Buying/Selling1 ? Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 Winzone Realty Inc. Baldev Singh Associate Broker/Notary Cell : 917-224-7395 Vol. 12 Issue 37 Wednesday 19-24 February, 2015 www.thesouthasianinsider.com Price $ 1 Published Weekly from New York Obama Calls Idea That The West Is At War With Islam ‘President Obama doesn’t love America’ Rudy Giuliani 'An Ugly Lie' (News Agencies) New York- Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani went straight for the jugular Wednesday night during a private group dinner here featuring Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker by openly questioning whether President Barack Obama “loves America.” Giuliani, speaking in front of the 2016 Republican presidential contender and about 60 right-leaning business executives and conservative media types, directly challenged Obama’s patriotism, discussing what he called weak foreign (Contd on page 22) (Insider Bureau) Washington DC- "The notion that the West is at war with Islam is an ugly lie and all of us — regardless of our faith — have a responsibility to reject it," President Obama said Thursday, at a summit on defusing violent extremism. The statement echoes the president's remarks from Wednesday, when Obama said it's crucial to change the narrative about the intersection of religion, particularly Islam, and modern society. He called it “a generational challenge”. Instead of focusing on Islam, the president and others have said at the summit, the U.S. and other countries should be trying to snip away at terrorism's ideological, economic and political roots.Obama spoke on the issue for more than 20 minutes, urging countries not to help lend legitimacy to extremist groups such as ISIS."Nations need to break the cycles of conflict especially sectarian conflict that are magnets for violent extremism." "We have to confront the warped ideologies espoused by terrorists like al-Qaida and ISIL, especially their attempts to use Islam to justify their violence." "When people, especially young people, feel entirely trapped in impoverished communities (Contd on page 23) India Republic Day Celebrated Judge stalls Obama immigration orders (News Agencies) The ruling puts on hold Mr. Obama’s orders that could spare as many as five million people who are in the U.S. illegally from deportation. It came from U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen, who once accused the Obama administration of participating in criminal conspiracies to smuggle children into the U.S. by helping reunite them with parents who live here illegally. In response, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it would halt preparations for a program to protect parents of U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents until further notice. (Contd on page 22) Negativity against Congress won BJP, AAP their elections: Raj Babbar Story ON P a g e 19 (News Agencies) Congress leader Raj Babbar on Tuesday said India is now seeing a new form of 'wave' politics which is based on the extensive use of the internet and web-based applications to influence young voters. "This is a politics of waves and both in the 2014 parliamentary (Contd on page 22) Swine flu kills 600-plus in India, refuses to die Story ON P a g e 23 WORLD Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 2 Canadian company behind Keystone to seek US approval for another pipeline (Agencies) The Canadian company behind the long-delayed Keystone XL oil pipeline will seek U.S. government approval for another pipeline — this one going north. Industry officials in North Dakota say the proposed Upland Pipeline could reduce reliance on the railroads to ship crude following recent concerns about safety. TransCanada Corp.’s proposed $600 million Upland Pipeline would begin near the northwestern North Dakota oil hub of Williston and go north into Canada about 200 miles. At peak operation it would transport up to 300,000 barrels of oil daily, connecting with other pipelines including the Energy East pipeline across Canada. “We expect Upland and Energy East to play a key role in providing sufficient pipeline capacity to improve supply security for eastern Canadian and U.S. refiners, and reduce the need for foreign imports,” TransCanada said in a statement. The company last year sought commitments from shippers and said in its quarterly earnings report last Friday that the effort was successful. TransCanada hopes to have the Upland Pipeline operating in 2018, pending approval from the U.S. State Department, North Dakota’s Public Service Commission and Canada’s National Energy Board. The company plans to submit an application to the State Department in the second quarter of this year. TransCanada has been trying for years to get U.S. approval for the 1,179mile Keystone XL, which would connect Canada’s tar sands to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast but has sparked environmental objections. Congress last week approved construction but President Barack Obama has threatened to veto the measure. TransCanada spokesman Davis Sheremata on Thursday said the company can’t speculate on whether it might run into similar problems with Upland. Company President and CEO Russ Girling last week told analysts and reporters that he hopes the drawn-out Keystone XL process is “an anomaly.” “Obviously, the market isn’t waiting for the regulators to catch up with their decisions — they’re moving the oil now,” he said. North Dakota Petroleum Council President Ron Ness on Thursday called the Upland proposal a needed project that would move the state’s crude to “great markets” in eastern Canada and the northeastern U.S. North Dakota, the nation’s No. 2 oil state behind Texas, is producing about 1.2 million barrels of crude daily. Several pipeline projects are proposed to move the oil, 80 percent of which now is being hauled by rail, according to North Dakota Pipeline Authority Director Justin Kringstad. US announces massive attack plans for 25,000 Iraqi soldier to retake Mosul from ISIS Rebel takeover of eastern Ukraine city raises questions about cease-fire, Putin’s intentions (Agencies) The Ukrainian military’s withdrawal from a key eastern city – leaving Russia-backed rebels to roam the streets in celebration – has raised questions about a newly struck ceasefire and Vladimir Putin’s ultimate intentions. The city of Debaltseve effectively fell to rebel fighters days after the ceasefire was signed last week with the heavy involvement of European leaders. That deal may have eased, for now, any consideration by the Obama administration of arming the Ukrainian military.But U.S. lawmakers say the latest developments only underscore the need for greater involvement by the U.S. and its allies. “The fall of Debaltseve to Russianbacked Ukrainian separatists should be all the evidence we need to proclaim the failure of the recent cease-fire agreement in Ukraine,” Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said in a statement, calling the deal a “delusional piece of paper.” They warned the Ukrainians’ retreat will only embolden Putin as he seemingly tries to aid the rebels in gaining more territory – effectively adding to his largest prize to date, the annexed Crimean Peninsula. Mariupol. “Persisting with the illusion of a ceasefire will only give Putin the cover he wants to plan his next act of aggression inside of Ukraine,” they said, accusing President Obama and other leaders of using “any available excuse not to provide defensive arms.” The Obama administration has made clear that arming the Ukrainians is on the table, although it has not yet taken that step. Asked about the latest developments on Thursday, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the U.S. “condemns continuing attacks by Russia-backed separatists in and around Debaltseve, Mariupol and other locations in eastern Ukraine which violate the cease-fire and flout the Minsk agreements.” She added: “We call on Russia and the separatists it backs to stop their attacks immediately, withdraw heavy weapons, halt the flow of fighters and equipment from Russia into Ukraine.” The war in eastern Ukraine has killed 5,600 people and forced over a million to flee their homes since fighting began last April, a month after Russia annexed the mostly Russian-speaking Crimean Peninsula. Russia denies arming the rebels or supplying fighters, but Western nations and NATO point to satellite McCain and Graham predicted the pictures of Russian military equipment in next offensive will likely occur in nearby eastern Ukraine. The Keystone XL would move 830,000 barrels of oil a day from Canada south, as well as about 100,000 barrels of domestic oil daily from North Dakota’s Bakken region. With Upland, a total of about 1 million barrels of oil could be moved by pipelines from North Dakota to markets across the U.S., Ness and Kringstad said. That would help displace rail shipments of North Dakota oil. Trains hauling crude from the state’s rich oil fields have been involved in major accidents in Virginia, West Virginia, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Alabama, as well as in Canada, where 47 people were killed by an explosive derailment in 2013 in Lac-Megantic, Quebec. “Producers want to put oil on pipelines to get it to these key markets,” said Ness, whose group represents more than 500 companies working in western North Dakota. “We’ve just got to get them permitted.” In Paris, French President Francois Hollande said he and German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke Thursday with the leaders of Ukraine and Russia -- Petro Poroshenko and Vladimir Putin -- about cease-fire violations and their consequences. The Kremlin confirmed the four leaders had spoken by phone and praised the cease-fire deal, saying it has led to "a reduction in the number of civilian casualties." France and Germany, which oversaw marathon peace talks between the Ukrainian and Russian leaders last week in Minsk, Belarus, both signaled Thursday that they're determined to salvage the cease-fire deal and keep the two sides talking. The German government said the four leaders had agreed "to stick to the Minsk agreements despite the serious breach of the cease-fire in Debaltseve." It said "immediate concrete steps" were necessary to ensure that the cease-fire is fully implemented and heavy weapons are withdrawn. Both sides were supposed to pull back heavy weapons in eastern Ukraine beginning Tuesday, but international monitors said Thursday they had not seen either doing so. "We have not observed the withdrawal of heavy weapons, however we have observed and reported on the movement of heavy weapons," said Michael Bociurkiw of the Organization for Security (Agencies) The operation to retake Iraq's second largest city from Islamic State militants will likely begin in April or May and will involve about 12 Iraqi brigades, or between 20,000 and 25,000 troops, a senior U.S. military official said Thursday. Laying out details of the expected Mosul operation for the first time, the official from U.S. Central Command said five Iraqi Army brigades will soon go through coalition training in Iraq to prepare for the mission. Those five would make up the core fighting force that would launch the attack, but they would be supplemented by three smaller brigades serving as reserve forces, along with three Peshmerga brigades who would contain the Islamic State fighters from the north and west. The Peshmerga are Kurdish forces from northern Iraq. The official said there also would be a Mosul fighting force, largely made up of former Mosul police and tribal forces, who would have to be ready to go back into the city once the army units clear out the Islamic State fighters. WORLD Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 Which woman says beauty to YOU? (Insider Bureau) Photographer travels the globe to prove appearance is all in the eye of the beholder In contrast to the constant barrage of women's fashion magazines declaring what is attractive, photographer Mihaela Noroc set off on a journey around the world -- and found that beauty really is in the eye of the beholder. The Romanian traveled to 37 different countries, where she of- ten met women simply walking the street and took stunning portraits of them, highlighting what is considered desirable in different cultures. From the freezing, chaffing Tibetan Plateau near the Himalayas to the sultry tropics of South America, Noroc, 29, entitled her startling and revealing project, 'The Atlas of Beauty.' At times spending only 30 seconds with each subject and traveling only with her camera and a backpack, Noroc tried to take pictures of young women all in their twenties. She explained in a statement to Daily Mail Online 'I'm a [29year-old] female photographer from Romania that quit her boring job and started a new life. Two years ago I took my backpack, my camera and begun to travel around the globe, with savings made in years of working. 'In this journey I photographed hundreds of natural women surrounded by their culture. My project is called 'The Atlas Of Beauty' and is about our planet's diversity shown through portraits of women.' Noroc said she visited a variety of locations, including favelas in Brazil and 'rough neighborhoods of Colombia,' as well as an Iranian mosque and the Amazon rainforest. She said in her statement 'Now I can say that beauty is everywhere, and it’s not a matter of cosmetics, money, race or social status, but more about being yourself. 'Global directions make us look and behave the same, but we are all beautiful because we are different. In the end, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and the beholder is always somebody else.' Noroc added 'When I photograph a woman I talk a lot, I try to to make her feel special, proud and unique. I can get along in 5 languages and this helps me a lot, but in some countries, talking becomes body language. 'I prefer to photograph natural faces, without a lot of make-up, and to capture that moment of sincerity and serenity that is so specific for women. 3 OPINION Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 Huzoor, AAP ? We pride ourselves in Ahankaar (as also Hunkaar, till recently). Do-you-know-who-I-am is our calling card. We adore Big Beasts with tinted glass. We think lal-batti is our birthright. We covet Z-plus security. It’s a high when all traffic stops for us. We walk with a swagger, usually with a bottle in one hand and a gun in the other. We greet each other with gaalis. We rage on the roads. We don’t care for rules. We hate traffic lights, zebra crossings and parking lots. Bullets fly over parking brawls. We hate queues. We think it’s beneath us to stand quietly in a line. Our communities are gated. Our rwas are territorial as pit bulls. We don’t like our house-helps in the same elevator as us. We side with diplomats who underpay maids, because it’s the norm here. We usurp whatever we can. We extend our houses. We make personal gardens of public parks. We spread out our shops. We plunder, we purge. We take hafta, we give hafta. Black money runs in our veins. When we buy or sell houses, we carry sacks to stuff in the illegal moolah. When we sign MoUs, suitcases full of cash exchange hands. When we win contracts, we shower the babus with gold. We like our lucre filthy, our deals underhand, our capitalism crony. We have bloated ghamand. We are snooty, we are class-conscious, status-minded. When we meet someone new, our first question is ‘where do you live?’. Golf Links, Civil Lines, West End? We have never been to, or even heard of, Seelampur, Shakur Basti or Geeta Colony. We may be mouthing paeans to the aam aadmi now, but we abhor the small guy. We squash the underdog. We trample, we stomp. We let nine-year-old boys clean our cars, adolescent girls sell roses at crossings. We curse rickshaw-pullers, we think slums are gangrene, we run over our homeless. We like our poor meek, servile and scrawny. We are suspicious of anybody with dark skin or slanted eyes. We torment and taunt the outsider. We ridicule men who like men. We take tourists for rides. We want to cull stray dogs. Our city is frightening for single women. Our girls have to be home by eight. We kill our girls if they marry for love. We stalk our women, we ogle, we touch, we pinch, we molest, we eve-tease, we throw acid, we abuse. And as everyone knows by now, we rape our women savagely. We are not honest or austere. We are guttural, we are gluttonous. Our weddings, our addresses, our cars, our jewellery, our little titles are our identities. We want them all gargantuan, shiny and shrill. We gobble, we plunder, we maraud. We are dynastic. Nepotism is in our blood. We take favours, we do favours. We are pushy, we use pull. An Aggarwal (or Agrawal, or Agarwala) Sweets Corner owner—or if that caste is too touchy right now, a Bengal Sweet House—will want his son to take over after him. A motorcyclemaker will want his son to run the business after him. A Delhi Gymkhana or a Delhi Golf Club member will bequeath his membership to his son. A think-tanker will want his son to join the thinktank. We don’t care too much about our daughters. Our youth is not very brainy or talented. Most of them don’t want to crack any entrance test, they mostly want to crack the formula of an original to make duplicates. We make duplicates of everything, from immersible motor pumps to Imodium. We are the world’s capital for fakes. We don’t do start-ups, we are more smashups. We are unruly, uncouth and uncaring. We have Vishaal Bhagwati Jagrans in the middle of the road. A baraat is not a baraat if it doesn’t block traffic for hours. We throw heaps of plastic plates of leftover puri-halwa on the sidewalk. We hate sidewalks. We set up taxi stands, security guard cabins, dhabas, paan kiosks, barber shops on them. 4 We set up weekly haats on residential lanes. Our autorickshaws don’t want to go anywhere. Our taxis overcharge. We are louts, we are touts. We scramble for passes for everything, from classical concerts to Formula One races. We steal electricity, evade taxes, sell spurious goods. We don’t take receipts for our transactions. We like our leaders in palaces. We worship them. We don’t ask why our MPs must stay in sprawling bungalows. Our leaders like us to suck up. They like yesmen and we like to say yes. We bow in front of the mai-baaps. Our citizens don’t rebel, they loathe protests. Give us our maa ki daal, our butter chicken, a double peg and we are numb. Egypt strikes back Egypt seems to have set its foot deep into the Islamic State (IS) quicksand. Since Monday, the Egyptian military has been carrying out raids on IS camps and weapon storage areas in northeast Libya. These attacks were in response to the brutal beheading of 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians kidnapped by militants claiming allegiance to IS. The tragic fact, by now obvious, is that Egypt’s military strikes are only a very partial solution to a continuously expanding IS threat. To make matters worse, these air strikes on Libyan soil would be seen as an assault on Libya’s sovereignty. About seven civilians, including four children, have been killed in these air strikes, which have damaged several residential areas in the city of Derna. Having a relatively stable base in Syria and Iraq, IS is now gradually carving out its presence in Libya. Libya has been in a political vacuum since the 2011 uprising which led to the overthrow of Muammar Qadhafi. The revolution has since been undermined by political factions and rebels struggling for power. Egypt’s attack on Libyan soil will only add to the existing lawlessness of that state, giving IS a better opportunity to dig in and strengthen its presence there. Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has been leading an internal battle against political-religious groups, especially the Muslim Brotherhood, his largest opposition. But Mr. Sisi’s error lies in declaring the Brotherhood a terrorist group and equating it with more violent ones such as IS and al-Qaeda. His crackdown may even lead some local groups to pledge allegiance to the IS in order to resist Mr. Sisi. This is in fact a strategy that IS has been deploying to destabilise other states as well. Jordan, for instance, was similarly provoked recently into a military strike following hostage beheadings, magnified by IS’s use of carefully crafted visuals in the media. (Contd on page 23) COMMUNITY-TRISTATE-NEWS Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 5 FBI's most wanted cyber criminal arrested in Pakistan (Insider Bureau) Karachi : Pakistani officials on Saturday arrested two men wanted for cyber crimes by Interpol and the FBI for defrauding several companies and individuals of over $50 million. Mir Mazhar Jabbar, a senior official with Pakistan's Federal Investigation Agency, told AFP his team had arrested Noor Aziz and Farhan Arshad from the northern part Karachi, the country's largest city and commerical hub. "They were on the most wanted list of the FBI and we have successfully arrested them," Jabbar told Media. The FIA team also arrested three others who are all part of the same extended family, Jabbar said.The FBI on its website said that Arshad and Uddin were wanted for their alleged involvement in an international communication scheme and hacking venture that defrauded individuals, telecom companies and government entities in the United States and elsewhere in the world. They cost their targets more than $50 million.Arshad and Uddin gained access to business telephones systems and used the systems to place long distance telephone calls to premium rate numbers as part of a scheme known as international revenue share fraud, according to the US agency. "Arshad and Uddin are part of an international criminal ring that the FBI believes extends into Pakistan, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, Spain, Singapore, Italy, Malaysia and other locations," the FBI said in late 2013.The FBI -- which had the pair on their "cyber most wanted" list -- had also offered a reward of up to $50,000 each for information that led to their arrest. Ex-NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg to aid ‘smart cities’ project Indian-American businessman shot dead in US (Insider Bureau) New York : A 28-year-old IndianAmerican businessman, who was gunned down by an unidentified assailant in his family-owned liquor shop in the US, has succumbed to his injuries, police said today. Amit Patel from Edison was shot and killed in New Jersey inside Roseway Liquors in Irvington yesterday. Patel was alone in the liquor store, owned by his father, when the assailant shot at him at close range, police said. There was no damage to the store or indication of a robbery and only one shot was fired, they said. When police arrived at the store, they found Patel injured from a gunshot wound. He was later pronounced dead, acting Essex county prosecutor Carolyn A Murray and acting Irvington police director Musa Malik said in a statement .According to close family friends, Amit's father was in the back office when the shooting took place. "Somebody came in, shot him... fell down here," family friend Rakesh Patel said. "We don't know if it was a robbery, nobody knows. They were alone here," Bimal Patel, another family friend, was quoted as saying by nj.com. "He was a nice guy. I don't know what happened. Everybody's nervous," he said. The victim got married only a year ago. Authorities said they were looking into whether the shooting may have been the result of a robbery, but said it was too early in the investigation to be sure. The CCTV camera footage will be examined for any leads in the case, in which no arrests have been made so far. (Insider Bureau) New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi and former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg announced a partnership to take forward the NDA government's "Smart Cities" initiative. The partnership between the urban development ministry and Bloomberg Philanthropies shall look to promote economic growth, improve governance and deliver effective public services in urban areas. Sources said that a formal memorandum of understanding between UD ministry and Bloomberg Philanthropies would be signed in a month to take forward the partnership. A release issued by the Prime Minister's Office said Bloomberg Philanthropies "will provide assistance to the ministry of urban development to select cities for Smart Cities Mission funding on a continuous basis ... It will ensure that real citizen engagement happens, as people get involved both in design and execution of city development plans. This will actualize the idea of cooperative and competitive federalism." Following PM's direction, the urban development ministry is working on a scheme to encourage competition among cities to make it to the list of Smart Cities. Bloomberg Philanthropies is expected to help the ministry in se- lecting the cities. Earlier in the day, the former New York mayor met urban development minister M Venkaiah Naidu where he said that in the US, state and city governments are more pro-active than the federal government so far as development of cities is concerned. He said Americans are apolitical in the matter of urban development and expect quick results and delivery of services. A release issued by urban development ministry said that Bloomberg mentioned that global financial institutions are increasingly coming under pressure not to assist any development activity that does not adequately address environment and climate change concerns. Kerala girl a step away from ticket to Mars (Insider Bureau) Mumbai: Kerala girl Shradha Prasad's dream of settling down on Mars is inching towards reality, with the 19-year-old from Palakkad qualifying for the final round of selection for the "once-ina-lifetime opportunity". Her parents' only child, this mechanical engineering student is also the lone candidate based in India to be selected by Netherlandbased Mars-One for the fourth round of the astronaut selection process, the organization announced on Monday. Three other Indians have been selected, of which two are based in the US and one in Dubai. Speaking to TOI, Shradha, a student of Coimbatore's Amrita University said, "I am keen on settling down on Mars as I have a passion for space sciences and technology. This apart, I also enjoy taking risks and doing something adventurous. The one-way trip to Mars combines the two." Asked if she was confident of making it into the 24member crew that will be selected to go to Mars, she replied: "After my success in the third round, my confidence has strengthened. I came to know on February 13 that I had passed. I was ecstatic. But we were not allowed to disclose it. It will be tough leaving my family, friends and all my near and dear ones. Yes, I agree it will not be that easy. But, let me not forget that it will be an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity." Asked how her parents view the possibility of their only child permanently settling down on Mars, she said: "They think I am crazy. But, I am known for doing eccentric stuff. So, they are not surprised." Out of 202,586 applicants, 100 qualified for the third round. Of these, 24 will be chosen by MarsOne for the mission. Among the organization's advisors are two Indians — K R Sridhara Murthi, former head of Antrix Corporation, Isro's commercial arm, and aerospace expert Gautam Hariharan. Mars-One is a non-profit organization based in the Netherlands. It aims to establish a permanent human settlement on Mars by offering a one-way trip to those selected. The current plan envisages crews of four departing every two years beginning 2024. The first unmanned flight is slated for lift-off in 2018. According to MarsOne, 50 men and 50 women passed the second round. The candidates came from across the world — 39 from the Americas, 31 from Europe, 16 from Asia, seven from Africa and seven from Oceania. EDITORIAL Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 6 Waking up to a new 'usual' BJP's dangerous liaison in J&K A conversation, factual or embellished, with a taxi driver has been the oldest ploy in the journalist's book. Sometimes it sparks new ideas, sometimes it helps to substantiate your hypothesis, and occasionally it is a farcical ploy to put in an anonymous mouth a too-clever one-liner you'd rather not utter yourself, but say nevertheless. A conversation with a top fund manager in a hotel lift is a different proposition, and a new spin on the old taxi-driver wisdom. So, how far do you think AAP will reach? How will the BJP recover? Can the Congress survive? He asked as we climbed from the first floor to the third of the suburban Mumbai hotel where I had just dispensed an hour's gyan to a hallful of moneyed people like, and including, him. Then he answered it more succinctly than I had, and in the time taken from floor 3 to 10. "Modern politics has now become like the IT industry," he said. "Just as smart tech start-ups keep disrupting established giants, a political start-up has disrupted established, big parties. The big question now, do they understand this? And how will they respond?" Let's test this proposition in some detail. It is easy to see how AAP is a start-up. First of all, it literally is one. Most of our established parties, national and regional, are old, multi-generation brands such as the Congress, BJP, CPI(M), Akali Dal, Shiv Sena, DMK. Or they are derivatives, offshoots and splinters such as the AIADMK, the many baby Congresses, TRC, TMC, NCP. Or amorphous, opportunistic amalgams, rather khichdis, such as the old Janata Party and its own estranged offspring, the Biju Janata Dal, JD(U) and many Lok Dals. Come to think of it, our politics hasn't thrown up many start-ups. The last ones I can think of are the Asom Gana Parishad in 1985 and NTR's Telugu Desam in 1982. Both, by the way, were an instant, stunning success. Both have endured for three decades or more, though the one in Assam now seems to be fading away, its leaders and votes moving to the BJP. AAP is even more of a start-up than these. The closer parallel is the AGP, which also morphed from an honest young people's movement with wide, emotional support, imaginative agitational tactics and a largely sympathetic media. Covering the movement closely as a newspaper reporter in 1981-83, its years of high idealism, I was amazed and stirred by such commitment and integrity at a very young age. Of course, the party took no time to evolve into "normal" political behaviour, but that is another story. I was not surprised seeing Rajmohan Gandhi in studios talking about AAP with adulation. Similar idealism had attracted him to Assam as a student leader in the early 80s, which is when we first met as he visited me at my home in Shillong. The TDP is a little different; at least it had a big film star launch it. The Aam Aadmi Party has sharper features of a modern-day start-up. It has the kernel of a new thought so essential for a disruptive idea: changing the way a business is done. Compare, say, Flipkart or Snapdeal with Kishore Biyani's Future, Tata's Croma or Reliance Retail. It is mostly led by under-50s, which is Indian politics' equivalent of IT people in their 20s. And its real troopers are barely in their twenties. You want to see how much younger, full of attitude they are, replay the footage of the members of the BJP and AAP celebrating victory in 2014 and last week, respectively. One, the familiar old way, stuffing mithai in each other's mouths, loading the leaders with garlands and bursting crackers. The other erupting in flash mobs, some even live in TV studios, singing and dancing steps perfected over many a wedding baraat and sangeet. And see how young they look. AAP is not even the classical case of a set of people growing out of student politics into the big league. Its heft and lung power come from thousands of supporters still in college. Like a classical start-up, it also carries no baggage, respects no legacy and finds reputation contemptible. Yogendra Yadav answers the larger question of AAP's ideology with a brilliant turn of political phraseology: the problem is, people cannot fit us into one of the ideological boxes that evolved in the early 20th century. We are willing to learn from everything and choose what works best. Of course, you know the box in which he belongs, or Prashant Bhushan or his self-proclaimed opposite pole, Kumar Vishwas. But none of them represents the ideology of AAP. It is still a work in progress and probably the right product in post-ideological times when India is muscled forward by an ambitious, me-first, selfie generation. In a very vaguely defined manner (and I know the comparison would enrage genuine intellectuals), AAP is evolving like the Congress did in its early days, having the right, left, even libertarians under its umbrella in pursuit of a common idea, not ideology. You can even stretch that comparison to the dumping of Gandhi, though the children of Anna Hazare have done it rather more brutally. The Aam Aadmi Party is now looking more and more like a cult built around Arvind Kejriwal, borrowing whatever ideas will make their product sell. They have taken the self-pitying, povertarian, freebie-laden discourse from the Congress, soft Hindutva, including Bharat Mata and Vande Mataram, from the BJP, and patriotic Sunny Deol hyper with Bhagat Singh and Inquilab Zindabad from Anna. Most amusingly, a "deshbhakti" song often played at AAP rallies was "Dil Diya Hai Jaan Bhi Denge, Ai Watan Tere Liye" from the Dilip Kumar-starrer Karma. As per the "sources" of various news channels, the Sarsanghchalak of the RSS, Dr Mohan Bhagwat, has reportedly expressed his displeasure at the proposed concessions to be made by the BJP to join a likely coalition in Jammu and Kashmir led by the PDP. This is unusual, to put it mildly. The PDP is known to have driven a hard bargain with the BJP on the terms of sharing power. Concessions on sensitive issues like AFSPA that impinge on the national security and also the morale of the armed forces, are rumoured to be part of the deal. That the Centre should start talks with the Hurriyat separatists too has been insisted upon, and reportedly conceded. But what takes the cake is the insistence on recommencing stalled talks with Pakistan. Never mind if this amounts to interfering in the conduct of the nation's foreign policy which is, unexceptionally, the Centre's domain. The Centre seem to have found a way to avoid the embarrassment on this count too by initiating the Pakistan dialogue even before the formal announcement of the coalition, so as not to let it be seen as a part of a domestic political quid pro quo. There are other sticking points too, such as the lakhs of Hindu PoK-refugees languishing as "non-subjects" of Jammu and Kashmir for more than six decades. And that is not all. With this deal, the BJP may have given itself a convenient excuse to keep the repeal of Article 370 in abeyance. To be fair to the BJP, their prevarication on this began months before the Assembly polls. But the PDP, reportedly, wants to rub it in by seeking an assurance on it in writing. The BJP's demand for the CM's post to be shared between the PDP and the BJP by rotation, too, in all likelihood, stands rejected by the PDP. Yet, the BJP looks eager for the alliance. For the prime minister and the other BJP leaders, particularly the one who is a senior minister in the government and is known to call all the shots on matters pertaining to Jammu and Kashmir, to disregard the reported reservations of the Sarsanghchalak, may not be an easy decision to take. But, if they do go ahead with their plans for Jammu and Kashmir, with the reported compromises, it is likely to cause some eminently avoidable repercussions. Tongues will wag. The easiest to foresee is an uneasy speculation dominating the discourse within the Parivar, which could, potentially, undermine the ideological clarity and cohesion among its cadres. For a cadre-based Parivar which is nothing if not every bit ideological, such a scenario will have consequences. The first NDA government too went through a few ideological fractures with the Parivar. Besides a few unseemly public showdowns, it also led to some of the senior-most leaders of the Sangh organisations snapping all communication links with those who led the BJP in the government. Such were the ruptures caused by their compromises that they remain to be mended till date. Additionally, the very icon of BJP's spectacular rise through the '90s stands isolated and rendered irrelevant after he, almost irretrievably, alienated the RSS. (Contd on page 23) ISSN No. 1554 06X Chairman: Karam Singh Thind (Honorary) Editor in Chief: Sharanjit Singh Thind Editor: Aruna Singh :(Political Affairs-India) President : Bhupinder Kaur Thind Associate Editor: Bidisha Roy Director : Anupam Nagpal Editorial Intern: Max TV Partner: Ajay Batra (IVS TV) Special Correspondent : Web Coordinator : Jatinder Kumar Gagandeep Singh (INDIA) REGD & MAILING OFFICE : P.O Box 7005 Hicksville New York 11801 TelFax : 516 934 0962 Cell : 917 612 3158 editor@thesouthasianinsider.com, thesouthasianinsider@gmail.com www.thesouthasianinsider.com Disclaimer The South Asian Insider is a weekly newspaper published every week by The South Asian Insider. It's available in community & religious centers, ethnic grocery stores and also available by mail, email & online to subscribers. The opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by the various writers, authors and forum participants in The South Asian Insider do not necessarily reflect the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints of the Editor. All advertisers advertising in The South Asian Insider assume responsibility for accuracy of their advertisements. The South Asian Insider and/or people associated with it are not responsible for any claims made by the advertisers and don't endorse any product or services advertised in The South Asian Insider. We strongly urge consulting your lawyer before buying/contracting /hiring through the ads published in the newspaper. We are in the business of selling space and claims made by the advertisers are not authenticated or confirmed by an independent source OP-ED Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 7 Unless Congress fights back, it could cease to be the Grand Old Party in Punjab Things seem to be going from bad to worse for the Congress in Punjab. The factionalism between Captain Amarinder Singh and Punjab’s state party chief PS Bajwa shows no signs of abating. Organisers say that this has weakened the party organisation at the grassroots level. The more worrying thing for the Grand Old Party (GOP) is that the Gandhis seem to have lost control in the recent past. Things have gone from bad to worse and the AICC vice president Rahul Gandhi has been unable to stop the rot in Punjab. The result is a slow exodus from the Congress to other parties. The impression that one gets is that the Gandhis are either confused or not in control. Whether the reason, the party continues to lose election after election. First the Lok Sabha elections, then Assembly polls in Haryana and now the recent rout in New Delhi. The last is possibly the most worrying for the GOP as it has revealed a new option for the electorate – the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). If the Congress does not fight back, it could soon cease to matter in the grander scheme of things. The party has also failed to learn lessons from their rivals. The biggest similarity between the AAP and the BJP are their organisational capabilities. They have clear vision, motivated cadres and a clear message. What they are both against is “dynastic politics, sycophancy and corruption”. People are associating all these things with the Congress and thus it received zero seats in New Delhi. The Congress must also learn lessons about how to keep a party together. Both PM Modi and Amit Shah were able to arrest factionalism in various states and thus create a united BJP. Despite losing some trusted lieutenants, the AAP’s Arvind Kejriwal rose from the ashes within just a year and prepared new warriors and controlled them effectively. Both the BJP and the AAP have used novices and first timers to channelise its game plan and it has worked. The Congress thus is in the middle of a great crisis. After losing Delhi, the party may also lose Punjab, which will go for Assembly elections in 2017. This is despite the fact that Shiromani Akali Dal-BJP relations are strained, but infighting, lack of motivation and lack of a clear message for the electorate are hurting the GOP. So rather than preparing for 2017, Punjab Congress leaders – Amarinder and Bajwa have trained their guns at each other. Both the Amarinder and the Bajwa factions, are organising rallies not to attack the rival SADBJP, but in an attempt to impress the high command. A frustrated Rahul Gandhi has rebuked both of them but has had little impact so far. Things are no different in neighbouring Haryana. Despite a shameful drubbing in Assembly elections, the party refuses to learn its lessons. Recently leaders of rival factions – namely state unit chief Ashok Tanwar and Congress Legislature party leader Kiran Choudhry – skipped the lunch that was hosted by former chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda recently. It does not help that the Gandhis are allegedly divided in their support. Tanwar is supposed to be Rahul Gandhi’s choice while Kiran is believed to be close to Sonia Gandhi. Hooda hownever has “re-emerged” as the leader with his show of strength and signalled to his “detractors” within the party that he cannot be sidelined. For now, this oneupmanship among these top leaders is likely to continue till the party high command intervenes decisively. Things are no better in Himachal Pradesh where CM Virbhadra Singh is locking horns with state transport minister GS Bali. The rivalry between the duo, which has given the party high command many headaches in the past, is now much much serious now. The fact is that many Congress leaders seem to be taking their cue from the national capital. After the Congress’ poor show in Delhi, former Delhi CM Sheila Dikshit attacked Delhi’s Congress CM candidate Ajay Maken by saying she “pitied” him, and he should have been much more aggressive in the campaign. The remarks were supposedly in reaction to Maken’s remarks in January this year when he said in a reference to Dikshit. “Every person has an era of glory which also comes to an end.” Unless the Gandhis comes down hard on this infighting, the Congress’ is likely to become a spent force soon. MANJEET SEHGAL Did AAP get votes because of free wifi ? By Anukriti Singh On 10th December AAP won the Delhi Elections with a surprisingly big margin. Out of 70, AAP won 67 seats whereas BJP had 3 seats and Congress and others were at 0. Kejriwal has managed to make his impression on all the Delhites. When Kiran Bedi had the support of Narendra Modi, Arvind Kejriwal has the support of Delhi. But what made the youth of Delhi trust and campaign for Kejriwal so much? Kejriwal’s manifesto had some points that might have been attractive to the youth of Delhi. Some caught my eye too like, the electricity bills would be halved, Delhi will be made a solar city, Free 700 litres of water to every household having metered connection, 500 new schools, 20 new colleges, Free Wi-Fi throughout Delhi, Drug-free city, Fill 55,000 immediate vacancies in government departments, Special reservations have been made for all senior citizens and youth of the nation, To provide loans to young entrepreneurs at low interest rates and To enforce an education loan guarantee scheme. I don’t know and I can’t question about the possibility of these promises but they sure attracted me. If I can use whatsapp no matter where I am I’ll be happy, so is this the only reason Delhi has trusted the ex 49 days old CM? Well, Kejriwal being a common man who is fighting for justice and is trying to make Delhi a better, secular, technologically advanced, environment friendly place. This has attracted the public, because he can relate to everyone’s problems and everyone can relate to him. All the Aam Aadmi’s of Delhi voted for the Aam Aadmi party! Kiran Bedi's open letter to fellow Indians on the Delhi debacle I opted for electoral politics not for position or power but for serving the city which is my home for last over 40 years. A city which I have served in various capacities, through thick and thin. I saw it through various challenges, international sports events, VIP security, political upheavals, communal riots, agitations, and more ... On crime front I saw it through when Delhi was hit by terror from outside. I spent years to catch a wink with boots on and with wireless blaring to get on the street any moment. I did crime prevention saving women from being raped in rural areas on dark nights by erstwhile criminal tribes with literally no cops on roles ... by involving village young men to patrol at night. While I was personally out 5 nights a week. Conducted traffic management for Asian Games with hundreds of students doing traffic duties, when my senior wanted to send me to Japan on a course, just to edge me out. Traffic was revenue for some. Another time when a district was ridden with bootlegging I managed to dry them out and rehabilitate them to honourable living ... or rag picking children sent to schools, now become community colleges and many of the same children become teachers ... or opened drug abuse treatment centres from police stations never heard of... All this became a life long mission and will remain ... I did it all not for any glory, I did it because the service and situations demanded it ... I stepped into electoral politics because I wanted to give my city all I still had, when i was given the feeling that I could be of value. I wanted to see it get a stable government in alignment with government of India to get all that Delhi needed. I also wanted to not die one day with a guilt that I was commenting only and never daring to pass the ultimate test of electoral politics. I have failed the test. And take full responsibility for my decision. But inside me has not failed. Because given the time I gave to myself I gave it all the energy and experience I had. Obviously it was not enough. In such trying situations one does not meet the challenge alone. There are several factors which play a vital role. And each one did. I wish to add nothing more. History will keep analyzing till cows come home. And as I read them, each one of them makes sense. And worth being reflected upon. The wise will read each one, and take due notice ... On the election trail I wish to say, we need to rework the way we campaign. Whole city or state comes to a grinding halt. Should it? Roads are in disarray, and work just stops. Everything is too loud, uncouth at times, insulting to thin skinned, false, insinuating, biased, revengeful, corrupt, wasteful, highly disruptive of common man's needs, breaking all laws, and sending all wrong messages. It's not a level playing field for the levelheaded serving people. It's a field for might and muscle in all respects. We need to address these. Hope to see it in my life time. People need services to be delivered. They want integrity, trustworthiness, and professional commitment. But they also want an implementable vision and plans. But they also want freebies ... more you give, more you get. They do not get it still, that there are no free lunches in life. If you rob Peter to pay Paul, it won't be long before all get robbed. Also all campaigning must be become lawful, transparent, facts and evidence based, civil, organized, more technology driven, reasonable, unbiased, neutral through different mediums, etc. Space could be allocated through neutral umpires appointed by the Election Commission as per laid down rules based debates and also grass root work done, and let candidates be chosen on the basis of performance or implementable ideas. Which means widespread use of television reaching out to the last mile... Public 'appeals' through use of congregations must be not be allowed and considered a violation of laws. Hence must be banned. NATIONAL-COMMUNITY NEWS Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 8 (Insider Bureau) The Income Tax department is likely to file a complaint against HSBC Bank, Geneva for allegedly abetting" tax evasion by unauthorisedly operating accounts of Indian citizens in its overseas branches. Sources said the complaint against the global banking giant is expected to be filed under Section 278 of the I-T Act (abetment of false return) before March 31 as these accounts pertain to the time period of 2006-07 and would get "time barred" after that date. The department, a senior I-T officer said, has taken upon itself to file these cases after informing the Special Investigation Team (SIT) on black money, which is understood to have given its go ahead. The taxman, sources said, has worked on at least four cases figuring in the purported 'HSBC lists' it got from France a few years back and gathered evidence against the bank to say that it "wilfully abetted" tax evasion in India by HSBC Bank under Inocme Tax radar for abetting tax evasions not disclosing client information and layering it to avoid law enforcement agencies, thus leading to violation of I-T laws and evasion of huge amounts in taxes. "The evidence has been vetted at the senior-most level in the department and the CBDT. The prosecution complaint against the bank would seek punishment under tax laws," the sources said. When approached by PTI, HSBC, however, declined to comment. In the four cases, the I-T probe has recorded statements of the bank account holders who said they were "aided and helped" by the bank in not disclosing their cash movements and balances. These clients have also submitted some email communications exchanged in this regard. The probe in the HSBC-Geneva cases, with names of 628 entities, gathered momentum recently as a number of cases under this category are getting timebarred by the end of this financial year, meaning they cannot be acted against after the said time period. The SIT has also widened its probe into these cases after revelations in this regard were made recently by ICIJ -- a global collective of journalists. Details of more than 1,00,000 account holders around the world, including over 1,000 from India, were claimed to have been disclosed through a joint investigation by ICIJ. The entire HSBC list features names of 1,668 Indians while the number of actionable cases stands at 1,195 after taking into account duplication and other factors. Collectively, these accounts had a balance of USD 4.1 billion (Rs.25,420 crore) till 2007. In the list published recently, there are 2,699 accounts linked to 1,688 Indians. Of these, 1,403 accounts were opened between 1969 and 2006 while the maximum amount of money associated with a client connected to India was USD 876.3 million. Earlier, India had received from France a list of over 628 Indians with accounts in HSBC's Geneva branch in Switzerland. That list was also part of the larger 'HSBC list', which a former bank employee had "secreted away" and handed to the French government. Miscreants paint hate message on temple’s wall in US (Agencies) WASHINGTON: A Hindu temple has been vandalized with hate message in the US state of Washington, sending shock waves through the community in the area and prompting authorities to launch an investigation. The incident happened when unidentified miscreants sprayed swastika and painted “Get Out” on one of the walls of the temple in the Seattle Metropolitan area. It is one of the largest Hindu temples in the entire North West. The Snohomish county sheriff’s department is investigating this case as malicious harassment. Yesterday top county officials visited the temple. “This kind of thing should not happen in the US. Who are you telling to get out? This is a nation of immigrants,” Nitya Niranjan, chairman of board of trustee of the Hindu Temple and Cultural Centre, Bothell, Washington told Media. Today the temple is celebrating Mahashivratri. Niranjan said some kind of painting was sprayed on the outside wall of the temple a few years ago, but they did not bring it to the notice of the law enforcement authorities as nothing was written. “We have no idea, who did it,” Niranjan said. While the temple has been there for nearly two decades, the construction on the second phase of the current building began recently. The Hindu American Foundation (HAF) condemned the incident. “The timing of this crime, occurring before a major Hindu festival, warrants special attention from law enforce- ment,” said Jay Kansara, director of government relations, Hindu American Foundation. “We are encouraged by the ongoing thorough investigation of the Bothell city police department. HAF will continue to engage through the local community with city, state, and federal officials until the perpetrator is brought to justice,” Kansara said. Of late there has been increasing incidents of vandalism of Hindu temples in the US including one in Loudoun County, Virginia and Monroe, Georgia last year. As of January 1, 2015, the department of justice ordered all crime reporting forms to include the category anti-Hindu under the possible motives of hate crimes. “Houses of worship are places where people should be able to be safe, at peace, and inspired to serve others,” said Padma Kuppa, HAF board member. “Instead, the vandalism of the Hindu temple in Seattle and the arson of a mosque in Houston this past weekend incite fear and result in distrust among communities,” he said. Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 (Agencies) THE swords are out for Prime Minister Narendra Modi after the BJP's disastrous showing in Delhi. Critics describe the verdict as a indictment of the PM's nine-month stint in office. From his '`10 lakh-suit' to 'love jehad' to Church vandalism, pundits have attributed many acts of omission and commission to the 67-3 score line against the ruling party. While experts are entitled to their opinion, let us take a look at the only empirical data available that sheds light on what the voters of the Capital actually think of the Centre. According to the CSDS post-poll data for the Delhi elections, two-thirds of the respondents said they were satisfied with Modi as prime minister. If the mandate was a referendum on the Modi government’s performance, then a massive 66 per cent of the respondents would not have said they approved of PM Modi’s work. Only 30 per cent were dissatisfied with the PM’s efforts. Even among the poorest voters, there was high level of support for Modi. Centre’s popularity CSDS polled 2,060 respondents across 120 locations in 24 Assembly constituencies of Delhi. It's not just the PM who scored on the popularity charts, even the central government got a thumbs up with 60 per cent respondents saying they were satisfied with the performance of the central government. People seem to be more patient than the pundits, who have been quick to describe Modi's government as a failure. So if it wasn't the PM's performance, what worked against the BJP? The data shows, contrary to common perception, that voters had a high opinion of Arvind Kejriwal's 49-day stint in power. A whopping 72 per cent expressed satisfaction with the aborted AAP government. Amongst poor voters, Kejriwal had an even stronger approval with almost 80 per cent of respondents approving his government. Even amongst middleclass and rich voters, 68 per cent said they had a high opinion of the 49-day AAP government. Only 24 per cent said they were dissatisfied. Kiran Bedi’s entry into the BJP made things worse for the party. 63 per cent of respondents disapproved of the decision. NATIONAL-COMMUNITY NEWS 9 WORLD Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 10 Now Fox News host Bill O'Reilly is forced to deny accusations that he 'pulled a Brian Williams' and exaggerated his war stories (Media Reports)One week after Brian Williams was unceremoniously kicked off the air by NBC for lying about his time in Iraq, combative Fox New host Bill O’Reilly is facing allegations he lied about his own wartime experiences. According to left-leaning magazine Mother Jones, 65year-old O’Reilly exaggerated his coverage of the Falklands War and the civil war in El Salvador in the 1980s. The article trawls through decades-old interviews in which O’Reilly said he had reported from ‘active war zones’, including the Falklands conflict - even though no American journalist was witness to the fighting during the 10-week war between the UK and Argentina. The magazine also claims that O’Reilly elaborated on the destruction he saw in one El Salvadoran town he visited during that fighting there in the early 80s. While NBC at first tried to downplay Williams’ false report, O’Reilly took the opposite stance Thursday, viciously defending his reporting in an interview with Daily Mail Online, in which he called the Mother Jones article a ‘hit piece’ written by a reporter with a grudge. ‘The report is a politically motivated smear job by a guy who has a long history of doing this. All you have to do is Google David Corn, Fox News, Bill O’Reilly to see that he does this on a regular basis,’ O’Reilly said. ‘He does this because he’s a far-left zealot, he doesn’t like the operation, so he sees an opportunity to try to tie me to Brian Williams and he takes it.’ It’s a ‘totally dishonest piece,’ according to O’Reilly, who adds: ‘Everything I’ve ever said about my reportorial career is accurate. I have never mislead anyone or said anything that is untrue.’ Corn says he gave O’Reilly and his network nine hours to comment on the story, and says their refusal to talk speaks for itself. ‘To me, the issue here is whether a media figure and journalist like Bill O’Reilly, who claims to be a truth teller, can get away without answering questions about specific statements he’s made, and hide behind name calling,’ Corn told On Media on Thursday. ‘I would encourage anyone else who covers this story to get Bill O’Reilly to answer those quesitons - if not to me, than to anyone else.’ The Mother Jones report centers mainly on O'Reilly's time covering the Falklands War in 1982, when the then 32-year-old reporter was working for CBS. O'Reilly arrived in Buenos Aires just before the country surrendered to British troops leaving the small chain 1,200 miles south of the Argentinian capital under the control of the United Kingdom. O'Reilly's wording in several interviews seems to be most at issue. While O'Reilly visited war zones, he includes the Falklands in these general statements making it seem as if he actually claims to have seen action between British and Argentinian troops. 'You know that I am not easily shocked. I've reported on the ground in active war zones from El Salvador to the Falklands.' he said in his 2001 book The No Spin Zone. However, during the Falklands War, no American journalists were approved to visit the chain during conflict, something CBS' lead reporter for the conflict, Bob Schieffer, and producor Susan Zirinsky, confirmed to Mother Jones. They say the CBS team worked out the Buenos Aires bureau, and were put up in a Sheraton HOTEL more than a thousand miles away from the fighting. India-National News Analysis Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 11 Lead Us To The Tap (Media Reports) Dear Modiji, began Arvind Kejriwal’s letter dated June 11, 2014. After congratulating Narendra Modi on his Lok Sabha victory, Kejriwal got straight to the point. “Delhi is reeling under massive power cuts,” wrote Kejriwal, reminding the prime minister of the time he himself was the chief minister of Delhi. “The discoms had attempted to blackmail the government, but when they were told in clear terms that deliberate power cuts would lead to cancellation of their licences, it led to immediate improvement in their work and behaviour. You are therefore requested to strictly enforce the accountability of these discoms, so that the people of Delhi are provided with immediate relief,” he wrote. June is a mere three months away. It is also the time when Delhi sweats under the summer heat, punctuated by the long power cuts. Last year, the month of June saw a record demand for power at 5,643 MW— the highest in all the four metros setting a record of sorts in consumption. With his tantalising promise of free power and water, the question everyone is asking is this: how will the newly elected government backed by an absolute mandate provide real power to the people—power that is continuous, power that comes sans high costs. At Patel Nagar, amidst the ecstatic crowds gathered to acknowledge the two-year-old party’s historic win, a former Congress block committee pre-s-ident says, “Jo bhi hua achcha hi hua (Whatever happened is for the good). Now we have to watch and see how AAP keeps its promises.” He reminds us that the promise of “free” bijli and paani received the loudest cheers at every AAP rally of Kejriwal.he prospect of free power and water has its takers but is it practical? Says a former official at the Delhi Regulatory Electricity Commission, “Subsidy has been sweetened for the last 12 years to those who consume between 0-400 units of power. In that sense, AAP’s promise is nothing new. It becomes a part of the manifesto of political parties. The question is power is bought from public sector companies whose rates are fixed by the government at the Centre and these cannot be manipulated.” But it is the manipulation of expenses incurred that AAP seeks to question when the party presses for an audit of the companies. The PSUs involved in fuel supply, the party says, have made windfall gains. Both public and private power sector power producers show excessive coal/ fuel consumption, resu-lting in unreasonably high tariffs for the consumer, says AAP. Both BSES, a subsidiary of the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group (ADAG), and Tata Power Delhi Distribution, which supply power to the entire capital, emp-hasise that there is no standard basis for the charge of high tariffs as it is influenced by the high cost of power procured for supply in the capital. On the issue of audit, both entities clarify that the CAG audit of discoms has been in progress since January 2014 and “we continue to provide the audit teams our fullest support and cooperation”. BSES states that it has even given the government auditors access to “our billing and consumer database. Relevant documents in excess of over one lakh pages have already been submitted”. In its 49 days in power in 2013-14, the AAP government had reduced electricity rates by half for households consuming up to 400 units a month. The state picked up a bill of Rs 200 crore as a result of this subsidy, of which Rs 139 crore was billed to the power companies. But the situation has changed now. Delhi has added nearly six lakh people since then, as they keep pouring into the capital in search of livelihoods. The cost of power continues to be high though the cost of fuel and coal has gone down internationally. If the government keeps its promise, the quantum of sub- sidy will see a rise. Rajiv Kakria, a member of the upscale Gre-ater Kailash Residents Wel-fare Asso-ci-ation, says the AAP government will not need to provide subsidies to help ease people’s burden of high bills if it fixes the meters. “Fixing the fast-running meters will itself bring 25 per cent relief,” he says. The AAP’s proposal does envisage a subsidy to the stateowned power tra-nsmission company Transco-—to whom private discoms owe Rs 3,500 crore as dues. While AAP’s hopes rest on discoms paying up, the matter is under dispute before the courts. AAP’s plan states that discoms should purchase power from economical sources and get out of unsustainable power purchase agreements as a first step. The longer-term plan includes Delhi’s own power station to meet peak power consumption of 6,200 MW. And lastly, AAP proposes to introduce competitive distribution leading to lower tariffs.Each of these proposals comes with their NRI offers Rs. 1.11 crore for Modi's Bandhgala suit (Media Reports) The controversial pinstriped suit has attracted massive offers from businessmen at an auction in Surat, where items gifted to the Prime Minister have gone under the hammer to raise funds for the Clean Ganga Mission. A whopping Rs 1.11 crore bid was made by a Gujrati NRI in an auction on Wednesday for the controversial pinstripe monogrammed bandhgala suit which Prime Minister Narendra Modi wore during United States President Barack Obama’s visit to India last month. Viral Chowksi, the NRI made the offer at the three-day auction which commenced on Wednesday. Another businessman Suresh Aggarwal made an offer of Rs. 1 crore for the suit. “I have offered Rs. 1 crore. This is work of charity and when the Prime Minister is doing for a great cause like the cleaning of the Ganga, I decided to go ahead and buy the suit,” he said. Another Raju Aggarwal offered Rs. 51 lakh for the suit, saying it was for a noble cause. The suit that created waves and kicked up a political storm will be auctioned along with 455 items that Mr. Modi had received as gifts during his nearly nine-month long tenure to generate funds for the Prime Minister’s ambitious ‘Clean Ganga RPT Ganga Mission’.“Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s suit, that he wore during his meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama last month, along with other 455 items that he received as gifts during his tenure as Prime Minister will be auctioned at a threeday event in Surat,” Surat Municipal Commissioner Milind Toravane told Media. The gift items belonging to Prime Minister Modi is a national treasure and the money generated from the auction will be utilised for the ‘Clean Ganga Mission’, he added. The event was organised at SMC’s Science Convention Centre at citylights road in Surat as the Prime Minister’s Office(PMO) had decided to hold the auction event in the city. Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 (Media Reports) In Calcutta, a beaming Mamata Banerjee was distributing chocolates as results came in from Delhi. In the national capital, an equally exultant AAP leader and Supreme Court lawyer, H.S. Phoolka, was tweeting, “Dilli hamaari hai, ab Punjab ki baari hai (Delhi is ours, Punjab’s next).” In Bihar, JD(U)’s Nitish Kumar got back his voice as he mocked at the bjp’s dis-comfi-ture. The saffron party would bite the dust in Bihar too (where assembly polls are due later this year), he hoped. In Cha-ndigarh, however, Punjab chief min-ister Parkash Singh Badal and his deputy, son Sukhbir Singh Badal, were dismissive. The AAP landslide, they felt, was confined to the national capital and would have little or no impact in Punjab. Bihar (2015), West Bengal (’16) and Punjab (’17) are sch-edu-led to elect new assemblies in the next three years (along with Assam, Kerala, UP and Tamil Nadu among others). But with AAP drawing a big support from Poorvanchalis (peo-ple from Bihar and eastern UP) in the capital and with all its four MPs in the Lok Sabha elected from Punjab, it can reasonably hope to do well in these states. Time may be a constraint in Bihar with an early election before the scheduled time of OctoberNove-m-ber appearing likely. But even a last-minute foray could affect the recently acco-mp-lished consolidation of anti-BJP elements. But in the other two states, the political situation appears ripe for a new party with a fresh outlook. But then hasn’t AAP learnt lessons from 2014? Stretching itself too thin, it conte-s-ted 470-odd seats for the Lok Sabha. As many as 468 of its candidates ended up forfeiting their security deposit. Chast-ened, the party decided not to con-test the Haryana ass-embly polls later in the year although Kejriwal himself, as well as AAP stalwarts Manish Sisodia and Yogendra Yadav, hail from the state. Will the Delhi landslide again lead to a plan change? While AAP is the elephant in the room, there is no unanimity on its potential. The dominant view is that it can’t in any way replicate its success beyond Delhi, or at best that the idea of AAP can work only in metropolitan cities and smaller urban conglomerations. Of course, the-re’s also a minority view that AAP is an idea whose time has come; that it’s only a matter of time before it spreads like wildfire and engulfs the country. Much will clearly depend on how the AAP government fares in Delhi. Its ability to live up to its own ideals, deliver on its pro-mises and keep both idealism and optimism alive will decide if the party can make inroads into the hin-terland. That said, the three most fertile India-National News Analysis grounds for it to leave its footprints are the ones mentioned above: Bihar, Punjab and Bengal. Will Bihar embrace AAP?: While AAP is reminiscent of the JP movement in the mid-’70s when Jayapr-akash Narayan called upon students to give up their studies for a year and help usher in ‘Total Revolution’, the state since then has witnessed a surge of identity politics along caste lines. Also, Bihar may rank at the bottom on socio-economic indices but such is the love for politics here that it’s pro-du-ced a disproportionately large number of dailies and TV news channels. With no mainstream party being a paragon of virtue in public life, a new outfit challenging the established order may appeal to the people. The related fear is about a split in the secular vote, helping the BJP.An advantage for AAP is the support it already enjoys in the capital among students, teachers and youth from Bihar. Both Delhi University and Jawaharlal Nehru Unive-rsity (JNU) have large numbers from the state and it came as no surprise to find the Facebook page of AAP’s Bihar unit had a photograph of its ‘Bihar volunteers’ at JNU. What is not clear is how it will impact the established parties if AAP does decide to put up candidates. Would it be satisfied with testing the waters by fielding a handful of candidates or will it go the whole hog, contest all 244 seats?With Jitan 12 Ram Manjhi playing the ‘Mah-adalit card’ and expected widely to join hands with Ram Vilas Paswan if he fails to prove his majority, new social and political equations are forming rapidly in the state. Neither the JD(U)-CongressRJD-Left combine nor the NDA will be comfortable with AAP muddying the situation furt-her. On the other hand, AAP supporters will be hoping the party makes a splash in the volatile state.Challenge for SAD: A political joke doing the rounds in Punjab for the past decade or so has the two top leaders of SAD and Congress in a boat that sinks. The question was who, if any, should be the survivor. The answer was none, that it would be Punjab which would be saved. India-National News Analysis Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 13 RSS says Kiran Bedi was a mistake, roasts BJP brass for Delhi loss (Media Reports) New Delhi: What BJP has been shying away from saying publicly, RSS has said in its mouthpiece 'Panchjanya'. In its latest issue, the fortnightly has raised questions on the choice of Kiran Bedi as the chief ministerial candidate for Delhi even as it pointed out how ignoring party workers may have cost BJP in the polls. In its two-part cover story titled 'Akankshaon ki Udaan' (flight of aspirations) and 'Vaade, Sawaal, Kejriwal' (promises, questions, Kejriwal), the RSS mouthpiece says, "The question is why did BJP lose? Was the decision to make Kiran Bedi CM candidate correct? Would the results have been different had Harsh Vardhan or any other BJP member from the state been chosen as CM candidate?" The piece written by Manoj Varma also asks if BJP failed to take to the masses the achievements of the Narendra Modi government and if the party was too dependent on the Modi wave. Hinting again at how Bedi's candidature worked against the party, the piece says, "Or did BJP lose because of lack of unity in the organization, planning and most importantly respect for the sentiments of the workers?" Another piece written by Hitesh Shankar raises questions on the BJP leadership itself. It says, "BJP office-bearers will have to answer if they have any capital other than Sangh's ideological strength and commitment of party workers. If some people in the organization and the government thought that the party is some kind of machine than can gallop at their whim, these results have broken that illusion. It is with the party workers' dedication and commitment to the nationalist ideology that BJP has been able to retain its vote share." It has also questioned the approach taken by BJP office-bearers towards projection of certain members. "Were BJP functionaries overconfident of their extreme acceptability among public? Or did some push for individual acceptability among people a little too much," said the piece.While BJP members in pri- vate have admitted to many of the "mistakes" hinted at in 'Panchjanya', the party has officially maintained that the responsibility of losing the elections is collective and that it is still analyzing the loss. However, several BJP leaders express similar concerns. "The very fact that we lost our safest seat in Krishna Nagar (Kiran Bedi's constituency) shows that not only BJP office-bearers but even workers have not supported the party in the polls. Selection of Bedi sent a message that we had a leadership crisis. Workers didn't like this," a BJP leader told Media. MP Congress attacks CM Shivraj Sunanda Case: Tharoor Lashes Out at Singh Chouhan on recruitment scam Media, Alleges 'Concocted' Stories (Agencies) Top Madhya Pradesh Congress leaders Monday accused the Special Task Force (STF) probing the Recruitment Scam of "tampering" with evidence to be submitted to court by removing Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan's name at several places in an excel sheet as one who had recommended jobs for contractual teachers. Accompanied by Congress leaders Kamal Nath and Jyotiraditya Scindia and senior Supreme Court advocate KTS Tulsi, former Chief Minister Digvijay Singh told a press conference in Bhopal that he has filed a statement under oath before the High Court appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT) that words 'CM' occurred at 48 places.This was changed to just 'minister' at 21 places, then 'Uma Bharati' at 18 places and 'Ms' at one place. In 18 places, it has been altered to be left blank, Congress leaders alleged.Rejecting their accusations, Madhya Pradesh Health and Family Welfare minister and government spokesperson Narottam Mishra said the allegations were "baseless and without any substance"."The allegations levelled by them are imaginary, baseless and without any substance. We have full faith in the SIT, STF, High Court and the Supreme Court. (Agencies) Former Union minister Shashi Tharoor today vent his anger at the media, alleging that "concocted" stories and "lies" about him were being put out in connection with the investigation into his wife Sunanda Pushkar's mysterious death. "Revolted by the lies in the media about me, esp on Kerala channels. Stories are concocted &attributed to police sources without any basis," the Congress MP from Thiruvananthapuram said in a series of tweets."Our country needs better &more honest journalism. Not 1 that will broadcast or publish any lie so long as it will titillate &increase TRPs," he said. "What a sad state we have reduced our press freedom to!," he said in another tweet which showed a picture of a placard which read "Caution: the media is NOT a reflection of reality". There were reports that the New Delhi police had warned Tharoor for not giving appropriate answers to the several questions asked by the special investigation team. "If there is such an issue, they would have informed me first rather than going to media. All such reports are totally baseless as I am fully cooperating with the investigation," Tharoor had said earlier insisting that he was fully cooperating in the probe. Tharoor had reportedly reached Thiruvananthapuram on Friday for a five-day programme in his home constituency after taking special permission from the SIT for travelling outside New Delhi. The police had informed that he should not go outside Delhi without permission. Tharoor said in his tweets, "I had my first taste of it during the mediamanufactured controversies around my every word or tweet in 2009-10. In the UPA era. "There is no better cure for any illusions about our media than reading or viewing a story u actually know something about!" INDIA Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 14 Spare judiciary from corrupt practices: Supreme Court NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday sent out a loud warning to the high and mighty, including politicians, not to try to change the course of judicial proceedings with corrupt practices and said any such attempt would be dealt with an iron hand. "Please keep corrupt practices away from judiciary. At least this institution should be spared," a bench of Justices T S Thakur and Rohinton F Nariman said while hearing a petition by mining baron Gali Janardhan Reddy, who is accused of paying a bribe of Rs 10 crore to a trial judge for getting bail. Reddy approached the court seeking that two cases filed against him — one for illegal mining and another for bribery — be heard together as the facts and evidence of the cases arose from the same offence. Expressing concern over attempts to bribe judges, the bench said, "People are having so much money that they are now bribing j u d g e s . W h e n money comes in abundance, then people don't know what to do with the money. They try to subvert the entire system and judicial process. Anyone who plays with the court system must be dealt with heavily. This virus has to be eliminated." It added that people who adopted corrupt practices like bribing a judicial officer were actually attempting 'Corporate espionage' in oil ministry Delhi police arrest former journalist Santanu Saikia NEW DELHI: Delhi Police crime branch has arrested former journalist Santnu Saikia and another energy consultant Prayas Jain on early Friday. Media has first reported about Jain being questioned on Friday. Jain runs an oil and gas firm based in New Delhi and Melbourne. Saikia runs an energy portal named indianpetro.com. Saikia and Jain have been accused of buying the leaked documents, analysing them and selling them off to business houses, police say. The number of arrests has shot up to 7 including 4 multitasking officers of the petrolium ministry. The arrested men will be produced in court around 2pm Friday. More arrests are likely. The RIL and Essar staff are still being quizzed. The cops have raided their offices along with that of two others like Cairn energy and recovered several documents and hard drives. The Delhi Police has now formed a SIT to investigate the ongoing case of corporate espionage. It comprises addl CP Ashok Chand, DCP Bhisham Singh, ACP KPS Malhotra, Inspectors Kulbir Singh, PC Yadav, Arvind and SI Ritesh among others. Joint CP (crime) Ravindra Yadav said that they had received information that two persons alongwith their associates wee involved in procuring/obtaining/stealing the official documents by trespassing into the offices of Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MoPNG) at Shastri Bhawan, New Delhi.After this, a trap was laid and three persons were spotted coming in an Indigo car to Shastri Bhawan. "Two persons alighted and went inside while the third remained sitting in the car. After around two hours, when the two persons entered the car, all three persons were apprehended," he added. "They were identified as Lalta Prasad (36) from Khichdipur, Delhi, Rakesh Kumar (30) from Nairoji Nagar and Raj Kumar Chaubey (39 ) from Va i s h a l i , G h a z i a b a d . O ff i c i a l documents were recovered along with duplicate keys used by them for accessing the offices of the MoPNG officials, forged Id-card and fraudulently obtained temporary passes were also recovered. The indigo car was having an unauthorized signage declaring the car to be of Bharat Sarkar/ Government of India," Addl CP Ashok Chand said. to hijack the system. The bench asked the counsel appearing for Reddy how much money was allegedly paid to the judge. The lawyer tried to skirt the question but the bench insisted on knowing the amount. "Don't feel embarrassed to tell the amount," the bench said. The counsel said the allegation against his client was that he paid Rs 10 crore. Reddy submitted that the two cases against him were related and should be tried together. He said his defence would be exposed if the cases were not clubbed together. "What defence can a person have for bribing a judge," the bench asked. The CBI has alleged that trial judge T Pattabhirama Rao granted bail to Reddy after the mining baron agreed to pay Rs 10 crore. The judge was later suspended by the Andhra Pradesh High Court and the CBI filed an FIR against him, his son and five others including Reddy. Dhoni behind Yuvraj's exclusion from World Cup: Father Yograj Singh Yuvraj Singh's father Yograj Singh held Indian captain MS Dhoni behind the non-selection of his son for the 2015 World Cup, which started on February 14 and continue till March 29. Before the squad was picked for the World Cup, Yuvraj was a likely candidate to find a place in the squad. But the selectors ignored him despite a good performance in the Ranji Trophy for Punjab. According to his father, Yuvraj was pushed away from the list on the insistence of skipper Dhoni who doesn't share a good personal relationship with the dashing lefthanded batsman. "If MS Dhoni is having personal issues with my son, I won't do anything, God will do justice. Pray India wins World Cup under your captaincy (MS Dhoni) but nothing can be more sad that you behaved this way," Yograj said. However, on Monday, Yuvraj got a best deal in the IPL 8 auction after he was bought by Delhi Daredevils at a whooping Rs.16 crore. Narendra Modi's yoga therapist who could rid Arvind Kejriwal of his chronic cough BENGALURU: He rises much before the sun. His day begins at 1.30 am and an hour later, he plunges into his regular twoand-a-half-hour yoga session. Meet Dr H R Nagendra, who could soon be treating Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal if the latter goes according to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s prescription. Watching Kejriwal battling persistent cough at a programme in Delhi on Tuesday, Modi had suggested that he consult the yoga therapist. “Allergic cough and diabetes are ailing Kejriwal,” said Dr HR Nagendra, who is known for having treated over 2 lakh asthma patients — from threemonth-olds to nonagenarians — with yoga and ayurveda. Kejriwal, though, is yet to approach Nagendra. The 72-year-old yoga therapist’s association with Modi began 10 years ago when the BJP leader came to meet Nagendra’s uncle H V Sheshadri, an RSS leader, in Karnataka. The acquaintance has only grown since. “Every year, I travel to Gujarat to teach yoga to cabinet ministers, including chief minister Anandiben Patel,” he told Media. Nagendra, who is co-founder of Swamy Vivekananda Yoga Anusandhana Samsthana (S-VYASA), believes that specialised yoga and lifestyle modifications are the key to health solutions. “We have taught yoga to kids with special needs. We’ve even had monks from Ramakrishna Ashram and nuns from Christian missionaries approach us,” he said. “In a polluted city like Bengaluru, asthma cases are on the rise. We had conducted a study on how yoga helped asthma patients, which was published in the Journal of Asthma, US. We formed three separate groups of those who practised yoga regularly, those who weren’t so regular and those who had learnt it but were not doing asanas. The study revealed that even the third category of people had benefited,” recalled Nagendra. Nagendra is a qualified mechanical engineer who has a PhD from IISc. He’s had a stint with NASA as a space scientist and also served Harvard University as consultant.Many premier institutions, including Nimhans, consult him. "He has been guiding the yoga centre in Nimhans for more than 15 years. We have signed an MoU with S-VYASA and will continue to do collaborative research. He has an objective approach towards yogic science. He's been working on taking yoga beyond faith, as youngsters look for scientific validation," said Dr B N Gangadhar, professor of psychiatry and programme director of advanced centre for yoga at Nimhans. Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 TRISTATE-COMMUNITYNEWS 15 India Association (IALI) offers Thanks Prayer (Shukrana) (By a Staff Reporter) Hicksville- Satnam Singh Parhar, President along with his team of India Association of Long Island (IALI) recently hosted and organized IALI Home Shukrana Kirtan at the Guru Nanak Darbar Gurdwara, Hicksville. Shukrana Kirtan celebration was well attended and among them were 10 IALI Past Presidents , IALI Executive council, IALI members and invited guests. The program started with kirtan in praise and to thank the Waheguru (God almighty) for making the IALI Home dream come true, that was organization's dream for the last 37years. The kirtan was followed by Katha Wachak (Preacher) congratulating Satnam Singh Parhar, saying that this was a good thing for the community. He also said he was very happy that this celebration was held at the Gurudwara instead of some restaurant or Hotel and thanked all the families for participating in this celebration. A Citation from the To w n o f H e m ps t e a d w a s presented b y To w n C l e r k Nasrin Ahmad to Satnam S i n g h P a r h a r. Nasrin Ahmed said it was a matter of pride that IALI was able to make IALI Home for the community. As per the Sikh Traditions, Community Food (Guru Ka Langar) was served to all attendees in t h e c o mmunity in the Gurudwara Kitchen. Valentine Day Celebrated by India Association (IALI) (By a Staff Reporter) Garden City, New York- India Association of Long Island (IALI) recently celebrated "Valentine Day 2015" in Mint Restaurant & Banquet Hall in Garden City, Long Island. Mostly female members of IALI led by celebrated the day with Music, Dance and Greetings to other members. Also in attendance IALI President for the 2nd term Satnam Singh Parhar & Media Chair Ajay Batra. (Seen in pictures: Members of IALI during the event). Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 ADVERTISEMENT 16 Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 ADVERTISEMENT 17 Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 ADVERTISEMENT 18 TRISTATE-COMMUNITYNEWS Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 19 India Republic Day Celebrated in Town of Hempstead (By our Staff Reporter) Hempstead - India Republic Day was recently celebrated for the 12th time at Nathan L.H, Bennett Pavilion in Town of Hempstead New York by Indian American Forum (IAF) . Honorable Town of Hempstead Supervisor Kate Murray hosted the Republic Day Celebration. On Thursday February 5, 2015, town Hall was decorated with Tricolors from Indian flag and patriotic songs were being played all over. Supervisor Murray was joined by Council members Anthony Santino, Dorothy L Goosby, Bruce Blakeman, Councilwoman Erin king Sweeney and Town Clerk Nasrin Ahmed. Several elected officers, judges and dignitaries were present and enjoyed this unique evening of celebrations. Supervisor Murray welcomed everyone and praised the efforts of Indian American Community in USA. An award was presented to Dr. Anila Midha, Founder and President of South Asian Women’s Alliance for her dedicated service to the community. Program started with Pledge of Allegiance by An appeal of $11 for Sri Sai Datta Ke Naam (By our Staff Reporter) New Jersey- Shri Sai Datta Temple is a Hindu religious learning and community service center located at South Plainfield, New Jersey. This temple is a religious worship center for Shri Sai Datta Baba. Within this one year of consecration, the temple has been a great source for Hindu religious teachings and worship while still continuing works of community service. The temple inspired many volunteers and organized food drives, blood drives, toy drives and back to school programs. On the religious side, Sai Bhajans and Satsangs are conducted every Thursday at the temple along with Aarthis to Sai Baba and other deities every day. With selfless help from many devotees and volunteers, Shri Sai Datta Temple is expanding to acquire 23 acres of land in New Jersey within June 2015. The plan is to construct a temple at this new site for spiritual saint Shri Sai Baba similar to that in Shirdi, India. With a motivation to provide lot of people the opportunity to be part of this process of acquiring land, Sai Temple is requesting a donation of only $11 per person from donors.The cost of each square yard is $11 and every donor will get an opportunity to donate a square yard for this temple. (Contd on page 23) Roubin Singh Thind, a 6th grader from Jonas E. Salk Middle School. Indian and American National anthem were sung by Part Maria and Manjari, runner up Miss Teen New York, 2014. Opening prayers were done by Pandit Ramesh Choudhry, priest from Vedic Heritage, Inc., Hempstead.Folk dances and other performances were presented by Sadhna Pranji School of Dance, students of Sangeeta Pandit and Local talents. Also present were winners of Miss Teen New York 2014. Emcee for the evening was Arvin Batra. End of the ceremony prayers done by priest Samiran Chakrovorty from NY Kali Mandir. Indu Jaiswal, Chairperson of Indian American Forum (IAF) thanked all present. 20 Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 Maha Shivratri Celebrated (By Our Staff Reporter) Floral ParkSri Sankat Mochan Hanuman Mandir in Floral Park, Queens recently celebrated the auspicious Maha Shivratri festival which commenced on Tuesday, February 17 and concluded on Wednesday, February 18. The festival of Char Pahar Ki Pooja started with the first Pahar at 6:00pm with Pundit Sanjeev Mishra, Pradeep Sharma and Krishna Shastri performing Maha Rudra Abhishek and Pooja Archana followed by the second Pahar at 9:00pm, the third Pahar at 12 midnight and the fourth Pahar at 3:00am. At every Pahar, the Main Shiv Lingam was given a special bath with milk, yogurt, honey, ghee, sugar, sandalwood paste and rose water. Moreover, the Shiv Lingam was adorned with the image of different Gods at each Pahar: Lord Ganesh at the first Pahar, Sri Hanuman at the second Pahar, Lord Mahakaal the third Pahar and the wedding of Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati at the fourth Pahar was decorated with flowers and fruits. Each Pahar ended with the chanting of Har Har Mahadev and Om Namah Shiva Mantra which reverberated throughout the well-decorated temple. Indu Gajwani relentlessly volunteered her services by phoning devotees to attend the festival and organizing the Pooja ceremony thought the four Pahars. A countless number of devotees volunteered their services to make the festival a grand success. The temple was thronged by a stream of devotees to perform the traditional Shivling Pooja with sincerity and devotion and seek blessings from Lord Shiva. MahaShivRatri which occurs on the 14th night of the new moon during the dark half of the month of Phalguna is celebrated enthusiastically by Hindus every year in reverence of Lord Shiva. According to a legend, the MahaShivRatri celebrates the marriage of Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati. Another legend states that on the ShivRatri day, the Lord Shiva danced the Tandav Nritya which signifies creation, preservation and destruction of the Cosmos. The holy pooja ended around 6:00am on Wednesday with Maha Mangal Arti and Maha Bhog. A langar prasad, tea and thandai were served to devotees throughout the festival. Widespread Condemnation of Excessive Force used by Alabama Police (Insider News Network) USA- Strong messages against the incident were issued by different officials and community leaders to condemn the use of excessive police force against Sureshbhai Patel, an Indian grandfather who was left partially paralyzed after an encounter with Alabama police. Congresswoman Judy Chu (CA-27), CAPAC Chair: “I was appalled to learn about the brutal attack on Sureshbhai Patel by a police officer in Madison, Alabama. It is a positive development that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has stepped in to investigate this case. In no way should the color of someone’s skin or their limited English proficiency lead to the type of confusion and unreasonable use of force that left Mr. Patel partially paralyzed. As we await the FBI’s findings, I will continue to work with my colleagues in Congress to ensure that this type of profiling and excessive force is no longer permitted by law enforcement.” Congressman Michael Honda (CA17), CAPAC Chair Emeritus: “I am pleased that the officer involved in the assault of an Indian grandfather visiting his family in Alabama has been charged with assault. My thoughts go out to the family and friends of Sureshbhai Patel, who is still recovering from injuries that have left him partially paralyzed. In the aftermath of so many events that have worn down the trust between communities of color and police officers, the Madison Police Department has taken the right step. I look forward to the findings of an FBI civil rights investigation into this incident.” Congressman Ted Lieu (CA-33): “A full investigation into this matter is what Mr. Patel, his family and the Madison, Alabama community deserve. Once all the facts are known about this unfortunate incident, it is vital that they serve as a roadmap to improve the way law enforcement interacts with individuals who possess limited English proficiency. I hope for Mr. Patel’s quick return to full health.” Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky (IL-09): “I join the call to investigate the violence against Sureshbhai Patel. We must ensure that people of all backgrounds, including visitors and immigrants, are treated fairly under the law.” The Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC) is comprised of Members of Congress of Asian and Pacific Islander descent and Members who have a strong dedication to promoting the well-being of the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community. Currently chaired by Congresswoman Judy Chu, CAPAC has been addressing the needs of the AAPI community in all areas of American life since it was founded in 1994. Congresswoman Meng “The episode in Madison, Alabama is very disturbing,” said Meng. “We will be watching closely to see what happens with this case, and we hope and pray that Sureshbhai Patel recovers from his injury. We have a reason to be concerned over this and other recent incidents that may be directed towards the Muslim and South Asian community. Arson investigators are looking into the cause of a fire that broke out at an Islamic school and family center in Houston and investigators are examining whether race and religion played a role in the shooting of Muslim students in North Carolina. In addition, Texas Muslim Capitol Day was disrupted and derailed last month by protesters. Whether or not these incidents are Islamophobic, one thing is crystal clear: Nobody in our society must ever be subjected to hate and violence. All Americans have a responsibility to raise their voice and condemn bigotry when and wherever it occurs. Our fight against intolerance must continue until all hate crimes are a thing of the past.” Sureshbhai Patel was visiting his son in Alabama and was stopped by police as he walked in the neighborhood. A neighbor who was suspicious of Patel called 911. The officer has been arrested and faces dismissal. Navjot Thind, Executive Director of New York based Center for Women’s Empowerment, expressed serious concern over injury of Sureshbhai Patel , Grandfather visiting from India and also felt disturbed about possible rise in incidents against South Asian community. “This is a very unfortunate and avoidable incident, with proper sensitivity training towards properly accommodating as well as treating people from different cultures and religions, who are visiting or who have made America their home”. Congressman Ami Bera: “This week's incident in Alabama that left an Indian grandfather visiting his American family partially paralyzed is horrible and tragic,” said Bera. “My heart goes out to Mr. Patel and his family and I wish him a speedy recovery. I’m glad officials have acted quickly to respond and that the FBI has opened an investigation. Moving forward, we must come together as a nation to tackle the very real issues our minority communities face, and to rebuild trust and understanding among law enforcement agencies and the diverse communities that they serve.” Man admits to shooting cop in NHP A man charged with the 2013 shooting of a police officer in New Hyde Park pleaded guilty to two felonies Tuesday and received a sentencing commitment of 30 years in prison, the Nassau County District Attorney’s office announced. Cong Xu, 22, of Brooklyn, pleaded guilty to assault in the first degree and burglary in the first degree, both B felonies, according to a district attorney spokesman. He received a sentencing commitment of 30 years in prison from Acting Nassau Supreme Court Justice Philip Greta and is due back in court for sentencing April 2. Xu, a Chinese national, had been facing charges of first-degree burglary, firstdegree attempted robbery, second-degree criminal possession of a weapon and first-degree attempted murder of a police officer. According to the Nassau district attorney’s office, Xu was fleeing from a burglary in New Hyde Park when he shot Nassau County police officer Mohit Arora in the hip. Arora, who was at the time 32 years old and a six-year veteran of the force, and another officer were responding to a 911 call by the homeowners of 241 Campbell St. to report a burglary in their home, police said at the time. According to the district attorney’s office, the officers confronted Xu as he fled the premises. As Xu ran away from the officers, he turned and fired several shots from a handgun, hitting Arora in the lower abdomen. A second suspect, Renhang Qiu, 23, also of Brooklyn, who the district attorney’s office said “aided and abetted Xu in the home burglary,” pleaded guilty in May to burglary in the first degree and received a sentencing commitment of seven years in prison, according to the DA’s office. He is due in court for sentencing on Feb. 23. “Police officers risk their lives every day as they work to keep our communities safe from armed and dangerous criminals,” acting District Attorney Madeline Singas said in a statement. “This burglar had a handgun when he entered a Nassau family’s home. Officer Mohit Arora responded and was shot protecting innocent civilians. As a result of Officer Arora’s heroism and today’s guilty plea, this defendant will no longer be a threat to others for a long time to come.” Both suspects were caught following a search that included the use of a police helicopter. Police said Xu was apprehended on Flower Lane and Nugent Street. Qui was caught on Lakeville Road at Sylvia Lane. “We had an extensive manhunt at the time,” police spokesman Vincent Garcia said at the time. The officers responding to the 911 call thought Xu was surrendering when he proceeded to run away and fire behind him, hitting Arora and fracturing his hip bone. WORLD Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 21 ISIS' incredible show of force on Europe's doorstep (Agencies) Terrorists in Libya who beheaded 21 Egyptian Christians parade their fleet of brand new 'police cars' in front of cheering children The video appears to show a fleet of Toyota Land Cruisers carrying the notorious black flag of Islamic State as they drive in perfect unison through the streets of Libya. Men, women and children cheer and salute the pick-up trucks as they drive freely through what is believed to be the city of Benghazi. The carefully produced propaganda video was uploaded by terrorist group Ansar al-Sharia on February 5. The group declared city an 'Islamic emirate' in July 2014 before pledging allegiance to Islamic State just three months later. In November of that year, the UN blacklisted it as a terrorist organisation. The group was widely blamed for the death of US Ambassador Christopher Stephens in Benghazi in 2012. And only this week, it was linked to the bloody executions of 21 Egyptian Christians on a beach in Libya. Fears of an equally brutal execution were raised following the news that 35 more Egyptians may have been kid- napped by Jihadists in the country. The latest abduction is thought to be a direct response to Egyptian airstrikes on extremist locations in the Libyan city of Derna, following the mass murder of their countrymen.The Islamic Youth Shura Council - a branch of Ansar AlSharia - was responsible for the very first footage of a beheading to surface from the North-African country. In November 2014, it released footage showing the murder of an Egyptian soldier who publicly supported his government's forces led by General Khalifa Haftar. Masked men in camouflage cut Muftah el-Nazihi's neck with a knife before removing his head and placing it on his back. The group has been enforcing Sharia Law by carrying out public beheadings and beatings in Libya since their formation in at least August 2014. Power exorcised by radical groups like the Islamic Youth Shura Council continued to grow until February this year when the Islamic State of Levant self-declared 'caliphate' in Sirte - where 21 Egyptians were believed to be beheaded recently. Its fighters traveled to the district in 40 heavily armoured cars and ordered residents to follow Islamic State's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. He has since appointed Ali Al- Qarqaa as Libya's Emir- or leader meaning control over the country's fractured terror groups falls to him according to Gulf-based analyst Dr Theodore Karasik. He told MailOnline: 'Libya is seen by North Africans now as the place to go spread the Caliphate. Unlike a few years ago, when everyone was leaving Libya to go to the Levant, you now have people going back. 'Because the idea of 'state' is there and now with the executions, they will feel like there are enough numbers on the ground to fight. They know at the same time the West is slow at acting.' Three years after the removal of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi as the country's ruler, Libya's main cities have surrendered control to a melting pot of extremist groups. Most of them - including Ansar al-Sharia, Libya Dawn and the Islamic Youth Shura Council - have pledged their allegiance to Islamic State who seek to use the country's location to establish a foothold in North Africa. CONTD. Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 22 Judge stalls Obama immigration orders (Contd from page 1) The decision does not judge the merits of the case, but it is a blow to a key Obama initiative that infuriated Republicans. In a statement, the White House defended the executive orders as within the president’s legal authority, saying the U.S. Supreme Court and Congress have said federal officials can establish priorities in enforcing immigration laws. “The district court’s decision wrongly prevents these lawful, commonsense policies from taking effect,” the statement said. The U.S. Department of Justice will appeal the ruling, the White House said. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said the Justice Department was reviewing the ruling and was confident the matter would ultimately be taken up by a higher court, possibly the U.S. Supreme Court. “We have to look at this decision for what it is- It is a decision by one federal district court judge,” Mr. Holder said. Mr. Obama took the sweeping measures November, saying he had to act because comprehensive, bilateral legislation to reform the country’s immigration system was stalled in the Republican-controlled House. Republicans leaders said Mr. Obama’s unilateral move would only make it more difficult to get bipartisan legislation through Congress. Congressional Republicans are now vowing to block Mr. Obama’s actions on immigration by cutting off Homeland Security Department spending for the program. House Speaker John Boehner said Hanen’s ruling underscores that MR. Obama acted beyond his authority and said he hoped Senate Democrats will relent in their opposition to the Homeland Security Spending bill. The first of Mr. Obama’s orders to expand a program that protects young immigrants from deportation if they were brought to the U.S. illegally as children was set to start taking effect Wednesday. The other major part of Mr. Obama’s order, which extends deportation protections to parents of U.S. citizens and permanent residents who have been in the country for some years, was not expected to begin until May 19. “The genie would be impossible to put back into the bottle,” he wrote, adding that he agreed with the plaintiffs’ argument that legalizing the presence of millions of people is a “virtually irreversible” action. Joaquin Guerra, political director of the Texas Organizing Project, called the ruling a “temporary setback.” The coalition of states, led by Texas and made up of mostly conservative states in the South and Midwest, argues that Obama has violated the “Take Care Clause” of the U.S. Constitution, which they say limits the scope of presidential power. They also say the order will force increased investment in law enforcement, health care and education. In their request for the injunction, the coalition said it was necessary because it would be “difficult or impossible to undo the President’s lawlessness after the Defendants start granting applications for deferred action.” Keywords: Obama immigration orders, White House appeal, U.S Negativity against Congress won BJP, AAP their elections: Raj Babbar (Contd from page 1)elections and in the Delhi elections, this wave was evident when both the Congress and the BJP lost with a huge margin," the former Congress MP from Agra said.In a conversation with the India Today in Agra, Babbar said that both the Lok Sabha and the Delhi Assembly elections had a common feature. "Koi gaali dekar PM ban gaya aur koi gali khakar CM ban gaya (In the parliamentary elections, someone became the PM by hurling abuses at others; in Delhi, another person became the CM by ignoring the abuses hurled at him)." Babbar said that Modi had hurled the same abuse at the Congress during the parliamentary elections last year. "He abused the Gandhi family so much that an atmosphere of negativity was created against the Congress party, which ultimately resulted in Modi's victory," he said. The Congress spokesperson then accused Modi of making empty promises and not delivering so far. "Nine months after Modi's victory, the people have realized that he won on empty promises and he is just survivng on rebranding the old schemes already launched by the UPA government in its ten-year tenture. The result of this deception was the sound beating received bythe BJP in the Delhi elections where they were barely able to hold on to the edge of the precipice with just three MLAs." Babbar said that if Modi had been able to display some credibility, the people would not have left the BJP in a lurch in the Delhi elections. The actor-turned-politician said that the Congress is the only party in the country that talks about equality and social justice and does not involve itself in regional or communal politics like the BJP. "Because the Congress has only one aim and that is maintaining the unity of this country," he said. "During the past elections, some negative elements resulted in the Congress descending into a state of confu- sion. The Congress was criticized all over the country, even in Delhi, but nobody from the party could provide an answer to the queries posed by the people," he said. "This situation will improve pretty soon and the Congress will emerge as a renewed party in 2017 in the Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections," Babbar said, adding that the state of law and order in the state has worsened and Mayawati's Bahujan Samaj Party is not presenting any credible opposition to the ruling Samajwadi Party. "The Congress is the only alternative left for the state and the 2017 elections will prove it," Babbar said. ‘President Obama doesn’t love America’Rudy Giuliani (Contd from page 1) policy decisions and questionable public remarks when confronting terrorists. “I do not believe, and I know this is a horrible thing to say, but I do not believe that the president loves America,” Giuliani said during the dinner at the 21 Club, a former Prohibition-era speakeasy in midtown Manhattan. “He doesn’t love you. And he doesn’t love me. He wasn’t brought up the way you were brought up and I was brought up through love of this country.” With Walker sitting just a few seats away, Giuliani continued by saying that “with all our flaws we’re the most exceptional country in the world. I’m looking for a presidential candidate who can express that, do that and carry it out.” CONTD. Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 23 Swine flu kills 600-plus in India, refuses to die NEW DELHI: The mercury rising, yet the H1N1 influenza A virus seems to defy its survival limitations, worrying the health ministry and doctors. This year, swine flu deaths have more than doubled compared to the previous year taking the toll to 624. A total of 9,311 people got infected, government data show. In February alone over 300 died across the country. In 2014, 218 swine flu deaths were reported from a total of 937 cases, pan-India."As it starts getting warmer, we expected cases to come down. This year the trend is different," says Dr Suranjit Chatterjee, senior consultant, internal medicine, at Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals. Union health minister JP Nadda has held frequent review meetings. The ministry's directed pharma companies to expedite supply of antiviral medicines to state hospitals and licensed retail outlets. "We've asked companies to airlift stocks, if required. We'll monitor availability in the retail market," Union health secretary BP Sharma said. The government hopes cases will come down with awareness and precautionary measures, he said. The ministry has directed states to provide protective kits to health workers. Although the cause is yet to be ascertained, doctors suspect a change in the strain behaviour — which generally happens in three to four years — resulting in the sudden spurt in cases. ICMR, though, has ruled out strain mutation, BP Sharma, secretary to the health ministry said. Doctors recom- 'An Ugly Lie' (Contd from page 1) where there is no order and no path for advancement, where there are no educational opportunities, where there are no ways to support families and no escape from injustice and the humiliations of corruption — that feeds instability and disorder, and makes those communities ripe for extremist recruitment.""We must acknowledge that groups like al-Qaida and ISIL are deliberately targeting their propaganda to Muslim communities, particularly Muslim youth. Muslim communities, including scholars and clerics, therefore have a responsibility to push back — not just on twisted interpretations of Islam, but also on the lie that we are somehow engaged in a clash of civilizations, that America and the West are somehow at war with Islam, or seek to suppress Muslims, or that we are the cause of every ill in the Middle East." Even before the U.S.-hosted Summit on Countering Violent Extremism began in Washington this week, the White House has been criticized for its position against using terms that directly link Islam or Muslims to terrorism. Last month, Politico's Rich Lowry complained of "a haze of euphemism and cow- ardice" in a January article about the White House's stance, written following the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris. That prompted The New York Times' Thomas Friedman to write, "I am all for restraint on the issue, and would never hold every Muslim accountable for the acts of a few. But it is not good for us or the Muslim world to pretend that this spreading jihadist violence isn't coming out of their faith community." Yesterday, the Times explored the administration's stance: "Obama aides say there is a strategic logic to his vocabulary: Labeling noxious beliefs and mass murder as 'Islamic' would play right into the hands of terrorists who claim that the United States is at war with Islam itself. The last thing the president should do, they say, is imply that the United States lumps the world's 1.5 billion Muslims with vicious terrorist groups." Today, Obama said, "When people spew hatred towards others because of their faith or because they are immigrants, it feeds into terrorist narratives. If entire communities feel they can never become a full part of the society in which they reside, it feeds a cycle of fear and resentment — and a sense of injustice upon which extremists prey." ities for the sake of perceived electoral advantages that may or may not accrue. But he will not countenance sacrificing national interest at the altar of a powerquest of a few. And the apex of the RSS would find it difficult to explain away such a "give" that no "take" can justify. Distancing itself from the "deal" is plain impossible. After all, it is Ram Madhav who conducted the negotiations with Haseeb Drabu of the PDP. Ram Madhav is an RSS Pracharak and was inducted into the BJP. The challenge in the Jammu and Kashmir is fast emerging as a litmus-test of the medicine shortages were reported from states, including Maharashtra and Delhi. Sharma maintains it's important to ensure needless prescription doesn't lead to the virus turning resistant to the drug. Doctors, nonetheless, suggest patients displaying severe symptoms start taking the antiviral medicine. "Once the disease develops, the medicine's efficiency starts going down," said Dr Arup Basu of Ganga Ram Hospital. Asthmatics are more vulnerable to swine flu. Nearly 30% of those hospitalized for the flu are asthma patients, a research says. "Swine flu and asthma attack the airways. An appeal of $11 for Sri Sai Datta Ke Naam (Contd from page 19) The temple has a plan to collect $11 from 1,000,000 donors and engrave the names of all those donors on a wall to be erected in the temple site. This new temple is envisioned to have an elaborate structure similar to Shirdi. The temple will also have many other Hindu deities so that people from all parts of India can worship and practice their religious activities. The envisioned temple will find us more space to organize more mass ritual events as conducted in 2014. These events will give us the opportunity to demonstrate to our kids and the younger generation regarding our rich and spiritually advanced culture. These events will also encourage many kids and families to shown interest in our Hindu scriptures like Vedas, Bhagawad-Gita and Yoga classes.As part of Shri Sai Blessings seva, Sai Paduka (Shri Sai Baba feet) will be taken to devotees’ houses to bring peace and cure their ailments. Shri Sai BJP's ability to draw a line, in Temple is very keen to involve its pursuit of power at the expense of what it stands for, what it mobilises its cadre for and what it gets all the votes for, (Contd from page 7) But across India. And, before the BJP King Abdullah’s commitment to signs on the dotted line, all that “fight back” against IS was not the RSS needs to worry is echoed by Jordanian public opinwhether, after such a compro- ion. To be clear, IS ultimately aims mise, will they be able to look for greater territorial sovereignty the very Jammu voter in the eye, and a Caliphate, maintaining a topin whose name the BJP seeks down model of power. But it is still to share power with the PDP on through affiliations and the reported terms. Or else, this decentralised networks with local government will be considered, groups, spread from Yemen to well and truly, to be run by the un- Libya and parts of Africa, that IS abashed practitioners of whatever is attempting to gain political legoes in the name of statecraft. gitimacy. The recent “lone wolf” BJP's dangerous liaison in J&K (Contd from page 6) There is another kind of spin sought to be put on the issue. That, through such inspired leaks, the RSS is attempting to distance itself from the fall-out of such a deal that is all but done. That the disapproving cadres would take solace in the fact that the RSS did not approve of such a deal though it could not prevent it happening. This is a far-fetched one, even by Digvijaya Singh's standards. Those who are inclined to thus speculate ought to know that an average Swayamsevak is far too sharp for that. He may ignore or forgive certain tactical ambigu- mend isolation of patients. They cautioned that only those with moderate to acute symptoms should go to hospitals for tests and treatment. "Patients with milder symptoms should stay home, take antiviral medicines and precautions," says Dr KK Aggarwal, leading cardiologist.Patients with breathlessness, high fever for three to four days or those already suffering from complex diseases and are immuno-compromised should go for hospitalization, according to Dr Aggarwal. Experts said the government should formulate a treatment protocol so there's no unnecessary testing and hospitalization. Last week, retail large number of people in temple activities. The unique aspect of this temple is that, temple and priest services like archana, abhishekam and individual house pujas will be conducted FREE of charge. The motivation towards this aspect is to embrace religion and religious practices as service to humanity. Last but not least, the temple embraces Baba’s quotes, especially “Athidhi devo bhava”, a person who steps into home should be welcomed with warm heart and he should never leave home hungry. The temple will organize Nithya-annadhanam program, where free food will be served to all devotees who visit the temple anytime. This is a supreme charity service and a great aspect of Hindu culture. To get more information regarding the Sai Datta Peetham and to participate in this project, Please contact the temple at 732-8091200 or by email at info@saidattanj.org or visiting on web page at Egypt strikes back terror attacks in Sydney, Paris, Copenhagen and so on are also instances of groups having ideological affiliations to the IS brand. It is this decentralised and spectral nature of the enemy that may frustrate Egypt’s military strikes as well. But the crucial difference between IS and all the previous Jihadist groups is that IS will hope to exploit these decentralised networks to eventually strengthen its territorial, sovereign political order. Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 ADVERTISMENT 24 LIFE STYLE Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 25 From Grand Theft Auto to Wall Street: How gamers are becoming traders (Agencies) Twenty-something consumers raised on video games such as Grand Theft Auto and Angry Birds are being wooed by financial trading apps, keen to build bridges with a post-crisis generation that is uninterested in financial services or plain mistrustful. Bright colors, cartoon graphics and the ability to trade risk-free with virtual credits are features of apps such as BUX and Kapitall, which eschew financial lingo and complex charts in favor of competitive head-to-head battles and motivational messages like "OMG!" after placing a trade. While financial trading is a niche slice of the $15 billion mobile gaming industry, dominated by brands such as King Digital Entertainment's Candy Crush, some two-thirds of UK retail traders already use their smartphone or computer to buy or sell and app makers are sensing an opportunity."Developers are realizing that games are played by all kinds of people with different desires and motivations, and the same kind of person who is hooked on a computer video game may seek a similar thrill from the stock market," said Kam Star, founder and managing director at games development studio PlayGen. Nick Bortot, a former executive at online broker Binckbank, set up BUX (getbux.com) last year in Amsterdam and London. BUX's launch followed that of similar firms Kapitall and invstr (invstr.com). Both BUX and Kapitall offer players the chance to play games such as challenging each other on how stocks might perform, but they also offer players the opportunity to go from playing for points to betting actual money. "I got hooked on BUX instantly, playing for fun, and trying to understand how shares and markets work. Since mid-December, I have been trading with real money," said Nathaniel Brooks, a 28 year old manager and Playstation aficionado. VIRTUAL POINTS All three companies hope their bright graphics and games can lure a younger audience to the sometimes arcane world of finance, the least trusted industry in the world according to a 2014 survey by communications company Edelman. By contrast, technology is the most trusted. For now, invstr is only focusing on games that allow people to predict where markets may go for virtual points, and on building up a community of users, but the company may also let people bet real money at a later stage. Bortot said only 5 per cent of BUX users converted from virtual play to real money, but there were still ways for BUX to make money from mere players. He said the company would charge small add-on fees of around 89 euro cents or roughly 80 pence to top up a "funBUX" virtual account, or to follow top traders on the Internet. For those converting from play money to real, BUX would then charge small commissions of around 35 pence or 40 euro cents per transaction, far cheaper than online brokerage costs at bigger, more mainstream firms. Some were skeptical over the prospects of such firms, while others expressed concerns over the possible trivialization of trading on financial markets. "We are aware that the two markets are converging, but we are keeping our financial trading and gambling parts quite separate," said Shai Heffetz, managing director at InterTrader, which is owned by gambling company BWin.Party. Nevertheless, technology analyst Susan Anthony at brokerage Mirabaud Securities said the business could be worth exploring. "Whether or not these things become killer apps is hard to predict, but I can certainly see how they might become quite addictive for some." SPECIAL FEATURE Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 A Somalia on the Mediterranean In the cases of Muammar Qadhafi and Saddam Hussein, opportunities to allow them to surrender were squandered. It was as if the new dispensations in Iraq and Libya could be created from scratch. Rather than disappear, the older currents would reappear in ways unforeseen in western and Gulf Arab capitals Libya’s “Islamic State” paraded 21 Egyptian workers along the Mediterranean. The IS fighters, dressed in black, then killed the Egyptians, dressed in orange jumpsuits. One of the IS men speaks, in English, of the beheadings in Syria before he says, “… we are on the south of Rome, on the land of Islam, Libya, sending another message.” It is a direct provocation to both the Egyptians and to the West. “The sea you’ve hidden Sheikh Osama bin Laden’s body in, we swear to Allah we will mix it with your blood.” The braggadocio is familiar, as are the acts. Within 24 hours, Egypt and the West responded as IS hoped. Three Egyptian jet fighters bombed eight targets in the eastern Libyan city of Derna, the hub of the “Islamic State.” Italy and France are eager to join in the intervention. Sources in the city say that some civilians (including four children) died in the Egyptian bombing, which also hit sites associated with the entrenched Islamist movement. Derna has been in the ledger of political Islam since the 1990s. That it is now in the claw of the IS should not be a surprise. Fighters from Derna have long gone to fight in the battlefields of modern jihad — Chechnya, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria. Foreign fighters, such as the speaker in the video, have also been known to take refuge there. A pipeline drew fighters from Derna to northern Syria via Turkey, and then back home. This pipeline was well known to western, Gulf Arab and Turkish intelligence. They had allowed it to flourish. It is precisely the social consequences of that pipeline that worries the Europeans. Kuwait on the Mediterranean In 2008, Saif al-Islam Qadhafi told a friend that he wanted to turn Libya into “Kuwait on the Mediterranean.” Oil-rich Libya had not been able to convert its wealth into a paradise for its people. Over the course of the rule of his father, Muammar Qadhafi, Libya had turned the social wealth into social goods — high social indicators demonstrate this fact amply. By the 1980s, however, it had become clear that the Qadhafi regime had neither the imagination nor the will to diversify Libya out of its reliance upon oil exports and to draw these newly educated people into the political system. Qadhafi tasked Saif al-Islam to “modernize” Libya. They drew on expatriate Libyans to “reform” the system — which meant, all too often, steady plans for giving away national assets to private hands. Domestic unhappiness — even from among those who had no desire to remove the Qadhafi system — was crushed. The most powerful challenge to the state came from the Islamists — the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, whose members were thrown into prison, executed or exiled. Those in exile joined the international jihadi networks. In 2011, discontent against the Qadhafi regime drew people onto the streets. The mélange of groups that desired something else was startling — there were the highly-educated liberals who had benefited from the oil revenue, the diasporic business elites who had been collaborating with Saif al-Islam, the old jihadis who saw an immense opportunity, ordinary Libyans who had stayed in the shadows but now saw a place for themselves. Rebellions are often produced out of such diversity, and Libya in 2011 did not disappoint. Sections of the military hastily defected to the rebellion, the city of Benghazi was lost to the Qadhafis and then the armed phase opened up. It would likely have taken a long time for the rebels to succeed, but in that interim they would have had to create some form of political agreement. As it turned out, geopolitical enmity against Qadhafi from the Gulf Arabs and the West resulted in a NATO bombardment that destroyed Libya’s infrastructure. It produced the conditions for a freefor-all. Libyan politics fragmented, with the archipelago of cities being held by their various militias, with foreign backers finding their own friends here and there, and with conflict over Tripoli’s resources at the centre of the emerging civil war. Early signs of danger were callously ignored by the new leadership — worker unrest in the oilfields over wages and protests by former fighters who wanted more from their new country. Neither the workers nor the thuwar (revolutionaries) saw the new government as theirs. The cult of the thuwar was all that was permitted — the rebels could hold onto their guns and be treated as saviours, but they were not integrated into either a new military or into the new institutions. Complex alliances Absent political agreement, chaos became the mode in Libya from 2012 onwards. The execution of Qadhafi in broad daylight had the same kind of effect as the execution of Saddam Hussein in Iraq — in both cases, opportunities to allow these men and their supporters to surrender were squandered. It was as if the new dispensation in both Iraq and Libya could be created from scratch, with the older regimes consigned to the dust heap. But these older currents did not disappear. They would reappear in ways unforeseen in western and Gulf Arab capitals. In Iraq, many Ba’athists and cashiered army men created an alliance with the Islamic State. Much the same seems to have happened in Libya. It is the only explanation for the Islamic State’s ability to take and hold Sirte, the birthplace of Qadhafi and the epicentre of his influence.After NATO’s intervention in 2011, radical Islamists in Benghazi who had fought on NATO’s side formed Ansar al-Sharia. It then turned on the West and was party to the 2012 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, during which the U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens was killed. Recently, a rogue Libyan general, Khalifa Haftar, has conducted Operation Karama (Dignity) against Ansar al-Sharia with mixed success. Many Ansar al-Sharia fighters have decamped to Sirte and to Derna to join IS. The Islamic State in Libya is not merely a Libyan problem but a regional one. The chaos in the country has allowed radical Islamists from across North Africa to take refuge here. As well, older connections with radical Islamists across the Sahara desert, in Mali for instance, are part of their world. Al Qaeda of the Maghreb, centred in Mali, had made alliances with disgruntled Tuareg nationalists, kidnappers of tourists, and trans-Saharan smugglers (of people, drugs and weapons). It operated as much as a criminal gang as a franchise of al-Qaeda. IS has links to these networks, including the trafficking of goods and pe ople. These are moneymaking enterprises that have supplanted older trades as 26 northern Africa suffers from acute desiccation caused by climate change. Absent of alternatives, a growing Sahara grows criminality. Regional solutions A source in the Pentagon suggests that Washington has no appetite for a serious engagement in Libya. He spoke of the need to rearm and refinance the Egyptian military. Washington, it appears, would like Egypt to take charge of this war against IS. But bombing runs by Egypt have reopened political fissures in Libya. The Muslim Brotherhood-dominated government in Tripoli considers the Egyptian bombings a violation of Libyan sovereignty. Khalifa Haftar has, so far, supported them as he did the August 2014 air strikes by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates around Tripoli. Egypt’s entry into the conflict is precisely what the Islamic State wants. Egypt’s harsh crackdown on all Islamists will likely afford the Islamic State recruits inside Egypt. Pressure needs to be brought on the Egyptian government to cease its harsh repression of its critics. Rather than maintain peace, this only creates the most dangerous extremism. It is naive to believe that aerial bombardment here or there will sort out the problems with the Islamic State. We have entered a new period in the history of the region. Longer-term strategies need to be worked out. Last August, the foreign ministers of North Africa met in Cairo to discuss the security challenge posed by Libya. They zeroed in on two immediate steps that need to be taken. First, that a unified government be formed in Tripoli. The only way to allow for this to happen is for the “cold war” between regional parties to be ended. Tensions between the Qatar-Turkey backed Tripoli government and the SaudiUAE-Egypt-West backed Tobruk government remain. The UN cannot facilitate a dialogue unless the regional enmity is lessened and unless pressure is brought to bear on all sides to join a political process. Second, that the countries “organize a common effort” to deal with the issue of porous borders and trafficking. Included in this should be the trafficking of jihadis from Libya to Syria, and from the world into Libya. Nothing has been done on this front. If a regional solution is not incubated, Libya is in danger of becoming a Somalia on the Mediterranean. TRAVEL Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 HAVE you ever been to a city where the alphabet gets jumbled and acquires uneven stance, and emotions get addled between the carnage of a war, the poetry of a Utopia, the darkness of a heart and the syrupy sinfulness of a pastry that comes with a meringue mop? It can happen in Warsaw. In the Polish capital, Ra is about the first female Nobel Laureate who lived in a yellow house and mulled over the properties of radium. F Minor might as well be a proud note from a composer whose heart still floats in cognac inside a church. Behind the immaculate mien of Warsaw hide the carnage of war, where Utopia sometimes is just a stanza from another Nobel laureate’s poem. Warsaw does something to you. Here not one column seems crooked, not one hue incongruous, not one façade discordant, not one monument a clutter. It seems as if the gods hunched over their drawing board for hours before creating this city that sits by the Vistula river. Then, history pokes a reminder — Warsaw is not as old as it looks; it is not even original. During World War II, the city was bombed into debris, only two buildings survived. When peace returned, the entire city was recreated in three years. Amidst the painstaking chore of recreating a city one brick on another, one dowel in a plank, one daub of emulsion, it did not forget its bravehearts. It built the Monument to the Heroes of the Jewish Ghetto, the Tomb to the Unknown Soldier and Monument to the Katyn Victims. ITHINK of Warsaw and the world much before the war and step onto the cobblestone pathways of the 14th century Old Town where moneyed merchants built the colourful narrowfronted tenement houses, where the Royal Castle looks oh! so medieval, where the tall Sigismund’s Column almost scrapes the sky and the crypt of Gothic St John’s Cathedral where lie the sarcophaguses of the princes of Mazovia and other famous Poles. I lean on the column and think of Joseph Conrad, he must have sat on these steps and woven the plots of Lord Jim and Heart of Darkness. Marie Sklodowska-Curie, the first female Nobel Prize winner, must have walked out of her yellow house by the Barbican Wall and mulled over the properties of radium, a discovery that fetched her Nobel Prize in 1903. Who knows maybe it was here that poet Nobel laureate Wislawa Szymborska defined the pentameters of her famous Utopia. However, my heart was pining for one Pole. The one with square jaw, gimlet eyes and magic in his fingers. I wanted him to play two polonaises in G minor and B-flat major on the grand piano. It was music composer Fredrick Chopin that I was yearning for. I knew I could never meet Chopin; I had walked into Warsaw 165 years after his death. But beyond the music in my heart, there was the heart of Chopin that rests in the Holy Cross Church. When Chopin died oftuberculosis in Paris at age 39, his heart was brought back to Warsaw,preserved in cognac and sealed behind a concrete pillar inside the Church. There is nothing ornate orflamboyant about the pillar, the plastic flowers in the white vase look odd, even the plaque that reads, Here rests the heart of Fredrick Chopin, looks too ordinary. I stood by the wall, waiting for the heartbeat to reverberate;instead I heard the strains of the Ballade No. 4. Maybe Chopin’s heart still beats in that vial of cognac. At least I heard the murmur in F minor. Next day, I left Chopin behind 27 and took the train to Krakow, one of the oldest cities in Poland, a city that grew from Stone Age into a busy trading centre as early as 965 to Poland’s royal capital (until 1596) to one of Europe’s most beautiful cities with Krakow Old Town being the first one on UNESCO’s World Heritage Sites. Perhaps no other place packs so much history within its cobblestone pathways – Old Krakow Town has nearly 6,000 historic sites and two million works of art. ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 28 The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel Premier held (By A Staff Reporter) London: The Royal World Premiere of THE SECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL was held on Tues- day evening, February 17, at the Odeon in Leicester Square, London with cast, crew, and royalty attending. Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, were on hand at the gala event joining Oscar-nominated director John Madden and members of the cast including Dame Judi Dench, Lillete Dubey, Dame Maggie Smith, Tina Desai plus many celebrity guests. THE SECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTELreleases across North American theaters on March 6. The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is the expansionist dream of Sonny (Dev Patel), and it's making more claims on his time than he has available, considering his imminent marriage to the love of his life, Sunaina (Tina Desai). Sonny has his eye on a promising property now that his first venture, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel for the Elderly and Beautiful, has only a single remaining vacancy posing a rooming predicament for fresh arrivals Guy (Richard Gere) and Lavinia (Tamsin Greig). Evelyn and Douglas (Judi Dench and Bill Nighy) have now joined the Jaipur workforce, and are wondering where their regular dates for Chilla pancakes will lead, while Norman and Carol(Ronald Pickup and Diana Hardcastle) are negotiating the tricky waters of an exclusive relationship, as Madge (Celia Imrie) juggles two eligible and very wealthy suitors. Perhaps the only one who may know the answers is newly installed co-manager of the hotel, Muriel (Maggie Smith), the keeper of everyone's secrets. As the demands of a traditional Indian wedding threaten to engulf them all, an unexpected way forward presents itself. Mumbai theatre cancels plans to stop twenty-year run of Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge after ‘overwhelming response ! e c n e r e f f i d e h t Spot n is the SPITTING IMAGE of Cindy Amy Willerto permodel by su to e ag m ho ys pa e sh as Crawford t iconic looks recreating some of her mos After the overwhelming public response, the management of Maratha Mandir theatre has decided to withdraw its decision to stop screening the iconic ‘Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge’. The film will now be screened at 11.30am from Friday. “Soon after the last show ended, both the theatre and Yash Raj Films began getting calls and requests against pulling down the iconic movie. By evening, we held a meeting. The owners spoke to YRF and we decided to resume the screening,” theatre manager Pravin Rane said. E a r l i e r i n t h e d a y, t h e management had decided to draw the curtains on the film after screening it continuously for a record 1,009 weeks. After the 1,000-week celebrations, theatre officials had requested YRF to reschedule the screening time to 9.15am as they were finding it hard to accommodate the screening of other new releases every week. The management was glad to continue the screening of the movie till it continued to draw large audiences. But owing to logistical issues, specifically the theatre staff having to work inordinately long hours to accommodate the early morning screening, it was mutually decided to end the film’s 1,009week run, an official statement from YRF said. While the film largely enjoyed a popular run at the cinema, it is believed that its footfall towards the end had decreased. The minimum price of the tickets was as low as Rs 20 as the Maharashtra government had exempted the movie from entertainment taxes. During a recent trip to the Sundance Film Festival, Amy Willerton was delighted to be asked if she was related to Cindy Crawford. And although there is no link between the 22-year-old British model and the world-famous supermodel who turns 49, the likeness is incredible in Amy’s latest photoshoot.To celebrate Cindy’s birthday, Amy has recreated some of the model’s most famous looks and the similarities are extraordinary. With Amy’s long brown hair, perfectly symmetrical features and slim figure, it’s not surprising that she was mistaken for the star. With her hair in big, bouncy Nineties waves for most of the pictures, all that is missing from Amy is Cindy’s distinctive mole above her lip. Amy said: ‘It was the greatest compliment but the most bizarre moment for me being asked whether Cindy and I are related. ‘At one point I was asked to provide photographs of my own mother in order for people to believe me. I kept repeating over and over again that I was not a Crawford love child. It made me chuckle, and as her biggest fan I left with the biggest smile on my face.’Willerton is following in the steps of the supermodel as producers in America have already set their eyes on her. Amy has flown out to America to discuss new opportunities and to film for a new pilot TV show.Amy’s photoshoot harks back to Cindy in her glory years, the Nineties.20 years ago, Cindy was among the ‘Big Six’: Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell, Kate Moss, Claudia Schiffer, and Christy Turlington - who famously quipped that they didn’t ‘wake up for less than $10K a day’ in a 1990 interview with Vogue.The Midwestern beauty’s memorable mole and 34-25.5-36 measurements led to sexy Pepsi adverts, MTV’s House of Style, and her disastrous acting debut in Fair Game with William Baldwin.Amy’s photoshoot harks back to Cindy in her glory years, the Nineties. 20 years ago, Cindy was among the ‘Big Six’: Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell, Kate Moss, Claudia Schiffer, and Christy Turlington - who famously quipped that they didn’t ‘wake up for less than $10K a day’ in a 1990 interview with Vogue. SHOWBIZ Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 FRENCH beauty Marion Cotillard shows her fashion edge in the March issue of Interview magazine. The 38year- old French beauty is featured on the cover wearing a blue satiny number with black ribbon tied seductively around her throat and displaying a timeless quality that’s singularly hers. Turning the pages, Marion can also be seen in an inside picture wearing a bronze lame dress with a slit down the skirt, sheer black stockings covering her legs and her hair styled in a glamorous ’ do inspired by screen sirens of the 1940s. A third image shows the star wearing a shiny black, floral number, along with those black stockings, staring off to the distance. Also generating interest is her new film Blood Ties , in which she plays a woman who will do anything for her children. Marion drew from her own experience as a mother to flesh out the role, as she told the magazine. Marion also had the benefit of working with her real- life partner, Guillaume Canet, who directed and co- wrote the crimedrama about two brothers on opposite sides of the law who combat each other in 1970s Brooklyn, New York. Describing her character Monica, an addict who turns tricks for a living, Marion said: “ It was actually one of my favourite characters. Things your girl doesn't want to hear Here are some things that you should always avoid telling your girl if you want to have a peaceful relationship You look a bit fat in that dress Now which girl would like you telling her that she is looking fat. A statement like this will definitely have you spending the night on the couch. Your mom looks like she's your younger sister Yes, girls love their mom, but don't ever do the mistake of comparing them, especially in the looks department. You won't score any brownie points by doing this. I have the best time with my friends You may enjoy hanging out with your friends, but that doesn't mean you say that to her on her face. Sometimes it's best to be diplomatic. I can't go out because I want to watch a match Unless your girlfriend is a sports buff don't give her this excuse very often. You remind me of my ex That's the worst thing you could say to your girlfriend. She will always be left wondering if you got into the relationship only because she is a mirror image of your ex. My mom is the best cook Women take great pride in their culinary skills. So don't ever claim that your mom cooks better than any woman in the world. 29 You may just have to put up with burnt food for the rest of the week. I don't like your friends Like you love hanging out with your friends, your girlfriend loves her friends. Don't make your dislike for them so obvious. Friends can influence your girl to a great extent, so make sure you are in their good books. Why do you spend so much on beauty treatments? ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 30 ACTOR Neetu Chandra may be getting rave reviews in the theatre world these days for her performance as Umrao Jaan, but that hasn’t helped her take the hit play to her home town in Bihar. “I want the people of Patna to see my performance as Umrao Jaan which has earned me praise everywhere, but there is absolutely no initiative from anybody in the state to help me stage the play there,” said Neetu, who shot to fame with\ her role as Sweety in the Akshay Kumara and John Abraham starrer Garam Masala 10 years ago. “The current political situation in Bihar reminds me of Bigg Boss,” she added, “All the leaders seem to be taking part in a reality show, plotting against each other. Nobody has time for anything else.” Neetu, who completed her 25th performance playing Umrao Jaan at a drama festival in Delhi on Friday, said she had been trying her best to get the art and culture department of the Bihar government or any other organisation committed to promotion of theatre in the state. “Apart from Mumbai and Delhi, my play has been staged in several cities such as Pune, Jabalpur and Bhopal with the help of government- aided organisations, but the possibility of taking it to my native place still seems a distant dream,” the Traffic Signal actress said. Heist trick gone wrong FIRST thing, Ranbir Kapoor does not have a starring role Roy — not in the traditional Bollywood sense — so go in knowing as much. That said he is Ranbir Kapoor. So he gets to romance the girl on screen, gets going with the naach-gaana, and gets to be in the thick of action substantially. All of it by way of an extended cameo that lets him play the title role. Well, Bollywood needs its stars to sell its films, especially a concept like Roy, a mystery movie that leaves a couple of lingering mysteries in your mind after the show. First, what was writer-director Vikramjit Singh actually trying to say? Second, whatever he was trying to say, did Ranbir Kapoor have to be a part of all the confusion? As the supposed suspense drama tries unfolding through layers of convoluted sub plots, you realise the only thing Singh got right was pooling in childhood buddy Ranbir for an extended cameo. Besides maxing out Ranbir’s superstardom at the film’s publicity phase to give it a big-budget feel (without actually spending big moolah on the film), Singh has done very little correctly. And if the art of promotion is increasingly becoming more important than script, direction, production and even stars in modernday Bollywood, the smart marketing drive woven around Ranbir should be the best thing about Roy. The film casts Arjun Rampal as Kabir Grewal, casanova and filmmaker who has minted big bucks directing hits about the daring art thief Roy. In Malaysia to shoot his new film, he meets London-based filmmaker Ayesha (Jacqueline Fernandez). She becomes Kabir’s latest muse. Things become complex as Kabir starts obsessing too much about his creative fancies and the line distinguishing re- ality from illusion in his mind starts blurring. At some point Jacqueline’s double role is revealed though there is not much of a difference by way of personality traits between her two avatars. Fractured character sketches leave it to varying lengths of hair and shades of lipsticks to differentiate one girl from the other. In fact, the whole cast — Ranbir included — suffers due to badly-etched roles. Arjun Rampal looks dapper but Kabir Grewal offers him nothing that might have helped him prove he can be anything but wooden. While on Ranbir, he looks seriously bored in most parts. The film starts on a slow note and fails to pick up pace thereafter. It becomes a tangled maze in its bid to create suspense, owing to inept storytelling. That’s a universal malady with Bollywood crossover lately. You spot the spark of an idea but the treatment is all goofed up. SHOWBIZ Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 31 THE GONG sounds. No it’s not a Chinese restaurant trying to create an ambience, but a group of diners taking part in a unique experiment. The concept called Dans Le Noir, which literally means ‘In the night’ is now being recreated in India. What this means is that a a bunch of strangers will relish various cuisines, brought to them by whitegloved waiters — blind. The concept, introduced by Food Talk India, is now being carried out in various restaurants in Delhi. Suchir Suri and Anjali Batra, founders of Food Talk India, explain that while the evening is a great ‘bonding’ experience, they want it to help break down barriers when it comes to food. As Anjali says, “Human nature is such that we eat with our eyes – or rather with the lens on our phones nowadays – before we really taste our food. What we loved about this concept was that we had the power to stimulate the senses. Through this you are now thinking about every bite you take, trying to trace down the exact flavours, the textures and identify every little element. It’s like shaking up your mind and making it learn things all over again.” It isn’t just stereotypes about food that are being shaken up. Anamika Singh, certified tea taster and founder/director of Himalayan Tea in 2011, has introduced ‘tea boutiques’ to help discover, or rather rediscover the power of chai. Apart from introducing new signature blends of tea, Anamika, through her tea boutique sessions, has decided to educate both Indians and foreigners about this unique beverage and break some stereotypes in the process. As she says: “There is more to tea than just chai! And that is primarily the reason why I conduct events and workshops, to create awareness and to make people understand that there is diversity in this particular beverage. You can infuse it in food, you can sip it with food, you can have the finest tea, and keep its sanctity alive.” The result is astounding. Apart from buying signature blends guests can now opt for tea appreciation workshops, pairing of the right tea with cheese, or if you prefer, tea with chocolate. As Anamika elaborates: “The reason why I do such varied workshops is to make people understand the ability of this beverage to not only stand alone and infuse your senses but also to bring in an element of surprise of how tea can balance or accentuate the other food it is being paired with, without undervaluing it in terms of palate. At times, a spicy roghan josh is balanced off beau- tifully with a sip of Autumn tea. Or an Oolong tea has its sweetness highlighted if sipped with a smoked Gouda.” Actually striking a chord with Gen- Next, many of whom are well-travelled foodies. Bored of standard restaurants and standard menus — such endeavours are a great boon as it helps them to meet like-minded people and talk about food. This also allows the hospitality industry to introduce ‘experimental’ dishes, which they would not normally have dared to introduce in their traditional menus.But more than anything else it is the sense of innovating on old-time favourite. Eat Treat, a Delhi-based food group on Facebook introduced a burgerfaceoff, where “hidden gems” of the food industry got to showcase their burgers in a no-holds barred competition. Also on the anvil this month is a food flea market where foodies with a talent for making home pickles, jams, or even exotic treats such as snails, can sell their wares. But it’s not just cooks. It also invites those who are farming organic vegetables, or selling unique kitchenware to take part. As a result, budding food entrepreneurs have a chance to meet their target customers. The emergence of these offbeat ideas ensures that we are in for one huge gourmet adventure in the Capital. ADVERTISEMENT Wednesday, February 18-24, 2015 ADVERTISEMENT 32
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