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China’s conspiracy to instal its puppet as Tibet’s next Dalai Lama

Communist games can be sometimes funnier than what Karl Marx or his dialectical materialism theories could have ever imagined. China’s communist leaders’ latest craze is to appoint a team of Buddhist monks under the leadership of a senior communist leader to discover the next incarnation of Tibet’s exiled Dalai Lama soon after he is dead. Their main purpose is to install a puppet Dalai Lama in order to put a stamp of legitimacy over their colonial control on Tibet.

The story started in 1949 when Chairman Mao’s People Liberation Army (PLA) conquered a major chunk of Eastern parts of Tibet. Following this he had no problem in coercing the 15-year old Dalai Lama’s theocratic government in Lhasa to sign on the dotted lines of what it called the “17 Point Agreement”. This agreement celebrated the ‘peaceful liberation’ of Tibet and its amalgamation into the ‘Motherland’ as an ‘Autonomous Region’ of China in 1951. 

Mao openly professed that religion was the enemy and opium of the masses. Still, this agreement promised that China would not interfere in the religious and cultural affairs of Tibet. But in their overenthusiasm to integrate Tibet and Tibetans into the new communist China the communist-military bosses of Tibet started working on the premise that a Tibetan minus his faith in Buddhism will make a perfect Chinese patriot.

However, direct interference in religious matters and challenging the monastic system of Tibet, which formed the basis of Tibetan social structure, led to an upheaval that culminated in the public uprising of March 1959 which ended with killing of over 80 thousand Tibetan people (as per UN documents) at the hands of PLA and the daring escape of Dalai Lama and a hundred thousand Tibetans to India.

China’s policy of annihilation of Tibet’s religion and religious institutions continued with religious zeal until late 1980s when two successive Tibetan uprisings against the occupying China made the Beijing bosses to sit up and take a fresh look at their religious policies on Tibet. Until then all administrative and Party dispatches from Lhasa were oozing with reports about Tibetan masses’ thankfulness to the Party and the government for bringing ‘prosperity’ and ‘liberation from the ‘serfdom’ of the ‘Dalai Clique’. They were shocked to observe that despite Dalai Lama’s absence for over three decades and enormous Marxist brainwashing of the existing three generations of Tibetans, the longing for Dalai Lama and religion played the main binding force among the young Tibetan demonstrators.

It was first time when Beijing leadership realized their failure in judging the importance of Buddha Dharma and the exiled Dalai Lama in the hearts of their colonized Tibetan subjects. A new resolve to exploit the power of religion was adopted to tame Tibet and to take on the Dalai Lama’s international influence. A major highlight of this resolve was to take charge of Tibet’s religious system, especially to bring the system of reincarnation under CPP’s control. The first experiment in this direction was appointment of a religious committee under a senior Communist leader for searching the new incarnation of Rangjung Rigpe Dorje, the previous (16th) Karma Pa, who was a senior and internationally popular incarnate lama who had died in exile in 1981.

Shunning away their anti-religion practices, the newly discovered boy Orgyen Thinley Dorje was enthroned in Karma Pa’s traditional monastery in Tsurphu in Tibet. The ceremony was televised live on China’s national TV amidst a large gathering of followers of the deceased 16th Karma Pa who were especially flown in from Europe. This process was repeated for the enthronement of the 11th Panchen Lama in 1995. The 10th Panchen Lama had lived as an ally of Beijing for three decades before he died under suspicious circumstances a day after a public meeting in Tibet in 1989 which witnessed his sudden outburst against Chairman Mao and Chinese control over Tibet.

For Beijing government these two events were like full dress rehearsals for the day when exiled Dalai Lama dies and it’s time to replace him with its own puppet reincarnation. It’s a different matter that the Karma Pa suddenly escaped to India on the eve of new millennium in December 1999. To make it worse for Beijing leaders, the Chinese appointed Panchen Lama has never been acceptable to the Tibetan people following the arrest and disappearance of 6 year old Gedhun Choeky Nyima whom Dalai Lama had recognized as the real incarnation of the previous Panchen Lama. Despite an unending international campaign going on since 1995, Beijing has yet to disclose the whereabouts of the boy and his parents.

Beijing government’s revised policy on Tibetan religion took a formal shape at the Third Tibet Work Forum, the highest strategy conclave of CPP and the government which was held from July 20 to 23rd in 1994 in Beijing. The Work Forum resolved to ‘cut the serpent’s head’, a euphemism for controlling Dalai Lama’s influence in Tibet; to increase punishment for public expression of anti-China and pro-Dalai Lama demonstrators and; to take official control of religious institutions and practices.

In line with this strategy, Beijing’s assertions about its monopoly over the selection of all Tibetan incarnate lamas, especially the Dalai Lama have become more frequent and high-decibel over the years. The most significant event in this chain came on Aug 3, 2007 when China’s State Administration for Religious Affairs issued its “State Religious Affairs Bureau Order no-5” as a statutory decree which made it compulsory for each new reincarnate lama to seek formal certification of the validity of his rebirth from four arms of the government, all controlled by the CPP directly or indirectly. This practically means that no reincarnation can take birth without approval of the Communist Party. Otherwise he, or for that matter, any future Dalai Lama will be declared “illegal and invalid” if his incarnation selection process is not certified by the CPP.

This Chinese stands is in sharp contrast to the Tibetan tradition of reincarnation which is based on the premise that each enlightened soul, which include the Dalai Lama, Panchen Lama and all Tulkus (‘Living Buddhas’ in Chinese terminology) are capable of deciding the time, place and family for their next birth as a new baby. While Dalai Lama is the supreme among them and is the titular as well as spiritual head of Tibet, all other Tulkus hold only spiritual powers. Each reincarnate baby is searched and identified through a specific set of rituals by other monks following the death of a Tulku. Tenzin Gyatso, the present (14th) Dalai Lama was found and identified in the Taktser village of Eastern Tibetan province of Amdo, now renamed by China as Qinghai in 1939 in a similar way.

The latest Chinese official assertion on Dalai Lama’s reincarnation came on 19th March this year when Geng Shuang, the spokesperson of China’s Minister of Foreign Affairs condemned the Tibetan claims by saying that selection of next Dalai Lama is China’s exclusive prerogative as part of its “policy of freedom of religious belief”. In a press briefing he declared that “reincarnation of living Buddhas including the Dalai Lama, must comply with Chinese laws and regulations and follow religious rituals and historical conventions of China.”

Sensing China’s designs about appointment of his successor, the Dalai Lama took a historic step in 2011 when he officially separated the spiritual and political powers of the institution of Dalai Lama and handed over his political powers to a ‘Sikyong’ (President) and the Parliament, to be elected through universal and confidential franchise among Tibetan community every five years. On the one hand this master stroke of Dalai Lama has pre-empted Chinese plans of installing a puppet baby as the next titular head of colonized Tibet and on the other hand gave an infinite shelf life to the Dalai Lama as a political institution free from Chinese intervention. No surprise, Beijing has rejected it and is asserting its authority over selection and installation of next Dalai Lama when the present one passes away.

Pakistan’s Financial Crisis: Who’s Responsible?

Closing down airspace may debar entry of commercial aircrafts but it doesn’t prevent hostile fighter aircrafts from entering these spaces and carrying out aggressive actions. Therefore, it’s obvious that Islamabad’s decision to close down it’s airspace for Indian flights consequent to the Balakot airstrike was more of a punitive action rather than a security related decision. This was a populist decision by the Pakistani ruling elite that was aimed at hurting India. On the face of it, this wasn’t a bad idea since it forced the Indian aviation industry to take alternate routes, which being much longer led to massive pecuniary losses. As per available estimates, from the time Pakistan closed its air space until July 2, while India’s national carrier Air India lost Rs 491 crores, the combined loss of private airlines was estimated at nearly Rs 56 crores.

But revenge is a double-edged sword and so, while Islamabad’s decision was financially bleeding India, it was simultaneously hemorrhaging Pakistan’s fragile economy, resulting in a whopping loss of about $100 million (Rs 690 crore) to it. At a time when Pakistan’s financial condition is so precarious that it’s literally at the mercy of foreign donor nations and the IMF, the decision to prolong closure of its airspace for nearly six months is rather surprising since it makes bad economic sense. But, if whispers emanating from the Block Q corridors of Pak Secretariat in Islamabad are to be believed, then it appears that while the Finance Ministry was keen to reopen Pakistan’s airspace much earlier since in this war of ‘economic attrition’, Islamabad was turning out to be the bigger loser. But the Pakistan Army, which oversees the country’s India policy, refused to relent.

It goes without saying that inept economic polices coupled with poor fiscal discipline of successive governments have brought Pakistan to the brink of an economic disaster and former army chief Gen Pervez Musharraf has openly blamed politicians by saying that while civil governments derailed Pakistan, it was the army that put it back on tracks. Pakistan Army’s current chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa too appears to share this viewpoint as is evident from his recent statement that while Pakistan was going through difficult economic situation due to fiscal mismanagement, the armed forces were playing their part in addressing this problem by voluntarily foregoing annual increase in defence budget. But the question is, when Pakistan’s army has ruled the country for three out of the seven decades of its existence and continues to manipulate government functioning even when not in power, how can one believe that the military is in no way blameworthy for Pakistan’s financial crisis?

The pro-army lobby points out that history bears testimony to the fact that Pakistan never faced any financial crisis when it was under military rule, which is a fact. But the flip side is that Pakistan was economically well-off under military rule only because its dictators ensured regular fund inflows through Faustian deals. During the cold war era, Gen Ayub Khan entered into the SEATO and CENTO defence agreements in order to get monetary and material aid from America, even though by doing so he turned Pakistan into a pawn of the US. By focussing only on matters military, the much-needed infrastructural development to create a self-sustaining economy was completely neglected.

The Paki Generals had got so used to massive aid grants that in 1979, Gen Zia ul Haq refused a $400 million (Rs 2,760 crore) US economic and military aid package, calling it “peanuts.” When the US launched its proxy war against the Soviets in Afghanistan, Pakistan Army became its main recruiter, trainer and supplier of mujahideen for which Islamabad was rewarded with massive doles in the guise of aid. But by allowing Pakistani soil to be used as a breeding ground for mujahideen, Zia ended up ushering terrorism into the country- a blunder that has economically ruined the country and the people of Pakistan continue to pay dearly for this humungous folly with their blood.

Gen Pervez Musharraf ended up selling the country’s sovereignty by allowing the US to conduct drone strikes within Pakistani territory in exchange for military and economic aid. He pushed Pakistan into the Kargil war that caused immense strain on the national exchequer without achieving any territorial or diplomatic gains. Also, during his rule clandestine delivery of nuclear technology to North Korea in exchange of an undisclosed sum of money took place and due to this irresponsible action, even today the international community looks down upon Pakistan as an undependable nuclear power.  

The ‘trigger’ for present economic crisis in Pakistan, is the army’s reluctance to act against terrorist groups that it considers to be its ‘strategic assets.’ Readers would recollect that in October 2016, Dawn newspaper created ripples in Pakistan by publishing a report written by Cyril Almeida that mentioned of how “…In a blunt, orchestrated and unprecedented warning, the civilian government has informed the military leadership of a growing international isolation of Pakistan and sought consensus on several key actions by the state.” Writing in Economic Times, Dharminder Kumar aptly summed up Almeida’s scoop by stating that “The report had revealed something that had rarely happened in Pakistan: the mouse of the government was roaring back at the lion of the military.”  He was right because it soon became clear that Pakistan’s powerful military wouldn’t take this affront lightly.

When Dawn stood by its journalist and refused to retract its report (that subsequently came to be known as the ‘Dawn Leak’), the army reacted like a spoilt brat with an inflated ego, it rejected findings of the inquiry ordered by the Prime Minister’s office, expressing its scorn for the legislature through DG ISPR Maj Gen Asif Ghafoor via a curt tweet that read, “Notification on Dawn Leak is incomplete and not in line with recommendations by the Inquiry Board. Notification is rejected.” But things didn’t end here — the then Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif was arm-twisted into sacking Information Minister Pervaiz Rasheed, later on Sharif lost elections to Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf which, (as everyone knows) was propped up by the military. Almeida became the only journalist in the Interior Ministry’s ‘exit control list’, an extraordinary action to prevent hardened criminals and high-profile economic offenders to evade the law by fleeing country.

No one can deny that the Trump administration gave Pakistan more than adequate time for clearing its stable of terrorists. But the government’s attempts to apprise Rawalpindi regarding the serious repercussions of duplicity in its war against terror, these apprehensions were rebuffed by the ‘high-on-ego’ military leadership. It was amusing to read the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) statement that Gen Bajwa “reiterated that Pakistan will not seek resumption of (US) aid but expects honourable recognition of our contributions, sacrifices and unwavering resolve in (the) fight against terrorism for peace and stability in the region.” An army General taking a national decision on financial matters maybe something unheard in modern democracies, but then Pakistan has always stood out as an exception in this regard.

So, how can the Pakistan Army disassociate itself from being equally responsible for the financial mess that Pakistan is in today?

Tailpiece: While announcing that Pakistan’s armed forces were playing their part to help in overcoming the nation’s financial crisis by voluntarily foregoing annual increase in defence budget, Gen Bajwa had also mentioned that “this isn’t the only step we are taking for improvement of the economy.” Though he didn’t reveal what other measures the Pakistan Army is contemplating, but if Gen Bajwa is genuinely as concerned about the country’s faltering economy as sounds, then he can really help Pakistan in a substantial way. All he needs to do is to hand over control of the more than 50 highly profitable commercial enterprises (valued at $20 billion by the Senate in 2016 that the Pakistani armed forces are presently running) to the civilian government.

But will Gen Bajwa walk his talk?

Lucknow to host 11th DefExpo from 5th to 8th February 2020

The 11th biennial edition of DefExpo India- 2020 is scheduled to be held for the first time in Uttar Pradesh capital Lucknow.  It offers an excellent opportunity for the Indian defence industry to showcase its capabilities and promote its export potential. Main theme of the DefExpo India- 2020 will be ‘India: The Emerging Defence Manufacturing Hub’ and focus will be on ‘Digital Transformation of Defence’.

The shows are conducted at an international level, which not only facilitates Business-to-Business (B2B) interaction with senior foreign delegations but also Government-to-Government (G2G) meetings and signing of Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs). The exhibition will also highlight emergence of UP as an attractive destination for investment in the defence sector and act as a platform for alliances and joint ventures in the defence industry.

The northern state has a strong defence industrial infrastructure. It has four units of Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd at Lucknow, Kanpur, Korwa and Naini (Prayagraj), nine ordnance factory units, including Kanpur, Korwa, Shahjahanpur, Firozabad and one unit of Bharat Electronics Limited at Ghaziabad. One of the two Defence Industrial Corridors (DICs) of India is also planned in Uttar Pradesh. The Corridor will encourage Defence Micro Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), including our Indian defence industry and promote Defence Public Sector Undertakings (DPSUs). The other DIC is proposed in Tamil Nadu.

The DefExpo will provide an opportunity to the major foreign Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) to collaborate with the Indian defence industry and help promote ‘Make in India’ initiative of Hon’ble Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi. It will be a unique platform for Defence industry OEMs, exhibitors and private industry to display their latest innovations and capabilities.

Ministerial level delegations from the foreign countries and visitors from all over the country as well as abroad are expected to visit DefExpo and witness India’s emergence as a major manufacturing hub providing attractive opportunities for co-development and co-production of defence equipment and systems not only for our defence forces but also for export to the world.

Seema Kohli’s solo show in Belgium explores themes of femininity, beauty, and spirituality

India’s celebrated artist Seema Kohli has recently taken her ‘Celestial Revelations’ to Belgium. The solo exhibition is currently on view at the Museum of Sacred Arts (MOSA), Durbuy. A multidisciplinary artist, Seema explores the myriad themes of femininity, beauty, and spirituality through her diverse set of works. The opening ceremony of the exhibition was marked by graceful performances of Harisaprasad Chaurasiya, flute maestro, and Gaura Nataraja, a brilliantly talented bharatnatyam dancer from Latvia.

 A celebration of female form and her energy, explored and captured in a contemplative mode, is well reflected in this vast and varied collection of about two hundred works of art in the exhibition. The show is curated by Sushma Bahl and founder of MOSA Martin Gurvich. The substantial solo show incorporates some new art in varied media created by her especially for MOSA. This includes Parvati within a composition of Ardhanarishwar as a manifestation of Shakti. Also ‘Saptmatrika’, ‘Astlakshmi’, ‘Navdurga’, ‘Dasmahavidya’, and ‘Chausath Yogini’, all of them revered women divinities, as part of the eclectic repertoire that celebrates female form and energy. “The body of works showcased at the museum encompasses my complete practice through various mediums and methods, ranging from sculpture in fibreglass & bronze, video, performance, paperworks, to, of course, paintings,” Kohli shared.

The focus for much of Seema Kohli’s artistic practice has been Hiranyagarbha  – the ancient notion of universe floating in waters amidst dark empty and non-existence realm, as the ‘golden womb’ – the all pervasive source of life. Inspired by philosophies and myths, the work retains its umbilical cord with divine dimensions as the central axis. The aesthetics of her art engage with beauty, vitality and sensuality within the concept of creation, decay and renewal in the cycle of life.  Another fascinating feature of her work is encompassing the sacred and the profane in a dynamic interactive mode, and not as opposing poles, as the creatives seek to search for the divine within. The remarkable exhibition embodies the ancient, mediaeval, modern, contemporary, urban and folk, as the different streams merge and cohabit in the soulful creations.

According to arts advisor and curator Sushma K. Bahl, “A fine blend of natural elements, anthromorphic forms and divine figures, often winged and flying, appear in Seema Kohli’s seminal artworks. There are mermaids and nymphs, women and men, gods and goddesses, birds and animals, trees and flowers, lotus and fish, the sun and the moon, mandala and other metaphors, along with meandering rivers and mighty mountains featured in the celestial revelations exposition. Various hybrid forms, part human part animal, encompassing the origin and proliferation of life add to the enticing appeal of the work.”  

“The multihued visuals incorporate swarming canvases, dense drawings, fine etchings, meticulously sculpted forms, enchanting installations, performative photographs and cinematic videos. The diligently drawn celestial embodiments, reveal and conceal as the creatives on display, in diverse mediums delve into the realm of Hiranyagarbha. Within the broad premise of Hiranyagarbha together with feminine energy, her visuals also explore themes of decay and transformation. In a dialogue of matter and memory, Kaal (time) and Maya (illusion), continuity and temporality, vulnerability and awareness, personal and public, the concept of Shakti, the divine feminine and cosmic energy, replays in diverse manifestations. A sense of harmony across faiths and coming together of yin and yang in tandem, evokes beauty and subliminally in her art,” she added. 

The range of materials and methods in Seema Kohli’s art-scape include prints, drawings on paper in pen and charcoal, paintings in watercolours and mixed media on canvas. Her sculptures and installations including cows and other forms, appear in bronze, fibre, steel and wood. She also works in photography, serigraphy and etchings besides live and performance videos. The exhibition will be on display at the Museum of Sacred Art (MOSA), Belgium till 15 December 2019.

Veteran Congress leader Sheila Dikshit passes away at 81

Popular Congress leader and former Delhi CM Sheila Dikshit passed away this afternoon. She was 81. Shiela Dikshit had been ill for a long time and was admitted at around 10.30 am today. She died at 3.30 pm at a city hospital.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has expressed his condolences on the death of Shiela Dikshit. In a tweet he said he is deeply saddened by the news. “Deeply saddened by the demise of Sheila Dikshit Ji. Blessed with a warm and affable personality, she made a noteworthy contribution to Delhi’s development. Condolences to her family and supporters. Om Shanti,” PM Modi said in a tweet.

Dikshit was the senior-most Congress leader in its Delhi unit. She served as Delhi’s chief minister for 15 years from 1998 to 2013. Dikshit led Congress party to three consecutive electoral victories in Delhi. In the December 2013 elections to the Delhi Legislative Assembly, Dikshit was defeated in New Delhi constituency by Aam Aadmi Party leader Arvind Kejriwal, who replaced her as Delhi’s chief minister. Subsequently, she was sworn in as Governor of Kerala on 11 March 2014. However, she resigned on 25 August 2014. She had been declared as Chief Ministerial candidate for the Indian National Congress in the 2017 Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly election; however she later withdrew. She was appointed as president of Delhi Pradesh Congress Committee on January 10, 2019

Dikshit was also very close to UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi. In a tweet, the Congress said it regrets the death of Sheila Dikshit. The party said as chief minister, she transformed the face of Delhi in her 15-year tenure.”We regret to hear of the passing of Smt Sheila Dikshit. Lifelong congresswoman and as three time CM of Delhi she transformed the face of Delhi. Our condolences to her family and friends. Hope they find strength in this time of grief,” the Congress said.

UN Human Rights Commissioner has no knowledge about Kashmir

The fatuous approach of the United Nations towards understanding the dynamics of “Kashmir issue” came to the fore once more in the second report presented by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on Human Rights situation in Kashmir and Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (POK). The report covers the period from May 2018 to April 2019.

On 14 June 2018, OHCHR had released the first report on the human rights situation in what it termed as the Indian-Administered Kashmir and Pakistan-Administered Kashmir. That report spoke of allegations of serious human rights violations. A notable parameter was excessive use of force by Indian security forces that led to numerous civilian casualties, arbitrary detention etc. etc…

The OHCHR had the good grace to admit that, “…the quantity and quality of information available on Indian-Administered Kashmir contrasts significantly to Pakistan-Administered Kashmir. Despite significant challenges, NGOs, human rights defenders and journalists are able to operate in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir, generating documentation on the ongoing human rights violations there. Restrictions on the freedoms of expression, opinion, peaceful assembly and association in Azad Jammu and Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan have limited the ability of observers, including OHCHR, to assess the human rights situation there.” In this single paragraph the report has given two different names to the region which indicates a complete lack of functional clarity. Despite this indictment Pakistan had welcomed the report while India had dismissed it as biased and frivolous.

What came as a big surprise was that the OHCHR had based its conclusions on the inputs given by an organisation going by the name of Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS) which, quite obviously, is aligned to Kashmir’s separatist movement being sponsored by Pakistan. It failed to leverage the complete freedom available in the state to collect some viable data and reach to empirical decisions.

It spoke of the use of pellet guns as an example of “excessive use of force” and failed to address the huge law and order problem that large, foreign motivated mobs create with the stone-pelting and the danger that is posed by them to the law enforcing apparatus of the state.

It spoke of the Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir) Special Powers Act 1990 (AFSPA) being a key obstacle to accountability since, “…In nearly three decades that the law has been in force in Jammu and Kashmir, there has not been a single prosecution of armed forces personnel granted by the central government.” This is a blatant lie. All cases pertaining to violation of law in Jammu and Kashmir have been investigated by the army. The Indian Army has, on several occasions, used the strict provisions of the Army Act to punish such soldiers who have committed criminal offenses. General Court Martial’s (GCM) have been convened and defaulters charge sheeted. The judicial procedure has been completed in a time period much less than what would be taken in a civil court. Justice has been fast and punishment exemplary.

The OHCHR has failed to understand that AFSPA does not give the soldier immunity from law, rather it merely places the soldier under a different set of laws that are equally stringent, if not more, than the Criminal Procedure Code. It is an enabling legislation that facilitates the soldier to function in an extraordinary situation without worrying about his own exploitation through legal means.

The OHCHR has further failed to understand that the Indian Army and other security forces operating in the state have an onerous responsibility to thwart all evil designs of the enemy and meet the aspirations of peace and tranquility that the common man harbours. While fighting foreign ingress in Jammu and Kashmir the soldier is only living up to his oath of securing the sovereignty and integrity of his nation and he can, by no means, be faulted for doing so.

The strong protest that India has lodged with UN Rights Office by asserting that the second report is a continuation of the earlier “false and motivated” narrative that ignores the core issue of cross-border terrorism emanating from Pakistan is the most befitting response to the meaningless discourse that the OHCHR seems to be pursuing of late.

One cannot help agree to a strong statement made by India’s Ministry of External Affairs Spokesperson Raveesh Kumar, “A situation created by years of cross-border terrorist attacks emanating from Pakistan has been ‘analysed’ without any reference to its causality. The update seems to be a contrived effort to create an artificial parity between the world’s largest and the most vibrant democracy and a country that openly practices state-sponsored terrorism.”

It must never be forgotten that the Indian Army while fighting against foreign sponsored insurgency and terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir has taken enormous risks of life and limb and has made tremendous sacrifices in order to protect the common man. The prime motivation for this has come from the love and respect that the common man of the region has bestowed on the soldier over all these years. The bond between the “Jawan and the Awaam” (soldier and the people) of Jammu and Kashmir has always remained strong and unique.

Till such time that Pakistan does not stop the export of terror from its soil the Indian Army has no option but to keep the pressure on and ensure that the threshold of violence is not allowed to escalate. Under these circumstances, there is little leverage to revoke AFSPA.

The OHCHR would be well advised to impose upon Pakistan to desist from its evil agenda of engineering cross border terrorism on to the territories of Kashmir and to give back to India the occupied territories of the state. Such an act would also assist Pakistan to shed the baggage of the partition and grow as a truly independent and honourable nation.

Dharmendra Pradhan urges use of steel pipes for water distribution

Dharmendra Pradhan, who holds the Ministries of Steel, Petroleum & Natural Gas has made a strong case for the use of steel pipes for water supply in the country. Pradhan in his letter to Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, Minister of Jal Shakti has pitched for a convergence between his steel ministry and the jal shakti ministry so that steel water pipes can be laid across India in order to ensure Har Ghar Jal (water connection to each home) by 2024.

“Steel can play an important role in this mission. Steel’s inert and corrosion resistant nature makes it an ideal material for transportation of potable and industrial water in all stages. Steel pipes also reduce leakage by minimizing the number of joints and they also require low maintenance,” Minister of Steel, Dharmendra Pradhan wrote in his letter to Jal Shakti Minister Gajendra Shekhawat.

Several industry estimates suggest that around 50% piped water is lost due to leakage in rickety iron pipes. Even in the country’s capital city Delhi, water lost in leakage during transmission is estimated at around 45%. All of this can stop if steel pipes are used instead of the iron pipes hitherto used for water distribution. Steel pipes also have a longer life span when compared with iron pipes thus reducing the replacement cost.

Minister of Steel Dharmendra Pradhan’s Letter to Jal Shakti Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat offering all cooperation to lay steel pipes for water distribution.

Minister of Steel Dharmendra Pradhan’s Letter to Jal Shakti Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat offering all cooperation to lay steel pipes for water distribution.

Outlining Prime Minister’s vision, Dharmendra Pradhan writes that Hon’ble Prime Minister Narendra Modi has given a call for water conservation and has appealed to civil society to come together for ‘Jan Shakti se Jal Shakti’ campaign.

Pradhan, further mentions that Ministry of Steel is all geared up to provide support to the noble mission of “Har Ghar Jal” (water to every home) and has called for convergence and synergy between the Ministry of Steel and Ministry of Jal Shakti to ensure this mission is achieved within the slated time.

Functional routes under UDAN rises to 186

New 12 routes under the Regional Connectivity Scheme (or UdeDesh ka AamNaagrik /UDAN in Hindi) have recently become functional.  This takes the total operational routes under UDAN to 186 (including 8 Tourism RCS routes) of the total 706 sanctioned Routes. Also, Durgapur airport is the 40th airport to become functional under the scheme.

The 12 routes with daily flight operations that commenced are:

Kolkata(WB)- Allahabad(UP)

Allahabad(UP)- Kolkata(WB)         

Allahabad(UP)-Raipur(CG)

Raipur(CG)-Allahabad(UP)

Gwalior(MP)- Bangalore(KA)

Bangalore(KA)-Gwalior(MP)

Kolkata(WB) -Gwalior(MP)

Gwalior(MP)- Kolkata(WB)           

Mumbai (MH) – Belgaum(KA)

Belgaum(KA)-Mumbai (MH)

 Mumbai (MH)- Durgapur(WB)

 Durgapur(WB)-Mumbai (MH)

The Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA) had launched Regional Connectivity Scheme (RCS) – UdeDesh ka AamNagrik (UDAN) on Oct 21, 2016 to stimulate regional air connectivity and making air travel affordable to the masses.  Since then 3 Round of biddings have been completed. The first RCS-UDAN flight was launched by the Prime Minister on 27th April, 2017 at Shimla. 106 RCS Airports / Water aerodromes (76 Unserved, 20 Underserved & 10 Waterdromes) and 31 heliports have been identified for commencement of RCS flight connecting small cities in India.  706 RCS routes including 46 Tourism RCS routes have been awarded to 19 selected Airline operators under UDAN. RCS flights commenced from 40 RCS (23 Unserved & 17 Underserved) Airports and Durgapur is the latest airport on the map of  RCS UDAN .

Netflix to hit Amazon Prime and Hotstar with cheaper subscription plans in India

Online content consumption in India has seen massive growth with data plans becoming more affordable. Video streaming company Netflix has now decided to roll out a cheaper mobile-only plan in India as it looks to woo viewers amid growing competition from Amazon Prime Videos and other local players.

After several months of testing, the company has decided to roll out a lower-priced mobile-screen plan in India to complement existing plans, Netflix said in a statement. “We believe this plan, which will launch in Q3, will be an effective way to introduce a larger number of people in India to Netflix and to further expand our business in a market where Pay TV average revenue per user (ARPU) is low (below USD 5),” it added. Netflix had been testing a Rs 250 monthly subscription for mobile devices in India. Its current plans are available for Rs 500 onwards.

Netflix Chief Product Officer Greg Peters said the company sees an opportunity to broaden access to its service in India. Peters said the company is also working on partnerships in the Indian market. “We are also working on the partnerships we have in the market because we think there are specific opportunities to improve accessibility via those partnerships as well,” he said.

Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos referred growth in India as a “marathon”. “We are in it for the long haul and we are seeing nice steady progress,” he said, adding that the company is also scaling up its library for the Indian market.

Netflix said its paid membership grew by 2.7 million in the second quarter, less than the 5.5 million in the year-ago period and its own forecast of 5 million for the June 2019 quarter. In the third quarter, Netflix said it expects to grow by 7 million paid memberships (0.8 million in the US and 6.2 million internationally) compared to an addition of 6.1 million subscribers in the year-ago period.

The company has over 148 million paid memberships in over 190 countries.

More than 1000 Indians languishing behind bars in Nepal; 3rd highest after Saudi and UAE

As many as 8,189 Indian prisoners, including undertrials, are lodged in various jails around the world, the External Affairs Ministry said on Thursday. While Saudi Arabia has the highest 1811 Indian prisoners, followed by the UAE with 1,392 and Nepal 1,160 jail inmates, Minister of State for External Affairs V Muraleedharan said in a written reply to a question in the Rajya Sabha. “As per the information available with the Ministry, the number of Indian prisoners in foreign jails as of May 31 is 8,189 which also includes undertrials,” he said.

“However, due to strong privacy laws prevailing in many countries, the local authorities do not share information on prisoners unless the person concerned consents to the disclosure of such information,” he said. Muraleedharan said even the countries which share data do not generally provide detailed information about the foreigners imprisoned.

The Union Minister said the government through its missions and posts abroad also takes up and pursues grant of amnesty and commutation of sentences of Indian prisoners in foreign countries.

“From 2016 till present, in the countries in the Gulf region a total of 3,087 Indian nationals have received amnesty or commutation of their sentences,” he said.