Italian minister resigns in blow to Berlusconi

July 5 (Reuters) – A former executive in Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s media empire who was unexpectedly appointed as a government minister last month resigned in the midst of an embezzlement trial on Monday.

The sudden departure of Aldo Brancher, named as “minister for federalism” in June, deals a fresh blow to Berlusconi whose centre-right government is facing crippling internal divisions that could put its future at risk.

“I am announcing my irrevocable decision to resign as government minister,” Brancher told a Milan court.

Brancher’s appointment as minister with responsibility for overseeing moves to give Italy’s regions more autonomy in matters including tax, education and health services had been heavily criticised by the opposition.

He caused further outrage when he used his newly acquired status as minister to claim immunity from his embezzlement trial and was forced to retreat and drop the claim only days later. (Reporting by Silvia Molteni; Writing by James Mackenzie)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Pakistan, June 20

(Reuters) – Following are security developments in Pakistan at 0602 GMT on Sunday.

QUETTA – A car-bomb blast wounded four soldiers and four passersby on the outskirts of Quetta city, police said.

Quetta is the capital of southwestern Baluchistan province where Baluch militants have waged a low-level insurgency for decades for greater autonomy.

MOHMAND – Security forces battled Taliban militants near the Afghan border late Saturday, killing four militants and wounding 10, a paramilitary spokesman said on Sunday.

ORAKZAI – Four Taliban fighters, including a commander, were killed in an accidental explosion in a hideout in Orakzai tribal region, officials said.

(Compiled by Islamabad Bureau; Editing by Bryson Hull) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

UPDATE 1-Renault to repay part of state debt before yr-end

PARIS, June 13 (Reuters) – French carmaker Renault (RENA.PA) aims to repay at least 500 million euros ($601.9 million) of debt to the state before year-end, Chairman and Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn said in an interview on French radio on Sunday.

“It will be a minimum of 500 million euros,” Ghosn told Europe 1, adding Renault wished to repay the debt in concert with fellow French carmaker PSA Peugeot Citroen (PEUP.PA).

“We wish that the re-imbursements are made together (with Peugeot)… before the end of the year,” Ghosn said.

Renault and PSA both received state loans of 3 billion euros in early 2009 to help secure their financing needs in return for guarantees relating to jobs and factories in France.

In May, Ghosn had said the French carmaker was not planning to wait until 2014 to reimburse the loan and it would not need a capital increase.

On Sunday, he said the debt markets had re-opened and the company would be able to raise fresh funds.

Ghosn is also Chairman and Chief Executive of Nissan (7201.T) in which Renault owns a 43.4 percent stake.

On a separate matter, Ghosn said Renault and its Japanese partner Nissan together wished to sell some 500,000 electric cars before 2015.

Electric vehicles are regarded as important engines of growth for the struggling car industry.

At first, Ghosn said, the car would not have an autonomy of more than 160 kms. ($1=.8307 Euro) (Reporting by Astrid Wendlandt; Editing by Louise Heavens)

Behavioural therapy may help reduce tics in kids with Tourette syndrome

Washington, May 19 (ANI): A new study led by a UCLA researcher has developed an effective, non-medication treatment for children and adolescents with Tourette”s and related tic disorders that has shown improvement similar to that found in recent anti-tic medication studies.

Tourette syndrome, a neurological disorder characterized by twitches like grimacing, blinking and vocalizations, is normally treated in children and teens with one of several antipsychotic medications.

But such drugs usually don”t cure tics completely, and worse, they can often have side effects, acting as sedatives, causing weight gain and impairing cognitive function.

Now, lead study author John Piacentini, a UCLA professor of psychiatry and his colleagues at seven sites around the nation found that a specialized form of behavior therapy called comprehensive behavioural intervention for tics, or CBIT, significantly reduced chronic tics and tic-related problems in children and adolescents.

Almost 53 percent of children receiving CBIT were rated as significantly improved, compared with 19 percent of those receiving a comparison treatment.

Tourette’s syndrome is often accompanied by other psychiatric problems, difficulties in school, work and social functioning.

In this new kind of therapy, children learned to recognize when a tic was about to occur and to engage in a voluntary action incompatible with the tic until the unwanted sensation passed.

Parents were also taught how to aid there children in such situations and reduce stressful conditions for their kids.

“The fact that CBIT works about as well as the standard medications for tics but without the negative side effects greatly expands the available treatment options for chronic tic disorders,” said Susanna Chang, a UCLA assistant professor of psychiatry and a study author. “Importantly, CBIT also emphasizes the development of skills that foster autonomy and empowerment, allowing for patients and their families to take a more active role in treatment than previously indicated.”

Piacentini are considering using neuroimaging and other neuroscientific techniques to examine the brain mechanisms underlying how CBIT might work.

In addition, investigators are currently working with the Tourette Syndrome Association and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to teach CBIT to clinicians who treat children with tic disorders and to develop new versions of CBIT for use with younger children and by nurses and other health care professionals.

The study appears in the May 19 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). (ANI)

Indian National Defence University to be set up in Gurgaon

New Delhi, May 13 (ANI): The Union Cabinet today accorded “in-principle” approval for setting up of the Indian National Defence University (INDU).

The university will be set up at Binola in district Gurgaon of Haryana.

INDU will undertake long term defence and strategic studies and create synergy between the academic community and Government functionaries.

It will promote policy oriented research on all aspect relating to national security as an input to strategic national policy making.

It will encourage awareness of national security issues by reaching out to scholars and an audience beyond the official machinery.

The existing four colleges on defence studies will be brought under the ambit of this university but they will continue to maintain their autonomy.

INDU will also educate national security leaders on aspects of national security strategy, national military strategy, national information strategy and national technology strategy through teaching and research. (ANI)

Dalai Lama holds hopes for ultimate resolution of contentious Tibet issue

London, May 8 (ANI): The Dalai Lama is still hoping for a softening of China’s stand on the contentious Tibet issue.

Undeterred by the years of inconclusive negotiations with Beijing over the touchy topic of Tibet’s autonomy, the Dalai Lama said that talks still needed to press ahead, and that there is still a possibility of working out a solution that is consensual.

“So far, dialogue failed, but that does not mean in future no possibility,” the Daily Express quoted Dalai Lama as saying. .

He conceded that years of indecisiveness over the issue of his homeland had left him despondent, but the slight change in mood from the Chinese side has renewed his hope, the report said.

He says that the worldwide awareness about the plight of Tibetans, sympathy amongst the Chinese intelligentsia regarding Tibet and mixed signals from some Chinese leaders in a departure from their hitherto reified stand were the cause of his newfound optimism, it added.

“They are realistic,” he said of the Chinese leadership. “They have the ability to act according to a new reality,” the report quoted him, as saying.

He says he doesn’t mind waiting a decade or two more for a peaceful resolution to the Tibet issue, and prescribes patience to achieve the desired results.

Talks between Chinese representatives and the Dalai’s envoys were restarted in January, however, Beijing stuck to its original stance and summarily rejected the idea of granting autonomy to Tibet.(ANI)

SC gives green signal for private universities admissions

New Delhi, May 6 (ANI): The Supreme Court on Thursday allowed 44 private deemed universities, which the Centre is trying to shut down, to go ahead with the admission process for the upcoming academic year.

Rejecting the Government”s request to put a pause on the admission process of these universities for the coming academic session, the apex court said, as the Government has not yet taken any decision on the future of these universities, and therefore, it could not stop admissions.

In a report submitted to the apex court in January, the Union Government said that these 44 private deemed universities were found to be below standard, and were functioning as “family fiefdoms.”

The universities, whose future is at stake, have challenged the Government”s decision of their academic standards, pointing out that the University Grants Commission (UGC) has given many of them positive reviews.

Deemed universities are allowed to function with complete autonomy on their syllabus, and fees.

The government believes that many of these universities charge exorbitant rates, accept too many students, and ignore reservation policies.

Over two lakh students are in a state of panic about their future should the universities be derecognised.

The Court, however, has reassured them that it will not allow such action without due consideration.

The Government also said that students at affected colleges would get certificates and degrees from state universities of their particular region. (ANI)

Kalmadi meets Manmohan Singh over new tenure regulations

New Delhi, May 5 (ANI): Indian Olympic Association officials along with a delegation of National Sports Federations met the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, on Wednesday over the issue of new tenure regulations.

Talking to reporters after the meeting, Kalmadi said, “We met Prime Minister over the issue of the IOA autonomy.”

“We have assured the Prime Minister that the Commonwealth Games will be a huge success. We conveyed that Sports Minister M S Gill should not have come out with all these ideas now. He should have come out after the Games. The Prime Minister has said that he will look into the matter,” Kalmadi added.

The officials are also unconvinced as to why this stir had to come just months ahead of the Commonwealth Games.

They have termed the government move as interference in their affairs and even warned that the attempts to erode their autonomy may invite international ban on India.

The new regulations restrict National Sports Federations presidents from occupying the posts for over 12 years, with or without break.

When it comes to secretaries and treasurers, the regulations allow them to serve eight years at a stretch and to seek a re-election only after a four-year gap.

Apart from Kalmadi, the regulation seeks to end the over a decade-old reign of VK Malhotra (archery), Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa (cycling), VK Verma (badminton), Captain Satish K Sharma (aero club), B S Adityan (volleyball) and Jagdish Tytler (judo). (ANI)

Six killed in Thailand’s insurgency-plagued south

Thu, Apr 1 09:30 PM

Suspected Islamic insurgents shot dead six Buddhist villagers in Thailand’s restive south on Thursday, police said, the latest attack in the troubled region bordering Malaysia.

The villagers in Narathiwat province were believed to have been ambushed, said police Colonel Sanit Suwanno. Two bodies were found in a pick-up truck and four were discovered in a hilly forest nearby, he added.

Ten policemen and soldiers were also wounded when a roadside bomb exploded as they were travelling to the scene of the shootings, police said.

More than 3,900 people have been killed in six years of unrest as ethnic Malay Muslims fight for autonomy from Thailand’s Buddhist majority in the region just a few hours by car from some of Thailand’s best-known tourist beaches.

Local Muslims largely oppose the presence of tens of thousands of police, soldiers and state-armed Buddhist guards in rubber-rich region, which was part of a Malay Muslim sultanate until annexed by Thailand a century ago.

About 80 percent of Thailand’s three southern provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat are Muslim.

The violence has ranged from drive-by shootings to bombings and beheadings. It often targets Buddhists and Muslims associated with the Thai state, such as police, soldiers, government officials and teachers.

(Reporting by Surapan Boonthanom. Writing by Jason Szep)

Study sheds light on factors that contribute to teens” decision-making autonomy

Washington, March 26 (ANI): A new study by researchers at the Pennsylvania State University has revealed that some adolescents have more say in certain areas than others while some have greater autonomy than other teens.

The findings have appeared in the March/April 2010 issue of the journal Child Development.

For nine years, the researchers annually canvassed parents in about 200 White, European-American families about their teens” decisions.

Mothers and fathers reported on who made decisions in eight areas of their children”s lives, including chores, appearance, curfew/bedtime, health, schoolwork, social life, activities, and money.

The researchers noted that young people”s input into decisions increased gradually from ages 9 to 14, and then surged from ages 15 to 20.

Moreover, young people had more input into decisions about appearance, activities, schoolwork, and social life than about chores, health, and curfew.

It was found that in late adolescence (ages 18 to 20), decisions about money and health were still being made jointly by parents and adolescents, suggesting that autonomy developed more gradually for these types of decisions.

The study also revealed that certain children had more decision-making autonomy than others.

Those with more decision-making autonomy included girls, young people whom their parents said were easy to supervise, and children with better-educated parents.

However, there wasn”t a single, universal pattern in the development of decision making.

Instead, decision-making autonomy depended on what kinds of decisions youngsters faced, and on their personal and family circumstances. (ANI)

Shiite rebels release 180 Yemen prisoners

Shiite rebels in Yemen have freed almost 180 prisoners as part of a ceasefire deal to end six months of fighting in the country’s north.

Houthi rebels in the northern Saada province have been fighting government forces for more autonomy since 2004.

But they signed a ceasefire agreement last month under which they promised to release 178 civilians and government soldiers, as well as reopen roads in the north, withdraw from government buildings and hand over weapons seized from security forces.

In return they have sought assurances the Yemeni government will also release its own prisoners.

But so far the government in Sanaa has accused the rebels of not complying with the ceasefire and it is unclear if the government prisoners will be released.

Kashmir is the jugular vein of Pakistan: Gilani

Islamabad, Sep.20 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Minister Yosuf Raza Gilani is back to singing his ‘K-tune’ by describing Kashmir as Pakistan’s jugular vein.

Interacting with a group of political leaders during an Iftaar party at the PM House here, Gilani said Islamabad’s policy on Kashmir was based on Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s stance that “Kashmir was the jugular vein of Pakistan.”

Referring to the government’s recent decision to grant internal autonomy to Gilgit-Baltistan, Gilani said Pakistan’s stand on Kashmir would remain unchanged.

“I want to express in clear and unequivocal terms that this decision of the government will not bring any change in Pakistan’s principled stand on Kashmir,” Gilani said.

Gilani blamed India of neglecting the long pending Kashmir issue and said that Pakistan wants a peaceful resolution to the dispute.

“We want to resolve the Kashmir dispute peacefully and have invited India for negotiations, despite it repeatedly ignoring them,” The Daily times quoted Gilani, as saying.

Gilani said he had categorically told Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh during their meeting at the margins of the NAM summit in Sharm-el-Sheikh earlier this year that resolving the issue was very important for establishing peace in the region.

“There could be no peace in the region until the Kashmir dispute was resolved according to the aspirations of its people,” he added. (ANI)

Tibetans living-in-exile surprised over China’s opposition to Dalai Lama’s visit

Gangtok, Sep 17 (ANI): Members of the exiled Tibetan community living at Gangtok said China’s opposition to the Dalai Lama’s visit to Arunachal Pradesh is “surprising”.

The Dalai Lama plans to visit Arunachal Pradesh soon. China has claimed part of Arunachal as its territory.

The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader’s aide said the Dalai Lama would be in Arunachal Pradesh state in the second week of November.

The intended visit has already sparked off controversy. China claims about 90,000 sq km of Arunachal Pradesh as part of its territory.

The Dalai Lama’s travel plan was announced a week after the completion of his visit to Taiwan, a self-ruled island claimed by Beijing. China denounced the trip.

“This time round when they (Chinese Authorities) are making some kind of pressure or some kind of opposition to the upcoming visit of his holiness to Arunachal Pradesh it is really very surprising.

Why would they complain when the government of India has no problem in his holiness visiting Arunachal Pradesh? So why should people of republic of china have some problem?” said Zimba Bhutia, Tibetan youth committee member.

“Chinese authorities have always been against the trip of Dalai Lama. So I think that they should know why Dalai Lama has been there. Dalai Lama has been welcomed by the people of Arunachal Pradesh as the spiritual and a Buddhist monk,” said Dhondup Dorjee, Tibetan welfare officer of Sikkim.

A visit to Arunachal Pradesh could now draw further attention to China’s treatment of Tibetan activists and the Dalai Lama’s calls for cultural and religious freedoms and autonomy. (ANI)

Jaswant Singh reaffirms his support for Gorkhaland

Bagdogra (West Bengal), Sept 16 (ANI): Expelled Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Jaswant Singh has said that his support to the creation of a separate Gorkhaland state remains unchanged despite his ouster from the party.

Speaking to reporters at the airport, he said that not only he, even his former party BJP is committed to the cause of Gorkhaland.

“My support to Gorkhaland remains the same. There is no change. That is the commitment I have made, which is personal and political. The BJP, which is my former party, has also affirmed that their position on Gorkhaland is unaltered. We support the creation of Gorkhaland as a separate state,” said Jaswant Singh.

Presently, Singh is on a five-day visit to Darjeeling and other areas. This is his first visit after being expelled from the BJP.

Jaswant Singh was expelled from the BJP for applauding Mohammad Ali Jinnah, founder of Pakistan in his controversial book ‘Jinnah – India, Partition, Independence’.

His expulsion came as a big blow to the members of the ethnic Gorkha community, who have sought a separate state to be carved out from West Bengal.

The Gorkhas have contended that the issue of Gorkhaland was spelt out in the election manifesto of BJP and as such Singh’s ouster will have change the party’s stand and it will abide by the pre-poll promises spelt out in the manifesto.

At least 1,200 people died in the first Gorkhaland campaign in the 1980s. The mass protests ended a few years later after Gorkha leaders accepted limited autonomy with the formation of a Hills Council.

However, this mechanism did not work out successfully, leading to the split in the Gorkha National Liberation Front (GNLF), the forerunner of Gorkhaland agitation.

Subash Gheising, the founder of GNLF was ousted and his opponents formed the parallel Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM).

The GJM canvassed extensively for the election of Jaswant Singh. (ANI)

Centre calls upon states for partnership in education reforms

New Delhi, Aug 31(ANI): The Centre has called upon States for support and partnership to ensure educational reforms in the country.

Addressing the inaugural session of the 56th Central Advisory Board on Education (CABE) meeting in the national capital on Monday, Union Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal underlined expansion, inclusion and excellence as the three underlying principles for educational reforms.

Sibal particularly called for collaboration from State Governments with regard to the Right to Education (RTE).

He pointed out that Rs. 1,50,000 crore would be required for implementing the RTE in the country and it is perceived that there will be a shortfall of Rs.60,000 crore, as it would be a massive exercise.

Sibal also said that in order to provide equal opportunity to all students trying for professional courses, a core curriculum in Maths and Science needs to be formulated. he minister also emphasised that diversity in education was to be respected and there was no intent of having a single board in the country.

With regard to higher education Sibal said that his Ministry was in the process of formulating the structure for an overarching body for higher education that would be responsible for higher education policy.

He said that some of the proposals for higher education included complete autonomy to universities for devising courses, cross fertilisation of courses and research oriented universities.

Sibal also said that he was open to the idea of Indian universities collaborating with foreign universities or with the corporate sector. He pointed out that the corporate sector was showing increasing interest in education as they require trained manpower. (ANI)

Bangladesh court tells troops to exit from Chittagong Hill Tracts

Dhaka, Aug.20 (ANI): A court in Bangladesh ruled on Thursday that troops should withdraw from the insurgency-hit Chittacong Hill Tract.

The order was passed despite pleas from some residents about militant attacks.

The army has begun pulling out the Chittagong Hill Tracts, where the government signed a peace treaty with the main militant group in 1997, but halted last week due to a court petition from a Bengali settler.

Government figures show 2,500 people died during two decades of fighting before the peace deal, and deadly violence has continued between the settlers who moved to the area recently and indigenous tribal groups who seek autonomy.

The armed forces said 2,100 troops would be withdrawn and 35 security camps dismantled by September. (ANI)

Warsaw names Dalai Lama honorary citizen

Warsaw – Tibetan leader Dalai Lama was named an honorary citizen of Warsaw after an unanimous vote from local councilors on Thursday.

“As councilors in a city as historically experienced as Warsaw, we have the moral right and responsibility to show respect and honour a person who seeks freedom and sovereignty for his countryman and his country,” the officials said in a statement.

China accuses the Dalai Lama of wanting an independent Tibet, but the exiled leader says he wants autonomy for the region.

The spiritual leader was in Poland in December to attend celebrations marking the 25th anniversary of former Solidarity trade union leader Lech Walesa receiving the Nobel Peace Prize.

Polish President Lech Kaczynski had also met with the spiritual leader, and sparked backlash when China warned Warsaw about creating impediments to Chinese-Polish relations. (dpa)

French tourist abducted in Pakistan

Islamabad- Gunmen have kidnapped a French tourist in Pakistan’s insurgency-hit Balochistan province, media reports said on Sunday.

Six French nationals, including a woman and two children, were intercepted Saturday afternoon near Dalbandin town, located some 320 kilometres west of the provincial capital Quetta, Dawn newspaper reported.

The masked gunmen seized one of the tourists and let the others go, Dawn cited senior police officer Qazi Hussain Ahmed as saying.

It said the French tourists had entered Pakistan from India last week and were travelling to Iran by road, adding that they had not informed the authorities about their journey.

“We are making all-out efforts to recover the French national,” Ahmed told Dawn.

No group claimed responsibility for the abduction, which took place in the region plagued by home-grown insurgency for greater autonomy and large share of natural resources found in the province.

The French Foreign Ministry said in a statement issued in Paris on Saturday that the kidnapping incident had come to its knowledge and authorities had been mobilized.(dpa)

Brit, Canadian Tamils vow to sustain Ealam struggle

London/Ottawa, May 22 (ANI): Large Tamil communities in Britain and Canada have vowed to continue the struggle for Tamil self-determination rights in Sri Lanka following the death of LTTE chief Vellupillai Prabhakaran.

Holding portraits of Prabhakaran, who was killed by Sri Lankan army soldiers earlier this week, the Tamil diaspora in these two countries are mobilizing to play a part in what leaders describe as a new phase in their struggle for an independent homeland.

According to The Telegraph, following the military defeat of the Tamil Tigers, the talk now is of employing democratic means to address Tamil concerns.

The paper says this goal could be tested, however, by a growing number of young expatriate Tamils who have become radicalized by the oppression of Tamils in Sri Lanka.

Like others around the world, British Tamils say their priority is the welfare of tens of thousands of refugees.

British Tamils have always donated generously to Tamil charities, but not without controversy.

Suren Surendiran, a spokesman for the British Tamils Forum, an umbrella organization, says that in the longer term, the events of recent weeks have radicalized the younger generation of Tamils abroad.

“The first phase of the fight for freedom, from 1948 to 1983, was about political negotiations,” he said.

“Then, the armed struggle from 1983 until last week ensured that the oppression and discrimination of Tamil people was highlighted on an international stage, Surendiran said, adding that in the third phase, Tamil diaspora will pursue their goal through political and democratic channels, the ultimate goal being a Tamil homeland in some form.
Young second-generation Tamils have been the driving force behind a largely peaceful occupation of Parliament Square, in front of the House of Commons, although protesters have clashed with police when hundreds of demonstrators attempted to block traffic during peaks in the recent fighting in Sri Lanka.

Across the Atlantic in Canada, home to the world’s largest Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora, community leaders are holding up Quebec as a path for resolving Sri Lanka’s ethnic problem.

“This model of autonomy could work for us,” says Ramani Balendra, an ethnic Tamil from Sri Lanka who is a member of the Tamil Action Committee that has been organizing protests in recent weeks.

Sympathy for the Sri Lankan Tamil struggle has in fact been highest among Quebec’s nationalist intellectuals, according to Narendra Balasubramanian, an associate professor of political science at McGill University who has been studying the conflict.

“The Quebec nationalists feel an affinity with Sri Lankan Tamil nationalism,” he says.

Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon earlier this week said Canada was prepared to assist Sri Lankan efforts to “find political reconciliation and a lasting peace.”

Professor Balasubramanian, however, says Canada’s role will be limited to humanitarian assistance, and perhaps monitoring. (ANI)

Shift in global balance of economic power underway, says Menon

New Delhi, May 13 (ANI): Guessing that the world is today on the cusp of a new type of multipolarity, Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon today said that an unavoidable shift in the balance of economic power is underway and BRIC, the grouping of Brazil, Russia, India and China, can hope to be a factor of growth and stability in the world economy for decades to come.

Addressing a pre-BRIC Summit preparatory meeting organised by the Observer Research Foundation (ORF), a New Delhi based think tank, Menon said he believed the role of BRIC countries in the global economy would increase further and further.

The two-day meeting is being attended by teams of experts from Brazil, Russia, India and China and it would come up recommendations for these countries which would be meeting in June this year in Yekaterinburg at the first BRIC Summit.

“As the global economy evolves and works its way through the present global financial and economic crisis, the BRIC are a factor of stability and growth. This was already evident in our role during the G-20 deliberations,” Menon said in his inaugural address.

He said increasingly the world itself is coming to espouse views that we share among the BRIC countries.

“For instance, it is now widely appreciated that globalization, development and economic processes cannot be left solely to the mercies of an unregulated free market,” Menon said.

It is becoming clearer and clearer that international decision-making on global economic issues must necessarily be democratized to reflect present realities, he said, adding that global flows of goods, people and capital and the development and dissemination of technology have eroded the autonomy and authority of the state, the old order and old geopolitical realities.

“What we see is a situation where the major powers simultaneously compete and cooperate with each other, each with all others, to a greater or lesser degree,” he said.

Menon said the shift we are witnessing is probably towards a flatter distribution of power in the world. And this shift is hastened by the geopolitical consequences of the global economic crisis.

“Unlike previous financial crises which were handled within the closed shop of the G-7 industrialized countries, this crisis is sought to be addressed in the G-20 which includes all the BRIC countries,” he said.

“Existing power holders are always reluctant to share or lose power. This fact alone therefore shows that an unavoidable shift in the balance of economic power is underway, and that the international role of the BRIC countries will increase further,” Menon said.

Saying BRIC is already the buzz word around the world, the Ambassador of China, Mr. Zhang Yan, said Brazil, Russia, India and China should join together to fight the global economic crisis with interesting and innovative ideas.

Describing BRIC as the guardian of developing countries and so the common interests of these countries, Zhang Yan suggested that meeting like this should become a regular feature in future to institutionalize the framework.

He said BRIC, which can become a good platform for achieving consensus, is in the long term interests of all the four countries and also other developing countries. He said he was sure BRIC would achieve greater influence in world affairs.

Brazilian Deputy Chief of Mission, Jose Carlos Fonseca Jr., described BRIC as “a good idea whose time is coming”. He said Brazil is very much interested in strengthening the cooperation between the BRIC countries.

M. Rasgotra, President of ORF Centre for International Relations, said there is a shift of gravity from the West to Asia, and India and China, being big powers in this continent, has a new role to play in the global affairs.

Saying that BRIC countries account for 40 per cent of the world population and 37 per cent of the GDP, Rasgotra said “if we work together, we can make a change in the world order”.

He wondered that is it not proper to include South Africa too in this grouping to make it more powerful and inclusive of developing countries. He also suggested institutionalizing BRIC with a proper secretariat.

The meeting at ORF is discussing aspects like “Institutionalizing the BRICs Engagement”, “BRICS: The Global Financial Crisis and the New Global Financial Architecture”, “Energy Security and Climate Change” and “Cooperation in Trade and Industry”. (ANI)