The Statesman – Leader of the Opposition blames CM for deaths of Delhi’ites due to pollution

The Kejriwal government was indifferent to this important issue for a long time that impacts the lives of every citizen and their families, he alleged.

New Delhi – India, 20 March 2021. The Leader of the Opposition (LOP) in the Delhi Assembly, Ramvir Singh Bidhuri, on Friday held Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal responsible for the death of 54 000 citizens of Delhi due to pollution and pollution-related problems.

Addressing a press conference at the Delhi BJP office on Friday, Bidhuri demanded Kejriwal’s resignation for his failure to deal with the alarming level of pollution in the national capital.

The Kejriwal government was indifferent to this important issue for a long time that impacts the lives of every citizen and their families, he alleged.

Citing the World Health Organization’s report that reportedly stated that 54,000 people died in Delhi in 2020 due to pollution, the Delhi Leader of the Opposition alleged that even the Delhi government could not utilise the Central government’s fund to address the rising air pollution level in the city.

“It is a matter of shame and regret that the Delhi government is blaming the Central government for his failure to deal with pollution,” he charged.

The public transport system in Delhi was in shambles and in the absence of proper public transport infrastructure, more private vehicles were running on Delhi roads leading to pollution and congestion, Bidhuri alleged.

The Tribune – Nagar kirtan to mark Guru Teg Bahadur’s 400th Gurpurb

Amritsar – Panjab – India, 19 March 2021. Dedicated to the 400th Parkash Purb of Guru Teg Bahadur, a massive nagar kirtan will be taken out from his birth place, Gurdwara Guru Ke Mahal, near Harmandr Sahib on Saturday.

Under the patronage of Guru Granth Sahib and led by Panj Pyaras, it will head to the martyrdom place of the ninth Sikh Guru in Delhi after passing through various places of the state and Haryana, associated with the Guru.

To take stock of the arrangements, SGPC chief Bibi Jagir Kaur on Friday visited Gurdwara Guru Ke Mahal. She said the Covid norms would be complied with during the religious procession. “It will take 40 days to complete the nagar kirtan upon reaching Anandpur Sahib.”

https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/punjab/nagar-kirtan-to-mark-400th-gurpurb-227770

Scroll.in – Indian-origin man in New Zealand arrested for allegedly threatening Sikh youth on social media

He reportedly called the Sikh man a ‘Khalistani terrorist’, and posted his photos and phone number online.

Scroll Staff

Auckland – North Island – New Zealand. 20 March 2021. The police in New Zealand’s Auckland city on Friday arrested a man of Indian origin for allegedly threatening a Sikh youth on social media and posting derogatory messages against him, The Times of India reported.

The accused also abused a few other people.

The man allegedly made the offensive remarks on a Facebook group. He reportedly called the Sikh man a “Khalistani terrorist” and posted his photos and phone number online.

The man accused the youth of running a hate campaign against Indians, and urged people to complain to the police about him.

The accused also told the youth that he would come to his house to teach him a lesson, according to The Times of India. The police have filed a case against the man based on the youth’s complaint.

They are also likely to investigate the role of some other people in making hateful comments.

Sikh community leaders in Australia have also noted a growing divide within the Indian-Australian community, according to The Guardian.

They alleged that Facebook and WhatsApp were being used to disseminate rhetoric against religious minority groups, amid the farmers’ protest in India.

Last month, armed men had attacked four Sikh students in Sydney. It was suspected to be a hate crime.

Thousands of farmers, mainly from Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, have been camping outside Delhi since December, the repeal of the Centre’s new agricultural laws.

The laws seek to open up the country’s agriculture markets to private companies. Farmers fear the policies will make them vulnerable to corporate exploitation and would dismantle the minimum support price regime.

https://scroll.in/latest/990062/indian-origin-man-in-new-zealand-arrested-for-allegedly-threatening-sikh-youth-on-social-media

Dawn – Talks on Indus waters in Delhi next week

Islamabad to raise objection to construction of two controversial Indian power projects on Pakistani waters.

Khalid Hasnain

Lahore – Panjab – Pakistan, 20 March 2021. An eight-member delegation of Pakistan’s Commission on Indus Waters will leave for New Delhi on Monday for a two-day meeting of the Permanent Commission on Indus Waters to discuss with their Indian counterparts Pakistan’s objections to the design of Pakal Dul and Lower Kalnai hydroelectric plants/projects and other issues.

The meeting is scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday. The last meeting took place in August 2018 in Lahore. Officials said the gap between the two meetings was caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

After the 2018 meeting, a Pakistani delegation was invited by India to inspect the sites of the hydroelectric projects being constructed by India on Pakistani rivers.

An official, however, claimed that in addition to the pandemic, India’s unilateral decision to change the special status of occupied Kashmir was another factor responsible for the long gap between the two meeting

Next week’s meeting is seen as an important development in the wake of recent statements by Prime Minister Imran Khan and Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa in which they reiterated Pakistan’s position on relationship with India and called for resolution of the disputes through dialogues.

Both the Pakistani leaders have nonetheless asked India to take the first step by agreeing to resolve the Kashmir issue according to the wishes of its people.

The Pakistani delegation will be led by Indus Commissioner Syed Mehr Ali Shah and that of India by his counterpart P.K. Saxena.

According to agenda of the meeting, the Pakistani delegation comprising officials of the Indus Water Commission, Water and Power Development Authority, Attorney General Office, Meteorology, Irrigation and other departments concerned, would discuss Pakistan’s objections to the design of 1,000MW Pakal Dul and 48MW Lower Kalnai hydroelectric plants (HEP).

Supply of information/data of the new projects by India on western rivers, flood data arrangements for the forthcoming flood season, programmes of meetings and tours of the commission, two recent new run-of-river hydroelectric plants. 19MW Durbuk and 24MW Nimu-Chilling, and any other issue with the mutual consent of both the commissioners.

“Under the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT), at least one meeting of the Permanent Commission on Indus Waters should be held each year alternately in India and Pakistan.

However, we can have more meetings each year since the treaty doesn’t bind us in this regard. Moreover, the tours/inspections from both sides are also paid by both sides to various sites,” Pakistan’s commissioner explained.

“We will not visit to any project site, as we will only have meeting with our counterpart in India,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Foreign Office, while confirming the Delhi meeting, said that under the provisions of the IWT 1960, said the Permanent Indus Commission was required to meet at least once a year.

However, the meetings could not be held regularly because of tensions between the two countries, it added.

“A host of issues under the Treaty, including our objections to the designs of Pakal Dul and Lower Kalnai hydroelectric plants, supply of information on new Indian projects on the western rivers and supply of flood data by India, will be discussed,” the FO spokesman said at a briefing.

The construction of controversial Pakal Dul Dam is currently under way on a tributary of the River Chenab by the Indian authorities in Kishtwar district of Jammu and Kashmir.

During the last meeting held in Lahore in August 2018, Pakistan had urged India to entertain the objections it had raised over the construction of Pakal Dul and Lower Kalnai hydropower projects on Chenab.

It conveyed in categorical terms to the visiting Indian team that Islamabad would approach the international forums defined in the IWT in case New Delhi failed to accept the requests as narrated in the detailed objections.

Pakistan also made it clear that it would have no option but to use international forums, appointment of neutral experts, taking the case to international court of arbitration, etc, in case India failed to address its concerns that were absolutely genuine and could be resolved amicably.

Pakistani authorities had also asked the Indians to reduce the height of Pakal Dul’s reservoir up to five metres, maintain 40-metre height above sea level while making spillways’ gates of this project, besides clarifying the pattern and mechanism for the water storage and releases.

Similarly, Pakistan raised some technical concerns over the design of the Lower Kalnai hydropower project, requesting India to address them at the earliest.

Finally, India agreed to get the sites of Pakal Dul and Lower Kalnai projects inspected by Pakistani experts.

It also assured Pakistan of taking up its objections/concerns over the two projects seriously by resolving them amicably in the light of technical memorandums to be prepared and exchanged by the two countries in the next meeting to be held in New Delhi.

Later in February 2019, Pakistani experts headed by the Commissioner on Indus Waters had inspected four hydropower projects at Chenab basin in India, including Pakal Dul, Lower Kalnai, 850MW Ratlay and 900MW Baglihar dams.

The construction work on Pakal Dul dam, which was earlier stopped, had resumed at that time.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1613516/talks-on-indus-waters-in-delhi-next-week