Intensify diplomacy to ease Indo-Pak tensions: Obama to admin

In a secret directive, President Barack Obama has asked his administration to intensify efforts to make India resolve its tensions with Pakistan, a priority for progress of the “US goals in the region”.

He has also asked his officials to intensify American diplomacy aimed at easing tensions between India and Pakistan, asserting that without detente between the two rivals, the administration’s efforts to win Pakistani cooperation in Afghanistan would suffer, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The directive, issued in December, concluded that “India must make resolving its tensions with Pakistan a priority for progress to be made on US goals in the region,” the US daily said quoting ‘people familiar with its contents’.

According to officials, the Pentagon, in particular, has sought more pressure on New Delhi, it said.

The only specific US request to New Delhi has been to “discourage India from getting more involved in training the Afghan military, to ease Pakistani concerns about getting squeezed by India on two borders”, the journal said quoting US and Indian officials.

The move comes amid continued requests by Pakistan for an intercession by the US in Indo-Pak disputes, despite a longstanding resistance from India to any mediation by a foreign country.

Pakistan has long regarded Afghanistan as providing “strategic depth” or a buffer zone in a potential conflict with India, and does not want India to have a larger influence in the country.

“Current and former US officials said the discussion in Washington over how to approach India has intensified as Pakistan ratchets up requests that the US intercede in a series of continuing disputes,” it said, adding the White House declined to comment on Obama’s directive or on the debate within the administration over India policy.

The directive to top foreign-policy and national-security officials was summarised in a memo written by National Security Adviser James Jones at the end of the White House’s three-month review of Afghan war policy in December, the journal said.

US military officials were circumspect about what specific moves they would like to see from New Delhi, the Journal said.

But according to people who have discussed India policy with Pentagon officials, the ideas discussed in internal debates include reducing the number of Indian troops in Kashmir or pulling back forces along the border, it said.

A 56-page dossier presented by the Pakistani government to the Obama administration ahead of Strategic Dialogue in Washington last month “contained a litany of accusations against the Indian government, and suggestions the US intercede on Pakistan’s behalf”, the journal reported quoting officials as saying.

US aims to ease India-Pakistan tension

Washington, Apr 5(ANI): United States President Barack Obama has reportedly issued a secret directive to its top foreign-policy and national-security officials to intensify their efforts aimed at easing tensions between India and Pakistan.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the directive was summarized in a memo written by National Security Adviser James Jones at the end of the White House’s three-month review of Afghan war policy in December.

In the directive it is stated that India must make resolving its tensions with Pakistan a priority for progress to be made on US goals in the region.

A debate continues within the administration over how hard to push India, which has long resisted outside intervention in the conflict with Pakistan.

Current and former US officials said the discussion in Washington over how to approach India has intensified as Pakistan ratchets up requests that the US intercede in a series of continuing disputes, The News reports. (ANI)

Radio Pakistan keen to reform Indian elections

Abohar, April 20 (ANI): While the world press is projecting Indian elections as an event where millions of people are exercising their democratic right to choose their representatives to the national parliament, the Pakistan radio seems to be worried that it is not perfect.

Radio Pakistan has been pointing out in its Punjabi Durbar programme that various political parties of India have given tickets to criminals, who, with the help of bad characters, would force people to vote in their favour.

The Indian poll process, widely known for its impartiality, also has its faults. But voters in India listen to everybody but take decisions on their own. If anybody tries to force them to do anything, they react against it.

“There are thousands of workers in our party, who are very good and gentle. They carry out their part of the work peacefully; distribute pamphlets and go home to home for canvassing. They guard against anyone who uses force,” said Satyapal Jain, a former Member of Parliament. The unfortunate thing about Pakistan is that the rulers of Pakistan feel that until and unless they spew venom and spread rumours against India, their existence can’t be proved. I also got a chance to visit Pakistan as member of a delegation in 1958 and listening to Pakistan TV, sometime I felt like laughing, and sometime angry. Pakistan is our neighbour. Disputes can be there between our two countries. Some 50-60 years back, we were one country and it might possible that in future we will get united again like Germany,” he added.

Pakistan must know that nomination of any person with criminal background can be nullified by the Election Officer, as was seen in the hi-profile case of Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt.

Besides, the elections are held under the supervision of Election Commission. The whole process has been operationalised under the watchful eyes of Election Commission, which is known for its strict execution of established regulations.

Moreover, large number of security personnel are deployed in sensitive areas. They take care against action by Naxals or terrorists and ensure that the voters feel fearless and get motivated to vote. Any incident or report of coercion can jeopardize the candidate’s political future in India.

Villagers can be misinformed for a little while but the people come to know the truth sooner than later. People from Pakistan visiting India and are amazed to find just the opposite of whatever negative they got to learn about the ‘reality’ of India. It is time Pakistan Radio conveyed truth to its listeners. (ANI)

Pak questions construction of Kishan Ganga Dam by India

Lahore, Apr.13 (ANI): Pakistan has once again questioned the construction of the Kishan Ganga Dam across the Indus River by India.

Addressing a ‘Pak-India Water Disputes’ seminar here, Indus Water Treaty Commissioner Syed Jamaat Ali Shah said Islamabad has conveyed its concerns to New Delhi.

“India could construct only those dams that were included in the Indus Water Treaty,” The Daily Times quoted Shah, as saying.

He informed that an Indo-Pak meeting on water reservoirs in both nations would be held in Pakistan in May. (ANI)

Indian Airlines asked to compensate passenger for injuries

New Delhi, April 5 (IANS) A consumer rights panel has criticised Indian Airlines for not providing proper medical aid and transportation facilities at the airport and directed the airlines to compensate Rs.25,000 to a passenger who injured his hand while in the airport bus.

The Delhi State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission headed by Justice J.D. Kapoor directed Indian Airlines to compensate a consumer for the pain and suffering caused after two of his fingers got fractured due to the rash and negligent driving of the airline bus ferrying passengers from the aircraft to the arrival terminal at Delhi airport.

Alok Kumar Sinha, a resident of Madhya Pradesh, was travelling from Varanasi to Delhi in Indian Airlines in 2005. After alighting from the craft, Sinha boarded a coach provided by the airline to go to the terminal building. The coach was very crowded and Sinha had to travel standing.

According to Sinha, the coach driver was driving in a rash and negligent manner and suddenly applied the brakes, making him lose his balance and fall. Other passengers fell over him due to which he suffered injuries to his face and two fingers of his right hand got fractured.

Sinha alleged that he was not provided proper medical aid at the airport and just administered a pain killer. When the pain persisted he consulted a doctor who diagnosed it as fracture. He then sued the airlines.

The consumer rights panel also asked the Airports Authority of India (AAI) to provide adequate medical facilities at the airport following Sinha’s case.

Justice Kapoor in his direction to AAI, said: ‘What is expected from AAI is to provide immediate service to whoever needs emergency treatment, like providing ambulance and immediate first aid. To run a hospital at the airport may not be possible but the airport authority may take into consideration such problems, particularly emergency cases, in view of the expansion of the airport and the large number of passengers having switched over to travel by air.’

Air India asked to pay Rs 1.4 lakh to woman for denying her seat

Air India has been directed by the State Consumer Commission to pay Rs 1.4 lakh to a passenger for refusing to let her board a flight despite a confirmed ticket. Penalising the airlines for a “deficiency in service”, the Delhi State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission has asked Air India to not only refund Rs 40,000 towards the cost of the ticket, but also to pay Rs one lakh as compensation to the complainant Geetika Sachdeva, for not letting her board the plane and for delayed baggage delivery.

In September 2002, Sachdeva had bought an open ticket through a travel agency on Air India’s Delhi-London-Toronto-London-Delhi flight. Two months later, when she informed Air India of her intention to travel from London to Delhi, she was told that her ticket was confirmed for London to Delhi.

She then boarded an Air Canada flight from Toronto and reached London. But at the airport she was told that the validity of her ticket had expired and she could not board the plane. Sachdeva was travelling alone and did not have money to buy another ticket. After waiting for several hours at the airport, she met another Indian passenger, who had come from Chicago and had also been denied boarding on the same grounds. With his help, she purchased a ticket of Virgin Atlantic Airways and came to Delhi. Her baggage, however, was transported a week later by Air India, for which she was charged an additional sum of Rs 650.

Air India, in its defence contended that the passenger had booked an open ticket for the Toronto-Delhi sector, which required prior confirmation before the commencement of journey and since she failed to do, so she could not be accommodated.

The court observed that the consumer had intimated Air India’s counterpart at Toronto in advance about her plan to travel from London to Delhi and therefore the argument that there was no confirmation, did not hold.

“The passenger was a young lady and travelled alone and therefore must have faced immense hardship when she was denied a seat,” Justice J D Kapoor, Commission President, said, adding that it was the “duty of the airline to make all possible arrangements” to accommodate Sachdeva on its flight leaving for London.

Justice Kapoor further ruled that “no airline has the right to refuse boarding to a person with a confirmed status ticket even if he has not re-confirmed the same 72 hours before, particularly when seats are available.”

Rising sea levels could spark conflict over energy and food reserves

London, Jan 8 (ANI): The Australian military has claimed that rising sea levels caused by climate change are threatening to destabilize island nations and spark conflict across the world over energy and food reserves.

According to a report in the Telegraph, a report by the Australian military revealed that “environmental stress” had increased the risk of conflicts over food and resources in the region.

It predicted warmer temperatures would change the location of South East Asian fishing grounds, leading to conflict over fishing rights, and lead to an increase in climate refugees fleeing the Pacific’s sinking atolls.

Environmental changes would “reinforce existing concerns regarding land availability, economic development and control over resources”, the report added, multiplying the threats faced by fragile states and increasing the chance they would fail.

But, the biggest threat to global security was the melting Arctic ice caps, which would give rise to a potentially dangerous international race for valuable sea oil and gas deposits, the report said.

“The Arctic is melting, potentially making the extraction of undersea energy deposits commercially viable. Conflict is a remote possibility if these disputes are not resolved peacefully,” it added.

Climate change has already been linked to the escalating fight for the world’s natural resources, including an increasingly precious commodity – dry land.

In November 2008, the newly elected president of the Maldives announced his country would begin to set aside a portion of its billion-dollar annual tourist revenue to buy a new homeland because rising seas were threatening to turn the 300,000 islanders into environmental refugees.

Also, resource-hungry nations are already snapping up large tracts of agricultural land in poor Asian and African nations.

High global oil and commodity prices, the biofuels boom and the economic downturn are prompting import-reliant countries to take action to protect their sources of food.

China and South Korea, which are both short on arable land, have signed up the rights to swathes of territory in Asia and Africa.

The report, into the effects of climate change by Australia’s Defence Force, predicted that disputes over access to scarce food resources could mean increasing the country”s navy in the seas to its north.

It added that climate change would “increase demands for the Australian Defence Force to be deployed on additional stabilization, post-conflict reconstruction and disaster relief operations in the future”. (ANI)

How pope’s illegitimate daughter Lucrezia Borgia got wealthy during an economic downturn

Washington, January 8 (ANI): A new study by a USC historian sheds new light on how Lucrezia Borgia, the illegitimate daughter of Pope Alexander VI, became so wealthy during an economic downturn.

Diane Yvonne Ghirardo has revealed that the Duchess of Ferrara was less interested in political intrigue than in running a business, and undertaking massive land development projects.

Forced by an economic downturn to reduce expenses and become an entrepreneur, Lucrezia would control between 30,000 and 50,000 acres in northern Italy within six years.

“This is a classic case of seeing only what you”re looking for and not getting the whole picture,” Ghirardo says of the centuries-old mystery surrounding how Lucrezia accumulated her vast personal wealth.

She say that historians have long dismissed Lucrezia as stupida because there is not record about her collecting art or antiquities.

“The information was there in the archives, but because she was a woman, scholars only looked at transactions for clothes, for jewellery, or for works of art. Nobody looked at the other entries in the account registers,” she says of the research project that took her more than seven years.

Revealing about how Lucrezia turned seemingly worthless swampland into reclaimed land in the current issue of Renaissance Quarterly, Ghirardo explained that the land was used to cultivate grains, barley, beans and olive trees.

She said that the land was also used to grow flax for spinning into linen; to pasture livestock for milk, meat, wool and hides; and for vineyards.

“That”s really a capitalist attitude: to leverage capital by getting the basic good — in this case, land — at the cheapest cost,” Ghirardo says.

“Lucrezia grasped the untapped potential of thousands of acres of marginal, waterlogged land, but she was too shrewd to employ her own resources to purchase it unless absolutely necessary,” she adds.

The historian further says that surviving documents also indicate Lucrezia”s knowledge of contract terms, border disputes, and even the skill of various hydraulic engineers.

The records also suggest that Lucrezia had pawned an extremely valuable ruby-and-pearl piece of jewellery to buy more water buffaloes, with a view to producing mozzarella.

“It”s not just what Lucrezia did and how she did it, but the immensity of her enterprises, that stands out. Nobody else was doing this on such a large scale, not even men. Nobody was prepared to put in that kind of money,” Ghirardo says.

The study has also revealed that Lucrezia held titles to the land she had acquired in her own name, not in her husband”s. Profits from Lucrezia”s entrepreneurial activities were also for her use alone, says Ghirardo.

“She could have purchased property that was already arable, but instead she got land that wasn”t useful and transformed it. I really believe that she thought of this as her Christian duty, to transform the land and make it better, and then to use money to help fund her spiritual and religious interests,” says the researcher. (ANI)

Kiwi strip club boss sues over billboard ad ban!

Wellington, Jan 6 (ANI): Owner of a strip club in New Zealand has challenged a council ban on his club’s raunchy billboard.

Craig Trevenna, boss of New Plymouth”s Crave Club, was forced to remove the billboard featuring Lisa Lewis because of a bylaw that forbids commercial sex premises from advertising anywhere but on their own premises.

Trevenna disputes the council classification and plans to fight to have it changed to an entertainment venue.

“We are not a brothel, I don”t believe in them and I won”t stand for them, we are an entertainment venue and offer a safe and fun environment,” the NZPA quoted him as saying.

However, the NPDC claims that going by the definitions in the bylaw, the club was classed as a commercial sex premises.

“Therefore the club is subject to the restrictions on signage,” said customer services general manager Cathy Thurston.

But, she claimed that the bylaw did not apply to other businesses.

Trevenna is furious that while other businesses could use explicit images in advertising, on the other hand their industry is being discriminated against.

“It”s a hypocritical situation that we are in. I feel we are being stripped of our right to advertise. We want equal rights to market our business the same as everyone else,” he said.

Trevenna said that there should be a level playing field for all business advertising, and they should be judged on the content of the ad and not the product.

“All businesses should have the ability to advertise, provided it is done tastefully,” he said. (ANI)

Foreign workers face tougher times in Singapore

Singapore – Foreign workers in Singapore are complaining of salary arrears, with an increasing numbers of them out of work under the impact of economic downturn, according to a news report Monday.

Workers from China and Bangladesh used the Manpower Ministry to intervene and negotiate their salary disputes with employers, the Straits Times reported.

It said 171 of the Chinese had decided to go back to work, 53 were going back to China and two others were taking their claims to the Labour Court.

Some volunteers helping foreign workers said they were seeing more of them coming to seek help.

Volunteer groups such as Transient Workers Count Too and Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics have called on the Health and Manpower Ministries to collaborate and carry out checks on the companies’ cash-flow status as well as hygiene in the cramped dormitories.

Singapore’s construction and services sectors depends on hundreds of thousands foreign workers. (dpa)

”Mumbai carnage strengthened Pak military establishment, weakened democracy”

Islamabad : The Mumbai terror attacks had strengthened military establishment and rightist ideology in Pakistan, putting democracy under threat, according to security analyst and columnist Dr Ayesha Siddiqua.

Speaking at an interactive session on ”Where to After Mumbai”, arranged by South Asia Policy Analysis Network (SAPANA) Pakistan, Dr Siddiqua said there was a weak political government, which did not know how to run the state.

She claimed that the General Headquarters (GHQ) was deciding the foreign policy and that the military establishment had improved its image in the aftermath of Mumbai attacks.

Dr Siddiqua said after the Mumbai attacks, peace process had been derailed and there were no signs of its resumption in the near future.

She suggested India and Pakistan work together and resolve outstanding disputes to curb terrorism, adding that the Kashmir issue should immediately be resolved in accordance with aspirations of Kashmiri people.

Dr Siddiqua ruled out the possibility of a war between India and Pakistan, and said India could not control reaction to its surgical operation in Pakistan.

Besides improving its relations with neighbours, Pakistan needed to resolve its internal problems too, the Daily Times quoted her, as saying.

Dr Siddiqua said democracy had not taken roots yet and possibility of a military intervention in future could not be ruled out.

“Pak Taliban not under Qaeda influence”

Lahore, The Pakistan unit of the Taliban, the Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) has reportedly said that none of its affiliate organisations was under the influence of Al Qaeda, and that it was ready to hold peace talks with the Pakistan government.

Neither the TTP nor any of its affiliate organisations is under the influence of Al Qaeda, the Daily Times quoted TTP spokesman Maulvi Omar as saying.

“The TTP had nothing to do with Al Qaeda,” he reiterated.

The TTP was sincere in peace talks with the government, he said and added that any effort to resolve the disputes in the Tribal Areas by force would prove to be fruitless.

Over the past few weeks, the Pakistan government has dropped enough hints that it was ready to hold talks with the TTP if it laid down arms. (ANI)