Showing posts with label New Delhi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Delhi. Show all posts

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Our Indian Feudal Service - By Shekhar Gupta - The Indian Express, New Delhi, India.

Some questions in public arena:
1.Was Sangeetha a professional maid, or accepted a position with Devyani, with intent to somehow immigrate to US? Her father being in US Consulate in New Delhi, could be fully aware if not helpful in forming an apparent illegal modus operandi to circumvent US immigrant laws. Was there some involvement of New Delhi US consular offices, in aiding and abetting Sangeetha with clear intent to save her and save her entire family by facilitating the rest of the families prompt departure to the US.The case against Devyani could have been an afterthought, when Devyani would have objected to Sangeetha's intent to leave her job with her and try to seek her fortune in US. It is a typical case, how majority of Indian immigrants in Gulf employed by one employer, try illegally to change their employment and immigrant status, by any means available and often fail. In Sangeetha's case, her US lawyer has probably come forward with a clearly ingenious scheme to keep her in US, by making her a victim of employer abuse.

2. Devyani and her consular colleagues and adviser seem to have gone extra vengeful, in first revoking her Indian passport to send her back to India, besides using Indian Judicial process to punish Sangeetha for leaving her job with the 'original sponsor' --- as Gulf people will say. The denial of chances for intending immigrants to find alternate employment or career, may be not legal or contractual, but still very cruel. Why Indian consular authorities have resorted to such heavy handed methods. Is there some personal tiff involved.
3. Why the unusual and un-proportional media and political outrage was unleashed without any need to run the whole affair through usual diplomatic deliberations. Was there any local issues were to be covered up through this hullabaloo?
GM
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http://www.indianexpress.com/news/national-interest-of-course-they-have-a-right-to-fleece-a-maid-break-the-law-and-claim-immunity/1210149/0

The Indian Express

Our Indian Feudal Service

Shekhar Gupta : Sat Dec 21 2013, 10:35 hrs
Of course, they have a right to fleece a maid, break the law — and claim immunity
Indian diplomacy has a well-deserved reputation for conservative understatedness. You've rarely seen a professional Indian diplomat grandstanding or headline-hunting. Not even Mani Shankar Aiyar, when he enjoyed diplomatic immunity. Probably no one after Krishna Menon's days of acid filibustery more than half a century ago. Not for any "proper" Indian diplomat the arrogant, stupid swagger of the occasional Pakistani — if anybody can recall an Indian insult to rival the unspeakable Munir Akram (later Pakistan representative to the UN) dismissing Salman Khurshid as a rented Muslim, and India as the sick man of Asia, please do let me know and I will stand corrected. To my recollection, the funniest Indian diplomatic comment came from K. Natwar Singh. When asked if he was a hawk or a dove, he said, "I am running foreign policy, not a bird sanctuary." For someone who represented Bharatpur in the Lok Sabha, that was really smart. And the most cutting in recent memory was also possibly the most subtle. As India and Pakistan seemed to be drawing close to war in 2001-02 following the attack on Parliament, Pakistan responded by test-firing several "new" missiles, all named after medieval invaders of India: Abdali, Ghazni, Ghori, etc. Asked for comment at her daily press briefing, Nirupama Rao, then MEA spokesperson, simply said, "We are not impressed". Just four brilliant, inoffensive words were enough to infuriate Pervez Musharraf.

What is to explain such a radical shift in the style and manner of such a classy, sophisticated and patient foreign service bureaucracy? Words like barbaric, despicable, inhuman, perfidy, betrayal, withdraw-all-charges-and-apologise and so on do not belong to the usual diplomatic vocabulary. These are the last resort of editorial writers and TV anchors always short of ideas or a clever turn of phrase. The same foreign service has handled three relatively recent incidents that amount to enormous perfidies — the torture and killing of Captain Saurabh Kalia and his patrol of five in Kargil (June, 1999), the beheading of an Indian soldier and disfiguring of the other on the LoC (January, 2013) and, in between, the greatest and continuing betrayal of all, the American double games over David Coleman Headley — with such mature equanimity.

It is not even as if Indian diplomats haven't been put through harassment and worse in the past. Ravindra Mhatre, our assistant high commissioner in Birmingham, was kidnapped and killed by the JKLF to free Maqbool Butt and much later, following the destruction of Babri Masjid, the residence of our consul-general in Karachi, Rajiv Dogra, was ransacked. But never did our hallowed foreign service reach for the holster as they have done now. Nothing, not the CIA, PLA or ISI has roused this country to come together against a common enemy as this. It took just one perfidious, conspiring maid to stand up and ask for her rights.

This paper hasn't been spared either for daring to advise against going overboard, and for pointing out the inconvenient fact that there is another person, a poor maid, also involved and probably (and I use this line with trepidation as it's been in bad odour lately) there are two versions of this story. Or put it another way. If you wanted to see an entirely new manifestation of journalism of courage, you should have been an Indian Express editorial writer walking through the lawns of Delhi's Hyderabad House on Thursday, peopled by a bevy of MEA officers at the minister's annual year-end lunch for the media. Having survived many sniper alleys in my career, my instincts recognise one almost immediately.
The Devyani Khobragade, or rather the Devyani-Sangeeta (remember, the maid?), case is complex as it involves three tricky factors: class, caste and caste. Wait a few moments for me to explain why I use "caste" twice. Class, because in a row between master and servant, class will always triumph and so Khobragade must be right. Caste, first because Khobragade is from a Dalit family and so the insult is compounded. And caste for the second time because, in the caste hierarchy of sarkar-i-hind, the highest caste of all, the Brahmins of Brahminism, is the Indian Foreign Service. If that upstart Preet Bharara dares to read his rotten Manhattan law to an Indian diplomat, he will be made to pay. Uski naani yaad dila denge. Or maybe even get some uncle of his in Jalandhar or wherever charged with atrocities under the SC/ST act and show him how effectively India's legal reform works. If only when it chooses to. Truth to tell, instead of cursing Bharara, we should try and import him as our first lokpal.

It is early for us to pronounce on the merits of the case yet, except that you cannot deny that there is a case, there are two sides, two versions and two victims. The maid, prima facie, is a victim of awful, callous exploitation, and the diplomat of being subjected to the horrible indignities of America's arrest procedures. We, by the way, are a nation of other extremes. We can't handcuff anybody, not even Ajmal Kasab, so you see these curious pictures of dreaded terrorists and policemen walking to courts hand-in-hand as if in some Jai-and-Veeru bonding. But of course, we make up by routinely torturing, raping and murdering in custody.

It will not be out of place to quote here a comment that New York Times columnist Roger Cohen made to me on a visit to Delhi last week. "Please explain your country to me. You have a Scandinavian rape law and the Russian homosexuality law." But then all our awful laws, sick thana culture, abusive policemen and creative FIR writers are not for PLUs. Definitely not for those on the top of the PLU pyramid. All these are for Sangeeta Richard and her type. Stupid, thieving, lying, free-booting maid types. India's original, and sadly most enduring, idea of our below-stairs class. At least that much that clown Bharara should have known! What happened to his Indian DNA? That is what we are so angry about. Just because they got away with arresting Dominique Strauss-Kahn moments before take-off, in spite of his high diplomatic status, they thought they could touch an Indian. We aren't the bloody French.

Of course, as an Indian, I would also wish that Khobragade is brought back to India, but made to face charges here of allegedly cheating her maid and bringing disrepute to her country by lying on the maid's visa form, if she did that. Chances are, in today's primetime-fuelled hyper-patriotism, she will be hailed as some kind of Jhansi ki Rani. We all know the oft-repeated truism that diplomats are sent abroad to lie for their countries. But are they also paid to lie to their maids, the visa authorities, and then claim immunity? Please tell me another. And please think twice before you can accuse an honest taxpayer like me, armed with no immunity other than what Article 19 of the Constitution gives 120 crore Indians, of carrying a chip on the shoulder about the IFS ('It's a chip', Rajiv Sikri, IE, December 19) for raising these simple points. Sangeeta Richard is Indian too, and poor or rich, must have the same rights as Khobragade.

This case has stumped the political establishment as well. The UPA displays so much fake anger, you wonder when will it rescind the nuclear deal. Khurshid said he won't come to Parliament until Her Excellency the Acting Consul General's honour is restored. Did he think of making some similar sacrifice to restore the dignity of 50,000 Muslims in the camps of Muzaffarnagar, 150 km away? Particularly when he represents Farrukhabad, not so far from there. As for our left-liberal bleeding hearts, they still can't figure out whether to fight for a poor member of The Great Unwashed or take on The Great Satan. And, since I am being so reckless, let me also ask another trick question. Where did your Indian pride and self-respect go when you silently congratulated the same Americans for denying a visa to Narendra Modi? Whatever your political differences, he is a leader elected to a high political office in India. If he can visit 7 Race Course Road or Vigyan Bhawan, he cannot be barred from visiting Washington. And if he is, we should at least make the pretence of protest. So let's not talk again about national pride and diplomatic propriety. Let's also not kid ourselves into believing that employing house maids is some kind of universal human right.

In a conversation the other night with a greatly respected former Indian civil servant, I learnt the history of the barricades in front of the US embassy in Delhi. A security review was carried out after the US embassy in Nairobi was bombed on August 7, 1998. The Delhi mission had no protection from such an attack, so a joint India-US team suggested putting up "Jersey" barriers, the heavy but movable concrete blocks so called because they were first used on the New Jersey turnpike. The MEA objected because it feared that every embassy would demand this. But L.K. Advani was advised by his key aides to overrule it, and he wisely did. Sushilkumar Shinde should have checked the files before getting these removed. And our churlish incompetence is only matched by America's stupidity. Why didn't they simply retaliate by shutting down the visa section until security was restored? The tone of primetime discussions would have changed overnight. How would you keep all those mummyjis, daddyjis and auntyjis away from their betajis in Christmas season?

sg@expressindia.com


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Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Delhi Wakf Landgrab builds worry in Sonia By Rohini Singh, The Economic Times, New Delhi, INDIA

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/eye-on-2014-elections-congress-to-resolve-incidents-of-encroachment-of-delhi-wakf-property/articleshow/22080997.cms

The Economic Times

Eye on 2014 elections, Congress to resolve incidents of encroachment of Delhi Wakf property

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PRINT HEADLINE: Delhi Wakf Landgrab builds worry in Sonia
By Rohini Singh, ET Bureau | 27 Aug, 2013, 10.25AM IST

48 comments

At the heart of the controversy are two plots of land, which a number of prominent Muslim clerics alleged have been encroached upon by the land mafia. (Pic by AFP)

At the heart of the controversy are two plots of land, which a number of prominent Muslim clerics alleged have been encroached upon by the land mafia. (Pic by AFP)-----


NEW DELHI: Two instances of alleged encroachment on Wakf property in the national capital, both seemingly anodyne, have prompted a damage-control effort by the top Congress leadership, including party president Sonia Gandhi and her influential political secretary Ahmad Patel. The episode illustrates the ruling party's concern over the possible fallout of the alleged landgrab on the 2014 elections.

At the heart of the controversy are two plots of land, which a number of prominent Muslim clerics alleged have been encroached upon by the land mafia. One is an eight-acre plot in the tony Jor Bagh area, which also happens to be the constituency of Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit. The second is a two-acre plot in Mehrauli in South Delhi. The approximate value of both the land parcels is over Rs 3,000 crore.

Delhi Wakf Board has Filed Complaint

But the reason for the protests by community leaders is the religious significance of the two plots. The Jor Bagh land has the oldest "Karbala" in the country - a religious shrine for the Shia community, and the Mehrauli plot is supposed to house the 500-year-old Ghausia mosque - a shrine for the Sunnis.

The Delhi Wakf Board, a government body, filed a complaint in April this year, asking the police to investigate and register a case of cheating, fraud and misappropriation against persons involved in the alleged landgrabbing in Mehrauli. An FIR on the matter was registered two-and-a-half months later, on June 23.

The complaint - the result of a representation the body received from those agitating against the alleged landgrab - named two officials in the office of the then lieutenant-governor of Delhi, Tejinder Khanna, and another official in the office of Urban Development Minister Kamal Nath. The FIR filed in June does not name the officials. ET is not naming the officials pending the outcome of the inquiry by the Delhi Police.

Delhi Police Commissioner BS Bassi confirmed that a FIR has been registered, but declined to share the status of the investigation. MA Usmani, the official who sent the complaint on behalf of the Delhi Wakf Board, confirmed that the board approached the police on the instructions of its then chairman. While the episode has so far attracted little national attention, the Congress leadership is clearly taking it seriously.



Eye on 2014 elections, Congress to resolve incidents of encroachment of Delhi Wakf property

Congress President Sonia Gandhi has personally intervened in the matter and has had two meetings to resolve the issue. On her directive, a committee was set up comprising Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit and Minority Affairs Minister Rahman Khan along with representatives of the Muslim community. But Maulana Kalbe Jawad, a Lucknow-based Shia leader, said the committee hasn't met.

The community leaders said they have held more than 20 meetings with Ahmad Patel on the matter. Patel had also organised two meetings on the issue with Pulok Chatterjee, the principal secretary to the prime minister. However, the clerics said Chatterjee was also unable to resolve the problem. Patel declined comment on the issue.

Muslim clerics said this isn't the only instance of alleged misappropriation of Wakf land, but with elections round the corner, the two instances will become major a major poll issue.


On Sunday, a day-long protest meeting was held by community leaders in Raebareli, the constituency of Sonia Gandhi. On Tuesday, a massive road show to showcase Congress' alleged "double speak" would start from Lucknow and travel to Raebareli and Amethi, the latter being the constituency of Rahul Gandhi, the Congress vice-president.

"Four months ago, Sonia Gandhi met us and assured that the issue will be resolved in four-to-five days. We have had several meetings with her political secretary Ahmad Patel, but have only got assurances. These are very sacred shrines, and not only has Congress shown scant regard for our sentiments, it has also insulted our clerics who were protesting, and registered false cases against them.

Congress representatives such as Rahman Khan have been beseeching us again to not protest and resolve the issue through dialogue, but that is what we have been doing over the past year-and-a-half.

The time for dialogue is over and we will now be launching massive protests, which will start from the heart of Congress in Uttar Pradesh - Amethi and Raebareli - and move to the rest of UP and Delhi," said Maulana Jawad. Other influential religious leaders, including Maulana Wali Rahmani, a Bihar-based cleric, and Maulana Arshad Madni from Deoband have also raised the issue with the Congress leadership.

Congress General Secretary Digvijaya Singh had also intervened in the matter on behalf of Rahul Gandhi, and given a written assurance that the matter would be resolved at the time of elections in Uttar Pradesh in early 2012. But Maulana Jawad said the promise was made only to thwart protests by Muslims against Congress during the state elections.

Rahul Gandhi's intervention, however, had resulted in an FIR being filed in the Jor Bagh land matter February last year. Dikshit told ET that the matter is "complicated" and was being examined by the minority commission.

V Narayanswamy, minister of state in the Prime Minister's Office, who also looks after the department of personnel - the administrative ministry for Central Bureau of Investigation - told ET that he had forwarded the complaints against government officials allegedly hand-in-glove with the land mafia for "appropriate action".










Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Rajnath Singh gag order on PM issue - TNN - The Times of India, New Delhi, India | Comment by Ghulam Muhammed

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/opinions/18341483.cms

My comments on Times of India story:

Rajnath Singh gag order on PM issue



Ghulam Muhammed (Mumbai)
If past has any relevance, BJP/RSS being caste-ist Brahmin outfits, there is hardly any chance for a non-Brahmin like Modi to become Prime Minister of India. At the most, he may follow L. K. Advani, and may be a candidate as Deputy Prime Minister in any future BJP led coalition government. People will not forget how non-Brahmins like Gandhi and Patel had to yield to a Brahmin Nehru, even in secular Congress. Besides, for BJP to make any meaningful success in garnering numbers, it has to concentrate on Uttar Pradesh. Naturally a PM candidate from UP, on the face of it, will attract more voters and therefore more MPs from Uttar Pradesh to make bulk of the tally. These are some of the hard facts that media should not paper over to build up false waves in the minds of general public.

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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Rajnath-Singh-gag-order-on-PM-issue/articleshow/18341483.cms

The Times of India

Rajnath Singh gag order on PM issue

TNN | Feb 5, 2013, 01.21 AM IST

Rajnath Singh gag order on PM issue
Singh's comments came in the wake of unease among sections within the party as well as ally JD(U) over the growing “Modi-for-PM” clamour.

NEW DELHI: BJP chief Rajnath Singh on Monday sought to put a lid on statements favouring Narendra Modi's projection as the party's choice for PM, only to see his "final appeal" being defied by two senior party leaders, C P Thakur and Shatrughan Sinha, within hours.

"I want to humbly appeal to BJP workers and leaders that there should be no statement from them on who will be the candidate for the prime minister's post. As I have said earlier, the BJP convention is that any decision on the chief ministerial or prime ministerial candidate is taken by the central parliamentary board," he told reporters.

Singh's comments came in the wake of unease among sections within the party as well as ally JD(U) over the growing "Modi-for-PM" clamour.

They were immediately welcomed by JD(U) chief and NDA convener Sharad Yadav who frowned upon the "mad rush" among NDA leaders to speak on the issue of the PM candidate. "I have never seen such a mad rush for prime ministership in the last six decades," Yadav complained.

JD(U), keen to keep its Muslim votes intact, is against Modi being made the NDA's prime ministerial candidate.

There were also indications that Modi's re-induction in the party's central parliamentary board may have to wait until at least the middle of March when the party will be able to hold the meeting of its national council, clubbing it with the session of the national executive.

Under the party constitution, election of the party chief and composition of parliamentary board has to be ratified by the national council. Although Rajnath Singh had initially planned to convene the national council earlier in Bhopal, logistical constraints forced him to put off the plan.

Modi, who was removed from the parliamentary board in 2007 by Singh in his first tenure as president, a call that he has publicly regretted, is set to retake his seat in the key body. His imminent re-induction, if along with his Madhya Pradesh counterpart, Shivraj Singh Chouhan, has been billed by many as the first step towards his appointment as the chairman of the party's campaign committee and, possibly, a prime ministerial candidate.

A strong, and growing, section in the party has, in any case, come out in the open for Modi's projection as the party's choice for PM. This was clear again on Monday when Thakur, while insisting that the party chief had issued no gag order, strongly batted for the Gujarat CM. "BJP will gain (by declaring Modi's name). By declaring him the candidate, BJP will certainly gain because of many factors... There is a feeling among people that he should be the candidate," he said.

In Patna, Shatrughan Sinha backed Yashwant Sinha who had earlier pitched for Modi as BJP's PM candidate. "Yashwant Sinhaji is a senior and an experienced leader. He never talks light. He speaks only after going deeply into an issue, I stand with him on what he has said," Sinha told reporters

Monday, February 4, 2013

Muslim groups want Censor Board reconfigured, say it is political - By Seema Chisti - The Indian Express, New Delhi, India

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/muslim-groups-want-censor-board-reconfigured-say-it-is-political/1068826/0

The Indian Express

Muslim groups want Censor Board reconfigured, say it is political

Seema Chishti : New Delhi, Mon Feb 04 2013, 00:18
Set up barely two years ago, "not as formally as the Milli Council or the Mushawarat" but as a loose body of 24 Muslim organisations, the Federation of Islamic Movements and Political Parties has been in the news for its objections to Kamal Haasan's Vishwaroopam.
One of its prominent members, Dr M H Jawahirullah, who is an MLA from Ramanathpuram and president of the Tamil Nadu Muslim Munnetra Kazhagam, objects to the organisation being referred to as a "fringe"one. "This federation consists of us, the Welfare Party, Jamiat Ulema e Hind, Tamil Literary Association, Jamat e Islami, Popular Front of India, SDPI and other groups. We are not fringe, we are mainstream," he asserts.
On protests against Vishwaroopam, he says, "We did not take to the streets or create a chaos. We were shocked at the Censor Board clearing such a film; so we approached the state government."
There is a talk of politics beyond cinema in this case as both the DMK and the AIADMK have strong connections with the cinema world. "My party contested the 2011 state elections in alliance with the AIADMK, but there are several other parties, which were in the opposite camp, so the group is a mixed bag. There is no question of politics. We only want proper representation of Muslims in these delicate and prejudiced times, " he says.
The federation wants the Censor Board to be reconfigured and "not be a political body". "It should be independent. They said a Muslim cleared it on the Board. I spoke to him. He is Hasan Mohammed Jinnah (DMK candidate in the polls). We want a sensitive Censor Board and not one with political nominees. There are parameters regarding how animals are to be treated while shooting, how they are to be depicted. Smoking and drinking are not shown. So how can things be shown that misrepresent a faith? If the Censor Board has cleared this, it is a wrong decision," Jawahirullah says.
Says S N Sikkandar, another member and state head of the Welfare Party, "Actor Vijay's movie, Thuppakki, showed Muslims in a poor light. Three of our members explained to him what was wrong. He made necessary changes and the film was re-released."
Jawahirullah adds, "We are not opposed to cinema. We value good cinema and want authentic portrayals. We are Tamilians. We are conscious of the huge influence films have on our state's imagination. Two script writers and three actors have become chief ministers here."
The federation essentially has two points against Vishwaroopam. The first showing "the Quran, namaz and other things sacred as essential preludes to all terror acts". The second is the declaration at the beginning of the film that the movie is based on facts and showing a "one-eyed character in Afghanistan called Omar who speaks Tamil, and when asked where he picked up the language, says he was in Coimbatore, Ayodhya and Ahmedabad for a year".
"What is Kamal Haasan trying to say here? There are no recruits to al-Qaeda from Tamil Nadu. The communal tempers have cooled down after a long time in Coimbatore. Does he want the situation to worsen again by misrepresenting facts? We are not holding any brief for the Taliban or the al-Qaeda. Anyone saying that the Quran encourages violence is wrong. The Quran forbids violence. This movie shows the Quran is linked to violence and people are killed the way we slaughter animals. This is simply unacceptable," Jawahirullah says. He adds, "We weren't shown the film. We approached the state government, who wrote to Rajkamal Productions. A team of 14 representatives were shown the film on January 6. After seeing it, our people were shell-shocked and left the auditorium without saying anything."
Members of the federation also say that though they respect Kamal Haasan for protesting against the demolition of Babri Masjid, they have had problems with his films, Hey Ram and Unnaipol Oruvan. Says Jawahirullah, "We spoke to him after Unnaipol Oruvan. He said that he would do something to compensate. Vishwaroopam was that compensation. So, the sense of betrayal is even more."
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Dhule unmasks rioters in uniform (2):
http://www.indianexpress.com/videos/exclusive-video/32/dhule-unmasks-rioters-in-uniform-%282%29/15052