The Tribune – Zaffarwal to stay away from protest rally

Ravi Dhaliwal, Tribune News Service

Gurdaspur, May 27. Former Babbar Khalsa International (BKI) chief Wassan Singh Zaffarwal made it clear today that he would stay away from the protest rally to be organised by Sikh organisations here tomorrow against the failure of the police to arrest those responsible for Jaspal Singh’s death who was killed in police firing on March 29.

The BKI chief was taken into preventive custody just before violence rocked the city in the last week of March following which curfew had to be clamped in the town.

Zaffarwal claimed only members of the deceased’s family would assemble at Kahnuwan Chowk tomorrow from where they would proceed to the Deputy Commissioner’s (DC) office to hand over a memorandum. But the police is leaving nothing to chance. R S Brar, SSP, today led a flag march in the town.

Seeking a CBI probe, Gurcharanjit Singh, Jaspal’s father, said he did not believe in the two inquiries being held to ascertain the cause of his son’s death.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120528/punjab.htm#10

The Tribune – Rescue debt-ridden farmers: BKU

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, May 27. The Bharti Kisan Union (Sidhupur) and the Internationalist Democratic Party today urged the Punjab government to enact a legislation in the forthcoming budget session to provide relief to the debt-ridden farmers.

The state assembly should unanimously adopt the Punjab Farm Credit Relief Bill which had been hanging fire for long. The government should also initiate steps to get loan waiver for the farm sector and initiate moves to create employment opportunities and arrange for better education and health facilities on the other.

Prof Gian Singh, an economist from Punjabi University, said going by the latest studies, farmers were incurring losses at the rate of Rs 415 per quintal on wheat. He said the government must completely waive the farmers’ debt and arrange for loan at a lower rate of interest.

BKU president Pishaura Singh said protests would be launched to press the state government to adopt the relief bill in the coming session of the assembly.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120528/punjab.htm#11

The Asian Age – De-addiction to be part of Punjab school curriculum

Tanveer Thakur, Asian Age Correspondent

Chandigarh, 28 May 2012. Losing out its young generation to the menace of drugs, the Punjab government has decided to tackle the problem at the grassroots level by introducing the issue of drug de-addiction at the school level. In a latest directive issued by the state education department, drug de-addiction is going to be the integral part of the school curriculum.

In its 14-point agenda, the director-general of school education (DGSE) has ordered all its district education officers (DEOs) that head teachers of all the government schools in the state should be directed that drug de-addiction is discussed during the morning assembly.

The directive has further asked the schools that during their monthly bal sabha (students meeting), held on the last working day of every month, should have some activity related to the issue of drug de-addiction.

The activity could vary from play, skit, group songs, debate and declamation, fancy dress and rallies on days like Anti-Tobacco Day and International Drug Abuse Day. The move is aimed at generating awareness on the issue among the school children.

The other instruction to the schools include that all school notice boards should carry a slogan daily related to the de-addiction, apart from a collage highlighting the ill-effects of drug addiction to be displayed on notice boards.

The students will be encouraged to participate in slogan writing and poster making competition on the issue. The education department has also asked the schools to lay emphasis on the counselling of the students addicted to drugs.

http://www.asianage.com/india/de-addiction-be-part-punjab-school-curriculum-572

Sint-Truiden – Brussel – Bristol vv 19/04 – 25/04 2012

On the 19th of April I went to Vilvoorde and on the 20th I travelled from Vilvoorde to Bristol via Brussel and  London. I returned from Bristol to Sint-Truiden on the 25th of April.

22 April, Bristol, Ramgharia Gurdwara, Granthi Singh doing katha

22 April, Bristol, Ramgharia Gurdwara, Divan Hall


22 April, Bristol, Ramgharia Gurdwara, Divan Hall

22 April, Bristol, Ramgharia Gurdwara, Divan Hall

22 April, Bristol, Ramgharia Gurdwara, Langar Hall
In most Ramgharia Gurdwaras langar is had on tables and chairs
I prefer sitting on the floor, but at least here you do not have ‘pangat’ sitting on the floor or on chairs and standing as you find in many London Gurdwaras.

Ramgharia Sikh Temple
81-83 Chelsea Road
Easton, Bristol BS5 6AS

To see more UK gurdwara pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157611278213681/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

Special to The Tribune – Pakistan-origin UK minister in eye of storm

Shyam Bhatia in London

The UK’s most senior Pakistani-origin politician is in deep trouble after allegations that she claimed generous parliamentary expenses while staying at a rent-free accommodation in London.

Cabinet minister without portfolio, the Right Honourable Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, whose parents hail from Bewal, Gujar Khan, in Pakistan, is the chairwoman of the ruling Conservative Party.

The allegation against her is that on several occasions she stayed rent free at a friend’s home in London in 2007-2008, while claiming a £165.50 (Rs 14,000) overnight parliamentary allowance for attending the House of Lords.

Public records show that within six months of taking her seat in the House of Lords in 2007, she claimed some £12,000 in overnight subsistence (more than Rs 10 lakh).

It turns out that she also failed to declare to Parliament the many thousands of pounds of rental income from a two-bedroom flat she owned in North London. Warsi has admitted this was “an oversight for which I take full responsibility”. But over the issue of the overnight allowance claims, she refers to the “occasional nights” she spent at a friend’s home claiming she made an “appropriate payment equivalent to what I was paying at the time in hotel costs.”

Friend denies taking rent

The friend in question is a doctor and former Conservative Party official, Wafik Moustafa, who said Warsi used his property for four months, but did not pay rent, bills or local tax.

In a statement made to the media, Moustafa said, “Baroness Warsi paid no rent, nor did she pay any utilities bills or council tax. It was an informal arrangement, so no tenancy agreement was drawn up. I’m not sure how many days she stayed in total, but I believe my home was her main London residence (at the time).”

Warsi not alone

Under parliamentary rules of the time, those MPs from the House of Lords or Commons who lived outside London were allowed to claim overnight charges – usually the costs of a hotel room or rent of a flat – without submitting a receipt.

The underlying assumption was that all MPs were men and women of the highest integrity who would not abuse the system to line their own pockets. But in 2009, a media-led investigation revealed actual and alleged misuse of permitted allowances and expenses, prompting criminal charges of false accounting against three Labour Party MPs from the House of Commons.

Members of the House of Lords were also affected. Among the Labour Lords suspended from the Upper House and ordered to pay back their expenses was Jalandhar-born Swraj Paul who was ordered to repay £41,000.

Two others suspended for similar reasons and also ordered to pay back their expenses were Tanzania-born Lord Alibhai Amir Bhatia and Baroness Uddin.

In recent weeks, Paul has claimed he was the victim of racism, arguing, “In financial year 2010, I gave £1 million to charity.

Does anybody think that for bloody £41,000, I’d loot the country?”

Whatever the merits of Paul’s argument, his reputation never recovered. Described last year as the 88th richest man in Britain, he is a former deputy Speaker of the House of Lords.

He resigned his membership of the Labour Party in 2010 after an investigating committee after conducting a probe described him as “utterly unreasonable” and “negligent”.

PM under pressure

What happens to Baroness Warsi remains to be seen, but Prime Minister David Cameron is under pressure to take appropriate action while the issue of her expenses claims is fully investigated.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120528/main4.htm

BBC News – India-Burma border caught up in a time warp

Saturday 26 May 2012. As Manmohan Singh begins a visit to Burma on 28 May, the first by an Indian prime minister in 25 years, the BBC’s Sanjoy Majumder travels to Moreh on the India-Burma border to find a town frozen in time.

Moreh, in India’s north-eastern state of Manipur, has all the trappings of a frontier town caught in a time warp.

A single, dusty lane snakes through the middle of the town, with rows of wooden shops, restaurants and houses lining either side.

Buddhist monks, Tamil traders, Burmese women with their faces smeared with sandalwood paste and Indian army soldiers saunter past in the searing midday heat.

At the end of the road, workers are busy constructing a ceremonial archway. Just beyond it is a barrier and then the large, shiny border gates with the Indian state emblem on them.

As they swing open at 07:00, traders, schoolchildren and villagers scramble through, crossing over to the other side. No papers are required as long as they are back before sundown.

‘Porous border’

But like most things in Moreh and between India and Burma, this is just window-dressing.

Only a part of the border is fenced so even before the gates open, many others have already made the crossing, walking along dirt tracks, through fields and ditches in full view of the army.

“As you can see, this is a porous border,” one Indian soldier tells me.

It is possibly the reason why, until recently, Moreh also had a wild reputation – as a major transit point for heroin and arms.

Efforts are on, however, to change all this. Construction is on at full swing to widen the road leading away from the border and into India. Eventually, the plan is for this to become India’s major gateway into South East Asia.

Delhi is also developing ports inside Burma and there are plans for a rail link – as part of the trans-Asian network that will link South East Asia with Europe.

But there are clearly plenty of hurdles.

“Both sides of the border are poor and underdeveloped,” says Sanjoy Hazarika, a leading expert on northeast India.

They are also awash with ethnic tribes who are often at conflict with the governments in Delhi and Nay Pyi Taw, part of the reason why the region is a hot-bed of insurgency.

The highway leading from Moreh to the Manipuri capital, Imphal, is dotted with army camps and military checkposts.

Strong links

“I make payments of several thousand rupees on each journey,” complains one trader about the bribes he has to hand over to the police, soldiers and the insurgents.

But the strong historical, cultural and economic links that exist between the two sides of the border are also India’s trading currency, as it hopes to gain goodwill and more from Burma.

As the border gates open every morning, groups of schoolchildren from Burma cross into India, standing out in their bright uniforms.

“They come here to study English,” explains K Shamol Singh, headmaster at the Eastern Shine missionary school, one of several in Moreh with a sizeable number of Burmese students.

“They don’t have good English-language schools in the Burmese countryside. The hope is that the language skills they acquire will help them get jobs in countries such as Thailand and Singapore.”

It is another illustration of how easy it has been even for legitimate visitors to travel across the border.

Strategic jigsaw

But economics is only one part of the puzzle. India has strong political and strategic interests in Burma.

Until the 1990s, it was a strong supporter of the pro-democracy movement of Aung San Suu Kyi who studied in India and whose mother served as ambassador in Delhi.

Many Burmese students and activists fled to India after the military crackdown following the 1988 uprising.

Among them was Dr Thura, a political activist who is among an estimated 10,000 Burmese refugees in India.

“We were contacted by the Indian embassy and given money to go across,” he tells me in the house he shares with four other Burmese families in the Manipuri town of Churachandpur, west of Moreh.

“We thought we’d get arms and training to take on the Burmese military. Instead, we were put inside a camp for the next three years and not allowed to move out.”

Many Burmese exiles living in India like Dr Thura are bitter and feel let down by the world’s largest democracy.

In the 1990s, as India realised China was gaining in influence in Burma, it switched tracks and began reaching out to the generals as part of its “Look East” policy.

But many are sceptical of whether it has achieved much or if its ambitions of using Burma as a foothold into South East Asia will ever be realised.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-18156861

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