Chaitra 3, 2065 Vik Samvat. Yugabda 5110: 16 March 2009

1. FESTIVALS: OVER 25L WOMEN TURN OUT FOR KERALA TEMPLE RITUAL:
More than 25 lakh women descended on the Kerala capital Thiruvananthapuram, on March 9 for the annual 'pongal' ritual at Attukala Devi Temple. The event billed as the largest congregation of women in Asia made it to the Guinness Book of World Records in 1977 with an attendance of 15 lakh. The all-woman affair falls on the penultimate day of the 10-day festival at the temple, also known as the 'Sabarimala' of women as men are a strict no on the ritual day.

"Agar koi Hindu ke khilaf ungali uthaiga, ya sochega ki Hindu kamzor hain…toh main Gita ki kasam khata hoon main unke haat kaat doonga (If anyone raises a finger towards Hindus or if someone thinks that Hindus are weak…then I swear on the Gita that I will cut that hand). -- Varun Gandhi, in a recent speech in Pilibhit.

2. BJP RELEASES IT VISION DOCUMENT: PM aspirant L K Advani has come out with BJP's IT vision document, hoping to cash in on the "connectivity revolution".
By tying its national IT vision to national security, employment, farm productivity, retail, education, medical facilities, health insurance, banking, mobile telephony, IT software, IT hardware, governance and overall transformation, BJP is attempting to reach out to a large electoral pool.
The dream it is selling is of making 21st century a Bharatiya century through creation of productive employment opportunities, accelerated human development through improved and expanded healthcare and education services, arresting corruption and making national security more robust.
Unveiling BJP's IT vision document, Advani said if voted to power, NDA would enact a law to make a multi-purpose national identity card mandatory for every citizen.
3. STUNNING! STEM CELLS FROM ADULT CELLS: It was 'Eureka, we did it too' for a core team of scientists at the well-equipped stem cell research centre, located in Bagayam in Bharat suburban Vellore in north Tamil Nadu. For the first time in India, the scientific team, which began work on generating iPS cells from mice in October 2008, scored a success in February 2009.
Working in labs in the hexagonal building in the quiet mofussil town, scientists experimented with infection-free mice recently acquired from certified labs in the US. Cells extracted from mouse tail tips were grown in a tissue culture plate to obtain adult fibroblasts (cells of tissues that play a vital role in wound healing). The iPS cells appeared 12 to 14 days later and were tested for their embryonic stem cell-like characteristics. The results were more than satisfactory.
The iPS cells have two major applications. First, they can be used to study mechanisms of disease or test drugs and secondly, they can be used to treat diseases without immunological rejection, which is a major problem with embryonic stem cells or adult stem cells taken from other human beings.
4. BHARATIYA MISSILE DEFENSES MATURE: Bharat continues to have success in developing its own anti-missile system. Recently, Bharat conducted its third successful test, intercepting an incoming missile 75 kilometers up. The Bharatiya BMDS (Ballistic Missile Defence System) actually consists of one radar system, and two different missiles. The Prithvi Air Defence (PAD) missile is used for high altitude interception, while the Advanced Air Defence (AAD) takes care of missiles that make it past PAD, and can deal with targets as high up as 30 kilometers. Bharat has been working on BMDS for a decade, and has bought radar and other technology from Israel. Because of the many successful tests, Bharat expects to deploy the first BMDS batteries next year.
5. BHARATIYA LAWMAKER SUSPENDED BY MALAYSIAN PARLIAMENT: An ethnic Bharatiya lawmaker was on March 16 held guilty of contempt and suspended for a year after he called Malaysia's next prime minister Najib Razak a murderer in connection with the 2006 killing of a Mongolian woman.
Gobind Singh Deo, member of the Opposition party DAP, was suspended from Parliament without allowance and benefits for his remarks which were termed derogatory by a majority of MPs, Speaker Pandikar Amin Mulia said.
Singh, whose father Karpal Singh is also an opposition MP, created a stir in the House on March 12 when he launched a tirade against Deputy Prime Minister Razak, who is to become Prime Minister next month.
Deo, a known lawyer, wanted Najib to respond to the opposition accusations that he had a hand in the killing of Mongolian Altantuya Shaariibuu's although the chair had ordered him to stop.
6. NUNS TREATED LIKE SERVANTS BY PRIESTS: CARDINAL: Early last year, a study by the Catholic church found that 25% of the nuns in Kerala were unhappy with life inside the four walls of a convent. More recently, a former nun dropped a bombshell revealing in a book about sexual abuse and mental harassment she suffered in the order. Now,there's further confirmation of their misery and it comes from the leader of India's archbishops.
Cardinal Varkey Vithayathil, who is president of Catholic Bishops Council of India, says the nuns are humiliated by priests and they live in fear.
The cardinal's views have appeared in his biography, much like the nun's own. If Sister Jesmi's book was called `Amen! Autobiography of a nun', Vithayathil's book is titled `Straight from the heart'. The cardinal tells his biographer Paul Thelakat, the spokesperson of Syro-Malabar Church, that the time has come to free the nuns from the "pitiable situation'' they are in.
"I would say to a great extent our nuns are not emancipated women. They are often kept under submission by the fear of revenge by priests. That's how the priests get away with whatever humiliation they heap upon them. It is a pitiable situation from which somebody has to liberate them,'' says the 82-year-old cardinal.
"A big complaint of our nuns is that the diocesan priests are treating them like servants, making them wash their clothes, prepare their food, wash the churches, etc and that too without getting paid.
7. HARAPPAN-ERA CEMETERY FOUND: In an extraordinary archaeological finding, a big housing complex that matured during the Harappan era has been discovered in the little known village Farmana about 40 km from Rohtak.
A cemetery belonging to the same civilization which existed about 3500-3000 BC has also been found at an adjacent site, where nearly 70 skeletons have been unearthed so far.
The team of archaeologists from Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Kyoto Japan, Deccan College, Pune and Maharshi Dayanand University, Rohtak, discovered the habitation site spread over 18.5 hectare. It has four big complexes and a cemetery spread over about three hectare. The excavations indicate that this region was part of the 5,000 years old Indus Valley culture, considered one of the most advanced urban civilizations in ancient times.
8. TIBET'S 50 YEARS OF BEING TOO PATIENT?: On March 10 every year, the residents of McLeodganj (Upper Dharamshala) wear their finery and head to Tsughlakhang, the temple near the Dalai Lama's house in the middle of a pine forest. After a round of chanting, the Tibetan leader appears on the temple's first floor and addresses the gathering. This year is the 50th anniversary of the Tibetans' failed uprising against the Chinese Army in Lhasa and the Dalai Lama's escape to Bharat. Fifty years is a long time to be patient, so observers believe the Dalai Lama may say something significant this year, thereby giving new direction to the Tibetan movement.
The Dalai Lama is under pressure from November's special conclave of Tibetan representatives held at Dharamshala which put his Middle Way strategy on notice, but he is still preaching patience. On March 10 last year, Lhasa had erupted with monks and ordinary Tibetans coming out on to the streets and clashing with PLA troops.
Wary of bloodshed again, the Dalai Lama used his Losar or Tibetan New Year address of February 24 to ask Tibetans to be patient so that "the precious lives of many Tibetans are not wasted, and they do not have to undergo torture and suffering." But his message was delivered as Tibetans boycotted Losar festivities to protest against last year's Chinese crackdown. "The authorities ordered all shops to be closed on the first day of Losar, but instead of complying with the order, most of the Tibetan shops were open early in the morning," a resident of Kardze in Tibet told Radio Free Asia last week.
Tempers are rising on the Tibetan plateau. Despite China's threat to "wage a people's war" to crush any rebellion, there are protests everyday. In the past few days, monks have taken out protest rallies in parts of Qinghai and Sichuan provinces. Last week, a monk in Sichuan tried to burn himself, prompting the Chinese police to shoot at him. Fearing an action replay of last year's unrest, which almost ruined Beijing's Olympics party, China has ensured the largest troop deployment since last year's Sichuan earthquake. Foreigners, including journalists, have been detained.
The Chinese are all set for an ideological assault on the Dalai Lama on March 10 by celebrating it as Serfs Emancipation Day. "There will be no trouble in Tibet. The government has made extensive plans to make sure there is no reccurrence of last year's riots," says Ma Jaili, a senior researcher with the state-run Institute of Contemporary International Relations in Beijing. "Most Tibetans want peace and prosperity. It is only a few mischievous elements misguiding them."
As far as peace goes, the Dalai Lama made it clear on March 6 that he was on the same page as the Chinese. "There is no scope for force, violence or terror for resolution of any issue in this globalized world," he said at a conclave in New Delhi.
Some Tibetan officials believe patience could be their strongest weapon against China. "For the first time, the Chinese economy is facing a crisis. They have used their economy to subjugate Tibet and to influence global opinion. Now, it's a good chance for Tibetans to assert themselves," says an official. In their 50th year in exile, it may be harder than ever before for Tibetans to believe the old proverb 'everything comes to him who waits'.
9. MUSIC AS AN EXPRESSION OF THE DIVINE: Rashtriya Sangeet Utsav in Mysore: A four day- Rashtriya Sangeet Utsav was organised at Nada Mantapa, a palatial super structure dedicated to the cause of music at Sri Ganapati Sachchidananda Ashram, Mysore (Karnataka) from 19th to 22nd February, 2009. The event was jointly organised by Sanskar Bharati and Kannada & Cultural Department, Government of Karnataka.
The nadaswaram unfurled the Utsav. Padama Bhushan Dr M Balamuralikrishnan, doyen of Karnataka music inaugurated the Utsav in the divine presence of Ganapati Sachchidananda Swami, Jagadguru Shivaratri Deshkendra Swami, Suttur Math, Mysore and Datta Vijayananda Swami of Datta Peetham. Mohan Bhagwat, Sarkaryavah, RSS, and Yogendra, Sanrakshak, Sanskar Bharati graced the occasion. In his inaugural address, Dr Balamurali Krishnan declared that his aim in life is to establish Bharatiya Sangeet and take it to higher pinnacles of glory.
Mohan Bhagwat, in his address, said that the very purpose of the existence of RSS is to take the nation to pinnacle of glory -- parama vaibhav -- through character building. Bharatiya sangeet is a Bharatiya identity in the entire world. We don't just treat sangeet as a means of entertainment. Sangeet has magnetic property which elicits satyam, shivam and sundaram in man and elevates him to the level of Narayana.
Around 500 delegates from all over Bharat took part in the utsav.
10. FULLY SOLAR-POWERED UP VILLAGE IS BHARAT’S: The sun never sets on Rampura village in Jhansi anymore. The Bundlekhand village is the first in the country to get its solar power plant. It did not have any electricity at all. But now, the kerosene lamps, under which children used to study, have started gathering dust.
The children in the village now study or play under electric lamps in the nights, listen to the radio and watch TV — all because of solar energy. It is an 8.7 kilowatt power plant. Installed at a cost of Rs 31.5 lakh, it provides electricity to all 69 houses in the village. Development Alternatives, a non-profit organisation, in collaboration with Scatec Solar of Norway, gave the village the Community-based Solar Power Plant. Rampura is 17 km from Jhansi.
Norwegian Minister for Environment and International Development Erik Solheim inaugurated the project. Solheim, an Indologist, told the villagers: “Your village draws its name from Lord Rama. And you will fight the demon of darkness (neglect, underdevelopment and backwardness) with the sun.” The plant was inaugurated on January 26.
11. EKAL VIDYALAYA FOUNDATION GETS BVP UTKRISHTATA SAMMAN: Bharat Vikas Parishad honoured the Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation with its Utkrishtata Samman for the year 2007-2008 for its excellent services in the empowerment of Vanvasis and villagers. The Samman was presented at the national Governing Body of the Parishad held in Hyderabad on February 14. It was second Samman by the Parishad, which was instituted in the memory of its founding secretary general the late Dr. Suraj Prakash. Vijay Maroo, president of the Foundation accepted the Samman. Subhash Gupta, president of US Chapter of the Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation was also present. Standing between Bharat's growth and her becoming a super power is illiteracy at the grass root level. Ekal's mission is to eradicate illiteracy from rural areas, particularly amongst Vanvasis so that the people can have access to primary health, childcare, gainful self-employment and to empower them economically and socially. It is a vision that embraces integrity, determination and commitment with 26724 Ekal Vidyalayas spread all over Bharat as on date.
12. MALAYSIAN INDIAN SPEAKER CAN ENGAGE OWN LAWYER: COURT: Indian origin speaker of Malaysia's Perak State Assembly V Sivakumar Friday won an appeal in court to appoint his own lawyer to fight suits filed by two parties, instead of being represented by the state legal adviser. The Court of Appeal said there "is no provision in any law that the Speaker must be represented by the State legal adviser. (He) is not a State officer or a Government of the State under Section 24(3) of the Government Proceedings Act 1956", the Star newspaper reported.
"We uphold that the speaker is at liberty to engage his own private advocate and solicitor," said Justice Mohammed Raus Sharif who sat with Justices Abdull Hamid Embong and Ahmad Ma'arop. The ruling overturned the orders given by Judicial Commissioner Ridwan Ibrahim March 3, 5 and 11, insisting that Sivakumar could only be represented by Perak State's legal adviser. He said that Sivakumar, as the presiding officer of the Legislature, was "part of the Government". The ruling gives a fresh twist to the ongoing controversy on Sivakumar's action last month of suspending from the legislature Perak Chief Minister Zambry Abdul Kadir and all six of his ministers. Sivakumar wanted his own counsel to represent him in the suit filed against him by the Chief Minister, the Ministers and three independents whom he had expelled.
13. A LESSON IN SAVING JOBS DURING MELTDOWN: Chetana 2009, a state level management festival was held under the auspices of Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) on February 20, 21, 22 at Osmania University, Hyderabad. About 450 management students across the State from more than 120 colleges attended the event. Saiprasad, State Convener of the Swadesh addressed a seminar on "Our Economic Progress and Globalisation".
Prof. Jayant Kulkarni of Chaitanya Bharathi Institute of Technology in his address exhorted students to follow Swami Vivekananda's teachings. He recalled that we were self-reliant in the past and still we are rich in natural resources and never had to depend on imports.
Prof. Tirupathi Rao vice-chancellor of Osmania University said the rate of savings in Bharat is 30 per cent where as in USA it is only 3 per cent. What is needed; is the efforts to intensify our rate of growth accured from our savings he said. A key requirement of developing knowledge workers, globally in demand, is proficiency in math, science, philosophy and logic. These are the characteristic of Vedic culture and society.
14. DHARMA SABHA BY IVHP IN DELHI: Jains are very much part of Hindu society—Jainacharya Vijay Ratnasunder Surishwar; Leading Jain saint Shri Vijay Ratnasunder Surishwar Maharaj categorically said in New Delhi that the Jains are part and parcel of Hindu society and any move to separate them from the Hindu society would set the disastrous precedent which may even lead to another Division of the nation. He was presiding over a Dharma Sabha in Delhi organised at Mahavir Kendra on March 1. All the speakers and the saints participating in the Sabha stressed the need to warn the political leadership in clear words not to divide the society any more. The Dharma Sabha was organised by Indraprastha Vishwa Hindu Parishad.
15. SWAMI RAMDEV’S AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION: After teaching millions the ‘miraculous powers’ of Yoga, Swami Ramdev has now embarked on a new proj¬ect to bring about krishi kranti (agricultural revolution) in the country and help farmers prosper.
Union Minister of State for Food Processing Industry Subodh Kant Sahai laid the foundation of Patanjali Food and Herbal Park, the ‘biggest such venture in Asia’, at Padaratha, a village 15 km from here on the Haridwar-Laksar Road. One of the 30 mega food parks to be set up in the country under a Union Government scheme, the Park will have a sprawling 1,700 bigha campus with a built-up area of about 20 lakh sq. ft., and an estimat¬ed investment of Rs. 500 crore, Swami Ramdev said. Processing about seven lakh tonnes of raw material fetched from the northern states per year, it would create around 30,000 jobs, he added.
16. THREE-DAY NATIONAL SEMINAR ON HEALTH IN DEHRADUN: "The health policies should be formulated involving the medical experts. The over all objective of any policy should be to extend the benefits to the last person of the society. It is the section of the society about whom everybody talk but nobody does anything. If we have truly to reach this section the campaigns targetting them should be in their own languages or dialects. It could develop a hope for these people,” said RSS Sahsarkaryavah Sureshrao Joshi who is popularly known as Bhaiyaji Joshi. He was inaugurating a three-day seminar on health in Dehradun recently. The seminar had been organised at Forest Research Institute. About 80 health experts from 22 states of the country participated in the seminar. The deliberations were on various aspects of health in 12 sessions. Arogya Bharati, Vishwa Ayurveda Parishad, Ayurveda Vyas Peeth, Jankalyan Samiti and Doctors' Cell of BJP also helped in the seminar.
17. NRIs COMING BACK, 100K OVER THE NEXT 3-5 YEARS: Bharatiyas and Chinese are returning home in droves from US, with over 100,000 each expected to wing back to their home country over the next three to five years. The principal reason for the reverse flight is not US visa restrictions but the enduring lure of family and friends, and new professional opportunities back home. A new study released in Washington recently has several such surprising and unexpected revelations, including the fact that a vast majority of those returning are relatively young — the average age of Bharatiyas was 30, and of Chinese was 33. The majority (89.8% of Bharatiyas and 72.4% of Chinese) were male; most (72.7% of Bharatiyas and 67.1% of Chinese) were married. The study shows that even those who are permanently settled in the US are choosing to return. Among the respondents who have already returned, 26.9% of Bharatiyas and 34% of Chinese held green cards (permanent residency) or US Citizenship.
18. THREE AUTHORS WIN NAVLEKHAN AWARDS: The authors who got the Bharatiya Jnanpith 2008 Navlekhan awards were Hindi language poets Ravikant and Umashanker Chaudhary and novelist Vimal Chandra Pandey.
While Ravikant's Yatra and Chaudhary's `Kehte Hai Tab Shahenshah So Rahe The' got a cash prize of Rs 21,000 each, Pandey's novel Darr got him Rs 25,000.
19. SEEDS OF A QUIET REVOLUTION: Bija Devi had a tough time recently explaining what gehu (wheat) was to a group of German students who had come all the way to her farm to learn about what they thought was a long-lost variety of wheat. Bija Devi’s seed bank at her farm near Dehradun in the foothills of the Himalayas has over a thousand varieties of ‘lost’ cereals, pulses, fruits and vegetables, and over 500 varieties of rice alone, though she’s clueless about their scientific names. Bija Devi has worked as a farmer since she was seven, has never been to school and isn’t sure about her age (she says she is in her early 40s). But she has become a focal point in the field of rescuing and conserving crops and plants that have been sacrificed to modern farming. She began under the guidance of green activist Vandana Shiva, who started a movement across the country to save seeds for future generations. Bija Devi’s work now attracts researchers, students and scientists from all over the world and agricultural universities in the US and Europe send her their students as summer trainees for six months. Her farm is a central seed bank for farmers in 16 states, with 34 similar community seed banks set up across India. “I am no scientist,” she says, “but I know that chemicals and hybrids have harmed the soil to a great extent. But we can still restore fertility and conserve water if we act now.”
20. CHINA HAS CREATED 'HELL ON EARTH' IN TIBET: DALAI: Charging China with launching a "brutal crackdown" in Tibet and creating "hell on earth" there, the Dalai Lama on March 10 asked Beijing to provide "legitimate and meaningful" autonomy for the Himalayan plateau.
China has brought "untold suffering and destruction" to that region by unleashing repressive campaigns, he said in a speech marking the 50th anniversary of the failed uprising that led him into exile.
"And quite apart from the current process of Sino- Tibetan dialogue having achieved no concrete result, there has been brutal crackdown on the Tibetan protests that shook the whole of Tibet since March last year," the 73-year-old monk said addressing a gathering in Meceodgant, Upper Dharmashala. The Chinese campaigns "thrust Tibetans into such depths of suffering and hardship that they literally experienced hell on earth," he said while noting that these had taken the lives of "hundreds of thousands" of Tibetans.
21. BALI TURNS TO YOGA ASANAS: The yoga bug is fast catching on among the people of Indonesia, especially in the island of Bali, who are seeking better health, cure of ailments or beauty through the ancient Bharatiya practice despite the ban on certain elements of yoga. "I have been learning yoga for the past one year at the Bali India Foundation under the aegis of professor Somvir. The benefits have been amazing - I feel good about myself," A.A. Ayu Sri Wariyani Se, a 43-year-old entrepreneur, said. "My son has also started learning yoga now. And I have also turned vegetarian because of this...although I do give in to the temptation of fish at times," she added.
"And it's not just people from one community learning yoga. In the past two years I have trained more than 100 Muslims and students from other communities. We are trying to tell people that yoga is beyond religion...it's just a means to a healthy life."
22. VISHWA MANGAL GO GRAM YATRA: A 108-day Vishwa Mangal Go-Gram Yatra will be flagged off from Kurukshetra on Vijayadashami, September 28, 2009 which will culminate in Nagpur on Makar Sankranti in 2010 after traveling 20 thousand kilometers length and breadth of Bharat. The yatra will pass all the four dhamas, seven pious cities, tweleve Jyotirlingas and almost all the pilgrimage places, rivers and mountain. Baba Ramdev, Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, Mata Amrutanandmayee, Muni Vidya Sagar ji, Sureshwarji, Jagjit Singh ji, etc are the flag bearers of the yatra. Dr. Pranab Pandya of Gayatri Parivar is the President of the Yatra Samiti and Dr. H.R. Nagendra Vice-Chancellor, Swami Vivekananda Yog University Benguluru is the executive president of the yatra.
23. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN: Nootan Varsha, Chaitra Shukla 1, Vik. Samvat. 2066 corresponds to. 27th March 2009, Abhinandan to all our Bhaginis/Bandhus around the Globe. Visitors: Smt. Joshna Mamtora and Shri Arjunlal Sharma from UK. Pravas: Dr. Shankarrao Tatwawadi, Samyojak Vishwa Vibhag, returned Bharat from Middle East for Akhil Bharaitya Pratinidhi Sabha baithak and he will tour South Africa in the first week of April.
24. FOOD FOR THOUGHT: The work of Sangh transcends narrow personalities, provinces, sects, languages and castes. The Sangh has no place for such different types of parochial loyalties. Its ideal is to bring all the people together on the common basis of love and reverence for the motherland and her culture. -- Shri Guruji.

JAI SHREE RAM
A PAKISTANI RED HERRING
MN BUCH
It is curious that just as the world had cornered Pakistan over the 26/11 Mumbai attack, Islamabad began to play the Taliban card. Obviously, the purpose is to divert attention from the core issue of Pakistan-sponsored cross-border terrorism. This diversionary tactic should be ignored by all.
On November 26, 2008, a group of terrorists originating in Pakistan created absolute havoc in Mumbai, during the course of which at least 177 people died, many were injured and the was city held to ransom for almost three days. We had to deploy the local police, Army, Navy and NSG commandos before all the terrorists were accounted for and normalcy restored. Fourteen policemen and two commandos were killed. One terrorist was arrested because a heroic member of the Maharashtra Police caught hold of him despite himself being fatally wounded.
Pakistan, of course, denied any knowledge of participation in the attack, even going to the extent of saying that the arrested terrorist was not a Pakistani. However, sustained interrogation of the terrorist by the Indian authorities, the FBI, British and Israeli intelligence agencies unravelled the conspiracy and eventually Islamabad had to acknowledge that the attack originated in Pakistan and the conspiracy was hatched in that country. FIRs have been registered in Pakistan and some sort of investigation is under way.
Pakistan has steadfastly refused to extradite to Bharat those suspected of participating in the 26/11 attack or are masterminds of such terrorist activity on a consistent basis. Of course, the US has been pressuring Pakistan to bring the perpetrators of this crime to justice, but it is obvious that Pakistan is dragging its feet.
Pakistan’s ISI and the Army, have actively encouraged organisations whose sole objective is to destabilise neighbouring countries, particularly Bharat and Afghanistan. These organisations are supported by various groups such as LeT, JuD, HuJI, etc, and many of them have been banned by the US. The overt involvement of the Pakistani Government and its covert approval of terrorist operations against India are well documented.
Neither Washington nor London has ever positively responded to our complaints that Pakistan has been subjecting us to a low intensity conflict, the objective of which is to destabilise the Indian state. It took the death of 46 foreigners, including British and American citizens, to convince these countries that India is a victim of Pakistan-conspired terrorism and that Pakistan must be forced to bring the terrorists to book. It is under the sustained pressure from the Western countries that Pakistan had to admit that Ajmal Amir Kasab is a Pakistani national and that the conspiracy against India was planned in Pakistan.
Almost coinciding with Pakistan’s admission three events occurred. The first was a statement by the Pakistani President, Mr Asif Ali Zardari, that Pakistan was in grave danger of being over-run by the Taliban. The second was a statement by Gen Pervez Musharraf that there was a conspiracy to run down and blame the Pakistan Army and the ISI as the fountainheads of terrorism. He said that these institutions and instruments of the state would result in the Taliban and Al Qaeda taking over the country. The third event was a statement by Mr Richard Holbrooke, the American special envoy to Pakistan and Afghanistan. Speaking in New Delhi, he said that the Taliban was a threat equally to India, Pakistan and the US and must be faced jointly.
How does one interpret these statements? The Pakistanis have been crying themselves hoarse that they are a victim of terrorism and that India instead of pressurising Pakistan after the 26/11 attack should extend cooperation in tackling the Taliban. As proof they pointed out that in the Swat Valley the Pakistani Government has had to make a compromise with the Taliban, which is virtually surrendering to extremism. The red herring drawn by the Pakistanis across the terrorist trail is that if India insists on action by Pakistan against the perpetrators of 26/11, then the Pakistani Government will become weak, the Taliban will take over Pakistan and India will have to face an implacable enemy.
Let us take the specific case of the Swat Valley. This is a part of the Provincially-Administered Tribal Area of NWFP, watered by the Swat river, which joins the Kabul River near Charsadda and the Indus at Attock. The easternmost part of northern NWFP consists of Buner, the western portion is Swat and the central portion of which goes up to the Afghanistan border is Mohmand, Bajawar and Jandol. The eastern part of this region is the Mahabun Hills, which became the stronghold of the extreme Wahabi Hindustani Fanatics whose origin lay in Patna. The British mounted a number of expeditions to eliminate the fanatics and in this process came into open conflict with people of Swat and Buner. 1858, 1871,1881, 1888 and 1891 were crucial years and in 1897 Mullah Sadullah raised the banner of revolt in the Swat Valley. The British raised the Malakand Field Force in order to restore peace in this region. Simultaneously, the Tirah Expeditionary Force was launched into the southern part of NWFP bordering the Safed Koh Mountains in Afghanistan. This was the first force to fully penetrate into and dominate Tirah. Almost every year, especially in 1919, this entire region, including Swat, was in turmoil and the British had to intervene from time to time with force. Unrest in this region, therefore, is not a new phenomenon, nor do compromises there indicate that Pakistan has surrendered to the extremists and that the Taliban is about to take over the whole country.
India and its friends must firmly reject any suggestion of Pakistan that 26/11 should be linked with events in Swat and Waziristan. Pakistan cannot be let off the hook under the excuse that this would encourage the Taliban. If it does, so what? It matters little to us whether Mr Zardari rules Pakistan, or Gen Musharraf, or the Taliban. Every Pakistani regime has encouraged anti-Indian activities and we have been able to neutralise most of them. If the Taliban comes to power we can neutralise them also, so why should we help Pakistan to keep them at bay? Our message to Pakistan has to be loud and clear: Keep your extremist elements under control, ensure that they do not launch attacks against India from Pakistan territory and bring to book to the perpetrators of 26/11. As for the rest, that is internal affair of Pakistan and if it weakens that country and its Government, that is no skin off our nose. -- The Pioneer, 17 March 2009.
AYE FOR SCIENCE
Obama allows federal funding for stem cell research in the US The controversy in America over the ethics of using embryonic stem cells to heal the sick hasn’t deterred US president Barack Obama from making a new policy announcement.
By issuing an executive order on March 9, Obama has reversed George W Bush’s policy that no federal funding would be available to promote research in human embryonic stem cells.
Will the US Congress now allow taxpayers’ money to be used for human embryo experiments involving their creation and destruction, overturning the legislative ban it has been renewing every year since 1996?
Stem cells are undefined cells present in adults; they are also found in abundance in embryos and umbilical cord blood. Though all stem cells have the potential to heal — because they can be coaxed to grow into specific kinds of tissues or organs with cloning technology — it is embryonic stem cells that have greater potential on account of their ability to grow into virtually any body part.
That’s why researchers prefer to work with embryonic stem cells that have greater scope than adult stem cells with their limitations. Stem cells hold the potential to cure leukaemia, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, spinal cord and cardiac diseases and others that leave patients either severely crippled or prove fatal.
Embryonic stem cells are controversial because the embryos are discarded once the cells are extracted from them. Critics object to creation of embryos for the purpose of harvesting their cells. However, given the growth of infertility treatments and with more people opting for assisted reproductive techniques, fertility clinics end up with more embryos than they require. Researchers are sourcing these to-be-discarded embryos for stem cells, and not creating new ones for the purpose.
The other objection is that the technology could be used in human reproductive cloning. Fears of reproductive cloning — as opposed to therapeutic cloning — are unfounded, too, since the US, like most countries, expressly prohibits it.
The Indian Council of Medical Research has laid down guidelines on stem cell research, following a proposal to set up a national apex committee for this purpose. Cord blood banks are also being encouraged in India and these might one day altogether circumvent the need to source stem cells from embryos. The US policy change would only enlarge and extend globally the scope of cutting-edge medicine, improving future health care. (Editorial, The Times of India, 16 March 2009)

Phalgun 18, 2065 Vik Samvat, Yugabda 5110, 1 March 2009

1. FESTIVALS: Phalgun (Chaitra), Krishan 6 (March 17 this year) is known as ‘Eknath Shashthi’, as Sant Eknath left for his heavenly abode by embracing "jalsamadhi" in sacred Godavari on this day. This great saint of Maharashtra was born sometime around 1530 AD at Pratisthan (present Paithan).
Eknath wrote his famous treatise on Chatushloki Bhagavat. Because of his all-out efforts, the legacy of Sant Dnyaneshwar could be restored in the form of undistorted version of ‘Dnyaneshwari’. He also devoted himself in fighting against casteism and other ills rotting the society. His life was perfect harmony in "Vichar, Uchchar and Achar" – i.e., purity of thought, speech and practices.
This month celebrates Holi festival, full of colours and fervour, on 10th-11th March. We wish Holi Shubhakamanye to all our sisters and brothers in all parts of the world.
2. SARSANGHCHALAK VISITS JHIRI VILLAGE WHERE EVERYBODY SPEAKS SANSKRIT: RSS Sarsanghchalak KS Sudarshan was moved hearing the people of Jhiri village in Madhya Pradesh talking fluently in Sanskrit. With a population of 976 people, the village comes under Rajgarh district. People of this village have been using Sanskrit in their daily conducts for the last six years.
Shri Sudarshan also felicitated Vimla Panna, an activist of Samskrit Bharati who first went to Jhiri in 2002 and played a key role in bringing this change. This village has become a model village not only in respect of Sanskrit sambhashan but also in many other fields like organic farming, water harvesting, etc. The atmosphere was like Diwali celebration when the Sarsanghchalak visited the village. He performed gopooja in the village. The whole proceedings were conducted in Sanskrit.Even the Sarsanghchalak started his speech in Sanskrit.
3. BHARAT A STEP CLOSER TO MAKING OWN CARRIER: The Navy's long-standing dream of operating two powerful carrier battle groups (CBGs), to project power as well as act as a stabilizing influence in the entire Bharatiya Ocean Region and beyond, took a big step closer to reality on Feb 28 with the keel of the first indigenous aircraft carrier (IAC) being laid at the Cochin Shipyard.
“The IAC, to be delivered in 2014, will enhance the Navy's blue-water capabilities. We hope to operate two-three carriers simultaneously in the not-to-distant future,'' said defence minister A K Antony. With this programme, Bharat has joined a select group of just four nations (US, Russia, UK and France) capable of designing and building a 40,000-tonne aircraft carrier.''
The 260-metre-long first IAC, construction of which has seen some collaboration from Italy and Russia, will be able to carry 12 MiG-29Ks, eight Tejas Light Combat Aircraft and 10 helicopters like anti-submarine and maritime reconnaissance Kamov-31s on its 2.5-acre flight deck and hangars.
4. SECOND AUSTRALIAN HINDU CONFERENCE: Second Australian Hindu Conference, to be held on April 11,12 2009 at Sydney brings together Hindus and Australian leaders to foster better understanding of the diversity of the Hindu way of life and the proud contribution of all Hindus in the well being of Australia and the World. The theme of the conference is “Sustaining Australia through strengthening bonds amongst communities” and it will be presided over by Pujya Swami Dayananda Saraswati Ji.
There will be special workshops for Youth, women and cooperation among Hindu temples etc. For more information, Souvenir Advertisement, Sponsoring & Registration: visit www.vhp.org.au
5. POSITIVE SIGNALS: MAOIST-HIT BASTAR WELCOMES INDUSTRY: In the Maoist stronghold of Bastar, a silent revolution is taking place. The young generation is coming round to the view that guns cannot change its fortune. It does not support the Maoists’ opposition to setting up of industry, and wants to embrace a life of peace and prosperity.
At least half-dozen major industrial projects are in the pipeline at Bastar which include Tata Steel’s Rs 1,000-crore project at Lohandiguda, Essar Steel's Rs 7,000-crore, 3.2 million-tonne plant at Kirandul and NMDC’s 13,000 crore Integrated Steel Plant at Nagarnar. Put together, the three projects would generate at least 25,000 jobs.
Government officials feel that industrialisation would not only provide employment opportunities, but it would also hit at the root cause of the Maoist menace.Bastar - comprising the six districts of Bijapur, Dantewada, Bastar, Kanker and Narayanpur - is the worst affected by left-wing rebel activities for over three decades.
6. SHRI GURUJI PURASKAR 2009: The Shri Golwalkar Guruji Puraskar of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh Jankalyan Samiti of Maharashtra were awarded to Asian Agro Foundation ( for research on ancient scripts ), Deendayal Shodh Sansthan, and women’s boxing champion Smt. Meri Kom of Manipur.The function was held at Jalna, Maharashtra on 22 Feb.
Every year, these awards of Rs. 51,000 each are presented to dedicated social workers, institutions, artists, players who have made a significant contribution in various social fields. This was the 14th year of the award. Senior journalist Shri Tarun Vijay was the chief guest and speaker on this occasion.
7. I COME FROM A COUNTRY THAT GAVE WORLD THE WORD 'OM'-RESUL POOKUTTY: "This is a Shiv Ratri gift. It is absolutely incredible," an elated Resul Pookutty said after his triumph at the Oscar awards for sound-mixing in 'Slumdog Millionaire'.
"I dedicate this award to my country. This is not just a sound award but a piece of history that has been handed over to me," a beaming and emotional Pookutty said while dedicating the trophy to a billion Bharatiyas.
"I come from a country and civilisation that gave the world the word that precedes silence and is followed by more silence. That word is 'Om'. So I dedicate this award to my country," said Kerala-born sound technician.
8. IIM GRADS IN GOVT FORM RESOURCE POOL: In an initiative to dust off the image of bureaucrats as musty, file-bearing and status quoist entities, a group of civil servants who share a common link — they have all been to IIMs — have devised a resource directory to pool their diverse skill sets and experience.
After IIM-G, or IIM in government, was formed by a small nucleus of civil servants in 2004, the group has grown to about a 100 members most of whom chose a career in public service after completing their management degrees in the 80's and 90's. Several meetings and exchanges over internet led to the idea of a resource bank.
Ranging between five and 25 years of working in government, IIM-G feels it can offer creative and proactive solutions that could run counter to the popular, if somewhat pejorative, value attached to the term "babus". “Hardly any consultant has the experience this group possesses in terms of working in government and having a management base," said Cabinet Secretary K M Chandrashekhar, releasing the resource directory on Feb 21.
9. DELHI METRO GETS UN CERTIFICATE FOR PREVENTING CARBON EMISSION: Adding yet another feather to its cap, Delhi Metro has become the first rail network in the world to get a UN certificate for preventing over 90,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide from being released into the atmosphere, doing its bit to fight against global warming. The report, given by Germany-based validation organisation TUV NORD found that the DMRC stopped the emission of 90,004 tonnes of carbon dioxide from 2004 to 2007 by adopting regenerative braking systems in the metro trains.
Under regenerative braking process whenever trains on the Metro network apply brakes, three phase-traction motors installed on them act as generators to produce electrical energy which goes back into the Over head Electricity lines.
10. NO JIHAD IN INDIA, SAYS DARUL ULOOM: Islamic seminary Darul Uloom Deoband on Feb 22 said it regarded India as Dar al-Aman or a “Muslim-friendly country”. It ceased to be Dar al-Harb or hostile for Muslims with the end of British rule. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP)’s Dharm Raksha Manch, issued a letter to the Deoband clergy demanding a fatwa, to declare Bharat as “friend of Islam to end religion-inspired violence”.
“How can a country where you choose your own government be Dar al-Harb?” the seminary’s Vice-Rector Abdul Khaleque Madrasi said.The VHP had also asked clerics to state that Hindus were not kafirs or nonbelievers and therefore jihad did not apply to them. Madrasi said the term kafir meant a person who did not follow Islam and not necessarily an enemy of Islam.
11. MUSLIMS CAN PROSPER UNDER MODI: IMAM: Mufti Shabbir Ahmed Siddiqui (52) - the Imam of Ahmedabad’s biggest mosque, Jama Masjid is pitted against hardliners who feel he is soft on the Narendra Modi government with which he has been building bridges in turbulent times.
But he is quite unabashed about it and would like Modi, who is popular among Shias, to gain acceptance among Sunnis too. The Imam blames Congress as much as BJP for the 2002 riots but feels the time has come now to move on. ‘‘Seven years after the riots, people have already started forgetting what had happened,’’ he said, adding that the projection of the riots was much graver than what had actually happened.
The Imam is full of praise for Modi for having ensured peace after 2002 and feels the CM had ‘‘lived up to expectations’’. ‘‘Muslims too have an opportunity to prosper in the peaceful environment that the Modi government has created. Modi has provided an atmosphere which is conducive for those who want to trade peacefully in Gujarat,’’ he said.
Stating clearly that Modi actually does not need Muslim votes to win the elections; he said it was up to the Muslims to make friends with the chief minister.
12. KERALA NUN UNVEILS DARK SIDE OF CHURCH LIFE: Amen, the autobiography of a nun, Sister Jesme, 52, revealing the darker side of life in a convent, including exploitation of nuns by priests and clandestine same sex relations among nuns, is bound to push the powerful Catholic Church into another controversy. Sister Jesme said she had quit the order as she could no longer bear the harassment at the hands of her superiors. She, however, said she continues to lead the life of a nun “outside the closed doors of a convent”.
“My attempt is to give a real picture of convent life, often shrouded in mystery and darkness,” Sister Jesme, now settled in Kozhikode, said.
Said Father Paul Thelekkat, spokesman of Syro-Malabar Church, “We are not denying what she said. We are not in paradise either. But she has sensationalised it to get cheap publicity. We believe in democratic values, so we have no plan to call for a ban on the book.
13. SBI MORE VALUABLE THAN CITIBANK: "May you live in interesting times," goes an old Chinese curse. And these are interesting times for sure. State Bank of India (SBI), the largest bank in Bharat, is now worth more than Citigroup, one of the world's largest banks.The market capitalisation (number of shares outstanding x the closing price of the share) of SBI on Feb 22 closed at Rs66,285 crore. This is around 25 per cent more than the closing market capitalisation of Citigroup on the New York Stock Exchange which was Rs52,931 crore.
Over the last four quarters, Citigroup has earned Rs230,485 crore as revenue, which almost eleven times more than the revenue earned by SBI.But when it comes to profits Citigroup over the last four quarters has suffered total losses of Rs83,474 crore.During the same time SBI has made profits of Rs8,262 crore.
14. CANADA TEMPLE ESTABLISHES TWELVE SACRED JYOTIR LINGAMS: The newly opened Hindu Heritage Centre Mississauga, Canada created history in North America by becoming the first ever temple to do the establishment of the twelve Jyotir Lingams. In an electrifying atmosphere of chanting of hymns, the 24,000 square feet temple was thronged by Devotees who came to see the Sthapana ceremony and take the blessings of Shiva during Feb 13-15.
15. SUKH RAM GETS 3-YEAR RI, RS TWO-LAKH FINE: “A corrupt public servant is a menace to the society and need of the hour is that the cancer of corruption should be checked immediately,” observed Special CBI Judge VK Maheshwari, while sentencing former Union Communications Minister Sukh Ram to three years' rigorous imprisonment. The CBI had alleged that Sukhram during his stint as Minister had abused his official position to amass disproportionate assets to the tune of Rs 5.36 crore and had forfeitured Rs 4.25 crore from his possession.
16. DISCOVERY TO PROFILE SUCCESS OF BIHAR’S SUPER-30: The success story of Super-30, a Patna-based private coaching institute, will now draw worldwide attention with the Discovery Channel deciding to beam the success saga in a one-hour programme during March 14-29. Last year, all the 30 students from Super-30 cracked the IIT-JEE exam. Over the years, the success rate of the institute has improved. In the very first year in 2002, 18 students had got through the country's premier engineering entrance test.
The documentary captures all the aspects of the novel experiment started by mathematician Anand Kumar where students from underprivileged families successfully make it to IIT's and also depicts the journey of the young, talented Anand Kumar, his passion for mathematics since his childhood, early loss of his father and the struggle ahead, including the lost opportunity to study in Cambridge University due to poverty.
17. SMITA SALASKAR AND SHIRISH KARKARE AT SANGH FUNCTION: "I don't take pride in calling myself 'veer patni', because the very fact that my husband was the victim of terrorists who were illiterate and some ordinary people who could handle guns - is extremely disgraceful to the national security of the country. How many more veer mata and veera patni do we want? Everybody should readily perform one's duty if such a danger has to be avoided in future".
Said Smita Salaskar, wife of late Vijay Salaskar, while speaking at Panvel on February 24. She was one of the chief guests in a public program organised by RSS Konkan Prant on the occasion of ‘Rashtraraksha Ninand Ghosh Shivir’.
Smt.Salaskar further added that organizations like RSS would inspire people to perform their duties.
Shri Shirish Karkare, brother of former ATS chief Hemant Karkare, shared some memories of his brother and expressed that every citizen should understand one's responsibility and perform one's duty honestly. Vaishali Ombale, daughter of martyr police constable Ombale also spoke on the occasion.
RSS Sahsarkaryavah Bhayyaji Joshi appealed to the audience to preserve national safety and exhorted the citizens to be prepared to destroy the evil tendencies in the society
Noted singer and music director Shridhar Phadke welcomed the chief guests. Delightful demonstrations presented by 770 ghosh vadaks set the mood of the programme. Attractive deepotsav was also arranged on the occasion.
18. SEMINAR BY WOSY ON GLOBAL TERRORISM: World Organisation of Students and Youth (WOSY), an ABVP initiative, organised an international seminar on Global Terrorism at Bengaluru on Frebruary 14. A total of 142 delegates from 31 countries, including 30 girls, participated in the seminar. At the inauguration Lt. Gen. (Retd) SK Sinha, former Governor of Jammu & Kashmir, deliberated upon the history and evolution, causes and consequences of global terrorism while Dr Chengappa, VC, University of Agricultural Sciences , Shri Sushil Pandit, chairman of WOSY and Ramesh Pappa secretary general also spoke on the occasion.
19. TALIBAN MAY TAKE OVER KARACHI: The Taliban's terror network is spreading across Pakistan so rapidly, it may be on course to strike the financial and shipping hub of Karachi, according to a police report submitted to the Sindh government.
The Taliban, which has already attacked Islamabad and Rawalpindi, has established hideouts in Karachi, "could take the city hostage at any point", the report said. Police said that the Taliban had systematically infiltrated Karachi, the hills on the outskirts of the city, slums and small motels had become Taliban nests and Taliban fighters have "huge caches" of weapons and ammunition and could strike in a manner similar to the Mumbai attacks of November 26.
20. JAGRITI PROJECT OF SEWA BHARATI IN J&K: Jammu & Kashmir unit of Sewa Bharati started a project at Siot village under Nowshera district of the state to impart training to rural youth so that they get employment in their village. A total of 24 kanal (about 2.5 acre) land was acquired by the Sewa Bharati in Siot and training and demonstration for vermiculture, composed fertilizer, mushroom and seasonal vegetable cultivation is being given with the help of three experts from Agriculture University of Jammu. About two acre land was tilled properly where wheat was cultivated with the help of enthusiastic local youth.
Sewa Bharati aims to motivate the youth of rural areas by imparting proper training in respect of cultivation of high yielding varieties of crops, latest knowhow, assistance and guidance from the experts, adopting allied agriculture activities for sustainable production and finally more and regular money generation. Apart from grains/serials cultivation, other activities like goshala, flower cultivation, mushroom cultivation, bee keeping, vegetable cultivation, agro forestry, ornamamental plantations, compost fertilizers, vermiculture, etc will be included in the awareness programme.
21. NOW, BYPASS WITHOUT CUTTING A SINGLE BONE: In what is claimed to be the first of its kind procedure in the country, doctors at Indraprastha Apollo hospital have used a minimally invasive technique to perform a multiple graft heart bypass surgery on a 53-year-old woman without cutting through a single bone.
The new procedure, being less painful, has many advantages over conventional bypass surgery and leads to much faster healing. "We don't require many blood transfusions. In this case, we didn't require any blood transfusion. The hospital stay is also short as compared to conventional surgery in which the patient stays in hospital for 7-8 days and takes 6-8 weeks for complete recovery," said Dr Yatin Mehta, senior consultant, anaesthesia, Indraprastha Apollo Hospital.
22. IT'S NO SECRET: Switzerland's largest bank UBS was recently compelled to hand over confidential client data to US tax authorities. It is now at loggerheads with US regulators who want access to fresh information on 52,000 accounts held by wealthy Americans suspected of offshore tax evasion. The issue has snowballed into a major controversy. One side of the Swiss political spectrum seeks a constitutional safeguard for banking secrecy, glorified as a national tradition. The other side supports the internationally prompted move for transparency. The global fallout is that the issue of tax havens will be up for debate at a G-20 summit in April. Switzerland's not being invited looks like a rap on the knuckles.
Switzerland has long been a secret treasure chest for much of the world's offshore wealth. Its banks including financial giants UBS and Credit Suisse offer clients privacy and personalised service. But the discretion it treats as brand value is also associated with suspicious opacity. Swiss banks have a point in saying their contracts with clients are based on the promise of privacy. So, disclosures-on-demand are a breach of trust, so important in their trade. But client confidentiality is valid only so far as account-holders' assets accrue from legitimate activity. That indulgence can hardly be extended to law-breakers seeking tax havens or places to park illegal assets.
Nor should confidentiality mean stonewalling of regulatory scrutiny into tax fraud, diversion of embezzled funds, money laundering and other illicit activity. A UBS banker's confession last year that he facilitated his clients' tax evasion and diamond smuggling only reinforces the case for systemic change. Besides, tax evaders are just one kind of economic offender. Secret bank accounts have served offenders ranging from Nazi war criminals and American gangsters to African dictators and global druglords. In a world waging war on terrorism, bank secrecy serves terrorists as well. Osama bin Laden's resort to Swiss banks to park terror funds was part of the US's post-9/11 investigations.
The world is wracked by a financial and economic crisis, felt to have originated in reckless banking practices. There's been a paradigm shift in public discourse concerning institutional transparency and reform. And this isn't restricted to financial services. Whether it is Barack Obama's disapproval of corporate profligacy, India's post-Satyam focus on corporate governance or the G-20's call for a refurbished global economic order, the international mood favours creating responsible and responsive institutions. By fetishising banking secrecy, Switzerland runs the risk of appearing to side with the bad guys. Banks should maintain secrecy as required by professional norms but also consent to providing client data to regulatory authorities or criminal investigators. That may be the way out of this impasse. (Editorial, Times of India, 25 Feb 2009)
23. RAVIKUMAR’S VISIT TO SRI LANKA, THAILAND, HONG KONG AND SINGAPORE: During this pravas, at Colombo his talk on Women’s emancipation in Hindus and Women’s Right Movement in West was well received. Ravikumar participated in the Intl Workshop on i2i (Israel to Indonesia) and spoke about the achievements of Modern Bharat much to the delight of all delegates. The workshop was organized by Dr. B.K.Modi ji of Spice Group.
In Bharat also Ravi Kumar has been addressing several important gatherings viz scientists of ISRO and social workers of Rotary Club in Bangalore, professional students of Babasaheb Ambedkar Vidyapeeth, Aurangabad and Andhra University, Vishakhapatnam and several other Engg and medical colleges. .
In Chennai a workshop on Overseas Tamils was organized on Jan 10 ( just after the Pravasi Bharateeya Divas ) where over 100 prominent delegates including Ministers, Members of Parliament and prominent dignitaries from Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Mauritius, Singapore took part. Prof. Surya Narayanan coordinated the workshop and Dr Shankar Tatwawadi ji and Ravi Kumar also attended.
24. JOURNEY FROM A TRIBAL VILLAGE TO IIT: Here is a story of remarkable grit and determination of a student, Lohar Sai Nag, who has come from a remote tribal village Sukavans in Chhatisgarh. Despite tremendous odds, he fought his way through school and got through the IIT.
"I come from a village where none goes to school. I worked as a child labour for a while," said Lohar.
"One day my mother got some food from Anganwadi. I liked the food so my mother began to send me to the government school where I used to get the food. There used to be huge crisis for money, but I always stood first since school," said Lohar. He managed to get through school with scholarships and then did his B Tech from Raipur. After working for a while, Loha decided to do his post graduation from IIT and now has two job offers despite the recession. And after fulfilling most of his dreams, he's now dreaming big for his village."I want to start a scholarship for talented students of my village because there is no opportunity for them," said Lohar.
25. MALAYSIAN OPPOSITION CONDEMNS ARREST OF INDIAN PROTESTORS: Malaysian opposition leaders condemned police use of water cannon against ethnic Indian demonstrators and the arrest of 17 protesting at the alleged ill-treatment of a detained rights group leader.Nearly 400 supporters of banned Indian rights group Hindraf had gathered on Feb 28 at a police station in the capital when police hit the crowd with chemical-laced water.
"This is clearly an example of an excessive and unjustified use of police force on the people," senior opposition parliamentarian Lim Kit Siang told AFP. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim said the move by police to disperse demonstrators filing reports on the health of detained Hindraf leader P. Uthayakumar, was worrying.
Uthayakumar, arrested in 2007 under the Internal Security Act, has since complained of a lack of treatment for his diabetes while in custody and his lawyer says there is a fear that he may lose his leg because of a lack of access to medical care.
26. 2000-YR-OLD SHIVA SHRINE FOUND: Believed to be among the oldest brick shrines in Bharat, a team of Lucknow University’s department of ancient Indian history and archaeology has unearthed a 2,000-year-old Shiva temple as part of its excavation project recently in at Sanchankot in Uttar Pradesh’s Unnao district.
‘‘It’s actually a complex comprising five temples,’’ Prof D P Tewari of the Lucknow University said. ‘‘While four temples belong to the Kushana period (1st-3rd century AD or 2,000 years ago), it appears that the primary temple was constructed during the Sunga period (2nd century BC to 1st century AD or 2,200 years ago).’’
Spread across an area of 600 acres, the temple is made of baked bricks. In Bharat, most of the brick temples were built in the Gupta period which existed in the fourth century AD. The temple’s architecture is ‘apsidal’ (semi-circular or u-shaped) in nature. A shivling, trishul, nandi and a river are inscribed over the seal. The legend of ‘Kaalanjar peeth’ is inscribed just below the river.
27. JSW MAY PIP TATA STEEL TO NO. 1 SLOT: With the commissioning of three million tonnes per annum (mtpa) additional production line at Vijaynagar plant on February 18, taking its total capacity to 6.8 mtpa Sajjan Jindal-led JSW Steel is set to pip Tata Steel and become the Bharat's largest private sector steel producer.
With the start of commercial production from the expanded facility, JSW Steel's overall production capacity would reach 7.8 million tonnes from the present 4.8. As of now, SAIL is Bharat's largest public sector steel maker with annual production close to 15 million tonnes, while Tata Steel tops the list among private players with installed production capacity of 6.8 million tonnes at Jamshedpur. JSW intends to reach 32 million tonnes of steel capacity by 2020 for which the firm is estimated to invest about Rs 1 lakh crore.
28. BANKS NET GAIN AMID SLOWDOWN: The period of slowdown is proving to be a good time for the commercial banks as most of them have reaped in a good business and minted money all through this downturn. A government estimate says that between April and December 2008 the commercial banks operating in the country have earned a combined net profit of Rs 36,500 crore as against Rs 28,900 crore in the same period in the previous year, a gain of 25.6%.
The rise in profit is a result of increased business as well as higher interest income. Interestingly, private and foreign banks - which have refused to bring down the interest rates despite the RBI slashing its key lending rates to banks by 3.5% - have had higher profit margins than their PSU counterparts.
29. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN: Visitors: Shri Arun Devani from Kenya; Shri Anil Pota and Smt. Neela Pota from U. K., Pandit Gangaram from Suriname.Pravas: Dr. Shankarrao Tatwawadi, Samyojak Vishwa Vibhag is touring ME. Shri Sethumadhavan along with Shri Shyam Parande visited Malaysia and Singapore.
30. FOOD FOR THOUGHT: If a person is constantly engaged in good actions then after sometime it becomes his habit and no amount of allurements and temptations can make him shun the virtuous path. He develops a strong character and firm belief in his convications. -- Sama Veda.
JAI SHREE RAM

GOVERNANCE CHANGING SILENTLY AND FOREVER
India’s bureaucracy rarely attracts accolades. Inefficient, corrupt, mired in red tape, hostile to change — these are the usual epithets used to describe it. But if the 18 awards for innovation in e-governance given away by the Department of Administrative Reforms in the Ministry of Personnel last week in Goa to government departments across 11 states are any indication, that is not the full story. Some of our public servants are making an effort to be just that, finding ingenious ways of using information technology to assist and empower the masses.
Hindustan Times profiles the five gold medal winning innovations:
Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation’s e-city
Almost every piece of paper a resident of Ahmedabad had to run around the offices of the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation for is now mailed to him online. Birth and death certificates, licences to set up business establishments, sanction for construction plans — they can all be got by simply filling up forms online, without visiting the corporation’s office at all. Queues at the corporation have virtually disappeared, corruption has nose-dived, while transparency has taken a giant leap forward.
But heralding the IT era was far from easy. Palani Panneervel, formerly the city’s Municipal Commissioner and now Revenue Secretary, who began the process six years ago, recalled that there had been tremendous resistance at first from the corporation's 42,000 employees.
“Finally, once I had the software in place, I called in the news television channels and announced the changes,” he said. “The employees had no choice but to fall in line.”
The process Panneervel is being copied across 160 other municipal bodies of Gujarat. The AMC has now the gold medal for ‘Exemplary Horizontal Transfer of ICT based best practice’.
Jaankari, Bihar
The idea came from Chief Minister Nitish Kumar himself. “We had held a number of meetings on how to give more teeth to the RTI act,” said Amir Shubani, Secretary in Bihar’s Personnel Department. “One afternoon Nitishji asked, ‘Why can’t we have a call centre to take RTI applications? That will help even an illiterate person to get the information he wants.”
Thus germinated Jaankari: a facility unique to Bihar which allows anyone to phone in his RTI application and thereafter completely takes over the task of ferreting out the information sought.
Operators take down the complaint in writing, forward it to the department concerned, and keep following up. If the applicant doesn’t get his answer within a specified time frame — which varies according to the complaint — or is dissatisfied with the information provided, he is allowed a first and then a second, appeal. The charge is a nominal Rs 10.
In two years since it began, Jaankari has tackled 22,600 applications. It received a gold medal in the ‘Outstanding performance in citizen centric service delivery’ category.
Public Distribution System, Chhattisgarh
The Public Distribution System (PDS) is a mess in most northern states. A shining exception, however, is Chhattisgarh, where IT has been employed to completely turn it around.
Starting in 2005, the Food and Civil supplies Department of the Chhattisgarh Government began putting all the data relating to the state’s 37 lakh ration cards online. A year ago it began issuing computerised ration cards. All details of grain purchased from 8 lakh farmers across the state and supplied to ration shops, have also been stored online. A call centre in Raipur takes complaints from ration card holders and processes them within four weeks.
“It was a Herculean task,” said Rajeev Jaiswal, who heads the Food and Civil supplies Department. “We had to ensure that no false claimant gets a ration card, and yet no genuine claimant is left out.”
Chhattisgarh’s PDS was awarded the gold medal in the ‘Excellence in Government Process Re-engineering’ category.
Sujala Watershed Project, Karnataka
With the expert knowledge provided to them through information technology, farmers across Karnataka, living below the poverty line, have increased their crop yields by 15-20 per cent.
The knowledge they get is remote sensing data relating to the nature of their soil, along with suggestions on choosing which crops to sow, which nutrients to use, how to recharge the groundwater, and so on. The software to collate and analyze the information was developed by Amtrix, the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organisation.
The project itself, called the Sujala Watershed Project, begun in September 2001, is a joint effort of the World Bank and the Karnataka government.
“We kept the big farmers out so that they do not influence the identification of tracts of land where the project should be implemented,” said Rajiv Ranjan, additional project director. The project has moved into other areas as well — organising self-help groups and empowering women by teaching them income generating skills like tailoring and pickle making.
Sujala won the gold in the Innovative usage of technology in e-governance category.
Tele-opthalmology in Tripura
Every day, from 10 am to 6 pm, a team of six ophthalmologists sits in a studio inside the premises of the Indira Gandhi Memorial Hospital at Agartala, gazing intently at a large computer screen. The computer is connected to a ‘vision centre’ at each one of the state’s 11 administrative blocks.
“Patients who want their eyes examined gather at the vision centres,” said Dr Bijay Debbarma, an ophthalmologist involved with the project. “We take one centre at a time, but cover all centres daily. We have sophisticated devices installed by which magnified images of a patient’s eye can be seen on the computer. We examine it and prescribe remedies. The patient is then given a printout.”“The long queues at each one of the vision centres every morning testify to the project’s popularity,” said Dr Sukumar Deb, deputy superintendent at the Indira Gandhi Hospital. Begun in April 2007, it has provided long distance treatment to over 12,000 patients. The tele-ophthalmology project won the gold medal in the ‘Special Sectoral award’ category. -- Hindustan Times , Feb 23. 2009