Anand Jon’s sister seeks Govt. intervention, threatens hunger strike

New Delhi, Sep.1 (ANI): Sanjana Jon, sister of celebrity fashion designer Anand Jon has appealed to the Government to intervene in the case of her brother, failing which she would observe hunger strike.

On Monday, Los Angeles Superior Court sentenced Anand Jon to 59 years in prison for sexually assaulting aspiring models as young as 14 years in age.

Sanajana said that she would observe a hunger strike, if her pleas for help at the inter-governmental level were not paid heed to.

“My appeal is for intervention and I have said if I don’t get any help, my only resort, last resort would be to sit on a hunger strike till my voice is heard,” said Sanjana Jon.

In Bangalore, Anand Jon’s fashion designer friend and stage artiste, Prasad Bidappa expressed sorrow at the American court’s judgement.

“Anand Jon case, I find particularly sad because I feel he was truly a very good talent; somebody who, I think, was taking India’s torch forward in terms of fashion. I feel very sad that it had to come to an end like this,” said Prasad Bidappa.

Last November, thirty five-year-old Jon was found guilty of 16 counts, including rape, sexual battery and performing lewd acts on a child.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge David Wesley sentenced Jon to 59 years to life after denying his motions for a new trial.

Prosecutors said the crimes started in 2001 when Jon set up a fashion design business through which he lured would-be models to Los Angeles.

Later, the police got involved in March 2007 after a woman said she was sexually assaulted at his Beverly Hills apartment.on, whose full name is Anand Jon Alexander, denied the charges. His lawyers said the girls and young women were revenge seekers who had made up their stories or who had ‘invited what happened’, and that in the case, there had been least physical evidence.

The Indian-born designer was profiled on the TV show ‘America’s Next Top Model’ in 2003 and selected by Newsweek magazine as one of the world’s most successful South Asians in 2004. (ANI)

Jon’s family expresses dismay over verdict, say he has been victimised

New York, Sep.1 (ANI): The family of Indian-born fashion designer Anand Jon has reacted with dismay to the 59-year sentence handed over to him by a US court for sexually assaulting aspiring models. They claimed that Jon has been “victimised” and that facts have been overlooked in the case.

The designer’s mother Shashi Jon said, “He is not capable of doing anything like this.This was beyond my belief that Anand has been taken in and arrested on charges of molestation”.

Defending 35-year-old Anand, his sister Sanjana said, “The fact that Anand is an Indian citizen and that he is being victimised is completely overlooked. So there is nobody questioning anything that we are facing there”.

“Every piece of evidence that is medical shows that nothing ever happened. There is no medical evidence that showed that anything ever happened,” she told TV channels.

Their family’s lawyer Majid Memon said, “It is very sad that this young boy, a celebrity from India, has to be left like this and being now convicted and sentenced to suffer for the whole of his life.”

Times Now quoted Memon as saying that all the girls alleging rape or molestation don’t have a “scratch on their body to suggest that there was any resistance or any violence by the accused.

Moreover, the complaints have been lodged weeks and even months after the incidents. So definitely this is a very dubious kind of a charge and unfortunately Anand was left alone and there was hardly any help.

Jon’s mother and sister will now move for an appeal,” Memon said.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge David Wesley today announced that Jon must serve 14 years in state prison-before he begins to serve a 45-year-to-life sentence.

The designer has been featured on the television show “America’s Next Top Model” and worked with such celebrities as Paris Hilton and Mary J Blige. (ANI)

Oz-Indian businessman says ‘offensive’ Indian students to blame for attacks

Melbourne, July 13 (ANI): One of Australia’s most prominent Indian-born businessmen has astonishingly said that the bashed students from his homeland provoked the assaults on themselves by being drunk and “making merry”.

Vikas Rambal, a Perth-based fertiliser tycoon and major cricket sponsor, also said that Australians only ever attacked anyone they found “too offensive”.

Groups in Australia have slammed his comments as “nonsense”, The Age reports.

The attacks on Indian students, which have mainly occurred in Melbourne, have caused a huge public outcry in India and have seen assurances given by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to his Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh that they were being properly investigated.

Rambal, whose company Perdaman Industries plans to build a 3.5 billion dollar urea plant in Collie, south of Perth, told students at his former university in the central Indian city of Nagpur on Thursday that Indian students had provoked the attacks on themselves.

“Who would want anything to do with a person who, although he has been sent to study, manages to earn a few hundred dollars driving taxis and spends them drinking or making merry in the worst possible ways,” he said.

“The Australians never attack anyone unless they find the person too offensive,” he said.

Federation of Indian Students of Australia president Amit Meghani said Rambal had no idea of the reality of life for an Indian student in Australia.

“I’d like him to spend a couple of weeks as a student, living five people to a room, going to a university with no computers, and walk home late at night not carrying a mobile phone. Then he can see how things work out,” Meghani said.

Victorian police commissioner Simon Overland and Western Australia Ethnic Communities Council president Ramdas Sankaran, a Malaysian-born Indian, said Rambal’s comments were “nonsense”.

“I really find it astonishing that someone would say that,” Sankaran said.

“Given that Australian authorities themselves accept what has happened, why blame the victim. The realities are various minorities are being attacked,” he added. (ANI)

Judge denies new trial for Anand Jon

New York, July 7 (ANI): A judge has denied a request for a new trial for Indian-born fashion designer Anand Jon.

His lawyers asked for a new trial on the basis of juror misconduct, saying a juror had improperly contacted Jon’s sister.

In his ruling, LA Superior Court Judge David Wesley did find that the juror and Alexander’s sister acted inappropriately and held both in contempt of court. However, Wesley ruled that their contact did not taint the verdicts.

Wesley said that, under California law, “a new trial will not be granted where there is a misconduct of such a trifling nature,” reports the New York Post.

“This is a total travesty of justice,” Jon said.

Jon is to be sentenced next month. (ANI)

Nine Asian women declared winners of Asian Achievement awards

London, May 21 (ANI): Nine British women of Asian origin have been declared winners of the Asian Women of Achievement Awards for the year 2009.

Businesswoman Vin Murria, who set up a foundation to support the education of children in India and was described by the judges as a “perfect ambassador and role model for Asian women in Britain”, was declared the overall winner.

Sri Lankan opera singer Kishani Jayasinghe, the first South Asian soprano to sing at the Royal Opera House, was declared the winner in the arts and culture category.

Veera Johnson, CEO, Procserve, an electronic procurement solutions and services company, was declared Business Woman of the Year, while Christina Vaughan, the first non-American to be voted on to the Picture Agency Council of America board, was declared Entrepreneur of the Year.

Riz Lateef, BBC London News, one of the key figures in the coverage of the 2008 mayoral elections, was declared Media Professional of the Year.

The Social and Humanitarian Award went to Shaista Gohir, a member of the National Muslim Women’s Advisory Group.

The Young Achiever award went jointly to Neev Ranu, a DJ, whose radio show on Kiss 100 attracts 607,000 listeners and has been nominated twice for the Asian Music Awards; and Rehana Azib, a barrister, who has studied law at Oxford University and is a scholar at Inner Temple.

Dr Sunita Verma, a dentist, she set up Sparkle Dental Boutique, a multi-award-winning private practice in west London, was declared Professional of the Year.

The Public Sector award went to Vicki Treadell, Britain’s Deputy High Commissioner in Mumbai, a diplomat with 30 years’ experience in policy and service delivery roles.

Prince Charles received the Global Empowerment award from the event’s founder Pinky Lilani, an Indian-born author and entrepreneur. (ANI)

Vanisha Mittal will be planet’s most powerful woman upon inheriting family biz

London, May 10 (ANI): Vanisha Mittal, the only daughter of the world’s fourth-richest man, steel baron Lakshmi, and Holly Branson, Virgin boss Richard’s baby girl, will be two of the planet’s most powerful women when they inherit the family firms.

Vanisha is already dubbed “Woman of Steel” after joining the board of her dad Lakshmi’s 80billion dollar global metals empire, and Holly gave up her medical career to join Virgin instead.

After earning a master’s degree at the European Business School Vanisha is considered such a worthy successor to the Indian-born tycoon that US financial “bible” Forbes magazine tips her to lead the family business to even greater success.

“She is just as hard as the steel on which her dad’s empire is based. In fact, she’s so good he almost had to plead with her to take a seat on the board,” The Daily Star quoted a fellow director, as saying.

Vanisha, who tops the Forbes rankings of super-heiresses most likely to expand their fortunes, stands to inherit more than 51billion dollars.

While Holly, 27, stands to collect approximately 3.8billion dollars.

Qualified doctor Holly “may not have her father’s thrill-seeking gene,” says Forbes, “but she’s well educated and grounded enough to take over control.”

A third British-based beauty also figures: Canadian Alannah Weston, whose dad bought the department store chain Selfridges back in 2003.

Forbes’ survey has been turned into an E!Entertainment television show titled The 20 Most Intriguing Billionaire Heiresses, to be broadcast later this month. (ANI)

Britain denies Gurkha ex-soldiers automatic right to settle

London, April 24 (IANS) Thousands of Gurkha soldiers who fought for Britain were told by the British government Friday they do not have an automatic right to settle down in the country.

The British home ministry said some 10,000 Gurkha ex-soldiers and their families would be allowed in as a result of new regulations announced Friday, but campaigners for Gurkhas said the new rules would help fewer than 100 men.

Gurkhas are campaigning for the government to allow in all ex-soldiers who have fought for Britain, but the new rules say Gurkhas would be allowed to settle down only if they had close family in Britain, served 20 years, or been wounded in battle or decorated.

The regulations were rejected as a ‘sham’ by campaigners.

‘They have set criteria that are unattainable. They require a Gurkha to serve for 20 years – but a rifleman is only permitted to serve for 15 years. It’s a sham and an absolute disgrace,’ said David Enright, a solicitor acting on behalf of the Gurkhas.

According to current rules, only those Gurkhas who left the British Army after 1997, when Hong Kong was handed back to China, have the automatic right to settle down in Britain.

Gurkhas were stationed in large numbers in Hong Kong to protect the territory.

Last year, a High Court judge ruled that the policy excluding older veterans was unlawful and in need of urgent review.

Indian-born actress Joanna Lumley, who is a campaigner for Gurkha rights, said: ‘The Gurkhas cannot meet these new criteria. It makes me ashamed of our government. We will fight on. We don’t stop. This has been a setback but that is all.’

There are currently around 3,500 serving Gurkhas. More than 200,000 fought during the First and Second World Wars, with between 45,000 and 50,000 giving their lives, according to Lumley.

Two winners of the Victoria Cross, Britain’s highest gallantry award, joined the campaigners Friday to voice their shock at the government decision.

Immigration Minister Phil Woolas said the changes will benefit around 4,300 more Gurkhas out of a total of 36,000 who retired before 1997.

He argued that granting automatic rights of settlement to all Gurkha ex-servicemen could mean allowing in 100,000 people, but Lumley disputed the figures saying: ‘We’re talking about seven to eight thousand men.’

The Gurkha brigade was formed following the partition of India in 1947 but Nepali Gurkha soldiers have been part of the British Army for almost 200 years.

Dr. Death to face trial for manslaughter on 14 charges

Melbourne, Apr 20 (ANI): Controversial Indian-born surgeon, Dr. Jayant Patel a.k.a ‘Dr. Death’, who is currently facing a committal hearing into allegations of manslaughter over the deaths of three patients, will stand trial on 14 charges involving the death of three people.

Former Bundaberg Base Hospital surgeon Patel will also face trial on charges of causing serious injury to two others and fraud in getting his job in Queensland.

Michael Woodward, counsel for Patel, consented to the charges being committed to the Supreme Court for trial on a yet to be determined date.

The Crown is expected to present an indictment charging Patel with the offences in the Supreme Court on Friday. Patel’s committal resumed today for cross-examination of a witness, The Courier Mail reports.

It was then expected that Crown Prosecutors and Patel’s lawyers would make written and oral submissions before Deputy Chief Magistrate Brian Hine would make a decision.

However, at the end of cross-examination Woodward said he had instructions to consent to the charges being committed up to the Supreme Court.

Judge Hine said he still had to decide whether there was enough evidence to commit Patel on all charges.

After reading the charges to Patel he then determined the matters should go trial.

When asked if he had anything to say, Patel replied: “No thank you, sir.” Patel did not enter a formal plea.

Patel, 59, worked at the hospital between 2003 and 2005, faced charges, of the manslaughter of James Phillips, Mervyn Morris and Gerardus Kemps. (ANI)

‘Dr. Death’ behaved ‘erratically’ in difficult situations, says colleague

Brisbane, Feb.25 (ANI): Controversial Indian-born surgeon, Dr. Jayant Patel a.k.a ‘Dr. Death’, who is currently facing a committal hearing into allegations of manslaughter over the deaths of two patients, had outdated medical knowledge, and was ‘erratic’ in when things went wrong inside his operation theater, the Brisbane Magistrates Court has learnt.

“If (there were) some problems (he) became a bit erratic,” The Sydney Morning Herald quoted Dr Dieter Berens, as saying.

Dr. Berens was an anaesthetist at the Bundaberg Base Hospital in 2004.

“He became more uneasy and at times started to lose his temper when that sort of thing happened,” Berens added.

He told the court that Patel’s medical knowledge regarding some issues were ‘outdated’.

Patel was not sure about when to give blood to patients in the intensive care unit (ICU), Berens said.

Patel, 58, is facing 14 charges, including manslaughter, fraud and grievous bodily harm, relating to his time as the Bundaberg Base Hospital’s director of surgery from April 2003 until April 2005. (ANI)

‘Dr. Death’ scooped blood out of patient, Brisbane court told

Brisbane, Feb.23 (ANI): Controversial Indian-born surgeon Dr. Jayant Patel a.k.a. “Dr. Death” reopened a patient’s abdomen and scooped out over two litres of blood, a magistrate’s court here was told on Monday.

According to The Australian, Gerry Kemps had lost so much blood after an oesophagectomy in December 2004 that Dr. Patel had to scoop it from his abdomen with a kidney dish, former Bundaberg Base Hospital scrub nurse Katrina Zwolak told the Brisbane Magistrates Court.

Zwolak said over 2.3 litres of blood was eventually removed in this manner, and through the use of sponges and a suction line.

Kemps was reopened for the treatment of the internal bleeding about five hours after the oesophagectomy.

The court was told Dr Patel failed to stop the internal bleeding during the initial operation, then left Kemps while he conducted non-emergency surgery on another patient.

It’s alleged Dr Patel again failed to stop the bleeding during the second operation, and Kemps died the next day.

Patel has been charged with Kemps’s manslaughter.

Zwolak told the court Dr Patel had been “frantic” when he couldn’t find the source of the bleeding, and that he kept saying: “This is not from my surgery.”

However, during earlier evidence in the committal hearing, vascular surgeon Dr Brian Thiele told the court he believed the bleed was caused by damage during surgery, as spontaneous aortic ruptures were “extremely rare”.

He also said a competent surgeon should have been able to locate the source of the bleeding.

Dr. Patel is facing 13 charges, including three of manslaughter. (ANI)

Expert tells Brisbane court that Patel surgery ‘inappropriate’, led to deaths

Brisbane, Feb.19 (ANI): Colo-rectal expert Brian Collopy told a Brisbane Magistrates Court today that controversial Indian-born surgeon Dr. Jayant Patel fell short of competent medical practice when he wrongly diagnosed and performed an unnecessary operation on a man who later died.

Bundaberg Base Hospital patient Mervyn Morris, 76, died in June 2003 after Dr Patel performed two operations to try to stop bleeding in his bowel.

According to news.com.au, Collopy told the court that the bleeding could have been treated with iron tablets, cortisone and occasional blood transfusions.

He said Dr Patel, 58, incorrectly diagnosed the source of the bleeding and unnecessarily removed part of the colon.

This was an “inappropriate” and “over-aggressive” response, Dr Collopy said.

Dr Patel has been charged with Morris’s manslaughter, as well as that of two other patients. He faces another 10 charges relating to his time as director of surgery at the hospital between 2003 and 2005. (ANI)

‘Dr. Death’ had unrealistic expectations on level of surgery, says nurse

Brisbane, Feb.18 (ANI): Controversial Indian-born surgeon, Dr. Jayant Patel, who is currently facing a committal hearing into allegations of manslaughter over the deaths of two patients, had “unrealistic expectations” about what surgery could safely be performed at Queensland’s Bundaberg Base Hospital, whistleblower nurse Toni Hoffman has told a court here.

In a 47-page statement tendered as evidence in the Brisbane Magistrates Court, Hoffman said she made her first complaint about the surgeon shortly after he started work at the hospital in April 2003.

Hoffman said she believed major procedures were too complex for Patel to be performing at the hospital because it lacked the appropriate post-operative care facilities.

Patel, 58, also faces 11 other charges, including another of manslaughter, relating to his time as director of surgery at the hospital between 2003 and 2005.

Hoffman, who blew the whistle on Patel’s allegedly negligent medical practices, said in her statement Patel refused to speak to her after she made the first complaint against him to then director of medical services Dr Darren Keating.

She said she also complained to Dr Keating about the way Patel interacted with his colleagues, saying he would “try and create disharmony by trying to divide and conquer the staff”.

Hoffman said nurses would ask for reassignment from Patel’s patients because of his behavior. (ANI)

‘Dr. Death’ had 100 percent complication rate inserting catheters, says nurse

Brisbane, Feb.17 (ANI): Controversial Indian-born surgeon Dr. Jayant Patel had a 100 per cent complication rate for inserting dialysis catheters, leading to the procedure being outsourced to a private hospital, a Brisbane magistrate’s court has heard.

The Australian quoted Bundaberg Base Hospital nurse Robyn Pollock as telling Dr. Patel’s committal hearing that the surgeon had inserted six renal patients’ catheters in the 12 months from August 2003.

“Of those six patients, every one had some kind of problem with their dialysis because of the way their catheter was inserted,” Pollock told the court via video link from Bundaberg. he nurse, the hearing’s 30th witness in six days, said she took the issue to hospital management.

Pollock said a dialysis company then paid for patients to have their catheters inserted at a private Bundaberg hospital.

Patel, 58, is facing 14 charges, including manslaughter, fraud and grievous bodily harm, relating to his time as the hospital’s director of surgery from April 2003 until April 2005.

Bundaberg nurse Toni Hoffman also gave evidence and, surprisingly, was only questioned for 20 minutes.

A whole day had been set aside for Hoffman’s evidence.

The court heard her original statement was more than 200 paragraphs long, but dealt with more patients than the charges related to.

Hoffman’s edited statement has been tendered to the court.

The hearing resumes tomorrow, when more of Dr. Patel’s former Bundaberg hospital colleagues will give evidence. (ANI)

Brit novelist reveals giving Rushdie shelter in a cottage after fatwa was issued

New York, Feb.16 (ANI): British novelist Ian McEwan has revealed that he gave Indian-born Salman Rushdie shelter in his Cotswold cottage after Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa against the latter twenty years ago.

McEwan reveals that Rushdie and he hid away shortly after the fatwa was issued on February 16, 2009 14, 1989.

This intimate detail is contained in a long profile of McEwan published in next week’s issue of the New Yorker, The Guardian reports.

Written by an editor at the magazine, Daniel Zalewski, the profile explores McEwan’s growing commitment to science and rationality as a factor, alongside the Rushdie affair, behind the controversy over Islamic fundamentalism in which he later became embroiled.

The Cotswold encounter came days after the fatwa was issued, when Rushdie was at the start of many years of internal exile.

“I’ll never forget – the next morning we got up early. He had to move on. Terrible time for him. We stood at the kitchen counter making toast and coffee, listening to the eight o’clock BBC news. He was standing right by my side and he was the lead item on the news. Hezbollah had put its sagacity and weight behind the project to kill him,” McEwan tells the New Yorker.

Until the dispute over The Satanic Verses and its supposed blasphemy against Muhammad erupted, McEwan had been regarded by several of his friends as leaning towards a more spiritual view of the world.

The New Yorker crowns McEwan as “England’s national author”, remarking that he is now pursued by the British media with an avidity otherwise reserved only for Amy Winehouse. (ANI)

‘Dr. Death’ ‘lied to families’ about the surgeries he conducted, says nurse

Brisbane (Australia), Feb.12 (ANI): Indian-born surgeon Dr. Jayant Patel a.k.a. “Dr. Death” lied to the families of patients he operated upon, claimed a nurse.

Bundaberg Base Hospital intensive care unit nurse Karen Stumer told a Brisbane Magistrates Court here today that Patel often lied about the success of his operations, even as his patients’ health was deteriorating.

The news.com.au quoted Stumer as telling the court that she overheard Dr.Patel telling the family of James Phillips that he was stable after an oesophagacetomy in May 2003.

Stumer said this concerned nursing staff, as they knew he was in a very serious condition.

“He wasn’t improving, he was actually deteriorating,” she said.

Phillips died just days after Dr Patel’s operation.

Patel, 58, is facing 14 charges, including three of manslaughter, relating to his time as director of surgery at the Bundaberg hospital from 2003 to 2005.

Stumer told the court she recalled Dr Patel making similarly positive comments to other families of very sick patients. Dr Patel also, she said, recorded incorrect information on patients’ charts to show a stable or improving condition.

“Did those patients recover?” crown prosecutor David Meredith asked.

“They were extremely unwell. Most of them died,” Stumer said.tumer also said Dr Patel rarely listened to the advice of his colleagues and that he often refused to transfer patients to Brisbane because he wanted to treat them himself.

She said other staff members would organise transfers on weekends when Dr Patel wasn’t there so as to avoid conflict.

The court earlier heard Dr Patel accused nurses of trying to hold up his theatre when they drew his attention to the excessive bleeding of a patient, who later died.

The hearing continues. (ANI)

Brisbane magistrate’s court to hear `Dr. Death’ case from Monday

Brisbane (Australia), Feb.8 (ANI): More than six months after his extradition from the United States, Dr Jayant Patel, an Indian-born surgeon facing 14 charges, including manslaughter, grievous bodily harm and fraud, will be presented for a committal hearing at the Brisbane Magistrates Court on Monday.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, former patients and their families are expected to join the media in witnessing the event.

Medical experts are expected to testify about the Indian-trained doctor’s qualifications and work during his time as director of surgery at Bundaberg Base Hospital in southern Queensland between 2003 and 2005.

It’s alleged Patel, 58, performed botched operations that led to death or permanent incapacity for several patients.

The fraud charges centre on allegations he drew a wage from Queensland Health by falsely representing his qualifications.

More than 150 witnesses will give evidence during the hearing, which will run for three weeks, with an additional two weeks available in April.

Two hearing rooms have been set aside to house the large media contingent, as well as friends and family of Patel’s alleged victims, the paper reports. (ANI)

Civil Nuclear Deal Strongly In India”s Interest: Indra NOOYI

Civil Nuclear Deal Strongly In India''s Interest: Indra NOOYINew Delhi, Sept 24 : Chief executive of US based beverage giant PepsiCo, Indra Nooyi on Wednesday hailed the India-US nuclear deal calling it strongly in country”s interests.

A U. S. Senate panel on Tuesday voted to approve the U. S.-India civil nuclear cooperation agreement.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted 19-2 in favor of the deal, which would end the three-decade ban on U. S. nuclear trade with India and is seen by the White House as the cornerstone of a new strategic partnership with New Delhi.

Indian born chief of the soft drink giant said the deal would be extremely beneficial for country”s economic prosperity.

“India”s energy also can be clearly met by nuclear power. On civil nuclear power I really believe this is strongly in India”s interest. India”s economic prosperity depends on access to reliable electric supply. In all these fields United States can be a tremendous partner to India. Of the 400 nuclear reactors around the world, 104 are located in United States,” said Nooyi.

PepsiCo entered India in 1989 and has invested more than 700 million dollar in the country so far and expects its revenue from the country to triple in next five years.

Indian American Indra Nooyi has been ranked as the world”s third most powerful woman by Forbes in its 2008 list of the top 100 business women of the world. (ANI)