The Tribune – Sikhs still divided on Nanakshahi calendar

Perneet Singh, Tribune News Service

Amritsar, January 8. With different Sikh groups sticking to their respective stands, the community continues to remain divided over the Nanakshahi calendar which was amended a couple of years ago.

While the SGPC-run gurdwaras celebrated the birth anniversary of Guru Gobind Singh on December 31, the DSGMC, led by Paramjit Singh Sarna, and other organisations like the Dal Khalsa went as per the original version of the calendar and celebrated the event today. Interestingly, as per the amended calendar, which is followed by the SGPC, Guru Gobind Singh’s birth anniversary will not be celebrated in 2012. Reason: As per the amended version, the gurpurb was celebrated for the second time in 2011 on December 31 while the birth anniversary does not figure in the calendar this year.

On the other hand, the birth anniversary of the 10th Sikh Guru is celebrated on January 5 every year as per the original calendar.

Sarna has been strongly opposing the amended calendar right since the changes were made and has maintained that original Nanakshahi calendar is a symbol of a separate Sikh identity.

Similarly, the Dal Khalsa vowed to stick to the original version, arguing that the amendments are in sync with Hindu religious events. The organisation voiced its concern against mixing of Nanakshahi (solar calendar) with Bikrami (lunar calendar).

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120109/punjab.htm#17

A Tribune series on government performance: finance; Have no money, will spend

The SAD-BJP government stuck to the populist ways of successive regimes in the state, running up a huge debt that is touching the limit set by the Plan panel. Fiscal discipline seems the only way out

Ruchika M. Khanna, Tribune News Service

Just as in any ill-managed household, finances were at the bottom of all squabbles during the SAD-BJP government’s tenure, which also saw a split in the family, at least ostensibly over how to use the kitty.

Burgeoning debt burden, a huge salary and pension bill, poor inflow of investment, and lacunae in tax collection, accompanied by evasion, played havoc with the once robust economy of Punjab.

The populist agenda adopted by the ruling alliance to keep the voter in good humour did nothing to help the situation.

Even as the state’s debt soared, the government insisted on not curtailing any populist scheme, whether it was power subsidy to the farm sector, subsidised flour and pulses for the poor, or various pensions for marginalised sections of society.

In fact, announcement of benefits for various categories continued till just days before the elections to the state Assembly were announced. Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal announced increase in the pay grades of a section of employees, 200 units of free power for economically weak and socially backward families, and a rehabilitation package for units in the Goindwal Industrial Complex.

The sops announced in just the past two months would increase the state’s liability by Rs 1,500 crore per annum. For 2011-12, the subsidy bill of the government is expected to cross Rs 5,500 crore.

Former vice-chancellor of Punjabi University S.S. Johl says it is the populist policies of successive governments that have played havoc with the economy of Punjab. “There have been unidentified expenditures on subsidies and grants handed out at sangat darshan programmes.

There have also been unprecedented salary and pension increases. And the excesses have been financed by borrowings,” he says, adding that the only way to revive Punjab’s economy is to ensure that any government in future spends every rupee only according to the state’s Plan, which, in turn, should be in accordance with the resources.

State of denial

No amount of counsel from experts was able to persuade the SAD-BJP government to acknowledge the fiscal mess the state is in. The only voice of dissent on the issue within the government — former finance minister and now People’s Party of Punjab president Manpreet Singh Badal — was silenced for his public outbursts on poor fiscal health and dissent on subsidies. The differences led to his estrangement from the government as well as the SAD, and spurred him to create his own political outfit.

Even today, the political leadership is not ready to accept the state’s finances are in a mess. Time and again, Badal has claimed the real reason for the huge debt burden is non-cooperation of the Central government in bailing out the state by giving it a debt waiver. He also wants a tax incentive scheme for attracting industrial investment on the lines of the concessions available to the neighbouring Himachal Pradesh. Punjab has also been demanding its share in the Central taxes collected in the state be increased from the present 30.5 per cent to 50 per cent.

Eating into future

As of today, the state’s economy is in a shambles. In the past five years, the debt burden increased from 48,344 crore to a whopping Rs 77,585 crore (by the end of this fiscal). The cost of servicing this debt, too, increased manifold.

Punjab has already reached a debt-GSDP (gross state domestic product) ratio of 39 per cent, for which the limit has been set at 40 per cent set by the Planning Commission.

In the past year alone, the government borrowings have gone up by over Rs 1,900 crore, as this financial year the net borrowings will be around Rs 8,037 crore. Since even the state’s committed expenses are more than its own tax revenues, the government has been borrowing liberally through state development loans, from small savings contributions, besides taking loans from the RBI, NABARD and LIC. These borrowings continue to increase year after year, as there has been no definite roadmap for revenue growth.

The state has also been giving sovereign guarantees for borrowings through its various boards and corporations, most of which are already in the red and will never be able to repay the loans. The liability for repaying this debt falls directly on the government.

In order to raise some funds for developing infrastructure, the government also revived the Optimum Utilisation of Vacant Government Land Scheme (OUVGLS) to sell vacant government land in prime locations in major cities and towns.

VAT the silver lining

The only saving grace in the Finance Department was the surge in tax collections, especially towards the end of the government’s tenure. In the last financial year (2010-11), the total collections in Punjab saw a remarkable jump of 44 per cent, mainly on account of higher VAT and excise collections, stamp duty and registration charges. This year the government is expecting the tax collections will go up by another 17 per cent.

But this may still be insufficient to foot the total salary and pension bill of the state, especially with an additional Rs 10,000 crore expense being added on account of pay hike and arrears to employees in keeping with the Fifth Pay Commission recommendations. As against the state’s own tax revenue of Rs 20,407 crore, the committed expenditure alone is Rs 24,014 crore.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120109/punjab.htm#1

The Hindu – Omar Abdullah cuts power supply to VIP homes

Special Correspondent

New Delhi, 9 January 2012. Shivering Srinagar residents, who have been experiencing severe power shortage, can draw cold comfort from the fact that their leaders — including Chief Minister Omar Abdullah — joined in their ordeal on Sunday.

While the Valley has been reeling under a severe power shortage over the last few days, reportedly due to snow damaging the transmission network, Mr. Abdullah ordered the VIP grid disconnected from power supply on Saturday night, so that hospitals and other essential installations can receive the electricity instead.

Senior officials at the Power Development Department told PTI that the order to disconnect the grid, which includes the Chief Minister’s residence, came from the very top.

For 21-year-old IAS aspirant Shakir Mir, the last 72 hours have been a nightmare. “I have my civil services examination coming up, but no light to study with. I can’t charge my laptop or watch the news, even BSNL services are going down, and it feels like we are being cut off from the rest of the world,” he said.

Grid stations affected

Apart from light, the lack of heat is disturbing and reports that ATMs are failing have added to the worry.

Unprecedented snowfall in the higher reaches of the Pir Panjal range had caused a fault on the Kishanpur-Wagoora Transmission Line at Pogal Paristan, and also affected 19 grid stations. These have now been charged and the electricity department was hoping that power would soon come from the national grid.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/states/other-states/article2786138.ece

Sint-Truiden – Hasselt – Antwerpen – Rotterdam – Den Haag vv 26 and 27 November 2011

26/11 – Early morning in Hasselt, train to Brussel and the Northsea coast

 26/11 – Hasselt, the train I travelled on from Sint-Truiden on its way to Genk

26/11 – Antwerpen Centraal, train from Hasselt
Low level track 13

 26/11 – Antwerpen Centraal, looking down to lowest level where Thalys (TGV) and Intercity trains to the Netherlands stop

I had 45 minutes in Antwerpen which I used to make pictures of tthe station and of the trams outside the station

To see more Belgium/Netherlands Public Transport pictures go to:

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

More Belgian/Netherlands pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – Punjab NRI couple in UK married for 86 years

London, January 8. An Indian-origin couple that married in Punjab in 1925 and moved to Britain in 1965, has hit the headlines after celebrating their 86th marriage anniversary with the prospect of being the longest married couple in the UK.

Karam Chand is 106 years old and his wife Kartari 99. The couple celebrated their 86th marriage anniversary yesterday.

Living in Bradford, Yorkshire, the couple have eight children, 27 grandchildren and 23 great grandchildren.

Britons who turn 100 receive a congratulatory message from Queen Elizabeth, and Kartari is looking forward to receiving it next year.

Karam Chand was born in Punjab in 1912 and married Kartari in 1925. He enjoys a daily cigarette and whisky, but advises moderation: “Eat and drink what you want, but in moderation. I have never held back from enjoying my life.”

Kartari said: “We have always eaten good wholesome food. There’s nothing artificial in our diet but things like ghee, milk and fresh yogurt are what we like. We know that being married for 86 years is a blessing, but equally, we will be ready to go when it’s time. It’s all up to the will of God, but we really have lived a good life.”

The couple live with their youngest son, Satpal, his wife and two of their four children.

Satpal told BBC: “We really feel blessed that our parents are still here with us and every day is a bonus. I think that keeping the minds of older people active is the key to them staying alert and healthy.”

He added: “If you have been given the privilege to look after your parents you must involve them fully in family life and never get angry with them. Keep them happy and they will then look forward to waking up the next morning.”

Kartari said that she and her husband enjoyed doing many things, such as eating together and going to the temple.

Karam Chand is now unable to walk a distance without help, but Kartari remains active and still has her own teeth. (PTI)

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120109/main6.htm

BBC News, From Our Own Correspondent – How Punjab governor’s killer became a hero

Owen Bennett Jones, BBC News, Pakistan

In January 2011, the governor of Pakistan’s Punjab province, Salman Taseer, was killed by one of his own bodyguards, who was subsequently sentenced to death. Now Mumtaz Qadri is appealing against his sentence and some people believe he could yet hold office himself.

As Salman Taseer was sitting in an Islamabad restaurant having lunch with a friend on 4 January, Mumtaz Qadri was considering his angles.

Already on three occasions that day Qadri had tried to line up a clear shot on Taseer and failed, but as Taseer moved from his lunch table through a leafy market towards his car, Qadri made his move.

Shouting “God is great”, the guard shot Taseer 27 times (it took just three or four seconds) then put his hands up in the air and said to his fellow guards (the governor moved with more than 20 armed men) “Don’t shoot – arrest me.”

They did.

He has subsequently been sentenced to death, but going on the past performance of the judicial system in Pakistan and the particular circumstances of this case, few expect that sentence to be carried out.

Democracy campaigner

Salman Taseer was a larger-than-life, domineering, self-made millionaire.

As a hard-up accountancy trainee in London in the swinging 60s, he was a croupier in the Playboy club and, by all accounts, knew some of the bunny girls pretty well. In fact, by some accounts, he knew all of them quite well.

Back in Pakistan, under the country’s harshest military dictator General Zia-ul-Haq, he took to politics and was thrown into solitary confinement for campaigning for democracy.

He was always cracking jokes. Hillary Clinton once visited him in Governor House in Lahore, which is a hangover from the colonial era, a huge white building replete with columned arcades and tall, stiff-backed attendees wearing red tunics and starched turbans.

Inside there are huge ceremonial halls and wide corridors with parquet flooring and portraits of former governors on the walls.

“Mrs Clinton, I should probably let you know that when I lived in London I used to throw rocks at the American embassy in Grosvenor Square”, Taseer said.

“Don’t worry, Mr Governor,” she replied, “so did I.”

When she was leaving they looked out on the acres of perfect, flat lawns (and this right in the middle of the city of Lahore).

“I am sorry Mrs Clinton,” he said. “We used to ask distinguished visitors such as yourself to plant trees in the lawns of Governor House here. Even the Queen planted one.”

“The tradition has stopped?” she replied.

“Well, Idi Amin planted one – but then he ate the gardener,” was his response.

To his great delight he later heard that she had giggled all the way back to Lahore airport.

Support for killer

So why did his bodyguard kill him?

Taseer – who had a record of protecting minority communities in Pakistan – was campaigning on a blasphemy case, that of a Christian woman called Asia Bibi.

Some Muslim women in her Punjab village accused her of defiling their well by drinking out of it and they demanded that she convert.

She refused and they accused her of blasphemy.

When he heard about the case Taseer decided he would try to get her a presidential pardon. He called a few journalists and visited her in prison and there he criticised the blasphemy law.

The blasphemy laws in Pakistan mean that anyone accused of denigrating the Koran or the Prophet is subject to immediate imprisonment.

In fact that is often a protection. Many of those accused of blasphemy have been killed by violent mobs.

Taseer believed the law was being misused by people who had petty disputes in order to get their enemies locked up.

But when he said that he himself was accused of blasphemy and that is why his bodyguard decided Taseer should die.

After a week in Pakistan asking people about the Taseer case, I left believing that more Pakistanis have sympathy for the murderer Mumtaz Qadri than for his victim Salman Taseer.

The issue is so sensitive in Pakistan that no senior lawyer would take on the state’s case against Qadri.

Eventually a Lahore lawyer did agreed to do it and I met him in his home where he now has two armed guards at the gate.

This is what he told me: “No lawyer would do it. My name was suggested. When I told my friends they said, ‘Don’t do it! Don’t do it!’ If the religious people here are annoyed with somebody they do not let them live.

“But Qadri’s death sentence has to be maintained. If it is reduced to life, I tell you he will end up being released.

“And then he will become a member of parliament or even a minister because he is a hero, not only of the normal people but also very well read people, including ex-judges and serving judges. Very, very highly placed people are making him out to be a hero.”

And that is true.

I went to see Mumtaz Qadri’s brother at their sprawling home in Rawalpindi, where no fewer than 72 close relatives live in pretty cramped conditions.

Qadri’s father was a brick-layer and his siblings have various low-paying jobs.

“You can’t imagine what my brother has done,” Qadri’s eldest brother said. “People who before used to refuse to even shake our hands now come up to us and kiss our hands.

“We are just grateful that God chose a member of our family to protect the reputation of the Prophet.”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-16443556 

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