Bhopal - The Pioneer
Transcription
Bhopal - The Pioneer
C M Y K 7`]]`hfd`_+ 0DXU4QY\i@Y_^UUb >@?6J' 78=3D901A>C74ABC>? D:B²0B80=A827;8BC RNI Regn. No. MPENG/2004/13703, Regd. No. L-2/BPLON/41/2006-2008 4bcPQ[XbWTS '%# ;PcT2Xch E^[ "8bbdT &' ?dQ[XbWTS5a^\ 0XaBdaRWPaVT4gcaPXU0__[XRPQ[T 34;78;D2:=>F 17>?0; 17D10=4BF0A A0=278 A08?DA270=3860A7 347A03D= VQSUR__[S_]TQY\i`Y_^UUb H@C=5( DB70B142><4C78A3 F>A;32>D=CAH)CAD<? DA@CE) ;0=:0?;0HF88= F>A;3C!C>30H 17>?0;BD=30H<0A27!! %*?064B''C! fffSPX[h_X^]TTaR^\ DBD0;ACA>31BA BF0?0=30B6D?C0 AdaP[<db[X\QPbT <P\PcP´bbWXT[S 1 SS_bTY^Wd_c_]UbU`_bdc°Q^TdXUcUQbU^µd^USUccQbY\i dXU\Qcdg_bTY^TYc`QccY_^QdUZ_eb^Q\Yc]°dXU V_bdXS_]Y^W1ccU]R\iU\USdY_^Y^GUcd2U^WQ\Yc\Y[U\id_ gYd^UccQbUQ\S_^dUcdDXUS_^dU^dY_^YcdXQdgXUbUQcdXU UQb\YUbVUU\Y^WgQcdXQd=Q]QdQ2Q^UbZUUµcDbY^Q]__\ 3_^WbUccg_e\TcUSebUQbUc_e^TY^WgY^dXUWb_e^T cYdeQdY_^XQcSXQ^WUTV_\\_gY^WdXUcU]Y_VVYSYQ\Q\\YQ^SU_V dXU3@9=Q^TdXU3_^WbUccD_dXYcSebY_ecQ\\YQ^SUXQc ^_gRUU^QTTUTdXUce``_cUTY]`QSd_VdXU=PaPSPcdY^W _`UbQdY_^dXQdcX_gUT]Q^iD=3\UWYc\Qd_bcQSSU`dY^W RbYRUcd_VebdXUbdXUY^dUbUcdc_VQVYSdYdY_ecRecY^Ucc DXUUhdU^dd_gXYSXdXUcdY^W_`UbQdY_^°gX_cU VY^TY^WcXQfURUU^QSS_bTUT\QfYcX`eR\YSYdiRidXU]QY^ ]UTYQWb_e`Y^GUcd2U^WQ\°gY\\U^QR\UdXU3@9= 3_^WbUccQ\\YQ^SUd_S\_cUdXUWQ`Q^TWYfUdXUD=3Qbe^ V_bYdc]_^UiYccdY\\Q]QddUb_VS_^ZUSdebUGUcd2U^WQ\XQc QbUS_bT_VU^TebY^W7_fUb^]U^dc*dXU3_^WbUccbe\UT e^SXQ\\U^WUTVb_]9^TU`U^TU^SUd_!)&'dXU<UVd6b_^d `bUfQY\UTVb_]!)''d_" !!Q^TdXUD=3Q``UQbcd_XQfU cdbU^WdXU^UTYdc`_cYdY_^Y]]UQcebQR\icY^SUYdg_^Y^dXU ´gQfUµU\USdY_^_V" !!5fU^dXU>QbU^TbQ=_TY_VVU^cYfU_V " !$S_e\T^_d`bUfU^d=Q]QdQVb_]cgUU`Y^WdXU<_[ CQRXQU\USdY_^c =eSX]_bUdXQ^Y^_dXUbCdQdUc`Qbdi_bWQ^YcQdY_^ cUU]cd_]QddUbY^_bTY^QdU\iY^GUcd2U^WQ\DXYcYcdXU bUQc_^gXi`_\YdYSQ\fY_\U^SUYcc_gYTUc`bUQTY^dXUCdQdU Q^TgXidXUbe\Y^WTYc`U^cQdY_^cdQbdc_VVgYdXQ^QTfQ^dQWU 2UdgUU^" !!Q^T" !&=Q]QdQXQc^_T_eRdYbbYdQdUTQ \QbWUcUSdY_^_VdXU]YTT\US\QccUc_gY^Wd_XYWX XQ^TUT^Ucc_VYdcSQTbUcQ^TdXUUhd_bdY_^YcdgQic_VQ `_\YdYSQ\\iS_^db_\\UT´ci^TYSQdUµdXQdY]`_cUce^_VVYSYQ\\UfYUc _^RecY^UccUcQ^T_dXUbUS_^_]YSQSdYfYdi1ddXUcQ]U dY]U=Q]QdQXQcY^SbUQcUTXUb`QbdiµcbebQ\`bUcU^SU dXQ^[cY^^_c]Q\\]UQcebURidXUTUVUSdY_^_VQSdYfYcdc UQb\YUbQcc_SYQdUTgYdXdXU3@9=5fU^YV=Q]QdQXQcd_ 8bXcTcWXRP[c^cT\_cX]SXeXSdP[b cdbeWW\UY^ebRQ^QbUQcYd YcVU\ddXQddXUTUVYSYdgY\\RU P]SXUcWThbdRRd\QU[Pd]cXc S_fUbUTRiXUbWb_gY^W PbX]R^]ca^eTacXQ[TTeXST]RT^U bebQ\ce``_bd 6Y^Q\\i=Q]QdQµc eT]P[Xch.CWXbXbP_WX[^b^_WXRP[ `_cYdY_^\__[ccUSebU_gY^W `dTbcX^]cWPcXbQTh^]S\h d_dXUcdb_^W=ec\Y] R^\_TcT]RTc^P]bfTa0[[cWPc ce``_bdV_bdXUD=3Y^ RP]QTbPXSXbcWPcY^da]P[Xb\ c_edXUb^Q^TSU^dbQ\`Qbdc _VdXUCdQdU=ec\Y]cgX_ ]TTSbc^U^Rdbc^PRcdP[ ]Q[Ue`^UQb\iQdXYbT_V fa^]VS^X]VaPcWTacWP] RWPaPRcTafTPZ]TbbTbcWPc\Ph dXUQSdeQ\f_dY^W `_`e\QdY_^]QiRUQ\Ydd\U d]STab^\TRXaRd\bcP]RTb ]_bUY^S\Y^UTd_gQbTcdXU [TPSc^TcWXRP[\XbbcT_b 3_^WbUccY^dXUR_bTUb TYcdbYSdc_V>_bdX2U^WQ\ <P\PcP\PhfX]cWT U^acWR^\X]V0bbT\Q[hT[TRcX^] ReddXUS_]]e^YdibU]QY^c gQbi_VdXU\_SQ\3@9= ^abWT\PhfT[[QTe^cTS^dc dXQ^[cd_dXU\eb[Y^W FWPcTeTacWT^dcR^\T8 `bUcU^SU_VV_b]Ub3XYUV bX]RTaT[hW^_TcWPccWT=PaPSP =Y^YcdUb2eTTXQTUR bcX]V_[Phb]^a^[TX]cWTUX]P[ 2XQddQSXQbZUUgX_XQc R^[[TRcXeTSTRXbX^]8UW^fTeTa QSaeYbUTQ^Y]QWU_V RUY^WY^Y]YSQ\d_ XcS^TbXcfX[[^_T]cWT dbQTYdY_^Q\Ycd=ec\Y]c U[^^SVPcTb^Ub^\TeTahS^SVh 1d_^UdY]U`QbdYSe\Qb\i Y^dXUQVdUb]QdX_VdXU" !$ Y^da]P[Xb\ U\USdY_^YdcUU]UTdXQddXU 2:@g_e\TU]UbWUQcQfYQR\UdXYbTV_bSUQ^T]QiRUUfU^ _fUbdQ[UdXU3@9=QcdXU]QY^?``_cYdY_^8_gUfUbdXU `Qbdi]QTUQcUbYUc_VdQSdYSQ\]YcSQ\Se\QdY_^cQ^TVQY\UTd_ TUfU\_`Q\_SQ\\UQTUbcXY`DXU2:@YccdY\\Q`_dU^dV_bSUY^ dXUUfU^d_VQ<_[CQRXQU\USdY_^RedYdXQcRUU^UTWUT_ed _VdXUbUS[_^Y^WY^\_SQ\`_\YdYSc GXY\UdXUU\USd_bQ\RQdd\UY^GUcd2U^WQ\YccdY\\dQ[Y^W cXQ`UYdYcY]`_bdQ^dd_TU\fUQ\Ydd\U_^dXU=PaPSP bUfU\QdY_^cdXQd_^dXUVQSU_VYdQ``UQbcd_XQfUTU^dUTdXU D=3µcY]QWU 9Q]^_dc_]eSXS_^SUb^UTgYdXdXUdY]Y^W_VdXU bUfU\QdY_^cdXQdQbUe^TU^YQR\iQY]UTQdY^V\eU^SY^WdXU U\USdY_^_edS_]U:ecdQc]Q^i]UTYQWb_e`cecUdXU `Qb\YQ]U^dQbicUccY_^d_]QhY]YcUdXUY]`QSd_VdXUYb ´cS__`cµ=PaPSP XQcbU\UQcUTYdccdY^W_`UbQdY_^VY^TY^Wc TebY^WdXUU\USdY_^cUQc_^9^dXU\YWXd_VdXU9^TYQ^]UTYQµc Y^S\Y^QdY_^d_RU`_\YdYSQ\`\QiUbcdXUdY]Y^W_VdXUcdY^W cX_e\T^µd_SSQcY_^bUQ\ceb`bYcU 8_gUfUbaeUcdY_^c^UUTd_RUQc[UTQcd_gXiQ^ _`UbQdY_^S_^TeSdUT`bY_bd_dXU" !$<_[CQRXQ`_\\gQc [U`dY^S_\Tcd_bQWUV_bc_\_^WDXUbUQbU]Q^iS_^c`YbQSi dXU_bYUcV\_QdY^WReddXU_^UdXQdQ``UQ\cd_]UYcdXUdXU_bi dXQddXU`eb`_cU_VdXUcdY^WgQcd_`ed`bUccebU_^=Q]QdQ Y^dXUUfU^ddXQddXU<_[CQRXQ`_\\dXb_gY^We`QVbQSdebUT fUbTYSdCY^SUdXU2:@g_^dXQdU\USdY_^_^Ydc_g^dXU \QbWUb`_\YdYSQ\`eb`_cU_VdXUcdY^WgQcTUVUQdUT8U^SUdXU `b_ZUSdgQccXU\fUTQ^TbUcebbUSdUTY^" !&gYdXQTYVVUbU^d _RZUSdYfU D_]i]Y^Tc_]U_VdXUUh`\Q^QdY_^cWYfU^RidXU =PaPSP UTYd_bcd_Uh`\QY^dXUTU\QiQbUe^S_^fY^SY^W1Ve\\ `_cd]_bdU]_VdXU_`UbQdY_^]QibUfUQ\Y^dUbUcdY^W\Y^[c BUWQbT\Ucc_VdXU]_dYfUc_VdXU´cS__`µ]UTYQdXUbUYc Qdb_eR\Y^WaeUcdY_^dXQdbU]QY^c?fUbdXU`QcdTUSQTU_b c_Y^fUcdYWQdYfUZ_eb^Q\Yc]°dXURbQ^SXdXQdRU\YUfUcY^ e^UQbdXY^W`_\YdYSQ\fU^Q\Ydi°XQcTYcS_fUbUTQecUVe\cX_bd SedY^cdY^W_`UbQdY_^c>UfUb]Y^T`\_eWXY^WdXb_eWXbUQ]c _VT_Se]U^dcV_bdXUc]_[Y^WWe^_bUfU^Y^dUbfYUgY^WdXU e^V_bde^QdUfYSdY]c_VS_bbe`dY_^YdXQcRUS_]U_R\YWQd_bid_ \ebUce``_cUT\ifU^Q\`_\YdYSYQ^cY^d_X_^UidbQ`cDXUcU Y^S\eTUV\Qe^dY^WgQTc_V^_dUcRUV_bU`U_`\Uc_]U_V gX_]]Qi^UfUbXQfUcUU^dXQd[Y^T_V]_^Ui 9cYdUdXYSQ\d_dU]`dY^TYfYTeQ\cQ^TYVdXUiceSSe]R V\Qe^dYdQcY^S_^db_fUbdYR\UUfYTU^SU_VfU^Q\Ydi/DXYcYcQ `XY\_c_`XYSQ\aeUcdY_^dXQdYcRUi_^T]iS_]`UdU^SUd_ Q^cgUb1\\dXQdSQ^RUcQYTYcdXQdZ_eb^Q\Yc]^UUTcd_V_Sec d_QSdeQ\gb_^WT_Y^WbQdXUbdXQ^SXQbQSdUbgUQ[^UccUcdXQd ]Qie^TUbc_]USYbSe]cdQ^SUc\UQTd_UdXYSQ\]YccdU`c =Q]QdQ]QigY^dXUV_bdXS_]Y^W1ccU]R\iU\USdY_^_b cXU]QigU\\RUf_dUT_edGXQdUfUbdXU_edS_]U9 cY^SUbU\iX_`UdXQddXU=PaPSP cdY^W`\Qic^_b_\UY^dXUVY^Q\ S_\\USdYfUTUSYcY_^9VX_gUfUbYdT_UcYdgY\\_`U^dXU V\__TWQdUc_Vc_]UfUbiT_TWiZ_eb^Q\Yc] C M Y K CRhReRd\VUe`ac`gVµ)UHHGRPRIVSHHFKQRW OLFHQFHWRLQVXOW,QGLD¶ ^R[`cZejSj>RcTY#) ³6PaXQXWPcP^´UX]SX]VUTTc d]STa<^SXad[T0\Xc BWPWcT[[b19?\TTc 2^]VP[[bTcc^X]e^ZT 0]cX3TUTRcX^]0Rc 344?0::D?A4C8Q =4F34;78 BD=8;:D<0A?=BQ 347A03D==4F34;78 he beleaguered Uttarakhand T Chief Minister Harish Rawat on Saturday got a breather with Governor Krishna Kant Paul asking him to prove majority on the floor of the State Assembly by March 28. The Governor’s directive came even as BJP, claiming strength of 35 with the support of nine rebel Congress MLAs in the 70-member Assembly, stepped up efforts to form its Government, contending that the Rawat Government had been reduced to a minority. On his part, Rawat asserted that he was ready to prove his majority in the Assembly. In a letter to the Chief Minister, the Governor asked him to prove his majority in the State Assembly by March 28, a top Raj Bhawan official said. It was dispatched to the CM shortly before his appointment with the Governor this evening. Rawat, who has been under pressure from the BJP, now has time till March 28 to get back the dissident MLAs. sserting that the BJP Government has A taken major strides towards the development of poor villagers and farmers with the Union Budget unleashing a slew of allocations for "gaon, garib aur kisan", BJP president Amit Shah on Saturday said the Garibi Hatao movement is finally finding its feet under the Modi dispensation, which is taking "one new initiative every 15 days". This, even as he took up the raging controversies over nationalism and freedom of ATQT[2^]VaTbb<;0bP1B?[TVXb[Pc^aP]ScWTaT_aTbT]cPcXeTb^U19?PUcTa\TTcX]V speech and slammed efforts to pass off 6^eTa]^a^UDccPaPZWP]S::?Pd[PcWXbaTbXST]RTX]3TWaPSd]^]5aXSPh ?C8 "anti-national acts as freedom of expression". He sought the party workers to ignite Invoking the Anti-Defection House as per the Anti-Defection "nationwide patriotism" saying, "Desh Act, the ruling Congress is all set Act. However, the legal experts are bhakti ka alakh jagayein (arouse the spirto appeal to the Governor to ter- finding loopholes in the it of patriotism in the nation)". Delivering the inaugural address at the minate the membership of the Government’s claim. They say the nine dissident Congress MLAs in Government claiming to have two-day National Executive of the BJP at the aftermath of Friday evening’s passed the Budget by voice vote the NDMC convention centre here, Shah happenings inside the House. The has made it difficult for it to take lashed out at Congress vice-president decision was taken after Chief action against the rebel MLAs Rahul Gandhi for "supporting" those raising anti-national slogans saying "such Minister Harish Rawat, Speaker under the Anti-Defection Act. Govind Singh Kunjwal and “Whip was issued, but the activities cannot be tolerated at any cost". Parliamentary Affairs Minister voice vote passage of the Budget has Hitting out at the Congress and Rahul, Indira Hridayesh deliberated over made the application of the law dif- Shah said they have a "negative mindset" the issue on Saturday. ficult,” said one of the legal experts. and hence, are making all baseless allegaAs per the law, membership of Legal experts say that as the tions against the Modi Government. the rebels would be terminated Opposition has demanded diviHe said any plan which is geared against unless things take the form of a sion of votes on the Budget it the unity and integrity of the country will not split that involves one-third of the amounts to no-confidence motion. be allowed to succeed by the party. Maintaining that the Congress imposed concerned party’s strength in the Turn to Page 4 8]SXP]R^d_[T P\^]V%!ZX[[TS X]5[h3dQPX_[P]T RaPbWX]AdbbXP 05?Q A>BC>E>=3>=ADBB80 Flydubai passenger jet crashed in southern Russia early on Saturday, killing all 62 people on board, including two Indians, as it tried to land in bad weather in the city of Rostov-onDon, officials said. Passengers killed in the crash include two Indians, 44 Russians, eight Ukrainians and one from Uzbekistan. The two Indians killed in the crash hail from Kerala. Perumbavoor natives — Shyam Mohan and his wife Athira — were both working at a hospital in Russia. They were returning after a month-long vacation in Dubai. The Boeing 737, heading from Dubai to the southern Russian city, was reportedly making its second attempt to land at 0050 GMT when it missed the runway, erupting in a huge fireball as it crashed, leaving debris scattered across a wide area. Detailed report on Page 7 A ?T^_[T[XVWcX]VRP]S[Tbc^U^a\cWT]d\QTa%_PccTa]cWPc\TP]b%\X]dcTbXb ^]TW^dac^RT[TQaPcTcWTF^a[S4PacW7^da^aVP]XbTSQhF^a[SFXST5d]SU^a =PcdaTFF5X]1W^_P[^]BPcdaSPh ?X^]TTa_W^c^ Emergency and banned freedom of Press when it was in power, Shah said it should not lecture the BJP on freedom of speech. "We support freedom of speech but will not let any effort to break the country's unity succeed," Shah said. The meet is being attended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Shah, Union Ministers Arun Jaitley, M Venkaiah Naidu, Rajnath Singh, Sushma Swaraj and all other Cabinet Ministers and Chief Ministers of BJP-ruled States. Veteran party leader LK Advani also attended the conclave and along with Modi, Shah and Jaitley was seated on the dais. A socio-economic resolution was passed by the meet which underlined the economic plan and policies of the Government for the betterment of the people belonging to "poor and marginal" sections. The main inputs for the resolution were given by the party general secretary Bhupendra Yadav. Turn to Page 4 0RGLSUHVHQWV.ULVKL.DUPDQ $ZDUGWR0DGK\D3UDGHVK ?=BQ =4F34;78 rime Minister Narendra P Modi conferred the Krishi Karman Award on Madhya Pradesh in New Delhi on Saturday. This is the 4th consecutive time the State is getting the award. Farmers Welfare and Agriculture Development Minister Bisen received the award on behalf of the State for record food grain production in the year 2014-15. Union Agriculture Minister Radhamohan Singh, Minister of State Sanjeev Baliyan and Mohan Bhai Kalyan Bhai Kundariya were also present on the occasion. The Prime Minister conferred the award to the State during a three-day Krishi Unnati Mela. The award carried memento, letter of citation and Rs 5 crore. Besides, in the Progressive Farmers Category, ,QGLDEHDW3DNRQWRXJK SLWFKEUHDNMLQ[ ?=BQ :>;:0C0 ?aX\T<X]XbcTa=PaT]SaP<^SXVXeX]VPfPh:aXbWX:Pa\P]0fPaSc^P<PSWhP ?aPSTbWUPa\TaU^a^dcbcP]SX]V_TaU^a\P]RTX]PVaXRd[cdaTPc:aXbWXD]]PcX<T[PX] =Tf3T[WX^]BPcdaSPh0VaXRd[cdaT<X]XbcTaAPSWP<^WP]BX]VWXbP[b^bTT] ?C8 the Prime Minister felicitated Narsinghpur's farmer Narayan Singh Patel for wheat production and Morena's Rekha Tyagi for millet production for the year 2014-15. They were given memento, letter of citation and Rs 2 lakh each. As a result of Chief Minister Shivraj Singh 03YDUVLW\UROOV EDFNPHGLFDO GHQWDOIHHKLNH BC055A4?>AC4AQ 17>?0; n a relief for medical and dental students, IUniversity the Madhya Pradesh Medical Science (MPMSU) rolled back its proposed ity of joy, Kolkata, lightened up C in celebrations as India beat arch-rivals Pakistan — yet again in a World Cup — with six wickets in hand on Saturday to get their World T20 up and running. On a pitch where Pakistan team had never lost against the Men in Blue, Team India changed the history and turned the tables on their arch-rivals. Mr reliable Virat Kohli's 55 not out, and Yuvraj Singh's priced little cameo of 24 runs helped India cross the finishing line. The duo shared a 61-run partnership for the fourth wicket which proved crucial in the final outcome. While chasing the modest score of 118, Men in Blue had a few roadblock which left them reeling at 23/3 at one stage. In the fourth over Pakistan's veteran pacer Mohammad Sami took two wickets on two balls sending Shikhar Dhawan and Suresh Raina back to the pavilion to silence the Eden Gardens crowd. But, after that Yuvi and Kohli made sure the Blues had no trouble in chasing down the target with a lit- ?aX\T<X]XbcTa=PaT]SaP<^SX19?_aTbXST]c0\Xc BWPWbT]X^a19?[TPSTa;:0SeP]XP]S5X]P]RT <X]XbcTa0ad]9PXc[ThPccWT_Pach´b]PcX^]P[TgTRdcXeT \TTcX]=Tf3T[WX^]BPcdaSPh 0[fX]BX]VWk?X^]TTa 8]SXP´b<B3W^]XR^[[TRcbPQP[[Pb?PZXbcP]´bBWPWXS0UaXSXQPcbSdaX]VcWT822F^a[SCfT]ch! ! %RaXRZTc\PcRWPc4ST]6PaST]bX]:^[ZPcP 0? tle bit of help from Dhoni's 13 runs in the end. Earlier, Pakistan notched up a well-earned and extremely competitive score of 118 at Eden Gardens after MS Dhoni believed in his bowlers and his batsmen's abilities to chase and put the visitors to bat in a rain-delayed 18 over match. On a pitch that is turning a mile and also offering assistance to pace, it is a good total, something that Dhoni would have wanted to hover around 90 -95. Turn to Page 4 hike in enrolment and eligibility fee by as much as 70 per cent. As per the new proposal, all students (except NRI quota) will be charged at a fixed rate. Enrolment fee for MBBS courses has been slashed from the proposed C8,000 to C2,000 per candidate. Similarly, dental students will have to pay enrolment fee of C1,000 instead of the proposed C4,000. The decision was taken by a fee review committee of MPMSU. On February 19, it was reported in the local media that MPMSU has proposed a stupendous hike that would hit the private medical college students. Before MPMSU was formed, enrolment fee paid to local university was as low as Rs 130 for MBBS course. Meanwhile, the fee review committee did not slash non-resident Indian quota medical students' fee hike. The NRI students will have to shell out more for enrolment (USD 1,200 to 3,000) than their yearly course fee. MPMSU officials suggest the hike in fee charged by the university is proportional to changing times. Earlier private and government medical colleges were affiliated to local universities across Madhya Pradesh. Recently, the MP government made is mandatory for all medical colleges affiliate with MPMSU. Chouhan's farsightedness to make agriculture profitable, extension of loans to farmers at zero percent interest rate, efforts to increase cultivable area and area under irrigation, the State has been conferred the Krishi Karman Award for the 4th time consecutively. Turn to Page 4 20?BD;4 50CF0A4942CB³170A0C <0C0:8908´B;>60= 7hSTaPQPS) 8]U[dT]cXP[8b[P\XR bT\X]Pah9P\XP=XiP\XP^] 5aXSPhXbbdTSPUPcfPSTR[PaX]V cWPc²aTPb^]³P]S8b[P\XR²UPXcW³ S^]^cP[[^f<db[X\bc^RWP]c cWTb[^VP]1WPaPc<PcPZXYPX 5A4B7B438C8>=20B4 0608=BC:0=708H0 <TTadc)CWTaTPaT\^aT[TVP[ ca^dQ[TbX]cWT^UUX]VU^a9PfPW Pa[P[D]XeTabXchBcdST]cb³D]X^] _aTbXST]c:P]WPXhP:d\PafW^ XbRdaaT]c[h^dc^]X]cTaX\QPX[0 1PYaP]V3P[PRcXeXbcUa^\ 1d[P]PSbWPWaWPbUX[TSPUaTbW RPbT^UbTSXcX^]PVPX]bc:d\Pa U^aP[[TVTS[hSXbaTb_TRcX]VcWT 8]SXP]Pa\TSU^aRTb <0374B8;4034AB:=>2: >=278=0´B3>>A :PcW\P]Sd)>]cWTTeT^U?aX\T <X]XbcTa:?>[X³beXbXcc^2WX]P [TPSTab^UPVXcPcX]V<PSWTbX _PacXTbX]=T_P[WPeTP__a^PRWTS cWT2WX]TbTT]e^hc^Tg_aTbb cWTXaR^]RTa]baTVPaSX]VcWT ]Tf2^]bcXcdcX^] D´:70=319?<;0´B108; ?4C8C8>=A4942C43 3TWaPSd])0[^RP[R^dac^] BPcdaSPhaTYTRcTScWTQPX[_[TP^U DccPaPZWP]S19?<;06P]TbW 9^bWXfW^fPbbT]cc^ #SPhb³ YdSXRXP[Rdbc^Sh^]5aXSPh C M Y K UX[\bce! 17>?0; kBD=30H k<0A27!! % D9@HE:>6 2XcVReV_eVceRZ_Vc 0XVWZDWFK WKULOOHU 8c´bP[[PQ^dcUPXcW 35$.5,7,52<FDXJKWXSZLWK6+$.7,$525$ZKRLV SOD\LQJDKRVWDIWHUKLVUHFHQWGDLO\VRDSVWLQWDQGWKHFUHDWRURI 0DQQ0HLQ9LVKZDDV+DLWRNQRZZKDWWKHQHZVKRZLVDOODERXW 6J6:?E96D<J Z_X+2]R_CZT\^R_9V]V_>ZccV_ 2Rc`_ARf] CReVU+'& "! f one were to tell you that a slowpaced movie can be near perfect, then it would be difficult to imagine this possibility. But Eye In The Sky is precisely this and much more. The movie is intelligent and thought-provoking. It is something that very few movies are able to do. However Hollywood manages to get right when it gets things in place. The film creates at atmosphere of ethics in a world where terrorism and violence has become a part and parcel of people’s lives — that of the common man — while the people who can do something about it are busy ‘referring up’ in their bid to be politically correct. It evokes consciousness at every step but at the same time makes you question whether a soldier who is fighting a war should have one, when the enemy is extremely dangerous capable of killing innocents with no conscience or regrets, killing them in his quest to make a point. Director Gavin Hood has managed to get the aesthetics in place in a film that is primarily about how different humans react in the same situation — here a military operation through the eye of a drone. If one is looking for any subtlety then there is none. This is because there is plenty of morality involved which plays out with the cold-blooded Colonel played absolutely brilliant by Helen Mirren. She is fierce and willing to bend quite a few rules. It is, of course, strange to see Alan Rickman alive – moving and talking and doing mundane tasks like having a problem in buying a doll. It is a movie that tells you the outcome of action and inaction and keeps the viewer on tenterhooks till the very end or it may not. It is a movie not be missed even with WT20 going on. fter a gap of almost 10 years, Sony channel has revived its show Mann Mein Vishwaas A Hai in an all-new avatar, showcasing a bunch I <2A@@CD@?D Z_X+7RhRU<YR_DZUYRceY >R]Y`ecR2]ZR3YReeCZdYZ<Ra``c CR[Re<Ra``cCRe_RAReYR\DYRY CReVU+(& "! here is nothing mundane about this family drama from Karan Johar’s kitty. In fact, it has his stamp written all over it from the word go. One had thought that Bollywood had almost forgotten to make such kind of films. So kudos to KJo for giving us a movie that has all the necessary ingredients to make its mark at the box office. Lately, things appear to be going in favour of KJo — first with Bahubali and now with Kapoor & Sons. And why not. The man had to contend with the flop of his magnum opus Bombay Velvet. Talking about Kapoor & Sons; it has everything — spice, drama, some great numbers — Ladki kar gayi chul — and set against a backdrop that is extremely picturesque. The fact that it portrays the everyday problems (read money) of a middle class family means that there is an instant connect with the audience. Add to it two estranged brothers and the stage is set for some drama and there is plenty of it. Director Shakun Batra should be given an A-plus for having managed to make a movie where shouting and fighting are common into an entertainer from the word go and keep up the tempo till the very end albeit with plenty T of twists and turns, with a few tears to be shed towards the end of the movie. What really works here is not the storyline but the brilliant casting. There is Ratna Pathak Shah. From playing the ranisa in Khoobsurat to a middle class house wife, she has proved her versatility. Rajat Kapoor has also managed to hold his ground as has Alia Bhatt, who plays a bubbly girl with a sad story to tell of her own. Then there is Sidharth Malhotra. Though there is very little chemistry between him and Alia, his acting improves as the movie progresses. Then, of course, there is Fawad Khan. He is definitely a keeper. After making his debut in B ollywood with Khoobsurat, he plays the role of a man who doesn’t like girls with aplomb. But the showstopper of this film is Rishi Kapoor who plays a 90-yearold. Though he may not have a lot of screen space, his presence is loud and clear in places where he is not in the frame; that is the quality of his performance in this one. He is witty, practices how to play dead at regular intervals much to the annoyance of his daughter-in-law (Ratna Pathak), loves Ram Teri Ganga Maili because of that one scene of Mandakini under the waterfall, loves to watch ‘rangeen films’ and antogonise the nurse. This is one movie that comes with a tag — a great entertainer. °BWP[X]XBPZbT]P °BWP[X]XBPZbT]P 3OHQW\RI DEVXUGLWLHV 3FD'&( Z_X+C`SVce5V?Zc`;VWWcVj5VR_ >`cXR_8Z_R4RcR_` CReVU+& "! ere’s a bit of confusion. Is the title of the movie Heist or Bus 657? If one H were to go by some reports, the original title was Bus 657 but it was changed to Heist. If this was the case, why not release the movie by its original title in India while the same was released in the US as Heist? Anyway, the mystery is not over the title. Nor is it an action thriller. It’s more about how a heist is planned, executed and the sequence of events that follow. It is definitely not a story that is new. There have been better movies made on the same subject. So it appears to be a tad strange why Robert De Niro, who has given some brilliant performances in movies like Raging Bull and Heat, would want to be associated with Bus 657. Having said that, the movie does manage to hold your attention. There is something about a film with a crime angle that has a thrill quotient despite the storyline being so mundane and generic. Obviously one wants the hero, however bad he is, to get away with his crime. It is a film that is somewhat engaging even though it is preposterous and full of absurdities. °BWP[X]XBPZbT]P of real-life miraculous incidents. The show will have a new story in each episode, selected from among the thousands of entries received by the channel, with popular actor Shakti Arora acting as the narrator. Explaining why the show is coming back, creative director Anshuman Sinha said at the launch: “Considering the number of letters we received with people telling their stories, we felt it was time to bring the show back.” The show will feature a series of miraculous and life-altering events that real people have witnessed in their lives. “The viewer can question if the life-changing incident is indeed a miracle or a mere coincidence and that is where the concept of vishwaas comes in; it’s all about perspective. Miracles are not something that can be proven but we try our best to corroborate the incident told to us with other people who were present. We try to portray the story with a lot of sensitivity,” he says. Stating that their motive behind creating the show is to reignite people’s faith in God and themselves, he mentioned that out of 17,000 stories they have got so far, 500 have been shortlisted. 40 episodes have been shot and another 40 are in the making. “The plan is to keep making Ef_VZ_e`eYVd`f_U`W^fdZT 038CH0=0A0H0= XbQPRZPbcWTW^bc^UBPAT6P<P?P^]ITTCEPUcTaPVP_^UU^dahTPab7TcP[Zbc^B0=644C0H030EPQ^dc fWPc\PZTbcWXbbW^fR[XRZP]SW^fXcWPbRWP]VTSWXb[XUT Q This is your fifth season as the host. What are you doing differently this time? It’s little bit of retaining the old style of hosting and bringing new innovations. Along with the fantastic music, we’ll bring contestants’ success story related to their struggles, family background etc so that the viewers could know them more than just a singer. There are always a lot of things that happen on the spur of the moment. We don’t create a set pattern. I’ll keep it more fun, real, spontaneous and create a light atmosphere by cracking jokes. Q How are the contestants? They are phenomenal. I don’t know how our country manages to produce so many good singers so consistently. This time we had extensive auditions. We called around 100 contestants to Mumbai to select top 12. Apart from the judges, this time we are going to have 30 jury members who have selected the final 12. These singers are all good but it depends on how they perform on that day. Q What has been your observation about the show over the years? There have been popular singers who were launched by this show and they went on to make it big for themselves. The level of the show is very high. The pressure is immense on contestants with judges like Pritam, Sajid-Wajid and Mika. Many end up doing things they should not be. It’s pretty much inevitable, given the setup. Q How have you grown as a host through this show? I found little bits of myself while hosting the show over the years. It has been a crucial juncture in my life. I was an 18-year-old who returned from London with a diploma in English contemporary music and didn’t know what to do. Suddenly this show came up. From then, there was no looking back. I gained a lot of popularity and learnt a lot. I interacted with a lot of senior musicians and people who I look up to like Lataji and Ashaji. Q You saw stardom at a very early age... A lot of my friends were contemplating about what they want to do in the future and here I was already establishing a name for myself. It gave me immense confidence. It was never my intention to work but to be a more till we have good stories to tell,” he said. “We are not promoting any religion or any particular God. We want to tell people that if they have faith, do good deeds and work for their goals, they will see miracles happening. More than believing in God, it is about what kind of relationship you share with God,” the host Shakti Arora tells you. He added that he agreed to the show not only because he loved the concept but also because he did not wish to work on a daily soap after just having finished Meri Aashiqui Tumse Hi, which ended in a hurry when TRPs went down. “It gives me more time for myself as shooting for this is not as intensive as a daily soap,” he said. Arora revealed that he has always been interested in the occult sciences and knowing what the future holds. For this, he even learnt tarot card reading and numerology. In fact, he has done these professionally but for charity. One of the people whose story has been picked up by the show, Shilpa Chaubey, was also present at the event and related her experience: “A few years back, my younger brother met with an accident and was on his deathbed. Although I am not really a believer, I took to praying to all the Gods I knew of and was ready to sacrifice everything — food, water, my marriage. Then I had an out-of-body experience where I felt I was in the presence of Sai Baba and he told me that I could take my brother back. After that, he started recovering and is now alive and well. I feel it is all because of my mother’s faith in God.” It is stories like this that the creators of the show want to bring to the viewers with the motto ‘Vishwaas ka koi tark nahi hota, lekin fark padta hai’ (Faith doesn’t have a logic but it does affect us). The show went on air on March 19. 9LVKIXOORIORYH B0=644C0H030EQaX]Vbh^dPaT_^acUa^\<d\QPX PQ^dccWT]TfbW^f^]ITTCEEXbWZP]hP learner. Ever since I was a child, right from the time I was trained under Kalyanji bhai, I’ve been very blessed to be learning and working at the same time. By the time I was seven-years-old, I already performed in 250 concerts across the world. I started singing in films and got offers for acting. I ended up singing more than 100 songs as a child artist and acted as well. By the time I was 13, I had a huge body of work under my belt. But then my voice cracked and it went through modulation during my adolescent phase. I was out of action for over six years. is beautiful yet deadly. She has stepped out of her home but Sshehenever has no supernatural powers. She is like any other human being. Yet there is something strange and mysterious about her. Aparajita, played by debutante Aishwarya Khare, is a woman who is brought her up by her mother Kalpana (Rohini Banerjee) with much love and care. But she is unaware of the fact that her mother has been poisoning her since childhood, preparing her revenge. “It’s a romance fable shown with a lot of intrigue, mystery, love and revenge. The backdrop of the story is taken from history which records that vishkanyas really existed. Chanakya was responsible for its creation. He was fed small portions of poison since his childhood by his mother so that his body could become immune to poisonous attacks. He strategically gave poison to a woman who turned into a vishkanya,” producer Nissar Parvez of Peninsular Pictures tells you. The makers emphasise that vishkanya is not propagating any disbelief and this is very different from the supernatural shows which showcase daayans, naagins, bhoot etc. “There is no disbelief in it. We have taken the backdrop from Chanakya’s story and showcased how the mother uses her daughter to take revenge. She turns blue at various intervals and her mother gives her a reason that she is suffering from an ailment and until she gains her immunity, she is not allowed to go out and mingle. Why she is doing it is what we’ll reveal later on the show,” Parvez says. The story takes an interesting twist when Malay Mittal, played by Vin Rana, returns from abroad after completing his studies. His curiosity makes him sneak into the house and when they both meet, he falls headover-heels in love with Aparajita. “From day one of the audition, I wanted to take up the show as the story is very catchy. I was ver y sure and confident that I fit the bill perfectly and can do justice to it. Malay is a modern-day man who is very progressive in his thoughts and is the apple-of-the-eye in his family. When he meets Aparajita for the first time, he finds her the most beautiful girl and their friendship grows into love. But it will be interesting to see when he’ll find out the truth,” Rana says. The show, set in Kolkata, is slated to go on air from March 28 at 6:30 pm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c^f]WP[[" 17>?0; kBD=30H k<0A27!! % 3;A^Z_`cZejTV]]ScVR\d ZeddZ]V_TVRe]Rde BC055A4?>AC4AQ 17>?0; he Bharatiya Janata Party T (BJP) minority cell that remains mute over its party leaders chants against Muslim community awakened to raise objection over All India MajlisE-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) president and parliamentarian Asaduddin Owaisi’s refusal to chant ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ and said that chanting ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ is not only our commitment but it is also our birthright. Minority cell State president Hidayatullah Sheikh in a statement here on Saturday said, “The statement of Owaisi is not only objectionable but is also laughable as chanting ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ is not only our commitment but it is also our birthright.” Sheikh further said that Owaisi’s statement has become <8=>A8CH24;;BC0C4?A4B834=C7830H0CD;;07 B748:75DAC74AB083C70C>F08B8³BBC0C4<4=C70B 142><40BD1942C>58=E4BC860C8>=0=3C74 B42DA8CH064=284B>5C742>D=CAHB7>D;3 8=E4BC860C4C70CD=34AF70C2><?D;B8>=C70C 7460E4BD270BC0C4<4=CF7H02740? BC0C4<4=C1420<478B2><?D;B8>=5>A2740? ?D1;828CH74@D4BC8>=43 a subject of investigation and the security agencies of the country should investigate that under what compulsion that he gave such a statement. Why a cheap statement became his compulsion for cheap publicity, he questioned. He said that similar disturbing statement was given by Owaisi during Bihar assembly election but the people did not supported him. If Owaisi hopes that such statements would garner him minority’s support than he would surely get disappointed. 7^\T6dPaSb_TaU^a\X]VRXeX[STUT]RT_a^VaP\\TX]1W^_P[^]BPcdaSPh BcPcT6^ec QXPbTSPVPX]bc B2BC80B ^UUXRTab)1B? BC055A4?>AC4AQ 17>?0; ahujan Samaj Party (BSP) leader and former MLA B Kishore Samrite has alleged that the State Government is biased towards the SC/ST IAS officers serving in Madhya Pradesh. In a statement, Samrite condemned the State Government’s alleged move to harass and isolate the IAS officers, Shashi Karnawat and Ramesh Thete, from the service by framing them in corruption cases. 8]PbcPcT\T]c BP\aXcTR^]ST\]TS cWTBcPcT 6^eTa]\T]c´b P[[TVTS\^eTc^ WPaPbbP]SXb^[PcT cWT80B^UUXRTab BWPbWX:Pa]PfPcP]S AP\TbWCWTcTUa^\ cWTbTaeXRTQh UaP\X]VcWT\X] R^aad_cX^]RPbTb As soon as Bharatiya Janata party (BJP) came to power it withdrew 28,000 to 32,000 cases of its party members and also against 42 IAS and IPS officials and nine ministers that were filed under Lokayukta investigation. Meanwhile, the State Government had sanctioned the prosecution against Karnawat. Samrite alleged that if she was corrupt she would have been rich, but she is under huge debt. During the suspension, Karnawat should be given 75 per cent of her salary, but she received nill and now she is at the verge of suicide. Similarly, Ramesh Thete was trapped in a bribe case of C35,000 and the Government will terminate him from services. Both the IAS officers are from the socially backward and weaker class. Samrite has advised Karnawat and Thete to stay away from Congress as in the past, IAS officers Maan Dahima and Hoshiyar Singh suffered as they depended on Congress. Samrite asked the officer, “If you intend to join politics by leaving job, they should come to the BSP will fight for your rights and forming Government by uprooting the riling BJP.” Noted writer Javed Akhtar has shown right mirror to Owaisi that where it is prohibited to chant for motherland. Islam also mentions of prayer of motherland, he added. He said that while the soldiers are performing duty at the borders of the country for its safeguard from enemy, it has become habit of the leaders like Owaisi to give bizarre statement. They do not believe that their statements confuse the community and also gives wrong message to the society, he added. ?X^]TTa_W^c^ APYSWP]XBWPcPQSXc^]^ [^]VTaWP[cPc3W^[_da <^aT]PbcPcX^]b ?=BQ 6F0;8>A ndian Railways will not stop Rajdhani Express and Shatabdi express at zero output stations. This issue was taken by the railway management to analyse it. The Dholpur and Morena Railway Stations are small stations and Railways is not getting enough number of passengers from there and thus resulting in major loss to the railway department. Now railway department is preparing not to stop these super fast trains like Shatabdi Express and Rajdhani Express at small railway stations. Shatabdi Express which starts from Delhi and reaches Habibganj will not stop at small stations as at such stations there are not enough passengers and also Railway department did not generate much revenue from these small stations. Railway department is preparing the plan avoiding stoppage of the Shatabdi Express in these stations. Railway department has told to management to analyse the halts at small stations. It is informed that the stoppage of two minutes of electric train costs around C20,000. B esides, the R ailway department is also planning not to stop Rajdhani Express at Gwalior Railway station. This train runs from New Delhi to Bilaspur as there is not proper traffic from Gwalior Railway Station, the railway might take final decision in this regard. 00?³b\TSXP 8=1A845 RT[[^aVP]XbTb 8=380=A;HBC>68E4C "%&2AC>BC0C4?>;824 f^aZbW^_^] b^RXP[\TSXP BC055A4?>AC4AQ 17>?0; day-long workshop on A social media was organised by Aam Aadmi Party’s social I Shatabdi Express will not stop as it is considered as zero output from Gwalior to Morena. It is expected that in April month small stations halt will be stopped and same instruction will be send to concern station managers respectively. According to Vijay Kumar Chief Manager Publicity Allahabad has informed that the train which runs with the speed of 120 kms per hour and stops for two minutes at zero output stations incurs major loss of around C24,506 and the train which runs 100 kms per hour and stops for two minutes will give loss of C21,207. Shatabdi Express will not stop at Morena, Dholpur and Lalitpur railway stations as they are considered as zero output railway stations. It may be possible that railway board will not stop Shatabdi Express on these zero output stations. At present Railway board has not declared any official statement regarding this. media coordinator Rajesh Sharma for the party workers and office bearers of AAP here on Saturday. While talking to media persons here on Saturday, Sharma said that in the present environment social media is an easy and effective medium of expression. In present condition, people know the difference between a clean and ugly politics, thus the social media is becoming predominant in sharing information and messages, he added. He further said that in Delhi, social media played a major role in forming AAP’s Government and in Madhya Pradesh in 2018 too it would play a decisive role. Praising the MP’s social media team of AAP, Sharma said that it is working like the team in Delhi and it is bringing out the flaws of the present government fearlessly, even after many hurdles and getting it to the citizens through the social media. On this occasion, the State social media in-charge Rahul Sharma evocated the team and said that it is time to start preparing for the 2018 election. AAP’s national spokesman and State secretary Akshay Hunka in his addressing speech expressed happiness in the advancement of the social media and said that in 2018 elections social media will play a major role. AAP is getting included in the discussions of the social media and it is also being taken seriously which is a sign of public awakening through social media, added Hunka. ;^Z7XcZPaXCadbcc^ #cW5^d]SPcX^]3PhPc86A<Bc^ RT[TQaPcT!!]S QTRT[TQaPcTSUa^\<Pa! c^!" U^d]SPcX^]SPhc^SPh T BC055A4?>AC4AQ 17>?0; ?=BQ 6F0;8>A he 22nd Foundation day of Lok Hitkari trust is going to T be celebrated on March 20 at Manas Bhavan at 1 pm. Lokhitkari trust is known for the welfare trust for the poor peoples. The president of Trust Ramvilas Sharma and Secretary Keshav Pandey have addressed the media people and informed that the Chief Guest of the programme is Gwalior Mayor Vivek Shejwelkar and main speaker is Professor Prakash Dixit. The programme is going to preside over by Chamber of commerce President Arvind Agarwal. During the press conference Vijay Gupta, Ganesh Chatur vedi, and Usha Chaturvedi were present. “At present as we are aware of the commercialisation in the medical treatment and the humanity is totally gone and it has become difficult for the medium class peoples to bear the expensive medical treatment then the Lokhitkari came forward on February 23 to serve for needy peoples, said Ramvilas Sharma. This ambitious campaign embarked on February 23, 1994 amongst four peoples and contributed C200, Foundation was laid in 1994 and at present from Monday to Saturday Lok Hitkari Trust opens in morning up to evening and attended the patients. On Sunday for villagers Lokhikari Trust serve free medical services. Lokhitkari Trust provides free medical treatments to the poor peoples and conduct camp in Allopathy, OPD, Eye treatment, Tooth Treatment etc. Most important thing of Lokhitkari trust is that more than 1500peples from all over the place gives donation to run this trust. he Indira Gandhi Rashtriya Manav Sangrahalaya under the celebrations of its 40th Foundation Day is organising various programmes and activities at its premises from March 21 to 23. Sangrahalya in continuation of four decade long tradition will celebrate foundation Day with various programmes with a state as theme. The chief guest of inaugural ceremony will be Professor BK Konwar (ViceChancellor, Nagaland University, Nagaland). On this occasion, a new Gallery on Ethno Music at Veethi Sankul will be inaugurated. Followed by inauguration of Nagaland Prasang: Cultural Festival of Nagaland under Celebration of Regional Cultures. Later in the evening of Foundation Day, country’s largest lamp with 1001 wicks ‘Aal-Vilakku’ will be lighted. In the evening cultural programmes- traditional presentations from Nagaland where famous band—Tetseo Sisters and Traditional Dances of 7UdbUQTid_Uh`UbYU^SU e^YaeU5eb_`UQ^SeYcY^U BC055A4?>AC4AQ 17>?0; EXbXcX]V2WTU:PcTaX]P 6Paf^^SUa^\;^]S^] SXb_[PhX]V4da^_TP] U^^SSXbWTbSdaX]V _aTbbR^]UTaT]RTPc 7^cT[9TWP]d\PATcaTPc X]1W^_P[^]BPcdaSPh ?X^]TTa_W^c^ Numa Retreat Club and Spa, Bhopal is all set to Jofferehan a unique European food experience for its esteemed clients. Visiting Chef Katerina Garwood, a graduate from Le Cordon Bleu, London would remain present. With her experience and knowledge, Chef Katerina will be organising various activities and promotions associated with European Cuisine and the art of fine dining. While talking to media persons here on Saturday, Katerina said that the proposed activities and promotions are- daily specials menu: On a daily basis Chef Katerina will be introducing some fine dining classics from the great kitchens of France. Guests can try her daily specials featured on our black board menus at both our outlets. Chef 's Tasting Menu: A specially prepared four course menu by Chef Katerina will be dished up for guests to truly experience the fine elegance and subtlety of classic European cooking. Offering unique opportunity to enjoy a full meal through elaborate courses and ingredient combinations. Dates for this special promotion to be confirmed soon. Cooking Classes: Chef Katerina will be organizing short workshops with our guests on the art of preparing, cooking and platting classic European dishes. The cooking classes include recipes which can be easily replicated at home with a fine dining touch. The best part about Chef Katerina's cooking is that most of the ingredients she is using it from our very own organic garden, and she is using them in perfect combination and in accordance with the ethics of genuine European technique. >]cWXb^RRPbX^]P]Tf6P[[Tah^] 4cW]^<dbXRPcETTcWXBP]Zd[fX[[QT X]PdVdaPcTS5^[[^fTSQh X]PdVdaPcX^]^U=PVP[P]S?aPbP]V) 2d[cdaP[5TbcXeP[^U=PVP[P]Sd]STa 2T[TQaPcX^]^UATVX^]P[2d[cdaTb various Naga Communities will be performed at Open air stage of Charaiveti premises from 7pm. On March 22, 2016, at 11am a special exhibition on ‘Cultural Heritage of Nagaland - The Nagas’ at Avritti Bhawan will be inaugurated. Followed by opening of a new exhibition entitled as “The Last of the Tattooed Headhunters: The Konyaks” at Veethi Sankul. In the evening cultural programmes- traditional presentations from Nagaland where famous band -Tetseo Sisters & Traditional Dances of various Naga Communities will be performed at Open air stage of Charaiveti premises from 7pm. On March 23, 2016, the day will commence with “Colloquium on Oral and Literar y Traditions of Nagaland” with key speaker Prof. Temsula Ao at Rock Art Centre from 10.30 am. In the evening cultural programmestraditional presentations from Nagaland where famous band –Purple Fusion & Traditional Dances of various Naga Communities will be performed at Open air stage of Charaiveti premises from 7pm. During the three day festival, from 11am “Live Demonstration Cum Sale of Traditional Art and Crafts of Nagaland” will take place at Himalayan village and Ethnic Cuisine of Gujarat, West Bengal and Punjab will be available at reasonable prices from 1.00 pm onwards at Open air exhibition Himalayan village. =Tf3T[WX) 8]SXP]APX[fPhbfX[[VXeTC "%&Ra^aTc^BcPcTb_^[XRT APX[fPh<X]XbcTaBdaTbW?aPQWdWPbPbbdaTS7^\TP]S9PX[b<X]XbcTa 1PQd[P[6PdaU^aTPa[hPRcX^]U^a_Ph\T]c6Pda\TcAPX[fPh<X]XbcTa ?aPQWdX]=Tf3T[WX^]BPcdaSPhP]SdaVTSWX\_Ph\T]c^U_T]SX]V P\^d]cP]SbP]RcX^]^U"%&_^bcb^U_^[XRT_Tab^]]T[U^a]Tf6A? _^[XRTbcPcX^]b 6PdaWP]STS^eTaP[TccTac^cWTAPX[fPh<X]XbcTaX]U^a\X]VcWPcPb^] >Rc^QTa! $P\^d]c^UC "%&Ra^aTfWXRWXb$_TaRT]c^U bP[PaXTbP]SP[[^fP]RTb^UAPX[fPh?^[XRT_Tab^]]T[Xb_T]SX]V0dSXc aT_^acWPbQTT]bdQ\XccTSc^cWTAPX[fPhbAPX[fPh<X]XbcTa?aPQWd PbbdaTS^UTPa[hPRcX^]U^a_Ph\T]c^U_T]SX]VP\^d]c 6PdadaVTSU^abP]RcX^]c^"%&_^bcbU^a]TfaPX[fPh6A?_^[XRT bcPcX^]b=Tf_^bcbX]R[dST#!U^a6A?BTRcX^]1W^_P[!(9PQP[_da P]S$'U^a8]S^aTfWXRWWPeTQTT]bP]RcX^]TSQh5X]P]RT 2^\\XbbX^]bUa^\hTPa (&c^ (''8]P[[ # _^bcbfTaTRaTPcTS X]hTPa! 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BdaT]SaPBX]W>]cWXb^RRPbX^]B_TRXP[36AXbWX:d\PaBWdZ[PP]S 0SSXcX^]P[36BdbW^QWP]1P]TaYTTfTaTP[b^_aTbT]c 70=38=6>E4A24A4<>=H74;30C66G34?C 1W^_P[) 7P]SX]V^eTaRTaT\^]h^U7PZ^2[TP]X]V<PRWX]TP]S & C^]2aP]TfPbS^]TX]bX\_[TUd]RcX^]WT[SPc66G3T_Pac\T]c1^cW cWTT`dX_\T]cfTaTd]STaQaTPZS^f]U^aeTah[^]VcX\TCWT7PZ^ R[TP]X]V\PRWX]T^U6Ta\P]\PZTfPb]^cX]dbTbX]RT ((fWXRW fPbaTRcXUXTSQhcWTST_Pac\T]cBX\X[Pa[hcWT &C^]RaP]TfPb]^c X]dbTbX]RT#hTPabfPb\PST^_TaPcXeTC62WPdaPVPST6<7A F42BR^]VaPcd[PcTScWTcTP\U^acWTXaTgRT[[T]cf^aZS^]TP]S P[b^PSSTScWPccWTf^aZS^]TQhcWTST_Pac\T]cfX[[bTcP]TgP\_[T U^a^cWTab>]cWXb^RRPbX^]=:1WPa6<5X]P]RTBPchP]PaPhP] 6<[^VXbcXRbbT]X^a^UUXRXP[baT_aTbT]cPcXeTb^UePaX^dbcaPSTd]X^]b P]S[PaVT]d\QTa^UT\_[^hTTbfTaT_aTbT]c<TP]fWX[T174; ;PSXTb2[dQ^]BPcdaSPhRT[TQaPcTSU[^aP[7^[Xb\TPaX]VU[^fTabPc TPRW^cWTaP]SVaTTcX]VTPRW^cWTafXcWfXbWTbU^acWTUTbcXeP[>] cWXb^RRPbX^]0ad]PHdVP]SWPa?aTbXST]c174;;PSXTb2[dQP[[eXRT _aTbXST]cP]S\T\QTab^UcWTR[dQfTaT_aTbT]cHdVP]SWPaX]WTa PSSaTbbR^]VaPcd[PcX]VP[[cWT\T\QTabfXcWfXbWTbU^a7^[XX] PSeP]RTbPXScWPc[^^ZX]VPccWTbRPaRXch^UfPcTafTP[[bW^d[S_[Ph 7^[XfXcW^dcfPcTa >1B4AE4! %0B<8=>A5>A4BC?A>3D244G?0=B8>=H40A 1W^_P[) CWT0SSXcX^]P[<P]PVX]V3XaTRc^a^UcWT<?BcPcT<X]^a 5^aTbc?a^SdRTQdbX]TbbP]SSTeT[^_\T]c2^^_TaPcXeT5TSTaPcX^] ;X\XcTS0iPSBX]VW3PQWPbX]P[TccTac^cWT<P]PVX]V3XaTRc^a^UcWT 5TSTaPcX^]daVTSc^cPZTSTRXbX^]c^^QbTaeTcWThTPa! %Pb²<X]^a 5^aTbc?a^SdRT4g_P]bX^]HTPa³3PQPbX]WXb[TccTac^cWT<3daVTS WX\c^cPZTPSTRXbX^]X]cWXbaTVPaS^]cWT^RRPbX^]^UF^a[S 5^aTbcah3Phc^QT^QbTaeTS^]<^]SPh<PaRW! 8cXb]TRTbbXchU^a cWTTgcT]bX^]^UcWTPRcXeXcXTb^UcWT5TSTaPcX^]P]S\P]h[TccTabWPeT QTT]faXccT]c^WX\X]cWXbaTVPaS^]TPa[XTa^RRPbX^]bP[b^X]cWPc ZTT_X]VP]ThT^eTacWTX\_^acP]RT^U\X]^aU^aTbc_a^SdRTPbXcWPb QTT]aT`dTbcTSc^^QbTaeTcWThTPa! %²<X]^a5^aTbc?a^SdRT 4g_P]bX^]HTPa³ 384B"8=9DA43F78;4A4?08A8=670=3?D<? BPc]P) 0[PQ^daTa^]BPcdaSPhV^cT[TRca^RdcTSfWX[TcWaTT^cWTa bdbcPX]TSQda]X]YdaXTbfWX[TcWThfTaTaT_PXaX]VPWP]S_d\_Pc 2WXcVPaWeX[[PVT8]STabT]:^[#<da[X2WW^cdP]S:P[[dfTaT _d[[X]V^dccWT_X_T^UcWTWP]S_d\_fWT]cWT_X_TRP\TX]c^ R^]cPRcfXcWP]T[TRcaXRfXaT8]STabT]SXTS^]cWTb_^cCWTQ^ShfPb bT]cU^a_^bc\^acT\<da[X2WW^cdP]S:P[[dfTaTaTUTaaTSc^ATfP U^acaTPc\T]c ]PcX^]# 17>?0; kBD=30H k<0A27!! % &KKDWWLVJDUKWRDGGNPUDLOWUDFNLQ\HDUV BC055A4?>AC4AQ A08?DA new railway line network of 1,300 kms would be A ready in Chhattisgarh within a span of six years. The State Government has also made provisions in the 2016-17 budget for providing public transportation to the people between Raipur and Naya Raipur. Under the plan, the metre gauge line between Kendri and Raipur will be taken from the Railways for development, officials stated. Notably, Chhattisgarh currently has only 1187 route kilometres of railway lines. It may be recalled that the Public sector IRCON International Ltd. has commenced work in connection with the construction of new ‘Broad Guage Electrified Double Railway Line’ in Chhattisgarh on the East West Corridor. The work is being undertaken in Gevra Road-Pendra Road and Dipka, Kathghora, Sendurgahr and Pasan sections, officials stated. Notably, freight train with speed of maximum 100 kms per hour will pass through Chhattisgarh in the East-West Corridor (Kolkata-Mumbai). The train will traverse through the States of West Bengal, Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra as the Ministry of Railways has sanctioned implementation of Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor (EDFC) and Western Dedicated Freight Corridor (WDFC) with freight train speeds of maximum 100 Kmph. Development of two key Rail corridors in mineral-rich Chhattisgarh is now set to expand the Railway line network by 45 per cent in the State, officials stated. The completion of 235-km Dallirajhara-RaoghatJagdalpur, East and East-West Rail corridor (300 km) projects will comprise a total of 535 kilometers Railway-line during the next two to four years, they stated. The South Eastern Coalfields Ltd (SECL) has urged timely completion of East & East-West Rail Corridors which are crucial for coal evacuation from its Korba and Raigarh coalfields in Chhattisgarh. The company has also urged for a massive Railway capacity augmentation, offi- cials stated. The South East Central Sector which includes Chhattisgarh is set to play a key role in Central government’s ambitious coal loading and transportation plans. A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) has been signed recently between Ministry of Railways and Coal India Limited (CIL) which will lead to procurement of 2000 wagons (33 rakes) in the first outgo, officials stated. The agreement which will result into speedy supply of wagons for coal loading in dedicated circuits. The Union Railway Budget 2016-17 presented in the Parliament on Thursday has put Chhattisgarh on Centre’s high priority list among states for its ambitious dedicated freight corridor project implementation plans. The Union Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu in his budget speech has put high emphasis on ensuring structuring, award and implementation of freight corridor projects in a time-bound manner through innovative financing mechanisms including Public Private Partnership (PPP). The Union Railway Minister in his budget speech has also put emphasis on rapid expansion of freight business to build more dedicated freight corridors for increased traffic with consequent benefits for the economy and environment with Chhattisgarh being the direct gainer from the initiative due to high coal and iron ore movement through the Railwaynetwork from the State. Prabhu also said that technological solutions for project management and monitoring will be taken up. The latest Drone and Geo Spatial based satellite technology will be used to monitor physical progress across major projects and also the progress on Dedicated Freight Corridor, he said. Notably, on February 9, the Union Railway Minister had commented: “For development of the country, extension of rail network in resource-rich State like Chhattisgarh is necessary and the task of Rail network extension in the State will be carried out through a special joint venture company.” He was speaking at a programme organised to sign Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for three rail corridor project between Indian Railway and Chhattisgarh government in New Delhi. The country has witnessed maximum railway track extension work this year, stated Prabhu, adding that the efforts made by Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Raman Singh on behalf of the State government "!)2^Sf]R_TVdecZ\V `_,#YV]Uf_UVc6D>2 6^ecbPhb bTaeXRTb]^c PUUTRcTS 341030B?A0370=Q 17D10=4BF0A he employees of the 108 Emergency Ambulances T continued their strike for the second day on Saturday. The Government, however, claimed that the strike is not affecting the ambulance services across the State. National Health Mission (NHM) Director Salini Pandit said two 108 Ambulance employees were arrested in Balangir district under the Essential Services Maintenance Act (ESMA). Drivers, helpers and medical technicians of the ambulances are on agitation demanding, among other things, payment of minimum guaranteed wages, a 15-per cent annual increment and construction of rest houses. Despite the appeal of the Ziqitza Health Service (ZHS), a private agency that runs the services, and also the State Government’s imposition of the ESMA threatening disciplinary action against them, the employees have resorted to the cease-work agitation demanding fulfilment of their sevenpoint charter of demands. The NHM Director said the strike has not affected the health service. However, the situation is expected to worsen in the coming days. Pandit said the ZHS has already agreed to hike the employees’ wages from eight per cent to 12 per cent, extra payment for overtime and food allowance. She further informed that the Government is on its toes to avoid any untoward incidents. The ZHS is operating 364 Basic Life Support (BLS) and 56 Advanced Life Support (ALS) ambulances in the State as per the NHM guidelines. “We have made alternative arrangements to meet the crisis arising out of the ongoing strike. We appeal to the striking employees to join work. Their demands are under consideration of the Government. Strict legal action will be taken as per the law if they fail to join at the earliest,” Pandit said. µ)UHHGRP Students performing street play during their annual function Maffick at MANIT on Saturday BQgQdQc[UTd_`b_fU]QZ_bYdi From Page 1 The Opposition and the dissident MLAs claim that the Speaker had throttled their voice at the behest of the Chief Minister by denying them the opportunity to vote. This is why they have demanded the Governor to dismiss the Harish Rawat Government immediately. They claim that as the Harish Rawat Government has all but fallen because of it running short of majority, the nine dissident MLAs -- Vijay Bahuguna, Harak Singh Rawat, Shailendra Mohan Singhal, Umesh Sharma Kau, Subodh Uniyal, Prem Batra, Amrita Rawat, Shailarani Rawat and Kunwar Pranav Singh Champion -are still members of the Vidhan Sabha. The Opposition said they would move no-confidence against the Speaker too when the Assembly meets again. Notably, when Vijay Bahuguna formed the Uttarakhand Government on March 13, 2012 then Cabinet Minister Harish Rawat had managed to have his staunch supporter Govind Singh Kunjwal appointed as the Speaker. Now Kunjwal, who had embarrassed the Bahuguna Government by raising corruption charges from public forum had acted in such a manner that his status as someone apart from the Treasury Bench was blurred, said the Opposition and the Congress rebel members of the House. However, they are keeping in mind the fact that the Speaker’s vote in case the motion leads to a tie can prove crucial. However, both sides are busy taking legal opinion before firming up their next strategies vis-à-vis the unfolding drama. Nine dissident MLAs constituting one-fourth of the Congress strength in the Vidhan Sabha standing at 36, four more are required to help things take the shape of a split, a possibility that BJP says is bright, given the fact that four, including a Cabinet Minister, are in touch with them. If things fail to fructify as BJP expects the nine dissidents would lose membership under the Anti-Defection Act. However, the Government is pulling out all stops to have the rebels disqualified before the Treasury Bench faces the Assembly. Sources said that the Opposition would bring the no-confidence motion against the Speaker as the first thing after the House reopens. Now, eyes are fixed on the Governor as the authority to appoint a protem Speaker in case the Speaker is removed rests with him. Regarding numbers, BJP has paraded 35 MLAs, including 26 from BJP excluding MLA Ganesh Joshi, who is now under judicial custody and nine rebel Congress MLAs. The Congress led front at the present juncture enjoys the support of 33 MLAs, including six from Progressive Democratic Front (PDF), Congress’s ally. If Harish Rawat manages to have nine dissident MLAs disqualified things would be easy for the Congress. Moreover, if the one nominated MLA throws his weight behind Congress its strength would go up to 34 in the 62-member Vidhan Sabha. While BJP claims the support of 35 MLAs including nine rebel Congress legislators, Rawat says he still enjoys a majority in the 70-member House as none of the so-called rebel MLAs has quit the party or the CLP. He also said that five of the rebels were in touch with him. On a day of claims and counter-claims by BJP and the Congress, Assembly Speaker Govind Singh Kunjwal said the “Anti-Defection law is in place and whoever is found guilty of violating it will have to be acted against”. “All Congress MLAs voted with the Government when the previous Bill was passed in the Assembly and nobody had challenged the Bill. Even the BJP accepts the voice vote,” he said. Asked about BJP’s no-confidence notice against him, Kunjwal said, “We will see when it comes in the Assembly. Members of the legislative Assembly will discuss and decide if the no-confidence notice is valid or not”. Hitting back at the BJP, Congress accused Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP chief Amit Shah of seeking to destabilise non-BJP Governments through lure of money and political power. “The duo of Modi and Shah are infamous for forcible eviction of elected Governments in this country. Elected Government are being destabilised by a sinister conspiracy. After Arunachal Pradesh, it is Uttarakhand,” Congress chief spokesman Randeep Surjewala told reporters in New Delhi. In Dehradun, BJP intensified efforts to dislodge the Rawat Government, claiming it has majority in Uttarakhand Assembly and should be invited to form the Government as the incumbent Congress dispensation has been reduced to a minority. “ The Harish Rawat Government has lost majority. Today BJP has the numbers with the support of rebel Congress MLAs to form a new Government in Uttarakhand,” Shyam Jaju, the State in-charge of BJP said. Jaju said the party is willing to present the MLAs whose support it enjoys before President Pranab Mukherjee and insisted that Rawat should immediately resign given the loss of majority. Nine rebel Congress MLAs have reached Delhi and are in touch with BJP leaders, he said. Accusing BJP of distorting facts, Rawat said, “Those who are saying they have support of 35 MLAs are misrepresenting facts. I am confident that I still have a majority in for expansion of Railway network in Chhattisgarh display his commitment towards Railway’s development in the State. The Chhattisgarh Government is committed towards extension of Railway lines across the State with necessary support from Union Railway Ministry, Chief Minister Raman Singh had stated. “Extension of Railway network is going to bring great fortune for Chhattisgarh by putting it on path of further development and efforts in this regard have already started in the State. As of now, 17 km-long railway route has been developed and soon it will reach 50 km mark,” he said. the Assembly and can prove it on the floor of the House,” he told reporters after emerging from a meeting with the Assembly Speaker. The rebel MLAs included, Congress has a strength of 36 MLAs in the 70-member Assembly. The ruling party also has the support of six members of the Progressive Democratic Front. The BJP has 28 MLAs. A three-member BJP delegation of former Chief Minister and MP Bhagat Singh Koshiyari, Jaju and general secretary Kailash Vijayvargiya met the Governor last night after the simmering discontent within a section of Congress legislature came to the fore. Amidst chaos in the Assembly, nine Congress rebels had joined BJP in demanding a division of votes on the State’s annual Budget, which could have led to the Government’s fall. Rebel Congress MLAs seen raising anti-Government slogans along with BJP were mostly those owing allegiance to former Chief Minister and MLA Vijay Bahuguna. The other eight were Harak Singh Rawat, Amrita Rawat, Kunwar Pranav Singh Champion, Shaila Rani Rawat, Pradip Batra, Subodh Uniyal, a confirmed Bahuguna loyalist, Shailendra Mohan Singhal and Umesh Sharma. Surjewala said BJP was resorting to such actions in the backdrop of poll debacle in Delhi followed by in Bihar which has “convinced” the ruling party at the Centre that it would not come to power in any State through popular vote. “Is this the Modi culture of politics of transparency and accountability to lure away legislators...Bypassing all constitutional norms?” he said. Admitting that Congress MLAs had flouted the party whip by sitting on a dharna along with Opposition members, Rawat said they were liable to be acted against in accordance with the Constitutional provisions. The Chief Minister said he was hurt by the behaviour of rebel party MLAs including Harak Singh Rawat and Vijay Bahuguna. “As far as Harak Singh is concerned, the less said the better. He is such a star of Uttarakhand’s political firmament. If one or two more such wrestlers are born in the State, Uttarakhand of our dreams will never become a reality,” he said. Rawat said he was shocked by Bahuguna’s conduct in the House on Friday as he came from a family which always fought against communal forces. “Coming as it did from the son of Hemvati Nandan Bahuguna who always fought for secular values and stood against communal forces, Bahugunaji’s behaviour was no less shocking,” the Chief Minister said. Senior BJP leader Kailash Vijayvargiya, on his way back from Raj Bhawan, said if the Governor does not immediately dismiss Harish Rawat’s minority Government, they would knock at the doors of the President. Earlier, packed in a luxury bus, BJP and rebel Congress MLAs numbering 35, went to Raj Bhawan to seek dismissal of Harish Rawat Government. The Governor assured the MLAs to look into the constituitional provisions and act accordingly, a Raj Bhawan spokesperson said. Leader of Opposition Ajay Bhatt, who was in the bus, said 35 MLAs including 26 of BJP and 9 from Congress voted against the Budget whereas only 32 from the ruling party voted in its favour causing the related Money Bill to fall in House. All 26 BJP MLAs, barring Mussoorie MLA Ganesh Joshi, who has been arrested in Shaktiman case, and sulking legislator Bhim Lal Arya, were present in the House on Saturday. Congress MLA Sarbat Karim Ansari also could not attend the House, which had an effective strength of 67 MLAs. Pioneer photo From Page 1 On Sunday, a political resolution focusing on national and international events would be passed by the meet with main inputs from another BJP general secretary Ram Madhav. Shah was effusive in his praise of the Union Budget and its "increasing focus" on impoverished villagers and farmers. Affirming that the promises to remove poverty have after a long time found feet under the Modi dispensation, Shah detailed the Prime Minister's crop insurance scheme for providing economic security to the farmers and described it " a revolutionary step". He also outlined the "people-centric" welfare measures of the Modi Government like the Mudra Bank and implementation of the OROP scheme for ex-servicemen among others. Compared to agriculture growth rate of 2 per cent in Congress-ruled States, the BJPgoverned States have a rate of 10 per cent, the BJP chief said. GZ[V_UVcZ_ec`fS]VW`cµTRdeZ_X RdaVcdZ`_d`_CD^V^SVcd¶ 0]bPaXPbZb3T[WX B_TPZTac^X]XcXPcT _aXeX[TVT_a^RTTSX]V A094B7:D<0AQ =4F34;78 ajya Sabha chairman and Vice-President M Hamid R Ansari has urged Delhi Legislative Assembly Speaker Ram Niwas Goel to initiate privilege proceedings against Leader of the Opposition in Delhi Assembly Vijender Gupta for allegedly casting aspersions on the members of Rajya Sabha and calling for abolition of the Upper House in an article published in a newspaper. Ansari has sent a letter in this regard to the Speaker following Janata Dal (United) MP KC Tyagi’s notice of question of privilege against Gupta — one of the three BJP MLAs in the 70member Delhi Assembly — to the Rajya Sabha. In his letter, Ansari has observed that on perusing the documents on record, the matter seems to involve prima facie a question of privilege. “I am accordingly referring this matter to you in terms of the procedure mentioned above, for further necessary action,” Ansari added. Citing procedures laid down by the Committees of Privileges of the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha in the report of their joint sitting in 1954, Ansari has asked the Speaker to initiate further necessary action against the Leader of Opposition in the Delhi Assembly. As per the procedure, one House cannot claim or exercise any authority over a Member of the other House in cases where a Member of one House is alleged to have committed a breach of privilege of the other House. When a question of breach of privilege is raised in any House in which a member, officer or servant of the other House is involved, the Presiding Officer shall refer the case to the Presiding Officer of the other House, unless on hearing the member who raises the question or pursuing any document where the complaint is based on a document, he is satisfied that no breach of privilege has been committed or the matter is too trivial to be taken notice of, in which case he may disallow the motion for breach of privilege. Upon the case being so referred, the Presiding Officer of the other House shall deal with the matter in the same way as if it were a case of breach of privilege of that House or of a member thereof. The Presiding Officer shall thereafter communicate to the Presiding Officer of the House where the question of privilege was originally raised a report about the enquiry, if any, and the action taken on the reference. ,QGLD <^SX_aTbT]cb:aXbWX From Page 1 But it was a contest in which Ashwin was bewilderingly not given his full four overs despite being restrictive at 4 runs an over and Hardik Pandya bowled just two to give away 25 runs as Shoaib Malik feasted on him with two brilliant sixes in consecutive balls. On the whole, it was a gruelling contest in the middle. The Indian spinners lived up to expectation, restricting the Pakistani batsmen and, to a certain extent, curbing the damage done by Pandya and Jasprit Bumrah who gave away 8 runs an over. Meanwhile in New Delhi, Indian women's team lost to Pakistan by two runs via Duckworth-Lewis method in a rain-affected group league encounter. :Pa\P]0fPaSc^ <PSWhP?aPSTbW From Page 1 Bisen said that during the year 2014-15, food grains production and productivity increased by 254 lakh tonnes and 1719 kg per hectare, respectively, the area under irrigation also increased by 3.26 lakh hectares. In the State, 29.45 lakh quintal certified seeds were produced. Free of cost spiral graders and seed treatment drums were provided in 40,000 villages under seed quality improvement programme. In the year 2014-15, 1.09 lakh hectare infertile land was converted to fertile. Agriculture advisories are being sent to the farmers through mobile SMS. Credit cards were distributed to 13.36 lakh farmers during the year 2014-15. At present, 78.75 lakh farmers have kisan credit cards. An Agriculture Cabinet has been constituted for better collaboration and coordination among concerned departments. The State's Principal Secretary for Agriculture, Rajesh Rajora, and the Director for Agriculture, Mohan Lal Meena, were also present on the occasion. [P]S\PaZ$ 17>?0; 8BD=30H k<0A27!! % 0]^cWTaPbbPd[cQh=306^ec^] 5ZgVcdZWjR_US``deZ_T`^VA>e`WRc^Vcd \XSS[TR[Pbb)APWd[^]X]cTaTbcRdc :A8B78D==0C8<4;0 ?=BQ =4F34;78 ith the agriculture sector under duress due to sudden change in weather conditions, Prime Minister Narendra Modi feels it is time for farmers to look at alternative sources of income as well, apart from agriculture. Speaking at the inauguration of Krishi Unnati Mela on Saturday, the PM urged the farmers to focus on crop diversification and go for allied activities like dairy, poultry and food processing to boost their income as depending of farming alone cannot help them sustain their families. In order to survive natural calamities, Modi suggested that farmers should follow threepronged approach towards farming to insulate from crop losses. “At present, farmers follow one pillar, that is farming alone. When this pillar falls down due to hailstorm, their survival is affected. So, it is W 42cPZTbd_XbbdT ^UWPcTb_TTRW _a^e^RPcXeTPSb fXcW_PacXTb New Delhi: The Election Commission on Saturday flagged the issue of “hate speeches” and plunging standards of political discourse during campaigning with the parties, in the backdrop of personal attacks by leaders in the recent Assembly polls. At the closed-door meeting, the political parties agreed that the issue had to be addressed. But most of the six national parties and the 49 regional parties opposed the suggestion of the poll panel to hike security deposit for contesting candidates and seeking a ‘no dues’ certificate from parties operating from Government accommodations. CWT2^\\XbbX^]P[b^ c^^Zd_cWTXbbdT^U ³X]SXaTRcRP\_PXV]X]V´X] PaTPbfWXRWV^c^_^[[bX] P\d[cX_WPbTST[TRcX^] At present, a candidate has to deposit a security of C10,000 for Assembly polls and C25,000 for Lok Sabha polls which is forfeited in case the contestant gets less that one-sixth of the votes polled. There were also divergent views on the use of ‘totaliser’, a machine with mixes votes from various polling stations and which EC feels would further protect voters’ identity during counting of votes. At the closed-door meeting, the Commission also took up the issue of ‘indirect campaigning’ in areas which go to polls in a multi-phased election. Meanwhile, after the removal of 37 officials including a District Magistrate and four Superintendents of Police two days back, the Election Commission today removed another IPS official Bharati Ghosh in poll-bound West Bengal following complaints from opposition parties. important to have our farming based on three pillars,” he said. The first one is to continue to regulate farming in one third of the crop area. The second one is to grow timber on the boundary of the farm field and the third one is to adopt animal husbandry, poultry and bee keeping among other activities. “If we do our farming on these three pillars then farmers will have ways to insulate from losses due to natural calamities. And their income will also rise,” Modi said. He called upon farmers to go for value addition and take up food processing in a big way to boost their income. “The more farmers take up food pro- cessing, the more their income will increase. If you sell milk, you will get less price. But you sell ghee and paneer, you earn more. Similarly, if you sell raw mango, you may get less price but you would earn more if you make pickles and sell,” he said, while urging farmers to unite together to bring changes in villages,” PM said. He even talked about the increasing market of organic food in the country and suggested farmers to explore this aspect as well. As per the latest Government data, the all-India average monthly income of agricultural households during the crop year July 2012-June 2013 was estimated at C6,426. The PM also asked farmers to conserve water and mentioned several initiatives taken by his Government for agriculture growth, including introduction of a new insurance scheme and giving soil health cards to farmers, with a view to doubling their income by 2022. nion Minister M Venkaiah Naidu Saturday lashed out at Congress leader Jairam Ramesh over his remarks that Government showed “utter contempt” of Rajya Sabha by passing Aadhar Bill as Money Bill and accused Congress of resorting to “flimsy political gimmicks” under a “game-plan”. “The statement of senior Congress leader Jairam Ramesh that the NDA Government showed utter contempt of Rajya Sabha on Aadhar Bill is reprehensible and once again shows the Congress mindset of opposing a progressive legislation for the sake of Opposition even though it aims at transforming the lives of millions of poor and marginalised sections in the country,” Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu said in a statement. Stating that it was “unfair” on the part of Ramesh to “question the prerogative of Lok Sabha Speaker” in declaring U once water reaches there, you all can think how much that land will give us back.” He suggested funds from MNREGA should be utilised for creation of assets such as ponds to conserve water. “About MNREGA, many discussions take place, but no asset has been created. This government is emphasising... During this summer in every village, one work should be done through MNREGA and that is desilting of ponds, deepening of ponds and creating new ones. In this Budget, the government is aiming at 5 lakh ponds,” Modi said. Modi also gave away the Krishi Karman Awards for 2014-15 to states and farmers for their outstanding performance in agriculture. He also launched a mobile application for farmers — Kisan Suvidha. This app will provide information to farmers on weather, market prices, seeds, fertilisers, pesticides and agriculture machinery. ?=BQ =4F34;78 fter taking on the Modi dispensation over the EPF tax, A Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi on Saturday attacked the NDA Government for cutting down interest rates on small savings, including PPF, terming it as an assault on the middle class. RSS-affiliate Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS) also opposed the cut in interest rates saying market-driven economic policies were not suitable for India. “Slashing interest rates on small savings — on PPF and KVPs — is yet another assault by the Modi Govt on hard working middle class people,” Rahul said in a series of tweets. “This Govt has failed farmers, failed the poor & now it’s failing the middle class. Modiji ppl are seeing through your event management politics!,” he tweeted. In a move that will hit common man, the Government had cut interest rates on all small sav- ings schemes, including PPF, Kisan Vikas Patra (KVP) and senior citizen deposits, to make them more market aligned. Interest rate on Public Provident Fund (PPF) scheme has been cut to 8.1 per cent for the period April 1 to June 30, from 8.7 per cent, at present. The Congress had reacted strongly against the Government’s latest move by saying it is “fleecing” the poor and is a “criminal breach” of trust of hapless people. It had described it as an overt attempt at “robbing money by snatching it from unsuspecting individuals”. Meanwhile, BMS general secretary Virjesh Upadhyay said the reduced interest rates has badly hit the common man, who in turn, will not keep their money in banks which are already in bad shape. “Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh opposes reduction in interest rates on small and long term savings. We demand that Government should reconsider its decision keeping in mind the feelings of common people investing in small savings,” Upadhyay said. The BMS also asked the Government to make a paradigm shift in the country’s economic model as “market-driven economic policies were not suitable for India.” The BMS had in the past also criticised the Government’s economic policies and said the recent announcement will also affect Prime Minister’s Jan Dhan Yojna. The Centre had termed the decision as a “normal exercise of resetting” rates in March every year and being in line with market conditions. 4]bdaTUPXabT_PaPcX^] 19?R[PX\b\PY^aXchX]D´:WP]S* ;RZe]Vj]RfUdARcdZddRjd ^UPbbTcbX]SXeXbX^] 2^]VbTTb_[Ph^U\^]Th_^fTa eY`fXYWVheYVjU`_¶e WVV]eYVjRcVR^Z_`cZej ^UBcPcTb)0_Tg2^dac C74CDA=>54E4=CB8=D´:70=3 ?=BQ =4F34;78 01A070<C7><0BQ =4F34;78 he Parliament while enacting a law to reorganise a State must ensure fair and equitable distribution of assets and funds between the two successor States, the Supreme Court has observed in a recent judgment. The court was dealing with a “tricky” situation arising out of a decision by Telangana Government to freeze the bank accounts operated by the Andhra Pradesh State Council of Higher Education (APSC) post-bifurcation. The APSC, created in 1988, was headquartered at Hyderabad and this became the bone of contention. What was at stake was a fixed deposit amount of C115.88 crore lying in the name of APSC and a bank balance of 18.41 crore held in State Bank of Hyderabad. The Telangana Government ordered the bank to freeze all finances operated in the name of APSC and the bank complied with the same. The Andhra Pradesh High Court ruled in favour of Telangana accepting the position that Hyderabad fell in Telangana territor y. In fact, the Telangana Government even passed a law creating a parallel APSC named Telangana State Council of Higher Education (TSC). But in Supreme Court, Telangana lost. Ruling against Telangana, the bench of Justices V Gopala Gowda and Arun Mishra said, “By no stretch of imagination can it be assumed that the complete takeover of assets of the erstwhile APSC by TSC, on the ground that the State institution happens to be in T Hyderabad, which is now a part of Telangana, was what the legislature had in contemplation while enacting the Reorganization Act 2014.” Any bifurcation, the bench observed, is sensitive and tricky and thus the onus is on the legislature to make a smooth division of State’s erstwhile assets, finances and liabilities in the Reorganization Act. It said, “Adequate care has to be taken by the legislature (Parliament) while drafting legislations such as the Reorganisation Act, 2014 to ensure a smooth division of all assets, liabilities, and funds between the States to make sure that the interests of the citizens living in these States are protected adequately.” The AP Government had read out from the Reorganization Act to show how APSC was meant to serve the interest of both states till such time they agreed to divide all assets, funds and liabilities accruing till the date of bifurcation in the ratio 52:48 based on population. According to this division, AP would benefit C77.89 crore from APSC while C56.4 crore will go to Telangana. But with the present decision of Telangana to unilaterally freeze the bank accounts, the money belonging to the 13 districts of AP post-bifurcation, over which Telangana had no claim, also got stuck. This fact also weighed with apex court in setting aside the freeze order. The bench directed both states to amicably arrive at a settlement and asked Centre to constitute a Committee, to determine the share, if no agreement was forthcoming within two months. 2^]VaTbbaTb^acX]Vc^U[X\bh_^[XcXRP[ VX\\XRZbd]STaPVP\T_[P])=PXSd ?=BQ =4F34;78 Modi added his Government has identified 90 stuck irrigation projects which can irrigate 80 lakh hectares. The Government is spending C20,000 crore to boost irrigation projects. He even emphasised on micro and drip irrigation as well as liquid fertiliser to reduce cost of production and raise farmers’ income level. Water harvesting is of as much importance as water conservation. We do not have the right to waste water. Per drop more crop is how we can do that,” Modi said. Attacking Opposition parties for claiming that all projects and programmes started when they were in power, PM said: “You would be surprised to know that as much as 90 projects which are full of water like dams have been built, but there is no way to provide water to farmers. Now, my Government is working to provide water from these projects and once it is completed, around 80 lakh hectares will get water. And =PXSdbPXScWTaTWPbQTT] PQb^[dcT[h]^PccT\_cc^ Qh_PbbAPYhPBPQWPP]S R[PX\TScWPccWT2^]VaTbb [TPSTafPbaPZX]Vd_P ±]TTS[TbbR^]ca^eTabh² ^eTacWTbT\P]cXRb ^UP<^]Th1X[[ Aadhar Bill as a Money Bill, Naidu said that by stating that it was the recommendation of the Government to consider it as a Money bill, the Congress leader, a member of Rajya Sabha, is “casting aspersions” on the wisdom and impartiality of the Speaker. He said there has been absolutely no attempt to bypass Rajya Sabha and claimed that the Congress leader was raking up a “needless controversy” over the semantics of a Money Bill. Naidu asserted that the Aadhar Bill could not be termed anything else but a Money Bill as it involved draw- ing huge expenditure to provide subsidies. “In such a situation, it is simply untenable for anybody to contest the categorisation of Aadhar Bill as a Money Bill. Secondly, where is the question of bypassing Rajya Sabha when due Parliamentary processes have been followed at every stage,” he said. Accusing Congress of adopting an “obstructive” attitude and “blocking” important welfare and development-oriented bills, Naidu said,”the Congress is showing utter contempt towards people’s mandate.” ith the Harish Rawat-led regime in Uttarakhand W in crisis, the ruling Congress on Saturday accused Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP chief Amit Shah of trying to destabilise non-BJP Governments through lure of money and political power. The BJP, for its part, asserted it has a majority in Uttarakhand Assembly now and should be invited to form the Government as the incumbent Congress dispensation has been reduced to a minority. Congress spokesman Randeep Surjewala said the party is not scared by the conspiracy and would deliberate on all legal, political and constitutional steps to shake off the challenge to the Government. The four-year old Congress Government is under threat with nine rebel Congress MLAs raising the banner of revolt and reportedly joining the BJP, which has staked claim to form the Government in Uttarakhand. The rebel Congress MLAs were mostly those owing allegiance to former Chief Minister and MLA Vijay Bahuguna. “The duo of Modi and Shah are infamous for forcible eviction of elected Governments in this country. Elected Governments are being destabilised by a sinister conspiracy. After Arunachal Pradesh, it is Uttarakhand,” Surjewala alleged. He said the BJP was resorting to such actions in the backdrop of poll debacle in Delhi followed by Bihar which has “convinced” the ruling party at the Centre that it would not come to power in any State through popular vote. “Is this the Modi culture of politics of transparency and accountability to lure away legislators...bypassing all con- CXVTabW^cSTPS! _^[XRT\T]bdbcPX] Qd[[TcX]YdaXTb Udhagamandalam: A tiger was shot dead on Saturday, eight days after it had killed a worker and triggered panic among the locals in Devarsholai, about 80 KM from here, even as two policemen sustained bullet injuries. The seven-year-old carnivore had received more than six bullets, police said. The 53-year-old worker from Jharkhand, Magu was mauled to death by the tiger on March 11 after which three teams, drawn from forest and police departments and Special Task Force, were on their toes to catch it live which had serious injuries on its leg and abdomen and provide treatment. Over 10 cameras and six cages were installed besides prey animals to catch it and the forces, numbering nearly 150 were monitoring round the clock its movement. As the STF men noticed the movement of the tiger this afternoon, a section of the combined forces fired from all sides, some sitting atop trees and temporary huts, resulting in the big cat's death around 3 PM, they said. PTI ?=BQ =4F34;78 Y CWT]X]TaTQT[2^]VaTbb <;0bWPeTPaaXeTSX]3T[WX P]SPaTX]c^dRWfXcW19? [TPSTab Y CWT6^eTa]^aWPbPbZTS 7PaXbWAPfPcc^UPRTcWT U[^^acTbc^]<PaRW!' Y CWT19?WPbcWT]d\QTab fXcWcWTbd__^ac^UcWTaTQT[ 2^]VaTbb<;0bc^U^a\P ]Tf6^eTa]\T]cX] DccPaPZWP]SR[PX\b9PYd Y 0UcTa0ad]PRWP[?aPSTbWXcXb DccPaPZWP]SP[[TVTb stitutional norms?” Surjewala said. A three-member BJP delegation of former Chief Minister and MP Bhagat Singh Koshiyari, Shyam Jaju, the State in-charge of party, and general secretar y Kailash Vijayvargiya met Uttarakhand Governor KK Paul late on Friday night after the Congress MLAs revolted against the incumbent Government. The nine rebel Congress MLAs have arrived in Delhi and are in touch with BJP leaders. The Governor has asked Harish Rawat to face the floor test on March 28. “The Harish Rawat Government has lost majority. Today BJP has the numbers with the support of rebel Congress MLAs to form a new Government in Uttarakhand,” Jaju said. He added the party is willing to present the MLAs whose support it enjoys before President Pranab Mukherjee and insisted that Rawat should immediately resign given the loss of majority. The rebel MLAs included, Congress has a strength of 36 MLAs in the 70-member Assembly. The ruling party also has the support of six members of the Progressive Democratic Front. The BJP has 28 MLAs. Amidst chaos in the BdaYTfP[P Y >]5aXSPhcWT]X]T2^]VaTbb aTQT[bWPSY^X]TScWT19? \T\QTabX]ST\P]SX]VP SXeXbX^]^Ue^cTb^]cWT BcPcT³bP]]dP[QdSVTc*Qdc cWTB_TPZTa^_cTSU^aPe^XRT e^cTfWXRWcWT6^ecf^] Y CWTaTQT[2^]VaTbb<;0bPaT \^bc[hcW^bT^fX]V P[[TVXP]RTc^U^a\Ta2WXTU <X]XbcTaP]S<;0EXYPh 1PWdVd]PP]S[TSQh <X]XbcTa7PaZPcBX]VWAPfPc C743D>>5<>38 0=3B7070A4 8=50<>DB5>A 5>A281;44E82C8>= >54;42C43 6>E4A=<4=CB8= C78B2>D=CAH 4;42C43 6>E4A=<4=CB0A4 148=634BC018;8B43 1H0B8=8BC4A 2>=B?8A02H05C4A 0AD=0270; ?A034B78C8B DCC0A0:70=3 ° BDA94F0;0 Uttarakhand Assembly on Friday, the nine Congress rebels had joined the BJP members in demanding a division of votes on the State’s annual budget, which could have led to the Government’s fall. Congress MLA from Rudraprayag, Harak Singh Rawat claimed the finance Bill in connection with the budget had fallen, thus giving clear indication that the ruling party has been reduced to a minority with 35 votes against the budget and 32 in its favour. auding the “liberal and largehearted” Parsis for their conL tribution in diverse fields, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Saturday said that the smallest community in India has never regarded themselves as minority, a “mindset” that has allowed them to emerge as a “role model” for others. “I think what stands out is the fact that the smallest minority in India has really never felt that it is a minority. It has never regarded itself as a minority. It is this mindset that has enabled it to be, in many standards, the role model for the rest of the country,” Jaitley said He was addressing the gathering after opening the Everlasting Flame International Programme Celebrates Multicultural Ethos of the ParsiZoroastrian Community here. Parsis came to India from Iran in somewhat adverse circumstances, Jaitley said while noting that they have preserved their culture and also exhibited the ability to reach the top whether it be industry, armed forces, legal profession, architecture or the civil services. Jaitley proposed that the town of Udvada in Gujarat, where the Parsis had landed centuries ago, should be developed as a global cultural centre. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had taken an initiative for developing the town when he was the Gujarat Chief Minister, he said. Union Ministers Najma Heptulla, Mahesh Sharma and Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi attended the event along with eminent members of the Parsi community, including British parliamentarian Karan Bilimoria. Jaitley also noted that although the British Parliament has a Parsi member, the Indian Parliament does not. Heptulla expressed concern over the slow growth of the Parsi population. She said that while she has worked extensively for population control, with regard to Parsis, it is otherwise. She lauded the community saying the measure of its contributions is disproportionate to its size and it has never sought any favour from the Government. ?<022;08<B?0AB8B´ 2>=CA81DC8>=B C>2>D=CAH <=PaT]SaP<^SX^]BPcdaSPh ?[PdSTScWT?PabXR^\\d]Xch U^aXcbR^]caXQdcX^]c^cWTR^d]cah X]ePaX^dbb_WTaTb°CWTaXRW Rd[cdaT^U?PabXR^\\d]XchXbP] X\_^acP]cP]SX]cTVaP[_Pac^U R^d]cah³bX]eP[dPQ[TWTaXcPVTCWT ?PabXR^\\d]XchWPb\PST bXV]XUXRP]cR^]caXQdcX^]X]cWT R^d]cah³bSXUUTaT]cX\_^acP]c b_WTaTb±<^SXbPXSX]P \TbbPVTfWXRWfPbaTPSQh <X]^aXch0UUPXabBTRaTcPahAPZTbW 6PaVPccWTX]PdVdaPcX^]Ud]RcX^] ^UP]TgWXQXcX^]^]?PabXWTaT \^]ThfXbT% 17>?0; kBD=30H k<0A27!! % EReRDeVV]dVVdC#!!!!Tc Z_gVde^V_eZ_8`aR]afcD6K I 8]SXPQd[[b7bV5X] c^aPXbTC$ Ra cWa^dVW=23b ?C8Q =4F34;78 ?C8Q B8=60?>A4 ata Steel is in discussion with foreign companies T for investments up to C20,000 crore in heavy industries over the next five years at its Special Economic Zone (SEZ) project at Gopalpur in Odisha. “We believe we should be able to get foreign investment between C15,000 to C20,000 crore over the next five years at the Gopalpur SE Z ,” Tat a Ste e l SE Z Managing Director Arun Misra told PTI here last night. “We are currently in discussions with 13 to 14 different investors. Talks are at various levels,” he said at the 'Emerging India Forum 2016' in Singapore. FTQT[XTeTfTbW^d[SQTPQ[Tc^ VTcU^aTXV]X]eTbc\T]cQTcfTT] C $c^C!Ra^aT^eTacWT ]TgcUXeThTPabPccWT6^_P[_da B4I_a^YTRcX]>SXbWP CPcPBcTT[B4I<30ad]<XbaP The investment will be in defence, metal downstream and electronics as well as chemicals and pharmaceuticals among others, Misra, who is marketing the Gopalpur SEZ as a gateway to the South East Asian markets, said. Tata Steel is the anchor tenant for the multi-product 2,970-acre SEZ at Gopalpur in Odisha. The UK-based Midget Corporations is setting up an assembly plant for ‘unmanned aerial vehicle targets’ which are used by army for firing practices. Singapore consultant Subrana Jurong has completed the SEZ's masterplan with all land cleared for leasing within the 30 square km boundary. “All master-planning has been done, the entire area has been cleared, there is no encumbrance,” Misra said. Basic utilities and road infrastructure has already been built in early development of the zone which has Tata Steel's ferrochrome plant. The Gopalpur SEZ, just off the National Highway 5, will be based on a Singapore model for industrial development which offers land parcels of various sizes for industries, he said. Tata Steel SEZ will invest between C2,000 and C2,500 crore by 2020 in the Gopalpur SEZ, for which a Tata Power power plant proposal is also on the drawing board. The company is also discussing a possible investm e nt i n e x p ans i on of Gopalpur port, about five kms away from the zone. “We want to show that if you plan well and provide infrastructure, SEZ can be successful,” Misra added. ndiabulls Housing Finance on Saturday said it will raise C510 crore by issuing non-convertible debentures (NCDs) through private placement. The issue will open on March 23 and close on the same day, the company said in a BSE filing. Under the plan, the company will issue 5,100 secured non- convertible redeemable debentures with an face value of C10 lakh each. Aggregating to C510 crore, on private placement basis, pursuant to special resolution passed by shareholders of the company held on September 7, 2015,” it said. The tenor of the issue varies from 719 days to 1,083 days, bearing coupon rate in the range of 9.4935 per cent to up to 9.4953 per cent. 6XeTUPXaRWP]RTc^<P[[hPbc^_\TSXPcaXP[bPhb<Pid\SPaBWPf ?C8Q 7H34A0103 MD of biotechnology major Biocon, said: “It (settlement) does not happen overnight” and said media exerting pressure on Mallya to settle the dues instantly does not make it easy. “Today everybody is being tried by media.Whether it's banks recovering their debts. Whether it’s the debtors, whether it’s the Government. Everybody is being tried by media. For instant recovery of all dues - each and every penny. Which is unrealistic. So, media frenzy is getting in the way of following due processes,” she said.Interestingly, noted industrialist Rahul Bajaj had said, “Wherever there are justifiable reasons (for non-payment of loans), actions should not be taken. However, where there are cases of wilful default, where loans were diverted for other purposes, action should be taken. Catching thieves will not harm the country.” Mazumdar-Shaw, however, said there are many companies which have large debts even though they have not been declared as defaulters. One has to focus on the bigger issues of debt recovery and dispute resolution and also on the mounting debt of public sector banks which is causing financial stress. The proposed bankruptcy law, when cleared by Parliament, would certainly expedite the process of resolving these enormous challenges (NPA issue), she said. “There are many debts which have to be recovered. Fair opportunity should be give to debtors to settle. But just being carried away by TV shows, nothing is going to come.” “I think every default- F^^S[P]Sc^PbbTbbbXcdPcX^] QTU^aTaT^_T]X]VA^WcPZbc^aTb 8B6427TPeh4]VV 0dbcaXP³b=Tdb^] 7hSa^cTRbXV]_PRcb oted entrepreneur Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw says beleaguered businessman Vijay Mallya should be given a fair opportunity to settle the loan default issues with banks, and maintained media trial against him would not help matters. Resolution of debt and financial disputes take a long time in the country due to lack of a bankruptcy law, she said in an interview to PTI here and noted Mallya has himself clarified he is willing to settle the loan default case and hence he needs to be given a fair opportunity to do so. She expressed confidence Mallya would return to India. Pointing that the case was pending before the Debt Recovery Tribunal for some years, the Chairperson and N ?C8Q 270=3860A7 fter its two outlets were looted and burnt in Rohtak, Haryana during the Jat agitation last month, footwear and apparel brand Woodland on Saturday said it will assess the situation before reopening the stores. The outlets were generating sales around C4-5 crore per annum, the company said. During the stir, arsonists had first looted and then burnt down two Woodland stores located in Rohtak, which was the epicenter of pro-quota Jat agitation. “For Rohtak, we will asses (situation) before we take a call on whether to reopen the stores,” Woodland Managing Director Harkirat Singh told PTI. He also described the mayhem in several parts of Haryana during Jat stir as setback. “It was a setback. We were running both of profitable stores. We would have opened another one, but now we are thinking to whether to reopen those two. It was a setback not only for us but for so many other companies,” Singh said. “We have close to 25-30 stores in Haryana. Practically A in all towns. And it is not that we are closing those stores, they will keep running,” he said. He further said the company might look at the possibility of opening its stores on a franchise model. “These things happen and they are very sad. We all feel there is a lot of market potential there, but when such things take place, we take a step back and we think whether it is really sensible to do it, but of course, one has to see as for the future. May be we will be more careful probably we open franchise. We have not yet thought of how we will take it up now. We are still kind of what is the possibility. Normally, we open company owned stores everywhere,” he said. “We have yet to decide what to do. We are still pursuing how we can get compensation then we will probably search for some franchisees. In places where we are not sure where we feel about safety angle and all, it is always better to have local person involved who can take care better,” he said. Rohtak had seen massive damage to the private property by violent protesters. ?=BQ =4F34;78 SGEC Heavy Engineering has signed four technical Icooperation agreements with Austria's Neuson Hydrotec GmbH for manufacture and supply of various items. “The company has signed four technical cooperation agreements with Neuson Hydrotec GmbH, GaisbergerstraBe 52, Austria for manufacture, sale and supply of items, jointly for India,” ISGEC said in a filing to BSE. Nosing press plant, forging plant, forging complex press, and straightening press are the items under the agreement for manufacture, sale and supply, it said. The technical cooperation agreement in respect of nosing press plant came into effect on March 16, it said. The remaining agreements will come into effect once they are approved by the Board of Directors in the next meeting. FT]TeTaWPSQP]Zad_cRh[Pf fWXRWXbeTahX\_^acP]c[Pfc^ STP[fXcWP[[cWTbTcWX]Vb8cWX]Z fTWPeTc^VXeTP]^__^acd]Xch ]^cYdbcc^EXYPh<P[[hPQdcP[[ STQc^abP]SSTUPd[cTabc^cahP]S bTcc[TfXcWQP]ZbP]SQP]Zbc^ aTR^eTaPb\dRWSdTbPbcWThRP] 18>2>=2<3:8A0=<0ID<30AB70F er should be given an opportunity to settle. If you constantly threaten the debtor that you will be arrested, you will be put behind bars... that's not the way to recover the debts.” “We never had bankruptcy law which is very important law to deal with all these things. I think we have to give an opportunity not just to Vijay Mallya but all debtors and defaulters to try and settle with banks and banks to recover as much dues as they can,” Mazumdar-Shaw noted. Noting that she and Mallya grew up together, she said “I have known him for a long time. And I know that he is sincerely trying to settle his debt. But now he is so worried about the way media has been going after him.” On whether Mallya would return to India, she said: “I am sure he will. Of course he is very worried about what will happen when he comes back. He is very keen to settle.” ,QGLDDLPVWRFDSWXUH PDUNHWVKDUH LQ,R7VD\V1DVVFRP ?C8Q 2>8<10C>A4 ndia aims to capture 20 per cent market share in Internet of Things (IoT), an emerging sector which would be worth $300 billion by 2020, a top Nasscom official said on Saturday. The IoT is driving the fourth wave of industrial re volut i on d r am at i c a l ly a ler ting manufac tur ing , energy, transportation, medical and other industrial sectors while emerging worldwide, Vice President of Na s s c om ( In du s t r i a l Initiative) KS Vishwanathan told reporters here. As the global IoT business is expected to touch $300 billion by 2020, India aims to capture 20 per cent market share in another five years, he said. I Vishwanathan was here to launch Nass com IoT Centre of Excellence, a joint initiative of Government of India, Depar t ment of Electronics and Information Technology (DEITY) along with TCS, Intel, Amazon Web S er vices and FORGE Accelerator. Depending on the success of Coimbatore hub, it was proposed to launch such centres in Pune, Baroda and Hyderabad, even as a pilot project was underway in Bengaluru, he said. To a query on the pace of setting up startups in view of additional tax being levied on them, Vishwanathan said, “nearly 1,000 startups are being added every year in India, which stands third in the world in terms of numbers and will continue to grow.” C`SVceGRUcRSRedW`c[VhV]]Vcd¶ UV^R_URXRZ_de"ViTZdV]Vgj ?=BQ =4F34;78 obert Vadra, son-in-law of S onia Gandhi, has R expressed solidarity with jewellers who are protesting against imposition of one per cent excise on non- silver jewellery and said a solution should be found to the problems of small-time workers who are suffering due to the issue. Noting that it has been many days that the jewellers have been protesting, he said they should be heard. “Imagine the plight of the small scale workers, who are suffering and struggling with day to day needs. And no one seems to be willing to find a solution,” Vadra, a businessman himself, said in a statement here. Vadra, who has met representatives of All India Gems and Jewellery Trade Federation, said “If the roll back has not been entertained, in that case the federation is simply wanting to allow the trade to pay excise duty of 1 per cent or equivalent amount of VAT paid (whichever is lower), to the centre through the Excise Department, but based on the VAT, so that the Government 8Y^TeZQRb_dXUbcd_` E;µc´1cYQ^BYSX<Ycdµ ?C8Q ;>=3>= he Hinduja brothers have emerged as the richest T Asian-origin entrepreneurs in Britain for the fourth consecutive year with an estimated personal fortune of 16.5 billion pounds. The India-born brothers G P Hinduja and SP Hinduja topped the ‘Asian Rich List 2016’ released here last night and the annual rankings showed that they had added one billion pounds to their personal fortune in a year to be worth an estimated 16.5 billion pounds. The ‘Asian Rich List’ assesses the total wealth of Britain's top 101 richest Asians and is compiled by UK-based publishing house Asian Media and Market. Steel tycoon Lakshmi N Mittal was ranked second in the list, released by the Indian High Commissioner to the UK Navtej Sarna. The fortune of Mittal, however, has plummeted by 3.3 billion pounds to finish with 6.4 billion pounds. Leading NRI industrialist Lord Swraj Paul is listed as 15th richest with fortune worth 500 million pounds. This year’s analysis showed that the UK’s richest Asians have their fortunes worth 55.54 billion pounds up from 54.48 billion pounds in 2015. The highest riser and a new entry is Cyrus Vandrevala, with 2 billion pounds at number five. He moved to London with his wife Priya, having made his money in the US in the internet business. He is now in private equity and real estate. Sri Prakash Lohia, chairman of the Indorama Corporation, is listed 3rd richest with fortune worth 3 billion pounds. The Arora brothers - Simon, Bobby 0da^QX]S^?WPa\P VTcbDB530P__a^eP[ U^a^bcT^_^a^bXbSadV ?=BQ =4F34;78 urobindo Pharma has received final nod from the A US health regulator to manufacture and market its generic Naproxen Sodium tablets used for the treatment of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women. “The company has received final approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (USFDA) to manufacture and market Naproxen Sodium tablets USP, 220 mg,” Aurobindo Pharma said in a BSE filing. The company expects to launch the product in the first quarter of the next fiscal, it added. “The approved product has an estimated market size of $96 million for the twelve months ended January 2016 according to IMS,” it said. The company's drug is the generic version of Bayer Healthcare LLC's Aleve tablets, it added. 7X]SdYPQQa^cWTab6?7 7X]SdYP B B?7 7X]SdYPcc^__TSccWT³³0bXP]AAXRW;;Xbc!! %´f fXcW P]TTbcX\PcTS__Tab^]P[UU^acd]T^^U %$QQX[[X^]__^d]Sb and Robin - owners of discount retail chain are 4th richest with a fortune worth 2.1 billion pounds. Within the Hinduja group -- conglomerate with interests across automotive, real estate and oil -Gulf Oil, Ashok Leyland, IndusInd Bank and Hinduja global Solutions appear to have done particularly well. According to the Asian Rich List, Gopi Hinduja, cochairman of the Hinduja group does not think that wealth should be measured only or even mainly by how much there is in someone's bank account. “If you consider one to be wealthy or rich only because of his money, you are totally wrong,” he said. “I consider someone to be wealthy and rich if he has good friends, good contacts, good relationships. If you want to calculate my wealth by counting my money then you are wrong,” he said. “My father always told his children, ‘Act local but think global’ and be diversified in your businesses. Don't be in one sector, be in different sectors, and also be spread geographically. Don't be in just one country so that you are always balanced. If one sector is not doing well, the other will.” Gopi Hinduja said, “My message is ver y clear. Bediversified; be in different countries and you will never have shocks. I have not seen any adverse impact on our businesses because we are spread across 38 countries and reach a hundred countries.” “Since the recession in 2008, the US has picked up. However, everyone is now nervous about China where the GDP has fallen to between 6 per cent and 6.5 per cent. But people forget the trillions of dollars China has its reserves.” He said the country that offered the best investment potential is India. “India is the best destination. In India today your GDP is 7.3 per cent - plus a lot of reforms are going to come in. We have a god budget,” he said. He said, “Prime Minister Narendra Modi has a good goal but his problem is similar to that of Manmohan Singh and that is implementation. So he has to have a team to implement what he is doing, but I think he is making improvements. Maybe in the next six months we will see there will be a structure where things started getting implemented. If you are in private sector you have huge opportunities.” 6.60LFURILQUDLVHV CFURUHWKURXJK VHFXULWLVDWLRQGHDO ?C8Q =4F34;78 KS Microfinance has raised Sritisation C538.11 crore through a secudeal -- the seventh such transaction in 2015-16. In a BSE filing on Saturday, SKS Microfinance said it has ‘completed seventh securitisation transaction during 2015-16 for a pool value of C538.11 crore’. With this transaction, the total sum of securitisation completed during the current fiscal (year-todate) is C2,319.93 crore, it said. The entire pool qualifies for priority treatment as per the Reserve Bank’s priority sector lending guidelines. “The pool has been rated AA (SO) by a leading rating agency, signifying a high degree of safety regarding timely servicing of financial obligations. Such instruments carry a very low credit risk,” it added. SKS Microfinance added that it has also assigned a pool of loan receivables of an aggregate value of C506.55 crore to one of the largest public sector banks on direct assignment basis as per guidelines prescribed by RBI. SKS Microfinance is a non-banking finance company regulated by the Reserve Bank of India. $*(/LQWHJUDWHV WZRVXEVLGLDULHV NEW DELHI: Adani Enterprises Ltd on Saturday said that its arm Adani Green Energy Ltd (AGEL) has incorporated two wholly-owned subsidiaries. In a BSE filing the company said, AGEL has incorporated a wholly owned subsidiary named Sami Solar (Gujarat) Private Ltd (SSGPL) on March 17. PNS jca^l CaPSTab³bcaXZTT]cTab 'cWSPh NEW DELHI: The strike by jewellers and bullion traders continued for the 18th straight day on Saturday demanding rollback of the proposed excise duty on non-silver jewellery. Most jewellery shops and establishments in the country have been on strike since March 2 after Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in his Budget announced one per cent excise duty on nonsilver jewellery. Jewellers are also opposed to mandatory quoting of PAN by customers for transactions of Rs 2 lakh and above. Meanwhile, in a bid to calm the frayed nerves of agitating jewellers, the finance ministry yesterday said artisans and job workers will not have to pay this levy. PNS does not suffer on revenues proposed.” But at the same time, he added, they want respite from the compliances which are impossible for small scale workers in the jewellery industry to follow. “I have understood and find it completely non practical, for small scale workers to follow these compliances,” he said. “More over, t he re a l probem of black money will be addressed when gold bars will not be sold, as the jewellers association promise willingly,” Vadra said, adding, “This will save our nation a great deal of funds, which are used to procure this unaccounted gold into the country to absorb individuals black money.” Jewellers and bullion traders have been on strike since last 18 days demanding rollback of the proposed excise duty on nonsilver jewellery. ?344e`eR\V`gVc9D4= NEW DELHI: State-run NBCC said its Board has approved takeover of Ko l k at a - b a s e d P SU Hi n d u s t a n S t e e l w o r k s Construction Ltd (HSCL). Initially, HSCL will operate as a subsidiary of NBCC and eventually it will be merged with the Navratna firm. HSCL also has an order book of C8,000 crore which could be handled by NBCC, a source said. PNS <T\QTa2dbc^\b2T]caP[1^PaS^U4gRXbT2dbc^\b1WdbWP]:d\Pa1P]bP[X]PdVdaPcTS823X]2>=2>Ab]Tf[h R^]bcadRcTS<d[cX<^SP[;^VXbcXRb?PaZ<<;?[^RPcTSPc:PcWdfPbAPYPbcWP]X]cWT_aTbT]RT^U2WPXa\P]P]S <P]PVX]V3XaTRc^a2>=2>A0]X[:d\Pa6d_cP2WXTU2^\\XbbX^]Ta^U2dbc^\b?aTeT]cXeT:P\P[9h^cX2WXTU 2^\\XbbX^]Ta2T]caP[4gRXbT9PX_daBB;T]ZP3XaTRc^a8]cTa]PcX^]P[<PaZTcX]V>_TaPcX^]b2>=2>AHPbWePaSWP] 3XaTRc^a5X]P]RT2>=2>A3a?0[[XAP]X3XaTRc^a3^\TbcXR2>=2>A0aeX]S1WPc]PVPa3XaTRc^a?a^YTRcb BTaeXRTb2>=2>AE:P[hP]PAP\PP]SWTPSb^UePaX^dbBWX__X]V;X]Tb2P_cPX]b^UcWT8]Sdbcah 0BB0<A85;4BA45DC4B270A64BA460A38=60BB0<A85;4B?D1;82B27>>; >U[PcT]d\Ta^dbPacXR[TbWPeTQTT]_dQ[XbWTSX]cWT]PcX^]P[SPX[XTbPVPX]bccWT<P]PVT\T]c2^\\XccTT STRXbX^]c^R[^bTcWT0A?B;PXcZ^aBRW^^[Ua^\cWT]TgcPRPST\XRbTbbX^]XT! %! &B^\T^UcWT UPRcbPaTQTX]VSXbc^acTSP]S\XbaT_aTbT]cTSc^QaX]VPSeTabT_dQ[XRXchc^cWT<P]PVT\T]cCWTbP\TPaT QTX]VR[PaXUXTS8]!%cWTPVVaXTeTSBcPUUP__TP[TSc^cWT7XVW2^dac6dfWPcXaTVPaSX]V]^] X\_[T\T]cPcX^]^U%cW2?2P]ScWT2^dacVPeTXcbYdSV\T]cX]UPe^da^U0A?BBcPUUU^a_Ph\T]c^U_Ph P]SPaaTPabPb_Ta%cW2?2Ua^\!%2PbTfPbcPZT]d_QhcWT<P]PVT\T]cfXcWcWTBd_aT\T2^dac _aTbT]cX]VcWTUX]P]RXP[R^]SXcX^]^UcWTBRW^^[U^aaTeXTfX]VcWT7XVW2^dac9dSV\T]cBd_aT\T2^dac _PbbTScWTXaYdSV\T]cX]9d[h! $X]UPe^da^U0A?BBcPUUP]SSXaTRcTScWT<P]PVT\T]cc^_PhcWT%cW 2?2PaaTPabX]TXVWc\^]cWbXTQh!cW<PaRW! %CWTPaaTPabWPeTQTT]_PXSc^cWTbcPUUPbSXaTRcTS QhcWTBd_aT\T2^dacCWTUd[[_PhP]SP[[^fP]RTbPb_Ta%cW2?2fTaT_PXSUa^\=^eT\QTa! $XcbT[U fWXRWX]R[dSTS (_TaRT]c30CWTBRW^^[<P]PVT\T]c2^\\XccTTf^aZTS^dccWPcX]^aSTac^_PhcWT bcPUUPb_Ta%cW2?2_PhbRP[TbcWTUTTb^UcWTRWX[SaT]f^d[SWPeTc^QTWXZTS\X]X\d\P__a^g%_Ta RT]cUa^\]TgcPRPST\XRbTbbX^]! % &CWT\PccTafPbaTUTaaTSc^cWT6^eTa]X]V1^ShfW^PUcTa VaTPcST[XQTaPcX^]bSTRXSTScWPcXcf^d[S]^cQTUTPbXQ[Tc^ad]cWTX]bcXcdcX^]fXcWbdRWbcTT_WXZTP]ScWT bP\T\PhQTR[^bTS0RR^aSX]V[hP[[_PaT]cbcTPRWTabbcPUUfTaTX]U^a\TSX]3TR! $ C M Y K f^a[S& 17>?0; kBD=30H k<0A27!! % C`^_VjSRT\d4cfke`S]`T\Ecf^a )O\'XEDLSODQHFUDVKHV ECXQcRUS_]UdXYbT LQ5XVVLDNLOOHG g_b\TS_e^dbi*Dbe]` Cf^8]SXP]b P\^]VSTPS BA0906>?0;0=Q F0B78=6C>= s part of the Republican establishment’s continuA ing bid to block front-runner Donald Trump, former presidential nominee Mitt Romney has now come out in strong support of Senator Ted Cruz in the hope that he alone can contain the Trump surge and ensure an “open convention” to select the party nominee. Ahead of next Tuesday’s Republican caucus in his home-State of Utah, Romney unleashed another round of attack on Trump, commenting that it has now become a contest between “Trumpism and Republicanism”, with Tr umpism representing “racism, misogyny, bigotry, xenophobia, vulgarity and, most recently, threats and violence”. “I will vote for Senator Cruz and I encourage others to do so as well, so that we can have an open convention and nominate a Republican,” Romney said in a Facebook post on Friday. Romney, who had campaigned for Governor John Kasich in Ohio just last week, sought to explain his aboutturn, saying: “The only path that remains to nominate a Republican rather than Trump is to have an open convention. At this stage, the only way we can reach an open convention is for Senator Cruz to be successful in as many of the remaining nominating elections as possible.” He went on to say that although he likes Governor Kasich and his “solid record 80=B Q <>B2>F 7UXPSSURPSWO\ ILUHVEDFNDW 5RPQH\FDOOLQJ KLPD³FKRNHU´ as governor”, a vote for Kasich from now on in the primaries will only help the controversial billionaire, making it “extremely likely that Trumpism would prevail”. Trump promptly fired back on Romney, calling him a “choker” for the manner in which he lost the 2012 race to President Barack Obama. “Failed Presidential Candidate Mitt Romney was campaigning with John Kasich & Marco Rubio, and now he is endorsing Ted Cruz. Mitt Romney is a mixed up man who doesn’t have a clue. No wonder he lost!” he commented in a series of vitriolic Twitter posts. Training his guns on other detractors from the Republican establishment as well, Tr ump tweeted: “Americans want to see a President who will fight FOR them – not a bunch of failed politicians fighting w/ each other about how to stop me.” And Romney’s endorsement of Cruz will be “good for me”, Trump said. The angr y exchanges between the two happened just hours before Trump arrived in Salt Lake City for his first major Utah rally that saw some clashes between protesters and supporters of Trump outside the venue after the event. If supporters kept chanting “Donald Trump”, protesters carried signs calling Trump a racist. “Mr Hate Out of Our State,” said one placard. Trump used the opportunity to make his appeal to Utah’s majority Mormon population and in the same breath wondered whether Romney truly represented their faith. Saying he loves the Mormons and has many friends in Salt Lake City, he remarked: “By the way, Mitt Romney is not one of them. Are you sure he’s a Mormon? Are we sure?” If Cruz was thrilled by Romney’s support and call to Utah voters, Kasich said while Romney is entitled to his opinion, the election is “not a parlour game” and that he himself remains convinced that he is the Republican best placed to defeat Hillary Clinton in the November race. Boeing 737-800 passenger jet operated by low cost airA line FlyDubai crashed while AT_dQ[XRP]_aTbXST]cXP[RP]SXSPcT3^]P[SCad\_b_TPZbPcPRP\_PXV]aP[[h^] 5aXSPhX]BP[c;PZT2Xch 0? Washington: Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has said the US has now become a “third world country” as compared to infrastructures in Dubai and China, and promised that things would change once he is elected the American President. “We have become a third world country, folks!,” Trump, 69, told his supporters at an election rally at Sal Lake City in Utah, which goes to presidential primary elections on Tuesday. “If you go to places like Dubai, China, you look at the roads, at the rail roads, they have the bullet trains that go 100s of miles an hour. And if you go to New York, they’re like 100 years ago,” he said. Trump said the US under him would knock out the ISIS and rebuild the country. “When it comes to trade, we are going to start being smart, because our country is poor. We are going to make American so great again. It is not great now. We need education to that,” he said. Reiterating that Trans Pacific Partnership is a “disastrous” trade deal, Trump said the US under him would have deal that would favor America. “It is not a question of free trading. Free trading is wonderful. The problem of free trading is that we need smart people on our side also. If I am president, I guarantee you they (Mexico) would pay (for the wall) and they would be very very happy about it,” he said. Trump said his administration would negotiate great trade deal amid applause and cheer from the audience. attempting to land in the southern Russian city of Rostov-onDon on Saturday, killing all 62 passengers, including two Indians. The flight was en route from Dubai and had been circling the airport for up to two hours after an initial aborted landing attempt, according to Russian news reports. There were high winds in the area at the time. The plane was coming in for a second attempt to land at 3 a.m. when it plunged to the ground and burst into flames. The crash occurred inside the airport’s perimeter, about 250 metres short of the runway. Ministry of External Affairs spokesman Vikas Swarup said the two Indians who appeared on a list put out by the Russian authorities are Anju Kathirvel Aiyappan and Mohan Shyam. According to Flydubai - an Emirati budget airline with a new fleet of planes that started flying in mid-2009 — the jet was carrying 55 passengers — 33 women, 18 men, four children and seven crew members, CNN reported. Initial reports suggested that all passengers on board were Russians; however, the Emergencies Ministry later confirmed that 11 foreigners AdbbXP]4\TaVT]Rh<X]XbcahT\_[^hTTbX]eTbcXVPcTcWTfaTRZPVT^UPRaPbWTS _[P]TPccWTA^bc^e^]3^]PXa_^ac^]BPcdaSPh 0? 5[XVWcaTR^aSTaU^d]S Moscow: Russian investigators probing the crash of a Dubai airliner in southern Russia that killed all 62 people on board have found one of the plane’s flight recorders. The Boeing 737-800 operated by FlyDubai was carrying 55 passengers, most of them Russian, and seven crew members of various nationalities when it crashed today in the city of Rostov-on-Don while trying to land in strong winds. Russia’s Emergencies Ministry said there were no survivors. Four children were among those killed, FlyDubai said. AP were on board, including all the crew members. FlyDubai said the passengers included 44 Russians, eight Ukrainians, two Indians and one Uzbekistani. “While we are still awaiting final confirmation, it is with great sadness that we report we believe there are no survivors,” FlyDubai said on the airline’s Facebook page. Speaking about the incident, FlyDubai chief executive Ghaith al-Ghaith said: “Our primary concern is for the families of the passengers and crew who were on board. “Everyone at FlyDubai is in deep shock and our hearts go out to the families and friends of those involved. We don’t yet know all the details of the accident but we are working closely with the authorities to establish the cause,” he said. The airport will remain closed until Sunday, and medics and psychologists were on standby to assist family members, the Emergencies Ministry said. About 700 people were involved in the rescue operation. $ZX[[TSX]8bcP]Qd[Q[Pbc 8aP`[Pd]RWTb^UUT]bXeTX]0]QPa 80=BQ 0=:0A0 t least five people were killed and 36 injured in a suicide bombing that hit Turkey’s central Istanbul on Saturday. The attack took place in front of the local governor’s office in Beyoglu, Hurriyat Daily News quoted Istanbul governor Vasip Sahin as saying. Turkish Health Minister Mehmet Muezzinoglu said 36 people, including 12 foreign nationals and a child, were injured.As many as seven of the injured were in critical condition. Three Israeli citizens were among the injured, Dogan News Agency reported. Israel’s Foreign Ministry Spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon said Israeli citizens were injured, but could not confirm the exact number. The surrounding areas were cordoned off. Germany, which kept its embassy in Ankara and consulate in Istanbul closed on March 17 05?Q 1067303 A 8=B B7>AC ?0;4BC8=80=BC01B 8BA04;8B>;384A forces have launched a broad offensive to retake the Icityraqi of Hit from the Islamic and March 18 following an intelligence input of a terror attack threat, warned its citizens in Istanbul after the attack to stay in their hotels and follow the media for security updates. The attack in Istanbul came six days after a suicide bomb attack in Ankara killed 37 people. The attack in Ankara was claimed by the Kurdistan Freedom Hawks (TAK), a terror group linked to the outlawed PKK. ?C8Q :0C7<0=3D n the eve of Prime Minister K P Oli’s visit to O China, leaders of agitating #:8;;438=E84C=0< 4G?;>B8>= rench President Francois Hollande met today with key F cabinet ministers and security (?8;6A8<B:8;;438= B0D380A0180 AXhPSW) 0c[TPbc (0aPQ _X[VaX\bfTaTZX[[TSP]S!! X]YdaTS^]BPcdaSPhX]PQdb PRRXST]c^]Pa^PS[X]ZX]V BPdSX0aPQXP³bW^[hRXcXTb <PZZPWP]S<PSX]P :8;;433D4C> 740EHA08=B8=?0: ?TbWPfPa)0c[TPbcT[TeT]\^aT _T^_[TfTaTZX[[TSX]cf^ bT_PaPcTX]RXST]cb^UW^dbT a^^UR^[[P_bTcaXVVTaTSQh c^aaT]cXP[aPX]bX]?PZXbcP]³b ]^acWfTbcTa]RXch^U?TbWPfPa B8G:8;;438=278=0 ;0=3B;834 1TXYX]V) 0c[TPbcbXgf^aZTab WPeTQTT]ZX[[TSPUcTaP [P]Sb[XSTbcadRZPadQQTa UPRc^ahX]b^dcWfTbc2WX]P³b Hd]]P]_a^eX]RT C M Y K rorist Daesh (ISIS) gangs have fled back into the town centre,” the head of the local council for Al-Baghdadi district, Malallah al-Obeidi, said. Daboun said Iraqi aircraft and jets from the US-led international coalition were providing air support. Al-Asad military air base, which houses a large contingent of US and other foreign military advisers, lies around 35 kilometres northwest of Hit. Iraq’s security forces launched a final push against IS in Anbar’s provincial capital Ramadi late last year and established full control over the city last month. Aid agencies have voiced concern over the fate of an estimated 35,000 civilians who have fled Hit and its surroundings in the run-up to the latest military offensive. The International Committee of the Red Cross said late yesterday that thousands of freshly displaced people were stranded in areas where very little assistance is available. 1aXcPX]´b?aX]RT7Paah[TUcP]S=T_P[TbT?aX\T<X]XbcTa:WPSVP?aPbPSBWPa\P>[XcP[ZSdaX]VP\TTcX]VPccWT?aX\T <X]XbcTa´baTbXST]RTX]:PcW\P]Sd=T_P[^]BPcdaSPh?aX]RT7PaahQTVP]PUXeTSPh^UUXRXP[caX_c^=T_P[^]BPcdaSPhc^ PccT]SPRTaT\^]hc^\PaZ!hTPab^UaT[PcX^]bQTcfTT]cWTcf^]PcX^]b 0? =T_P[³bPVXcPcX]V<PSWTbX[TPSTabZ]^RZ^]2WX]P³bS^^a 9TadbP[T\) 0?P[TbcX]XP] cTT]PVTabcPQQTSP]Sf^d]STS P]8baPT[XQ^aSTaVdPaSX]cWT ^RRd_XTSFTbc1P]ZRXch^U 7TQa^]c^SPhQTU^aTQTX]VbW^c STPS8baPT[X_^[XRTbPXScWT [PcTbcX]PbTaXTb^UPccPRZb>]T VdPaSfPb[XVWc[hX]YdaTSX]cWT X]RXST]cfWXRW^RRdaaTS]TPaP SXb_dcTS_[PRT^Uf^abWX_X] RT]caP[7TQa^]P]SP]^cWTa Q^aSTaVdPaSZX[[TScWT &hTPa ^[SPbbPX[P]c_^[XRTbPXSX]P bcPcT\T]c 7P]^X) 0c[TPbcU^da_T^_[T fTaTZX[[TSP]S^]TX]YdaTSX] P]Tg_[^bX^]X]EXTc]P\³b RP_XcP[7P]^X^]BPcdaSPh State (ISIS) group in the western province of Anbar, a top commander said today. Led by the elite CounterTerrorism Service, forces from the police, army and local tribal fighters were making a final push to retake Hit, 145 kilometres west of Baghdad. “They have begun a broad operation to liberate Hit and Kubaysa,” Major General Ali Ibrahim Daboun, the head of the Al-Jazeera Operations Command, said. Kubaysa is a smaller town a few miles west of Hit, a key hub along the Euphrates that the jihadists have controlled since October 2014. Daboun said Iraqi security forces and tribal fighters had retaken a cement plant west of Kubaysa and raised the Iraqi flag there. “Members of the ter- Madhesi parties in Nepal have approached the Chinese envoy here to express their concerns regarding the new Constitution. In a meeting held here, the leaders of the alliance yesterday handed over a memorandum to Ambassador Wu Chuntai urging China to exert diplomatic pressure on Nepal for fulfilling their demands related to 7^[[P]STW^[Sb\TTcX]V PUcTacTaa^abdb_TRcPaaTbc 05?Q ?0A8B officials after the arrest in Belgium of the last major suspect wanted in connection with the November Paris attacks. As well as Prime Minister Manuel Valls, the meeting included the interior, defence, justice and foreign ministers, top security officials and the armed forces chief. “The goal, following the arrest of (Salah) Abdeslam and several of his accomplices, is to review operations that are under way and the fight against terrorist groups in France and Europe,” a member of Hollande’s entourage said. Abdeslam, Europe’s most wanted man who allegedly helped plan the November 13 attacks in which 130 people were killed, was captured in a dramatic raid by armed police in Brussels on Friday. Abdeslam, 26, and four other suspects were arrested in the gritty Brussels neighbourhood of Molenbeek. Hollande, whose embattled presidency will be partly defined 0QSTb[P\BP[PW by his response to the worst terror attacks on French soil, said Paris would request Abdeslam’s extradition from Belgium “as rapidly as possible”. With Belgium having arrested a series of people over links with Abdeslam, Hollande said many more were involved in the Paris attacks than originally believed. In Paris, meanwhile, four suspected Islamists were arrested Wednesday, one of whom was thought to be planning “violent acts”, French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said. Cazeneuve played down reports that an attack had been “imminent” and said the authorities “carry out arrests of this kind every day.” Hollande, though, said the “threat level remains very high.” the new charter. “We have mentioned that a large section of the population in Nepal has not accepted the new constitution and the government has been suppressing their agitation against the new constitution,” said Manish Suman, the general secretary of Sadbhavana Party. “We also said that the prime minister has lied to the international community through his claims that the new constitution has ensured rights of all communities in the country,” he claimed. According to Suman, “the meeting was a step toward establishing people-to-people relations between Nepal and China” by sharing proper information. Until now the Madhesi leaders have only met Indian officials seeking support for their demands and agitation. C M Y K J B^dcW0UaXRP\PhbcPacPb UPe^daXcTbPVPX]bc0UVWP]XbcP] c^SPhQdccWTbcPcXbcXRb\PhQTX] UPe^da^UcWT0bXP]bXST 0UVWP]XbcP]WPeTPQTccTafX]^U %!!!X]C!8bR^\_PaTSc^cWT ?a^cTPb$(%$ ' J 17>?0; kBD=30H k<0A27!! % A>>C70305>A<8301;4BD<<4A74 8B3458=8C4;HC74<0=8=5>A<5>A0;; 5>A<0CB740;F0HB703020;< 74030BB4BB8=6C74B8CD0C8>= ?A4CCHF4;;748BC740=27>A8= C748AC40<=><0CC4AF70C5>A<0C ¯ 9?3d\X]h C > 3 0 H 8 = 0 2 C 8 > = GUcd9^TYUcfcCbY<Q^[Ql14=60;DAD <YfUCdQbC`_bdc '*# `] 3QbbYRUQ^\__[d_cSQbU\Y_^cQgQi 7XVW^]R^]UXST]RTFX]SXTbcPZT^];P]ZPX]T`dP[UPRT^UUc^SPh µHZ_UZVdTR_SV UVdecfTeZgV¶ 41D5<9>5 14=60;DAD @D9 igh on confidence after their emphatic victor y over England, the West Indies will once again look for an explosive knock from Chris Gayle to inch closer to a semifinal berth when they take on defending champions Sri Lanka in a World Twenty20 Super 10 Group 1 match today. The West Indians showed ominous form in the triumph over England but the Lankans are expected to put up a stronger challenge to them. Gayle could, however, prove to be the trump card for the West Indians after setting the tone with a 47-ball hundred against England — the fastest ever in World Twenty20. Should his bat roars the way it did against England, the Lankans will find it nearly impossible to stop him from steering West Indies. Both the sides are not short on experience with Angelo Mathews and Tillakaratne Dilshan being the Lankan mainstays. As far as the batting of the West Indies is concerned it will revolve around the power-hitting Gayle who hammered 11 sixes against England. Perfect foil for Gayle at the other end would be Marlon Samuels, who would be keen to continue the form which he hit against England in the previous match. Samuels struck eight fours in his 37 before Gayle’s brutal strikes took West Indies home. The West Indies also seem unaffected by the absence of all-rounder Kieron Pollard, opener Lendl Simmons and Darren Bravo. Mystery spinner Sunil Narine is not there to trouble the rival batsmen with his unorthodox bowling, but the Caribbeans still have a decent spin trio of Samuel Badree, Sulieman Benn, and Marlon Samuels. On the other hand, Sri Lanka are 41D5<9>5 14=60;DAD H @D9 he contract row back home has cost them a couple of good players in the ongoing ICC WT20 but West T Indies captain Darren Sammy on Saturday said he is not B7>>C8=6C8<4)FTbc8]SXTbRaXRZTcTab_[PhX]VU^^cQP[[SdaX]VP_aPRcXRTbTbbX^]PccWT<2WX]]PbfP\hBcPSXd\X]1T]VP[dad^]BPcdaSPh coming into the match with a win against Afghanistan, who posed a spirited challenge before the seasoned Tillakaratne Dilshan guided the islanders to a six-wicket win in their opening match. The Angelo Mathews-led side will look to Dilshan, who smashed 83 not out off 56 balls against Afghanistan, to give yet another rollicking start against the formidable West Indies. Dilshan’s knock would have bolstered the low confidence of Sri Lanka as they had suffered three consecutive losses in the Asia Cup besides B C0C 8 B C 8 G ! 2WaXb6Ph[TaT`dXaTb^][h! \^aTbXgTbc^QTR^\TcWTUXabc QPcb\P]c^aTPRW bXgTbX] C!RaXRZTc $ BaX;P]ZPWPeTf^]UXeTP]S [^bcYdbc^]T^UcWTbXg\PcRW Tb_[PhTSPVPX]bcFTbc8]SXTb >eTaP[[;P]ZP]bWPeTf^]% P]S[^bcYdbc^]!^RRPbX^]b PVPX]bccWT2PaXQQTP]bXST ! $" BaX;P]ZPb! $"PVPX]bcFTbc 8]SXTbX]! $XbcWTWXVWTbc bR^aTX]VP\TbX]e^[eX]VcWTbT cf^bXSTbX]cWXbU^a\Pc 5PXbT[5TPcdaTb losing two warm-up games in the lead up to their tournament opener. Dinesh Chandimal would like to give a brisk start to counter the threat posed by Gayle and Co. After losing some matches coming into this tournament, Sri lanka suffered another when their 2014 WT20 winning skipper Lasith Malinga stepped down, following concern over his slow recovery from a knee injury. With bowling their weak link, the onus would be on the batsmen to put the big score on the board. B@D03 Sri Lanka: Angelo Mathews (captain), ?C8 Dushmantha Chameera, Dinesh Chandimal, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Rangana Herath, Shehan Jayasuriya, Chamara Kapugedera, Nuwan Kulasekara, Suranga Lakmal, Thisara Perera, Sachithra Senanayake, Dasun Shanaka, Milinda Siriwardana, Lahiru Thirimanne. West Indies: Darren Sammy (captain), Samuel Badree, Sulieman Benn, Carlos Braithwaite, Dwayne Bravo, Johnson Charles, Andre Fletcher, Chris Gayle, Jason Holder, Ashley Nurse, Denesh Ramdin, Andre Russell, Marlon Samuels, Jerome Taylor, Evin Lewis. the least bit concerned as the ones who are in the side have enough calibre to be simply destructive. West Indies annihilated England in their opening World T20 match in Mumbai with swashbuckler Chris Gayle hammering the event's fastest hundred that came off just 47 balls. The comprehensive win has renewed the team's selfbelief, which had taken a hit during the payment row with the Cricket Board after which players such as Darren Bravo opted out of the event. "Yes we are missing important players but once we execute our plans then we can be very destructive. It's cricket and it's an event that we enjoy playing. So, whatever issues, they are C!8B05D==H60<4 behind us. Our focus is on win- 0=30;;B>ACB>5 ning matches and we want to C78=6B20=70??4= take it step by step," he told on 0CB0<4C8<4F4 the eve of Sunday's match =443C>2><4D? against Sri Lanka here. "It is the calibre of the F8C7>=4>ACF> players in the squad that I am ?;0=BC> concerned about," he added. =4DCA0;8B4C74186 Asked whether it is a 6D=B8=C748AB834 revenge match since West ¯BA8;0=:02>027 Indies lost to Sri Lanka in the semifinals of the previous 6A070<5>A3 World T20, Sammy said, "I wouldn't say it is revenge. If this match was the final then we could think on those lines but it is a group game." "We respect them a lot and we have had great games between us. Hope it is a good game tomorrow. We want to keep winning. We want to execute our plans. You saw it against England." In India, Sammy said the dew factor expectedly plays a big role. "Here in India, we know dew is a big factor so obviously we weigh that. But you know that we have no control over the toss. We know what to do if we win the toss," he said. 508AC81B5 ; > > : 6 ? B F 8 = <0C27 C_edX1VbYSQfc1VWXQ^YcdQ^l<D<108 l<YfUCdQbC`_bdc #*# `] 41D5<9>5 <D<108 @D9 dvancing into the Super 10 stage for the first time in three attempts, minA nows Afghanistan will face a formidable challenge when they clash with South Africa in the ICC World Twenty 20 Championship at the Wankhede Stadium here on Sunday. Afghanistan suffered a narrow defeat against defending champions Sri Lanka in their opening Group 1 game at Kolkata's Eden Gardens and they will have to get across South Africa to keep themselves afloat. The Proteas, on the other hand, suffered a stunning two-wicket loss against England last night despite scoring a record-high score of 229 for 4 and Faf du Plessis' men would come hard at the Afghans, eager to notch up their first win in WT20 to stay in semifinals contention. The Afghans need to stand up to this assault, with both bat and ball from South Africa whose bowlers were taken FTRP]ccPZTP]hcTP\U^a VaP]cTSBPfcWTfPh 0UVWP]XbcP]_[PhTSPVPX]bc BaX;P]ZPX]cWTUXabcBd_Ta VP\TFTS^]ccPZTcWT\ U^aVaP]cTSPcP[[FTZ]^ffT WPeTc^_[Ph^daQTbcRaXRZTc CWTbW^acTacWTU^a\PccWT\^aT RWP]RTbP\X]]^fcTP\WPb^U d_bcPVX]VPbca^]VcTP\K ¯B>DC705A820B 70B78<0<;0 FTWPeTeTahV^^Sb_X]PccPRZ APbWXS:WP]=PQX <^WP\\PSWTXbPV^^S ^UUQaTPZTa7P\iP7^cPZ cWT[TUcPa\b_X]]Ta CWa^dVW^dccWTc^da]P\T]c cWThWPeTQ^f[TSeTahfT[[b^ ^dabcaT]VcWXbb_X]Q^f[X]VPb fT[[FTbPf<d\QPXfXRZTcXb P[fPhbUP\^dbU^aQXVbR^aT P]SQXVcPaVTc ¯ 05670=8BC0=B:8??4A 0B670ABC0=8:I08 batsman Mohammed Nabi. The Afghan bowling attack also lacks in experience to stand up to the assault of the likes of Quinton de Kock, Hashim Amla, A B de Villiers, Faf du Plessis, David Miller and Duminy. Off-spinner Nabi and leggie Rashid Khan have been the most successful in the tournament with seven wickets so far, but they will face a stiffer task against the top-class Proteas' batting line-up. B@D03 South Africa: Faf du Plessis (capt), Kyle Abbott, Hashim Amla, Farhaan Behardien, Quinton de Kock (wk), AB de Villiers, JP Duminy, Imran Tahir, A434<?C8>=C8<4)B^dcW0UaXRP]_[PhTabfX[[[^^Zc^^_T]cWTXaPRR^d]cPVPX]bc0UVWP]XbcP] ?C8 David Miller, Chris Morris, Aaron Phangiso, Kagiso Rabada, Rilee Rossouw, chase, is unlikely to be as accommoda- Dale Steyn, David Wiese. to the cleaners by the England. Can a bunch of amateur cricketers tive to the Afghans led by Asghar Afghanistan: Asghar Stanikzai (capt), defeat a top outfit like South Africa, who Stanikzai. Stanikzai was the lone top- Mohammad Shahzad (wk), Noor Ali will be coming at them at full tilt, and order batsman to come out with his rep- Zadran, Usman Ghani, Mohammad remain in contention for a semi-final utation enhanced with a knock of 62 Nabi, Karim Sadiq, Shafiqullah Shafiq, against Sri Lanka and he not only needs Rashid Khan, Ameer Hamza, Dawlat spot, is the big question. The pace attack of the Proteas, to fire big again, but would require good Zadran, Shapoor Zadran, Gulbadin which leaked runs aplenty to allow Root support from the likes of opener Naib, Samiullah Shenwari, Najibullah and company stage a magnificent run Mohammad Shahzad and middle-order Zadran, Hamid Hassan. >C74AB?>AC H^VTbWfPabTRdaTb>[h\_XR`d^cP 5[`\Vce`WRTVCRWRZ_D7 BPX]P?aP]]^haTPRWbT\XUX]P[b C M Y K ?C8Q 0BC0=0 0?Q 8=380=F4;;B tar wrestler Yogeshwar Dutt on Saturday secured an SOlympic quota place for India with =9^FX[UaXTS Cb^]VP &% ! &% ! Pc cWT 1=? a gold-medal finish in the men's 65kg freestyle category in the Asian Olympic Qualification tournament here. Yogeshwar became the second Indian wrestler after Narsingh Yadav to book a berth for the Rio Games, to be held later this year. Even before he clinched the yellow metal, the 33-year-old had qualified for Olympics by virtue of reaching the final on the second day of the competition. The top two finishers in each weight category here are assured of a Rio berth. ^ePZ3Y^Z^eXRS^\X]PcTSQ^cWcXTQaTPZTabc^QTPc The London Olympics bronzemedallist finished on top of the podium after his rival from China Katai Yeerlanbieke forfeited the gold-medal bout. En route the final, Yogeshwar put up a dominating show, winning all his three bouts rather comfortably. ?PaXQPb >_T] ^] 5aXSPh bTccX]V d_ P bT\XUX]P[ PVPX]bcAPUPT[=PSP[UTPcdaX]Vcf^_[PhTabfW^^f] PR^\QX]TSbTeT]cXc[TbX]cWT2P[XU^a]XPSTbTac =PSP[ STUTPcTS :TX =XbWXZ^aX %# %" R^]]TRcX]V ^] '( _TaRT]c ^U WXb UXabc bTaeTb X] cWT \PcRW _[PhTS X] ( STVaTT "! 2 WTPc d]STa P aT[T]c[Tbbbd]=PSP[XbPcWaTTcX\TfX]]TaPc8]SXP] FT[[b BTaT]PFX[[XP\baP[[XTSPUcTab`dP]STaX]VP" [TPSX]cWTbTR^]SbTcc^QTPc0V]XTbiZPAPSfP]bZP %#&% P]SaTPRWcWTUX]P[U^acWTUXabccX\TbX]RT ! fWT]bWTf^]P]ScWT]Q^hR^ccTScWTTeT]c U^a #hTPabd]cX[aTcda]X]V[PbchTPa 8]Bd]SPhbUX]P[FX[[XP\bfX[[cPZT^]EXRc^aXP 0iPaT]ZPfW^PSeP]RTSfXcWP&% %%!fX] ^eTa:Pa^[X]P?[XbZ^eP ?C8Q 10B4; shuttlers Saina Nehwal and H S Prannoy registered fightIingndian victories in the last eight contests of women's and men's singles events respectively to reach the semifinals of the $120,000 Swiss Open Grand Prix Gold badminton tournament here. Two-time champion, Saina took another step towards the Swiss Open crown after ekeing out a 1321, 21-15, 21-14 win over Japan's Sayaka Sato, seeded seventh. The Olympic bronze medallist will next take on her fierce rival Wang Yihan, seeded 3rd. Saina has a 4-9 record against the former World No 1 but the top seeded Indian will take confidence from her three wins against the Chinese in 2015. In men's singles, 13th seed Prannoy took almost an hour to get across Thailand's Tanongsak Saensomboonsuk, seeded 16th, 2118, 22-24, 21-9. He will next face Tzu Wei Wang of Chinese Taipei. :44?8C6>8=6) FTbc8]SXTbfX[[[^^Zc^ZTT_cWTXa\^\T]cd\V^X]V ?C8 41D5<9>5 274==08 @D9 FX]SXTb[^^Zc^R^]cX]dT fX]]X]Vad]eb1´STbW heir campaign got off to a positive start after a hardfought win over Pakistan, West Indies will look to conT tinue the good run in the ICC Women's World Twenty20 when they take on a struggling Bangladesh in a Group B match here on Sunday. West Indies rallied to eke out a narrow four-run win over Pakistan in their World T20 opener and they would to look produce a better performance against Bangladesh, who are smarting from losses against India and England. On paper, West Indies are the hot favourites against minnows Bangladesh, who qualified for this World T20 like Ireland in the tournament at Thailand last year. Skipper Stafanie Taylor was only bright spot in West Indies' batting during their last match against Pakistan as they could muster only 103-8 and they will have to address their batting woes ahead of the bigger clashes — England (March 24 at Dharamsala) and India (March 27 at Mohali) — which awaits them in the tournament. The Caribbean side boast off as a balanced side with experience and youth. Captain Stafanie Taylor has been the highest run-getter for them for the last five years and had also become the first West Indian woman to surpass the 2000 mark in this format. Similarly, off-spinner Anisa Mohammed have carried the bowling attack on her shoulders. The 27-year-old's haul of 3 for 25 against Pakistan on Wednesday helped her to cross the 100 wickets mark. <0C27! 3URWHDVORRNWRERXQFHEDFN FTbc8]SXTbeb1P]V[PSTbW 274==08 ;8E4BcPaB_^acb")"_\ BaX;P]ZPeb8aT[P]S <>70;8 ;8E4BcPaB_^acb&)"_\ ce^TQi ]QWQjY^U =QbSX" " !& FWT]8´\f^aZX]V 8S^]´cWPeTa^^\c^ cWX]ZPQ^dc\hbT[U P]S\hXbbdTb8c´b aTP[[hUaTTX]VCWTaT Xb]^a^^\U^a\T fWXRWXbaTP[[h]XRT °2WPa[XiTCWTa^] 5 A > < =RfXYZ_X`fe]`fU 0]X]cTaeXTffXcWbcP]Sd_ R^\TSXT]]TAPSWXZPEPiPQ^dc W^fbWTcaXTbc^QTUd]]hP]S fWPcXUWTaY^ZTbS^]^cf^aZ C 7 4 8 = B 8 3 4 DaZTjc`feVe`dfTTVdd 0]XbWP<^cfP]X´bBc^a\cWT=^a\ RWa^]XR[TbW^fb]PRZbQaP]S:daZdaT QP]ZTS^]cWT]^cX^]bPbb^RXPcTS fXcWPWP__h8]SXP]UP\X[h 2aYV_`^V_R]UZdT`gVcj FTX]ca^SdRTP]TfR^[d\]BcX[Tcc^b cWPcSXbRdbbTbX]Xcb\PXST]TSXcX^] cWTUXabcSXaTRc^QbTaePcX^]^U VaPeXcPcX^]P[fPeTbTPa[XTacWXbhTPa 5a^\PbTeT][PZWf^aS[^]VQ^^ZfaXccT]^eTa!$hTPab¯fWXRW fPbaTYTRcTSQhTeTah_dQ[XbWTaPQa^PS¯c^fX]]X]VcWT $FX]SWP\2P\_QT[[;XcTaPcdaT?aXiT! %U^aUXRcX^] 9Taah?X]c^aTR^d]cbWXbY^da]Thc^0=0=H01>A6>708= umbai-based author and freelance journalist Jerry Pinto’s novel, Em and the Big Hoom (Rupa Publications, 2012), which won him the Windham-Campbell Literature Prize 2016, worth $150,000, was a profoundly gripping story of his mother who suffered from bipolar disorder. Em was the nickname for her and The Big Hoom was an endearment for the father in the novel. Beautifully written, it documented the lives of the family and their everyday struggles. But then, chronicling was not new to Pinto who had earlier written Bombay, Meri Jaan: Writings on Mumbai, Helen: The Life and Times of An H-Bomb, Leela: A Patchwork Life (with Leela Naidu), and so on. Something about the process of registering histories always appealed to him. Pinto emphasises, “I’ve a terrible fear that we live in a state called Amnesia, not India. Forgetting is our favourite sport. If it were an Olympic sport, we would be gold medalists. Names, people, myths, legends, stories, languages, cultural nuances, recipes — they are all dying around us. In some sense, writing for me is an act of retrieval, to control this tide of forgetting. When I teach at the post-graduate Social Media Communications department at Sophia Polytechnic, Mumbai, I make my students write a 5,000-word long essay on their mothers. They are required to go and interview their mothers, the mothers’ friends and family, and document their lives. I tell the students that they have to hand over their essays to their daughters because we tend to forget women’s stories. Women’s histories are the first to be erased. This may be why I use anthologies so often: To remind people of what has happened in the world of the book and to bring these in contact with things that I have made happen by commissioning them. And why I chose somewhat peripheral figures in Helen and Leela Naidu. Because the periphery can tell you a lot about the mainstream but also about itself.” It becomes apparent that he treats nostalgia as a literary technique to attain catharsis. Through his writing, he goes back in time to relive memories. He says, “Nostalgia needs rose-tinted glasses; it means inventing a glorious past and contrasting it with the unsavoury present. When we try and remember our past, it should be located in its context. To cite a minor example, if people say that they could buy a whole basket of mangoes for one paise back in the day, one should realise that they earned a salary of one rupee at that time and that one paise had a completely different value. Thus remembering needs us to look around, to have a stereoscopic view, taking into account all the problems and conflicts of the past as well. In this country, there’s a golden view of anything from the past; we romanticise it. As they say about the great Indian family, ‘It’s all about loving your parents’ (from Karan Johar’s Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham). We like to uphold families as emblems of collective contentment but we all know our families. The first 20 minutes of any family party is peaceful, then the debates and fights ensue amidst all merriment and on their way back in the cars, the arguments resume, “Why did you say that?” or “Why didn’t you ask…?” We tend to be more cautious about how we project our family life. For instance, we erase the nutty grandmother from our clean familial narratives, ditto the aunty who went away to say the Osho ashram.” And it is this scrutiny of an Indian family set-up which has led to his forthcoming book. He recalls, “Many readings of Em and the Big Hoom would turn into deeply densely emotional sessions. I remember in the Q&A round, a woman started weeping, saying that her family had locked her brother for five years because he M 8=8=380F40A4 D=50<8;80AF8C7>C74A ;8C4A0CDA4B5>A4G0<?;4 =864A80=0=38=3>=4B80= <>E8=614H>=3C74 F4BC4A=60I4;4CDB0;; 70E4>?4=<8=3B0=3 ?DABD4>C74A;8C4A0AH F>A:BF8C74@D0; 4=C7DB80B<87>?4F4 A42>=586DA47>F >DA;8C4A0CDA48BB44= 0=3F4B7>D;30;; 2>;;42C8E4;H140?0AC >5C78BA4B70?8=6 was hearing voices. I am not a trained mental health professional and don’t know how to react to that level of emotion; I’m a writer and in that capacity, I become a catalyst for these people to channelise their grief. So eventually, I told them to write their stories down. A friend suggested putting them together in a book. The Book of Light (Speaking Tiger) is almost ready and will be released soon. Again, the past comes in, people come in, and the quiet person in the corner of the photograph comes to life.” Nonetheless, writing seemed to have helped him stabilise something that was missing in his life. It’s rare that a novel like this — strikingly original, insightful and profoundly poetic — could not help him enhance his own personality. He replies, “Whenever I meet a younger person, I feel like apologising for where we are headed today. My generation should have worked harder at establishing the ideals and institutions of the country. We should have made civil society more resilient. But then when I watch the vigour and determination of the young lot — in JNU and Hyderabad, so to say — I feel glad that the spirit is alive and hopefully they will do a better job. And so perhaps words produce the cement that holds things together for me. I am happiest when I am writing.” It’s this quest to establish one’s identity that did not allow him to name the narrator of the novel; so as not to limit him. He says, “I appreciate the slippage of meaning between the reader and writer. I didn’t write it as a book of mental ill health as well, it was a book of love. Again, if it is perceived as a narrative of psychology, I wouldn’t complain”. When he actually decided to pen his story, it accumulated into a work that was seven lakh words long and written over 25 years, finally reduced to 60,000. And they were all handwritten! About this fascinatingly unique journey, he says: “Every year, I indulged in self-imposed ‘self-improvement’ exercises. If one summer was invested in reading Plato, Aristotle, Socrates etc, one would be about reading Kamala Subramaniam’s version of the Mahabharata. So, one summer, it became about writing my own novel. I thought I would start in April and end in June. I did about 14,000 words that summer and then gave it up. Draft one dead in the water. There were other attempts in other forms: A play, a dramatic monologue, a novel with an omniscient observer, Em telling her own story. Then when I was 40, at the Jaipur Literature Festival, my friend Naresh Fernandes arranged for me to meet Suketu Mehta, his friend. He told Suketu sternly that he was to get me to the right company and create the opportunity for me to tell a story. So Suketu Mehta gets me to a table where Salman Rushdie and Kiran Desai are having a conversation and David Godwin is also sitting around. Then he knocks on the table and says, ‘Jerry will now tell a story’. I was horrified but I thought, ‘Let’s do this then’ and I told a story, a family story. They listened, they laughed, they seemed to be having fun. Not only that, Godwin said that if I wrote the story, he would represent me. On my way back from Jaipur, I thought, Loha garam hai maar do hathoda (from Sholay)! I quit my job and wrote for five years, I wrote a thousand words a day and ended up with the 750,000 words. But when I tried to edit them after a six-month gap, I discovered that the first two lakh words were so pathetic that it was unfair to put anyone through them. I thought I had waited five years of my life but I read on dutifully and dolefully. Then suddenly, I liked a passage and typed it out. Ten thousand words later I found another. Then a third and suddenly I began to see that I might have a novel. I found 40,000 words in that rubbish heap and I rewrote it and it became Em and the Big Hoom.” //a# ce^TQi ]QWQjY^U 94AAHB48=54;32>2A40C>A >5B48=54;3F>D;3A4FA8C4 78B9>:4B0C;40BC$C8<4B 145>A4B4CC;8=6>= C7458=0;E4AB8>= LAKLHA =QbSX" " !& ?^_d[Pa4]V[XbWbcP]Sd_R^\TSXT]]TAPSWXZPEPicP[Zbc^0=0=H01>A6>708= PQ^dcW^fbWTdbTbWd\^dac^d]STa\X]TVT]STa_a^_aXTcXTbU^af^\T] FQji_e\Y[UYd What are your opinions about the Hindi comic shows that are either slapstick or in the roast format? Some people do love them. I love slapstick personally — actually, it can be very funny depending on how good the performers are. The one thing I am not a fan of is men playing women. Every time I see that on TV, I wonder to myself, “Come on, they couldn’t get a fat, funny woman to play that?” It’s just weird to me and very old-fashioned. But then again the audience that watches that type of thing loves it and I guess that matters more than my jealousy-laden opinion. Abroad, while people absolutely love Tina Fey, Amy Poehler etc, they love to hate Lena Dunham. Do you think Lena’s brand of comedy is a little extreme and self-appropriating or is she a ‘feminazi’ as many claim her to be? Oh please! Extreme according to whom? That’s the thing, isn’t it? It’s always going to be extremely something to someone. And that is probably why I think she is fantastic! She just goes ahead and does her thing without worrying about the reactions. I don’t think she is trying to offend people — people just take offense because they have nothing else to do! I love Lena and everything she attaches herself to. I love women who know they are in your face and have no fear. It’s a life lesson. In fact, I would say my style is way more Lena than Tina or Amy. Speaking of ‘feminazi’, that sounds like a word an old man made up because his khap panchayat got taken down! So old school! But I suppose brave women will always be attacked. They change the status quo, they try to shift the power. That’s too much for some sexists, I suppose. eading Indian comedienne Radhika Vaz is not only a stellar performer of English stand-up acts in the country but is also a strong voice that subverts conformist stereotypes and proprieties women are subjected to. At a time when stand-up comedy has still not filtered into the mainstream, Radhika’s humour — particularly her play, Unladylike — has succeeded in dislocating regressive social and gender taboos among many urban youths. In an interview, the artiste, born in Mumbai and raised in Bangalore, talks about her way of thinking. L Your memoir (Unladylike, Aleph Books) chronicles your early life in detail, but you have not narrated much about your foray into a career as a stand-up comedienne. Why so, since most of your readers will (probably) pick up the book essentially because they identify you for your comic acts? I would like to think that the readers just want to laugh, and my life — childhood, adolescence and adulthood — is rife with ridiculous anecdotes about me hoping that one day I would become a ‘feminine’ woman. That said, I did intentionally leave out the whole career bit mainly because I needed something for book number two! And I find I need some emotional distance from a subject before I write about it. I want to write about the good times and the pain — but I need to get over the pain, so I wanted to take my time. How do you create a funny scene? Or in other words, what triggers an idea in you? I have to think it’s funny, I have to have laughed at it myself otherwise I won’t write about it. Any writing class always tells you, “write what you know” — it’s the same for jokes. If it affects you personally in any way, whether it makes you angry or amuses you or even if it’s just something you are curious about for some reason, then it’s probably worth exploring for material. Sometimes it’s an immediate reaction — like we all have towards stupid things some politicians or other public figures say or do, and sometimes it’s issues that you live with every single day like gender inequality. And sometimes it’s your own personal experience — marital problems, kid problems, bowel movements. It’s a long list. What narrative or writing techniques do you use to keep your acts original and fresh? Wow! “Narrative” that’s a big, writer-ly word! Now I feel slightly stupid! I came to all of this with no formal training, I put myself through writing and comedy ‘school’ by taking night classes and weekend classes, so you have to ask me questions with real simple words in there! I guess I keep things fresh by reading a lot. Reading what other people write is an amazing way to broaden your own horizons. It gives the mind new directions to go in. When I am with my friends, I am never the funniest person in the room. I think who you hang out with is important too. I am also lucky to be surrounded by very smart, funny people — their opinions, whether they agree with me or not, have helped me form strong ones of my own. So essentially, what I am saying is I steal other people’s ideas! I’m assuming there may have been times when your audience may have found you unfunny or even offensive. Could you share an anecdote about a disappointing reception of your performance? Me? No! That’s some other comedian you are thinking about. Just kidding. Of course, I have eaten it on stage more than a few times. I once had a client who assured me that the crowd was “super chilled out”. That’s a pretty stupid thing to say to a comedian like myself unless you are absolutely sure about it. But he did, so I jumped in with both feet and talked about the issues young women face — like having to remain virgins until they are married. Suffice it to say the middle-aged, predominantly male and so not “super chilled out” audience almost had a stroke! I then made it marginally worse by talking about how parents hate talking to their kids about safe sex. I think I may have hit too close to home on that one! In that case, are Indians mature and democratic enough to understand your humour? Well, it would be a bit much to expect all of us to be mature and democratic. We aren’t democratic enough to allow people to eat beef or watch James Bond kiss for more than six seconds (refer to Pehlaj Nihalani’s now infamous censorship of the last Bond film)! Having said that, I do get audiences who are with me from start to finish, men and women who enjoy my style of story-telling and so I try and enjoy the ones that appreciate my big mouth rather than the ones who think I go “too far”. Plus, you can’t please all people all the time, right? Right, but how would you improvise if things go awry in the middle of your act? I usually don’t. My act is set in stone because I am making a point not just telling a series of jokes. It’s not for everyone and I can live with that. I feel no fear or pressure once I am on stage. It’s not the most conventional stand-up format, but then again I don’t care much for convention. As a humourist who has performed in different parts of the world, is what people find funny universal? Meaning, although your audiences differ culturally and geographically, is there any one joke which everyone imminently finds funny? I think human beings are all the same really and most of us have a gut reaction to a few things. I think people always find other people’s bad luck quite entertaining. There are the standard things that are amusing: Mothers-in-law, awkward sex stories, jokes about powerful people, jokes about powerful people who also happen to be overweight. I notice it’s never OK to fat-shame unless the person you are shaming is powerful — then it’s allowed. This is a universal truth. Personally, I find anything unexpected or risky very amusing. And, of course, fart jokes! Why is the standup comedy scene in Bangalore stronger than in rest of India? That is probably because Bangalore audiences are enthusiastic supporters. You can’t have a popping scene in a dead city, no matter how fantastic a comedian is; if the city is uninterested, there will be no show. Add to that the equation of the Bangalore comedians themselves — all amazing, cool performers who have worked hard to put the city on the map. They do it all — improv, sketch and standup. And they are super supportive of travelling comedians such as me. Which Indian female comedians would you recommend to our readers? I have watched (and so recommend) Neeti Palta, Aditi Mittal and Sonali Thakker. Kaneez Surka is a hot improvisor, Anu Menon and Sumukhi Suresh do sketch and stand-up, and there is Vasu Primlani who I have not watched but I have read some of the things she writes about and so I imagine her act is funny and different. P]P]hP_X^]TTa/V\PX[R^\ (\HFDUHUHGXFHV VWUHVVGXULQJH[DPV 5XeT_TaRT]c^UbRW^^[ZXSbR^\_[PX] ^UbcaPX]TS^acXaTSThTbaTbd[cX]VUa^\ T]S[TbbW^dab^UbcdShX]VSdaX]VTgP\ cX\TfaXcTb3a<078?0;BB02734E xam time means a lot of reading, writing and spending endless hours either in the library or while gazing at computer screens to hunt for notes and finish assignments. All this usually results in stressful and strained eyes. Therefore, students are advised to take good care of their health and eyes in particular. Around five per cent of schoolchildren have strained or tired eyes, especially during revision sessions which start just before examination days. So if your child complains of headache, tired eyes or blurred vision, the best advice is to let them take regular short breaks, close their eyes for a while or look out of the window or at some distant object to relax. Checking a smartphone or watching TV is not a break! One has to be particular about eyes as tired eyes can be very disconcerting. The last thing parents need to fear during examination days is the unexpected trip to the optician or the eye hospital as it can be very distracting. Usually the symptoms are a result of studying for long hours, or not taking a break in between or studying in bad light. According to statistics, approximately one in five children need spectacles for sight correction. Hence, it is important to note that if the eye strain persists, then you should take your child for a complete eye check-up to rule out any refractive errors or any other eye disorder. But if your child is using a computer or tablets for study purpose then their eye problem could also be linked to computer vision syndrome (CVS) or digital eye strain. This is the condition in which individuals experience eye discomfort and vision problems when viewing digital screens for extended periods. The level of discomfort appears to increase with the duration of digital screen usage. In such a scenario, adjusting the display settings, like brightness, text size and contrast, etc of your digital screen can help reduce eye strain and fatigue. Another important point for students to remember while using computer is to blink often as it moistens your eyes and prevents dryness and irritation. When working on a computer, people blink less frequently than what they normally do. To reduce the risk of dry eyes dur- E ing computer use, try this exercise: Every 20 minutes, blink 10 times by closing your eyes as if falling asleep (very slowly). This will help rewet your eyes. Also, to further reduce the risk for CVS, and neck, back and shoulder pain, take frequent breaks in between work. Here are a few tips for eye care during examinations: It is advisable to wear the glasses prescribed when studying, especially while working on digital screens to avoid strain and headache. If you are using contact lenses, do not use them for more than 12-14 hours a day. Follow the 20-20-20 rule during long hours of study. After every 20 minutes, look out of the window for about 20 seconds at an object which is about 20 feet away. This helps relax your eyes and relieve eye strain. Avoid watching TV and playing games on your mobile or iPad in your break time so as to avoid added stress on your eyes. It is advisable to keep the reading material at a distance and study in a well-lit room. You should not slouch over the table or read in awkward positions. This might lead to neck pain and headache. Lubricant eye drops can be used for soothing eyes during the examination days but only in consultation with your eye doctor. Whip up an eye mask. This can help in rejuvenating tired eyes. Take a small washcloth or towel and run it under cold water, wring it and put it over your eyes for 2-7 minutes. Ice cold compresses and tea bags are also beneficial in relieving puffy eyes. For a home-spa effect, add a few drops of lavender oil or rose water to your eye mask. Try focusing on objects at different distances to reduce eye strain. Focus on the tip of the pen and bring it closer to your nose at a steady pace. Do 5-10 repetitions. Focusing helps in improving vision and can also help a twitch caused by tired eyes. A good night’s sleep and a healthy diet with adequate water intake are also equally important. Good luck for your exams! CWTfaXcTaXb2WPXa\P] 2T]caT5^aBXVWc=Tf3T[WX 5 A > < ?0 6 4 7KHDZDUGVDQGUHZDUGVRIZULWLQJ t was difficult to tell such a personal story because there are moments, as he says, when one is hamstrung by the truth. But at the same time, he knew that the mother lode was always present. All he had to do was to nurture it. The responses have been as overwhelming as well. He says, “I remember this one time when a journalist who I thought was a friend asked me at a public event if I felt guilty about using my mother’s mental illness to write a book. It’s difficult to react to such hurtful questions in public but the appropriate answer occurred to me a couple of days later: ‘Don’t you feel guilty about asking me such a question?’ I believe for every author, every story we write comes from our own storehouse of the self. For example, Helen is about Helen but it is also about my father sending me to watch Hindi films every I Thursday. And sitting in the seven different theatres in Mahim, I discovered this strange figure, so Indian, so alien and I fell in love. I wouldn’t have found my way to the book had it not been for those encounters. My editor, publisher and friend Ravi Singh and I were at a bar and her song Mungda mungda (from Inkaar) started playing. We both stopped talking just to listen to it and to smile, and then Ravi asked if I knew someone who could write a book on Helen and I said, “Me” and the next day I was at Lamington Road, buying her films. It’s the same with Leela Naidu. As a young journalist I had gone to interview Dom Moraes, who was then her husband, and it was such a difficult task to interview him because of his sophistication. He was very elegant, such a world citizen; he knew Sir Stephen Spender and Roger Bacon, and he spoke with this British accent that was almost impossible to decipher. On the other hand, Leela was kindness itself. Suketu tells this story where Leela went to a house party, sat herself and did not move for several minutes after all guests had left. In the presence of just the family members, she finally moved her feet under which a cockroach was trapped. She did not want the family to be embarrassed by the presence of cockroaches in their house. So when she asked Adil Jussawalla if he could help her find someone who could assist her in writing her autobiography, he recommended me. At the same time, he also unsettled many stereotypes about Roman Catholics in Mumbai, such as, say, ‘Sandra from Bandra’ (borrowing from Paromita Vohra’s documentary by the same name). As he notes, “You know, I actually appear in Paromita’s film. Stereotypes are a lazy way of thinking about people. Literary fic- tion is about making a case for highly specific individuals and that should always break stereotypes.” Apart from the sentimental nuances, he also had the literary information and expertise to write the novel. He made a lot of literary references in it. How did he strategise its format? He answers, “It is, of course, a collaborative effort. First, don’t send your draft until you are very sure of its credibility. I sent it to Adil Jussawalla, Rashmi Palkhivala, Naresh Fernandes etc for their opinions. Adil, for example, suggested that I put titles for chapters because he felt it read like an investigative report, as if some journalist were trying to find out about a family. I think I had kind and talented friends who could help me enhance the prospects of the book.” He has also mentioned in the past how he can write only in Mumbai. He says, “That is because I hand-write everything and I cannot afford to lose the pages. So I prefer to be at home in Mumbai for that purpose. So I edit what I have written when I am travelling or I translate. But if push comes to shove, I know I will be able to write where I am because I need me to be there”. One might find writing a lucrative career option after winning this award but Pinto clarifies, “I must say I did the book on Bollywood posters for money. However, I love Bollywood and its aesthetic gives me a peculiar pleasure. So even in that case, there was still a connection with the subject and the desire to say something. I think it is possible to earn a living from writing as long as you do not have children and do not have to pay the rent (or EMIs) in a metro. Oh and a codicil for all those people who are living in their own homes and do not have children. You cannot want to live it up and still earn a living through writing. If you are willing to keep it simple, if you’re willing to buy only what you need, then it’s just about possible, I think”. He continues, “I have never really been burdened by worries in the first place. My needs are books, films, and travel. If I can’t travel physically, I will do so through reading. What makes me feel elated about the prize is that the novel was rejected by everyone abroad when David Godwin approached publishers as my agent. Then Radhakrishnan Nair commissioned me to interview Pankaj Mishra and I handed him the novel. He loved it, he showed it to his wife Mary Mount and I got published in England and America. So I did it my way.” Does that redefine contemporary Indian literature under the Western gaze? Because his writing is an Indian story, unlike the works of say, Jhumpa Lahiri or even Rushdie. His story is not about expatriates but is rooted in ‘Indianness’, like we have seen in the works of an Arundhati Roy or a Vikas Swarup and Raj Kamal Jha. He says, “I don’t know. I think every book we read helps reshape our world. So I hope it will reconfigure things in its own small way but I also believe we should all be a part of the reshaping of literature. Before we say: America should read more Indian novels, can we say: I should be reading more Indonesian/Nigerian/Peruvian novels? Can we open our libraries and hearts and reading lists to authors from other nations before we insist on other nations reading us? And can we reach out, through translation, to the languages we have in India?” P]P]hP_X^]TTa/V\PX[R^\ ce^TQi ]QWQjY^U =>=4>5C74C7A44<>BC 50<>DBC0;4B>50;0338= 0;81010B8=103 02CD0;;H 2><45A><0A0180==867CB C74HF4A4;0C4A438C8>=B >KKGO =QbSX" " !& D1<5C?6=1>I39D95C GXQd]Q[Uc1^YcCXYfQ^Yµc:PaPRWXAPY cYW^YVYSQ^dYcdXQdYdcX_gc;QbQSXYQ^T;QbQSXYYdUc`b_TeSY^WS_^TYdY_^c _VXQRYdQdY_^_fUbQ^TQWQY^cddXUTUfQcdQdY_^bUWe\Qb\ie^\UQcXUTRidUbb_bYc]gbYdUc1>E281F@B1481> nis Shivani’s Karachi Raj is so believable that it’s unconvincing. Soon as I flipped over the last page and finished the book I asked myself: Is this about Mumbai, about Delhi, or about Karachi? And if it is indeed about Karachi, then are we really so alike? Of course, in this sense Shivani’s debut novel can be located as part of an established canon of literature on the mega-cities of the world. It offers glimpses of the many socio-economic layers which have constituted urban life for the past 200 years or so: The poor, the middling, and the rich, with all their dreams and aspirations jumbled in a confused, searing, almost undecipherable mix. Shivani’s Karachi is a city of the desperately poor aspirationally rubbing shoulders with the uber rich; liberal bourgeoisies holding a semblance of civic rationality against the increasingly unmasked clout of religious fundamentalists; and welfarist expatriates wooing industrialists and politicians to bring A hope to urban squatters. It is a city where ghosts of a bloody past hint at a violent future, a city whose aspiration to globality are constantly undercut by its own schizophrenic self-destruction. As such, then, it is much like any other mega-city in the Indian subcontinent, if not the so-called developing world. Seema, Claire, Hafiz, Ashiq, Majid, Hina, and Tipu are all characters familiar from our own lives on this side of the tumultuous border. Their lifejourneys, the manner in which their existences entangle with each other’s, all of these are mirrored in the pages of our own life-stories. Seema’s curiously platonic relationship with Ashiq, Majid’s meteoric rise to fame and success, Claire’s search for the variegated truth of life in the basti, and Hafiz’s dalliances with various forms of employment and employers, all of these are tropes which for long have attended writing on cities and their denizens. Images of deprivation and decrepitude too have been increasingly familiar with the success of =4F 0AA8E0;B 0=>C74A5024 8=C742A>F3 8]SaP]TT[36 0\Pah[[XbC ($ BTcX]3T[WXcWXbXbcWTaXQ cXRZ[X]VP]Sb^\TcX\TbcTPa X]SdRX]Vbc^ah^UcWaTT SXP\TcaXRP[[h^__^bXcTUaXT]SbP]SP SP\bT[fW^Xb]^cX]SXbcaTbbQdcR^d[S QTcWTRPdbT^USXbcaTbbU^acWT\T] FT[R^\Tc^cWTWX[PaX^dbf^a[S^U5Pcb^ ¯P?d]YPQX0S^]Xb9PVb¯PCP\X[ ²2^\\d]Xbc³1aPW\X]1P[X¯P =^acWTPbcTa]7T[T]^UCa^h^Ub^acb P]S\T®P_[PX]bX\_[TR^]UdbTS1^]V 9dbc^dc^UR^[[TVTP]SX]cWTXaUXabc Y^Qb[XUTXb_TaUTRc¨d]cX[fTPaTWXc QhcWTWdaaXRP]T^UUPcT B703>FB>D; =P]SXcP1^bT 0\Pah[[XbC!!$ B^\TT]eXPQ[T_XRcdaT _TaUTRc[XeTbbW^d[S]^cQT bRadcX]XbTS^aSXbad_cTS CWTPaaXeP[^UBWPdaYh^Pc3a 6PdcP\APZbWXc³bW^dbT^dVWcc^WPeTQTT] Pa^dcX]T_[TPbP]cb^Y^da]P]S]^cWPeTcWT R^]bT`dT]RTbXcSXS5PcTWPbXcb^f] fWX\b0]SPc#3TeXZP[XeTb^]P[^]TPc cWTQTPdcXUd[QPa^`dT<TTaP<P]bX^]P\XS \T\^aXTb^UPU^aVTccPQ[T\PaaXPVTP]ScWT QaXTUTbcb^d[bTPaX]VX]ca^SdRcX^]c^PSd[c [^eTCWTWTPacWPbXcb^f][^]VX]V\dRW PUcTacWT\X]SR^\_aTWT]Sbb^RXP[ R^\_d[bX^]bP]SX\_^bbXQX[XcXTb 8C´B34BC8=H <H;>E4 BPdaPQW;TTZWP =^cX^]C &( CWXbbc^ahbTcX]cWTTPa[h !bXbPQ^dc0SXchP?PcWPZ 8c³bPQ^dcVaXcSTcTa\X]PcX^] P]SQTPcX]VcWT^SSb0]X]b_XaX]VaTPS PQ^dcPbdQSdTSRWX[SfW^cda]bX]c^P aTQT[[X^dbbdaeXe^a^URXaRd\bcP]RTb0SXchP WPbPWd\Q[Td_QaX]VX]VX]P]^]STbRaX_c W^dbTP]SWXb[XUTaTe^[eTbPa^d]SWXbUPcWTa CXVTa]XRZ]P\TSQhWX\P]SWXb\^\P]S WXb\^cWTaA^hP[1T]VP[CXVaTbb]TTSb]^ X]ca^SdRcX^]7XbUPcWTaPb\P[[cX\T^UUXRTa fP]cb0SXchPc^U^[[^fWXbU^^cbcT_bP]SXb]³c c^^ZTT]^]WXb^][hb^]]dabX]V[PaVTacWP] [XUTP\QXcX^]b0[[WTfP]cbXbWXbb^]c^[TPS PR^]cT]cWP__h[XUTPcW^\TP]SPcf^aZ Slumdog Millionaire, and the many tribulations of life in the basti and Seema, Hafiz, and Claire’s struggles with, for, and against them seem part of the larger narrative of urban inequity all across the world. What makes Karachi Raj significant and interesting, then, is the incidence of its topicality, that it is about Karachi. It not just adds to the growing corpus of literature on Pakistan in the English language, but also performs a vital exercise in similitude. It brings the reader to the human heart of Karachi, to hope and despair of a people whose existence in the larger, global imagination seems a factor only of militancy and mullahs. Shivani’s Karachi is a city like any other, with grim, gun-toting men threatening civic life only from the peripheries of daily life. When bomb blasts happen, as in Saddar, it serves only as reminder of the cataclysmic violence which threatens the very basis of civic life. Otherwise, life goes on in the city — and particularly in the basti — with an <2C249:C2; 2_ZdDYZgR_Z 7`fceY6deReV C'** unconcern which is indicative, to refer to Huma Yusuf ’s provocative postulation, of a planned productivity of habitation working to make a violent, dangerous city healthily liveable. Importantly, Shivani’s narrative trope, practices, and aesthetics enable the generation of this tactical productivity of habitation. Hina’s world of films and television, for instance, goes at its own pace and direction regardless of the bloodshed frequently unleashed by militants. Similarly, the mystics and fakirs of Tipu’s Sufi dargahs evoke an age and space which violence cannot touch. Ferhana and Rehana, Ashiq’s wellplaced and well-heeled sisters, live a life of luxury and privilege which neither fundamentalism nor political unrest seems to touch, and even Claire, sequestered in the basti, is exposed more to the vagaries of the elements and unsanitary living conditions than to the machinations of jihadis and of conservatives in a heavily sexist society. This is where Karachi Raj seems a particularly dexterous novel. By presenting and linking vignettes of Karachi’s various socio-economic spheres, it shows Karachi and Karachiites producing conditions of habitation, over and against the devastation regularly unleashed by terrorism. Divided into 12 months of the year from the calendar of the American anthropologist Claire, the narrative evokes well the linked fragmentation which constitutes the varied experiences of everyday Karachi. However, at times this fragmentation seems a little forced, it seems apparent that the effort to delink linkages has been made too strenuously. Yet, the last chapter is satisfyingly disappointing: There is no conclusion, not even a closure. The narrative simply stops, refusing to conjure the illusion of a happily ever-after for either the city or its citizens and making-up for the less satisfactory disappointments of narrative fragmentation elsewhere in the novel CWTaTeXTfTaXbPBT]X^a<PaZTcX]V4SXc^afXcW ?aX\db1^^ZbEXTfbTg_aTbbTSWTaTPaTWXb^f] 0=8B70<>CF0=8faXcTbPQ^dccWTbc^ah^URWX_bQaP]S:daZdaTP]SW^fXcRP\Tc^W^[SXcb^f] X]P\PaZTccWPcWXcWTac^WPS^][hcf^U^a\b^U_^cPc^RWX_b¯cWTcaPSXcX^]P[P]SbP[cTS4gRTa_c) 7ZLVWHGPRGHUQLW\+RZ.XUNXUHZRUNHG hen it comes to describing the success of the 15-year-old brand Kurkure, the Cl,000-crore-plus snack brand of PepsiCo India, old timers often talk of providence. Over the years, Kurkure has come to be identified as a quintessential family brand and has brought joy to many families, consistently highlighting thought-provoking contemporary points of view on the Indian family and its myriad interactions. Right from the beginning, Kurkure has been steering between tradition and modernity: Made with familiar kitchen ingredients but in shape and format and flavour delivery; of ‘twist on tradition’. It was launched in 1999 and has since then transformed the way Indians snack. At its core, it questioned the existing norm that salty snacks were divided into two large segments, traditional and potato chips. Kurkure introduced a new sub-segment within namkeens, creating a new palate experience for consumers. Armed with its unique product proposition: ‘Familiar taste in an innovative format’, the brand broke category codes and transformed the landscape of snacking in India, both sensorial and visual. It introduced a sub-segment that was not palm food, but finger food — so if namkeen was eaten in a bowl, Kurkure was eaten out of a bag. Brandishing a strangely addictive, intense chatpata taste, it was launched as Lehar Kurkure, a sub-brand under the umbrella of Lehar. It used traditional Indian ‘kitchen ingredients’ like rice, lentils, corn and Indian masala seasoning; and the story goes that it took 220 trials to make Kurkure. Consumer testing had people loving the crunchiness and saying it was very ‘kurkura’ (crunchy) — and from there came the name. W When it was launched in Chandigarh, the sales team literally ‘painted the town orange’ with all three-wheelers carrying the packs being painted in that colour. One of the fastest market placements, Kurkure had near 100 per cent coverage in 10 days, something that was repeated in many other markets soon after. The small packs hanging in ‘ladis’ (hangers) outside shops rather like shampoo sachets, was another innovation that became a category norm. With its zesty, multi-sensorial taste that was energising and mood transforming, and as a consumer once put it, an ‘item number in the mouth’, it was launched with the tagline: ‘Kya karen, control nahin hota’ to drive home the addictive taste of the product. In a country so rooted in family values, few brands came across as truly ‘family brands’. Kurkure rooted itself in the family social context and became a commentator on the changing Indian family, always bringing its own insightful observations on quirky truths of the great Indian family. It professed that families that snacked together and laughed together, stayed together. It portrayed a family that was happily, unabashedly idiosyncratic and playfully imperfect, always accepting that ‘we are like this only’ and that ‘in our family it happens like this only’. When other players started trickling in, sensing the opportunity, Kurkure had to reassert its uniqueness and elevate itself above the mass of copycats. It did a re-jig of the product (extra spicy) and linked the product’s transformational experience to the ‘twist’ in army regular arid staid situation. The ‘twist on tradition’-centred promotion continued till 2004 even as the brand then signed on the bubbly actress, Juhi Chawla in 2004 in an attempt to target housewives who were the ‘gate- DE@C>E96?@C> 2_ZdYR>`ehR_Z CfaR C&!! keeper’ audience for the brand. Kurkure wanted to do something special with Juhi and decided to leverage her cheerful personality, her amazing sense of comic timing, her non-glam doll image and the fact that she was a mother and housewife too. Since housewives were generally hooked on TV serials, Kurkure decided to target them by making a spoof on Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi, a popular TV soap at that time. It continued with many a spoof, be it of Bollywood classics or TV soaps that helped tell product stories of ‘Kahaani mein twist’ (A twist in the story). Starting with 2005, it also strategically targeted evening teatime, at the time the largest occasion for snacking-consuming macro snacks, ie biscuits and namkeens-as the consumption occasion. It reached out to the homemaker who desired ‘evening tea’ as the moment for changing gears and to other members who looked forward to evening tea as a moment of relaxation and a joyful collective family huddle. Kurkure stepped in not just as a snack but as a bonding factor that brought the family back into the same hying room, creatively rendering, ‘Chaitime masti bole to Kurkure!’ The timing could not have been better with the large family as a unit beginning to disintegrate into nuclear set-ups. To further enhance its share of teatime, it launched two subbrands ‘Kurkure Solid Masti’, as new-age substantial snack options for that ‘evening peckishness’ and ‘Kurkure Masti Squares’, as an aid to the homemaker who desired versatility in teatime snacks. Both sub-brands, however, did not find much traction with consumers. It kept raising its standards in terms of variants, flavours, formats, occasions and communication to deter copycats that posed serious threat. Disruptive largescale consumer engagement programmes like ‘Kurkure Mast Family Jackpot’, ‘Kurkure Jupp for the Cup’ (during the ICC World Cup 2007) and ‘Kurkure Chaitime Achievers’ were launched to drive consumption. ‘Kurkure Chaitime Achievers’ (family face on the pack communication) was not just engagement, but consumer-generated participation, another first from the ever-innovative Kurkure. The winning recipe made out of Kurkure was the ‘family’s passport to fame’, with the winning families having their photograph featured on one million Kurkure packs. This was the first-ever consumergenerated participation in the history of advertising in India; and with over 100,000 responses, it lead to a surge in business. To leverage yet another consumption occasion, Kurkure came up with ‘Zyada meetha ho gaya? Muh Kurkure karo’ for Diwali, which was traditionally a sweetscentred feasting time. This was again in line with the brand DNA: a twist on tradition. It launched its ‘X-treme’ edition of flavours to connect with the youth, which in turn reinforced its positioning as ‘always doing the unexpected’. Unearthing yet another insight into the great Indian family, Kurkure launched its iconic tagline ‘Tedha hai par mera hai’ in 2008. ‘Tedha hai par mera hai’ became a part of everyday conversations and advertising folklore. Some of the novel initiatives during this period included new, unusual ingredients; introduction of regional variants; flavours inspired by master chef sessions around chutneys/pickles; and creating rituals — Kurkure bhel via on-premise bhel carts at PVR. Many of its other flavours were co-created with chefs who specialised in regional cuisines, or those who loved experimenting with fusion food. It also introduced the puffed range, again stealing the show with new shapes. Puff corn has been one of the most successful launches for Kurkure in the puffed segment. It revamped its communications strategy in late 2012, scaling up its ‘Tedha hal par mera hai’ proposition, creating a first-of-itskind ‘Kurkure screen family’. With a very modern ‘remix bahu’ at its centre, India’s Most Crooked Family is a joint family, bubbling with conversation and energy; disagreements and conflicts, negotiating between the individual and the collective, balancing tradition and modernity, and always looking for ways to resolve everything with warmth and laughter. And this quirky family told every new story, be it new taste, new pack size, or new price point. To help drive sales in the large pack segment, the family gathered in the living room and tapped into the insight of ‘the making of the guest list’ — that, in an Indian family, there is no such thing as a ‘small family party’! 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This development took place on March 18, a day after Mufti met BJP president Amit Shah in New Delhi. BJP general secretary and the party’s point-man for Jammu & Kashmir, Ram Madhav, issued a statement that day from the national capital, saying that, “A Government cannot be formed on the basis of conditions”. This was most appropriate and a candid response to the PDP’s ill-motivated pre-conditions. The stand of the BJP will surely be appreciated across the nation in general and in Jammu & Kashmir in particular. It will silence the socalled ‘secular’ critics, who until now had been questioning, day-in and day-out, the party’s alliance with what they called a ‘pro-Pakistan’ and ‘pro-separatist’ outfit. In fact, the people of Jammu and the internallydisplaced Kashmiri Hindus have already welcomed the BJP’s rational and nationalist stand. They have opined that it will go a long way in sending the right message to Kashmiri separatists, their cohorts in the so-called Kashmiri parties and to the political establishment in the State — that Prime Minister Narendra Modi means serious business in the separatist and militant-infested Jammu & Kashmir State. Three of the most controversial pre-conditions set by the PDP are: Transfer of the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation-run and controlled Dulhasti (Jammu) and Uri-II (Kashmir) power projects to the Jammu & Kashmir Government; T revocation of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act from certain areas of Jammu & Kashmir, including Srinagar in Kashmir and Kathua in Jammu; and vacation of certain lands which the Army has been lawfully using for long for training purposes and military operations to defend the borders and maintain peace in the restive and militantinfested areas of the State. Other demands of the PDP include two smart cities, one each for Jammu and Kashmir; another financial package for the flood-affected people in the valley; a free-hand to run the Government so formed; and result-oriented talks with Pakistan on the Kashmir issue. For decades, Pakistan and its Kashmir-based agents, Kashmiri political parties such as the PDP and the National Conference, and Kashmiri civil society members including the Kashmir High Court Bar Association and the Kashmir Economic Alliance, have denounced Afspa as a ‘draconian’ law, contemptuously termed the NHPC-run power projects as “symbols of Indian imperialism”, and described the Indian Army as an “occupying force”. Even the Kashmiri leadership of the so-called grand old party of India, the Congress, has on umpteen occasions, expressed almost identical views in their desperate bid to strike a chord with the communal constituency in Kashmir. On June 5, 2011, senior Congress leader and then Minister for Irrigation, Taj Mohi-ud-Din even even went to the extent of terming the Government of Indiaowned NHPC as a replica of the East India Company and charged it with draining the State’s power potential. “The NHPC is behaving like the 0_PacUa^\bT\X X]ST_T]ST]RT Ua^\8]SXP^aPc [TPbc[X\XcX]VcWT YdaXbSXRcX^]^U =Tf3T[WX^eTa 9:c^^][h STUT]RTU^aTXV] PUUPXabP]S R^\\d]XRPcX^] <dUcX<^WP\\TS BPhTTSWPSP[b^ b^dVWcT`dP[ b^eTaTXV]_^fTab U^a8b[P\PQPSfXcW =Tf3T[WXX]b^\T _Pacb^UcWTBcPcT East India Company in the State. It is exploiting the water resources of poor States. Their attitude is arrogant and they are contemptuous towards law of the land,” Mohi-udDin said while addressing a daylong seminar on the Management of Water Resources in Jammu and Kashmir, organised by the J&K Citizens Welfare Council in Srinagar. The point is that the PDP, which is a sub-regional party with its support-base confined only to certain parts of the valley, has pitched for power, paisa (money) and Pakistan. The overwhelming view in Jammu, Ladakh and the camps housing lakhs of internally-displaced Kashmir Hindus is that the PDP wanted to re-stitch the alliance with the BJP to reassume power for a bigger purpose. This view was based, and rightly so, on the oft-repeated statement of the PDP president that her deceased father, Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, had entered into a post-poll alliance with the BJP “not for power but for fulfilling his vision for J&K” and that she will accept the chair only if she got a definite assurance from the Government of India that she will have “unbridled powers to fulfill her father’s dream and give an effect to her father’s most-cherished vision within a definite timeframe”. So, what was the vision and dream of her father? His vision was “self-rule” as succinctly defined in the PDP’s 2014 election manifesto, also called Aspirational Agenda. Apart from seeking semi-independence from India or at least limiting the jurisdiction of New Delhi over J&K to only defence, foreign affairs and communication, the Mufti had also sought equal sovereign powers for Islamabad with New Delhi in this part of the State. In other words, his vision talked about what he himself called “supra-state measures” and “shared sovereignty”. This was the vision of Mufti Mohammed Sayeed. He assumed power as Chief Minister on March 1, 2015, to achieve his mission but only after the Hurriyat leadership gave its consent to the PDP for forming the Government with the BJP. To put things into perspective, it is desirable to quote verbatim what the incumbent PDP president said on December 12, 2015, while speaking at Agenda Aaj Tak: “With Vajpayee the experience was good, but forming an alliance with the present BJP was not easy for us. It took us two months to decide the agenda of alliance. Hurriyat party was also called and getting consent on most of the issues the Government is working”. There are potent reasons for the BJP to say what it said in response to the PDP’s pre-conditions. Had the BJP conceded to these demands, Kashmiri separatist and their supporters would have construed it as their crowning glory and a great step forward towards their ultimate goal. They would have seen the acceptance of these three demands not only as an act of retreat by a defeated Indian state from Kashmir, but also used it to further embolden the votaries of limited accession to intensify their activities in the valley, browbeat and blackmail New Delhi, and seek more concessions that will further widen the already wide constitutional, political and emotional gulf between Kashmir and the rest of the country. (The writer is former Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Jammu) 5 4 4 3 1 0 2 : ´CUSe\QbYcdccXQ[U^Ri CbYCbYcWbQ^TcX_g Reader response to Swapan Dasgupta’s column, Usual Suspects, published on March 13: Good show: Sri Sri Ravi Shankar helped showcase our art and culture. He brought together 35,000 artists on the banks of Yamuna. It’s good that the Prime Minister attended. The President should have been there as well. Bapty S Seshasayee Disappointed lot: Pseudoseculars are devastated that such a large crowd happily participated in this mammoth jamboree. Chandra Moorthy Unholy combination: The writer has underlined the unholy combination of the Congress, the communists and some section of religious minorities, whose sole aim seems to be Hindu-bashing. Mahendra Patel The Left-leaning bubble has already been punctured. A minuscule percentage of Indian TV viewers care about the anxieties and concerns of these worthies. It was heartening to see the Prime Minister attend the event. Our leaders mustn’t be guided by the Delhi-based English media. If they fall into that trap, they will be reduced to insignificance. Jitendra Disruptive elements: Quite a few students who graduated from Jawaharlal Nehru University have turned out to be foul-mouthed and intolerant public intellectuals. Look at the leaders of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the Communist Party of India. They have shamelessly said that they will keep interrupting the Rajya Sabha and paralyse parliamentary business so as to make Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Government dysfunctional. Vigilant citizens should identify habitual interrupters and seek their removal from Parliament. The MPs were elected to do legislative business — not disrupt Parliament. There may be freedom of speech and expression, but let’s not confuse that with freedom of disruption. Anil Tandale Big issue: JNU Students Union president Kanhaiya was arrested on sedition charges. He is being hailed by the media as a national hero. But the writer thinks all this is just a side show. Perhaps, he forgets that the action of the police and courts carry little weight. It is the media that is the arbitrator of public opinion. BB Seculars stuck: Sri Sri Ravi Shankar put up a great show which was enjoyed by a large audience. Prime Minister Narendra Modi was in attendance but it would have been better if Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi, RJD chief Lalu Prasad, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury and other self-declared secularists were also in attendance. Perhaps, they got stuck in the Delhi traffic! Premolal ?V`b_fY^SYQ\Yc]Q^T `bUVUbU^dYQ\`_\YdYSc Reader response to Kanchan Gupta’s column, Coffee Break, published on March 13: Nation first: It is sad that regionalism is taking the front seat in Indian politics. This is happening at the cost of national interest. This is a dangerous trend for Indian democracy. There should a compulsory test or mandatory coaching that all individuals seeking public office should have to take. This has to happen at all levels of Indian politics and governance. This system should help inculcate the concepts of nation, nationality and national interest — and explain the importance of prioritising the nation above all others. This will best serve the growth of Indian democracy and economic development. I know such a system is unlikely, but one can always hope for the best. Mahesh Kumar Economic alienation: In an all-India context, provincialism is bad. But the question is: Where does provincialism come from? Think about this: Even within a State, some people want to carve out autonomous or separate districts. Why? In most cases, it is because people in a particular area or region feel that they have been economically marginalised by the larger administrative unit — be it a state or nation. Our leaders with narrow vision are responsible for this sense of alienation. Niladrinath Mohanty ce^TQi 0<0B2>C34B86=43>=50I;8 <0=6>4B5>D=38=<0;30 38BCA82CF8;;14DB43C> B?A4030F0A4=4BB0<>=6 E>C4AB07403>5F4BC 14=60;0BB4<1;H?>;;B ]QWQjY^U >=?G>KJA =QbSX" " !& $$3-'8GHVSHUDWHWR JHWQDWLRQDOSDUW\VWDWXV bd]SPh Vd_bWd_ 70A8B70=:0AEH0B here was a time when the BSP, NCP and RJD were in the race to become national parties after the Congress and BJP. Now, AAP and JDU are in the same race. After being badly defeated in the Lok Sabha Elections, AAP plans to move ahead gradually. Under this strategy, the party has decided to fight elections in Punjab and Goa. Elections will be held in these States next January. After that, Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh elections will be held at the end of next year. It is being said that AAP will fight in these two States as well. In the same manner, JDU is projecting its candidates for Assam elections, which are scheduled for next month. Bihar CM Nitish Kumar will also go there for campaigning. Next year, JDU will fight Punjab and Uttar Pradesh elections too. In both these States, there is a possibility of an alliance between JDU and Congress. There is a good number of Bihari immigrants in both States and they constitute majority votes on the 17 seats. However, JDU and AAP have to perform well in four States so that they can get the status of a national party. The real reason behind this is to project their leaders as PM candidates in 2019 Lok Sabha Elections. T 2;0<>DA 5>A C742708A his is election year in UP and there T are many contenders for the CM post within the BJP. The party also has to take a decision on the new State President, which is said to be the reason why the party is not announcing its CM candidate now. Supporters of Yogi Adityanath demand that he be declared the CM candidate or they will boycott the elections. The sadhus who back Yogi have also demanded the same. He is so serious about his claim that when Anupam Kher criticised him at a function in Kolkata, he became angry and called the actor a villain in real life. However, there is a different story playing out between State President Lakshmi Kant Vajpayee and organisation General Secretary Sunil Bansal. When Bansal called a meeting to discuss the plans of six big rallies in the State, Vajpayee was not invited. Vajpayee has to be replaced but the decision will not be easy. Amid all this, Varun Gandhi is also staking his claim. 2>=60=320BC44@D0C8>= of the Congress are not able to understand how to cope with the Scastetrategists equation in UP. At present, there is ;468B;0C8E4F>A:>= 7>;3 t seems highly unlikely that the Government would be able to Iaccomplish any important legislative CWTaTfPbPcX\TfWT] cWT1B?=2?P]SA93 fTaTX]cWTaPRTc^ QTR^\T]PcX^]P[_PacXTb =^f00?P]S93DPaT X]cWTbP\TaPRTCWT cf^_PacXTbWPeTc^ _TaU^a\fT[[X]U^da BcPcTbb^cWPccWThRP] VTccWTbcPcdbcWTh STbXaTCWTaTP[aTPb^] QTWX]ScWXbXbc^_a^YTRc cWTXa[TPSTabPb?< RP]SXSPcTbX]! ( work in this Parliament Session. All legislative work could be suspended till the Assembly Elections in five States are over. The Government was hopeful of getting the GST Bill passed in the next half of the session, but now the chances seem bleak. Those who were in support of the Bill are now hesitant. TMC will not support this Bill due to political compulsions as State elections are around the corner. There is a clamour for Muslim votes in West Bengal and that is the reason why leaders of the party feel that TMC must not be seen supporting the BJP or the Central Government. In this scenario, the Government will get a big jolt as TMC had been supporting the GST Bill all this while. Jayalalithaa has always been against the GST Bill, so there is no chance that she will support it during election time. On the other hand, the Congress and BJP are at loggerheads on many issues, so a compromise is unlikely. The Congress is not happy about the row over Rahul Gandhi’s citizenship, while the BJP is miffed with the comparison of RSS and ISIS. Tension between the Opposition and Government has increased over the Aadhar Bill too. In this scenario, the Government is bound to face problems in legislative works. That is why there is a chance that two more Bills, along with GST, will be stuck. D=05542C431HC74BC8=6 before the elections in West Jtheust Bengal, a sting operation has become cause for a tug of war between the ruling and Opposition parties. In this sting operation, around a dozen TMC leaders were allegedly shown taking bribe. Leaders of Congress and TMC are considering it a trump card. Though sources in TMC claim Mamata Banerjee is not taking it seriously and might not even take action against any of the leaders. If necessary, notice will be sent to one or two of them. However, her party has decided to give an apt reply to this. MPs and leaders of TMC are citing the example of a sting operation done in Delhi in 2014. They are saying that even in Delhi, many people were implicated in a sting operation. There were allegations against Kumar Vishwas and Alka Lamba, but Arvind Kejriwal did not take any action, rather countered the Opposition parties and alleged that this was nothing but political vendetta. Mamata is treading the same path. She said that the tapes of the 2014 sting operation have been doctored and released now only to defame her. The issue of sting operation could increase the problems of Rajya Sabha MP KD Singh. Mathew Samuel, the brain behind the sting operation, used to work with a news magazine of which KD Singh is the owner. Samuel had started working on the sting operation when he worked with the magazine, and that is why many leaders are raising questions about KD Singh. 0?A>1;4<>5?;4=CH his year’s Rajya Sabha elections have put the BJP in a dilemma. For the T past many years, the party had two Muslim faces that entered Parliament from different Houses — Shahnawaz Hussain in Lok Sabha and Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi in Rajya Sabha. Now, Najma Heptulla has been added to this list. There is no Muslim face of the BJP in Lok Sabha as Hussain was defeated in the last elections. On the other hand, apart from Naqvi and Heptulla, MJ Akbar is also in Rajya Sabha. Naqvi and Akbar will retire in July. It is almost certain that Naqvi will be elected from UP again. Probably this time Akbar will not be re-elected from Jharkhand, but will rather be nominated. Though this is also true that Salim Khan is also a strong contender from the nominated quota. Sources say he had been promised a Rajya Sabha seat after the Padma award controversy last year, and can be nominated on the seat vacated by his former partner, Javed Akhtar. Sources in the BJP say Hussain is trying to get a Rajya Sabha seat either from Madhya Pradesh or Bihar. Apart from him, Sabir Ali is also said to be a contender for Rajya Sabha. That means, this year, five Muslim faces of the BJP —Hussain, Naqvi, Akbar, Ali and Khan — are contenders for Rajya Sabha seat and the party can give green signal for only two of these. no core vote bank of the party in the State. So, discussions are going on to find out how to attract one or two major castes. Sources say this has been discussed in the recent meetings of party leaders. The party is hopeful about Brahmin voters. That is why the name of Sheila Dikshit has been proposed either for party in-charge of UP or CM candidate in the State. Though many leaders say the party will not gain anything from thinking about Dikshit. They say the fact that senior leaders are mulling over her name proves that the Congress doesn’t have any strong Brahmin leader. However, the truth is different. There are many good Brahmin faces in the party, such as Rajesh Mishra, Jitin Prasada, Pramod Tiwari, Rita Bahuguna Joshi and Satish Sharma. The party can send Satish Sharma to Rajya Sabha again. Meanwhile, Rahul wants to tap into the Dalit and Muslim vote bank. Not just him, even P Chidambaram and Ghulam Nabi Azad are indulging in similar political tactics. In-charge General Secretary of UP Madhusudan Mistry has even prepared a roadmap for this. That is why it is being said that Rahul wants him to continue on the post. In this scenario, PL Punia and Salman Khurshid might also become prominent. For Thakur votes, the party can also give a big role to Sanjay Singh from Amethi. 9Rd@SR^R\ZT\deRceVUR_VhRc^dcRTV0 ran’s decision to test-fire two ballistic missiles emblazoned with the legend “Israel must be wiped out” in Hebrew is not the sort of reassuring conduct one would expect from a country that claims it wants better relations with the outside world. Timed to coincide with US Vice-President Joe Biden’s tour of the Gulf states and Israel, the missile launches will not just be seen as an unnecessarily provocative act of aggression by countries like Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. They are also deeply embarrassing for the Barack Obama administration, which is still trying to reassure its allies in the Gulf and Israel that its controversial nuclear deal with Tehran has ended Iranian attempts to build nuclear weapons — for the time being, at least. Only a few weeks ago, naive enthusiasts of President Obama’s nuclear deal claimed that gains made by socalled moderates in Iran’s recent elections for the Majlis, or Parliament, as well as the Assembly of Experts, demonstrated Iran was well on the way to reform and move towards a more transparent system of Government. What these modern-day fellow travellers — and they include many leading lights in our own Foreign Office — fail to appreciate is that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s uncompromising Supreme Leader and guardian of Iran’s Islamic revolution, personally vetted all of the candidates. Thus only those with impeccable revolutionary credentials were allowed to stand. So much for Iran’s new spirit of reform. For, despite the modest gains made by these so-called reformers, the fact remains that the real power in Iran lies with the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), whose duty is both to defend and export Iran’s revolutionary values throughout I 5^[[^fX]VcWTDB ?aTbXST]c³bX[[PSeXbTS]dR[TPaSTP[fXcW8aP]cWTaT Xb]^fPaXbZcWPcBPdSX0aPQXPP]SXcbP[[XTbfX[[QTR^\TX]e^[eTSX]P SP]VTa^db\X[XcPahR^]Ua^]cPcX^]fXcWcWT]PcX^]bPhb2>=2>D67;8= 0=>1E8>DB508;8=6 >5>10<0³B=340;8B C70C8C0;;>FB8A0= C>2>=C8=D4F>A:>= 8CB10;;8BC82<8BB8;4B F0B78=6C>=14;84E4B C74A48B=>70A< 8=C47A0=1D8;38=6 <8BB8;4BC70C20= BCA8:40CC74740AC>5 4DA>?4F74=8C3>4B =>C70E4C74<40=B C>58CC74<F8C7 =D2;40AF0A7403B the Muslim world — with special focus on neighbouring Arab states. Not only do the Revolutionary Guards control a significant percentage of the Iranian economy — including the country’s vast oil reserves — they are also responsible for Iran’s defence and security policy which, contrary to Washington’s confident predictions in the wake of the nuclear deal, has led to a significant upsurge in Iranian meddling in neighbouring Arab states. The fear now among pro-Western Arab leaders is that Iran will embark on a military build-up funded by the estimated $150 billion Tehran is set to receive as a result of the sanctions being lifted. The missile tests will certainly be seen by many regional leaders in that context, particularly as many Western intelligence experts are convinced the missiles are being designed specifically to carry nuclear warheads. In addition to continuing to develop its ballistic missile programme, Tehran last month also concluded a deal with Russia to improve its missile defences. One of the more obvious failings of Obama’s nuclear deal is that it allows Iran, a country which the CIA says once had an illicit nuclear weapons programme, to continue development work on its ballistic missiles. Washington no doubt believes there is no harm in Tehran building missiles that can strike at the heart of Europe when it does not have the means to fit them with nuclear warheads. But that is not how things are viewed in the Gulf. According to senior security officials I have spoken to recently in the region, there is no guarantee that Obama’s deal will prevent Iran from continuing work on its nuclear weapons programme. As one senior defence official commented: “We know the Iranians well, and we know they have no intention of giving up their ambitions to acquire nuclear weapons.” Not surprisingly, the Gulf states have now embarked on developing a multi-billion pound anti-missile shield of their own. If nothing else, Obama’s legacy to the Middle East will have been to initiate a new arms race. In Israel, too, intelligence officials take the same view about Iran’s longterm nuclear ambitions, which no doubt explains Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s recent decision to cancel his proposed visit to Washington later this month. The problem now is that if Washington is not prepared to take Iran’s continued acts of bellicosity seriously, there are plenty of Arab leaders who will. For the past two weeks, Saudi Arabia has been hosting the Middle East’s biggest-ever military exercise — Operation Desert Thunder. An estimated 20 Muslim nations have taken part in the exercise which is aimed at strengthening the ability of the Saudi-led coalition to defend itself against the growing threat posed by Islamist-inspired terror groups, such as Daesh. But the possibility should not be ruled out that one day these same forces could be used to defend Sunni Arab regimes from the threat posed by Shia Iran. In Yemen, Saudi Arabia is already fighting a proxy war against Iranian-backed Houthi rebels, while Riyadh has made no secret of its determination to secure the overthrow of the pro-Iranian regime of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria. Despite all the evidence to the contrary, the Obama administration continues to hail the merits of its nuclear deal with Iran, which it insists will form the centerpiece of Obama’s legacy when his presidency concludes later this year. Yet if Iran continues with unprovoked acts of aggression, such as its latest test-firing of ballistic missiles, then there is a genuine risk that Saudi Arabia and its allies will become involved in a direct, and far more dangerous, military confrontation with Iran. And that is most certainly not the kind of legacy Obama had in mind when he concluded his ill-advised deal with the ayatollahs. CWT3PX[hCT[TVaP_W ce^TQi ]QWQjY^U ?0;4BC8=80=C40274A 70=0=0;7A>D170B F>=0 <?A8I45>A74A F>A:F8C7278;3A4= 4G?>B43C>E8>;4=24 B C 8 ; 4 C C > B CWTVaTPcTbcbRXT]cXUXR SXbR^eTah^UcWTRT]cdah E 05C4AC78B38B2>E4AH C74D=8>=2018=4CB083 8C7038=?A8=28?;4 0??A>E430?A>?>B0; 5>A06A0E8C0C8>=0; F0E434C42C>A8= 8=380;4CDB7>?4 C70CC78B064=308B =>CB01>C06431H ?>;8C820;?0AC84B8= 0@D4BC5>AE>C4B F470E4<8BB43C78B 1DB0C;40BC>=24 cation of our species’ advanced intellect to understand what really happened, much more than political clatter. We have discovered an extraordinary story. Just over a billion years ago, many millions of galaxies away, a pair of black holes had collided. They had been circling around each other, and so by the time they were a few 100 miles apart, they were releasing great amounts of gravitational energy. When the black holes finally merged, they radiated a 100 times more energy than all the stars in the universe combined to form a new black hole 62 times as heavy as our sun. The waves rippled outward in every direction, and 50,000 years ago at the time when we homo sapiens were also beginning on our path of evolution, these waves entered our Milky Way galaxy. The story of how this monumental discovery took place is equally mind- boggling. In 1916, Einstein had predicted the existence of these gravitational waves, but it was a hypothesis without any tangible proof. This led to a great deal of speculation and inspired massive numbers of ‘gravitational wave hunters’ to go exploring for proof. There were many false starts and rumours about gravitational waves that even led to the perception that gravitational wave hunters may be careless or at worst liars. After years of studies, reports, presentations, and committee meetings, the National Science Foundation in the US funded the construction of an enormous gravitational wave detector called the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). The construction in the US of LIGO began 22 years ago. The US also invited India to set up a LIGO lab because the findings from another distant location in the world would help consolidate the findings on gravitational waves. The Indian Government at that time could not take a decision at the appropriate time. The problem is that the viability of research is often evaluated using the general formula of productivity, which by definition divides outputs by inputs. The outputs are measured by the gross contribution of a research project and the estimated rate of maturity, whereas the input variable in this case is often the cost of the research project. The LIGO team was diverse. It even included a set of people whose job was to create fake evidence of a gravitational wave so as to booby trap LIGO scientists and this way keep them on their toes. About 60 Indian scientists were also part of the data analysis aspect of =QbSX" " !& 2D;CDA4 ;0=4 3cjR_2UR^d¶dXfZeRcUVWRTVU run-in with customs at Cairo airport has left rock singer Bryan Adams fuming, after a border agent scrawled a number on his guitar. The Grammy award-winning musician, who was in Egypt for a concert at the Giza pyramids, posted a picture of the vintage Martin acoustic guitar on his Instagram account. A number and an illegible word in Arabic had been written in green ink on the mahogany instrument’s side. “Airport customs graffiti on my 1957 Martin D-18 from Egypt. Back to the luthier bryanadamsgetup,” Adams wrote on Instagram, referring to his latest album, Get Up. Adams said his problems with customs had begun on his arrival at the airport. “We almost didn’t get the equipment into the country, and when we did, it was all marked like this,” he wrote in a Facebook message. “There were absolutely no apologies.” A customs official said instruments were marked with serial numbers, although usually with stickers. Regarding the ink, he suggested: A <8=8H0270CC4A98 DXUVYbcdTYbUSd_RcUbfQdY_^_VWbQfYdQdY_^Q\gQfUc_^6URbeQbi!!dXYc iUQbgY\\cebU\i_`U^e`^UgVb_^dYUbc V_be^TUbcdQ^TY^W_ebe^YfUbcU ver since we homo sapiens replaced our neanderthal cousins, we have tried to lay order amongst our species in the form of various governance systems, so that we can apply our species’ advanced intellect to the challenges of survival, evolution, and further exploration. Gradually in many parts of the world we formed rules for political representation to govern ourselves. But as a Frankenstein case, governance has become the challenge that we need to solve. In the US, the electoral cacophony and fanfare called Super Tuesday took place this month, and it made millions across the world wonder how two of the most disliked politicians in America had managed to win. In India, too, politics managed to shock people when parties blew out of proportion a situation in Delhi where students, including the head of the students’ union, were protesting. Political institutions, which we ourselves created, may have become the biggest stumbling block to our evolution and exploring our curiosities. Last month marked possibly the greatest scientific discovery of the century. On February 11, 2016, in Washington DC, it was announced that the first direct observation of gravitational waves had been made. This discovery proved right Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity made about a 100 years ago. It opens up new frontiers for understanding our universe. So far more than 95 per cent of our universe remains imperceptible to traditional astronomy. This discovery of gravitational waves is a development that deserves the appli- EJPANJ=PEKJ=H gravitational waves discovery. A group, led by Indian Bala Iyer at the Raman Research Institute in collaboration with scientists in France, led the mathematical calculations used to model gravitational wave signals from orbiting black holes and neutron stars. Another group led by Sanjeev Dhurandhar at IUCAA initiated and carried out foundation work on developing data analysis techniques to detect weak gravitational wave signals buried in the detector noise by looking for the best match between the calculated waveforms and the detector signal. In their initial proposal to construct the instrument, the LIGO team had warned that the preliminary design was unlikely to detect anything. Nonetheless, they argued, an imperfect observatory had to be built to understand how to build a better one. In this way the Advanced LIGO — an improvised version of the earlier instrument — was scheduled to be unveiled on September 18, 2015. This machine was to be the most sensitive instrument ever built in history to detect anything that was not a gravitational wave. The results of these efforts were finally borne around 11 am Central European Time on September 14, 2015, when Marco Drago, a 32-year-old Italian postdoctoral student and a member of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, was viewing the LIGO data remotely at the Albert Einstein Institute in Hannover, Germany. On that day he was the first person to notice that the gravitational waves had reached Earth. It took months for the LIGO team to test and ensure that this detection of the gravitational waves met the statistical threshold of five sigma, which is the gold standard for declaring a discovery in physics. The September 14 detection of gravitational waves was thereafter officially known as GW150914. It represents the first observational evidence that black-hole pairs exist. Until now, they had existed in theory, because by definition they swallow all light in their vicinity, making themselves invisible to regular telescopes. Near a black hole, gravity becomes the strongest force in the universe. Einstein had predicted this in 1916, and the LIGO results suggest that his equations align almost perfectly with the real-world observation. Indian scientists have been given credit for the data analysis aspect of this discovery. Since 2011, a consortium of Indian research establishments have been lobbying to have a gravitational wave detector located in India. Known as the LIGO-India project, it is piloted by the Department of Atomic Energy and the Department of Science and Technology. After the announcement of the detection of gravitational waves last month, the Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, said that it had in-principle approved a proposal to have a gravitational wave detector in India. Let us hope that this agenda is not sabotaged by political parties in a quest for votes. We have missed this bus at least once. CWTfaXcTaXb2WXTUBdbcPX]PQX[Xch>UUXRTaU^acWT Va^d_^UR^\_P]XTb9X]SP[BcTT[P]S?^fTa;cS “Maybe it wasn’t us?”It is not the first time someone has written numbers on one of Adams’s guitars. In 2015, he tweeted that Air Canada had scrawled a serial number in black ink. Egyptians mocked the incident on social media: “Doesn’t Adams know that we glued together Tutankhamun with super glue? It’s normal that we write something on a 60-year-old guitar,” one wrote. 3V_2WW]VT\+C`SZ_ZdR]cVRUjUVRU t is just the latest bit of ignominy for the superhero sidekick known as Robin. Quietly sidelined by the keepers of the Batman flame after Joel Schumacher’s oft-ridiculed 1997 debacle Batman & Robin, the caped crusader’s crime-fighting partner has now been killed off before the first frame has rolled of the new superhero movie, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. The new Batman, Ben Affleck, revealed the news in an interview with Entertainment Weekly, in which he discussed his take on Gotham’s eternal defender as older and more jaded. “[Batman is] bitterly disappointed... that he’s lost this guy who fought by his side,” said Affleck. “That character’s death must have been devastating to him, and he’s suffered. We get the sense that he’s suffered a lot of devastating losses before this movie even starts.” Batman’s pain at the death of his protege mirrors the events of Frank Miller’s 1986 graphic novel The Dark Knight Returns, which Batman v Superman director Zack Snyder has said will be a key influence on his I movie. In the comic book, a cruel, grey-haired Batman laments the loss of former boy wonder Jason Todd, who was killed by The Joker in an earlier episode, though he also takes on a new, female Robin, Carrie Kelley. Affleck said the new Batman is both inspired by and fearful of superheroes such as Wonder Woman, AKA Diana Prince, who will be played by Gal Gadot in Snyder’s movie. Dej]Vd`WWVcVUaRceZ_?`]R_¶d3d]ZXaZ arry Styles has reportedly been offered a role in Christopher Nolan’s second world war epic Dunkirk. According to Deadline, the One Direction singer is set to make his acting debut in the drama alongside Tom Hardy, Kenneth Branagh and recent Oscar winner Mark Rylance. The reports suggest that it won’t be a leading role. Details of the film are being kept secret but the Inception director is rumoured to be searching for mainly unknown actors to play the key roles with the more well-known talent taking a back seat. He is said to be keen H on newcomer Fionn Whitehead for one of the two leads. Last month it emerged that Nolan will be using authentic Second World War battleships for the film because he wants to avoid using too many digital effects. The film will tell the story of the Dunkirk evacuation at the start of the Second World War. Styles was previously offered a role in romantic drama Tulip Fever, alongside Judi Dench and Alicia Vikander, but turned it down. He is loosely attached to star in the next season of horror comedy series Scream Queens alongside Emma Roberts. > 3 3 ;H 4=>D67 2>?BB44:³20?C08=0<4A820´ 8=140DCHBC>A4A>114AH man dressed as Marvel superA hero Captain America was involved in a beauty store robbery in Texas along with a sidekick. Security camera photos shared by Plano police crime stoppers showed the two suspects and their vehicle at the scene of a robbery at an ULTA retail store. One man can be seen wearing a black and yellow hoodie while the other is dressed in a Captain America costume. Police said the men may be connected to a string of similar robberies in the area, although it is unclear what was stolen from this location. The suspects escaped in a silver four-door SUV, believed to be a Dodge Durango or Chrysler Aspen. D?8 ?08AB>5B7>4B5>D=3 >=DB8=C4ABC0C47867F0H tate Department of Ecology offiScials say a crew picking up litter found 100 pairs of shoes in boxes along Interstate 90 east of North Bend. KIRO-TV reports an Ecology Youth Corps crew found the white, flatheeled shoes Tuesday morning. State officials say the shoes, which appear new, have been donated to a Seattle organisation that helps homeless women, children and families in need. 0? 8C´B³A08=8=658B7´ 0<833A>D67C74A4 family in Australia were excited to see the A end of a drought in the area, but got more than they bargained for when fish began falling from the sky. Tahnee Oakhill shared video of the phenomenon to her Facebook page as her daughter excitedly placed the tiny fish into a nearby puddle. “The kids got a good little catch today — five or so,” Oakhill wrote in a comment. “It was pretty surreal watching them walk around on a once droughted property in the guts of the [Queensland] bush and scoop living fish out of mud puddles on the dirt road.” The Oakhill’s Winton property had received about three inches of rain prior to the appearance of the fish. “It’s pretty crazy, getting that much rain was pretty shocking and then that happening after that...it’s been a weird week,” said Oakhill. As for the fish, ecologist Dr Peter Unmack said the spangled perch which are “pretty much everywhere” in central Australia likely did not fall from the sky. He explained that the tiny fish can quickly travel long distances in small amounts of water, but added that this tendency did allow a small possibility for them to get caught in rainclouds. “The other key point is if you did get massive updrafts of water and fish that got carried up into the clouds, every- thing up there is frozen because it’s too cold,” he said. “So it is theoretically possible, but it’s difficult to see many situations where fish get picked up by strong winds and can survive.” D?8 D:20C743A0;<>E4BBC0CD4 C>0E>83C4GC8=6<8B70?B British cathedral sought to reassure visitors that they could still view a A massive sculpture following a Facebook post by the statue’s creator saying the church had moved it because people kept bumping into it while texting. The Salisbury Cathedral, located about 90 miles outside of London, said in a tweet under the Twitter handle @SalisburyCath: “Don’t worry, you can still see ‘The Kiss’ at the Cathedral. We’ve moved the sculpture onto the lawn #Relationships.” ‘The Kiss’ is a 20-foot sculpture of clasping hands by artist Sophie Ryder. Recently, Ryder posted a video on Facebook of a crane moving the statue, with the comment “We had to move ‘The Kiss’ because people were walking through texting and said they bumped their heads! Oh well!!” The Cathedral did not respond to a Reuters request for comment on why it moved the sculpture. Social media users poked fun at the statue’s relocation to the lawn. Visitors were originally meant to follow a path through the clasped hands. @GRumpGitRant tweeted: “It’s safe now to visit #salisbury cathedral. The kiss statue better known as the #claspedhands is no longer a danger.” “I think it is crazy it was moved,” wrote Karin Muir on Ryder’s Facebook page. “Maybe if more people bumped their heads whilst walking and texting, they’d stop doing it sooner.” ATdcTab <0=´B24;;?7>=45;>>343F8C7 274F102208<?4AB>=0C>AB Virginia man unknowingly AChewbacca became the judge of a impersonator con- test after his friends posted his phone number on Craigslist. Blake Webb’s friends posted his number to the online classified site and encouraged people to call Webb’s phone with their best Chewbacca impression in order to win a prize of $50. The fraudulent contest was set to run through May 4, a day commonly associated with Star Wars due to a twist on the Jedi saying, “May the force be with you,” “May the 4th be with you.” “Most of the time they would just go, ‘Hey is this the guy from Craigslist?’ And I was like, ‘What?’” said Webb. “[After they do the impersonation] I was like, ‘Hello!’ They’d be like, ‘Is that good? And I’d be like, ‘Yeah, that was pretty good.” Webb said that he’s actually had some lengthy conversations with the callers after the initial confusion. 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Lord Vishnu came to Prahlad’s aid and as a result, Holika burnt while Prahlad remained unharmed. The stories from Puranas appear to be mythological tales to a layman as the incidents described in them often refer to things that seem supernatural or surreal, for example, the power to remain unscathed in fire or the invocation of energy called Vishnu. Puranas are, in fact, chronicles of real events that occurred with our ancestors, who inhabited this planet many thousand years ago. These ancestors were not aliens or super-humans, they were humans like you and me, only they were able to tap into the phenomenal potential that a human being has. Majority of us, on the other hand, leave that force within us unused. The physical creation is a manifestation of the five elements in their various permutations and combinations. These elements come together to form a body because there is an impurity or dosha. As per Ayurveda, these doshas are vata pita and kapha, as per other Vedas, it is a selfish/negative thought. The dosha along with its action tendency determines your prakriti or basic nature. The level of impurity reflects upon the thought process of a person. The purer the elements, the higher the thoughts; more the impurities, the grosser thoughts one H catches from the environment. Our body is because there is dosha and it is these doshas that cast us into the whirlpool of diseases, imbalances, emotional congestion and an overall negative approach towards life. If there is dosha (negativity) in the body, the body will remain ie there is always an aspect of negativity in humans, the level of negativity decides whether you are good or bad. When negativity is more, one is termed as bad, when it is less, he/she is called good. Swami Vivekananda once at a lecture expressed a similar view while speaking about a black dot on a white background that was presented to him. He explained how all our lives we focus on the tiny black dot, missing out on the limitless white expanse. This is, in fact, the primary reason why whether someone drives a luxury car or travels by a bus, each one is unhappy and disturbed with the way things are. I get countless mails daily from all over the world and 99 per cent of them are negative. If only we could change from negative to positive, our health would improve as would the quality of life, and time (both good and bad) which seems to drag at a snail’s pace would seem to be pass away in no time. That is a sign of evolution. Holi is a perfect time to move from negativity towards positivity. This Purnima of the month of Phalgun holds within itself the phenomenal power to burn away negativity. The night of Holi is a powerful t is very unfortunate to see this all-pervading anger. Elaborate plans are being made and executed to kill innocent schoolchildren. Parents are scared about sending their kids to schools, but do they try to control their own anger? Divorces and single parent families are becoming the norm, not an exception. Almost no one is trying to control his or her anger. It has become fashionable to become angry. One feels good about it. Is this not a sad situation, rather a dangerous situation? In this article, I will try to analyse the reasons for such widespread anger, the harm it is doing to all concerned, what we can do about it and the benefits of being able to do so. Let us start with children. Amazingly, they are beginning to keep pace with others. They are shouting at their parents and also on others, breaking things, acting rebelliously and, generally, harming themselves. And all these video games, serials, etc are not helping, if anything they are promoting anger. One will assume that children, when they grow up, will become more sensible. Yes, some do but others have problems with many things, like money situation, difficulties faced in doing well in studies, thoughts about future, inability to enjoy life, etc. Are the middle-aged doing any better? The scenario is quite bleak. The realisation that they are not even close to what they had dreamed about is enough reason to be I here are turbulent times. These are competitive times. These are disturbing times. These are changing times. And the pace of change is very fast. By the time one is able to adapt to the change, the scenario has changed. Naturally, the one thing that is available for a high premium is tranquillity of mind. Man is not at peace with himself. In fact, philosophically speaking, he is not at pace with himself as there is a competition between his inner self, the core, and the outer self, the periphery, which is the significant other. Significant because though ephemeral in nature, it is an entity that impacts man significantly. But pause for a moment. Is this a new phenomenon? Think deeply and you will realise it is not. It was always there. Times were disturbing, turbulent and competitive. Changes were taking place. But still that tranquillity and peace, that seem to slip away from the hand like an eel, was not all that elusive. Why it is that tranquillity is difficult to achieve today? Because the nature of competition between the inner self and the outer self is different. It was competition of the inner self with the outer self. Today, it is the competition of the inner self against the outer self. The very nature of this competition is hostile and in any kind of hostility, peace is the first causality. But the most vital issue that arises is can this condition be changed? Is it an impossibility? With a little bit of insight and some sincere effort, the condition can be changed. The inner self needs to be explored, found and strengthened. And it is possible because people in the past could do it. They also had the outer and inner self. They also had the conflict between the two selves. But they could resolve that harmoniously, achieving peace and tranquillity in the process. The solution lies in reinventing the self. It is reinventing the self that will lead to increase in self-effectiveness that we are so desperately searching. But there is a process for reinventing the self. The process begins with self-introspection. The prescription is ‘find time for yourself ’. Today the greatest difficulty is to find time for oneself. Technology has speeded up things, shortened distances, catalysed communication and supposedly increased leisure. But the paradoxical part is that this leisure finds you in far greater shortage of time. Swami Vivekananda had said that if you are not talking to yourself at least once a day, you are missing the opportunity of meeting an excellent person in this world. And rightly so. You are your best friend. You are your best enemy too. How you handle self will determine this. Learn to talk to yourself. It is an art. The art of self-introspection. From this will arise the means of self-renewal that will pave the path of reinventing self and finally lead to heightened self-effectiveness. The inner self is the pivot of self-renewal but is not given due importance. The outer self bags all our attention. The following words from Lord Rama may help in understanding the nature of outer self. After vanquishing demon king Ravana, the Lord reached Ayodhya. The people asked how he could slay the mighty Ravana. Lord Rama then said, “I didn’t kill Ravana. It is the ‘I’ who killed Ravana.” ‘I’ refers to Ravana’s ego. 06=8>A58A4 ?DA8584B 0=HC78=6C70C 2><4B8= 2>=C02CF8C78C 0=37>;3BC74 20?028CHC> <0:4H>DA8B4 =>F>=34A8C 1420<4C74 58ABCF>A3>5 C7458ABCE430 C74A86E430 night, a night of silence and of internalisation, a night when the potency of various mantras and jaaps is at its peak as is the transformational effect of fire. It is important here that the mantras be given by a guru who is siddha in the mantra. Mantra is shakti in the form of dhwani; any errors in the uchharan changes the frequency of the sound, and the result can be disastrous. Holi is a night of chanting mantras which have been channelised by one’s guru and of invocation of positivity through yagya in his/her presence. The experiences one gets and their effects on one’s being equals the sadhna of many years together in just one night. Yagyas are of various kinds — there are those for channelising creative forces in the environment and also those for siddhi of the God or Goddess that is being invoked. There are specific yagyas for fulfillment of specific tasks as desired by the sadhak. Depending upon the capacity and desire of the sadhak, the guru prescribes a yagya to be performed on the night. A yagya uses fire as a medium to interact with the shaktis that run creation. Fire or agni deserves a special mention among the five elements as it is the only element that cannot be polluted. It is also the only element that rises up despite the pull of gravity. The implication of this is that agni purifies anything that comes in contact with it and holds the capacity to make you rise. No wonder it became the first word of the first Veda, the Rig Veda. On certain days, energy patterns are especially conducive to the process of purification in the body, the day of Holi being one of them. On this day, Holika entered the fire with her nephew Prahlad. She was a sadhika and it was her time to get purified, hence the fire accepted her. Prahlad, on the other hand, was already pure and so did not burn. So a body that is pure remains unaffected by fire; fire here symbolises the physical fire as well as the negativities or disturbances of our life. A pure body would be eligible to go to higher lokas and have conversation with gods and be in ananda all the time. An impure body would be revelling in the pleasures of the physical world which are of course temporary. It would think that it is having fun and passing time, while in reality, it is time that is passing it and taking it towards rog because rog is the opposite of bhog — the creation being bipolar and a sum of opposites. Sanatan Kriya details certain fire purification techniques for Holi, where you make a circle of fire around you and the guru gives you certain mantras to instantly trigger the process of purification, leaving you lighter while the regular practice of Ashtang Yog makes you Prahlad. When the body is pure, its receptivity to the positive forces in creation heightens, manifestation of thoughts and darshan of Gods and Goddesses follows. CWTfaXcTaXbcWTVdXSX]V [XVWc^U3WhP]5^d]SPcX^] DXUbQWY^WQ^WUb 098C:D<0A18B7=>8P]P[hbTbaTPb^]bQTWX]ScWTfXSTb_aTPSP]VTa frustrated and angry, which reflects in their behaviour. The last group of old persons, one would have hoped, would have calmed down. No, they have problems with their children either due to being ignored by them or attempted to be exploited by them, society they live in and alleged injustice done to them in their lives. To be honest, the situation appears quite bleak to say the least. Let us see some of the reasons for such all-pervading anger. The first reason is envious nature. Denial of lust is not far behind. Intolerance is fanning anger all round. People are getting impatient; they want everything instantly. Ill health contributes to getting irritated. Overstress is another reason. Just like envy, dislike of someone becomes a cause for getting angry. Injustice appears to be a valid reason to be angry. Or humiliation suffered, even though the self maybe the cause of it. Similarly, being cheated gives enough justification for being angry. Infidelity is another reason for exploding. Helplessness also gets converted into anger sometimes, as does frustration. And now there is attention one gets worldwide by showing your anger by doing terror acts. What harm is anger doing to the self and others? One loses peace of mind — a very big loss. One may take some step and suffer irreparable damage. Anger causes enmity and one may be avoided by others. One loses control over self and may damage one’s own health. Anger causes strain in relationships, and one looks foolish. Anger is destructive. What can be done to control this CWTfaXcTaXbP_a^UTbb^a^U\P]PVT\T]cP]S_dQ[XR b_TPZTa7TRP]QTaTPRWTSPc__PcWPZXb\/V\PX[R^\ enemy, which results in foolishness, which in turn causes bewilderment, ie inability to take the right decisions based upon experience; and, subsequently, causes intelligence to be lost, which ensures that one is doomed. (Bhagavad Gita 2.63) Such measures could be individual or collective, ie through proper education. But the latter solution is time-consuming and may not be so effective after all in the short term. Therefore, we must try to do so ourselves. I am not ashamed to state that I am also guilty of this fault and now I have taken an oath to control my anger. Fortunately, it is working because I have become aware of my shortcomings and am fully determined to work on them. The following measures are quite practical. Try to avoid situations which can cause anger. Don’t be a perfectionist because in this material world it is impossible to be one. Control lust. Have faith in justice of God. Mind control is a basic necessity for achieving it. Tolerance and patience are absolute must. Reduction of stress will help. Lastly, if we keep in mind the harm we will avoid that anger inflicts on us, we will want to give up anger. 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In case one’s physiology goes bad, it has to have related adverse bearing on the mindset. Mind then comes under stress, which in turn, causes hormonal imbalance in the system, and which further increases the stress level, at times leading to depression. At the same length, if mental state gets anyway disturbed, it leads to health complications. Man, thus, gets trapped into a circuitous web of body-mind infirmities. As a consequence, sleep becomes the first casualty. Eventually, the thought process becomes incoherent, when medical intervention becomes necessary. And, since the whole system remains under strain, it calls for holistic care. It’s pertinent to note here that Ayurveda and Homeopathy are premised on the concept of providing holistic healing to ailing persons and so go for systemic correction to bodymind organism. On the contrary, modern medical science remains focused to treating just the disease. Their medicines may bring immediate relief, but there may not be any improvement in H +HDOWKFRQFHUQVQHHGKROLVWLFFDUH terms of the constitutional status of a being. And then at times medicine has side-effects that may lead to other health issues sooner or later. A case in point is that of a young girl undergoing psychiatric treatment for quite some time, but with not much of improvement. The doctor prescribed psychotropic drug, and subjected her to psychological counselling, which was premised on feed back offered by her parents about her behavioural pattern. But they have no means to figure out the basic constitution of her body-metabolism, which varies from person to person. But despite all the medication and counselling, she doesn’t have sound sleep, but for which her energy level remains low when she wakes up in the morning. Her head remains heavy, feels lot of heat inside. She does not feel like doing anything. She has a feel that nobody in the family loves her, as they do not listen to her. Not finding a way out, her parents brought her seeking guidance. When asked: Whether she has an irregular bowel, she answered in the affirmative. Remember, when the bowel movement becomes irregular, assimilation of food in the body becomes disorderly. As a result, the various energy streams emanating from food, vital to nourishment of different organs of the body, become short of the requirement. In turn, the cough, pitta, and vayu constituents of the body get imbalanced. Excessive air element keeps the mind in agitated state, where after sleep becomes the first casualty, which in turn, leads to further health complications. In such cases, unless the digestive system gets toned up, no psychotropic drug or counselling could be of any help. A look at the astrological chart of an ailing person can figure out the overall tendencies of physical and mental health of a being. Let us now look at the girl’s astrological pointers. Lagna lord Venus is conjunct 6th lord Jupiter, which incidentally happens to be the lagna sublord as well implying a fragile health profile. Jupiter occupying the nakshatra owned by Ketu posited in Mercury owned sign Gemini points to being vulnerable to problems of mind genesis. Health indicator, the Sun, conjunct Mercury occupies the Virgo sign, both ill-disposed off to Uranus, Neptune, and Rahu. The implication, in the first place, is that her bowel movement would be irregular. Second, she would have an agitated and unstable mind, lacking focus. Also, she would have a vacillating mind. The two read together account for her impaired reasoning and judgment. Third, she would be erratic and habitually inclined to disregard elder’s advice. Fourth, she remains stuck to her fanciful dream world, often distanced from ground realities, and not keen to look beyond. She may not acknowledge truth on its first appearance. Moon occupying Cancer sign, though well aligned to the Sun, is placed opposite Saturn. That, in the first place accounts for unpredictable mood swings. Second, she’s comfort loving and caught with inertia and indolence, and therefore, would not be keen to take pains to work towards fulfillment of her ambitions. She has a negative mindset which brings in a sense of pessimism, making her vulnerable to depression. Mars placed adverse to Neptune speaks of inferiority complex. All put together makes her a fit case for psychiatric problems. A holistic treatment has been accordingly advised, which if taken up seriously, she may regain her normal self soon. CWTf faXcTaXXbPP]PPbca^[^VTaeePbcdRR^]bd[cP]c P]Sbb_XaXcdP[RR^d]bT[[^aF FaXcTcc^WWX\PPc6 6$$ 1PbT\T]c99d]V_daP44gcT]bX^]= =Tf3 3T[WX # CT[)((' '"&!&"!!#" " 4\PX[)__X^]TTa`dTaXTb/QWPaPcPbca^R^\ FTQbXcT)f fffQWPaPcPbca^R^\ C40<064=30 438C>A-B7>1>A860=6D;8★ 34B:-CD;8:006=87>CA8>970B4=8>A0BB8BC0=C438C>Ak 0=0=H01>A6>708=540CDA4BFA8C4A★ ;0H>DC34B86= - B0C8B7270=3A090:7<>;0B4=8>A438C>A2A40C8E4k 18=8C018B7CB4=8>A34B86=4A >_gi_eSQ^gbYdUd_ecQd QWU^TQ`Y_^UUb0W]QY\S_]
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