Thursday, March 31, 2022

924 Killed In Assam In 10 Years In Man-Elephant Conflict

As many as 924 people got killed in man-elephant conflicts in Assam in the last 10 years, Environment and Forest Minister Parimal Suklabaidya told the Assembly on Wednesday.

In a written reply, the minister also said that the number of people injured in such conflicts during the period stood at 772.

Replying to a query by BJP MLA Terash Gowalla, the minister said conflicts were mostly reported from 16 districts — Goalpara, Sonitpur, Biswanath, Nagaon, Hojai, Udalguri, Baksa, Majuli, Golaghat, Jorhat, Lakhimpur, Chirang, Tinsukia, Kamrup, Darrang and Sivasagar.

Congress MLA Bhaskar Jyoti Baruah, on his part, said along with humans, the elephants are also getting killed in the conflicts.

BJP legislator Rupjyoti Kurmi informed the House that Assam had over 5,600 elephants.

“Elephants from neighbouring hill states come to the plains of Assam in search of food… The Assam government should seek the Centre’s help in this regard,” he added.

 

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Atleast Five Killed In Shooting In Israel, Bennett Vows To Fight Terror With 'Iron Fist'

Israeli medical personnel and rescue workers evacuate a body from the scene of a fatal shooting attack on a street in Bnei Brak, near Tel Aviv, Israel on March 29, 2022 (Reuters)

At least five people were killed in a shooting on Tuesday evening in a suburb of Tel Aviv, in the third such attack in Israel over the last seven days, bringing the total number of Israeli deaths to eleven in the recent terror attacks.

In a stern message following the attack, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett vowed to deal with such attacks with an "iron fist", prompting the Israeli police to go to the highest level of alert.

"Israel is facing a wave of murderous Arab terrorism...The security forces are at work. We will fight terrorism with persistence, diligence and an iron fist," Bennett said in a statement.

"They will not move us from here. We will prevail," the Israeli PM vowed.

A police spokesman said that the shooting took place in two different areas in Bnei Brak near Tel Aviv.

One of the victims is said to be a police officer who was trying to stop the attacker, while the rest were civilians.

Israeli Prime Minister Bennett held a security consultation on Tuesday evening to discuss the chain of events in the terrorist attacks in Bnei Brak and Ramat Gan earlier, the PM's foreign media adviser said in a statement. 

"The immediate operational steps to be taken by the security forces were also discussed," the statement said. 

Bennett will convene the Ministerial Committee on National Security Affairs (the Security Cabinet) Wednesday afternoon.

The Defense Minister, the Foreign Minister, the Public Security Minister, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) Chief-of-Staff, the Director of the Israel Security Agency, the Israel Police Inspector General, the Director of the National Security Council, the Prime Minister's Military Secretary, the head of the IDF Intelligence Directorate, the head of the IDF Operations Directorate and some other officials participated in the discussions.

In a recorded message released by the PM's office, Bennett said that these are difficult days for Israel but with determination we will prevail this time as well.

"Every few years, the State of Israel deals with a wave of terrorism. After a period of quiet, there is a violent eruption by those who want to destroy us, those who want to hurt us at any price, whose hatred of Jews, of the State of Israel, drives them crazy. They are prepared to die so that we will not live in peace," the Israeli Prime Minister said.

"We are currently dealing with a new wave of terrorism. What we witnessed less than a year ago in Operation Guardians of the Walls, the terrorism and the violence, from within Israel and inside Israel, was the first sign. This is a great and complex challenge.....that requires the security establishment to be creative and for us to adapt ourselves to the new threat and read the tell-tale signs of lone individuals, sometimes without organizational affiliation, and to be in control on the ground in order to thwart terrorism even before it happens," he added.

"The security forces of the State of Israel are the best in the world. They are up to the task and, as in the previous waves, we will prevail this time as well," he asserted.

Footage from the terror attack scene showed the assailant entering a convenience store armed with an assault rifle and firing at a young man, who is seen escaping into a nearby building.

The shooter then aimed his rifle at another person riding on a bike, but missed, and then opened fire at a passing car. The car came to a stop after the initial fire, at which point the assailant came closer to it and fired through the window at the driver, who was killed.

Police said that the assailant was shot at the scene by a police officer.

The shooter was named as Diaa Hamarsheha, a 26-year-old Palestinian from Ya'bad, near Jenin, in the West Bank. He had apparently been in Israel illegally.

He is said to have been arrested by Israel in 2013 for security offenses and also served a six-month sentence.

Israeli Police were looking for other suspects amid warning by Ramat Gan Mayor, Carmel Shama-Hacohen, to the city's residents not to leave their homes if not absolutely necessary.

There have been two more terror attacks in Israel in the southern city of Beersheba and the northern city of Holon over the past week.

Defense Minister Benny Gantz convened a situational assessment with the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) chief of staff, the head of the Shin Bet security service, the head of military intelligence and the head of the military's operations division. 

The Israeli security cabinet will hold a meeting on Wednesday regarding the attack.

An official for Islamic Hamas in the Gaza Strip said that the organization "welcomes the heroic operation, which is a natural response to the crimes of the occupation against the Palestinian people." 

"This is also a swift response to the shameful summit that was held in the south," he said, referring to the Negev Summit in which Israel hosted a number of Arab foreign ministers.

No group has yet taken responsibility for the shooting.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas condemned the attack, saying that killings of both Israeli and Palestinian civilians might lead to escalation, at a "time in which we are striving for stability" ahead of Ramadan, Passover and Easter.

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

"Bulli Bai", "Sulli Deals" App Creators Get Bail On Humanitarian Grounds

 

A Delhi court on Monday granted bail to the 'Bulli Bai' app case accused Niraj Bishnoi and 'Sulli Deals' app creator Omkareshwar Thakur on humanitarian grounds.

The court considered that the accused are first time offenders and continued incarceration would be detrimental to their overall well being.

The court had imposed strict conditions on the accused persons so that they could not threaten any witness and temper with any evidence.

The conditions include that the accused person would not try to contact, influence, induce any victim.

The accused person would not tamper with evidence, would provide his contact details to the Investigation Officer, would keep his phone switched on and would provide his location to the Investigating Officer, said the order.

The accused persons would not leave the country and would appear before the court on each and every date, and would not commit a similar offence while on bail, stated the order. 

 

Monday, March 28, 2022

Shanghai Starts China's Biggest COVID-19 Lockdown In 2 Years

 

Representational Image

China began its most extensive lockdown in two years Monday to conduct mass testing and control a growing outbreak in Shanghai as questions are raised about the economic toll of the nation's “zero-COVID” strategy.

China's financial capital and largest city with 26 million people, Shanghai had managed its smaller, past outbreaks with limited lockdowns of housing compounds and workplaces where the virus was spreading. But the citywide lockdown that will be conducted in two phases will be China's most extensive since the central city of Wuhan, where the virus was first detected in late 2019, confined its 11 million people to their homes for 76 days in early 2020.

Shanghai's Pudong financial district and nearby areas will be locked down from Monday to Friday as mass testing gets underway, the local government said. In the second phase of the lockdown, the vast downtown area west of the Huangpu River that divides the city will start its own five-day lockdown Friday.

Residents will be required to stay home and deliveries will be left at checkpoints to ensure there is no contact with the outside world. Offices and all businesses not considered essential will be closed and public transport suspended.

Already, many communities within Shanghai have been locked down for the past week, with their housing compounds blocked off with blue and yellow plastic barriers and residents required to submit to multiple tests for COVID-19. Shanghai's Disneyland theme park is among the businesses that closed earlier. Automaker Tesla is also suspending production at its Shanghai plant, according to media reports.

Panic-buying was reported on Sunday, with supermarket shelves cleared of food, beverages and household items. Additional barriers were being erected in neighborhoods Monday, with workers in hazmat suits staffing checkpoints.

Shanghai detected another 3,500 cases of the infection on Sunday, though all but 50 people tested positive for the coronavirus. While people who are asymptomatic can still infect others, China categorizes such cases separately from “confirmed cases” — those in people who are sick — leading to much lower totals in daily reports.

Saturday, March 26, 2022

Madeleine Albright, First Female US Secretary Of State, Dies

 

Madeleine Albright (Reuters)

Madeleine Albright, a child refugee from Nazi- and then Soviet-dominated Eastern Europe who rose to become the first female US secretary of state and a mentor to many current and former American statesmen and women, died on Wednesday of cancer, her family said. She was 84.

A lifelong Democrat who nonetheless worked to bring Republicans into her orbit, Albright was chosen in 1996 by president Bill Clinton to be America's top diplomat, elevating her from US ambassador to the United Nations, where she had been only the second woman to hold that job.

As secretary of state, Albright was the highest-ranking woman in the history of the US government. She was not in the line of succession to the presidency, however, because she was born in what was then Czechoslovakia. Still, she was universally admired for breaking a glass ceiling, even by her political detractors.

“We have lost a loving mother, grandmother, sister, aunt and friend,” her family said in a statement.

President Joe Biden ordered flags at the White House and other federal buildings and grounds to be flown at half-staff until March 27.

Outpourings of condolences came quickly. Biden said, “America had no more committed champion of democracy and human rights than secretary Albright, who knew personally and wrote powerfully of the perils of autocracy. When I think of Madeleine, I will always remember her fervent faith that America is the indispensable nation.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Albright was “a brilliant diplomat, a visionary leader, a courageous trailblazer, a dedicated mentor, and a great and good person who loved the US deeply and devoted her life to serving it.”

Former president George W. Bush said Albright “lived out the American dream and helped others realise it... She served with distinction as a foreign-born foreign minister who understood first-hand the importance of free societies for peace in our world.”

Linda Thomas-Greenfield, US envoy to the United Nations, honoured Albright as a “trailblazer and a luminary” in remarks on the General Assembly floor.

In 2012, then president Barack Obama awarded Albright the Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honour, saying her life was an inspiration to all Americans.

Albright remained outspoken through the years. After leaving office, she criticized Bush for using “the shock of force” rather than alliances to foster diplomacy and said Bush had driven away moderate Arab leaders and created potential for a dangerous rift with European allies.

As a refugee from Czechoslovakia who saw the horrors of both Nazi Germany and the Iron Curtain, she was not a dove and played a leading role in pressing for the Clinton administration to get militarily involved in the conflict in Kosovo.

She also took a hard line on Cuba, famously saying at the United Nations that the Cuban shootdown of a civilian plane was not “cojones” but rather “cowardice.” Albright advised women “to act in a more confident manner” and “to ask questions when they occur and don't wait to ask.”

“It took me quite a long time to develop a voice, and now that I have it, I am not going to be silent,” she told HuffPost Living in 2010.

When the Senate Foreign Relations Committee asked her in January 2007 whether she approved of Bush's proposed “surge” in U.S. troops in bloodied Iraq, she responded, “I think we need a surge in diplomacy. We are viewed in the Middle East as a colonial power and our motives are suspect.”

Albright was an internationalist whose point of view was shaped in part by her background. Her family fled Czechoslovakia in 1939 as the Nazis took over their country, and she spent the war years in London. After the war, as the Soviet Union took over vast chunks of eastern Europe, her father, a Czech diplomat, brought his family to the United States.

As secretary of state, Albright played a key role in persuading Clinton to go to war against the Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic over his treatment of Kosovar Albanians in 1999. As UN ambassador, she advocated a tough US foreign policy, particularly in the case of Milosevic's treatment of Bosnia and NATO's intervention in Kosovo was eventually dubbed “Madeleine's War”.

“My mindset is Munich,” she said frequently, referring to the German city where the Western allies abandoned her homeland to the Nazis.

Albright helped win Senate ratification of NATO's expansion and a treaty imposing international restrictions on chemical weapons. She led a successful fight to keep Egyptian diplomat Boutros Boutros-Ghali from a second term as secretary-general of the United Nations. He accused her of deception and posing as a friend.

And she once exclaimed to Colin Powell, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who would later succeed her as secretary of state: “What's the point of having this superb military you're always talking about if we can't use it?”

Powell, who died last year, recalled in a memoir that Albright's comment almost made him have an “aneurysm”.

Despite her championing of diplomacy in the Middle East and a late Clinton-era foray into North Korea, which made her the highest-ranking US official to visit the Stalinist state, Albright drew criticism for her support of sanctions against Iraq that many blame for humanitarian suffering in the country under Saddam Hussein.

“I am an eternal optimist,” Albright said in 1998, amid an effort as secretary of state to promote peace in the Middle East. But she said getting Israel to pull back on the West Bank and the Palestinians to rout terrorists posed serious problems.

Albright made limited progress at first in trying to expand the 1993 Oslo Accords that established the principle of self-rule for the Palestinians on the West Bank and in Gaza. But in 1998, she played a leading role in formulating the Wye Accords, that turned over control of about 40 per cent of the West Bank to the Palestinians.

She also spearheaded an ill-fated effort to negotiate a 2000 peace deal between Israel and Syria under then president Hafez al-Assad. She helped guide US foreign policy during conflicts in the Balkans and the Hutu-Tutsi genocide in Rwanda.

As an outspoken Democrat in private life, Albright often joked that she had her “political instincts surgically removed” when she became secretary of state. True to that, she formed an unlikely friendship with arch-conservative North Carolina senator Jesse Helms to increase funding for the State Department and US diplomacy and oversaw a radical change in Washington's handling of Cold War-era messaging.

Born Marie Jana Korbel in Prague on May 15, 1937, she was the daughter of a diplomat, Joseph Korbel. The family was Jewish and converted to Roman Catholicism when she was 5. Three of her Jewish grandparents died in concentration camps.

Albright later said that she became aware of her Jewish background after she became secretary of state. The family returned to Czechoslovakia after World War II but fled again, this time to the United States, in 1948, after the Communists rose to power.

They settled in Denver, where her father obtained a job at the University of Denver. One of Josef Korbel's best students, a young woman named Condoleezza Rice, would later succeed his daughter as secretary of state and was the first Black woman to hold that office.

Among current officials who worked closely with Albright are Biden's domestic policy adviser and former UN Ambassador Susan Rice, as well as Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and a host of others.

Albright graduated from Wellesley College in 1959. She worked as a journalist and later studied international relations at Columbia University, where she earned a master's degree in 1968 and a PhD in 1976.

She worked for the National Security Council during the Jimmy Carter administration and advised Democrats on foreign policy before Clinton's election. He nominated her as US ambassador to the UN in 1993.

Following her service in the Clinton administration, she headed a global strategy firm, Albright Stonebridge, and was chair of an investment advisory company that focused on emerging markets.

She also wrote several books. Albright married journalist Joseph Albright, a descendant of Chicago's Medill-Patterson newspaper dynasty, in 1959. They had three daughters and divorced in 1983. (PTI)

Friday, March 25, 2022

MP: Four Girls Sick After COVID Vaccination

Representational Image

 

Four girls, aged 12 to 14 years, fell sick after they were vaccinated against COVID-19 at a primary health centre in Satna district of Madhya Pradesh, a health official said on Friday.

However, the condition of all of them is stable now, chief medical and health officer (CMHO) Dr Ashok Kumar Awdhiya said.

Nearly 50 children in the 12-14 age group were administered vaccine doses at the Aamdara primary health centre on Thursday, he said.

Four of them, students of a local school, fell on the ground due to dizziness, triggered probably by fear, Awadhiya said.

All of them were rushed to the Maihar civil hospital, from where they were taken to the district hospital in Satna for further treatment, he said.

They are out of danger and their health condition is stable, he said.

District collector Anurag Verma visited the hospital in Satna and enquired about their condition.

The state health department and the district administration have launched a probe into the incident.

The coronavirus vaccination drive for children in the 12-14 age category was launched in Madhya Pradesh on Wednesday. The Corbevax vaccine is being administered to children in this age group.

 

 

Thursday, March 24, 2022

Who Betrayed Anne Frank?

 

Anne Frank

The publisher of a new and controversial work about Anne Frank is pulling the book after a group of Dutch historians released an in-depth criticism of its “most likely scenario” of who betrayed the Jewish teenage diarist and her family in German-occupied Amsterdam during World War II.

Meanwhile, the U.S. publisher of “The Betrayal of Anne Frank: A Cold Case Investigation” announced Wednesday that it will continue to sell the book.

The cold case team's research, published early this year in a book by Canadian academic and author Rosemary Sullivan, immediately drew criticism in the Netherlands.

In a 69-page written “refutation,” six historians and academics describe the cold case team's findings as “a shaky house of cards.” The book's Dutch publisher, Ambo Anthos, repeated an earlier apology and announced Tuesday night it was withdrawing “The Betrayal of Anne Frank.”

The book alleged that the person who revealed the location of the Frank family's secret annex hiding place was likely a prominent Jewish notary, Arnold van den Bergh, who disclosed the location in an Amsterdam canal-side building to the German occupiers to save his own family from deportation and death in Nazi concentration camps.

The Dutch historians reviewed the team's work and concluded the “accusation does not hold water.”

The historians said the book “displays a distinct pattern in which assumptions are made by the CCT (Cold Case Team), held to be true a moment later, and then used as a building block for the next step in the train of logic. This makes the entire book a shaky house of cards, because if any single step turns out to be wrong, the cards above also collapse.”

In response, the cold case team's leader, Pieter van Twisk, told Dutch broadcaster NOS the historians' work was “very detailed and extremely solid” and said it “gives us a number of things to think about, but for the time being I do not see that Van den Bergh can be definitively removed as the main suspect.”

Since the book's publication in January, the team has published detailed reactions to criticism of its work on its website. 

Dutch filmmaker Thijs Bayens, who had the idea to put together the cold case team, conceded in January that the team did not have 100% certainty about Van den Bergh.

“There is no smoking gun because betrayal is circumstantial,” Bayens told The Associated Press at the time.

Not all publishers were dropping the book. In the U.S., HarperCollins Publishers issued a statement saying it stands by “The Betrayal of Anne Frank,” adding that “While we recognize there has been some criticism to the findings, the investigation was done with respect and the utmost care for an extremely sensitive topic.”

The Frank family and four other Jews hid in the annex, which was reached by a secret staircase hidden behind a bookcase, from July 1942 until they were discovered in August 1944 and deported to concentration camps.

Anne and her sister died in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Anne was 15. Only Anne's father, Otto Frank, survived the Holocaust. He published her diary after WWII and it quickly became an enduring symbol of loss and resilience, read by millions around the world. 

Ronald Leopold, the director of the Anne Frank House museum based in the building where the Frank family hid, said in January that there remained "many missing pieces of the puzzle. And those pieces need to be further investigated in order to see how we can value this new theory.”

On Wednesday, Leopold said question marks the museum had in January about the cold case team's conclusions “are supported by the counter-examination of leading historians. You may not consign someone to history as Anne Frank's betrayer if you do not have conclusive proof. We hope that this counter-investigation clears Van den Bergh's name from blame, also for his relatives, including granddaughter Mirjam de Gorter.”

 

Wednesday, March 23, 2022

‘Hum Dekhenge’: The Kashmir Files

 


by SHALINI RAI

I had to first watch Gangubai Kathiawadi before I could watch The Kashmir Files.

It so happened that I reached the multiplex, 20 kms from my house, thinking that I would be able to get a ticket to see The Kashmir Files (TKF) if I landed there a few minutes early. When the lady manning the ticket counter told me the film was running housefull, it left me pleasantly surprised. But also a bit inconvenienced. This was on March 12. I was finally able to secure a ticket for the next day, evening show.

An overwhelming majority of important things in my life happen on the 13th or revolve around the number 4. So, it was serendipity that the first time I saw TKF was on March 13. So much has already been said, written and debated about this film that it is a tough call to add something new and thought-provoking about it. But I will try.

The film tells the story of the genocide of Kashmiri Pandits in the 1990s, the circumstances that led to their exodus from the land of their ancestors and the subsequent misleading and false narrative peddled about both the episodes. How do I know that this narrative was ‘misleading’ and ‘false’? For that, I must mention the declaration by the film’s director Vivek Agnihotri at the start of the feature, where he says that his entire screenplay is based on real-life testimonies of over 700 KP families, which Vivek Agnihotri and wife Pallavi Joshi interviewed as part of their research into TKF. Vivek Agnihotri also mentions that this is not the first but the seventh time in history that KPs have been driven out of Kashmir ignominiously and in most cases, with just the clothes on their back.

I know the numbness that follows such abrupt departure. I have experienced it first-hand both in India and while studying abroad. It makes you question the nature of life, your place in this world and why such things had to happen to you. But it is hardly enough to try to understand, empathise with or convincingly convey the pain, struggle, suffering, humiliation, violence and violations faced by KPs in the years following January 19, 1990.

Without giving away the plot of the film, let me just say that documenting the excesses faced by Kashmiri Hindus in the run-up to 1990, during that year and in the years that followed, would not have been easy for the film’s team. Vivek Agnihotri and Pallavi Joshi have mentioned in interviews how tough it was to listen to the horrors seen and violence faced by KPs during the research stage. It admittedly left them drained, depressed and hopeless.

If this is the effect that just hearing the truth of Kashmir in the 1990s could have on two seasoned artists, with a fair bit of life behind them, I wonder what horrors the KPs themselves would have had to suffer at the hands of their acquaintances, friends, neighbours during those testing times. And if the truth was so difficult to deal with for Vivek and Pallavi, one can only imagine what the immediate persecution would have done to the psyche and mental and physical health of KPs.

Some scenes from the movie left an indelible impression on my mind.

Among the first, right at the beginning of the film, is one which shows how local thugs rough up Shiva Pandit, elder brother of Krishna — the film’s main protagonist, for chanting ‘Sachin! Sachin!’ while playing cricket on a snow-covered field in Srinagar. They also call him an ‘Indian dog!’ and punch the teenage boy, several years their junior and physically at a disadvantage.

The next dreadful incident is the cold-blooded murder of Shiva’s father Karan, while he hides in a barrel of ‘tomul’ (rice) in the attic of his home, by Farooq Malik Bitta, a dreaded terrorist who was once also the student of Pushkar Nath Pandit, Shiva and Krishna’s grandfather. While Bitta fires incessantly at the metal rice barrel, Sharda, his wife and Shiva and Krishna’s mother wails and watches helplessly, even as Krishna (a baby at the time) cries piteously in the background. Bitta then asks Sharda to eat a fistful of grains of rice covered in the blood of her husband, saying he will spare the rest of her family if she eats the blood-soaked rice.

Another scene that I could not erase from my mind was the public humiliation/disrobing of Sharda by Bitta and then the act of cutting her into pieces using an electric saw. This last bit was too terrible to watch and I closed my eyes involuntarily, even though I could not shut out the sound of an electric saw meant to chop and shape wood slicing its way through the naked, violated body of a woman, even as her teenage son Shiva watches the horror in stunned silence and paralysing helplessness, amid heart-rending sobs.

There is a scene in the movie where Bitta shoots point-blank at four IAF officers and removes the Indian flag from Lal Chowk, which is actually a location in Mussoorie, as TKF team had to leave Kashmir and put up the set in the Uttarakhand hill station due to threats to their lives and ‘fatwas’ issued against them. After throwing away the Indian flag, Bitta replaces it with a flag meant to represent ‘Azad Kashmir’, even as Brahma Dutt, IAS (played by Mithun Chakraborty), looks on at the AK-47 wielding terrorist, unable to do anything, despite being a prominent and powerful administrative officer.

The depiction of the vulnerability of KPs forced into exile is evident in the character of Pushkar Nath Pandit (played by Anupam Kher), condemned to live through his son’s gruesome death, to face the uprooting of his dignified, comfortable life in ancestral Srinagar, to suffer the abasement of living in a snake and scorpion-infested refugee camp, witness his daughter-in-law and grandson’s macabre end and the brainwashed apathy of a young Krishna, a student of ANU (yes, you guessed it right), who takes great pride in raising the slogan ‘Azaadi!’.

The ‘Azaadi’ — independence — of Kashmir.

So much can be said about so many scenes in TKF and the entire screenplay, dialogues, cinematography and direction that this space will fall short. I will keep it short and just say that this film is a must-watch, whichever side of the ideological divide you find yourself on. If you think you know what happened to KPs and what caused their genocide and forced exodus from the Kashmir Valley, you have another think coming after watching this film, which is a labour of love and has been put together with great empathy and humanity.

A word about the cast. Pallavi Joshi as the firebrand orator and ANU Professor Radhika Menon, has essayed the role of a lifetime, portraying as she does the sheer hypocrisy of her stance on KPs, her ‘friendship’ with the dreaded Bitta and her ‘networking abilities’ in Kashmir. In one scene, she tells Krishna, who she is mentoring to be ANU Students’ Union President, “Government unki hui to kya hua, system to hamara hai….” (So what if they are in power, the system is ours after all.) Her calculated magnetism, glibness, kohl-lined eyes, chunky jewellery, sunglasses as hair accessory-turn as the main antagonist makes you feel awed (negatively) by her selective sympathy for Kashmiris (not including KPs). If she reminds you of a certain ‘professor’, ‘author’ and ‘activist’, you are not alone.

Her rendition of Hum Dekhenge — a hopeful lament by Pakistani poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz — surrounded by scores of gullible, malleable, impressionable ANU students accords the film complexity and brings out the resilience of the written word, despite originating in a different country in a different context.

Then comes the sheer evil that Chinmay Mandlekar has brought forth onscreen through his character — Farooq Malik Bitta. I could feel the influence of two separate persons in the construction of this persona — Bitta Karate and Yasin Malik, both JKLF members. The chilling testimony that Bitta gives to journalist Vishnu Ram (Manoj Raghuvanshi in real life)– confessing to killing over 20 Kashmiri Pandits — in the 1990s is made more menacing by the inclusion of his involuntary ‘lazy eye’ — a trait unique to Yasin Malik.

Krishna’s role is played convincingly by Darshan Kumar, who had wowed audiences with his act as the violent killer of his sister and others in the visceral film NH-10. Kumar brings alive the denial, brain-washing, confusion and ultimately catharsis, of a young Kashmiri Pandit, enrolled in ANU and unaware of the truth of his family’s grotesque, unjust end. The audience can relate to the confusion arising out of a falsified view of Kashmir’s history that he has grown up with, in his initial idolisation and subsequent denunciation of the ideology and politics of Prof Radhika Menon, good friends with Bitta.

Mithun Chakraborty as IAS officer Brahma Dutta, Prakash Belawadi as Dr Mahesh Kumar, Puneet Issar as DGP Hari Narain and Atul Srivastava as journalist Vishnu Ram play their roles with unprecedented restraint and empathy and bring out the powerlessness of the administration, medical practitioners, police and media during the 1990s and in subsequent years.

After watching the film twice, the first time with great enthusiasm and the second time with great trepidation (at reliving the violence faced by KPs), I can emphatically say that it is an important piece of cinematic history. TKF brings out the unvarnished truth of Kashmir, the Kashmir where ‘Upanishads were written and Saraswati/Sharda was worshipped’ (as Pushkar Nath Pandit tells Krishna). He rightly says, “Tu Kashmir ke baare mein jaanta hi kya hai…!?” (What do you really know about Kashmir…!?)

The last scene of the film is revealing, in so many senses of the word. It is the recreation of the Nadimarg massacre of March 23, 2003, in which Bitta shoots dead 24 KPs — with a single bullet to the forehead — after forcing them to stand at the edge of a deep pit, reminiscent of the modus operandi of the Nazis, who accorded the same treatment to the Jews during the Holocaust.

It is the same pit into which Shiva jumps playfully while going to school one day and is admonished by mother Sharda for it. It seems as if Sharda subconsciously knew that the pit would one day become the mass grave of her son Shiva and many other hapless Kashmiri Pandits. Baby Krishna and Pushkar Nath Pandit, despite being present, are spared by the militants, because, as Bitta says, “Koi doosron ko bataane wala bhi to hona chahiye….” (Some of you must be left alive to tell the story to others).

The Kashmir Files is deeply symbolic and deeply moving. Reams can be written about the symbolism, naming, construction and portrayal of almost all mnemonic characters in the film.

The legacy of The Kashmir Files can be best encapsulated in the fact that despite exiting two different theatres on different occasions, the menacing cry in Kashmir during the unprecedented violence of, before and after January 19, 1990 — “Raliv, Galiv ya Chaliv…!” (Convert, Die or Leave) — kept echoing in my mind and despite my best efforts, might continue to do so, two nights and several hours later.

The film’s end is rich in metaphors, as we see Sharda/Saraswati disrobed, dismembered and left to die, all while still breathing and a bullet wound on the forehead of Shiva, a spot associated with the ‘Third Eye’ and all the wisdom and mythology that evokes. It is as if the filmmakers want to say this is what Kashmir, the land of ancient knowledge, mysticism, mythology, wisdom and breathtaking beauty, has been reduced to — with Saraswati violated and lying in pieces and Shiva with a fatal injury where the Third Eye ought to have been…

Mumbai Court Summons Salman Khan, His Bodyguard On Journalist's Complaint

 

Salman Khan

A local court has issued a process (summons) to actor Salman Khan and his bodyguard Nawaz Shaikh on a complaint filed by a journalist in connection with a dispute in 2019.

Metropolitan Magistrate R R Khan in his order on Tuesday noted that a police report in the matter stated that offences under Indian Penal Code Sections 504 (intentional insult with intent to provoke breach of peace) and 506 (criminal intimidation) are made out against the accused persons.

The court issued process/summons and posted the matter for further hearing on April 5.

Journalist Ashok Pandey had in his complaint sought criminal action to be initiated against Salman Khan and Shaikh.

Pandey alleged that the actor had snatched away his mobile phone while cycling on a Mumbai street when some media persons started clicking his photos. The actor had allegedly entered into an argument and threatened him, Pandey said in his complaint.

The court had earlier directed the D N Nagar Police to conduct an inquiry and submit a report.

In its order on Tuesday, the court said, "Keeping in view the self-speaking material on record, positive police report and other material on record, there are sufficient grounds to proceed against the accused persons."

The issuance of a process marks the beginning of criminal proceedings before a metropolitan or judicial magistrate on the basis of a complaint lodged by an individual.

The magistrate court issues the process if it finds prima facie substance in the allegations made in the complaint.

Once the process is issued, the accused persons have to appear before the court.

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Woman Gangraped In MP, Bulldozers Run Over Accused's House

Representative Image

 

In another case of sexual assault, a 28-year-old woman was gangraped in Shahdol district of Madhya Pradesh. The victim later died while undergoing treatment in a hospital.

On Tuesday, the house of the main accused was demolished on the direction of Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan.

As per police, the woman was gang-raped by three persons on Saturday. The victim died in a hospital during treatment. District Police claimed to have arrested all three accused involved in the case. They were identified as -- Shadab Usmani and his two friends Rajesh Singh and Sonu George.

Police said Shadab Usmani was in a relationship with the woman for the past one-and-a-half years. On Saturday, he took her for a picnic in Kshirsagar area, around 20 km from the district headquarters Shahdol.

"After reaching Kshirsagar, Usmani called his two friends over to the spot and consumed alcohol. They then took turns to rape the woman. The victim was force-fed a poisonous substance, which led to her death in the hospital," a senior police officer told IANS.

According to the police, while the main accused -- Usmani fled the spot, the other two accused left her outside the district hospital. Upon reaching the hospital, they (Rajesh and George) tried to pass it off as a case of excessive consumption of alcohol.

Meanwhile, one of the accused informed the victim's family on phone that she had consumed alcohol and was admitted in the hospital in a critical condition, police said.

"The post-mortem report has confirmed that the woman was gang-raped and she died because of consumption of some poisonous substance. All three accused have been arrested and further process is underway," police said.

On Tuesday, the district administration, along with the local police, reached Usmani's house with a couple of bulldozers and demolished his house located in Javara locality in Shahdol district.

Speaking to IANS, Shahdol district collector Vandana Vadya said: "The house of the main accused Shadab Usmani was demolished today. Two other accused involved in the case were living in rented accommodation."

On Monday, bulldozers were used to demolished houses in Sheopur district after a minor girl was gang-raped by three persons.

Crime against women in Madhya Pradesh has been a serious concern and the opposition Congress has been targeting the Chouhan government on this issue. Recently, chief minister Chouhan had held a meeting with top police officials in the state to discuss the law and order situation.

During his farewell speech, former Director General of Police (DGP) Vivek Johari, who retired on March 4, also mentioned that growing crime against women in the state is a big concern for Madhya Pradesh Police.

 

 

Monday, March 21, 2022

'BJP Will Liberate PoJK': Union Minister Jitendra Singh

 


Like the abrogation of Article 370, which was "beyond the imagination" of people, the BJP government led by Narendra Modi will keep its pledge to "liberate" Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK), Union Minister Jitendra Singh said on Sunday.

He also took a dig at the National Conference over its criticism of 'The Kashmir Files', a recently released movie based on the genocide/exodus of Kashmiri Pandits from the Valley in the 1990s, and claimed the "rigged" assembly elections of 1987 worked as a trigger for the eruption of terrorism in J-K.

Parliament passed a resolution unanimously in 1994, emphasising that Pakistan must vacate parts of Jammu and Kashmir under its illegal occupation. "It is our promise to liberate the PoJK," the Union minister told reporters after unveiling a 20-ft statue of Maharaja Gulab Singh, the founder of erstwhile J&K state -- in Kathua district.

"Article 370 was removed and it was done in accordance with the BJP's promise even though it was beyond the imagination of many people. Likewise, former prime minister A B Vajpayee had predicted a landslide victory for the party in 1980, which was again beyond the thinking of the people. The Modi government took over and under his leadership, all the pledges and promises made to the people, including liberation of POJK, will be fulfilled," Singh, who is the minister of state for Prime Minister's Office (PMO), said.

The bronze statue of the Maharaja, astride a horse, has been made by Padma Shri Ravinder Jamwal, a renowned sculptor of J&K, who worked for the last three years on it.

"It is a day of great satisfaction for us to pay our greatest tribute to the great ruler and warrior of J-K. Our last king, Maharaja Hari Singh, had said his religion is justice but the region faced discrimination after his forced exile. The sacrifices and services of the Dogra rulers were totally neglected by the successive rulers in the last six decades," Singh said.

However, he said the situation changed after Modi became the prime minister and the projects which were pending for decades were cleared to ensure fast-paced development.

"We have full support and patronage of the prime minister, who himself is monitoring the developmental activities in all parts of Jammu and Kashmir," the minister said.

On the criticism of 'The Kashmir Files' by former chief minister and National Conference vice president Omar Abdullah, he said they are terming it a one-sided story because they had buried the truth in the grave "under a strategy".

"A couple of families of Abdullahs and Muftis had an understanding with (the then prime minister Jawahar Lal) Nehru. The friendship which started between Sheikh Abdullah and Nehru was taken forward by Nehru's grandson Rajiv Gandhi and Abdullah's son Farooq Abdullah," he said.

Singh alleged that Farooq Abdullah rigged the 1987 assembly elections by misusing the government machinery and Gandhi closed his eyes, which ultimately became the trigger for eruption of terrorism and subsequent events.

"'Farooq fled to London and a spate of killings started with the killing of local BJP leaders (creating fear among the Pandit community)."

He said former governor Jagmohan has written everything in detail in the second edition of his book My Frozen Turbulence.

"We have not forgotten anything," the minister said.

Singh said JKLF chief Yasin Malik openly attacked Air Force personnel but instead of facing any action, he was given "VIP treatment".

"It is only this government which has taken action against him -- the action which should have been taken 30 years ago. It was possible because of Home Minister Amit Shah, Singh, who is an MP from Udhampur constituency," he said.

The minister said when Abdullah returned from London in 1996 and the elections were held, the polling percentage was negligible.

"The party won seats on merely a few percent voting because of the fear psychosis. They want terrorism to continue and enjoy power by becoming chief minister by exploiting the vacuum,"' he said and reiterated his demand for the passage of a bill in Parliament to make a certain percentage of polling in an election compulsory for the successful candidate.

Saturday, March 19, 2022

Deep Ocean Mission Soon To Study Origins Of Life: MoES Official

 

Shutterstock (For representation)

India will soon scour the ocean bed to unravel the mysteries of the origins of life as scientists are set to travel up to 6,000 metres below the sea surface under a deep ocean mission (DOM).

Initially, the Rs 4,077-crore mission will entail scientists travelling to a depth of 500 metres to test various technologies being developed for the purpose before taking a deeper dive into the unknown.

"Some of the mysteries about the origins of life still persist. There are theories that life originated in hydro-thermal vents which exist at a depth of four to five kilometres in the ocean," M Ravichandran, Secretary, Ministry of Earth Sciences, told PTI.

"It is completely dark at the depth of four to five kilometres, but there are living organisms. How is life born at that depth, how does life survive? The deep ocean mission will also help us understand this," he said.

The DOM will also help India map the ocean bed, which is a rich source for metals and minerals, Ravichandran said, adding that the mission will help scientists identify and demarcate resource-rich areas which could be exploited later when suitable technology is available for deep sea mining.

The exploration studies of minerals will pave the way for commercial exploitation in the near future as and when such a code is evolved by the International Seabed Authority, he said.

"Right now, we roughly know that such resources are available in a given area, and the DOM will help us know the specifics," Ravichandran added.

The DOM could also lead to the development of various technologies such as acoustic phones, components that withstand a high-pressure environment, research vessels and related infrastructure, he said.

The technologies required for deep sea mining have strategic implications and are not commercially available, Ravichandran said, adding that attempts will be made to indigenise technologies by collaborating with leading institutes and private industries, the official said.

Ravichandran said this mission is also directed towards capacity development in marine biology which will provide job opportunities in Indian industries.

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Pune Techie ‘In Touch’ With Elon Musk Aspires To Work With Him

Pranay Pathole (Twitter)

 

Four years back, 23-year-old Pune-based software professional Pranay Pathole, who was then an engineering student, was on cloud nine after his “role model” Tesla CEO Elon Musk replied to his tweet on automatic windscreen wipers.

Since then, Pathole, who now works with the Tata Consultancy Services, has been in regular touch with Musk via direct messages (DMs) through Twitter. He aspires to meet Musk physically and get an opportunity to work with him.

“As I was quite fascinated by Musk, I used to tweet him about technical stuff. In 2018, I tweeted him regarding some auto wiper sensor which will start working once it detects water droplets. Within a few minutes, Musk responded that it (the feature) was being implemented in the next update (of a vehicle manufactured by his company),” Pathole told PTI.

The elation continued for Pathole when Musk in December 2020 sent a direct message (DM) on Twitter while replying to his query on a raptor engine used in the building of a big rocket – Starship – by Musk-owned SpaceX.

“Thereon, our DM conversation started. I used to tweet him some interesting technical things and then he would respond to it. I think he found my tweets intriguing and interesting. They (tweets) caught his attention and he started responding,” he said.

Since he started receiving responses from Musk, Pathole’s follower base on the microblogging site surged and he now has over one lakh followers.

The engineer, who is interested in learning about machines, claimed that Musk responds to him frequently and he asks him questions about SpaceX and technical specifications of the Starship rocket and its powerful engine.

“I also ask him about Tesla’s ‘full self-driving’ car, and the toughest challenge that his firm’s engineers have to overcome to develop such a vehicle. So, I raise these kind of questions and he replies through DMs to me,” the software engineer said.

Pathole said they even had a conversation on why making life multi-planetary is quite essential for the survival of humanity, and why taking human beings to Mars is essential.

The engineer says he does not care about his follower base on Twitter.

“I am not doing it to create a clout on social media. I interact with him (Musk) because I admire him. I genuinely feel his heart is in the right place and he is trying to achieve big and ambitious things for the right reasons. I consider him as a role model,” he said.

Since Musk is constantly “innovating”, Pathole is excited about the future.

“It is my biggest aspiration to work with him and learn as much as possible from him. He is very hardworking and his multi-tasking ability is incredible,” Pathole said.

“One day, he is working on building the most powerful rocket (Starship), the next day he is working on a fully self-driving car, next he is trying to solve traffic issues, and trying to find solutions for diseases like Alzheimer’s through Neuralink. Getting an opportunity to work with him for a young guy like me would be really amazing,” he said.

Pathole also said he plans to do a master’s course in machine learning/data science and go to the US, where he hopes to get a chance for a physical interaction with Musk.

 

 

 

Wednesday, March 16, 2022

'No Sanction But Think About Where You Want To Stand': US To India

 

A destroyed armoured vehicle, with the letter "V" painted on its turret, is seen on a street in Ukraine (Reuters)

India taking up Russia's offer of discounted crude oil would not be a violation of American sanctions, the White House has said.

"Our message to any country continues to be that abide by the sanctions that we have put in place and recommended," White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters at her daily news conference on Tuesday.

Asked about a report on the possibility that India could take up the Russian offer of discounted crude oil, Psaki said, "I don't believe this would be violating that (sanctions)."

"But also think about where you want to stand when history books are written at this moment in time. Support for the Russian leadership is support for an invasion that obviously is having a devastating impact," Psaki added.

India has not supported the Russian invasion of Ukraine. New Delhi has consistently asked all stakeholders to resolve differences through dialogue. It has, however, abstained in all United Nations resolutions against Russia.

Officials of the Biden administration have shown an understanding of India's position and have told lawmakers that New Delhi has a major dependence on Russian military supplies for its national security.

However, Indian-American Congressman Dr Ami Bera expressed disappointment over reports that India is contemplating buying Russian oil at a steeply discounted rate.

"If reports are accurate and India makes this decision to buy Russian oil at a discounted price, New Delhi would be choosing to side with Vladimir Putin at a pivotal moment in history when countries across the world are united in support of the Ukrainian people and against Russia's deadly invasion," he said.

"As the world's largest democracy and as a leader of the Quad, India has a responsibility to ensure its actions do not directly or indirectly support Putin and his invasion," Bera said in a statement.

 

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Not Part Of Islamic Faith: K’taka HC Dismisses Pleas To Wear Hijab In Classrooms

 

FILE PHOTO: A faculty member talks with students after the school authorities denied them entry for wearing a hijab in Kundapura of Karnataka's Udupi district (PTI)

The Karnataka High Court on Tuesday dismissed petitions filed by a section of Muslim students from the Government Pre-University Girls’ College in Udupi, seeking permission to wear the hijab inside the classroom, saying the headscarf is not a part of the essential religious practice in the Islamic faith.

“The prescription of school uniform is only a reasonable restriction, constitutionally permissible, which the students cannot object to,” a three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi further noted.

Karnataka Primary and Secondary Education Minister B C Nagesh welcomed the order and described it as “landmark.”

“We are of the considered opinion that wearing of Hijab by Muslim women does not form a part of essential religious practice in Islamic faith,” Chief Justice Awasthi, who headed the full bench of the High Court, said reading out a portion of the order.

The other two judges in the panel were Justice Krishna S Dixit and Justice J M Khazi.

The bench also maintained that the government has the power to issue an impugned order dated February 5, 2022 and no case is made out for its invalidation.

By the said order, the Karnataka government had banned wearing clothes which disturb equality, integrity and public order in schools and colleges, which the Muslim girls had challenged in the High Court.

The bench also rejected the plea to initiate a disciplinary inquiry against the college, its principal and a teacher.

“In the above circumstances, all these writ petitions being devoid of merits are liable to be and accordingly are dismissed. In view of the dismissal of the writ petition, all the pending applications fell into insignificance and are accordingly disposed off,” the bench said in its order.

Minister Nagesh welcomed the order. He tweeted, “I welcome (the) Landmark judgement of Hon’ble Karnataka High Court on School/College uniform Rules. It reiterated that the law of the land is above everything.”

On January 1, six girl students of a college in Udupi attended a press conference held by the Campus Front of India (CFI) in the coastal town, protesting against the college authorities denying them entry into the classroom wearing the hijab.

This was four days after they requested the principal permission to wear the hijabs in classrooms, which was not allowed. Till then, students used to wear the hijab to the campus and entered the classroom after removing the scarves, the college principal Rudre Gowda had said.

“The institution did not have any rule on Hijab-wearing as such and no one used to wear it to the classroom in the last 35 years. The students who came with the demand had the backing of outside forces,” Gowda had said.

The demand by a section of girls in the Udupi Pre-University College to wear the hijab inside their classrooms erupted into a major row after some Hindu students turned up in saffron shawls, with the issue spreading to other parts of the state, even as the government insisted on a uniform norm.

Subsequently, the institutions were shut for a few days before the court directed their re-opening, while directing students not to insist on wearing any cloth on campuses of educational institutions which can instigate people, till the matter is resolved.

Challenging the February 5 order of the government, the girls had argued before the bench that wearing the Islamic headscarf was an innocent practice of faith and an Essential Religious Practice (ERP), and not a mere display of religious jingoism.

Invoking Article 25 of the Indian Constitution before the bench, senior counsel Devadatt Kamat, who appeared on behalf of the Muslim girls from Udupi pre-university college, said the article speaks about ‘freedom of conscience’.

Kamat had also argued that wearing Rudraksha or putting a Nama (Tilak or vermillion on the forehead) was similar innocent faith as people who put it feel protected by the divine and a connect with the creator.

The petitioners also contended that the restriction violated the freedom of expression under Article 19(1)(A) and Article 21 dealing with personal liberty.

However, state Advocate General Prabhuling Navadgi rejected the argument and said the right to wear the hijab did not fall under Article 25 of the Constitution as argued by the girls. He also said there was no restriction on wearing the hijab in India, with reasonable restrictions subject to institutional discipline.

He even contended that the girls were seeking a declaration to make the hijab mandatory. Once the declaration is affirmed by the court, it will become binding on every Muslim woman to wear it or else they will be branded as anti-religious.

“The consequence of the demand to declare Hijab as an essential religious practice is huge because there is an element of compulsion or else you will be expelled from the community,” Navadgi had told the court during the course of the hearing.

The counsel appearing for the Udupi Government Pre-University Girls’ College, its principal and a teacher, S S Naganand, contended that the prayer of the Muslim girls regarding the institution’s authorities was unusual and that there was a fine line of distinction between religion and culture.

Naganand also told the court that the parents of the Muslim girls, who want the hijab to be permitted on the college campus, requested the teachers to ensure that their daughters are not involved in singing, dancing, music and extra-curricular activities.

“Now a different context is given to the whole thing. I don’t know whether they mean the Muslim girls should not sing with their classmates. If the national anthem is sung, they should not sing? Is it against Islam?” Naganand had argued.

During the course of the hearing, the Karnataka High Court also took note of the role of the Campus Front of India (CFI), after Naganand submitted that the hijab row was started by some students owing allegiance to the student body.

The senior counsel said the organisation was spearheading and drumbeating in favour of students demanding wearing of hijab in class-the rooms. Accordingly, Advocate General Navadgi made the government’s submission regarding the CFI in a sealed envelope.

The court was also informed that some teachers were threatened by CFI activists in Udupi and an FIR was also registered against them.

Monday, March 14, 2022

China Battles Multiple Outbreaks, Driven By 'Stealth Omicron'

 

The Wuhan Institute of Virology

Chinese authorities reported 1,337 locally transmitted cases of COVID-19 across dozens of mainland cities Monday as the fast-spreading variant commonly known as stealth omicron fuels China's biggest outbreak in two years.

The vast majority of the new infections were in far northeastern Jilin province with 895 cases. Shenzhen reported 75 new cases as residents began the first of three rounds of mass testing. Officials on Sunday locked down the city, which has 17.5 million people and is a major tech and finance hub that neighbours Hong Kong. 

The surge on the Chinese mainland is infecting people in cities ranging from Shenzhen to Qingdao on the coast, to Xingtai in the north and the numbers have crept steadily higher since early March. While the numbers are small relative to numbers reported in Europe or in the US, or even the city of Hong Kong, which had reported 32,000 cases Sunday, they are the highest since the first big outbreak of COVID-19 in the central city of Wuhan in early 2020. 

China has seen very few infections since its strict Wuhan lockdown as the government held fast to its zero-tolerance strategy, which is focused on stopping transmission of the coronavirus as fast as possible, by relying on strict lockdowns and mandatory quarantines for anyone who has come into contact with a positive case. 

The government has indicated it will continue to stick to its strict strategy of stopping transmission for the time being.

On Monday, Zhang Wenhong, a prominent infectious disease expert at a hospital affiliated with Shanghai's Fudan University noted in an essay for China's business outlet Caixin, that the numbers for the mainland were still in the beginning stages of an exponential rise. Shanghai confirmed 41 new cases on Monday. 

Much of the current outbreak is being driven by the variant commonly known as "stealth omicron," or the B.A.2 lineage of the omicron variant, Zhang noted. Early research suggests it spreads faster than the original omicron, which itself spread faster than the original virus and other variants.

"But if our country opens up quickly now, it will cause a large number of infections in people in a short period of time," Zhang wrote on Monday. "No matter how low the death rate is, it will still cause a run on medical resources and a short term shock to social life, causing irreparable harm to families and society."

Friday, March 11, 2022

Preparation For Natural Disasters Depends On How The Message Is Sent

 

FILE PHOTO: Villagers row a makeshift raft through a flooded field to reach a safer place at the flood-affected Mayong village in Morigaon district of Assam, on June 29, 2020

Coastal areas are at the frontline of natural hazards -- a fact now thrown into sharp relief as flooding devastates parts of southeastern Australia.

Providing information is one of the most important ways governments can help communities cope with these events. Such information aims to encourage people to make more informed decisions about the risks they face and act accordingly.

But as our new research shows, simply providing information is not enough. We found when authorities delivered generic information about natural hazards via passive means, such as radio ads and brochures, most households did not change their behaviour.

To ensure our communities remain resilient in the face of worsening natural disasters, governments must find better ways to deliver important messages.

Barriers To Being Prepared

Numerous studies have suggested providing the public with information can overcome knowledge gaps, overcome inertia and prompt people to change their behaviour.

But even if a person is informed about the risks of natural hazards, other factors can influence their willingness to prepare for them.

For example, financial constraints might mean a person cannot stock up on food supplies before a storm hits.

Some people may simply not consider themselves to be at risk. Others may have competing priorities such as work or child care.

That means we need to better understand what types of information best lead to behaviour change and how barriers to action can be overcome.

Does Passive Information Work?

Information can be categorised into three types:

Passive (seeks to reach a wide audience through, for example, online communication, pamphlets or radio ads).

Interactive (information derived through interactions with other people).

Experiential (information gleaned from personal life experiences).

Information provided by governments to coastal households is predominantly passive. For example, households are often encouraged to access information on natural hazards such as floods, and how to prepare for climate change.

We set out to test the effectiveness of this passive approach to delivering information.

What We Found

Our study focused on two Australian coastal communities: Mandurah in Western Australia and Moreton Bay in Queensland.

We surveyed households and conducted interviews with locals. We explored the types of information that shape responses to three hazard scenarios: a heatwave, a severe storm and sea-level rise.

People who wanted more information about their exposure to future climate risks were more likely to:

Perceive their local area as vulnerable to environmental hazards.

Consider local environmental health important to their households' well being.

Likewise, people who wanted information on preparing for climate hazards believed:

Households were very capable of managing the impacts.

Their local council was capable of preventing harm.

However, passive information rarely informed a person's response to natural hazards. Instead, people tended to believe in the power of common sense, especially when dealing with short-term impacts of hazards.

For example, one interviewee said no response to a heatwave was required, but if you do have to go out you don't go out for very long.

Household action was also informed by past experience. One Mandurah resident told us: "We did have a scenario here; we had a pretty severe storm and were out of power. So I have lots of candles and you just get by."

Conversely, a Moreton Bay resident drew on their past exposure to a storm to justify the limited need for action: "The area has never been affected by those sort of floods; it hasn't stopped us from doing the day-to-day things like getting kids to school."

But as extreme weather worsens under climate change, basing decisions on past experiences may not be sufficient.

When it came to responding to hazards, most people adopted short-term coping strategies, such as securing loose items in their yard.

Other, more proactive actions, such as installing window protection, were limited. There was also a lack of collective actions such as joining local recovery or conservation efforts.

Where To From Here?

Prior exposure to a climate hazard appears to drive some people to adapt. But most households generally employ coping strategies, informed by perceptions of common sense.

So what type of information best promotes the transition from short-term coping with natural hazards to longer-term adaptation?

The answer may lie in promoting adaptation well before natural disasters hit as a common sense response to the climate threat.

Passive information rarely contains targeted information that can capture the interest of all households. So there's value in moving beyond this approach.

Two-way communication tools such as workshops, demonstrations, community events and harnessing opinion leaders offer promise. They enable collective discussion where participants can share experiences, beliefs and values, building trust and collaboration.

Some households value passive information. But if resilience to climate hazards is indeed the objective, communication promoting household response must change.

Whether information resonates with a household depends on various factors, including their capacity to respond. So improving people's confidence in their capability to act may also trigger better adaptation.

But households should not be seen solely as individual units acting to reduce their personal risk. They are also part of a broader system and can contribute to social change through collective action.

This might include collectively lobbying politicians, sharing experiences and strategies, and helping each other during times of crisis.

As climate change threatens to bring more severe and frequent natural disasters, more research is needed into information that encourages people to cope and adapt both individually and together. 

(The Conversation: By Carmen Elrick-Barr, Research Fellow, University of the Sunshine Coast and Tim Smith, Professor and ARC Future Fellow, University of the Sunshine Coast)  

Thursday, March 10, 2022

Punjab: Electoral Gains Increase AAP's Rajya Sabha Prospects

 

The AAP already has three members in Rajya Sabha. It stands to gain in Punjab as two different elections will be held for the five Rajya Sabha seats (PTI Photo)

With a landslide victory in Punjab under its belt, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) appears set to make big inroads in Rajya Sabha.

Elections have been announced to five Rajya Sabha seats in Punjab and the AAP might bag all of them, taking its total in the Upper House to eight.

The AAP already has three members -- all from Delhi -- in Rajya Sabha. It stands to gain in Punjab as two different elections will be held for the five Rajya Sabha seats — one for three seats and another for the remaining two.

Among the retiring members from Punjab are Partap Singh Bajwa and Samsher Singh Dullo (both Congress), Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa and Naresh Gujral (both Akali Dal) and Shwait Malik (BJP).

Two more members — Balwinder Singh Bhunder (Akali Dal) and Ambika Soni (Congress) — from the state will complete their tenures in July and the AAP may bag both.

With the AAP declaring Bhagwant Mann, who is Lok Sabha member from Sangrur, as its chief ministerial candidate, the party is set to lose representation in the lower house. Mann is the lone AAP member in Lok Sabha.

A total of 75 members, including seven nominated, are completing their tenure in the upper house in 2022, while two seats, one each from Karnataka and Bihar, are vacant.

Elections for 13 Rajya Sabha seats are set to be held on March 31, while 20 more seats are set to fall vacant in June, followed by 33 in July and two in August.

The BJP is expected to gain seats in Himachal Pradesh and Assam, from where Congress members Anand Sharma, Ripun Bora and Ranee Narah are retiring next month. The BJP will also add another seat in its kitty from Tripura, where CPI (M) member Jharna Das Baidya is completing her tenure next month.

However, the BJP is not in a position to return its member from Punjab to the Upper House.

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

White House Warns Russia May Use Chemical Weapons In Ukraine

 

The Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in south-eastern Ukraine

The Biden administration has publicly warned that Russia might seek to use chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine as the White House rejected Russian claims of illegal chemical weapons development in the country it has invaded.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova this week, without evidence, accused Ukraine of running chemical and biological weapons labs in its territory, supported by the US. White House press secretary Jen Psaki called Russia's claim "preposterous" and said it could be part of an attempt by Russia to lay the groundwork for itself using such weapons of mass destruction against Ukraine.

"This is all an obvious ploy by Russia to try to justify its further premeditated, unprovoked, and unjustified attack on Ukraine," Psaki tweeted on Wednesday.

"Now that Russia has made these false claims, and China has seemingly endorsed this propaganda, we should all be on the lookout for Russia to possibly use chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine, or to create a false flag operation using them."

The US, for months, has warned about Russian "false flag" operations to create a pretext for the invasion. Wednesday's warning suggested Russia might seek to create a pretense for escalating the two-week old conflict that has seen the Russian offensive slowed by stronger-than-expected Ukrainian defenders, but not stopped.

Pentagon press secretary John Kirby on Wednesday called the Russian claim "a bunch of malarkey."

The international community, for years, has assessed that Russia has used chemical weapons before in carrying out assassination attempts against Putin enemies like Alexey Navalny and former spy Sergei Skripal. Russia also supports the Assad government in Syria, which has used chemical weapons against its people in a decade-long civil war.

Asked by a Russian journalist about the claims, United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric said, "At this point, we have no information to confirm these reports or these allegations about these kinds of labs."

"Our colleagues at the World Health Organisation, who have been working with the Ukrainian Government, said they are unaware of any activity on the part of the Ukrainian Government which is inconsistent with its international treaty obligations, including on chemical weapons or biological weapons," Dujarric added.

Designate Russia As 'Terrorist State': Zelenskyy Urges UK Parliament

 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has urged British MPs to designate Russia as a ''terrorist state'' after President Vladimir Putin ordered a special military operation against his nation and called for tougher sanctions on Moscow to ''make sure our skies are safe''.

The 44-year-old Ukrainian leader, who made a ''historic'' address to the House of Commons via videolink on Tuesday, received a standing ovation by members of Parliament.

"We are looking for your help, for the help of Western countries. We are thankful for this help and I am grateful to you, Boris," said Zelenskyy, addressing British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

"Please increase the pressure of sanctions against this country (Russia) and please recognise this country as a terrorist state. Please make sure that our Ukrainian skies are safe. Please make sure that you do what needs to be done and what is stipulated by the greatness of your country. Glory to Ukraine and glory to the United Kingdom," he said.

While the West has imposed crippling sanctions on Russia, it has not yet cut off the supply of Russian oil to Western countries. Though Zelenskyy has sought a no-fly zone over Ukraine, the US and its allies seem unlikely to accept this to protect Ukrainians from Russian air power.

In an emotional address, Zelenskyy invoked Britain's war-time Prime Minister Winston Churchill's words, promising to fight Russian troops in the air, sea and on the streets.

''We will not give up and we will not lose, we will fight until the end, at sea, in the air... we will continue fighting for our land. Whatever the cost...we will fight in the forests, in the fields, on the shores, in the streets,'' he said.

In his address, Zelenskyy gave a day-by-day account of the attack by Russia, which began a fortnight ago.

He described how it was a war Ukraine ''didn't start and we didn't want'', but his country now had to fight.

''We do not want to lose what we have, what is ours... just the same way as you once didn't want to lose your country when the Nazis started to fight your country and you had to fight for Britain,'' he added.

And quoting Shakespeare, he said the question for Ukraine is ''to be, or not to be... it's definitely yes, to be''.

He concluded his speech by saying: ''Do what you can, do what you must, because greatness obliges greatness, of your state and your people."

It marked the first time a foreign leader has directly addressed MPs in the Commons after Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle confirmed his request.

Prime Minister Johnson said President Zelenskyy had ''moved the hearts of everybody'' watching, and pledged to ''press on with tightening the economic vice'' around Russian President Putin.

Labour leader Keir Starmer also praised ''the bravery [and] the resolve'' of the president and his people, adding: ''He has shown his strength and we must show him -- and the Ukrainian people -- our commitment and support.'' Zelenskyy's address followed Johnson's meetings with the leaders of Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic to discuss the crisis in the region and the need to boost security efforts in central Europe.

Zelenskyy, a former comedian and actor turned politician, has been centrestage as Russian President Putin's forces began an armed conflict with Ukraine on February 24. Last week, he received a standing ovation when he spoke to the European Parliament, also via video link.

He has been in regular phone contact with Johnson, who launched a week of diplomacy to create a coalition against Russia's actions in Ukraine.

He hosted Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte at Downing Street on Monday and later spoke with US President Joe Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to maintain pressure on Russia to isolate Putin diplomatically and economically.

It came as a plan to fast-track UK sanctions against allies of Vladimir Putin got through the House of Commons at rapid speed, backed by all parties on Monday. The UK government says its Economic Crime Bill will stop wealthy Russians from using the City of London for money laundering much quicker.

During the debate, condensed into a single day to try to get the measures into place as quickly as possible, UK Home Secretary Priti Patel said: ''The UK must send a strong signal that it will not be a home for corruption.'' The bill, which now goes to the House of Lords and is expected to become law later this month, contains several measures to tackle oligarchs and companies associated with Putin.

On February 24, Russian forces launched military operations in Ukraine, three days after Moscow recognised Ukraine's breakaway regions -- Donetsk and Luhansk -- as independent entities.


Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Ukraine Accuses Moscow Of Using 'Medieval' Tactics

 

A C-17 aircraft set to fly to Romania to bring back Indians evacuated from Ukraine (PTI)

The humanitarian crisis in Ukraine deepened on Monday as Russian forces intensified their shelling and food, water, heat and medicine grew increasingly scarce, in what the country condemned as a medieval-style siege by Moscow to batter it into submission.

The third round of talks between the two sides ended with a top Ukrainian official saying there had been minor, unspecified progress toward establishing safe corridors that would allow civilians to escape the fighting.

Russia's chief negotiator said he expects those corridors to start operating from Tuesday.

But that remained to be seen, given the failure of previous attempts to lead civilians to safety amid the biggest ground war in Europe since World War II.

Well into the second week of the invasion, with Russian troops making significant advances in southern Ukraine but stalled in some other regions, a top US official said multiple countries were discussing whether to provide the warplanes that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been pleading for.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's forces continued to pummel cities with rockets, and fierce fighting raged in places. In the face of the bombardments, Zelenskyy said Ukrainian forces were showing unprecedented courage.

“The problem is that for one soldier of Ukraine, we have 10 Russian soldiers, and for one Ukrainian tank, we have 50 Russian tanks,” Zelenskyy told ABC News in an interview that aired Monday night.

He noted that the gap in forces was diminishing and that even if Russian forces “come into all our cities,” they will be met with an insurgency.

In one of the most desperate cities, the encircled southern port of Mariupol, an estimated 200,000 people — nearly half the population of 430,000 — were hoping to flee, and Red Cross officials waited to hear when a corridor would be established.

The city is short on water, food and power, and cellphone networks are down. Stores have been looted as residents search for essential goods.

Police moved through the city, advising people to remain in shelters until they heard official messages broadcast over loudspeakers to evacuate.

Hospitals in Mariupol are facing severe shortages of antibiotics and painkillers, and doctors performed some emergency procedures without them.

The lack of phone service left anxious citizens approaching strangers to ask if they knew relatives living in other parts of the city and whether they were safe.

In the capital, Kyiv, soldiers and volunteers have built hundreds of checkpoints to protect the city of nearly 4 million, often using sandbags, stacked tires and spiked cables. Some barricades looked significant, with heavy concrete slabs and sandbags piled more than two storeys high, while others appeared more haphazard, with hundreds of books used to weigh down stacks of tires.

“Every house, every street, every checkpoint, we will fight to the death if necessary,” said Mayor Vitali Klitschko.

In Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city, with 1.4 million people, heavy shelling slammed into apartment buildings.

“I think it struck the fourth floor under us,” Dmitry Sedorenko said from his Kharkiv hospital bed. “Immediately, everything started burning and falling apart.” When the floor collapsed beneath him, he crawled out through the third story, past the bodies of some of his neighbors.

Klitschko reported that fierce battles continued in the Kyiv region, notably around Bucha, Hostomel, Vorzel and Irpin.

In the Irpin area, which has been cut off from electricity, water and heat for three days, witnesses saw at least three tanks and said Russian soldiers were seizing houses and cars.

A few miles away, in the small town of Horenka, where shelling reduced one area to ashes and shards of glass, rescuers and residents picked through the ruins as chickens pecked around them.

“What are they doing?” rescue worker Vasyl Oksak asked of the Russian attackers. “There were two little kids and two elderly people living here. Come in and see what they have done.”     

In the south, Russian forces also continued their offensive in Mykolaiv, opening fire on the Black Sea shipbuilding center of a half-million people, according to Ukraine's military. Rescuers said they were putting out fires caused by rocket attacks in residential areas.

At The Hague, Netherlands, Ukraine pleaded with the International Court of Justice to order a halt to Russia's invasion, saying Moscow is committing widespread war crimes.

Russia “is resorting to tactics reminiscent of medieval siege warfare, encircling cities, cutting off escape routes and pounding the civilian population with heavy ordnance,” said Jonathan Gimblett, a member of Ukraine's legal team.

Russia snubbed the court proceedings, leaving its seats in the Great Hall of Justice empty.

Efforts to set up safe passage for civilians over the weekend fell apart amid continued Russian shelling. Before Monday's talks began, Russia announced a new plan, saying civilians would be allowed to leave Kyiv, Mariupol, Kharkiv and Sumy.

But many of the evacuation routes headed toward Russia or its ally Belarus, which has served as a launch pad for the invasion. Ukraine instead proposed eight routes allowing civilians to travel to western regions of the country where there is no shelling.

Later, Russia's U.N. Ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, told the U.N. Security Council that Russia would carry out a cease-fire on Tuesday morning and appeared to suggest that humanitarian corridors leading away from Kyiv, Mariupol, Sumy and Chernigov could give people choice in where they want to go.

The U.N. humanitarian chief, Undersecretary-General Martin Griffiths, addressed the Security Council and urged safe passage for people to go “in the direction they choose.” 

Zelenskyy's office would not comment on the Russian proposal, saying only that Moscow's plans can be believed only if a safe evacuation begins. The office said Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk planned to make a statement on the issue on Tuesday morning.

The battle for Mariupol is crucial because its capture could allow Moscow to establish a land corridor to Crimea, which Russia seized from Ukraine in 2014.

The fighting has sent energy prices surging worldwide and stocks plummeting, and threatens the food supply and livelihoods of people around the globe who rely on crops farmed in the fertile Black Sea region.

The U.N. human rights office reported 406 confirmed civilian deaths but said the real number is much higher. The invasion has also sent 1.7 million people fleeing Ukraine.

On Monday, Moscow again announced a series of demands to stop the invasion, including that Ukraine recognize Crimea as part of Russia and recognize the eastern regions controlled by Moscow-supported separatist fighters as independent. It also insisted that Ukraine change its constitution to guarantee it won't join international bodies like NATO and the EU. Ukraine has already rejected those demands.

Zelenskyy has called for more punitive measures against Russia, including a global boycott of its oil exports, which are key to its economy.

“If (Russia) doesn't want to abide by civilized rules, then they shouldn't receive goods and services from civilization," he said in a video address.

He has also asked for more warplanes. Deputy U.S. Secretary of State Wendy Sherman said officials are "trying to see whether this is possible and doable.”     

While the West has been rushing weapons such as anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles to Ukraine, some officials fear that sending warplanes could be seen by Moscow as direct involvement in the war.

One possible scenario under discussion: Former Soviet bloc nations that are now NATO members could send Ukraine their own Soviet-era MiGs, which Ukrainian pilots are trained to fly, and the US would then replace those countries' aircraft with American-made F-16s.

Russia's invasion has nearby countries terrified the war could spread to them. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken began a lightning visit to the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, former Soviet republics that are NATO members. Blinken hoped to reassure them of the alliance's protection.

NATO has shown no interest in sending troops into the country and has rejected Zelenskyy's pleas to establish a no-fly zone for fear of triggering a wider war. 

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