Politics Archive

Delhi court issues bailable warrant against Amar Singh

New Delhi, Nov 3 – Taking a serious view of the non-appearance of Samajwadi Party general secretary Amar Singh, a city court Tuesday issued a bailable arrest warrant against him for not deposing in a two-year-old case.

Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Kaveri Baweja issued the warrant against Singh against a bail amount of Rs.10,000 for Dec 22. The court noted that Singh had earlier on two occasions failed to appear before it, citing various reasons.

Singh’s counsel submitted before the court that the 53-year-old politician could not appear before it as he was busy campaigning for his party candidate from Firozabad parliamentary constituency in Uttar Pradesh.

The court had earlier on two occasions granted him exemption from personal appearance due to his poor health.

Singh had registered a case against Barun Kumar Verma June 4, 2007, alleging that Verma tried to extort money from him in connection with hearing of a case in the Supreme Court relating to Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav.

Meanwhile, Verma through his counsel Anoop Kumar Sharma filed an application in the court requesting it to dismiss the criminal case on the ground that Singh had failed to appear before it despite several opportunities.

The court, however, went ahead with the recording of the statements of witnesses Gitanjali, a personal secretary of Singh, and Ajay Seth, the then landlord of the accused.

Delhi cabinet gives nod to new mediation centres

New Delhi, Nov 3 – To provide speedy justice and reduce backlog of pending cases in city courts, the Delhi government Tuesday decided to open mediation centres across the national capital.

‘In order to provide speedy justice economically and reduce backlog of pending cases in the courts, it has been decided to get registered Delhi Disputes Resolution society to pave the way for creation of a number of mediation centres in different parts of the city,’ Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit said after the cabinet meeting here.

Initially four mediation centres will start functioning.

‘In all, 11 consumer affairs mediation centres, four cheques dishonour mediation centres and four community mediation centres will come up. Services of the retired judges will be utilised at reasonable amount of remuneration per sitting. Apart from this, services of reputed advocates will also be requisitioned,’ Dikshit said.

‘The government is committed to establishing mediation centre in each district with requisite infrastructure. These centres would help parties resolve their disputes amicably, economically and quickly, clear backlog of cases from the courts and save cost of litigation,’ an official statement said here.

‘The focus will primarily be on the pre-litigation disputes. However, the post-litigation cases will also be targeted simultaneously,’ it added.

Pre-litigation disputes would include schools, hospitals and employment-related malpractices, workplace problems, property, harassment, noise, pets problems, water issues, property damages, money issues, cases of consumer affairs, accidental compensation cases and others.

The post-litigation cases would include cases in consumer courts, dishonoured cheques, family disputes, land-related cases, motor accident compensation cases and cases by or against government.

The lone woman minister in Karnataka storm is a gritty fighter

Bangalore, Nov 3 – Shobha Karandlaje, the lone woman minister in the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) first ministry in Karnataka, whose scalp is being demanded by the rebels, is not perturbed.

‘Allegations and insinuations are not new to me,’ she retorts in response to dissidents’ charge of her overbearing attitude and interference in other ministries. Karandlaje is considered close to beleaguered Chief Minister B.S. Yeddyurappa.

The rebels led by Tourism Minister G. Janardhana Reddy and his elder brother G. Karunakara Reddy want Yeddyurappa to go. They may settle for a compromise that would include sacking Karandlaje from the 17-month-old ministry.

Karandlaje, a post-graduate in social work, is not a push over.

‘I have come up the hard way. Let these people prove that I have been interfering in their work,’ she challenges when reporters ask her about the rebels’ allegations.

‘He is like a father figure,’ she says of Yeddyurappa when questioned about her closeness to him.

‘He recognizes talent and hard work. I am not the only woman he has encouraged. There are many in the party whose abilities have been spotted and encouraged.’

Karandlaje was born near Puttur in the coastal Dakshina Kannada district, about 350 km from here, on Oct 23, 1966 to Monappa Gowda and Poovakka.

‘I have been a swayamsevak (a member of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh) and then came to BJP. I have worked hard and not aspired for any post in the organization or government,’ Karandlaje insists.

She was active in the BJP’s student wing Akhila Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishath, Mahila Morcha (women’s wing) and was also the general secretary of the state BJP unit.

Karandlaje is not married and devotes full time to BJP. She was elected to the Vidhana Parishat (legislative council) in June 2004 for the first time.

As she rose in the party ranks, controversies surrounded her, mainly around her closeness to Yeddyurappa.

Ignoring opposition within the party, Yeddyurappa picked her up to fight the May 2008 assembly elections from Yeswanthpur in Bangalore north.

She beat her detractors and won the seat though a section of BJP workers did not canvass for her saying she was an ‘outsider’ as she hailed from Dakshina Kannada.

Yeddyurappa rewarded her by giving Rural Development and Panchayat Raj ministry. He also made her in charge of the prestigious Mysore district, a popular tourist attraction, including the Jamboo Savari or procession of caparisoned elephants during Dussehra festival.

In addition, she was given the task of briefing the media after cabinet meetings.

There have been murmurs ever since by a section of ministers, legislators and partymen about her style of functioning.

When these got louder, she dropped out of the briefing job which was taken over low-profile, soft-spoken Home Minister V.S. Acharya.

She has frosty relations with Mysore district BJP leaders, many of whom boycotted this year’s Dussehra festivities.

The bad blood between her and Mysore leaders had prompted her to appeal to Yeddyurappa at a public function in Mysore a few months to relieve her of the charge the district.

Karandlaje has her supporters in the ministry, besides Yeddyurappa. Medical Education minister Ramachandra Gowda recently rubbished the talk of Karandlage interfering in other ministries.

‘If the charges are proved, I will resign,’ he had said springing to the defense of his lone woman colleague in the ministry.

Karandlage has been keeping a low profile ever since the turmoil reached a high pitch. ‘I am busy attending to my work. My ministry is so vast,’ she explains.

Give up arms, Muslim clerics tell terrorists and Maoists

Deoband (Uttar Pradesh), Nov 3 – Terrorists and Maoists were urged Tuesday to give up arms by a mass gathering of Muslim clerics at India’s oldest Islamic seminary here, prompting Home Minister P. Chidambaram to applaud the move ‘as a call to duty … to all right thinking people’.

Addressing an estimated 500,000 followers, the clerics said the Muslim community, the country’s largest religious minority, would take up their cause if the terrorists and Maoists shunned violence.

‘If terrorists and Maoists agree to give up violence, they are welcome to join us. I would like to assure them that we will fight for them,’ said Maulana Mehmood Madni, convenor of the annual convention whose words carry a lot of weight among Muslims not just in India but even abroad.

The event was organised at the Darul Uloom at Deoband, about 150 km from New Delhi, by the Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Hind, which counts thousands of Muslim clerics in India as members. The Jamiat is one of the most influential organisations among Sunni Muslims in South Asia.

Hailing the clerics for their bold declaration denouncing terrorism, Chidambaram said: ‘I regard the decree as a call to duty to not only Muslims but to all right thinking people. I would urge that more voices be raised, loudly and clearly, against terrorism and all forms of violence.’

Among the 25 resolutions passed at the convention was one reiterating the clerics’ opposition to reciting ‘Vande Mataram’, the national song, as well as to homosexuality and terrorism.

Supporting the 2006 fatwa, or Islamic decree, against ‘Vande Mataram’, the clerics said that some of its lines were ‘against the religious principles of Islam’.

‘We cannot bow before anybody other than the Allah. It is un-Islamic,’ Moulana Muizuddin of the Jamiat told IANS. Muslim clerics issued the fatwa against the national song in 2006. They contend that ‘Vande Mataram’ means ‘Mother (India), I bow to thee!’.

The gathering also demanded reservation in jobs for Muslims as well as implementation of the recommendations of the Sachar Commission, which detailed the socio-economic backwardness of Muslims in India, while seeking a new legislation to equate communal violence with terrorism.

For the first time, some Hindu religious activists also attended the convention – a first in the history of the Islamic seminary, which came up

during the British colonial era.

Renowned yoga guru Swami Ramdev sought to promote his method of keeping fit. He emphasised the need to promote communal harmony. ‘It is high time people realized that ‘Ishwar’ and ‘Allah’ were two names of one and the only god.’

Swami Agnivesh drew much applause when he talked about banning liquor and urged Muslims not to recite Vande Mataram.

In his speech, Chidambaram described the 1992 razing of the Babri Masjid as a manifestation of ‘extreme prejudice’. He emphasized that communalism was against pluralism and opposed political freedom to people.

‘Communalism is the negation of pluralism. Communalism also opposes modernity, rejects the idea of civil society, and opposes political freedom to the people,’ Chidambaram told the gathering.

‘The demolition of the Babri Masjid was a manifestation of religious fanaticism and an act of extreme prejudice. Likewise, taking to the path of violence in the name of religion must also be deplored in unequivocal terms,’ he said.

Chidambaram said India, home to the world’s third largest Muslim population after Indonesia and Pakistan, could not view Islam as an ‘alien faith’.

‘Our Muslim brethren are honoured citizens of India. This is the land of your forbears; this is the land of your birth; and this is where you will live and work. It is a matter of pride for us that all major religions of the world, including Islam, exist and thrive in India.’

The minister said civil society was based on a compact and tolerance was at the core of this compact.

Minister of State for Communications Sachin Pilot, All India Muslim Personal Law Board’s senior vice president Maulana Kalbe Sadiq and social activist Swami Agnivesh also addressed the gathering.

PM questions quality of higher education in India

Chandigarh, Nov 3 – Coming to his alma mater, the Panjab University, after many years made Prime Minister Manmohan Singh feel a ‘little emotional’. But that did not stop him from questioning the quality of higher education being imparted by institutions in the country.

Addressing faculty and students of the university where he once studied and later taught, Manmohan Singh, wearing his trademark white kurta-payjama and a black half-jacket with light-blue turban, said: ‘A major problem that we face is in the quality of higher education that our institutions impart. Unfortunately, most of them produce pass-outs who are nowhere near international standards.’

The prime minister was honoured by the PU with a Doctor of Law (honoris causa) at a special convocation here. Later, he laid the foundation stone of a multi-purpose auditorium and examination centre.

The prime minister said: ‘In fact, one dimension of the quality deficit is the difficulty being faced in recruiting top class faculty for the new IIMs, IITs, central universities and other such institutions that the government has decided to establish in the last five years.’

‘Even if we meet our targets of higher access and enrolment, even if we spend huge amounts on higher education and even if we open a large number of new institutions, this issue of quality will not get addressed by itself.’

He said that to overcome this deficit of quality in higher education, the central government has come out with a ‘very progressive pay package for attracting and retaining talented faculty’. He added that the central government was fully committed to structural reforms in higher education.

‘I do recognize that we have a mammoth task ahead in pursuing our goal of providing access to good education to every citizen in the country. This is true of higher education also.’

He noted that at present, in any year, only about 12 per cent of the students who complete secondary education enrol for higher education. ‘This does not compare well with the figure of about 70 per cent in some developed countries. It is also much lower than the figure of about 20 per cent in some southeast Asian countries. We must increase this proportion,’ he said.

‘We must also address the existing imbalances in our higher education system. Today, nearly half of the institutions of higher learning exist in only five states, nearly 70 per cent of the total intake capacity for professional courses exists in another five states. There is a large gender gap in enrolments for higher education, and there are large intra-state imbalances too. We must address these deficiencies.’

The prime minister told students in the audience that they were a ‘privileged lot’ to be studying ‘in one of the best universities in the country’.

Saying that he was ‘greatly indebted’ to the PU, the prime minister said that he had spent ‘some of the best years’ of his life here.

CPI-M demands action against police officials, Dinakaran

Chennai, Nov 3 – The Communist Party of India-Marxist’s (CPI-M) Tamil Nadu unit Tuesday demanded the state government take disciplinary action against the four police officials indicted by by the Madras High Court recently in the attack on lawyers.

‘The state government must implement the court order against the officials while holding talks with the lawyers to avoid boycott of courts in the future,’ CPI-M state secretary N. Varadarajan said, according to a statement issued here.

A two member bench of the Madras High Court Thursday held that the Feb 19 attack by the police on the lawyers was an attack on the judiciary and ordered disciplinary action against former city police commissioner K. Radhakrishna, now an additional director general of police, and three other senior officials – A.K. Viswanathan, M. Ramasubramani, and Premanandan.

While the counsel for the state government told the court that the government would implement its order, no action has been taken against the officials till date.

The CPI-M leader also demanded the Prime Minister to drop Telecom Minister A. Raja over the spectrum allocation issue while urging the Chief Justice of India to take action against P.D. Dinakaran, chief justice of Karnataka High Court, for land encroachment.

Madhu Koda in hospital, raids continue for fourth day

Ranchi/New Delhi, Nov 3 – Former Jharkhand chief minister Madhu Koda, under the scanner for allegedly amassing over Rs.2,000 crore (Rs.20 billion / $425 million) illegally, was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) of Apollo Hospital in Ranchi as raids continued at his premises for the fourth consecutive day Tuesday.

Income Tax (IT) officials were questioning Koda at his Ranchi residence when he said that he was feeling uneasy. Koda has a history of medical problems.

‘He was admitted after complaining of stomach ache, vomiting and high blood pressure. We are conducting tests and will be able to say anything after the test reports,’ D.P Sinha, a doctor at the hospital, told IANS.

‘His condition is now stable,’ he said.

Koda was operated upon a fortnight ago after he complained of stomach pain.

The Lok Sabha MP returned home from the hospital last week when the IT department started raiding his houses and other properties.

Both the Enforcement Directorate and the IT department, which is leading the probe, are investigating disproportionate assets amassed by Koda and his associates. They have already conducted raids at 70 places in eight cities and discovered documents relating to illegal transactions worth Rs.20 billion.

The Enforcement Directorate has already charged Koda with investing $1.7 million in a coal mine in Liberia through a Russian middleman.

Investigators told IANS that they were still trying to unravel investments made at different places, the network used to invest money and people involved in the illegal transactions.

‘This is a big network and money was funnelled illegally to countries abroad,’ said a finance ministry official. The investigations have now fanned out to five countries.

An official press release on Monday said the IT department is continuing its search and seizure operations under provisions of the Income Tax Act and has summoned six people for questioning.

The six who have been asked to appear before the department Nov 6 are Vinod Kumar Sinha, Sanjay Chaudhary, Devendra Mukhiya, Basant Bhattacharya, Manoj Punamiya and Anil Bastawde. Sinha and Chaudhary are close associates of Koda.

‘If they fail to appear on the said date, the department will be constrained to take strict legal actions as permissible under various laws,’ the statement added.

Asked if Koda was cooperating with the IT sleuths, Director-General (IG-Investigation), Anjani Kumar, told reporters, ‘Not much. If I get proper support and cooperation, the investigation will conclude soon.’

Meanwhile, Sinha Tuesday said that he will fully co-operate with the investigation.

‘I will personally appear before the Income Tax department before the given date (Nov 6) and present version of things,’ Sinha told a television channel.

Sinha acknowledged that he is a good friend of Koda and said the raids were ‘politically motivated’ ahead of assembly polls in the state.

‘Koda is good friend of mine. I belong to his constituency and I know him well. The Income Tax and Enforcement Directorate raids are politically motivated and aims to defame Koda,’ Sinha said.

‘The raids are motivated due to assembly polls. There are people who do not want Koda to emerge stronger in our areas (Jamshedpur and Chaibaasa),’ he said.

Koda became chief minister at the age of 35. In 2005, his declaration to the Election Commission listed his total assets at Rs.12 lakh.

Protesters stop Shatabdi trains in Haryana, Punjab

New Delhi, Nov 3 – A Shatabdi Express from Amritsar to the national capital was prevented from leaving Tuesday by activists of a Sikh outfit, while another Shatabdi was stopped in Haryana by villagers after it ran over six people.

The Amritsar-New Delhi Shatabdi was stopped at the Amritsar railway station by activists of Dal Khalsa, a radical group that called a shutdown to protest against what it said was the denial of justice to families of thousands killed in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.

‘The train was stopped at the Amritsar station. As it was difficult to start the journey due to the protests, the train was later cancelled,’ A.S. Negi, public relations officer of Northern Railways, told IANS.

In a separate incident, the New Delhi-Ajmer Shatabdi was stopped for five hours by angry villagers early Tuesday after six people were crushed by the speeding train at Pataudi in Haryana.

‘Six people were run over by the Shatabdi when they were crossing the railway track. They were all from the same village,’ said Anant Swarup, a spokesperson of the Northern Railways.

‘Because of the accident, the engine of the train was damaged. We sent another engine from Delhi. However, because of the protests there, the relief engine could not be attached immediately,’ he said.

Police said villagers stoned the train and blocked traffic on the Delhi-Ajmer section for five hours.

‘The police managed to clear the tracks and the train left Pataudi for its onward journey at 1.15 p.m.,’ said Swarup.

In the Punjab shutdown, other trains such as Sachkhand Express, Dadar Express and Superfast Express were also stopped by the protesters. Scores of Dal Khalsa members squatted on the tracks.

Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by two of her Sikh guards Oct 31, 1984. The killing led to riots against Sikhs with thousands being killed and rendered homeless.

Muslim clerics support Vande Mataram fatwa, BJP calls it ‘anti-national’

Deoband/Lucknow, Nov 3 – The Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Hind Tuesday supported a decree against the national song ‘Vande Mataram’ on the grounds that some of its lines were ‘against the religious principles of Islam’. The move drew fierce criticism from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which termed the move ‘anti-national’.

The resolution asking Muslims not to sing the national song was passed at the national convention of the Jamiat, one of the largest groups of Muslim clerics in India, held at Darul Uloom Deoband, one the largest Muslim seminaries in South Asia, about 150 km from the national capital.

Home Minister P. Chidambaram was present at the convention, which was also attended by some Hindu priests.

Muslim clerics had issued the fatwa, or decree, against the song in 2006. They contended that ‘Vande Mataram’ means ‘Mother (India), I bow to thee!’.

Terming the decree against the singing of the national song as ‘anti-national’, the BJP said Islamic organisations should desist from issuing such fatwas that are against the nation’s interest.

‘We oppose the fatwa and will not tolerate such religious decrees at any cost. They are against our national values,’ BJP national general secretary Kalraj Mishra told reporters at a press conference in Lucknow.

‘As such fatwas stand against national integrity, we all should stand united against them,’ he added.

The BJP also strongly criticised the Congress ministers for participating in such a convention where the fatwa against the national song was issued.

‘Participation of Congress ministers like Home Minister P. Chidambaram is unfortunate. It clearly reflects approach of the Congress party that it doesn’t mind compromising with anti-national organisations just to appease the minority community,’ said the BJP’s state unit president Ramapati Ram Tripathi.

‘Interestingly, the Congress leaders are singing the national song since 1896 and had even organised a programme in 2006 on its 100th anniversary, but now it’s truly shocking and surprising as they themselves are supporting anti-national organisations that are against Vande Matram,’ he added.

However, Muslim clerics were firm on their stand.

‘Some of its lines are of course against the religious principles of Islam. We cannot bow before anybody other than the Allah. It is un-Islamic,’ Moulana Muizuddin of the Jamiat said.

‘Islam teaches us to worship only one god, Allah. We are Indians and there are other ways to express our feelings for the nation rather than bowing before it. Loving your country doesn’t only mean worshipping it,’ Muizuddin told IANS.

‘We love our mothers. Islam doesn’t even permit bowing before mother. We love the Prophet but we cannot even bow before him.’

Maulana Salman, who teaches at the Deoband seminary, said: ‘We are true Muslims and true Indians. There is no doubt about that. But we no longer remain Muslims when we offer our prayers to anybody else than the Allah. Patriotism is not only about singing songs. We are and will remain Indians without singing Vande Mataram.’

Muslim clerics support fatwa on ‘Vande Mataram’

Deoband (Uttar Pradesh), Nov 3 – The Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Hind, one of the largest organisations of Muslim clerics in India, Tuesday supported a decree against the national song ‘Vande Mataram’ on the ground that some of its lines were ‘against the religious principles of Islam’.

The resolution asking Muslims not to sing the ‘Vande Mataram’ was passed at the national convention of the Jamiat held at Darul Uloom, Deoband, one the largest Muslim seminaries in South Asia, about 150 km from the national capital.

Home Minister P. Chidambaram was present at the convention, which was also attended by some Hindu priests.

Muslim clerics had issued the fatwa, or decree, against the national song in 2006. They contend that ‘Vande Mataram’ means ‘Mother (India), I bow to thee!’.

‘Some of its lines are, of course, against the religious principles of Islam. We cannot bow before anybody other than the Allah. It is un-Islamic,’ Moulana Muizuddin of the Jamiat said.

‘Islam teaches us to worship only one god, the Allah. We are Indians and there are other ways to express our feelings for the nation rather than bowing before it. Loving your country doesn’t only mean worshipping it,’ Muizuddin told IANS.

‘We love our mothers. Islam doesn’t even permit bowing before mother. We love the Prophet, but we cannot bow even before him.’

Maulana Salman, who teaches at the Deoband seminary, said: ‘We are true Muslims and true Indians. There is no doubt about that. But we no longer remain Muslims when we offer our prayers to anybody else than the Allah. Patriotism is not only about singing songs. We are and will remain Indians without singing Vande Mataram.’