The Tribune – Riots Case Against Tytler; CBI didn’t counter-check defence claims: Petitioner

Aditi Tandon, Tribune News Service

New Delhi, February 16. In a significant development in the anti-Sikh riots case against Congress leader Jagdish Tytler, the widow of a victim who was burnt to death on November 1, 1984, today told a Delhi Court that the CBI hastily bailed out Tytler and didn’t counter-check his defence claims with key witnesses.

In the written arguments filed to support her petition challenging the CBI’s closure report against Tytler, Lakhwinder Kaur asked the CBI why it didn’t investigate the conspiracy angle against Tytler and why it didn’t question actor Amitabh Bachchan and Congress leader RK Dhawan to ascertain if Tytler was speaking the truth.

Tytler has said he had no role in the riots that left three persons, including petitioner’s husband Badal Singh, dead on November 1, 1984,. He said at the time of the riots, he was at Teen Murti Bhavan, close to the body of slain former PM Indira Gandhi.

The CBI, for its closure report, relied on CDs which Tytler supplied to prove his presence at Teen Murti House. However, the CDs neither mention the time nor the date. Yet, the CBI did not cross-check Tytler’s claims with actor Amitabh Bachchan and Congress leader RK Dhawan who were present at Teen Murti House and were seen in the CDs. “The CD showed the accused present at the gate of Teen Murti House very briefly.

RK Dhawan and Additional Commissioner of Police Gautam Kaul were standing next to Tytler. Amitabh Bachchan was also present close to where the accused was standing. These people were natural witnesses to prove the reliability of the undated and untimed CDs but the CBI did not examine them,” Lakhwinder Kaur said.

In another argument, the petitioner challenged the CBI for not probing the conspiracy angle.

“That day, Tytler went to the office of the Police Commissioner and yet the angle of conspiracy under Section 120-B, IPC, has not been investigated to ascertain the role of the accused in getting the release orders of persons arrested for killing, rioting and arson,” the petitioner said.

Further, although the CBI maintained that one US-based Resham Singh, the only surviving eyewitness to the Pulbangash riots, was not available for deposition when its teams went to the US, counsel for the witness GS Pannu today said on oath that he had approached the CBI repeatedly and that Resham Singh wanted to depose.

The case will come up for hearing on March 19.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120217/punjab.htm#4

Published in: on February 17, 2012 at 9:00 am  Leave a Comment  
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The Tribune – DSGMC poll: Delhi Government files appeal in High Court

Perneet Singh, Tribune News Service

Amritsar, February 16. The Delhi Government has finally moved an appeal against the High Court stay on the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) elections that were schedule for March 11.

Talking to The Tribune, DSGMC chief Paramjit Singh Sarna said the government had filed an appeal in the Delhi High Court yesterday, seeking that the stay be vacated.

He said it had been pleaded that since the election process had already started, it would not be right to postpone the same.

“Also the preparation of voters’ list as per the court order and subsequently the delimitation process would take place over a year.

This will further delay the elections. The current House completed its term last year,” he said. Seeking a stay on the DSGMC poll was a deliberate attempt to hamper the poll process, he alleged.

The Delhi High Court had on February 7 granted a stay on the DSGMC elections following a petition filed by Harmohan Singh.

The case will now come up for hearing on March 22.

The elections to the DSGMC, that has 46 seats, were held last in 2007. The SAD (Delhi) had won 27 seats and the SAD 12.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120217/punjab.htm#15

The Asian Age – Dalit attacked for drinking from pitcher

Hisar (Haryana), 17 Februay 2012. In a shocking case of caste-related violence, a man belonging to the upper caste almost chopped off an arm of a dalit youth as he drank water from his pitcher.

The police said here on Thursday that Rajendar alias Pappu almost chopped off an arm of dalit labourer Rajesh Ranga alias Raju for drinking water from his container on Wednesday.

The culprit has been arrested under Section 326 of the IPC (voluntarily causing grievous hurt by dangerous weapons or other means) and under various provisions of the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, they said.

Ranga, a daily wager of village Sanyana in Fatehabad district in the state, had gone in search of work in village Daulatpur near here. As he became thirsty, he stopped to drink water from the pitcher of Rajendar, a farmer.

But hardly had the dalit touched the pitcher, the farmer got enraged and attacked him with a sickle, badly injuring his arm.

A surgery was conducted on the victim at a local private hospital where doctors said it might take three months for him to recover. Meanwhile, the district authorities handed over `50,000 to the dalit youth and a deputy superintendent of police has been deputed to investigate the case. (PTI)

http://www.asianage.com/india/dalit-attacked-drinking-pitcher-239

Published in: on February 17, 2012 at 8:31 am  Leave a Comment  
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Netherlands 23 december till 2 January, Den Haag & Amsterdam

26 December, Den Haag, Transvaalbuurt, Kempstraat
In an area with many Moroccan and Turkish inhabitants is this apartment block with ‘ethnic’ decorations

26 December, Den Haag, Transvaalbuurt, Hertzogstraat
Apartment block built between the two World Wars

  
26 December, Den Haag, Transvaalbuurt, Hertzogstraat
Entrance to Scheepersstraat Gurdwara’s backyard


26 December, Den Haag, Transvaalbuurt, Hertzogstraat
Entrance to Scheepersstraat Gurdwara’s backyard

To see more Belgium and Netherlands public transport pictures :

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

To see more Belgium and Netherlands gurdwara pictures :

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

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

The Tribune – Punjabi singer among 16 held in UK

London, February 16. A singer from Punjab is among 16 Indians arrested in a series of operations by Britain’s immigration officials for offences that include entering into arrangements with EU nationals to register bogus marriages in order to stay in the UK.

Official sources here said operations were carried out in recent months at various places in Britain, including companies where some of those arrested were working illegally. Garry Sandhu (29) described as a “rising Bhangra star”, had been sent back to India because he did not have permission to be in the UK. He first came to the UK under a different identity and claimed asylum, which was refused by the UK Border Agency.

He was then placed on immigration bail but absconded. He came to the attention of immigration officials several years later when he was caught driving without insurance, a press release said. Six Indian nationals were arrested for working illegally, and jailed for taking part in bogus marriages. The six men were arrested in enforcement operations in South Wales.

On February 9, the men were found working illegally in shops in Caerphilly. They had committed immigration offences, including overstaying their visas and working in breach of their visa conditions.

All six men have been detained pending their removal from the UK. The shops where they worked illegally now face fines of up to 10,000 pounds for each illegal worker, unless they can prove that they carried out the correct pre-employment checks.

A UK Border Agency spokesperson in South Wales said: “This series of successful raids shows that our officers will track down immigration offenders wherever they are. Any business that takes on a foreign national without permission to work is breaking the law and faces a heavy fine.” (PTI)

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120217/main5.htm

BBC Column, Soutik Biswas – Is hope a fiction for India’s poor?

Soutik Biswas, Delhi correspondent

Wednesday, 15 February 2012. “We try so many things,” a girl in Annawadi, a slum in Mumbai tells Katherine Boo, “but the world doesn’t move in our favour”.

Annawadi is a “sumpy plug of slum” in the biggest city – “a place of festering grievance and ambient envy” – of a country which holds a third of the world’s poor. It is where the Pulitzer prize-winning New Yorker journalist Boo’s first book Behind the Beautiful Forevers is located.

Annawadi is where more than 3,000 people have squatted on land belonging to the local airport and live “packed into, or on top of” 335 huts. It is a place “magnificently positioned for a trafficker in rich’s people’s garbage”, where the New India collides with the Old.

Nobody in Annawadi is considered poor by India’s official benchmarks. The residents are among the 100 million Indians freed from poverty since 1991, when India embarked on liberalising its economy.

‘Garbage justice’

Boo’s story – a stirring and gritty non-fiction narrative, one of the best ever written by a foreigner on India – revolves around the self-immolation of a cantankerous, one-legged slum woman called Fatima Sheikh and how her neighbour and a hardworking, young garbage trader called Abdul and his family are framed on a charge of murdering her. Fatima’s death is a liberation from enervating poverty, and a chance for some eighbours to make money from Abdul’s family, who are making a bit more money than the rest from selling recyclables.

This is when Abdul realises that the Indian criminal justice system was a “market like garbage” – “innocence and guilt could be bought and sold like a kilo of polyurethane bags”.

Boo adopted what she calls the “vagrant-sociology approach” and followed Abdul and his neighbours of this unexceptional slum over the course of several years – November 2007 to March 2011 – to see “who got ahead and who didn’t, and why, as India prospered”.

She used more than 3,000 public records, many obtained using India’s right to information law, to validate her narrative, written in assured reported speech. The account of the hours leading to the self-immolation of Fatima Sheikh derives from repeated interviews of 168 people as well as police, hospital, morgue and court records. Mindful of the risk of over interpretation, the books wears its enormous research lightly.

Boo’s narrative is peopled by a vast range of gripping characters from Annawadi, the world from which New India shies away.

An aspiring slum boss woman who volunteers for a local Hindu right-wing party. A man who paints his horses with stripes and rents out the fake zebras to birthday parties of middle-class children. A corrupt nun who runs a children’s home. A deranged man who talks to a luxury hotel building skirting the slum.

Then there’s a bunch of young scavengers and thieves, ravaged by rats and high on white correction fluid, who live, work and die quickly. They are the young flotsam that India breathlessly parades as its demographic dividend when, in reality, the children, tired and brutalised, are already past their sell-by-date.

Bleak

The people of Annawadi are also caught up in the hideous web of corruption and official venality which hurts the poor most, and lead utterly de-humanising lives in a city that aspires to become India’s Shanghai. It is far removed from the dreadful stereotype of the happy-poor Mumbai of Slumdog Millionaire.

Behind The Beautiful Forevers  

The local councillor runs fake schools, doctors at free government hospitals and policemen extort the poor with faint promise of life and justice, and self-help groups operate as loan sharks for the poorest. The young in Annawadi drop dead like flies – run over by traffic, knifed by rival gangs, laid low by disease; while the elders – not much older – die anyway. Girls prefer a certain brand of rat poison to end their lives.

Behind The Beautiful Forevers is a bleak, heart-breaking book, which leaves you numb with anger, helplessness and pain. In this age of globalisation, Boo writes, hope is not a fiction. But hope flickers dimly in Annawadi as the “unpredictability of daily life has a way of grinding down individual promise”.

Boo asks some uncomfortable questions: What is the “infrastructure of opportunity” in India? What capabilities does the market offer? What capabilities are wasted? Why don’t places like Mumbai where filthy slums stand cheek-by-jowl with the world’s priciest buildings explode into violence? Why don’t unequal societies implode? What happens to the powerless when, among powerful Indians, the distribution of opportunity is “typically an insider trade”.

Boo has an interesting take on corruption, rife in societies like India’s. Corruption is seen as blocking India’s global ambitions.

But, she writes, for the “poor of a country where corruption thieved a great deal of opportunity, corruption was one of the genuine opportunities that remained”.

On the other hand, Boo believes, corruption stymies our moral universe more than economic possibility. Suffering, she writes, “can sabotage innate capacities for moral action”. In a capricious world of corrupt governments and ruthless markets the idea of a mutually supportive community is a myth: it is “blisteringly hard”, she writes, to be good in such conditions. “If the house is crooked and crumbling”, Boo writes, “and the land on which it sits uneven, is it possible to make anything lie straight?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-17038326

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