Monday, November 9, 2009

No special treatment to Manu: Sheila Dikshit

D
elhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit has said rules were followed in granting parole to Manu Sharma.

Manu Sharma, given the life sentence for murdering model Jessica Lall, is on parole, partly because his mother is ill. However, his mother has been organizing cricket matches, leading to doubts about her illness.

Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit reportedly supported his application for parole.

"All procedure to give parole were followed. Details were taken from the jail superintendent & Delhi Police and detailed inquiries were made," she said.

"Files came to me only after that, which I signed. There was no special treatment given to Manu. This is the right of all convicts. If they have stayed in jail for a few years and have good behaviour, then they can be out on parole. Everyone gives certain reasons, committee looks into these and when if found appropriate, parole is given.

China protest baseless, visit to Tawang is non-political: Dalai Lama

T
ibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, who arrived in Arunachal Pradesh on Sunday to a rousing reception by hundreds of monks, rejected Chinese claims that he was spearheading a separatist movement and said his visit to the northeastern state was non-political.

"It is quite usual for China to step up campaign against me wherever I go. It is totally baseless on the part of the Chinese Communist government to say that I am encouraging a separatist movement," the Dalai Lama told journalists at the Tawang monastery after inaugurating a museum.

The spiritual leader of the Tibetans, who has thousands of followers around the world arrived at this picture-pretty town perched at an altitude of more than 11,000 feet, close Chinese border, on a weeklong visit.

"My visit to Tawang is non-political and aimed at promoting universal brotherhood and nothing else," he stressed.

"I am very happy to be here in Tawang as there are lots of emotions involved. When I escaped from China in 1959, I was mentally and physically very weak as I was down with dysentery," he said.

It was through Tawang, a revered seat of Buddhism, that the Dalai Lama escaped the Chinese to enter India where he set up base in Dharamsala in Himachal Pradesh.

Tawang is also spiritually important for the Tibetans as the sixth Dalai Lama was born in the 17th century at the Urgelling Monastery near here.

"The Chinese did not pursue us in 1959 but when I reached India, they started speaking against me. I am always surprised (by Chinese reactions)," the Dalai Lama said.

"Tibetan Buddhism and culture is passing through a very difficult period. But there is a hope of the religion and culture surviving in this free area, particularly in India. So there is lot of responsibility for people here and in south India to keep the flag flying," he added.

Thousands of locals in traditional costumes and monks attired in their maroon robes, waiting on either side of the eight-kilometre road leading from the helipad to the Tawang monastery, waved at a beaming Dalai Lama as his motorcade snaked through the hilly terrain.

The highly revered spiritual leader looked jovial as he was seen waving back at the crowd.

At the monastery, about 800 monks, including scores of child monks, gave the Dalai Lama a religious welcome amid chants of Buddhist hymns as a strong smell of burning incense wafted through the air.

Giant gongs were played by monks, while monastery priests prostrated as the Dalai Lama alighted from the vehicle. Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu and other high priests then led the spiritual leader inside the monastery.

Indian and Tibetan prayer flags fluttered, while banners and life-size posters of the Dalai Lama adorned the streets of the Tawang, home to about 35,000 people.

"It was a lifetime experience to have seen the Dalai Lama from so close. He waved back at us and I consider this to be a blessing for me and the people here," an excited child monk who identified himself as Sherbu said.

The Dalai Lama will hold a prayer session at a school playground near the monastery Monday. He would then visit the adjoining town of Bomdilla and Dirang November 12, before leaving for state capital Itanagar November 14. The visit ends November 15.

China has raked up a controversy by asking India not to allow the Tibetan spiritual leader to visit Arunachal Pradesh, as it lays claim on the territory.

India and China fought a border war in 1962, with Chinese troops advancing deep into Arunachal Pradesh and inflicting heavy casualties on Indian troops. China has never recognised the 1914 McMahon Line agreed between the British and the then Tibetan rulers

and claims 90,000 sq km of territory, that includes nearly all of Arunachal Pradesh.

A total of 140,000 Tibetans live in exile -- over 100,000 of them in India. Over six million Tibetans live in Tibet.

Bombs explode near school, no casualty

T
wo bombs exploded in front of a school in Bilasipara in Assam's Dhubri district today but there was no casualty or injury, police sources said.

The bombs, suspected to be dropped by dacoits while fleeing from the area, were found near Roukhapa Higher Secondary School in Bilasipara town.

The bombs exploded around 10.30 am but there was no casualty or injured as today being a Sunday, the school was closed.

Senior police and civil officials have rushed to the spot and the entire area has been cordoned off, sources added.

Dalai Lama arrival rouses sleepy Tawang

D
awa Tsering, 56, cursed his mother for dragging him out on a freezing February morning in 1959 to see a bright young Tibetan man pass by his house with scores of followers. It didn’t take long for Dawa to know who the man was and why he had come from the land of the Gemi – a derogatory Monpa tribal term for the Chinese.

Dawa reached Tawang, 105 km southwest of his village Shok-Tsan, Saturday evening to catch a glimpse of the same man – the 14th Dalai Lama. He couldn’t, as the spiritual head of Mahayana Buddhism drove past in a silver-gray Toyota Fortuner with tinted glasses.

"My village by the river Ngamjang Chu is half a day’s walk from the Kentse Mani post (on the India-China border) from where he entered India fifty years ago," said Dawa, adding he would now have to stay back another day to see the Dalai Lama.

Tenzin Delek, 30, missed the Dalai Lama the last time he came here in 2003. So he trekked for three days from his village Mago near the border with Bhutan to the west. It didn’t matter for Tenzin that he couldn’t see the Dalai Lama meandering past a sea of humanity from the helipad 8 km downtown. "I know he saw me, and blessed my child from inside the car," said the man who had held his five-year-old son aloft as the SUV approached.

Dawa and Tenzin were among some 11,000 people including 500 Bhutanese who lined up the road from the helipad to the Gaden Namgyal Lhatse or Tawang Monastery. It was quite a spectacle for a 2,085 sq km district that has only 38,924 people.

For the local Monpa and Sherdukpen tribal people, the Dalai Lama's arrival was akin to attaining moksha. But for hundreds of Tibetan refugees living here and elsewhere in the Northeast, it was an emotional issue.

"Whenever we see him, we feel we are closer to the homeland the Chinese drove us away from," said 62-year-old Lhakpa Chokyi, a Tibetan refugee from Nagaland's capital Kohima. "I prayed for him - and our homeland - as he drove past."

As the Dalai Lama’s high-security motorcade comprising 30 vehicles passed through the town en route to the monastery, people chanted "om mani padme hum" – the sacred mantra of the Avaloketesvara. Hours before the civilian chopper landed around 10.30 am at the helipad 8 km downtown, the people lined up the street holding either a khada - traditional silk cloth - or a bunch of incense sticks.

The Dalai Lama drove straight to the 400-year old Tawang Monastery to first inaugurate the new museum building and the school library in the monastery campus. After the monks of the monastery welcomed him to the sacred hoots of the tunching, a five-foot long Monpa trumpet, he offered prayers in the dukhang or main prayer hall of the monastery.

Dalai Lama to push for Himalayan ecology conservation

T
he choedhar – Buddhist religious flag – sports five colours from the blue symbolizing sky to the yellowish-ochre of earth with white, red and orange in between.

But when the 14th Dalai Lama landed from the sky on this spiritual spot in the eastern Himalayas and drove to the Tawang Monastery past rows of choedhars on Sunday, his emphasis was on another principal Buddhist colour – green representing vegetation.

"His Holiness is deeply concerned about the stress on the Himalayan ecology," former Arunachal Pradesh minister TG Rimpoche told Hindustan Times. "His agenda is to blend spiritualism with conservation using Tawang as the launch pad for his green mission."

Rimpoche, also the abbot of the Lumla Monastery 65 km west of this town, accompanied the Dalai Lama from Guwahati to Tawang in a 24-seater civilian chopper.

The Eastern Himalayas, part of the highly sensitive Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot, are unstable and prone to landslips. The central and western Himalayas are more settled, but have been bearing the brunt of global warming.

According to Rimpoche, the Dalai Lama wanted to make a strong green statement ahead of the Copenhagen summit on climate change. "Emotionally attached to the Himalayas, which he feels needs to be saved to save the world, His Holiness insisted on dovetailing an eco-friendly programme with his three-day religious discourse. After all, Budhism is also about the environment people live in."

Accordingly, the Tawang district authorities slated a sapling-planting event before the start of the first session of the Dalai Lama’s sermons at the Yid-Gha-Choezin ground here on Monday. The spiritual head of Mahayana Buddhism would also be distributing to 1,500 lamas and devotees saplings blessed by him.

"We intend to plant these saplings, all indigenous species, on barren patches around this town. We shall also be seeking the help of local heads of the monasteries to expand the green mission to save the Himalayas," said Tawang Deputy Commissioner Gamli Padu.

Arunachal Pradesh, spread across the Eastern Himalayas, is one of the biologically richest regions on earth. A recent WWF report said between 1998 and 2008, at least 353 new species were discovered in this region – an average of 35 new species finds every year for the last 10 years.

I am not encouraging separatist movement in China: Dalai Lama

T
he Dalai Lama, who arrived in this strategic Indian border state on a much-watched visit on Sunday to a rousing welcome by hundreds of monks, rejected Beijing's charges that he was spearheading a separatist movement. He said he would never return to China until the Tibetans there were treated properly.

"It's quite usual for China to step up campaign against me wherever I go. It's totally baseless on the part of Chinese Communist government to say that I am encouraging a separatist movement," the Tibetan spiritual leader told journalists here after inaugurating a museum at the historic Tawang monastery in Arunachal Pradesh state.

The Dalai Lama, a highly venerated religious figure with thousands of followers around the world, arrived at this picture-perfect town perched at an altitude of more than 11,000 feet, close to the Chinese border, on a weeklong visit.

"My visit to Tawang is non-political and aimed at promoting universal brotherhood and nothing else," the Dalai Lama stressed.

"Unless the Chinese government addresses the basic problems of the Tibetans in Tibet seriously, there is no question of my return (to China)," he said.

Beijing had opposed the Dalai Lama's visit to Arunachal Pradesh as it lays claim on the territory.

India and China fought a border war in 1962, with Chinese troops advancing deep into Arunachal Pradesh and inflicting heavy casualties on Indian troops. China has never recognised the 1914 McMahon Line agreed between the British and the then Tibetan rulers and claims 90,000 sq km of territory, that includes nearly all of Arunachal Pradesh.

Asked about his stand on China's claims over Arunachal Pradesh, he said, "everybody knows the position and I have also made my stand very clear several times", implying that the state is an integral part of India that he has reiterated on earlier occasions.

"When I escaped China in 1959, I was mentally and physically very weak as I was down with dysentery," the spiritual leader recalled.

"Now I am very happy to be here in Tawang as there are lots of emotions involved. This is my fifth visit to Tawang."

It was through Tawang, a revered seat of Buddhism, that the Dalai Lama escaped the Chinese to enter India where he set up base in Dharamsala in Himachal Pradesh.

Tawang is also spiritually important for the Tibetans as the sixth Dalai Lama was born in the 17th century at the Urgelling Monastery near here.

"The Chinese didn't pursue us in 1959, but when I reached India they started speaking against me," the Buddhist leader said. "Today China is taking a very hard approach towards me and the people of Tibet."

"Tibetan Buddhism and culture is passing through a very difficult period. But there is hope of the religion and culture surviving in this 'free area' (outside Tibet), particularly in India. So there is lot of responsibilities for people here and in south India to keep the flag flying," he said.

Earlier, thousands of locals in traditional costumes and monks in maroon robes, waiting on either side of the eight-kilometre road leading from the helipad to the Tawang monastery, waved at the Dalai Lama as his motorcade snaked past them.

The spiritual leader looked jovial as he was seen waving back at the crowd.

At the monastery, about 800 monks, including scores of child monks, welcomed their leader amid chants of Buddhist hymns as the smell of burning incense wafted through the air.

Giant gongs were played by monks while monastery priests prostrated as the Dalai Lama alighted from the vehicle. Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu and other high priests then led the spiritual leader inside the monastery.

Indian and Tibetan prayer flags fluttered, while life-size posters of the Dalai Lama adorned the streets of Tawang, home to about 35,000 people.

"It was a lifetime experience to have seen the Dalai Lama from so close. He waved back at us and I consider this to be a blessing for me and the people here," an excited child monk who identified himself as Sherbu told this IANS correspondent.

The Dalai Lama will hold a prayer session at a school playground near the monastery Monday. He would then visit the adjoining town of Bomdilla and Dirang Nov 12, before leaving for state capital Itanagar Nov 14. The visit ends Nov 15.

A total of 140,000 Tibetans live in exile -- over 100,000 of them in India. Over six million Tibetans live in Tibet.

Six NLFT insurgents surrender

W
ith Bangladesh security forces carrying out raids on their hideouts, six insurgents of the outlawed National Liberation Front of Tripura have surrendered before troops in West Tripura district, police said on Monday.

Two of the ultras surrendered yesterday before the commandant of 15 Battalion of Assam Rifles at Hrankhawlpara camp under Teliamura police station and deposited two AK-series rifles, two magazines and cartridges.

The four others surrendered before the Commandant of 1st battalion of Tripura State Rifles (TSR) at Lefunga camp under Sidhai police station and deposited cartridges.

During interrogation, the insurgents revealed that security forces in Bangladesh were making frequent raids on their hideouts, mainly in Chittagong Hill Tracts, police said.

Around 330 insurgents of two banned outfits - NLFT and All Tripura Tiger Force (ATTF) have surrendered before security forces this year.

Dalai Lama stresses on peace as 30,000 attend Tawang discourse

T
ibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama on Monday called for universal brotherhood and peace among all communities as he addressed more than 30,000 devotees in Arunachal Pradesh.

"Compassion and peace are the two words that should be remembered by all," the Dalai Lama said at the opening day of the three-day religious discourse at the Polo Ground in Tawang.

The Tibetan spiritual leader, who arrived on a weeklong visit to this strategic Indian border state on Sunday, had raked up a controversy by hitting out at China during two separate interactions with journalists on the first day of his trip.

The Dalai Lama said Chinese opposition to his visit to Arunachal Pradesh was "totally baseless" and was on expected lines and nothing "unusual".

He also charged Beijing of unnecessarily trying to accuse him of encouraging a "separatist movement" in Tibet.

Beijing had opposed the Dalai Lama's visit to Arunachal Pradesh as it lays claim on the territory.

India and China fought a border war in 1962, with Chinese troops advancing deep into Arunachal Pradesh and inflicting heavy casualties on Indian troops. China has never recognised the 1914 McMahon Line agreed between the British and the then Tibetan rulers and claims 90,000 sq km of territory, that includes nearly all of Arunachal Pradesh.

Thousands of followers, including monks donning maroon robes and some foreign devotees, listened to the Dalai Lama's preachings sitting on the ground under a clear sky.

"The congregation was huge and it should be around 30,000 to 35,000 people already inside the ground," said T.G. Rinpoche, a local Buddhist spiritual leader.

Earlier, the Dala Lama inaugurated a multi-speciality hospital in Tawang. He had contributed Rs.2 million towards its construction.

"The hospital would go a long way in meeting the healthcare needs of the local people," the Dalai Lama said.

The religious discourse at Tawang would continue till Wednesday.

The Tibetan leader would then visit the adjoining towns of Bomdilla and Dirang Nov 12, before leaving for state capital Itanagar Nov 14. The visit ends Nov 15.

On Sunday, the Dalai Lama had stressed that his visit to Tawang was "non-political".

It was through Tawang, a revered seat of Buddhism, that the Dalai Lama escaped the Chinese to enter India where he set up base in Dharamsala in Himachal Pradesh.

Tawang is also spiritually important for the Tibetans as the sixth Dalai Lama was born in the 17th century at the Urgelling Monastery near here.

Dalai Lama donates Rs 20 lakh for Tawang hospital building

T
ibetan Spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama on Monday inaugurated a district hospital in Tawang and donated Rs 20 lakh for its building on the second day of his visit to Arunachal Pradesh.

The Dalai Lama inaugurated the Kahndo-Dowa Songma Tawang district hospital and consecrated a Buddhist statue at its entrance.

Later he visited the Yid-Ta-G-Choezin ground where he planted saplings and also distributed some of them among the thousands of devotees assembled there.

Addressing the devotees, the 74-year-old Tibetan monk asked the younger generation to join monasteries to carry forward Buddha's message of peace.

"Buddhist culture and tradition have to be preserved at every cost," he said. Speaking on the occasion, Chief Minister Dorjee Kandu urged the people to preserve the Buddhist culture in this part of the country.

The Dalai Lama, who arrived here on Sunday on a four-day visit, had rebuffed China for objecting to his trip to Arunachal Pradesh and expressed surprise over its claims to Tawang, a revered seat of Buddhism.

In Tawang, Dalai Lama slams China

I
t is the future of Tibetans that matters, not mine, the Dalai Lama (74) declared on Sunday, revisiting Tawang after six years.

“The issue is not my going back (to Tibet). It is the well-being of six million Tibetans,” he said soon after his arrival.

The four-day visit drew international attention after China objected to it. It is also steeped in symbolism. Tawang — 550 km northeast of Guwahati, at a height of 8,750 feet — houses the world’s biggest Buddhist monastery outside Lhasa in Tibet. It is located in Arunachal Pradesh, a region China has always claimed as it own.

This monastery was the first spot where the Dalai Lama paused for a few days while fleeing Tibet after the Chinese army overran it in March 1959.

The Dalai Lama said China first established direct contact with him in 1980, outlining five conditions if he wished to return to Tibet. “They offered to send an envoy to Delhi to take me back, but I turned them down.”

Beijing re-established contact in 1993, and again in 2002. “They made me a fresh offer to return,” the Dalai Lama said. “But my reply was the same.”

Thousands lined the streets of the town as the Dalai Lama’s motorcade passed. For locals, all Buddhists, the sight of him was akin to attaining moksha (salvation).

“Whenever we see him, we feel closer to the homeland the Chinese drove us away from,” said 62-year-old Tibetan refugee Lhakpa Chokyi.

Madhu Koda to be questioned by IT department from Tuesday

New Delhi, Nov 8(ANI): Former Jharkhand Chief Minister Madhu Koda, who was discharged from a city hospital here today, will be questioned by the Income Tax (IT) Department at his Ranchi residence from Tuesday over an alleged Rs 2,000 hawala transaction case.

“Now that he (Koda) has been discharged from hospital, we have recorded his statement. He said that he is still not feeling well and wants some time before being questioned. So, we have decided to question him from Tuesday,” an IT official said.

The official also informed that Koda has been put on a prohibitory order, which does not restrict his movement, but he would not be allowed to remove any object from his residence.

According to reports, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) has been informed about the IT department''s move to question Koda and they would be closely following it.

Earlier in the day, Koda was discharged from Apollo Hospital in Ranchi, where he was admitted after he complained of a pain in his abdomen, giddiness and vomiting on November 3.

The department has also asked its officers in Ranchi to bring a list of the seizures and records of statements of his associates, which will be put across to Koda during the questioning.

On October 9, the ED had charged Madhu Koda and his former Cabinet colleagues under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) for allegedly amassing assets worth several hundred crores.

Koda, an independent member of Lok Sabha and a UPA supporter, has been charged with having business interests of diverse kinds - cement, steel, auto, power, agro and tourism. (ANI)

Assam: Ulfa calls for 12-hour bandh


T
he Ulfa has called for a 12-hour bandh on Monday demanding the release of their two top leaders - Sasadhar Chowdhury and Chitrabon Hazarika, who were picked up in Bangladesh and handed over to India.

The outfit wants these two leaders to be produced in front of the media. The Ulfa leaders, who fled Bangladesh after a security crackdown there, surrendered to the Border Security Force in Tripura.

The leaders were produced in a Guwahati court. They are being interrogated by a special branch of the Assam Police who will be joined by central intelligence agencies soon.

Fifty-year-old Chitrabon Hazarika who belongs to Nowong district of Assam, had escaped to Bangladesh before the crackdown on militants in Bhutan.

Hazarika was one of the central committee leaders of Ulfa who was trained in early eighties along with NSCN cadres.

Sasadhar Chowdhury who hails from Nalbari district, is known as Hasan Ali in Bangladesh and holds a diploma in civil engineering
.

Chowdhury even tried to take the cause of Ulfa in interational forums too.