Nitish is wrong in singling out Modi. All of BJP is communalÖ.
Transcription
Nitish is wrong in singling out Modi. All of BJP is communalÖ.
Tripura Times, Agartala, Wednesday, April 17, 2013 2 TRIPURA TIMES WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, VOL.50, ISSUE NO-174 It is forbidden to kill; therefore all murderers are punished unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets. Voltaire EDITORIAL G B Hospital; ìA Gehenna of Killersî Proved to be in an absurd notion that filled into the notorious and fatal acts regarding successive untimely and uncared deaths of prematured, nay, quite young patients, often, go unknown and uninvestigated by the police less than the hospital administration involving ìefficientî doctors and nurses, being in privy, as alleged in most of the cases since the hospitalís inception. What does one suggest the patients should do? In the cases that bear suggestive clues of ignorance or cavalier disregard or unwanted complexities that instigate the medics to get themselves involved in unwanted business risking the lives of the patients ~ a process canít further be allowed to continue as wishfulfilment of mad desires; had there been strictures to thwart such irregularities at their embryonic stage then such massive and wider damage could have been avoided. An underhand criminality ever after the mortal act the ëcarcassí of certificates (bed tickets. Postmortem reports) that might bear the telltale story of the ësecrecy and colours of the vistims, hope to get some ëjusticeí on the cause of sudden shocking ëdamageí done to the bereaved family. Rupa chakraborty (25) and Taju Minha (35), being the burning example to be victimized as negligent and criminal deaths by the doctors and nurses attended them, have so far not been provided with even reasonable comments as to how such ëblunderí taking place. The answers of such pathetic scenes so gapingly wounded with immediate outrageous ëconductsí just the people of the city have been seeing and equally seething under mistrust notion and opinions against the doctors and the ëwould beí in the near future, when these ëscionsí will rule the roost in the stateís health-care system ~ or are digging our own grave with such butchers in the sacred name of so-called doctors. So dangers are quite afoot, itís time, the administration were at its grips, otherwise, the day is not far, where the own Frankenstein monsters are forming to grow to swallow their masters. MESSAGE THE WINE OF HEAVEN Whatever be thy love bother it not, be adhered, serve with care and interest to nurture and exalt the Love and suffer elatedly to do so, be thou complacementó so shall thy love be transparent with heavenly shower, drink thatóthe wine of heaven and enjoy. Sri Sri†Thakur†Anukulchandra Nitish is wrong in singling out Modi. All of BJP is communalÖ. Prashant Panday Nitish Kumar has spoken. And he has stuck to his script. Clearly hinting (though not naming) that Modi is unacceptable to him as the NDA PM candidate, he has made his partyís alliance with the BJP hinge on this one single point. But is he being fair in singling Modi out like this? Is it his point that anyone else from the BJP is acceptable as PM, but not Modi? If his argument is one of secularism, then I am sorry but no one from the BJP qualifies to be his partner. Take Advani, the one that Nitish hinted might be acceptable when he said that the NDA had fought under him in 2009. But how can Nitish forget Advaniís role in the BJPís megatreachery of the century (even bigger than the postGodhra riots), the demolition of the Babri Masjid. It was Advani, wasnít it, who started it all off with his 1990 yath ratra. With his exhortations to his cohorts days and hours before they went and did what they had already premeditated to do ñ bring down a centuries old monument? How is Advani different from the Taliban leadership which ordered the Bamiyan Buddhist statues in Afghanistan to be destroyed? And what about the others? Murli Manohar Joshi, one of the longest serving party MPs of the party, also was right there, in Ayodhya, urging his followers to have no second thoughts about ìrighting the wrongs of historyî. And what about Arun Jaitley, who is the biggest force backing the Muslim baiter Narendra Modi? What kind of comfort would it give Nitish if Arun Jaitley became the PM; if he felt obliged to either bring in Modi as the Home Minister or something or keep condoning his deeds as CM of Gujarat ñ back then in 2002 and now (when he continues to keep the Muslims out of the mainstream)? What about Sushma Swaraj, who is nothing but a part of the opposition-to-Modi camp in the BJP, and is otherwise a backer of Advani for PM? Advani and Swaraj are two sides of the same coin, she backing him for PMship, the he backing her for party presidentship. And what about all the ìsister organizationsî of the BJP? The RSS ñ which not only spews venom against the minorities, but also against the lower castes, especially the dalits? Hope Nitish doesnít forget why the RSS was first set up ñ as a counter to Ambedkarís dalit push in the 1920s. If Nitish believes that the only problem with the BJP is its communal credentials, surely he is not serious? Surely he knows just how much the BJP loathes the lower castes, and vice versa? Leave RSS, what about the more brazenly branded Vishwa Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal and the Durga Vahini? These organizations donít even try to hide behind the fig leaf of ìdevelopmentî as Modi does, or ìjanataî as the BJP does. They are clear in their agenda ñ they are pro-Hindu parties (mostly pro-Brahmin), and they will push for India declaring itself a Hindu country. Can Nitish forget how Dara Singh ñ a Bajrang Dal worker ñ ruthlessly massacred Graham Staines, the Australian missionary working for the upliftment of the under-privileged in Orissa? Or Praveen Togadia of the VHP whose antiminority rhetoric can only be bested by an Uma Bharati? Will Nitish also forget that BJP governments all over the country are silently pushing the Hindu agenda? That saraswati Vandana and yoga are being used as cultural tools to spread the color of saffron? That during the NDA rule, in which Nitish himself was a party, the education department (Ministry of HRD) under Murli Manohar Joshi had all but changed the text books to reflect the glory of Hinduism and show the Mughal rule in a prejudiced manner? Or will not consider the kind of ìpermanentî allies the BJP has? The Shiromani Akali Dal, whose very formation is on communal lines. Or the Shiv Sena, which in addition to having a Marathi agenda also has a strong anti-Muslim one? Does Nitish see the JD(U) in this company? So Nitish is being canny in singling Modi out? If he is serious about his partyís secular credentials, he should never have joined hands with the BJP. The reality is different it appears. Nitish signed up with the BJP to keep Laloo out. It was near-term political compulsions, not any longterm considerations, that brought Nitish into the grasp of the BJP. The 17 year old relationship has been largely driven by near term compulsions. Today, it is again near term compulsions that are making Nitish attack Modi. Nitish realizes he is on a slippery slope in Bihar. His 2nd†term has been anything but satisfactory. There are no jobs in Bihar; electricity is a problem; and even his own partymen (refer Indian Express stories of the last two days) agree that corruption is a big issue. Today, to win in Bihar, Nitish needs the Muslim votes like never before. Today, the BJP itself has become a problem for Nitish. Nitishís identification of Modi as the fount of communalism is just a clever politicianís way to balance his ìloyalty to the N D A î w h i l e b e i n g opposed to communal issues. Modi is suffering the wrath of Nitish only because he is the loudest of all the loud mouths in the BJP. Modi brags all the time; and has ìearnedî the #feku tag†(#Feku or sapnon ka saudagar). Yesterdayís TOI brings out more about this habit of his. Modiís ability to gas is profound; his ability to conceal unpleasant facts about his state even more so. But heís now getting exposed. Stories about the drought in Gujarat; and his governmentís mishandling are only now coming out months after similar stories came out about Maharashtra. Modi is a victim of his own ìgas bagî quality. Heís easy to attack. Thatís what Nitish is doing. Even though ñ and the BJP should be clear about this ñ Nitish is actually attacking all of the BJP. The real truth†is that Nitish is trying to be clever by singling out Modi, when in fact she should have the guts to tick off the entire BJP. Such clever attempts at wooing the Muslim crowd will not succeed. Todayís world is vastly different than what it was ten years backÖ. The Caracas Conspiracy and how to subvert democracy Shobhan Saxena Something very sinister is brewing in Caracas, the capital of Venezuela. The way the opposition candidate Henrique Capriles Radonski, who lost the election to acting president Nicolas Maduro on Sunday, is talking it seems he has a plan up his sleeve. Not ready†to accept the election result ó 50.6% votes for Maduro and 49.1% for him ó Capriles is now calling the president-elect ìillegitimateî, demanding a ìvote by voteî †recount and vowing to ìfight to the finishî. With the Organisation of American States now throwing its weight behind Caprilesí demand for ìvote by voteî recount, it seems a conspiracy is being executed in Caracas. The aim is to rob Maduro ó and millions of his poor supporters ó of the election. Even before the result was out on Sunday night, Capriles had started crying foul.† It looks like a conspiracy because Venezuelaís high-tech electoral system is considered the most advanced in the world. Former†US president Jimmy Carter, who goes to Venezuela as an observer in all elections, has called it the ìbest voting system in the worldî. There is no room for error in this system, and recounting canít change the result.† On Sunday, as polling was taking place in Venezuela and later the votes were being counted, a set of independent election observers were blogging live on the website of Centre for Economic Policy and Research (CEPR), a Washington-based think-tank whose Advisory Board includes Nobel Laureate economists Robert Solow and Joseph Stiglitz; and Richard Freeman, professor of economics at Harvard University. This is what an election monitor blogged on the CEPRís website: ì8:23 PM ó Now watching the citizen audit at Fermin Toro, a high school in Caracas. There were 12 voting stations and the turnout was 73.3%. [4,773 out of a possible 6,465 voted]. After reading off all of the ballots and putting them in stacks they are counting each stack and comparing them with the number on the tape. 9:26 PM - The count matched perfectly. î Citizen audit of voting? Have you ever heard of something so transparent anywhere in the world? In Venezuela, after they cast their ballot on an electronic voting machine, the voters get a receipt which they put in a box. These ballots are then audited by independent monitors and citizen groups. This system has been appreciated by all. ìThe Venezuelan electoral system is the†most automated in the world, because it can be audited and verified at every stage,î said Jennifer McCoy, director of the Carter Centerís Americas Program, when she visited Venezuela during the elections last year. Another report on the same website by an informal election monitor had this to say about polling in Venezuela: ìThere are 10 of†us in Caracas from the US doing some informal observations of the election process here. Today we visited several polling places. At the last one, we were actually invited in to witness the voting process. At every site, we saw a very efficient process and no problems were reported, other than the need to replace one faulty machine. This is actually the third election process they have had in this country in the past year, so the process is moving along very well. People talk about how quickly they got through the lines and how smoothly things went.î ì What we saw when we were invited in was a model of transparency, with many checks and balances to assure integrity. People must show identification, their serial number is then entered into a digitial device and their photo comes up, then they give a thumb print to verify their identity again. They then proceed to vote electronically, receiving a paper receipt which they check and deposit in a box for later auditing. They then sign out, give a thumb print next to their signature, and dip their pinky finger in a vial of indelible ink to assure that they canít vote again. All of this is facilitated by randomly chosen registered voters and witnessed by representatives of the political parties. There is an audit of 55% of the voting tables to check the paper receipts against the electronic returns,î wrote the American election monitor. † Compare this system with Americaís, where in the year 2000 black voters were turned aways from polling booths in Florida and George W Bush became the president despite losing the popular vote to Al Gore; or for that matter with Indiaís, where the voter has to live in suspense about the result for weeks after pressing a button on an electronic machine. Forget audit, in Indiaís stone-age voting system, there is not even a record of who voted for whom and where.† But if despite such a foolproof system in place, Capriles is raging like a bull and hoping to change the result in the recount, there has†to be a reason behind this madness. The reason for his confidence is the backing he is getting from the western capitals and their media. This was wonderfully exposed by Corey Robin, the American author of ëThe Reactionary Mind: Conservatism from Edmund Burke to Sarah Paliní. †In a glimpse of what the US media coverage of the election results is likely to look like, Robin compared the New York Timesí treatment of Venezuelaís election with George Bushís similarly close victory over Kerry in the 2004 US elections. ìIn November 2004, 50.7% of the American population voted for George W. Bush; 48.3% voted for John Kerry. The headline in the New York Times read: ìAfter a Tense Night, Bush Spends the Day Basking in Victoryî, wrote Robin on his blog on Sunday. ìThe NY Times News Analysis read as follows: It was not a landslide, or a re-alignment, or even a seismic shock. But it was decisive, and it is impossible to read President Bushís re-election with larger Republican majorities in both houses of Congress as anything other than the clearest confirmation yet that this is a centerright country ñ divided yes, but with an undisputed majority united behind his leadership...î Then Robin goes on to analyse NYTís treatment of the Venezuelan election. ìTonight, 50.6% of the Venezuelan population voted for Chavezís successor Nicolas Maduro; 49.1% voted for his opponent Henrique Capriles. The Times headline this time: ëMaduro Narrowly Wins Venezuelan Presidencyí. And hereís how the article begins: ìNicol·s Maduro, the acting president and handpicked political heir to Hugo Ch·vez, narrowly won election to serve the remainder of Mr. Ch·vezís sixyear term as president of Venezuela, officials said late Sunday...î ASTRO TODAY Aries: Donít be surprised if you are the centre of someone specialís attention. A potential love interest may set their sights on you and you may not even realize it. Pay attention, Aries, because this may be your opportunity to find a long term lover. You may need to adjust to a different way of living, but it only takes time and an open mind to get used to something new. Taurus: It would serve you well to remember that you get out of life what you put in. That being said you cannot underestimate or forget the power of a positive attitude. If you approach a situation with a pessimistic attitude chances are you arenít going to give your best energy and wonít get the results you desire. Life is full of challenges and pleasures and itís up to you to navigate the issues to enjoy the fun. Uplift your attitude, Taurus, and watch how pleasing the results are. Gemini: You have a seemingly magic way of getting things done with the utmost quality. Those around you have grown accustomed to your standards, yet are still unaware of how you achieve the results you do. For this reason it can appear as though you have to supply very little effort to do a job well, which of course you know isnít the case. Continue doing what you do, Gemini, and those of influence can elevate you to a superior position. Cancer: You like to pursue your goals with tenacity, Cancer, but this very admirable trait doesnít come without responsibility. It is necessary for you to know your role or station in life and at work so you can avoid stepping on someone elseís toes. You fit in somewhere just as everyone does and it is important to stay in your lane and take the appropriate actions until your position changes. Leo: As generous as you are, Leo, it is a real treat for this generosity to be returned. When you find someone who makes it their business to go out of their way for you it is important to show them you recognize and appreciate their effort. Some people just take without a thought of giving back and others are willing to do whatever it takes to make you smile. Those are the people you need to spend your time with and energy on. Virgo: When it comes to financial business, Virgo, write everything down. You are meticulous when it comes to official affairs and know how to document everything. This habit will come in handy when you deal with a fiscal arrangement right now. The more detailed you can be in your description of the arrangement and the expectations of each party involved, the less a risk you have of confusion later on. Libra: If someone wants to change you, Libra, then it is safe to say they do not love you in the way you need to be loved. If you love someone, you love who they are and donít desire to change them. If someone wants to change you it may be time to look at exchanging them for someone who will appreciate your characteristics even the annoying ones. All relationships require compromise, but you cannot compromise on who you are. Be proud of who you are and find someone who loves you just as much as they should. Scorpio: When it comes to work right now you are urged to keep your emotions under wraps. The tension has been building between you and another and if youíre not careful you can explode. If you lose control of your emotions, Scorpio, you lose your bargaining power and that is something you donít want to do. Walk away, take a break or do whatever it is you have to do to stay calm and not lose your cool. Remember, Scorpio, you have a much better chance of getting your way if you stay calm. Sagittarius: If you go out and about to socialize with friends it is important to show the real you. You never know who is around and watching and you donít want to give anyone a false impression. You are usually pretty frank and have no problem showing who you are and this is no time to start putting up a front. If you do meet someone interesting you can judge if they like the real you or not from the start. Capricorn: When it comes to a family situation it will be important for you to listen before you speak. Youíll want to get a solid understanding of how the other people are feeling about the circumstances before you make any judgments about what you want to do. There is no use getting upset or involved in a battle of egos as neither of these actions will solve the problem. Stay calm and rational while you listen and try to understand the other peopleís feelings. Then, try to make a logical decision about how to proceed. Aquarius: The last place you want to be right now, Aquarius, is stuck in the past. Whether you believe it or not everything happens for a reason and your job is to learn from the past, not live in it. Take the lesson you need with you and go about building your future. Focus your energy on all the positive strides youíve made since a past misstep and continue making plans to improve your life. Pisces: If there are overdue administrative tasks you need to handle it would be smart to do so now. The longer you leave things undone the quicker they pile up and your agenda shows no signs of slowing. You must maintain control of your affairs and ensure your responsibilities are handled. It is imperative for you to stay on top of the everyday agenda items that ensure your life runs smoothly. 24 Hrs. Ambulance Service 1. Colonel Chowmuhani Yuba Sangstha 2. Sanghati Club 3. Ramkrishna Club Ph.9862570116