The Tribune – Badal clan beats royalty in riches

Kanchan Vasdev, Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, January 10. Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal’s family of agriculturists is richer than the royal family of Patiala. While the Badals are worth nearly Rs 100 crore, Captain Amarinder Singh and his wife Preneet Kaur are worth less than half at Rs 45.71 crore. Although the couple’s son, Raninder Singh, will file his papers tomorrow, his assets in the 2009 parliamentary election, when he contested from Bathinda, were Rs 7.28 crore and that of his wife Rs 6.47 crore.

Badal’s affidavit that formed part of his nomination filed from Lambi today showed he possessed assets worth Rs 6.92 crore. Interestingly, Badal has gone poorer by Rs 2.36 crore in the past five years. Sukhbir Badal had yesterday declared that he owned assets worth Rs 76 crore and his wife Harsimrat worth Rs 15.38 crore, making the net worth of the Badal family Rs 98.30 crore.

Preneet Kaur has declared assets worth Rs 2.2 crore while Amarinder has declared assets worth Rs 43.51 crore.

Amarinder does not own a car while Preneet has an Innova. Badal does not own any car but has a tractor (Tafe) worth Rs 3.25 lakh.

Amarinder has shown his Patiala residence Moti Bagh Palace as commercial property worth Rs 35 crore. Badal’s total movable assets are worth Rs 1.21 crore and immovable assets are worth Rs 5.71 crore.

Manpreet Singh Badal, president of the PPP, has assets worth Rs 28.70 crore.

(With inputs from Umesh Dewan and Archit Watts)

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120111/punjab.htm#2

Railnews.co.uk – New High Speed network approved


London St Pancras, Hitachi Javelin Highspeed trains

The Transport Secretary has given the green light to a domestic High Speed Rail network in Britain. The eventual system will connect London, Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds, and allow through running to the continent via HS1. It will also include a link to Heathrow Airport.

The track will be designed to allow line speeds up to 400km/h — a third higher than the maximum on the existing British High Speed line between London and the Channel Tunnel, and faster than most current High Speed lines offer in other countries.

Justine Greening said the project would provide new railway capacity on a scale which would not be achievable by ‘tinkering with our Victorian rail infrastructure.”

She continued: “A new high speed rail network will provide Britain with the additional train seats, connections and speed to stay ahead of the congestion challenge and help create jobs, growth and prosperity for the entire country.

“HS2 will link some of our greatest cities – and high speed trains will connect with our existing railway lines to provide seamless journeys to destinations far beyond it. This is a truly British network that will serve far more than the cities directly on the line.

“HS2 will deliver up to 26,000 more seats for rail passengers each hour and journey times slashed by as much as half.

By attracting passengers off existing rail lines, roads and domestic air services, its benefits will be felt far beyond the network.”

http://www.railnews.co.uk/news/general/2012/01/10-breaking-news–new-high.html

The Hindu – 42 per cent of Indian children are underweight

Manmohan calls new report’s findings a ‘national shame’

Aarti Dhar

New Delhi, 10 January 2012. A new study based on a survey of the height and weight of more than one lakh children across six States has found that as many as 42 per cent of under-fives are severely or moderately underweight and that 59 per cent of them suffer from moderate to severe stunting, meaning their height is much lower than the median height-for-age of the reference population.

The findings – contained in the Hunger and Malnutrition (HUNGaMA) report by the Naandi Foundation – were described by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as a “national shame” at a release function here on Tuesday. Despite impressive growth in India’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in recent years, the level of under-nutrition is unacceptably high, he said.

With the government already under attack for drafting a weak food security Bill, the latest anthropometric confirmation of the link between poverty, food insecurity and nutrition is likely to increase pressure on the UPA to be more generous with the poor.

The report also found that of the stunted children, about half are severely stunted and about half of all children are underweight or stunted by the time they are two years. However, the number of underweight children has decreased from 53 to 42 per cent in the past seven years – the last study on the subject was done in 2004.

Dr. Singh said, “This 20 per cent decline in malnourishment in the last seven years is better than the rate of decline reported in the National Family Health Survey-III. However, what concerns me is that 42 per cent of our children are still underweight. This is an unacceptably high occurrence.”

“Positive change”

Conducted across 112 rural districts, the survey found “positive change for child nutrition in India is happening, including in the 100 Focussed Districts.”

The 100 Focus Districts are located across Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh – states which perform the worst on child nutrition.

The survey notes that the prevalence of malnutrition is significantly higher among children from low-income families. It found that children from Muslim or SC/ST households generally had worse nutrition indicators.

Birth weight is an important risk-factor for child malnutrition, says the report.

The prevalence of underweight in children born with a weight below 2.5 kg is 50 per cent, while that among children born with a weight above 2.5 kg is 34 per cent.

Low awareness

The survey found that awareness among mothers about nutrition is low — “92 per cent mothers had never heard the word malnutrition.”

Highlighting the negligence shown towards girl children even in their early childhood, the report says the nutrition advantage girls have over boys in the first months of life seems to be reversed over time as they grow older.

According to the survey, the mothers’ education level also determines children’s nutrition.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article2789902.ece?homepage=true

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

26/11 – Koningin Astridplein, Tram 12


26/11 – Koningin Astridplein Tram 24

 26/11 – Koningin Astridplein Tram 24

 26/11 – Koningin Astridplein Tram 24

The Tribune – Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s haveli in Pakistan faces demolition: Scholar

Amritsar, January 10. Local historian Surinder Kochhar today claimed that an ancestral haveli of Maharaja Ranjit Singh is being demolished in Gujranwala township of Pakistan to clear the land for construction of a commercial plaza.

Kochhar claimed that he was informed about the move by his Gurjanwala-based friend Mohammad Kasim Rafeeq, who lives in the vicinity of the old building. Rafeeq called him up on his mobile phone this morning.

He added that the building was damaged by armed goons despite local residents trying to resist the move. The residents were reportedly threatened with dire consequences. He claimed that the building had earlier been given a heritage status by the Heritage Department of the Pakistan government. He claimed that a leader of the Muslim League had played a key role in the demolition of the building.

Kochhar said he had stayed in the said building for two days during his visit to Gujranwala. “Earlier, the building housed a police station which was shifted out around two years ago. Later, as the building was not cared for properly by the department, it turned into a safe haven for drug addicts and other anti-social elements,” he claimed.

SGPC secretary Dalmegh Singh said they would talk to Sikh leaders in Pakistan and find out the status of the building, besides approaching the Centre to utilise diplomatic channels to take up the issue with Pakistan. (TNS)

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120111/punjab.htm#19

BBC News – Pakistan Supreme Court warns PM Yousuf Raza Gilani Mr Gilani is accused of ignoring the constitution

Pakistan’s prime minister could be disqualified from office for not reopening corruption cases against top politicians, the Supreme Court says.

A panel of senior judges suggested Yousuf Raza Gilani was not an honest man and had violated his oath.

Relations between Pakistan’s civilian government and the judiciary are tense.

In 2009 the Supreme Court overturned an amnesty protecting President Zardari and hundreds of other politicians from being prosecuted for corruption.

There are still court cases pending in Pakistan against Mr Zardari, who spent years in jail after being indicted for corruption, charges he says were politically motivated. His office currently provides him with immunity from prosecution.

Former President Pervez Musharraf brought in the amnesty by decree in 2007. It was aimed at a possible power-sharing deal with Mr Zardari’s late wife, Benazir Bhutto.

She returned to Pakistan from abroad after the so-called National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) was signed into law, but was assassinated soon after. Subsequent elections swept her Pakistan People’s Party to power.

PM ‘not honest’

Critics of the amnesty say it is illegal to help so many politicians and officials to escape prosecution for alleged wrongdoing.

The Supreme Court said the government had failed to implement its ruling.

“The government is not taking interest to observe the order for the last two years,” it said. “The court has taken an oath to defend the constitution. The prime minister respected the party over the constitution.

“Prima facie… he may not be an honest person on account of his not being honest to the oath of his office.”

The government has resisted re-opening the cases covered under the amnesty, insisting that as far as they are concerned, it is a closed chapter.

The BBC’s Shahzeb Jillani says the strongly-worded remarks by senior judges have confirmed what many in Pakistan have been fearing for some time: that the civilian government and Pakistan’s top court are on a collision course.

The stand-off comes amid a growing rift between civilian and military leaders.

Many in Pakistan feel the pressure on President Zardari’s government could leave him with no choice in the end but to call an early election, our correspondent says.

The next general election is due by early 2013. Mr Zardari’s term runs out later that year.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-16494070

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