Monday, June 15, 2009

Manmohan Singh leaves for Russia

New Delhi, June 15 (ANI): The Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh,left Monday for Russia on a three-day visit to attend two multilateral summits.


In his first trip abroad during the second term, Singh will visit Yekaterinburg to attend Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) and Brazil-Russia-India-China (BRIC) Summits, the main agenda of which is expected to include the global financial crisis, terrorism and food security.


A significant aspect of the visit will be a meeting between Singh and Zardari on the sidelines of the two summits.

This will be the first highest-level contact between the two countries since the Mumbai attacks last year as India has suspended dialogue till Pakistan takes "concrete" action against those behind the strikes and dismantles the terror infrastructure.

The meeting between Singh and Zardari, though informal with no structured agenda, may lead to a resumption of bilateral dialogue at some level if the two leaders agree to it. (ANI)

Amid losses Air India delays payment of salaries

New Delhi, Jun 15: Citing 'resource crunch' the national carrier, Air India has announced that it will pay 30,000 employees their June salaries 15 days late. And according to a circular issued by Air India management, the payment of productivity-linked incentive (PLI) too has been delayed by 15 days.


"The salaries of June will be paid on July 15 due to the resource crunch that the company is facing," an unnamed Air India spokesperson was quoted in a news agency report.


However the company has assured that there will not be any lay-offs and that it is only forced to delay the payment of the salaries.

Air India posted losses for the last financial year at around Rs 4,000 crore as opposed to 2,226 crore in the previous fiscal.
Read: ಕನ್ನಡದಲ್ಲಿ
There are speculations that the national carrier may seek Rs 5,000 crore as additional equity, Rs 7,000 crore as a soft loan, and a grant of Rs 2,000 crore. However Air India officials have denied this.

Shiney Ahuja sent to police custody till June 18

Mumbai, June 15 (ANI): Bollywood actor Shiney Ahuja, who was arrested in Mumbai for allegedly raping his domestic maid, has been sent to police custody till June 18.


The actor has been charged under Indian Penal Code (IPC) section 376 with rape, along with wrongful restraint and intimidation.


Reports said that Ahuja was arrested after preliminary medical tests confirmed that he had raped his 18-year-old domestic help. He had also threatened to kill her.

The maid filed a case with Mumbai's Oshiwara police last night according to which the actor gagged and raped her while they were alone in his house on June 14 in the absence of his wife and child.

The actor, who is known for his roles films like 'Hazaaron Khwaishein Aisi' and 'Gangster', was due to be taken into court later today. Heavy police presence is expected outside court since the incident has generated a lot of media and public curiosity.

Under Section 376 a rape convict shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term, which shall not be less than seven years. The accused could also be punished for life or for a term, which may extend to ten years. The accused may also be liable to fine unless the woman raped is his own wife and is not under twelve years of age. (ANI)

Union Budget 2009-10 on Jul 6

New Delhi, Jun 15: The first session of the Union Budget of the newly constituted Parliament will commence from July 3 and the General Budget for 2009-10 will be presented to the Lok Sabha on Jul 6. Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh decided the schedule on Monday, Jun 15.


The Union Railway Budget will be presented by Mamata Banerjee, the Railway Minister on Jul 3. The Budget session which will start from Jul 1 with the presentation of the Economic Survey, would last till Aug 7. UPA government is hoping to pass the Union Budget before Jul 31 to avoid the need for a fresh 'vote-on-account'.
Presentation of the Economic Survey, the Railway Budget and the Union Budget followed by a discussion on the demands for grants of select ministries, a discussion on the General Budget and adoption of the Appropriation Bill would take up most of the time.

Mathur Begins by Cracking Whip in NC Hills

The North Cachar Hills Autonomous District Council in Haflong.

Guwahati, Jun 15 : The new administration under the governor has given time till tomorrow to members of the controversy-embroiled North Cachar Hills District Autonomous Council to vacate their official quarters and return their official vehicles.

The order comes two days after Governor Shiv Charan Mathur took over the administrative control of the district council, whose chief executive member Mohit Hojai was arrested for alleged links with militants.


The decision shows Raj Bhavan’s resolve not to tolerate any kind of interference from any quarter in administrative and security matters, even as Dispur initiated a move to appoint an administrator for the district to act as an interface between the district and the governor.

That a crackdown has begun in the right earnest was also indicated by the seizure of all official records since 1992, besides sealing of offices of the council which has been accused of diverting funds to militant coffers.

The move to seal council offices was necessitated by the coming visit of the National Investigating Agency (NIA) team which will peruse the records to assess the nature of alleged diversion of development funds and the politician-militant nexus.

This is the first case being probed by the NIA since it was formed after the Mumbai terror attack in November last year.

Hojai is already in the agency’s custody.

The names of several government officials, journalists and politicians have cropped up during interrogation of the two arrested so far in the fund diversion case, a source said.

“A fresh accounting system has to be put in place as this year’s budgetary sanction has been all but exhausted. We need to put in a foolproof accounting system,” he added.

The government has already appointed two new officials — superintendent of police Anurag Tankha and principal secretary to the autonomous council Diwakar Nath Mishra — to bolster the security scene as well as the local administration.

Both the officials are said to enjoy the confidence in both Raj Bhavan and Dispur.

Besides, an administrator will help the governor with day-to-day functioning of the council and could be based in either Haflong or Guwahati.

The official could be the incumbent deputy commissioner S. Jaganathan, the new principal secretary or a senior bureaucrat, to be chosen from a panel of officials that Dispur may submit to Raj Bhavan.

The governor, in fact, returned today from Delhi where he met Union home minister P. Chidambaram on Friday and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh yesterday to discuss the situation in North Cachar Hills.

Migrants Leave Manipur

Bengal workers flee Imphal in droves

Migrants at the Dharmasala relief camp in Imphal on Saturday

Imphal, Jun 15 : Terror-stricken migrant workers from Bengal took the first bus out of Manipur this morning, while their less solvent brethren sat huddled in relief camps wishing they had enough money to pay their fare out of the killing field.

Early this morning, at least 20 migrants left Dharamsala relief camp, opened by the government in the city, and boarded buses for Bengal.


Nearly 250 migrants, including 130 Bengalis, were collected by police from in and around Imphal city and sheltered at two relief camps.

Assurances by Manipur authorities to provide protection could not arrest the exodus.

Six migrants from Bengal were called out of their huts on the Central Agricultural University campus on Thursday night, made to sit in a row on a football field, and shot from behind.

While four were killed, two escaped, one with a minor injury. The four bodies were flown to Bengal yesterday.

A commandant of the Bengal armed police, S. Sherpa, visited those huddled in the Dharamsala relief camp yesterday afternoon.

He will submit a report to the Bengal director-general of police.

“We briefed him about the situation in Manipur. He told us that the Manipur government would provide us security and asked us to stay at the camp for some time till the situation improved. He also promised help from the Bengal government,” said Sanjay Naiya from 24 Parganas, one of the 110 migrants at the relief camp.

The police official also met the inspector-general of police (law and order-III), V. Zathang, who is also the officiating director-general of police.

“He (Sherpa) came here to take the four bodies. I briefed him about the efforts we are making to arrest the culprits and the security measures. He assured me that no harm would come to Manipuris living in Bengal,” Zathang said.

The Bengalis staying at the relief camp now desperately want to return home.

“We want to go home. But we do not have money for the fare. Our contractor, Binod Mandal, is away in Calcutta. We do not know what to do,” Sanjay said.

One of the victims of the university campus was a brother of the contractor.

The migrants are likely to request the state government to fund their trip home.

The district administration has been providing the migrants Rs 60 each day for their food.

The management of the Dharamsala and Bheirodan High School, located nearby, are also helping with food.

“There is no problem about safety, food and lodging. We are making all possible arrangements to help the migrants. We will keep them here till the situation turns normal,” an official posted at Dharamsala relief camp said.

There were no further attacks on migrants since the campus strike, though the police have not been able to name the culprits in the case as yet.

Twenty-two migrants have been killed in Manipur since February this year.

The All-Manipur Construction Workers Union demanded an inquiry into the migrant killing cases and ex gratia to relatives of the victims.

Political parties, including the CPI, a partner in the Okram Ibobi Singh-led coalition, the BJP, the Manipur People’s Party and the Nationalist Congress Party have also condemned the killings.

Warm Welcome Awaits Manipur Pugilist Duo

Suranjoy, Nanao

Imphal, Jun 15 : Mayengbam Suranjoy Singh of Manipur who won a gold in the Asian Boxing Championship in Zhuhai, China yesterday and Thokchom Nanao Singh who bagged a silver, have brought cheer to the boxing fans of Manipur.

Though Nanao had been in the news recently for winning a gold medal in the AIBA-Youth World Boxing Championship in Mexico last November, little was heard about Suranjoy.


Waxing eloquent on the performance of Manipur boxers in the Asian circle, secretary of the Manipur Amateur Boxing Association and senior vice-president of the Indian Amateur Boxing Federation (IABF) Khoibi Salam said the association would accord a warm reception to the boxing heroes once they returned.

The duo are expected to land in India tomorrow.

Suranjoy, 22, a resident of Uchiwa Leirak Achouba in Imphal West, began his boxing career in 1998 at a small local competition in Lukram Leirak.

He received his training at the SAI camp in 1999 under coach Ibomcha Singh and joined the Navy in 2004.

He fetched a gold in the 32nd National Games in Hyderabad.

An euphoric Ibomcha Singh said Suranjoy was the first Indian in 15 years to win a gold medal.
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Imphal, June 14: Mayengbam Suranjoy Singh of Manipur who won a gold in the Asian Boxing Championship in Zhuhai, China yesterday and Thokchom Nanao Singh who bagged a silver, have brought cheer to the boxing fans of Manipur.

Though Nanao had been in the news recently for winning a gold medal in the AIBA-Youth World Boxing Championship in Mexico last November, little was heard about Suranjoy.

Waxing eloquent on the performance of Manipur boxers in the Asian circle, secretary of the Manipur Amateur Boxing Association and senior vice-president of the Indian Amateur Boxing Federation (IABF) Khoibi Salam said the association would accord a warm reception to the boxing heroes once they returned.

The duo are expected to land in India tomorrow.

Suranjoy, 22, a resident of Uchiwa Leirak Achouba in Imphal West, began his boxing career in 1998 at a small local competition in Lukram Leirak.

He received his training at the SAI camp in 1999 under coach Ibomcha Singh and joined the Navy in 2004.

He fetched a gold in the 32nd National Games in Hyderabad.

An euphoric Ibomcha Singh said Suranjoy was the first Indian in 15 years to win a gold medal.

Electricity transforms Kabul living

All-day electricity has finally arrived in Kabul, bringing with it some of the small comforts that many in the developed world take for granted.

Life at the house of Sayed Abdul Rahim has become, in his words, "easier and more entertaining".

Mr Rahim's clothes are now ironed regularly, he is able to enjoy daily hot baths, his children no longer have to squint at their homework by candlelight, and his 10-year-old son, Ajmal, never misses his favourite Indian soap operas on television.

All of these changes have been brought about by a deal struck earlier this year between the Afghan finance ministry and the government of neighbouring Uzbekistan.
A handful of Kabul's districts now enjoy 20 hours of electricity every day following a four-year project to build a high-voltage line between the two countries.

Previously the Afghan capital had no more than four or five hours of intermittent diesel-generated power a day.

Officials hope that in the coming years, many more provinces will also get electricity.

But progress comes at a price. Nearly one third of Rahim's salary goes on his electricity bill.

"We are very happy that we have electricity all the time but poor families like mine can't afford to pay $40 (£12) a month. They need to bring the prices down," he said.

An official at the finance ministry defended the policy saying that for poor Afghans, electricity cost three cents per kilowatt but for businesses and international organisations it was 20 cents per kilowatt.

Sick of war

Shopkeepers throughout central Kabul have reported a big spike in the sale of electrical products.

At Sediq Omar market, known locally as "the electric market", traders talk about the big rise in in television and DVD sales.
"People buy televisions and DVDs everyday. They are tired of war, corruption and problems, so they want to watch television and movies to escape from these problems," says shopkeeper Wali.

Mohammad Shafiq, 42, is one of Wali's customer.

He works for the Afghan army. Today he has come to buy a television and a DVD player because he too is getting 20 hours of electricity a day.

"I couldn't afford a generator in the past so I didn't want to have a television and DVD. We either argued in the family or listened to radio or went to bed early. But now we can watch television and movies and have hot baths in the morning," he says.

And it is not just inside the home that Kabulis can see the difference.

Night drivers no longer rely solely on their sense of direction and the narrow, yellow beams of their headlights to guide them through the city's labyrinthine streets.

Nowadays the hills surrounding Kabul are speckled with golden orbs from lights inside houses, gleaming like thousands of small fireflies hovering in the night sky.

However, there remains much work to be done.

The Afghan government estimates that only 7% of the country has access to electricity. Many Afghans complain that while most of their political leaders can boast of 24 hours of electricity, the majority of villages and valleys still rely on kerosene lamps and firelight.

Although Afghanistan has several of its own hydroelectric dams, the output of these dams has been hit hard by a series of droughts.

But officials at the water and energy ministry are optimistic about the coming months, after a winter of heavy snow and a rainy spring.

Some Afghans argue that more rivers should be diverted to feed more hydroelectric dams. But this is politically sensitive.

In the past, several neighbouring countries - including Pakistan, Iran, and Uzbekistan - that also rely on the water from these rivers have blocked such initiatives.

Despite all this, Afghans like Mr Rahim have had their spirits buoyed.

But the destruction of the past three decades also leaves him wary that such luxuries may not last.

"I won't get rid of my Bukhari [wood-fired stove]. We have used it for a long time, and I am not convinced that the electricity will always be able to provide us with heat in the winter. But we are still very thankful because for many many years we were deprived of it in the past."

Indian scientist body recovered

The body of an Indian atomic scientist who went missing last week from a power plant near the city of Bangalore has been recovered, police say.

Naval divers discovered L Mahalingam's body in a river close to the power plant on Saturday, five days after the scientist went missing.

Police suspect that the scientist could have committed suicide.

Mr Mahalingam was last seen taking a walk in the complex next to India's biggest naval base.

Officials sought to allay fears that Mr Mahalingam could have been kidnapped. They said he was not carrying any "secret documents".

Mr Mahalingam worked at the plant's simulated training department.

US general assumes Afghan command

The next leader of US and Nato forces in Afghanistan, Gen Stanley McChrystal, has taken over command there.

He takes over from Gen David McKiernan, who was sacked by the US defence secretary after one year and whose time coincided with a surge in violence.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai told Gen McChrystal the priority would be to reduce civilian casualties.

Gen McChrystal has said his measure of effectiveness would be "the number of Afghans shielded from violence".

'Practical measures'

Gen McChrystal is a four-star general and former special forces commander.

The handover took place in a low-key ceremony at the Nato-led International Security Assistance Force HQ in Kabul on Monday.

Gen McChrystal will now command 56,000 US troops and 32,000 Nato-led forces currently in the country.

But he will also oversee US President Barack Obama's new strategy of increasing troops in Afghanistan as forces in Iraq are drawn down.

On Sunday, Mr Karzai's office said the Afghan government would "fully co-operate" with the "very important goal" of reducing civilian casualties.

Gen McChrystal pledged "practical measures to prevent civilian casualties during counterinsurgency operations".

The issue has been a key source of friction between Afghanistan and the foreign forces.

Nato and US troops are struggling to contain the Taliban insurgency in the country.

Last week, Gen McChrystal told the BBC Radio 4's Today programme that counter-insurgency was key.

"When we are in position, one of the things we'll do is review all of our rules of engagement and all the instructions to our units, with the emphasis that we are fighting for the population.

"That involves protecting them both from the enemy and from unintended consequences of our operation, because we know that although an operation may be conducted for the right reason, if it has negative effects it can have a negative outcome for everyone."

Among the 400 senior staff Gen McChrystal will bring with him to Afghanistan will be Adm Gregory Smith who has been assigned to improve communications efforts.

Swine flu rise in Indian cities

More people have tested positive for swine flu in India, bringing the total number of those infected in the country to 23, according to reports.

Fresh cases have been detected in the northern city of Jalandhar, as well as Hyderabad and Bangalore in the south.

These include a student who tested positive on returning from a trip to US. Eight of his classmates are suffering from flu symptoms.

Last week the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the global flu pandemic.

The swine flu (H1N1) virus first emerged in Mexico in April and has since spread to 74 countries.

Official reports say there have been nearly 30,000 cases globally and 141 deaths, with figures rising daily.

In India, a 29-year-old woman and her three-year-old daughter who had flown in from US were quarantined in Bangalore after testing positive for the virus.

In Jalandhar, eight students were quarantined when one of their classmates tested positive for swine flu in a hospital in the capital, Delhi.

They were part of a group of students who had returned from the US at the weekend.

In Hyderabad, reports say three people tested positive, including two girls and their grandmother. They also had returned from the US.

Earlier this month, India issued an alert against the flu. Airport screening has been tightened and more testing facilities would come.

The government has said that India was fully equipped to deal with the outbreak.