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    IT firm cheats 400 employees

    The chairman and managing director of Dolphin Solutions, an IT company situated at Nandagiri Hills, was arrested by the Jubilee Hills police here on Friday after a case of cheating was filed against the firm.

    The police arrested Gali Vinay Naidu for allegedly cheating 400 employees to the tune of Rs 4 crore and closing down the company.

    Vinay is from Chittoor and had set up the company a year ago by renting a building at Nandagiri Hills after taking huge loans.

    He allegedly used to take Rs 1 lakh to Rs 3 lakh from each of the 400 employees to appoint them. He allegedly gained their confidence by paying them salaries for the first three months and promising them of better prospects and foreign tours.

    However, Vinay allegedly failed to pay back the loans, rents of the building, payments for various services and even stopped paying salaries to the employees.

    A few months ago, he closed down the firm and absconded.

    Several employees of the company lodged a complaint with the Jubilee Hills Police Station who in turn nabbed the accused on Friday.

    He will be produced before the court on Saturday, the Jubilee Hills police inspector, Mr B.Limba Reddy, said

    Gujjars shut Delhi

    At least two persons were killed, one of them in police firing, and 14 security personnel injured in violent clashes between Gujjar demonstrators and the security forces in Delhi and Haryana on Thursday. The Gujjars took over the areas bordering the national capital and paralysed rail and road traffic, completely disrupting normal life till late in the afternoon.

    One person was killed when the police opened fire on agitators, blocking traf fic on the national highway at Patti Kalyana in Panipat district, while the other died in a stampede reportedly triggered by the police action at Samalkha in Haryana. State Chief Minister, Mr Bhupinder Singh Hooda, ordered a magisterial inquiry into the circumstances leading to the death of the two persons.

    On the warpath over their demand for Scheduled Tribe status, the Gujjar community, observing “martyrs’ day”, poured into the national capital region since the early hours of the morning and blocked major roads leading to New Delhi.

    The security forces resorted to lathicharges, lobbed teargas shells and fired rubber bullets to disperse violent mobs at Mehrauli, Mathura Road, Gazaipur and Anand Vihar, among other areas.

    Nearly 110 agitators were detained by the police.

    The agitators fought pitched battles, hurled stones and other missiles at the police.

    Life came to a standstill in the affected areas as shops downed shutters and people stayed indoors, while marauding mobs moved around brandishing lathis and spears.

    Gujjar alert on in Delhi

    Intensifying their agitation, Gujjar protesters on Wednesday laid siege on major highways leading to the national capital, with traffic on the entire Mehrauli-Gurgaon and G.T.-Karnal stretches thrown completely out of gear.

    The agitators, demanding scheduled tribe status for their community, put up roadblocks at several important junctions. A high alert has, meanwhile, been sounded in Delhi and neighbouring parts of Uttar Pradesh and Haryana, with the Gujjars declaring that they would observe Thursday as a “black day” to mourn its “martyrs” killed in police firing in Rajasthan.

    Earlier in the day, the protesters struck fear among both commuters and local residents as they moved around brandishing swords and other weapons and set ablaze tyres on Gurgaon’s M-G Road area, the hub of the satellite township where most of the major shopping malls are located.

    The Gujjars have threatened to bring the entire national capital region to a halt on Thursday. The Centre, fearing that the situation could get out of hand in the Gujjar-dominated areas, has ordered the beefing up of security in sensitive zones: Mehrauli, Ghazipur, Patparganj, Badarpur, Khanpur, Ayanagar, Chilia village and Rampur. Security forces are expected to cordon off these areas.

    The Union home secretary, Mr Madhukar Gupta, who is personally monitoring the situation, is in touch with the Delhi police commissioner and the DGPs of UP and Haryana.

    The BJP, meanwhile, sent two of its leaders to Jaipur to review the situation.

    Chief Minister, Ms Vasundhra Raje, met her ministers and party leaders, including Prakash Javdekar and Kalraj Mishra.

    Gujjars at Bayana and Sikandara in eastern Rajasthan have blocked the rail route connecting Mumbai to Delhi, and the national highway linking Jaipur to Agra. Hit by turbulence, the railways on Wednesday cancelled 10 trains passing through Rajasthan for the fifth consecutive day and diverted several others to different routes.

    Back to work after a break

    Fishermen are now preparing to venture into sea as the 45-day ban on fishing is coming to a close. As scientists found fish breeding to be active during April and May, fishing by mechanised boats in the east coast of Tamil Nadu has been prohibited between April 15 and May 29. The two-lakh fishermen spread over 13 coastal districts of the state pulled their boats offshore and carried out overhauling works, apart from mending fishnets.

    Now the fisherfolk across the state have started taking out their boats for a trial run after a month.

    Fishermen had welcomed the 45-day holiday as it facilitates increase in fish production. There are over 50,000 registered fishing vessels in Tamil Nadu of which 5,596 are mechanised fishing boats.

    The state government had announced that they would pay Rs 500 per family during the mandatory fishing ban period, which benefitted two lakh fishermen families and cost the government Rs10 crore.

    Mr A. Alwyn, fishermen from Rameswaram said, “Even though the ban on fishing would help us in getting a good catch, it does not lend us any hand in getting more money. The agents form a syndicate and bring down the price of our catch. So the fisher folk’s dream of earning more money after the holiday does not realise.” The Rameswaram fishermen have a different issue, apart from the price.

    They are have the fear of being attacked by the Sri Lankan Navy, which hampers their free movement in the sea.

    The ban came into effect after the Centre suggested it — by a mutual consensus among all maritime States — to conserve and replenish fishery wealth. It is being enforced since 2001 in the State.

    Husband fled with our child

    Tahseen weeps as she shows the photograph of her daughter Soha and husband Khalid Oman. Soha has been allegedly kidnapped by her father.

    A foreign national, married to a local girl, has been charged with kidnapping his three and a half year old daughter from the city.

    Khalid Osman (32), a physiotherapist from Sudan, married Tahseen Sultan (26), a resident of Hakeempet, 10 years ago. Six years after marriage, they went to Sudan. Once there, Khalid reportedly started harassing Tahseen and locked her up in a dark room everyday.

    Fed up with the torture, she returned to India on February 14 last with her daughter and started staying with her mother.

    After six months, Khalid Oman also came to the city and started harassing her again. On May 2, he kidnapped his daughter Soha from his wife’s maternal house and escaped.

    Tahseen filed a complaint against her husband in the Banjara Hills police station.

    Mr Ashok Kumar, subinspector of police, said: “A case has been registered under Section 498A IPC and investigation is on.” Police say Khalid has taken shelter in Delhi.

    “My husband behaved like a sadist. He called me up last night from Delhi and threatened to sell my child.

    Though I filed a complaint in the police station, the police doesn’t seem to bother. I want my child back at any cost. I cannot live without her,” said Tahseen.

    Yeddy may rake up Hogenakkal

    The Hogenakkal drinking water scheme could face problems as chief minister elect B. S.eddyurappa in Karnataka is expected to keep his ‘promise’ that should his BJP return to power in the state, he would halt the project once and for all.

    It may be recalled that Mr Yeddyurappa had inspired the antiHogenakkal agitation in Karnataka by undertaking a boat ride in the Hogenakkal falls on March 16. But, chief minister M. Karunanidhi had put the project on hold and said it could be taken up after a government got elected in Karnataka. The ambitious Hogenakkal drinking water scheme could hit a roadblock as the chief minister elect B. S. Yeddyurappa in Karnataka is expected to keep his ‘promise’ that should his BJP return to power in the state, he would halt the project once and for all.

    It may be recalled that Mr Yeddyurappa had inspired the antiHogenakkal agitation in Karnataka by undertaking a boat ride in the falls on March 16. Following violent protests, chief minister M.

    Karunanidhi had put the project on hold so that it could be taken up after a popular government got elected in Karnataka. However, Mr Yeddyurappa had then declared in an interview to a Tamil biweekly that the project would be “permanently stalled once a BJP govern ment gets elected.” Now that the BJP has come to power and he would himself lead the government, it is logical to assume that Mr Yeddyurappa would block Tamil Nadu’s Rs.1,334 crore project for providing drinking water to the districts of Dharmapuri and Krishnagiri bordering Karnataka.

    His stand is that the Tamil Nadu project would hurt the availability of water for Karnataka, while Tamil Nadu argued that Karnataka had already tapped its share of Hogenakkal water to feed the domestic taps in Bangaluru.

    Sensing the changed political situation in Karnataka, chief minister Karunanidhi had instructed the officials during a review meeting of the municipal administration and water supply departments on Friday to resume Hogenakkal works. “As far as Tamil Nadu is concerned, work is happening as per schedule,” said chief secretary L. K. Tripathy on Monday.

    Petrol will cost more soon

    The Centre is seriously considering market-determined prices for petrol together with a significant reduction of customs and excise duties.

    Petroleum ministry sources said that if the present excise duty of Rs 14.30 per litre is reduced by half, it would save the petroleum companies Rs 7.50 per litre. The price will then be hiked by just Rs 5. In 2002-03, soon after the administered price mechanism was discontinued, petrol was sold at market-determined prices. Petrol used to subsidise the price of diesel.

    The NDA government then started to subsidise the cost of petrol. The oil companies now want petrol again to be sold at market prices.

    Gujjar leader spurns peace

    The Gujjar agitation for Scheduled Tribe status continued for the third day on Sunday. The leader of the agitation, Col.

    Kirori Singh Bainsla (Retd), turned down the Centre’s invitation for talks and he also refused to travel to Jaipur to meet the Rajasthan Chief Minister, Ms Vasundhara Raje.

    With the death toll rising to 38, the Centre rushed additional companies of paramilitary forces to Rajasthan to bring the violence under control. On Sunday, 21 companies (about 2,500 personnel) of the paramilitary forces, drawn from the Border Security Force (BSF), Rapid Action Force (RAF) and the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), are stationed in violence-hit districts of the state.

    The “rail roko” call given by Col. Col. Bainsla resulted in the disruption of rail traffic between New Delhi and various destinations in Rajasthan on Sunday. The rail traffic was disrupted ahead of the anniversary of last year's Gujjar agitation, which had claimed 26 lives between May 9 and June 4, 2007. Railway officials here said at least seven trains passing through Rajasthan, including the AmritsarMumbai Golden Temple Mail and Nizamuddin-Bandra Garib Rath Express, were cancelled in the interest of passenger safety.

    The Centre has issued advisories to the states neighbouring Rajathan — Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi — to remain alert in order to prevent any untoward incident in the wake of the Gujjar violence.

    The Rajasthan Gurjar Arakashan Sangarsh Samiti, which is spearheading the agitation, has rejected the Rajasthan government's special relief package of Rs 282 crores for Gujjar-dominated districts, as was suggested by the Ramdas Agarwal committee. The committee was constituted on the recommendation of the Justice Chopra committee,which had rejected a demand for ST status for Gujjars last year. Instead, the Chopra committee favoured the provision of special relief for the uplift of Gujjars.

    The CPI(M) has condemned the police firing in Rajasthan on Friday and Saturday, and a politburo statement said,0 “The Vasundhara Raje government, which has earned notoriety in police firings, is solely responsible for the present killings. The BJP government has not learnt any lesson from last year's incidents and completely bungled in tackling the agitation.

    5,000 women still untraced

    The state government’s proposal to establish a Women and Child Protection Bureau (WCPB) in the home department is yet to take off. It was meant to be umbrella organisation to deal with crimes against women.

    At present, there is a Women Protection Cell attached to the Crime Investigation Department (CID) to deal with crimes against women. But it only deals with major cases and leaves the rest to the local police.

    However, the local police is ignoring cases related to trafficking of women. This is worrying the CID.

    “Many instances of trafficking in women have come up in Vijayawada but cases are not being registered under the relevant Act,” said a top CID official.

    “We wrote many letters to the Vijayawada police commissioner but there was no response. We are taking up the issue again now.” The government had decided to set up the WCPB after the High Court rapped it over the alarming increase in cases of missing women and children. It even summoned the director general of police for a personal explanation.

    “There are many laws to protect women but a unified command is lacking to effectively enforce the laws and deal with the crimes,” said the inspector general of police (CID), Mr S. Umapathi.

    The home minister, Mr K.Jana Reddy, announced in the budget session of the Assembly that the WCPB would soon be put in place but that has not happened as planned.

    Mr Jana Reddy, in fact, held a meeting with women MLAs to take their suggestions on the WCPB. They suggested tough measures, besides good counselling programmes, to deal with the crimes.

    Sources said the home department would consider all these suggestions while framing the framing the structure of WCPB.

    Meanwhile, as per an undertaking given by the DGP to the High Court, a standard operating procedure has been evolved for station house officers to investigate cases of missing children and women. Statistics reveal that cases relating to missing children and women has gone up sharply in the last four years.

    In all, 13,557 such cases were reported between 2004 and 2007 of which only 9,496 cases resulted in the missing persons returning safely. “This is posing a big challenge to us,” said a senior police officer. Even now, 4,061 persons remain untraced causing great anxiety to their families and police, which has been pulled up by the HC.

    Terror, violence and desensitisation

    IN THE aftermath of the Jaipur blasts, a leading news channel had organised a discussion on whether India had become shockproof in respect of violence and if repeated terror attacks had desensitised us as a society. In my view, the answer is an unqualified yes. It may be debatable whether our country has become shockproof to terror attacks, but the undeniable fact is that the more noble and elevating responses of earlier times have yielded ground to a certain lessening of shock and a certain amount of cynicism.

    In many ways, given the profile of those present, the debate should have been exceptionally moving. There was a young widow whose husband had just lost his life in a terrorist encounter and another woman whose son, also in the armed forces, had similarly lost his life fighting insurgents in Kashmir.

    She told me something I will never ever forget. She told me how she mourns her son every day, yet she is proud that he died in uniform and gave his life to his country. Her heart went out to the families of innocent civilians who had been senselessly killed in terrorist attacks. I stared at her in awe. Here was a woman who had lost her son, an unthinkable fate for any parent, and she had it in her heart to feel both pride because her son had died in uniform, and sorrow for innocent civilians who die in terror attacks. There are simply no words to describe such simple goodness. It was an extraordinarily humbling moment for me.

    Then there was another older woman who had brought along her 12-year-old granddaughter whose parents had been killed in the Sarojini Nagar blasts. While she wept talking about her son and daughter-in-law, all she could hope for was no one else to suffer like her. A man whose niece died in the Jaipur blasts spoke about how the agony was not just his but the collective angst of an entire society. This should have encouraged deep soul-searching. But, for some reason, the discussion became predictably dissonant and an exercise of apportioning blame.

    This is, perhaps, the measure of the times we live in and how the recurrence of violence and our perception of it has somehow become a little unfeeling and cynical.

    The response of political society to terror has to be both constructive and united. At no point in time should an internal blame game commence, which will only have an effect of dividing society. The Indian National Congress has always offered a spontaneous and constructive support to the government of the day at times of national crisis, such as in the aftermath of the attack on Parliament.

    Unfortunately, the BJP has chosen not to follow the constructive path. It lost no time in launching a blistering attack upon the Prime Minister and the Union government. The chief minister of Rajasthan made snide remarks about the Congress president’s visit to Jaipur with L.K. Advani standing by her side. For some reason, it was wrong for the Congress president and UPA chairperson to visit Jaipur to offer condolences to the injured and to victims‘ families, but it was perfectly fine for Mr Advani to do the same thing.

    It is nobody’s case that the principal Opposition party should not point out the mistakes that they might perceive the government has made, but, there is a time, a place and a constructive manner in which that can be done. Sadly, the BJP does not understand or observe the “Laxman rekha” between constructive and destructive criticism. It is also very important that terror should never be communalised or used for political propaganda, particularly in the immediate aftermath of an attack.

    The shock, horror and trauma following a terror attack are a time of great human suffering and the victims need the entire nation’s support. It would be cynical and insensitive to muddy waters at a time when society has to present a united face against terrorism.

    The response of civil society and institutions such as the media are also very important at these times. The ordinary Indian has shown exceptional qualities of humanity and concern during moments of crisis. Whether following a terror attack or a communal riot or a huge natural calamity like an earthquake or tsunami, local citizens have rushed to the aid of the injured and affected without a moment’s hesitation. It is always the nearby villager who wades into the devastated area and renders all possible assistance to people who need it. In the aftermath of the tsunami I was humbled by the sight of simple homemakers who cooked whatever food was available in their homes and fed those who were stranded or had lost their homes. The resilience of our people is legendary, as is our capacity to bounce back to normalcy. In far more developed countries we have seen images of looters and vandals taking advantage of the shock and disruption of a natural calamity.

    Kolli hills set to get a makeover

    The state tourism department has embarked on an ambitious plan to bring the un-spoilt and picturesque verdant Kolli Hills, a segment of the vibrant Eastern Ghats in Namakkal district, onto the tourism roadmap of the country.

    Accordingly, massive projects have been evolved to develop the Kolli Hills, which promises a sequestered haven for nature lovers, at an outlay of Rs 6 crore.

    The officials hope to develop the spot as a leisure destination and also as health resort.

    “There is tremendous scope for promoting Kolli Hills as a health resort.

    Unlike the recreational hill stations like Ooty and Kodaikanal, Kolli Hills is a rich repository of medicinal plants,” a senior tourism official said and added, “though it was still very nascent for the government to establish a health spa, the department is determined to promote this lesser known spot.” Pointing out that a catch phrase to market this scenic spot would soon be evolved, the official told this newspaper that initially Rs 1 crore has been earmarked to establish infrastructure facilities especially park, parking lot, lighting, drinking water facilities, etc.

    Further, the Centre had in principle agreed to provide Rs 5 crore for creating additional infrastructure. Once this sum is obtained and the works completed, Kolli Hills would witness a surge of tourism activities.

    Besides promoting it as an important tourist destination in the state, the officials anticipate to develop Kolli Hills as a destination for adventure sports.

    Hills has numerous attractions including the shimmering Akash Ganga falls, trek routes, nature trails and the renowned Sri Arapaleeshwarar temple and over 70 hairpin bends.

    Cuddalore stalker nabbed

    The police detained a Kannada speaking man, suspected to be behind the several murderous attacks on villagers in Cuddalore district, Tamil Nadu, on Saturday night. A village patrol team nabbed the man after he was found moving in a suspicious manner with bloodstains on his clothes.

    People living in over 50 villages in Cuddalore had been spending sleepless nights for the last few weeks after an unidentified man brutally killed two persons and injured many during night attacks.

    “We have strong suspicion that the man we detained could be behind the two murders and other attacks.

    All the people were attacked when they were sleeping.

    The man we picked up had no injuries on his body but had bloodstains on his veshti. We are sending the bloodstained clothes for DNA test as the man was not co-operating when ques tioned. We found that he is mentally unstable,” Mr Pradip Kumar, superintendent of police, Cuddalore district, told this newspaper on Sunday.

    First murder was reported on May 9 in Kothavaheri village where an auto rickshaw driver Ravi (30) was the victim. A farmer named Balasubramanian (28) was killed two days later. The unidentified man reportedly attacked many other villagers also. All attacks took place when the victims were asleep.

    According to the police, the Kannada speaking man was not ready to talk despite the authority getting an interpreter to talk to him. “He is mentally unstable. We don’t see any reason for him to be roaming around in the villages. Only a patrol team from the village caught him.

    We are positive about his involvement in the attacks.

    Right now he is a suspect.

    Only after DNA tests we can confirm his involvement,” the official added.

    After the reports about attacks by unidentified man started appearing, senior police officials had deployed more than 250 men in different villages along with local patrol teams.

    When the police heaved a sigh of relief on Saturday night after catching the suspect, another attack was reported on Sunday morning triggering speculation that the actual culprit is still at large. However, a senior official claimed that the latest incident, in which an old lady was attacked, is not related to serial attacks.

    “The old lady was attacked after she had a family problem,” the official said.

    BJP pins hopes on Yeddy

    The ‘intrusive’ Hogenakkal water project will not be affected by the return of B. S. Yeddyuruppa as Karnataka’s chief minister, Tamil Nadu president of the party L. Ganesan asserted.

    “I do not foresee any threat to the Hogenakkal project. It is a scheme that ought to be implemented by Tamil Nadu government,” Mr Ganesan said on Sunday and added, that Mr Yeddyuruppa was a “staunch nationalist who believes that India is one nation from Kanyakumari to Kashmir. I am sure he would help resolve the issue amicably.” Mr Ganesan was reacting to a query on the prospects of implementing the Hogenakkal project in Dharmapuri owing to stiff opposition from Karnataka.

    Karnataka BJP had been belligerently opposing the project.

    In March Mr Yeddyuruppa visit ed the site bordering Karnataka and asked the TN government to stop it. The state government put the project on hold but hardly two days before counting commenced in Karnataka, chief minister M. Karunanidhi asked offi cials to complete the Rs 1,334crore project as scheduled.

    Expressing that the state government should go ahead with the project, Mr Ganesan remarked, “Let Mr Yeddyuruppa first assume charge as chief min ister. The issue could be explained to him and he would surely act favourably.” On his party’s behalf, the senior leader pledged ‘full support for the project’.

    He told reporters at Kamalalayam, party headquarters here, that the rout of Congress in Karnataka Assembly elections showed that people have rejected the Congress. Elated over his party’s victory in Karnataka, he said the poll verdict was a victory to the party’s policies and achievements of the government led by former prime minister A.B.Vajpayee and Mr Yeddyuruppa’s short but good rule.

    Meanwhile, party members were on cloud nine over the victory and possibility of forming the first-ever saffron government in South India on May 28.

    Sweets were distributed and crackers burst.

    State general secretary Dr Tamilisai Soundarajan and other leaders participated.

    Setback for Congress in Lok Sabha bypolls

    It was a day of set backs for the Congress, with the party defeated in three byelections to the Lok Sabha. Thane in Maharashtra went to the Shiv Sena, Hamirpur in Himachal Pradesh to the BJP and Tura in Meghalaya to the NCP. The Congress, however, managed to retain two Assembly seats in Haryana.

    In Tura, Delhi lawyer Agatha Sangma, daughter of senior NCP leader Purno A. Sangma, consensus candidate of the Meghalaya Progressive Alliance, defeated the Congress’ Zenith Sangma by 99,855 votes. Ms Sangma, 27, becomes the fourth member of her family in public life:

    two of her brothers are MLAs in Meghalaya.

    In Hamirpur, chief minister Prem Kumar Dhumal’s son Anurag defeated O.P.Rattan of the Congress by 1,74,666 votes. In Thane, the Shiv Sena’s Anand Paranjape defeated Sanjeev Naik of the NCP by 90,872 votes. In Haryana, former chief minister Bhajan Lal won the Adampur Assembly seat.

    BJP reigns supreme

    The BJP made history on Sunday as it planted its first saffron flag in the South, winning 110 seats in a hard-fought election for Karnataka’s 224member Assembly. “There was no question of defeat,” said the BJP’s triumphant chief ministerial candidate, Mr B.S. Yeddyurappa. “I was always confident of victory.” Mr Yeddyurappa is expected to be sworn in as Chief Minister on May 28.

    He will be formally elected leader of the BJP legislature party on Monday.

    BJP sources claimed that the party would get the support of four Independents. The unambiguous vote for change and an end to a series of fractured mandates dealt a severe blow to the Congress, which had hoped for a comeback in the southern state ahead of the general elections in 2009.

    The Congress won 80 seats, retaining much of its voteshare at 34.6 per cent, but was unable to translate support into seats, garnering an increase of 15 seats from its previous haul of 65 in 2004.

    The biggest loser was the Janata Dal (S) and the father and son duo of Mr H.D. Deve Gowda and Mr H.D. Kumaraswamy, who were restricted to their traditional rural vote base, winning 26 of a total of 28 from the southern districts, down from their 2004 tally of 58.

    The Janata Dal(Secular) clearly took a beating at the hands of the BJP, which cashed in on the twin election planks that played out — the “betrayal” by the JD(S) as well as the plea to be given a chance to run a singleparty government.

    Mr Kumarasawmy told this newspaper that the main reason for the JD(S) defeat was because senior leaders had left his side. “It was a one-man show,” Mr Kumaraswamy said, meaning he had campaigned singlehandedly.

    But poll analysts like Harish Bijoor ascribed the BJP’s victory to Karnataka’s fractious caste and cash-rich politics.

    “It was a consolidation of the Lingayat vote in the BJP’s favour and a fracturing of the Vokkaliga vote between the Congress and the JD(S).” The AICC office-bearer in charge of Karnataka, Mr Prithviraj Chavan, said the weak Congress organisational structure as opposed to the BJP’s, which was fully geared for an election, was responsible, pointing to the party’s voteshare, which remained higher than that of the BJP’s 33.9 per cent.

    Former chief minister, Mr S.M. Krishna, on whom the Congress’ hopes of a resurrection had rested and whose own political future is yet to be decided, said it was “the saddest day of my life.” Party insiders ascribed the drubbing to the inability of the party to inspire confidence in the Congress’ time-honoured vote base of minorities, Muslims, dalits and SCSTs. Out of the 51 SC-ST seats, the BJP won 29, Congress 17 and the JD(S) two. The Congress was simply not ready for an election. “We were expecting elections in November,” admitted one Congress leader.

    The much-vaunted Bahujan Samaj Party was a no-show, although its state president Marasandra Muniyappa said his party had gained six per cent of the vote.

    “While we stand in second place in 10 constituencies, we are the third in around 36,” he said. The giant killer of the day was Mr Yeddyurappa.

    He ended his rival S.Bangarappa’s unbeaten electoral run as well as that of a number of senior Congressmen, such as former chief minister, Mr Dharam Singh, who lost by a paltry 56 votes while attempting a record ninth consecutive win.

    Spotted deer chased to death

    He plight of a three-year-old spotted deer that strayed into residential areas ended in a tragedy on Saturday.

    According to eyewitnesses, a few villagers, mostly youngsters chased the male herbivore for about 20 minutes until the animal died of shock.

    According to forest department sources the incident happened near ‘Pannaikuppam Eri’ in Villupuram district. The curious villagers made several attempts to catch the animal, but the shock created during the chase affected the nervous system of the deer. The villagers noticing that the animal was breathless informed the district forest authorities and the wildlife officials on their arrival found the animal dead.

    A senior wildlife official informed this newspaper that a post-mortem was carried on the deer the same day.

    The autopsy report confirmed that the animal has sustained severe stress and trauma resulting in the collapse of the nervous system and renal failure.

    The animal had lost its way from the adjacent reserve forest areas and was in search of a water body, the official added.

    According to wildlife activists, the loss of deer habitat due to urbanisation and uncontrolled exploitation of reserve areas are the major reasons forcing the animals to stray into residential areas during which fatal human animal conflicts are becoming usual.

    Spotted deer (axis) are extremely nervous animals and are always on the alert for a stalking predator. The spotted deer is the most commonly found deer species in India.

    Computer aided designs for traditional sarees

    The state handlooms and textile department has introduced 3,000 new designs for the benefit of the handloom weavers cooperative societies producing silk and cotton sarees.

    Among them are 378 traditional designs, including a unique design woven on a traditional silk saree made as far back in 1902. These traditional designs were reintroduced because they were exquisite. “All these 378 designs have been contributed by weavers and connoisseurs. The century-old saree was given by one Chettiyar family,” says Vishwanath Shegaonkar, secretary, handlooms, handicrafts, textiles and khadi department. He told this newspaper that the designs have been introduced as part of an effort to improve the marketing strategy of over 1,103 handloom weavers cooperative societies across the state.

    These computer-aided designs come in handy to make the products more attractive and thereby increase the sales, he added.

    Moreover, this would ensure continuous work for weavers. The department gave upto Rs 2,000 for each design obtained from the people.

    Asked to comment on the stagnation of products due to soaring prices of yarn in Erode and other parts of the state, Mr Shegaonkar said chief minister M. Karunanidhi had already written a letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh urging the Centre to bring down the yarn prices.

    “The Centre should ensure that cotton is made available for processing into yarn for the benefit of the weavers,” he said. Presently, 73 lakh cotton bales were required for the textile industry in the state per annum. But only 5.5 lakh bales were produced in the state and the remaining quantity was purchased through open markets from Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra.

    But for now the department was concentrating on value addition like introducing organic cotton shirts and aroma shirts with jasmine fragrance. The yarn for the organic cotton shirts is made from the cotton grown by the tribals of the Chitling Hills in Dharmapuri district. Cotton is cultivated in about 40 acres land without using chemical fertilisers or insecticides.

    During 2007-08, the Cooptex has registered a retail sale of Rs 126.5 crore and earned a profit of Rs 5 crore.

    Claiming that the government was taking steps to improve the sale of handloom products, Mr Shegaonkar said over 140 weavers societies across the state have been asked to produce export items as this would enable the weavers to get enhanced wages ranging between Rs 120 to Rs 200 per day.

    Karnataka results today, BJP banks on Mayawati

    The BJP appears to be relying on the charge of Mayawati’s blue elephant to score a victory in the recently-concluded Karnataka Assembly polls. An internal survey conducted by the party before the polls indicated that Ms Mayawati’s Bahujan Samaj Party could increase its voteshare by at least four per cent.

    Counting of votes will begin across the state at 8 am on Sunday, and almost all projections indicate that there might be a hung Assembly for the second consecutive time. The first results are expected by 11 am, and almost all results are likely to be declared by late Sunday afternoon.

    A senior BJP leader said: “The increase in the BSP’s voteshare could hit the Congress hard.” BJP spin doctors are confident that the increase in the BSP’s vote percentage would benefit the saffron camp. The leader added: “Another post-poll survey conducted by the BJP once again confirmed that Mayawati would strengthen her position in the state, as far as voteshare was concerned.” The BSP is contesting 219 of the 224 Assembly seats in the state.

    Both the BSP and the Samajwadi Party are in the fray in Karnataka. Though neither of the parties are expected to win any significant number of seats, both could eat into the voteshare of other major players, particularly the Congress.

    The BJP has also been talking of major “consolidation” of the Lingayat community in its favour. The BJP’s Chief Ministerial candidate, Mr B.S.Yeddyurappa, belongs to the politically-dominant Lingayat community. According to the saffron brigade’s calculations, the BSP would “eat into the Congress’ dalit votebank.” It can be mentioned that in the 2004 Assembly polls in Karnataka a major chunk of the dalit votebank had shifted from the Congress to the BSP.

    Sources said that “Congress managers were somewhat apprehensive of a similar outcome.” If Ms Mayawati’s charge could hit the Congress hard, the BJP strategists were a bit wary of the Samajwadi Party.

    The SP, led by Mr S. Bangarappa, is contesting nearly 50 seats in the state. A BJP strategist pointed out that during the 2004 polls, Mr Bangarappa was with the saffron brigade and it had “helped us to a great extent to emerge as the single largest party.” However, Mr Bangarappa, 76, has now been talking of the need to “oust the communal forces from Karnataka.” Mr Bangarappa is contesting against Mr Yeddyurappa.

    BJP leaders in New Delhi claimed that there was a “kind of wave in favour of the party,” and that Mr Bangarappa would not be able to make any dent in it. The party also denied speculation that some of its top brass were holding “secret parleys” with Janata Dal (Secular) chief H.D. Deve Gowda.

    Trying to cast her spell over the 22 per cent dalits in the state, Ms Mayawati had taken on all the three outfits — BJP, Congress and JD(S) — during her campaigning.

    Though the BJP has played on the “betrayal by the JD(S)” and exhorted the electorate to “give the party a last chance,” it is quite apprehensive about what might transpire on Sunday. “It just might be difficult for us to touch the magic figure and we might fall short by maybe 15 seats,” a party leader said. Some of the BJP top brass are preparing to rush to the state in the event of a hung Assembly.

    Sherpa climbs Everest 18 times

    Appa Sherpa broke his own world record by conquering Mount Everest for the eighteenth time.

    Appa Sherpa, from a village at the base of the world’s highest peak, topped out in the early hours of the morning, the head of Nepal’s Mountaineering Association said.

    “Appa Sherpa summitted Everest at 5:45 am (local time) this morning. He has set the new world record as it is the 18th time he has got to the top,” Ang Tsering Sherpa said.

    Appa’s closest competition — trailing at 15 ascents — is the 42-year-old Nepalese climber Chhewang Nima.

    Appa Sherpa, known as one of Nepal’s “Super Sherpas” — hardened climbers with almost superhuman stamina — was among 37 climbers taking advantage of good weather to reach the summit on Thursday. Twenty-seven others reached the peak on Wednesday. Ten of them were Indians, including two women.

    The mountaineers, including an IPS officer, belong to the Union home ministry, an official release said.

    The Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, and home minister Shivraj Patil congratulated the team on its success, it added.

    Twenty-two Indians have summitted the world’s highest peak in two days as part of 12 different expeditions.

    Kalpana Dash of Orissa, India, reached the summit on Tuesday leading a Friendship Everest Expedition. She also became the first Indian to scale the world’s highest peak this season.

    Twelve Indian climbers, all members of Sana Expedition, scaled Everest on Tuesday. Nine Indian climbers from another expedition, Snow Lion from the Indian Army, also reached the top.

    Kalpana, 38, made it after two failed attempts. According to her family and information received from Arun Trek and Expedition Training, Nepal, Kalpana reached the peak at 11.30 am on Wednesday.

    Kalpana persevered to scale the Everest after abortive attempts in 2004 and 2006.

    She had left Dhenkanal on March 5, saying this time she will return home only after scaling the Everest. As news reached the district, her family members were delighted. Sweets were distributed amongst local people and well wishers who thronged her Kumbharasahi residence.

    Another Indian summiteer is a policeman from Jammu and Kashmir. Constable Ram Singh accomplished the mission and unfurled the flag of Jammu and Kashmir police on the summit State’s director general of police, Kuldeep Khoda said, “It is a moment of honour and pride not only for Jammu and Kashmir police but for the whole state.” Ram Singh was part of the Indian Mount Everest North Col. Expedition sponsored by the Union home ministry.

    This spring’s other aspiring recordbreakers include adventurer Yuichiro Miura, 75, of Japan and Nepalese Min Bahadur Sherchan, 73, who are vying to become the oldest person to conquer Everest.

    PAK, TALIBAN SIGN PEACE ACCORD

    The Pakistan government and Taliban militants have signed a 15-point peace agreement to eliminate training camps of the militants, besides halting attacks on security forces and government installations in the restive Swat district.

    Senior NWFP provincial minister Mr Bashir Ahmed Bilour said on Wednesday evening that the government and the local Taliban has signed the “historic 15-point peace agreement.” Talking to reporters after conclusion of the third and final round of talks in Peshawar with representatives of Tehrik-e-Taliban, he said that both the parties agreed to make practical efforts for the establishment of durable peace in Swat and hence inked a peace truce.

    “The local Taliban have agreed to cooperate with the state machinery in the maintenance of peace and harmony in the region besides binding them to cooperate with the government,” said Mr Bilour.

    The minister, while dilating upon others points of the accord, said that measures will be taken for swapping the prisoners and there would be total ban on display of arms and ammunition. Similarly, he said, the Taliban will cooperate with the government health teams in campaigns against fatal diseases.

    Mr Bilour said Imam Dheri Madrassa, the strong hold of Taliban from where the present uprising had started by rebellious cleric Maulana Fazalullah, will be converted into an Islamic university. The accord bounds Taliban against raising private militia in their respective areas, Mr Bilour added.

    According to the peace truce, the Taliban will hand over lethal and heavy weaponry to the govern ment, will not attack CDs, barbar and music shops, will neither resort to suicide blasts and instead will condemn it and will allow women to perform their duties at the work place without any fear.

    Moreover, the Taliban will accept writ of the government and only licensed FM radio stations would be allowed to operate in the area. The government will implement “Shariah” (Islamic laws) in Swat and Malakand divisions. The government has agreed to the gradual withdrawal of security forces from the district.

    Meanwhile, Taliban militants said on Thursday that the success of a peace deal with the government in a north-western area depends on the complete enforcement of Islamic law in the region.

    The agreement in the scenic Swat Valley ends months of fighting between troops and rebels loyal to pro-Taliban commander Maulana Fazlullah who was campaigning for the introduction of harsh Sharia law.

    “We have accepted to give up the armed struggle because the government has agreed to the complete enforcement of the Sharia laws,” pro-Taliban militant spokesman Muslim Khan said in a statement.

    “We are happy about the agreement but the success of agreement depends on the conduct of the government, especially in enforcing the Sharia laws,” Mr Khan said.

    AMU to launch Islamic banking

    The Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) will shortly start a course on Islamic Banking and Finance that will be based on the norms of Shariah (Islamic rules on transaction). This is the first time that such a course that allows “interest free banking” is being started in India.

    The Islamic law prohibits interest on both loans and deposits, as both profit and risk are shared together by the borrower and the lender.

    As a result, the depositor, who does not bear risk in other banking systems has to equally share the risk with the bank in Islamic banking. Owner of the capital, however, is allowed to have a share in the surplus.

    India has no banks that operate on shirkah and muzarabah that are the basic Islamic principles. The Daurl Ifta Deoband has even issued a fatwa against “normal and routine” banking schemes that do not subscribe to Islamic norms.

    There are, meanwhile, a few non-banking cooperatives like Al Ameen Islamic Financial and Investment Corporation Ltd. in Karnataka and Mumbai-based Al-Barr Finance House Limited, which have branches in some cities, including Aligarh. There are also some popular investment companies that claim to invest money as per the Islamic laws.

    A three-member committee has been set up under the chairmanship of Dr Mohammed Nejatullah Siddiqi, a retired Aligarh Muslim University, professor of economics and Islamic studies to work out the modalities of the course on Islamic banking.

    HC says temple land not to be alienated to BEL

    The Andhra Pradesh High Court on Thursday directed that the state should not alienate temple land to that of Bharat Electronics Limited (Bel) at Nemmaluru village in Krishna district.

    While dealing with a petition filed by Mr M. Venakatacharyulu, chairman of the trust board of Venkateswaraswamy temple, stating that the district administration was making efforts to alienate 53 acres of temple land to Bel for establishing an additional unit to manufacture and supply of optical and opto-electronic vision devices, the court asked the government not to allot the land till further orders.

    The petitioner informed the court that the land, which was proposed for alienation, is the main source of income for the temple.

    The petition also said the temple was founded in 1669 and devotees gifted the land for the purpose of nithya deeparadhana (the daily rituals of the temple).

    Re-admit medical students, says HC

    The AP High Court on Thursday directed the NTR University of Health Sciences to allow the students, whose admissions had been cancelled on the ground that they did not have the qualifying marks, to attend classes again.

    While dealing with a petition filed by physically disabled students of MBBS first year classes, who have been barred by the university after pursuing studies for a year because they did not obtain the required 50 per cent marks in the entrance exam, after pursuing studies for a year, Justice Ramesh Ranganathan directed that the university permit the students to write the internal exams to be held at the end of May.

    The university had recently rejected the admission of 22 students and asked them to vacate the hostels. Eight of these students had approached the court seeking a suspension of the university.

    Lifestyle diseases to beat viral threat

    Bacteria, viruses, germs and worms will play a low profile in the next two decades as lifestyle diseases overtake infectious and communicable diseases.

    The global burden of disease is fast shifting from infectious diseases to noncommunicable diseases, with chronic conditions such as heart disease and stroke now being the chief causes of death globally, including India. While the World Health Organisation warns that shifting health trends will push lifestyle diseases up the chart, health experts in India point out that the trend has already started in the country with the number of heart diseases and diabetes going up considerably.

    According to a WHO report, leading infectious diseases like diarrhoea, HIV, tuberculosis, neonatal infections and malaria will become less important causes of death worldwide over the next 20 years. The WHO has arrived at this projection based on data on 73 health indicators.

    Senior interventionist cardiologist Dr DK Barua says the chief causes of death are noncommunicable diseases like heart attack, diabetes and hypertension. “The incidence of non-infectious diseases has gone up considerably. We are on the ascending stage now and 20 years from now, India could over take China in diabetic cases,” he says.

    The WHO statistics show risk factors like smoking and alcohol consumption will push the number of non-communicable diseases including maternal mortality, which is currently as high as 450 per lakh live births in India and other developing countries.

    King George Hospital superintendent, Dr T Ravi Raju, supports WHO data saying India will become a leading county in terms of number of cases of diabetes and heart and kidney ailments.

    The average life span of an Indian was 37 years before Independence and now it has gone up to 65.

    Experts say that the change in pattern of diseases is not necessarily due to the change in lifestyle or stress but Indians are genetically more prone to heart diseases than those living in any other developing country.

    Complaint filed on Gold Quest

    After the alleged Gold Quest scandal came to light, the first case against the company was registered in the city on Wednesday night.

    A 65-year-old retired government employee, Mr Radhakrishna of Tarnaka, lodged a case with the Mahankali police on Wednesday night against Gold Quest and an agent claiming that they together cheated him of Rs 27,000 in 2006.

    According to the police, in 2006, a friend of Radhakrishna introduced him to a Gold Quest agent, C.Srinivas.

    The agent allegedly assured the complainant that by paying Rs 27,600 Mr Radhakrishna can join the scheme and if he gets another member to join as well, he would earn Rs 11,500 per month. Three months after Mr Radhakrishna paid the membership money of Rs 27,000, he was given a gold and a silver coin worth Rs 6,000 by the company, the police said. As Radhakrishna did not introduce anyone else he did not get any further incentives.

    Though the Gold Quest office at Surya Towers in Mahankali was locked since the Gold Quest scam came to light, on Wednesday Mr Radhakrishna decided to lodge a complaint.

    Based on the complaint lodged by Mr Radhakrishna, police registered a cheating case under section 420 of IPC and cases under sections 4 and 5 of the Prize Chits and Money Circulation Scheme (Banning) Act 1978 against Gold Quest and agent Srinivas.

    ‘I win because people love me’

    He is described as “ajaathashatru (one who does not have rivals)” in state politics. Former chief minister Dharam Singh is in the news but this time for different reasons. The Congress candidate from Jewargi constituency wants to create a record of sorts by winning elections from the same constituency for the ninth time in a row. In an interview with this newspaper, he discussed what could happen in Jewargi and in the state as well.

    Q: How are your poll preparations and what is your take on your victory?

    A: Besides my friend and KPCC president, Mallikar jun Kharge, no leader has even won elections eight times in a row from the same constituency. Because of the delimitation, he had to change the constituency this time. I am contesting from Jewargi from where I have been winning since 1972. I will win this time too, no doubt.

    Q: But, the BJP has been making allegations that you have not done anything for the constituency and you won the elections in the past by distributing money. Your comments.

    A: (Visibly disturbed) They are desperate and therefore, they make such baseless allegations and you publish them ... It is the BJP which brought mine-owners to distribute money. I won elections because people loved me and this time too, it is the same factor that will work in my favour. In a way, this election will be the easiest. It will be a cakewalk.

    Q: If you have achieved so much, can you tell me some of the major programmes.

    A: Mudabala, Indi and Jewargi branch canals were sanctioned during my tenure. Development of Bidar-Srirangapatna state highway is a major achievement. Every grampanchayat got a high school, one IT college, five junior colleges and one degree college were sanctioned after I became the chief minister. Who got circuit benches to Gulbarga and Hubli? If this is not development, what else is development? Apart from this, I am there for a marriage or paying the fee of a child in my constituency.

    Isliye woh log mohabbat kartien hain (That is why they love me).

    Q: What is your poll prediction?

    A: The Congress will get a comfortable majority. The BJP will not cross more than 80 and the Janata Dal(S) might get around 35.

    Q: It looks like that BJP has an edge because of the Lingayat factor. Don’t you consider this?

    A: The BJP will not do well in these 69 constituencies. The Lingayat factor has not worked here. Mr Yeddyurappa is not mature.

    He is not chief minister material. You see how they ran the government for 20 months. Almost every day, the partners (JD-S and BJP) fought. You would remember that when I was the chief minister, things were different. We never fought in public.

    Employee is strangled

    Following the murder of Jayaraman, a 32-year-old data entry operator of Pondicherry university on Tuesday, employees of the Pondicherry university and relatives of the victim squatted on East Coast Road with the body of the victim, demanding action against a senior university official, who is allegedly responsible for the death.

    Jayaraman was found strangulated to death in his estate near his house in Kalapet.

    He was missing since Monday evening and his brother found the body on Tuesday.

    According to members of the non-teaching staff’s welfare association of the university, the deceased was facing threat from a particular university official.

    “Jayaraman was aware of the official’s malpractices in the university. He had already informed the higher officials about the activities of the official concerned. So fearing further expose the official killed him,” the protesting employees of the university alleged.

    More than 200 people blocked the ECR in the afternoon, seeking immediate police action against the official.

    “They blocked the traffic by keeping the stretcher carrying the dead body on the road. The police had to give assurance to make people disperse from the road,” said the police. It may be noted that Jayaraman had already given a complaint at the Kalapet police station saying that he was facing threats from a particular official.

    He had also tried to commit suicide a few months ago due to the alleged harassment from the official. Jayaraman’s brother had lodged a fresh complaint on Wednesday against the official at the Kalapet police station.

    Minister’s homage at the Rajiv memorial

    Carrying a torch, he, along with his party men, went around the mural in silence.

    Mr Reddy was the last man from Andhra who Rajiv Gandhi met a few hours before his death. With tears welling up in his eyes, he recalled a brief meeting organised by the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee in the venue, “When I called on Rajivji in Chennai before he left for Sriperumbudur, he asked me to work for the Congress’ victory in Parliamentary elections.

    Taking orders from him, I was attending election meetings in Nellore when I received a call that he was dead. Since then, I keep coming to the site every year in his memory.” Y.S.Rajashekera Reddy’s government, he said, had been implementing all programmes named either after Rajiv Gandhi or Indira Gandhi. He wanted the Congress to come to power in Tamil Nadu too.

    He brought with him about thousand workers in a motorcade of hundred vehicles and also organised poor feeding. The Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee too came on a yatra carrying Rajiv jyoti from Bangalore to Siperumbudur under the leadership of its labour department convenor S.S.Prakasam. Carrying a torch, he, along with his party men, went around the mural in silence.

    Mr Reddy was the last man from Andhra who Rajiv Gandhi met a few hours before his death. With tears welling up in his eyes, he recalled a brief meeting organised by the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee in the venue, “When I called on Rajivji in Chennai before he left for Sriperumbudur, he asked me to work for the Congress’ victory in Parliamentary elections.

    Taking orders from him, I was attending election meetings in Nellore when I received a call that he was dead. Since then, I keep coming to the site every year in his memory.” Y.S.Rajashekera Reddy’s government, he said, had been implementing all programmes named either after Rajiv Gandhi or Indira Gandhi. He wanted the Congress to come to power in Tamil Nadu too.

    He brought with him about thousand workers in a motorcade of hundred vehicles and also organised poor feeding. The Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee too came on a yatra carrying Rajiv jyoti from Bangalore to Siperumbudur under the leadership of its labour department convenor S.S.Prakasam.

    Steps to prevent theft of babies

    In a bid to put an end to the “mixing” of newborn and the alleged “lifting” of male babies from the Erode GH and to avoid the ensuing conflicts, the footprints of the babies will be maintained as records in the Medical Record Department along with the details of the respective parents.

    This initiative is first of its kind mooted in the Erode GH and comes close to the increasing number of babies being swapped besides the babies that go missing from the maternity wards in the hospital.

    The simple procedure would help avoid the complicated, time consuming and expensive DNA tests, Dr. Hussain Ali told this newspaper.

    The impression of the right foot is taken of the male babies and left of the female.

    With an average of 18 deliveries per day, footprints that are as unique as the fingerprints have been made mandatory.

    Initially CCTVs were suggested to keep an eye on the mishappenings at the labour wards. Even if funds for these could be managed it was not foolproof and could be manipulated unlike the footprints, he said.

    BSNL

    For the first time in the country, Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL) has launched the international standard smart payphone service at Anna University campus on Monday.

    Speaking at the function where Dr D Viswanathan, vice chancellor, Anna University launched the service here, Mr A S Egaya chief general manager, Tamil Nadu telecom circle, said the service was brought about through a tie up with Navitel Corporation Private Limited.

    “Through this phone the users can avail the local, STD and ISD facilities by drop of a coin.

    The box has electronic intelligence to accept multi denomination coins like Rs 1, 2 and 5.

    Naxalite issue to be taken up at meeting

    Naxalites’ interference in tiger reserves and cross-border issues are going to be taken up during the third meeting of the National Tiger Conservation Authority, scheduled for Wednesday. The Centre has accepted that Naxalite activities are “greatly interfering” in tiger reserves management, specially in Indravati in Chhattisgarh and Palamu in Jharkhand, which were inaccessible for the recent tiger census.

    Members will also discuss on strengthening the strategy for tiger conservation and a refined methodology which will be used for the next tiger evaluation.

    Assessment of ecological integrity of tiger reserves as an integral part of the management effectiveness will also be taken up during this meeting.

    “To promote ownership among stakeholders as well as transparency, diversity of stakeholders is essential. It is necessary that those who are part of a tiger reserve must use the assessment results to improve the condition of that individual reserve. It will help in bringing the required changes that are necessary for wildlife conservation,” said a member of the NTCA, adding that timing of the next all-India tiger estimation and NTCA’s logo will also be finalised. During the last census, the International Union for Conservation of Nature had given few suggestions to Project Tiger on its evaluation process.

    No land for IT companies to set up shop

    Several major Information Technology companies have been waiting in vain for land from the state government to set up their units around the city.

    Though the government claims to have a pro-IT stance, it has not yet responded to the applications of top-notch companies such as Siemens, HCL, Applabs and Value Labs for land.

    The state government did say some time back that it would not allot any more land around Hyderabad to IT firms but it made exceptions for companies such as Infosys. “We expected a positive response from the government when we proposed to set up our second centre in the country in Hyderabad,” said a Siemens official. “But it has not taken a decision yet.” In fact, the IT department does not have even a single acre to allot to the IT compa nies. The state government has transferred hundreds of acres to the AP Infrastructure Corporation for auction, because of the increasing pressure on land around Gachibowli and in the vicinity of Shamshabad Airport.

    “How can we give land to companies when there is no land available around Hyderabad?” asked Mr S.K. Joshi, secretary of the IT department.

    “The available land is with the APIIC.” Vexed, Siemens is planning to start another development centre at Visakhapatnam. “This does not necessarily mean we have abandoned the Hyderabad project,” said the company official.

    Other companies are still waiting for a favourable decision from the IT department.

    The government’s decision to achieve exports of over Rs 25,000 crore this year. And to achieve this, it is intending to promote ‘IT towns’ in areas which fall in Nalgonda and Mahbubnagar districts.

    “We don’t want to face a logjam as in Bangalore where land is not available and travel has become difficult,” said an IT department official.

    IT companies are, however, eager to have their unit near Hitech city or around Shamshabad Airport.

    “We are not asking the land for free,” said the representative of an IT firm. “But the government should give some relief to the companies that have already generated much employment.”

    Ship near Somalia coas

    The hijacked Jordanian cargo ship with 10 Indians among its crew was traced three days after it was commandeered by heavily armed Somali pirates off the Somalian coast.

    According to reports received here on Tuesday, the ship M V Victoria was located at Garacad, about 600 kms north of Somalian capital Moghadishu. Further details are awaited and it was immediately not known if any ransom demand was made.

    The ship, which left Mumbai early this month carrying humanitarian aid, was hijacked about 55 kms near Moghadishu on Saturday in a string of attacks off the lawless Somalian coast, according to director general of Shipping.

    4,200 tonnes of bagged sugar were being taken to the war-ravaged Somalia hit by food shortages. News of the vessel being traced came even as Indian Navy ships were put on high alert. Officials of the Kenyabased East Africa Seafarers’ Association were also involved in efforts to locate the ship.

    Destroyer INS Delhi has been put on stand-by and is ready to sail at a moment’s notice, Navy sources said.

    Sea pirates in three speed boats with heavy arms and guns hijacked the ship which had 21 crew members. Besides the 10 Indians there were two Burmese, two Bangladeshis, three Kenyans and two Tanzanians. The ship is owned by Sharjah-based Five Seas Company and operated by Sharjah-based Marwan Shipping. MV Victoria, registered in Jordan, was built in 1979.

    “The pirates have not made any demands yet,” Mr Andrew Mwangura of the East Africa Seafarers Assistance Programme said on Monday.

    He was a great scholar’

    Vijay Tendulkar was one of the greatest playwrights in India. He was the investigative journalist of society. I first met him several years back, not as a playwright but as a neighbour. Then I met him again while I was assisting Ashutosh Gowarikar and then while acting in a TV serial by his daughter Priya that he produced. He fondly called me Jesus Christ.

    I read a line written by the great filmmaker Tarkwasky that said, “Imagination is less richer than reality.” Tendulkar’s writing made me understand the truth behind this statement. His classic plays Ghasiram Kotwal, Sakharam Binder and Shantata Court Chalu Aahe (translated as Silence! The Court is in Session) are deeply imprinted in my mind. He was a scholar, a thinker and a guide.

    A strong man who went through a lot, having faced three deaths in his house — that of his son, his daughter and his wife. My biggest guilt is that I didn’t meet him in the last six-seven months. I remember his quiet walks in the Vile Parle East area. I always wondered what would be going thorough his mind as he walked at an even speed. He was vocal about the loss of freedom in the aftermath of the blasts in Mumbai in a newspaper. He was a fearless man. His play Sakharam Binder was banned by the state censor board; a play named Gidhade too was performed without tickets as that too went through a censor hassle.

    He was threatened several times by political and cultural goons. As a writer, I dwell very often on the fantastic, but it’s he who made me understand the richness of reality. I am grateful to him for giving me the freedom to write a script based on his classic play Sakharam Binder titled Sakharam ke Khoj Mein and now I have written a film script on it called Sakharam.

    I will be recollecting his words and his silence and hope they take me through my future. If at all life exists after death, I’d really want to meet him again.

    Karuna back to work

    He attended office at the Fort St. George on Monday and received the interim report from the one-man commission of Justice P.Shanmugam probing the telephone-tapping episode.

    At the end of high-level talks with officials later on Monday, the chief minister passed orders for reverting to the old scheme of tendering the sand trade. The power to handle the tenders for sand quarrying was delegated to the district collectors.

    Also, it was decided at this meeting to hold the review meetings with the collectors and district superintendents of police.

    The letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh came the next day, pleading for intervention to save the weavers from spiralling yarn price.

    It was also decided to sanction compensation of Rs.one lakh each to the two families of the workers from Tamil Nadu killed in Iraq recently.

    Now the chief minister is getting ready to chair the review meetings with the district collectors and SPs, to be held everyday up to May 30—except for recess on May 26.

    It could be very difficult, even torturous, for someone who had just undergone treatment for pain in the neck and the back, to undertake to preside over these long bureaucratic sessions, but then, that’s what Mr Karunanidhi is made of—a spirit of hard steel even though he needs the support of someone else’s shoulder to shuffle around with his fatigued frame. He attended office at the Fort St. George on Monday and received the interim report from the one-man commission of Justice P.Shanmugam probing the telephone-tapping episode.

    At the end of high-level talks with officials later on Monday, the chief minister passed orders for reverting to the old scheme of tendering the sand trade. The power to handle the tenders for sand quarrying was delegated to the district collectors.

    Also, it was decided at this meeting to hold the review meetings with the collectors and district superintendents of police.

    The letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh came the next day, pleading for intervention to save the weavers from spiralling yarn price.

    It was also decided to sanction compensation of Rs.one lakh each to the two families of the workers from Tamil Nadu killed in Iraq recently.

    Now the chief minister is getting ready to chair the review meetings with the district collectors and SPs, to be held everyday up to May 30—except for recess on May 26.

    It could be very difficult, even torturous, for someone who had just undergone treatment for pain in the neck and the back, to undertake to preside over these long bureaucratic sessions, but then, that’s what Mr Karunanidhi is made of—a spirit of hard steel even though he needs the support of someone else’s shoulder to shuffle around with his fatigued frame.

    Jaipur blasts: RDX not used

    After a week-long analysis, the National Security Guard and the Rajasthan Forensic Laboratory have confirmed that RDX was not used in the nine blasts that rocked Jaipur on May 13.

    Sources in the NSG as well as in the forensic lab said no traces of RDX were found from the places which were rocked by the blasts in the Pink City, and it mainly contained Neogel-90, an explosive comprising ammonium nitrate.

    The bomb data squad of the elite NSG, after examining the remains of the splinters gathered from the location of the blasts, said all the splinters, mainly comprising cycle ball bearings, flew only in one direction A similar modus operandi of assembling the explosive material was used in the Hyderabad blasts last year

    Pranab in Pak, calls on Sharif & Zardari

    External affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee on Tuesday invoked the loss of Pakistani leader Benazir Bhutto’s life to terrorism to suggest that India and Pakistan must work together to combat the menace of terrorism for the sake of their collective futures.

    “That would be a fitting tribute to Ms Benazir Bhutto’s memory and her legacy,” Mr Mukherjee said after arriving in Islamabad.

    “Her loss is still a fresh wound. Not just Pakistan, but our entire region has lost a charismatic leader of great promise, foresight and capability,” he added.Mr Mukherjee is visiting Pakistan to resume the bilateral “composite dialogue” process.On Wednes-day he will hold talks with his Pakistani counterpart, Mr Makhdoom Shah Mah-mood Qureshi.

    They will review the composite dialogue process and discuss the modalities of commencing the fifth round of the talks.

    Mr Mukherjee said India looks forward to continuing the talks in a spirit of cooperation, trust and pragmatism, but added a caveat that “this is predicated on an atmosphere free from terrorism, violence or the threat of it.” Mr Mukherjee met Pakistan People’s Party cochairman Asif Ali Zardari soon after reaching Islamabad.

    He also met Pakistan Muslim League (N) leader and former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.He is expected to call on Awami Nati-onal Party leader Asfandyar Wali Khan, who is a member of the ruling coalition.Mr Khan is the grandson of the legendary Khan Abdul Gaffar Khan.

    Mr Mukherjee will call on Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf and Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani on Wednesday.

    Mr Mukherjee said he would be looking forward to get a sense of how a “new democratic environment” in Pakistan would help the two countries in addressing various issues related to peace, stability and economic development.

    Wednesday’s talks between Mr Mukherjee and Mr Qureshi will be the first formal high-level political contact between the two countries after the recently concluded election in Pakistan, which saw the formation of a democratically-elected government there.

    According to sources tracking India’s engagement of Pakistan, the Indian side would be particularly interested in hearing from the Pakistan government on the Kashmir issue. New Delhi would want to know whether the new, democratically-elected government in Pakistan will want to pursue Pervez Musharraf’s four-point Kashmir plan or whether it will make any new proposals. The four-point plan comprised withdrawal of troops, local self-governance, no change in the border, and a joint supervision mechanism involving India and Pakistan.

    Mr Mukherjee said several proposals in the political, economic and regional fields are on the anvil for consideration and implementation. An Associated Press of Pakistan report said Pakistan and India have finalised a consular access agreement to facilitate the early release of prisoners following their identification.

    The APP report quoted an unidentified Pakistan foreign ministry official as saying that Pakistan has presented 15 proposals to the Indian side on the eight issues of the composite dialogue process. According to the official, both sides agreed to put the Siachen and Sir Creek issues on the “fast track”. The APP report cited the official as suggesting India and Pakistan were closer to an agreement on the Sir Creek issue after the joint survey and preparation of agreed maps. On the issue of handing over Jinnah House in Mumbai to Pakistan so that it can open a consulate in it, the Indian side said the case is pending with the Supreme Court, the report added.

    Earlier in the day, the foreign secretaries of India and Pakistan met to review the fourth round of the composite dialogue process.

    A statement issued by the Pakistan foreign ministry said Mr Shivshankar Menon and his Pakistani counterpart Salman Bashir “expressed satisfaction at the progress made so far and exchanged views on carrying forward the composite dialogue process.” The talks were held in a friendly and constructive atmosphere, the statement added.

    In the meeting, Mr Menon said he raised the issue of firing by Pakistani troops along the Line of Control (LoC).

    “Both sides made it clear that they attach great importance to the ceasefire and they want to make it hold,” he said.Mr Menon said the matter had also been taken up by the directors-general of military operations and both sides are committed to maintaining the ceasefire, which came into force in November 2003. India has been concerned by the recent incidents of firing on its soldiers from across the LoC. There have been three such incidents since May 8, and an Indian soldier was killed on Monday.

    India and Pakistan launched the composite dialogue process in 2004. It comprises eight subjects: Peace and security including confidence-building measures; Jammu and Kashmir; Siachen; Sir Creek; Tulbul navigation project/Wullar barrage; terrorism and drug trafficking; economic and commercial cooperation; and promotion of friendly exchanges in various fields. The fourth round concluded in October 2007.

    Steel prices to decline after Centre moves

    Steel prices may further soften due to the government putting pressure on companies to contain the commodity’s rates to tame inflation and the slackness in construction activities on the onset of monsoon, say analysts.

    As inflation rose to near 44-month high of 7.83 per cent for the week ended May 3, the government is likely to put more pressure on steel companies to contain the rising prices, Karvy Comtrade’s G. Harish said.

    The onset of monsoon will also contribute towards slackening of steel prices as construction work slows down during this period, resulting in less demand of the commodity, he pointed out.

    The wholesale ingot and scrap prices have fallen by up to Rs 500 per tonne in New Delhi last week. The fall is said to be due to cautious approach by buyers after secondary steel producers announced to cut prices on all flat products by about Rs 4,000 a tonne.

    In the futures markets, Mr Harish said, steel prices are expected to trade between Rs 25,000 and Rs 26,000 a tonne level next month, after which the rates are likely to firm up.

    However, independent strategy consultant in steel and natural resources, Mr A.S. Firoz, hopes that steel prices will cool down in another 2 to 3 months as there is a slowdown in infrastructure projects in domestic as well as global level.

    “The prices are artificially maintained by speculative forces and cannot continue to trade in the same level as the global demand for the commodity is weakening,” Mr Firoz said. He said it will either remain at the same level or slacken a bit in the coming week.

    The wholesale ingot and scrap prices were down by Rs 500 per tonne in New Delhi on Monday due to reduced demand from re rolling steel units.

    Ship with 10 Indian sailors hijacked off Somalia coast

    A year after it missed getting hijacked on the seas wrapping the Horn of Africa, the directorate-general of shipping (DGS) on Monday confirmed that Merchant Vessel Victoria had been hijacked.

    The DGS said the vessel had been hijacked off the Somalian coast on Saturday with at least ten Indians on board. The hijacking allegedly occurred on the 3,700 km coastline of Somalia, large stretches of it not patrolled by Somali coast guard or international sea safety agencies.This is the third such case in this year so far.

    According to a top DGS official they were investigating the matter but were hindered in their efforts as there was no intimation about the hijacking from the ships owners.

    The 3,340 gross register tonnage (GRT) vessel MV Victoria registered in Jordan and made in 1979 had 12 crewmembers from India, Tanzania, Pakistan and Bangladesh.At the time of the incident, the master and crew gave a distress signal.There is no update on the safety of the crew so far.

    The International Maritime Organisation had issued guidelines to member states because of the increasing number of cases of piracy and armed robbery on ships off the coast of Somalia.

    India has alerted the Coast Guard in Somalia and the International Maritime Bureau piracy centre in Kuala Lumpur and London.

    The ship laden with cargo had sailed from Mumbai earlier this month and went missing about 55 nautical miles off the Somalian coast. The ship was believed to be carrying sugar donated by Denmark from Mumbai to Mogadishu towards humanitarian aid.

    According to shipping officials, the hijackers were in all probability militia fighters from Somalia.

    They said these incidents occurred when militias ruled the roost in Somalia. However the defeat of several militias by armed forces of Somalia and other African Horn nations meant the pirates have made a comeback.

    “They are well-equipped with speed boats and high end satellite phones through which they track merchant ships. These were probably former militia fighters who after having done with their wars have now entered the world of high sea piracy,” said an official.

    According to shipping officials they have learnt from the Kenyan Seafarers’ Assistance Programme that the pirates boarded the ship from three speedboats and took the vessel north towards Hobyo region.Last year MV Victoria was involved in another failed hijacking attempt which failed food aid for Somali.

    Annamayya receives musical honour

    The Tallapaka village, birthplace of saint poet Annamacharya, reverberated with his keerthans on Monday, when his 600th birth anniversary was observed.Hundreds of classical singers from across Andhra Pradesh and neighbouring states rendered keerthans in front of his 108-feet tall statue.

    For the first time, the processional idols of Lord Venkateswara and his consorts descended the seven hills to take part in the festivities of his ardent devotee, Annamayya, in his native village.

    Tallapaka is located 100 km away from Tirupati at Rajampeta mandal in Kadapa district.

    A festive atmosphere prevailed in several villages en route to Tallapaka too. Villagers decorated the roads with leaves and plantain trees to welcome the Lord who was trav eling to Tallapaka.

    Bhajan mandals took out a procession from Rajampeta to Tallapaka with the Lord of the seven hills in the lead. Caparisoned elephants and horses were part of the procession.

    Despite the sweltering heat, majority of the members of the bha jan mandals walked without slippers as a sign of their reverence for the Lord.

    Apart from the heads of various mutts, renowned musicians and artistes including Kunnakkudi Vaidyanathan, P.B. Srinivas, Padmasri Yella Venkateswara Rao, Dwaram Lakshmi, Padma Subrahmanyam and Chitti Babu attended the celebrations. Classical singers, Dr Shobha Raju, Jyothirmayee Chowdhary, G. Balakrishna Prasad, Dr Seshu Latha, Hyderabad sisters, and hundreds of others were also present. The film director, Mr K.Raghavendra Rao, who portrayed the saint poet in celluloid, joined the celebrations along with other film personalities, Manju Bhargavi and Kanchana.

    The singers rendered Annamayya’s sapthagiri samkeerthanalu beginning with Bhavamulona Bhagyamunanduna and also presented his popular numbers.

    Notices to unknown Jaipur land buyers

    The stamp and registration department of Rajasthan has directed to issue notices to over 4,000 mysterious buyers to prove their bona fide as they acquired land in the border districts of the state. The police and security agencies have already been investigating such land deals.

    The sale of land in the border area has brought considerable embarrassment to the ruling BJP government as a local BJP leader is reported to have played a key role in the land deals and earned huge amounts in commission.

    According to sources, the Registration authorities found that such deals were finalised through power of attorney documents.

    The sources said the registration department has given one month to the buyers to prove their credentials otherwise the authorities will recommend an investigation by the CID. The registration authorities have already referred 500 such deals to the CID when the buyers did not turn up to reply.

    According to the revenue authorities, such buyers acquired huge areas of land in the border districts of Barmer, Jaisalmer, Bikaner and Jalore despite the Central government notification for these districts in 1996 which does not allow any outsider to move there without permission. A BJP leader allegedly acted as middleman in land deals and is reported to have earned Rs 19 crores as commission.

    He acted as middleman in deals for the sale of 1,90,000 bighas of land.

    Interests of Pervez, Zardari coincide

    The collapse of Pakistan’s ruling coalition is a result of the fact that power in Pakistan has been split in three directions. The game is to play one against the other. The question to ask is who is more compatible with Asif Ali Zardari, who is an arch calculator. He has to choose between (President) Musharraf and (Nawaz) Sharif.

    After the elimination of Benazir Bhutto, Sharif is the only politician who has a mass base in the state of Punjab. From these three politicians, I would say that he is the only one who has a future. Of course, when President Musharraf first seized power, he had Sharif arrested.

    Sharif apologised in order to get himself released from jail but that period of his life is behind him There is a Great Game being played out in Pakistan. I believe that if Sharif has to be destroyed, it will be done in the name of Islam. Sharif is close to the Saudis and they allowed him to live in their country for the last eight years. When he returned to Pakistan, a Saudi prince escorted him back. So, in that sense, Sharif does not have a weak hand. But we must not forget that on the question of Islam, American and Saudi interests are not on the same line. The US is scared of radical Islam. It does not suit them. Sharif has at present chosen to stay out of the government. He wants a civil government installed and a return to democracy. That is why he is pressing for the reinstatement of the dismissed judges.Musharraf’s interests, on the other hand, are extremely limited. He is saying, “Don’t get rid of me.” He supports the US and vice-versa. The Pakistan Army will get along with Musharraf.

    So basically, Musharraf, Zardari and the US will survive together for the time being. It’s obvious that Musharraf’s and Zardari’s interests coincide. They can survive by helping each other.

    Obviously, two sides in this triangular contest will stay together in order to help each another.

    My experience is that countries which are not democratic have no guarantors. Our own situation is India is very different. As a democracy, we have been able to build strong institutions and so are able to stand on our own feet.Terrorism worries America.

    Look at what has been happening in Pakistan for the past two years. They have been sending pilotless planes into the NorthWest Frontier Province in order to bomb their own people. It’s a very messy game being played out there. Both Balochistan and the North-West Frontier have become extremely radical. I may be sounding extremely cynical but democracy (in Pakistan) is an ideal that only people in Lahore are ready to buy. Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan’s family is not very radical. It is therefore a very good sign that his grandson is the present chief minister of that state. The question, of course, is how does India safeguard its own interests, especially with the stepping-up of militant activity along our western border? We need to understand that Pakistan was never a moderate state. They were always under the influence of radical Islam. The most important agitation that the Muslim League launched in order to get Pakistan was Direct Action. Both Jinnah and Liaquat Ali represented the forces of moderation but they went away sooner than was expected.

    I must emphasise that radical Islam was not born today. It was the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan which saw an upsurge of ultra-rightwing forces. Some years ago, when I met former Russian President Mikhail Gorbachev at an international meet, I asked him, “Mr President, we were your friends.

    But you did not inform us about the invasion.” He replied, “I did not know about it myself. I came to know about it on the third day through the newspaper. There was a junta within the politburo who had ordered it.” Everything does not work according to one’s calculations.

    By pressing for democracy, Sharif is growing in stature by the day. Obviously, the patience of the public is also wearing thin.

    The counterweight to these radical elements will come from Punjab. Punjab is the only state which has a small middle class.

    Nawaz represents this middle class. It is for this reason that he suits India more than the others.

    DNA test for moms BABY SWAPPING

    Two mothers from Erode who have been fighting over a newborn child underwent DNA tests at a forensic lab here on Monday to determine the child’s actual parentage.

    Thirty-year-old Sundari delivered a baby girl on April 19 at the Government Hospital in Erode. Within a few hours of her delivery, the doctors at the GH claimed that the baby had gone missing from the hospital. A complaint has also been filed with the Erode police regarding the incident. Meanwhile, about a week later Sundari and her husband Ramaswamy spotted a child that resembled their newborn at the same hospital. “When we enquired, we got to know that the child belonged to Papa (35). They claimed that Papa had also delivered at the same hospital and that it was their baby,” Sundari’s relatives said. After the doctors failed to solve the confusion among the mothers over custody of the girl child, they referred both the parents to the government forensic lab at Dr Radhakrishnan Salai here for DNA tests.

    Blood samples of all five of them – Papa and her husband, Sundari and her husband Ramaswamy, and the newborn – have been taken.

    According to the officials at the lab, the results would be out in three days. Both the mothers will have to wait for three more days to find out if the baby is theirs. A few weeks ago, two mothers from North Chennai underwent DNA tests.

    Ganguly sworn in Madras CJ

    Justice Ashok Kumar Ganguly, was sworn-in as Chief Justice of Madras high court on Monday, replacing Ajith Prakash Shah, who was recently transferred as Chief Justice of Delhi high court.

    In an official ceremony, attended by Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M Karunanidhi and some of his cabinet collegues, electricity minister Arcot N.Veeraswamy and law minister Durai Murugan, Governor Surjit Singh Barnala administered the oath of office to Justice Ganguly, who was transferred from the Orissa High court.

    This was Mr Karunanidhi’s first public function after he was discharged from a private hospital on Sunday.

    The chief minister pre sented a yellow coloured silk shawl and bouquet of flowers to Mr Ganguly after the latter was sworn in as Chief Justice at a function in Raj Bhavan.

    Born on February 3, 1947, Mr Ganguly, who hails from West Bengal, after completing M.A (English) in 1968 and LLB in 1970 from Calcutta University, was enrolled as an advocate on December 1, 1971.

    He practiced in the Calcutta high court and also in the Supreme Court and handled cases dealing with Constitutional, Service, labour, Company, Education, Revenue, Customs, Civil and Criminal matters.

    He was appointed as a permanent judge of Calcutta high court on January 10, 1994. Immediately, he was transferred to Patna high court.

    After being in Patna high court for more than six years, he was transferred to the Calcutta high court in August, 2000.He was shifted to the Orissa high court in April 2006.He became its acting Chief Justice in January 2007 and the regular Chief Justice on March 2, 2007.

    BJP objects to Sonia pics in ads

    Senior BJP leader and former Union minister Ravishankar Prasad on Monday demanded the removal of the photographs of Congress president Sonia Gandhi from all government advertisements as the post that she held, that of UPA chairperson, was a political one and not a government office. It was simply a political title “which conferred no entitlement or legitimacy for being featured in media advertisements paid for by the government,” he said.

    Mr Ravishankar Prasad noted that Mrs Gandhi was earlier chairperson of the National Advisory Council (NAC), which was a governmental position, but she subsequently stepped down from that in the wake of the office-of-profit row. At present she does not hold any government office, he pointed out, therefore there was no justification for her being featured in government advertisements.

    The BJP leader said her photographs were appearing on an almost daily basis not only in advertisements released by the Union and some (Congress-led) state governments, but also in those of public sector undertakings. The Congress president was thus getting “free and privileged publicity at the cost of crores of rupees from the public exchequer,” he said.

    “Though Dr Manmohan Singh was nominated Prime Minister by Mrs Sonia Gandhi, we hope appropriate direction would be given by him to stop this palpably illegal and unjustified practice,” he said. The BJP leader demanded that the Prime Minister’s Office instruct all ministries, departments and PSUs to put an immediate end to “this corrupt and unjustifiable practice.” A directive to this effect must go out immediately, he added, so that when the government completes four years on May 22 Mrs Sonia Gandhi is not projected in the publicity blitz.

    Rice exporters face lawsuits

    The export duty on basmati rice will not curtail inflation but will lead to loss of export market, Ficci said on Sunday.With a view to discourage exports, the government imposed an export duty of Rs 8,000 a tonne on basmati rice. The government has also lowered minimum export price (MEP) from $1,200 to $1,000 a tonne.

    Ficci said the total consumption of rice in India is close to 89 million tonnes, of which, the consumption of basmati is a paltry 0.2 per cent. Even this meagre domestic consumption is restricted to the upper income consumers who have high disposable incomes.Ficci in a letter to the Prime Minister said the twin measures hold out the possibility of loss of export market.

    Meanwhile, Saudi importers are already threatening lawsuits against Indian rice exporters for default on commitments and have started negotiating with Pakistan and Thailand for its rice requirements.

    Indian exporters have told the importers in Saudi Arabia that they can not absorb the additional duty as their margins are thin. They have said that the Saudi importers will have to bear this additional duty. Meanwhile, the Riyadh chamber of commerce and industry has asked the Indian government to withdraw this duty.

    The market lost by the Indian basmati rice farmers will in turn, help their Pakistani counterparts.

    China confirms its N-facilities are unaffected

    Nuclear facilities in China that were jolted by a massive earthquake have been confirmed to be safe, an environmental safety official said on Sunday.
    China’s nuclear safety agency ordered staffers to be on standby in case of an environmental emergency following last week’s magnitude 7.9 quake that rocked Sichuan province, home of several key atomic sites.

    Those facilities are safe and under control, said a man at the ministry of environmental protection’s nuclear safety department who only gave his surname, Mr Li.He was confirming a report by the government’s Xinhua News Agency, which issued a one-line statement citing unidenti fied government officials.

    China has a research reactor, two nuclear fuel production sites and two atomic weapons sites in Sichuan, according to the French nuclear watchdog.All were 60 to 145 km from the epicentre.

    Beijing had not publicly announced any damage to nuclear sites, although the French Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety said China reported “light damage” to unspecified nuclear facilities that were being dismantled before the quake.

    Mr Thierry Charles, the group’s director of plant safety, said Chinese authorities immediately shut down nuclear sites for inspection. There were no reported leaks of radioactivity, he said.

    9 FIRs filed by Jaipur blast victims

    Charges of attempt to murder and waging conspiracy against the nation were pressed in nine FIRs filed on Sunday by victims of Jaipur terror blasts that left 64 people dead.
    The cases were registered under different sections of IPC related to unlawful prevention activities at public places, attempt to murder, waging conspiracy against the nation, and explosive act, a senior official said.

    Four FIRs were lodged by victims in the Manak Chowk police station while five were registered with the Kotwali police station, the official said.

    Nine bombs packed in separate bags attached to bicycles tore through crowded markets at five places in Jaipur on May 13 in which 64 people died and over 150 injured. Based on one of the seven sketches, a man was interrogated at the Jyoti Nagar police station.

    But he was a priest on way to his job when a passerby alerted, another official said, adding that he was immediately set free.

    A hardcore Simi activist Mohammed Sajid and his three accomplices detained on Saturday at Udai village in Sawaimadhopur district by Special Investigation Team were being interrogated separately, the official sources said. SIT is working in the areas concerning the bicycles, seven sketches, and twenty people including Simi activists detained for interrogation, the sources said.

    The next terror attack could be from the sea

    Tuesday evening’s serial bomb blasts in Jaipur, in which over 60 people were killed, has demonstrated yet again how ill-equipped India is to handle the new complexities of terror warfare. A new command must be created to protect the nation.
    Jaipur was the eleventh major terrorist strike on ‘soft’ targets in the past three years. The political leadership has stuttered out its usual statements about ‘resilience’ and ‘foreign hand’ ad nauseam, while the bureaucracy has predictably kept mum on what is a colossal failure of leadership and intelligence at both the Central and state levels. The Intelligence Bureau, in the meantime, has suggested that terrorists are planning seaborne attacks against the dozens of oil rigs, including production and support platforms, along both the coasts of India. This appears to have fallen on deaf ears.

    An oil rig, like the proverbial iceberg, has a small portion visible above the surface — leaving the vulnerable parts beyond visibility. What cannot be seen are the supporting legs of the rigs, the labyrinth of pipelines with interconnecting control valves that ensure flow of crude oil from the rigs to the mainland or to single buoy moorings (SBMs), which, in turn, permit oil tankers to embark the same crude for transportation ashore. In some places, like the Gulf of Kutch, these SBMs are also used to enable incoming oil tankers to pump out their imported crude to refineries ashore. Supporting this gigantic effort is a large number of logistic ships (OSVs, or offshore support vessels), which provide food, handle personnel transfers (sometimes also done by helicopters), pollution control response, fire tender duties, etc.

    The extreme vulnerability of the oil rigs was vividly displayed by the massive fire and total destruction of an oil production platform in Bombay High in July 2005 when an OSV accidentally collided with the rigs’ underwater pipeline. This resulted in a massive search and rescue operation by the Indian Navy, the Coast Guard and by civilian ships, followed by counter-pollution operations by the Coast Guard to prevent pollution along the Mumbai coastline.

    In addition to the financial loss, the nation had to face a massive drop in crude oil outflow from this offshore oilfield, located some 40 nautical miles off Mumbai port.

    This event will not have been missed by the new breed of maritime terrorists, who would also know that India has invested over Rs 1,60,000 crore in these rigs. There is an organisation to deal with offshore security threats to oil rigs, coastal refineries, coastal nuclear power plants and ports.

    The Coast Guard looks after peacetime security and is in regular touch with all stakeholders — the Navy, the port authorities, shipping, ONGC, Oil India and the intelligence agencies. Wartime threats are handled by the Navy.

    In this era of ‘no-war, no-peace’, there is an ever-present threat to offshore and coastal installations. The threat from the sea can take various forms — trained ‘sea terrorists’ can attack by approaching the target in dhows or even submersibles, making the last mile in collapsible rubber boats, lay explosives in the most vulnerable parts and depart or carry out suicide attacks.

    Another alternative would be to bring an explosives-laden ship and collide it against the target, or sink it in the harbour approach to block the port. And, of course, terrorists can enter coastal targets by land and cover the last stretch, as in Israel, in microlite aircraft to get in.

    In any such terror attack, the repercussions would be severe — economic, envi ronmental and in sheer terms of shock.

    India’s economic prosperity lies in being completely secure at sea — 90 per cent of our trade, 70 per cent of our oil imports and 70 per cent of our indigenous oil and gas production comes from the sea.

    The issue of modifying India’s national security-cum-intelligence apparatus to address new forms of warfare has been hammered to near-death. Little may have moved but the need for a completely new machinery to fight terrorism is becoming all the more relevant in everyday incidents as in Jaipur’s. We are simply not equipped to address terrorism.

    There have been reports that the government is considering handing over the 2010 Commonwealth Games project to the Army keeping in view the failure of the bureaucracy and civil administration to deliver.

    The United States, in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, has been far more ruthless and successful in protecting its citizens. With Jaipur’s incident in focus, does it not look like it is time to hand over all anti-terrorist activities to three separate ‘empowered’ joint commands, which will include all elements of the military, paramilitary, police, intelligence, railways, ports, airports and any other agency that needs to be a part of the apparatus? These three commands can be headed by the Army, for land threats, the Navy for seaborne-coastal threats, and the Air Force to address aerial threats. There is also an urgent need to augment the force levels of the Navy and the Coast Guard. Each of these seagoing services should reach a strength of 200 ships, and each should double their aviation assets.

    Laws to permit the Navy and Coast Guard to board and search suspicious ships need to be introduced at the earliest. The existing force levels — 75 ships and 45 aircraft for the Coast Guard; and 130 ships and about 200 aircraft for the Navy — are inadequate.

    Getting our counter-terror mechanism in place should take priority over time-worn intellectual debates. Also, at some point in the future, these joint commands could also be pressed into action to combat the Naxalite threat, which today spans 11 states.

    The protection of its citizens is the Centre’s primary duty. The buck stops there.

    How seriously other nations take this threat is best exemplified by what I saw in the United States in 2005. All armed forces units were flying an additional flag — of a serpent with the inscription ‘Don’t Tread On Me’. This flag has been used by presidential proclamation only four times in 234 years. It was brought out during the wars that threatened the American nation — the War of Independence (1776-1781), the Civil War (1860-1865), the attack on Pearl Harbour (1942) and post 9/11 (2001).

    India too faces this new form of warfare and its government cannot take the rather philosophical view that was once articulated by a television commentator, to my considerable amazement: ‘As everyone knows, there is no reality, but only points of view.’ Global terrorism is a hard reality, and it is here to stay, irrespective of individual perceptions and views. Dealing with this new form of asymmetric war will require the combined might and wisdom of all of India.

    We need not emulate the Americans by hoisting a second flag to remind our citizens (and leaders) that the nation is in a state of war. But we do need to get our act together, and quickly. The present form of asymmetric war being waged by international terrorists who serve no nation is, after all, too serious an issue to be left only to the politicians, bureaucrats and the overstretched intelligence agencies and paramilitary forces. Remember the old saying: ‘Steel fist in a velvet glove’? That is what we need.