Radio Pakistan’s Dalit propaganda exposed

Abohar, July 14(ANI): Radio Pakistan, in its recent Punjabi Durbar programme, has said Scheduled Castes (SCs) children are being denied admission in schools in India, but nothing can be further from the truth.

Shyam Lal Arora, the district president of the Recognised and Affiliated Schools Association, Punjab termed the report false and malicious propaganda.

“The Dalits are not being discriminated or ill treated here in India. The Dalit children have been given equal rights and status in every school, college, office and department. Pakistan is making such statements to create tension in this country,” said Arora.

“In villages also, Dalit children are being given admission without any discrimination. Pakistan’s statement that the Dalit community is being stopped from taking water from community taps in the country is completely wrong. Here, people of all religions and Dalits take water from the same tap,” Arora added.

Pakistan is trying to create a divide in this country by asserting that casteism is dominant in India.

Radio Pakistan’s propaganda on casteism in India stands exposed by the fact that since independence, the Indian Government has taken several initiatives to improve the socio-economic and literacy conditions of the less-privileged in the country.

For instance, the strategy of the Scheduled Castes Sub-Plan (SCSP), which was evolved in 1979, is one of the most important interventions through the planning process for social, economic and educational development of Scheduled Castes and for improvement in their working and living conditions.

As far as reservation of seats in educational institutes are concerned, the Central Government has reserved 27 per cent of higher education seats, and individual states have been given freedom to legislate further reservations.

In 2008, the Supreme Court had upheld the law that provides for 27 per cent reservation for Other Backward Castes (OBCs) in educational institutions supported by the Central Government, while ruling that the creamy layer among the OBCs should be excluded from the quota.

This shows that the caste system as it existed in the past has been formally abolished.

Radio Pakistan, therefore, needs to study the Indian Constitution before airing baseless allegations about India. (ANI)

The Afghan Taliban warlord Pak seeks as a “friend” is US’ worst foe

Islamabad, June 20 (ANI): With the Pakistan government deciding to initiate an offensive against the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud in South Waziristan, and ordering the troops to march in towards the warlord’s stronghold in the region, both the government and Mehsud now want Maulvi Nazir, a key Taliban commander in Afghanistan, to side by them.

While Mehsud is hell-bent upon creating havoc in Pakistan, Nazir is more focused on the Taliban’s activities in Afghanistan and fighting against the US led allied forces there.

For Pakistan, Nazir could apparently be an important ally, but it could also mean that Islamabad is trying to betray the United States because it (US) sees Nazir as a potential danger for its troops stationed in Afghanistan, a report in the Globe and the Mail said.

Pakistan is trying to woo one Taliban commander to fight against another, which suggests that it still has not been able to overcome the perception of ‘good’ Taliban and ‘bad’ Taliban, the report said.

“Pakistan still has this idea of ‘good’ militants and ‘bad’ militants. Baitullah is Pakistan’s problem. For securing U.S. objectives in Afghanistan, Maulvi Nazir remains important,” the report quoted Christine Fair, an analyst at Rand Corporation, as saying.

However, the United States, which considers Pakistan its key ally in the ‘war on terror’, has been continuously pressing Pakistan to act against all the militant organizations operating on its soil, rather than acting against only those which pose a threat to the country, the report added.

It is also believed that the Pakistan Army sees certain terror groups as an effective tool to safe guard its western border and wage a proxy war with India, it went on to add.

The military is of the view that if it takes initiatives to eliminate all the extremists on its soil then such a war could continue for several years and it would result only in generations of blood-shed, it opined.

Now, Pakistan is left with nothing but to make a choice that whether it wants to quell the problem which is even threatening its existence.

The Pakistani military should try to keep Nazir neutral, as he is highly unlikely to join the battle against its offensive targeting Mehsud.

Experts also believe that the golden rule of ‘divide and rule’ would be the best strategy against the extremists.

“It doesn’t pay if you push all the Taliban into one corner and start fighting them. It’s better to divide them,” said Mehmood Shah, a former senior security official for the tribal area. (ANI)

Now, a robot becomes ‘Facebooker’!

London, May 7 (ANI): A robot is being given its own Facebook profile page in a bid to bridge the divide between humans and robots.

With the development, researchers are hoping to foster meaningful relationships with people.

The page will be populated with interactions the robot has with people as well as photos of the time it spends in human company.

The idea is of Dr Nikolaus Mavridis and co-researchers as they look into ways of overcoming the reluctance of people to stay in touch with robots, reports The BBC.

In a paper on the pre-print website Archive.org server, the researchers say they want to find out if this can be thwarted by giving humans and robots a pool of shared memories.

The platform for exploring the problem is a robot created by Mavridis and colleagues from the Interactive Robots and Media Lab (IRML) at the University of the United Arab Emirates plus co-workers in Germany and Greece.

The robot has three software modules that aid it human interaction. One module distinguishes faces of humans and the pictures they post on Facebook.

A language module allows the machine to have real-time discussions and helps it continue a catalog of its friends and their data on Facebook. This allows it to maintain its own Facebook profile. It also has a supplementary range finder, touch screen and stereo camera.

The robot is named and modeled after Arabic scholar Ibn Sina aka Avicenna.

The robots interactions with humans will be logged on its Facebook profile. (ANI)

Left needs to move forward from its regressive anti-development policies: Priyanka Vadra

Amethi (Uttar Pradesh), Apr.21 (ANI): Priyanka Vadra, the daughter of UPA chairperson and Congress president Sonia Gandhi, has said that the Left needs to have a rethink on some of its regressive and anti-development policies if it is desirous of taking Indian forward in the new millenium.

Speaking in an interview to Times Now, Priyanka said: “The need of the hour for our country is to go forward into the modern era, where development is a need and the economy must be strong for this. So any ideology that holds it back, is regressive in that sense. I think it needs a little bit of a rethink.”

Asked what would her reaction be if the numbers came out after the elections in such a way that there would be a need to take on the Left as a coalition partner again, she said: “Well, ideally one should stick to their principles. But as I said, coalition politics is a reality. So one cannot tell the future. As I said before, ultimately to be able to change things, to be able to move forward, power is required. Because if you don’t have power you cannot do a lot of things that you would like to do for the nation.

Therefore every political party ultimately does aspire to be in power and compromises are made. If those compromises have to be made preferrably it should not be in your ideology. In the sense, Congress is a secular party and that is its main stay. So as long as the compromise is not on that smaller compromises perhaps may have to be made.

When asked whether the pro-LTTE statements coming out of Tamil Nadu have hurt her family, Priyanka said: “I would speak for all my family members when I said that politics is quiet separate to us from a personal grief. I think that none of us have any hatred or anger towards those who killed my father. So, if somebody says things about them or praises them, it does not cause us personal grief.”

When asked whether on meeting Nandita, one of the accused in the 1991 assassination of her father had given her a sense of closure about the whole issue, she said: “This is a very personal thing. But, I really have never understood this word closure. Because when you lose somebody you really love, there is never any closure.”

She also said that she learnt a lot from her meeting with Nandita.

Priyanka said that she was clear on what the people wanted and admitted that the divide between rural and urban India was quite wide. Therefore, she could not understand how political parties or politicians leading them could talk about issues that really did not matter.

“I am talking about the people in the villages and ordinary people, who have really tough difficult lives. We can’t even compare city life with what I see here. They are very clear of what they want. They want development and they want to move forward.

Their demands are based on these things. So when political parties bring up things which actually are of no concern to the real issues of the election, I find it incongruent because I don’t understand, how politicians cannot understand that what they are saying is of no interest to the people.”

She also claimed that people were beyond the issue of the Babri Masjid demolition.

“I think the people of India are very wise. Perhaps there are some sections which might get charged up. But people are very wise. They know when they are being used politically. They know when their religion is being used for politics. They know when their caste is being used for politics,” Priyanka told the news channel. (ANI)

Moderate Hurriyat may take part in polls in Kashmir

Srinagar, Apr.16 (ANI): The moderate faction of the Hurriyat conference has said that it will not use the word boycott in the ongoing parliamentary polls in the state.

A decision to this effect was taken despite the fact that its hardline political faction has chosen to call for the poll boycott and even expressed resolve to conduct an anti-election campaign.he decision was reached after a three day marathon meeting at the faction’s Rajbagh headquarters in Srinagar.

“Kashmir is a disputed territory and to hold sham elections in the state is a dubious act which will not affect the status of the dispute,” the Hurriyat Conference said in a statement issued to the press.

“Polls have proven futile in the past and will prove so again,” the statement added.

Thursday’s statement only repeats the clichid Hurriyat stance. “Election were never the issue with us. They make no sense in the absence of the settlement of the larger Kashmir conflict. Our position is that elections over the past six decades have resolved nothing. Kashmir problem as it existed at the time of partition remains the same. This election similarly will make no difference,” the statement says further.

However, the decision today has been taken in the absence of the chairman Mirwaiz Umar Farooq who is in New Delhi for his medical treatment.

The omission of the boycott call is likely to create a further divide between hawks and doves and further splinter separatist leadership. (ANI)

‘KNP concerned over missing people in Muzaffarabad’

London, Apr.13 (ANI): Kashmir National Party Spokesman Dr Shabir Choudhry has expressed serious concern over disappearance of Kashmiri youths from Muzaffarabad. Over the months dozens of young men have disappeared from Muzaffarabad, and people are really concerned about this, said Dr Shabir Choudhry.

Last night another young man Adnaan Mir disappeared without a trace. Last week a dead body of Shah Zaman was discovered from a deserted hotel building. Shah Zaman disappeared some weeks ago and no one knew anything about him until his dead body was discovered inflicting fear and worry among the citizens of the city.

About two months ago Khawaja Asim Rasool, a cousin of a famous political activist Khawaja Abid Kashmiri went missing and no one knows where he is. Khawaja Abid Kashmiri pursues a nationalist politics and wants a complete independence of the State from India and Pakistan.

Khawaja Abid Kashmiri while talking to Dr Shabir Choudhry said, ‘people are seriously worried about these disappearances’. He said over the months dozens of young men have disappeared and no one knows where they are and what has happened to them.

KNP Spokesman said, ‘this is very serious matter and we need to know what is going on. Are these people kidnapped by the agencies to teach lesson and harass those who oppose Pakistani domination in the area; or they are used for some other sinister motives’.

Dr Shabir Choudhry said, ‘this is a serious breach of UNCIP Resolutions under which Pakistan assumed control of these areas. Pakistani authorities must come clean on this matter and stop harassing those who espouse nationalist politics’.

Dr Shabir Choudhry said, ‘some organisation are only concerned about human rights abuse on the Indian side of the LOC; but we condemn and oppose human rights abuse on both sides of the divide, as our struggle is against wrong policies and human rights abuse rather than any specific country’.

Dr Shabir Choudhry said, ‘we have asked people to prepare a list of missing people that we can take up their case with the relevant authorities and international human rights organisation, including the UN and Amnesty International’.

KNP Spokesman said, ‘we will investigate human rights abuse in Gilgit and Baltistan and in Pakistani Administered Kashmir, and take it up at the international level that this trend must stop; and people of these areas are not intimidated for their political or religious views. By Dr Shabir Choudhry (ANI)

When north Indians matter in Mumbai

RAM SINGH stands outside Malad railway station and points to a line of vegetable and fruit vendors. “You will find all of UP (Uttar Pradesh) and Bihar here,” he says.

A potato vendor, the 40-year-old Singh takes pride in being a “Bihari Bambaiyya”. Like most migrants, he is a registered voter; he has lived 30 years in the city.

Singh knows his time is now, when elections are round the corner. Parties in the fray know north Indian migrants are a suburban vote bank they cannot ignore and politicians are wooing the community with all their skill.

This time they have all the more reason to do so, what with Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) chief Raj Thackeray’s anti-north Indian campaign in 2008 available as a readymade issue. The north Indian vote The suburban belt from Andheri to Borivli has a significant north Indian presence.

Some of these areas fall in the Mumbai North West constituency, but most are part of the Mumbai North constituency, where the fight is between BJP’s Ram Naik and Congress’s Sanjay Nirupam. North Indians form up to 25 per cent of the electorate in Mumbai North.

And while many north Indians say they support the BJP, others in this constituency are also open to giving Nirupam, a Bihari settled in the city, a chance. “Sanjay Nirupam’s candidature is a slap on the face of those who wanted to divide this city,” Singh said.

“We must ensure he goes to Parliament to prove this is our country and that we have the right to settle anywhere.” To be able to vote, Singh cancelled a trip to his village.

Thackeray has always maintained he has nothing against those who have lived here for decades, only against those who have trickled in recently, as such constant influx puts a strain on the infrastructure. Autorickshaw driver Jagnarayan Pandey (39) agrees.

“Raj is right,” the north Indian living in Chandivali said. “But his way of explaining this is wrong.

” Pandey is a BJP supporter, his 19-year-old son an MNS party worker. “It is his choice,” Pandey said.

Such arguments cut no ice with Ramdeni Kandu (67), a native of UP. “People like Raj create a divide,” he said. For the upper middle class, the entire issue is insignificant.

“This (MNS-north Indian issue) is not even on my mind,” a teacher who resides in Kandivli said, requesting her north Indian name not be mentioned to avoid trouble. “Raj did it just to attract the Marathi man after quitting the (Shiv) Sena.

” Support, yes. But vote? Thackeray may have managed to make an impression on the Marathi man right from his days in the Shiv Sena, but that may not necessarily translate into votes.

The Marathi vote may get divided between the Shiv Sena and other regional parties, such as the NCP and the MNS. Businessman Surendra Golikeri (60) said the issue would have been decisive if all regional parties had come together. “The Shiv Sena has aligned with the BJP, which is contradictory to the issue.

The NCP has an electoral understanding with the UPA, so they won’t broach the subject,” he said. “So the issue is getting diluted.

Radio Pakistan urges Sikhs, Muslims to unite against Hindus

Amritsar, Mar.20 (ANI): Radio Pakistan appears determined to continue to propagate a policy of ‘divide and rule’ in India.

In its recent Punjabi Darbar program, it urged both Muslims and Sikhs to unite against Hindus, by calling the latter as the ‘enemy’.

Hindu and Sikh clerics, however, condemned this sort of propaganda wholeheartedly.

“Pakistan has issued a statement that Sikhs in India and Pakistan are one and we have right to visit gurudwaras’in Pakistan; but the people who go there, tell us about the dire condition of gurudwaras in Pakistan. Sikhs and the Hindus share a very good relationship. We Sikhs have the same respect for people of all religions, and we live with a feeling of brotherhood. It’s been 20 years since I am working as the village head and I share good relationship with other village heads and MLAs in the nearby villages. There is no difference between the people of any castes and nor anybody can create it,” said Vishnu Upadhyay of Kalarkheda village in Amritsar District.

“There is no discrimination on the basis of religion. People visit each other’s holy place with devotion. Pakistan is spreading illogical rumours, saying that we fight with each other but this is not true, we live together. The Golden Temple of Amritsar is the biggest example where people of all the religions make visits. The rumours spreaded by Pakistan that we want to make India a Hindu dominating country, is immoral,” said Sukhdev Singh Barad, the head granthi of the Gurdwara Sahib in Usmankheda village in the same district.

The population of Sikhs in Punjab is estimated to be 59.9 per cent as of 2004, while that of Hindus is an estimated 37 percent. The Muslim population in the state is said to be less than two percent. It stands to reason that the Sikhs and the Hindus are the dominant communties in the state, and therefore, the question of Sikhs joining hands with Muslims to neutralise the Hindu community is farfetched and borders on the ridiculous. (ANI)

“No question” of boycotting new Zimbabwe summit: MDC

Harare- Zimbabwe’s pro-democracy Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) will attend next Monday’s summit of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) meant to try to kick-start the stalled power-sharing deal between the country’s political protagonists, the MDC said Tuesday.

The day after a 12-hour meeting in Harare failed to close the divide between the MDC and President Robert Mugabe’s Zanu-PF on a unity government, MDC secretary general Tendai Biti said there was

“no question of us boycotting. We will be attending (the SADC summit).

But he was “not hopeful.”

“You can have a million extraordinary summits but as long as no-one (in the SADC leadership) has the courage to look at Mugabe in the face and tell him, old man, logic has to prevail, it will be meaningless.”

If the SADC extraordinary summit, which will be the third such meeting of the 15-nation bloc in less than a year on the Zimbabwe crisis, fails, the MDC expects the African Union at its regular summit in Ethiopia the following week “to take over this matter and kill it once and for all.”

“We need finality,” Biti said. (dpa)

Uttarayan brings people together in Gujarat

By Ami Sharma

Ahmedabad, Jan.8 (ANI): Uttarayan or Makar Sankranti is one of the biggest Hindu festivals celebrated in Gujarat. A large number of people here mark it as a kite festival, in which people from all communities participate.

These kites are chiefly made by members of the Muslim community. Ahead of the festival, there is usually high demand for kites that are made available in the in attractive hues and sizes in the markets.

Many Gujaratis believe that Uttarayan festival is not just about an occasion when people fly kites but it is a time which also promotes and strengthens harmony among Hindus and Muslims in communally sensitive State.

Thousands of Muslims in Gujarat are into the kite making business. Every one of them feels proud to be a part of such business. These days the kite makers as well as the kite flyers are busy preparing for the upcoming festival.

Jamalpur Kite market in Ahmedabad sets a good example of communal harmony. The Muslim-dominated market has been making a variety of kites for decades for kite flyers. .

Umar Bhai, a Muslim kite maker, has been into this business for over 35 years. He feels glad to be a part of the ”Uttarayan” festival.

“Uttarayan is a festival of communal harmony. We feel proud that we make kites for our Hindu friends. Here, every kite maker is a Muslim and the buyers are Hindus. But this divide (on religious lines) has never affected the affection and love among us,” says Umar Bhai.

“This year the kite festival will help us forget recession and the Mumbai terror attacks. Nobody can create a divide between our two religions; we are like brothers. Hindu brothers come this side to purchase kites and we welcome them,” Umar Bhai adds.

Meanwhile, the kite lovers have already started visiting the markets. The buyers are of the view that Muslim kite makers are skilful and innovative.

The traders say that demand for kites has gone down this year. Shopkeepers dealing in kites are hopeful that customers will soon come to buy kites for marking Uttarayan festival.

” Though there is recession in the market and terror attacks have ruined the festive atmosphere we still want people to be one and work together ‘said Mukhtaar Ahmed Sheikh, another kite maker.

During Uttarayan, the sky in Gujarat would be dotted with innumerable colourful kites of various shapes and sizes. The kite fliers throng the roof terraces and open spaces amidst loud music and festive fervour.

Uttarayana is the time when the Sun travels towards north on the celestial sphere. The starting of Uttarayan is celebrated as Makar Sankranti throughout India. (ANI)

UK”s Roman Catholic Cardinal says credit crisis has killed capitalism

London, Jan.6 (ANI): The leader of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales has declared that capitalism is dead because of the credit crunch.

Cardinal Cormac Murphy O”Connor, 76, made the astonishing claim at a lavish fund-raising dinner at Claridges which secured pledges of hundreds of thousands of pounds for the Catholic church, the Telegraph reports.

The Cardinal, dressed in his full clerical regalia, said in a speech at the black tie dinner that he had worried whether the dinner should go ahead because of the troubled economic times. But he went on to say that in 1989, with the collapse of the Berlin wall, that “communism had died”. In 2008, he said, ” capitalism had died”.

The remarks will cause dismay in Downing Street as the Cardinal”s remarks will be interpreted as a signal that the entire economic order has collapsed.

The Government has clashed with the Cardinal before over homosexual adoption, abortion and the Embryology Bill.

One Whitehall source said: “We would like the church to work with us, not against us.”

The four course dinner, with a champagne reception, had been provided free of charge by Derek Quinlan, the property developer, who owns Claridges who is worth an estimated 60 million pounds.

The remarks by the Cardinal come as leading bishops in the Church of England have launched a withering attack on the Government, questioning the morality of its policies.

Five of the Church’s most senior figures said the Government now presided over a country suffering from family breakdown, an unhealthy reliance on debt and a growing divide between rich and poor. (ANI)

Cancer cells ‘can outwit chemotherapy’

Cancer cells 'can outwit chemotherapy' The diseased cells have a Houdini-like “escape tactic” which can outwit even potent drugs, researchers found.

The study could explain why some cancers recur after treatment.

Scientists had previously believed that no cells could live after the therapy triggered a process called apoptosis, or cell suicide.

However, laboratory tests have shown that some breast, skin, liver and cervical cells can survive even after that stage.

Researchers found that the cell suicide process had to reach a crucial, advanced point before it was sure that all cancer cells would die.

Cancer charities said that the findings could allow scientists to understand more clearly how some cancer cells survive chemotherapy.

Around one in three people will develop cancer at some point in their lives, and many will have chemotherapy treatment following or instead of surgery.

Researchers at The Chinese University of Hong Kong subjected the cancer cells to three different types of the therapy, all of which cause apoptosis.

They gave the cells enough of the deadly chemicals to spark the impulse to die.

But they found that although the cells were damaged by the chemotherapy, once it was stopped they regained their original shape, began to function as normal and continued to divide, causing them to grow and spread.

The cells were mortally damaged only if their central part had already begun to disintegrate.

However, this does not usually happen until right at the very end of the normal cell suicide process, according to the findings, published in the British Journal of Cancer.

Professor Ming-Chiu Fung, from the department of Biology at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, said: “We have shown that various cancer cell lines can survive programmed cell death.

“This research suggests the existence of an escape tactic which cancer cells might call upon to survive chemotherapy treatment.

“Our finding sparks new leads to research what drives cancer cells to come back to life after chemotherapy treatment. Or to what extent this ability of cancer cells to reverse cell death contributes to their continued division and growth during cycles of anticancer treatment. Answers to these questions will provide potential new therapeutic targets in our battle against cancer.”

Dr Lesley Walker, from Cancer Research UK, said: “This eye-opening discovery has created an entire map of new routes to explore in the search for new therapy targets. It is an intriguing advance and one that we hope will play a useful part in our efforts to beat cancer.”

Recurrence of cancer happens when, in spite of various treatments, some cancer cells remain in the body and begin to spread.

Occasionally the cells can remain dormant for some time, meaning the cancer comes back months or even years after the initial therapy.

One million live in poverty in wealthy Hong Kong, Democrats claim

Hong Kong – Hong Kong has the greatest rich-poor divide of any developed country with more than 1 million people living in relative poverty, a party political leader claimed Sunday.

Democratic Party leader Albert Ho called the divide between the rich and poor in the wealthy city of 6.9 million “an embarrassment to our society” and called on Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang to act.

“The government has made it an article of faith and told all of us to believe in the ‘trickle-down effect’ in the market economy,” Ho said on state-run radio.

“In reality, while the amount of wealth generated in Hong Kong has continued to increase, the wealth and poverty gap has grown wider and is now the highest among developed countries.”

Ho called on Hong Kong’s chief executive Donald Tsang to address the issue by tackling rising unemployment and taking steps to relieve the tax burden on poorer families.

Property prices in Hong Kong have plunged and the Hang Seng Index has lost 50 per cent of its value in the past 12 months with the onset of the global economic crisis. (dpa)