Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Kashmir's most-wanted terrorist killed in encounter - India

13 sept 2011

Kashmir's most-wanted terrorist killed in encounter


Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Sopore:  Kashmir's most-wanted terrorist, Abdullah Uni, was shot today in a police encounter in Sopore in the state's Baramulla district.

Uni was the senior-most commander of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) operating in this area.

Uni, a Pakistani resident, was behind some of the biggest attacks in the last decade in Northern Kashmir. He targeted security forces, political workers and civilians.

He was also among those accused of killing Maulana Shoukat Ahmad Shah, the cleric who headed the Jamiat-e-Ahli Hadees, a religious group of Sunni Muslims. He died in a bomb blast near a Srinagar mosque in April.

In the last two years, he was cornered eight times during different operations by security forces, but managed to escape.

Acting on a tip-off about the presence of some Lashkar militants in Baghat-e-Batpora locality in Sopore, a joint team of police and Rashtriya Rifles cordoned off the area around noon, official sources said.

As security forces began combing houses to track down the militant, the terrorists opened fire. Uni was killed.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Health of Indian politicians often treated like state secret - India

12 sept 2011

Health of Indian politicians often treated like state secret


Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Jacqueline Kennedy, Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru, Indira Gandhi and President John F.
Kennedy arrive at the White House for a private
dinner in November 1961.

New York:  In the tempestuous latter half of August - marked, in India, by a prominent activist's public fast, pop-up protests, debates about corruption, and even debates about the debates about corruption - the Congress party seemed to flounder like a dinghy in a maelstrom. Perhaps it was because no one was at the tiller. Earlier in the month, a spokesman had announced that Sonia Gandhi, the Congress president, had left the country for three weeks for surgery, and that the party would, in her absence, be run by a four-man committee.

Then even that trickle dried up; the party released no official word on what she was being treated for, where she was being treated, or when precisely she would return. When presented with rumors - of cancer, of a visit to the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, of an Indian-origin oncologist being mysteriously called away from holiday - the party replied with grim silence. (She's back now - or so we were told, in an equally laconic vein.)

In this, Sonia Gandhi appeared to be following in an established tradition, by which Indian political leaders guard news of their health as if it were a state secret. Not for them the publicly fought battles of Rudy Giuliani against his prostate cancer, of Dick Cheney against his troublesome heart, or of Hugo Chavez against his recent pelvic abscess. Even the example of Mahatma Gandhi - who let it all hang out, often greeting his ashram's residents with updates about his bowel movements - is an aberration in Indian politics. The health bulletins that Mr. Gandhi issued during his various imprisonments and protest fasts may have been tools of political leverage, but they were also ways to reach out to a population that loved him deeply.

Subsequent leaders have been reticent for strategic reasons. Mohammad Ali Jinnah had been diagnosed with tuberculosis in June 1946, but he kept it from public knowledge; thus, in those charged years, few knew that Mr. Jinnah had little time left to push for an independent Pakistan. He died in September 1948, a mere 13 months after the creation of Pakistan.

It was said of Jawaharlal Nehru that India's 1962 war against China - against the fraternal power in his ideal of Asianism - sickened him and hastened his demise. But even in photographs from just before the war - from September 1962, for instance, with the nuclear scientist Homi Bhabha - Mr. Nehru seems to look haggard and ill, very different from the fit, cheerful prime minister who had met Jackie and John F. Kennedy in Washington the previous November. The historian Srinath Raghavan points me to a revealing letter from his archival database, written on Valentine's Day 1962 by Mr. Nehru's sister, Vijayalakshmi Pandit, to Lord Mountbatten:

"You know bhai has been rather seriously ill... He has aged in a frightening manner. One can hardly hear him speak across the dinner table because his voice has almost disappeared, he walks with head and shoulders bent, he seems to have lost the keen interest in everything around him which was one of his marked characteristics... All Indian doctors are agreed that he must have a long rest - three to six months, in order to survive... There is irresponsible talk everywhere, even in the highest circles, and a whispering campaign is going on to the effect that the PM has lost his grip on the cabinet - that he cannot think clearly, cannot make decisions and so on."

Indira Gandhi would also find cause to be discreet about a disease, although at a time when she was still Nehru's daughter, and not political aspirant or Indian prime minister. In 1939, Ms. Gandhi checked into a plush sanatorium in Leysin, in Switzerland, to be treated for tuberculosis. At the time, writes Katherine Frank in Indira, consumptive patients "often had a leper complex. Tuberculosis was infectious and therefore stigmatized." Her doctor, Auguste Rollier, refused to use the word "tuberculosis," and,

"[T]o an extent, Indira and Nehru colluded in Rollier's deception, for they, too, never mentioned 'tuberculosis' in all the letters they wrote to each other... [T]o her father, she wrote only of her chronic low weight and increasing depression."

More examples abound. The Indian prime minister's office refused, in 2009, to grant a Right to Information request that sought to know how the former Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri had died during a state visit to Tashkent in 1966. In 2009 too, news of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's heart surgery was released less than a day before he went under the knife.

The reluctance to admit frailty is perhaps a primal political instinct, linked closely to another such: the desire to retain power. But these Indian politicians seem to have ranked the strategic benefits of secrecy over the right of their constituencies to know how fit their leaders are.

When they do, they veer toward behaving like rulers who build cults of personality, seeming to worry that weakness - even of a temporary, physiological sort - will jeopardize their power and spark new bids for their position. "The talk is about succession and nothing else," Ms. Pandit wrote to Lord Mountbatten in 1962 - a fearsome observation for India's politicians, even today.



Sunday, September 11, 2011

Pregnant Aishwarya Rai prays with parents - India

11 sept 2011

Pregnant Aishwarya prays with parents


Mom-to-be Aishwarya Rai Bachchan was spotted at the Siddhivinayak Temple with her parents. The actress looked pretty as ever and was seen wearing a saffron chunni over her suit.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Suspicious item found at Washington airport - India

10 sept 2011

Suspicious item found at Washington airport


Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Washington:  Washington state police explosives experts gave an all-clear after investigating a "suspicious item" that forced gate evacuations at Dulles airport near Washington on the eve of 9/11 anniversary events, a spokesman said.

An item was detected around 4:30 pm, and an area around a cargo container on an airfield was evacuated, said Dulles International Airport spokesman Robert Yingling.

The evacuation area's perimeter included "a few" gates at concourse B of the facility, the largest international airport near the US capital, the spokesman said. Those gates were closed for four hours but then reopened, Yingling said.

The Virginia state police Explosive Ordinance Disposal unit declared an all-clear at 8:30 pm yesterday, he said.

"The boxes on the cargo pallet were found to have nothing harmful or hazardous," Yingling said.

During the investigation, the airport remained open and operating, the spokesman said.

The security alert came as the United States was on a tense watch ahead of the 10th anniversary of the landmark terror strikes, the worst on US soil.

One group of 9/11 hijackers took off from Dulles International, west of the US federal capital of Washington, seized the jet - American Airlines flight 77 - and crashed it into the side of the Pentagon.

On Saturday, former president George W. Bush joined current Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Bush-era defence chief Donald Rumsfeld at a Pentagon wreath-laying ceremony to honor the Pentagon workers and airline passengers who died there.

Memories remain raw of the day when Al Qaeda hijackers slammed two passenger planes into the World Trade Center in New York city and a jet into the Pentagon, while a fourth jet crashed in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Almost 3,000 people were killed in the attacks.



9/11 anniversary: Ten years on, relatives pine for remains of loved ones - India

09 sept 2011

9/11 anniversary: Ten years on, relatives pine for remains of loved ones

Five scientists work full time on trying to identify DNA to match 1100 missing dead to around 9000 degraded remains. In the last five years, only 26 new identifications could be done.

New York: Ten years after the 9/11 terror attack, one of the harshest reality that a 9/11 victim's family faces is never having found the remains of their loved ones.
Many of the people killed in the attacks have never been found. Five scientists work full time on trying to identify DNA to match 1100 missing dead to around 9000 degraded remains. In the last five years, only 26 new identifications could be done.
Charles Wolf lost his wife Katherine on 9/11 attacks. Ten years later, he is still looking for closure. Because, he still has not seen his wife's body. He wishes he had some physical part of his wife, so that the two could be buried next to one another.
"I mean if one believes in any kind of spirituality, one understands that even we say 'the body of so and so.' It's not 'so and so', it's the body of 'so and so' so 'so and so' is still alive in the spiritual world but the body is not alive anymore. But still, you need that, and unfortunately I don't have it," said Charles Wolf.
Like Charles, the last 10 years have been painful for Michael Burke, whose brother was killed in the World Trade Centre's North Tower. William was killed while trying to save a paralyzed man.
"You know it's remarkable to think that in the morning you got a living, lively, loving human being and then you're searching for DNA a couple of days later. And nothing, nothing of the jacket, nothing of the helmet, and he's basically gone into history," says Michael.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Anna sues Manish Tewari - India

08 sept 2011

Anna launches into Manish Tewari, slaps legal notice

New Delhi: Manish Tewari's public expression of regret for his outburst against Anna Hazare has failed to cut much ice with the anti-corruption crusader, who today sent a legal notice to the Congress spokesman seeking a written apology for calling him corrupt from “head to toe”.
Anna launches into Manish Tewari, slaps legal notice
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India
Hazare's lawyer Milind Pawar sent the notice by email and registered post to Tewari on the instructions of the Gandhian.
Pawar had earlier said a defamation case would be filed against the Congress MP in a Pune court for casting aspersions on Hazare.
The notice calls upon Tewari to "apologise with written application by you and on behalf of your party, undertaking not to commit such false imputations and defamatory statements (about Hazare) in future".
It says the Congress leader had committed offence under sections 499 and 500 of IPC by his defamatory references to Hazare.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Meet the judge who sent Amar Singh to jail - India

07 sept 2011

Meet the judge who sent Amar Singh to jail

Amar Singh's arrest has just added to the list of high profile cases that Sangita Dhingra Sehgal has dealt with in her 27- year- long career.
Cash-for-votes scam is one of the many high profile cases Sangita Dhingra Sehgal has Dealt with.(www.indiatodayimages.com)
Dr Sanjay Kumar Cardiac Cardiothoracic Heart Surgeon India

Cash-for-votes scam is one of the many high profile cases Sangita Dhingra Sehgal has Dealt with.
New Delhi: Amar Singh's arrest has just added to the list of high profile cases that Sangita Dhingra Sehgal has dealt with in her 27- year- long career.

Sehgal, who joined judicial services in 1984, has overseen cases that hogged headlines such as the hawala case, the match- fixing scandal and the Lajpat Nagar bomb blast. As she went further up the judicial ladder, she dealt with cases against Iftikhar Gilani and Reliance Ltd under the Official Secrets Act.

Known for her professionalism, the 53- year- old judge has heard both criminal as well as civil cases. She has also been the secretary of the Delhi Legal Services Authority at the Patiala House Court Complex.

There, she is remembered for working on building centres to explain basic and legal rights to lower income communities. As the secretary of the Press Council of India, she worked to preserve the media's freedom.

Dhingra started her career at a civil court. Currently a special judge at the Tis Hazari courts, she oversees cases under the Prevention of Corruption Act and is likely to hold the current post for the next two years.

Sehgal completed higher education at Chandigarh's Government College for Women and went on to do her MA in public administration from Panjab University and LLB from DU. She topped the Delhi Judicial Service examination in 1984.