Gates meets Health Secretary

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): Microsoft founder Bill Gates met Union Health Secretary Sujatha Rao in New Delhi on Friday and the duo reportedly discussed health-related issues prevailing in India, like polio and vaccination.

“It”s a great increase in investment in health and it”s great to see. It is going to lead to getting finished with polio. We hope more vaccination and there are some good things taking place,” said Gates after the meeting.

“In this trip, I learnt a lot about how our foundation (Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, a private charity) can help with that,” he added.

Sujatha Rao, however, did not give any statement on the meeting with Gates, but said that all information would be released after President Pratibha Patil approves the Memorandum of Cooperation (MoC) Gates signed with the Bihar Government.

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on Thursday signed a MoC with Bihar government to make medicare services and products availbale and accessible to several districts of the state.

The MoC, which was signed in the presence of Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, aims at improving and increasing the availability, quality and utilisation of health-care facilities and services.

The foundation will also particularly try to cut down the maternal mortality rate (MMR) and infant mortality rate in Bihar.

With the signing of this MoC, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will extend aid to accelerate statewide improvements in maternal, newborn and child health. (ANI)

India demands stern action against Melbourne race attack perpetrators

New Delhi, Sept 16 (ANI): The Indian Government on Wednesday called on the Australian Government to take stern action against the perpetrators of alleged racial assaults on Indians in Melbourne, Victoria.

External Affairs Ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash said in a statement that the matter of the recurring attacks on Indians in Australia had been taken up with Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith by Indian High Commissioner Sujatha Singh.

“As we take note of the assurances given, including from the highest levels of the government and provincial authorities of Australia, it is our earnest hope that the concerned authorities would take all necessary steps towards the safety and security of Indians in that country,” said Prakash in a statement.

“The Indian Consul General in Melbourne is in contact with authorities in Victoria including the police authorities,” he added.

“We hope that the latest incident is investigated with care and the culprits are dealt with, according to the laws of the land. It would also help, if various measures being contemplated by the Australian side, in addition to those already announced, are put in place at the earliest, to prevent reoccurrence of such incidents in the future,” Prakash said.

Officials of the Consulate General of India in Melbourne, are also in touch with family members of the victims.

Two Indian nationals and two other persons of Indian origin were assaulted by a group of individuals at Melbourne late in the evening on September 12.

One of the Indian nationals, Sukhdip Singh sustained serious injuries and is presently undergoing treatment.

“We are informed that the police arrested four individuals who have since been released pending further investigations,” Prakash said. (ANI)

India demands stern action against perpetrators of Melbourne attackers

New Delhi, Sept 16 (ANI): The Indian Government on Wednesday called on the Australian Government to take stern action against the perpetrators of alleged racial assaults on Indians in Melbourne, Victoria.

External Affairs Ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash said in a statement that the matter of the recurring attacks on Indians in Australia had been taken up with Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith by Indian High Commissioner Sujatha Singh.

“As we take note of the assurances given, including from the highest levels of the government and provincial authorities of Australia, it is our earnest hope that the concerned authorities would take all necessary steps towards the safety and security of Indians in that country,” said Prakash in a statement.

“The Indian Consul General in Melbourne is in contact with authorities in Victoria including the police authorities,” he added.

“We hope that the latest incident is investigated with care and the culprits are dealt with, according to the laws of the land. It would also help, if various measures being contemplated by the Australian side, in addition to those already announced, are put in place at the earliest, to prevent reoccurrence of such incidents in the future,” Prakash said.

Officials of the Consulate General of India in Melbourne, are also in touch with family members of the victims.

Two Indian nationals and two other persons of Indian origin were assaulted by a group of individuals at Melbourne late in the evening on September 12.

One of the Indian nationals, Sukhdip Singh sustained serious injuries and is presently undergoing treatment.

“We are informed that the police arrested four individuals who have since been released pending further investigations,” Prakash said. (ANI)

Rudd speaks with Manmohan Singh, to take steps to ensure safety of Indian students

Canberra (Australia)/New Delhi, May 30 (ANI): Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has reassured his Indian counterpart, Manmohan Singh that his government will take appropriate steps to ensure the safety and security of Indian students in Australia.

Diplomatic relations between the two countries are said to be tense after India expressed anger and dismay over attacks on Indian students in Australia.

In a telephone conversation, Rudd congratulated Dr Singh on his recent re-election and also discussed the violent assaults, sources told The Age.

A statement released last night indicated Dr Singh spoke strongly to Rudd about the attacks.

The Indian Prime Minister had “suitably” conveyed his concerns about the vicious attacks, it said.

The Indian foreign ministry called in Australian High Commissioner John McCarthy yesterday to discuss the matter.

It was the first time McCarthy was called in by the Indian Government since the 2007 arrest of Muhammad Haneef, an Indian doctor working in Australia, on terrorism-related charges.

Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna spoke to Foreign Minister Stephen Smith about the issue.

Krishna said the Australian Government had assured him that steps were being taken to protect Indian students.

India’s High Cmmissioner to Australia Sujatha Singh said Victoria Police were insensitive towards some Indian crime victims.

Singh said many students felt insecure and some were unhappy with the police treatment.

Her comments came as Victoria Police again denied that the increasing attacks – which the Indian student community claims could be as many as 70 in 12 months – were racially motivated.

Singh said the Indian high commission in Canberra had received complaints from students about police. When an incident was reported, there was a perception that there was sometimes “a delay in reacting and … perhaps a lack of sensitivity dealing with the issues”.

Singh flew to Melbourne from Canberra to meet Premier John Brumby and police Chief Commissioner Simon Overland following the attack on Sravan Kumar Theerthala, 24, last weekend. He was allegedly racially abused and stabbed with a screwdriver at a party at a house in Hadfield, near Glenroy.

Last night he remained in a coma in intensive care at the Royal Melbourne Hospital. A 17-year-old from Glenroy has been charged with attempted murder. It was the third serious attack this month.

Trauma psychologist Dr Michael O’Neill, who works with Indian victims of crime in Melbourne, said he saw on average one bashed student a week and about half of those attacks were racial. (ANI)

Victoria Premier meets Indian envoy, reassures her about Indian students safety

Melbourne, May 29 (ANI): The Premier of the Australian state of Victoria, John Brumby today met with Indian High Commissioner Sujatha Singh and Consul General of India Anita Nayar to discuss the safety and security of the Indian community in Victoria.

In a statement issued after the meeting, Brumby said the discussions had centered on the safety and security of Victoria’s Indian student community and further measures that may be required to ensure their experience of living, studying and working in Victoria was a successful and enjoyable experience.

“It was a pleasure to meet Mrs. Singh and Ms Nayar, and our discussions were very positive and productive,” Brumby said.

“Our discussions were about safety and security within Victoria’s Indian community, including what measures our Government and police have in place to ensure safety and what further measures may be required to make sure that Victoria continues to be the first-choice destination for Indian students.

“It’s important to note that on the whole Victoria is a wonderful place for Indian students and we want every Indian student who comes to Victoria to have that experience.

“The vast majority of Victorians welcome Indian students to our state but, we do recognize that there are some times and places where Indian students are more vulnerable and that’s a concern we’ve been working to resolve.

“We agree that while the overall rate of crime in Victoria is low compared to other jurisdictions, any incidence of crime or violence against a member of Victoria’s Indian community is one too many, completely unacceptable and should not be tolerated.

“We are a community built on the understanding that we may come from different and races, follow many faiths and different cultures – but we are all equal and our community is richer because of our multicultural make-up. Any attack on an individual because of race, culture, gender or appearance is disgraceful and unacceptable.”

Brumby said attacking any individual is abhorrent to the values and principles that made Victoria among the world’s most successful multicultural communities.

“That’s why our Government introduced the Racial and Religious Tolerance Act and that’s why Victoria Police is working hard with our Indian community to tackle incidents of crime and violence,” he said.

“Last year our Government established an Overseas Student Experience Taskforce which examined a range of issues, including safety. The task force released a report in late December that included a number of recommendations that the Government is closely examining.

“But we recognize that there is more that can be done and we will look at whether there needs to be changes to make it easier to access information or legislative changes to ensure penalties are matching the severity of a crime.

“With this in mind we will be announcing new measures in the near future to improve the overseas student experience, particularly with respect to safety.”

In addition, Victoria Police is also working to tackle issues together with the Indian community, he said.

In a separate statement, Australian Deputy Prime Minister and Education Minister Julia Gillard said she was deeply saddened and shocked by the attack on a group of Indian students in Melbourne over the weekend and condemned it unreservedly.

“I would like to extend my sympathies to the victims of this callous attack. I want to reiterate my statement before Parliament on Tuesday that the Australian Government will not tolerate victimisation and violence against international students. Such attacks violate the fundamental Australian values of tolerance and respect for diversity in our society,” she said.

“The Victorian Police are investigating this serious crime. On the information I have, two people have been interviewed and one has been charged with assault-related offences and is currently in custody on remand. I note also that two alleged attackers have been arrested in relation to an incident involving an Indian student on a train in Melbourne on 9 May 2009,” she added.

“I can assure you that the perpetrators of recent attacks in both Sydney and Melbourne will face the full force of the law and I will be working closely with the Victorian and New South Wales State Governments to ensure every effort is made to minimize the possibility of such attacks in the future,” Gillard said.

She said that the Australian Government would be convening a round table to discuss issues affecting international students and student safety soon. (ANI)

Australia assures safety of Indian students after attacks (Roundup)

Melbourne/New Delhi, May 28 (IANS) The Australian government Thursday assured a worried India that it was taking a number of measures to ensure the safety of Indian students even as a 25-year-old Indian student, who was brutally assaulted by Australian teenagers a few days ago, slipped into coma.

Two Australian teenagers were arrested Thursday for badly beating an Indian student on a train.

Three attacks on Indian students in quick succession have triggered outrage in India. The first incident was reported May 9 while the most recent took place Monday.

Sravan Kumar Theerthala, a 25-year-old Indian student who was assaulted Sunday in Melbourne along with three other students, is battling for his life in intensive care unit in Royal Melbourne Hospital.

Theerthala, who hails from Andhra Pradesh, went to Melbourne to study two years ago. The attackers allegedly hurled racist abuses at Indian students and hit them with a screwdriver.

“Doctors are unclear about the prognosis. They are pessimistic about his chances of survival,” Anita Nair, India’s consul-general in Melbourne, told IANS.

Nair accompanied India’s High Commissioner to Australia Sujatha Singh, who had flown in from Canberra, to Melbourne where she visited the hospital in which Sravan Kumar was admitted. The Indian envoy also met the premier and deputy premier of Victoria state who assured them about various steps taken by the Australian authorities for improving the security of the international students. Over 430,000 international students visit Australia annually.

“They have told us about increased patrolling in areas where international and Indian students stay and patrolling on the trains,” said Nair.

Representatives of Indian students in Australia also met the Indian envoy in Melbourne.

The Australian government has launched a hotline, staffed by volunteers who are fluent in English and Hindi to provide support, information and advice to Indian students.

Nair said such attacks have been happening for over a year. The Indian mission in Australia has been in regular touch with the Australian authorities.

Another Indian student Baljinder Singh was robbed and stabbed in Melbourne Monday.

Singh had left a railway station when two men carrying weapons approached him and demanded money. As he searched through his bag to hand over his wallet he was stabbed in the abdomen, Herald Sun reported.

“They just laughed when they stabbed me in the stomach. They laughed at me… I was screaming ‘don’t kill me, don’t kill me’.

“Now there are lots of attacks. You can see that in the western suburbs,” he said.

Australian police Thursday arrested two teenagers over the beating of yet another Indian student on a Melbourne train.

Sourabh Sharma, 21, was beaten by a group of young men as he travelled on a train May 9, Herald Sun reported.

Sharma suffered a fractured cheek bone and a broken tooth in the attack, which was captured on closed circuit television cameras.

He said he was also racially abused and robbed during the attack.

In the wake of the attacks on Indian students in Melbourne, an Australian police officer is also planning to travel to India to give “safety strategy tips” to prospective students on avoiding street violence in Australia, media reports in Australia said.

“I want to send a message loud and clear that international students are very welcome in this nation and Australia will not tolerate discrimination against or victimisation of any of our international students,” Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Education Julia Gillard said in a statement in Australian parliament.

The minister also unveiled the plan to hold a round-table of international student representatives to discuss with the government issues affecting their study experience.

“As foreign minister, I’m appalled by these attacks and I condemn them absolutely. Australia takes very seriously its reputation as a safe destination for Indian students. Action is being taken.”

Australian High Commissioner to India John McCarthy underscored efforts by the Australian government to ensure safety of Indian students.

The attacks on Indian students have sparked outrage in India. India’s External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna Wednesday said he has asked the Australian authorities to ensure the safety of Indians and bring the culprits to justice.

There is some confusion over whether the attack was racially motivated.

Andrew Holloway, Victoria University’s vice-president for international students, has been quoted as saying that the attacks were not racist, but reflect the fact that Indian students often have part-time jobs and hence have to use public transport late at night.

According to Nair, there is some racist angle to the attack, but added cautiously that the attacks were aimed at not just Indian students, but at international students.

Incidents like these are set to affect the popularity of Australia as an education destination for Indian students.

According to Australian Education International, the enrolment of Indian students in Australian universities showed an increase of 38.9 percent from last year as on March 2009, when Australian universities had 75,000 Indian students enrolled in various courses.

Attack on Indian students: Australian official to visit India

Melbourne, May 28 (IANS) In the wake of the attacks on Indian students in the country, an Australian police officer is to travel to India to brief prospective students on avoiding street violence in Australia, media reports said.

Police community liaison officer Senior Constable Victor Robb said that his advice would mainly cover “safety strategy tips”, Radio Australia reported Thursday.

“Probably much the same sort of information I would give my own daughter if she was going overseas,” Robb said.

Shravan Kumar, a student from Andhra Pradesh, who was attacked by a group of teenagers over the weekend in Melbourne, is at present battling for life in a hospital.

The report quoted Andrew Holloway, Victoria University’s vice-president for international students, as saying that the attacks were not racist, but reflect the fact that Indian students often have part-time jobs and hence have to use public transport late at night.

Representatives of Indian students in Australia would meet Indian High Commissioner to Australia Sujatha Singh Thursday.

Australia has about 400,000 foreign students, with a large proportion from the Indian subcontinent.

New Delhi condemns attacks on Indian students in Australia

New Delhi, May 27 (IANS) Condemning allegedly “racist” attacks on Indian students in Melbourne, the government Wednesday said it will impress upon the Australian authorities that such attacks should not be permitted and the culprits should be brought to justice.

“I have been appalled by the attack on our students in Melbourne. Our consulate general in Melbourne has been in touch with the students affected and with the state police,” External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna told reporters.

“We will also impress upon the Australian authorities that such attacks should not be permitted and that it is their responsibility to ensure the well-being and security of our students in Australia,” he said.

India’s High Commissioner to Australia Sujatha Singh has rushed to Melbourne to ensure that Sravan Kumar Theerthala, an Indian student who is now battling for his life in the intensive care unit after a racially motivated assault, receives the best possible treatment. The Indian envoy is expected to send a report on the incident to New Delhi in a couple of days.

India will ensure that “that the culprits are brought to book”, Krishna said, while conveying his concern over the latest bout of violence directed against Indians in Australia.

The 25-year-old Theerthala, who went to Melbourne to study two years ago, was among the four students from India assaulted by a group of Australian teenagers this week. The attackers allegedly hurled racist abuses at them and hit them with a screwdriver.

The assault was the latest in a spate of violent attacks on Indian students.

The Australian authorities plan to launch a telephone helpline Friday for Indian students facing discrimination and violence.

Incidents like these can affect the popularity of Australia as an education destination for Indian students.

According to Australian Education International, the enrolment of Indian students in Australian universities showed an increase of 38.9 percent from last year as on March 2009. Australian universities, as of March 2009, had 75,000 Indian students enrolled in various courses.

Hritik Roshan, Farah Khan pledge support for HIV/AIDS patients

Mumbai, May 20 (ANI): To express their solidarity with people living with HIV/AIDS, Bollywood actors Hrithik Roshan and Farhan Akhtar attended the 26th International AIDS Candlelight Memorial in Mumbai today.

Sponsored by the National AIDS Control Organization (NACO), the Mumbai District AIDS Control Society had organized the event to pay tribute to those who lost their lives to the deadly disease.

Themed ‘Together, We Are the Solution,’ the programme was a part of the Global Health Council to spread awareness about HIV and AIDS across the world.

Hrithik Roshan, who was accompanied by wife Suzzane Roshan, floated a lantern in the air carrying the message, “Together we are the solution”.

Roshan, who had just returned from Cannes Film Festival to attend the campaign, took the pledge to create awareness and educate people about HIV and AIDS.

“This is not a one time thing, this has to go on. I am here to take my pledge to be a part of this and I will do whatever I can. Not only just come and give speeches but be personally present in places where I can pass on, embrace and educate people through visual medium,” said Roshan.

Actor-cum-director Farhan Akhtar, who also attended the event, said that he was glad to see such a huge turnout of people for such a noble cause.

“Whether it’s voting or HIV or any other serious issue it’s (awareness) always a good thing and I am glad that people come forward and do it,” said Akhtar.

Sujatha Rao, Director General of NACO, A V Birla Group chairman Kumar Mangalam Birla, author Shobha De also attended the event among others.

Choreographer Sandeep Soparrkar accompanied by model Jesse Randhawa put up a dance presentation. (ANI)

Interesting Facts and Figures: Johnny Lever

He was born Janardhana Rao aka ISHAAN NATH

Janardhana Rao famously known as Johnny Lever (born 14 August, 1956) is an actor in Hindi cinema known as a comedian of great regard, who has appeared in several films since the 1980s playing comic supporting roles.

Johnny Lever started off as a comedian in real life while still at school. His beginnings as a comedian in his village consisted mainly of imitations of his teachers, his father and his grandfather. He could not study much though and dropped out of school when he was in seventh grade.

Lever got his first break in Indian cinema was in the film Dard Ka Rishta, thanks to the late Sunil Dutt, who saw him perform at a charity show organized by Kalyanji-Anandji. Since then, Johnny has worked in more than 160 films.

Even though he mimics many people, he has created a style of his own which makes him unique.

His younger brother Jimmy Moses, is too, a stand-up comedian and mimcry artist.

He also starred on Zee TV on his own show called Johny Aala Re. In 2007.

He also appeared as a judge on the stand-up reality show Comedy Circus.

He often appears in cameos with Shahrukh Khan.

On 8 December 1998, Johnny Lever was convicted and sentenced to seven days imprisonment for disrespect to the Indian National Anthem and Indian Constitution during a private performance in Dubai. According to the Police, this private performance was on the occasion of birthday party of the son of Anis Ibrahim, brother of international smuggler and terrorist Dawood Ibrahim.

He is married to Sujatha and they have two children Ishak and Jesse.