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Men are tourists, women are vagabonds

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WEB OF MISOGYNY: Driving women away January 12, 2014


Men are tourists, women are vagabonds



    Amanda Hess is a writer on sex and feminist issues for several websites and online magazines. Sometime last year, while on vacation, she received a phone call from her friend early one morning. Her friend told her that she was receiving threats on Twitter. 

    A startled Hess checked her Twitter feed. Someone called “headlessfemalepig” had been tweeting her. One read:“I see you are physically not very attractive. Figured.” Another said that she was extremely promiscuous, in unprintable language. Hess was used to this kind of behaviour, but the next tweet jolted even her. “I am 36 years old, I did 12 years for ‘manslaughter’, I killed a woman, like you, who decided to make fun of guys c****,” it read. This was followed by an even more explicit threat. “Happy to say we live in the same state. Im looking you up, and when I find you, im going to rape you and remove your head.” The 
final tweet promised more of the same. “You are going to die and I am the one who is going to kill you. I promise you this.” 

    Hess’ emotions went from disorientation, terror to finally anger. She dialled 911 and called the police. A couple of hours later a policeman ap
peared. He asked her a number of questions, and one of them was “What is Twitter?” 

    “The best answer I could come up with was, ‘It’s like an e-mail, but it’s public.’ What I didn’t articulate is that Twitter is the place where I laugh, whine, work, schmooze, procrastinate, and flirt. It sits in my back pocket 
wherever I go and lies next to me when I fall asleep. And since I first started writing in 2007, it’s become just one of the many online spaces where men come to tell me to get out,” writes Hess. 

    Hess’ experience is hardly unique. She lists a number of women journalists and commentators who face rape and death threats on a regular basis. She also talks about the physical, monetary and emotional toll these threats take on their targets. On the internet, she says, men are like tourists, able to go anywhere and write anything, while women are like vagabonds – not moving because they want to, but because they are forced to. “Abusers tend to operate anonymously, or under pseudonyms. But the women they target often write on professional platforms, under their given names, and in the context of their real lives. Victims don’t have the luxury of separating themselves from the crime,” she writes 

   
http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=TOINEW&BaseHref=TOICH/2014/01/12&PageLabel=15&EntityId=Ar01502&ViewMode=HTML

A matter of honour. Many aspirants to PM post. Welcome, add to the list.

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A matter of honour says Mulayam Singh Yadav.

That brings together an impressive tally of aspirants who want to become PM after Manmohan reportedly resigns in a few days in response to a likely SC obiter dicta on Coalgate.

The list:

Narendra Modi
Rahul Gandhi
Sharad Pawar
Arvind Kejriwal
Kumar Vishwas
Mulayam Singh Yadav
J. Jayalalithaa

...
I am politically naive. Name of Sharad Pawar may be only as interim PM before the polls announcing the disbanding of SoniaG Congress.

I am sure more names will be added to the list by poll pundits and columnists who crystal-gaze -- pontificating with their advice and guidance on governing a state.

I exclude the candidates preferred by Uncle Sam, the likes of Nilekani or Ahluwalia or even Raghuram Rajan as list of caretakers of US interests everywhere, certainly India. Any insights from Ford Foundation? 

What will Pranab Babu's take be on all this?

Kalyanaraman

Manmohan Singh's last tango -- Ram Jethmalani. MMS is a sardar,he won't resign, Ram ji. Sharad Pawar may have to wait.

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RAM JETHMALANI
ETHICS & POWER
Ram Jethmalani is a senior politician and eminent lawyer.
Manmohan Singh’s last tango
 SATURDAY | JANUARY 11, 2014
Prashant Bhushan has informed me categorically that Rahul is preferred as PM over Narendra Modi. To my direct question whether this is the view of the new Aam Admi Party, he avoided a clear answer.
Dr Manmohan Singh
omething happened last week which has made me break my ongoing series about the effort and failure of the evolution of a composite socio-religious culture during the Mughal rule. I will revert to it next week.
At this point I must digress into the happenings of Black Friday, 3 January 2014. I had expected that Sardar Manmohan Singh would salvage some self respect by a prompt resignation after the Delhi debacle of managing a paltry eight Assembly seats out of 70 in the Assembly. The city state of Delhi is not an autonomous entity like other states. Several critical administrative areas, most notably, the police, and consequently citizens' safety, and urban land are completely controlled by the Central government. The Delhi debacle was not the defeat of Sheila Dikshit alone. It was also the defeat of the national government of India.
The Aam Admi Party symbolised a new formation fighting a great war against corruption. Whose corruption were they fighting? It would be perfectly reasonable to assume that it was primarily the corruption of the UPA government whose meticulously calibrated monumental scams of the last decade continue to tumble out of the closet even today, in Q4, the last quarter of their regime, with the entire Cabinet being exposed as a bunch of bandits and embezzlers in the eyes of the voters of India. Even so, the "honest" Prime Minister, himself at the centre of one of the largest scams of India, and at the periphery of another (leave aside the pettier ones, dealing with only thousands and not lakhs of crores), made it more than clear that he had no intention of leaving his seat before he had earned the dubious honour of enjoying two full terms as Prime Minister of India.
I believe the Prime Minister did his last tango, and bargained for a "deal" to complete his term. A deal is a "contract" in the language of the law. A contract is not valid without a consideration, and in this case it included a promise to do something exceptional for Rahul Gandhi, in return for the latter postponing his own coronation on the sinking throne. Deep down, Rahul knows that he cannot defeat Narendra Modi and would prefer that the crown is not foisted on his reluctant head. He deliberately asked for a consideration which he thought Manmohan Singh would not pay, namely, asking him to repeat Sonia Gandhi's statement that "Modi is a murderer". Much to Rahul's disappointment, Manmohan Singh had no compunction in uttering this fiction camouflaged though in what he considered less savage language.
But this fiction is not going to wash with the sensible voters of India. I am aware of the heavy pressure tactics being used on disgruntled bureaucrats and on judicial and executive agencies to involve Modi in some false murder case. These will all surely be exposed one day with appropriate retribution: "Though the mills of God grind slowly; Yet they grind exceeding small."
It is my personal appeal to the Muslims of India not to get misled and deceived by this hate propaganda against Modi. Remember the deception and false promises made by the Congress to the Muslims of India, both before and after Independence. Once again, they are trying to make pawns out of you and trying their best through their dubious spokespersons to involve you in furthering this criminal conspiracy of rulers now in rapid retreat. I earnestly appeal to you to accept the advice of responsible and good Muslims and Hindus who believe in the progress of our people and country, and have stood by you at all times.
Meanwhile, before your infamous exit from office, will you, Dr Manmohan Singh answer a few questions? Remember that in the government of the sovereign people of India, just as in regular judicial tribunals, precious time is never wasted on testimony, unless the person furnishing it is prepared to face and survive cross examination. On behalf of the people of India and certainly in exercise of my right as a citizen of this great Republic, I ask you the following simple questions:
1. Did you make this monstrous charge against Modi, who has become the only hope for millions in this country, on some credible evidence in your possession, or because you were induced to make it by Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi their associates?
2. Do you have the courage to present your evidence to the judicial tribunals of the country or even lodge or cause to be lodged your information with any responsible investigating agency?
3. Has any court or agency taken cognizance of it?
4. Are you willing to present your evidence in a sworn affidavit and distribute its copies to all the voters of India? I am prepared to bear the cost for this, if you wish.
5. Have you consulted the Attorney General or any law office and taken their advice?
6. Are you aware that the specially constituted SIT and the courts have already rejected these ignoble efforts to subvert the judicial process and get Modi indicted somehow?
7. Nitin Gadkari, former BJP president, has publicly alleged that he has personal knowledge of a secret understanding between your Congress Party and the Aam Admi Party of a pre-election deal, kept secret from the nation, that a coalition government between the two shall come into existence only after the election, the intervening secrecy being necessary to prevent the electorate from discerning that both your parties are in reality comrades in a murky and immoral conspiracy to defeat Modi. Unlike Gadkari, I do not even suggest that I am a witness to such a conspiracy. But being a criminal lawyer of some experience, I deduce the existence of criminal conspiracies from circumstantial evidence, which is a far superior foundation for the discovery of truth than oral testimony of human witnesses.
Here is that circumstantial evidence and I demand that you make a credible refutation of.
Circumstance No. 1: Prashant Bhushan, an old friend, whose veracity and sincerity I hold in high esteem, has informed me categorically that Rahul is preferred as Prime Minister over Modi.
Circumstance No. 2: To my direct question whether this is the view of the new Aam Admi Party, he avoided a clear answer.
Circumstance No. 3: In spite of my being an expelled member of the BJP (which I have challenged in court), I wrote a letter on 21.10.2013 to Arvind Kejriwal informing him that a founder member of AAP had made this astounding statement to me, and requesting him to let me know whether this was the settled political decision of the Party.
Circumstance No. 4: Kejriwal neither replied to me nor issued any clarification to the voters. After a reminder from me, he deputed two of his trusted party men to call on me, and convince me that this was not the party view or decision, that after the Delhi elections they would discuss with me how not to divide the anti corruption vote, and lastly that a coalition with Congress was impossible under any circumstances.
Circumstance No. 5: This was a device to prevent me from suspecting the diabolic scheme and gigantic deception of the people, and of me too.
Circumstance No. 6: After the AAP decides to have a coalition with the very party whose corruption they pretended to target, the dynasty managed to get an anti-Modi criminal libel from you. (Kejriwal has certainly contributed a most original and innovative paradigm to political science, how to wage a war against corruption while in league with the corrupt.)
Circumstance No. 7: You would be aware that my colleagues and I have moved the Hon'ble Supreme Court to hold you in contempt for not disclosing, publicly or privately, the names of the dacoits who have secret bank accounts in off-shore tax havens, in defiance of the orders of the Supreme Court of India. Have you in your conspiracy with the AAP stopped them from demanding disclosure regarding this gargantuan economic crime against the nation, or will you now comply voluntarily?
So I must state that what Gadkari claims to know was known to me too, but through a somewhat different route.

http://www.sunday-guardian.com/analysis/manmohan-singhs-last-tango

The Admiral Ramdas team on a global mission with a focus on India

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 Kavita Ramdas is married to a Pakistani Zulfikar Ahmed : https://www.mtholyoke.edu/offices/comm/vista/spring04/ramdas.shtml

SPRING 2004 • VOLUME 9, NUMBER 1

Kavita Ramdas '85 Helps Girls
and Women Build New Lives
by Investing in Their Dreams
When Kavita N. Ramdas '85, president and CEO of the Global Fund for Women, says that standing with women who are making peace, challenging injustice, and creating change is the organization's everyday work, she means it literally. During her eight-year tenure, Ramdas has supported South African domestic workers in their fight for minimum wage and unemployment rights, empowered teenage girls in Uganda to denounce the brutal rite of female genital mutilation, and helped inspire more than 3,000 women to run for political office in Cambodia. In 2003, the Mount Holyoke trustee visited groups of women and girls in Ghana, India, Pakistan, Turkey, and Afghanistan. This year she will meet with women from Sierra Leone, Ukraine, Cambodia, and Iran.
The San Francisco-based Global Fund (www.globalfundforwomen.org), founded in 1987, is the largest grant-making foundation in the world focusing exclusively on women's rights outside the United States. To date, it has awarded over $31 million to more than 2,200 groups in 160 countries, groups working to protect women from violence, increase girls' access to education, and improve economic opportunities.
Born in India, Ramdas was drawn to social work as a teenager and dropped out of college to volunteer at a small farm in the Indian state of Bihar. Thinking it was the best way she could help the poor, she worked, separating wheat from chaff, until an elderly farmer offered her some life-changing advice. "He told me to go use my education and compassion to make a bigger difference. He urged me to tell the world about his community's struggles," she recalled. "I suddenly understood that the advantages I'd been given could be used to help others on a much larger scale."
Soon after, Ramdas had a serendipitous meeting with Mary Jacob, Mount Holyoke's former dean of international students, who was traveling in India. She remembered being inspired by Jacob, "who made MHC feel accessible and welcoming." Only after she was accepted did Ramdas learn that her mother, a peace activist, had applied to Mount Holyoke many years earlier. "My mom did not go, because her folks would not let her live so far away," Ramdas said. "I was very grateful that my parents had always expected us to excel and be independent. My parents have three daughters, and despite gender biases in India, our minds and ambitions always mattered to them. Attending Mount Holyoke was a natural extension of my upbringing."
As a woman who spends her days demonstrating that investing in women is a strategy that works, Ramdas has the highest regard for Mount Holyoke's mission. She remains grateful for the scholarship that made it possible for her to enroll at the College. And it was the realization that alumnae and other individuals were contributing so that she could have choices and opportunities that sparked her interest in philanthropy.
After graduating with a bachelor's degree in political science and international relations, Ramdas earned a master's degree in international development and public policy from Princeton University. She then spent eight years working as a program officer for the MacArthur Foundation in Chicago. Along the way, she married Zulfiqar Ahmad, a longtime peace activist and Hampshire College graduate who works as a South Asia program officer for the University of California at Berkeley's Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainable Development. The couple has a ten-year-old daughter, Mira.
Ramdas met Ahmad at a campus dance three weeks after her arrival at Mount Holyoke. Their unlikely relationship--Ramdas is a Hindu and the granddaughter and daughter of India's highest-ranking naval officers, while Ahmad is a Muslim from Pakistan--reflects Ramdas's commitment to bridging cultures and respecting individual choices.
At the Global Fund, that translates to never assuming what poor and disadvantaged women need. As an example, Ramdas points out that what girls in a war-torn African nation might really need is a van to transport them safely to and from school without the threat of rape. Ramdas's organization allows women and girls to speak for themselves, and accepts grant applications in any language or format. Some requests, she said, have arrived on scraps of paper after traveling for months by post. Any project promoting women's equality and human rights will be considered. Global Fund grants range from $500 to $15,000.
Ramdas is inspired by the grant recipients, girls and women who--despite being deprived of the most basic human rights and sometimes living in situations where they risk their lives daily--still dare to imagine a new world for themselves. "These women give me a huge amount of hope," Ramdas said.
As for believing in her own potential to create change, Ramdas said that that conviction became firmly rooted during her time at Mount Holyoke.

"MHC was life changing in far-reaching ways. It gave me confidence in myself at a time when I was unsure and searching for direction. It opened a whole world of strong women achievers to me, from math professors to crew members who were my dorm mates. It let me choose a wide variety of courses and to revel in learning. And it made me a more open and tolerant person as I made friends with Latina and African American women, out lesbians, and women from countries I had been taught were enemy nations," Ramdas said. "Meeting my husband at Mount Holyoke was wonderful, but it could have happened anywhere. The rest, however, was not accidental--it was a part of what makes MHC so special."

India, Nepal and Sri Lanka

Kavita N. Ramdas

RepresentativeNEW DELHI
Kavita N. Ramdas serves as the representative for the foundation's office in India, Nepal and Sri Lanka, where she oversees all of our grant making in the region. The regional work focuses on issues of equity, inclusion, economic fairness, freedom of expression, human rights, sexuality and reproductive health and rights, transparency and accountable governance, and sustainable development. Kavita also works to leverage relationships with government, civil society and the private sector to advance social justice.
Before joining the foundation in 2012, Kavita served as the founder and first executive director of the Program on Social Entrepreneurship (PSE)—housed at the Centre for Democracy, Development and Rule of Law at Stanford University's Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. PSE brings global leaders in social innovation to share their expertise as practitioners with the academic community.
From 1996 to 2010, Kavita served as president and CEO of the Global Fund for Women, which grew under her leadership to become the world's largest public foundation for women's rights. During her tenure, the fund's assets increased from $3 million to $21 million—giving women in more than 170 countries access to financial capital that fueled innovation and change.
In addition, Kavita has broadly promoted women's human rights, social justice philanthropy and international development through her membership and professional affiliations on the boards and advisory councils of a diverse array of organizations. She currently chairs the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council for India and serves as a board member at the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.
Kavita has a master's degree in public affairs with a focus on international development from Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. She holds a bachelor's degree in politics and international relations from Mount Holyoke and academic training from Delhi University. She is fluent in Hindi/Urdu, English and German and is conversant in Tamil, Spanish and French.
Kavita Ramdas is the head of India-Nepal-Sri Lanka units of  Ford Foundation....http://www.fordfoundation.org/regions/india-nepal-sri-lanka/team 

Admiral Ramdas heads Transparency International of India. His wife Lila Ramdas looks after Green Peace and comes to AAP meetings to bless all.

Sunanda Tharoor throws hissy fit in Dubai -- Muaz Shabandri, Khaleej Times

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Khaleej Times Report today - Drunken Sunanda Tharoor says - she has thrown liquor at Arnab Goswami :

Sunanda Tharoor throws hissy fit in Dubai

Muaz Shabandri / 12 January 2014

Indian minister Shashi Tharoor's wife says she hates the media and threatens to throw drink on KT journalist. 
Shashi Tharoor and Sunanda at the private party in Dubai. — KT photo by Mohammed Mustafa Khan
It was at a private dinner party late on Thursday  night in Dubai, that Sunanda Tharoor, wife of Indian Minister of State for Human Resources Dr Shashi Tharoor, put up a show most unbecoming.
This journalist was having an affable chat with Tharoor — on the dynamics of the impending Indian general elections later this year — when the missus suddenly barged onto the scene and launched into a rant. “You really need to stop this!” she said (referring to the media interaction her husband was having).
The normally unflappable minister seemed lost for words, the outburst from Sunanda — heard by all within earshot — catching him clearly by surprise. The embarrassed minister, his charm rapidly fading, slipped into the shadows. Not only was an apology not forthcoming, the spectacle took a turn for the worse.
Sunanda started heaping more indignity. “This is why I hate the media,” she screamed at this reporter. “I have thrown liquor at Arnab Goswami (a leading Indian television anchor). You think I can’t do that to you?”
Ego, pride and a screaming sense of elitism was evident that night.
Sunanda is not far removed from such boorish behaviour. Last year, she slapped a political worker on a trip to her husband’s home state Kerala.
The public relations firm which had organised the interview was apologetic and admitted Sunanda had stepped out of line, while thanking this reporter for not responding to her insults and verbal assault.
We have dutifully recorded the interview and the angry turn of events.
Earlier that evening, Shashi Tharoor was his usual charming self. He was dressed nattily in a traditional white Kerala mundu and a silk kurta; a silk angavastram (stole) draped across his shoulders completed the sartorially splendid picture. He and Sunanda, who looked glamorous in a beige sari, posed with the assembled glitterati.
After the cameras had done their job and captured the couple who looked so in love, the minister agreed to an interview. By then, the din at the party reached a crescendo with blaring music. Food was in plenty and the conversation was flowing.
Tharoor was patient, smiled and was happy to wade into the thick of questions of national importance.
His party — the Indian National Congress — may be on a sticky wicket in India with the resurgence of the Bharatiya Janata Party and the rise of the Aam Aadmi Party, but Tharoor chose not to fend off tough questions.
“I think the BJP was allowing itself to become perhaps too confident of the elections, given some of the inevitable anti-incumbency that seeps in the Indian electorate, whether state or national, after 10 years of the same party in power.” It was while he was adding, “I think the Aam Aadmi’s party’s revival ...’’ that Sunanda put in her appearance and put an abrupt end to the interview.
Last heard, the minister was back in India, at a function with the Kerala chief minister. All attempts to reach him through the PR agency had borne no fruit at the time of going to print. — muaz@khaleejtimes.com

Devyani goof-up: Sangeeta's in-laws had worked with expelled US diplomat

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Devyani case: Sangeeta's in-laws
had worked with expelled US diplomat
The Times of India, January 12, 2014

The parents-in-law of Sangeeta Richard, the domestic help at the centre of the India-US diplomatic spat, worked with US diplomat Wayne May who was expelled by India for his role in the Devyani Khobragade episode. This seems to be the main reason why May is said to have gone out of his way to facilitate the "evacuation'' of Sangeeta's husband Philip and children by arranging T-visas (trafficking) for them.

Many have wondered as to why US authorities approved surreptitious evacuation of Sangeeta's family even at the cost of antagonizing a strategic partner. India had said May was responsible for the unilateral action by the State Department in evacuating the family and the subsequent arrest of Khobragade. May left India on Saturday.

May worked as the chief of the embassy's security service representing the US Bureau of Diplomatic Security. He was also looking after issues related to trafficking. The diplomatic security service was responsible for the arrest and handcuffing of Khobragade before she was handed over to US marshals. There is suspicion that the counselor, who has put in more than 27 years of service, may have used his influence with the diplomatic security in New York to ensure that Khobragade was subjected to the ``standard operating procedure'' after she was picked up from outside her children's schools.

May's conduct is said to be primarily the reason for the government's assessment that the US embassy had acted in "bad faith''. The action by May disregarded prior legal processes in India, including a case of cheating against Sangeeta's husband and a non-bailable warrant against Sangeeta, which insisted that the dispute between Khobragade and Sangeeta had to be contested in an Indian court. Sources here though said the government is not looking at the alleged role of May's wife in procuring air tickets for the Sangeeta's family.

External affairs minister Salman Khurshid on Saturday blamed the US for what he described as a 'mini- crisis'' saying that the incident could have been avoided if the US had warned foreign secretary Sujatha Singh and other senior Indian officials who were in the US just before Khobragade's arrest on December 12. In a television interview, he said India's "immediate”  concerns had been addressed.

Later talking to reporters, he said there was "no stand-off'' between India and the US. "There is no reason now to feel any immediate concern about any outcome that might be adverse or particularly disturbing in nature," he said. Khurshid and Singh met Khobragade at South Block on Saturday. She told journalists that the government and her lawyer would speak on her behalf.

Speaking to Devil's Advocate on CNN-IBN, Khurshid also said there was going to be no rethink on withdrawal of privileges to the US embassy staff "at least for now''. India has said the decision to withdraw diplomatic privileges and pull out barricades from outside the embassy was reciprocal, and not retaliatory, measure.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Devyani-case-Sangeetas-in-laws-had-worked-with-expelled-US-diplomat/articleshow/28694831.cms

Vedic workshop of Kozhikode. I wish it was not held in Bharatam.

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Narayanan Komerath and I tried to warn the organiser of the Vedic workshop in Kozhikode (Fwds of mails appended). 

Apparently, our warnings were of no avail.

The workshop seems to have ended with a presentation on "Vedic and Asian Mythology" by Wales Prof. of Sanskrit & Director of Graduate Studies, Dept. of South Asian Studies, Harvard University, USA.  http://ivw2014.org/images/IVW-Program-Format.pdf

What we sow, so we reap. I wonder what the workshop has achieved in promoting an understanding of Vedic heritage among the people of India, the sacred land of the Veda .

Namaskaram.

Kalyanaraman

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: S. Kalyanaraman <kalyan97@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 6:49 AM
Subject: Re: On the Occasion of Your Workshop
To: Narayanan Komerath <narayanan.komerath@gmail.com>
Cc: vinodpolpaya@gmail.com

Dear Prof. Komerath,

Namaskaram.

I am deeply grateful to you for expressing the sentiments of many of us students of Hindu traditions.

I wrote to Dr. Vinod Bhattathiripad (see appended fwd) and I haven't received any reply from him.

It pains me that in this sacred land we should allow anti-hindu haters to sell their academic wares in the guise of promoting vedic studies.

Are we really paying a tribute, repaying the ऋणम् we our pitr-s for giving us the heritage of dharma and satyam?

Sorry, I can't write any further. The agony is too deep for tears.

Dhanyosmi, for the impassioned letter you have written to Dr. Vinod. If you permit me, I will post both your letter and my letter in a blogpost and bring them to the attention of a wider audience. If Dr. Vinod has a response, I will post that also on the blogpost.

Respectfully yours, 

Kalyanaraman

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: kalyan <kalyan97@yahoo.com>
To: "vinodpolpaya@gmail.com"<vinodpolpaya@gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2013 4:44 PM
Subject: Please ask the organizers to find another venue outside India


Dear Dr. Dr. P. Vinod Bhattathiripad,

Namaskaram. 

Please see this blogpost which brings out clearly the anti-Hindu hatred of the foreign coordinator for the Conference. Please advise them to find another outside India if they want to denigrate the Vedic tradition with false analyses hiding under an academic burqa.

Namakaram. 
S. Kalyanaraman, Ph.D
Sarasvati Research Centre



On Thu, Jan 2, 2014 at 6:32 AM, Narayanan Komerath <narayanan.komerath@gmail.com> wrote:
Namaskaram, Dr. Bhattathiripad.
I came to know of your Vedic Workshop yesterday.

http://www.ivw2014.org/Contacts.html

I heard it from a person who is an authority both on technology and on the Vedas, having studied them since he was a little boy, from some of the best authorities. With his scientific and technical credentials, and his lifelong dedication, his understanding of the Vedas in my view surpasses that of anyone else whom I have met. He is also a teacher of mine over the past four decades, from the time when I was privileged to study under him in a truly world-leading institution. However, he has no other role in what I discuss below.
It was good to see a Workshop on our ancient sources of wisdom, being conducted in the land where the rituals of the Vedic times have been conducted without a break for many millennia.
I see that this is the Sixth Workshop of this kind - and that the last five were conducted at Harvard University. Perhaps there is a reason that Harvard chose not to host this, but that is just a wild guess on my part. Anyway, I am sure the name of Harvard University brought great pride to local organizers, and unquestioning acceptance, understandably so, based on the reputation of many of the colleges at that great University. I do not know if the Department of Sanskrit, or of Linguistics, is one of those. 

When I saw the list of organizers, memories of events from the USA came flooding back. In particular, of what became known as the California Donkey Trials. These were two court cases which ended with major settlements having to be paid by the California State Board of Education (i.e., the taxpayers of California) to Hindu/ Indian-American parents and children who suffered from the atrocities allegedly committed by the Board in gross violation of their own guidelines if not the law, under the (mis)guidance, and alleged deep malice, of  certain entities associated with major universities. As I recall, one case was filed by the Hindu American Foundation, an entity organized by professionals in the USA, in the State Court of California. The other was filed by a group of young parents who were trying to get a fair education for their children. This was in the United States Federal court, alleging gross violation of Civil Rights.

In both cases, the rich and powerful legal entities representing the State of California, after 1 year in one case and 3 years in the other of foot-dragging and desperate attempts to avoid the issues, chose to settle at the last minute, seeing the writing on the wall from what the Justices had already pronounced. In each case, the cost to the taxpayers ran into the millions of dollars, yet it did not come anywhere close to properly atoning for the gross injustice perpetrated against the children of California. Predictably, the entities responsible for misguiding the Board declared "victory", just as Ayub Khan, Yahya Khan and Pervez Musharraf declared victories in 1965, 1971 and 1999.

This article is quiet on the precise contents of the settlement statements, the depositions of the entities who had to come clean on their actions, or the statements of the justices which convinced the Board to settle before the cases came to trial. However I have seen some of those, and since I have no special access, so can you, I am sure, if you are so interested. 

These cases, and the extreme demonstration of arrogance which preceded and led to them, no doubt earned well-deserved "fame" for some of the entities, just as the nation led by Ayub and Yahya and Pervez has achieved today. I suspect that it would have been exceedingly difficult to find entities in the USA who would want or agree to organize a Workshop with such names on them, in 2014.

However, I note that they have succeeded in finding people who are either unaware of these events, or are aware and unaffected.
In either event, my best wishes to you for a Workshop which tries to find Truth, though I wish I could be more  optimistic about that outcome.
My own role in this controversy was quite limited. For one thing I do not live in California or Massachusetts. But I was profoundly disturbed as a decent human being, and  as a teacher and researcher by profession,  by what I saw being done in the name of a great university, under the claim of "scholarship". This compelled me to write and post the article that I have linked below. This was back in 2006 when citizen outrage was just starting.

I am writing this email now to assuage my own conscience: that I tried my best to inform the organizers of this Workshop of what they were supporting, and make them aware while there was still time, to guide it, and the resulting reputation of their own esteemed organizations, as they see fit. I am sorry that this comes at the last minute: I was made aware of the Workshop, and had a chance to browse its antecedents, only yesterday afternoon.

If the Board in California had opened their minds for a moment and put their arrogance on hold for a moment in 2006, long enough to read, listen and think, they could at least have saved themselves the utter disgrace, if not the great expense, that they imposed on the taxpayers of California. The settlements paid directly to the HAF and CAPEEM, while substantial, were small compared to the huge expenses incurred by the Board and the employers of those who allegedly (and very obviously) misguided the Board. No doubt there were internal repercussions.  The Board members who participated in these events have long-since been removed from the Board, I believe.

Perhaps you might also choose to read in time, one can only hope. In any event, here is my humble contribution, it is of course nowhere near the deep standards of scholarship that are no doubt prerequisite for the deliberations at your Workshop.

Satyam Eva Jayate.

http://narayanankomerath.wordpress.com/2013/04/05/scholarship-of-equine-posteriors-harvardappa-style-november-2006/
Of course, my article was just a ripple compared to what became eventually a tsunami of citizen outrage. I am sure you can find deeply academic treatises on the various issues, written about these events by others who are far more qualified than I am to write on the Vedas. All it will take is a few minutes on Google Search, which is a standard part of the due diligence that precedes all research and scholarship.

They however, share, and in most cases exceed, the outrage and dismay that I felt when I saw the arrogance of these entities, and the damage that they had been doing, and continue to try to do, to our children.
That, unfortunately, may be what this Workshop too will remind all those people - more support to undermine our children's education, this time coming from deep within the land where the knowledge of the Vedas have been preserved throughout the millennia. But I have already said enough. My deep apologies for the disturbance that I may have caused. 

Respectfully submitted

narayanan

Baby & bathwater debate over interns -- R.Balaji. One intern has already harmed a Justice without even lodging a complaint.

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Monday , January 13 , 2014 |

Baby & bathwater debate over interns

New Delhi, Jan. 12: The second instance of allegations by a law intern against a judge has prompted calls to scrap the training system, drawing a sharp response from academics.

“I don’t know whether the allegations against the judges are true or if they are victims of any conspiracy by vested interests to frame them. But it is high time that the practice of having interns is scrapped,” said lawyer and civil liberties activist Sanjay Parekh.

Under the system in vogue since 2006, interns — final-year law students — are engaged to help judges of the Supreme Court and high courts for six months for a stipend. The job involves researching earlier verdicts and helping judges draft official communication. The stipend, usually ranging between Rs 10,000 and Rs 15,000, is paid by the respective court administration.

Parekh said the intern system could compromise the confidentiality related to judgments and orders. “After completing their law course, many interns will be employed by corporate firms and houses. So how can you give important research work to such persons? They are also not court employees, they are on contract,” the lawyer said.

After the allegation against former judge Asok Kumar Ganguly became public, some lawyers had questioned the need for continuing with the practice of engaging interns. That view has gained ground now with another intern levelling allegations against a judge who was in service when the alleged incident took place. Both Ganguly and the other former judge have denied the allegations.

Senior counsel Pundit Parmanand Katara echoed the view that the intern system should be done away with.

“Earlier, there was no such practice (of hiring interns), but now it has become a fashion. If students want to learn something, they should start from scratch. Let them first go tomunsif courts and trial courts. They should learn the rudiments there. Why should they come to the Supreme Court or high courts directly?” Katara said.

Till the 1980s, Katara added, only advocates with a minimum experience of seven years appeared in the country’s highest court. “But today, we have students fresh from college directly appearing in the Supreme Court. There is no written code that there should be a minimum experience for appearing in higher courts, but there has to be some basic norms to restrict rookies….”

Others have ridiculed such suggestions.

Ruchira Goswami, an assistant professor at the National University of Juridical Sciences (NUJS) in Calcutta, said: “Why are points like ‘law interns starting from scratch’ or ‘threat to important documents getting leaked’ being raised now? Allowing interns to work with judges of the apex court is a global practice. Scrapping this in view of recent complaints would be like throwing the baby out with the bathwater,” she said.

The interns who levelled the allegations against the two former judges are NUJS alumni.

Goswami said the intern system was started so that students could get to work with judicial officials of the highest calibre. “Besides, how can you say that trial courts or lower courts don’t deal with important research documents?”

Subhrangshu Shekhar Chatterji, the dean of law at Calcutta University, echoed Goswami. “Over the past six years, 25 CU students have interned with Supreme Court judges every year. It helps them get hands-on experience, which is crucial for a career in the field. If that practice is scrapped in the wake of one or two stray incidents, it would be unfortunate,” said Chatterji.

Pravin H. Parekh, the president of the Supreme Court Bar Association, said it would be “unfair to disband internship” and that the interns provide “wonderful research material to judges”.

On the allegations, the senior lawyer said: “One does not know whether they are true or not. But if you see that complaints have been filed after two years, the delay has to be explained by the victims.”

A senior judge said all victims must approach police. Delhi police are awaiting a statement from the intern who complained against Ganguly. 

“According to existing rules, the Supreme Court has no power to act against retired judges. The victim always has the remedy of approaching the police. The law will take its own course,” the senior judge said.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1140113/jsp/frontpage/story_17782235.jsp#.UtM3ytKSwng

SG changes opinion: Money laundering Act applies to Kanimozhi

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SG changes opinion: Money laundering Act applies to Kanimozhi

Written by Amitav Ranjan | New Delhi | January 13, 2014 04:05
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Under Section 4 of the amended PMLA, a conviction can lead to seven-year imprisonment, and attachment of properties identified as “proceeds of crime”. PTI Under Section 4 of the amended PMLA, a conviction can lead to seven-year imprisonment, and attachment of properties identified as “proceeds of crime”.
PTI

Summary

The money laundering charges could put Kanimozhi back behind bars.

In what could spell fresh trouble for DMK MP Kanimozhi, Solicitor General Mohan Parasaran has reversed his earlier opinion and said that the Enforcement Directorate can file a chargesheet against her and others in the 2G spectrum case on money laundering charges.
Asked to review his opinion of July 2013, the Solicitor General told the Law Ministry last month that the Prevention of Money Laundering Act could be applied on the transfer of Rs 200 crore to the DMK family-run Kalaignar TV.

The Rs 200-crore transfer from DB Realty group (which was awarded 2G spectrum) to Kalaignar TV, in which Kanimozhi was a 20 per cent stakeholder, forms the crux of the CBI and ED’s case against the DMK leader. The money laundering charges could put Kanimozhi, who spent six months in jail in 2011 after being charged by the CBI in the 2G scam, back behind bars.

Under Section 4 of the amended PMLA, a conviction can lead to seven-year imprisonment, and attachment of properties identified as “proceeds of crime”.

Kanimozhi’s advocate Joseph Aristotle said it was “too premature” to comment on the development. “Once it is out in the court, I would be able to comment,” he said.

The ED, through the Revenue Department, had asked for a review of the legal opinion from the Law Ministry on filing of the PMLA charges in September 2013.

On December 18, the Solicitor General wrote: “I find considerable force in the view of the Revenue Department and also taking into account the views of Attorney General as well as High Court judgments. While recalling my earlier opinion, I would like to state that in the facts and circumstances of the present case, the ED will be at liberty to await the launch of prosecution or launch prosecution.”

Parasaran also advised the Revenue Department to move quickly. “If the department defers launching prosecution for a considerable length of time, then the persons accused, by virtue of the change in the position of law subsequent to the amendments, may also challenge belated launch of prosecution and take advantage of delay and seek to challenge the very order of attachment (of property).”

The accused had challenged the application of the PMLA to the money transfers saying that 2G licences were allotted on January 10, 2008, much before the PMLA was amended on June 1, 2009, that made criminal conspiracy a ‘scheduled offence’ under the IPC.

In his previous opinion, on July 27, 2013, Parasaran had taken the same position, saying since the “offences under Section 13 of the Prevention of Corruption Act and Sections 120B, 420, 471 of the IPC were not scheduled offences under the PMLA” at the time, “prosecution for the offence of money laundering under Section 3 of the Act would be barred by Article 20 of the Constitution”.

Article 20 says that no person shall be convicted of any offence except for violation of the law in force at the time of the commission of the act charged as an offence.

Parasaran’s view had run contrary to the Attorney General’s opinion, of June 14, 2013, that the PMLA would apply from the date on which the proceeds from a crime were projected as being untainted or, simply put, being laundered. Money was transferred to Kalaignar TV between December 23, 2008, and February 28, 2011 — after the amendment of the PMLA.

In his opinion last month that showed a reversal of stand, Parasaran also wrote: “The AG being the principal law officer for the government, his views customarily have to be given the highest weight and regard, and this is not a matter where any doubt has been cast on the earlier opinion given by the AG, which was accepted by the Law Ministry.”

http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/sg-changes-opinion-money-laundering-act-applies-to-kanimozhi/

2004-2014, India's lost decade -- Anil Padmanabhan. Price paid by India for chamchagiri.

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2004 to 2014—India’s lost decade

Anil Padmanabhan on why the period between 2004 and 2014, presided over by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, is India’s lost decade
FRI, JAN 10 2014. 12 49 AM

The UPA will be judged—by history as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh claimed—for not what it did, but for what it didn’t do. Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty Images
Last week, addressing his third press conference in 10 years, prime minister Manmohan Singh, responding to a provocative question on the legacy of corruption that has dogged the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA), said: “As far as the charges of corruption are concerned, most of these charges relate to the period of UPA-1 (his government’s first stint in power between 2004 and 2009). Coal block allocation as well as 2G spectrum allocation were both in the era of the UPA-1. We went to the electorate (in 2009) on the basis of our performance in that period, and the people of India gave us the mandate to govern for another five years.”
It was evident where he was heading and he didn’t disappoint.
“So, whether these issues, which have been raised from time to time by the media, sometimes by the CAG (Comptroller and Auditor General), sometimes by court, one must never forget that they belong to a period which was not the period of the UPA-2, but the period relating to the previous five years, and the people of India entrusted us with new responsibilities. So the people of India do not seem to have paid heed to all these charges of corruption which are levied against me or my party.”
Singh’s statement smacked of denial. And the cynicism underlying it left most people stunned. One expected a defensive response (of the indefensible) to the question, given his government’s abysmal record, not a piece of sophistry. Here was a regime that had been ushered into power, not once but twice (and with such hope and expectations the second time), and which boasted, at least on paper, some of the finest public administrators of our times.
Not only did it not deliver on the potential, but it also let the economy slip—the UPA inherited an economy that was growing at 7% in 2004-05, and it will bequeath to the next government, a growth rate that is likely to drop below 5%.
The period between 2004 and 2014 is truly India’s lost decade.
The UPA will be judged—by history as the PM claimed—for not what it did, but for what it didn’t do. I have previously written that (http://www.livemint.com/legacy) no Prime Minister in the history of modern India had the credentials of Singh. As a politician, he had the best exposure as leader of the opposition in the Rajya Sabha and, in the 1990s, as finance minister. As a policy wonk, there is not one important post in government that Singh missed out on—he was chairman of the University Grants Commission, adviser to the prime minister, Reserve Bank of India governor, deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, and chief economic adviser.
Yet, this is the man who has presided over a decade of lost opportunities.
I am sure the government or, at the least, the Prime Minister’s handlers, will contest this.
Yes, materially we are better off as a country. As the trading up series that Mint published (http://www.livemint.com/trading-up) revealed the people of this country are far better off than they were at the turn of the Millennium. People who were walking are now cycling, those using two wheelers have graduated to four wheelers. Similarly, those drawing water from a pond, now draw from a well, while those drawing water from one community tap now get piped water at their homes. Together with the entitlement regime that the UPA propagated—guaranteeing rural jobs, education, information and, most recently, food security—this has ensured that the level of poverty dropped to a historic low of 22%.
However, this material progress stops here. Entitlements do not and cannot satisfy aspirations.
Unfortunately, this approach came at a time when the country’s demography underwent a structural change with 65% of its 1.2 billion people being less than 35 years old.
The best way to meet aspirations and guarantee growth (both personal and national) would have been to train people and later provide them with jobs. The UPA dropped the ball on this. Its efforts to overhaul education through legislation got mired in the political gridlock in Parliament; this nixed efforts to bring in transparent regulation of higher education. Its much acclaimed Right to Education ended up achieving enrolment, but failed to deliver on quality. A focus on skill development has remained more about talk than action.
The government’s record on the jobs front has been abysmal. But for the rebound in the last two years, the UPA would have gone out with probably the worst record of any government in job creation. In the two years ended 2011-12, the Indian economy, according to the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO), added 14 million jobs to the workforce. According to the earlier, 66th round survey of the NSSO, the economy added a mere 1 million jobs in the five years ended 2009-10.
Effectively, in eight out of its 10 years in power, for which data is available, the UPA has created 15 million jobs. (Since the Prime Minister’s Office loves to compare its growth figures with those of the preceding regime headed by the Bharatiya Janata Party, it would be worth pointing out that between 1999-2000 and 2004-05, 58 million jobs were created.) In contrast, the country adds 12 million people to the labour force every year. Leave alone absorbing new job claimants, the economy is nowhere close to clearing the backlog of unemployed.
Like the Prime Minister’s defensive response at his press conference, the UPA has spent a large part of its time and energy in denying the employment numbers. One would have expected instead an effort to own responsibility and evolve a structural fix to the problem.
This is exactly why the UPA is being judged harshly. It can still make a fresh beginning if it admits to its lapse rather than resorting to sophistry. As the recent state elections show, people do pay heed to non-performance.

Anil Padmanabhan
Anil Padmanabhan is deputy managing editor of Mint and writes every week on the intersection of politics and economics.
http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/pJn6VtNuSyLCIkQFwx5OqN/2004-to-2014Indias-lost-decade.html

The Return of the Ugly American -- Shashi Tharoor

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Photo of Shashi Tharoor

 

Shashi Tharoor is India’s Minister of State for Human Resource Development. His most recent book is Pax Indica: India and the World of the 21st Century.

The Return of the Ugly American

NEW DELHI – Nearly a month after American authorities arrested India’s deputy consul general in New York, Devyani Khobragade, outside her children’s school and charged her with paying her Indian domestic worker a salary below the minimum wage, bilateral relations remain tense. India’s government has reacted with fury to the mistreatment of an official enjoying diplomatic immunity, and public indignation has been widespread and nearly unanimous. So, has an era of steadily improving ties between the two countries come to an end?
Judging from Indian leaders’ statements, it would certainly seem so. India’s mild-mannered Prime Minister Manmohan Singh declared that Khobragade’s treatment was “deplorable.” National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon called her arrest “despicable” and “barbaric,” and Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid refused to take a conciliatory phone call from US Secretary of State John Kerry.
Emotions have run high in India’s Parliament and on television talk shows as well. Writing to her diplomatic colleagues after her arrest, Khobragade, who has denied the charges against her, noted that she “broke down many times,” owing to “the indignities of repeated handcuffing, stripping, and cavity searches, swabbing,” and to being held “with common criminals and drug addicts.” A former Indian foreign minister, Yashwant Sinha, has publicly called for retaliation against gay American diplomats in India, whose sexual orientation and domestic arrangements are now illegal after a recent Supreme Court ruling. The government has not taken him seriously, but his suggestion indicates how inflamed passions have become.
Some retaliation has occurred. The initial American rationale (that foreign consuls in the US enjoy a lower level of immunity than other diplomats) led India’s government to re-examine privileges enjoyed by US consular officials that are unavailable to their Indian counterparts in the US. These privileges – including full-fledged diplomatic ID cards, access to the restricted customs areas of airports, tax-free shipments of items for personal consumption, and no questions asked about the terms of their employment of local domestic staff – were swiftly withdrawn. The cardinal principle of diplomatic relations is reciprocity, and India realized that it had been naïve in extending courtesies to the US that it was not receiving in return.
Likewise, the police have removed bollards and barriers that the US Embassy had unilaterally placed on the street in front of its complex in New Delhi, creating an obstacle to free circulation on a public road that India had tolerated in a spirit of friendship. (The government has, however, reiterated its commitment to the US Embassy’s security, even reinforcing the police presence outside.)
Tempers remain inflamed, with US Ambassador Nancy Powell, in a New Year’s message to Indians, ruefully acknowledging that ties have been “jolted by very different reactions to issues involving one of your consular officers and her domestic worker.” Kerry has also expressed “regret” over the incident. But the US has shown no signs of moving to drop the charges to defuse the crisis.
Indians remain bewildered that the US State Department would so willfully jeopardize a relationship that American officials had been describing as “strategic” over a practice routinely followed by foreign diplomats for decades. Most developing-country diplomats take domestic staff with them on overseas assignments, paying them a good salary by their national standards, plus a cost differential for working aboard. In Khobragade’s case, perquisites included a fully furnished room in a pricey Manhattan apartment, a television set, a mobile phone, medical insurance, and tickets home.
The cash part of the salary may be low by US standards – Khobragade herself, as a mid-ranking Indian diplomat, earns less than what the US considers a fair wage – but, with the other benefits, the compensation is attractive for a domestic helper. More to the point, Khobragade did not find her maid in the US labor market and “exploit” her; she brought her from India to help her in her representational duties, on an official passport, with a US visa given for that purpose. In almost no other country are local labor laws applied in such a manner to a foreign diplomat’s personal staff.
Privately, US diplomats express frustration at their helplessness in the face of theatrical grandstanding by the ambitious federal prosecutor, Preet Bharara, an Indian-American who has launched a series of high-profile cases against Indians in America. For once, however, the zealous Bharara seems to have slipped up, because Khobragade was arrested at a time when she enjoyed full diplomatic (not just consular) immunity as an adviser to India’s United Nations mission during the General Assembly. The State Department’s handling of the matter – which included approval of Khobragade’s arrest – has been, to say the least, inept.
Worse, just before the arrest, the maid’s family was spirited out of India on US visas for victims of human trafficking. The implication that an Indian diplomat in a wage dispute with her maid is guilty of human trafficking understandably riles Indian diplomats as much as the treatment of Khobragade after she was detained. The American habit of imposing its worldview self-righteously on others is deeply unwelcome. To most Indians, common discourtesy cannot be repackaged as moral virtue.
Indian-American relations had been strengthening, owing to both sides’ shared commitment to democracy, common concerns about China, and increasing trade and investment. The Khobragade affair suggests, however, that all of this is not enough: sustaining a strategic partnership requires, above all, mutual respect.
India had handled American diplomats with a generosity of spirit that it felt the bilateral relationship deserved. Now, with the same spirit shown to be lacking from the other side, the friendship has suffered. Until the US displays appropriate deference to the sensitivities, pride, and honor of other peoples and cultures, it will continue to be resented around the world.

http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/shashi-tharoor-says-that-us-authorities--arrest-in-december-of-india-s-deputy-consul-general-in-new-york-has-profoundly-damaged-bilateral-relations

Expelled US diplomat, ugly American. Misspelt Mayo.

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A mis-spelt Mayo. When May looks at a cow, she misses the steak.

And has no qualms engaging maids in India?


Kalyanaraman

Comment by Krishen Kak:

Matthew 7:3-5

King James Version (KJV)
And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?
Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye?
Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye.

http://www.worldcat.org/title/enucleated-universes-an-ethnography-of-the-other-america-and-of-americans-as-the-other/oclc/083110547 (available in the US through your friendly neighbourhood library!!) 

Was expelled US official a bleeding heart or an ugly American?

,TNN | Jan 13, 2014, 01.15 AM IST



Wayne’s world: Was expelled US official a bleeding heart or an ugly American?
Chidanand Rajghatta,TNN | Jan 13, 2014, 01.15 AM IST

Devyani’s dad shows letters of witnesses14 more maids in US, threat of Devyani rerun loomsWonder if I will ever reunite with my family, Devyani Khobragade saysDevyani case: Expelled US diplomat went out of way to ‘evacuate’ maid’s kin

WASHINGTON: The US official who was expelled in a tit-for-tat diplomatic battle over Devyani Khobragade was nearing the end of his posting in India, scheduled to leave New Delhi in February. But in their three years in India, Wayne May, who headed the US embassy's security team in New Delhi, and his wife Alicia Muller May, who worked as the embassy's community liaison officer, revealed conflicting impulses and contradictory outlook towards the people and country they served in. 

On the one hand, it was evidently their bleeding heart concern for housekeeper Sangeeta Richard, whose in-laws worked with them and a succession of US embassy officials, that led them to "rescue" the nanny's husband and children from the strong-arm tactics of the Indian judicial and police system that diplomat Devyani Khobragade unleashed on them after Sangeeta fell out with her. On the other hand, their facetious comments about a stereotypical India abounding in chaos and filth, which some might see as offensive, shows them as the archetypal "ugly Americans". 

They laid out their opinions and views quite guilelessly on social media through photographs and comments that were quickly seized on and distributed by bloggers and trolls ever sensitive to any perceived insult of India. Although the comments are often flippant, the kind many people make on social media without fear of consequence, they sound extremely offensive now given the fraught context of the diplomatic spat. Their profiles, pictures and comments were removed and their social media presence sanitized soon after they were discovered, but not before the online warriors had saved and uploaded them on other social media sites, portraying them as "racist American diplomats". 

The Indian "holy cow" is a recurring theme in their entries, starting from the time Wayne May was posted in New Delhi in 2010. The first of the pictures appears in June 2010 with a comment from Wayne saying, "No eating the sacred cows". A little later, he adds, "one week in country and I already miss steak". 

His wife Alicia captions another photo "Stupid Cow". A friend comments, "You just insulted their cow," to which May responds, "Not the first time, not the last time". But a short time later, she shows the kind of frustration that many Indians might also share: "Just wait till you have to dodge these beasts in your car because they are laying in the middle of the road blocking traffic — they lose their 'holiness' real fast. And, as holy as they are supposed to be, most of them are bodyline starved. It's awful to see. Everything is a contradiction here ..." 

There is other banter in which enraged nationalists see signs of Indian laws being broken by the meat-loving diplomats. "Had real American Hamburgers for dinner last night. A friend smuggled them in his suitcase last night," Alicia Muller May writes in September 2010, soon after their arrival in India, adding, "water buffalo burgers just aren't cutting it. Oh, the simple pleasures of life ..." Another time, she alerts her friends in Delhi to "a good friend in Beijing who is coming to the CLO office with beautiful pearls for sale ..."— which some see as evidence that embassy premises were being used for commercial activities. 

In one bizarre exchange in November 2012 in response to a Huffington Post article on claims that are meat eaters being more prone to violence and sex crimes, Alicia May says "I'd like them to do a follow up article on how many vegetarians rape women here every day." It is the vegetarians that are doing the raping, not the meat eaters, she says, later adding that, "Applies only to Indians, not westerners". 

The domestic Indian staff for whom they professedly had concern don't come out very well either in their corrosive social media exchanges. In one photograph, it is pointed out that their pet dog Paco looks bigger and in better health than their Indian gardener. Paco, says May, gets more protein in his diet. Another time, May goes to a mosque in Delhi with two visitors where they get a VIP tour because they are from the US embassy. 

"I hate the taste but I have to be polite," she says about having to drink tea at the mosque. Her friend: "Tea? I thought it was coffee.""If it tastes like rancid mushroom, don't drink it." Friend (who is evidently serving in Afghanistan): ''Everything is rancid in Afghanistan. That's how you know it is farm fresh." 

To be sure, most of the exchanges are frivolous and typical of social media tattle. But given the sensitive positions they occupied in the US embassy, they are, particularly in hindsight, astonishingly offensive, robbing the couple of their "bleeding heart" credentials that is said to have led them to spirit out Sangeeta Richard's family from New Delhi. The biggest irony: Alicia Muller May is the US embassy's community liaison officer.

http://duckduckduckdoge.tumblr.com/

Swami on lips, Modi on mind - Telegraph Kolkata. Hypocrisy, thy name is SoniaG.

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Monday , January 13 , 2014 |

Swami on lips, Modi on mind

New Delhi, Jan. 12: Manmohan Singh and Sonia Gandhi today invoked Swami Vivekananda to stress the need for communal harmony and underline the danger of religious “fanaticism” in comments seen as an allusion to Narendra Modi.
At an event to mark the end of year-long celebrations of Vivekananda’s 150th birth anniversary, Prime Minister Singh said true religion couldn’t be the basis of hatred and division and called for imbibing Vivekananda’s lessons of tolerance and respect for all faiths.
“It is no use celebrating Swamiji’s life, paying our respects to his ideas and teachings and honouring his memory if we do not imbibe the values that he advocated,” Singh added.
The comments and the emphasis on “imbibing” were seen as a potshot at Modi, the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate who has often described Vivekananda as his ideal.
“His (Vivekananda’s) truly great message for us, which is of great relevance to our country and our sub-continent, was that true religion and true religiosity cannot be the basis of hatred and division but of mutual respect and tolerance for faiths and beliefs of all.”
The Prime Minister also quoted from Vivekananda’s speech at the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893.
“Swami Vivekananda said sectarianism, bigotry and fanaticism have long possessed this beautiful earth. They have filled the earth with violence, drenched it often with human blood, destroyed civilisation and sent whole nations to disrepair. Had it not been for these horrible demons, human society would be far more advanced than it is now.”
In her speech, UPA chairperson Sonia warned against falling prey to narrow-mindedness and appealed to people to fight fanaticism.
“Swamiji’s words are all the more weighty today as religious fanaticism of all hues threatens peace of many nations and our region. His ideas must be taken into the hearts and minds of our new generation of young Indians who will, and must, battle fanaticism.”
Defence minister A.K. Antony, who also spoke on the occasion, said Vivekananda never preached superiority of any one religion but accepted all and showed the world the way to unity and peace.
The Centre had launched the year-long celebrations on January 12 last year. The culture ministry cleared 54 plans at an estimated cost of Rs 253 crore to spread the teachings and messages of Vivekananda. Minister Chandresh Kumari Katoch said all plans were being implemented.
The proposals include a film on Vivekananda by Ramakrishna Mission, Belur. Among other plans are holding a World Poetry Festival once in two years, documenting heritage sites associated with Vivekananda, renovating Sister Nivedita’s residence in Calcutta, upgrading a Ramakrishna Mission hospital in Bihar’s Muzaffarpur and constructing Vivekananda Sabha Griha (meeting hall) at the mission’s ashram in Jalpaiguri.
A few overseas proposals by Indian embassies and high commissions were approved too. These include setting up a Chair in Vivekananda’s name at Chicago University.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1140113/jsp/nation/story_17782158.jsp#.UtNgsdKSwng

Is citizen sting operation legally tenable? -- S Murlidharan

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Is citizen sting operation legally tenable? by S Murlidharan 13/1/14

CCTVs would be accepted as evidence by courts, whereas spy cams run the risk of being questioned


Delhi Chief Minister, Arvind Kejriwal has exhorted the denizens to catch the bribe takers with their pants down, as it were, by either video or audio recording their direct or indirect demands for bribe. While it is flattering to a human ego to indulge in a bit of dare-devilry and sleuthing, there are some imponderables. Wouldn't closed-circuit televisions (CCTVs) in public places have served a better purpose? Would the old, the disabled and the weak be able to whip out in a jiffy their cell phones doubling in as cameras and recorders to capture the disagreeable event? The issue this article seeks to examine, however, is whether the exhortation and the resultant actions by the citizens would pass muster under the Indian laws.

In Sweden, sting operation is a strict no-no. In the US, by and large, stinging can be done with prior approval from governmental law enforcement agencies like the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In India, however, the issue has been mired in grey, with only a limited light being thrown.

To be sure, the Delhi High Court in the Anirudh Behal v. State case had upheld stinging as an adjunct to realisation of the ideals of the freedom struggle enshrined in article 51A(b) of the Indian Constitution - a corruption-free society. But can this judgment be construed as empowering the citizens of the country in general to strut about with spy cams, albeit in an evangelical spirit given the fact that it was rendered in the limited context of investigative journalism engendered by the Tehelka expose of wrongdoings in defence contracts targeting the former BJP president Bangaru Laxman?

The Press Council of India is seized of the matter and is in the process of making elaborate guidelines for conducting sting operations by journalists. Meanwhile, the Delhi High Court has taken the initiative and made its own limited guidelines for television channels seeking to carry out sting operations. The point is the drift of happenings in the judiciary and regulators say sting is at best accepted as kosher when carried out by journalists in the course of their investigative journalism. The law of the land itself is silent on the issue, with the Evidence Act not explicitly conferring legitimacy on evidences produced through stinging.

Was it, then, proper on the part of the Delhi chief minister to exhort people to take law in their own hands? No doubt, he is a man in a hurry but he ought to have at least referred the matter to the Central government given the fact that law and order does not come under the remit of the Delhi government, which enjoys only limited powers unlike other full-fledged states.

It is also curious that Kejriwal did not plump for the more effective, economical, less-chaotic, less-disruptive and less-intrusive option - the time-tested CCTVs. CCTVs are already used extensively in public places and ATMs. These can be easily installed in all public offices, especially where the public-official interface takes place.

The investment required would be very small and in any case money well spent. It is more fool-proof and would readily be accepted as evidence by courts of law, whereas the evidence produced through spy cams always run the risk of being questioned as being a work of photography trick. Its unobtrusive but hawkish presence would have deterred bribe taking in any case, the raison d'être of the chief minister's initiative and without chaos ruffling too many feathers and without rocking many boats.

The most fundamental legal objection one could take to the cheeky move is the government shirking its responsibility and indulging in does it amount to? It is the duty of the government to nab the culprits, including bribe takers. Can this important function be outsourced albeit to the potential victims themselves?

CCTVs are installed by and at the instance of government, whereas the ubiquitous cell phones have to be invested in by the public. What if one does not have a cell phone? Further, an adolescent experiences frisson while indulging in sleuthing and policing but these are not the activities a woman or the elderly are cut out for, especially with the possibility of being violently retaliated staring them in their faces. One can perform the role of citizen journalist in an evangelistic spirit but whipping out a spy cam in the heat of the moment is not everyone's cup of tea.
Last, in the US a distinction is drawn between stinging and entrapment with only the former being kosher. Entrapment is instigating someone to commit a crime, a plaintive plea made by Laxman rather unsuccessfully though in retrospect. Should the common man be exposed to such titillating and frightening possibilities associated with spy cam which admittedly can be used for nefarious purposes when the harmless CCTV is there for the asking?
Author is a chartered accountant

India's Topi moment. Visionaries: Addl Solicitor Gen. Indira Jaising gets $1.24 m.(Rs.7.7 crores); other 13 get Rs. 60 crores

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India's Topi moment

Ford Foundation Working with Visionaries on the Frontlines of Social Change Worldwide http://www.fordfoundation.org/

CIA’s Trojan Horse enters the Heart of India -- Shelley Kasli

From Ford Foundation grants (Note: India rep. is Admiral Ramadoss' daughter) http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2014/01/the-admiral-ramdas-team-on-global.htmThe Admiral Ramdas team on a global mission with a focus on India

Addl Solicitor Gen. Indira Jaising gets $1.24 m.(Rs.7.7 crores); other 13 get Rs. 60 crores -- See list below with photos down the line. The recipients include AAP operatives (Sisodia, Yadav), SoniaG govt. operatives (Nilekani -- Aadhar card Minister, India Jaising -- ASG)

A selection of Ford Foundation grants (2007-11); just 14 of them:
1 Sisodia 3,97,000
2 JNU 4,00,000
3 Titus 9,10,000
4 Dikshit 6,50,000
5 Yadav 3,50,000
6 Mehta 687,000 (Note: Poor Mehta! Gets a mere 6 digits 687k USD)
7 Shah 2,55,000
8 Behar 25,00,000
9 Joseph 13,19,031
10 Mitra 8,00,000
11 Jaising 12,40,000
12 Nilekani 2,30,000
13 Sivadas 5,00,000
14 Mohanty 6,00,000
Total of 14 recipients: USD 108,38,031
Who Paid the Piper CIA AAP Arwind Kejriwal India
The CIA uses philanthropic foundations as the most effective conduit to channel large sums of money to Agency projects without alerting the recipients to their source. From the early 1950s to the present the CIA’s intrusion into the foundation field was and is huge. A U.S. Congressional investigation in 1976 revealed that nearly 50% of the 700 grants in the field of international activities by the principal foundations were funded by the CIA. The CIA considers foundations such as Ford“The best and most plausible kind of funding cover”. The collaboration of respectable and prestigious foundations, according to one former CIA operative, allowed the Agency to fund “a seemingly limitless range of covertaction programs affecting youth groups, labor unions, universities, publishing houses and other privateinstitutions”. The latter included “human rights” groups beginning in the 1950s to the present. One of the most important “private foundations” collaborating with the CIA over a significant span of time in major projects in the cultural Cold War is the Ford Foundation.

CIA & The Ford Foundation

By the late 1950s the Ford Foundation possessed over $3 billion in assets. The leaders of the Foundation
were in total agreement with Washington’s post-WWII projection of world power. A noted scholar of the
period writes:
“At times it seemed as if the Ford Foundation was simply an extension of government in the area of 
international cultural propaganda. The foundation had a record of close involvement in covert actions inEurope, working closely with Marshall Plan and CIA officials on specific projects”. This is graphicallyillustrated by the naming of Richard Bissell as President of the Foundation in 1952. In his two years inoffice Bissell met often with the head of the CIA, Allen Dulles, and other CIA officials in a “mutual search” for new ideas. In 1954 Bissell left Ford to become a special assistant to Allen Dulles in January 1954. Under Bissell, the Ford Foundation (FF) was the “vanguard of Cold War thinking”.
FordLogosheet_A_2009[FOR PRINT ONLY]
One of the FF first Cold War projects was the establishment of a publishing house, Inter-cultural
Publications, and the publication of a magazine Perspectives in Europe in four languages. The FF purpose
according to Bissell was not “so much to defeat the leftist intellectuals in dialectical combat (sic) as
to lure them away from their positions”. The board of directors of the publishing house was completely
dominated by cultural Cold Warriors. Given the strong leftist culture in Europe in the post-war period,
Perspectives failed to attract readers and went bankrupt.
Another journal Der Monat funded by the Confidential Fund of the U.S. military and run by Melvin Lasky
was taken over by the FF, to provide it with the appearance of independence.
In 1954 the new president of the FF was John McCloy. He epitomized imperial power. Prior to becoming 
president of the FF he had been Assistant Secretary of War, president of the World Bank, High Commissioner of occupied Germany, chairman of Rockefeller’s Chase Manhattan Bank, Wall Street attorney for the big seven oil companies and director of numerous corporations. As High Commissioner in Germany, McCloy had provided cover for scores of CIA agents.
Than CIA's head Allen Dulles’ best bud, John McCloy,is shown here with David Rockefeller and Chase Manhattan executives after he successfully merged the Warburg’s Manhattan bank with Rockefeller’s Chase bank. A top Rockefeller leutenant, McCloy acted for decades on the family’s behalf as an adviser to presidents and dictators. He even shared a box with Hitler and Goering at the 1936 Olympics.
Than CIA’s head Allen Dulles’ best bud, John McCloy,is shown here with David Rockefeller and Chase Manhattan executives after he successfully merged the Warburg’s Manhattan bank with Rockefeller’s Chase bank. A top Rockefeller leutenant, McCloy acted for decades on the family’s behalf as an adviser to presidents and dictators. He even shared a box with Hitler and Goering at the 1936 Olympics.
McCloy integrated the FF with CIA operations. He created an administrative unit within the FF specifically to deal with the CIA. McCloy headed a three person consultation committee with the CIA to facilitate the use of the FF for a cover and conduit of funds. With these structural linkages the FF was one of those organizations the CIA was able to mobilize for political warfare against the anti-imperialist and pro-communist left.
Official photo of Warren Commissioners that covered-up JFK Assassination. Allen Dulles(than head of  the CIA) is seen second from left. To his right is John J. McCloy, lawyer and troubleshooter for both  the Warburg and Rockefeller family. McCloy was appointed as a member of the Warren Commission, purely  for the purposes of disguising Rockefeller’s crime.
Official photo of Warren Commissioners that covered-up JFK Assassination. Allen Dulles(than head of the CIA) is seen second from left. To his right is John J. McCloy, lawyer and troubleshooter for both the Warburg and Rockefeller family. McCloy was appointed as a member of the Warren Commission, purely
for the purposes of disguising Rockefeller’s crime.
Numerous CIA “fronts” received major FF grants. Numerous supposedly “independent” CIA sponsored cultural organizations, human rights groups, artists and intellectuals received CIA/FF grants. One of the biggest donations of the FF was to the CIA organized Congress for Cultural Freedom which received $7 million by the early 1960s. Numerous CIA operatives secured employment in the FF and continued close collaboration with the Agency.
Here is McCloy (extreme left) with the rest of the gang, the other six hacks and fraudsters, of the  Warren Commission, as they present the phony report to President Ford.
McCloy (extreme left) with the rest of the gang, the other six hacks & fraudsters, of the Warren Commission, as they present the phony report to President Ford.
From its very origins there was a close structural relation and interchange of personnel at the highest
levels between the CIA and the FF. This structural tie was based on the common imperial interests which
they shared. The result of their collaboration was the proliferation of a number of journals and access
to the mass media which pro-U.S. intellectuals used to launch vituperative polemics against Marxists and
other anti-imperialists. The FF funding of these anti-Marxists organizations and intellectuals provided
a legal cover for their claims of being “independent” of government funding (CIA).
One prominent journalist, Andrew Kopkind, wrote of a deep sense of moral disillusionment with the
private foundation-funded CIA cultural fronts. Kopkind wrote
“The distance between the rhetoric of the open society and the reality of control was greater than 
anyone thought. Everyone who went abroad for an American organization was, in one way or another, awitness to the theory that the world was torn between communism and democracy and anything in betweenwas treason. The illusion of dissent was maintained: the CIA supported socialist cold warriors, fascist cold warriors, black and white cold warriors. The catholicity and flexibility of the CIA operations were major advantages. But it was a sham pluralism and it was utterly corrupting”.
When a U.S. journalist Dwight Macdonald who was an editor of Encounter (a FF-CIA funded influential
cultural journal) sent an article critical of U.S. culture and politics it was rejected by the editors,
working closely with the CIA. In the field of painting and theater the CIA worked with the FF to promote
abstract expressionism against any artistic expression with a social content, providing funds and
contacts for highly publicized exhibits in Europe and favorable reviews by “sponsored” journalists. The
interlocking directorate between the CIA, the Ford Foundation and the New York Museum of Modern Art lead
to a lavish promotion of “individualistic” art remote from the people — and a vicious attack on
European painters, writers and playwrights writing from a critical realist perspective. “Abstract
Expressionism” whatever its artist’s intention became a weapon in the Cold War.
The Ford Foundation’s history of collaboration and interlock with the CIA in pursuit of U.S. world
hegemony is now a well-documented fact. The remaining issue is whether that relationship continues into
the new Millenium after the exposures of the 1960s? The FF made some superficial changes. They are more
flexible in providing small grants to human rights groups and academic researchers who occasionally
dissent from U.S. policy. They are not as likely to recruit CIA operatives to head the organization.
More significantly they are likely to collaborate more openly with the U.S. government in its cultural
and educational projects, particularly with the Agency of International Development.
The FF has in some ways refined their style of collaboration with Washington’s attempt to produce world
cultural domination, but retained the substance of that policy. For example the FF is very selective in
the funding of educational institutions. Like the IMF, the FF imposes conditions such as the
“professionalization” of academic personnel and “raising standards.” In effect this translates into the
promotion of social scientific work based on the assumptions, values and orientations of the U.S.
empire; to have professionals de-linked from the class struggle and connected with pro-imperial U.S.
academics and foundation functionaries supporting the neo-liberal model.
As in the 1950s and 60s the Ford Foundation today has developed a sophisticated strategy of funding
human rights groups (HRGs) that appeal to Washington to change its policy while denouncing U.S.
adversaries their “systematic” violations. The FF supports HRGs which equate massive state terror by the
U.S. with individual excesses of anti-imperialist adversaries. The FF finances HRGs which do not
participate in anti-globalization and anti-neoliberal mass actions and which defend the Ford Foundation
as a legitimate and generous “non-governmental organization”.
In the current period of a major U.S. military-political offensive, Washington has posed the issue as “terrorism or democracy,” just as during the Cold War it posed the question as “Communism or Democracy.”  In both instances the Empire recruited and funded “front organizations, intellectuals and journalists to attack its anti-imperialist adversaries and neutralize its democratic critics. The Ford Foundation is well situated to replay its role as collaborator to cover for the New Cultural Cold War.

CIA’s Trojan Horse reaches India

India had been sucked into the spiral of this Cultural Cold War since a long time. However with the US 
economy already bust and the EU falling like dominos; it is again the East where the West would anchor 
it’s sinking ship of so called Exceptionalism that fuels the Western Civilization. The game on the 
Indian side is very well crafted and carried out through CIA’s Trojan Horse which has entered into the 
heart of Indian Politics – Delhi.
CIA-Trojan-Horse-Ford-Aam-Aadmi-Party-AAP-India
A new political party pledging to sweep corruption from the Indian capital made surprising gains in
state elections, grabbing a huge share of votes from the incumbent Congress party and leaving Delhi with
no clear leader on Monday — and no party willing to form a coalition.
The fledgling Aam Aadmi Party, or Common Man’s Party, seized 28 of Delhi’s 70 assembly seats just nine
months after its formation. The Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party took first place with 31, while
Congress was left with a meagre eight, a stunning decline from its previous 43.
Aam-Aadmi-Party-CIA-Ford-Kejriwal-India-Arwind-India
All three ruled out entering into a governing alliance, leaving the capital in a leadership lurch and
raising the possibility of new elections.

CIA lays the “Foundation” of Indian Policymaking

The Ford Foundation, which completes six decades in India next year, provides a continuing flow of
grants to institutions, think-tanks, civil society, and even farmer groups, to carry out research and
advocacy work. The sums are not inconsequential—about $15 million (about Rs 70 crore) a year. And the
recipients—320 grants, over the past four years—are the who’s who of civil society and advocacy groups
in India.
Its representative, Steven Solnick, said the Foundation’s last installment to Kabir (an NGO run by Arvind Kejriwal and Manish Sisodia) was in 2010. “Our first grant to the NGO was of $1,72,000 in 2005 ; the second was in 2008 of $1,97,000,” he told Business Standard.
Steven Solnick - Ford Foundation's representative in India
Steven Solnick – Ford Foundation’s representative in India
Kabir, run by Arvind Kejriwal and Manish Sisodia, key figures in AAP(Aam Aadmi Party), has received $400,000 from the Ford Foundation in the last three years.
Link for $197,000 – now removed by Ford. Refer screenshot of the same below.
Kabir Ford Foundation CIA
In reply to an RTI query that questioned the funding and expenditure of Kabir, the organisation has disclosed that they have received funds from the Ford Foundation (Rs 86,61,742), PRIA (Rs 2,37,035), Manjunath Shanmugam Trust (Rs 3,70,000), Dutch Embassy (Rs 19,61,968), Association for India’s Development (Rs 15,00,000), India’s friends Association (Rs 7,86,500), United Nationals Development Programme (Rs12,52,742) while Rs 11,35,857 were collected from individual donations between 2007 to 2010.
Interestingly, a major part of the funding to an organisation that is prominent in the “War against corruption” has come from abroad and mainly from the United States. Apar from the UNDP, Ford Foundation and the India Friends Association are US-based organisations, while PRIA and Association for India’s Development are headquartered in Asia.
Ford-Foundation-AAP-Kejriwal-CIA-India-1
Ford-Foundation-AAP-Kejriwal-CIA-India-2
Ford-Foundation-AAP-Kejriwal-CIA-India-3
Ford-Foundation-AAP-Kejriwal-CIA-India-4
The foundation, on its part, makes no bones about its neo-liberal agenda, broadly pro-market, seeking
accountability in governance, and promoting marginalised groups. It funds a small number of
institutions, but chooses effectively. At a post-budget meeting two years back, it was noted that all
the think-tanks represented (NCAER, NIPFP, ICRIER and the Centre for Policy Research) on the dais
received grants from the foundation. Academicians and scholars from these think-tanks are regularly
consulted by the government on various policy issues.
CIA Ford Foundation Aam Aadmi Party India
On whether the views of these intellectuals actually get reflected in subsequent policies, Planning Commission deputy chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia declines to comment. “I don’t really have a view on it,” he says. He does, however, concede that India’s association with the foundation “is something that has been on for a long time”.
Moreover, three of core members ( Arvind Kejriwal, Kiran Bedi and Manish Sisodia) are also Magsaysay award winners which are endowed by the Ford Foundation and Rockefeller.
The Three Stooges
The Three Stooges
As far as the Magsaysay Award winners are concerned, this award is an American award for Asians established and funded by the Rockefeller Foundation ostensibly in memory of Ramon Magsaysay, the former President of Philippines.
According to well-placed sources in  the U. S.  Intelligence community opposed to the State Department’s policy toward the Philippines, $30 million in covert funds was supplied to the Philippine opposition to  help finance  its presidential campaign.  This  $30 million was  laundered through Hong Kong,  where the money was converted into  the Philippine peso at the black market rate of 20 pesos to the dollar.
Philippine  sources reported that  the money  had, been  in part funneled  into the CIA-controlled citizens elec­tion watch group,  called Namfrel ,  the National Movement for a Free Election, which was originally created  in  1953 in order  to  bring Ramon Magsaysay into power.  Namfrel  was central  in the State Department’s policy of intervening  into the Philippines election.
In 1957, the Rockefeller Foundation established the Ramon Magsaysay Prize for community leaders in Asia. It was named after Ramon Magsaysay, president of the Philippines, a crucial ally in the US campaign against Communism in Southeast Asia. In 2000, the Ford Foundation established the Ramon Magsaysay Emergent Leadership Award. The Magsaysay Award is considered a prestigious award among artists, activists and community workers in India. M.S. Subbulakshmi and Satyajit Ray won it, so did Jayaprakash Narayan and journalists, P. Sainath. In general, it has become a gentle arbiter of what kind of activism is “acceptable” and what is not. In reality the award is the living memory of the dictatorial president of Philippines known for the murder of thousands of communist guerrillas during the Huk Rebellion under US-planned anti-communist counter-insurgency operations. It explains the silence of the anti-corruption group against corporations and the private sector.
For more details read : CIA manipulation of 1953 elections
This perfectly fits in with a recent shift in the US policy of association with India, which is now focusing on building state-to-state partnerships by “engaging Indian state and local leaders” throughout the country on “topics of mutual interest”. Civil society groups and think-tanks are expected to play an important role in this. As Prof Anil Gupta of IIM-Ahmedabad observes, “Their influence is far beyond what is recognized, and not always benign.”
Should NGOs receiving grants from international agencies like the Ford Foundation and others be barred from participating in the shaping of public policy?
And are these civil society groups working as stooges of the West to execute an “American agenda” ?
These are the question the Aam Aadmi has to answer.
Not the copyrighted ones; but the real Aam Aadmi.

Report by

Shelley Kasli

Ukraine Kiev Lenin Statue Demolished CIA
Update : Just last night CIA’s Urban Guerrilla Unit demolished Lenin’s statue in Kiev, Ukraine same as they did with Saddam’s as part of a psychological warfare protesting against Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych staunch stand against EU and East European countries and refusal to sign the free-trade agreement that would devastate his nation’s remaining industry already devastated by IMF.
References :
—————
The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters
Ford Foundation, a philanthropic facade for the CIA
CIA manipulation of 1953 elections
Warren Commission
Allen Dulles
John J. McCloy
Flowing The Way Of Their Money
Claims that Hazare’s movement is US-funded baseless: Arvind
‘We’re No Policy Advisors’
Kejriwal Admits, His NGO Took Money From Ford Foundation 2 Years Back
It’s Official – US-Based Ford Foundation Funding Anna’s Movement

21 thoughts on “CIA’s Trojan Horse enters the Heart of India

  1. Arvind Kejriwal is a CIA stooge
    Union steel minister Beni Prasad Verma who had sparked controversy a week ago in an attempt at defending Union law minister Salman Khurhid, now says anti-graft activist Arvind Kejriwal is a CIA stooge. When on a tour of Gonda district, his parliamentary constituency, the minister told reporters that he has reason to believe that Arvind Kejriwal is funded by NGOs in the U.S and by the CIA to create an atmosphere of instability within India.
  2. Lok Sabha polls: Congress shortlists Nandan Nilekani for Bangalore South
    NR Narayana Murthy gives Aam Aadmi Party, Nandan Nilekani a thumbs up
    NR Narayana Murthy gives Aam Aadmi Party, Nandan Nilekani a thumbs up
    Software major Infosys’ chairman NR Narayana Murthy has said that the stunning debut by the Aam Aadmi Party in the recent Delhi elections proves that voters are willing to embrace a political party that promises clean governance. He also threw his weight behind former colleague Nandan Nilekani’s plunge into politics asserting that Nilekani has all the good qualities to be elected as a Member of Parliament
  3. When our 11th floor babus are sleeping in daylight, what more we can expect. No clear agenda, no foresight, no policy, and above all puppet in the hands of politicians. Needs change in organisation as well as MEA.
  4. With Rs 164 crore in kitty, Rohini Nilekani to chart a new course in philanthropy
    Nandan Nilekani’s wife to start new ‘philanthropic venture’ to provide grant capital to individuals and organisations in the areas of governance, legal services, environment protection and new media.
    The model that Rohini has chosen is close to the approach taken by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar, whose family office has provided a mix of grants and equity money of around $125 million (roughly Rs 760 crore) in India so far.
    Pierre Omidyar is the guy who bought off all the Snowden documents from Glenn Greenwald of Guardian UK and subsequently covered up 99.9% of all the worst NSA secrets.
  5. AAP Social Engineering in Progress – Rich and influential technocrats flooding into AAP
    In Bangalore, V Balakrishnan, the Infosys board member once seen as a future CEO, who quit the company last month, said on Wednesday he had joined AAP. In Mumbai, banker Meera Sanyal, the Harvard Business School-educated head of Royal Bank of Scotland, has quit to join AAP.
    • NDTV is muslim tv channel who took 5 crore from saudi arabia to depress hindu in india only broadcast only muslim favor new example just show to world what go againts muslim but never shows how killed hindu in godra riot

India's Topi rally? No. 2nd freedom struggle, Vishwas tells Amethi -- Mohammad Hamza Khan

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Kumar Vishwas, AAP likely candidate against Rahul Gandhi asked the poeple in Amethi to join the 'revolution'. (IE Photo: Vishal Srivastav) - 

Nation calls, join 2nd freedom struggle, Vishwas tells Amethi

Written by Mohammad Hamza Khan | Amethi | January 13, 2014 08:18


Azmi predicted that Kumar would win by a margin of one lakh votes.


Launching his Lok Sabha election campaign here at a ‘Jan Vishwas Rally’, the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) likely candidate against Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi, Kumar Vishwas, told Amethi on Sunday to join “the revolution”, adding “The nation is calling, come with us, there is nothing left in these (political) families.”

Announcing that he had applied for an AAP ticket from Amethi, Vishwas said: “I have not come here for a win or loss. My only concern is that when the sons of my daughter ask me 20 years later where I was at the time of India’s second revolution for freedom, I can tell them I was on the streets, facing lathis, under the Tricolour, for the revolution.”

He added that there was a possibility of him getting killed “in the next three months”.

Attacking Rahul, Vishwas said: “I have come here because Rahulji, the people of Amethi sent you (to Parliament), but in 10 years, you haven’t asked a single question and your presence there was minimum. Whenever there was an issue, be it the rape of a six-year-old girl, 2G, Coalgate, Commonwealth Games, we kept waiting for you to speak.”

Instead of voting for such “yuvraj, maharani, rajkumar and maharajas”, Vishwas said, Amethi should free itself of “the clutches of dynasty” and this time “select a servant and tell him to take their word to Parliament”.

AAP leaders Sanjay Singh and Ilyas Azmi and journalist-turned-politician Ashutosh were present at the rally, which drew around 10,000 people, though the party claimed the crowd numbered around 50,000. A rally to be addressed by Rahul in Amethi on the same ground, two days before Vishwas’s, was postponed at the last minute citing waterlogging at the venue.
Addressing Sunday’s rally, Sanjay Singh too termed the fight “the second freedom struggle” and attacked dynasties from Kashmir to Tamil Nadu, while Ashutosh urged people to be “a part of the revolution”. Azmi predicted that Kumar would win by a margin of one lakh votes.

“Wish you had asked him (Rahul) why only 20 per cent of Amethi’s roads are constructed, why Nehru’s 1954 promise of an Unchahar-Salon-Amethi railway line is still a promise, why over 500 villages have to suffer because a bridge in Shankerganj is broken for the last two years,” Vishwas asked in his speech. “Going to a Dalit’s house and having dinner won’t do, Rahulji.
The job of a parliamentarian is to worry if all Dalits are sleeping on full stomachs.”

Also attacking Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Vishwas said that when she doesn’t trust the sons of India for her treatment and goes to foreign countries, how can the people of Amethi and the country trust her son.

Kumar and his cavalcade of about 150 vehicles faced sporadic protests as they drove to Amethi from Lucknow. In Inhona, around 50 Muslim youths showed him black flags. They claimed they didn’t belong to any party or organisation and that Vishwas had hurt their sentiments by making derogatory remarks against Hazrat Imam Hussain. At Jagdishpur, ink was thrown at his vehicle while he was at a girls’ college, while later stones were pelted at it.
Rickshawpullers queued up “in support” of the Congress, while Congress workers at Gauriganj waved flags and asked Vishwas to return. Stones were allegedly also hurled at buses ferrying party workers, damaging panes.

Vishwas brought up the issue of attacks again and again in his speech, terming them reflection of the “frustration” of rival parties.

“They are mistaken if they think that ink and eggs and sticks and stones will scare us,” he said.
Calling the protests “sponsored”, the AAP leader added: “Why they are doing so? Is Amethi a separate country, where I need a passport for visiting?”

However, Vishwas added, he was sorry “if any of my comments have hurt anyone’s sentiments”. To his own supporters, he instructed, never raise hands in attack and hug people instead.

When two more protesters showed black flags at the rally on Amethi’s Ramlila ground, Vishwas asked “the Congressmen” to be called up on stage “so that we can hug them and hear them out”. He added that that he would be staying in Amethi and could meet these protesters at a time and place of their choosing, “alone”.

Tweaking his poem Koi Deewana Kehta Hai, he said he may have been called a “joker”, but only a “joker” like him could understand the bechaini (worry) of Amethi. He later recited his poem Tiranga.

The local representative of Rahul in Amethi, Chandra Kant Dubey, denied that Congressmen were involved in the protests against Vishwas. “Our party workers are busy celebrating Vivekanand Jayanti and Priyanka (Vadra)’s birthday… None of them was involved in the protests against Vishwas,” PTI quoted him as saying.

- See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/india/politics/nation-calls-join-2nd-freedom-struggle-vishwas-tells-amethi/#sthash.ZfM4BSn8.dpuf

To uphold Constitution, defeat Congress: NaMo -- Sandhya Jain

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Monday, January 13, 2014

Defeating Congress best way to uphold Constitution

By Sandhya Jain on13 Jan 2014

Defeating Congress's communal politics is best way to uphold Constitution
Narendra Modi on Sunday escalated his attack on Congress misrule (vikrit vyavastha), corruption, and vote-bank politics, and endorsed and commended Goa’s uplifting vision of seeking special status to protect the identity, environment, traditions, and culture of the State without any extra financial support from the Centre. Addressing a two lakh strong crowd at the Vijay Sankalp Rally at the Merces Ground in Goa, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)’s Prime Ministerial candidate honed his attack on the corrosive politics and policies of the Congress, indicating that the countdown for the 2014 general election has begun in earnest now that the Assembly elections in northern India are over.
In his sharpest ever criticism of the Congress’s politics of Muslim appeasement which is shaking the foundations of the nation and eroding the basic framework of the Constitution, Narendra Modi lambasted the Congress desire to rule the nation at any cost. Just two days ago, he reminded his audience, the Union Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde gave an interview on television stating he had written a letter to all States and would again write to them to warn them to desist from arresting Muslims for any crimes. Why, asked the Gujarat Chief Minister, should guilty persons of one faith be treated differently, and why should the criminal law of the land not be applied evenly to all accused? Is crime decided according to religion, he asked, and asserted that the approach should be to ensure that all arrested persons are treated fairly and get justice if they are innocent. No one should go to jail on the basis of communal identity, but the same law must be applied to all.
Expressing rage at the Home Minister’s conduct, Narendra Modi pointed out that under the Constitutional arrangement, law and order is a State Subject and Shinde had no right to assault the Constitutional framework. Mocking at the Prime Minister, he said that if one complains to him about the “nonsense going on”, Manmohan Singh will claim surprise and say, “What, OK I will see”. In contrast to such ruinous behaviour, Goa has a common civil code and the people here live happily.
Expressing sympathy of the unemployment and economic distress in Goa on account of the closure of its mines, the Gujarat strongman said that the ‘Delhi sarkar’ is sleeping and does not understand that mining is the engine of the economy of a small State like Goa. Promising that the State’s travails would end in a few months, he assured that mining would be resumed with transparency and the protection of the environment. Deriding the functioning of the Union Ministry for Environment & Forests, he said that it was being said that the movement of files would stop until a new tax called ‘Jayanthi tax’ was paid; can we not change such a system of governance, he asked the audience. The Gujarat Government, he recalled, had once written to the Centre for permission to auction the leases for its limestone quarries to the highest bidder, in order to earn more money for its exchequer. To his surprise, the permission was refused on grounds that it was against the rules!
Recalling that the former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi had created a huge hype about taking the country into the 21st century, he asked if Gandhi had done even one thing to prepare the nation for the challenges of the current century. There is no need to recount the history of what happened in the Rajiv era, he said, lamenting that people had had very high hopes from a man coming from outside the formal political process, but all hopes were belied. Instead, the youth were faced with a situation in which they may have to repeat the struggles and hardships of their parents’ lives because the Congress, particularly in these last 10 years of the UPA regime, had put the people in a hopeless situation. Calling on the people to vote it out of office, he said that in the UPA had made all institutions and Constitutional offices dysfunctional and concentrated all power in one source which had no accountability. The BJP, in contrast, believed in decentralisation of power and would restore the accountability of all public offices.
Commending all the BJP leaders and Chief Ministers for living simple lives with their families, he said the nation now yearned to get rid of the Congress and its leaders, and particularly the Congress culture of the last 60 years which had seeped into the veins of the nation and many political parties, and emerged in public life as the diseases of nepotism, casteism, communalism, unemployment, poverty, and above all corruption. When people question the credentials of the BJP in this respect, they have only to look at persons like Atal Bihari Vajpayee who has been a parliamentarian for many years and held the office of the Prime Minister, but does not even own a house. In a family, Narendra Modi said, a non-performing member is seen as a burden. Ten years of Congress-UPA have become a burden on the nation with its unending saga of failures on all fronts. The parties that support the UPA and its legion of defenders are all guilty for the sufferings imposed on the nation. The country now needs experienced leaders to pull it out of the morass, people who have vision, even if they are never seen on television. He commended the Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar for dedicating the funds collected from the rally to the victims of a recent building collapse in which 25 persons have died.
BJP president Rajnath Singh said that though Goa is generally viewed as a favoured tourist destination, it was a history going back to the Mahabharata era and a culture that deserves proper recognition. The Puranas mention it as deo-bhumi; it is the famed tapa-bhumi of Shiva. And it was in Goa that the BJP decided Narendra Modi would be its Prime Ministerial candidate. Lamenting the Goa had to wait until 1961 for liberation from the Portuguese, he said the Congress was responsible for the continuing problems with Jammu & Kashmir and Article 370. Directly attacking Manmohan Singh and Sonia Gandhi for the price rise, corruption, security crisis and other ills bedeviling the nation, he said that in his recent Press conference, Manmohan Singh had admitted that Sonia Gandhi was a power centre in the country. Condemning Manmohan Singh for his frontal attack on Narendra Modi at his Press conference, the urged the people to give the BJP a complete mandate to run a stable Government. Other speakers at the rally included Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar; deputy Chief Minister Francis d’Souza; Sripad Naik, MP; Mahadev Naik, MLA; State unit chief Vinay Tendulkar; V Satish; Smriti Irani, and others.
http://www.niticentral.com/2014/01/13/defeating-congresss-communal-politics-is-best-way-to-uphold-constitution-178583.html

Devyani goof-up: State-sponsored trafficking by USA and failure of Indian immigration -- Brahma Chellaney

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Fury of the meekest
By Brahma Chellaney, India Today,
January 13, 2014

America’s demeaning strip and cavity search of an Indian diplomat in breach of international norms has become a symbol of a once-flourishing bilateral relationship gone awry. The U.S. and India entered into a much-ballyhooed strategic partnership, not a patron-client relationship. With 27 military allies, the U.S., however, is used to a patron-client equation, not a partnership, which demands some degree of equivalence and mutual respect. It thus began to take India for granted, and appeared genuinely surprised that India reacted to Devyani Khobragade’s humiliation as if it were the proverbial straw threatening to break its back.
U.S.’s “problem” with India extends well beyond this episode. For example, almost one-third of all T visas it has issued worldwide to victims of extremely grave sex or labour trafficking have been to Indians, thus mocking the most-populous democracy’s judicial system. The manner in which it spirited out of India the family of Khobragade’s maid on T visas and with tax-exempt tickets improperly procured by its embassy, paradoxically, was tantamount to an act of state-sponsored trafficking. The action had an openly conspiratorial ring to it: No sooner had the U.S., playing global cop, “evacuated” the maid’s family from its home country than it arrested Khobragade.
Make no mistake: America would not have dared to arrest and strip search a Chinese or Russian diplomat for allegedly underpaying a maid because that would have invited swift and disproportionate retaliation. In fact, just one week before Khobragade’s arrest, Preetinder Singh Bharara—the rogue prosecutor in New York who likes to be addressed as “Preet” or “Pete” when in reality he is Mr. Pretender—charged a number of Russian diplomats and consular officials for defrauding Medicaid of $1.5 million. But before unveiling the charges, the defendants were allowed to leave the US.
What has been India’s response to the insults heaped on it, or what the incredible Manmohan Singh called “some hiccups”? Don’t let all the sound and fury spook you: India’s only response thus far has been to start withdrawing non-reciprocal privileges to US diplomatic and consular staff and their families.
In a classic case of impotent fury, India made no effort to try to penalize the U.S. Indeed, India did the exact opposite by rewarding America with a new mega-contract—a $1.01-billion deal for additional C-130J military aircraft. Its demand for a formal apology has dissipated. It did not even hold back its new ambassador from taking charge in Washington until the U.S. made some amends. Why blame the U.S. for taking liberties when India’s toadying foreign minister has hailed NSA’s notorious global surveillance as “only a computer study” and “not snooping”?
Indeed, no Indian is asking the key question: Why did India in the first place unilaterally extend the privileges to U.S. diplomatic and consular staff that it is now withdrawing? India’s servility went to the extent of granting family members of U.S. consular officials a degree of diplomatic immunity for which they were ineligible. Ignoring its own security protocol, India handed out identity-less airport passes usable by any diplomat or consular official. India’s VVIPs, often seeking visas and other favours for their relatives, blocked New Delhi’s Nyaya Marg (the road behind the U.S. Embassy) to graciously allow U.S. Embassy personnel to visit the American Club without having to cross a public street.
New Delhi made no effort over the years to ensure that those working in American schools and other non-diplomatic U.S. government facilities in India were employed in compliance with Indian labour laws, which mandate, among other things, income tax and provident fund deductions. U.S. diplomats’ spouses worked in American schools and other U.S. facilities without seeking host-nation permission or paying taxes on their earnings. India turned a blind eye to such violations, which, if they occurred in the U.S., would land a violator in serious trouble, possibly even in jail.
India has now asked a reluctant U.S. Embassy to supply all the relevant details. Will the Embassy come clean? Who will crack the enforcement whip? India’s compromised governing elites?
There is yet another unanswered question: When there was a non-bailable Indian warrant against Khobragade’s absconding maid, how did Indian immigration allow her family to leave on “T” visas? True, a family cannot be liable for an absconding member. Yet Indian immigration and intelligence should have smelt a rat that the family was leaving on “trafficking” visas.
Clearly, Indian authorities have a lot to answer for. India—having absorbed no lesson from the case involving U.S. informant David Headley—must blame itself for inviting the latest outrage. Indeed, what was billed as India’s atypically tough response has ended in a whimper, reinforcing the country’s lamb-like image.
Brahma Chellaney is a geostrategist and author.
http://chellaney.net/2014/01/07/fury-of-the-meekest/

India's topi moment. BJP should announce nation as ideology.

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Is ideology necessary for governance? 

Ideology makes it unnecessary for people to confront individual issues on their individual merits. One simply turns to the ideological vending machine, and out comes the prepared formulae. And when these beliefs are suffused by apocalyptic fervor, ideas become weapons, and with dreadful results. - Daniel Bell, The End of Ideology

The End of Ideology: On the Exhaustion of Political Ideas in the Fifties is a collection of essays published in 1960 by Daniel Bell, who described himself as a "socialist in economics, a liberal in politics, and a conservative in culture".

AAP has made an ideological statement with the topi.

A critique of the vision document of AAP from a communist says:

"What is astonishing is that a political party hoping to take the reins of power is mute on the global processes, particularly those advancing the tentacles of neoimperialism, which are inextricably influencing our politics and our society. Is it just a parochial vision or is it silent endorsement of those processes, which are welcome to the class base of the AAP? With such complete silence on the basics, the compensation is found in excessive articulation of the trivial. How else can one explain an entire three pages of the 20-page document being devoted to spelling out how the party propaganda will be carried out, how the candidates for elections will be chosen, and how the elected members of the party will live." -- From   
Myopia, Distortions and Blind Spots in theVision Document if AAP’, S.P. Shula in EPW, February 16, 2013 

Defining values of an ideology is an ongoing process. Marxist ideology, as propounded by Marx and Engels, lacked any ethical guidance for an individual. The ideology viewed individuals as insignificant in the historical process of dialectical materialism. Lenin and Stalin in Soviet Union and MaoTse Tung in China had to fill this lacunae in Marxist ideology to some extent. 

On the other hand, India's freedom movement from its genesis emphasized personal values and ideals and largely ignored economic and political issues. It may surprise some to know that 'Early to bed and early to rise' was a value propagated by India's freedom movement. During pre-independence India, 'prabhat pheri' (early morning rally) was a common activity of the freedom movement activists. Such rallies were seen as wake-up calls for the society. The rallies used to often culminate in a small public meeting or prayer meeting. Even after independence, for many years 'prabhat pheris' continued to be taken out as part of Independence Day and Republic Day celebrations. Even today, the main function in Delhi on the occasion of Independence Day or Republic Day begins at 8 a.m. As India moves away from the values and ideals of freedom movement, sooner or later there will be a demand to change to more convenient timings. 

Waking up early was not the only value propagated by Indian freedom struggle's leaders. Their ideals covered almost every aspect of human life. One might wonder -- what has freedom struggle got to do with, for example, sexual morality. Yet, when one looks at any major political movement anywhere in the world, one finds that the movement insisted on its members adopting some values and ideals or in other words -- having a character or personality that, in due course, became the identity of the movement. 

Many of these values and ideals are internal, but an ideology also needs some external symbols. Mussolini's brown shirted revolutionaries, Gandhi cap, blue jeans worn in sixties and seventies by flower children - are typical examples of use of dress code to build and strengthen the identity of an ideological movement.

External symbols and internal values and ideals, also called character, play a very important role in the growth of an ideology. On one hand, they facilitate interaction between followers of the ideology. On the other hand, they foster a community feeling between the followers leading to building of personal bonds with each other and with the organization acting as the flag-bearer of the ideology. The facilitation of interaction is like two fax machines being able to communicate since both follow a common technical protocol. The ease of interaction between persons having faith in the same ideology takes place because there is mutual trust and understanding. Once the interaction starts the natural process of growth of bonding takes place. In due course the bonds and linkages acquire a life of their own. 
...
The prosperity of the colonial masters inspired hopes and raised expectations  across the world. Colonial powers and their intellectuals have been prescribing the model that brought them prosperity to the countries that were impoverished by their looting, little realizing non-sustainability of the model. Democracy and capitalism were supposed to be twin magic keys to prosperity; but have failed to deliver the promised kingdom of heaven on earth for the poor. Communism has failed even more with every communist country degenerating into a morass of inefficiency and ineptitude.
...
The intellectual class has failed to recognize their own failure in keeping the skeleton and lifeblood of different ideologies in a healthy state. Communists treated their intellectuals in the same fashion as Catholic Church did -- using them as coolies of knowledge. In democratic countries, there has been a tendency to eulogize democracy to such heights that a critical evaluation of democracy has been well nigh impossible. 

Is it not surprising that in the past one and a half centuries there has been no fundamental development in the notion of democracy? Modern intellectuals face a challenge of combining the advantages of a notion of divine with a political ideology. No, they do not seem to have even tried to face this challenge.

--Anil Chawla 

Congress Party never had an ideology excepting for the topi promoted by Gandhi during the freedom movement. This topi has been hijacked by the AAP for making fools of the Delhi electorate. The local idiom says: to anoint one with a topi means to fool or dupe that person. India's topi moment has arrived with the AAP topi.

When Ram Manohar Lohia promoted the 'Socialist' ideology by forming the Socialist Party, it was a revolt against the Communist ideology which was drifting away from national interests and moving towards the visionary comintern, the communist international.

India since Independence has not had the luxury of development of political parties governed by ideologies such as 'labour' or 'liberal' or 'conservative' labels. Indian political science philosophers were satisfied with the use of terms like 'left' or 'right' to define the role of the state in public affairs -- one assigning the leading role to the state and the other demanding the removal of the state from the shoulders of the citizens.

This tendency is well mirrored in American politics predominantly dominated by a two-party system called 'Democrats' and 'Republicans'. Both are wedded to the ideology of the primacy of the marketplace but one group sees a dominant role for the state and the other sees no role for the state except in matters of national defence and the nation's monetary system.

No such ideological churning has occurred in India since 1947 when the country gained independence from the colonial regime and faced the mess of a truncated geographical entity with trifurcated states called Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. This trifurcation has, in effect, left a festering sore which may be called the 'muslim' problem as yet unresolved in defining their identity within the nation-state subject to a uniform civil code and absolute adherance and loyalty to the nation. The 'muslim' problem is, but a problem torn between sectarian religious identity and mainstream national identity.

Built upon this massive divide and social identity tention, parties have built up ideologies based on false identities such as the 'dravidian' in Tamil Nadu or 'dalit' in Uttar Pradesh and other pockets dominated by the Bahujan Samaj Party, or collaboration with 'muslim' vote banks as demonstrated by Socialist Party in Uttar Pradesh which now rules the populous state. Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool Congress Party founded as a revolt against the Congress hegemony has successfully countered the communist ideology in West Bengal and paid the price comparable to the Socialist Party in Uttar Pradesh of a coalition with 'muslim' sentiments mixed up with the ideology of ridding the state of any power to confiscate land to support private sector at the cost of the farmer-tenant as the master of the soil, exemplified by the Singur movement.

Both BJP ruling in states like Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Chattisgarh and Congress (and in coalition with its allotrops like NCP or JD-U) in Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka have no ideological differences which distinguish them. In a way, both BJP and Congress have no ideological baggage to carry.

Congress rule at the Centre for an extended period initially started with a hybrid socialistic pattern and drifted towards the free markets and promotion of private sector, withdrawing the state from investment initiatives while still controlling the flow of funds for the investment initiatives of the private sector by doling out sectoral allocations under a five-year plan. Federal system has also not been allowed to evolve with the Centre exercising the role of a donor of grants to the States through allocations of central funds which constitute the major segment of the nation's GDP and leaving the States with little initiative to harness funds on their own initiative. Congress has tended to play the Big-brother role in the dole-outs to the States. Thus, even federalism within a unitary state as an ideology has no clarity in execution. Panchayati Raj initiative is a virtual non-starter with virtually no powers vested with the Panchayat institutions for development project initiatives.

In summary, the functioning of the Constitution is in a mess, chalta hai situation resulting in the accumulation of looted wealth by the criminalised politicians and most of this wealth has been routed through devious methods of hawala transactions and Participatory Notes to be stashed away into tax havens abroad, thus depriving these funds to be used by the nation's financial system.

If there has to be an ideology to define BJP which is distinct from that of Congress, it has to relate to this: restitution of illicit wealth which the nation's which should be brought back to the nation.

This will at least define BJP as a nationalist party concerned with the nation as the ideology while steering clear of -isms which end up as cliches like socialism or communism or feudalism or liberalism and find expression in pseudo-secular politics or pseudo-draidian-aryan mirages as in Tamil Nadu, to avoid resolution of the 'muslim' problem with resoluteness, not compromising on the primacy of the ideology of the nation.

In summary, BJP has to announce an answer to the vacuum left by the disintegrated Congress, a vacuum sought to be occupied by nakshals like AAP. The answer should not be casteism or dravidian divide or pseudo-secular divide, but swaraj for the nation, true independence. 

This will announce that the 2014 polls is a freedom struggle to re-establish the identity and primacy of the nation. 

Nation should be the answer to the ideology question. The role models for the leader of the nation should be Shivaji and Netaji. In Hindustani language Netaji means: "Respected Leader". They are the national heroes who laid down their lives in defence of the nation. This will be a tribute: Jai Jawan. Jai Bharat. sending a message to the neighbours who may harbour evil intent to usurp part of India.

This, I think should be the response to the topi moment. Let saffron scarves adorn the millions who throng to the meetings of Narendra Modi feeling proud in their national identity as Bharatiya in memory of a nation which has the potential to lead and create an Indian Ocean Community among 59 nations along the Indian Ocean Rim and celebrating Angkor Wat as the largest Vishnu Mandiram which evokes the memory of Bharatiya ancestors who participated in the formation of the Hinduised states of South-east Asia (the phrase used by the French savant, George Coedes in the title of his book which is a tour de force in historical studies of the region). As Swami Vivekananda said, India has a destiny to fulfil and the next leader of the nation should vow to fulfil that destiny of leading India to the 25% of the global wealth which she had at the turn of the millennium in 0 Common Era (as noted by Angus Maddison).


This goal set for the leader to achieve will provide meaning to the nation of India as ideology.

If BJP wants to announce a Vision document to counter AAP's sloppy vision document or Congress' platitudes in their manifesto or fragmenting parties like SP or BSP or TCP or NCP or JDU or BJD, 

I suggest that this goal for the nation as ideology should become the central and operative slogan to rid the nation of the rotten Congress rule. 

Enough of Congress rule. Enough. Congress, quit ruling. Let us reclaim the nation from listless usurpers and opportunists for abhyudayam (social welfare) and attain Purna Swaraj.

Kalyanaraman


Emails of Medha Patkar, letter from Congress Party leader and perjury in SC

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Confidential emails of Medha Patkar and letter from Congress party leader:



30 May, 2012

Medha Patkar's perjury in Supreme Court


Above: Medha Patkar's Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA) banner with threats to Government officials

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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

Civil Appeal No. 2082 of 2011

Narmada Bachao Andolan ....Appellant

Versus

State of Madhya Pradesh & Anr. ....Respondents

WITH

Civil Appeal Nos.2083-2097 of 2011

State of Madhya Pradesh ....Appellant

Versus

Narmada Bachao Andolan & Anr. ...Respondent

AND

Civil Appeal Nos. 2098-2112 of 2011

Narmada Hydro-Development Corporation ...Appellant

Versus

Narmada Bachao Andolan & Ors. ...Respondents

WITH

Civil Appeal No. 2115 of 2011

State of Madhya Pradesh ..Appellant

Versus

Narmada Bachao Andolan & Anr. ..Respondents

AND

Civil Appeal No. 2116 of 2011

Narmada Hydro Electric Development

Corporation Limited ..Appellant

Versus

Narmada Bachao Andolan & Anr. ..Respondents

Extracts from the Court Order

115. The appellants herein have raised an objection that the tenure holders of the said land are still in actual physical possession and they had never been evicted. However, on behalf of the respondent i.e. Narmada Bachao Andolan, Shri Alok Agrawal, Chief Activist of the organisation, has filed the counter affidavit dated 1.2.2010 before this Court, wherein it has specifically been mentioned as under:

(a) The acquired lands/properties of these 5 villages stood already vested in the State. The State is not competent to withdraw the land acquisition proceedings.

125. In the instant case, in view of the fact that land in dispute is an agricultural land and has 167 dwelling houses, law in fact requires taking over the actual physical possession. The respondent no. 1 has asserted that the tenure holders are not in possession of the said land. We considered it proper to appoint a Commissioner and to have his report. Thus, vide order dated 24.2.2011, this Court requested the District Judge, Indore to have an inspection of the lands in dispute in five villages and submit the report as who is in actual physical possession of the same.

126. In pursuance of our direction dated 24.2.2011, Shri M.K. Mudgal, learned District and Sessions Judge, Indore (M.P.) has submitted a detailed report after having conducted spot inspections and examining all the tenure holders in respect of the land in dispute in presence of Shri Alok Agrawal, Chief Activist of Narmada Bachao Andolan, (who remained present in this Court throughout the proceedings also and had been instructing the learned counsel for the said party) and recorded the following findings of fact:

(1) So far as the land in dispute in villages Dharadi, Guadi, Kothmir, Nayapura and Narsinghpura, having an area of 284.03 hectares is concerned, the original tenure holders are in actual physical possession;

(2) The Bhumiswamis (tenure holder) had sown the crops on the said land;

The report concludes as under:

"Therefore, on the spot inspection and the recorded evidence, there is no doubt in my mind to conclude that the standing crops have been sown by the former Bhumiswamis and the acquired lands of five villages in questions are actually in possession of the former Bhumiswamis even now. It has also got to be deduced further that N.V.D.A. has never been in possession of the aforesaid lands since the acquisitions of the same." (Emphasis added)

129. In view of the above, this becomes crystal clear that none of the tenure holders, so far the land in dispute is concerned, has been evicted / dispossessed. All the tenure holders are enjoying the said land without any interference. The tall claims made by the respondents before the High Court were totally false. The High Court was not justified in entertaining their applications in this regard, without verifying the factual aspects.

131. Before adverting to the next issue, it is desirable to deal with the conduct of the NBA. The question is not of justification of the tenure holders to retain possession of the land, rather it had emphatically been argued by Shri Sanjay Parekh, learned counsel appearing for the said applicant / respondent, that powers under Section 48 of the Act 1894 could not be resorted to because the tenure holders had already been physically dis-possessed and land stood vested in the State. Therefore, the same could not be divested. The matter was argued by Shri Sanjay Parekh at great length to impress upon the Court that the tenure holders had been actually dis-possessed long ago. This fact was denied by the State. It was only after considering the rival submissions on behalf of the parties that this Court thought it fit and appropriate to have a spot inspection report and then the District Judge, Indore, was asked to make a local inspection and submit the report. The report has been made after making an inspection of the area and recording statements of the tenure holders in presence of Shri Alok Agrawal, Chief activist of NBA and thus, we accept the same. It is evident from the said report that statements made by the said applicant / respondent in the Court, in this regard are factually incorrect and false. The Court has been entertaining this petition under the bona fide belief that NBA was espousing the grievance of inarticulate and illiterate poor farmers, with all sincerity and thus, would not make any misleading statement. However, our belief stands fully belied. Applicant / respondent made pleadings and advanced arguments without any basis only to secure unwarranted benefits to those tenure holders. In the instant case it stands discredited totally in the eyes of this Court. This Court had been a little careful and cautious in this regard, which has exposed the true picture.

132. In such a fact-situation, the NBA not having personal interest in the case, cannot claim to be dominus litis. Thus, it ought to have acted at every stage with full sense of responsibility and sincerity. Earlier also, this Court in Narmada Bachao Andolan v. Union of India & Ors., (1998) 5 SCC 586, has disapproved the conduct of the Narmada Bachao Andolan and described it to be most unfortunate that it had celebrated the 4th anniversary of the stoppage of work of the dam under the interim orders of the Court. This Court found it to be an obstruction in the way of implementing the R & R Policy. However, at that time this Court was assured by the said NBA that they "shall not directly or indirectly give any cause for concern by this Court." But, in our opinion, it has not been able to keep its solemn undertaking given to this Court.

144. In such a case the person who suppresses the material facts from the court is guilty of Suppressio Veri and Suggestio Falsi i.e. suppression or failure to disclose what a party is bound to disclose, which may amount to fraud.

145. In view of the above, we reach the inescapable conclusion that the NBA has not acted with a sense of responsibility and so far succeeded in securing favourable orders by misleading the Court. Such conduct cannot be approved. However, in a PIL, the Court has to strike a balance between the interests of the parties. The Court has to take into consideration the pitiable condition of oustees, their poverty, inarticulateness, illiteracy, extent of backwardness, unawareness also. It is desirable that in future the Courts must view any presentation by the NBA with caution and care, insisting on proper pleadings, disclosure of full facts truly and fairly and in case it has any doubt, refuse to entertain the NBA. However, considering the interests of the oustees, it may be desirable that the Court may appoint an Amicus Curiae to present their cause, if such a contingency arises.

161. We have been given to understand that on the Narmada River, in the State of Madhya Pradesh, in all 29 major and minor projects are contemplated. Some of them have already been completed, but on account of stay order by the court/Authority some projects could not be completed. It is unfortunate that in spite of the fact that a huge amount has been spent, yet no one is able to reap the fruits of investment. The State should take immediate steps to get the final verdict in such cases or stay vacated and start the project at the earliest.


.............................J.
(J.M. PANCHAL)

.............................J.
(DEEPAK VERMA)

.............................J.
(Dr. B.S. CHAUHAN)

New Delhi

May 11, 2011

Complete Court Order at: Case Status of Supreme Court of India
http://dharmanext.blogspot.in/2012/05/medha-patkars-perjury-in-supreme-court.html
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