Didigiri Rules

India, June 5 — The lane leading to 30 B, Harish Chatterjee Street, close to the Kalighat temple in south Kolkata, is crowded on most days. But for the past three days, a fresh fervour appears to have gripped its residents. “Didi, didi, this way”, goes the chorus, as the lady emerges from the tiled house. Some dive at her feet, others attempt to garland her. Her neighbours in the dingy lane have closely witnessed the dizzy rise of Mamata Banerjee. From a student leader at the Jogmaya Devi College to the firebrand minister who is close to dislodging the 33-year-old communist government in West Bengal, she has come a long way. Banerjee’s political career is divided into three phases. First, as a young Congress worker, she trounced CPI(M) heavyweights such as Somnath Chatterjee in the 1984 Lok Sabha polls. In the second phase, between 1991-1997, she ran an almost parallel Congress organisation in Bengal that would later evolve into the Trinamool Congress. In the third phase, between 2006 and 2010, she spearheaded the Singur and Nandigram agitations, trouncing the Left in most elections held since. Most of her life as Congress member was spent trying to convince the party leadership about her credentials as the only leader who could give the Left Front a run for its money. Banerjee’s spunk impressed former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi. After his death, she got a ministerial berth in the P.V. Narasimha Rao Government. The same minister sat on a dharna against the government over the Terrorists and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act and fought the Pradesh Congress Committee elections against party satrap Somen Mitra. She lost and realised that the manner in which state leaders perceived the Congress should function and the way she saw it were different. In 1997, her relationship with the Congress leadership reached a nadir, when, during an AICC session in Kolkata, she launched the Trinamool Congress. Her flirtation with the BJP began and she fought the 1998 Lok Sabha elections with the saffron party. After a repeat performance in 1999 she became Railway Minister. Banerjee soon began to grow uncomfortable as her BJP connection was alienating her Muslim voters. A stir over kickbacks for the purchase of coffins for the army gave her the opportunity to wriggle out. In a hurriedly cooked alliance with the Congress, Banerjee fought the 2001 assembly polls and lost. She could not counter Buddhadeb Bhattacharya’s popularity and the simultaneous backstabbing by a section of Congress leaders. The National Democratic Alliance led by the BJP was a natural choice once again. But the Godhra riots further alienated her Muslim supporters and the 2004 Lok Sabha elections saw her party win just one parliamentary seat from Bengal: Banerjee herself. In the 2006 assembly elections too, her party fared badly. In almost three-decade long political career, Banerjee has remained an enigma. Her now-legendary mood swings have baffled even those close to her. She has often behaved rudely inside the Parliament and was even spotted hurling the “resignation letter” at the speaker. One of the lowest points of Banerjee’s career came in 1989 when she lost in the Jadavpur Lok Sabha polls to Malini Bhattacharya. More than the defeat, she became an object of ridicule for using “Dr” in her posters during campaigning. She defended her “degree”, but nobody could trace the East Georgia University that had conferred her the honour. In 1996, she attempted “suicide” by threatening to hang herself with a shawl accusing the Congress leadership of doling out assembly tickets to “criminals”. Banerjee’s split personality has evoked veneration and wrath from admirers and rivals respectively. Says senior journalist Manojit Mitra: “She is strange mixture. It is difficult to understand her appeal with our urban educated sensibilities. But she attracts the masses like a magnet.” “She talks something in the morning and the opposite in the evening”, says West Bengal CPI (M) secretary Biman Bose. After hours, didi, as she is popularly known, loves humming Tagore songs and playing the synthesiser. She also paints, mostly flowers and Lord Ganesha. She is on the treadmill at least once a day. Before and after her workouts, Banerjee works on her books – at last count she had written 17. Histrionics aside, Banerjee is one of the few Indian leaders who reach out to the common man in his own language. She often travels to remote villages to comfort grieving relatives of a party man. Reporters recall villagers leaving their meals and rushing out to have a glimpse of her motorcade. The agitation over Singur and Nandigram, which began in September 2006, revived Banerjee’s sagging political career. Her protests against land acquisition made her the darling of the rural masses, Left loyalists for long. The Communists gave in meekly and the Nandigram project was scrapped. Banerjee reaped rich dividends in the panchayat polls of 2008. In the 2009 Lok Sabha elections, the one-MP-party bagged 19 seats. There has been no looking back since. Whether it was the assembly by-elections or the school committee polls, the Trinamool Congress emerged as a formidable force in Bengal.

If recent poll results are any indication, Banerjee is inching closer to the red building at Dalhousie Square. For the past three days, she has remained huddled with top Trinamool leaders. “There is no governance in Bengal right now. I want early elections,” she said on Thursday.

Lung virus behind pneumonia kills 200,000 kids worldwide annually

London, Apr 16 (ANI): A University of Edinburgh study has shown a common virus that causes wheezing and pneumonia claims the lives of up to two hundred thousand children worldwide each year.

The study, published in the Lancet, also showed that about 3.4 million children require hospital treatment for severe lung infection caused by the bug – respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).

RSV – which infects most children before the age of two – usually causes mild cold-like symptoms, but can lead to serious illness in babies who are born prematurely or who have congenital heart disease.

The study confirms that RSV is the single largest cause of lung infection in children.

Dr Harish Nair, of the University of Edinburgh”s Department of Population Health Studies, said: “Our greatest hope of fighting this virus is to develop a vaccine, but before we can implement an immunisation programme, we need to understand exactly how big a problem RSV poses.

“This is the first time we have gathered information on such a global scale and is the best estimate we have for the number of children dying each year from this preventable illness.”(ANI)

Delhi High Court says judges asset declaration covered under RTI

New Delhi, Sep.2 (ANI): The Delhi High Court has on Wednesday said that the Chief Justice of India is a public authority under the RTI Act, which means that asset declaration is covered by the RTI under Section 8 1 (A).

This comes after SC judges had decided tp make their assets public. The only question was whether judges would entertain questions from the public under the RTI act.

A petition was filed by the apex court in the Delhi High Court challenging the Central Information Common Order which had questioned whether the judges revealed their assets to the Chief Justice of India.

Political parties and legal experts last week had welcomed the move of the Supreme Court judges to make public the details of their assets.

Union Law and Justice Minister M. Veerappa Moily said: “If they have come forward to disclose it, it is welcome. It is for the judges to decide how it should be done because what is best in the interest of the judges, they are the best judge.”

Welcoming the move, BJP spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad said: “I am afraid that this decision could have been taken earlier and the unfortunate controversy over the last couple of months could have been avoided.”

Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi said the judiciary has avoided “further needless controversy”, but it could have been avoided if the decision was taken earlier, he said.

“It is a question of public perception and public confidence, trust, faith and in that light it is a step in the right direction,” he said.

Describing it as a very good decision taken by judges, Former Attorney General and constitutional expert Soli Sorabjee said: “I think it is a very good development. It”s better late than never.”

“I am sure their initial reluctance not to declare assets was not because they had anything to hide. They had misgivings that it may be misused,” he added.

Senior lawyer Harish Salve said: “The whole controversy had become very unsavory with this kind of suggestions that judges have something to hide they want to be above the law. I am so happy that the Supreme Court has risen to the occasion.”

Senior advocate Prashant Bhushan said the move would also now encourage the High Courts judges to make public their assets.

“It is absolutely a welcome move and I am sure it will also encourage the judges of the High Courts to publicly declare their assets and force the government to put up assets of government servants on public website which can be accessed by the people,” Bhushan said.

Terming the decision as “excellent”, senior advocate K K Venugopal said: “I think it is the greatest step that the judiciary could take because it has cleared all the clouds which have been hanging over the issue.” (ANI)

Supreme Court judges decision to disclose assets welcomed

New Delhi, Aug 27 (ANI): Political parties and legal experts on Thursday welcomed the move of Supreme Court judges to make public the details of their assets.

Welcoming the move, BJP spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad said: “I am afraid that this decision could have been taken earlier and the unfortunate controversy over the last couple of months could have been avoided.”

Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi said the judiciary has avoided “further needless controversy”, but it could have been avoided if the decision was taken earlier, he said.

“It is a question of public perception and public confidence, trust, faith and in that light it is a step in the right direction,” he said.

Describing it as a very good decision taken by judges, Former Attorney General and constitutional expert Soli Sorabjee said: “I think it is a very good development. It’s better late than never.”

“I am sure their initial reluctance not to declare assets was not because they had anything to hide. They had misgivings that it may be misused,” he added.

Senior lawyer Harish Salve said: “The whole controversy had become very unsavory with this kind of suggestions that judges have something to hide they want to be above the law. I am so happy that the Supreme Court has risen to the occasion.”

Senior advocate Prashant Bhushan said the move would also now encourage the High Courts judges to make public their assets.

“It is absolutely a welcome move and I am sure it will also encourage the judges of the High Courts to publicly declare their assets and force the government to put up assets of government servants on public website which can be accessed by the people,” Bhushan said.

Terming the decision as “excellent”, senior advocate K K Venugopal said: “I think it is the greatest step that the judiciary could take because it has cleared all the clouds which have been hanging over the issue.” (ANI)

Delhi HC seeks CBI’s response on legality of summoning Buta Singh

New Delhi, Aug 26 (ANI): The Delhi High Court on Wednesday sought response from the CBI on a petition filed by Buta Singh accusing the agency of illegally summoning him for questioning in connection with a multi crore corruption case.

Buta Singh, who holds a post of Cabinet rank, argued that the agency couldn’t question him without taking mandatory sanction from the Centre.

On this, Justice Geeta Mittal issued notice to the CBI and asked it to file its reply by Monday.

After accepting the notice, Advocate Harish Gulati, appearing for CBI, said he would take instructions from the agency on whether sanction was taken or not before summoning Singh.

Buta Singh’s son Sarabjot Singh was arrested by the agency on July 31 for allegedly demanding a bribe of three crore rupees from Nasik-based contractor Ramrao Patil.

Earlier, Buta Singh had stated: “Latest attack (by CBI) is an attempt to kill my whole political life and my political future.”

Patil had allegedly taken a loan of around 10 crore rupees from a cooperative society on behalf of over 100 persons from the Dalit community.

He allegedly pocketed the money following which a case was registered against him. (ANI)

I have the right to speak on the judiciary: CJI

New Delhi, Aug 24 (ANI): Chief Justice of India K.G. Balakrishnan on Monday called the Karnataka High Court Judge D.V. Shylendra Kumar’s move to declare his own assets as a publicity strategy, and reiterated his right to speak on matters related to the judiciary.

“He wants publicity and such a thing is not good for a judge. Judges should not be publicity-crazy,” Chief Justice Balakrishnan said.

The Chief Justice of India refuted charges that he was against judges making their assets public.

“The public has a right to know what is happening in the judiciary and I am telling them. I stand by what I have said on disclosure of assets by judges, and No one can stop them (Judges) if they chose to do so,” he said.

Earlier, Justice Kumar had said the chief justice of India did not have the authority to speak on behalf of all judges.

“I have the authority to speak in favour of judiciary,” Balakrishnan said.

Earlier senior lawyer Harish Salve said, while he agreed with Justice Kumar’s view that judges should publicly declare their assets, his criticism of the Chief Justice was not in order.(ANI)

R.D.Burman remembered on his 70th birth anniversary in New Delhi

New Delhi, June 27 (ANI): A number of fans and music enthusiasts celebrated the 70th birth anniversary of legendary Bollywood music composer R.D.Burman on Saturday in the national capital.

Various performers, on this occasions, sang late R.D. Burman’s compositions and children gave dance presentations during a function organised by a fan club devoted to his name in the national capital.

The fan club of R.D.Burman, who was popularly known as ‘Pancham Da’, celebrates his special days every year and awards new singers and artistes on this occasion.

“Every year on his birthday and his death anniversary, we pay homage to him. And we also promote new talent through his music. His songs are given to new artistes to perform and every year we give them awards as well,” said Harish Nadan, Director of the Pancham Fan Club.

Burman had numerous Bollywood melodies to his credit. Considered to be the reigning king of Hindi film music in the 1970s and 80s, Burman was believed to have revolutionised Bollywood music with various innovations.

Burman teamed up with famous Bollywood singers such as Kishore Kumar, Asha Bhosle and Lata Mangeshkar and rendered his voice to many songs. (ANI)

English lords over Hindi in Lok Sabha oath-taking ceremony

New Delhi, May 28 (ANI): Fifty nine ministers took their oath in English and Hindi at a solemn ceremony in Rashtrapati Bhavan on Thursday.

President Pratibha Patil administered oath of office to 38 ministers in English and 21 ministers in Hindi.

The 59 ministers will now join Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and 19 other Cabinet Ministers.

The 38 ministers who took their oath in English were: Farooq Abdullah, Dayanidhi Maran, A Raja, Mallikarjun Kharge, M S Gill, G K Vasan, Pawan Kumar Bansal, M K Alagiri, Praful Patel, Prithviraj Chavan, Sriprakash Jaiswal, Jairam Ramesh, Srikant Jena, E Ahamed, V Narayanasamy, Mullapally Ramachandran, Jyotiraditya Scindia, D Purandeswari, K H Muniyappa, Ajay Maken, Panabaka Lakshmi, M M Pallam Raju, Saugata Ray, S S Palanimackam, A Sai Prathap, Gurudas Kamat, K V Thomas, Dinesh Trivedi, Sisir Adhikari, Sultan Ahmed, Mukul Roy, Chowdhary Mohan Jatua, D Napolean, S Jagathrakshakan, S Gandhiselvan, Praneet Kaur, Prateek Prakashbapu Patil, R P N Singh, Shashi Tharoor and Vincent Pala.

The, 21 ministers who took their oath in Hindi were: Virbhadra Singh, Vilasrao Deshmukh, Selja, Subodhkant Sahay, Mukul Wasnik, Kantilal Bhuria, Salman Khursheed, Dinsha Patel, Krishna Tirath, Namo Narain Meena, Jitin Prasada, Harish Rawat, Bharatsinh Solanki, Mahadev Khandela, Tusharbhai Chaudhary, Sachin Pilot, Arun Yadav, R P N Singh, Pradeep Jain and Agatha Sangma.

The 79-member Union Government reflects a cross section of Indian Society. The ministers come from 21 of India’s 28 states and include representatives from both the Muslim minority and the lower castes. (ANI)

Cabinet expansion today

New Delhi, May 28 (ANI): Fifty-nine ministers will take oath in the second round of cabinet expansion here today.

Dr. Singh has recommended several names to the President for inclusion in his Council of Ministers.

The names doing the rounds are that of Virbhadra Singh, Vilasrao Deshmukh, Farooq Abdullah, Dayanidhi Maran, A Raja, Mallikarjun Kharge, Kumari Selja, Subodh Kant Sahay, M S Gill, G K Vasan, Pawan Kumar Bansal, Mukul Wasnik, Kantilal Bhuria and M K Azhagiri, who have been recommended for cabinet rank.

The names of Praful Patel, Prithviraj Chavan, Sriprakash Jaiswal, Salman Khursheed, Dinsha Patel, Jairam Ramesh, Krishna Tirath have been recommended for Ministers of State with Independent Charge.

The names of E Ahamed, V Narayanasamy, Srikant Jena, Mullappally Ramachandran, D Purandeswari, Panabaka Lakshmi, Ajay Maken, K H ,Muniyappa, Namo Narain Meena, Jyotiraditya Scindia, Jitin Prasada, A Sai Prathap, Gurudas Kamat, M M Pallam Raju, Mahadev Khandela, Harish Rawat, K V Thomas, Saugata Ray, Dinesh Trivedi, Shishir Adhikari, Sultan Ahmed, Mukul Roy, Mohan Jatua, S S Palanimanickam, D Napoleon, S Jagathrakshakan, S Gandhiselvan, Preneet Kaur, Sachin Pilot, Shashi Tharoor, Bharatsinh Solanki, Tusharbhai Chaudhary, Arun Yadav, Prateek Prakash Patil, R P N Singh, Vincent Pala, Pradeep Jain and Agatha Sangma have been recommended for Ministers of State.

In the first round of swearing-in on Friday, only 19 ministers were inducted along with the Prime Minister. Portfolios have been allocated to only six ministers. (ANI)

PM, Sonia Gandhi finalise list of ministers ahead of cabinet expansion

New Delhi, May 27 (ANI): Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress President Sonia Gandhi met here today to finalise the list of ministers ahead of the cabinet expansion.

Fifty-nine ministers will take oath in the second round of cabinet expansion on Thursday.r. Singh has recommended several names to the President for inclusion in his Council of Ministers.

The names doing the rounds are that of Virbhadra Singh, Vilasrao Deshmukh, Farooq Abdullah, Dayanidhi Maran, A Raja, Mallikarjun Kharge, Kumari Selja, Subodh Kant Sahay, M S Gill, G K Vasan, Pawan Kumar Bansal, Mukul Wasnik, Kantilal Bhuria and M K Azhagiri, who have been recommended for cabinet rank.

The names of Praful Patel, Prithviraj Chavan, Sriprakash Jaiswal, Salman Khursheed, Dinsha Patel, Jairam Ramesh, Krishna Tirath have been recommended for Ministers of State with Independent Charge.

The names of E Ahamed, V Narayanasamy, Srikant Jena, Mullappally Ramachandran, D Purandeswari, Panabaka Lakshmi, Ajay Maken, K H ,Muniyappa, Namo Narain Meena, Jyotiraditya Scindia, Jitin Prasada, A Sai Prathap, Gurudas Kamat, M M Pallam Raju, Mahadev Khandela, Harish Rawat, K V Thomas, Saugata Ray, Dinesh Trivedi, Shishir Adhikari, Sultan Ahmed, Mukul Roy, Mohan Jatua, S S Palanimanickam, D Napoleon, S Jagathrakshakan, S Gandhiselvan, Preneet Kaur, Sachin Pilot, Shashi Tharoor, Bharatsinh Solanki, Tusharbhai Chaudhary, Arun Yadav, Prateek Prakash Patil, R P N Singh, Vincent Pala, Pradeep Jain and Agatha Sangma have been recommended for Ministers of State.

In the first round of swearing-in on Friday, only 19 ministers were inducted along with the Prime Minister. Portfolios have been allocated to only six ministers. (ANI)

Nepal bypolls boost ruling Maoists

Kathmandu, April 11 (IANS) Nepal’s ruling Maoist party has received a boost in by-elections to six seats, with the results coming in Saturday indicating it was poised to win three, including an opposition stronghold.

Nepal’s biggest opposition party, the Nepali Congress (NC), suffered setbacks in two seats in Friday’s bypolls. The Maoists have done well despite growing public criticism of their seven-month-old government.

The Kanchanpur seat had been a stronghold of former NC prime minister Sher Bahadur Deuba and returned him to parliament in the 2008 election. Vacated after Deuba won from a second constituency as well, the bastion fell to the Maoist grassroots leader whom Deuba had humbled, Harish Thakulla.

Thakulla, also known as Kamal Chhetri during the Maoists’ 10-year ‘People’s War’, who had lived in India’s Mumbai city for several years, supporting himself by hawking newspapers, pulled off a surprise victory over NC candidate Ek Raj Joshi.

The NC also lost its Dhanusha citadel, which had voted for the party in 2008.

NC lawmaker Ram Baran Yadav had resigned from the seat after being elected the first president of the republic of Nepal, replacing deposed King Gyanendra as the head of state.

Though Yadav’s son, radiologist Chandra Mohan Yadav, was fielded by the NC, the debutant politician floundered in third place with the regional party, Terai Madesh Loktantrik Party, and the ruling Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist, which is a member of the Maoist-led coalition government, fighting neck and neck.

The NC however got a shot in the arm when its candidate Shekhar Koirala won from Morang district in eastern Nepal.

Koirala, nephew of NC chief and former prime minister Girija Prasad Koirala and uncle of Bollywood diva Manisha Koirala, had been humbled in the same constituency last year by the new regional party, Madhesi Janadhikar Forum. This time however he clawed back, with the blessings of his octogenarian uncle who was among the first few to cast their votes, winning by a slender margin of 692 votes.

In the other seat in Morang, there were no surprises. Won last year by the Forum, it voted for the same party’s Jay Ram Yadav, with the Maoists coming a close second.

Counting will start late for the seat in Rolpa, regarded as the cradle of the Maoist movement and won last year by Maoist supremo Pushpa Kamal Dahal Prachanda.

It is likely to be retained by the ruling party despite a dissenter contesting as an independent candidate.

Besides Kanchanpur, Maoist contestant Krishna Bahadur Gurung won from Kaski, the district that last year voted for Maoist Law Minister Dev Gurung.

21-pt plan to ensure stress-free examination

A Spate of cheating, suicide and forgery cases during the Secondary School Certificate (SSC) and the Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC) examinations this year has prompted the Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education (MSBSHSE), Mumbai division, to formulate a 21-point Stress Free Exams programme with the help of a team of psychiatrists and psychologists.

The initiative was developed after a day-long brainstorming session with the team on Wednesday. A booklet, containing articles and tips to reduce stress levels during examinations, will be circulated to all schools and colleges in the Mumbai division by June after acquainting principals and teachers through meetings and teacher training programmes.

The team comprised Dr Rajendra Barve, Dr Harish Shetty, Rajeev Tambe, Vijay Jamsandekar, head of psychology department at University of Mumbai Dr Anuradha Sovni, Shailaja Mulay, Sujata Chowfer and board officials.

Basanti Roy, secretary, MSBSHSE Mumbai division, said, “board exams are significant in a student’s life because this is the first time that he appears for an exam outside his school along with lakhs of other students. Also, it is the first time that he appears for exams that are based on the entire year’s portion. Besides, marks that students score in these exams hold importance in their future for choosing colleges, career, profession and also their status symbol in a way. We have recognised all the factors that make students stressful during exams and have tried to come up with a possible solution to help students overcome these.”

The five factors of stress identified are – students: many do not study regularly and hence cannot cope with studies, some find the syllabus tough; parents: high expectations or total neglect; schools and colleges: many fail students in the 9th and 11th standards to ensure 100 per cent result in 10th and 12th, teaching apathy, competitive atmosphere; society and community: exerting undue pressure on students; and other factors like TV and internet. The booklet will contain five to eight points under each of the five categories and action plans.

Rawat, Congress out to break 20-year jinx

It’s been two decades since former Uttarakhand PCC chief Harish Rawat won a Lok Sabha election. Coincidentally it was also 20 years ago that Congress won the Haridwar Lok Sabha seat.

In 2009, the fates of both Rawat and the Congress seem to be interlinked with the senior Congress leader getting the party high-command’s nod to contest from Haridwar. Almora, Rawat’s home constituency from where he won his last Lok Sabha battle in 1989, had become reserved following delimitation and hence he was shifted from the hills of Kumaon to the plains of Haridwar.

Between 1989 and now, Rawat has lost the Almora seat four consecutive times and in 2004 his wife Renuka too failed to win from there. Similarly, after 1989, when the Congress’s Jagpal Singh won from Haridwar, the party has failed to win favour of voters in the region.

Last year, after the end of his Rajya Sabha tenure, Rawat had surprised many by announcing his decision not to contest any election till 2010. But he is back in the fray and hopes to end his losing streak and revive Congress fortunes in Haridwar as well.

“I had decided to remain away from election due to adverse family circumstances. But now that the party has given me an opportunity, I have decided to take up the challenge,” he told HT. In his list of schemes for Haridwar, the Congress leader aims to achieve a synergy between agriculture and industrialisation while keeping in mind religious sentiments and traditions, develop new townships, improve education and strengthen rail, road and air connectivity.

“The BJP has failed to give attention to Haridwar’s issues in the past. My aim would be to realize the tremendous potential of the region as I understand the issues of this place very well,” he said.

Rawat doesn’t mind the ‘outsider’ tag given to him by his opponents and says it is a ploy used by the BJP and other parties like the BSP and Samajwadi Party because they have no issue to counter Congress. “I am a Pahari from Almora, but for the past 44 years, I have been involved in issues of other areas as well.

I am the most frequently seen politician in Haridwar, have visited almost every village and remained in touch with residents in the area for over three decades,” he said. Blaming his past losses from Almora on the BJP wave and the agitation for a separate state, Rawat is hopeful that after 20 years, he will be able to revive his electoral fortunes.

SC reserves order on Sanjay Dutt’s plea

New Delhi, MAR 30 (ANI): The Supreme Court on Monday reserved its order on actor-turned-politician Sanjay Dutt’s plea seeking a stay on his conviction under the Arms Act in connection with the 1993 Mumbai blasts case.

A bench comprising of Chief Justice K G Balakrishnan, Justice P Sathasivam and Justice R.M. Lodha reserved the verdict after hearing several parties involved in the case, including Dutt’s counsel Harish Salve, Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) counsel Additional Solicitor General Gopal Subramanium and several other senior lawyers who opposed Dutt’s plea.

The court is expected to announce its verdict within the next two days.

Dutt, who was named by the Samajwadi Party as its candidate for the Lucknow seat in the forthcoming general elections, moved the Supreme Court on March 5.

Defence counsel V R Manohar, who represented Dutt in the case, said he couldn’t contest unless the Supreme Court stays the conviction and suspends the sentence.

Under the Representation of the People’s Act, anyone sentenced to more than two years imprisonment is barred from contesting elections till a court of law stays the conviction and sentence.

On November 27, 2007, Dutt was granted bail by the apex court. He is out on merely on bail following his conviction in the blasts case. So his conviction stands. n July 31, 2007, he was sentenced to a jail term of six years for illegal possession of firearms acquired from terrorist acquaintances, who were responsible for the 1993 Mumbai bomb blasts.

He was, however, “cleared of terrorism conspiracy charges in the blasts.” (ANI)

Charlie Chaplin’s statue causes controversy in Mangalore

Mangalore, Mar. 16 (ANI): A statue of Hollywood’s most famous comedian Charlie Chaplin has sparked controversy in Karnataka.

Some radical activists protested against the construction of the statue, which was being set up for a dance sequence of a film called ‘House Full’, saying that they would not let a statue of a Christian actor to be built near the temple.

The Chaplin statue was being set-up up near a temple at the Ottinene beach near Udupi, but some locals along with Jagrana Vedike activists halted the construction.

“He is a Christian and does not belong to this region. There was a historic character called Tenali Rama in Vijayanagar kingdom of the state many years ago. If they make his statue and erect it we have no problem but why his (Chaplin) statue? We do not want it here,” noted Harish, a local.

Although the objection by the locals made the film unit to abandon their erection of the of Charlie Chapin statue plans, but in the absence of formal complaint, no case has been registered so far.

“The public objected to the excavation of the earth for installing the statue. The film people stopped the work and went back. Since no untoward incident as such taken place, so no case has been lodged,” said Gopal Hosur, Inspector General of Police, Mangalore.

The statue was to be set up an estimated cost of 3.5 million rupees.

Earlier, Jagrana Vedike was alleged to be involved in an attack on a Christian school in Karnataka in 2008. (ANI)