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)

Fiji military government tightens control

Wellington – Fiji’s military government, which is ruling with emergency powers, strengthened its hold on the country Tuesday, taking over the Reserve Bank and ordering the country’s Human Rights Commission office closed, according to reports from the capital, Suva. The Reserve Bank tightened exchange controls with immediate effect and deputy governor Sada Reddy said the move was in line with the bank’s core objective of safeguarding foreign reserves, Radio New Zealand reported.

Cameron Bagrie, chief economist for the ANZ and National Bank in New Zealand, predicted the Fiji economy would now implode, the report said.

The military government under Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama, which has imposed strict censorship on the Pacific island country’s newspapers, radio and television services, ordered the Fiji Human Rights Commission not to open its office in Suva following the Easter holiday, the independent Fijilive website reported.

It quoted chairwoman Dr Shaista Shameem as saying, “My staff went to the office this morning and they were greeted by police officers guarding the premises.

“They were informed that they had orders that the FHRC office will not be open,” she said.

The Australian Broadcasting Commission’s veteran Pacific affairs reporter Sean Dorney and New Zealand TV3 reporter Sia Aston and her cameraman were escorted to aircraft leaving Fiji on Tuesday after being ordered out of the country.

A local Fiji One television reporter, identified by colleagues as Edwin Nand, was arrested, reportedly for transmitting news material overseas.

Bainimarama’s government, which has ruled since a military coup ousted the elected government in December 2006, is back in power after being declared illegal by the Court of Appeal last week.

President Ratu Josefa Iloilo sacked the judges, revoked the constitution and enacted emergency powers before swearing in Bainimarama and his cabinet.

The governments of Australia and New Zealand have criticized Bainimarama as a self-appointed dictator and are consulting other countries on extending sanctions on the military administration while not hurting Fiji’s 837,000 people. (dpa)

Mother India fights back

RANI PAL, the mother of slain BSP MLA Raju Pal, has filed her nomination from Pratapgarh as an Independent candidate. She said she was fighting the election to avenge the murder of her son allegedly at the hands of Atiq and his brother Ashraf.

The mother and wife of the slain BSP MLA from city north, who was killed by a gang of assassins on January 25, 2005, had fainted after hearing the news of her death. When the duo regained consciousness, they had vowed to bring Atiq and Ashraf to justice.

Puja, who had married Raju barely nine days before his murder, has taken on Atiq, the MP from Phulpur, in court. But her mother-in-law has other ideas.

“The aim is not only to defeat him, but also to tell the electorate that he (Atiq) is a murderer and not fit for public life,” alleged Rani, who recently gave up her job as a health supervisor so she could contest elections. Shri Kant, a close aid of the slain MLA’s mother, alleged that Raju had been murdered because he had defeated Ashraf in the Assembly elections from the city west constituency.

“The brother-duo against whom there are dozens of criminal cases could not digest the idea of suffering defeat at the hands of an ordinary person like Raju,” Kant said. “I had been impatiently waiting for the day I would be able to contest elections against this man and tell voters what he has done to a mother.

I will continue to contest all future elections against him no matter from which corner of the country he fights,” Rani told Hindustan Times. Rani is ready to go to the extent of filing another nomination from Phulpur in case Atiq’s wife Shaista Parveen plunges into the fray as an Independent from Phulpur, Kant added.

Lucknow women protest against Gaza offensive

Lucknow, Jan 19 (ANI): Scores of women here staged a demonstration against Israeli offensive in Gaza to show solidarity with the Palestinians.

The protest was organised under the aegis of the All India Muslim Womenersonal Law Board (AIMWPLB) and Communist Party of India (CPI) on Sunday and came after Israel offered a unilateral ceasefire in Gaza.

Protestors urged New Delhi to snap all diplomatic ties with Israel.

“We are protesting against the Israeli attack on Palestine. We urge the Government of India to close the embassy of Israel and snap all diplomatic ties with the nation. Israeli strikes on Palestinian territory, hospitals and mosques are illegal. The United Nations must take action on this,” said Shaista Amber, President of AIMWPLB.

More than 1,150 Palestinians have been killed since Israel launched its offensive against Gaza on December 27 to force Hamas to stop rocket attacks on its territory.

Israel has accused Hamas of taking shelter among the civilian population and using sites such as mosques and schools as military posts.
Hamas said on Sunday it would cease fire immediately along with other militant groups in the Gaza Strip and give Israel, which already declared a unilateral truce, a week to pull its troops out of the territory. (ANI)