Harjinder Singh – The Man in Blue – Date of Birth 6 May 1947

Harjinder Singh
Outside Hounslow Postoffice

Harjinder Singh
Speaking in Gravesend

Harjinder Singh
29 April 2012
Luik, Liège

On the 6th of May 1947, in the Sint Laurentius Ziekenhuis, Roermond, Limburg (The Netherlands) a boy was born to Anna de Jong and Willem Jacob Heule, who was given the name Cornelis.

On the 14th of July 1996, in Amritsar district, Panjab (India) Cornelis Heule was initiated into the order of the Khalsa and he was given the name Harjinder Singh.

On the 6th of May 2012, in Sint-Truiden, Limburg (Belgium) Cornelis Harjinder Singh Heule reached the age of 65.

The Tribune – Afforestation drive fails to take roots; Forest department forced to plant saplings on college, school premises due to lack of open land

Mohit Khanna, Tribune News Service

Ludhiana, May 4. Three years after over a lakh trees were axed and nearly two lakh plants uprooted for widening of the National Highway-I, Punjab is finding it hard to meet its afforestation target due to paucity of forestland. So much so that the state Forest Department was now planting saplings on common village land and in educational inititutes.

Apart from this, the Centre’s apathy on the ecology front could be gauged from the fact that it has only released Rs 10 crore of the promised Rs 35 crore for tree plantation. The drive was to be initiated to make up for the massive felling done by the National Highway Authority of India (NHAI).

But, the state government too does not appear to be serious. For, it has not even been able to utilise the allocated Rs 10 crore so far. The Forest Department officials blame lack of open land for their going slow on afforestation. They say they were planting saplings on whatever open land they found in schools, colleges or villages.

Chief Conservator of Forests Kuldeep Kumar said the department had transferred 713.911 hectares of land to the NHAI.

“Following the transfer of land, we need to develop forests on 1,528 hectares. We have planted saplings on 217 hectares in Patiala, 100 hectares in Ludhiana and 175 hectares in Jalandhar. Our year-end target is 887 hectares…. Most of the plantation has been done in schools, colleges or on panchayat land,” he said.

Kumar says 400 acres of land had been identified in Garhshankar for plantation. But, the residents living nearby objected to its use for forestry and have even moved court against the step, he says. “The residents fear forests will attract wild animals,” he says. Officials say though a number of NGOs were active in the field, none were ready to help the department in acquisition.

They say as soon as people get to know that their land is to be acquired for afforestation, they jack up prices. “They hike rates three to four times, which gets beyond our reach,” they say.

State government fails to act

It’s been over two years since 10,000 trees were axed for the Rs 400-crore expressway on the southern bypass along Sidhwan Canal in Ludhiana. But, Punjab has so far not provided any land to compensate for the ecological loss through afforestation.

Environmentalists say widening of roads near canals has been a blow for the Forest Department as that was the only chunk of land left with them for planting saplings.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120505/punjab.htm#1

The Tribune – Phagwara man shot dead in Vancouver

Ashok Kaura

Phagwara, May 4. Ranjit Cheema, 43, an NRI, was shot dead in front of his house in Vancouver yesterday. When this reporter visited his native village Pandori Sher Singh, most residents expressed ignorance about the victim’s family.

Sarpanch Gursharan Singh Ghoshi said Malkiat Singh Cheema, the deceased’s father, came to the village immediately after Independence. But the family shifted to Noormahal and then migrated to the the UK from where they moved to Canada.

Ranjit, who was reportedly trying to re-enter drug trafficking trade in Canada, was gunned down by some unidentified gunmen. He even served a five-year jail term in California on the charges of trying to sell nearly 200 kg of heroin.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120505/punjab.htm#12

The Hindu – In Siachen, weather is enemy as search for avalanche victims continues

Anita Joshua

Gayari, Siachen, 4 May 2012. Forever hostile to all life on the towering heights of this glacier, the weather has been particularly nasty ever since April 7 when a massive avalanche wiped out an entire battalion of the Pakistan Army in the Gayari sector at 13,000 feet.

If overcast skies bring along with them sub-zero temperatures and blizzards, bright sunlight and rising temperatures raise the possibility of more slides that caused the avalanche in the first place.

The weather changes come with little announcement as a group of journalists saw for themselves while being helihopped by the Army to Siachen’s Ground Zero on Thursday.

For the first time, an Indian journalist was included in the group being taken to witness the rescue operations. Rescue workers have been struggling for nearly a month to recover the bodies of the 139 men — 8 of them civilians. But until now, not a single one has been found. Only some traces of the battalion headquarters have surfaced: a few life jackets, pieces of the soldiers’ igloo accommodation, and medicines were found about 600 metres from the original location. That was on April 23, over a fortnight after the avalanche.

Nothing has been found since.

Yet the search continues, and the Chief of the Army Staff, Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, reiterated, while talking to the visiting journalists, that it would continue until the bodies, each one of them, was found.

“The minimum we can do is recover the bodies,” said General Kayani, on his third visit since the disaster. On a previous visit, he had said: “If we need to dig out this mountain, we will do so to get the bodies,” no matter how long it took.

The weather and the inhospitable terrain have taken more lives on this side of the glacier as well as on the Indian side than the actual conflict, and now it is the most slowing factor of the rescue work.

This is difficult to fathom from afar or from the pictures that are being regularly released by the Army about the work going on in the Gayari sector to find the bodies, but it is immediately apparent to the visitor.

The father of Major Zaka ul-Haq, the battalion second-in command who perished in the avalanche with his men, had accompanied the COAS to the site. Fighting back his tears, the bereaved father from Muzzafargarh in the Punjab province, urged the Army to declare them dead, something it has not done so far. He conceded that it was only after coming here that he realised what an uphill task was under way to find the bodies.

The Army had apparently considered making the announcement on April 30 — a day designated as ‘Yaum-e-Shuhada’ when the military remembers the sacrifices of its personnel — but held back.

Every day brings a new challenge for the rescuers, and the barren greyness of the area is a stark reminder of the futility of a war in the highest battlefield of the world. This is an area where the mountains seek to challenge the skies and man on the Pakistani as well as the Indian side of the glacier has sought to challenge both not only at his own peril but also nature’s.

Putting the task of the rescuers in perspective, Commander of the Force Command Northern Areas Ikram ul Haq said the area that requires to be dug up is 3.6 million cubic feet in mass. Of this, 1.73 million cubic feet, or roughly more than a third, has been excavated.

Since the avalanche took place around 2 a.m., most of the men would have been indoors, so the focus of the rescuers is on tracking down the main accommodation area.

The area has been zeroed in on primarily with the help of two rocks — one of which bears the words ‘Welcome’ and was near the entrance, and the other ‘Allah Hafiz,’ near the exit.

Still, according to Major General Haq, the rescue teams would be able to hit the ground level of the main accommodation by this monthend only.

“The problem is that after every 20-30 feet, we are encountering huge boulders which we are now blasting, despite expert advice against it.”

Pointing to a boulder sitting in front of the ‘Bilafond La Wall’ — which the Army had thought would protect the battalion headquarters from slides that are frequent in the area — he said it measured 22 metres in height and 44 metres in visible length. “This boulder came down with the avalanche which came at such speed and intensity that the Bilafond La Wall could not stop it.”

Similar boulders are being encountered all along the way by rescue workers. To avoid triggering more slides in the process of blasting, the boulders are being blasted in the morning as “this is the only way we can make our way through this,” despite the heavy machinery that has been shipped in from Rawalpindi. Ferrying the machinery itself has proved to be a challenge as it has to be done by road. At Juglot in Gilgit district
on the Karakoram Highway, they have to be dismantled as the bridges en route cannot take their weight, and then put back together at Goma, a base camp of the Army. All this takes a minimum of a fortnight, and on any given day 30 per cent of the equipment cannot be used due to snags, caused mainly by the weather and rocky terrain.

The equipment and expertise brought in by some European countries were of no use as they are made for homogeneous snow-laden avalanches, and not the mix of snow, sand, slush and hard rock that they encountered in Gayari.

The ground-penetrating radars donated by China too had the same limitations. The mercurial swings in the weather have ensured that for nearly the entire month, helicopters could not fly into Gayari. This is a delayed winter, and at a time of changing seasons, slides are almost a daily occurrence. On one day, there were as many as 54 of them, said the FCNA commander, and each slide is preceded by very strong blizzards.

He is of the view that the April 7 avalanche was also triggered by the late winter and frequent changes in temperatures.

An added problem is that the avalanche blocked the river Gayari, changed the lay of the land even as it took lives.

After days of work, a water course has been opened to clear the lake that was formed by the blockade on the river.

Simultaneously, a wall had to be constructed around the artificial lake to prevent the water from inundating the area marked out for excavation. The construction has disturbed the area so much that it is no longer safe for habitation.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3384842.ece 

8 April 2012 Easter Sunday walk


Diestervest – Stadspark

Diestervest – Stadspark

Diestervest – Stadspark

Diestervest – Stadspark

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 – Raninder Singh: Rakhra’s kin behind vendetta cases

Aman Sood, Tribune News Street

Patiala, May 4. Levelling allegations against the police and the local SAD leadership, many senior Congress leaders, including former Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh’s son Raninder Singh, has warned the Akalis of backlash if vendetta cases continued.

“A majority of such cases are reported from Samana where Surjit Singh Rakhra is the MLA and now a cabinet minister. His close relative is running the administration and is the man behind these cases,” they alleged.

A delegation of Congress leaders, including Raninder Singh, Rajpura MLA Hardyal Singh Kambhoj and Nabha MLA Sadhu Singh Dharmsot, today submitted a memorandum to the Patiala DC and the SSP, urging them to reinvestigate cases where Congress workers and their family members had been “implicated at the behest of SAD leaders”. They listed 13 cases in the memorandum wherein FIRs had been registered against Congress workers “to settle personal scores”.

“There are instances where Congress leaders were attacked by Akali workers and the police did not act. Political bosses have given an open hand to goons to target our workers,” reads the memorandum.

“In some cases even women members of Congress workers’ families were beaten up in police stations,” Raninder told The Tribune. “Our sarpanches and other members are being booked in cases pertaining to fraud, cheating, theft, attempt to murder etc,” he said.

Deputy Commissioner GK Singh said he had received the memorandum and would forward it to the authorities. SSP Gurpreet Singh Gill said some cases pertained to the period before his joining Patiala, but assured that no vendetta cases would be allowed. A spokesperson for Rakhra said all these allegations were baseless and their leader had nothing to with it.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120505/punjab.htm#4

Dawn – Arguments completed in memo probe commission

Malik Asad

Islamabad, 5 May 2012. Arguments before the commission investigating the so-called memo scandal for the past four months were concluded on Friday and the commission which is yet to decide matters relating to forensic test of evidence adjourned its proceedings till Saturday.

Soon after the parties concluded their arguments, Zahid Hussain Bokhari, the counsel for former ambassador Husain Haqqani, told reporters that his contract with his client had ended and, therefore, he would not appear in further proceedings of the commission.

In his concluding remarks, advocate Bokhari said that American businessman Mansoor Ijaz wrote an article in the Financial Times in October 2011 when he was sure that the Research in Motion (RIM), the service provider to the BlackBerry company, had deleted the record of exchange of messages.

Mr Ijaz was quick to waive his privacy rights because he knew that RIM had deleted the record. Mr Haqqani, he said, was not aware of this, but still he also waived his privacy rights.

According to the data provided by the businessman, Advocate Bokhari said, Mr Ijaz had made nine calls to his client in May 2011 while Mr Haqqani made two calls to him.

He pointed out that the claim of Mr Ijaz of having taken dictation from Mr Haqqani for drafting the memorandum in a 16-minute telephone call was false because it was not possible to note down the memo consisting of 900 words in this time. The wide range of topic, covering events from 1971 to 2012 and beyond, the Pak-US relations, nuclear assets, political and military relations, and cooperation in the fields of law enforcement, economy and other fields could not be summarised in less than 20 minutes, he added.

He accused Mr Ijaz of sending emails to Mr Haqqani from fake addresses like USA007 and some emails from the address of his son because he wanted Mr Haqqani to delete emails without reading them.

It was his plan to trap Mr Haqqani because he saved emails in order to use them at a proper time, he added.

The businessman, he said, was a critic of the Pakistan army, nuclear programme, Inter Services Intelligence and energy sectors’ initiatives and in the so-called memo controversy, he tried to destabilise the country on the directions of some foreign intelligence agencies.

Deputy Attorney General Tariq Mehmood Jahangiri supported the arguments of Advocate Bokhari. He said Advocate Sheikh had claimed that his client was a simple businessman although he was engaged in talks in Sudan, Kashmir and other parts of world and had links with about 24 intelligence agencies of the world.He said Mr Ijaz was loyal only to the US and had nothing to do with Pakistan’s interests. Defending the absence of Mr Haqqani, DAG Jahangiri said the former ambassador, due to his ailment, could not attended the proceedings but was ready to be cross-examined via a video link from abroad.

Justice Faez Isa, the head of the commission, remarked that instead of repeating the arguments of Mr Bokhari, the DAG should concentrate on other aspects and should come up with something different.

He said it was not a good sign for the government that its ambassador was showing reluctance to appear in the court and the government had failed to persuade him to record his testimony.

The businessman did not speak against the government of Pakistan and President Asif Ali Zardari, but he spoke in their favour, Justice Isa said and asked the DAG: “Do you think he was wrong?” The DAG did not respond.

Advocate Akram Sheikh, the counsel for Mr Ijaz, told the court that the commission should not extend any favour to Mr Haqqani because he had defied its orders and, despite several summons, did not appear to record his statement.

On the other hand, Mr Haqqani criticised the Supreme Court and the memo commission in the media and even accused the judiciary of delivering biased verdicts, he added.

Referring the Murphy law, evidence act and principles of adverse presumption, Advocate Sheikh said that a fugitive from any inquiry or proceedings could not be entitled to court’s indulgence.

http://dawn.com/2012/05/05/arguments-completed-in-memo-probe-commission/

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