Thursday, May 31, 2018

How Donald Trump is weaponising the courts for political ends

It was a startling omission even according to the peculiar moral norms of the Trump era. When Wendy Vitter, one of the US president’s judicial nominees, was asked whether she supported the supreme court’s 1954 Brown v Board of Education decision to end racial segregation in schools – a near sacred pillar of progress for civil rights in the 20th century – she did not say yes.

“I don’t mean to be coy,” Vitter, who is up for a seat on the US district court for the eastern district of Louisiana, told her Senate confirmation hearing. “But I think I get into a difficult area when I start commenting on supreme court decisions which are correctly decided and which I may disagree with.”

If approved, Vitter, currently general counsel of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of New Orleans and an opponent of abortion rights, would join a wave of lifetime appointments that threatens to fundamentally tilt the balance of America’s courts – and embolden conservative activists to bring cases that once seemed lost causes.

With just over a year in office, Donald Trump has already appointed 21 of America’s 167 current circuit judges and intends to fill an additional 20 or more vacancies by the end of the year. He is far outpacing Barack Obama, whose 21st circuit court nominee was approved 33 months into his presidency amid gridlock in Congress. Seventeen of Trump’s nominees for district courts, most of whom replaced Democratic appointees, have also been approved by the Republican-controlled Senate.

Dominated by white men, many of whom are under 50, it is the least diverse crop of new judges for a generation and may prove Trump’s most lasting legacy. Last December, for example, an analysis by the progressive organisation Lambda Legal found that nearly one-third of his judicial nominees up to that point had anti-LGBT records, with some openly hostile to gay rights.

“This is stunning,” said Christopher Kang, former deputy counsel to Barack Obama, who for more than four years was in charge of the selection, vetting and confirmation of Obama’s judicial nominees. “Conservatives are using the courts to bring us back to a time when ‘religious liberty’ allowed discrimination. We’re seeing legal arguments we had hoped were consigned to the dustbin of history being dusted off and used again in the hope of turning back the clock on the way we treat all Americans.”

Four cases relating to Trump’s ban on transgender personnel in the military are working their way through the courts. Employment and housing protections for LGBT individuals could be at risk. Battles over reproductive rights are also under way at state level. Last month a federal appeals court blocked an Ohio law that would cut taxpayer funding to 28 Planned Parenthood clinics, holding that conditions it imposed that denied funds to abortion providers were unconstitutional. But campaigners against abortion rights are unlikely to be deterred.

Kang, now chief counsel at the not-for-profit group Demand Justice said: “In the efforts to roll back reproductive rights, they’re going to keep trying until they find a judge with such ideologically extreme views that he or she agrees with them.” He added: “If the supreme court moves in their direction, they only need to get one case up to the supreme court to overturn Roe v Wade.”

Trump, on course to be the first Republican since Herbert Hoover to name fewer women and minorities to the court than his Republican predecessor, has shown no compunction about weaponising the courts for political ends. At a Susan B Anthony List campaign for life gala in Washington last week, he boasted of appointing a record number of judges who will “defend our constitution and interpret the law as written”, seen by critics as cover for a throwback to the gender and racial injustices of the founding document.

Judicial appointments have proved crucial for grassroots conservatives and Christian evangelicals who might otherwise be alienated by Trump’s sex scandals and boorish behaviour. Many cited the supreme court vacancy as a major factor in their decision to vote for him in the 2016 president election, and they were rewarded with his pick of the conservative justice Neil Gorsuch.

Similarly his nominations to the lower courts, rushed through by Republicans without many of the usual protocols and traditions, have insulated him from criticism on his right flank. Curt Levey, president of the rightwing advocacy group the Committee for Justice, said: “I can’t tell you how many conversations I’ve had with people where the first thing they jump out and say is ‘judges’.”

And Hugh Hewitt, an author and commentator, wrote in the Washington Post last week: “Someday, conservative critics of President Trump will have to reconcile their vehement opposition to him with their love of the Constitution.”

Hewitt predicted: “By 2019, Trump judges will be participating in more than 15,000 decisions every year, and almost all those decisions will be the law of the land. There will be no fewer than 400 crucial case votes and dozens of signed opinions, each year, every year for most of the Trump judges.”

Trump’s judicial picks are profoundly shaped by the Federalist Society, a group of conservatives and libertarians who favour an “originalist” interpretation of the constitution, and the Heritage Foundation, a Washington thinktank where Newt Gingrich is a regular speaker and where Margaret Thatcher is lionised.

John Malcolm, vice-president of the Institute for Constitutional Government at the Heritage Foundation, said: “In the same way that liberals have pushed more progressive causes when they felt the judiciary was favourable, I’m quite sure that when there are more conservatives on the bench, that will prompt conservative groups to file more lawsuits.”

Progressives have in recent years won landmark victories on issues such as same sex marriage and transgender rights. But conservatives, sensing the wind changing in their favour, may push significantly harder on issues such as environmental regulations, land rights, racial profiling, trade unions and reproductive and voting rights.

Douglas Keith, counsel with the fair courts arm of the Brennan Center for Justice, said: “There’s long been an asymmetry to interest, resources and advocacy, with the right organising much more than the left.”

he noted, was spending millions of dollars to support Trump’s nominees in the low courts, for example by running TV ads to pressure vulnerable Democrats to support them.

Even so, the impact on litigation strategy will take time, Keith suggested. “It is a long game. It is not always the one big case; it may be smaller cases at the district and circuit courts.”

The JCN itself denied that activists were using the courts as a blunt instrument. Carrie Severino, its chief counsel and policy director, said: “The conservative strategy shouldn’t ever be – and isn’t in these cases – to run to the courts to change the law. That’s the legislature’s job.

“However, there are many issues in which the legal questions are fairly clear if the judge is willing to set aside his or her own politics to decide based on the law alone. In those cases, it is a great relief to litigants to know they will be treated fairly in the courts.”

But for their opponents, the road is long and bleak. Sasha Buchert, a staff attorney at Lambda Legal, warned of the implications for LGBT rights. “It’s absolutely a disaster. This is putting Trump’s values on the courts for the next 10, 20 or 30 years in places where folks have the least protections already.”

SOURCE : THE GUARDIAN

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Kim Jong-un receives Russia's top diplomat in Pyongyang

MOSCOW, May 31. /TASS/. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has received Russian top diplomat Sergey Lavrov who arrived in Pyongyang for talks on the Korean Peninsula issue, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Thursday.

"On May 31, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov made an official visit to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and was received by Chairman of the State Affairs Commission Kim Jong-un," the statement reads.

"The talks with North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho discussed the current state of and the prospects for the further development of friendly relations and cooperation between Russia and North Korea, as the two countries celebrate the 70th anniversary of diplomatic relations this year," the ministry added. "There was a thorough exchange of views on the situation surrounding the Korean Peninsula, with the focus on ways to enhance the coordination of efforts aimed at finding political and diplomatic solutions to the entire range of issues the subregion has been facing," the statement says.

SOURCE : TASS.com

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Rahul Gandhi cites media report on 'kickbacks' to defence ministry officials, asks PM to act

Congress President Rahul Gandhi today urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to take "immediate action" against "corrupt" officials, citing a media report alleging that Ukraine is probing kickbacks worth crores paid to India's Defence Ministry officials for an aircraft spares deal.

Tagging the report by a newspaper, Gandhi tweeted, "Ministry Of Defence, India (MODI) officials, accused of making millions of $'s in kickbacks via Dubai by Ukrainian Govt. in AN32 deal." 

"Modi ji, as our self proclaimed chokidar, I urge you to take immediate action against your corrupt MODI officials," he said on Twitter, using the hashtag 'BJPDefenceScam'. 

Ukraine is investigating alleged kickbacks to the tune of USD 2.6 million (Rs 17.55 crore) in India's purchase of spares for military transport aircraft An-32 in which its Anti-Corruption Bureau suspects the involvement of Indian Defence Ministry officials, the report alleged. 

SOURCE : ECONOMIC TIMES

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UP by election results: Yogi Adityanath fails to impress; Narendra Modi-Amit Shah must rejig strategy to win 2019 polls

Even as the 2019 Lok Sabha election draws near, the path ahead for the BJP to retain its rule in New Delhi increasingly looks challenging, far from the buoyancy that it had ahead of the 2014 General elections, owing to the massive Narendra Modi wave that swept the country's political scene.

What's worse, Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath, on whose shoulders lies the huge responsibility of steering his party to a win in the state in the big poll next year, has failed to deliver on multiple occasions now.

How patient the BJP top brass would be, with these kinds of back-to-back failures, remains to be seen, as the defeats are a clear indicator of the growing clout of the Opposition in the state.

What's notable is that Congress is playing second fiddle in most of these contests, allowing regional satraps to lead the charge. The result so far has been impressive for the Opposition, which is trying to regroup after the big failures in Lok Sabka election 2014 and Uttar Pradesh Assembly election in 2017.

On Thursday, after nine rounds of counting in the Kairana Lok Sabha seat, Ajit Singh's Rashtriya Lok Dal received 66.47 percent of the votes (46,909 votes) while BJP's Mriganka Singh got 31.13 percent (21,970 votes).

RLD candidate Tabassum Hasan, who is leading Mriganka in the parliamentary constituency, looks confident of winning the seat if the trend continues in this manner. Mriganka also contested the Assembly elections in Kairana but lost heavily to Samajwadi Party's Nahid Hasan, who is the son of party's former MP Munawar Khan.

On the other hand, Samajwadi Party is leading in the Noorpur Assembly seat as well. SP candidate Naeem Ul Hasan is currently ahead of BJP's Avani Singh in the Noorpur seat. The by election to Noorpur Assembly seat was necessitated by the death of sitting BJP MLA Lokendra Singh Chauhan in a road accident in February.

In Kairana, the grand alliance against BJP is at play, with the Congress, Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and SP all offering their support to the RLD. Hassan had won the seat in 2009 on a BSP ticket, against Mriganka, daughter of BJP winner in 2014 Hukum Singh whose death necessitated the bypoll.

Kairana parliamentary constituency has five Assembly segments: Shamli, Thana Bhawan and Kairana in Shamli district, and Gangoh and Nakur in Saharanpur district. According to the Election Commission, there are 16.09 lakh voters in Kairana: 8.73 lakh male voters and 7.36 lakh female voters.

Noorpur Assembly constituency has 3.06 lakh voters. Apart from Kairana, where Samajwadi Party's Hasan represents the Assembly seat, all the remaining four Assembly seats falling under the Kairana Lok Sabha seat are with the BJP. Thana Bhawan is with Suresh Kumar, Shamli is with Tejendra Nirwal, Nakur is with Dharam Singh Saini and Gangoh is with Pradeep Kumar, all from the BJP.

However, despite the advantage, the combined strength of Congress, SP and RLD proved to be too much for the BJP. Adding salt to the wound, the Opposition replicated the formula they used in the Gorakhpur and Phulpur by elections early this year, where the ruling party suffered an unexpected defeat. The withdrawal of candidature of Lok Dal's Kanwar Hasan from the fray and his joining of the RLD has only added to the Opposition's confidence.

Although Adityanath left no stone unturned in campaigning for the bypoll along with his deputy Keshav Prasad Maurya in Saharanpur and Shamli, the efforts don't seem to be fruitful.

Apart from them, the BJP had thrown in at least five state ministers into the 'fight for Kairana'. They included Dharam Singh Saini (Minister of State for Ayush), Suresh Rana (sugarcane development minister), Anupama Jaiswal (basic education minister) Surya Pratap Shahi (agriculture minister) and Laxmi Narayan (religious affairs, culture, minority welfare, waqf and Haj minister). Jaiswal is the minister in charge of Shamli district, while Shahi is the minister in charge of Saharanpur.

"Laxmi Narayan Chaudhary has been roped in since he hails from a farming background," a senior Uttar Pradesh BJP leader had said. BJP MPs Sanjiv Baliyan, Raghav Lakhan Pal, Vijay Pal Singh Tomar and Kanta Kardam also actively campaigned for Mriganka.

The SP and Congress, however, had termed the line-up of Uttar Pradesh ministers as a sign of "party jitters".

According to the locals, the major issues in this bypoll are law and order and the woes of sugarcane growers. RLD candidate Hasan had accused the BJP-led state government of resorting to divisive politics.

"Sugarcane growers in the region are feeling the maximum amount of pain, as no payments have been made to them by the state government," she had told PTI, rejecting the official claim that the dues from sugar mills were being cleared.

The issue was also raised during an election meeting of state minister Laxmi Narayan Chaudhary, who said that the dues accumulated from the time of the past governments had been paid out, and the rest would be settled soon.

"In Uttar Pradesh, 10,828.59 lakh quintals of sugarcane were purchased by sugar mills from farmers during the BJP government in 2017-18, as compared to 6443.41 lakh quintals under the Samajwadi Party government in 2015-16. Similarly, Rs 21,186.56 crore payments were made during the BJP government in the state in 2017-18, in comparison to Rs 11,841.34 crore made during the SP government in 2015-16," BJP spokesperson Chandramohan had said.

Divergent views also emerged on the reported 2016 exodus of Hindu families from Kairana.

"The area is adjacent to Panipat district in Haryana. The labourers (both Hindus and Muslims) from the area go to the neighbouring state to work in the industries there. They go in the morning and return in the evening," Hasan had said while rejecting the claims of any such exodus.

The RLD leader further said that the locked houses, even of Muslims who had gone to Panipat for work, were photographed and used as a "propaganda". "In Kairana, both Hindus and Muslims live in peace," she had added.

Mriganka, on the other hand, had said, "The exodus of Hindu families from Kairana has stopped now. But hundreds of Hindu families had fled from Kairana out of fear and harassment before the 2017 UP Assembly elections".

The present defeat would compound problems for the BJP as in March this year, SP had won both the Lok Sabha seats of Gorakhpur and Phulpur, which were vacated by Adityanath and Maurya.

With the BSP backing its bitter rival Samajwadi Party, the BJP had to absorb a shock defeat in both the constituencies in what was seen as a major embarrassment to Adityanath in particular.

Samajwadi Party's Nagendra Singh Patel had won the Phulpur seat beating BJP's Kashlendra Singh Patel while Pravin Nishad of the Samajwadi Party won over the BJP candidate Upendra Dutt Shukla in Gorakhpur, which Adityanath had won five consecutive times.

The Uttar Pradesh bypolls are a timely wake-up call for Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP president Amit Shah, as the charm of winning 325 seats in the 403-Assembly in the state last year is certainly gone. Along with it, the magic of winning 71 seats out of 80 in the 2014 Lok Sabha election has also vanished.

There is little doubt that the upcoming Lok Sabha election is altogether a different ball game and if BJP wants to repeat its 2014 feat, it'll have no choice but to totally rejig its electoral strategy.

SOURCE : FIRST POST

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Vasundhara Raje to kick-off farm loan waiver scheme from Banswara

Chief minister Vasundhara Raje will kick-off the farm loan waiver scheme, the biggest sop in poll year, from Banswara on Thursday.

Raje conducted Jan Samwad programme in the tribal district on Wednesday and spelled out the development works that were executed for the tribal by her government.

Raje claimed that her government did planned development works in the tribal areas and its Bhamasha Health Insurance Scheme is a pioneer in the country.

“To promote birth of girl child we had initiated Raj Shri Scheme and for free medical and health scheme Bhamashah Scheme was launched. Bhamashah is the country’s first scheme in the health sector availing which the tribal are getting treatment in the private hospitals of which they could have never thought of,” Raje told the locals attending the Samwad programme at Banswara’s Gadi Assembly constituency.

The CM held dialogues with the locals and took feedback on government schemes. A report card was also presented by the CM to the locals. She claimed that her government spent Rs 6500 crore in Banswara district in four years, of which Rs1100 crore alone was allocated to the development works in Gadi area.

She announced Rs1 crore for Baloda Drinking Water Project which was demand raised by the locals.

Raje on Thursday will distribute loan waiver certificates to the farmers. This loan waiver would cost the exchequer Rs 8,000 crore. The scheme is expected to benefit more than 28 lakh farmers in the state. The first camp will be held in Banswara where Raje will give away the certificates to beneficiary farmers. There are more than 1  lakh farmers in Banswara.

SOURCE : DNA INDIA

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Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Will ‘2+2’ add up to S-400s? Trump gives Modi a tough math problem to crack

A lot is riding on the high-level dialogue between India and the US scheduled for early July. Can the ‘2+2’ meeting between the defence and foreign ministers smoothen the wrinkles currently fogging the relationship? From trade disputes to threats of US sanctions, the background noise has got louder in recent months. So, what’s up?

India filed a case last week in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) against the US decision to impose tariffs on imported steel and aluminium. New Delhi plans to slap addition duties of $165 million on American cashews, chickpeas, walnuts and wheat by June 21unless the US moves.

New Delhi feels stung when Mexico and Canada got a waiver, while India didn’t. A WTO wrangle between friends is not unusual. But when it comes with an unproductive trade dialogue, things can get sticky

The atmospherics have taken a hit lately. And atmospherics matter, because much of the ‘feel good’ factor in the India-US equation is sustained by words. Soaring rhetoric of “shared democratic values” and being “natural partners” helps obscure serious trade disputes and the slow pace of progress on defence projects and acquisitions.

And now the sword of US sanctions hangs over the relationship. Indian officials are nervously watching developments on Capitol Hill around the Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (Caatsa), a law that defeats the purpose for which it was written: punishing Russia. The second and third order consequences of Caatsa seemed to have escaped its ambitious writers. 

Last week, the Trump administration got no assurance from Senate Democrats that countries such as India would get a waiver when they do business with Russia, Iran and North Korea, the primary targets of Caatsa. The Democrats are itching to punish Republicans, and the politics is out of control. 

The attempts, so far, to amend Caatsa still leave a heavy burden of proof on the administration and affected countries. The latest effort asks for “specified steps, including terminating defence relationships with Russia or reducing reliance upon the Russian defence or intelligence sectors” before relief can be given. 

India’s recent informal summits with China and Russia haven’t helped the atmospherics. Neither did the unannounced visit of deputy external affairs minister V K Singh to North Korea. The optics of Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in New Delhi last week talking of expanding ties “in all fields” are all too obvious. 

But it’s India’s purchase of Russian S-400 Triumf anti-aircraft and anti-missile system that has unnerved Washington. Apart from triggering sanctions, US officials are worried about the security implications of the S-400s for their own systems. Some have suggested that India-US joint military exercises may be affected if the S-400 is inducted into the Indian Air Force. William Thornberry, chairman of the US House Armed Services Committee, hinted that India’s access to the best US technology, such as armed drones, could become more difficult. 

While India can buy drones elsewhere, it can’t get the S-400 anywhere else. A comparable one doesn’t exist. China, first in line for the S-400, has already received the first delivery from Russia and it’s buying six battalions of this relatively low-cost system. 

After you cut the hype, defence analysts agree that the S-400 is a game-changer with its multiple intercept missiles that can aim high and low. It can hit targets just 5 m off the ground and as far as 400 km and faster than any existing aircraft. Its radars are supposed to defeat stealth fighters. 

No wonder so many countries — Turkey and Saudi Arabia included —are eager to buy the S-400, and Washington is worried. Turkey, a Nato member, was told that the S-400 was incompatible with the alliance’s systems. The US Congress is considering a Bill to block the sale of F-35s to Ankara in retaliation. 

The US is understandably concerned about the proliferation of S-400s because they can dramatically upset the military balance, especially vis-à-vis China. It will strongly raise the issue in the upcoming ‘2+2’ meeting of external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj and defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defence Secretary James Mattis. India will equally strongly defend its decision to ‘secure its borders’. 

While there is an overall understanding that New Delhi is doing what any country must — secure its national security interests — especially given the difficulties of dealing with an unpredictable US president, there will still be noise from the sidelines to pick a side. It could be a tough political and diplomatic walk. 

SOURCE : ECONOMIC TIMES

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Modi in Indonesia LIVE: PM visits Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta

Prime Minister Narendra Modi today began his Indonesia visit by paying homage to martyrs of Indonesian independence struggle as he laid a wreath at the Kalibata National Heroes' Cemetery in Jakarta.

Prime Minister Modi, who is here on his first-ever official visit to Indonesia, will meet President Joko Widodo today and discuss bilateral cooperation in a broad range of areas, including maritime, trade and investment.

Kalibata Heroes' Cemetery in South Jakarta is a military cemetery in Indonesia. It was built in 1953 and opened in November 1954 when the first burial took place.

External Affairs Ministry Spokesperson Raveesh Kumar said in a tweet: "Lest we forget...Paying homage to martyrs of Indonesian independence struggle! PM @narendramodi laying wreath at the Kalibata National Heroes' Cemetery and signing the Visitor's Book".

LIVE UPDATES

12:25 pm: PM Narendra Modi reached the famous Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta. Indonesian President Joko Widodo is accompanying  PM Modi.

12:15 pm: Prime Minister Narendra Modi attends a Kite exhibition in Jakarta. PM Modi also shows his kite flying talent on the occasion.

10:55 am: For the development of Indo-Pacific region we (India - Indonesia) have agreed to the same shared vision. India's Act East Policy and the vision of SAGAR (Security and Growth for all in the Region) matches President Jidodo's Maritime Fulcrum Policy: PM Modi

10:45 am: India-ASEAN partnership is such an important power that can become a guarantee of peace not only in Indo-Pacific region but also beyond it: PM Modi in Jakarta.

10:43 am: India and Indonesia to upgrade ties to Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, says PM Narendra Modi after talks with President Joko Widodo.

10:42 am: Both India and Indonesia need to help each other in skill development. We aim to double the trade between the two nations by 2015: PM Modi.

10:41 am: India stands resolutely with Indonesia in the fight against terror, we condemn the recent terror attacks in Indonesia in which many innocent people lost their lives: We need to fight the menace of terrorism together, says PM Modi.

10:40 am: PM Narendra  Modi is making a statement after the delegation-level talks between India and Indonesia.

09:29 am: Delegation-level talks between India and Indonesia begins. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Indonesian President Joko Widodo are attending the dialogue

08:20 am: Prime Minister Narendra Modi reaches Kalibata National Heroes' Cemetery in Jakarta to pay to tribute to Indonesia's military bravehearts,

Prime Modi will also visit Arjuna Wijaya Monument during his  Indonesia visit. The Arjuna Wijaya Monument is one of the iconic monuments in Jakarta. It is just next to Monas, which is the National Monument of Indonesia.

The iconic monument depicts the scene of Indian epic Mahabharata where Arjuna and Lord Krishna are in a chariot.

On May 31, on his way to Singapore, PM Modi will make a brief halt in Malaysia to congratulate the new Malaysian leadership and will meet Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad.

In Singapore, Prime Minister Modi will deliver the keynote address at Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual security meet, on June 1.

SOURCE : INDIA TV NEWS

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President of India reviews passing out parade of 134th course of National Defence Academy; says armed forces represent India’s pluralism and India’s ethos

Pune : The President of India, Shri Ram Nath Kovind, reviewed the passing out parade of the 134th course of the National Defence Academy, this morning (May 30, 2018) in Khadakwasla, near Pune.

Speaking on the occasion, the President said that he was delighted to review the passing out parade at the NDA. As the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, this was a moment of immense satisfaction for him. The Armed Forces are a symbol of excellence and dedication for the entire country. This parade comprises cadets from all parts of India and from a variety of communities. Its harmony speaks for our essential unity as much as for our pluralism as a society.

The President said that a soldier or an officer in uniform, irrespective of whether he or she is from the Army, the Navy or the Air Force, evokes admiration and trust everywhere in the country. If a fellow citizen sees a member of the Armed Forces at a railway station or a market or at any other place, there is an immediate emotion of pride and reassurance. This is due to the unparalleled and unquestioning service to the nation in times of war and peace, on the border or within the country during a natural calamity. The Armed Forces represent the best of the Indian ethos.

The President said that the NDA is more than just a training facility. It is the crucible of valour and bravery. It has inculcated a resolve and a spirit of national service in generations of cadets and generations of officers. It is because of this heritage that in December 1978 President Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy conferred the President’s Colours on the NDA.

Addressing the cadets, the President said that the Armed Forces are not merely about doing a job – they are about answering a calling. And this is a calling for a rare breed of human beings. Today, the cadets have become role models for our young people, guarantors of our peace and prosperity, and guardians of our nation. He expressed confidence that the graduating cadets would prove worthy successors to the unflinching and fearless officers who have preceded them.

SOURCE : APN NEWS

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Hon'ble President of India Sets a New Precedence With Presence at 'SantokBaa Humanitarian Award' Function

Mr. Ram Nath Kovind, Hon'ble President of India, set a precedent when he came to Surat on 29th May 2018 to attend the 'SantokBaa Humanitarian Award' presentation function, organised by SRK Knowledge Foundation (SRKKF). After conferring the 'SantokBaa Humanitarian Award' to Nobel Laureate, Mr. Kailash Satyarthi, and Former Chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), Mr. A.S. Kiran Kumar, along with Rs. 1 crore (equivalent to US$ 1,50,000) each, he admitted that he came to attend the award function by breaking tradition of Rashtrapati Bhavan (President House).

He said that generally the President wouldn't attend functions of private organisations. "When I learnt that Satyarthi and Kiran Kumar were to be awarded, I said these two are good men. Later, after checking the credentials of the award-giver, I learnt that they are also fine. "So, I decided to break the tradition a little bit to felicitate two good people," the President said.

Mr. Kailash Satyarthi said he was honoured to receive the award and declared that he would donate the money to Surakshit Bachpan Fund (Safe Childhood Fund) for the welfare of children. He asked the Chief Minister of Gujarat to take stern actions in eradicating child labour which still exists in some parts of the State.

Mr. Kiran Kumar said he received the award not as an individual, but as a representative of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). He said he would dedicate this money to further research and development work in space science and technology. Mr. Kiran Kumar is one of the persons instrumental in taking India to the list of top 5 countries having space technology.

Mr. Kovind said he was happy that Surat's business community was supportive of philanthropic and social welfare efforts. He also praised the organisers for instituting the awards.

Mr. O. P. Kohli, Hon'ble Gujarat Governor, and Mr. Vijay Rupani, Hon'ble Chief Minister, were also present at the occasion. Both of them complimented the Awardees and praised SRKKF for its notable contribution to the larger good of the society. At the occasion, SRKKF also received a letter of appreciation from Mr. Narendra Modi, the Hon'ble Prime Minister of India.

SRKKF Chairman Mr. Govind Dholakia, barely educated, once a farmer now a diamond baron and a great philanthropist, said, "I wanted to institute an award in the memory of my mother who taught me values of life. We have been able to recognise wonderful people who have been working for the betterment of society and impacting lives of millions."

Started in 2007, the award has been conferred upon other eminent personalities from a variety of fields, including Mr. Ratan Tata, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Dr Sudha Murthy, Lord Bhikhu Parekh, Dr Verghese Kurien, Gandhian Narayan Desai, Dr. H. L. Trivedi, Mrs. Poornima Pakwasa, Father Valles, Dr. M. S. Swaminathan and Mr. Sam Pitroda.

About Shree Ramkrishna Knowledge Foundation 

Shree Ramkrishna Knowledge Foundation (SRKKF) is a culmination of the evolution journey embarked upon, more than half a century ago, by our Founder Chairman, Shree Govind Dholakia, in 1964. His focused, resilient, visionary, passionate and innovative approach along with his belief of 'Giving back to the Society' has inspired to setup SRKKF. Our aim includes extensive contribution in the areas of health, education, agriculture and community welfare. In accord with this vision, Shri Govind Dholakia instituted the SantokBaa Award in the year 2007, in the affectionate memory and honour of his mother SantokBaa. Her selfless devotion and humanitarian values inspired him to further her mission by honouring altruists from various fields.

SOURCE : PRNEWS WIRE

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PAKISTAN TO HOLD GENERAL ELECTION ON 25 JULY – OFFICIALS

ISLAMABAD – Pakistan will hold a general election on July 25 and President Mamnoon Hussain has approved the date, electoral officials said on Saturday, as the government enters its final week in office.

Pakistan’s government and parliament is due to be dissolved on 31 May, when a new interim prime minister and an interim administration is meant to take over.

However, political wrangling between the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party and the opposition in parliament had delayed the announcement of the new interim premier.

Cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf, or Justice Party, is expected to be the main challenger to the ruling party.

The outgoing government of Shahid Khaqan Abbasi is only the second to complete a five year term in office, which underscores a democratic transition in the nuclear armed nation.

The upcoming election is due to be held at a time of growing political instability, with the ruling PML-N party accusing the powerful military, which has ruled Pakistan for about half its history since independence in 1947, of interfering in politics and trying to weaken it.

The military denies involvement in politics.

The interim administration usually does not make any major decisions except for supervising elections until a new government is elected, though it may be forced to act to shore up the $300 billion economy amid a worsening macro-economic outlook.

Pakistan’s foreign reserves are rapidly depleting and the current account deficit has widened sharply over the past year, prompting many analysts to speculate Pakistan may need another International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout.

However, Pakistan is expecting to obtain fresh Chinese loans worth $1-2 billion to help it avert a balance of payments crisis, Pakistani government sources have said.

SOURCE : EWN.co.za

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Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Trump’s trade agenda crashes up against reality of global politics

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump’s hardline views on trade, a staple of his message long before he entered politics, are beginning to collide with the cold realities of global geopolitics.

Trade talks on China and the North American Free Trade Agreement have hit stumbling blocks, posing a challenge for a president who vowed to make trade deals more equitable for the United States during his 2016 campaign and who famously tweeted that trade wars are “easy to win.”

Trump’s trade agenda — at least lately — has not been so easy.

After threatening China with $150 billion in tariffs, Trump’s administration has suspended plans to impose the tariffs for now and the president tweeted Wednesday that a “different structure” will be needed in the trade talks involving the world’s two largest economies.

The president has bemoaned the massive U.S. trade deficit with China — $337 billion last year — as evidence that Beijing has been complicit in abusive trading practices and outsmarted his predecessors.

Pointing to a pause in the trade dispute, the administration pointed to China’s plans to “significantly increase” its purchases of U.S. goods and services and make “meaningful increases” in U.S. exports of agriculture and energy products. Financial markets, wary of a calamitous trade war, were relieved.

But Beijing did not agree to any specific dollar amounts, despite the Trump administration’s push to lower the U.S. trade deficit by at least $200 billion. And doubts remain about whether China will address allegations the Chinese engage in cybertheft of trade secrets, force U.S. companies to transfer some of their technology in exchange for market access or back away from its China 2025 plan to dominate emerging technologies.

“Chinese r laughing at us again. They have never delivered on 1 promise in the past. Appeasement is the devils friend,” Dan DiMicco, a former Nucor steel chairman and trade adviser to Trump’s campaign and transition team, tweeted last Monday.

Separately, on Friday, the U.S. reached a deal on ZTE Corp. that will allow the Chinese telecommunications giant to remain in business. Under the deal, ZTE will oust its management team, hire American compliance offers and pay a fine — on top of the $1 billion it has already paid for selling equipment to North Korea and Iran in violation of U.S. sanctions.

In return, the U.S. Commerce Department will lift a seven-year ban on ZTE buying components from U.S. companies. The ban, imposed this month, threatened to put ZTE out of business.

Trump said earlier that a resolution will help U.S. firms that supply ZTE with components, but members of Congress, including several Republicans, warned that the U.S. is being too lenient on a company that has violated U.S. sanctions.

“ZTE presents a national security threat to the United States — and nothing in this reported deal addresses that fundamental fact,” said Sen. Chris Van Hollen, a Maryland Democrat. “If President Trump won’t put our security before Chinese jobs, Congress will act on a bipartisan basis to stop him.”

Trump’s team, meanwhile, has hit an impasse with Canada and Mexico on negotiations over NAFTA. The president has sought to overhaul NAFTA as a way of returning automobile production to the U.S. and reduce America’s trade deficit with Mexico.

But the talks are running into the complications of Mexican elections in July and the U.S. midterm elections in November along with a dispute over rules for car production.

Seeking leverage, Trump’s administration launched an investigation into whether tariffs might be necessary on car imports, based on national security concerns. The potential penalties could affect Mexico, Canada, Japan and the European Union.

The administration used a similar Commerce Department probe to impose tariffs in March on imported steel and aluminum.

But auto manufacturers said they did not push for the auto investigation, and members of Congress questioned the validity of the probe.

“The Honda Accord is not a threat to our national security,” said Rep. Jeb Hensarling, a Texas Republican, hours after joining Trump for a bill signing at the White House. But he added that “taxing it with trade tariffs is a threat to the economic security of millions of hard-working American families.”

Stephen Moore, a former Trump campaign adviser and visiting fellow at The Heritage Foundation, said Trump remains focused on how the trade policies affect the financial markets and economic growth. But he expects the president to continue to press for a better deal with China.

“As a long-term strategy, I don’t see him backing down in his demands on China,” Moore said.

The trade talks with China have come against the backdrop of Trump’s efforts to hold a June summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, which the president said Friday could get back on track after he nixed it a day earlier. His attempts to push Kim toward denuclearization have required the cooperation of China, something the president acknowledged to reporters earlier in the week.

The president said alongside South Korean President Moon Jae-in, prior to this week’s uncertainty over the Singapore summit, that he has a “much bigger picture” in mind as he considers China trade, a reminder that his trade policies are no longer a matter of campaign rhetoric.

“I’m also thinking about what they’re doing to help us with peace with North Korea. That’s a very important element,” Trump said. “So we’ll see how it all works out. But in the end, it will work out. Can’t tell you exactly how or why, but it always does.”

SOURCE : JAPAN TIMES

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Ex-Pakistani ISI Chief Banned From Leaving the Country for Controversial Book

Islamabad: Pakistan’s powerful spy agency ISI’s former chief Lt Gen (retd.) Asad Durrani has been banned from leaving the country and will face a Court of Inquiry over a controversial book he recently co-authored with India’s former intelligence head.

Durrani, who headed the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency from August 1990 till March 1992, along with former RAW chief A.S. Dulat has recently published the book titled The Spy Chronicles: RAW, ISI and the Illusion of Peace in India.

He was summoned to the General Headquarters (GHQ) today to explain his position on the book Spy Chronicles, said a statement issued today by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) – the Pakistan military’s media wing.

“A formal Court of Inquiry headed by a serving Lieutenant General has been ordered to probe the matter in detail,” the statement said.

It also said that “competent authority has been approached to place the name of Lt Gen (retd) Durrani on Exit Control List (ECL).”

Those persons on the ECL are prohibited from leaving Pakistan.

Durrani has expressed dismay at his “own people” after facing severe backlash over his recent book that landed him in controversy. He was also targeted by some retired senior army officers on different TV talk shows.

Lt Gen retired Abdul Qayyum and Maj Gen retired Ijaz Awan questioned the motive behind releasing the book on the internet.

Durrani was apparently summoned after ousted Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif demanded an urgent meeting of the high-powered National Security Committee (NSC) to discuss a recent book co-authored by former spy chiefs of Pakistan and India.

Also, former chairman Senate Raza Rabbani and prominent leader of Pakistan Peoples Party criticised the joint book by rival spy chiefs and said if it was written by a civilian, he would have been branded a traitor.

The two former spy chiefs have touched upon some thorny issues in the book including terrorism, particularly Mumbai attack, Kashmir and the influence of intelligence agencies.

In the book, Durrani has revealed that track-II diplomacy was in place since long aimed at averting war between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.

SOURCE : THE WIRE

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Rajinikanth has clear political vision, target, says RPI leader

CHENNAI: Actor Rajinikanth has a clear vision and a target for his political career and he is updating his political knowledge and current developments, said Se Ku Tamilarasan, former MLA and president, Republic Party of India, on Monday.The four-time MLA, Tamilarasan, one of the influential Dalit leaders of the state, met  Rajinikanth at his oPoes Garden residence on Monday. “I wanted to meet him. After coming to know my wish, he called me to meet him,” he told Express.

“He is interested in knowing all issues of the state and proper solutions. He wants to update his political and social knowledge as he wants to serve as a good leader as the late matinee idol and AIADMK founder MGR did and he has a clear vision and a clear target of what he is going to achieve in politics,” he pointed out.

Asked about Rajini’s dialogue in Kabaali and Kaala over Dalit politics, Tamilarasan said that Rajini wanted to express the voice of the suppressed people and he did it in his recent films. Any work will get a literary status when it speaks about the life and pain of people, who are voiceless. And all art forms are only for the people’s welfare.

Hence, I consider that he used the space for highlighting the people’s voice.”
The RPA leader said, “We have been acting on the concepts and principles of BR Ambedkar for the betterment of Dalits. Whether we will have an alliance with Rajinikanth or not will be decided, depending on the situation after the election dates are announced. We always take decision based on the welfare of the suppressed community people”  he emphasised.It may be recalled that Rajinikanth has, of late, been meeting various personalities in several fields including politics.

SOURCE : NEWS INDIAN EXPRESS

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Are Women Being Sidelined in Indian Politics? 

Women’s votes played a decisive role in the Karnataka elections. The statistics speak for themselves. In the  Chamundeshwari  seat lost by former chief minister Siddaramaiah to his Janata Dal (Secular) rival G.T. Deve  Gowda, 1.10 lakh women cast their vote as opposed to 1.14 lakh men.

K.N. Ramesh, the joint chief electoral officer in Karnataka pointed out, “The voting percentage of women was 75% as opposed to 76% men in  Chamundeshwari.”

With women voting in such large numbers (of the 2.4 crore women in the Karnataka electoral list, 1.8 crore women cast their votes on May 15) it would be expected that  the  political parties would have given a large number of tickets to women candidates.

The reality is that despite all this tall talk of smashing gender barriers, the number of tickets to women candidates has  shrunk drastically. Out of 224 assembly seats in Karnataka, the BJP gave a measly six seats to women candidates while the Congress gave 16.

The argument that there are not enough women in the state’s politics who could be given tickets is specious. Karnataka was one of  the first states  in India to reserve seats for women in  panchayats  and has many experienced women in grassroots politics  who could have been given tickets for assembly elections.

Fewer tickets to women candidates in Karnataka is part of a trend seen across all states, be it Tripura, Gujarat, Punjab or Uttar Pradesh. And this is happening at a time when the Election Commission has found that women candidates are often more educated than their male counterparts and with no criminal records.

In the Tripura assembly elections, not only did women vote in larger numbers than their male counterparts in many constituencies, but they also made a difference in many crucial elections.  In  Dhanpur, the constituency of former chief minister Manik Sarkar,  according to Taposh Roy, deputy election commissioner,  female voters averaged 95.26% against male voters who averaged 90.09%.

In chief minister Biplab Kumar Deb’s constituency Banamalipur, women voters crossed the 86.09 percentage mark against the male voting percentage of 86.30.

Tripura Congress vice-president Tapas  Dey admitted to their crucial role in helping the BJP win. Dey claimed that,  “Women, who have a 3% higher vote share than men in this election, voted against the CPI(M).”

One of the main reasons why the BJP trumped the women vote was because of the high rate of crime against women. The National Crime Record Bureau (NCRB) has shown that Tripura has the highest rate of crime after UP, but has one of the lowest conviction rates amongst all states.

Aparna  De, secretary of the Tripura State Commission for Women,  expressed satisfaction at the large numbers of women who have participated in the election and attributed it to their high levels of political awareness.

What she was not willing to make a comment on was on the fewer number of women candidates  across all parties.

Despite 25 years of Left rule, only 24 women contested the assembly elections in this state (two less than in 2013)  and from these, three won, including Bijina  Nath  who won for the third time on a CPM ticket.

But look at the case of Gujarat, Prime Minister Narendra  Modi’s  own state which has a deficit sex ratio for women and where political power continues to  escape the majority of women.  The gender ratio among voters in the 2017 election was 920 women per 1,000 men as against 910 per 1,000 male voters in 2012. Of the 11.85 lakh teenagers who were eligible to vote in these elections,  only  38%  were  female  voters.

A surprising development in Gujarat is that while EC statistics show  that  out of  the 4.3 crore voters in Gujarat, 2.08 crore were women, the vote  share of women has dipped considerably in the last elections.

Ahmedabad-based political scientist Professor  Ghanshyam  Shah has his own assessment of why women voters turned up in fewer numbers.

He claims that the Narendra  Modi charisma among women is on the decline. This is something that had been reported extensively in the Gujarati press. “Earlier, women were impressed with  Modi’s aura of masculinity and talk. But now his own supporters and loyalists feel he overdoes his boasting and are disillusioned with his performance,” says Shah.

Shah also feels the major increase in prices of all food and essential commodities as well has a hike in fuel prices has led women to feel the BJP and its leaders do not care for their  concerns.

Congress spokesperson Ami  Yagnik  believes the low turnout was a criticism of the Gujarat model of development. Yagnik  described how during  the past five years, the BJP state government has closed down 13,000 government-run schools in which girls and boys from poorer homes  studied.  Families were saving and skimping to send their boys for an education even if the schools are located several  kilometres  away.

But what was the fate of the girl child? She was being forced to stay at home with the present government allocating only 2% of its budget to  the field of education.

Yagnik  also pointed to the growing sense of insecurity among  Gujarati women in which the state  saw 472 gang rapes  in the last two years  but  the  entire  Nirbhaya  fund was returned unused to the Centre . In Gujarat, only 21 women were given tickets.  Among  the  338 candidates who contested the Himachal Pradesh polls, only 19 were women.

This patriarchal mindset is reflected in the fewer numbers of women contesting elections.

Women politicians decry this trend pointing out that the main reason for their being sidelined is because they lack the money and muscle power to fight elections. Prior to 1980, Karnataka, to cite an example, saw up to 19 women in the assembly in 1957.

Former minister  Leeladevi  R. Prasad says that she had earlier fought and won elections for as little as Rs 25,000 but today “caste and money power are in the forefront”.

Dr  Ranjana  Kumari, director of  the  Centre for Social Research, believes there is a more insidious reason for this exclusionist politics. “The RSS ideology is basically reflective of an extremely patriarchal mindset. Politics for them is a masculine activity. They talk about giving support to the weaker sections of society but that is not the case. The last four years have seen ten percent of women being forced out of the workforce despite the fact that a large number of our homes are today headed by single mothers,” said Kumari.

“The BJP has a few poster women at the top but someone like  Sushma  Swaraj  can hardly be said to have risen in politics because of her RSS background,” Kumari  added.

Political scientist Dr  Zoya Hasan is equally critical of  how all our public spaces are becoming all-male preserves.  ‘This male-dominated ideology spread by the RSS has seen a huge rise in sexual violence.  Not that rape did not occur earlier.  But in the case of the  Kathua  rape case, two BJP MLAs had actually defended the accused and even the Jammu Bar Association went to the extent of claiming the case be handed over  to the CBI since the J&K crime branch had communalised the investigation. The police in  Unnao  did the same when they gave a clean chit to the local  MLA  Kuldeep  Singh  Sengar,’ said  Hasan.

Dr  Hasan  feels it is the insidious spread of this ideology which has seen women being sidelined from public positions. ”How many vice chancellors in the country are women? How many women have been inducted into the  Niti  Aayog?   Women are hardly visible in the public domain,” she maintained.

Left leader and former member of the National  Commission  for  Women  Malini  Bhattacharjee  believes political parties give a token acceptance to women, many of whom are celebrities who have no understanding of ground realities.

“Today, for women who come from poorer sections of society to make an entry into politics is next to impossible,” she said. Bhattacharjee also pointed out that tough, outspoken women are not given tickets. “Can you imagine someone like Gauri  Lankesh  being asked to fight an election?  She was such a danger to the powers that be that she was made to shut up,” said  Bhattacharjee.

The Women Reservation Bill which would have ensured 50% reservation for women in assemblies and  in the  Lok  Sabha is in a limbo. This is obviously something which the  Modi  government does not consider amongst its priorities. The result  may be a further sidelining  of  Indian  women from the political arena.

SOURCE : THE WIRE

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How the BJP – Master of Mixing Religion and Politics – Is Taking India for a Ride

I had never imagined in the wildest of my dreams that a day would come when I would swoon over Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president Amit Shah’s pronouncements. But this is exactly what happened when I heard him saying that nobody should galvanise political support on the basis of religion and religion should not be used to polarise people.

It is common knowledge that the absolute domination of the BJP by the two-member team of prime minster Narendra Modi and party president Amit Shah had rendered L.K. Advani absolutely irrelevant and he had come to represent the epic obsolescence of Bhishma Pitamah of the Mahabharata. However I did not know that his definition of who was “secular” and who was “pseudo-secular” too had become obsolete.

This facile distinction seemed to have collapsed and everybody had turned secular as the ruling party president was saying exactly the same thing that the “pseudo-secular” did not tire to repeat. So, I experienced a strange kind of euphoria and got almost convinced that the promised era of “achhe din” had finally arrived.

But sadly, good things have a very short life. When I paid attention to the context of Amit Shah’s jumla, I realised that I had been taken for a ride. What he actually meant was that no religion other than Hinduism should be used to galvanise political support and to polarise people to achieve political objectives. After all, whatever the irrelevant constitution might say, India happens to be a Hindu rashtra where politics have to be conducted only on the basis of the religion of the majority community. It shows Hinduism’s spirit of tolerance that other religions can also co-exist with it in the country. But they should know their place.

This was the real import of Amit Shah’s jumla as he was reacting to a letter written by Delhi Archbishop Anil Couto and addressed to all parish priests and religious institutions in the Archdiocese of Delhi. In the letter, Archbishop Couto committed the crime of saying that “we are witnessing a turbulent political atmosphere which poses a threat to the democratic principles enshrined in our constitution and the secular fabric of the nation” and exhorting them to “pray for the nation”, “all the more so when we approach the general election”.


BJP president Amit Shah with party MP Yogi Aditya Nath during an election road show in Gorakhpur district. Credit: PTI

What is so objectionable in it that several TV news channels have been crying foul and BJP president Amit Shah and Union home minister Rajnath Singh have chosen to react against it? Is it not a fact that ever since the Modi government came into power, attacks on minorities have stepped up? And, has the Archbishop asked the laity to vote for a particular political party? Where is the political mobilisation on the basis of religion in his letter that is accompanied by the draft of a prayer? And is it not really rich for a political party whose guiding philosophy is named Hindutva, which means the essence of Hinduism or Hinduness, thus making its inextricable relationship with the majority community’s religion explicit?

Is it not true that Swami Karapatriji Maharaj formed his Ramrajya Parishad soon after Independence on the plank of Hinduism?Is it not true that in 1966, Hindu sadhus had launched the cow-protection movement that later culminated into surrounding and attacking parliament and turned into a confrontation with the law and order machinery? Is it not true that the BJP and VHP played a pivotal role in forming Dharma Sansad where Hindu sadhus and mahants deliberated on various political issues, particularly the issue of building a Rama temple in place of Babri Masjid in Ayodhya?

Is it not true that many religious leaders such as Mahant Avaidhyanath, Yogi Adityanath, Uma Bharti and Sakshi Maharaj contested elections as BJP candidates? And, is it not true that many of them indulged in hate speech against minority communities – Vishwa Hindu parishad leader Acharya Dharmendra was convicted for it – and the videos of their public speeches can still be viewed as they continue to be circulated in public domain? Was Advani’s ‘Rath Yatra’ not a blatant attempt to mobilise Hindu masses on the basis of religion? And, was not the Ayodhya movement a textbook example of using religion to achieve political goals? Is not the BJP’s spectacular rise as a result of this movement proof enough?

Recently, the Gujarat government sought divine intervention for good rainfall. After digging the state’s water bodies deeper, the Vijay Rupani-led BJP government decided to hold 41 ‘parjanya yagnas’ on May 31 at each of the 33 districts and eight major cities in the state to appease Lord Indra and Varun for good monsoon in the state.

Yogi Adityanath, head of the Gorakhnath peeth in Gorakhpur, is the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh while  Hindu sanyasin Uma Bharti is a minister in the Narendra Modi government. While campaigning for the BJP candidate in Kairana Lok Sabha by-poll, Yogi Adityanath is openly stoking communal fires by taking the names of two Hindu boys who were killed before the Muzaffarnagar riots began on a full scale. In recent years, the RSS clan launched several campaigns like ‘love jihad’ and ‘ghar wapasi‘ that were clearly aimed at using strong arm tactics against the Muslim and Christian minorities.

The violent campaign against the film Padmaavat had full support of the Hindutva forces and was anti-Muslim in nature. The ongoing campaign in Aligarh Muslim University against the portrait of Jinnah is also aimed at the Muslims because it is being instilled in the minds of the common Hindus that Muslims’ loyalties lie with Pakistan and its founder M. A. Jinnah.

Smear campaigns are regularly being launched on the internet and social media platforms using fake information and photo-shopped pictures to attack political-ideological opponents like Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, the latter being projected as a descendant of a Muslim grandfather, while the former as the well-wisher of Muslims and enemy of Hindu interests. This was the accusation used by Nathuram Godse against Gandhi to justify his act of assassination.

All the RSS organisations including the BJP resort to communal polarisation and regularly mobilise the Hindu masses on religious basis. Sadhus, sants, mahants, god men and god women and other assorted Hindu religious leaders actively help them in this communal project. When Dera Sachcha Sauda chief Ram Rahim appealed to his followers to vote for a particular political party, BJP leaders did not object. When a woman BJP leader appealed Hindu voters to choose between “Ramazade and haramzade”, Amit Shah’s secular conscience did not prick him nor did Rajnath Singh raise a finger. Therefore, it is more than amusing to see these worthies invoking secularism and fuming against mixing religion with politics.

However, I am willing to again swoon over Amit Shah and Rajnath Singh if they stick to their words and refrain from using Hinduism for political gains.

SOURCE : THE WIRE

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Indonesia, India to strengthen relations in politics, defense

Indonesia will strengthen relations with India during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit on Tuesday, focusing not only on economic cooperation but also politics and defense, Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi said on Monday.

She said the two countries had increased trade over the years, with trade volume reaching US$18.87 billion last year, while in terms of investment, India was the 16th largest investor in Indonesia, a big leap from 24th position the year before. As for tourism, around 500,000 Indians visited Indonesia last year, a 28 percent increase from a year prior.

“From an economic perspective, the indicators are very clear, while from political indicators, we have also maintained good relations since the birth of the country,” she said.

She said the two countries would discuss several agreements in the meeting, including an update to a defense agreement, “but the finalizing will be continued up to the last minutes.”

Retno added that among interesting developments was that the two countries would conduct joint production in the strategic industry. “One of the finalized prototypes is water cannon, which will be produced by PT Pindad and Tata Motors,” she said, adding that the product would be exhibited during Modi’s visit.

Modi is scheduled to arrive in Jakarta on Tuesday evening and meet with President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo at the Merdeka Palace on Wednesday. The two leaders also plan to visit the National Monument and the Grand Istiqlal Mosque.

SOURCE THE JAKARTA POST

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China interfered in Australian politics -- secret probe

MELBOURNE -- A secret Australian investigation uncovered a campaign by China to infiltrate the country's major political parties, a news outlet has reported, in the latest allegation of Chinese interference likely to strain relations between the trading partners.

The probe ordered by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull revealed a decade-long effort by the Chinese Communist Party to compromise Australia's political process and influence policymaking, 9 News reported on Monday.

The findings of the review by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation and the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet reportedly prompted Turnbull's proposal last year of pending anti-foreign interference laws that have tested ties with Beijing.

Turnbull unveiled the new laws -- which would ban foreign political donations, expand the definition of espionage and create a register of foreign lobbyists -- while warning of attempts by "foreign powers" to influence Australian democracy. While insisting the legislation was not aimed at a specific country, Turnbull, the leader of the center-right Liberal Party, cited reports of alleged Chinese interference as a justification for the legislation.

Beijing blasted Turnbull's remarks at the time as catering to "irresponsible reports by some Australian media that are without principle and full of bias against China."

Separately, Fairfax Media reported on Monday that former Foreign Minister Bob Carr, who leads a think tank established by a businessman with links to Beijing, had asked a senator to look into the background of the government adviser who led the probe.

Australia's ties with China, its biggest trading partner, have reached a nadir over alleged meddling. In recent months, Beijing has been accused of interference including cultivating Manchurian candidates for office, kidnapping dissidents, leaning on local Chinese-language media and spying on Chinese students studying here.

"I think we can be well protected, we can protect ourselves if we understand where it is that the CCP is trying to steer our influential people and just be very alert to not being steered in that direction," Merriden Varrall, director of the East Asia Programme at the Sydney-based Lowy Institute, told the Nikkei Asian Review.

Last week, Andrew Hastie, a Liberal Party MP, unleashed shock waves when he used parliamentary privilege to accuse a high-profile Chinese-born businessman of involvement in the bribery of a high-level United Nations official. Chau Chak Wing, who has launched defamation proceedings against a number of media organizations for tying him to the Chinese government, has vehemently denied the allegation.

The Global Times, a newspaper with links to the Chinese Communist Party, said in a recent editorial that Australia's relations with China had dropped to "their lowest level" and were now "among the worst of all Western nations."

Meanwhile, Geoff Raby, a former Australian ambassador to Beijing, earlier this month called for Foreign Minister Julie Bishop to be sacked over her failure to visit China for more than two years, as well as comments on the South China Sea and democracy that have angered Beijing.

In an apparent effort to alleviate escalating tensions, Bishop met with her Chinese counterpart Wang Yi last week for talks on the sidelines of the Group of 20 foreign ministers meeting in Buenos Aires. While Bishop subsequently described the discussions as "very warm and positive," the Chinese foreign minister struck a less conciliatory tone. Wang said Australia should "take off the tinted glasses" and be positive toward China's growth if it wanted to improve ties.

"We do both need each other and we do both need the relationship to continue to be positive," Varrall said. "So while there may be tensions and moments of hate, I don't think either side wants this to turn into something really serious."

SOURCE : ASIA.NIKKEI.com

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Monday, May 28, 2018

Justin Trudeau’s narcissism reveals Canada’s divisions

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s official trip to India earlier this year, with its mock piety and clumsy handling of relations with a rising power of 1.2 billion people, rightly set off alarm bells in addition to a lot of ongoing jokes. A larger pattern of bizarre Trudeau behaviour is coming into focus, Canadians now realize, that’s been obscured by his progressive politics and human rights activism at home and abroad.

The asylum-seeker issue and Trudeau’s handling of Canada-U.S. relations are cases in point. Though snapshots from two years in power, each is vital to Canada’s unity and prosperity.

A Globe and Mail columnist recently argued that the Trudeau government needs to re-establish control over the border before the broad-based and all-party Canadian support for immigration is threatened by the surge in asylum-seekers from the United States.

That assumes there is a pro-immigration consensus in Canada in the first place. In fact, Trudeau’s politics have served to expose pre-existing divisions among liberal and conservative Canadians on immigration issues.

Asylum-seekers became a hot political issue after U.S. President Donald Trump moved to block migration from certain Muslim-majority countries in January 2017. Trudeau, former U.S. president Barack Obama and many Canadians objected to the travel ban. The prime minister tweeted that Canada was a tolerant, welcoming haven.

Exodus to the north begins
Soon after, asylum-seekers began flowing north in large numbers – more than 26,000 in the last 15 months while as many as 400 a day are expected to cross Canadian borders this summer – many of them saying they would have remained in the U.S. if not for Trump’s rhetoric and policies.

When that happened, Liberal government ministers started emphasizing Canada’s tough and selective admission process.

Why the tricks? Because many Canadians are conservative enough that they apparently do not support the open-ended invitation that many assumed was contained in Trudeau’s tweet.

Once people began crossing the border illegally, it became clear that Trudeau’s politics on asylum-seekers was yet another type of shallow conceit that saw him play dress-up in India and embarrass himself internationally for almost a week.

The tweet earned the progressive prime minister some global kudos, but the truth is that Canada under Trudeau failed the first time it was tested only slightly on the issue of asylum-seekers.

In fact, every effort is being made to stem the flow of asylum-seekers from coming to Canada by the federal government amid provincial complaints.

Many asylum-seekers favour Quebec’s long, often isolated border with the United States. But Quebec operates only four asylum-seeker shelters, 1,850 spots in total, and citing the drain on provincial resources, refuses to open more. The claim an entry point has “reached capacity” is actually a tactic, used by U.S. officials at the border with Mexico, to discourage asylum-seekers.

Quebec also wants the federal government to pay to redirect asylum-seekers in excess of provincial capacity somewhere else in Canada.

The Trudeau government is pursuing more comprehensive measures to stop asylum-seekers from coming to Canada illegally. Since last fall, Canadian officials have been talking with their U.S. counterparts about changing the Safe Third Country Agreement.

Canada wants a tougher deal
The bilateral deal, allowing asylum-seekers moving either way to be turned back, only covers official border points. So people crossing into Canada at an isolated field, for example, are not covered. Canada wants the agreement rewritten to apply to the entire border, raising this “at least a dozen” times.

In the meantime, Canadian officials have been trying to staunch the flow of border-crossers through proactive efforts. They’ve travelled to Nigeria, where many recent asylum-seekers are from, to discuss the issue with the Nigerian government and U.S. embassy officials.

Canada has also asked the U.S. government to tighten its visa procedures so that it does not have to greet so many asylum-seekers, arguing that migrants are merely using the U.S. as a transit point before heading to Canada.

Trudeau, however, broadcast to the world that Canada was prepared to welcome everyone.

Avoiding honouring that boast is now the government’s priority on the asylum-seeker issue. It is not just about conservative voters any longer. The government risks alienating fundamentally liberal voters — people who remain committed to the progressive politics espoused in the original tweet, but who believe that there have to be rules and Canada’s immigration rules must be respected and preserved.

These two segments of the electorate comprise the core of Canada’s liberal-conservative political culture, and perhaps the difference between victory and defeat in federal election 2019.

Canada superior?
Trudeau’s tweet also called attention Canada’s distinctiveness and separateness — and actually suggested a superiority —from the United States, an unnecessary risk at the best of times. These are not the best of times.

American relations with its major trading partners have not been this bad since the early 1980s. Trump claims the U.S. is getting fleeced by its free trade pacts. He doubts multilateralism and the liberal-democratic international order that has stabilized the world since 1945. He gained the White House promising to put “America First.”

So what has Trudeau been doing with an infamously thin-skinned and erratic president? He’s been poking at him, including when Trump falsely asserted that the U.S. has a trade deficit with Canada.

Canadians may not like Trump, but Trudeau is responsible for protecting Canada’s national interests. Far from kowtowing, which would be highly unpopular, Trudeau is going too far the other way.

It is not about going along to get along. The point is about working smoothly with the leader of a country that Canada depends upon economically. By constantly asserting Canada’s distinctiveness, Trudeau is failing to do everything he can to work with the U.S. and prevent bilateral irritants from multiplying.

Now we see it’s Trump’s turn to emphasize the differences. He has imposed a 25 per cent tariff on steel imports and 10 per cent on aluminum, targeting “economic enemies” like China and allies like Canada.

Exempted – for now
Trump has granted temporary exemptions to Canada, Mexico and others, delaying a potential trade war while American negotiators work on extracting trade concessions. The latest extension expires on June 1.

Canada and Mexico can avoid the tariffs by agreeing to “modernize” NAFTA to suit Trump’s call for a better deal for America. If not, the U.S. will apply the tariffs, citing impairment to national security. Trudeau has most recently questioned Trump’s logic on the president’s suggestion of auto sector tariffs.

Of course, the Canada-U.S. relationship is about far more than the leaders. But as I and others have argued elsewhere, what happens at the top is of crucial importance. The leaders set the tone, and if the U.S. president decides that he/she likes the Canadian prime minister, then that electrifies the system and things can happen. Trudeau is not encouraging that.

And, perhaps consequently, the Americans are not co-operating with Canada. The asylum-seeker issue is worsening, and the U.S. is practically blackmailing Canada on NAFTA.

So, two years on, and we are left with a sad realization and a sobering question.

What face will Trudeau show to the country and to the world: Will it be the smiling fool, the grinning narcissist, or the self-aware, constructive and sober world leader?

SOURCE : THE CONVERSATION

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Saturday, May 26, 2018

Four years of Modi govt: AAP slams govt on rising fuel prices, broken promises

Aam Aadmi Party on Saturday mounted a scathing attack on the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi over its failure to fulfil the key election promises made at the time of general elections in 2014.Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Singh said at a press conference that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led government had failed to deliver on creating two crore jobs every year, increasing the minimum support price (MSP) for farmers by one-and-a-half-times, providing safety for women and crediting every Indian’s bank account with ₹15 lakh.“When anyone questions them on their failures, they distract the public by raising communally polarising issues, which are completely irrelevant to the worsening economic situation in the country,” Singh said at the conference, which was organised to take stock of the performance of the Modi government in the first four years.The MP was severely critical of the rising fuel prices, which have breached the ₹85-mark in parts of the country.“There has been a 211% increase in the excise duty of petrol since 2014. The excise duty on diesel, on the other hand, has witnessed a 450% steep rise since 2014,” noted Singh, adding that prices of crude on the international market have been on a downward spiral since the Modi government came to power.“India’s oil prices are higher than that of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Burma, Thailand and Sri Lanka,” he added.AAP spokesperson Dilip Pandey at the press conference that the government had accumulated nearly ₹9 lakh crore in its coffers through the selling of petrol and diesel over the last two years. “This year, they are projected to collect ₹8 lakh crore,” he added.

The MP said that the rising prices have translated into higher input costs for agriculture and were having an adverse effect on inflation.He further flayed the government on the issue of women’s safety, saying that government campaigns like ‘Beti Bachao Beti Padhao’ were just creating a false image about the BJP.“A matter of fact remains that only 15 paisa per day per woman is being spent on measures to enhance women safety, even as BJP’s leaders go about raping women with impunity,” he said.Taking more potshots at Modi government’s economic policies, Singh said that the BJP had gone back on its opposition to the Goods and Services Tax (GST), Aadhar and FDI in retail since it won elections in 2014.AAP spokesperson Dilip Pandey at the press conference that the government had accumulated nearly ₹9 lakh crore in its coffers through the selling of petrol and diesel over the last two years. “This year, they are projected to collect ₹8 lakh crore,” he added, questioning if the BJP was planning on using the taxpayers’ money to fund its 2019 election campaign.Both the AAP leaders, MP Singh and Pandey, held up the example of the AAP government in Delhi, saying PM Modi’s performance should be compared with that of Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal.“Delhi’s government presented the people with a budget surplus. We were the only state government in the country to do so. We have delivered on all of our key election promises on education, healthcare and bringing down costs in general,” said Singh.“There must be a public debate in the country over the performance of the Modi government,” said Singh.When asked if AAP would join hands with other Opposition parties in the lead-up to next year’s elections, Pandey remarked that “AAP doesn't believe that Narendra Modi is big enough to have all opposition parties joining hands against himself.”

SOURCE : NATIONAL HERALD INDIA

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The Trudeau government gets another chance to do election law reform right

Andrew Scheer suggested this week that Justin Trudeau is trying to "rig the next election."

It's quite a thing to say. In fact, it's just about the most serious charge one can level at a government. It apparently failed to make much of a ripple on Parliament Hill — an indication, perhaps, of how numb everyone has gotten to the effects of apocalyptic political rhetoric.

Whether Bill C-76 — the Liberal government's expansive set of changes to elections laws — amounts to fixing the 2019 election is rather debatable. But perhaps, in the interests of maintaining the public's faith in our democratic system, the Liberals might try meeting the Conservative leader halfway.

​Scheer's stated fear of a "rigged" election is apparently linked to the Liberals' proposal to regulate political activity in the weeks immediately preceding a federal campaign.

In this new "pre-writ period" — to begin on June 30 in years with a fixed election date in October — parties would be permitted to spend a maximum of $1.5 million on political advertising, while third-party groups and other outside organizations would be allowed to spend up to $1 million on partisan advertising, activities and opinion surveys.

Scheer has two problems.

Putting a leash on pre-writ government PR
First, he suggests that two third-party organizations — advocacy groups that take up particular causes — could team up to effectively outspend a political party, even though the bill would prohibit collusion between such groups.

Second, Conservatives say they're troubled by the fact that the pre-writ spending limits would not apply to government activity or advertising. Scheer notes that ministers would still be able to travel the country making announcements and promoting government policy. (As an example, Scheer could always point to Pierre Poilievre's cross-country Universal Child Care Benefit PR tour in the summer of 2015, just months before the election his government lost.)

Under guidelines drafted by the Liberals in 2016, government advertising is banned in the 90 days before an election date — but that does not line up with the new pre-writ period. In 2019, for instance, the ban on government advertising would kick on July 24.

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Fixing that timeline discrepancy should be easy enough. And the Conservatives would like to see the government's advertising rules written into legislation.

Banning government travel and activity during the pre-writ period could be trickier. The pre-writ rules would only apply to advertising; Andrew Scheer and all other opposition MPs would also still be free to travel the country. And if cabinet ministers were to be banned from appearing in public during the pre-writ period, it might make sense to also sequester opposition leaders in an undisclosed location.

That's not the sum of opposition concerns about C-76, of course. The Conservatives have backed away from raising fears about voter fraud, but they also want tighter restrictions to ensure third-party groups don't use foreign sources of funding for election activities. The New Democrats are calling for more oversight of how political parties collect and use data on voters.

Expert testimony at committee hearings no doubt will raise other concerns — maybe about how well this bill deals with the emergent digital threats of the social media era.

But the prime minister says the government is open to amendments. And none of the gaps identified by Conservatives or New Democrats seem unbridgeable.

Let's make a deal
And it's in the Trudeau government's own interests to limit the grounds on which it might be accused of running roughshod over democracy — partly because the recent precedents are so ugly.

Election reform has been a source of woe for the Liberals, some of it self-inflicted. Trudeau's promise of deep electoral reform ended in retreat and recrimination. A subsequent proposal to explore parliamentary reform was met with such outrage from the opposition parties that the government felt it had to back away.

But its not like Trudeau's government is the only one to burn its fingers on this file in recent memory.

In 2008, Stephen Harper's government was nearly toppled after proposing to eliminate a vote subsidy for political parties.The Conservative government's Fair Elections Act in 2014 prompted warnings that thousands of Canadians could be disenfranchised.

Significant parts of C-76 are meant to repeal and rewrite measures in the Fair Elections Act. But the Fair Elections Act also was more than a series of legislated changes. It was a grisly affair that ultimately did nothing to maintain Canadians' confidence in the electoral system. Before it was over, a cabinet minister had publicly questioned the chief electoral officer's motivations.

In hindsight, that was a dangerous moment that could have seriously shaken public confidence in the democratic system.

Bill C-76 is a chance to demonstrate that debating election law needn't go that far.

SOURCE : Cbc.ca

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Aspirational India will reject 'anarchist' formation of disparate political parties to fight BJP: Arun Jaitley

Aspirational India will reject the "anarchist" formation of "disparate political parties" which are promising to come together to fight the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the next general elections, Union Minister Arun Jaitley said today.

He said the political agenda for the debate this year appropriately will be Prime Minister Narendra Modi versus an "anarchist combination" of such parties"

A group of disparate political parties are promising to come together. Some of their leaders are temperamental, the others occasionally change ideological positions. With many of them, such as TMC, DMK, TDP, BSP and the JD(S), the BJP has had an opportunity to share power. They frequently change political positions," Jaitley wrote in a Facebook post.

Aspirational societies with vibrant democracies do not invite anarchy, the minister said, adding that a strong nation and the requirements of good governance abhor anarchy.

Several opposition parties including the Congress are trying to forge an alliance to take on the BJP in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

Prime Minister Modi has given 'scam-free' government and his fifth year will focus on consolidation of policies and programmes, he wrote.


Jaitley, who had a renal transplant earlier this month and has yesterday been shifted out of ICU, said the country's mood has transformed from despair to hope and aspirations in last four years.

"Good governance and good economics have been blended with good politics. The result of this has been that the BJP is more confident, its geographical base has become much bigger, its social base has expanded and its winnability has hugely increased," he said.

Attacking Congress, Jaitley said the party "is in desperation without the perks of office".

"From the dominant party of Indian politics, it is moving towards the 'fringe', its political positions are not of a mainstream party but one usually adopted by 'fringe' organisations. Fringe organisations can never hope to come in power," the minister's Facebook post noted.

"Its best hope lies in becoming a supporter of regional political parties. State level regional political parties have realised that the marginalised Congress can at best be either a junior partner or a marginal supporter," he said.

SOURCE : INDIA TV NEWS

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Putin: We're held hostage to political strife around Trump

ST PETERSBURG: Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday bemoaned troubled relations with the United States, saying Russia wants to improve them but is effectively held hostage by the disputes surrounding President Donald Trump.

Putin's comments in a meeting with top editors of international news agencies underlined how Russia's once-high hopes for improved relations under Trump have eroded. Although the Trump administration has imposed sanctions on Russia and expelled scores of its diplomats, Russian politicians generally portray Trump as blocked by domestic opposition from fulfilling his campaign promises of improving relations with Moscow.

Earlier in the day, speaking at an annual economic forum, Putin sharply criticized Trump's decision to pull out of the Iranian nuclear deal, saying it could trigger dangerous instability.
The Russian leader said the US withdrawal from the 2015 agreement came even as the international nuclear watchdog confirmed that Tehran was fulfilling its obligations. "What should it be punished for, then?" Putin asked.

Trump's administration has demanded that Iran stop the enrichment of uranium and end its involvement in Syria, Yemen, Lebanon and Afghanistan in order to negotiate a new deal.
"If international agreements are revised every four years it would offer zero horizon for planning," Putin said. "It will create the atmosphere of nervousness and lack of trust." In the meeting with editors, Putin declined to assess relations between Trump and North Korea's Kim Jong Un, but said the United States should not try to take a hard line with the country.

In order to talk about a full denuclearization of North Korea, I believe we should give North Korea a guarantee of their sovereignty and inviolability," the Russian president said. "I am deeply convinced that if you do impose anything, if you don't behave aggressively and if you don't corner North Korea, the result that we need will be achieved faster than many would think, and at less cost."
Putin also expressed frustration at having little contact with Trump and faulted the investigation into whether there was collusion between Trump's campaign and Russia and whether Russia tried to interfere with the 2016 US election.

"We are hostages to this internal strife in the United States," Putin said. "I hope that it will end some day and the objective need for the development of Russian-American relationships will prevail." At the economic forum, Putin also engaged in a tongue-in-cheek exchange with French President Emmanuel Macron, saying with a smile that Russia could help protect Europe if its rift with the US widens over Iran.

"Don't you worry, we will help ensure your security," Putin said. Macron responded on a serious note that France and its allies could stand for themselves. In his speech at the forum and during talks with Putin on Thursday, Macron called for closer ties between France and Russia despite their differences. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also spoke at the forum and called for closer cooperation with Russia.

SOURCE : TIMES OF INDIA

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Tagore united what politics divided — Mamata Banerjee and Narendra Modi

Those who have heard West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee tearing apart the policies of the Modi government — from demonetisation to GST — in the past, will find it hard to believe that both were seen sharing the same stage and smiling too. 

 PM Narendra Modi and Bangladesh PM Sheikh Hasina inaugurate Bangladesh Bhavan in #SantiNiketan. #WestBengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee also present

When PM Narendra Modi arrived in Santiniketan on Friday (May 25), he was received by Banerjee with a bouquet of flowers. Modi, who was in Santiniketan to attend the 49th convocation ceremony of the Visva-Bharati University, shared the dais with Bangladesh PM Sheikh Hasina besides Banerjee. The PM, who is the chancellor of the central university, also inaugurated the Bangladesh Bhavan on the occasion along with Hasina.

For the audience, it was not just a convocation but also a stage for bilateral relations between two countries and interaction between two arch political rivals. To the amusement of the onlookers, both Modi and Banerjee waxed eloquent on Tagore and his legacy with the latter taking the lead in her mother tongue, Bangla.

But PM Modi stole Banerjee's thunder by addressing the crowd in Bangla. "Gurudev said that walk alone if nobody responds to your call. But I would like to tell you that if you take one step, the government would take four to work towards your better future," Modi said quoting from Tagore's "Ekla Chalo Re".

Banerjee recited Tagore's poems as well as those written by Kazi Nazrul Islam in her own style, reminding how Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam bind both Hindu and Muslim Bengalis.

As she spoke, PM Modi was seen sitting next to Hasina and listening carefully to each word spoken by Banerjee in Bangla. It may not have been all about the language, but a lot about the confident body language that has made the two leaders stalwarts in own rights in the Indian political stage.

But just like Sheikh Hasina said, "Rabindranath Tagore belongs not just to West Bengal [India], but Bangladesh too. We have all grown up reading his books. Santiniketan is extremely close to our hearts."

That's true, Tagore remains close to everybody's heart.

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Friday, May 25, 2018

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Twitter to add special labels to political candidates in US

Twitter says it's adding special labels to tweets from some U.S. political candidates ahead of this year's midterm elections.

Twitter says the move is to provide users with "authentic information" and prevent spoofed and fake accounts from fooling users. The labels will include what office a person is running for and where.

Both the candidate's account and the tweets from it will get labels. The labels will appear on retweets as well as tweets off of Twitter, such as when they are embedded in a news story.

Twitter, along with Facebook and other social media companies, has been under heavy scrutiny for allowing their platforms to be misused by malicious actors trying to influence elections around the world.

The labels will start to appear next week for candidates for governor and Congress. Twitter wouldn't say whether it will extend this outside the U.S., where elections interference has also been a big issue.

The San Francisco-based company is working with the nonprofit, nonpartisan Ballotpedia to help identify the relevant Twitter accounts.

Beyond labelling accounts, Twitter and other companies have previously said they would label political ads as such and provide information on who paid for them.

Facebook said in March that it is making progress in addressing election abuse ahead of the U.S. midterms. Its efforts include expanding its fact-checking efforts and using artificial intelligence to block malicious accounts before they can spread misinformation.

SOURCE : ABC news

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Modi in Indonesia LIVE: PM visits Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta

Prime Minister Narendra Modi today began his Indonesia visit by paying homage to martyrs of Indonesian independence struggle as he laid a w...