Experts call for creation of Adivasi Police, tribal autonomy to deal with Naxal problem

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): Former Indian Police Service officers and Naxal experts today strongly criticised the government”s strategy in dealing with the Maoist challenges and suggested a development strategy with justice to the poor and tribals through good governance.

Participating in a roundtable on “Meeting the Maoist Challenges: A relook at the current strategy”, organised by Observer Research Foundation, experts also suggested providing autonomy to the tribal areas and establishment of an ‘Adivasi Police’ to deal with the increasing problem.

They said the poor and tribals cannot be blamed for the current situation as every institution of the government has become institutions for exploitations of these people.

Mahendra Kumawat, former Special Secretary, Internal Security of the Home Ministry, suggested setting up a special force with training in jungle warfare to fight the menace. Kumawat, who earlier led the successful Greyhounds in Andhra Pradesh, said the government should adopt a multi-pronged strategy with focuses on good governance, development, political measures and security measures.

Dr. D.M. Mitra, another IPS officer, said he differed with the security-centric approach. “Security is not the solution. But Governance is,” he said, stressing on the importance of “right and appropriate structure of force” to deal with the menace. He also focused on good governance and right policies which should also take care of the local interests.

Well-known economist and author Mohan Guruswamy, who has worked extensively on the subject, suggested creation of an Adivasi Police force and providing autonomy to tribal areas to tackle the problem.

K. Subramaniam, former IPS officer who had long stints at the Home Ministry, said the ministry is facing an information crisis with lack of reliable information and institutional mechanism for policy formulation.

He said the ministry is depending on IPS officers of state police and Intelligence Bureau officers who have no training and capacity to do such a task which in turn creates biased, prejudiced information.

He criticised the policy of the present Home Minister, who he said, does not talk about much need police reforms, human rights of the people or their exploitation. He blamed lack of government policies for the spread of naxalism. Pointing out that the minister has been able to increase the home ministry budget by Rs. 15,000 crore in the last two years, he asked what the minister is going to do with that?

A senior Environment Ministry official said there is an onslaught of corporates on our rich forests which is benefiting only a small section. He said India is following a wrong development model, vying with China to ape the US. “The forests are being destroyed. India is also being destroyed,” he said. He called for a debate on the expenditure-based GDP growth, saying wealth is not created, but only transferred.

Prof. Nandini Sundar from the Delhi School of Economics, who had been working among the tribals, narrated how they had been hounded by the police forces, allowing research work only to police officers. “All our information is one sided nowadays. The government is least interested in solving the problem,” she said.

Prof. Sundar said the problem should be addressed by ensuring justice to the poor and tribals by restoring civil administration, providing education and setting up a judicial commission to monitor violence by the state and the Maoists.

Speakers were very critical of the inaction of the central government which has not taken any action even on the report of the committee formed by the Planning Commission. (ANI)

SIT questions Togadia for role in 2002 Gujarat riots case

Gandhinagar, May 10 (ANI): Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) leader Praveen Togadia appeared before a Special Investigation Team (SIT) on Monday for questioning in connection with his role in the 2002 Gujarat communal riots.

Togadia was accompanied by several VHP activists, who shouted ”Jai Shree Ram” slogans and sang bhajans outside the SIT office, till his questioning was completed.

Togadia was earlier asked to appear before the SIT on April 29, but failed to do so.

He was summoned by the SIT after it had questioned Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi.

On April 28, the Supreme Court gave an additional 15 days to the SIT, to conduct an inquiry against Modi and 62 others in connection with post-Godhra riots, and to submit its final report.

The Supreme Court had given the deadline to complete the inquiry into complaint of Zakia Jaffery in which she alleged that Modi, his cabinet colleagues, some police officials and senior bureaucrats aided and abetted the post-Godhra riots of 2002.

Zakia”s husband and ex-MP Ehsan Jaffrey was among the 69 killed during the 2002 riots in the Gulburg Society.

SIT has already recorded statements of a number of persons named in Zakia”s complaint, which include former Minister of State for Home Gordhan Zadafia, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader I K Jadeja, former BJP MLA from Lunawada Kalu Malivad and sitting MLA from Mehsana Anil Patel, former IPS officer R B Sreekumar, social activist Teesta Setalvad, IG Shivanand Jha, some other senior police officers and political leaders. (ANI)

No change in CBI’s clean chit to Amod Kanth in Uphaar Cinema fire case

New Delhi, Aug.29 (ANI): Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Saturday stood by its probe report in a Delhi court on giving clean chit to former Indian Police Service officer Amod Kanth in the 1997 Uphaar fire tragedy case in which 59 people died of asphyxia.

“There is nothing to suggest any criminal intention on the part of Amod Kanth as alleged by the Association of Victims of Uphaar Tragedy (AVUT),” the probe agency, in its reply to the protest petition of the AVUT, said.

District and Sessions Judge S P Garg said the judicial records of the case be filed for deciding the matter and adjourned it for September 15.

Seeking dismissal of AVUT’s petition against the clean chit to the former IPS officer, the investigative agency CBI said: “No criminal case is made out against any of the officials other than the persons already chargesheeted.”

Kanth, the then Deputy Commissioner of Delhi Police (Licencing), had allegedly allowed retention of 37 extra seats in the theatre in 1979 in violation of the Cinematography Act.

It consequently blocked the exits at the balcony of the theatre where movie watchers died of asphyxia as they could not go out when fire engulfed the hall. (ANI)

Raman Srivastava appointed as next DG of BSF

New Delhi, July 1 (ANI): Raman Srivastava has been appointed as the next Director General (DG) of the Border Security Force (BSF).

Srivastava will replace M.L.Kumawat who retires on July 31. He will be the Director General of the BSF from August 1 until his superannuation on October 31, 2011 or till further orders.

Currently, Special Secretary (Internal Security) in the Ministry of Home Affairs, Srivastava is an IPS officer of the 1973 batch and belongs to the Kerala Cadre. (ANI)

Security personnel kill top Naxalite leader in Warangal

Warangal (Andhra Pradesh), May 24 (ANI): Security personnel shot down a top Naxalite rebel and his associate during an encounter, carried out in Tadwai Mandal region of Warangal District of Andhra Pradesh on Sunday.

The encounter took place just after dawn, around 6.00 a.m

The killed naxalites were identified as Patel Sudhakar Reddy, a self-styled commander of CPI (Maoists) central committee and his associate Venkataiah.

Reddy, known by the names of Srikanth and Suryam, carried a reward of worth 1.2 million rupees on his head. He was also overseeing Maoist activities in the adjoining Karnataka state.

He was allegedly involved in a number of cases including the bid on the life of Chandrababu Naidu, former chief of Andhra Pradesh.

He was also involved in an attack on Greyhounds, the elite and crack outfit of policemen at Balimela reservoir along the Andhra Pradesh-Orissa border in 2008 and also in the killing of senior IPS Officer K S Vyas in the 1990s. (ANI)

Andhra’s top Maoist leader killed in police encounter

Warangal (Andhra Pradesh), May 24 (ANI): One of Andhra Pradesh’s top Maoist leaders Patel Sudhakar Reddy was killed along with a colleague in an encounter with police here on Sunday.

The encounter took place in the Lavella forest area in Warangal district at 6 a.m. this morning, District Superintendent of Police V C Sajjanar said.

The second Maoist killed was identified as Venkataiah, a member of Maoist district committee.

Reddy, a native of Kurthirao Cheruvu in Mahabubnagar district, was allegedly involved in the bid on life of former Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu at Tirupati in 2003 and the assassination of former state Home Minister A Madhava Reddy in 2000.

He was also allegedly involved in an attack on the elite Greyhounds policemen in Balimela reservoir in Andhra- Orissa border last year and also the killing of senior IPS Officer K S Vyas in the 1990s.

Reddy carried a reward of Rs.12 lakhs on his head. He was currently in-charge of Maoists activities in Karnataka, police said. (ANI)

Senior IPS officer in dock over phone tapping issue

Sumir Kaul Jaipur, Apr 19 (PTI) A senior IPS officer of Rajasthan cadre may find himself in trouble over the alleged phone tapping of senior politicians and bureaucrats during the previous BJP government in the state with telephone operators substantiating the charge of a committee constituted to look into the issue. The committee constituted by the Ashok Gehlot Government and headed by state Chief Secretary has been informed by the telecom operators that nearly 100 numbers were illegally tapped during the tenure of Vasundhara Raje Government.

Four top officers of Intelligence, ATS and Special Operations Group, and Inspector-General of Police, Jaipur (range I) are to assist the committee in the probe. Though the Committee is yet to meet formally, sources in the state government said the members had written to all the operators in Rajasthan asking for details of the numbers tapped and also where the sanction was not taken by the appropriate authorities.

According to the Indian Telegraph Act, phone calls can be tapped under special circumstances only after written orders from the state Home Secretary. PTI.
PTI

From Milan to Marathwada

FROM THE and #252;ber-chic environs of Milan amid fashion luminaries like Georgio Armani and Gianni Versace to the dustbowls of Marathwada slugging it out with politicians double her age, 27-year-old Preeti Shinde has made a reverse journey of sorts. Shinde, an MBA in Fashion Marketing from the Milan-based Insituto Europeo di Design, seems to be an unlikely candidate for the general elections in Nanded, where the only fashion accessories are multi-coloured bandanas people tie to escape the heat wave.

However, Shinde, as a Lok Sabha candidate from Vinay Kore’s Jan Surajya Party, is giving established politicians in Nanded sleepless nights, as she takes on CM Ashok Chavan’s brother-in-law Bhaskarrao Bapurao Khatgaonkar, in the CM’s home turf of Nanded. A fiery orator who is proficient in Marathi as well as Italian, Shinde is the daughter of ex-IPS officer Madhu Shinde and was born in Jalgaon but has spent the bulk of her life in Mumbai.

After completing her masters in Political Science, Shinde went to Italy to complete her MBA. After returning from Italy, she had been working with a textile firm, Alok Industries, as an assistant sourcing manager. A chance meeting with the 37-year-old Vinay Kore, the chief patron of Jan Surajya Party and cabinet minister in the Maharashtra government, however, made her decide to take the plunge in electoral politics.

“We all tend to live insulated lives, not understanding what goes on in far away areas. I always wanted to do something for the nation.

However, it was only after meeting Kore that I decided to turn my words into action,” says Shinde. Kore decided to field Shinde as one of the two candidates of the party and asked Shinde to shift base to Nanded and work with the party cadre.

In her three-month stay at Nanded, Shinde claims to have visited close to 800 hamlets and settlements in her constituency. However, many voters believe that Shinde may not emerge triumphant in the elections, but her presence has forced established politicians work harder to woo the voters.

“The voters of Nanded didn’t have an option apart from the two main political parties, both of whom have failed in developing this area. Shinde provides us an alternative to them,” says Shankar Waghmare, a voter from the constituency.

Shinde, however, believes that she is in the race to win. “I had read somewhere that Bharat and India are two different ideas.

The India of the city’s middle class is pitched against the Bharat of the village folk. My aim is to work towards making these two ideas come together and strive for inclusive growth of everyone.

Lok Sabha ticket, job offer for shoe throwing scribe

Chandigarh, April 7 (IANS) Iraqi journalist Montadher al-Zaidi, who is biding time in a prison after his shoe-throwing action on then US President George W. Bush last year, is not going to like it.

The main protagonist of the Indian version of his act, journalist Jarnail Singh who hurled a shoe at Home Minister P. Chidambaram in New Delhi Tuesday, has not only been released but is getting attractive offers.

The Akali Dal (Amritsar) led by radical leader and former IPS officer Simranjit Singh Mann has offered a Lok Sabha ticket to Jarnail Singh.

Mann has offered to give his party’s ticket for the Amritsar seat, from where cricketer-turned-politician Navjot Singh Sidhu is seeking re-election on a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ticket.

‘Jarnail has done a big act of bravery. We all Sikhs take pride in what he did to highlight the injustice against Sikhs. He is a warrior of the community,’ Mann said.

The Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC), the mini-parliament of Sikh religious affairs, has offered to give a job to Jarnail Singh if his employer (Hindi newspaper Dainik Jagran) fires him from his present job after his action.

Jarnail Singh’s employers, in a press statement, have already said disciplinary action was being initiated against him.

The cash-rich SGPC, which has an annual budget of Rs.4.48 billion (448 crore), also offered to take care of Jarnail Singh and his family.

The Delhi unit of the Akali Dal has already announced a reward of Rs.200,000 to the shoe-throwing scribe.

Ex-IPS man who fought rioters now in BJP

Retired IPS officer A I Saiyed, who had a brush with the rioting mobs in the 2002 post-Godhra violence in Ahmedabad, has joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

A day after joining the party, reportedly on the invitation of the BJP Gujarat president, Purshottam Rupala, Saiyed said, “I have received over two dozen phone calls greeting me for the bold initiative I have taken.” But why the BJP, that too at this juncture? He said the party is better than the Congress to join hands “at this juncture”.

“People are happy at this development and even met me personally. But their names cannot be revealed now,” he said when asked about the reaction from his community, adding, he would rope in more members from the community.

A 1978-batch IPS officer, Saiyed retired as an Additional Director General of Police and currently lives in the Muslim-dominated ghetto of Ahmedabad city- Juhapura. A native of north Gujarat, Saiyed said he joined the BJP as he was impressed by Chief Minister Narendra Modi’s administrative acumen.

When Saiyed was the Joint Director of the Gujarat Police Academy in 2002, during the riots, a mob of around 1,000 people had stopped his official car and tried to attack him after spotting his nameplate on his uniform. He remembers that his driver, a Hindu, had raced the car away to safety.

Saiyed said the incident has no bearing on his joining the BJP, and that he is willing to do any work that would be given to him in the coming days of election campaign, including canvassing for Patan BJP candidate Bhavsinh Rathore among local Muslims.

“I have done so much for all communities during my service that my presence itself in the area will be good enough for the people to vote for our candidate,” said Saiyed, who feels the dual policies of Muslim leaders pushed him to the BJP. Talking of ideology? “The Congress has an ideology, but only on paper,” he said

What will he gain from joining the BJP and what was his expectation, especially when the top BJP leaders openly tell Muslims that they could join the party at their own risk and peril without expecting anything? Saiyed responded to this saying he was not expecting any favours. “Expecting things like a party position or ticket is not my nature,” said Saiyed, whose entry to the BJP was cleared at all the levels after a prolonged process.

Welcoming this, BJP’s minority cell convener Sajjad Heera said it was a sign of the party gaining acceptance among “good Muslims” and this would improve the party’s image among the community members soon.

Ex-IPS man who fought rioters now in BJP

Retired IPS officer A I Saiyed, who had a brush with the rioting mobs in the 2002 post-Godhra violence in Ahmedabad, has joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

A day after joining the party, reportedly on the invitation of the BJP Gujarat president, Purshottam Rupala, Saiyed said, “I have received over two dozen phone calls greeting me for the bold initiative I have taken.” But why the BJP, that too at this juncture? He said the party is better than the Congress to join hands “at this juncture”.

“People are happy at this development and even met me personally. But their names cannot be revealed now,” he said when asked about the reaction from his community, adding, he would rope in more members from the community.

A 1978-batch IPS officer, Saiyed retired as an Additional Director General of Police and currently lives in the Muslim-dominated ghetto of Ahmedabad city- Juhapura. A native of north Gujarat, Saiyed said he joined the BJP as he was impressed by Chief Minister Narendra Modi’s administrative acumen.

When Saiyed was the Joint Director of the Gujarat Police Academy in 2002, during the riots, a mob of around 1,000 people had stopped his official car and tried to attack him after spotting his nameplate on his uniform. He remembers that his driver, a Hindu, had raced the car away to safety.

Saiyed said the incident has no bearing on his joining the BJP, and that he is willing to do any work that would be given to him in the coming days of election campaign, including canvassing for Patan BJP candidate Bhavsinh Rathore among local Muslims.

“I have done so much for all communities during my service that my presence itself in the area will be good enough for the people to vote for our candidate,” said Saiyed, who feels the dual policies of Muslim leaders pushed him to the BJP. Talking of ideology? “The Congress has an ideology, but only on paper,” he said

What will he gain from joining the BJP and what was his expectation, especially when the top BJP leaders openly tell Muslims that they could join the party at their own risk and peril without expecting anything? Saiyed responded to this saying he was not expecting any favours. “Expecting things like a party position or ticket is not my nature,” said Saiyed, whose entry to the BJP was cleared at all the levels after a prolonged process.

Welcoming this, BJP’s minority cell convener Sajjad Heera said it was a sign of the party gaining acceptance among “good Muslims” and this would improve the party’s image among the community members soon.

‘Super cop’ turned MP bets on god to win again

Bangalore, April 1 (IANS) H.T. Sangliana, a former IPS officer who plunged into politics after retiring as a Karnataka ‘super cop’, is lucky to be nominated for the Lok Sabha elections from India’s IT hub despite switching loyalty to the Congress from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Just as the BJP sprung a surprise by fielding him in 2004 from Bangalore North and he defeated Congress veteran C.K. Jaffer Sharief, the Congress has gone out of the way to favour the 66-year-old to contest from the newly formed Bangalore Central Lok Sabha constituency.

‘It is by god’s grace that I am in the fray again, not by chance. I depend 100 percent on god and god’s people for my victory. I say so because I am a beginner in politics. I don’t want to be a so-called politician, which people define as a profession or occupation of scoundrels,’ Sangliana told IANS.

Sangliana, who originally hails from Mizoram, continues to live with his family in a modest apartment at the National Games village in upscale Koramangala suburb.

Though fearless and unfazed, Sangliana has ‘Z’ category security provided on the express directive of outgoing Lok Sabha speaker Somnath Chatterjee after he was heckled by BJP MPs and his office was ransacked by BJP cadres for voting in favour of the UPA government during the trust vote in July 2008 on the India-US nuclear deal in parliament.

Ironically, someone who protected Bangalore as the city police commissioner in 2001-02 is guarded by six commandos round-the-clock. An escort jeep accompanied him when he travels.

A day after his candidature was announced in New Delhi late Saturday, Sangliana first touched base with Congress legislators representing the assembly segments within his Lok Sabha constituency.

‘I am a strong believer that god ordains each one of us for His purpose. I am twice blessed to serve the people even after retiring from 36 years of police service,’ Sangliana said.

The transition to Congress following his disqualification by the BJP in August has not been smooth. Sangliana continued to face harassment from his erstwhile party cadres and was politically isolated for over eight months.

‘I am not a conventional politician by definition and do not waste time in socialising or wheeling-n-dealing. Though I was deprived of discharging my duties as an MP, I remained serving the people of my constituency and attending to their problems to the best of my ability,’ the former top cop recalled.

Having pipped Sharief in securing the much coveted Bangalore Central, the task is cut out for Sangliana. The constituency is not only new for him but it has witnessed polarisation after the 2008 assembly elections when the BJP grabbed 17 of the 28 assembly segments across the expanded city.

Sangliana has four Congress legislators to bank on for mobilising votes to outsmart B.Z. Zameer Ahmed Khan of the Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) and P.C. Mohan of the BJP in a triangular contest.

‘I am confident of winning again as people are well aware of me. Though my constituency consists of diverse communities and a mix of citizens from other states, they are liberal, educated, articulate and cosmopolitan to judge a candidate on merits,’ he said.

With a 1.9 million electorate, the constituency forms the heart of the city and has a sizeable minority voters, especially from Muslim-dominated Shivajinagar segment represented by Congress legislator Roshan Baig.

Sangliana does not think the matured electorate, particularly the youth, would vote on caste and community lines if the candidate has a clean image and is reputed for honesty, integrity and morality.

‘The voters are aware of the infrastructure projects and civic works I executed in the North constituency under the MP Local Area Development Scheme. I was one of the few MPs from the state who fully utilised the corpus of Rs.20 million (Rs.2 crore) annually for developing the constituency. Even the people of that constituency are coming forward to campaign for me and testify my credentials,’ an upbeat Sangliana said.

Having been a no nonsense officer in service, Sangliana does not agree that his candidature is a reward from the Congress for bailing out the UPA government.

‘The fact I have been given ticket to contest from this prestigious constituency is a testimony to my ability to win. I consider it a reward for my god-given inner strength, honesty, integrity, dependability and principle against corruption and corrupt people,’ Singliana added.