15 January 2012 – Winter Walk around Sint-Truiden

Sunday the 15th of January was a wonderful clear winter day and I decided that instead of sitting in the Gurdwara I should go for a long walk around the south side of Sint-Truiden

Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
I got through this without getting wet feet !

 Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
IC Doubledecker to Sint-Truiden, Hasselt and Genk

 Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
Here we are on safer ground


Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
Now it is my turn to go underneath the railway line

 Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
We reached the roundabout ! Not very exciting I am afraid.
The footpath continues to Sint-Truiden station, but I decided to walk home via the Tiensesteenweg

To see more Belgium (mostly Limburg) pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157622046344528/

More Belgium pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – Rajoana adamant, wants to be hanged; Writes to Akal Takht, says no need to seek clemency for him

Aman Sood, Tribune News Service

Patiala, March 26. Even as Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal today stated in the assembly that he would meet President Pratibha Patil and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to seek clemency for Balwant Singh Rajoana, the latter has asked him not to do so as “he wants to get hanged as per the court orders”. He said he did not want anyone to beg for clemency on his behalf.

In a letter to the Akal Takht, Rajoana has clarified that there was no need to seek clemency for him. “I have fought for my rights all through my life. I do not want to give away my principles for anyone,” says Rajoana in a letter handed over to his sister Kamaldeep Kaur, following their meeting at the Patiala Central Jail today.

Criticising politicians, especially the Akalis, Rajoana has said he neither trusts them (Akalis) nor believes them as they have failed to get justice from New Delhi. “These leaders were mum till date and suddenly they are speaking for my clemency. All know how they have made money and what their reality is,” reads the letter. “…the Akalis should give away blue turbans and instead don khaki turbans for failing to get justice from New Delhi time and again”.

Rajoana also refused to accept any sympathy from the BJP, Captain Amarinder Singh or from late CM Beant Singh’s family members. “Asking for mercy from them is not even in my distant dreams,” reads the letter. Earlier today, Badal said in the assembly that the state government was taking all possible legal and constitutional measures to secure clemency for Rajoana.

He said the government had received a copy of the mercy appeal sent by the SGPC to the President.

The Case Files

July 31, 2007: A special court awards death sentence to Balwant Rajoana, Jagtar Hawara

March 13, 2012: The court of Additional District and Sessions in Chandigarh issues execution warrants of Rajoana’s hanging; warrents are sent to Patiala jail where he is lodged

March 16: The orders are returned by Patiala jail stating inability on the part of the Jails Department to hang Rajoana

March 20: The court re-sends the warrants to Patiala jail to hang Rajoana on March 31

March 24: The warrants are again returned by the jail authorities to the court in Chandigarh

DSGMC also to file clemency plea

Amritsar. After the SGPC, the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee is also gearing up to file a clemency petition for Balwant Singh Rajoana before President Pratibha Patil tomorrow. DSGMC chief PS Sarna said, “We have prepared the clemency petition and will submit it to the President tomorrow.”

About the basis of the plea, he said they had raised four points in the petition. First, the petitions of the co-accused in the case were pending with the SC, while one of them had got his death sentence commuted to life term. Second, the consequences that may emerge out of Rajoana hanging should also be kept in mind. Third, the SC has termed death penalty fit only in rarest of rare cases, which does not apply here. Finally, the capital punishment is being done away with in various countries and it should be done here as well. (TNS)

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120327/punjab.htm#2

The Tribune – Bandh on March 28; Ludhiana sells 30,000 saffron flags in a day

Puneet Pal Singh Gill, Tribune News Service

Ludhiana, March 26. Two days before the Punjab bandh call given by various Panthic organisations, sale of Kesri (saffron) flags with a “khanda” printed on it has increased in the city. The bandh call for March 28 has been given in protest against hanging of Balwant Singh Rajoana, one of the accused in ex-CM Beant Singh’s assassination case.

Rajoana as well as several Panthic organisations had appealed to Sikhs to install Kesri flags on top of their houses on March 28 and March 31.These flags could be purchased from several shops located in Field Ganj, Model Town, Dugri and even other parts of the city.

They are priced between Rs 10 and Rs 20 per piece, depending on the size and quality. Shopkeepers said nearly 30,000 flags were sold in the city today alone. Prabhjot Singh Gora, owner of Khalsa Gift and Music House near Gurudwara Kalgidhar in Field Ganj, said that one day he sold around 15,000 such flags.

Another shopkeeper, Avtar Singh, said people from villages have been giving him bulk orders about these flags. “Most of these flags are made in Amritsar and keeping in mind their demand, we have already maintained high stocks.” Gurdeep Singh of SAD (Delhi) said that he was distributing these flags to all his friends so that they could install them on top of their houses.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120327/punjab.htm#7

The Asian Age – Badal to meet PM, President on Rajoana

Tanveer Thakur, Asian Age Correspondent

Chandigarh, 27 March 2012. Punjab chief minister Parkash Singh Badal on Monday said that the government is taking all possible legal and constitutional steps for seeking clemency for Balwant Singh Bhai Rajoana, accused in former chief minister Beant Singh’s killing.

In a statement made in the state Assembly, Mr Badal said that eminent jurists are of the view that to seek clemency in this case is within the ambit of law and Constitution and several old cases, judgments and precedents are also available for support.

Mr Badal said that the Punjab government has decided to take further the initiative on this issue and he would personally call on President Pratibha Patil and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to seek clemency for Balwant Singh Rajoana. He added that other legal efforts will also continue simultaneously along with it.

Describing the issue as historic and sensitive, the chief minister appealed to all the Punjabis and countrymen to safeguard the peace of Punjab and amity at all costs. He said that our approach would not only impact the present but the future generations also as history will judge all of us that what sort of Punjab we will give to our coming generations in legacy.

The superintendent of Patiala jail also moved a petition in a court here, seeking deferment of Balwant Singh Rajoana’s hanging, with CBI questioning locus standi saying he was not the competent authority to challenge the death sentence.

Lakhwinder Singh Jakhar submitted that the death warrant could not be executed as the matter of other convict, Lakhwinder Singh, was still pending before the Supreme Court.

Mr Badal said it is important to mention the appeal has been made by the family members of Late Beant Singh to adopt a humane and positive approach over this issue for maintaining an atmosphere of peace, unity and communal harmony in Punjab at all costs.

He added that Punjab PCC president Captain Amarinder Singh has also issued a statement to extend support to the government, if it files an appeal or petition to the President of India for commutation of punishment of Balwant Singh Rajoana.

http://www.asianage.com/india/badal-meet-pm-prez-rajoana-439

15 January 2012 – Winter Walk around Sint-Truiden

Sunday the 15th of January was a wonderful clear winter day and I decided that instead of sitting in the Gurdwara I should go for a long walk around the south side of Sint-Truiden 

Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
The poppy shows the way


Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
Sint-Truiden – Landen railway line

 Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
The brook passes underneath the railway line

 Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout

 Footpath to Tiensesteenweg roundabout
This bit is seriously muddy

To see more Belgium (mostly Limburg) pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157622046344528/

Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – Tribune Analysis; SAD forced back to Panthic agenda

Naveen S Garewal, Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, March 26. In less than a week after the debate over the capital punishment to former CM Beant Singh’s assassin started, the focus of Punjab politics has shifted from development to Panthic agenda.

Convicted way back in 2007, Balwant Singh Rajoana was almost forgotten until March 10 when a local CBI Special Court issued warrant for hanging him till death. This too did not have much impact, except his sister Kamaldeep Kaur holding a press conference to highlight the issue. In the meantime, Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal along with his Cabinet was sworn in on March 12.

Again for a week till March 19, the issue was buried under the euphoria of the formation of a new government. After the warrants were issue for a second time on March 19, it changed everything for the state.

The Akal Takht, the highest spiritual and temporal body of the Sikhs, moved into action. Jathedar Giani Gurbachan Singh went to meet Rajoana in Patiala jail two days after the second warrant was issued, hoping to persuade him for a clemency petition.

The timing of the warrants has raised several questions. But what has transpired this week is even more intriguing. The theory doing the rounds in political circles is that Badal’s detractors tried their hand at fermenting trouble for the newly formed SAD-BJP government.

The move would have served two purposes: hamper development (the mantra of SAD success in the polls) and strain the relations between the SAD and BJP as both the parties have divergent stands on the issue.

However, two parties emerged stronger in the episode: the Beant Singh family, which was on the radar of the hardliners, managed to placate the radicals by saying they had no issues with clemency and Badal once again managed to show his political acumen by neutralising his detractors and putting the Congress on the defensive, forcing PCC chief Captain Amarinder Singh to issue a statement supporting clemency.

It is apparent that till the second warrant was issued on March 19, the government could not visualise its implications or was working on a plan. The Akal Takht Jathedar called a meeting to discuss the issue on March 23. The Jathedar, apparently under pressure from radical elements, declared Dilawar Singh, the “human bomb” who killed Beant Singh, as a ‘martyr’ and Rajoana a ‘living martyr’. He even issued an edict to the SGPC, the CM and the SAD president to seek clemency for Rajoana.

It is at this point that the SAD think-tank launched its counteroffensive. The SAD core committee directed the SGPC to petition for clemency to the President, something that forced the Congress also to issue a statement supporting the clemency move.

But, before the SAD core committee could ask the CM to make a statement on the floor of the Punjab Vidhan Sabha today, Badal had taken BJP leaders like LK Advani and Arun Jaitley into confidence. Therefore, there was not much uproar in House today when the CM expressed his inability in executing Rajoana.

Though the SAD has managed to neutralise the hardliners, one thing is clear that the Panthic agenda is still a sensitive issue in Punjab, which can be easily exploited.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120327/punjab.htm#3

BBC News – ‘Alarming’ surge in executions, says Amnesty International

Tuesday, 27 March 2012. Amnesty International says there was a surge in the number of executions carried out worldwide in 2011, mainly centred in the Middle East.

In an annual report, the group said Iraq, Iran and Saudi Arabia were most responsible for the increase.

But it also noted that China executed more people than the rest of the world put together.

Overall however, fewer countries now practice the death penalty, the group noted.

It said the number of countries using capital punishment has fallen by a third, compared to a decade ago.

“Only 20 countries are known to have carried out executions which means that 178 are not carrying out executions,” Amnesty’s general secretary Salil Shetty told the BBC.

‘Shameful’  

According to the review released on Tuesday, at least 676 people were executed in 20 countries in 2011, according to Amnesty, compared with 527 in 23 countries in 2010.

Amnesty no longer publishes figures for China, where the data is considered a state secret. The rights group believes the figure to be in its thousands.

The number of confirmed executions in the Middle East rose by almost 50%, to 558, it said.

It said most were in Iran, which sent 360 people to their deaths, many of them for offences under new anti-drug laws brought in last year.

In Saudi Arabia, there were at least 82 executions compared to at least 27 the previous year, while Iraq executed at least 68 people, compared to at least one in 2010, according to Amnesty.

Meanwhile, violence in Libya, Syria and Yemen in the wake of the Arab Spring made it difficult to gain accurate information on the use of the death penalty, the report noted.

The group also condemned as “shameful” the US’s use of the death penalty, noting that it was the only Western democracy to execute prisoners last year.

“The big executioners are China and Iran and then you have North Korea, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Somalia but very sadly… the United States of America as well,” said Salil Shetty.

The US ranked fifth in the world in capital punishment, with 43 people executed last year. The figure fell slightly from 2010, when 46 people were executed.

Amnesty called on China to publish its data “to confirm their claims that various changes in law and practice have led to a significant reduction in the use of the death penalty over the last four years”.

However, the group noted that China had dropped the death penalty for 13 white-collar crimes.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-17520053

Published in: on March 27, 2012 at 7:10 am  Leave a Comment  
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Ten Sikh Women You Should Know and Why You Should Know Them

Valarie Kaur

Huffington Post, 22 March 2012. If you ask a Sikh about their religion, the first thing you will hear is belief in the Oneness of God. The second is that Sikh men wear turbans to cover their long hair, an article of faith which tragically became a target after 9/11 (See, I just did it). But if you linger a minute longer, you will hear us beam about the equality of women in our faith. Unlike in most other religions, our scriptures are explicit about women as equal in the eyes of God.

What if you asked for names of famous Sikh women? You will hear a short pause. Then, a slight effort in concentration, before: Ah ha! There’s Mata Tripta, the mother of the first Guru! And Mata Nanki, the sister of the first Guru! And Mata Khivi, wasn’t she the second Guru’s wife? You will hear an earful of mothers, sisters, and wives of the Ten Gurus, or teachers of the Sikh faith in the 15th and 16th centuries. As the list ends there, you may begin to sense there is something amiss.

It’s time to confront the gap between our ideals and how we live them.

Sikhs Americans like me talk a great deal about women’s equality, but we are steeped in an old patriarchal culture that makes us complicit in the erasure of women, past and present. Even the few famous women in our history are defined in relation to their men. Their full contributions as thinkers, poets and warriors unto themselves are eclipsed by the men they supported.

The real life consequence? Sikh girls today are told they’re fully equal, and yet many are expected to carry out traditional gender roles — with few role models to suggest otherwise.

We would never tell you this, of course. You can’t blame us. There are so few of us, it’s hard to air our community’s problems – especially after 9/11, when explaining that “Sikhism” is a religion in the first place became a matter of daily survival. In fact, as a third-generation Sikh American activist, it took me nearly a decade after 9/11 even to begin talking about women again. After the terrorist attacks, we women tacitly agreed to put our issues on hold. We needed to protect our men first – our brothers and husbands and sons whose turbans and dark skin marked them as primary targets for hate in the years after 9/11.

This was a mistake. As we waited (and are still waiting) for the discrimination to pass over us, some of the cultural dysfunctions in our community worsened. Women are girls are always the first casualties within minority communities under siege. That is no different in ours. Just as in most patriarchal traditions around the world, the bodies of women have been considered vessels of honor in Punjabi culture.

When riots and massacre swept Punjab during the 1947 Partition of India, some Sikh men poisoned their daughters before letting them fall into the hands of Muslim rioters. Today in America, while many Sikh families champion education and freedom for sons and daughters alike, others have tightened control over women and girls in the 9/11 decade. In the worst anecdotes, domestic violence is an outlet for men who bear racism on the street, intermarriage an act of betrayal, and honor killings an actual threat.

But there’s another story too. The call for liberation pulses through the Sikh tradition: it’s in our scriptures and songs and stories. Hearing the call, a new generation of Sikh women has emerged as lawyers, artists, entrepreneurs, doctors, filmmakers and more. They have found brave new ways to defend their communities while offering their own unique voices to public discourse. I am proud to call them my contemporaries – they are sources of inspiration, wisdom and leadership in their communities who deserve to be known.

Here are 10 Sikh women who embody the highest Sikh ideal of the warrior-saint. Half are legends from early history - women who we will never fully know but whose deeds ignite our imagination as the first female warrior-saints. Half are modern-day heroines - each one stands for hundreds of Sikh women who are blazing their own paths as the warrior-saints of our era.

My hope is that the next time you ask a Sikh on the street about their religion, they will be able to name all these women. And you will already know their names.

Click on the link below to see the slides showing the ten Sikh women

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mobileweb/slideshow/1353700/216643/

Published in: on March 27, 2012 at 6:23 am  Leave a Comment  
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