Tourists flock to Kufri to beat the heat

Shimla, May 3 (ANI): As the mercury rises across northern India, Kufri in Shimla is attracting lots of tourists.

The climate of Kufri is providing much-needed relief to many tourists who leave behind temperatures in mid to high 40s.

“I am from Ahmedabad, the temperature is 47 degree Celsius and here the temperature is very low and here we are enjoying the low temperature and the beauty of hills. The weather is very nice here,” said Prateek, a tourist.

Locals involved in the tourism business say that this tourist rush indicates a good season for them this summer.

“As the summer is going up, tourists are rushing to Kufri. We are having a good business these days. As the mercury will rise in May and June, this rush will increase more. This is good for the hundreds of local youth involved in horse-riding business here,” said Shiv Singh, who arranges horse-riding trips for tourists.

From Shimla and Kufri, tourists also move to other tourist destinations in Himachal Pradesh, like Manali and Dalhousie.

The maximum temperature in most hill-stations of Himachal Pradesh varies from 24 to 27 degree Celsius. (ANI)

Shiv Sena-BJP alliance confident of victory in Maharashtra assembly polls

Mumbai, Sep 19(ANI): Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Shiv Sena on Saturday expressed confidence about emerging victorious in the forthcoming Maharashtra Assembly elections.

“It is 45 years since Shiv Sena came into being. And this first day of Navaratri happens to be a red-letter day in the history of Shiv Sena that has crusaded for the cause of Samyukta (unified) Maharashtra. Considering all these aspects, I feel it is an auspicious timing (of) declaring the seat arrangement and we are confident of our combine emerging victorious,” said Uddhav Thackeray, Executive President of Shiv Sena party.

Leaders of both the parties confirmed that there was no bargaining for seats between the two allies.

“Today, is the first day of Dussera and we have arrived at the figures of seat sharing. Yes, it is 169 and 119. The 169 in favour of Shiv Sena and 119 for BJP and it will be interesting to note that both the figures end in 9, a lucky number; 169 and 119. And now onwards we will work on joint strategy. There is no clash of interests and now onwards we will devote to the selection of suitable candidates,” said Gopinath Munde, senior BJP leader.

In the 2004 elections, Shiv Sena had contested for 171 seats while BJP had contested for 117 and jointly they had bagged 119 seats in the legislative house of 289 members.

The alliance of Congress and regional National Congress Party (NCP) had emerged victorious in the 2004 polls. (ANI)

Congress – NCP to finalise seat-sharing formula on Saturday

New Delhi, Sep 19 (ANI): The crucial meeting of the Congress Party and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) leaders will be held here on Saturday to give the final shape to the seat sharing agreement for next month’s Maharashtra Assembly polls.

The Election Commission issued notification for the assembly polls in Maharashtra, which is to be held on October 13.

On Thursday it was reported that both parties had broadly agreed to a formula of 174: 114 seats for the Congress and the NCP respectively.

The Maharashtra Assembly has 298 constituencies.

Poll management leaders of both the Congress and the NCP met their respective party chiefs on Friday after three days of negotiations.

They had earlier held a series of discussions in Mumbai to give final shape to the seat sharing process.

If the current formula gets the stamp of approval of both parties then the NCP would settle for ten seats less than what it contested the last time.

Meanwhile the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) – Shiv Sena alliance settled on a seat sharing, for 119 for the BJP and 169 seats for Shiv Sena (ANI)

Shiv Sena activists burn Pakistan national flag in Amritsar

Amritsar Sep. 13 (ANI): Outraged over the rocket firing incident by Pakistan on Friday night in Attari Sector of Punjab’s Amritsar district, a group of Shiv Sena (Hindustan) activists on Sunday burnt Pakistan’s national flag here.

The Shiv Sena (Hindustan) is a local outfit.

A number of activists assembled at the Hathi Gate Chowk of Amritsar and burnt Pakistan’s national flag.

The protestors said that they burnt the Pakistan’s national flag to express their anguish and register protest against the rockets lobbed from the Pakistani soil into Indian Territory.

Carrying a banner in their hands, the activists shouted anti-Pakistan slogans.
Protestors demanded that the Government of India should force Pakistan to stop anti-India activities immediately.

Ajay Seth, President of the Shiv Sena (H), condemned the anti India activities of Pakistan and said that Pakistan’s nefarious designs always have an effect on the peace initiatives. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

Bihar court issues warrant against Bal Thackeray

Bhojpur (Bihar), Sep 5 (ANI): A Sub divisional magistrate in Bhojpur in Bihar has issued a non-bailable arrest warrant (NBW) against Shiv Sena chief Balasaheb Thackeray on Friday for his alleged uncharitable and inflammatory remarks against the Biharis.

Thackeray has made these remarks in his one of articles in Shiv Sena’s mouthpiece ‘Samna.’

Judicial Magistrate Rakesh Pati Tiwari issued NBW against Thackeray, after the later failed to appear before him in compliance with his July 7 order.

Earlier on July 7, Judge Tiwari issued a bailable warrant against Thackeray, but Thackeray failed to comply the orders by presenting himself or by his lawyers before the court to explain the stand.

A senior advocate Rajesh Kumar Singh has filed the petition in the court in 2008 accusing Thackeray of making comments against Biharis in his party’s mouthpiece. (ANI)

Radio Pakistan unhappy over criticism of Jaswant Singh book on Jinnah

Abohar, Sep.3 (ANI): The expelled Bharatiya Janata Party leader Jaswant Singh has got a new fan in Punjabi Durbar programme of Radio Pakistan.

In its latest edition, the Punjabi Durbar programme has described all political parties of India be it Bharatiya Janata Party, Congress or Shiv Sena being anti-Pakistan for voicing objection to Jaswant Singh’s book- “Jinnah-India, Partition, Independence”.

In its recent Punjabi Durbar Programme, Radio Pakistan said that Jaswant Singh has paid a huge price for his biography of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan.

Many Indian scholars have expressed sympathy with Jaswant Singh, but have taken exception to Pakistan Radio describing all Indian political parties as anti-Pakistan.

Anil Kumar, a historian and a commentator on current affairs has stated that political parties in India have tried their best to cultivate good relations with Pakistan ever since independence.

“India has been maintaining friendly relationship with Pakistan since 1947. India parted with funds held by united India, when Jinnah demanded it. Even after Pakistani aggression in 1965 and 1971, India returned to Pakistan the territory which was in India’s possession in the hope that there would be cordial relations between the two countries,” he said.

“Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh have been continuously trying to maintain good relations with Pakistan, but Pakistan continued terrorist attacks in India,” Anil Kumar added.

“India is a secular country. There are more Muslims in India than the total population of Pakistan. Moslems are happy to be in India. Many feel that they are safer than in Pakistan, which is being subjected to violence by the Taliban,” said Anil kumar, who is, an expert on Indo-Pak affairs.

India is continuing talks at different levels despite incidents like Mumbai terror attacks and Pakistan’s ongoing support to militancy in Kashmir.

It is surprising that broadcasters of Radio Pakistan expect political parties in India to sing praise of Jinnah, who was chiefly responsible for the division of the sub-continent on the basis of religious identities.

They accept Jinnah’s contribution during the freedom struggle against the British Raj, but are critical of his role in dividing the country. (ANI)

BJP- Shiv Sena finalises seat sharing for Maharashtra assembly polls

Mumbai, Aug 31 (ANI): Though the party’s top leadership is struggling to set the house in order, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Maharashtra unit has finalised the seat sharing agreement with the Shiv Sena on Monday for the upcoming assembly polls in the state.

According to BJP sources the talks with Shiv Sena are almost over and an official announcement would be made in a day or two.

Both the parties agreed for the existing 171:117 formula for the 288 Assembly seats, sources added.

In the 2004 Assembly elections, the Shiv Sena-BJP alliance had allotted seven seats to Shetkari Sanghatana led by vetern farmer’s leader Sharad Joshi. As Joshi’s party is no more a partner of Sena-BJP combine, both the parties are expected to share these seats.

BJP is claiming the Chindwada seat, as the sitting legislator of that constituency joined the party.

The poll managers of the saffron alliance are confident of achieving seat matrix despite trouble faced by the BJP central leadership.

Meanwhile, the ruling Congress – Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) combine is still not sure on maintaining the alliance. Also the strategy of Raj Thackeray’s Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) is not yet clear.

The MNS is holding its cards close to the chest as to go alone or ally with one of the two major political groups, or opt for the Third Front. (ANI)

Dry spell hits Chhattisgarh

Reeva (Chhattisgarh), Aug 30 (ANI): Prolonged dry spell loomed large over Chhattisgarh, known as ‘rice bowl of central India’.

Lack of proper rainfall, a requisite for a good yield of rice, has left the farmers deeply worried.

Though the sowing has been done in 92 per cent of the targeted area, the yield is bound to be affected badly as cracks appear in fields due to lack of water.

Reeva is one such village.

“The paddy has been sown but cracks have developed in the fields due to lack of water. I haven’t seen anything like this before,” said Banarasi, a farmer.

The farmers have sown hybrid variety of rice and have invested around rupees 2,800 a substantial amount, for these poor farmers who are already reeling under financial crisis.he paddy crop in many fields has been damaged due to intense heat.

“I had sown paddy and maize. I had sown hybrid variety of paddy and had purchased it for rupees 2,800 from Baikunthapur and had worked very hard in the fields. But despite all this, the crop has started drying up. My entire labour and money is wasted. I have not seen such a situation before,” said Sudama, another farmer.

The farmers want the government to declare their region as drought hit and provide them aid.

According to State Agriculture Minister Chandrasekhar Sahu, the yield of the paddy is bound to go down and is likely to be reduced to around 60 per cent of the usual produce in the state.

“Considering today’s scenario, we have estimated that this year, there will be around 60 per cent less produce than the normal production in the region,” said Sahu.

The production of rice in Chhattisgarh was 5.7 million tons in 2008.

But this year’s poor monsoon is making it difficult to meet the higher target in a state where around 80 per cent of the total population is dependent on agriculture.

Eighteen districts of the state have been declared drought hit by the state government.

Around 70 per cent of Chhattisgarh’s agricultural area is totally dependent on rains. By Shiv Shankar Sarthi (ANI)

India, Pak foreign secretaries burn midnight oil to find common ground

Sharm-el-Sheikh (Egypt), July 15 (ANI): Foreign Secretaries of India and Pakistan – Shiv Shankar Menon and Salman Basheer – burnt the midnight oil on Tuesday to try to work out some kind of framework to lay the ground for the resumption of talks between the two countries.

Mandated by their respective Prime Ministers’ – Dr. Manmohan Singh and Yousuf Raza Gilani-to work out the modalities before the two heads of government meet on Thursday (July 16). Menon and Basheer interacted with each other without the assistance of aides late into the night.

The 90-minute meeting took place soon after the Indian delegation landed here from Paris after attending the French National Day celebrations there.

According to senior officials, the discussions between the two were good and detailed, and both agreed to meet again on Wednesday on the sidelines of the XVth Non-Aligned Summit that opens in this Red Sea resort today.

There were suggestions of some movement being made by both sides on the issue of terrorism and the possibility of a joint media appearance by the Prime Ministers’ of the two countries after they hear from their respective foreign secretaries.

Menon and Basheer are believed to have discussed the progress made by Islamabad in its probe into the 26/11 strikes and the steps taken to dismantle the terrorism infrastructure on its soil.

Menon and Basheer’s discussions are also believed to have covered Pakistan’s flip-flop over the arrest and release of Sayeed and the withdrawal of petitions challenging his release from the Supreme Court.

Ahead of the meeting between the two foreign secretaries and the two Prime Ministers’, Indian External Affairs Minister S M Krishna has demanded a “visible response” and undertaking from Pakistan on bringing the perpetrators of Mumbai terror attacks to justice.

Prime Minister Gilani, who also arrived here on Tuesday, has said that he will approach his meeting with Dr. Singh with an “open heart and a positive mind.”

But he refused to comment on the Punjab provincial government’s decision to withdraw the petitions that challenged last month’s release from house arrest of Jamaat-ud Dawa chief Hafiz Mohammed Sayeed.

Tuesday night’s talks come four days after Pakistan handed over a fresh dossier on its probe into the Mumbai terror attacks to India.

The dossier, handed over to the Indian High Commission officials in Islamabad on Saturday, identifies 13 new suspects and gives an update on Pakistan’s investigations into the November 26 attacks, sources said.

After Prime Minister Singh’s disclosure on Saturday that ISI chief Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha had met some Indian High Commission officials in Islamabad, speculation are rife about the powerful spy agency’s influence on the talks process.

At present, the Indian side is unwilling to hazard a guess on whether the ISI will be a part of the talks.

There is, however, a hope on the Indian side about some kind of commitment being made by Pakistan to bring the Mumbai terror accused quickly to justice and to stop the use of Pakistani soil for terror acts against India.

The Pakistani side is of the view that the composite dialogue process should not be held hostage to one case. (ANI)

Shiv Sena wants houses in Mumbai for only for locals

Mumbai, July 14 (ANI): In turf battle ahead of state polls in Maharashtra, Shiv Sena has promised houses in Mumbai to state’s bona-fide residents.

Having lost ground to its faction, the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena, over hardline political posturing, Shiv Sena executive president Uddhav Thackeray led a bunch of party activists and supporters to the Mumbai Metropolitan Regional Development Authority (MMRDA) head office demanding that non-Maharashtrians should be barred in that allotment of shelters.

“In another two to three months, Shiv Sena is confident of coming to power and then our government will provide 500 square feet area houses to Marathi ‘manoos’ (bona-fide residents of Maharashtra) to ensure that they need not go out of Mumbai to reside.

Marathi manoos is entitled to shelter and none else. This is our stand,” said Thackeray.

“In Mumbai, the houses are built by the MMRDA for the poor. These houses are also grabbed by builders. Immigrants from Bihar and Bangladesh are begging for accommodation whereas what we are demanding is proper accommodation from government which is our right,” he added.

The MMRDA last month announced that it would provide 43,000 homes at a rent starting as low as Rupees 800 per month.

The project is aimed at reducing the number of slums in Mumbai.

Shiv Sena members feel that the housing scheme doesn’t give preference to Maharashtrians and would encourage outsiders to settle in Mumbai.

Maharashtra will hold elections to state assembly by October and the migrants’ issue could swing votes. (ANI)

Bal Thackeray admitted to Lilavati hospital

Mumbai, July 6 (ANI): Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray was admitted to the Lilavati hospital on Monday for a routine check-up of his health.

According to party sources, the 82-year-old Thackeray was admitted to hospital for a routine follow-up.

Thackeray was hospitalized last month after he complained of breathlessness. (ANI)

Shiv Sena protests vegetable price rise in Mumbai

Mumbai, July 4 (ANI): Shiv Sena activists staged a protest here against the rise of vegetable on Friday.

They alleged that the rise in fuel prices had had a cascading effect on the prices of vegetables and other essential commodities.

Raising slogans against the price hike, they demanded that the government roll back the fuel price hike.

“Two months back the prices of coriander leaves were Rupees 35 but now it has shot up to Rupees 70. It is an essential material for cooking material making it difficult for us to buy. This price hike is because of the Congress government and in future if the prices don’t come down then along with the locals we will stage further such protests,” said Kishori, Shiv Sena activist.

“The prices of potatoes and onions were around Rupees eight but now it has gone up to Rupees 16. How can we afford buying vegetables at such a high rate?” said Mahananda, a local.

Despite price increase, oil firms are likely to suffer a revenue loss of 560 billion rupees this fiscal. (ANI)

Shiv Sena protests against erratic power supply in Thane

Thane (Maharashtra), July 1 (ANI): Shiv Sena party workers ransacked a power station in Thane in a violent protest against power tariff hike and growing power shortage on Tuesday.

The protestors also raised slogans against what they termed as a ‘steep rise’ in the tariffs and also set a car on fire to vent their anger against erratic power supply in the region.

Shiv Sena supporters, including women, tried to scale the police barricade, leading to altercation.

Last week at least 35 people were injured during clashes between police and protesters when Shiv Sainik workers protested against power tariff hike in Mumbai.

Shiv Sena party has been holding violent demonstrations on various issues ranging from Valentine’s Day to migrants living in the state.(ANI)

Indian origin scientist makes breakthrough in developing “spintronic devices”

London, June 27 (ANI): A team of researchers led by a scientist of Indian origin has created new ‘superatoms’ with magnetic properties for the first time, a breakthrough that could be used to make “spintronic devices”, faster computer processors and denser memory storage.

According to a report in New Scientist, the research was led by Shiv Khanna from Virginia Commonwealth University.

Superatoms were discovered in the 1980s when Walter Knight and colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, found that groups of sodium atoms can share electrons amongst themselves.

The electrons form a collective “supershell” that coats the cluster.

Until now, clusters that copy the magnetic properties of other elements have proved more difficult to design.

Magnetism is caused by the spin of an atom’s electrons, which are arranged in shells, or orbitals, around the atom’s nucleus.

Their net spin determines the strength of the atom’s magnetic “moment,” and because they tend to occur in pairs that cancel each other out, it is the atom’s unpaired electrons that contribute to its magnetic moment.

Unpaired electrons, however, will make an atom, or a superatom, more likely to react with others in an attempt to fill its orbitals and become stable.

As a result, stability and magnetism have long been thought to be mutually exclusive.

A team led by Shiv Khanna at Virginia Commonwealth University has come up with a way around the problem.

Khanna’s team worked out that encapsulating an atom of vanadium in a cage of eight caesium atoms would create a stable supershell of electrons around the entire cluster.

This would prevent the vanadium atom’s unpaired electrons from reacting with other atoms, maintaining its magnetism.

The arrangement would yield a magnetic moment of five Bohr magnetons, which is the same as an atom of manganese.

“What we have done is expand the range of possible magnetic materials,” said Khanna.

Khanna’s magnetic superatoms are only calculations at this point, but he has funding from the Department of Energy to make them a reality.

He hopes the clusters can be used to give researchers a new dimension of control in designing new materials.

For example, stable magnetic clusters could one day be used in new “spintronic” devices, which compute or store information using magnetic moments rather than simply electrical charge.

Encoding data in this way means the devices can be far smaller than those used to make conventional electronic components, potentially providing an overall boost in computing power. (ANI)

President Patil condoles passing away of Assam Governor

New Delhi, June 26 (ANI): President Pratibha Patil has condoled the passing away of the Governor of Assam, Shiv Charan Mathur, who died after prolonged illness at a hospital in New Delhi on Thursday evening.

In her message, the President said Mathur was closely associated with developmental activities at various levels in Rajasthan during his long public career.

He was always concerned about the welfare of the people in rural areas. In his passing away the nation has lost a personality who was always in touch with the grassroots of society

The 84 year-old Governor was suffering from acute heart and kidney ailments for the last several months.

He was first admitted to the Guwahati Medical College and Hospital and later shifted to the Escorts Hospital in New Delhi four days back.

After little recovery the Governor was released from hospital on thursday afternoon and taken to his Vasant Kunj residence in the capital. But he fell sick again and immediately brought to the nearby Fortis Hospital where he breathed his last at around 8.05. p.m.

A veteran Congress leader, two-time Chief Minister of Rajasthan, Shiv Charan Mathur, was sworn- in as the 20th Governor of Assam on the July 4 last year. (ANI)

World’s second cloned buffalo calf ‘Garima’ born in Haryana

Karnal (Haryana), June 24 (ANI): A team of veterinary scientists of the National Dairy Research Institute (NDRI) at Karnal in Haryana has successfully conceptualised the birth of the world’s second cloned buffalo calf.

The scientists tried out a new and advanced mode known as ‘Hand-guided Cloning Technique’.

The buffalo calf named Garima is a female and it was born through caesarean operation. The weight of the baby calf was around 43 kilograms at the time of birth.

According to the scientists, Garima is healthy and having normal weight gain likes other naturally born calves.

This cloning technique developed at NDRI, Karnal, has the potential to create elite breed of buffaloes of desired sex which will contribute in further increasing India’s milk production.

Dr. A.K. Srivastav headed the team of the scientists comprising of Dr. S K Singla, Dr. R S Manik, Dr. M S Chauhan, Dr. P Palta, Dr. Shiv Parsad, Dr. R S Shah and Dr. A George.

Keeping in view the fact of shortage of outstanding he-buffaloes, the ‘Hand-guided Cloning’ can decrease this gap and supply the bulls in the shortest possible time.

The world’s first ever-cloned buffalo calf was also born at NDRI on February 6, 2009 but it died within a week due to pneumonia. (ANI)

WHO declares swine flu pandemic

NEW DELHI: The World Health Organisation on Thursday raised the alert for swine flu to the highest `pandemic’ level, signalling that a global epidemic of the H1N1 virus had begun. The announcement followed a sharp rise in infections in countries outside North America, from where the outbreak began.

The last flu pandemic was declared 41 years ago, when H3N1 virus strain killed an estimated 1 million people in 1968. WHO’s escalation of the alert level from Phase 5 to Phase 6 means that the disease is spreading fast but doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s causing more severe illness or more deaths.

The latest flu, which has been largely mild so far, is caused by the H1N1 strain of influenza that originated in pigs. Globally, the virus has infected 27,737 people in 74 countries and led to 141 deaths. However, WHO believes that actual infections are far higher. The organization fears that the virus could infect one-third of the world’s population within a year.

The Phase 6 alert came after an emergency WHO meeting in Geneva following reports of community level transmission of the virus in Spain, Britain, Japan and Australia. WHO will now officially recommend to its 194 member countries to put in place their pandemic plans which may include social distancing measures like closing down schools and restrictions on foreign travel. Each country will decide on the measures it needs to take for checking the spread of the virus.

In Hong Kong, the government ordered all kindergartens and primary schools closed for two weeks after a dozen students tested positive for swine flu. In Australia, swine flu cases jumped to more than 1,000 on Monday and reached 1,260 by late Wednesday.

Dr Shiv Lal, director of the National Institute for Communicable Diseases, told TOI, “India will not start social distancing measures immediately but will focus on early detection and treatment because the number of cases as yet are only 15. A joint monitoring committee meeting of the health ministry will be convened on Saturday to chart the future course of action.”

Meanwhile, an foreign ministry statement said India would be seeking more aggressive screening of passengers coming in from countries affected by swine flu. “We have issued necessary instructions to our missions in the countries concerned to take up the matter with the host governments on an urgent basis,” it said.

WHO recommends consideration of exit screening for international travellers departing countries with human infection at Phases 4, 5 and 6.

Pharmaceutical companies have indicated that it could be six months before a suitable vaccine against H1N1 can be produced for global use.

Talking about the nature of the virus, WHO said, “The virus we are dealing with right now is a new influenza virus that is behaving like a human virus. The virus originated from pigs but is not transmitted by pigs. This is the basic difference H1N1 has with H5N1 bird flu virus in which those getting infected handled infected birds.”

According to an editorial in the Lancet, the next global influenza pandemic would kill 62 million people with 96% of these deaths occurring in low income and middle-income settings.

WHO has asked all countries to activate their pandemic preparedness plans. At this stage, effective and essential measures include heightened surveillance, early detection and treatment of cases, and infection control in all health facilities.

Drunk driver crushes three sleeping on Delhi pavement

New Delhi, May 28 (IANS) A 31-year-old accountant was arrested here Thursday for allegedly running his car over people sleeping on a pavement in northwest Delhi while returning home after getting drunk – killing a man, his son and a child and injuring three more people.

At 1.25 a.m, Navin Jain was returning to his Keshavpuram home from a marriage function in Gurgaon, adjacent to the national capital, in his Maruti Alto car when he lost control. The car climbed a pavement near Kanhaiya Nagar Metro station close to his house.

Police said around 15 people were sleeping on the pavement then. Jain’s car reportedly ran over Deepak, 8, and Guddu, 12 and Chanderpal, 50. It also hit two brothers Harinder, 12, and Jitender, 9, and 46-year-old labourer Lala Ram.

According to eyewitnesses, Jain, who works as an accountant with a steel factory in Wazirabad Industrial Area, was heavily drunk.

“He was so drunk that he did not even realise what had happened. People had to drag him out of his car. He was roughed up,” said Shyam Lal, who was also sleeping on the pavement.

Another labourer Shiv Prasad said: “The car just zipped passed me. I was fortunate that I did not get killed. The driver was drunk and could not even stand on his feet after he was dragged out. The driver said he could not see the people sleeping on the pavement.”

Police rushed the victims to the Bhagvan Mahavir Hospital where doctors pronounced Deepak and Guddu dead. Deepak’s father Chanderpal succumbed to his injuries early in the morning.

Guddu’s father Lala Ram was shifted to Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital and his condition remained serious till Thursday evening. Harinder and Jitender were in Bhagvan Mahavir Hospital.

Police said they had arrested Jain under section 304 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and for drunken driving.

“Jain was speeding and was under the influence of alcohol. We have charged him under the stringent section of 304 of IPC,” said Deputy Commissioner of Police (northwest Delhi) N.S. Bundela.

All party meeting seeks stringent punishment for Vienna culprits

Chandigarh, May 26 (ANI): In a two hour-meeting attended by SAD-BJP, Congress, CPI, CPM, BSP, and Shiv Sena, parties urged the Centre to accelerate parleys with its Austrian counterpart to give rigorous punishment to those guilty in the incident which claimed the life of a Sikh preacher.

The meeting, convened by Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal strongly condemned the incident in Vienna, which claimed the life of a Sikh preacher and a two-minute silence was observed as a mark of respect for Sant Rama Nand and those killed in protests.

In this meeting a unanimous resolution was passed seeking stringent punishment for those responsible behind the crime.

Addressing the media after the meeting, Badal informed that he would take up the issue with the Foreign Affairs Minister SM Krishna on Tuesday.

Badal also appealed to the people of the state to maintain peace and communal harmony and compensation to those who were killed was announced.

“The government will compensate those whose private properties have been damaged in the backlash and next of the kin of three killed in violent protests,” he said. (ANI)

Thackeray family feud now out in the open

Mumbai, May 24 (ANI): The Shiv Sena and the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena have both been electorally routed in Mumbai and in parts of Maharashtra in the recent general elections, but this has not stopped the Thackeray family from bringing its internal bickering out into the open.

Shiv Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray has blamed his cousin and MNS chief Raj Thackeray for the Shiv Sena’s poll debacle. But Raj has wasted no time in hitting back at Uddhav.

Raj Thackeray said: “I have a question for Uddhav Thackeray. You voted for Mahesh Jethmalani. Is he a Marathi? Do you think Marathis will benefit by voting for Mahesh Jethmalani?”.

The Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) chief said that MNS did not steal anybody’s votes.

He said while addressing his party workers here last Friday in the wake of the comments by Uddhav Thackeray’s comments that the votes of the “Marathi Manoos” had been taken away that due to presence of MNS, the votes were split in the recent elections.

“I have not stolen the votes of anybody, its the people who have supported us… Balasaheb Thackeray has all the right to say anything about me and I will not debate against him… I will also ask Uddhav Thackeray as to whom did he vote in this election. If it”"”s Mahesh Jethmalani , then is he a Marathi and if not then how can they allege that I have stolen the votes of Marathi?” said Raj Thackeray.

Stung by this direct attack, Uddhav raked up the Ramesh Kini’s murder case in which Raj was one of the accused.

Uddhav reminded Raj that Jethamalinis had helped him get acquitted and that too in the murder of a Marathi.

“You say I voted for a non-Marathi candidate like Mahesh Jethmalani but it was Jethmalani with whom Sena chief Bal Thackeray was in constant contact with, to acquit you in the murder case of Ramesh Kini, a Marathi,” Uddhav Thackeray added.

Sena chief Bal Thackeray has already declared that he’s broken all ties with his nephew Raj. And now the Thackeray cousins licking their electoral wounds are locked in a bitter verbal slugfest.

MNS, a splinter group of the Shiv Sena has played a spoilsport for the National Democratic Alliance in their strongholds Mumbai and Thane.

Out of its 12 nominees, three candidates of MNS had come up second while the remaining bagged the third spot in the election.

While Shiv Sena bagged 11 seats, the BJP managed just nine of the total 48 constituencies in Maharashtra. (ANI)