The Netherlands : Den Haag – Rotterdam – Amsterdam 2 till 12 September 2011

Mostly pictures of gurdwaras, trains and trams taken during my recent visit to the Netherlands

4 September, Rotterdam, Sunday Divan

Gurdwara Siri Guru Nanak Dev Ji
Ottergracht 6
3064 LN Rotterdam-Kralingse Veer

5 September, Den Haag, Parallelweg, NS doubledecker IC train, HTM Tram

5 September, Den Haag, Parallelweg, NS doubledecker IC train, HTM Tram
It looks like a number 9 tram

5 September, Den Haag, Parallelweg, HTM Tram
Tram turning from underneath the railway tracks towards Holland Spoor Station
8, 9, 11 and 12 run along the Parallelweg
1, 10, 16 and 17 use the tracks underneath the railway viaduct

To see more pictures of Gurdwaras and sangat in the Netherlands :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157622147381380/

Belgium and Netherlands public transport pictures at :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157622685920411/  

More Netherlands pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – Bhullar clemency resolution unlikely in Punjab Assembly

Kulwinder Sangha

Mohali, September 29. Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal today said that a resolution asking for clemency for Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar would be introduced in the coming session of the Punjab Vidhan Sabha only if there was a possibility of geting it passed.

Badal, who was here to inaugurate a hospital, told mediapersons that the BJP and Congress had already started opposing the proposal and under such circumstances, it would not be possible to get it passed in the House.

“We (SAD) wanted to bring a resolution to convert Bhullar’s death sentence to life imprisonment for his benefit, but the Congress and other political parties are opposed to it,” said Badal.

“Now if we bring in the resolution with most political parties opposed to it, it will be defeated and the step will harm Bhullar.”

When asked whether the Punjab Government would try to convince the BJP and the Congress on the issue, Badal said that his party would not like to talk to anyone on this issue. He, however, clarified that there were no differences with alliance partner BJP as such and every political party had its own principles.

The BJP has already made it clear that it would not support the clemency plea for Bhullar, even if it is brought up by its alliance partner in the Punjab Vidhan Sabha.

On the other hand, Congress president Captain Amarinder Singh has stated that Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar’s death penalty should be commuted to life imprisonment, but has rejected the proposal as politically motivated.

Amarinder has maintained that his stand was clear and categoric that Bhullar must not be hanged as he has been in jail for 17 years, out of which he was on death penalty for eight years while a life term is for 14 years only. He cannot be punished twice – life term and death sentence – for the same crime.

Meanwhile, the All-India Sikh Students Federation (AISSF) on Thursday demanded that the Punjab Government immediately seek the transfer of Devinder Pal Singh Bhullar, who is lodged in Delhi’s Tihar Jail, to a prison in Punjab.

“The present Punjab government has refused to accept the transfer of Prof Bhullar to a prison in Punjab stating that he is a dangerous terrorist,” said AISSF president Karnail Singh Peermohammad.

Peermohammad accused the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal of raking up the issue of clemency for Bhullar and save him from the gallows as Assembly elections in Punjab were round the corner.

Bhullar was sentenced to death for masterminding a 1993 car bomb attack in front of the Youth Congress office in New Delhi that killed 12 people.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2011/20110930/main2.htm

The Asian Age – After 19 years, 215 men, all officials, convicted

Zakeer Hussain, Asian Age Corespondent

Dharmapuri (Tamil Nadu). 30 September 2011. Nearly two decades after the incident, a sessions court here on Thursday sentenced all the 215 men of the police and forest and revenue departments to jail terms ranging from one to 10 years for assault and rape of tribals during a raid targeting sandalwood smuggling in remote Vachathi village in Dharmapuri district.

Of the total 269 accused in what came to be known as the Vachathi case, 54 had died during the CBI investigation and the trial.

Principal district and sessions judge S. Kumaraguru held guilty 126 forest personnel, including four IFS officers, 84 men from the police and five from the revenue department.

Seventeen men were sentenced to seven years’ rigorous imprisonment for rape and 12 of them were given an additional 10 years’ RI for offences under the SC/ST Act, with both terms running concurrently. The rest were awarded jail terms ranging from one to three years.

Most of the convicted men were aged and some of them found it difficult to even remain standing in the court, which was packed with Vachathi villagers. Mediapersons had descended from all over considering that this case had shocked the nation for the magnitude of barbarian abuse of helpless tribals.

Several relatives of those convicted were present in court. Some erupted in anger when the verdict was pronounced.

“My husband had gone to provide security for the raid team on the orders of his superiors. He did no wrong,” wailed a woman. But the majority in the huge crowd welcomed the verdict as justice delivered, at last.

According to the Central Bureau of Investigation, a team of 155 forest personnel, 108 policemen and six revenue officials entered Vachathi on June 20, 1992. They dragged the tribals out of their homes, assaulted about 100 of them and raped 18 young women, besides ransacking properties.

http://www.asianage.com/india/after-19-yrs-215-men-all-officials-convicted-034

My visit to Italy from 18 July till 5 August

Pictures taken on 2 August of the Gurmat Camp in the San Bonifacio Gurdwara

Granthi Naginder Singh


Gurmat Camp, four of the Sikh women came to help every day

Vahiguru Ji Ka Khalsa  Vahiguru Ji Ki Fateh

Vahiguru Ji Ka Khalsa  Vahiguru Ji Ki Fateh
The girl on the left lives across the square from where I was staying in Montecchia

Associazone Guru Nanak, Mission Seva Society
Via Ritonda 81b
37047 San Bonifacio
Verona province, Veneto region

More Italy pictures to follow !
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

Published in: on September 30, 2011 at 6:50 am  Leave a Comment  
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A Tribune Investigation – Punjab Public Transport 4

Public losses, private profits

Punjab Bureau, Chandigarh, September 29. Transport corporations in the public sector in Punjab today face the same fate as Air India does in the aviation sector.

If Air India is deep in the red after the open skies policy which saw private sector airliners mushroom, the two major Punjab state transport undertakings, Punjab Roadways and PEPSU Road Transport Corporation, PRTC, are rapidly going down the same road.

With the implentation of a liberal transport policy of encouraging the private sector, adopted by the Parkash Singh Badal government when it came to power in 2007, public sector operators have experienced a steep fall in market share and piled up huge losses. From a market share of 48 per cent in 2004-05, the share of state transport undertakings (STU) came down to 39 per cent in 2008-09 with the accumulated losses during the period aggregating a whopping Rs 462.03 crores. Punjab Roadways alone lost as much Rs 76 crores in 2009-10.

Key indicators show how badly off the STUs are. In the the transport sector, a major indicator of performance is productivity per bus per kilometre per day. The 2009 report of the Comptroller and Auditor-General (CAG) says that productivity in kms – kilometres done per day per bus – has declined sharply in the case of Punjab Roadways. From 206 km per bus per day in 2004-05, it had come down to 105 km per day per bus. The national average is 313 kms per bus per day. The productivity of PRTC is much better mainly because it enjoys more monopoly routes than Punjab Roadways. Against 306 km per bus per day in 2004-05, it was doing 310 km per bus per day in 2009. Private transport operators in this sector do anything between 350 and 400 km per bus per day.

The losses of the state transport undertakings were primarily because major trunk and profitable routes, that had been traditionally with them have, during the past four years, gradually been overtaken by private transport operators, many of them owned by political bigwigs. Though there has been no change in the scheme that governs public transport in Punjab, which was formulated in 1990 and modified in 1997, private operators allegedly exploit the loopholes to gain more routes.

The 1997 rules state that STUs will have a monopoly on all inter-state routes. On national highways within the state, the share is in the 75:25 ratio between STUs and private operators. On all other routes falling on state highways and other roads in the state, the ratio would be 40:60 between STUs and private operators.

The policy was good when formulated as the idea was to bring in private operators to compete with STUs to improve services and connectivity, especially to neglected areas of the state. Instead, the reverse has happened. The 2009 CAG report observed critically that the scheme was not implemented in letter and spirit. It pointed out that the private operators were allotted excess routes on the National Highways and on monopoly routes in disregard to the scheme. In case of violations, the STUs are required to file petition with the State Transport Appellate Tribunal (STAT).

The CAG report said that 107 petitions filed by the STUs were still pending with the tribunal causing huge loss to the state exchequer.

The Punjab Transport Department issues a limited number of permits for every route at a price. The average is six to eight permits per route. The CAG report revealed that profitable routes operated by the state undertakings have dropped from 219 in 2005 to as few as 90 in 2009. No prizes for guessing who took over the remaining share of profitable routes.

Investigations by The Tribune revealed several methods by which many private operators exploit loopholes to gain routes and access to what should have been profitable or monopoly routes for state undertakings. Among them is that some private operators pick up permits for short distances and then manipulate the rules to get it transformed into a single permit for a larger and more profitable route.

Other private operators are accused of muscling into the time-tables to ensure that they get the best timings during peak hours. There are serious allegations that influential private operators manipulate the timings, so that they get more selling time for tickets at the counter thereby ensuring more passengers. Ordinarily, they get an average of three minutes at the counter but many operators ensure that they get six to nine minutes to book passengers usurping the counter time of STUs.

An example of how some private operators allegedly manipulate the timetable is to ensure that STUs buses are scheduled before and after it. The open secret of the trade is that the buses of the two STUs invariably fail to show up on the timings given, thus giving the private operator more time on the counter to book the passengers. Master Mohan Lal when he was Transport Minister in the Badal government not only admitted to such practices but also charged that the crew of many state-owned buses were in connivance with private operators in missing schedule timings and also carrying a low passenger load.

The CAG report said the main causes for the mounting losses of state transport undertaking was a steep fall in operating kilometres, decrease in fleet strength, overage buses and insufficient crew. These undertakings were unable to induct new buses and replace the over age buses due to their poor financial health and also due to lack of financial assistance from the state government. It also pointed out that un-remunerative sectors, including services to rural and remote areas, still remain largely with the public sector. The CAG pointed out that while state undertakings earned Rs 20.57 per km, they spent Rs 23.65 per km resulting in a loss of almost three rupees a kilometre.

PRTC chairman Ranjit Singh Ballian, a political appointee, however, does not agree that public transport is in the red because of the growing strength of private operators. He says, “Private transporters have not affected us much. It’s just the financial crisis that is making things difficult for us. We have a monopoly on certain routes and this continues to exist. But we get no financial aid either from the Centre or the state government as a result of which has put our finances under considerable strain.”

The government transport union workers are more critical. “PRTC is running into huge losses because the Punjab Government is making policies that are beneficial for private transporters and thus causing major losses to PRTC,” charges Nirmal Singh Dhaliwal, president of PRTC Workers’ Union, AITUC.

Gurdev Singh, senior vice president of the Punjab Government Transport Workers Union (PGTWU), alleges that many private operators not only evade payment of taxes but operate more than one bus on a permit and evade mandatory charges, including adda fee or parking fee inside a bus stand.

As proof, the PGTWU office-bearers cite the allegation made by former Commissioner of Patiala Division Jasbir Singh Bir, who last year decided to seek voluntary retirement from the Indian Administrative Service (IAS) because of his failure to prevent parking of buses belonging to Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal’s private company, Orbit, in the residential-cum-commercial area of Mohali.

As a result of the skewed transport policy, there are complaints that connectivity with rural and remote areas in Punjab has deteriorated. Public road transport system in rural areas of the Moga district for example, has collapsed in the last couple of years because of poor connectivity. As a result, students, teachers and workers suffer every day. While in some areas, the only consolation is mini-buses, in the rest passengers have to use unconventional modes of transport, including archaic three-wheelers and indigenous “rehras” pulled by diesel pumps. All this is a far cry from the transport revolution that the Badal government promised when it came to power in 2007.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2011/20110930/main3.htm

BBC News – Pakistan PM Gilani rejects US Haqqani pressure

29 September 2011

Pakistan will not bow to US pressure to step up its fight against militancy, its prime minister has said.

Yousuf Raza Gilani told a rare meeting of political and religious parties that relations between the two countries should be based on mutual respect.

Relations have hit new lows since the top US military officer said Pakistan backed the Haqqani militant group in Afghanistan, a charge Pakistan rejects.

Correspondents say many Pakistanis see the US comments as a threat of war.

Washington wants Islamabad to sever links with the Haqqani group, which analysts say has roots deep inside Pakistani territory.

US officials say they are close to deciding whether to label the group as a foreign terrorist organisation, and on Thursday the Treasury Department announced new sanctions on five individuals it said are linked to “the most dangerous terrorist organisations operating in Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

“These financiers and facilitators provide the fuel for the Taliban, Haqqani Network and al-Qaeda to realise their violent aspirations,” said Treasury official David Cohen said in a statement.

Correspondents say that the department’s move means that US companies and individuals are prohibited from engaging in transactions with the targeted individuals – and any assets they hold under US jurisdiction are frozen.

Among the five is Abdul Aziz Abbasin, who the Treasury Department accused of a series of high-profile attacks and described as a “key commander in the Haqqani network”.

Angered and humiliated

But in the Islamabad meeting, Mr Gilani said that Pakistan “cannot be pressured to do more” in the battle against militancy.

“The blame game should end, and Pakistan’s sensitive national interests should be respected,” he said, in comments carried live on local television stations.

He said that Pakistan was united over any threat to its sovereignty.

Pakistan’s army head Gen Ashfaq Kayani and ISI spy chief Lt-Gen Ahmad Shuja Pasha were also at the meeting.

Lt-Gen Pasha said told the meeting that any US military action against insurgents in Pakistan would be “unacceptable” and that the Pakistani army was capable of responding.

He said that Pakistan would not allow the situation to get to a “point of no return”.

The US has been targeting militants, including members of the Haqqani group, for months in Pakistan’s tribal areas near the Afghan border – some in the US Congress are now calling for it to go beyond drone strikes.

Pakistan’s military was deeply angered and humiliated when US commandos killed al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden in a secret raid on Pakistani soil in May.

‘Shocked’

Tensions between the two countries rose still further last week when the most senior US military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, made his accusations, calling the Haqqanis a “veritable arm” of Pakistan’s spy agency.

The BBC’s Aleem Maqbool in Islamabad says the emergency meeting of Pakistan’s parties is the largest gathering of its kind in the country for years.

He says Admiral Mullen’s comments have caused much anger in Pakistan and led many people to feel the US is threatening war. The White House, however, made slightly more conciliatory noises on Wednesday.

Spokesman Jay Carney said he would not have used the same language as Admiral Mullen, while Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the two countries have to “work together”.

At the meeting, Mr Gilani said that any attempts by America to put pressure on Pakistan to do more would fail.

“American statements shocked us, and negate our sacrifices and successes in the ongoing war against terror,” he told the gathering in his opening remarks.

“We should give up talking about assumptions for the sake of meaningful negotiations. Pakistan cannot be pressurised to do more. Our national interests should be respected. Our doors are open for dialogue.”

The prime minister also rejected allegations made by Admiral Mullen that Pakistan had helped orchestrate attacks on US targets in Afghanistan.

Pakistan has long denied supporting the Haqqani group, but BBC correspondents say it has a decades-old policy of pursuing foreign policy objectives through alliances with militants.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-15106632

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