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Monday, 26 October 2015

Powerful earthquake measuring 7.7 strikes Srinagar

  • All office staff evacuated during earth quake at Jawahar Lal Bhavan, External Affairs Ministry. Photo : Shanker Chakravarty

A massive earthquake, measuring 7.7 on the Richter scale was felt in Srinagar and other parts of North India at around 2.45 pm on Monday.
The quake had its epicentre in the Hindukush region of Afghanistan, said a statement from the government.
The quake was 196 km (120 miles) deep and centred 82 km southeast of Feyzabad in a remote area of Afghanistan in the Hindukush mountain range, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.
Metro rail services in Delhi have been suspended for the time being as a precaution.
Former J&K Chief Minister Omar Abdullah tweeted saying the electricity had been cut off in Srinagar after the tremors. "Electricity cutoff with the tremors in Srinagar. Praying it hasn't caused loss of life or too much damage anywhere.
An earlier USGS Report on Seismotectonics of the Himalaya and Vicinity says, "Seismicity in the Himalaya dominantly results from the continental collision of the India and Eurasia plates. Northward underthrusting of India beneath Eurasia generates numerous earthquakes and consequently makes this area one of the most seismically hazardous regions on Earth."

The world's strongest earthquakes since 1900

  • April 11, 2012 - A magnitude-8.6 quake off the west coast of northern Sumatra in Indonesia triggers tsunami warnings in more than two dozen nations.
  • March 11, 2011 - A magnitude-9.0 quake off the northeast coast of Japan triggers a tsunami, killing more than 18,000 people.
  • Feb. 27, 2010 - A magnitude-8.8 quake shakes Chile, generating a tsunami and killing 524 people.
  • Sept. 12, 2007 - A magnitude-8.5 quake near Sumatra in Indonesia kills at least 25 people.
  • March 28, 2005 - A magnitude-8.6 quake in northern Sumatra in Indonesia kills about 1,300 people.
  • Dec. 26, 2004 - A magnitude-9.1 quake in Indonesia triggers an Indian Ocean tsunami, killing 230,000 people in a dozen countries.
  • Feb. 4, 1965 - A magnitude-8.7 quake strikes Alaska’s Rat Islands, causing an 11-meter (35—foot) -high tsunami.
  • March 28, 1964 - A magnitude-9.2 quake in Prince William Sound, Alaska, kills 131 people, including 128 from a tsunami.
  • Oct. 13, 1963 - A magnitude-8.5 quake in the Kuril Islands triggers a tsunami.
  • May 22, 1960 - A magnitude-9.5 earthquake in southern Chile and ensuing tsunami kill at least 1,716 people.
  • March 9, 1957 - A magnitude-8.6 quake strikes the Andreanof Islands in Alaska triggers a 16-meter (52-foot) -high tsunami.
  • Nov. 4, 1952 - A magnitude-9.0 quake in Kamchatka in Russia’s Far East causes damage but no reported deaths despite setting off 9.1-meter (30-foot) waves in Hawaii.
  • Aug. 15, 1950 - A magnitude-8.6 earthquake in Tibet kills at least 780 people.
  • Feb.1 , 1938 - A magnitude-8.5 quake in Banda Sea, Indonesia, generates a small tsunami.
  • Feb. 3, 1923 - A magnitude-8.5 quake in Kamchatka in Russia’s Far East triggers a tsunami.
  • Nov. 11, 1922 - A magnitude-8.5 quake along the Chile—Argentina border triggers a tsunami that causes damage along Chile’s coast.
  • Jan. 31, 1906 - A magnitude—8.8 quake off the coast of Ecuador generates a tsunami that kills at least 500 people.

Sunday, 25 October 2015

No party can change quota policy, says Modi

At his poll meeting at Naubatpur in Patna, the last on Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi broke his silence on the issue of reservation, saying no party today could afford to make any change in the reservation policy enshrined in the Constitution.
He said that on this issue, he was with Nitish Kumar, Lalu Prasad and other leaders. “There will be no change in the reservation policy that Babasaheb Ambedkar espoused in the Constitution… In fact, no party today can afford to make any change,” he said. “Rights given by Babasaheb Ambedkar for the socially backward classes will never be taken away by my government … ” Mr. Modi said.
In the States where the BJP was in power quotas had not been tampered with, he said.
“I’ve been Chief Minister of Gujarat for 15 years… We’ve government in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Haryana and in other States as well but nowhere reservation has been touched.”
Striking a personal note, he said: “Sometimes I wonder had Babasaheb Ambedkar not been there, what would have happened to Narendra Modi, who was selling tea in trains in his childhood.”
On the same page
In a bid to clear the confusion over the BJP’s stand on the reservation issue, Mr. Modi said that he might have differences with Nitish Kumar and Lalu Prasad or others on other matters, but on the issue of quota he held the same view.
“We cannot even think of doing anything with the reservation policy. There has not been any demand for a change in the policy from anywhere…in fact, there are only demands from others to include them in the reservation benefits,” said the Prime Minister.
“But, since they [rival grand alliance leaders] have no other issues, they are spreading misinformation and canards against us,” Mr. Modi charged.
Earlier, in an interview, RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat had said that there should be a “review” of the reservation policy. That statement put the BJP-led NDA on the back foot in the Bihar election campaign.

Modi ties unity to development

Prime Minister Narendra Modi. File photo.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a pitch for unity and diversity on Sunday, saying the mantra of unity should pervade “our thought, conduct and articulation.”
Saluting Sardar Patel for geographically uniting India, Mr. Modi called for social unity in his Mann Ki Baat address to the nation. “India is a nation of diversities. There are many sects, communities, languages and castes. India is a diverse country and this diversity is our adornment,” he said. “Peace, harmony and unity are necessary for development.”
Mr. Modi’s statement follows statements made by him and President Pranab Mukherjee in the wake of an outcry over the killing of a Muslim at Dadri in Uttar Pradesh on the suspicion of storing beef and the “insensitive” statements made by some BJP leaders after the incident.
Mr. Modi has reached out to Dalits at a time when Union Minister of State for External Affairs V.K. Singh’s “dog” analogy in the wake of the deaths of two children from Dalit families has led to an outcry.
He said the house where Dr. B.R. Ambedkar lived in London had now become Indian property and he would be present there just after Diwali for the formal inauguration.
“This house will give inspiration to Dalits, the exploited and oppressed, the backward and those who face difficulties in life that if they have will power they can surmount difficulties and move ahead in life,” Mr. Modi said. The house would be a pilgrimage center for Dalit youth going to London on government scholarships.
The statement had immediate political repercussions. Janata Dal (United) leader K.C. Tyagi, whose party is taking on the NDA in alliance with the Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Congress in Bihar, saw this as an attempt to reach out to Dalits in the State and, thus, a violation of the model code of conduct.
Policy initiatives

The Prime Minister announced some policy initiatives that would soon kick in. There would be no interviews for Group B, C and D appointments in non-gazetted jobs under the Central government from January 1, he said. Gold monetisation — where banks will give interest on gold deposits just like cash — would be ushered in around Diwali, and ‘Sovereign Gold Bonds’ and gold coins would also be issued soon, he added.
Leaders of the grand alliance in Bihar were quick to attack Mr. Modi. “The PM’s announcement of doing away with interviews for Group D, C and B non-gazetted posts in Central government means a goodbye to the reservation policy as recruitment will only be held on merit basis. The PM’s statement suggests so. We strongly oppose this and will make a representation to the EC [Election Commission] soon and raise this issue inside and outside Parliament,” Mr. Tyagi said.
Congress leader R.P.N. Singh and eminent lawyer K.T.S. Tulsi were with him. “This is the effective implementation of Mohan Bhagwat’s demand for a review of the reservation policy,” he said.

Supreme Court takes up cause of Muslim women

They have been asked whether “gender discrimination” suffered by Muslim women should not be considered a violation of the fundamental rights.

Thirty years after the Supreme Court urged the government to frame a uniform civil code to “help in the cause of national integration” in the Shah Bano case, a two-judge Bench of the court has suo motu ordered registration of a public interest litigation petition and asked the Chief Justice to set up a Special Bench to consider gender discrimination suffered by Muslim women owing to “arbitrary divorce and second marriage of their husbands during the currency of their first marriage”.
Justices Anil R. Dave and Adarsh Kumar Goel issued notice to the Attorney-General and the National Legal Services Authority of India to reply, on November 23, whether “gender discrimination” suffered by Muslim women should not be considered a violation of the fundamental rights under Articles 14, 15 and 21 of the Constitution and international covenants. The October 16 verdict refers to dozens of its judgments since the 1990s to record the court’s growing realisation that gender discrimination violated the constitutional rights of women.
They have been asked whether “gender discrimination” suffered by Muslim women should not be considered a violation of the fundamental rights under Articles 14, 15 and 21 of the Constitution and international covenants.
The verdict, dated October 16, refers to dozens of its own judgments since the 1990s in order to record the Supreme Court’s growing realisation that gender discrimination is a violation of the constitutional rights of women.
Considering the strong pitch made by the Supreme Court recently for a common civil code, this judgment is significant as this is the first time that the court itself has shed its self-imposed restraint by suo motu ordering the registration of a PIL petition.
Even in the 1985 Shah Bano case, the court had only reminded the government of the lack of “evidence of any official activity for framing a common civil code for the country.” It had said a “common civil code will help in the cause of national integration by removing disparate loyalties to laws which have conflicting ideologies.”
Justice Goel wrote that the decision to “consider” the rights of Muslim women came up during discussions with lawyers on gender discrimination at the hearing of a batch of civil appeals on the issue of a daughter’s right to equal shares in ancestral property under the Hindu succession law.
“An important issue of gender discrimination which, though not directly involved in this appeal, has been raised by some of the learned counsel for the parties which concerns rights to Muslim women. Discussions on gender discrimination led to this issue also. It was pointed out that in spite of guarantee of the Constitution, Muslim women are subjected to discrimination. There is no safeguard against arbitrary divorce and second marriage by her husband during the currency of the first marriage, resulting in denial of dignity and security to her,” the judgment recorded.
“It is pointed out that the matter needs consideration by this court as the issue relates not merely to a policy matter but to fundamental rights of women under Articles 14, 15 and 21 [of the Constitution] and international conventions and covenants,” Justice Goel wrote of the discussions the Bench had during the court hearings.
Justice Goel wrote how even in the Danial Latifi judgment of 2001, the Supreme Court’s Constitution Bench had not addressed the issue of gender discrimination, though it held that “Article 21 included right to live with dignity which supports the plea that a Muslim woman could invoke fundamental rights in such matters.”
In the Latifi case, the court attempted to uphold the constitutional validity of the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986, by extending the right of a Muslim woman to get maintenance till she re-marries. This Act had diluted the Shah Bano judgment and reduced the period of maintenance to the completion of iddat.
Justice Goel refers to several judgments of the past to show how the court stopped short of a judicial debate on the uniform civil code, fearing it would then take on an “activist role.”
Changing stance
But Justice Goel points to recent SC judgments, like Javed vs. State of Haryana in 2003 in which a three-judge Bench intervened in personal law to uphold the dignity of women, to show the change in attitude.
In the Javed case, the court held that “polygamy is injurious to public morals and can be superseded by the State just as practice of ‘Sati’.”
Again, Justice Goel referred to the John Vallamattom case judgment of 2003, which said “laws dealing with marriage and succession are not part of religion.” Finally, Justice Goel refers to the 2015 judgment in the Charu Khurana case, in which the court struck against gender discrimination shown to women make-up artists in the film industry.

Friday, 23 October 2015

Send V.K. Singh to jail for his anti-Dalit remark: Mayawati


BSP supremo Mayawati on Friday accused the BJP government in Haryana of being “insensitive” towards Dalits.

Bahujan Samaj Party supremo Mayawati on Friday demanded immediate sacking of Union Minister V.K. Singh for his dog remark on the Dalit killings in Faridabad and said he should be sent to jail for his “petty, mean and low-level mentality“.
“Prime Minister Narendra Modi should immediately dismiss him. He should be sent to jail for harbouring such petty and low-level mentality towards Dalits,” Ms. Mayawati told reporters at a hurriedly convened press conference here.
Her outburst came after Mr. Singh’s controversial remarks that “government cannot be held responsible if somebody stones a dog”.
“The comment is against the self-respect and honour of Dalits all over the country. Our party not only condemns it, but also demands from the Prime Minister that he should immediately dismiss him for having such petty, mean and low-level mentality and send him to jail,” an angry Ms. Mayawati said.
“If Modi does not do the same, it will be taken that he has nothing to do with the pride of Dalits and his recent announcement of building memorial in the name of Ambedkar is merely aimed at taking advantage of their votes,” she said.
At the press meet, the BSP leader and former Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister accused the BJP government in Haryana of being “insensitive” towards Dalits and termed as shameful the killing of two children who were burnt alive three days ago in Faridabad.
“It clearly indicates that BJP is not at all concerned or sensitive towards Dalits. It shows insensitivity of the Haryana government.”
She said the incident is more shocking because it happened despite the police deployment in the area.
“Despite police presence, four Dalits were burnt alive. What was their fault. It was because they (Dalits) wanted to live with self-respect,” she said.
'BJP's double standards'
Ms. Mayawati said on the one hand Modi spoke about honouring Ambedkar, on the other his (Ambedkar’s) followers were being targeted.
“Political parties are merely using Ambedkar’s name for narrow gains and they should stop this immediately,” she said.
She also said resignation of the Haryana Chief Minister should be taken for failing to protect Dalits.
“Stern action should have been taken by the Haryana government against the accused and mere suspension of the police personnel will not serve the purpose, they should be sent to jail under stringent sections of the law,” she said.
Takes dig at Congress
On leaders of different parties rushing to Faridabad after the incident, Ms. Mayawati was especially critical of Congress leader Rahul Gandhi.
“Where was he when a similar incident took place in Hissar in Haryana when Congress was in power. Congress ‘yuvraj’ rushed there to shed crocodile tears...When Congress was at the helm both at the Centre and Haryana and Dalits faced atrocities in Hissar he kept sleeping like Kumbhakarna...though he could have done a lot for them as his party was in power there,” she said.
“When it is the Congress government, it is BJP which indulges in drama and vice versa...I want to tell the central government that Congress did this drama and today they are out of power...if BJP and its alliance partners follow Congress they too will face the same fate...it can face the same fate in Bihar,” Ms. Mayawati said.
“At the time of election, leaders of all parties indulge in drama of different kind to woo Dalits. They are expert in putting up hoardings, making films, going to their ‘bastis’ (hutments) and having ‘khichdi’ with them...but after elections they do not even look towards them,” she said.
The BSP Chief said she was the first to instruct her party people to go to Faridabad and extend help to the affected family and it was only after that other party leaders started arriving there.

Wednesday, 21 October 2015

‘RSS enrolment up by 300% after Bhagwat interview’


Debunking the notion that the Dadri lynching was an “accident,” the National Commission for Minorities (NCM) says the assembly of a mob that killed Muhammad Akhlaq on September 28 was a “premediated” act of violence.
The NCM is a government-run body with a mandate to safeguard the constitutional rights of the religious minorities.
On October 10, its team visited Bishara village in Dadri district of western Uttar Pradesh to probe the killing.
The report dispels the claim that the assembly of the mob was “spontaneous.” According to the report: “The team feels that a crowd of large numbers appearing within minutes of the announcement from the temple’s loudspeaker and at a time when most villagers claimed they were asleep seems to point to some premeditated planning.”
Since Union Minister Mahesh Sharma concluded that the incident was an “accident,” the report challenges the notion, saying: “A sacred place like a temple was used for exhorting people of one community to attack a hapless family.” Therefore, calling it an accident would be an “under-statement.”
On the night of September 28, the priest of the temple made a loud announcement that the remains of a slaughtered cow were found near Akhlaq’s house. Hearing that, a mob broke into Akhlaq’s house, accusing him of eating and storing cow meat, and killed him instantly.
The NCM team has expressed concern at the growing vigilantism in western Uttar Pradesh. It perceives the ongoing moral policing in the region as a “malaise” which is “spreading fast.” Picking holes in the functioning of the police, the report says intelligence-gathering “is no more occurring in the rule book of the authorities. It has to be revived with utmost sincerity.”

Killing of Dalits: Rahul blames it on Modi, RSS

Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday meets Jitender whose house was set on fire.

An angry Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday met Jitender — a Dalit whose house was set on fire allegedly by upper caste men at Sunperh in Faridabad leading to the death of his two children — and blamed the Haryana government, the Prime Minister and the RSS/BJP for the incident.
“They are weak and poor, that is why they are being treated like this. This is not the government of the weak,” Mr. Gandhi’s office tweeted. “This is an attitude shared by PM, CM & BJP-RSS. If somebody is weak, they can be crushed. What you are seeing is the result of this attitude!”
A visibly agitated Mr. Gandhi shot back when asked whether he was there for a “photo opportunity,” saying “people were dying left, right and center,” and the question was an insult to the family.
CPI(M) leader Brinda Karat also visited Haryana and blamed the State government and the police for the incident. She said the police hadn’t acted on multiple applications the children’s father had filed and accused the government of “not taking complaints of Dalits seriously.”
A day after the incident, the death of the Dalit children threatens to snowball into a national controversy at a time when Bihar is in the midst of polls. The State has 16 per cent Dalits, and the BJP has been trying to enlist the support of two major Scheduled Castes — Dusadhs and Musahars — through alliances with their leaders Ram Vilas Paswan and Jitan Ram Manjhi. However, the Haryana incident has given a chance for rivals to question the BJP’s credentials on Dalits. While the BJP had brushed off criticism on the Dadri lynching and the killing of rationalists by saying it was the State governments of the Congress and the Samajwadi Party that needed to be questioned, rivals are using the same argument against the BJP’s Haryana government now.
The reverberations of the Haryana incident in which a Dalit family was set on fire, burning alive two children, were immediately felt in Bihar, with Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, RJD leader Lalu Prasad and even Mr. Ram Vilas Paswan reacting to it.
Torching generates poll heat
Mr. Kumar tweeted, “Shocked at this gruesome incident. Where are those now who claimed, bring our government, and everything will become better.”
Mr. Prasad also tweeted: “Before giving speeches in Bihar, PM Modi should answer till how long will Dalits and the backward classes be exploited and killed under their rule in Haryana and the Centre.”
Mr. Paswan of the LJP, too, laid the blame on the Haryana government of Manohar Lal Khattar: “Law and order is totally the State government’s accountability.”
BJP spokesperson Shahnawaz Hussain shot back: “Laluji seems to have forgotten that it was during his regime that maximum Dalits were killed in Bihar. Today he is shedding tears for votes.”