Missing Hindu nurse’s parents’ pleas in Pak falling on deaf ears

Karachi, Sep.18 (ANI): Family members of the Hindu nurse, Bano, who disappeared from Karachi last month under mysterious circumstances, have urged the government to step into the issue and direct the concerned authorities to pursue the matter seriously to find out her whereabouts.

Bano’s uncle and the head of the Hindu Maheshwari community, Narain Das feared that her niece could have been killed or forced to convert her religion.

“The incidents of kidnapping our community girls’ have recently increased alarmingly and despite our repeated protests and approaches to the higher authorities, nothing has so far been done to protect the community members. Kidnappers have recently kidnapped several girls as young as thirteen and fourteen years old,” Das said.

The police has arrested Gulzar, who worked with Bano in the hospital, but failed to gather any substantial report regarding her whereabouts.

Gulzar has told officials that Bano has accepted Islam and married her boyfriend Jaffer, but Bano’s parents fear she has been murdered.

When enquired about the issue, Provincial Minister for Minority Affairs Dr Mohan Lal said he would look into matter and issue guidelines to concerned authorities.

“I would personally talk to the police authorities and will ensure her release as soon as possible,” The Daily Times quoted Lal, as saying. (ANI)

Asif inches closer towards Champions Trophy berth

Karachi, Aug.18 (ANI): Tainted Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Asif, who is eyeing a place back in the national squad, has impressed chief selector Iqbal Qasim with his form and fitness in a low-profile match.

Qasim along with other member of the selection committee, Saleem Jaffer, watched Asif play during a match between youngsters attending an Under-23 Emerging Players Camp, and looked satisfied with the speedsters performance.

“He (Asif) seemed to be fine today,” said Qasim.

Asif took a wicket giving away only 23 runs in his nine over spell in the match.

Qasim said Asif would be considered for the Champions Trophy, but the final decision in this regard will be taken only after holding talks with the captain and the coach.

“The final decision about the composition will be taken by the committee after we weigh all our options. We want to discuss each and every detail with the captain and the coach before taking a final decision on the Champions Trophy squad,” The News quoted Qasim, as saying.

The 26-year-old pacer, whose career had plummeted after he failed a dope test during the Indian Premier League’s (IPL) inaugural season, is hoping to find a place in Pakistani team after serving a one-year ban imposed by the PCB.

The PCB has already included the left hand seamer in the preliminary list of 30 probables for the Champions Trophy. (ANI)

Pak selectors angry with PCB for ignoring them after T20 World Cup win

Lahore, June 29 (ANI): The national selectors, who picked the Pakistan squad that won the Twenty20 World Cup, are angry that they have been completely ignored in the celebrations for the team’s triumph.

Although former chief selector Abdul Qadir has resigned from his job, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has not clarified the status of Saleem Jaffer and Shoaib Mohammad who were on the selection committee that picked the World Cup squad.

The board had appointed an interim selection committee headed by former captain Wasim Bari to pick the team for the Test tour of Sri Lanka.

“No one has the decency to even invite us for any celebratory event even though our contribution is clear that we picked the winning side,” one selector said.

Qadir, who resigned from his post in acrimonious circumstances while the team was playing in the Twenty20 World Cup, has also castigated the board for their treatment of the selectors.

“No matter what they do they can’t take away the credit from us that we picked the World Cup winning squad,” the Daily Times quoted Qadir, as saying. (ANI)

Party hoppers galore confuse Karnataka’s poll scenario

Bangalore, April 6 (IANS) Karnataka voters are in a quandary. Though familiar with most of the candidates in the poll battle, they are no longer sure who is in which party as the number of politicians switching sides is increasing as the voting dates approach.

Staunch Congressmen have suddenly turned strong loyalists of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which to them was a ‘communal party’ even a day before changing sides.

Some who had left the Congress for the BJP are now realising that it has been ‘communal all along’ and are celebrating their home-coming to the Congress.

A few Congress and BJP men who had derided the Janata Dal-Secular as a ‘thande-makkala paksha’ (father and sons party) of former prime minister H.D. Deve Gowda and his tribe, are ‘discovering’ that it is the only party that cares for the poor, the minorities and the oppressed.

The BJP, ruling Karnataka for the first time, leads in netting leaders from the Congress and the JD-S, a situation reminiscent of politicians flocking to it ahead of the 2004 Lok Sabha polls hoping that its ‘India Shining’ campaign would return the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) to power in New Delhi.

The Congress and the JD-S have also had their men crossing over to each other, but their number is insignificant compared to what the BJP has bagged.

The latest to join the BJP bandwagon from the Congress was D.B. Chandre Gowda, who vacated his Chikmagalur seat in 1978 to enable Indira Gandhi to contest from a safe Congress harbour after her defeat and the rout of the Congress in northern India in the 1977 polls held after she lifted the emergency imposed in 1975.

The BJP is fielding him from the Bangalore North constituency against Congress veteran and former railway minister C.K. Jaffer Sharief.

Another Congressman, L.R. Shivarame Gowda, who joined the BJP along with Chandre Gowda, has been given the ticket for the Mandya constituency, held by M.H. Ambareesh of the Congress, a Kannada film actor and central junior minister. The BJP tried in vain to woo him.

The BJP has won over Congress strongman in north Karnataka Gurpadappa Nagmarpalli, who was a member of the state assembly from Bidar. He will now take on former Congress chief minsiter N. Dharam Singh in Bidar.

For Nagmarapalli, it is a double whammy. His son will be the BJP candidate for the bypoll for the Bidar assembly seat.

C.P. Yogeshwar, a Kannada film actor-producer and a realtor, has also latched on to the BJP after resigning from the Congress and the assembly. He is being fielded from Bangalore Rural against former chief minister and JD-S candidate H.D. Kumaraswamy and sitting member Tejaswini Gowda of the Congress.

Incidentally, the BJP had demanded action against Yogeshwar after complaints that he had taken people for a ride with promises of flats in his Mega City project on the outskirts of Bangalore that they never got.

The BJP eagerly welcomed these cross overs as Chandre Gowda, Shivareme Gowda and Yogeshwar belong to the politically powerful Vokkaliga community. The BJP did not have many Vokkaliga leaders and its support base is among Lingayats, another dominant community.

The BJP welcomed another Congress leader V. Somanna, who quit the party and the state assembly and will formally join the BJP next week. His son preceded him in joining the BJP ranks a few days ago.

Voting will take place in 17 constituencies in the first phase on April 23. In the remaining 11 constituencies, voting is scheduled for April 30. With the BJP nominating candidates for all 28 seats, any more new joinees will have to wait their turn for rewards.

The Congress managed to get H.T. Sangliana, a former Bangalore city police commissioner, who had won the Bangalore North Lok Sabha seat in 2004 on the BJP ticket. He is the Congress candidate from Bangalore Central, a new seat created following re-drawing of constituenices.

The Congress welcomed back former chief minister S. Bangarappa, who went to the BJP and later to the Samajwadi Party. He is being fielded from his home-district Shimoga against Chief Minister B.S. Yeddyurappa’s son and BJP candidate B.Y. Rahavendra.

The JD-S, which enjoys huge clout among Vokkaligas, could only get a few second-rung Lingayat leaders from the BJP.

‘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.

Ranji Trophy Final: UP’s Bhuvneshwar and Mumbai’s Rohit star on opening day

Hyderabad, Jan.12 (ANI): Uttar Pradesh fast bowler Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Mumbai’s star batters Rohit Sharma and Abhishek Nayar stole the limelight on the first day of the five-day Ranji Trophy final on Monday.

While Kumar captured his first five wicket haul in a final, Sharma rode his his luck to score an unbeaten 113. He was ably assisted by all-rounder Nayar, who fell one short of a well-deserved century.

Kumar stole the thunder from much more illustrious names and in-form players in the morning by reducing Mumbai to 55 for four,including consigning batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar to his first first-class duck in Indian domestic cricket.

Sharma lived a charmed life, being dropped twice by Uttar Pradesh skipper Mohammad Kaif. He added a streaky 207 with Nayar while waltzing away to his fourth first class hundred.

The final began with the question of how UP would counter Tendulkar. But in the first session, Mumbai were asking themselves how to tackle the seam movement UP bowlers were getting with the new ball.

After winning the toss on a greenish pitch, Kaif went straight to his strength – the pace bowlers. Early breakthroughs were seen as the only way UP could threaten a solid Mumbai team, who have looked unbeatable all season. The Kumars, Praveen and Bhuvneshwar, gave UP just that kind of start.

Bhuvneshwar provided UP the first breakthroughs, claiming Wasim Jaffer and Vinayak Samant LBW. Mumbai lost Ajinkya Rahane, who got a shocker of a decision from from the umpire – the delivery from R P Singh that pitched outside his leg stump.

Bhuvneshwar claimed the all important wicket of Tendulkar when he inside-edged the ball onto the pad, and Shivakant Shukla ran in and dived from short midwicket to take the catch, stunning the Mumbai team.

At close of play, Mumbai’s score read 297 for 6 with Sharma on 113 and Ajit Agarkar on 21 at the crease. Kumar ended up with five wickets for 64 runs of 23 overs. (ANI)

PCB forced to award contract to pacer Abdul Rauf

Karachi, Jan 12 (ANI): The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) was forced to review its central contracts’ list by including young fast bowler Abdul Rauf in it after the pacer complained in various television interviews that he was treated in an unjust manner.

A PCB spokesman said on Sunday that chief selector Abdul Qadir recommended a C-category contract for Rauf and later the Board chairman, Ijaz Butt, approved the player’s inclusion in the list.

Rauf’s inclusion in the elite list came just a day after the pacer complained of unfair treatment meted out to him by the PCB, The News reported.

“I am really sad at not being considered for the contract. I don’t understand why they ignored me,” Rauf said in one of the interviews.

Rauf made his One-day International debut last February against Zimbabwe. He has so far played four ODIs, collecting eight wickets at 26.50.

He was not the only one disappointed after seeing the 26-man list. A number of other talented cricketers were also ignored.

There were also reports that two of the three national selectors were not even consulted over the central contracts.

It was alleged that chief selector Qadir prepared the list all by himself without taking advice from fellow selectors Shoaib Mohammad and Saleem Jaffer.

Pakistan coach Intikhab Alam, manager Yawar Saeed and Qadir were the three officials given the task to prepare the list.

Unlike the previous list that was based on performance, the new contracts were based on seniority and even cricketers who did not play a single match for Pakistan in 2008 were given A-category contracts. (ANI)