Meet the maker of the SIKHS IN KABUL (Afghanistan) documentary

Sikhs from Afghanistan
सिख इन काबुल”
سیکهـ ها و هندوها در کابل

 
Sikh Channel Presenter
Pritpal Singh interviewing Bobby Singh Bansal – Maker of the Sikhs in Kabul (Afghanistan) documentary.

This LIVE discussion programme with the film-maker was held immediately after the documentary was aired on Sikh Channel (Sky 840) on Monday, 3rd June 2012 at 19.40 GMT.

Watch the full talk show discussing the condition of Sikhs in Kabul


Pritpal Singh and Bobby Singh Bansal

Documentary focuses on the Sikh community of Afghanistan that have dwindled from 80,000 to a mere 1000 as of 2012. The proud Afghan Sikhs have been a part of the culture and heritage of Afghanistan ever since the founder of Sikhism Guru Nanak Dev Ji visited Kabul on his return from Baghdad and Mecca to India in the 16th century.

This film has captured the testimonies of the surviving Sikh families of Kabul who live in appalling conditions within their damaged Gurdwaré (Sikh place of worship) where 2 families are confined to a room. Since the American invasion of 2001 numerous wealthy Sikhs fled in haste to Pakistan and Europe, but some unable to flee were stranded and today their dilemma is worse than ever.

For more videos on Sikhs from Afghanistan search
TheDutchSikh on YouTube or click here

http://goo.gl/aHKWN

The Tribune – On Day One of Siachen talks, India, Pakistan stick to their guns

Afzal Khan in Islamabad

Defence delegations of India and Pakistan began their two-day talks in the Siachen issue on a cautious note at Rawalpindi this evening.

The talks led by defence secretaries S K Sharma of India and Nargis Sethi of Pakistan are designed to find an acceptable resolution to the issue in the backdrop of the calls to demilitarise the world’s highest battlefield. The discussions, according to official sources, revolved around reiteration of the respective positions by both the countries and some broad ideas in search of striking a common ground to revolve a solution that has eluded for so long.

“The ultimate resolution would await agreement between the political leadership of both the countries that may take long time,” a Pakistani official said.

Before the talks began, Pakistan emphasised the need for demilitarisation and an early pull back of forces, while India wanted authentication, delineation and demarcation of the respective troop positions before any withdrawal.

The bitter memories of the Kargil conflict loom over stiffening of India’s stance.

During the last round of talks held in New Delhi last year, Islamabad handed over a “non-paper” envisaging a roadmap for resolution of the issue. Pakistan had proposed immediate disengagement as a way forward.

An avalanche that killed 140 persons — 129 Pakistani troops and 11 civilians — on April 7 has lent urgency to the resolution of the issue. Countless soldiers and civilians have died on both sides more because of hostile weather-related problems than the occasional skirmishes. The catastrophic episode is believed to be one factor that may ultimately help soften entrenched positions though no immediate breakthrough is expected.

Ahead of the talks, Indian Defence Minister A K Antony cautioned against expecting any breakthrough at the meeting of the Defence Secretaries.

“Do not expect any dramatic announcement or decision on an issue which is very important for us, especially in the context of national security,” he told reporters in New Delhi last week.

India’s Cabinet Committee on Security discussed the Siachen issue at a meeting last Thursday.

Second and the concluding round of talks will be held on Tuesday after which a joint statement is expected before the India delegation flies back home. The Indian delegation also met Pakistan’s new Defence Minister Naveed Qamar and visited Taxila on arrival on Sunday.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120612/main3.htm

The Tribune – Controversial Muni killed

Is this what Guru’s fight against injustice has come to ? Do revenge killings really come under Guru’s hukam ? Man in Blue

Raj Sadosh

Abohar, June 11. Suraj Muni, who had allegedly thrown a copy of Guru Granth Sahib into a canal on the Malout-Dabwali road a few months ago triggering protests by Sikhs, was murdered today.

Three unidentified persons forced their entry into his dera in Ward 16 at Peelibanga in neighbouring Hanumangarh at 11 am and attacked him with sharp- edged weapons. His body was found lying in a pool of blood inside his hut.

Anticipating a backlash, the police cordoned off the locality, called for forensic science experts and deployed additional.

The Muni, who was arrested by the Haryana police for hurting the religious sentiments of the Sikhs, was residing in his dera after being let off on bail.

Additional Superintendent of Police Daleep Jakhar said some persons had been detained for interrogation.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120612/punjab.htm#11

The Hindu – Standard and Poor rating agency: Manmohan unable to influence colleagues

Special Correspondent

New Delhi, 12 June 2012. The global rating agency, Standard and Poor (S&P), in its report on the Indian economic impasse, said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh “often appears to have limited ability to influence his Cabinet colleagues and proceed with the liberalisation policy he favours …It would be ironic if a government under the economist, who spurred much of the liberalisation of India’s economy and helped unleash such gains, were to preside over their potential erosion.”

It noted that setbacks to or reversals in India’s path to a more liberal economy “could hurt its long-term growth prospects and, therefore, its credit quality.”

Evidently, even while not pointing to the specific measures of liberalisation, the agency appears to be referring to the government’s flip-flop on opening up foreign direct investment to multi-brand retail and the more recent reports on the UPA’s ally Trinamool Congress blocking pension reforms.

Among the BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India and China), the S&P noted, the other three enjoyed a higher rating or outlook than India.

Incidentally, the report comes at a time when views are expressed as to whether the ‘I’ in BRIC should be replaced with Indonesia on account of its comparatively robust growth.

The only bright side of the report is to allay fears of India facing a 1991 type of crisis, saying the situation is much better now.

http://www.thehindu.com/business/Economy/article3516749.ece

29 April 2012 Luik/Liège Vaisaki Nagar Kirtan & 6 May 2012 my 65th birthday visit to Brussel

Luik – Liège Guillemins
Train to Landen, Brussel and Northsea coast


Luik – Liège Guillemins

Luik – Liège Guillemins
Two conductors talking to each other before departure

Luik – Liège Guillemins
Ready to leave for Landen, where I will change to a train serving Sint-Truiden

6 May 2012 my 65th birthday visit to Brussel

On my birthday I went to see my Brussel friends Manpreet Kaur and Jean
After our meal we went for a walk in this nice park in Watermaal

To see more Belgium and Netherlands public transport pictures :

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

More Belgium pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – SAD-BJP win in Punjab civic polls comes with a rider

Naveen S Garewal, Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, June 11. There is euphoria in the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) – Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) alliance about the results of the municipal corporation elections that were declared yesterday. The alliance has swept the poll in the four largest cities of the state – Amritsar, Jalandhar, Ludhiana and Patiala.

But a close look at the number of seats that the alliance has won should be a sign of worry rather than jubilation. Barring Amritsar, the number of seats retained by the alliance has actually dipped.

Losing seats in three municipal corporations, barely four months after the alliance won the Assembly seats here, can at best be seen as early warning signs for the alliance.

Compared to the 2007 results, the share of the SAD-BJP seats has gone down. Coming at a time when the main Opposition Congress is fragmented and in disarray, the result shows that the people are beginning to get disillusioned with the delay in implementation of promises made before the Assembly elections.

The slight gain for the alliance in the Amritsar MC is perhaps because the Congress is the weakest in the Majha region. In Amritsar, the SAD seats have gone up marginally from 15 in 2007 to 24 now.

Similarly, the BJP has won 24 seats in this elections. It had 17 in the 2007 edition.

The alliance went in for the civic poll soon after the Assembly elections to take advantage of its preparedness. Though it has managed to retain its hold in all four cities, it needs to be cautious.

The reason for the decrease in the number of seats for the alliance could be its diversion from the citizen-centric announcements in the form of reforms it has announced prior to the Assembly poll.

In the four months since the alliance formed the government in Punjab for the historic second successive term, the work on reforms has slowed down. The police reforms remain on paper, the ‘suvidha kendras’ are non-functional at many places and the ‘fard kendras’ have also not delivered according to expectations. This perhaps has got reflected in the results.

The dip in the number of seats for the alliance could also be due to the shaking of the people’s confidence in the government due to events like honouring of Balwant Singh Rajoana, the assassin of former Chief Minister Beant Singh, with the title of living martyr. This coupled with the Blue Star Memorial in the Golden Temple complex also does not appear to have gone down well with the urban voters as these might be reminding them of the days of terrorism in the state.

Even a tussle for supremacy has begun between the SAD and BJP. In Amritsar, the BJP and the SAD have won 24 seats each, but now the state Election Commission has ordered a re-poll in ward 3.

Here Raj Kumar Jolly of the SAD is pitted against Surinder Chaudhary of the Congress. If after the re-poll the SAD candidate wins, the party will have one more seat than the BJP. It then could stake a claim for the Mayor’s position which was earlier with the BJP.

Party sources in the BJP said that the EC has ordered the re-poll on a very flimsy ground that someone, sitting outside the polling booth, was trying to hack the EVMs with a laptop — something which is not only improbable, but highly questionable as the ground for a re-poll. The BJP claimed that it has performed better than the SAD as it has managed to hold its ground in Jalandhar and Patiala, improved in Amritsar and suffered a marginal setback in Ludhiana.

Meanwhile, other smaller parties like the PPP, BSP and CPI have managed to mark a token presence by winning one seat each.

In Ludhiana, SAD had won 33 seats in 2007 which is down to 29 this time. The SAD’s candidate for the Mayor’s position has lost. Even the seats for the BJP have come down from 17 to 13. In Patiala, the SAD has lost three seats. Now, it has 32 victories as compared to 35 last time. The BJP has just managed to retain its seven seats.

In Jalandhar too, both the SAD and BJP have seen a drop in seats. SAD is down from 12 to 11 and the BJP from 21 to 19. The Congress too has lost in terms of the number of seats, but the Congress was not expected to dominate these polls.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120612/main2.htm

BBC News – Old tensions bubble in Burma

Fergal Keane BBC News

Monday 11 June 2012. For decades the fear and hatred has simmered, but rigid military control has largely kept it in check.

Now, as Burma enters a new era of liberalisation, decades of pent-up feelings have exploded into sectarian violence.

Buddhists and Muslims in Rakhine state have attacked each other, prompting the government to declare a state of emergency and impose a dusk-to-dawn curfew in several areas.

President Thein Sein has warned of an unravelling of the country’s democratic transition in the face of inter-communal violence.

“If this endless anarchic vengeance and deadly acts continue, there is the danger of them spreading to other parts and being overwhelmed by subversive influences,” he said on Sunday.

“If that happens, it can severely affect peace and tranquillity and our nascent democratic reforms and the development of the country.”

Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi met Muslim leaders in Rangoon earlier this week and issued a similar appeal for tolerance.

History of hatred

Local Buddhists blame the Muslim Rohingya people for the outbreak of violence, which appears to have started when a woman was raped and killed. Three Muslim men are in custody following the attack.

In what seems to have been a revenge attack, 10 Muslims were killed in an attack on a bus.

But whatever the cause of the latest clashes, the conflict between Buddhists and Muslims in Rakhine state has deep roots.

During the Second World War and again in the early 1990s, sectarian violence claimed many lives.

One of the most worrying trends is the appearance on placards and on the internet of demands for Rohingyas to be removed from Burma. Under the country’s constitution they are denied citizenship.

There are an estimated 750,000 Rohingyas in Rakhine state, but they are frequently referred to as “Bengalis” who belong in neighbouring Bangladesh.

As a former Burmese foreign minister reportedly once remarked: “Historically, there has never been a Rohingya race in Myanmar [Burma].”

But the Rohingya are also stateless in Bangladesh, where many thousands have sought refuge from persecution in Burma.

The campaign group Human Rights Watch said discriminatory government policy in Burma had helped inflame tensions.

The organisation said the government’s handling of the latest crisis would be a critical test of its reform program.

Elsewhere there has been progress in negotiating an end to some of the other ethnic problems that have plagued Burma since independence, although the situation in Kachin state remains hugely problematic.

Newfound freedoms

So how great a threat to the transition is the violence in Rakhine state?

If the violence was happening in isolation then the threat could be regarded as relatively small.

But for a country emerging from nearly 50 years of military domination, with different groups testing the limits of freedom, the current position is potentially precarious.

In recent months there has been a series of labour disputes and protests over power shortages that would have been unthinkable under the old dispensation.

The demonstrations certainly reflect a more tolerant state, but also a flexing of muscle on the part of a previously quiescent people who are frustrated with poverty and lack of development.

Set against all this is the emergence of the National League for Democracy (NLD) as a potent electoral force.

It won 43 out of the 44 seats it contested in recent by-elections, a result that surprised the military backed government.

There have been signs in recent weeks that the celebrity profile of its leader Aung San Suu Kyi – and her warning against “reckless optimism” about Burma’s future – has unsettled some within the leadership.

President Thein Sein cancelled his appearance at an economic forum in Bangkok apparently in response to the high profile accorded to the opposition leader. Her forthcoming tour of Europe will likely heighten official anxiety that Aung San Suu Kyi is already being treated as Burma’s national leader by Western governments.

The relationship between the president and Aung San Suu Kyi is fundamental to the success of the transition.

For now, Thein Sein has managed to keep the more conservative parts of the military on board, just as Aung San Suu Kyi has persuaded her more radical supporters to accept compromise with the state.

There is a fear that more conservative elements of the government might see rising ethnic unrest, expanding protests over living conditions, and the growing political threat from the NLD as a reason to put the brake on reform.

As the regime’s grip loosens and long dormant forces emerge the transition is likely to be challenged in numerous and unpredictable way.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-18402678

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