J and K Govt seeks Center’s clearance to construct concrete huts along LAC

Srinagar, Sep 16 (ANI): The Jammu and Kashmir Government has sought clearance from the Ministry of Defence to construct huts like along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) bordering China.

According to sources the State Government forwarded this proposal with the aim of strengthening the Indian presence along the LAC.

State Revenue Minister Raman Bhalla, said concrete huts would also help the nomadic shepherds to stay.

Nomadic shepherds are currently using mobile tents.

Recently Leh’s Deputy Commissioner Ajit Kumar Sahu said, the Chinese had threatened some shepherds in the remote regions of the district.

The State Government is also reportedly planning to house revenue officials and guards to monitor Chinese activities along the Pangong Lake, sources said.

Meanwhile, National Security Advisor M.K.Narayanan has called a meeting of the China Study Group of the Union Government on Wednesday, to discuss the situation along Indo-China border.

Cabinet Secretary K.M. Chandrasekhar, Defence Secretary Pradeep Kumar, Home Secretary G. K. Pillai, Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao, Senior officials of the Army, the Air Force and the Navy, officials from the Intelligence Bureau (IB) would also attend the meeting. (ANI)

Sikhs celebrate Manmohan’s premiership in Jammu-Kashmir

Jammu, May 24 (IANS) Two days after Manmohan Singh was sworn in as prime minister, massive celebrations were witnessed in the gurudwaras here Sunday.

Sikh youth danced to the drum beats and others distributed sweets to mark the celebrations, hailing a Sikh becoming prime minister for the second time. Manmohan Singh was sworn in as prime minister Friday.

The biggest celebrations were witnessed outside Digiana Gurudwara, where Manmohan Singh paid his obeisance in December when he came to campaign for the assembly polls in the state.

“He paid obeisance at this gurudwara and sought blessings. He became the prime minister again because of that,” said Avtar Singh Khalsa, a Sikh leader.

He said: “We are extremely delighted.”

Congress legislator Raman Bhalla, who participated in the celebrations, thanked the Sikh community for supporting the Congress in the Lok Sabha polls.

He said Manmohan Singh sent a strong signal to the people of Jammu and Kashmir by inducting Ghulam Nabi Azad into the central ministry. Azad, a former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, is a Rajya Sabha member from the state.

Obama unlikely to go down nuclear path with Pakistan in a hurry: US experts

Washington, April 10 (IANS) President Barack Obama’s administration is unlikely to follow through on a suggestion to initiate a dialogue with Pakistan to acknowledge its nuclear weapon status in a hurry, analysts say.

But the US must find a way to make Pakistan’s nuclear programme transparent and ensure the safety and security of Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, they said commenting on an Asia Society Task Force report suggesting such a dialogue.

Since US Special Representative on Pakistan and Afghanistan, Richard Holbrooke and National Security Advisor Gen James Jones were active members of the task force until they took up their current assignments, the suggestion had sent alarm bells ringing in New Delhi.

Holbrooke and Jones stood down before the report was written, but they as also other members of the task force like Pakistani journalist and author Ahmed Rashid, have been advising the administration on its Af-Pak strategy and would have influence on its policy.

‘However, how to acknowledge Pakistan’s nuclear weapon status, I don’t know if that’s something on which Obama administration would be moving on fairly quickly,’ Reva Bhalla, Director of Analysis at STRATFOR, a global intelligence company, told IANS.

Pakistan has a feeling that it has not been treated fairly by Washington in reaching the landmark civil nuclear deal with New Delhi that has become symbolic of the strategic partnership with India.

Pakistan is not exactly on the same footing, Bhalla said, but ‘the whole point is how to integrate Pakistan under a better international regime and how to make Pakistan’s nuclear programme more transparent.’

The administration should try to do something, though not an India like civil nuclear deal, to begin with acknowledge Pakistan’s nuclear status, she said. ‘Pakistan of course would demand more and seek access to nuclear technology and nuclear fuel but that’s not going to pass Congress easily.’

Lisa Curtis, a Senior Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington think tank, agrees that initiating a dialogue with Pakistan to acknowledge its nuclear weapon status was not an easy proposition. ‘There would be several complicating factors to going down this path,’ Curtis told IANS.

‘For starters, US Congressional officials have been dissatisfied with the handling of the A.Q. Khan nuclear proliferation debacle and, at a bare minimum, would require clarification on his status within Pakistan and a fuller accounting of his proliferation activities before they would give any consideration to officially recognising Pakistan’s nuclear weapons status.’

However, ‘there are good reasons for having a discreet US-Pakistan dialogue about the safety and security of Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal,’ Curtis said.

‘But that is a far cry from official recognition of Pakistan as a nuclear weapons power – a status even India does not enjoy. Despite that it has shown far more responsibility with regard to controlling proliferation of its programmes.’

Information on judges’ appointment can’t be revealed under RTI : Govt.

New Delhi, March 4 (ANI): The Delhi High Court on Wednesday stayed an order of the Central Information Commission, following the Centre’s plea stating documents relating to appointment and transfer of judges could not be revealed under the Right to Information (RTI) Act.

Additional Solicitor General P. P. Malhotra, while challenging the order of CIC asking the government to disclose documents and file-notings on appointment of the Chief Justice of Himachal Pradesh, stated in plea that such informations were beyond the purview of RTI Act.

“Correspondence exchanged between constitutional authorities is beyond the purview of the Act and the commission erred in law by directing to disclose it,” the Government said in its petition.

Justice S Ravindra Bhat, after hearing his contention, stayed the CIC order and issued notice to the RTI applicant on whose plea the Commission had passed the direction.

The Commission on January 19 had directed the Centre to disclose all information and file notings on appointment of Chief Justice of Himachal Pradesh Jagdish Bhalla, whose promotion file was returned by former President APJ Abdul Kalam.

Chief Justice Bhalla, who was earlier the acting Chief Justice of Chattisgarh, was facing allegations of misconduct during his tenure in the Allahabad High Court.

In 2006, Justice Bhalla was recommended to be elevated as the Chief Justice of Kerala. However, the move ran into controversy after then President A. P. J. Abdul Kalam raised objection.

After his objections, apex court collegium headed by Chief Justice K G Balakrishnan shifted him to Chattisgarh High Court as a judge. He later became the acting Chief Justice of that High Court. (ANI)