் கேப்டன்கள் புறக்கணித்து விடுவர். பின், நாம் கடையை திறந்து என்ன பிரயோஜனம்? கல்லா பெட்டி நிறைய வேண்டுமல்லவா?


முழு சுமையோடு வரும் கப்பல், தரையில் உட்கார்ந்து விட்டால், பின் இந்த கால்வாயின் பூகோளமே மாறிவிடும். இந்த கால்வாய் மராமத்துக்கு பின் ஆழம் தோண்டிக் கொண்டே இருக்க வேண்டும். குறைந்தது, ஆழம் தோண்டும், 10, "டிரெட்ஜர்' கப்பல்களை வாடகைக்கு எடுக்க வேண்டும். நாம் செலவு செய்யும் பணத்துக்கு, வட்டி கூட கட்ட முடியாது. பின் ஏது வருமானம்? இப்பிரச்னையை வைத்து, பலர், பாமர மக்களை திசை திருப்பி அரசியல் செய்கின்றனர். இதுவரை, மக்கள் வரிப்பணத்தை, கடலில் கொட்டியது போதும். மக்கள் அறிவாளி ஆகிவிட்டனர். இனி, மக்களை ஏமாற்ற முடியாது. உண்மையிலேயே, தமிழ் மண்ணுக்கு ஏதாவது செய்ய வேண்டும் என்று நினைத்தால், தென்னக நதிகளை இணைக்க பாடுபடட்டும். மக்களுக்கு, ஓரளவு ருசியான குடி தண்ணீராவது கிடைக்கும். 


http://www.dinamalar.com/splpart_detail.asp?id=67
English translation:

Dinamalar, 15 July 2013 (Tamil Daily)

What is the truth about Setusamudram Channel Project?

U. Murugaiah, Indian Navy Commander (Retd.) writes from Sivakasi. Based on my 35 years' experience working in the oceans, I wish to inform the public about the pros and cons of the Setusamudram Channel Project. Short distance Suez and Panama canals are canals dug in the land between two oceans; the canals have embankments on either side and are so designed as to prevent sandbanks entering the canals.

The canal bed is at a higher elevation than the sea-bed on either end of the canals and hence, during high waves during sea-sstorms or movements of sands from the ocean beds do not adversely affect the depth of the canals. Hence, the maintenance costs of the canals are very minimal. Navigation through the canals involves a large number of high-volume carrying ships and hence, the revenue earned by the canals is high. The Setusamudram Channel Project is an exact opposite of this situation.

Setusmudram Channel Project is a deepening of the mid-ocean to create a navigable channel and is an affront against natural forces. We cannot fight against nature. All organizations and institutions involved with coastal zones and oceans know about the Gulf of Mannar and the Persian Gulf. This Mannar region is situated in the ocean with very deep ocean depths and very heavy wind-currents alternating with clocjk-wise and anti-clockwise movements of wind-currents.

If we keep on dredging the deep-ocean sands, sandbanks will keep filling up the dredged areas. In this Gulf of Mannar ocean region, sea-depths (bathymetry) increase and decrease cyclically every six hours. Because the Setusamudram channel is long, navigation through the channel is NOT possible during the periods when the ocean waves reach great heights. When the wind currents intensify, the ships cannot navigate in a straight-line. However efficient a ship's captain, mistakes will occur. As the ship tosses about, time is lost and increased consumption of fuel will result in higher navigation costs. Will any captain allow a Rs. 5000 crore ship to be exposed to such navigational hazards including the possibility of getting stuck in sand-beds? Any captain will avoid navigation of a ship through such nautically hazardous channels. So, what is the benefit of opening the shop of such a Setusamudram channel? Should we not be ensuring income to the nation's exchequer through charges levied for navigation through a channel?

If a fully-laden ship gets grounded in a sand-bank, the entire geography of the channel will be changed. Continuous dredging of the channel will be required apart from regular maintenance of the depth of the channel and at the minimum, the channel has to be deepened as a continuing process. We may have to rent 10 dredger vessels. We cannot even service the interest payments for the capital costs we incur. Then, where is the income from the channel?

Many people are diverting attention from the real issues and politicising the channel issue.

Enough of this. Already a lot of tax-payers' money has been sunk in the ocean for this channel. People have become smart. They cannot be fooled anymore. If really someone wants to do something real for Tamil land, let the rivers of the nation be interlinked, at least some sweet drinking water will be available to the people.
http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/07/setusamudram-channel-what-is-truth-u.html
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