India has reason to smile

London, May 7 — The wheels of fortune turned for Indian-origin candidates in the British elections as a suave 42-year-old Sikh businessman won a parliamentary seat once represented by an MP who promised “rivers of blood” over immigration. Conservative candidate Paul Uppa ousted his fancied rival, the sitting Labour MP Rob Marris, by a razor-thin margin of 691 votes to take the Wolverhampton Southwest seat. He was among a record eight Indian-origin candidates – half of them fresh faces – to make to the British parliament. The city of Wolverhampton, located in west-central England and home to one of the largest Sikhs communities in Britain, became notorious when the local Conservative MP, Enoch Powell, made an infamous speech on immigration on April 20, 1968. “As I look ahead,” said Powell, “I am filled with foreboding; like the Roman, I seem to see ‘the River Tiber foaming with much blood.’” Powell was sacked as a member of the shadow cabinet after the speech prompted outrage around the world, but as recently as in 2007 a Conservative candidate in the region was forced to stand down after claiming Powell was “right” when he gave his anti-immigration speech. Also making their entry into the House of Commons were the first Indian-origin women – Valerie Vaz, Labour (sister of Britain’s longest serving MP of Indian origin Keith Vaz), Priti Patel, Conservative. “This is long overdue,” Patel, 37, said. Introduced to politics by former Conservative heavyweight Cecil Parkinson, Patel has few family links left in India although her parents were originally from Gujarat. The fourth debutant is Alok Sharma of the Conservative party, who won Reading West, a Labour seat for over a decade. Other winning candidates of Indian origin were the sitting MPs Keith Vaz (Labour, Leicester East), Shailesh Vara (Conservatives, Cambridgeshire northwesh), Marsha Singh (Labour, Bradford west), and Virendra Sharma (Labour, Ealing Southall).

Rushnara Ali, 35, became the first Bangladeshi woman to be make to the House of Commons.

Virendra Sharma wins in Ealing Southall

London, May 7 (IANS) Indian origin Labour candidate Virendra Sharma, formerly a bus conductor, Friday retained the Ealing Southall constituency in the British general election.

Sharma polled 22,024 votes, defeating closest rival Conservative Gurcharan Singh (12,733 votes). Liberal Democrat candidate Nigel Bakhai stood third.

The others in the fray but who lost badly were Green Party’s Suneil Basu, Christian Party’s Mehboob Anil and English Democrats’ Sati Chaggar, BBC reported.

Sharma was first elected as MP from Ealing Southall in July 19, 2007 during a by-election called following the death of the sitting Labour MP, Piara Khabra.

Born in India, Sharma speaks fluent Punjabi, Hindi and Urdu apart from English. The grandfather-of-three came from India in 1968 and started out as a conductor on the 207 route.

He enrolled in the London School of Economics on a Trade Union Scholarship.

The Ealing Southall constituency covers Dormer Wells, Ealing Broadway, Ealing Common, Elthorne, Greenford Broadway, Lady Margaret, Norwood Green, Northfield, Southall Broadway, Southall Green and Walpole.

According to the 2001 census, the constituency has a high British Asian population – around 39 percent, the majority being of Indian origin.

Brit Indian MP Vaz facing calls to step down for abusing power

London, Mar.16 (ANI): Keith Vaz, the Brit-Indian Labour MP, is facing calls to resign as the chairman of the Home Affairs Select Committee after a letter surfaced that said that he had asked a High Court judge to halt a case in which a friend stood to lose 400,000 pounds.

According to The Telegraph, Vaz intervened on behalf of a Shahrokh Mireskandari, a high-profile solicitor and convicted con man from whom he had allegedly received hospitality.

It has been confirmed that Vaz signed the letter in his capacity as chairman of the Home Affairs Select Committee, sparking claims that he abused his position.

Opposition parties have called for the former minister to step down, with Tory justice spokesman Dominic Grieve saying that the news “casts real doubt on his continuing as chair”.

The existence of the letter was made public in September last year and a parliamentary sleaze investigation requested by Vaz cleared him of misconduct.

But the publication of its contents has renewed focus on the senior Labour figure’s relationship with Mireskandari, who has also donated money to the party.

In the letter sent on June 19 last year, Vaz, MP for Leicester East, said that he was “deeply concerned” about how the “ethnic-minority” law firm Dean and Dean had been dealt with, and called for the hearing to be adjourned.

The company, which is run by Mireskandari, faced bankruptcy if the judge ordered it to pay 400,000 pounds to an airline after a long-running contractual dispute.

The note, which was written on House of Commons notepaper and did not mention Vaz’s personal relationship with the solicitor, was reportedly dismissed by the judge.

It was co-signed by Virendra Sharma, Labour MP for Ealing Southall, who has subsequently said she was not aware of the extent of Vaz’s friendship with Mr Mireskandari.

Last night, Vaz told the Daily Mail: “The Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards has considered all the evidence on this matter and dismissed the complaints in full. I have nothing to add.” (ANI)