Qualcomm says looking for partners for India broadband

June 11 (Reuters) – Qualcomm Inc (QCOM.O), which won broadband spectrum in four of India’s 22 zones, is looking for one or more local partners, a senior company official said.

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Kanwalinder Singh, president for Qualcomm’s Indian and South Asian operations, said the company was looking for partners among the firms that won third-generation (3G) spectrum in a recently concluded auction. (Reporting by Sanjeev Choudhary; Editing by Unnikrishnan Nair)

Kashmiri agent dubbed ‘Mr. XXXXX’ let into Canada, but UK lawmaker was not

Toronto (Canada), Apr.29 (ANI): A British lawmaker, George Galloway, was barred entry to Canada last March after the government deemed him a supporter of a terrorist organization, but surprisingly, a Kashmiri agent dubbed ‘Mr. XXXXX’ was let in despite giving 40,000 rupees to an Islamist terrorist.

Galloway scuttled his 2009 Canadian speaking tour upon being declared a persona non grata, but a man with a vastly more checkered past landed on the tarmac of Vancouver International Airport.

According to the Globe and Mail, under questioning from federal agents, the South Asian caught with a false passport revealed his secret story.

He said that he had once dreamed of dying as an Islamist terrorist. He had handled guns and fired assault rifles in his youth.

Pressed about his line of work, he told border guards he had been operating as a spy.

And during that December, 2008, interrogation, the border guards heard his views on the previous month’s carnage in Mumbai.

“It’s stupid. It’s crazy,” he said, disagreeing with the terrorists’ tactics. “ … They should not kill people in the streets. They should do it at the border.”

Nearly 18 months later, this man – referred to only as Mr. XXXXX in court documents, owing to refugee-anonymity laws – is living in Canada despite being initially declared inadmissible.

He is one of only 30-odd people that Immigration Minister Jason Kenney declared “inadmissible” that year as national-security threats, Mr. Galloway being a more prominent example.
IRB decision. (ANI)

Human brain reacts differently to different races

Washington, Apr 27 (ANI): When dealing with people outside of one”s own race, the human brain fires differently, a new study has found.

The research out of the University of Toronto Scarborough explored the sensitivity of the “mirror-neuron-system” to race and ethnicity.

The researchers had study participants view a series of videos while hooked up to electroencephalogram (EEG) machines. The participants – all white – watched simple videos in which men of different races picked up a glass and took a sip of water. They watched white, black, South Asian and East Asian men perform the task.

Typically, when people observe others perform a simple task, their motor cortex region fires similarly to when they are performing the task themselves. However, the UofT research team, led by PhD student Jennifer Gutsell and Assistant Professor Dr. Michael Inzlicht, found that participants” motor cortex was significantly less likely to fire when they watched the visible minority men perform the simple task. In some cases when participants watched the non-white men performing the task, their brains actually registered as little activity as when they watched a blank screen.

“Previous research shows people are less likely to feel connected to people outside their own ethnic groups, and we wanted to know why,” says Gutsell. “What we found is that there is a basic difference in the way peoples” brains react to those from other ethnic backgrounds. Observing someone of a different race produced significantly less motor-cortex activity than observing a person of one”s own race. In other words, people were less likely to mentally simulate the actions of other-race than same-race people”

The trend was even more pronounced for participants who scored high on a test measuring subtle racism, says Gutsell.

“The so-called mirror-neuron-system is thought to be an important building block for empathy by allowing people to ”mirror” other people”s actions and emotions; our research indicates that this basic building block is less reactive to people who belong to a different race than you,” says Inzlicht.

The finding is published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. (ANI)

Muslim Group Claims Nevada Police Detained 7 Men for Praying

LAS VEGAS — The nation’s largest Muslim advocacy organization has filed a complaint with police in a Las Vegas suburb, saying seven Muslim men from southern California were detained and told they were acting suspiciously while praying in a shopping center parking lot.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations said Friday it filed the complaint this week against the Henderson Police Department because it did not understand what was suspicious about the men.

“Our main concern is the police department looking at praying and the way they looked as probable cause for investigating those men,” said CAIR spokeswoman Munira Syeda. “They did nothing illegal.”

Henderson police spokesman Todd Rasmussen said the complaint was received and internal affairs would investigate, but he declined comment on the incident.

Rasmussen said the department would inform the group of the outcome of its complaint, but said it did not have a timeline for an investigation.

The group says the men, whom it identified as being of various ethnic backgrounds including Middle Eastern and south Asian, were performing one of five required Muslim daily prayers in the lot while stopped to buy gas and food Dec. 20 during a roadtrip.

As they returned to their car, they were stopped by three officers and kept for about 40 minutes while three officers checked their backgrounds and searched their car, Munira said.

Munira said the men were not blocking traffic or preventing other cars from parking.

A CAIR attorney said in a statement that the group was seeking discipline against the officers involved, changes to officer training and compensation for the emotional distress of the men.

“The scope and length of the stop was not reasonable under the circumstances, nor did it serve any legitimate investigative purpose,” CAIR lawyer Ameena Qazi wrote in a letter to Henderson police.

Shahrukh Khan clarifies that his detention was not a drama

Mumbai, Aug 18 (ANI): Bollywood superstar Shahrukh Khan on Tuesday clarified that his detention at Newark International Airport in the US was not a drama.

Addressing mediapersons here after his return, Khan said, “I was asked bizarre questions by the airport officials. It wasn’t a drama. I don’t want publicity. But, I feel routine procedure was not followed there. We should not be treated on the basis of our colour or nationality.”

Recalling the incident, he said he was not angry over what had happened there. However, he felt that the airport officials ‘went a little overboard’ with the questioning.

Denying that he felt bad about the questioning, he said what really hurt him was the question they popped at him several times, “Your name is very common. Can anyone vouch for you to enter here?”

Rubbishing reports that he was trying to promote his upcoming movie ‘My Name is Khan’, he said, “I hate people who rake up religious issues for their personal gains. I don’t want to sound pompous here but I don’t need publicity to promote my movie. I am too big a star for that.”

The actor also said the incident would not prevent him from visiting the US again. e said that if a ‘tit for tat’ policy was to be followed, then he would love to be allowed to frisk Hollywood stars Angelina Jolie or Megan Fox.

Khan was detained for about two hours at the airport where he had arrived to attend a South Asian related event in Atlantic City.

Khan was released after Congress MP Rajiv Shukla spoke to the authorities in the US and the Indian consulate.

He was detained after his name flashed on a computer and was asked several questions about the purpose of his visit. (ANI)

Zawahiri asks Pakistanis to support insurgents against US ‘crusade’

Islamabad, July 15 (ANI): In an apparent bid to garner the support of people against the US,Al-Qaeda has asked Pakistani civilians to help insurgents in their battle against the US-led ‘crusade’.

In a video released by Qaeda’s second in command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, Pakistanis have been urged to support the fight against the US, which according to him, is threatening the ‘country’s existence’.

The video titled “My Muslim Brothers and Sisters in Pakistan” showed Zawahiri asking the youth of the nation to join the fight against the US.

Zawahiri said the US intervention in Pakistan’s military and politics could break up the nuclear-armed country.

“The American crusader manipulation of Pakistan’s destiny has reached such an extent that it now poses a grave danger to Pakistan’s future and very existence,” the eight minute video showed Zawahiri, as saying.

“It is evident that Pakistan is deeply involved in a fierce internal struggle between two forces- one representing ‘Islamic values’ and the other being the US-led ‘crusade’ to neutralize fighters threatening Western interests,” he said.

The video which has been dubbed in English language was posted several jihadist web forums on Tuesday, The Nation reports.

“If we stand by passively without offering due support to the mujahedeen, we shall not only contribute to the destruction of Pakistan and Afghanistan, but we shall also deserve the painful punishment of Almighty Allah,” Zawahiri added.

Zawahiri’s latest video comes nearly a year after he had announced a ‘jihad’ (holy war) against the South Asian nations in August 2008. (ANI)

Five swine flue suspects quarantined in Dehradun

Dehradun, June 19 (ANI): Five more people on Friday were quarantined in Dehradun for showing swine flu like symptoms.

A couple and their three children, had just returned from a South Asian tour.

“We first went to Singapore, then to Malaysia and then via Thailand came to New Delhi on 17. My children complained of sore throat. So I came here for a precautionary check up. When I told the hospital authorities that I have come from aboard, then they asked us not to leave and stay in the hospital,” said J. S. Rathod, a swine flue suspects.

The doctors said they have admitted them as a precautionary measure and have sent their test reports for examination.

“They have swine flu like symptoms and we have called as precautionary measure admitted them in isolation wards in the hospital. We have informed the CMO (Chief Medical Officer). They have sent pathologists National Institute of Communicable Disease and the report is awaited by the evening, ” said K. C. S. RAWAT, chief of medical superintendent.

The total number of positive cases in the country has gone up to 44.

Earlier, the World Health Organisation had said that world was closer to a pandemic.

Reportedly, H1N1 has infected almost 30,000 people in over 70 countries including 145 fatal cases. (ANI)

The truth about Lanka’s secret refugee camps revealed

Colombo, May 24 (ANI): They squat in a circle, grinding their tiny hands nervously into the mud behind the six foot high barbed wire fence that imprisons them. And their little eyes stare wide open in fear at what lies on the other side. This is the Pulmoddai refugee camp in war-torn northern Sri Lanka, where soldiers sit, each one ten yards apart, their AK47 assault rifles trained at the 6,000 terrified refugees huddled inside.

This, according to the News of The World, is the terrifying aftermath of Asia’s longest civil war.

Speaking to the tabloid in the belief that their representatives are aid workers, the official in charge of the Pulmoddai compound claimed the Tamil women and children were being “held” for their own safety.We are protecting these people. This is why there are so many soldiers here. There might be Tamil Tigers in there and we cannot just let them come and go. They have water and shelter and they are happy to be free of the war,” the official is quoted, as saying. charity worker, however, gives a very different view: “The children, their mothers, their grandmothers, they can’t get out. They are trapped behind barbed wire with guns trained on them, innocent children. This is a prison camp, a Nazi-like detention camp that evokes the worst fears of humanity.”

And if the children of this bloody war are not being held in camps, they are in a different kind of hell-in orphanages scattered across their war-torn land with no mother or father to comfort them.

To get to the terrifying fallout of the 26-year conflict between the Sinhalese-dominated Sri Lankan Government and the Tamil Tigers took a 13-hour, 400-mile drive from the west coast capital Colombo along dangerous roads and through more than a dozen heavily militarised checkpoints and cordons-once having to hide in the back of our minivan.

At every stage of our journey the Sri Lankan military that has effectively created a border cutting off the north of the island from foreigners-brandished their weapons to try to intimidate us and stop us seeing what they don’t want you to see.

For here, in the north-east of the South Asian island, is a scene light years away from the pristine tea plantations and golden sandy beaches in the south and west of the island that attract more than 100,000 British tourists a year.

To British honeymooners, Sri Lanka is a tropical paradise; to British businessmen it is source of clothing for high street stores like M and S, Next and Gap. But for the past three decades the former British colony has been gripped by a deadly war that has bitterly split the South Asian nation in two and killed 100,000 people.

It erupted in 1983 after the demands of the minority Tamils for a homeland of their own separate from the Sinhalese were refused. Last week it finally came to a violent and bloody end in the north of the country. And since January, an estimated 7,000 civilians, many of them children, have died in the crossfire at the hands of both sides.

But now the end of the conflict has brought new and terrible suffering for the Tamil people left behind. (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)

India has to exercise regional, global leadership expected of a rising power: NYT

New York, May 20 (ANI): Given the overwhelming mandate received in the 2009 general elections, the Indian National Congress-led coalition government of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh will now have to exercise the kind of regional and global leadership that is expected of a rising power, says a New York Times editorial.

According to the NYT, New Delhi can start off with Pakistan, arguably the most dangerous country on earth.

A key challenge would be to convince and maybe prevent Islamabad from expanding its nuclear stockpile. Washington is already legitimately asking whether billions of dollars in proposed new assistance might be diverted to Pakistan’s nuclear program. Both countries, therefore, should demand assurances from Islamabad that it will not be.

Tensions between the two South Asian neighbours remains high, as the Pakistani Army continues to view India as its main adversary. India, therefore, should take the lead in initiating arms control talks with Pakistan and China.

According to the NYT, it should also declare its intention to stop producing nuclear weapons fuel, even before a proposed multinational treaty is negotiated. That would provide leverage for Washington and others to exhort Pakistan to do the same.

Tensions with Pakistan over Kashmir, a festering sore of over six decades standing, is another challenge that New Delhi would have to address directly.

Stephen P. Cohen, a South Asia expert at the Brookings Institution, suggests – broader regional talks on environmental and water issues might be an interim way to find common ground. Ignoring Kashmir is no longer an option, he adds.

A third challenge is Afghanistan. India has played a constructive role in helping rebuild Afghanistan, but it must take steps to allay Islamabad’s concerns that this is not a plan to encircle Pakistan.

It should foster regional trade with Pakistan and Afghanistan. More broadly, India must help to revive world trade talks by opening its markets. It could use its considerable trade clout with Iran, Sudan and Myanmar to curb Tehran’s nuclear program, end the genocide in Darfur and press Myanmar’s junta to expand human rights.

India is the dominant power in South Asia, but it has been hesitant to assume its responsibilities. The Congress Party has to do better – starting with Pakistan, the editorial in the paper concludes. (ANI)

England keen to become ‘home away from home’ for Pak cricket

London, May 17 (ANI): England is keen to become a ‘home away from home’ for Pakistan cricket, as several foreign teams have refused to tour the South-Asian country due to the precarious security situation there.

According to The News, arrangements are being made for Pakistan to play a four-match Test series in England next year against Australia.

“We all recognise that Pakistan are having an issue at the moment, in terms of being able to stage home matches. If we can get this sort of neutral event, that does help them,” the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) chief executive David Collier said.

Several teams have refused to tour Pakistan in the recent past citing security reasons, and the terror attack on the visiting Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore in March, in which six players were injured, has only worsened the situation.

The International Cricket Council (ICC) also shifted 2011 World Cup matches from Pakistan saying conditions are not conducive in the country to organize such a major event. (ANI)

India and US discuss modernisation, increased presence of Chinese Navy

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): India and the United States today discussed various issues concerning the South Asian region like the rapid modernization of the Chinese armed forces, peace and stability in the region in wake of rise of the Taliban in Pakistanand Afghanistan.

Admiral Timothy J Keating, the US Pacific Command chief, who is on a daylong visit to India, today met Navy Chief Admiral Sureesh Mehta, National Security Adviser MK Narayanan and Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon.

The head of the US Pacific Command is in India on the invitation of Admiral Mehta and will be soon handing over his command to his successor Admiral Robert Willard.

Admiral Keating said: ” Yes we discussed growth of Chinese armed forces and the fact that the PLA Navy is deployed in the Gulf of Aden conducting anti-piracy operations.”

He said that Chinese Navy is still not a Blue Water Navy, and added that deploying couple of ships for couple of months in Gulf of Aden does not qualify it for the same.

The top US general’s visit comes just after Indian, American and Japanese warships participated in the ‘Malabar’ war games off the coast of Japan from April 29 to May 3.

Rejecting Chinese views that such military groupings are the axis of democracy, Admiral Keating said that there is a possibility of China’s participation in the further edition of the Malabar exercise, and added that the PLA Navy should regularly take part in bilateral and multilateral exercises.

Replying to a question, Admiral Keating said he has made Indian authorities aware of US’ concern regarding three bilateral deals including Logistics Support Agreement, which would ensure free access to US warships and aircraft to India for refuelling and replenishment of supplies.

He further said that the United States shares long standing friendship in military field with India and New Delhi is a good friend and strong partner of Washington.

Commenting on May 1 incident in which two Chinese fishing boats closed in on and maneuvered dangerously close to the USNS Victorious in international waters in the Yellow Sea, Admiral Keating said that the recent harassment of US Navy ships by the PLA Navy is “troublesome.”

Earlier on March 8, five Chinese vessels surrounded and harassed the USNS Impeccable 80 nautical miles off Hainan Island.

“We view Chinese behaviour with concern and our State Department has issued demarche on several occasions. We want Chinese ships to operate in lawful manner,” the head of the US Pacific Command added.

Admiral Keating further said that piracy has been tremendously reduced in the Malacca Straight due to a joint effort between Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Philippines and the US.

“Some 40 percent of world trade, or 50,000 ships a year, pass through the straight dividing the Indian from the Pacific Oceans.

Three years ago, pirates launched 50 attacks a year, now down to five,” he said. By Praful Kumar Singh (ANI)

US should support Pashtun demands to merge NWFP, FATA: Expert

Washington, May 12 (ANI): The United States should support Pashtun demands to merge Pakistan’s NWFP and FATA, and follow it up by a consolidation of those areas and Pashtun enclaves in Baluchistan and the Punjab into a single unified “Pashtunkhwa” province that enjoys the autonomy envisaged in the inoperative 1973 Pakistan constitution, feels a US expert on South Asian affairs.

In an article for the Washington Post, Selig Harrison, the author of the report “Pakistan: The State of the Union,” based on a six-month study of ethnic tensions in Pakistan, says: “To American eyes, the struggle raging in Pakistan with the Taliban is about religious fanaticism. But in Pakistan it is about an explosive fusion of Islamist zeal and simmering ethnic tensions that have been exacerbated by U.S. pressures for military action against the Taliban and its al-Qaida allies.”

Therefore, he says there is a need to understand the ethnic dimension of the conflict if Washington wants to evolve a successful strategy for separating the Taliban from al-Qaida and stabilizing multiethnic Pakistan politically.

He also is critical of sending a Punjabi-dominant Pakistani army to an area that is entirely Pashtun.

“Sending Punjabi soldiers into Pashtun territory to fight jihadists pushes the country ever closer to an ethnically defined civil war, strengthening Pashtun sentiment for an independent “Pashtunistan” that would embrace 41 million people in big chunks of Pakistan and Afghanistan,” he warns.

“While army leaders fear the long-term dangers of a Taliban link-up with Islamist forces in the heartland of Pakistan, they are more worried about what they see as the looming danger of Pashtun separatism,” he adds.

So how should the Obama administration proceed?

Militarily, Harrison says the United States should lower its profile by ending air strikes and politically, U.S. policy should be revised to demonstrate that America supports the Pashtun desire for a stronger position in relation to the Punjabi-dominated government in Islamabad.

The Pashtuns in FATA treasure their long-standing autonomy and do not like to be ruled by Islamabad. Conventional wisdom suggests that either Islamist or Pashtun identity will eventually triumph, but it is equally plausible that the result could be an “Islamic Pashtunistan.” (ANI)

US needs to do everything to stabilize Pakistan, says expert

Washington, May 6 (ANI): An expert on South Asian affairs has said that the United States needs to do everything it can to help stabilize Pakistan, while recognizing that Washington’s best efforts alone will not be sufficient for the task.

Lisa Curtis, a senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation, also says that Pakistani leaders also must step up to the plate and demonstrate they are fully committed to bringing peace and security to the region and are willing to stand up to Taliban advances in their own country.

“Given the fluidity of the current political situation, the U.S. must also develop contingency containment strategies that guard against the possibility of terrorists gaining access to Pakistan’s nuclear weapons arsenal,” she says in a testimony before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Admitting that developing and implementing an effective U.S. policy toward Pakistan is one of the most complicated yet important foreign policy challenges the Obama Administration faces, Curtis says that Pakistan is in the midst of societal and political shifts that are challenging its leadership’s ability to maintain stability and even raising questions about the potential for an Islamic revolution in the country.

“Pakistan has long suffered from ethnic and sectarian divisions in different parts of the country. But the more recent threat from a well-armed and well-organized Islamist insurgency pushing for the establishment of strict Islamic law in the country’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP) adds a new and more dangerous dimension to the country’s challenges,” she adds.

While ruling out the collapse of the Pakistani state, she says the government’s surrender of the Swat Valley is a major victory for Islamist extremists seeking to carve out pockets of influence within the country.

“Islamabad’s decision to allow the implementation of a parallel Islamic courts system in the Malakand Division of the NWFP (including Swat Valley) demonstrates the weakness of the Pakistan government and military in the face of an onslaught by Taliban-backed extremists seeking to take over parts of the province,” she said.

The Pakistan military, she says, has surrendered to militants in the region. The closing of the civil courts in Swat Valley several weeks ago has belied the Pakistan government’s claim that the establishment of Islamic courts in the region would not usurp state authority.

Events over the last two weeks, however, may have finally awakened some Pakistani officials to the downsides of the Swat peace deal and in the final analysis, it will be up to the Pakistani military to decide how much of the country will be ceded to the Taliban. (ANI)

Bangladesh blacklists 12 militant outfits

Dhaka – Authorities in Bangladesh have asked intelligence agencies to closely monitor activities of 12 suspected militant outfits running so-called Islamic activities in the predominately Muslim South Asian country, media reports said Saturday.

“The government has kept watchful eyes on the activities of the 12 organizations listed as terrorist outfits by the immediate-past interim administration,” State Minister for Home Affairs Tanjim Ahmed Sohel Taj told a private television channel.

He said that the present Awami League-led alliance government of Sheikh Hasina Wazed was working towards rooting out any sort of militancy.

Reviewing the previous list of militant outfits, Hasina’s cabinet in mid-March ordered detailed reports on the suspected militants and their activities, the state minister said.

The ministry was now compiling information on patrons of the militants, funding, present activities, organograms of the outfits, their links with political parties, operations, recruitment systems, international connections and training, he added.

The previous military-backed government of Fakhruddin Ahmed had listed Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh, Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami, Hizbut Towhid, Ulama Anjuman al Baiyenat, Hizb-ut-Tahrir, the Islami Democratic Party, Islami Samaj, Touhid Trust, Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh, Shahadat-e-al-Hikma Party Bangladesh, Tamira ad-Din Bangladesh (Hizb-e-Abu Omar) and Allahr Dal as suspected terrorist grups active in Bangladesh.

The Bangladesh Nationalist Party-led alliance government of Khaleda Zia had banned four Islamist outfits – the Jamaatul Mujahideen Bangladesh, Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami, Jagrata Muslim Janata Bangladesh and Shahadat-e-al-Hikma – after a series of attacks between 2001 and 2006.

Khaleda’s government had captured six militant kingpins who were hanged in early 2007.

The current Awami League-led ruling alliance this week formed a high-level committee to tackle militancy as it was convinced that many organizations were involved in subversive activities.

The committee is designated to collect information on militant activities, analyse them, and work out strategies and issue directives to fight the threat. (dpa)

Pak will do everything to get own version of India’s spy satellite: Experts

Islamabad, Apr.21 (ANI): With India launching its first spy satellite, RISAT-2, to keep an eye on all activities along Pakistan border, experts believe that Pakistan too would initiate a programme to counter the Indian move.

Experts are of the view that Pakistan would not remain insensitive over the issue and would soon follow India to boost its surveillance potential.

“Now with India taking the lead Pakistan would also expedite efforts to counter the Indian programme as soon as possible”, The Nation quoted a defense analyst, as saying.

According to sources, Pakistan Government has taken serious note of the developments and is preparing to balance out the situation in any circumstances.

Sources added that Islamabad is in the process of acquiring satellite launch vehicle technology, and may launch indigenous satellite in year or two.

Experts feel that the issue could further damage the already estranged relations of both the neighbouring countries.

“Since both the South Asian nuclear neighbours, India and Pakistan, always had tense relations because of Kashmir dispute, this development would add new dimension to their already estranged relations”, a defense expert said.

Pakistan has been working on space research programme from late 80′s. It had also launched two satellites, Badar-1 and Badar-2, on an experiment basis with help from one of the Central Asian country. (ANI)

Two Indian-Americans get key posts in Obama team

United States President Barack Obama on Saturday announced the appointment of two more Indian-Americans – Raj Shah and Aneesh Paul Chopra – to his key administration posts.

While Shah has been nominated as Under Secretary for Research, Education and Economics in the Department of Agriculture, Chopra will be the Chief Performance Officer, Obama announced on Saturday morning in his weekly radio address.

“As Chief Technology Officer, Chopra will promote technological innovation to help the country meet its goals from job creation, to reducing health care costs, to protecting the homeland,” the president said.

In his current position as Virginia’s Secretary of Technology, Chopra leads the strategy to effectively leverage technology in government reform, to promote Virginia’s innovation agenda and to foster technology-related economic development.

He has earlier worked as Managing Director with the Advisory Board Company, leading the firm’s Financial Leadership Council and the Working Council for Health Plan Executives.

On the other hand, another Indian-American Shah is currently the Director of Agricultural Development in the Global Development Programme for Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Said to be Gates Foundation’s sharpest executives, Shah, 36, lives in Seattle.

In this capacity, he manages the Foundation’s Agricultural Development programme — including grant-making portfolios in science and technology, farmer productivity, market access, and policy and statistics — with the goal of helping the world’s poor lead healthy and productive lives.

Having joined the Foundation in 2001, he has served as the Foundation’s Director of Strategic Opportunities and Deputy Director of Policy and Finance for Global Health.

In these roles, he helped develop and launch the Foundation’s Global Development Programme and International Finance Facility for Immunisation — an effort that raised more than USD 5 billion for child immunisation and hopes to save more than five million lives around the world.

Prior to joining the Foundation, Shah was the health care policy advisor on the Gore 2000 presidential campaign and a member of Governor Ed Rendell’s transition committee on
health.

Co-founder of Health Systems Analytics and Project IMPACT for South Asian Americans, he has served as a policy aide in British Parliament and worked at World Health Organisation.

Currently, Shah serves on the boards of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, the Seattle Public Library, and the Seattle Community College District. Shah earned his MD from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School and Master of Science in health economics at Wharton School of Business.

He is a graduate of the University of Michigan and London School of Economics and has published articles on health policy and global development. In 2007, he was named a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum.

Very difficult to change Pakistan’s attention from India to Taliban’

Washington, April 16 (IANS) With Pakistan army focused heavily on its perceived threats from India, a former US official says it would be very difficult to change its orientation to fight Taliban extremists on its border with Afghanistan.

‘Both Indians and Americans, and Pakistanis for that matter, view the current challenge germinating from the frontiers with Afghanistan,’ says Evan A. Feigenbaum, former deputy assistant secretary of state for South Asia.

But ‘The Pakistan army has trained for fifty years to fight India in the plains of the Punjab,’ he says.’So that really requires a change in orientation by the Pakistan army, which is very difficult for them because it’s so different from what they’ve trained and prepared for the past fifty to sixty years.’

The United States and India obviously share a lot of interests in South Asia, Feigenbaum, now Senior Fellow for East, Central, and South Asia at Council on Foreign Relations, said in an interview with the Washington think tank’s website, CFR.org

But ‘what’s been interesting and important about the US-India relationship over the last decade is that it has really exploded the boundaries of South Asia in a lot of ways,’ he said when asked about India’s opposition to being included in US Special Representative Richard Holbrooke’s portfolio.

Sceptical voices were raised in India about Holbrooke’s mandate, ‘because many Indians, like many Americans, view the great achievement of the last decade as moving the US-India relationship beyond South Asian issues and beyond Indo-Pak this, and Indo-Pak that,’ he said.

‘From an Indian perspective, linking India and the Kashmir issue into the issues that Ambassador Holbrooke is looking at in Afghanistan, is something that Indians really oppose,’ he said.

In the US too, he said there’s a broad recognition in both Democratic and Republican parties ‘that India is a country that has capacity to work with us on a whole array of global challenges, not just issues within the region.’

‘Thus the focus has really been on building a US-India relationship with a more global orientation,’ Feigenbaum said.

‘When you go down the list of challenges facing the United States, whether it’s forging a deal on climate change or ensuring a successful Doha round or the international trade regime, the United States needs to find a way to work with India.’

Bangladesh faces political storm over ex-PM’s home

DHAKA, April 12 (Reuters) – Leaders of Bangladesh’s top political parties have warned of tough actions in a dispute over a home of ex-prime minister Begum Khaleda Zia, a controversy analysts say may deal a fresh blow to the country’s stability.

The rivals staged protests in the capital Dhaka and other main cities over the weekend, as Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government said it was determined to get Khaleda out of a sprawling house within the army barracks in the capital.

Khaleda, who leads the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, has lived in the house since her general-turned-president husband Ziaur Rahman died in an abortive coup in 1981. The government revoked the lease of the house to her last week, saying she has another leased house in Dhaka.

“This indicates the frivolous and volatile nature of the country’s politics, from which, unfortunately, the major parties have again failed to break out,” Ataur Rahman, a Dhaka University professor and chairman of Bangladesh Political Science Association, said of the dispute.

“They are (fighting) each other on a largely non-political issue at a time when the country badly needs a new democratic structure and a sustainable administration,” he told Reuters on Sunday.

Analysts say such disputes are a distraction when Bangladesh’s government should be concentrating on measures to stem corruption and increase transparency, steps that would help attract much-needed investment and aid to the impoverished South Asian country of more than 140 million people.

Asif Nazrul, a law professor and analyst, said the government and opposition should go to court to resolve the dispute over Khaleda’s residence.

“It could temporarily calm down the situation. But the mistrust created through this incident may manifest in various ways and impact future politics,” he told Reuters on Sunday.

Bangladesh looked set to achieve a degree of stability following a peaceful and credible election in December which ended two years of rule by a military-backed “interim government” that took over amid political violence in January 2007.

Such hopes were soon dented when paramilitary rebels killed nearly 60 of their commanding officers, all drawn from the army, and triggered fears of more unrest.

Hasina, leader of the ruling Awami League, managed to cool the tension by promising to conduct a fair and transparent investigation into the February 25-26 mutiny in the Dhaka headquarters of the Bangladesh Rifles, whose primary responsibility is to guard the borders.

But now the country faces the possibility of growing protests and rallies related to the house lease issue, and the possiblity they will turn violent or seriously disrupt economic activity, as has happened with Bangladesh street politics in the past, analysts say.

Thousands were already involved in demonstrations over the weekend. (Editing by Jerry Norton)